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Full text of "The Catholic world"

THE 











MONTHLY MAGAZINE 



OF 



GENERAL LITERATURE AND SCIENCE. 




VOL. XXVI. 
OBER, 1877, TO MARCH, 1878. 



NEW YORK: 
THE CATHOLIC PUBLICATION SOCIETY 

COMPANY, 

9 Barclay Street. 
1878. 



Copyrighted by 
I. T. HECKER, 

1878. 




THE NATION PRESS, 27 ROSE STREET, NEW YORK. 



CONTENTS. 



A Final Philosophy, 610 

A Glance at the Indian Question, . . . 195 

A Great Bishop, 6*5 

A Legend of Dieppe, 264 

A Ramble after the Waits, .... 485 

A Silent Courtship, 39 

A Sweet Revenge, 179, 384 

Among the Translators, .... 309, 732 
Africa, Religion on the East Coast of, . . 411 

Catholic Circles for Working-men in France, . 529 

Charles Lever at Home, ..... 203 

Christianity as an Historical Religion, . 434, 653 

Church of England, Confession in the, . . 590 

Compostella, St. James of, .... 163 

Confession in the Church of England. . . 590 

Criminals and their Treatment, ... 56 



Marguerite, ....... 73 

Marquette, Father James, Death of, and Dis- 

covery of his Remains, .... 267 

Michael the Sombre, .... 1599, 791 

Mickey Casey's Christmas Dinner-Party, . 512 

Mont St. Michel, The Last Pilgrimage to, . 128 

Mormonism, The Two Prophets of, . . 227 

Mystery of the Old Organ ..... 356 



Descent of Man, The, 
Dieppe, A Legend of, 
Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



496 
264 
774 



Evolution, Dr. Draper and, .... 

Fortifications of Rome, Civiltk Cattolica on 

the, 

Free Religionists, The, 

French Home Life, 

Froude on the " Revival of Romanism," 
Froude on the Decline of Protestantism, 

German Element in the United States, . 

Hedge-Poets, The Irish, 

Holy Cave of Manresa, The 

How Steenwykerwold was Saved, . 

Indian Policy, our New, and Religious Liber- 
ty 

Indian Question, A Glance at the, . 
Industrial Crisis, Character of the Present, 

Ireland in 1878, 

Irish Hedge-Poets, The 

Isles of L<5rins, The, 

Italy, The Outlook in 



403 
'45 
759 



372 



406 
821 



Organ, The Mystery of the Old, 
Our New Indian Policy and Religious Li- 
berty, ....... 

Papal Elections, 53 7l 

Philosophy, A Final, 

Pilgrimage, The Last, to Mont St. Michel, . 

Pius the Ninth. 

Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philoso- 
phy, 

Preachers on the Rampage, .... 

Protestantism, Froude on the Decline of, 

Protestant Episcopal Convention and Con- 
gress, 

Religion in Jamaica, 

Religion on the East Coast of Africa, 

Roc Amadour, 

Romanism, Froude on the Revival of, 
Rome, The Civilta. Cattolica. on the Fortifi- 
cations of, ...... 

Science, The God of " Advanced," . 
Scholastic Philosophy, Recent Polemics and 



356 



811 
610 
128 

846 

337 
700 
470 

395 

69 

411 

23 



Irenics in, 



St. Hedwige I0 g 

547 St. James of Compostella, .... 163 

The Character of the Present Industrial 

90 Crisis, i 22 

195 The God of " Advanced " Science, . . . 251 

122 The Home-Rule Candidate, . . . 669 742 

721 The Late Dr. T. W. Marshall, ... 806 

406 The Little Chapel at Monamullin, . . 213, 322 

685 The Old Stone Jug, 638 

i The Two Prophets of Mormonism, . . . 227 



Jamaica, Religion in 69 United States, The German Element in the, . 372 



Lerins, The Isles of, 
Lever at Home, 



Man, The Descent of, 
Manresa, The Holy Cave of, . 



685 
203 

.496 



Waits, A Ramble after the 485 

Wolf-Tower, The, 440 

Working-men in France, Catholic Circles 

for, S 2 9 



821 Year of Our Lord 1877, The, 



560 



POETRY. 



A Child-Beggar, 683 Order 



After Castel-Fidardo, 
A Little Sermon, 
A Mountain Friend, 
At the Church Door, 

Between the Years, 



789 
713 



382 



Outside St. Peter's 75 6 

Smoke-Bound, 161 

Sonnet, 



Blessed Virgin, The, 731 The Bells, 



Brother and Sister, 
Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, 



45 

18 

6sa The Hiver's Voice, 535 

" There was no Room for Them in the Inn," 668 
577 To the Wood-Thrush, 250 



Faber, To F. W 305 Tola Pulchra 355 



In Retreat, 



699 Witch-Hazel, To the, 447 



IV 



Contents. 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



A Life of Pius IX. down to the Episcopal 

Jubilee 135 

Almanac, Catholic Family, .... 572 
Almanac and Treasury of Facts for the year . 

1878 .860 

Ancient History, 432 

Annals of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, . 144 
Antar and Zara, 431 

Bible of Humanity, The, .... 143 
Bibliotheca Symbolica Ecclesiae Universalis, . 284 
Blanche Carey, 



Catacombs, A Visit to the Roman, . 
Catechism of Christian Doctrine, . 
Catholic Parents' Friend, The, 
Charles Sprague, Poetical and Prose Writ- 
ings of, 143 

Christianity, The Beginnings of, . . . 425 



140 
859 
144 



Marie Lataste, The Life of, .... 134 
Mary, The Knowledge of, . . . .715 

Materialism, 859 

McGee's Illustrated Weekly, .... 143 

Mirror of True Womanhood, .... 719 

Miscellanies, ....... 281 

Missa de Beata Maria, 139 

Modern Philosophy, ..... 428 

Mongrelism, . . . . . . .142 

Monotheism, ....... 571 

Morning Offices of Palm Sunday, Holy Thurs- 
day, and Good Friday, .... 858 

Nicholas Minturn, ...... 575 



Records of a Quiet Life, 
Recueil de Lectures. 



De Deo Creante, 



426 



Eternal Years, The, 575 

Evidences of Religion, 572 



137 
139 



God the Teacher of Mankind, . 
Grammar-School Speller and Definer, The, 

Human Eye, Is the, Changing its form under 

the Influences of Modern Education ? . 860 

Iza, 575 

Jack, 143 

Knowledge of Mary, 715 



Letters of Rev. James Maher, D.D., 
Life of Marie Lataste, 
Life of Pope Pius IX., A Popular, . 
Lotos-Flowers, 



135 

573 



Repertorium Oratoris Sacri, . . 

Roman Catacombs, A Visit to the, . 

Sadlier's Elementary History of the U. S., , 
School Hygiene, Report upon, . . . 

Shakspere's Home, 

Specialists and Specialties in Medicine, . . 
Standard Arithmetic. No. I., . 

Standard Arithmetic. No. II i 

Sunday-School Teacher's Manual, 
Suppression of the Society of Jesus in the 
Portuguese Dominions, History of the, 
Surly Tim, 

The Beginnings of Christianity, 

The Kail of Rora 

The Life of Pope Pius IX., '. 

Vesper Hymn-Book, The New, 
What Catholics Do Not Believe, . 



859 
288 
574 
859 

432 
136 
719 
142 
287 
288 
575 

429 
574 

425 
J 35 
573 
719 



THE 



CATHOLIC WORLD 



VOL. XXVI., No. 151. OCTOBER, 1877. 



THE OUTLOOK IN ITALY. 



I. WHAT IS THE MEANING OF RE- 
CENT EVENTS IN ITALY ? 

THE revolutionary movement in 
Italy headed by Victor Emanuel 
has, step by step, trampled under 
foot every principle of religion, 
morality, and justice that stood be- 
tween it and its goal. No pretext 
of the welfare of a people, even 
when based on truth, can ever 
make perfidy and treachery lawful, 
or furnish a covering of texture 
thick enough to hide from intelli- 
gent and upright minds so long 
and black a list of misdeeds as the 
Piedmontese subjugation of South- 
ern Italy contains. " All iniquity 
of nations is execrable." What is 
more, the catalogue of the crimes 
of this revolution is by no means 
filled, and, what is worse, the fu- 
ture forebodes others which, in their 
enormity, will cast those of its be- 
ginning into the shade. That the 
natural desire for unity among the 
Italian people might have been 
realized by proper and just means, 
had the religious, intelligent, and 



influential classes exerted them- 
selves as they were in duty bound 
to do, there is little room for rea- 
sonable doubt. For it would be an 
unpleasant thing to admit that civ- 
ilized society, after the action of 
nineteen centuries of Christianity, 
could find no way to satisfy a legiti- 
mate aspiration, except by a pro- 
cess involving the violation and 
subversion of those principles of 
justice, right, and religion for the 
maintenance and security of which 
human society is organized and 
established. It is indeed strange 
to see the Latin races, which 
accepted so thoroughly and for so 
long a period the true Christian 
faith, now everywhere subject to 
violent and revolutionary changes 
in their political condition. How 
is this to be reconciled with the 
fact that Christianity, in response 
to the primitive instincts of human 
nature, and in consonance with the 
laws which govern the whole uni- 
verse, aims at, and actually brings 
about when followed, the greatest 
happiness of man upon earth while 



Copyright : Rev. I. T. HECKER. 1877. 



The Outlook in Italy. 



securing his perfect bliss hereafter? 
For so runs the promise of the 
divine Founder of Christianity : " A 
hundred-fold more in this life, and 
in the world to come life everlast- 
ing." 

What has beguiled so large a 
number of the people of Italy, once 
so profoundly Catholic, that now 
they should take up the false prin- 
ciples of revolution, should accept 
a pseudo-science, and unite with 
secret atheistical societies ? How 
has it come to pass that a people 
vvho poured out their blood as free- 
ly as water in testimony and de- 
fence of the Catholic religion, whose 
(history has given innumerable ex- 
amples of the highest form of Chris- 
tian heroism in ages past, now fol- 
lows willingly, or at least submits 
tamely, to the dictation of leaders 
who are animated with hatred to 
the Catholic Church, and are bent 
-on the extermination of the Chris- 
tian faith, and with it of all reli- 
.gion? 

Only those who can read in the 
seeds of time can tell whether 
such signs as these are to be inter- 
preted as signifying the beginning 
of the apostasy of the Latin races 
from Christianity and the disinte- 
gration and ruin of Latin nations, 
or whether these events are to be 
looked upon as evidence of a latent 
capacity and a youthful but ill-re- 
gulated strength pointing out a tran- 
sition to a new and better order of 
things in the future. 

Judging from the antecedents of 
.the men placed in political power 
by recent elections in Italy, and 
their destructive course of legisla- 
tion, the former supposition, con- 
fining our thoughts to the imme- 
diate present, appears to be the 
.more likely. It is not, therefore, a 
matter of surprise that Catholics of 
an active faith and a deep sense of 



personal responsibility feel uneasy 
at seeing things go from bad to 
worse in nations which they have 
been accustomed to look upon as 
pre-eminently Catholic. Nor is it 
in human nature for men of ener- 
getic wills and sincere feelings of 
patriotism to content themselves 
when they see the demagogues of 
liberty and the conspirators of 
atheistical secret societies coming 
to the front and aiming at the de- 
struction of all that makes a coun- 
try dear to honest men. Nowhere 
does the Catholic Church teach 
that the love of one's country is an- 
tagonistic to the love of God; nor 
does the light of her faith allure to 
an ignoble repose, or her spirit ren- 
der her members slaves or cow- 
ards. 

Serious-minded men, before' going 
into action, are wont to examine 
anew their first principles, in order 
to find out whether these be well 
grounded, clearly defined, and firm, 
and also whether there may not be 
some flaw in the deductions which 
they have been accustomed to draw 
from them. An examination of this 
kind is a healthy and invigorating 
exercise, and not to be feared when 
one has in his favor truth and 
honesty. 

II. THE UNITY OF ITALY. 

The idea of unity responds to 
one of the noblest aspirations of 
the soul, and wherever it exists 
free from all compulsion it gives 
birth to just hopes of true great- 
ness. Would that the cry for unity 
were heard from the hearts of the 
inhabitants of the whole earth, and 
that the inward struggle which reigns 
in men's bosoms, and the outward 
discord which prevails between 
man and man, between nations and 
nations, and between races and 
races, had for ever passed away ! 



The Outlook in Italy. 



" When will the hundred summers die, 

And thought and time be born again, 
And newer knowledge, drawing nigh. 
Bring truth that sways the hearts of men ?" 

Unity is the essence of the God- 
head and the animating principle 
of God's church; and wherever her 
spirit penetrates, there the natural 
desire for unity implanted in the 
human heart is intensified and uni- 
versalized, and man seeks to give 
to it an adequate embodiment in 
every sphere of his activity. It was 
this natural instinct for unity guid- 
ed by the genius of Catholicity that 
formed the scattered tribes of Eu- 
rope of former days into nations, 
uniting them in a grand universal 
republic which was properly called 
Christendom. Who knows but, as 
there reigned, by the action of an 
overruling Providence, a political 
unity in the ancient world which 
paved the way for the introduction 
of Christianity, that so there may 
be in preparation a more perfect 
political unity of peoples and na- 
tions in the modern world to open 
the way for the universal triumph 
of Christianity ? 

But there is a wide difference 
between recognizing that political 
unity is favorable to the strengtli 
and greatness of nations and the 
spread and victory of Christianity, 
and the acceptance of the errors of 
a class of its promoters, the ap- 
proval of their injustice, or a com- 
promise with their crimes. 

" When devils will their blackest sins put on, 
They do suggest at first with heavenly shows." 

The actual question, therefore, 
is not concerning the union of the 
Italian people in one nation, or 
whether their present unity will be 
lasting, or revoked, or by internal 
weakness be dissolved, or shaped 
in some way for the better. But 
the actual and pressing question is, 
How can Italy be withdrawn from 



the designing men who have man- 
aged to get control over her poli- 
tical government under the cloak 
of Italian unity, and who are plain- 
ly leadingher on towards a precipice 
like that of the French Revolution 
of 1789, to be followed by another 
of even more atrocious notoriety 
that of 1871 ? He must be blind to 
the sure but stealthy march of 
events who does not see that, un- 
der the control of the present party 
at the head of the legislative power, 
Italy is rapidly approaching such a 
catastrophe. A few thousand fren- 
zied men held and tyrannized over 
France in 1789; a greater number 
in Italy which, like all Europe, is 
worm-eaten by secret societies are 
only waiting for the spark to pro- 
duce a more destructive explosion, 
when the character of their leaders 
and the more inflammable materials 
they have to work upon are con- 
sidered. 

There is running through all 
things, both good and evil, an un- 
conquerable law of logic. What is 
liberalism on Sunday becomes li- 
cense on Monday, revolutionism on 
Tuesday, internationalism on Wed- 
nesday, socialism on Thursday, com- 
munism on Friday, and anarchy on 
Saturday. He who only sees the 
battered stones made by the cannon 
fired against its walls when the 
Piedmontese soldiers entered into 
Rome by Porta Pia, sees naught. 
There are more notable signs than 
these to read for him who knows 
how to decipher them. In the in- 
vasion and seizure of the temporal 
principality of the head of Christ's 
church, which had stood for cen- 
turies as the keystone of the Chris- 
tian commonwealth, the indepen- 
dence of nations was overthrown, 
international law trampled under 
foot, and the sacred rights of reli- 
gion sacrilegiously violated. It was 



The Outlook in Italy. 



then let those who have ears to 
hear listen that rights consecrated 
through long ages, and recognized 
by 200,000,000 of Catholics to-day, 
were broken in upon by the Pied- 
montese army ; and yet men are 
found to wonder that the violation 
of these rights by the Italian 
revolutionary party should fire 
with indignation the souls of the 
faithful in all lands. But revolu- 
tion will take its course; and so 
sure as the Piedmontese entered 
by Porta Pia into Rome and took 
possession, and held it until the 
present hour, so sure is it that the 
conspirators of the secret interna- 
tional societies will in turn get pos- 
session of Rome and do their fell 
work in the Eternal City. " They 
that sow wind, shall reap the whirl- 
wind." 

\Vho foresaw, or anticipated, or 
even dreamed of the atrocities of 
the Commune in Paris of 1871 ? 
What happened at Paris in the 
reign of the Commune will pale in 
wickedness before the reign of the 
internationalists in Rome. *As Pa- 
ris represents the theatre of world- 
liness, so Rome is the visible sanc- 
tuary of religion. Corruptio optimi 
pcssima. 

Is there a man so simple or so 
ignorant of the temper and designs 
of the conspirators against civilized 
society in Europe, as well as in our 
own free country, who fancies that 
these desperate men will shrink from 
shaping their acts in accordance 
with their ulterior aims ? 

No one who witnessed the re- 
ception of Garibaldi in Rome in 
the winter of 1875 can doubt as to 
who holds the place of leader 
among the most numerous class of 
the population of Italy. The views 
of this man and the party to 
which he belongs are no secret. 
" The fall of the Commune," he 



wrote in June, 1873, " 1S a misfor- 
tune for the whole universe and a 
defeat for ever to be regretted. . . . 
I belong to the internationals, and 
I declare that if I should see arise 
a society of demons having for its 
object to combat sovereigns and 
priests, I would enroll myself in 
their ranks." It is only the well- 
officered, strictly-disciplined, and 
large army of Victor Emanuel that 
hinders Garibaldi from hoisting the 
red flag of the Commune in Rome 
and declaring an agrarian republic 
in Italy. But how long will the 
Italian army, with the present radi- 
cals at the head of affairs, remain 
intact and free from demoraliza- 
tion ? 

" The heights infected, vales below 
Will soon with plague be rife." 

The army is drawn from a pop- 
ulation which the internationalists 
have penetrated and inoculated 
with their errors and designs, and 
their emissaries have been discover- 
ed tampering and fraternizing with 
the troops. 

Who can tell how near is the 
hour when St. Peter's will be offi- 
cially declared the pantheon of red- 
republican Italy, and the statue of 
Garibaldi will be placed on the high 
altar where now stands the image 
of the Crucified God-Man ? This 
will not be the end but the prelude 
to the final act of the present im- 
pending tragedy, when the black 
flag will be unfurled and the pala- 
ces of Rome, with St. Peter's and 
the Vatican, and all their records 
of the past and centuries of heaped- 
up treasures of art, will be reduced 
by petroleum and dynamite to a 
shapeless heap of ruins. To those 
who can tell a hawk from a hand- 
saw this is the hidden animus and 
the logical sequence of the entrance 
of the Piedmontese army into Rome. 



TJie Outlook in Italy. 



5 



This is the real reading of the hand- 
writing on the walls of Porta Pia : 

" Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return 
To plague the inventor. This even-handed justice 
Commends the ingredients of our poisoned chalice 
To our own lips." 

But is there not a sufficient num- 
ber of conservatives in the present 
national party of Italy to stop the 
men now at the head of affairs be- 
fore they reach their ultimate de- 
signs? Perhaps so; it would be 
pleasant to believe this. But the 
present aspect of affairs gives but 
little hope of this being true. These 
conservatives, who did not, or could 
not, or would not stop the spolia- 
tion of the property of the church 
and the trampling upon her sacred 
rights ; these conservatives, who did 
not take measures to hinder the 
Italian radicals from possessing 
themselves of the legislative power 
of the present government and 
pursuing their criminal course 
these are not the men to build one's 
hopes upon in stemming the tide 
that is now sweeping Italy to her 
destruction. The dictates of com- 
mon sense teach us to look to some 
other quarter for hopes of success. 

III. THE MISSION OF THE LATIN 
RACE. 

How much of the present condi- 
tion of the Latin peoples, politically, 
commercially, or socially consider- 
ed, can be satisfactorily explained 
or accounted for on the score of 
climate, or on that of their charac- 
teristics as a race, or of the stage 
of their historical development, or 
of the change made in the chan- 
nels of commerce in consequence 
of new discoveries, it is not our 
purpose to stop here to examine or 
attempt to estimate and decide. 
One declaration we have no hesita- 
tion in making at the outset, and 



that is : If the Latin nations are 
not in all respects at the present 
moment equal to others, it is due 
to one or more of the above-enu- 
merated causes, and not owing, as 
some partisans and infidels would 
have the world believe, to the 
doctrines of their religious faith. 

The Catholic Church affirms the 
natural order, upholds the value of 
human reason, and asserts the nat- 
ural rights of man. Her doctrines 
teach that reason is at the basis of 
revelation, that human nature is 
the groundwork of divine grace, 
and that the aim of Christianity is 
not the repression or obliteration 
of the capacities and instincts of 
man, but their elevation, expansion, 
and deification. 

The Catholic Church not only 
affirms the natural order, but affirms 
the natural order as divine. For 
she has ever held the Creator of the 
universe, of man, and the Author 
of revelation as one, and therefore 
welcomed cheerfully whatever was 
found to be true, good, and beauti- 
ful among all the different races, 
peoples, nations, and tribes of man- 
kind. It is for this reason that she 
has merited from those who only 
see antagonism between God and 
man, between nature and grace, be- 
tween revelation and science who 
believe that " the heathen were 
devil-begotten and God-forsaken," 
and " this world a howling wilder- 
ness " the charge of being supersti- 
tious, idolatrous, and pagan. 

The special mission of the people 
of Israel by no manner of means 
sets aside the idea of the directing 
care of divine Providence and the 
mission of other branches of the 
family of mankind. The heathens, 
so-called, were under, and are still 
under, the divine dispensation giv- 
en to the patriarch Noe ; and so that 
they live up to the light thus re- 



The Outlook in Italy. 



ceived, they are, if in good faith, in 
the way of salvation. The written 
law given by divine inspiration to 
Moses was the same as the un writ- 
ten law given to Noe and the 
patriarchs, and the patriarchal dis- 
pensation was the same as was re- 
ceived from God by Adam. There 
is no one rational being ever born 
of the human race who is not in 
some sort in the covenanted graces 
of God. It is the glory of the Ca- 
tholic Church that she exists from 
the beginning, and embraces in her 
fold all the members of the human 
race; and of her alone it can be 
said with truth that she is Ca- 
tholic that is, universal both in 
time and space : replevit orbem ter- 
rarum. 

Affirming the natural order and 
upholding it as divine, the Catho- 
lic Church did not hesitate to recog- 
nize the Roman Empire and the 
established governments of the 
world under paganism, and to in- 
culcate the duty, " Render unto Cae- 
sar the things that are Caesar's." 
Hence she willingly accepted al- 
liance with the Roman state when 
Constantine became a Christian, 
and approved, but with important 
ameliorations, the Roman code of 
laws ; and of every form of govern- 
ment, whether monarchic or demo- 
cratic, established among the Gen- 
tile nations of the past or by non- 
Christian peoples of the present, 
she acknowledges and maintains 
the divine right. 

The great theologians of the 
church, after having eliminated the 
errors and supplied the deficien- 
cies of the philosophy of Plato and 
Aristotle, accepted and employed 
their systems, and the labors of 
these " immortal heathens " have 
contributed no little to the glory of 
Christianity. It is to the labor 
of Christian monks that the world 



is indebted for what it possesses of 
the writings of the genius of the 
" heathen " poets, moralists, and 
other authors. It was the church's 
custom to purify the heathen tem- 
ples by her blessing, and transform 
their noble buildings, without alter- 
ing their structure, into Christian 
temples. It was in the bosom of 
the Catholic populations of Italy 
that the revival of classical litera- 
ture and art took its rise in modern 
Europe. Notwithstanding the ex- 
travagance of some of its votaries, 
which called forth the righteous 
indignation and condemnation of 
Savonarola, its refining influence, 
combined with the wealth 'due to 
industry and commerce, elevated 
the Italian cities to a height of 
civilization that has not been sur- 
passed, if equalled, by the foremost 
nations of our day. When the 
ships of Spain covered every sea 
with commerce, and its activity 
broke through the confines of the 
known world and discovered, by the 
guiding genius of Columbus, a new 
continent ; when it was said of 
Spain that the sun never set upon 
its realms ; when Spain was most 
productive of great warriors, great 
statesmen, great artists, and great 
saints, it was then, and precisely 
because of it, that Spain was most 
profoundly and devoutly Catholic. 

All the joys that spring from the 
highest intellectual and artistic 
culture, the happiness derived from 
man's domestic and social affec- 
tions, the gratification of the senses 
in the contemplation of the beauty 
of all creation, and the pleasure 
drawn from the fruits of industry 
and commerce all these, when 
pure, are not only consistent with, 
but form a part of, the life and wor- 
ship of the Catholic faith. The 
very last accusation for an intelli- 
gent man to make against the Ca- 



The Outlook in Italy. 



tholic Church is that she teaches a 
"non-human " religion. 

No political government, at least 
in modern times, has ventured to 
rely so far upon the natural ability 
of man to govern himself as that of 
the republic of the United States. 
It may be said that the government 
of this republic is founded upon 
man's natural capacity to govern 
himself as a primary truth or max- 
im. It assumes the dignity of hu- 
man nature, presupposes the value 
of man's reason, and affirms his 
natural and inalienable rights. 

These were declarations of no 
new truths, for they spring from 
right reason and the primitive in- 
stincts of human nature, and be- 
long, therefore, to that natural order 
which had ever been asserted and 
defended by the great theologians 
and general councils of the Catho- 
lic Church. These truths underlie 
every form of political government 
founded in Catholic ages, corre- 
spond to the instincts of the people, 
and were only opposed by despots, 
Protestant theologians, and the er- 
roneous doctrines concerning the 
natural order brought into vogue 
by the so-called Reformation. 

Our American institutions, in the 
first place, we owe to God, who 
made us what we are, and in the 
next place to the Catholic Church, 
which maintained the natural order, 
man's ability in that order, and his 
free will. Under God the founders 
of our institutions owed nothing to 
Englishmen or Dutchmen as Pro- 
testants, but owed all to the self- 
evident truths of reason, to man's 
native instincts of liberty, to the 
noble traditions of the human race 
upheld by God's church and 
strengthened by the conviction of 
these truths ; their heroic bravery 
and their stout arms did the rest. 

This is why Catholics from the 



beginning took an integral part in 
the foundation and permanent suc- 
cess of our republic. Among the 
most distinguished names attached 
to the document which first declar- 
ed our national independence and 
affirmed the principles which un- 
derlie our institutions will be found 
one of the most intelligent, con- 
sistent, and fervent members of the 
Catholic Church. The priest who 
was first elevated to the episcopate 
of the Catholic hierarchy in the 
United States took an active part 
in its early struggles, and was the 
intimate friend of Benjamin Frank- 
lin and an associate of his on a 
mission to engage the Canadians 
to join in our efforts for independ- 
ence. 

The patriotism of Catholics will 
not suffer in comparison with their 
fellow-countrymen, as is witnessed 
by the public address of General 
Washington at Philadelphia imme- 
diately after the close of the war 
with England. And when they 
now come to our shores from other 
countries, it matters not what may 
have been the form of their native 
governments, they are at once at 
home and breathe freely the air of 
liberty. 

Sincere Catholics are among our 
foremost patriotic citizens, and, 
whatever may befall our country, 
they will not be found among those 
who would divide her into factions, 
or who would contract her liberties, 
or seek to change the popular in- 
stitutions inherited from our heroic 
forefathers. Catholic Americans 
have so learned their religion as to 
find in it a faithful ally and a firm 
support of both political and civil 
liberty. 

Nowhere, on the other hand, does 
the Catholic Church reckon among 
her members more faithful, more 
fervent, and more devoted children 



8 



The Outlook in Italy. 



than in the citizens of our republic. 
Everywhere the Catholic Church 
appears at the present moment 
under a cloud ; there is only one 
spot in her horizon where there 
breaks through a bright ray of hope 
of a better future, and that is in 
the direction of our free and youth- 
ful country. What better test and 
proof of the Catholic Church's 
sanction of the entire natural order 
can be asked than her unexampled 
prosperity in the American repub- 
lic of the United States ? 

If the Latin peoples are back- 
ward in things relating to their po- 
litical or material or social pros- 
perity, or in any other respect, in 
the natural order, this is not to be 
laid to the charge of the Catholic 
faith. If the races are not wanting 
to her, the church will never be 
wanting to the races. 

The force which is at work in 
the actual turmoil in Italy we are 
firmly convinced will renew the 
Catholic faith, and open up to its 
people let us hope without their 
passing through a catastrophe fear- 
ed by many, and not without 
grounds anew and better future. 

IV. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. 

They are blind to the lesson 
which every page of the history of 
the Catholic Church teaches who 
indulge in the fancy that the Christ 
laden and guided bark of Peter will 
not ride safely through the present 
world-wide, threatening storm. As 
the fierce beating of the storm 
against the majestic oak fixes its 
roots more firmly in the soil and 
strengthens and expands its limbs, 
so by the attacks of calumny the 
militant church of Christ is made 
better known, by persecution she 
is strengthened, and the attempts 
at her overthrow prepare the way 



for new and more glorious tri- 
umphs. 

The pages of history point out in 
other centuries dangers to the exis- 
tence of the church equal to those 
of the present crisis, through which 
she passed with safety and renewed 
strength. A master-pen in word- 
painting has given a picture of one 
of those critical periods, all the 
more striking as the events which 
it portrays are within the memory 
of men still living, and also because 
the writer is famed for anything 
rather than Catholic leanings. " It 
is not strange," he says, " that in 
the year 1799 even sagacious ob- 
servers should have thought that 
at length the hour of the Church of 
Rome was come, an infidel power 
ascendant, the pope dying in cap- 
tivity, the most illustrious prelates 
of France living in a foreign coun- 
try on Protestant alms, the noblest 
edifices which the munificence of 
former ages have consecrated to 
the worship of God turned into 
temples of victory, or into banquet- 
ing houses for political societies, 
or into theophilanthropic chapels. 
Such signs might well be supposed 
to indicate the approaching end of 
that long domination. But the end 
was not yet. Again doomed to 
death, the milk-white hind was still 
fated not to die. Even before the 
funeral rites had been performed 
over the ashes of Pius VI. a great 
reaction had commenced, which, 
after the lapse of more than forty- 
years, appears to be still in pro- 
gress. Anarchy had had its day. 
A new order of things rose out of 
the confusion, new dynasties, new 
laws, new titles, and amidst them 
emerged the ancient religion. The 
Arabs have a fable that the Great 
Pyramid was built by antediluvian 
kings, and alone, of all the works 
of men, bore the weight of the 



The Outlook in Italy. 



Flood. Such as this was the fate of 
the Papacy : it had been buried 
under the great inundation, but its 
deep foundations had remained un- 
shaken ; and when the waters had 
abated it appeared alone amid the 
ruins of a world which had passed 
away. The republic of Holland 
was gone, the empire of Germany, 
and the great Council of Venice, 
and the old Helvetian League, and 
the house of Bourbon, and the par- 
liaments and aristocracy of France. 
Europe was full of young creations 
a French Empire, a kingdom of 
Italy, a Confederation of the Rhine. 
Nor had the late events affected 
only territorial limits and political 
institutions. The distribution of 
property, the composition and spi- 
rit of society, had, through great 
part of Catholic Europe, undergone 
a complete change. But the un- 
changeable church was still there."* 

Three centuries of protests 
against the idea of the church and 
of her divine authority have serv- 
ed to bring the question of the ne- 
cessity of the church and the claims 
of her authority squarely before the 
minds of all men who think on re- 
ligious subjects. So general was 
the belief in them before the rise 
of Protestantism that theological 
works, even the Sum of St. Tho- 
mas, did not contain what is now 
never omitted by theological wri- 
ters: the " Tractatus de Ecclesia." 
The violent protests of heresy, join- 
ed with the persecutions of the 
despotic power of the state, have 
ended in showing more clearly the 
divine institution of the church, 
and proving more conclusively her 
divine authority. 

" In poison there is physic." 

The idea of the church is a di- 
vine conception, and the existence 

* Macaulay. 



of the church is a divine creation. 
The church as a divine idea lies 
hid in God, and was an essential 
part of his preconceived plan in 
the creation of the universe. Hence 
the error of those who consider the 
church as the creation of " an as- 
sembly of individual Christian be- 
'lievers"; or as the product of the 
state, as in Prussia, Russia, Eng- 
land, and other countries; or as 
the effort of a race, as Dean Mil- 
man maintains in his History of La- 
tin Christianity; or as "the con- 
scious organization of the moral 
and intellectual forces and resources 
of humanity for a higher life than 
that which the state requires." 
Hence also the failure of all 
church-builders and inventors of 
new religions from the earliest ages 
down to the Luthers, Calvins, Hen- 
ry VIIIs., Wesleys, Charles Foxes, 
Mother Ann Lees, Joe Smiths, Dol- 
lingers,'and Loysons, et hoc genus 
omne. Poor weak-minded men ! 
had they the slightest idea of what 
the church of God is, or had they 
not become blind to it, they would 
sooner pretend to create a new uni- 
verse than invent a "new religion or 
start a new church. The human is 
impotent to create the divine. 

Christ alone could replace the 
Jewish Church by his own, and 
that because he was God. And 
this substitution was accomplish- 
ed, not by the way of a revolution- 
ary protest, but in the fulfilment 
of the types and figures of the Jew- 
ish Church and the realization of 
its divine prophecies and promises. 
The ideal church and the histori- 
cal church which have existed upon 
earth from Adam until Noe, and 
from Noe until Moses, and from 
Moses until Christ, and from Christ 
until now, which is the actual Ca- 
tholic Church, are divine in their 
idea, are divine in their institution, 



10 



The Outlook in Italy. 



are divine in their action, and their 
continuity is one and unbroken. 
The church can suffer no breaks 
without annihilation. 

God created man in his own im- 
age and likeness, and supplied from 
the instant of his creation all the 
means required for man to become 
one with himself. This was the end 
for which God called man into ex- 
istence. This commerce and union 
between God and man, with the 
means needed to elevate man to 
this intercourse and to perpetuate 
and perfect these relations in an 
organic form, constitutes the church 
of God. 

The great and unspeakable love 
of God for man led God, in the 
fulness of time, to become man, in 
order to make the elevation of man 
to union with himself easier and 
more perfect. To this end the 
God-Man, while upon earth, de- 
clared to his apostle Peter: " I will 
build my church, and the gates of 
hell shall not prevail against it." 

This places beyond all doubt or 
dispute the fact that Christ built a 
church, and therefore its institu- 
tion was divine. Moreover, it is 
clear by these words, not that his 
church should be free from the at- 
tacks of every species of error and 
wickedness which lead to hell 
they rather imply the contrary but 
that these attacks should never 
prevail against her, corrupt, over- 
come, or destroy her. 

He added : " Lo ! I am with you 
always, even to the consummation 
of the world!" This promise con- 
nects Christ's presence with his 
church inseparably and perpetual- 
ly. Hence once the church, always 
the church. The whole world may 
go to wreck and ruin sooner than 
Christ will desert his church. 
" Heaven and earth shall pass, but 
my words shall not pass." Let, 



then, attacks come from any quar- 
ter, let revolutions shake the foun- 
dations of the world and conspira- 
tors overthrow human society, let 
anarchy reign and her foes fancy her 
destruction the Catholic Church 
will stand with perfect faith upon 
this divine Magna Charta of her 
Founder as upon an adamantine 
rock. 

Before Christ's ascension he ap- 
pointed the rulers in his church ; 
he gave " some apostles, and some 
prophets, and other some evange- 
lists, and other some pastors and 
doctors, for the perfecting of the 
saints, for the ministry, for the edi- 
fying the body of Christ." He 
commanded them to tarry in Jeru- 
salem until they should receive the 
Holy Ghost. When the days of 
Pentecost were accomplished, the 
Holy Ghost descended upon them 
visibly, " and they were all filled 
with the Holy Ghost." That was 
the moment when the divine insti- 
tution of the church was complet- 
ed, and then began her divine ac- 
tion upon men and society that 
never was to cease while the world 
lasts. The past dispensations of 
God were all fulfilled in Christ, and 
his church, which was to embrace 
all mankind in her fold and guide 
humanity to its divine destination, 
was divinely established. 

It is quite natural that those 
races which, by God's providence, 
have been intimately connected 
with the church from her cradle 
should be inclined to think that the 
church is confined to their keeping 
and is inseparable from their exis- 
tence. Christianity and the church 
are undoubtedly affected in their 
development by the peculiarities 
of the races through which they 
are transmitted, and it i<j natural 
that they should accentuate those 
truths and bring to the front those 



The Outlook in Italy. 



n 



features of organization which com- 
mend themselves most to the genius, 
instincts, and wants of certain races. 
This is only stating a general law 
held as a maxim among philoso- 
phers : Whatever is received, is re- 
ceived according to the form of the 
recipient. Thus, the contact of the 
church with the intellectual gifts 
of the Greeks was the providential 
occasion of the explicit develop- 
ment and dogmatic definition of the 
sublimest mysteries of the Chris- 
tian revelation. And through her 
connection with the Latins, whose 
genius runs in the direction of or- 
ganization and law, the church per- 
fected her hierarchy and brought 
forth those regulations necessary to 
her existence and well-being known 
under the name of " Canon Law." 

The objective point of Christian- 
ity, the church of Christ, is to em- 
brace in her fold all mankind ; but 
she is, in her origin, essence, and 
institution, independent of any hu- 
man being, or race of men, or state, 
or nation. 

The Italians, the Spaniards, the 
French, or any other nation or na- 
tions, may renounce the faith and 
abandon the church, as England 
and several nations did in the re- 
ligious revolution of the sixteenth 
century, yet the church exists and 
is none the less really and essen- 
tially Catholic. The church has 
existed in all her divinity without 
including any one nationality or 
race, and, if it please God, can do 
so again. The sun would give 
forth its light the same though 
there were no objects within the 
reach of its rays, as when they are 
reflected from nature and display 
all their hidden beauty ; so the 
divinity of the Catholic Church 
would exist in all its reality and 
power the same though there were 
no Christians to manifest it by 



their saintly lives, as at some future 
day when, after the victory over her 
enemies, she will unite in one the 
whole human race, and all her hid- 
den glory will be displayed. 

This law also holds good and is 
applicable to her visible head, the 
supreme pastor of the faithful. The 
pope, as pope, was no less the father 
of the faithful and exercised his 
jurisdiction when driven into the 
Catacombs, or violently taken by a 
despot and imprisoned at Fontaine- 
bleau, or, as at present, forced by 
the action of a desperate faction 
of Italians into retirement in the 
Vatican, than when his independ- 
ence and authority were recognized 
and sustained by the armies of the 
Emperor Constantine or defended 
by the sword of Charlemagne, the 
crowned emperor of Christendom. 

"The pope," to adopt the words 
of Pius IX., " will always be the 
pope, no matter where he may be, 
in his state as he was, to-day in the 
Vatican, perhaps one day in prison." 

The perpetuity of the Catholic 
Church is placed above and beyond 
all dangers from any human or sa- 
tanic conspiracies or attacks in that 
Divinity which is inherently incor- 
porated with her existence, and in 
that invincible strength of convic- 
tion which this divine Presence im- 
parts to the souls of all her faithful 
children. It is this indwelling di- 
vine Presence of the Holy Spirit 
from the day of Pentecost which 
teaches and governs in her hier- 
archy, is communicated sacramen- 
tally to her members, and animates 
and pervades, in so far as not re- 
stricted by human defects, the whole 
church. Hawthorne caught a 
glimpse of this divine internal prin- 
ciple of life of the Catholic Church 
and embodied it in the folio wing pas- 
sage : " If there were," he says, " but 
angels to work the Catholic Church 



12 



The Outlook in Italy. 



instead of the very different class ' 
of engineers who now manage its 
cranks and safety-valves, the sys- 
tem would soon vindicate the dig- 
nity and holiness of its origin." 1 
This statement put in plain Eng- 
lish would run thus: The Catholic 
Church is the church of God actu- 
alized upon earth so far as this is 
possible, human nature being what 
it is. The indwelling divine Pre- 
sence is the key to the Catholic po- 
sition, and they who cannot per- 
ceive and appreciate this, whatever 
may be their grasp of intellect or 
the extent of their knowledge, will 
find themselves baffled in attempt- 
ing to explain her existence and 
history ; their solution, whatever that 
may be, will tax the faculty of cre- 
dulity of intelligent men beyond 
endurance; and at the end of all 
their efforts for her overthrow 
these words from her Founder will 
always stare them in the face : " Non 
prsevalebunt " "the gates of hell 
shall not prevail against her." If this 
language be not understood, per- 
haps it may be in its poetical trans- 
lation : 

" The milk-white hind was fated not to die." 

The radical party now in power 
in Italy may succeed in ruining 
their glorious country, but they 
may rest assured that this does not 
include, as her foes foolishly and 
stupidly imagine in every turn of 
her eventful history, the. ruin of the 
Catholic Church. " What God has 
made will never be overturned by 
the hand of man." 

V. THE SYLLABUS. 

One of the principal offices of 
the Catholic Cliurch is to witness, 
guard, and interpret the revealed 
truths, written and unwritten, which 

* Marble Faun^ vol. ji. p. 129, Tauch. Ed. 



was imposed upon her by Christ' 
when he said: "Go and teacli all 
nations whatsoever I have com- 
manded you." This duty she has 
fulfilled from age to age, in spite of 
every hindrance and in face of all 
dangers, with uncompromising firm- 
ness and unswerving fidelity, prin- 
cipally by the action of her chief 
bishop, whom Christ charged to 
" feed his sheep and lambs " and 
"to confirm his brethren." This 
Supreme Pastor, in watching over 
the sheep of Christ's flock, has 
never failed to feed them with the 
truths of Christ, and, lest they 
should be led astray, he has point- 
ed out and condemned the errors 
against these truths one by one as 
they arose. 

Whatever some critics may have 
to say as to the form in which the 
Syllabus has been cast, or as to the 
technical language employed in its 
composition, this document never- 
theless is all that it purports to be, 
an authoritative and explicit con- 
demnation of the most dangerous 
and subversive errors of our epoch. 

" That last, 

Blown from our Zion of the Seven Hills, 
Was no uncertain blast !" 

Were the Syllabus the product of 
the private cogitations of an Ital- 
ian citizen named John Mary Mas- 
tai Ferretti, promulgated and im- 
posed upon the unwilling conscien- 
ces of Catholics by his personal 
authority, Catholics would .indeed 
have reason to resist and complain. 
But the violent opposition, the hos- 
tility and hatred, that the Syllabus 
has excited among so many non- 
Catholics and leading minds is a 
cause of no little surprise. 

" What's Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, 
That he should weep for her ?" 

Suppose things were as they 
dream them to be, the attitude of 



The Outlook in Italy. 



that venerable Pontiff in the Vati- 
can, powerless to do physical harm 
to any one, even if he would, stand- 
ing up in the sole strength of his 
convictions, and, in spite of the 
clamors of fanatics, the rage of 
conspirators, and the threats of 
the prime ministers of powerful 
empires, proclaiming to them and 
the world that what they hold to be 
truth is a lie, what they maintain 
to be right is wrong, and what they 
desire as good is evil this pre- 
sents the most august and sublime 
figure the nineteenth century has 
witnessed. O noble old man ! well 
dost thou merit to be placed among 
the great men of the holy church, 
and as chief pastor to be ranked on 
the pages of her history in the list 
of her heroic and saintly pontiffs, 
with her Leos and Gregories. 

But read the Syllabus and few 
of its opponents have done this ; 
take the trouble to understand 
rightly what you have read and 
fewer still have taken this pains 
and if you have not lost sight of 
the prime truths of reason, and 
have any faith left in the revealed 
truths of Christianity, you must at 
least assent to its principal deci- 
sions and approve of its censures. 
For its condemnations are chiefly 
aimed against pantheism, atheism, 
materialism, internationalism, com- 
munism these and similar errors 
subversive of man's dignity, socie- 
ty, civilization, Christianity, and all 
religion. What boots it that these 
distinctive errors are cloaked with 
the high-sounding and popular 
catch-words, " intellectual culture," 
" liberty of thought," " modern 
civilization," etc., etc.? They are 
none the less errors, and all the 
more dangerous on account of their 
attractive disguise. 

The opposition of those who are 
not internationalists and atheists 



to the condemnation and censures 
contained in the Syllabus, can be 
explained, putting it in the mildest 
form, on the ground of their lack of 
the sense of the divine authority of 
the church and its office, and the 
misapprehension or misinterpreta- 
tion in great part of its language. 
For at bottom the Syllabus is 
nothing else than the Christian 
thesis of the nineteenth century, as 
against its antithesis set up by 
modern sophists and conspirators, 
who openly put forth their pro- 
gramme as in religion atheism, in 
morals free-love, in philosophy 
materialism, in the state absolute 
democracy, in society common 
property. 

This, then, is the significance 
and the cause of the rage which it 
has called forth : the Supreme Pas- 
tor of Christ's flock, with his vigi- 
lant eye, has detected the plots of 
those who would overthrow the 
family, society, and all religion, and, 
conscious of the high obligations of 
his charge, would not in silence take 
his repose, but dared, in protection 
of his fold, to cry aloud and use 
his teeth upon these human wolves, 
and thus warn the faithful and the 
whole world of their impending 
danger. This is the secret of the 
outcry against the Syllabus and 
Pius IX. Herein is the Quare fre- 
muerunt gentes. But does not the 
Syllabus declare that there can be 
no reconciliation between the Ca- 
tholic Church and modern civiliza- 
tion ? O blind and slow of heart ! 
do you not know that modern 
civilization is the outcome of the 
Catholic Church ? What was the 
answer of Christ to Satan when he 
offered to him " all the kingdoms 
of the world and the glory of 
them "? " Begone, Satan !" Which 
means, What you offer is al- 
ready mine, and not yours to 



The Outlook in Italy. 



give; away, hypocrite and deceiv- 
er ! So to-day, when the declared 
enemies of Christian civilization 
come in disguise to the Catholic 
Church and insist upon her recon- 
ciliation with modern civilization, 
she replies with Christ : Begone, 
Satan ; modern civilization is the 
product of the Catholic Church, 
and not yours, and not under your 
protection or jurisdiction; away, 
hypocrites and conspirators ! 

Reconciliation with what these 
conspirators call " modern civiliza- 
tion " ? Do men who have their wits 
about them know what this means ? 
This means the overthrow of the 
great institutions of society, which 
have cost nineteen centuries of toil 
and struggle of the noblest men 
and women of the race. And for 
what ? Only for the tyranny of a 
commune of declared atheists, the 
emancipation of the flesh, and the 
reign of Antichrist. Thank God ! 
there is one man who cannot be 
bought by bribes, or won by flat- 
tery, or made to stoop by fear ; who 
dares meet face to face the foes of 
Christ and the enemies of mankind, 
open his mouth and lift up his 
voice, and, in answer to these hy- 
pocritical invitations, speak out in 
tones that ring in the ears of the 
whole world and can never be for- 
gotten : " Non possumus." 

The question is not whether the 
church will be reconciled with mo- 
dern civilization. The real ques- 
tion is whether modern society will 
follow the principles of eternal jus- 
tice and right, and reject these false 
teachers; whether it will legislate 
in accordance with the rules of 
right reason and the divine truths 
of Christianity, and turn its back 
upon revolution, anarchy, and athe- 
ism ; whether it will act in har- 
mony with God's church in up- 
holding modern civilization and in 



spreading God's kingdom upon 
earth, or return to paganism, bar- 
barism, and savagery. The ques- 
tion, the real question which in the 
course of human events has become 
at the present moment among the 
Latin race a national question, and 
particularly so in Italy, is this : 
" Christ or Barabbas ?" " Now, Ba- 
rabbas was a robber." 

It is because the Syllabus has 
placed this alternative in so clear 
and unmistakable a light that Sa- 
tan has stirred up so spiteful and 
so wide-spread an opposition to it 
among his followers and those 
they can influence. Here is where 
the shoe pinches. 

VI. THE VATICAN COUNCIL. 

It is folly to attempt to interpret 
any society without having first 
discovered its animating principle 
and fairly studied the nature and 
bearings of its organization. How 
great, then, is the folly of those who 
seem not to have even a suspicion 
that the greatest and grandest and' 
the most lasting of all societies and 
organizations that the world has 
ever known the Catholic Church 
can be fathomed by a hasty glance ! 
Yet there are men well known, and 
reckoned worthy of repute, who 
bestow more time and pay closer 
attention to gain knowledge of the 
structure and habits of the meanest 
bug than they deem requisite be- 
fore sitting in judgment on the 
church of the living God. There 
is in our day a great variety of 
demagogues, and their number is 
very great, but a truly scientific 
man is a rara avis. 

There are also men standing high 
in the public estimation, and some 
of them deservedly so in other re- 
spects, who imagine that the decree 
of the Vatican Council defining the 
prerogatives of the successor of St. 



The Outlook in Italy. 



Peter has seriously altered the 
constitution of the Catholic Church, 
when it lias done nothing more or 
less than make the common law of 
the church, whose binding force 
from universal usage and universal 
reception was admitted, a statute 
law. 

Starting off from this serious mis- 
take as their premise, they wax 
warm and become furious against 
the Vatican Council and its de- 
cree concerning the Roman Pontiff. 
And the new-born pity with which 
they are seized for benighted Ca- 
tholics, would be worthy of all 
admiration, were there not good 
grounds to question their common 
sense or suspect their sincerity. 
They talk about " a pontifical Cae- 
sar imposed upon the Catholic 
Church," " priestly domination car- 
ried to its highest point of develop- 
ment," "the personal infallibility 
of the pope," " the Roman Church 
transformed into.an enlarged house 
of the Jesuit Order," " the incom- 
patibility of the Catholic Church, 
with its new constitution, with the 
state," etc., etc. Then follows a 
jeremiad over " the mental de- 
pendency of Catholics," and so 
forth. All this and much more 
has, according to their opinion, 
been accomplished by a single 
decree of the Vatican Council. 
Apparently this class of men look 
upon the Catholic Church as a 
mere piece of mechanism, abandon- 
ed to the control and direction of a 
set of priests swayed by personal 
ambition and selfishness, and whose 
sole aim is to exercise an absolute 
tyranny over the consciences of 
their fellow-Christians; or as an 
institution still more absurd and 
vile, for heresy and infidelity have 
in some instances succeeded in so 
blinding men's minds that they do 
not allow the good the church does 



as hers, and, stimulated by malice, 
heap upon her every conceivable 
vice and evil. Christ had to de- 
fend himself against the Jews, who 
accused him of being possessed by 
a devil ; and is it a wonder that his 
church should have to defend her- 
self against the charge of misbe- 
lievers and unbelievers as being the 
synagogue of Satan ? The servant 
is not greater than his master. 

Even Goethe, in spite of his anti- 
Christian, or rather his "anti-Protes- 
tant, instincts, would have saved 
these men from their fanatical 
blindness and their gross errors by 
imparting to their minds, if they 
were willing to receive it, a true in- 
sight into the real character of the 
Catholic Church. " Look," he says, 
after premising that " poems are like 
stained glasses " 

41 Look into the church from the market square ; 
Nothing but gloom and darkness there ! 
Shrewd Sir Philistine sees things so : 
Well may he narrow and captious grow 

Who all his life on the outside passes. 

" But come, now, and inside we'll go ! 
Now round the holy chapel gaze ; 
'Tis all one many-colored blaze ; 
Story and emblem, a pictured maze, 
Flash by you : 'tis a noble show. 
Here, feel as sons of God baptized, 
With hearts exalted and surprised !" * 

The " Philistines " we are speak- 
ing of infuse into the Catholic 
Church their own forensic spirit, 
and fancy that she is only a system 
of severe commandments, arbitra- 
ry laws, and outward ceremonies 
enforced by an external and abso- 
lute authority which, like the old 
law, places all her children in a 
state of complete bondage. They 
are blind to the fact that the Cath- 
olic Church confines her precepts, 
such is her respect for man's liber- 
ty, chiefly to the things necessary 
to salvation, leaving all the rest to 
be complied with by each individ- 

* John Dwight's translation. 



i6 



The Outlook in Italy. 



ual Christian as moved by the in- 
stinct of divine grace.* 

The aim of the Catholic Church 
is not, as they foolishly fancy, to 
drill her children into a servile 
army of praetorian guards, but to 
raise up freemen in Christ, souls 
actuated by the Holy Spirit to 
create saints. 

They are also ignorant of the 
nature and place, of the authority 
of the church, as they are of her 
spirit. 

It is the birthright of every mem- 
ber of the Catholic Church freely 
to follow the promptings of the 
Holy Spirit, and the office and aim 
of the authority of the church is to 
secure, defend, and protect this 
Christ-given freedom. 

To make more clear this relation 
of the divine external authority of 
the church with the divine internal 
guidance of the Holy Spirit in the 
soul, a few words of explanation 
will suffice. 

It is the privilege of every soul 
born to Christ in his holy church 
in the waters of regeneration, to re- 
ceive thereby the indwelling pre- 
sence of the Holy Spirit. 'It is the 
. bounden duty of every Christian 
soul to follow with fidelity the 
promptings of the Holy Spirit. In 
order that the soul may follow faith- 
fully the indwelling Holy Spirit, it 
must be secured against all mis- 
takes and delusions and protected 
against all attacks from error. 
Every child of the church has 
therefore a claim in justice upon 
the authority of the church for 
this security and protection. But 
it would be absurd and an intoler- 
able indignity for the soul to obey 
an authority that might lead it 
;i stray iu n matter concerning its 
divine life and future destiny; for 

* See Sum of St. Thomas, i. 2, cviii. 



in the future world no chance or 
liberty is left for a return to correct 
the mistakes into which the soul 
may have fallen. Therefore the 
claim is founded in right reason 
and justice that the supreme teach- 
ing and governing authority of the 
church should be divine that is, 
unerring. And it is the intrusion 
of human authority in the shape 
of private judgment, or that of the 
state, as supreme, in regard to the 
truths of divine revelation, that is 
the radical motive of the resistance 
to Protestantism as Christianity on 
the part of Catholics. 

Now, when the soul sees that 
the authority which governs is ani- 
mated by the same divine Spirit, 
with whose promptings it is its in- 
most desire to comply, and appre- 
ciates that the aim of the commands 
of authority is to keep it from 
straying from the guidance of the 
indwelling divine Spirit, then obe- 
dience to authority becomes easy 
and light, and the fulfilment of its 
commands the source of increased 
joy and greater liberty, not an irk- 
some task or a crushing burden. 
This spiritual insight springing 
from the light of faith is the secret 
source of Catholic life, the inward 
principle which prompts the obedi- 
ence of Catholics to the divine au- 
thority of the holy church, and from 
which is born the consciousness of 
the soul's filiation with God, whence 
flow that perfect love and liberty 
which always accompany this di- 
vine Sonship. 

The aim of the authority of the 
church and its exercise is the same 
as that of all other authority sec- 
ondary. The church herself, in this 
sense, is not an end, but a means to an 
end. The aim of the authority of the 
church is the promotion and the 
safeguard of the divine action of 
the indwelling Holy Spirit in the 



The Outlook in Italy. 



soul, and not a substitution of itself 
for this. 

Just as the object of the authori- 
ty of the state is to promote the 
common good and to protect the 
rights of its citizens, so the autho- 
rity of the church has for its aim 
the common good of its members 
and the protection of their rights. 
And is not the patriotic spirit that 
moves the legislator to make the 
]a\v for the common good and pro- 
tection of his fellow-countrymen 
identically the same spirit which 
plants in their bosoms the sense of 
submission to the law? Conse- 
quently, to fix more firmly and to 
define more accurately the divine 
authority of the church in its pa- 
pal exercise, seen from the inside, 
is to increase individual action, to 
open the door to a larger sphere 
of liberty, and to raise man up to 
his true manhood in God. 

It does, indeed, make all the 
difference in the world, as the poet 
Goethe has so well said, to " look at 
the church" with "Sir Philistine" 
in a " narrow and captious" spirit 
from " the market-square" stand- 
point, or to gaze on the church 
from the inside, where all her divine 
beauty is displayed and, in a free 
and lofty spirit, fully enjoyed. 

VII. THE VATICAN COUNCIL (fOlltitl- 

UC(f) . 

To define the prerogatives of the 
papal authority, and its place and 
sphere of action in the divine au- 
tonomy of the church, was to pre- 
pare the way for the faithful to fol- 
low with greater safety and free- 
dom the inspirations of the Holy 
Spirit, and thus open the door wi- 
der for a fresh influx of divine life 
and a more vigorous activity. 
Thanks for those great advantages 
to the persistent attacks of the foes 
of the church ; for had they let her 
VOL. xxvi. 2 



authority alone, this decree of the 
Vatican Council would not have 
been called for, and the preroga- 
tives of the papal functions might 
have been exercised with sufficient 
force as the unwritten and common 
law, and never have passed into a 
dogmatic decree and become the 
statute law. 

The work of the Vatican Coun- 
cil is not, however, finished. Other 
and important tasks are before it, 
to accomplish which it will be soon- 
er or later reassembled. Divine 
Providence appears to be shap- 
ing events in many ways since the 
adjournment of the council, so as, 
to render its future labors compara- 
tively easy. There were special 
causes which made it reasona- 
ble that the occupant of St. Peter's- 
chair at Rome should in modern, 
times be an Italian. Owing to the 
radical changes which have taken, 
place in Europe, these causes no 
longer have the force they once 
had. The church is a universal, 
not a national society. The boun- 
daries of nations have, to a great 
extent, been obliterated by the 
marvellous inventions of the age. 
The tendency of mankind is, even 
in spite of itself, to become more 
and more one family, and of na- 
tions to become parts of one great 
whole rather than separate entities. 
And even if the wheel of change 
should, as we devoutly hope, re- 
store to the Pope the patrimony of 
the church, the claims of any dis- 
tinct nationality to the Chair of 
Peter will scarcely hold as they 
once held. The supreme Pastor of 
the whole flock of Christ, as befits 
the Catholic and cosmopolitan spirit 
of the church, may now, as in form- 
er days, be chosen solely in view of 
his capacity, fitness, and personal 
merits, without any regard to his na- 
tionality or race. 



i8 



The Outlook in Italy. 



It must be added to the other 
great acts of the reigning Pontiff 
whom may God preserve ! that he 
has given to the cardinal senate of 
the church a more representative 
character by choosing for its mem- 
bers a larger number of distinguish- 
ed men from the different nations 
of which the family of the church 
is composed. This, it is to be 
hoped, is only a promise of the no 
distant day when the august senate 
of the universal church shall not 
only be open to men of merit 
of every Catholic nation of the 
earth, but also its members be 
chosen in proportion to the impor- 
tance of each community, according 
to the express desire of the holy 
oecumenical Council of Trent. 
Such a representative body, com- 
posed of the Mite of the entire hu- 
man race, presided over by the 
common father of all the faithful, 
would realize as nearly as possible 
that ideal tribunal which enlight- 
ened statesmen are now looking 
for, whose office it would be to act 
as the arbitrator between nation 
and nation, and between rulers and 
people. 

. Since the close of the first ses- 
sion of the Vatican Council nearly 
all the different nations of Europe 
liave, of their own accord, broken 
the concordats made with the 
church and virtually proclaimed a 
divorce between the state and the 
church. This conduct leaves the 
church entirely free in the choice 
of her bishops ; which will tend to 
bring out more clearly the spiritual 
and popular side of the church ; to 
set at naught the charge made 
against her prelates as meddling in 
purely secular affairs ; and to wipe 
out the stigma of their being in- 
volved in the political intrigues of 
courts. 

Modern inventions and improve- 



ments, such as telegraphs, railroads, 
steamships, cheap postage, the press, 
have added time, increased efficien- 
cy, and lent an expansive power of 
action to men which poets, in their 
boldest flights of fancy, did not 
reach. These things have changed 
the face of the material world and 
the ways of men in conducting their 
secular business. 

Pope Sixtus V. readjusted and 
improved in his day the outward 
administration of the church a 
reform that was greatly needed 
and placed it by his practical ge- 
nius, both for method and efficien- 
cy, far in advance of his times. 
This same work might, in- some re- 
spects, be done again and with in- 
finite advantage to the interests 
and prosperity of the whole church 
of God. 

One of the most, if not the most, 
important of the congregations of the 
church is that De Propaganda Fide. 
It is the centre of missionary en- 
terprises throughout the whole ex- 
tent of the world. No other ob- 
ject can be of greater interest to 
every Catholic heart, no branch of 
the church's work calls for greater 
practical wisdom, more burning 
zeal, and more energetic efficiency. 

There is, perhaps, no position in 
the church, after that of the papal 
chair, so great in importance, so vast 
in its influence, so wide in its action, 
as the one occupied by the cardi- 
nal prefect of the Propaganda. 
Could it be placed on a footing so as 
to profit by all the agencies of our 
day, it would be better prepared to 
enter upon the new openings now of- 
fered to the missionary zeal of the 
church in different parts of the 
world, and become, what it really 
aims to be, the right arm of the 
church in the propagation of the 
faith. 

Who can tell but that one of the 






The Outlook in Italy. 



results of the present crisis in Iialy 
will lead by an overruling Provi- 
dence to an entire renewal of the 
church, not only in Italy, but 
throughout the whole world? Such 
a hope has been frequently ex- 
pressed by Pius IX., and to pre- 
pare the way for it was one of the 
main purposes of assembling the 
Vatican Council. 

VIII. IMPENDING DANGER. 

Scarcely any event is more de- 
plorable to the sincere Christian 
and true patriot than when there 
arises a discord, whether real or 
apparent, between the religious con- 
victions and the political aspira- 
tions of a people. Such a discord 
divides them into separate and hos- 
tile camps, and it is not in the na- 
ture of things that in such a condi- 
tion both religion and the state 
should not incur great danger. 
Every sacrifice except that of prin- 
ciple should be made, every ma- 
terial interest that does not involve 
independence and existence should 
be yielded up without reluctance 
or delay, in order to put an end to 
these conflicts, unless one would 
risk on one hand apostasy and on 
the other anarchy. 

The discord which has been sown 
between the state and the church 
by the revolutionary movement in 
Italy has not only excited a violent 
struggle in the bosom of every Ita- 
lian, but has created dissension be- 
tween husband and wife, parents 
and children, brother and brother, 
friend and friend, neighbor and 
neighbor, and placed different class- 
es of society in opposition to each 
other. The actual struggle going 
on in Italy is working every mo- 
ment untold mischief among the 
Italian people. Already symptoms 
of apostasy and signs of anarchy 
are manifest. Every day these dan- 



gers are becoming more menacing. 
A way out of this dead-lock must 
be speedily found. 

The church has plainly shown 
in ages past that she can live and 
gain the empire over souls, even 
against the accumulated power of a 
hostile and persecuting state. She 
has shown in modern times, both 
in the United States and in Eng- 
land and Ireland, that independent 
of the state, and of all other sup- 
port than the voluntary offerings of 
her children, and with stinted free- 
dom, she can maintain her inde- 
pendence, grow strong and pros- 
perous. The church, relying solely 
upon God, conquered pagan Rome 
in all its pride of strength, and, if 
needs be, she can enter again into 
the arena, and, stripped of all tem- 
poral support, face her adversaries 
and reconquer apostate Rome. 

But who can contemplate with- 
out great pain a nation, and that 
nation the Italian, passing through 
apostasy and anarchy, even though 
this be necessary, in the opinion of 
some, as a punishment and purifi- 
cation ? Can those who believe so 
drastic a potion is needed to cure 
a nation give the assurance that it 
will not leave it in a feeble and 
chronic state, rendering a revival 
a work of centuries, and perhaps 
impossible? Every noble impulse 
of religion and humanity should 
combine to avert so dire a cala- 
mity, and with united voice cry out 
with the prophet : " Is there no balm 
in Gilead ? Is there no physician 
there ? Why, then, is not the wound 
of the daughter of my people 
healed ?" 

The balm that will cure the pre- 
sent wound in Italy is not likely to 
be found in a closer alliance of the 
church with the actual state. For 
the state throughout Europe, with 
scarcely an exception, has placed 



2O 



The Outlook in Italy. 



itself in hostility to the church, 
and to expect help from this quar- 
ter would indeed be to hope in 
vain, and to rivet more closely 
the shackles which bind the 
free action of her members. Is it 
not the apparent complicity of the 
church with some of the govern- 
ments of Europe, since they have 
thrown off the salutary restraints 
of her authority, that has been one 
of the principal causes of the loss 
to a fearful degree of her influence 
with the more numerous class of 
society, giving a pretext to the 
tirades of the socialists, commun- 
ists, and internationals against her? 
The church has been unjustly iden- 
tified, in the minds of many, with 
thrones and dynasties whose acts 
and policy have been as inimical 
to her interests as to those of the 
people. 

In the present campaign it would 
be far from wise to rely for aid 
on states, as states now are 
whether they be monarchies, or 
aristocracies, or republics, or de- 
mocracies or upon contending dy- 
nasties ; the help needed in the ac- 
tual crisis can come only from the 
.Most High. "Society," as Pius 
IX. has observed, " has been en^ 
closed in a labyrinth, out of which 
it will never issue save by the hand 
of God." 

The prime postulate of a sound 
Catholic is this: The church is di- 
vine, moved by the instinct of the 
Holy Spirit in all her supreme and 
vital acts. The Catholic who does 
not hold this as a firm and immov- 
able basis has lost, or never had, 
the true conception of the church, 
and is in immediate danger of be- 
coming a rebel and a heretic, if he 
be not one already. Whoso fails 
to recognize this permanent divine 
action in the church, the light of 
the Holy Spirit has departed from 



his soul, and he becomes thereby 
external to the church. Of this 
truth De Lamennais, Dollinger, 
Loyson, are modern and sad ex- 
amples. Instead of seeking a 
deeper insight into the nature of 
the church, and drawing from 
thence the light and the strength 
to labor for the renewal of Chris- 
tianity and the unity of Christen- 
dom, they have become blinded by 
passion and deluded by personal 
conceits, and have fallen into here- 
sy and sectarianism. For the di- 
vine Spirit embodied in the church 
and the divine Spirit indwelling 
in every Christian soul are one and 
the same divine Spirit, and they 
bear testimony to each other, and 
work together for the same end. 

The errors which menaced the 
truths of divine revelation and the 
peace of society are known and 
condemned by the supreme autho- 
rity of the church. The same voice 
of the Chief Pastor called a general 
council to remove all evils from 
the church, "that our august reli- 
gion and its salutary doctrine 
might receive fresh life over all the 
earth." 

Again and again he has exhort- 
ed the faithful to uphold and en- 
courage the Catholic press in de- 
fence of religion as one of their im- 
portant duties, and followed up his 
advice by his own personal exam- 
ple. 

Everywhere he has approved of 
the formation of societies for the 
advancement of science, art, and 
education ; for the protection and 
amelioration of the working-classes ; 
and the meeting of Catholic lay- 
men for the discussion and promo- 
tion of the interests of the church 
and society. 

" Prayer, Speech, and the Press " 
these are the watch-words of Pius 
IX. These words, which have the 



A Mountain Friend. 



21 



impress of the seal of divine grace 
upon them, have awakened the uni- 
versal consciousness of the church. 
The church gained her first victo- 
ries by prayer, by speech, and by 
writing, and these peaceful weapons 
are not antiquated, and, if earnestly 
employed, are in our day more 
than a match for needle-guns, 
Krupp cannon, or the strongest 
iron-clads. Above all, when han- 
dled by Catholics they have the 
power of Almighty God to back 
them, and that strength of convic- 
tion in Catholic souls which knows 
no conquerors. 

If there be one thing more than 
any other that strikes dismay in 



the camp of the foes of *he church, 
it is the un ited action of Catholics in 
defence of their faith. Let Italian 
Catholics act unitedly and, wher- 
ever and whenever they can, act 
politically, saving their faith and 
their obedience ; uphold generously 
'the Catholic press ; let them speak 
out manfully and fearlessly their 
convictions with all the force of 
their souls ; and for the rest, look 
up to God, and the enemies of 
God and of his church and of 
their country will disappear " like 
the dust which the wind driveth 
from the face of the earth." 

" It is time, my brethren, to act 
with courage." * 



A MOUNTAIN FRIEND. 

I. OUR BOND. 

I KNOW not why with yon far, sombre height 
I hold so subtle friendship, why my heart 
Keeps it in one dear corner set apart ; 
No rarer glory clothes it day and night 
Than find I otherwhere, yet, whensoe'er 
Amid all wanderings wide by road or crest 
Mine eyes upon those simple outlines rest, 
My heart cries out as unto true friend near. 
Nor holds that half-forbidding strength of form 
Memories more dear than give so deep a grace 
To other heights, yet e'er on yon dark face, 
Sun-lighted be it, or half-veiled in storm, 
I longing gaze with thoughts no words define, 
And feel the dumb rock-heart low-answering mine. 

H. NOON. 

I climb the rugged slopes that sweep with strength 
And lines, scarce broken, from the desert wide, 
Beneath whose shadow frailest flowers abide 

And sweetest waters trip their murmuring length ; 



* Words of Pius IX. 



22 A Mountain Friend. 

I stand upon the crown the autumn air 

Blows shivering out of scarcely cloud-flecked skies, 
While warm the sunshine on the gray moss lies 
And lights the crimson fires low leaves spread there. 
Beyond, hills mightier far are lifted, stern 

With ancient forest where wild crags break through, 
And, nobler still, far laid against the blue, 
Peaks, white with early snow, for heaven yearn 
Whose azure depths the quiet shadows wear 
Crowning my mountain with their distance fair. 

' III. NIGHT. 

The strong uplifter of the wilderness, 
.Holder of mighty silence voiceful made, 
With bird-song drifting from the spruces' shade, 
By quivering winds that murmur in distress, 
Proud stands my mountain, clothed with loneliness 
That awesome grows when darkness veileth all 
And south wind shroudeth with a misty pall 
Of hurrying clouds that ever onward press, 
As something seeking that doth e'er elude, 
Flying like thing pursued that dare not rest, 
By some wild, haunting thought of fear possessed 
Not drearness all, the cloud-swept solitude : 
Through changing rifts the starlit blue gives sign 
Of mountain nearness unto things divine. 

iv. DAWN. 

Slow breaks the daily mystery of dawn 

In far-off skies gleams faint the unfolding light, 
Anear the patient hills wait with the night 

Whose shadow clings, nor hasteth to be gone. 

A passionate silence filleth all the earth 

No wind-swept pine to solemn anthem stirred, 
No distant chirp from matin-keeping bird, 

Nor any pattering sound of leafy mirth. 

And seems that waiting silence to enfold 
All mystery of life, all doubt and fear, 
All patient trusting through the darkness here, 

All perfect promise that the heavens hold. 

Lo ! seems my mountain a high-altar stair 

Whereon I rest, in thought half-dream, half-prayer. 

V. ON FIRE. 

Scarce dead the echo of our evening song 

That o'er the camp-fire's whirling blaze up-soared 
With wealth of hidden human sweetness stored 

Life-thoughts that thronged the spoken words along; 



Roc Amadour. 

Scarce lost our lingering footsteps on the moss, 
When the slow embers, that we fancied slept, 
With purpose sure and step unfaltering crept 

The sheltering mountain's unsmirched brow across. 

Alas ! for straining eyes that through long days 

Of strong-breathed west wind saw the pale smoke-drift 
Its threat'ning pennons in the distance lift, 

So setting discord in sweet notes of praise. 

Yet hath the wounded mountain in each thought 

Won dearer love for wrong, unwilling, wrought. 



ROC AMADOUR. 

La douce Mere du Creatour, 

A 1'eglise, i Rochemadour, 

Fait tants miracles, tants hauls fails, 

C'uns moultes biax livres en est fails. 

Gauthier de Coinsy, of the thirteenth century. 




THERE is not a place of pilgrim- 
age in France without some special 
natural attraction, from Mont St. 
Michel on the stormy northern 
coast to Notre Dame de la Garde 
overlooking the blue Mediterranean 
Sea; from Notre Dame de Buglose 
on a broad moor of the Landes to 
Notre Dame de la Salette among 
the wild Alps of Dauphine"; but 
not one of these has the peculiar 
charm of Notre Dame de Roc Ama- 
dour in Quercy, which stands on 
an almost inaccessible cliff over- 
hanging a frightful ravine once 
known as the Vallte Ttntbreuse. 
And not only nature, but history, 
poetry, and the supernatural, all 
combine to render this one of the 
most extraordinary of the many 
holy sanctuaries of France. For 
this is the place where, as hoary 
legends tell, the Zaccheus of the 
Scriptures ended his days in a 
cave ; where the peerless Roland 
hung up his redoubtable sword be- 
fore the altar of the Virgin ; where 
Henry II. of England, Louis IX. 
of France, and so many princes 
and knights of the middle ages 



came to pay their vows ; where 
Fenelon, the celebrated Archbishop 
of Cambrai, was consecrated to the 
Virgin in his infancy, and where lie 
came in later life to pray at his 
mother's tomb ; and which has 
been sung by mediaeval poets and 
rendered for ever glorious by count- 
less miracles of divine grace. 

On a pleasant spring morning we 
left Albi to visit the ancient pro- 
vince of Quercy. From the fertile 
valley of the Tarn, overlooked by 
the fine church of Notre Dame de 
la Dreche the tutelar Madonna of 
the Albigeois we entered a dreary, 
stony region beyond Cahuzac, then 
came into a charming country with 
wooded hills crowned with old 
towers and villages, as at Najac, 
where the railway passes through a 
tunnel directly beneath the ancient 
castle in the centre of the town, 
and crosses the Nexos on the other 
side of the hill, which we found 
merry with peasant women washing 
their linen in the clear stream and 
hanging it on the rocks to bleach 
in the hot sun. The whole region 
is full of wild ravines kept fresh by 



Roc Amadour. 



capricious streams and the shadows 
of the numerous hills. The way- 
side grows bright with scarlet pop- 
pies, the cherry-trees are snowy 
with blossoms, the low quince 
hedges are aflush with their rosy 
blooms, and the pretty gardens at 
the stations are full of flowers and 
shrubbery. We pass Capdenac, sup- 
posed by M. de Champollion to be 
the ancient Uxellodunum whose 
siege is related by Caesar in his 
Commentaries, also on a high hill 
around which the river Lot turns 
abruptly and goes winding on 
through a delicious valley, the 
water as red as the soil, perhaps 
owing to the recent rains. Soon 
after . the country becomes rocky 
and desolate again, with stone walls 
instead of flowering hedges, and 
flocks of sheep here and there nib- 
bling the scant herbage among the 
rocks, looking very much inclined, 
as well they may, to give up trying 
to get a living. The whole region 
is flat, the earth is ghastly with the 
pale stones, everything is subdued 
in tone, the horizon is bounded by 
low, dim hills, the sky becomes 
sombre and lowering. But there is 
something about all this desolation 
and silence and monotony that ex- 
cites the imagination. Even our 
epicurean friends felt the strange 
charm, for this is the region where 
truffles abound, scented out by the 
delicate organ of the animal sacred 
to St. Anthony the Great ! 

We were now in Quercy, which 
comprises such a variety of soil 
and temperature. In one part 
everything is verdant and flowery, 
the hills wreathed with vines and 
the trees covered with fruit-blos- 
soms, and over all a radiant sun ; 
perhaps a little beyond is a stunted 
vegetation, the trees of a northern 
clime, and a country as rough and 
bleak as Scotland, with long, deso- 



late moors, arid and melancholy in 
the extreme. 

Some way this side of Roc Ama- 
dou r we came upon the singular 
gap of Padirac, where St. Martin is 
said to have had a race with the 
devil. They were both mounted 
on mules, St. Martin's a little the 
worse for wear, and, starting across 
the country, they flew over walls 
and precipices and steep cliffs, with- 
out anything being able to arrest 
their course. Satan at length turn- 
ed to the saint and laid a wager he 
could open a gap in the earth no 
unaided mortal could pass. St. 
Martin laughed him to scorn. The 
angel of darkness then sjtretched 
forth his hand, and, laying on the 
ground his forefinger, which sud- 
denly shot out to an enormous 
length, the earth instantaneously 
opened beneath it to the depth of a 
hundred an.d fifty feet. " Is that 
all ?" cried the undaunted saint, as 
he spurred his beast. The mule 
sprang across the yawning gulf, one 
hundred feet broad, leaving the im- 
press of his hoofs in the solid rock, 
as is to be clearly seen at this day. 
One of these foot-prints turns out, 
because, we are told, St. Martin's 
mule was lame. This, of course, 
made his victory the more wonder- 
ful. After this feat the saint, in 
his turn, challenged the demon, and, 
resuming their race, St. Martin 
hastily thrust a cross of reeds into 
the fissure of a rock they came to, 
whereupon Satan's mule reared and 
plunged and overthrew its rider, to 
the everlasting glory of St. Martin 
and the triumph of the cross. A 
more durable cross of stone now 
marks the spot where this great vic- 
tory was won over the foul fiend. 

Roc Amadour is in the diocese 
of Cahors, which is a picturesque 
old town built on and around a 
cliff in a bend of the river Lot. It 



Roc Amadour. 



is quite worthy of a passing glance 
and has its historic memories. In 
ancient times it bore so imposing 
an appearance that one of its his- 
torians pretends Caesar, when he 
came in sight of it, could not help 
exclaiming in his astonishment : 
" Behold a second Rome !" In the 
middle ages, if we are to believe 
Dante, it was notorious as a city of 
usurers. He ranks it with Sodom ; 
but perhaps this was owing to his 
strong Italian prejudices against 
the French popes, for at Cahors was 
born John XXII., whom he severe- 
ly consigns to ignominy. We are 
shown the castle where this pope 
passed his childhood, at one edge 
of the town. Passing by the uni- 
versity, we are reminded by a sta- 
tue of Fe"nelon, in the centre of a 
square called by his name, that he 
was once a student here. There is 
likewise a street named after Cle- 
ment Marot, whose version of the 
Psalms became so popular among 
the Huguenots. He was born at 
Cahors, and is now regarded as one 
of its chief celebrities, though not 
tolerated in the place in the latter 
part of his life from a suspicion of 
heresy, then almost synonymous 
with treason, which caused him to 
be imprisoned in the Chatelet. He 
thus protested against the accusa- 
tion : 

" Point ne suis Lutheriste, 
Ne Zuinglien, et moins Anabaptiste, 
Bref, celui suis qui croit, honors et prise 
La saincte, vraye, et Catholique Eglise." * 

Though released, he was obliged 
to take refuge in Geneva on ac- 
count of the use of his paraphrase 
of the Psalms in the conventicles, 
but there he was convicted of mis- 
demeanors, and, by Calvin's orders, 
ridden on an ass and sent out of 



* Lutheran I am not ; nor Zwinglian ; still less 
Anabaptist. In short. I am one who believes in, 
honors, and respects the holy, true, and Catholic 
Church. 



the city. Neither fish nor flesh, he 
now sought an asylum in Italy 
" the inn of every grief," as Dante 
calls it and died at Turin in 1546. 

In passing through Quercy we 
are struck by the constant succes- 
sion of old castles bearing some his- 
toric name like that of Turenne. 
Among others is Castelnau de Bre- 
tenoux, associated with Henry II. 
of England, on a lofty eminence on 
the left shore of the Dordogne, 
overlooking one of the most beau- 
tiful valleys of France, which is said 
to have inspired Fenelon with his 
description of the island of Calyp- 
so. A few years since this vast 
chateau was one of the finest spe- 
cimens of feudal architecture in 
France. Its embattled walls and 
massive towers ; the long gallery, 
with its carvings and gildings, where 
the fair ladies of the time of Louis 
Treize used to promenade in their 
satins and rich Mechlin laces, ad- 
miring themselves in the rare Ve- 
netian mirrors ; the spacious cellars 
with their arches ; the vaulted sta- 
bles, and the vast courts with their 
immense wells, have been greatly 
injured by fire and now wear an 
aspect of desolation melancholy to 
behold. Galid de Genouilhac, a 
lord of this house, who was grand 
e"cuyer in the time of Francis I., 
and would have saved his royal 
master the defeat of Pavia had his 
advice been listened to, was dis- 
graced for presuming to admire the 
queen, and, retiring to this castle, 
he built a church, on which he 
graved the words still to be seen : 
J-'aime fort une. 

"Roc Amadour!" cried the 
guard, as he opened the door of 
our compartment, disturbing our 
historic recollections. We looked 
out. There was nothing to corre- 
spond with so poetical a name. No 
village; no church. Nothing but a 



26 



Roc Amadonr. 



forlorn station-house on a desolate 
plain. Behind it we found an om- 
nibus waiting to catch up any stray 
pilgrim, and we availed ourselves 
of so opportune a vehicle, rude as 
it was. We could not have asked 
for anything more penitential, so 
there was no occasion for scruples. 
It leisurely took us a few miles to 
the west, and finally dropped us 
mercifully in the middle of the 
road before a rough wayside inn 
that had a huge leafy bough sus- 
pended over the door to proclaim 
that poor wine only needed the 
larger bush. We were not tempt- 
ed to enter. The driver pointed 
out the way, and left us to our 
instinct and the pilgrim's staff. 
There was nothing to be seen but 
the same dreary expanse. But we 
soon came to a chapel in the centre 
of a graveyard, where once stood a 
hospice with kind inmates to wash 
the bleeding feet of the pilgrim. 
Then we began to descend diagon- 
ally along the side of a tremendous 
chasm that suddenly opened before 
us, passing by a straggling line of 
poor rock-built huts, till we came 
to the archway of an old gate, once 
fortified, that stands at the entrance 
of a village. This was Roc Ama- 
dour. 

Imagine a mountain suddenly 
cleft asunder, disclosing a frightful 
abyss several hundred feet in depth, 
lined with gray rocks that rise 
almost perpendicularly to the very 
clouds, and, far down at the bot- 
tom, a narrow stream winding sul- 
lenly along, looking like one of the 
fabled rivers of the abisso doloroso 
of the great Florentine. Half way up 
one side of this Vallce Tdnttreuse, 
as it was once called, hangs the vil- 
lage of Roc Amadour like a clus- 
ter of birds' nests along the edge of 
a precipice, over which are sus- 
pended several churches, one 



above the other, that seem hewn 
out of the very cliff. These are 
the famous sanctuaries of Roc Ama- 
dour that have been frequented 
from time immemorial. 

Several hundred feet above these 
churches, on the very summit of 
the mount, is the old castle of La 
Charette, with its ramparts over- 
looking the whole country. This 
served in the frequent wars of the 
middle ages not only for the de- 
fence of the sanctuary below, but ot 
the town of Roc Amadour, which 
was then a post of strategic im- 
portance, and has its page in his- 
tory, as every reader of Sir John 
Froissart knows. 

The sight of this mountain, that 
looks as if rent asunder by some 
awful convulsion of nature, with 
the castle on its summit ; its rocky 
sides once peopled with hermits, 
and still alive with the voice of 
prayer ; the churches that swell 
out of the cliff like the bastions of 
a fortress ; the village on the ledge 
below ; and the dizzy ravine in the 
depths, is truly astonishing. 

The town looks as if the breath 
of modern progress had never 
reached it. It is the only place in 
all Europe where we did not meet 
an Englishman or an American. 
One would think the bivalve in 
which it is lodged just opened after 
being closed hundreds of years. 
There is the Rue de la Couronnerie, 
where Henry Court-Mantel was 
crowned King of Aquitaine. There 
are the remains of the house occu- 
pied by his father, Henry II. of 
England, with the huge well he 
caused to be dug, from which the 
inhabitants still draw water. And 
there are the remains of the four 
fortified gates ruined in the wars of 
the sixteenth century. 

We stopped at the Grand Soleil 
a hostel of the ancient time, with 



Roc Amadour. 



27 



an immense kitchen that would 
have delighted Jan Steen, with 
beams black with the smoke of a 
thousand fires, hung with smoked 
hams, and gourds, and strings of 
onions, and bright copper kettles 
the very place for roistering villa- 
gers such as he loved to paint. It 
looked ancient enough to have 
been frequented by King Henry's 
soldiers. It had a very cavern for 
a fireplace, with seats at the yawn- 
ing sides beneath the crook, with 
which M. Michelet says the sanctity 
of the fireside was identified in the 
middle ages far more than with 
the hearth, and curious old andi- 
rons, such as are to be seen at Paris 
in the Hotel de Cluny, with a suc- 
cession of hooks for the spits to 
rest on, and circular tops for bra- 
ziers and chafing-dishes. Stairs 
led from the kitchen to the story 
above, well enough to mount, but 
perilous in descent, owing to their 
steepness. Everything is rather in 
the perpendicular style at Roc Ama- 
dour. An invocation to Marie con- 
fue sans pfahe was pasted on the 
door of our chamber, and a statu- 
ette of the Blessed Virgin stood on 
the mantel. The windows looked 
out on a little terrace dignified 
with the name of Square, where 
children were playing around the 
great stone cross. At table we 
found the sacrifice of Abraham and 
other sacred subjects depicted on 
our plates, and a cross on the salt- 
cellar. Roast kid and goat's milk 
were set before us with various ad- 
juncts, after which patriarchal fare 
we issued forth to visit the cele- 
brated chapel of Our Lady of Roc 
Amadour. We found we had done 
well in fortifying the outer man for 
such an ascent, particularly as the 
day was far advanced, and the morn- 
ing supplies at Albi had been of the 
most unsubstantial nature. We 



passed several houses with old 
archways of the thirteenth century, 
but the most imposing house in the 
place is a seigneurial mansion of 
the sixteenth century, now occu- 
pied by the Brothers of the Chris- 
tian Doctrine. We soon came to 
the foot of the staircase leading up 
the side of the cliff to the sanctua- 
ries. It consists of about two hun- 
dred and forty steps, partly hewn 
out of the rock, and is generally 
ascended by the devout pilgrim on 
his knees and with prayer an en- 
terprise of no trifling nature, as we 
are prepared to vouch. On great 
festivals this sacred ladder is crowd- 
ed with people ascending and de- 
scending. Their murmured prayer 
is a gradual Psalm indeed. The 
first flight of one hundred and forty 
steps leads to a platform around 
which stood formerly the dwellings 
of the fourteen canons consecrated 
to the service of Mary. A Gothic 
portal, with a stout oaken door cov- 
ered with fine old scroll-work of 
iron, leads by another flight of sev- 
enty-six steps to the collegiate 
church of Saint-Sauveur, one of the 
six remaining sanctuaries. For- 
merly there were twelve chapels 
built among the rocks in honor of 
the twelve apostles, but these all 
disappeared in the time of the un- 
sparing Huguenots. Twenty-five 
steps more, at the left, bring you to 
a terrace with the miraculous cha- 
pel of Our Lady on one side and 
that of St. Michael on the other. 
Between them, directly before you, 
is the cave-like recess in which 
Zaccheus is said to have ended his 
days, and where he still lies in effi- 
gy on his stone coffin. Rupis ama- 
tor he was called the lover of the 
rock whence St. Amateur, and St. 
Amadour, the name given him by 
the people. Amadour quasi ama~ 
tor solitudiiris, say the old chroni- 



28 



Roc Amadour. 



cles. His body remained here from 
the time of his death, in the year of 
our Lord 70 (we adhere to the de- 
lightful old legend), till 1166, when, 
according to Robert de Monte, 
who wrote in 1180, his tomb was 
opened at the request of a neigh- 
boring lord who was extremely ill 
and felt an inward assurance he 
should be healed by the sacred 
relics. His faith was rewarded. 
The body was found entire, and, on 
being exposed to public veneration, 
so numerous and extraordinary 
were the miracles wrought that 
Henry II. of England, who was at 
Castelnau de Bretenoux, came here 
to pay his devotions. It was now 
enshrined in the subterranean 
church of St. Amadour, where it 
remained several ages so incorrupt 
as to give rise to a common pro- 
verb among the people : // est en 
chair et 0s, comme St. Amadour. 
But when the country was overrun 
by the Huguenots, his chdsse was 
stripped of its silver mountings, 
his body broken to pieces with a 
hammer and cast into the fire. 
Only a small part of these venera- 
ble remains were snatched from the 
flames. 

The terrace between the chapel 
of Our Lady and that of St. Mi- 
chael is called in ancient docu- 
ments the Platea S. Michaelis. 
Here all official acts relating to the 
abbey were formerly drawn up. 
The overhanging cliff, that rises 
above it to the height of two hun- 
dred and twenty feet, gives it the 
appearance of a cavern. Built into 
it, on the left, is the chapel of St. 
Michael, on the outer wall of which, 
suspended by an iron chain, is a 
long, rusty weapon popularly known 
as the sword of Roland. Not that 
it is the very blade with which the 
Pyrenees were once cleft asunder 
and so many kingdoms won. That 



shone as the sun in its golden hilt, 
the day the mighty Paladin came, 
on his way to Spain, to consecrate 
it to the Virgin of Roc Amadour 
and then redeem it with its weight 
in silver ; whereas this is as dim 
and uncouth as the veriest spit that 
ever issued from a country forge. 
The wondrous Durandel, to be sure, 
was brought back after Roland's 
death and hung up before the altar 
of Notre Dame de Roc Amadour, 
to whom it had been vowed, where 
it remained till carried off by Hen- 
ry Court-Mantel, who, adding sa- 
crilege to hypocrisy, came here in 
1183 on the pretext of a pilgrimage, 
and, in order to pay the, soldiers 
who served him in his rebellion 
against his father, pillaged the holy 
chapel so revered by King Henry. 
But his crime did not remain un- 
punished. He was soon after seiz- 
ed with a fatal illness, and died, 
but not unabsolved, in the arms of 
Gerard III., Bishop of Cahors. 

Over Roland's sword hang the 
fetters of several Christians deliv- 
ered from a terrible slavery on the 
coast of Barbary by Our Lady's 
might. Among these was Guil- 
laume Fulcheri of Montpellier, 
whose mother came to Roc Ama- 
dour on the eve of the Assumption 
to offer a cake of wax to burn be- 
fore the image of Mary for the re- 
demption of her son. That same 
night, while she was keeping vigil 
with prayers and tears before the 
altar of the Virgin, his fetters were 
loosened in a mysterious manner, 
and he made his escape. One of 
his first acts on his arrival in France 
was to come to Roc Amadour with 
an offering of gratitude. 

So, too, Guillaume Remond of 
Albi, being unjustly confined in 
prison, with no other hope of liber- 
ty but his trust in the power of the 
glorious Virgin of Roc Amadour, 



Roc Amadour. 



29 



while he was persevering in-prayer 
during the night-watches his chains 
suddenly fell off about the ninth 
hour, to the utter amazement of 
the jailer, who became too power- 
less to hinder his escape. He took 
his fetters with him to hang up be- 
fore the altar of his potent protec- 
tress. 

On the pavement beneath these 
and other trophies of divine grace 
is an old chest with iron bands, 
fastened with a double lock of sin- 
gular mechanism, in which pilgrims 
centuries ago deposited their offer- 
ings. Just beyond is a doorway 
over which is painted St. Michael 
holding the balance of justice in 
which we must all be weighed. 
This door leads by a winding stone 
staircase up to St. Michael's cha- 
pel, the oldest of the existing edi- 
fices of Roc Amadour. This sin- 
gular chapel is built against the 
rough cliff which constitutes one 
side of it, as well as the vault. It 
is chilly, and cave-like, and drip- 
ping with moisture. A niche at 
one end, like an arcosolium in the 
catacombs, is lined with faded old 
frescos of Christ and the evan- 
gelists. The windows are low and 
narrow, like the fissures of a cave, 
being barely wide enough for an 
angel in each Michael with his 
avenging sword, Gabriel and his 
Ave, and Raphael looking protect- 
ingly down on Tobias with his fish. 
On one side is a spiral ascent to a 
balcony over the Platea S. Mi- 
chaelis, from which the abbot of 
Roc Amadour used to bestow his 
solemn benediction on the crowd 
on the great days of pardon. 

Descending to the Platea, we 
stop before the entrance to Our 
Lady's chapel to examine the half- 
effaced mural paintings of the great 
mysteries of her life around the 
door. Near these can be traced 



the outlines of a knight pursued by 
several spectres, popularly believed 
to be the ex-voto of a man who 
sought to be delivered from the 
ghosts of those whose graves he had 
profaned. But the learned say this 
fresco refers to the famous old Lai 
des trois Morts et des trois Vifs of the 
thirteenth century, in which three 
young knights, gaily riding to the 
chase, with no thought but of love 
and pleasure, meet three phantoms, 
who solemnly address them on the 
vanity of all earthly joys. This 
painting was a perpetual sermon to 
the pilgrims, enforced, moreover, 
by the numerous tombs that sur- 
rounded the sanctuaries of Roc 
Amadour. For many noble fami- 
lies of the province, as well as pil- 
grims from afar, wished to be buried 
near the altar where their souls had 
gotten grace. So great was the 
number buried here in the middle 
ages that the monks became alarm- 
ed, and refused to allow any more 
to be brought from a distance. But 
Pope Alexander III. issued a bull 
declaring this place of burial free 
to all except those under the ban 
of the church. 

It is, then, with these thoughts of 
death and the great mysteries of 
religion we enter the miraculous 
chapel around which we have so 
long lingered with awe. The sea- 
son of pilgrimages has not yet fairly 
opened, and we find it quiet and 
unoccupied except by a stray pea- 
sant or two, and a few Sisters of 
Calvary with sweet, gentle faces. 
We hasten to drop our feeble round 
of prayer into the deep well fed by 
the devotion of centuries. Over 
the altar is the famous statue of 
Our Lady of Roc Amadour in a 
golden niche black as ebony, per- 
haps from the smoke ot the candles 
and the incense of centuries, and 
dressed in a white muslin robe 



Roc Amadonr. 



spangled with gold. It is by no 
means a work of high art. Perhaps 
it is as ancient as this place of pil- 
grimage. Tradition says it was ex- 
ecuted by the pious hands of St. 
Amadonr himself, who was doubtless 
incapable of expressing the devout 
sentiments that animated him. It 
is carved out of a single piece of 
wood, and is now greatly decayed. 
The Virgin is stiff in attitude. Her 
hair floats on her shoulders. Her 
hands rest on the arms of the chair 
in which she is sitting, leaving the 
divine Child, enthroned on her knee, 
with no support but that of his in- 
herent nature. A silver lamp, shap- 
ed like a fortress, with towers for 
the lights, hangs before her, and 
beneath is a blazing stand of can- 
dles. The profusion of lights in 
the chapels of popular devotion 
throughout France is truly remark- 
able. It was the same in the mid- 
dle ages. The old chronicles tell 
us how the mother who sought the 
cure of a beloved child sometimes 
sent his weight in wax to be burned 
before the powerful Virgin of Roc 
Amadour. Others brought candles 
of the size of the limb they wished 
to be healed. And those who had 
already obtained some supernatural 
favor generally sent a candle once 
a year in token of gratitude. So 
numerous were the lights formerly 
given to this chapel that there was 
scarcely room for them. Poets 
even celebrated this profusion. 
Gauthier de Coinsy, one of the most 
celebrated cantadours of the thir- 
teenth century, among other poems 
has left one entitled Du eierge que 
Notre Dame de Roc Amadour envoya 
sur la viele du me'nestrel qui vielait et 
cJiantait devant sy image, relating how 
our benign Lady accorded one of 
these votive candles to a pious min- 
strel as he was singing her praises : 
Pierre de Sygeland was in the habit 



of entering every church he passed 
to offer a prayer and sing a song of 
praise to the sound of his viol. 
One day, as he was prolonging his 
pious exercises before the altar of 
Notre Dame de Roc Amadour, 
drawing every one in the church 
around him, both " clerc et lai," by 
the melody of his voice, he raised 
his eyes to the sacred image of 
Mary and thus sang: "O sovereign 
Lady, Dame de toute courtoisie, if my 
hymn and the sound of my viol be 
acceptable to thee, be not offended 
at the guerdon I venture to implore : 
bestow on me, O peerless Lady ! 
one of the many tapers that burn 
at thy sacred feet." 

His prayer is heard. The candle 
descends in the presence of five 
hundred persons and rests upon 
his viol. Friar Gerard, the sacris- 
tan, accuses him of using incanta- 
tions, and, seizing the candle ireful- 
ly, restores it to its place, taking 
good care to fasten it firmly down. 
Pierre continues to play. The 
candle descends anew. The good 
brother, suspecting him of magic, 
is more vexed than before and re- 
places the candle. The enraptured 
minstrel 

"En vielant soupire et pleure, 
La bonche chante et li cuers pleure " 

sighing and weeping, singing with 
his lips and weeping in heart con- 
tinues sweetly to praise the Mother 
of God. The candle descends the 
third time. 

" Rafaict le eierge le tiers taut."" 

The crowd, in its transport, cries : 
" Ring, ring the bells, 

Plus biax miracle if avint jamais 

greater miracle was never seen." 
The minstrel, with streaming eyes, 
returns the candle to her who has 
so miraculously rewarded his devo- 



Roc Amadour. 



tion, and continues during the re- 
mainder of his life not only to sing 
the praises of Our Lady of Roc 
Amadour, but to offer her every 
year a candle still larger than the 
one she so graciously bestowed on 
him. 

The moral of this old poem 
dwells on the obligation of honor- 
ing God, not merely with the lips, 
but with a sincere heart : 

" Assez braient, et assez orient, 
Et leurs gorges assez estendent, 
Mais les cordes pas bien ne tendent. 

La bouche a Dieu ment et discorde 
S'a li li cuers ne se Concorde " 

that is, many bray, and scream, 
and distend their throats, but their 
heart-strings are not rightly attun- 
ed. . . . The mouth lies to God, 
and makes a discord, if the heart be 
not in harmony therewith. 

Of the many miraculous chapels 
of the Virgin, consecrated by the 
devotion of centuries, that of Roc 
Amadour is certainly one of the 
oldest and most celebrated. Pope 
Pius II., in a bull of 1463, unhesi- 
tatingly declares " it dates from the 
earliest ages of our holy mother 
the church." And Cardinal Baro- 
nius speaks of it as one of the old- 
est in France. The original chapel, 
however, built by St. Amadour 
himself in honor of his beloved 
Lady and Mistress, is no longer 
standing. That was destroyed 
several centuries ago by a portion 
of the impending cliff that had 
given way, but another was erected 
on the same spot in 1479 by Denys 
de Bar, bishop and lord of Tulle, 
whose arms are still to be seen over 
the door. This chapel was devas- 
tated in 1562 by the Huguenots, 
who swept over the country, destroy- 
ing all that was most sacred in the 
eyes of Catholics. They gave not 
only a fatal blow to the prosperity 
of the town of Roc Amadour, but 



pillaged all the sanctuaries, carry- 
ing off the valuable reliquaries, the 
tapestry, the sacred vessels and 
vestments, the fourteen silver lamps 
that burned before the Virgin, the 
necklaces and earrings, and the 
pearls and diamonds, given by 
kings, princes, and people of all 
ranks in token of some grace re- 
ceived. Their booty amounted in 
value to fifteen thousand livres an 
enormous sum at that period. They 
only left behind an old monstrance, 
a few battered reliquaries, and a 
processional cross of the twelfth 
century, carved out of wood and 
ornamented with silver, still to be 
seen. They mutilated the statues, 
burned the wood-carvings, and of 
course destroyed the bells, which 
was one of their favorite amuse- 
ments. The roofless walls were 
left standing, however, and the 
venerated statue of Our Lady was 
saved, as well as the sacrificial 
stone consecrated by St. Martial, 
and the miraculous bell that rang 
without human hands whenever 
some far-off mariner, in peril on the 
high seas, was succored by Notre 
Dame de Roc Amadour. 

The chapel has never fully re- 
covered from this devastation. It 
was repaired by the canons, but 
their diminished means did not al- 
low them to restore it to its former 
splendor. Not that it was ever of 
vast extent. On the contrary, it is 
small, and the sanctuary occupies 
full one-half of it. It is now severe 
in aspect. The wall at one end, as 
well as part of the arch, is nothing 
but the unhewn cliff. The mould- 
ings of the doorways, some of the 
capitals, and the tracery of the low, 
flamboyant windows are of good 
workmanship, but more or less de- 
faced by the fanatics of the six- 
teenth century and the revolution- 
ists of the eighteenth, who could 



Roc Amadour. 



meet on the common ground of 
hatred of the church. 

Suspended beneath the lantern 
that rises in the middle of the 
chapel is the celebrated miraculous 
bell, said to be the very one used 
by St. Amadour to call the neigh- 
boring people to prayer. It is un- 
doubtedly of great antiquity. It is 
of wrought iron, rudely shaped into 
the form of a dish about three feet 
deep and a foot in diameter. 

The Pere Odo de Gissey, of the 
Society of Jesus, in his history of 
Roc Amadour published in 1631, 
devotes several chapters to this 
merveilleuse cloche, in which he tes- 
tifies that " though it has no bell- 
rope, it sometimes rings without 
being touched or jarred, as fre- 
quently happens when people on 
the ocean, in danger from a tem- 
pest, invoke the assistance of Our 
Lady of Roc Amadour, the star of 
the sea. Some persons," he goes 
on to say, " may find it difficult to 
believe this ; but if they could see 
and read what I have the six or 
seven times my devotion has led 
me to Roc Amadour, they would 
change their opinion and admire 
the power manifested by the Mo- 
'ther of God." The first miracle he 
relates is of the fourteenth century, 
but when he came to Roc Amadour 
the archives had been destroyed 
by the Calvinists, and he could only 
glean a few facts here and there 
from papers they had overlooked. 
Most of the cases he relates had 
been attested before a magistrate 
with solemn oath. We will briefly 
relate a few of them. 

On the loth of February, 1385, 
about ten o'clock in the evening, 
the miraculous bell was heard by a 
great number of persons, who testi- 
fied that it rang without the slight- 
est assistance. Three days after 
it rang again while the chaplain was 



celebrating Mass at Our Lady's al- 
tar, as was solemnly sworn to by 
several priests and laymen before 
an apostolic notary. One instance 
the pere found written on the 
margin of an old missal, to the ef- 
fect that March 5, 1454, the bell 
rang in an astonishing manner to 
announce the rescue of some one 
who had invoked Mary on the 
stormy sea. Not long after those 
who had been thus saved from im- 
minent danger came here from a 
Spanish port to attest their miracu- 
lous deliverance. 

In 1551 the bell was heard ring- 
ing, but the positive cause long re- 
mained uncertain. It was not till 
a year after a person came from 
Nantes to fulfil the vow of a friend 
rescued from danger by Our Lady 
of Roc Amadour at the very time 
the bell rang. 

The sailors of Bayonne and Brit- 
tany, especially, had great confi- 
dence in the protection of Notre 
Dame de Roc Amadour, and many 
instances are recorded of their 
coming with their votive offerings, 
sometimes of salt fish, after escap- 
ing from the perilous waves. The 
sailors of Brittany erected a chapel 
on their coast, to which they gave 
her name. It is of the same style 
as that of Quercy, and the Madon- 
na an exact copy of St. Mary of Roc 
Amadour. 

In those days, when the miracu- 
lous bell was heard the inhabitants 
of the town used to come in pro- 
cession to the chapel, and a solemn 
Mass of thanksgiving was sung by 
the canons amid the joyful ringing 
of the bells. 

" The tuneful bells kept ever ringing 
While they within were sweetly singing 
Of Her whose garments drop alway 
Myrrh, aloes, and sweet cassia." 

St. Amadour's bell has not ceased 
to proclaim the power of Christ's 



Roc Amadour. 



33 



holy Mother. It is still heard now 
and then softly announcing the ben- 
efit of having recourse to her effica- 
cious protection. 

To many this may sound weird- 
like, and recall 

" The wondrous Michael Scott, 
A wizard of such dreaded fame 
That when, in Salamanca's cave. 
Him listed his magic wand to wave, 
The bells would ring in Notre Dame." 

We leave such to fathom the mys- 
tery. Our part is only that of 
the historian. Blessed is he who 
finds therein something more than 
sounding brass or tinkling cymbal ! 

The holy chapel is no longer 
adorned with the rich offerings of 
other times, but there are still many 
objects that attest the piety of the 
people and the clemency of Mary. 
On the rough cliff that forms one 
end hang a great number of 
crutches and canes, and models of 
limbs, in token of miraculous cures. 
A glass case suspended on the side 
wall contains watches, rings, brace- 
lets, gold chains, lockets, etc., the 
memorials of grateful piety. At 
the side of the altar stand immense 
Limoges vases, an offering from 
that city. And around the chapel 
are hung several votive paintings, of 
no value as works of art, but full of 
touching beauty to the eye of faith. 

The most interesting of these is 
one offered by M. and Mme. de Sa- 
lignac de Lamothe Fenelon in grati- 
tude for the restoration of their child 
to health. The little Fenelon lies 
with a head of preternatural size in 
a long box-like cradle with no rock- 
ers. Beside him kneel his father 
and mother, the former with a long 
< urled wig, a flowing scarlet robe, 
nvcr which is turned a Shaksperian 
collar, lace at the wrists, his hands 
crossed on his breast, and his face 
bent as if in awe before the Virgin. 
Mme. Fenelon wears an amber-col- 
VOL. xxvi. 3 



ored tunic over a scarlet petticoat, 
with deep lace around the low-neck- 
ed waist. Her hands are prayer- 
fully folded and her face raised to 
the Virgin, who appears in the 
clouds holding in her arms the in- 
fant Jesus, who bends forward with 
one hand extended in blessing over 
the cradle almost ready to escape 
from his Mother's arms. 

Madame Fenelon always mani- 
fested a particular devotion to No- 
tre Dame de Roc Amadour, and by 
her will of July 4, 1691, ordered 
her body to be buried in the holy 
chapel, to which she bequeathed 
the sum of three thousand livres, 
the rent of which continued to be 
paid till the Revolution. She is 
buried near the door that leads to 
the church of Saint-Sauveur. 

The Chateau de Salignac, where 
Fenelon was born, and which had 
been in his family from time im- 
memorial, is not far from Roc Ama- 
dour. Old documents go so far a* 
to assert that St. Martial, when he 
came to Aquitaine to preach the 
Gospel in the first century, was hos- 
pitably received at this castle, and 
that St. Amadour, hearing of his ar- 
rival, went there to see him. 

Beyond the miraculous chapel of 
Our Lady is the church of Saint- 
Sauveur, built in the eleventh cen- 
tury for the use of the canons. It is 
a large edifice of a certain grandeur 
and severity of style in harmony 
with the cliff which forms one end. 
Two immense pillars stand in the 
middle of the nave, each surround- 
ed by six columns, and between 
them is a large antique crucifix 
quite worn by the kisses of the 
faithful who come here to end their 
pilgrimage at the feet of Christ 
Crucified. 

This church presents a striking 
aspect on great solemnities, with its 
crowded confessionals, the Holy 



34 



Roc Amadour. 



Sacrifice constantly going on at the 
different altars amid solemn chants 
or touching hymns, and the long 
lines of communicants moving de- 
voutly to and from the table of the 
Lord. Over all is the divine Form 
of Christ depicted on the arches in 
the various mysteries of his earthly 
life, filling the church, as it were, 
with his Presence. On the walls 
are the majestic figures of some of 
the greatest pilgrims of the ages of 
Jaith. To mention a few of them : 
St. Louis, King of France, came here 
in 1245 in fulfilment of a vow, after 
recovering from a severe illness, 
.accompanied by Queen Blanche, 
his three brothers, and Alphonse, 

Count of Boulogne-sur-Mer, after- 
wards King of Portugal. In 1324 

. came Charles-le-Bel and his queen, 

with King John of Bohemia. In 

. September, 1344, came John, Duke 

of Normandy, eldest son of Philippe 

de Valois. In 1463 Louis XL, on 
his return from Beam, paid his de- 

votions to Notre Dame de Roc 
Amadour on the 2ist of July. St. 

.Englebert, Archbishop of Cologne, 
. of illustrious birth, had such a ten- 

der love for the Blessed Virgin that 
for many years he fasted every Wed- 
nesday in her honor, and twice dur- 
ing his episcopate he visited her 

chapel at Roc Amadour. Simon, 
Count de Montfort, came here in 

121 1 with his German troops, who 
wished to pay their homage to the 
Mother of God before returning to 
their own country. 

To come down to recent times : 
. It was at the feet of the Virgin of 
Roc Amadour that M. Borie made 
his final choice of a missionary life 
that won for him the glorious crown 
of martyrdom in Farther India at 
the age of thirty. 

The mill where M. Borie was 
born stands solitary on the border 

of .a stream, surrounded by chest- 



nut-trees, in a deep, narrow, gloomy 
valley of La Correze, near Ro< 
Amadour a humble abode, but 
the sanctuary of peace, industry, 
and piety. When the news of his 
martyrdom came to this sequester- 
ed spot, his heroic mother was fill- 
ed with joy, in spite of her anguish, 
and his youngest brother cried : 
" I am going ! God calls me to 
the land where my brother died. 
Mother, give me your blessing. I 
am going to open heaven to my 
brother's murderers!" He went; 
and we remember hearing a holy 
Jesuit Father relate how, like the 
knights of the olden time, he made 
his vigil before the altar of Our 
Lady of Roc Amadour the night 
before he joined the sacred militia 
of the great Loyola. 

Beneath the church of Saint- 
Sauveur is the subterranean church 
of St. Amadour, with low, ponderous 
arches and massive columns to sus- 
tain the large edifice above. You 
go down into it as into a cellar. 
At each side as you enter are ela- 
borate carvings in the wood, one 
representing Zaccheus in the syca- 
more-tree, eager to behold our 
Saviour as he passed ; the other 
shows him standing in the door of 
his house to welcome the divine 
Guest. On the arches is painted 
the whole legend of St. Amadour. 
Then there is Roland before the 
altar of the Virgin redeeming his 
sword with its weight in silver, and 
beyond is a band of knights bring- 
ing it back from the fatal battle- 
field. In another place you see St. 
Martial of Limoges and St. Satur- 
nin of Toulouse, coming together 
to visit J5t. Amadour in his cave. 
And yonder is St. Dominic, who, 
with Bertrand de Garrigue, one 
of his earliest disciples, passed the 
night in prayer before the altar of 
Our Lady in the year 1219. 



Roc Amadonr. 



35 



All that remains of the body of 
St. Amadonr is enshrined in this 
church behind the high altar. 

A service for the dead was going 
on when we entered this crypt, 
with only the priest and the beadle 
to sing it. Black candlesticks 
stood on the altar, and yellow wax- 
lights around the bier. The church 
was full of peasants with grave, de- 
vout faces and lighted candles in 
their hands. The funeral chant, 
the black pall, the motionless 
peasants with their lights, and this 
chill, tomb-like church of the 
eleventh century, all seemed in 
harmony. 

The pilgrim, of course, visits the 
chapel of St. Ann overhanging the 
town, and that of St. Blaise, with its 
Roman arches of the thirteenth 
century, built to receive the relics, 
brought by the Crusaders from the 
East, of a holy solitary who lived 
many years in a cave of the wilder- 
ness, the wild beasts around as sub- 
missive to him as to Adam in Para- 
dise. 

The chapel of St. John the Bap- 
tist was founded in 1516 by a pow- 
erful lord named Jean de Valon, 
who became a Knight of St. John 
of Jerusalem. Out of piety towards 
Our Lady of Roc Amadour, he 
built this chapel, authorized by the 
pope, as the burial-place of himself 
and his family, and bequeathed the 
sum of five hundred livres to the 
prebends, as the foundation for a 
Mass of requiem every Monday, 
and the Mass of Our Lady every 
Saturday, for the remission of his 
sins and those of his friends and 
benefactors. 

The family of Valon, which still 
exists, has always shown a remark- 
able devotion to Notre Dame de 
Roc Amadour. We read of a 
Dame de Valon whose pilgrimage 
to this chapel in the twelfth century- 



was marked by a miracle. This 
family owned considerable proper- 
ty in the neighborhood, and had a 
right to part of the revenues from 
the sale of the sportulas, or sporlcl- 
/as, which were medals of lead bear- 
ing the image of Our Lady on 
one side and of St. Amadour on the 
other. Sir Walter Scott, in his 
Qite ntin Ditnvard, deridingly depicts 
Louis XI. with a number of leaden 
medals of like character in his hat. 
The pilgrim who wore one needed 
no other safe-conduct in ancient 
times. His person was so sacred 
he could even pass in safety through 
the enemy's camp. In 1399, during 
the war between the French and 
English, the sanctuary of Roc Ama- 
dour was frequented by both parties, 
and both camps regarded the pil- 
grim hither with so much respect 
that if taken prisoner he was set 
free as soon as his quality was dis- 
covered. Three of these old al- 
mond-shaped sportellas are still to 
be seen in the Hotel de Cluny at 
Paris. 

The ancient standard of Our 
Lady of Roc Amadour was held in 
great veneration. It was not only 
carried in religious processions, but 
sometimes to the field of battle. 
Alberic, a monk of Trois Fonts, re- 
lates that the Virgin appeared three 
Saturdays in succession to the sac- 
ristan of Roc Amadour, and order- 
ed her standard to be carried to 
Spain, then engaged in a critical 
contest with the Moors. The prior, 
in consequence, set forth with the 
sacred banner and arrived at the 
plain of Las Navas on the i6th 
of July, 12 1 2. The Christians had 
refused to give battle the day pre- 
vious, because it was the Lord's 
day, but the fight began early Mon- 
day morning. The Templars and 
Knights of Calatrava had been put 
to flight and the army partly rout- 



Roc Amadonr. 



ed. At the last moment, when all 
hope seemed lost, the prior of Roc 
Amadour unfurled the banner of 
the Virgin. At the sight of the 
holy image of Mary with the divine 
Babe every knee bent in reverence, 
fresh courage was infused into eve- 
ry breast, the army rallied, and the 
fight was renewed to such purpose 
that they smote the infidel hip and 
thigh. Sixty thousand of the ene- 
my were slain and a greater num- 
ber taken captive. The archbish- 
ops of Toledo and Narbonne, the 
bishop of Valencia, with many other 
prelates and a great number of 
priests, sang the Te Dcum on the 
field of battle. The King of Cas- 
tile, Alfonso IX., had always shown a 
special devotion towards Our T,ady 
of Roc Amadour. In 1181 he con- 
secrated to her service the lands of 
Fornellos and Orbanella, in order, 
as he says in the charter, to solace 
the souls of his parents and secure 
Ins own salvation. And, by way 
of intimidating the lawless free- 
booter of those rough times, he se- 
verely adds : " And should any one 
trespass in the least on this gift or 
violate my intentions, let him incur 
the full wrath of God, and, like the 
traitor Judas, be delivered over to 
the torments of hell as the slave of 
the devil. Meanwhile, let him pay 
into the royal treasury the sum of 
one thousand livres of pure gold, 
and restore twofold to the abbot 
of Roc Amadour." 

This gift was afterwards confirm- 
ed by Ferdinand III., Ferdinand 
IV., and Alfonso XI. 

King Alfonso was not the only 
royal benefactor of the miraculous 
Hiapel. Sancho VII., King of Na- 
varre, for the weal of his soul and 
the souls of his parents, gave in 
1202 certain rents amounting to 
toi ty-eight pieces of gold, to be em- 
ployed in illuminating the church 



of St. Mary of Roc Amadour. A 
candle was to burn night and day 
before the blessed image on Christ 
mas, Epiphany, Candlemas, Whit- 
sunday, Trinity Sunday, the As- 
sumption, and AH Saints' day. 
And twenty-four candles, each 
weighing half a pound, were to be 
placed on the altar on those days. 
The remainder of the money was- 
to be used for the incense. 

Sancia, wife of Gaston V. of 
Beam, and daughter of the King 
of Navarre, sent the chapel of Roc 
Amadour a rich piece of tapestry 
wrought by her own royal hands. 

Count Odo de la Marcbe in 1 1 19,. 
during the reign of Lours-le-Gros r 
offered the forest of Mount Salvy 
to God, the Blessed Mary of Roc 
Amadour, and St. Martin of Tulle,, 
free from all tax or impost, adding ; 
" And should any one presume to 
alienate this gift, let him incur the 
anger of God and the saints, and 
remain for ever accursed with Da- 
than and Abiram." 

In 1217 Erard de Brienne, lord 
of Rameru, allied by blood to the 
royal families of Europe, and Phi- 
lippine, his wife, daughter of Hen- 
ry, Count of Troves and King of 
Jerusalem, made an offering of two 
candles to burn night and day be- 
fore the image of Notre Dame de 
Roc Amadour for the redemption 
of their souls and the souls of their 
parents. 

Alfonso, Count of Toulouse, bro- 
ther of St. Louis, presented a silver 
lamp to burn before the statue of 
Our Lady, and another was given 
by the Countess de Montpensier, a 
French princess. 

Letters are still extant by which 
Philip III., King of France, in 
1276, ratified the foundation of his 
uncle Alfonso, Count of Toulouse, 
amounting to twenty livres of Ton- 
mine money, to be paid, one-half 



Roc Amadour. 



37 



at the Ascension and the other at 
All Saints, to keep a candle con- 
stantly burning before the Virgin 
of Roc Amadour. 

Pope Clement V. bequeathed a 
legacy to this church in 1314 that 
a wax candle might burn contin- 
ually in Our Lady's chapel, in her 
honor and to obtain the redemp- 
tion of his soul. It was to be 
honorably placed in a silver basin 
or sconce. 

Savaric, Prince de Mauleon and 
lord of Tulle, celebrated for his 
familiarity with military science 
and the elegance of his poesy, 
among other gifts in 1218 gave 
the lands of Lisleau, exempt from 
all tax, to the church of St. Mary 
of Roc Amadour. 

Louis of Anjou, afterwards King 
of Sicily, in 1365 ordered twenty 
livres to be given annually to this 
church from his domain of Rou- 
ergue, out of the love he bore the 
holy Virgin. 

The Viconite de Turenne, in 
1396, assigned a silver mark an- 
nually from one of his seigneuries 
as a contribution to the support of 
the miraculous chapel. 

On the 22d of June, 1444, the 
noble and puissant lord, Pierre, 
Count of Beaufort, moved by his 
devotion towards Jesus Christ, the 
Redeemer of the world, and to 
Mary, his glorious Mother, and de- 
sirous of procuring his own salva- 
tion and the solace of the suffering 
souls in purgatory, assigned to the 
monastery of Roc Amadour the 
sum of ten Hvres annually from the 
ferry over the Dordogne at Mount 
Valent, that a solemn Mass might 
be sung every Thursday, at least in 
plain chant, with three collects, one 
in honor of the Holy Ghost, an- 
other of the Blessed Virgin, and 
the third for the repose of the 
faithful departed. After Mass the 



priest, laying aside his chasuble, 
was to go daily, with all the clergy 
of the chapel, to sing before the 
statue of Our Lady either the Salrc 
Regina or the Rcgina Cce/i, accord- 
ing to the season, with the Libera 
or the De Profundis, for the repose 
of his and his wife's souls and the 
souls of his parents. 

We could multiply these beauti- 
ful examples of devotion to the 
Blessed Virgin, but forbear, though 
it is not useless to recount the 
deeds of our forefathers in the 
faith. They have their lesson for 
those who know how to read aright. 

Among the glorious prerogatives 
with which the chapel of Notre 
Dame de Roc Amadour is favored 
is the Grand Pardon, accorded by 
several popes of the middle ages, 
on the feast of Corpus Christi when- 
ever it coincides with the nativity 
of St. John the Baptist. This fre- 
quently happened before the cor- 
rection of the Calendar by Gregory 
XIII., but it now only occurs when 
Easter falls on St. Mark's day that 
is, the 25th of April. The Grand 
Pardon comprises all the privileges 
of a solemn jubilee, and is gained 
by all who visit the miraculous cha- 
pel on the appointed day, receive 
the sacraments with the proper dis- 
positions, pray for concord among 
Christian princes, the extirpation 
of heresy, and the exaltation of our 
holy mother the church. So great 
was formerly the affluence of the 
pilgrims on such occasions, as in 
the jubilee of 1546, the town could 
not contain them, and tents were 
set up in the country round. Pil- 
grimages to this ancient chapel are 
still common. 

A remnant of the old palace of 
the abbot of Roc Amadour is still 
standing, but is used for the sale of 
objects of devotion. Here Ai- 
naud Amalric, the papal legate, 



Roc Amadour. 



spent the whole winter of 1211, 
and many other eminent prelates 
received hospitality, as the holy 
martyr St. Englebert, Archbishop 
of Cologne. Behind this building 
a narrow, dangerous path leads 
along the side of the cliff to an an- 
cient hermitage that now bears the 
title of Maison a Jlfarie, where peo- 
ple desirous of spending a few 
days in retreat can find an asylum. 
It hangs like a bird's nest on the 
edge of a fearful precipice, and 
must be a trying residence to peo- 
ple of weak nerves. The Sisters of 
Calvary, who have charge of it, 
look like doves in the clefts of the 
rocks. Still further along the cliff 
is their convent. 

A winding stair of two hundred 
and thirty-six steps, hewn out of 
the live rock, and lighted only by 
the fissures, leads from the sacristy 
of the church up to the ancient 
castle, and a scarcely less remark- 
able ascent has been constructed 
zigzag over the cliff. This castle, 
half ruined, was bought by the 
Pere Caillau about forty years ago, 
and repaired as a residence for the 
clergy who served the sanctuaries of 
Roc Amadour under his direction. 
The old ramparts remain, affording 
a fine view of the whole country 
around. Bending over them, you 
look straight down on the group of 
churches below, and the village 
still further down, while in the 
very depths of the horrid abyss is a 
faint line marking the course of the 



Alzow along the bottom of the Val- 
//<? Ttnebrcuse. 

A few years ago the ruined cas- 
tle and crumbling churches below 
looked as if they belonged to the 
time of King Dagobert, but they 
have lost in a measure their air of 
charming antiquity in the necessa- 
ry restorations, by no means com- 
plete. Nothing, however, can de- 
stroy the singular grandeur and 
wild beauty of the site, or the thou- 
sand delightful associations his- 
toric, religious, poetic, and legend- 
ary connected with the place. 

We close this imperfect sketch 
by echoing the sentiments that ani- 
mated the saintly Pere Caillau 
when he entered upon his duties as 
superior of Roc Amadour : " With 
what joy I ascended the mysterious 
stairs that lead, O Mary, to thy au- 
gust sanctuary! With what fervor 
I celebrated the holy mysteries at 
thy altar! With what love and re- 
spect I kissed the sacred feet of 
thy statue T With what impatience 
I awaited the hour for returning \ 
Happy the moments passed at thy 
feet ! The world seemed as no- 
thing in my eyes. What devotion-, 
what profound silence there was in 
my soul ! What sweet transports 
of joy ! My heart seemed consum- 
ed by a sacred fire. Why, why 
were such moments, so short ? 
May their remembrance, at least, 
abide for ever ! And may I never 
cease to chant thy praise and exalt 
thy wondrous mercy L" 






A Silent Courtship. 



39 



A SILENT COURTSHIP. 



ITALIAN hotels of the old kind 
are a very pleasant remembrance 
to travellers from the north ; they 
have the romance and the forlorn 
beauty which one expects to see, 
and few of the obtrusively modern 
arrangements called comforts. The 
new hotels that have arisen since 
the age of progress are very different, 
and not nearly so pleasant, even 
to the traveller with the most mod- 
erate expectations of the pictur- 
esque. The less-frequented towns 
inland have kept the old style of 
hostelry, as travel does not increase 
enough in their neighborhood to 
warrant the building of new-fash- 
ioned hotels ; and though the palace 
floors and walls may be cold and 
look cheerless on a damp winter 
day, there are a hundred chances 
to one that no foreigner will be 
there to note down such an expe- 
rience. 

But Macchio, in the Umbrian 
Marches, once had a hotel more sin- 
gular than almost any other. It 
had no name, such as even the 
most unmistakable palazzo gene- 
rally puts on to show its present des- 
tination; it was called after the 
name of the old family whose 
stronghold it had once been ; and 
as of this stronghold only one part 
was whole, the hotel was called 
" Torre Carpeggio." It consisted, 
indeed, of a tower that is, only the 
lower was whole, furnished, and 
usable ; among some ruins of the 
rest of the building were a rude 
kitchen and stables, patched up 
with modern masonry not half so 
solid as the original, and some ser- 
vants slept in the lofts above these 
apologies for " offices," but the re- 



markable tower only was in good 
repair. The owner, a native of the 
place, and whose family had been 
for generations in the service of the 
Carpeggios, was an unsophisticated 
countryman of the old school, not 
at all like the exasperating land- 
lord of city hotels, who has just 
begun to wake up to the dignity of 
his position and to experiment in 
his behavior towards his foreign 
guests. He was the real owner, 
having paid good money down for 
the castle ; but he still called the 
last Carpeggio his young master, 
and loved him like his own son. 
This youth, like some of his re- 
moter forefathers, was fond of 
learning, and, seeing no other means 
of securing an education and a 
start in life that should make some- 
thing better out of him than a starve- 
ling noble of the Marches, had sold 
his inheritance to his old retain- 
er, keeping back only one-third of 
the vintage produce as a small year- 
ly income to fall back upon, and 
had gone to a German university, 
where even the most exacting of 
the professors considered him a 
modern Pico della Mirandola. The 
selling of his old ruined castle had 
brought down upon him the anger 
and contempt of neighbors of his 
own class, but he was indifferent to 
local opinion and despised the dis- 
guised meanness of too many of 
his neighbors. He had in reality- 
passed through a severe struggle 
with his own prejudices before 
yielding to his better sense and 
parting with the shadow to pursue 
the substance. 

If learning should ever bring 
him money, he meant to reclaim. 



40 



A Silent Courtship. 



the old place, which in the mean- 
while could not be in safer hands ; 
but on this he did not reckon, and 
while he looked down on the sordid 
poverty that only prompted his 
neighbors to sell butter and milk, 
and take toll from visitors coming 
to see the faded frescos or old ar- 
mor in their ruinous dwellings, he 
saw with very different eyes the 
probable future of another kind of 
poverty before him : the pittance 
and privations of a student's lot, 
the obscure life of a professor or 
the uncertain one of a discoverer ; 
but withal the glorious counter- 
weight of intellectual life, the wealth 
of vigor and progress, and stimu- 
lated, restless thought, doubling 
and trebling his interests, and mak- 
ing akin to himself all the mental 
processes or achievements all over 
the world, which would come of a 
few years' study and the sacrifice 
of his home. Far more patriotic 
and far more proud was this youth 
who sold his inheritance than the 
indignant vegetators around him, 
who all felt the honor of their order 
insulted by his unheard-of deed, 
and their country deprived of an- 
jother son unworthy of her because 
he could see in Germany something 
more than a barbarous, hereditary 
tyrant and enemy ! 

So it came about that the good 
Salviani kept a hotel in Carpeggio 
tower, the walls of which had al- 
ways been kept in good repair, and 
which was easily furnished, at no 
great expense, from the contents of 
various lumber-rooms and a little 
.intelligent help from the local car- 
penter, who, like most Italians, had 
an intuitive understanding of the 
artistic. Tourists who had stopped 
here for a night or two ; artists who 
had established their sketching 
headquarters here ; Italians of some 
fortune who passed here on their 



way to their inland 
anglers and peddlers, friars, and 
even commercial travellers of vari- 
ous nations who had begun to ex- 
periment on the rural population 
hereabouts; pilgrims to the two 
neighboring shrines hardly known 
beyond twenty miles around, and 
yet the boast of the neighborhood 
for nearly four hundred years ; wine 
merchants from the next cities 
these and many more could witness 
to the satisfactory way in which 
Salviani kept the only hotel in Mac- 
chio. And of course his prices were 
moderate indeed, to a foreigner 
they seemed absolutely ridiculous ; 
and he always made it a- point to 
give an Englishman or an American 
plenty of water, having found that 
by experience a salve to the fault- 
finding spirit, and his young master 
having also accustomed his old at- 
tendant to it by requiring it him- 
self ever since his boyhood. For- 
eigners with a " turn " for antique 
furniture spent more time roaming 
the old chambers than they did 
eating at the landlord's excellent, if 
strictly national, table (for Salvi- 
ani, knowing that he was ignorant 
of foreign dishes, never attempted 
to drive away his guests by bad 
imitations). The tower was very 
high and uncommonly large in pro- 
portion; in fact, it reminded you 
rather of two Cecilia Metella tombs 
raised one above the other than of 
an ordinary tower; and it was odd- 
ly distributed within. A staircase 
wound in the centre of the building, 
communicating with the rooms on 
each tier by a circular corridor on 
which the doors opened ; but from 
the third floor this staircase ceased, 
and from that to the fourth there 
was no access except from a wind- 
ing stair within the thickness of the 
outer wall. The great stairs were 
of stone and uncarpeted, and in 



A Silent Courtship. 



the corridor on which the doors of 
the rooms opened were placed at 
intervals pieces of furniture, such 
as chairs, tables, stands, bronzes, 
vases, marble cornices, things pic- 
turesque, but not always available 
for use, and many sadly injured and 
mutilated, yet forming such a col- 
lection as sent a thrill of envy to 
the heart of a few stray connois- 
seurs who had come across it and 
never been able to bring away even 
a specimen. Old Salviani had his 
superstitions, but, unlike his coun- 
trymen in general, he felt that these 
forbade him to sell anything be- 
longing to the old family seat, es- 
pecially to a foreigner. 

One day two travellers stopped 
at the hotel, a mother and daugh- 
ter " English, of course," said the 
landlord with a smile, as he saw 
their costume and independent air. 
The daughter was, equally of course, 
in evident and irrepressible rap- 
tures about everything she saw in 
the place, frojn the ruinous out- 
houses to the museum-like interior. 
Their own rooms on the first floor, 
large, marble-paved, and scantily 
but artistically furnished with the 
best preserved of the antique things, 
satisfied them only for a short time ; 
they wanted to be shown over the 
whole house. The bed-rooms were 
not quite in such good taste, they 
thought; and indeed, as Salviani 
was not perfect, here the " cloven 
foot " did appear, for a peddler had 
once beguiled him into buying 
some Nottingham lace curtains 
with which he disfigured one of the 
third-story rooms, and some cheap 
chintzes which he had made into 
curtains for some of the patched-up 
bedsteads. But as the two stran- 
gers went up through each corridor, 
looking down at the tier below and 
at the various beautiful things be- 
side them, they forgot these blem- 



ishes in their delight at a sight so 
unusual as this large, inhabited, 
well-preserved tower. They had 
seen nothing like it and could 
never have imagined it. It had an 
air of dignity, of grandeur, of re- 
pose, and yet of connection with 
the present to which one is more 
accustomed in old English country- 
houses than in Italian palaces. 

One of the rooms on the fourth 
tier was almost unfurnished, having 
only two dilapidated bedsteads, 
one very large and promiscuously 
heaped with bed-quilts of equal 
dilapidation, while the other, in 
the form of a cot, or child's bed, 
was also much larger than such 
beds are made now. On this was 
thrown an old-fashioned but al- 
most new black mantle trimmed 
with silk ribbon. This was the 
room afflicted with the Nottingham 
lace curtains, which were cleaner 
than seemed natural in such a 
room. The view hence was beau- 
tiful, and the young Englishwoman 
was moved to suggest that they 
should change their plans a little 
and stay here a few weeks, when she 
would endeavor to learn the lan- 
guage and would make a study of 
this tower-nest with the fine view. 
It would be so out of the way, and 
a few antique chairs and a table 
would be enough furniture to re- 
place the beds, which could be put 
into the next room. The mother 
smiled ; she was used to these sud- 
den schemes growing up full-fledg- 
ed out of any pleasant and sug- 
gestive-looking circumstances, but 
the landlord, seriously entering in- 
to the proposal, said he feared 
the other room was too small to 
hold the beds certainly the big 
one, which could not be got through 
the door, and, in fact, did not take 
to pieces. This set the young girl 
to examining the bed, and sudden- 



A Silent Courtship. 



ly she called her companions to no- 
tice a panel in the tall head-board, 
which reached nearly to the ceil- 
ing. It seemed movable, she said, 
and might she not try to find the 
spring? Did the signer know any- 
thing about it? Salviani turned 
lather pale and hastily crossed 
himself, muttering something in 
Italian; then, in bad French, at- 
tempted to explain to his guest 
that there was a story of a former 
Carpeggio who was said to have 
lived alone on this top story and 
to have been a wizard, but how 
long ago he could not tell, nor if 
the bed had been there then. The 
young girl insisted on getting to the 
bottom of the secret of the panel, 
which at last yielded, and revealed a 
space between itself and another 
room of which only a corner was 
visible, and a very small grated win- 
dow high up in the wall. She scram- 
bled through the panel opening, 
out into a lot of rubbish which fill- 
ed the intervening space and cov- 
ered the sloping floor several inch- 
es deep. The door into the other 
room was gone, or else there had 
never been one, and there were 
.large hooks on either side of the 
gap, as if curtains might once have 
hung there. The floor was sunk 
much lower than this level 
quite three feet giving one the im- 
pression of a shallow well, so that 
there must have once been some 
movable way of descent. An old 
press or chest, with two drawers 
at the bottom, filled one corner, 
and on it was a faded piece of 
green silk, looking unmistakably 
part of a woman's dress, and a 
beautiful, delicate ivory desk lying 
open, with many thin plates folding 
together like the leaves of a port- 
folio. The curious girl handled it 
with a sort of dread, yet eagerly 
and closely inspected it, leaving it 



afterwards in just the position in 
which she had found it. As she 
turned from it she gave a cry of 
surprise; a chair stood in the cor- 
ner, half hidden by the press, and 
across the back of it hung a long 
lock of hair, brown and silky, now 
fluttering in the unaccustomed 
draught from the open panel. Sud- 
denly the intruder was aware that 
the walls were covered with books 
but thy were hidden behind aclose, 
thin green wire netting, which had 
at first looked like the pattern of 
the wall. She eagerly called for a 
chair to stand on to examine them ; 
the landlord handed her one 
through the door, and theji for the 
first time, fascinated yet afraid, gaz- 
ed into the room. Many were the 
voluble and simple exclamations 
he uttered; but he was evidently 
more concerned as to the risk of 
touching such uncanny things than 
pleased at the discovery of the en- 
ergetic stranger. Meanwhile, she 
looked at the books, which filled up 
two sides of the room from floor to 
ceiling they were a treasure, as 
she knew : old Italian and Ger- 
man books on theological and 
philosophical subjects ; transla- 
tions into Italian of some Eliza- 
bethan authors these, perhaps, 
unique of their kind, and rarer 
than originals in either English or 
Italian ; Italian translations of 
more modern English books ; poet- 
ry, science, illuminated manuscripts, 
first editions of sixteenth-century 
printed books the Italian ones, 
everMhose in black-letter, perfectly 
clear and legible to a tyro, while 
a few English books of a century 
later were not half so decipherable ; 
a good many Greek and Latin 
books, but not so many as of the 
Italian and German ; and a few Ori- 
ental manuscripts, chiefly Hebrew, 
Arabic, and Syriac. In two places 



A Silent Courtsliip. 



43 



on the wall, which showed traces 
of a rough kind of painting as a 
background, were hung unframed 
Chinese landscapes on wood, and 
in other parts of the room old en- 
gravings, some plainly framed, some 
not, but pasted on to boards, and 
one or two unfinished etchings. 
The most interesting purported to 
be a head of St. Peter not a con- 
ventional one, but a copy from 
some old painting, itself copied 
from a Byzantine fresco, and claim- 
ing to be so said the quotation at 
the foot of the etching a portrait 
of the apostle as he really was. 
The pedigree of the portrait, how- 
ever, was the really interesting 
point, and this was minutely trac- 
ed in the foot-note, added by one 
signing himself Andrea C., to the 
unfinished etching of the artist, who, 
it seems, had died while engaged 
on this work. 

And here ends the part the 
strangers took in the affair ; for they 
continued their journey to Anco- 
na, and often in after-years-, in their 
quiet English home between lake and 
rocky fell, wondered what became 
of the books of Torre Carpeggio. 
Uut the faithful Salviani had written 
to his young master at once, and 
( 'arpeggio returned a joyous answer, 
full of excitement and curiosity, pro- 
mising a visit as soon as his means 
and his studies combined would al- 
low of it. It was a year before he was 
able to come a year during which 
he had changed and ripened, but 
which had left the old tower, and, in- 
deed, the sleepy, beautiful old city, as 
unchanged as anything can be where 
human beings are being born, mar- 
ried, and buried in due season. 
Kven this inevitable change, how- 
ever, was neutralized by the firmly- 
grooved life which, as each genera- 
tion grew up, it placidly inherited 
from the last and religiously carried 



out, undreaming of any other pos- 
sibilities and ignorant even of its 
own dormant energies. This was. 
before the commotions of the last 
twenty years, and there , was not 
even a political ferment, much less 
an intellectual one, to disturb the 
even flow of things. One or two 
of the cathedral clergy had the re- 
putation of being great scholars, 
and, indeed, had the right to be so 
looked upon, if by scholarship we 
understand the kind of knowledge 
which made the men of the Medici 
days fully the equals of the Oxford 
dons of only one generation ago ; 
but that sort of scholarship harmo- 
nized well with the air of serene 
drowsiness that covered the pictur- 
esque and half-deserted old city. 
The old canons kept much to them- 
selves, and studied in a dainty, desul- 
tory, solitary way, not extending the 
daintiness to dress or furniture, but 
keeping up an unconscious kind of 
picturesqueness which they chiefly 
owed to such details as velvet skull- 
caps and bits of stray carving, or 
an old and precious ivory crucifix 
or Cellini relic-case things prized 
by them for their meaning rather 
than for their art-value. 

To this quaint, quiet city Emilio 
Carpeggio came back, after a t\vo 
years' absence, a youth still for he 
was only twenty but a phenome- 
non, if any one had known what 
was passing in his brain. He found 
the state of things more deplorable 
than ever, now that he had had ex- 
perience of a different lot ; he had 
thought it hopeless enough before. 
Practical and farseeing, he did not 
find a panacea in reckless political 
disturbances, and in impossible 
strivings to make citizens and states- 
men out of his easy-going neigh- 
bors, so he was saved the loss of 
time that clogged the efforts of so 
many well-meaning men of his ac- 



44 



A Silent Courtship. 



quaintrmce abroad ; individual men- 
tal activity was what he looked 
forward to as the thin edge of the 
wedge that should break up this 
spell of vhat he could not help 
looking upon as lamentable stagna- 
tion, however beautiful the disguise 
it wore. 

His three months' holiday came 
to an end, and he disappeared 
again, carrying off his treasures 
with him to Germany, where they 
became the wonder and envy of 
the professors. But such luck, af- 
ter all, was only due, said the kind- 
ly old men, to one who had done 
so much to win knowledge. 

There was one of these men, not 
nearly so old as the rest, the spe- 
cial teacher to whom Carpeggio 
had attached himself, who was the 
young man's best friend. To him 
only the dreams and hopes and re- 
solves of this concentrated young 
mind were made freely known ; for, 
though young as regards most of 
the professors, Schlichter was like 
a father to the Italian student. He 
was only forty-two, and already 
had a European reputation in his 
own line mining engineering. A 
year after Carpeggio came back 
from his visit to Italy his master 
received an invitation from a sci- 
entific society in England to give 
a course of lectures in London dur- 
ing the summer. He proposed to 
the young man to accompany him, 
telling him that there was no know- 
ing what practical advantages might 
result from his visit to a country 
where you needed only energy to 
grasp success. 

"But you forget the Mammon- 
worship of the English," said Emi- 
lio, "of which you yourself have 
so scornfully told me, and that ob- 
scure young foreigners without in- 
terest are not likely to have a 
chance of showing off their energy. 



I think I had better stay and study 
here another year or two, instead 
of deliberately exposing myself to 
the vertigo of London." 

"Nonsense!" said Schlichter im- 
patiently. " Society is not likely to 
dazzle us, or, indeed, take much no- 
tice of us ; they know how to keep 
the streams separate, even if the 
fine ladies do play at a little pretty 
enthusiasm for science now and 
then. A lecture nowadays is only 
another excuse for a pretty toilette, 
a change from the breakfast and 
morning concert or the afternoon 
kettle-drum; but that does not im- 
ply a real, personal notice of the 
lecturer, or, indeed, of -any other 
working-bee. But, seriously, I know 
some men in London who might 
help you, if they had a mind to do 
it. You know how many surveys 
and plans there are always some 
new expedition to far-away places 
and young men of brains are al- 
ways useful, especially single men, 
who can leave home without re- 
gret or difficulty. You speak Eng- 
lish and other useful modern lan- 
guages, and you have every chance, 
I tell you, if you will only keep 
your eyes open. As for study, a 
man need never say he can find no 
time for it, however busy he is. 
If my evil genius had made me a 
merchant, I should have found time 
for study, and so will you, just as 
well as if you stayed at home. It 
is settled, is it not?" 

So they went, and the lectures 
were given, and the little world of 
learned men which is the leaven of 
England met the two strangers 
heartily ; but, as Schlichter had fore- 
told, nothing very remarkable or 
very dazzling occurred to them, 
though, to be sure, the elder man 
kept a jealous eye on his young 
friend, as if he had fears or expec- 
tations of something happening. 



A Silent Courtship. 



45 



But Emilio calmly came and went, 
studied and sa\v sights, went to 
quiet family gatherings or to large 
parties which the uninitiated could 
not have distinguished from those 
of the charmed uppermost circle, 
and yet no one of the many girls 
he saw seemed to dwell in his 
thoughts more than courtesy re- 
quired while he was in their pre- 
sence. One day Schlichter told 
him that a friend of his had recom- 
mended him to a mine-owner as 
general overseer and agent of his 
underground property, and that lie 
probably would have nothing to do 
but to step into the place. " You 
would rather have been tacked on 
at the tail of some South American 
expedition or Central African sur- 
vey, I dare say," he said ; " but you 
had better take this and be thank- 
ful, Carpeggio. The country is wild 
and picturesque, I believe Mon- 
mouthshire, just on the Welsh bor- 
der and you will be pretty much 
your own master. It only depends 
on you to go up higher; but still I 
would not have you forget the prac- 
tical altogether. One must live, 
even if one does not run after 
money for its own sake, which you, 
at all events, are not likely to do." 
So Emilio was left alone in Eng- 
land, in a responsible if not very 
brilliant position, and faithfully did 
his work so as to gain his employ- 
er's whole confidence and respect. 
The local society decidedly flatter- 
ed the grave young overseer, whose 
title had over women the vague 
charm it always awakens in ro- 
mantic or speculating Englishwo- 
men, and was even not obnoxious 
to the men, whose practical minds 
forgave the " foreign bosh " for the 
sake of the man's good English and 
modest, hard-working life. He was 
popular among the miners, and al- 
together, in his little sphere, su- 



preme. But parties and picnics 
sadly wearied him, and he feared 
he was growing misanthropic (so 
he wrote to Schlichter), when his 
employer took a new turn and be- 
gan to court the notice of guests 
for one of his newest mines, of 
which he made a pet and a show. 
Whenever he had people to see 
him he arranged a party for going 
to see the mine and its new im- 
provements ; it was to be a model, 
the machinery was carefully chosen 
on improved principles in fact, the 
place became a local show. Stran- 
gers came, and the country people 
began to take pride in it, so that 
Carpeggio often had to escort fat 
dowagers, experienced flirts, fast 
young men, and statesmen on a 
short holiday, down the mine. The 
contrast between this and his old 
home among the vineyards of Um- 
bria often made itself felt with 
strange vividness as he sat by these 
people in the large cage or basket, 
swinging up or down between the 
dark, damp, unfragrant walls of the 
shaft, he shouting one steady word 
to the men who held the ropes, and 
then quieting the half-sham tremors 
of a young lady, or smiling at the 
equally assumed carelessness of an- 
other whose part in the play was 
the reverse of the old-fashioned 
ingenue* 

It was the contrast between his 
old life in Germany, so true and 
still, and this English one, so full 
of froth and shifting scenes, that 
kept him from feeling the fasci- 
nation of his new surroundings. 
Graver and graver he grew, as the 
wonder in his mind grew also, con- 
cerning the effect that all this 
whirl of unreality must have, in its 
different degrees, upon its victims. 
Were they all willing or passive 

* Childlike simplicity. 



46 



A Silent Courtship. 



ones ? Did no one ever rebel against 
the mould ? Did no woman's heart 
and woman's hopes strive against 
those worldly calculations which 
seemed to hedge in every family, 
from that of the half-starving village 
solicitor, and even that of the hard- 
working vicar, to that of his em- 
ployer, and no doubt also of the 
squires and the marquis, whose two 
daughters had just been presented 
at court? Report said that one 
of these was very beautiful ; it also 
added, wilful. But that probably 
meant only a spoilt child, not a 
woman with an individuality of her 
own. 

One day Emilio was in the mine, 
making a sketch by the light of a 
lantern for an improvement that 
had just occurred to him, when he 
heard a noise not far off, and knew 
it to be the basket coming down 
the shaft. He was putting his 
papers together to go and see who 
had come, when he was met by one 
of the men smiling covertly, who 
told him that two young ladies had 
insisted on coming down with him 
as he returned from an ascent with 
a load of ore. They were alone, 
he said, and wore gray waterproof 
cloaks and rubber boots, which they 
said they had put on on purpose, 
meaning to go down the mine. He 
had begged them to wait till he 
brought the overseer to do them 
the honors. " As pretty as pic- 
tures," said the man as Carpeggio 
moved off, " but evidently strangers 
to the place." A solution at once 
darted to the young man's mind, 
but he said nothing, and, when he 
got to the opening, he saw before 
him the great, dirty basket, and 
two laughing, fresh faces still in- 
side, as the girls clung with un- 
gloved hands to the ropes and 
peered out into the darkness be- 
yond them. 



" Allow me," he said, as he of- 
fered one of them his hand. " I am 
afraid you will be disappointed in 
the very little there is to see, but 1 
shall be happy to show you over 
the place." The two girls seemed 
suddenly confused and answered 
only by letting him help them 
down. He led them on, and here 
and there explained something 
which was Greek to them. Pre- 
sently one whispered to the other : 
" Why, Kate ! he is a gentleman." 
" Hush," said the other in sudden 
alarm: "he will hear you." And 
she immediately asked a question 
of their guide. When she found 
out that there was a lower level 
than the one they were on, she 
asked to go down at once, but 
Carpeggio gravely declined, on the 
plea of their being alone and his 
not wishing to take the responsi- 
bility if they should get wet through. 

" No one need know," said one 
of them. " We ran away on pur- 
pose, and there is just time to g:> 
down and get home for tea. Lun- 
cheon does not matter." 

" Forgive me, madam," said the 
young man with a smile, " but 1 
would rather not, and you can 
easily come again, with any one 
authorized to let you have your 
own way. I cannot in conscience 
allow it while you are alone." 

" It is no fun coming with a lot of 
old fogies, and in a carriage, and 
one's best behavior, and so on," said 
the spokeswoman; "is it, Kate?" 
The other blushed and hesitated, 
and at last said she thought it was 
best to give up the lower level and 
go home ; yet she seemed just as full 
of life and fun as her companion, 
and had evidently enjoyed the es- 
capade just as much. Carpeggio 
looked at her for a moment and led 
the way towards the basket. He 
went up with them and courteously 



A Silent Courtship. 



47 



bade them good-by at the mouth 
of the shaft. The younger one 
held out her hand and said: " You 
will tell us whom we have to thank, 
I hope ?" 

" Oh !" he said confusedly, glanc- 
ing at the other and only seeing the 
outstretched hand just in time not 
to seem rude, " I am only the over- 
seer." 

The other girl suddenly looked 
up and held out her hand to him, 
saying : " Thank you ; I am sure 
you were right about going further 
down. And now we must say good- 
by." 

Carpeggio went down again to 
his interrupted drawing, but the 
face and name of " Kate " came 
between him and his work. He 
saw neither of the girls again for 
weeks, and carefully forbore to 
make any inquiries ; the gossip of 
the men did not reach the society 
which might have twitted him with 
the visit of those unexpected ex- 
plorers, and he kept his surmises 
to himself. 

Yet the door had been opened, 
and he was no longer the same, 
though to outsiders no change was 
visible. Two months later there 
was a public ball in the county 
town an occasion on which many 
persons meet officially on terms 
that are hardly kept up all the 
year round, but which yet offer op- 
portunities of social glorification 
"warranted to keep" till the same 
time next year. This ball was to 
be followed the next night by an- 
other, given by the regiment ; and 
though this was "by invitation," it 
was practically nearly as public as 
the other. These gayeties greatly 
excited the small world of the 
mining district, and for the first 
time became of interest to Emilio, 
though he was angry and ashamed 
to acknowledge it to himself. His 



work was the only thing that did 
not suffer ; as to his studies, they 
were interrupted, and even his 
calm gravity became absent-mind- 
edness. He was one of the earli- 
est guests present at the county 
ball, and watched the door eagerly 
for an hour at least before he was 
rewarded. Then came a large- 
party, to whom the appointed ushers 
paid unusual attention, though the 
head of it seemed but a kindly 
middle-aged man, remarkable only 
for his geniality. Every one, how- 
ever, knew the marquis by sight; 
Carpeggio, who did not, felt it was 
he before even the deference paid 
to him told him so. By his side 
were the two girls he had first seen 
in the mine-basket, now dressed in 
white ball-dresses, airy and com- 
monplace, just the same society 
uniform as the three co-heiresses, 
the daughters of his own employer, 
but to him how different, ho\v 
tender, how sacred ! That is to 
say, Lady Katharine's; for her 
pretty sister seemed an ordinary 
woman beside her. 

And now began all the sweet, 
old-fashioned, foolish tumult of 
which bards and romancers weave 
their webs; the trembling and fear 
and joy and jealousy which Car- 
peggio had read of, but thought 
impossible in this century of sham 
excitements and masqueraded lives. 
He thought that she looked much 
more beautiful in her gray cloak 
and drooping black hat; but still 
" Kate " in any dress was a vision 
of heaven rather than a common 
mortal. As she came into the 
room, she looked anxiously around 
and saw him at once. She had ex- 
pected to meet him here, then 
both were conscious of it in that 
one look, and it seemed as if this 
blissful understanding between 
them were enough. The youth 



48 



A Silent Courtship. 



turned to do his duty by his em- 
ployer's three daughters and all the 
rest of his acquaintances, to whom, 
in the character of a " dancing 
man " as well as a good match, lie 
was interesting; he spun off little 
courteous speeches, not untrue but 
commonplace, until he felt that he 
had satisfied natural expectations, 
and then he allowed himself a re- 
spite and gazed at the marquis' 
youngest daughter. Towards sup- 
per time Carpeggio's employer, 
proud of the great man's courteous 
notice of him, suddenly bethought 
himself that an " Italian nobleman " 
in his wake might make the mar- 
quis respect his all-powerful purse 
the more, so he introduced his 
young overseer to the marquis 
with a flourish very unpleasant to 
the former and rather amusing to 
the latter. Emilio was struck with 
dumbness or confusion ; his new ac- 
quaintance took compassion on him 
and led him up to his daughters, 
whose eyes had been for some time 
fixed upon him with breathless in- 
terest. As he shook hands with 
them the second time he was in an 
awkward bewilderment whether or 
no to allude to their former meet- 
ing ; in fact, his usual indifference 
was wholly upset. Lady Katha- 
rine was equally silent; whether she 
shared his embarrassment he could 
not tell ; but the other, Lady Anne, 
skilfully and with a latent, suppress- 
ed gleam of mischief in her eye, 
talked so as to cover his confusion 
and clear away the thorns that 
seemed to grow up between him and 
her sister. At last he had the 
courage to ask each of the girls for 
a dance, and this, together with a 
word in the cloak-room as he es- 
corted them to their carriage, and 
the certainty of meeting them 
.igain at the military ball next 
night, was all that happened to 



feed the flame of a feeling he knew 
to be already beyond the bounds 
of reason. 

Yet he did nothing to check this 
feeling ; are not all lovers fatalists 
for the time being ? Of course it 
was hopeless, insane, impossible 
he could see it with the eyes of the 
world ; but he -also knew that it was 
true love, the ideal and pure love 
of Arcadia, the one thing which, 
whether realized or not, lifts men 
above conventional life and turns 
gold to^ dross. He also fancied 
that this love might be returned, 
and did not care to inquire further 
just now, when to be blind to de- 
tails was to be happy.. Besides, 
these were the first girls he had 
seen that had not lost their natu- 
ralness, and he wanted to watch 
and see if they could keep it in the 
atmosphere in which they lived. 
This was not quite an excuse ; for 
the young cynic had really got to 
be a sharp observer of human na- 
ture, and had, like most such ob- 
servers when young, hastily con- 
cocted one or two theories which 
he was now becoming anxious to 
test. 

Nothing happened at the mili- 
tary ball more than the most unin- 
terested spectator might see at any 
ball; and yet much happened, for 
Carpeggio met Kate and danced 
with her, and both, as if by mu- 
tual understanding, were very si- 
lent. Her sister, however, made 
up for this by chattering in the 
most meaningly meaningless way, 
and delighting the lovers by her 
tacit abetment of anything they 
might choose to think, say, or do. 
After these balls there was for a 
long time no more opportunity 
for meetings, and Emilio chafed 
against his fate, using the leisure 
time he had before spent in study 
for long walks to the marquis' 



A Silent Courtship. 



49' 



house that is, as near as he dared 
go without danger of trespassing. 
Once or twice he was lucky enough 
to meet the girls on the highroad 
outside the park, and this he enjoy- 
ed indeed ; the progress was quick- 
er, though as silent as in the ball- 
room. Then once he met them 
out driving with their father, and 
on another occasion came upon 
them at a neighboring squire's, 
where they were on a state visit. 
But all this made little outward 
difference, though he felt as if he 
no longer needed anything but a 
solemn pledge to change the inner 
certainty into an acknowledged 
fact. Lady Anne was evidently a 
thorough partisan, and her sister's 
silence and looks told him all he 
wanted, to know; yet he refrained 
from saying the word, and knew 
that she understood why he did so. 
The fact was, he trusted to Provi- 
dence and his own power of shap- 
ing any opportunity sent him. 
The whole thing seemed to him 
wonderful and mysterious ; and as 
it had begun, so doubtless would it 
be guided to a happy end. 

One day his employer told him 
with much importance that he was 
going to bring a " very distinguish- 
ed" party to see the mine, and af- 
terwards to go through the works 
and see the melted ore pouring out 
from the furnaces, " as that always 
amused young people so." The 
marquis was coming with his 
daughters and his only son from 
Eton, and a young friend, a cousin 
of his, Lord Ashley; then he would 
have one or two of the " best peo- 
ple" from the immediate neighbor- 
hood, and his own daughters, be- 
sides the son of a friend out in 
Australia, a Mr. Lawrence, whom 
Carpeggio had heard rumor speak 
of as a not unwelcome son-in-law 
in the eyes of the rich mine-owner. 
VOL. xxvi. 4 



He wondered whether Lord Ashley 
might be destined by her father as 
a suitor for Kate ; but the elder 
daughter would be more likely to 
be thought of first, besides being 
the prettier. 

The day came, and with it the 
party, who arrived in the after- 
noon, picnicked in the adjoining 
woods, and then sauntered over to 
the shaft, where Emilio met them. 
Kate wore the same gray water 
proof, and, as he took her hand to 
help her into the basket, he gave it 
the slightest pressure, with a look 
that spoke volumes. She was al- 
most as grave as himself. I can- 
not describe all that went on dur- -. 
ing the inspection, which to all, save 
Mr. Lawrence and the marquis, was , 
a pleasure party in disguise; for the 
former knew something of the sub- 
ject from Australian experiences, 
and the latter was considering the , 
question of renting, or himself work- 
ing, a mine lately found on his own 
property. Technical questions, ex- 
planations, and discussions, between . 
these two visitors and the owner 
and overseer took up the time, 
while the youngladies, Lord Ashley, 
and the jolly Eton boy, who was a , 
counterpart of his livelier sister, , 
laughed and joked like a mixed ; 
school in play-time. Carpeggio, 
however, kept his eye on Kate the 
whole time, and was comforted ; for 
there was no fear of that nature be- . 
ing spoiled, though he thought with 
sorrow that it might be bruised and 
crushed. Suddenly, in the midst 
of a discussion, his ear caught an 
unaccustomed sound, and he turn- 
ed pale for a moment, then bent : 
forward composedly and whispered 
in his employer's ear. The latter, , 
after an almost imperceptible start, 
said briskly to his guests : " As 
it is near the hour for the fur- ; 
naces to show off at their best, I , 



A Silent COM t ship. 



think we had better be moving," 
and led the way rather quickly to 
the shaft. Carpeggio contrived to 
get near Kate, whose silence show- 
ed how glad she was of the com- 
panionship, but he was preoccupied 
and anxious and spoke a few words 
absently. A loud noise was heard, 
seemingly not far away, and the 
visitors asked, "What is that ?" 
while the master hurriedly said, 
" Oh ! it is only a blast, but we must 
not be late for the furnaces ; come," 
and tried to marshal his guests 
closely together. Instinctively they 
obeyed and hurried forward ; the 
marquis looked round for his 
children. Anne and the boy were 
near him, but Kate not to be seen. 
There was a corner to be turned, 
and she was just behind it, when 
another noise overhead was heard 
and Carpeggio rushed like the wind 
from behind the angle, carrying the 
girl in his arms. It was the work 
of a second ; for as he set her on 
her feet by her father's side, and al- 
most against the basket, down came 
a huge fragment and all but block- 
ed up the gallery behind them, fall- 
ing on the spot where she might 
-have been had she lingered another 
moment. Whether or not she had 
heard his passionate whisper, " My 
own," as he gathered her suddenly 
in his arms and took that breath- 
less rush, he could hardly tell, for 
she was dazed and half-unconscious 
when he set her down again. Her 
father thanked him by an emphatic 
shake of the hand and a look he 
treasured up in his soul ; but there 
was no time for more, as the bas- 
ket was hastily loaded with the 
girls and drawn up. As the signal 
came down that they were safe, the 
owner's tongue was loosed, and he 
explained rapidly that something 
had happened on the second level 
(they were on the third) and shaken 



the rock below ; he trusted noth- 
ing more would happen, but he 
must beg his guests to visit the 
works alone, as he must stop to see 
to the damage. 

" No," said the overseer, " think 
of your daughters' anxiety, my dear 
sir ; there is probably nothing very 
serious, and it is nearly time for 
the men to come up. I shall do 
very well alone." 

The marquis looked at him ad- 
miringly ; he could not advise him 
to leave without doing his duty, yet 
he felt suddenly loath to have any- 
thing happen to the preserver of 
his daughter. After a short alter- 
cation the master consented to go 
up, provided Carpeggio would send 
for him, if necessary ; and the basket 
came down again. As they reach- 
ed the next level, where the overseer 
got out, they heard uncomfortable 
rumblings at intervals; and when 
they got out at the mouth of the 
shaft, where they met a good many 
of the men who had come up by 
another opening, they were very un- 
like a gala party. Kate was still 
there ; they had wanted her, said 
the girls, to go in and rest in a cot- 
tage near by, but she insisted on 
waiting ; and when she saw all but 
Carpeggio she only turned away in 
a hopeless, silent way that concern- 
ed her sister, who alone knew the 
cause. Anne immediately put 
questions that brought out the 
facts of the case ; and as their host 
tried hard to put the party at their 
ease again by hastening to the fur- 
naces under the sheds, she whisper- 
ed : " Kate, do keep up, or there 
will be such a fuss." 

" Never fear," said the girl ; " and 
try and make them stay till we hear 
what has happened, Anne ; I do 
not want to go home without know- 
ing." 

It was nervous work for the mas- 



A Silent Courtship. 



ter and the men who were tending 
the molten ore to conceal their anx- 
iety. The beautiful white iron, 
flowing like etherealized lava, 
rushing out from the dark, oven- 
like furnaces and spreading into 
the little canals made ready for it, 
gave one a better idea of pure light 
than anything could do. The heat 
was intense, and the men opened 
the doors with immense long poles 
tipped with iron ; the gradual dark- 
ening of the evening threw shadows 
about the place, and the streams of 
living light, that looked as the at- 
mosphere of God's throne might 
look, settled into their moulds, hard- 
ening and darkening into long, 
heavy, unlovely bars. A suppress- 
ed excitement was at work ; groups 
of men came up every minute with 
contradictory reports as to the ac- 
cident ; women and children met 
them with wild questions or equally 
wild recognition ; and the master 
repeatedly sent messages to the 
mouth of the- shaft. At last, throw- 
ing by all pretence, he begged his 
guests to wait for news, and with 
Lawrence went back to the mine. 
More men were coming up the last 
but five, he was told and Mr. Car- 
peggio had said he thought he and 
his four mates could do all that 
was needed and come up before 
any mischief happened to them. 
The soil was loosening under the 
action of water, and to save the 
ore accumulated below, and which 
-eould not be hauled up in time, 
they had built a sort of wall 
across the gallery as well as 
the circumstances and the time 
would allow; Mr. Carpeggio had 
sent the men away as fast as he 
could spare them, and kept only 
four with him to finish, which was 
the most dangerous part of the 
business, as the water threatened 
them more and more. 



" He sent all the married men up 
first, and asked the rest to volun- 
teer as to who among them should 
stay, as he only wanted four," said 
one of the men ; " and I thought 
they would all have insisted upon 
staying, but he grew angry and said 
there was no time ; so they agreed 
to draw lots." 

Another quarter of an hour's sus- 
pense, and then a low, muttering 
sound that spread horror among 
the whispering multitude gathered 
at the mouth of the shaft. Some 
men went down to the first level, 
and soon came up with blank 
faces an.d whispered to the master : 
no sound but that of water was to- 
be heard below, and fears for the 
safety of the workers were too con- 
fidently expressed. Nothing re- 
mained but to give orders for af- 
fording relief; the only comfort was- 
that there had been no sign of the 
air becoming vitiated. Here the 
master's experience was at fault,, 
and he had to rely on that of some 
of the older men. " If Carpeggio had 
been here, he would have got the 
men out in two hours," he asserted 
confidently; " but he must go and 
get himself mewed up there, and 
leave me no one to direct things 
though I believe he can get him- 
self out as quick as any of us can 
dig him out," he said, with a half- 
laugh ; and one of the men whisper- 
ed to his neighbor : 

" I do not wonder he sets suclv 
store by him ; I had rather be down> 
there myself than have him killed.'" 

At last it became certain, by 
signs which this faithful chronicler 
is not competent to explain techni- 
cally, that the five men had been 
cut off behind a mass of rock and 
ore, and that it would take two- 
days or more to get them out. 
Work was vigorously begun at once ; 
relays of men went down to search, 



A Silent Courtship. 



by making calls and rapping on the 
echoing walls, in which direction 
lay the least impenetrable of the 
obstacles between them and the 
sufferers ; the pumps were set go- 
ing and every one worked with a 
will. The news was receive^ by 
the party at the works in a silence 
that marked their interest well, and 
the young men eagerly asked their 
host if they could be made of any 
service personally, while the mar- 
quis offered to send down some of 
his men to help, if more were want- 
ed, and promised to send all he and 
his daughters could think of as 
useful to the imprisoned men when 
they should be brought out of their 
dangerous predicament. But as 
this accident refers only, so far as 
our tale is concerned, to the links 
between Emilio and Kate, we must 
pass over the hourly exciting work, 
the reports, the surmises, the visits 
and inspections of newspaper men 
and others, the 1 telegrams and sym- 
pathy of people in high places, the 
details which accompany all such 
accidents, and which it takes a skill- 
ed hand to describe in words that 
would only make the expert laugh 
at the ambitious story-teller. Space 
also, and mercy on the feelings of 
practised novel-readers, make us 
hesitate to do more than hint at the 
state of mind of the girl whose 
dream of love and happiness hung 
in the balance for nearly five days. 
Only her sister guessed the whole, 
.and skilfully managed to shield 
!her from inconvenient notice and 
inquiry; and, indeed, the excitement 
of the time helped her in her work. 
The fifth day, towards evening, a 
messenger on horseback brought 
word of the safety of the men all 
but one, who had died of exhaustion 
and hunger. Carpeggio and the 
rest had narrowly escaped drown- 
ing as well as starvation, but had 



nevertheless managed to help on 
his deliverers by working on his 
o\vn side of the bed of earth and 
clearing away no small part (con- 
sidering his disadvantages) of the 
embankment. The men had de- 
clared that but for him and his 
indomitable spirit, their suspense, 
and even their danger, would have 
increased tenfold; and, besides, he 
had contrived, by his efforts previ- 
ous to the final falling in of earth and 
rushing in of water, to save a large 
portion of valuable ore which must 
otherwise have been either lost or 
much spoilt. He had been taken 
to his employer's house, where the 
greatest care was bestowed on him, 
and the other men to their respec- 
tive homes. The marquis resolved 
to go over the next day and inquire 
after him, and showed the greatest 
interest and anxiety about him ; but 
Lady Anne shook her head as she 
said to her sister : 

" He will do anything, Kate, for 
Mr. Carpeggio " (the young man 
had tacitly dropped his proper ti- 
tle for the time being), " except the 
one thing you want ; and you know 
that, with me, the wish is far from 
being father to the thought in this 
matter." 

There was nothing to do but to 
wait, and then came the overseer's 
recovery and first visit to the house 
of his love as a cherished guest, 
his silent look of longing* and un- 
certainty, the gradual and still si- 
lent knitting together of a new and 
happier understanding than before, 
and finally the offer of the father to 
make him manager and part owner 
of the new mine on his own estate. 
The ownership he at once refused ; 
but, as he could well manage the 
overseeing of the marquis' colliery 
without prejudice to his first em- 
ployer's interests, he joyfully accept- 
ed the first partj]of the proposal. 



A Silent CourtsJiif. 



53 



Then a cottage was pressed upon 
him, and this also he accepted, pro- 
vided it was understood to form 
part of his salary. The old man 
was both pleased and nettled at 
his stiff independence ; but when 
Anne reminded him that the circum- 
stances of the case made this the 
only proper course, he forgot his 
vexation and heartily praised the 
manliness of his new employ^. 

Carpeggio was often at the house, 
and in fact grew to be as familiar 
a presence there as that of the in- 
mates themselves, and still the si- 
lent bond went on, seemingly no 
nearer an outward solution, though 
the marquis' favor visibly increas- 
ed. The colliery prospered and 
brought in money, and the over- 
seer carefully put by his salary and 
studied hard at night, till his name 
got to be first known, then respect- 
ed, in the scientific world ; and one 
day an official intimation was made 
to him that the third place on a 
mining survey expedition to South 
America was at his disposal. He 
had written to Schlichter constant- 
ly, and at last had made a clean 
breast of what he called his un- 
spoken but not the less sealed en- 
gagement. The two girls had gone 
through two London seasons; Lord 
Ashley and Mr. Lawrence had be- 
come brothers-in-law by each mar- 
rying one of the trio who had so 
long expected to make a conquest 
of the overseer himself; and Car- 
peggio had enough to buy a large 
share in the concern of either of his 
two employers. Such was the state 
of affairs when the proposal of an 
American trip was made to him ; 
if the survey was satisfactory, and 
a company formed in consequence, 
he would be out at least three 
years, with the chance of a perma- 
nent settlement as director of the 
works and sharer in the company. 



Both pecuniarily and scientifically 
a career was open to him, while at 
home there was success in all but 
love nearly'as certain. Schlichter 
strongly advised him to go; the 
marquis himself saw the thing as a 
thorough Englishman, and was will- 
ing to lose his right-hand man, as 
he called him, for the sake of this 
opening; Carpeggio saw the allur- 
ing chance of travel, adventure, the 
prestige of his possible return in a 
different character, the enlarged 
field which he could not help look- 
ing on as more tempting than suc- 
cess equally solid, perhaps, but 
more humdrum at his very elbow, 
and the glorious southern climate, 
like to, and yet more radiant than, the 
old home one to which he had been 
used as a boy among the vineyards 
of Umbria. He knew that Kate 
would follow him there gladly, as 
she would had he gone to the 
North Pole; but there was /// in- 
tangible yet terribly real barrier. 
In everything but the weighty af- 
fair of mating he was held as 
Kate's equal, and the equal of all 
whom he met at the marquis' house ; 
even in London, where he had 
once stayed with them a week, and 
gone into that society which was 
" their world," he had been receiv- 
ed in a way unexceptionally satis- 
factory ; he was put on more than 
an equal footing with young Eng- 
lishmen of good standing, but he 
knew that he shared with them 
the cruel, tacit exclusion from com- 
petition for first-class prizes. He 
was good enough to dance with, 
ride with, flirt with, and escort to 
her carriage the daughter of a 
duke; so were the many young 
fellows who made the bulk of the 
young society of the day ; but 
there were preserves within pre- 
serves. The second sons, the 
young lawyers, the men in " march- 



54 



A Silent Courtship. 



ing" regiments, the naval cadets, the 
government clerks, and even the sons 
of admirals, clergymen, and men who 
had made their mark in the literary 
and scientific as well as the. social 
world all these were tacitly, courte- 
ously, but inexorably tabooed as re- 
gards marriage with their partners, 
friends, and entertainers. In fact, 
society had bound these youths over 
to " keep the peace,"while it encour- 
aged every intimacy that was likely 
to lead to a breach of it. Carpeg- 
gio had lived long enough in Eng- 
land to be quite aware of this and 
to " know his own place " in the 
world ; but he trusted to time and 
Kate's faithfulness. He at last 
made up his mind to go to South 
America, and that without saying 
anything that would weigh Kate 
down with the knowledge of a se- 
cret to be withheld from her fa- 
ther ; but he had likewise made up 
his mind to speak to the marquis on 
his return. He would be true to 
his employer, but could not afford 
to be false to himself; his own 
rights as a man were as present to 
his mind as the position and preju- 
dices which he appreciated and tol- 
erated in the person of a man so 
"thoroughly gentlemanlike as his pa- 
tron; and this compromise of a 
three years' absence and silence 
seemed to him to honorably fulfil 
all the expectations that could be 
formed of him. He said good-by 
to the girls together in their fa- 
ther's library, and the old man 
blessed him and bade him God- 
speed in the heartiest fashion, al- 
most with tears in his eyes ; but of 
more tender and definite speech 
there was none. Who is there, 
however, but knows the delicate, 
intangible farewell, the firm pro- 
mise conveyed by a pressure of the 
hand, and one long, frank, brave 
look, and all that true love knows 



how to say without breaking any 
other allegiance and without in- 
curring the blame of secrecy? 

So Emilio Carpeggio went and 
prospered, while Kate remained a 
beauty and a moderate heiress (she 
had half of her mother's small for- 
tune), courted and loved, and go- 
ing through the weary old treadmill 
of London seasons and country 
" parties." People wondered why 
she did not marry. Her sister did, 
and made a love-match, though there 
was no violent obstacle in the way, 
and the lover was perfectly accept- 
able as to station and fortune. 
She was lucky, also, in loving a 
man who had some brains to boast 
of. This unknown brother-in-law in 
after-times became a powerful lever 
in favor of Carpeggio's suit; but 
longbefore the young engineer came 
back the kind, tender-hearted old 
marquis had found out his daughter's 
secret, and after some time overcame 
his natural prejudices, and as gener- 
ously agreed to Kate'shopes ashehad 
before vigorously opposed them. 
And yet all this was done while hard- 
ly a word was spoken : for if any 
courtship was emphatically a silent 
one, it was this. Everything came 
to be tacitly understood, and a fevr 
hand-pressures, a kiss, a smile, or a 
long look expressed the changes and 
chances of this simple love-story. 
At the end of three years the 
young man came home on a holi- 
day, which he meant to employ in 
determining his fate. He had pro- 
mised the new company to go back 
permanently and take charge of 
their interests as a resident, and 
many of the native members had 
shown themselves willing and ea- 
ger to make him a countryman and 
a son-in-law. He went home, and 
saw the marquis the first evening 
of his stay, two hours after he got 
off the train. To his surprise, he 



A Silent Courtship. 



5.5 



found his request granted before 
lie made it and his road made 
plain before him. The old man 
did not even ask him not to return 
to America. It is of little use to 
descant on his meeting with Kate 
and on his (literally) first spoken 
words of love. They told each 
other the truth that is, that the 
moment they met in the mine, five 
years before, wa$ the beginning of 
their love. They were married 
with all the pretty pastoral-feudal 
accessories of a country wedding in 
England, and spent their honey- 
moon in the old tower of Carpeg- 
gio, where the bride explored the 
library-room with great curiosity, 
and was charmed with the old-fash- 
ioned figures of the principal peo- 
ple of the town, whom she enter- 
tained in what was now again her 
husband's own house. 

Signer Salviani had built a pret- 
ty, villa-like hotel half a mile fur- 
ther, and was as proud on the day 
when his young master again took 
possession of the old tower as the 
bridegroom himself. From there 
Carpeggio went to his German 
friends, presented the famous 
Schlichter to his wife, and got his 
rough and fatherly congratulations 
on his choice, his perseverance, and 
his success. In three months the 
young couple set sail for their new 
home, where Carpeggio had sent 
the last orders needed to set up 
quickly the nest he had half-pre- 
pare"d already in anticipation of his 
visit to England. When they arriv- 
ed, Kate found a lovely, fragile- 
looking, cool house, half-southern, 
half-northern, covered with vines 
which the natives still looked upon 



with distrust, but beautiful and lux- 
uriant beyond measure (this was 
the oldest part of the house, the 
original lodge which the overseer 
had lived in when he first came), 
some rooms with white tile floors, 
and some partially covered with 
fancy mats of grass, while one or 
two rejoiced in small Turkey rugs, 
suggestive of home, yet not oppres- 
sively hot to look at. All his 
wife's tastes had been remembered 
and gratified, and Carpeggio was 
rewarded by her telling him that if 
she had built and furnished the 
house herself, she could not have 
satisfied her own liking so thor- 
oughly as he had done. One room 
was fitted up as their den (or, as the 
world called it, the library), and 
was as much as possible the exact 
counterpart of the room in Torre 
Carpeggio where the books and cu- 
riosities had been found. Of course 
the collection had been carefully 
transferred here. Years afterwards 
this place was the rallying-point of 
English and American society ; 
travellers came to see it and its 
owners ; its hospitality was the 
most perfect, generous, and deli- 
cate for a hundred miles around ; 
no jealousies arose between its 
household and those of the natives ; 
the mining company prospered, 
Carpeggio grew to be an authority 
even in German scientific circles, 
and a sort of paradise was once 
more realized. True, this kind of 
thing only happens once or twice 
in a century; but then it really 
does, so it is pardonable for a sto- 
ry-teller to choose the thousand- 
and-first couple for the hero and 
heroine of his tale. 



Criminals and tJicir Treatment. 



CRIMINALS AND THEIR TREATMENT.* 



THE judicious management of 
the criminal classes is a question 
which has long occupied the seri- 
ous consideration of legislators and 
social reformers throughout the civ- 
ilized world ; and though much of 
what has been said and written on 
the matter is visionary and based 
on imperfect data, the agitation of 
the question cannot but be produc- 
tive of advantageous results. In 
pagan times penal laws were enact- 
ed chiefly with a view to the pun- 
ishment of crime, and but little ac- 
count was taken of the criminal. 
The Julian law and the Justinian 
Code and Pandects inherited this 
cruel and unchristian character, 
which attached itself to them for 
centuries even after the birth of 
our Saviour. The influence of 
Christianity was long powerless to 
mitigate the horrors of barbarous 
legislation. In vain did the bish- 
ops of the church protest against 
the atrocities which were every- 
where practised on prisoners. So 
far from listening to these humane 
appeals, hard-hearted rulers ex- 
hausted their ingenuity in devising 
new modes of penal torture, while 
for the wretched culprit not a piti- 
ful word went forth from royal or 
baronial legislative halls. Among 
the Romans treason was punished 
by crucifixion, the most cruel of 
deaths. The parricide was cast 
into the sea enclosed in a sack, 
with a cock, a viper, a dog, and a 
monkey as companions. The in- 
cendiary, by a sort of poetic retri- 

* The Juket : A Study In Crime, Pauper- 
ism, Disease, and Heredity, etc. By R. L. Dug- 
dale. With an Introduction by Elisha Harris 
M.D. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 



bution, was cast into the flames, 
while the perjurer was flung from 
the heights of Tarpeia's rock. But 
the treatment of prisoners for debt 
was still more barbarous and quite 
out of proportion to the magnitude 
of the offence. The unfortunate 
being who could not meet the de- 
mands of his creditors was compel- 
led to languish in a filthy dungeon 
for sixty days, during which time 
he was fed upon twelve ounces of 
rice daily and had to drag a fifteen- 
pound chain at every step. If, at 
the expiration of that time, the 
claim against him was still unsatis- 
fied, he was delivered over to his ob- 
stinate and unrelenting creditors to 
be torn limb from limb as a symbol 
of the partition of his goods. 

The severity of these provisions 
was somewhat softened in later 
times, but throughout the middle 
ages, and, indeed, down to the latter 
half of the eighteenth century, the 
same fierce and Draconian spirit 
pervaded all laws having reference 
to the punishment of crime. Vast 
numbers of prisoners, without dis- 
tinction of age, sex, rank, or charac- 
ter of crime, used to be huddled to- 
gether in wretched pens, where they 
rotted to death amid blasphemous 
and despairing shrieks. Spiritual 
comfort and advice were withheld 
from them ; for it was a feature of 
these miserable laws to pursue their 
victims beyond the grave by a 
clause which stipulated that they 
should die " without benefit of 
clergy." 

Individual efforts here and there 
were not wanting to alleviate the 
sufferings of prisoners, and many a 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



57 



bright page of the martyrology 
grows brighter still with a recital 
of the noble sacrifices made by the 
saints of the church to ameliorate 
the condition of captives. St. Vin- 
cent de Paul, a voluntary inmate of 
the bagncs of Paris, teaching and 
encouraging his fello\v-prisoners, 
was the prototype of Goldsmith's 
kind-hearted Dr. Primrose, with the 
exception that the saint outdid in 
reality what the poet's fancy merely 
pictured. Other saints, when pre- 
vented from offering relief at home, 
sold themselves into foreign servi- 
tude ; and we read of their noble 
efforts to render at least endurable 
the acute sufferings of captives in 
Barbary, Tripoli, and Tunis. 

But these spasmodic and unsys- 
tematic endeavors to better the 
condition of criminals were attend- 
ed with no lasting good, and not 
till the serious labors of the noble 
Howard invited attention to the 
importance of the matter was pub- 
lic attention fully awakened. His 
visits to the prisons of the Conti- 
nent of Europe, and his frequent 
appeals to the governments to in- 
troduce much-needed reforms and 
to redress palpable wrongs, enlisted 
the active sympathies of the wise 
and good. Then for the first time 
the doctrine which Montesquieu 
and Beccaria had so often admira- 
bly set forth in their writings was 
adopted in practice, and legislators 
and governments assumed as the 
basis of prison reform the principle 
that all punishment out of propor- 
tion to the crime is a wrong inflicted 
on the criminal. Advances at first 
were exceedingly slow, but the true 
impetus to prison reform was given 
and a new and higher 'social lode 
was struck. 

While John Howard was yet en- 
gaged in the effort to solve the 
problem he had set before him- 



self, a new science was springing 
into existence which was to lend to 
his labors the full promise of suc- 
cess. The value of statistics was 
but little understood and appre- 
ciated till the latter portion of the 
last century, and so imperfect in 
this respect had been the records 
of town, provincial, and national 
communities that history has keen- 
ly felt the loss of this important ad- 
junct to her labors, and has been 
compelled to grope in darkness 
because the light of statistical in- 
formation c.ould not be had. Since 
this century set in, however, statis- 
tics have risen to the dignity of a 
science, and the truly valuable in- 
formation they afford, the floods of 
light they have shed on all social 
matters, the service they have lent 
to medical science, to hygiene, to 
sanitary reforms, and above all to 
the prevalence of crime with its 
grades and surroundings, fully at- 
test the sufficiency of its title. 

Through statistics, then, we are 
placed in possession of the facts re- 
lating to crime and criminals, and 
facts alone can give the color of 
reason and good sense to all mea- 
sures of reform, to all projects 
looking to the suppression of crime 
and the elevation of the criminal 
classes. Statisticians, therefore, 
whatever may be their theories, 
whatever their pet views about 
crime and criminals, deserve well 
of the community ; for without 
their close and painstaking work 
the most ingenious theorist and the 
best-inclined philanthropist would 
be utterly at sea ; for as Phidias 
could not have chiselled his unri- 
valled Zeus without the marble, nei- 
ther can the most zealous reformer 
advance a foot without clear and 
well-tabulated statistics. 

For this reason we bid especial 
welcome to the interesting mono- 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



gram of Mr. Dugdale, which is a 
monument of patient and laborious 
exploration in a field of limited ex- 
tent. It is evident that he did not 
set about his work in a dilettante 
spirit, but spared no effort and 
avoided no inconvenience and 
his inconveniences must have been 
many to ascertain the utmost mi- 
nutiae bearing on his topic. He 
has not contented himself with ad- 
hering to the methods of inquiry 
usually in vogue, but has added to 
the law of averages, which ordinary 
statistics supply, individual envi- 
ronments and histories which may 
be considered causative of general 
results, and as such are the key to 
common statistics. 

" Statistics," he says, "cumulate facts 
which have some prominent feature in 
common into categories that only dis- 
play their static conditions or their rela- 
tive proportions to other facts. Its rea- 
soning on these is largely inferential. 
To be made complete it must be com- 
plemented by a parallel study of indi- 
vidual careers, tracing, link by link, the 
essential and the accidental elements of 
social movement which result in the se- 
quence of social phenomena, the distri- 
bution of social growth and decay, and 
the tendency and direction of social dif- 
ferentiation. To socio-statics must be al- 
lied socio-dynamics. Among the notable 
objections to pure statistics in the pre- 
sent connection is the danger of mistak- 
ing coincidences for correlations and the 
grouping of causes which are not distri- 
butive." 

Thus, Mr. Dugdale recognizes as 
underlying the testimony of mere 
figures a variety of factors essen- 
tially modifying the inferences 
which the former, exclusively view- 
ed, would justify us in drawing, 
and endeavors to catch the ever- 
shifting influences of individual 
temperament, age, and environ- 
ment. Heredity and sex, being fix- 
ed, are covered by the ordinary 
methods of statistical compilation. 



But as environment is the most po- 
tent of the varying factors which de- 
termine a career of honesty or crime, 
so heredity may be regarded among 
the fixed causes as the most con- 
tributive of effect in the same di- 
rection. " Heredity and environ- 
ment, then, are the parallels be- 
tween which the whole question of 
crime and its treatment stretches, 
and the objective point is to de- 
termine how much of crime results 
from heredity, how much from 
environment." It is to the solu- 
tion of this rather complicated 
problem that Mr. Dugdale address- 
es himself; and when we say it is 
complicated we do not .exaggerate, 
so that we may be pardoned if, at 
times, in the course of the sinuous 
meanderings the question must 
necessarily take, we find ourselves 
at variance with some of his con- 
clusions. Heredity is of two sorts : 
i, that which results from cognate 
traits transmitted by both parents; 
and, 2, that which exhibits the 
modification dependent on the in- 
fusion of strange blood. This dis- 
tinction is important as bearing on 
the question of heredity in its ten- 
dency to perpetuate propensities. 
If consanguineous unions intensify 
and transmit types of character 
with any degree of constancy and 
uniformity, we are justified in con- 
ceding that heredity is a criminal 
factor quite independent of envi- 
ronments, and that its relation to 
the solution of the problem why 
crime is so prevalent cannot be ig- 
nored. Now, the test furnished by 
the infusion of strange blood will 
enable us to judge whether con- 
stancy and uniformity of types are 
confined to consanguineous unions 
or not ; for if, the environments re- 
maining the same, a change of 
type is induced by non-consangui- 
nity, then to the admixture of fresh 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



59 



blood alone can we attribute change 
of type, and so we must again ad- 
mit the importance of heredity in 
the study of the case, but only to 
the extent and within the limits 
we shall hereafter point out. Mr. 
Dugdale is of opinion that both 
heredity and environment play a 
very important part in the career 
of the criminal, and it is with the 
design of sustaining his opinion 
that he has given us the history of 
die " Jukes." Before we deal fur- 
ther with his conclusions we will 
here present a brief summary of 
the facts as related by him. 

The term " Jukes " is a sort of 
pseudonym very considerately in- 
tended to cloak the identity of 
members of the family who may 
now be engaged in honest pursuits. 
The family had its origin in the 
northern part of the State of New 
York, and has rendered the place 
notorious by the unbroken chain 
of crime which, link after link, 
binds the jail-bird of to-day with 
the jolly and easy-living " Max " of 
a century ago, who drank well, 
hunted well, and ended his days in 
the quiet enjoyment of animal 
peace. He certainly was more in- 
tent on hospitable cares and the 
gratification of his passing desires 
than on the welfare of his progeny ; 
for no man ever left behind him a 
more serried array of criminal de- 
scendants whose name has become 
the synonym of every iniquity the 
tongue can utter or the mind con- 
ceive. This man had two sons, 
married to two out of six sisters 
whose reputation before marriage 
was bad. The eldest of the sisters 
is called "Ada Juke" for conve- 
nience' sake, though in the county 
where the family lived her memory 
is unpleasantly embalmed as "Mar- 
garet, the mother of criminals." Ada 
had given birth before her mar- 



riage to a male child, who was the 
father, grandfather, and great-grand- 
father of the distinctively criminal 
line of descendants. She afterwards 
married, and thus commingled in 
her person two generations exhib- 
iting characteristics essentially pe- 
culiar to each, though they often 
bear leading features of resem- 
blance. The sisters " Delia " and 
" Effie " married the two sons of 
Max, and in this way, though some- 
what obscurely, Mr. Dugdale con- 
nects Max with the most criminal 
branch of the Jukes. We say 
somewhat obscurely; for the reader 
is first inclined to believe that Ada 
was married to one of Max's sons, 
till on chart No. iv., page 49, he 
quite casually lights on the remark 

" Effie Juke married X , brother 

to the man who married Delia Juke, 
and son of Max." While acknow- 
ledging the inherent difficulty of a 
lucid arrangement of facts so com- 
plicated and bearing such manifold 
relations, we believe that a little 
more fulness of statement would 
lead to at least an easier under- 
standing of Mr. Dugdale's work. 
" Effie " became, through her mar- 
riage with the second son of Max, 
the ancestress of one of the dis- 
tinctively pauperized branches of 
the family. The progeny of Delia 
inclined more to crime, and" Ada 
thus became the parent stem whence 
both the criminal and pauperized 
army of the "Jukes " mainly sprang; 
for it is a circumstance deserving 
notice that, whereas the offspring 
of " Ada " before marriage founded 
the criminal line of the family, her 
offspring after marriage inclined 
rather to pauperism than to crime. 
So likewise in the case of " Effie," 
whose known offspring was the re- 
sult of marriage ; we find few crimi- 
nals, but nearly all paupers, among 
her descendants. 



6o 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



In the first chart Mr. Dugdale ex- 
hibits a detailed history of the illegi- 
timate posterity of "Ada " through- 
out seven generations. The first 
legitimate consanguineous union in 
the family took place between the 
illegitimate son of "Ada" and a 
daughter of " Bell," from which six 
children resulted. The branch is 
considered illegitimate, as far as 
" Ada " is concerned, so that Mr. 
Dugdale sets down each collateral 
branch as either legitimate or ille- 
gitimate, according to the legitima- 
cy or illegitimacy of that child of 
the five sisters which stands at the 
head of the list. Now, glancing 
along the column of the third gen- 
eration, or that exhibiting the six 
legitimate children of the illegiti- 
mate son of "Ada" and a legiti- 
mate daughter of " Bell," we find 
their history to be as follows : The 
first, a male, lived to the age of seven- 
ty-five ; was a man of bad character, 
though inclined at times to be in- 
dustrious, and depended on out- 
door relief for the last twenty 
years of his life. The sisters and 
brothers of this man strongly re- 
sembled him in character, being all 
noted for their longevity, their pro- 
pensity to steal, and their habitual li- 
centiousness. They were, moreover, 
exceedingly indolent, with one ex- 
ception, and were a constant burden 
on the township. It is unnecessary 
to trace out the history of these or of 
their descendants, except to present 
a few typical cases which will ena- 
ble us to understand the conclusion 
arrived at by Mr. Dugdale. 

The first son of " Ada," just men- 
tioned, married a non-relative of 
bad repute, by whom he had nine 
children. This woman died of sy- 
philis ; and it is well to note at what 
an early period this poisonous strain 
showed itself in this the illegitimate 
branch of "Ada's" descendants. 



These nine children surpassed their 
father, their uncles, and their aunts 
in criminal propensity. They were 
especially more violent, were fre- 
quently imprisoned for assault and 
battery, and, though no more licen- 
tious than their father, were espe- 
cially addicted to licentiousness in 
its grosser forms. They inher- 
ited the constitutional disease of 
which their mother died, and with 
it the penalty of an early death, the 
oldest having died at the age of 

O O 

fifty-one and the youngest at twen- 
ty-four. It will be observed that 
they were not so constantly de- 
pendent on out-door relief as the 
generation immediately- preceding 
them ; this fact being attributable 
to the greater violence of their tem- 
per, which induced them to acquire 
by robbery and theft the means of 
livelihood, while the others pre- 
ferred to beg. One aunt of these 
nine viz., the second sister of their 
father and fourth from him in birth 
never married, but had four chil- 
dren by a non-relative ; and, for a 
purpose soon to be understood, we 
will compare their career with that 
of their nine cousins, who, it must 
be remembered, were born in wed- 
lock. These four were illegitimate 
all the way back to their grand- 
mother, "Ada"; and if there be 
any force in the statement that 
prolonged illegitimacy has an in- 
fluence in the formation of char- 
acter, we here have a opportunity 
of verifying it. The first of these, 
a male, was arrested at the age of 
ten ; was arraigned for burglary soon 
after, but acquitted ; was indict- 
ed for murder in 1870, and, though 
believed to be guilty, was again ac- 
quitted; was in the county jail in 
1870, and in 1874 was depending 
upon out-door relief. The second, 
a female, began to lead a loose life 
at an early age, which rapidly de- 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



61 



veloped into a criminal one. The 
third, a male, was guilty of nearly 
every known crime, and at last ac- 
counts was undergoing a term of 
twenty years' imprisonment in Sing 
Sing for burglary in the first degree. 
The fourth, also a male, died at the 
age of nineteen, after having spent 
three and a half years in Albany 
penitentiary. Thus, though the re- 
cord of the nine cousins is not very 
flattering, the vicious proclivities of 
these four illegitimates are mani- 
festly more marked and decided. 

If we now turn to the chart ex- 
hibiting the posterity of the legiti- 
mate children of Ada Juke, we will 
find an order of things entirely dif- 
ferent. The husband of " Ada " 
was lazy, while her paramour, on 
the contrary, was always industrious. 
Syphilis likewise showed itself at a 
still earlier period than in the il- 
legitimate branch ; for whereas this 
disease first appeared in the gen- 
eration of the illegitimate line, 
Ada's first child by marriage be- 
came a victim to it at an early age, 
and her two legitimate daughters 
are set down as harlots at an 
equally early age. Ada's first 
child, a son, married after the poi- 
soned taint had got into his blood, 
and transmitted the loathsome heri- 
tage to his eight children. The 
immediate descendants of these 
eight were for the most part blind, 
idiotic, and impotent, and those 
who were not so became the pro- 
genitors of a line of syphilitics 
down to the sixth generation. 
Moreover, the intermarriages be- 
tween cousins were much more fre- 
quent along this line than in the 
illegitimate branch. It is a note- 
worthy fact that in this chart one 
of the " Juke " blood is, for the first 
and only time, set down as being 
a Catholic the only time, indeed, 
that reference is made to the ques- 



tion of religion. Mr. Dugdale allows 
us to infer from this exceptional 
allusion that he found but one Ca- 
tholic in this edifying family. We 
would recommend this fact to the 
consideration of our rural friends 
who think that chiefly in the me- 
tropolis abound the criminals, quo- 
rum pars maxima they believe to be 
Catholics. The first time these 
unco-pious people had the fierce 
light that beats upon a town turn- 
ed upon themselves, the spectacle 
thus revealed is not over-pleasant. 
This en passant. Were we to ex- 
amine the other statistical exhibits 
of Mr. Dugdale, we would find 
pretty nearly the same result made 
clear. Without, therefore, entering 
into details that are painful in char- 
acter and difficult to keep constant- 
ly in view, we will give a summary 
of the conclusions which the.de- 
tailment of facts seems to justify : 

1. The lines of intermarriage of 
the Juke blood show a minimum of 
crime. 

2. In the main, crime begins in 
the progeny where the Juke blood 

has married into X (non-Juke 

blood). 

3. The illegitimate branches have 
chiefly married into X . 

4. The illegitimate branches pro- 
duced a preponderance of crime. 

5. The intermarried branches 
show a preponderance of pauper- 
ism. 

6. The intermarried branches 
show a preponderance of females. 

7. The illegitimate branches pro- 
duced a preponderance of males. 

8. The apparent anomaly presents 
itself that the illegitimate criminal 
branches show collateral branches 
which are honest and industrious. 

We here find a most curious and 
interesting history and an epitome 
of conclusions which challenges 
serious consideration. That the 



62 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



family of the " Jukes " was more 
vicious than their neighbors whose 
surroundings were similar cannot 
be disputed, and the question 
arises, What was there peculiar and 
exceptional in their case that 
made the fact to be such ? The 
habits of life of the immediate 
descendants of Max were bad in 
the extreme, but partly forced up- 
on them by environments. These 
people dwelt in mud-built cabins, 
with but one apartment, which serv- 
ed all the purpose of a tenement. 
Here they slept and ate, and of 
course privacy was rendered entire- 
ly impossible. Decency and mo- 
desty were out of the question, and 
the anomaly of whole families utterly 
bereft of all regard for domestic 
morals began to exhibit itself. We 
will now lay down a fundamen- 
tal principle, by the light of which 
we hope to be able to solve the < 
knotty question of this intense 
perversity of a series of blood-re- 
lated generations, and Mr. Dugdale 
himself will furnish the proofs. 

Early impurity beyond all other 
causes warps the moral sense, 
blunts the delicacy of womanly 
modesty, dims the perception of 
the difference between right and 
wrong in a word, is quickest to 
sear the conscience. Crimes of vio- 
lence, crimes of any sort, which are 
not traceable to this origin are out- 
bursts of momentary distemper; but 
impurity of the sort mentioned lays 
the foundation of an habitual apti- 
tude to commit the worst crimes, 
as though the tendency to do so 
were inborn and natural. Let us 
examine the facts as exhibited in 
the history of the Jukes family. 
Throughout the six generations 
studied by Mr. Dugdale he found 
162 marriageable women, including, 
as facts required him to do, some 
of very tender years. Of these 84 



had lapsed from virtue at some 
time or other. This is an enor- 
mous percentage compared with the 
police returns of our most crowd- 
ed seaboard cities. Among the 
Jukes women 52.40 per cent, were 
fallen women. In New York, Lon- 
don, Paris, and Liverpool the high- 
est calculation does not exceed 1.80. 
If such was the moral status of the 
female portion of the family, it is 
not difficult to conceive what a low 
ebb morals among the males must 
have reached. The more closely 
we look into the facts recorded by 
Mr. Dugdale, the more irresistible 
becomes the conclusion that these 
moral pariahs yielded themselves 
up without restraint to every ex- 
cess from the moment sexual life 
dawned upon them, and blushed 
not to commit crimes which do 
not bear mention. In the record of 
their lives we meet at every line 
expressions which brand these peo- 
ple as the modern representatives 
of the wicked ones who 3,700 years 
ago shrivelled in the fire of God's 
anger on the plains of the Dead 
Sea. Indeed, the fact that the in- 
famous practices which made the 
"Jukes" family notorious are the 
beginning of an utter loss of con- 
science has been long recognized 
by Catholic theologians, who, while 
admitting that loss of faith is a 
more serious loss than that of puri- 
ty, contend that the latter is more 
degrading, more profoundly dis- 
turbs the moral nature of man, and 
speedily blinds him to the percep- 
tion of every virtue. Many more 
facts might be adduced in support 
of this proposition, both from the 
pages of Mr. Dugdale and the va- 
rious reports of our reformatory 
and punitive institutions, but what 
has been said will no doubt be 
deemed sufficient. 

If, then, it be admitted that a cor- 



Criminals and tJieir Treatment. 



rupt life begun in early youth and 
continued for a long time is the 
broadest highroad to crime, it is 
interesting to enquire how far so- 
called criminal heredity is influ- 
enced by the transmission of im- 
pure propensities. It has become 
the fashion of late days to allow to 
hereditary influence a vast import- 
ance in the discussion and manage- 
ment of crime, so that there is dan- 
ger even that the criminal will be 
led to look upon himself as natural- 
ly, and consequently unavoidably, 
vicious, and that society ought not 
to visit upon him the penalty of 
his misdeeds any more than it 
should punish the freaks of a mad- 
man. Dr. Henry Maudsley, in his 
recent work entitled Responsibility 
in Mental Disease, holds language 
startling enough to make every in- 
mate of Sing Sing to-day regard 
himself as one against whom the 
grossest injustice had been done. 
He says : 

" It is certain, however, that lunatics 
and criminals are as much manufactured 
articles as are steam-engines and calico- 
printing machines, only the processes of 
the organic manufactory are so complete 
that we are not able to follow them. 
They are neither accidents nor anoma- 
lies in the world, in the universe, but 
come by law and testify to causalitv ; and 
it is the business of science to find out 
what the causes are and by what laws they 
work. There is nothing accidental, noth- 
ing supernatural, in the impulse to do 
right or in the impulse to do wrong 
both come by inheritance or by educa- 
tion ; and science can no more rest 
content with the explanation which at- 
tributes one to the grace of heaven and 
the other to the malice of the devil than 
it could rest content with the explanation 
of insanity as a possession by the devil. 
The few and imperfect investigations of 
the personal and family histories of 
criminals which have yet been made are 
sufficient to excite some serious reflec- 
tions. One fact which is brought strong- 
ly out by these inquiries is that crime is 
often hereditary ; that just as a man may 



inherit the stamp of the bodily features 
and characters of his parents, so he may 
also inherit the impress of their evil pas- 
sions and propensities ; of the true thief, 
as of the true poet, it may indeed be said 
that he is born, not made. That is what 
observation of the phenomena of hered- 
itary [jzV] would lead us to expect ; and 
although certain theologians, who are 
prone to square the order <;f nature to 
their notions of what it should be, may 
repel such doctrine as the heritage of an 
immoral in place of a moral sense, they 
will in the end find it impossible in this 
matter, as they have done in other mat- 
ters, to contend against facts." 

We have quoted the words of 
Dr. Maudsley at some length, in 
order to show to what unjustifiable 
lengths the recent advocates of he- 
redity are inclined to go. 

The argument employed by Dr. 
Maudsley is very weak happily so, 
indeed; for were his conclusions 
correct man's misdeeds would be 
neither punishable nor corrigible, 
any more than the blast of the tem- 
pest which strews the shore with 
wrecks and desolation. They 
would be the necessary outcome of 
his constitution. The trouble is 
that Dr. Maudsley pushes to excess 
a doctrine which has in it much 
that is true. We do not deny the 
doctrine of hereditary impulses; 
we know that some are more prone 
to evil than others, that the moral 
lineaments are often transmitted 
from parent to child to no less an 
extent than physical traits and re- 
semblances ; but we know that free 
will remains throughout, and that, 
no matter how strong the impulse 
to do a certain act may be, the 
power to resist is unquestionable. 
Habit and association may render 
the will practically powerless, but, 
unless a man has lost the attributes 
of his race, he never becomes abso- 
lutely irreclaimable. The allusion 
to grace and diabolical temptation 
is, to say the least, stupid. Dr. 



64 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



Maudsley knows as much about the 
matter, to all appearances, as the 
inhabitants of Patagonia. No theo- 
logian deserving the name ever as- 
serted that man is swayed to good 
by grace alone, or equally moved 
to evil by the spirit of darkness, 
without any will-activity. The 
doctrine would be just as subver- 
sive of free-will and moral order as 
Dr. Maudsley's, and consequently 
as absurd. The truth is that man's 
will has been weakened by his fall 
( labefactata ac debilitata), is weaker 
in some than in others, but never 
becomes extinct, unless where the 
abnormal condition of insanity oc- 
curs. We regret that Mr. Dugdale 
accepts Dr. Maudsley as an au- 
thority and quotes approvingly the 
following words: 

"Instead of mind being a wondrous 
entity, the independent source of power 
and self sufficient cause of causes, an 
honest observation proves incontestably 
that it is the most dependent of all natu- 
ral forces. It is the highest development 
of force, and to its existence all the low- 
er natural forces are indispensably pre- 
requisite." 

This is simply scientific jargon. 
It conveys no meaning, and in 
reality substitutes new and more 
obscure terms for old and well-un- 
derstood ones. We are told to re- 
ject the " wondrous entity " mind, 
and to consider instead all so-call- 
ed mental operations as the out- 
come of force. In a previous arti- 
cle* we pointed out the great di- 
versity of meanings annexed to the 
word force, and proved that none 
of those who so glibly use it have 
a clear conception of what it signi- 
fies. Mr. Dugdale further accepts 
the recent materialistic doctrine of 
Hammond, Vogel, and the so-called 
modern school of physiologists, who 

* THE CATHOLIC WORLD, June, 1876, " Ham- 
mond on the Nervous System." 



make will a mere matter of cere- 
bral activity and cell-development. 

His system of psychology is ex- 
ceedingly brief and meaningless, 
and invites the social reformer to 
deal with the criminal as the watch- 
maker would deal with a chrono- 
meter out of repair, or as a ship- 
calker would attend to a vessel that 
had felt and suffered from the hard 
buffets of the ocean. Now, while 
we utterly repudiate the doctrine 
which views the criminal as a mere 
machine, we do not wish to reject 
any doctrine or theory which facts 
sustain, and we accept the doctrine 
of heredity in the sense we shall 
shortly mention, and contend that 
the facts justify its acceptance to 
no further extent. 

In the first place, most people of 
good sense will admit that environ- 
ment is a far more potent criminal 
factor than heredity, and that the 
constant similarity of environments 
where heredity exists disqualifies 
the observer for ascertaining the 
exact extent to which the latter 
operates. The children of the vi- 
cious for the most part grow up 
amid the surroundings which made 
their parents bad, and no child 
born of the most depraved mother 
will fail to respond to healthful in- 
fluences early brought into play, 
unless an obviously abnormal con- 
dition exists. The advocates of 
heredity in the ordinary sense point 
to the vast army of criminals pro- 
pagated from one stock, and claim 
this to be an incontestable proof of 
their doctrine. But right in the 
way of this argument is the fact 
that it ignores similarity of environ- 
ment, and that it overlooks the di- 
versity of crimes. If the law of 
heredity were strictly as stated by 
many writers, then the burglar 
would beget children with burgla- 
rious instincts, the pickpocket dit- 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



to, and so throughout the whole 
range of crime. But nothing of 
this sort is the case. The vicious 
descendant of a sneak-thief is as 
likely to be a highwayman or a 
housebreaker as to follow the safer 
paternal pursuits. No special pro- 
pensities to commit crime are trans- 
mitted, but appetites are transmit- 
ted, and appetites beget tendencies 
and habits. Now, the t\vo appe- 
tites which prove to be of most fre- 
quent transmission are the erotic 
and the alcoholic. The erotic pre- 
cedes the alcoholic, and, indeed, ex- 
cites it to action. Mr. Dugdale 
says (p. 37) : " The law shadowed 
forth by this scanty evidence is 
that licentiousness has preceded 
the use of ardent spirits, and caus- 
ed a physical exhaustion that made 
stimulants grateful. In other words, 
that intemperance itself is only a 
secondary cause." And again: "If 
this view should prove correct, one 
of the great points in the training 
of pauper and criminal children 
will be to pay special attention to 
sexual training." 

It would appear, then, from this 
that heredity chiefly affects the 
erotic appetite, and through it the 
entire character. The impure be- 
get the impure, subject to improve- 
ment through grace and will-power, 
and, despite of changed environ- 
ments, the diseased appetite of the 
progenitor is apt to assert itself in 
the descendant, though it is not, of 
course, so apparent in the matter of 
the erotic passion as in the alco- 
holic. These are the facts so far 
as they justify the view of crime as 
ft neurosis. This conclusion, while 
harmonizing with the data of ob- 
servation, renders the solution of 
the question, What shall we do 
with criminals? comparatively easy, 
and points to the best mode of 
treatment. Until society holds that 
VOL. xxvi. 5 



the virtue of purity is at the bot- 
tom of public morality, and that 
the custom to look indulgently on 
the wicked courses of young men 
is essentially pernicious, we cannot 
hope to begin the work of reform 
on a sound basis. Corrumpere et 
corrumpi s&dum vocatur is as true 
to-day as eighteen hundred years 
ago, only now we call it " sowing 
wild oats." And how is this change 
to be wrought ? By education ? 
Yes, by education, which develops 
man's moral character by that edu- 
cation which gives to the commu- 
nity a Christian scholar, and not 
a mere intellectual machine. Mr. 
Richard Vaux, ex-mayor of Phila- 
delphia, who is a believer in Mauds- 
ley, and consequently an unsus- 
pected authority, speaks in these 
significant terms: 

" Without attempting to discuss the 
value of popular instruction for the 
youth, or to criticise any system of public 
or private education, we venture to as- 
sert that there are crimes which arise di- 
rectly out of these influences, and which 
require knowledge so obtained to per- 
petrate. If the former suggestion be 
true, that the compression of the social 
forces induces to crime, then those offen- 
ces which come from education are only 
the more easilyforced into society by the 
possessed ability to commit such crimes. 
If facts -warrant this suggestion, then edu- 
cation meaning that instruction imparted 
by school-training is an agent in developing 
crime-cause. ... It is worthy of notice 
that afar larger number of offenders are 
recorded as having attended ' public 
schools' than those who ' never went to- 
school. ' " * 

This is a startling exhibit/upheld, 
it seems, by undeniable figures. Is 
it possible that the state is engaged 
in "developing crime-cause," and 
that it is for this purpose oppressive 
school-taxes are imposed ? Alas ! it 
is too true. The majority of those 



* Some Remarks on Crime-Cause. 
Vaux. 



Richard 



66 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



who get a knowledge of the three 
" Rs" in our public schools come 
forth with no other knowledge. 
God is to them a distant echo, 
morality a sham, and they finish 
their education by gloating over 
the blood-curdling adventures of 
pirates and cracksmen in the pages 
of our weekly papers. Mr. Dug- 
dale proposes some excellent means 
for the reclamation and reforma- 
tion of the criminal, but they come 
tainted, and consequently much im- 
paired, by his peculiar psychical the- 
ories. On page 48 he says : 

" Now, this line of facts points to two 
main lessons : the value of labor as an 
element of reform, especially when we 
consider that the majority of the individ- 
uals of the Juke blood, when they work 
at all, are given to intermittent indus- 
tries. The element of continuity is lack- 
ing in their character ; enforced labor, in 
some cases, seems to have the effect of 
supplying this deficiency. But the fact, 
which is quite as important but less obvi- 
ous, is that crime and honest)- run in the 
lines of greatest vitality, and that the 
qualities which make contrivers of crime 
are substantially the same as will make 
men successful in honest pursuits." 

These remarks are full of signifi- 
cance and point unmistakably to 
the necessity of supplying work to 
the vicious. Hard work is the 
panacea for crime where healthful 
moral restraints are absent. The 
laborer expends will-force and 
muscular force on his work, and 
has no inclination for deeds of 
violence or criminal cunning. But 
how absurd it is to suppose that, as 
an educational process, its whole 
effect consists in the changed de- 
velopment of cerebral cells, and 
not, as is obviously true, in the 
fatigue which it engenders! Mr. 
Dugdale thus sets forth the philoso- 
phy of his educational scheme for the 
reformation of the criminal (p. 49): 

" It must be clearly understood, and 
practically accepted, thai the whole ques- 



tion of crime, vice, and pauperism rests 
strictly and fundamentally upon a phy- 
siological basis, and not upon a sentimen- 
tal or a metaphysical one. These phe- 
nomena take place, not because there is 
any aberration in the laws of nature, 
but in consequence of the operation of 
these laws ; because disease, because 
unsanitary conditions, because educa- 
tional neglects, produce arrest of cerebral 
development at some point, so that the 
individual fails to meet the exigencies of 
civilization in which he finds himself 
placed, and that the rurefor unbalanced 
lives is a training which will affect the 
cerebral tissue, producing a correspond- 
ing change of career." 

This is downright materialism, 
and is the result of Mr. Dugdale's 
hasty acceptance of certain views 
put forward by a school of physi- 
ologists who imagine that their 
science is the measure of man in 
his totality. We admit that crime 
is closely connected with cerebral 
conditions, that the brain is the 
organ of manifestation which the 
mind employs, and that those mani- 
festations are modified to a consid- 
erable extent by the condition of 
the organ. But this does not in- 
terfere with the character of the 
mind viewed as a distinct entity ; 
indeed, it rather harmonizes with 
the facts as admitted by the uni- 
versal sentiment of mankind. Mr. 
Dugdale makes a fatal mistake 
when he supposes that a changed 
cerebral state may be accompanied 
by a change in the moral character ; 
for it is possible that a chemist may 
one day discover some substance 
or combination of substances which 
might supply the missing cells or 
stimulate the arrested growth. Man 
is not a machine; neither is he a 
mere physiological being. He is a 
rational animal, consisting of a soul 
and a body, two distinct substan- 
ces hypostatically united; and until 
this truth is recognized no reform 
can be wrought in the ranks of the 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



criminal classes by even greater men 
than Mr. Dugdale. If the "whole 
process of education is the build- 
ing up of cerebral cells," admoni- 
tions, instructions, and example are 
thrown away on the vicious. There 
is naught to do but to "build up 
cells " and stimulate "arrested ce- 
rebral development." How false 
is this daily experience proves; for 
we know that a salutary change 
of prison discipline often converts 
brutal and hardened criminals into 
comparatively good men. Take as 
an instance what occurred in the 
Mai son de Correction de Nimes in 
1839. This prison was in charge 
of certain political favorites who 
were fitter to be inmates than offi- 
cials. Mismanagement reigned su- 
preme, and the excesses committed 
by the prisoners can scarcely be 
believed. The most revolting 
crimes were done in broad day- 
light, not only with the connivance 
but at the instigation of the keepers. 
At last things had come to such 
a pass that the government was 
compelled to interfere, and, having 
expelled the unworthy men in 
charge, substituted for them a 
small band of Christian Brothers 
under the control of the late vener- 
able Brother Facile, when an amaz- 
ing change soon ensued. There 
was no question with the brothers of 
studying the increase of cerebral 
cells or stimulating arrested devel- 
opment. They changed the dietary 
fur the better; they separated the 
most depraved from those younger 
in crime ; they punished with dis- 
crimination ; they >encouraged good 
conduct by rewards; they set be- 
fore the convict the example of self- 
sacrificing, laborious, and mortified 
lives ; and in three weeks they con- 
verted this pandemonium into the 
model prison of France. 

Can these facts be made to ac- 



cord with the statement that the 
whole process of education is 
"building up of cerebral cells"? 
If Mr. Dugdale would substitute 
the term " moral faculties " for " ce- 
rebral cells," he would theorize 
much more correctly and to better 
practical effect. Speaking of sub- 
jecting the growing criminal to a 
system of instruction resembling 
the Kindergarten, he says : 

" The advantage of the Kindergarten 
rests in this : that it coherently trains the 
sense and awakens the spirit of accoun- 
tability, building up cerebral tissue. It 
thus organizes new channels of activity 
through which vitality may spread itself 
for the advantage of the individual and 
the benefit of society, and concurrently 
endows each individual with a govern- 
ing will." 

We agree with Mr. Dugdale that 
such a system of training is well 
calculated to bring about these re- 
sults, but certainly not in the man- 
ner he indicates. Let us translate 
his language into that which cor- 
rectly describes the process of im- 
provement in the criminal, and we 
find it to be as follows : 

Let the subject on whom we are 
to try the system of training in 
question be a boy of fourteen res- 
cued from the purlieus of a large 
city. His education must be very 
elementary indeed. His intellec- 
tual faculties are to be treated ac- 
cording to their natural vigor or 
feebleness, but his moral faculties 
are especially to be moulded with 
care and watchfulness. He has 
been accustomed to gratify his evil 
passions and to yield to every pro- 
pensity. The will, therefore, is the 
weakest of his faculties, and con- 
stant efforts must be made lo 
strengthen it. With this view he 
should be frequently required to 
do things that are distasteful to 



68 



Criminals and their Treatment. 



him, beginning, of course, with what 
is easy and what might entail no 
discomfort on the ordinary boy. 
The will is thus gradually strength- 
ened, both by this direct exercise 
and by the reaction upon it of the 
intellect, which is undergoing a con- 
current training. 

This is all that Mr. Dugdale 
means to convey when his words 
are translated into ordinary lan- 
guage. When lie dismounts from 
his scientific hobby, however, he 
imparts counsel for the treatment 
of criminals which we heartily en- 
dorse. Thus, in speaking of in- 
dustrial training, he says (p. 54) : 
" The direct effect, therefore, of in- 
dustrial training is to curb licen- 
tiousness, the secondary effect to 
decrease the craving for alcoholic 
stimulants and reduce the number 
of illegitimate children who will 
grov/ up uncared for." He tells us 
that with the disappearance of log- 
huts and hovels and, we might add, 
the reeking tenements of our cities 
lubricity will also disappear. This 
is true to a great extent, but surely 
it is not all that is required. We 
might cultivate the aesthetic tastes 
to the utmost, we might have a 
population dwelling in palaces and 
lounging in luxurious booths, and 
be no better morally than those 
who, while enjoying those privi- 
leges, tolerated the mysteries of the 
llona Dca and assisted at the abomi- 
nations which have made the city 
of Paphos the synonym of every 
iniquity. All attempts at the re- 
formation of our criminal classes 



without the instrumentality of re- 
ligion will prove unavailing. You 
may " make clean the outside of 
the cup and of the dish, but within 
you are full of rapine and unclean-' 
liness." These words will for ever 
hold true of those who inculcate 
and pretend to practise morality 
without religion. The attempt has 
often been made, and has as often 
signally failed, so that we regard 
the presentation of proof here su- 
perfluous. The student of the his- 
tory of social philosophy is well 
aware of the truth of this principle, 
and none but the purblind or the 
unwilling fail to perceive it. Reli- 
gion is the basis of morality, and 
morality the pivot of reform. Let 
the friends of the criminals recog- 
nize these fundamental truths, and 
they may then hope to make some 
progress in their work. Then it 
will be time to defend and demon- 
strate the merits of the congregate 
system of imprisonment; then we 
might with profit insist upon the 
proper classification of prisoners, 
the necessity of proportioning pe- 
nalty to offence, and not blasting 
the lives of mere boys by sending 
them for twenty years to Sing Sing 
for a first offence, thus compelling 
them to consort with ruffians of 
the most hardened description dur- 
ing the period which should be the 
brightest of their lives. Then all 
those reforms which philanthropists 
are ever planning might be wisely 
introduced, but not till then can 
we hope for the millennium of true 
reform to dawn upon us. 



Religion in Jamaica. 



69 



RELIGION IN JAMAICA. 



THE population of Jamaica num- 
bers about half a million, of whom 
nearly four-fifths are blacks, one 
hundred thousand colored people, 
and only thirteen thousand Euro- 
peans. In addition to these there 
are several thousand Cubans and 
Haytians, who have been driven 
from their homes by political trou- 
bles, some thousands of Indian 
coolies, and a few Chinese and Ma- 
deira Portuguese. 

Of this motley population only a 
few thousand are Catholics. The 
greater part of the English belong 
to the Church of England, which, 
however, has been disestablished in 
Jamaica for some years. These 
enjoy the full benefit of the usual 
High Church and Low Church party 
warfare. One of the leading clergy 
of this denomination has started a 
monthly paper in Jamaica, called 
the Trtoth- Seeker. It is to be hoped 
that he may be successful in his 
search. The last number which the 
writer saw contained arguments in 
favor of spiritualism, homoeopathy, 
and Extreme Unction. The editor 
is a vegetarian and) teetotaler, and 
is said to have employed in the 
communion service, as a substitute 
for wine, the juice of a few grapes 
squeezed into a tumbler of water. 
When the bishop was asked about 
it he made a wry face and express- 
ed a hope that he might never re- 
ceive the communion in his teeto- 
tal friend's church again. This re- 
minds us of an incident related by 
a Church of England parson. He 
arrived at Kingston by the mail 
steamer from England on a Sun- 
day morning, and duly betook him- 
self to a church. It happened to 



be communion Sunday, and he 
" stayed." He noticed that most 
of the white people went up to re- 
ceive first, and that the few who 
neglected to do so, and who com- 
municated with the negroes, came 
back to their seats screwing up very 
wry faces. Our friend solved the 
mystery when, going up nearly 
last, he found that his black friends' 
lips had imparted such a flavor to 
the cup that he did not lose the 
taste of it for hours ! 

But the most popular sect amongst 
the blacks is the Baptist. The 
Baptist ministers are credited with 
having been the cause of the insur- 
rection a dozen years ago, which 
was attended with so much blood- 
shed. Their great recommendation 
to the people appears to consist in 
their teaching virtually that the 
country belongs to the black man, 
and that the whites endeavor to 
defraud them of their rights by 
giving them insufficient wages and 
by other means. The consequence 
is that the negroes frequently de- 
fraud their employers by theft, 
shirking work, injuring their pro- 
perty, and so forth. 

The Wesleyans and Presbyterians 
have large followings. There are 
also some Moravian stations. After 
a certain term of years the Mora- 
vian missionary is judged worthy to 
be rewarded with connubial bliss, 
and a spouse is selected by the au- 
thorities in Europe and sent out to 
him. The Jews are numerous and 
opulent, a great part of the commerce 
of the country being in their hands. 
But they are said to be very indif- 
ferent as to their religion, Jewish 
ladies often marrying people of 



Religion in Jamaica. 



other religions and ending by pro- 
fessing none at all. 

It is pleasant to turn from these 
conflicting sects to consider the 
Catholic Church. Kingston, the 
capital of Jamaica, contains forty 
thousand people, and of these seven 
thousand are Catholics. The Ja- 
maica mission is in the hands of 
the Jesuits. They do not num- 
ber more than half a score, and 
are consequently hardly worked. 
They have a convenient house, 
popularly called the " French Col- 
lege," though there is only one 
French priest there. Attached to 
it is a small college for the educa- 
tion of Catholic youths, but several 
Protestants are permitted to bene- 
fit by the instruction there given. 
In the little chapel at the back of 
the house the Blessed Sacrament is 
reserved. Among the priests is a 
venerable man whose tall, ascetic 
figure commands universal respect. 
He was formerly a Protestant cler- 
gyman, a fellow of his college at 
Oxford, and one of that remarkable 
band of men who founded the Ox- 
ford or Tractarian party. His quiet, 
instructive sermons are of a very 
high order, simple, admirably ex- 
pressed, and pregnant with matter. 
Equally beloved is a white-headed 
French priest who has labored in 
Kingston for thirty years, and who 
endeared himself to all by his inde- 
fatigable devotion to the sick and 
dying during a terrible epidemic of 
yellow fever which raged there some 
years ago. He is well acquainted 
with, and sympathizes in, the joys 
and sorrows of all the congrega- 
tion, and, in spite of a strong French 
accent which renders his conver- 
sation nearly unintelligible to a 
stranger, all seem to understand 
him perfectly. There are several 
younger priests who conduct the 
college, and one devotes his ener- 



gies especially to work amongst the 
Cubans. There is also an excellent 
lay brother, a convert from Protes- 
tantism, who presides over a school 
for the children of poor Catholics. 
The church, dedicated to the Holy 
Trinity, is a plain brick structure, 
like all the churches and chapels in 
Kingston, but it is distinguished 
from the others by crosses on the 
gable ends. There are two side 
altars in addition to the high al- 
tar. The latter is handsomely 
adorned, and above it is a rose- 
window of stained glass. There 
is a good attendance at the daily 
Masses, which are said from five to 
half-past six, the congregation con- 
sisting mainly of black or colored 
people. 

Besides the large church there is 
a smaller one dedicated to St. Mar- 
tin, and commonly called the " Cu- 
ban Chapel," because it is employ- 
ed especially for their use. Span- 
ish sermons are preached there 
at the eight o'clock Mass on Sun- 
days. At the commencement of 
the month of May a handso/ne new 
altar was built and High Mass cele- 
brated, the church being crowded 
with devout worshippers. 

Near the large church is a con- 
vent with a private chapel, the nuns 
devoting themselves to the educa- 
tion of a number of young ladies, 
mostly Haytians, who reside with 
them. 

A mile from the town is the 
camp of the First West India Regi- 
ment, a corps of Black Zouaves. 
Some of them being Catholics, 
Mass is said there on Sundays by 
a priest from Kingston. Another 
goes on alternate Sundays to Port 
Royal, a few miles from Kingston, 
where the guard-ship, the Abou- 
kir, is stationed, and says Mass for 
the Catholic seamen. 

The whole of the remainder of the 



Religion in Jamaica. 



island is served by three priests, who 
lead a most arduous life, constantly 
riding or driving from one station 
to another. Newcastle, a beautiful 
place in the Port Royal mountains 
nearly four thousand feet above 
the sea, is the station of the Thirty- 
(Ktli Regiment of the Line, and 
Mass is said here on alternate Sun- 
days by a young priest who has 
just arrived from England, and re- 
placed a stalwart father who was 
formerly senior captain in his regi- 
ment. Another extensive district 
is served by a worthy Belgian fa- 
ther with venerable beard and sim- 
ple manners. This apostolic man 
rides long distances, often having 
to ford dangerously swollen tor- 
rents, and frequently having no 
lodging but the sacristy of a rural 
chapel, and no food but a little 
yam and salt fish. 

But the most experienced mis- 
sionary in the island is the superior 
of the Jesuits, who is vicar-apos- 
tolic. He has travelled about Ja- 
maica on missionary journeys for 
sixteen years, and boasts that he 
knows every road and track in the 
country. He is generally beloved 
by Catholic, Protestant, and Jew 
alike, his genial manners and cheer- 
ful conversation making him a wel- 
come guest everywhere, and his 
medical skill (for he was a physician 
before he joined the Society of Je- 
sus) having enabled him to confer 
material benefits on many suffering 
persons. He has always led an active 
life, and is especially fond of relating 
his reminiscences of the siege of 
Sebastopol, where he was senior Ca- 
tholic chaplain to the British for- 
ces. He drives about in a buggy, 
with spare horses following under 
the charge of his servant, or " boy," 
who rides on horseback. The Ja- 
maica horses are small, poor-look- 
ing animals, costing little, and very 



hardy and inexpensive, but they 
are capable of a great deal of try- 
ing work. 

To reach Kingston for the con- 
firmation on Pentecost Sunday, the 
good father had to drive for some 
miles over a road on which the wa- 
ter had risen from a neighboring 
river to such an extent that it was 
as high as the axles, and sometimes 
even came into the buggy. Ford- 
ing swollen streams on horseback 
in the rainy season is often very 
dangerous work. This father hav- 
ing one day with difficulty crossed 
such a stream, a negro, who had 
been watching him all the time, 
told him that he was the first per- 
son who had succeeded in cross- 
ing there for some days, three men 
who had attempted it having been 
drowned. 

"Why didn't you tell me, then?" 
asked the priest. 

"My sweet minister, me want to 
see what you do." 

Not that the man bore him any 
malice, but these people seem to be 
totally reckless of human life. 

If he can be said to have any 
home, the vicar-apostolic lives in 
a pretty little house on the north- 
west coast. It is about a mile 
from the sea, but some hundreds 
of feet above it, and commands a 
magnificent view of the well-wood- 
ed hills, the sea, and the numerous 
small islands covered with man- 
groves. Near the house is a small 
oratory, built as a coach-house. It 
is very plain, and yet unpaved, the 
congregation kneeling on small 
pieces of board placed on the 
earth. Attached to the house is a 
pen, or grazing farm, of about 
seven hundred acres. It is for the 
most part overgrown with bush, 
the property having been much 
neglected ; but strenuous efforts 
are being made to set it in good 



Religion in Jamaica. 



order, and not without success. It 
is hoped that it will eventually real- 
ize sufficient to support four or 
five missionary priests, which will 
be a great advantage to the church 
in Jamaica, as the mission there is 
very poor. The property was left 
to the church by a Catholic gentle- 
man who resided on it and died 
some few years ago. It now sup- 
ports about one hundred head of 
cattle, besides which it is planted 
with a number of pimento, lime, and 
cocoanut trees, the fruits of which 
are of value. 

A private chapel, which stands in 
the grounds of a gentleman who re- 
sides on one of the most beautiful 
pens in the island, is well worthy of 
mention. This gentleman is a con- 
vert and has done much for the 
church. His chapel is the most 
charming little rustic oratory im- 
aginable, the chancel screen and 
other woodwork being made of 
rough twisted branches of trees, 
and the staircase to the gallery 
consisting of the trunk of a pine 
tree with steps cut in it. On the 
Sundays when Mass is said here 
the Catholics from eight or ten 
miles round drive or ride in, and 
the chapel is sometimes nearly fill- 
ed. After Mass they take their 
dinner, which they have brought 
with them, and walk about and 
admire the beautiful garden, the 
hospitable proprietor and the ladies 
of the family saying kind words of 



welcome to their humbler friends. 
An hour after Mass there is rosary 
and benediction, after which the 
people return to their distant 
homes. 

But not always can a church be 
had for Mass. In some places a 
room in a private house is all that 
can be obtained, and the Catholics 
of the neighborhood, having been 
warned by letter of the intended 
service, assemble at the appointed 
hour. The priest will sit in one 
room to hear confessions, whilst 
the people wait in an adjacent one, 
where a sideboard or table is pre- 
pared as an altar. After Mass will 
often follow baptisms, ma-Triages, or 
confirmations. But the great work 
before the church in Jamaica no\v 
is to form stations with churches 
where Mass may be celebrated at 
stated times. Several such are al- 
ready established, and things are 
better than formerly, when the Holy 
Sacrifice had often to be offered up 
in the houses of Protestants. But 
much has yet to be done, and there 
is good reason to hope that the 
time will come when the small Ja- 
maica church will develop into a 
flourishing diocese. In spite of 
the prevalent indifference as to re- 
ligion, some of the Protestants are 
beginning to see that truth is not 
to be obtained in their conflict- 
ing sects, and they are turning 
their eyes Romeward in search of 
peace. 



Marguerite. 



73 



MARGUERITE. 



" FROGS, fresli frogs ! Buy a few 
frogs!" cried a sweet girl's voice, 
which blended strangely with the 
other sounds and voices round 
about the little booth near Fulton 
Market. " Frogs, fresh frogs !" 
"Ride up, gentlemen, ride up !" 
" Move on quick, move on !" 
" Look out, mister, or I'll run 
over you !" 

And on the 'buses and drays and 
express-wagons rumbled and rolled, 
and the policeman screamed him- 
self hoarse trying to keep the great 
thoroughfare clear ; the mud, which 
was knee-deep, flew in all directions, 
the jaded horses floundered and 
fell in the grimy slough, and 'twas 
Pandemonium indeed jnst here 
where pretty Marguerite's frog- 
stand stood. But the girl, who was 
used to the bustle and din, went on 
quietly knitting a stocking and call- 
ing out, " Frogs, fresh frogs ! Buy a 
few frogs !" while her words, like a 
strain of sweet music, floated away 
upon the muggy April air, heavy 
wtth oaths and villanous cries. 

We have called our heroine pret- 
ty ; yet this was not strictly true. 
Many a young woman passed 
through the market with more 
beautiful features than she had. 
Her nose was of no particular 
shape we might term it a neutral 
nose and her mouth was decided- 
ly broad; while the tall, white cap 
she wore gave her a quaint, out- 
landish appearance that made not 
a few people stare and smile. But 
Marguerite's eyes redeemed, ay, 
more than redeemed, whatever was 
faulty in the rest of her counte- 
nance. Oh ! what eyes she had 
so large and black and lustrous. 



T,ike two precious stones they seem- 
ed ; and when she turned them wist- 
fully upon you, you were fascinat- 
ed and rooted to the spot, and if 
the girl ever sold any frogs it was 
thanks to those wonderful eyes. 

Poor thing ! at the age of seven- 
teen to be left an orphan, alone and 
friendless in the big city of New 
York. Poor thing! From the Bat- 
tery up to Murray Hill, and across 
from river to river, not a solitary 
being knew or cared about her ; 
and had she died died even a vio- 
lent, sensational death the coro- 
ner's inquest would have taken up 
scarce three lines in the daily 
papers, after which, like a drop of 
water falling into the ocean, she 
would have passed out of sight and 
mind for ever. 

But no, we are wrong; there was 
one who did care for Marguerite 
one who had known her parents 
when they first came over from 
France, and had done everything 
she could to help them. But, alas ! 
down in the whirlpool of poverty 
husband and wife had disappear- 
ed and died, and many a pang 
shot across Mother Catherine's 
breast as she thought of the child 
left now to shift for herself like so 
many other waifs. 

The girl's home was in a tene- 
ment-house, and the room where 
she slept was shared by three other 
.women, who would have made it a 
filthy, disorderly place indeed ex- 
cept for Marguerite. Every morn- 
ing she swept the floor, opened the 
window to let in fresh air, and 
imparted a cosey look to what would 
otherwise have been the most 
squalid chamber in the building. 



74 



Marguerite. 



By her mattress hung a crucifix, a 
gift from Mother Catherine, and 
near the crucifix was a piece of old 
looking-glass which Marguerite had 
found in a dust-barrel. Before this 
she would daily spend a quarter of 
an hour making her toilet. Her 
dark hair was neatly gathered up 
beneath her Norman cap only one 
little tress peeping out ; across her 
bosom was pinned a clean white 
kerchief; the mud-spots were care- 
fully brushed off her tattered gown ; 
then, after lingering a moment to 
admire herself, she would sally 
forth, the envy of all the slatterns 
in the neighborhood, and the boys 
would wink to one another and 
say : " What a nice-looking gal !" 

Marguerite often wished that 
she had a better class of admirers 
than these. " But, alas !" she 
would sigh, " I am poor. Poverty 
like a mountain presses me down. 
If I could sell more frogs and get 
a new dress, then real gentlemen 
might notice me. But, alas ! I must 
be thankful I have this old calico 
thing to cover me. But even this 
is falling in rags, and I may soon 
be without shoes to my feet." 

One day, while she was thus in- 
wardly bemoaning her hard lot and 
crying out : " Frogs, fresh frogs ! 
Buy a few frogs !" without having 
anybody come to buy even a 
dime's worth, her attention was 
drawn to a middle-aged man, dress- 
ed in a faded suit of black, who 
had paused on his way up the 
street, and seemed to be listening 
with wonder to her cry. 

He was not at all handsome, yet 
there was something very striking 
about him, and you would have 
marked him out in a crowd as one 
who did not follow in the beaten 
ways of other men. 

When lie first halted, his thin, 
wan face had assumed an air of 



surprise ; but presently, advancing 
nearer to the booth, this changed 
to an expression of melancholy 
which caused the girl to feel pity 
for him. 

"Are you selling frogs, miss 
frogs ?" he said, fixing his deep, 
sunken eyes upon her. 

" Yes, sir. Would you like a 
few ?" replied Marguerite, her heart 
fluttering with hope. 

"Well, now, I thought I had 
eaten almost everything that is 
eatable; but upon my word this 
does go a little beyond my experi- 
ence," said Abel Day, as he bent 
down to examine the delicate 
white frogs' legs, which. were rang- 
ed in rows, tastefully fringed with a 
border of parsley leaves. " But are 
you sure they are what you say 
they are ? No toads among them ?" 

" We don't eat toads in France, 
sir," returned Marguerite, the blood 
mounting to her cheeks. 

" In France ! Why, are you from 
France?" 

" I am. O la belle France ! 
And father and mother used to 
keep a frog-stand in Rouen ; and 
they had a fine mushroom garden 
there, too. But folks here don't 
know what is good to eat. Oh ! I 
wish my paients had never come to 
America ; and so did they wish it 
before they died." 

" Well, what sort of a place is 
France ?" inquired the other, who 
began to feel interested in the girl. 

" I was very young, sir, when I 
left it ; therefore I cannot describe 
it to you. But I know France is a 
beautiful country. It must be beau- 
tiful ; no country in all the world 
can compare with it. Father and 
mother used to drink wine in 
France." 

" Well, people here drink wine, 
too, sometimes." 

" Do they ? All those I know 



Marguerite. 



75 



drink nasty water or else horrid 
whiskey," said Marguerite, making 
a wry mouth. 

"Humph! you are the first I 
ever met who didn't like America," 
pursued Abel Day. " However, 
I'll not let this set me against you ; 
so what is the price of your 
frogs ?" 

" How many do you wish ?" in- 
quired Marguerite, who hardly ex- 
pected him to take over a quarter 
of a dollar's worth at most. 

u Let me have the whole lot." 

" Well, will four dollars be too 
much ?" she said hesitatingly. 

" Here is your money," answered 
Abel, drawing forth the sum. " And 
now, while you are wrapping up 
these funny-looking creatures veri- 
ly, I might take 'em for little pigmies 
just ready for a swim please tell 
me how business is." 

" Bad, sir. It always is with 
me; and I sometimes think of giv- 
ing it up." 

" And trying something else ? 
Well, now, take my advice don't. 
This business can be made to pay 
as well as any other. All that's 
wanted is to know how to go about 
it." 

" Oh ! I'd be only too thankful if 
vou'd tell me what to do," exclaim- 
ed Marguerite. "Too thankful; 
for I'm almost in despair." 

"Well, then, open your ears, and 
I'll give you a ' wrinkle ' that'll set 
you on the highroad to prosper- 
ity." Here Abel lifted his forefin- 
ger ; then, after clearing his throat, 
"My young friend," he went on, 
" you must know that the world is 
largely composed of fools. Of 
course it wouldn't do to tell 'em 
so; nevertheless, it's the truth, 
though they are not to be blamed 
for it not a bit. We are born 
what we are; we don't make our- 
selves. A pumpkin can be nothing 



but a pumpkin ; a genius is a ge- 
nius. And this makes the world all 
the more interesting, at least tome. 
Why, what a dull place 'twould be 
if we were all alike ! Oh ! I do 
love to look down upon the broad 
pumpkin-field of humanity, and feel 
how far, far above it some few men 
are elevated some very few." 

" Like yourself," interposed Mar- 
guerite, with an air of seriousness, 
only belied by a laughing gleam in 
her eyes. 

" Please let that pass ; no digres- 
sions," said Abel, waving his hand. 
" But come back now to where we 
started from namely, how to make 
the frog business pay." Here he 
gave another cough. " In the first 
place, my young friend, this booth 
is altogether too small. It not only 
doesn't allow your frogs half a 
chance to be seen, but you yourself 
are almost hidden inside of it. And, 
speaking of yourself, do not be of- 
fended if I observe that you have 
wonderfully attractive eyes, and a 
charming voice, and spirits which 
keep bright and cheerful no matter 
how cloudy the sky is. Yes, this 
much I know, though I never met 
you before. Well, now, here is the 
advice I give : Hire a small store 
close by ; then have an immense 
sign-board hung over the entrance, 
with Frog Emporium painted on it 
in twelve-inch letters, and let every 
letter be of a different color, so that 
people will be attracted by it when 
they are a good block off. Then 
beneath the words Frog Emporium, 
and on the left-hand side, you must 
paint a fat, contented old mother 
frog, squatting, at the edge of a 
pond, watching a lot of merry tad- 
poles swimming about. This will 
represent maternal felicity. At the 
other end of the sign you may 
paint a hungry-looking man with 
mouth wide open, and Mr. Bullfrog 



Marguerite. 



taking a header down his throat, 
and screeching out as he goes 
down, ' This fellow knows what's 
good!' You should likewise get a 
cooking-stove, so as to have a dain- 
ty dish of frogs all prepared for 
anybody who may come in and 
wish to taste them. There, now, is 
my plan ; I submit it to your con- 
sideration. Carry it out, and you'll 
soon find it difficult to supply all 
your customers." 

"Well, indeed, sir," answered 
Marguerite, " I thank you from the 
bottom of my heart for the interest 
you take in me. But, alas ! I am 
too poor to pay the rent of ever so 
small a store ; why, I couldn't even 
pay for such a sign-board as you 
describe. In fact, if you knew how 
very narrow my means are, you 
would wonder that I can manage 
to keep alive." 

" Is that so ?" said Abel, in a 
tone of compassion. "Well, then, 
leave the sign to me; I will order 
it this very day, and the moment it 
is ready it shall be brought to you. 
I'll also go security for your rent." 

At these words Marguerite's eyes 
filled with tears, glad tears, and, 
clasping one of his hands, she press- 
ed it warmly ; while Abel thought 
to himself, " How full of sentiment 
she is ! Poor creature!" 

" Oh ! what a blessed thing it is 
to be rich," exclaimed the girl 
presently. " But all rich people, 
sir, are not like you no, indeed." 

"Never mind my wealth," said 
Abel; " we'll talk about that some 
other time. Go ahead, now, and 
carry out my notion ; put implicit 
trust in me. Everything will come 
out right in the end." 

Again Marguerite pressed his 
hand her heart was too full for 
words after which Abel Day went 
away, promising to return before 
the week was ended to see how she 



was getting on. The girl followed 
him with her eyes until he was lost 
to view, wondering who he could 
be. " Well, whoever he is," she 
thought to herself, "he is a real 
gentleman. True, his clothes are 
rather worn ; but we cannot judge 
a man by his clothes. Yes, he is a 
real gentleman, and different from 
any other that I have ever seen. 
He didn't beat me down in my 
price; no, he bought all my frogs 
and paid me what I asked. Any- 
body else would have forced me to 
take three dollars and a half or 
three dollars. I might even have 
let them go for two and a half. But 
no, he isn't like other rich persons. 
And, oh! may God bless him and 
make him happy; for I am sure 
from his looks there is something 
weighing on his heart." 

During the next few days Mar- 
guerite's thoughts constantly turned 
upon her strange friend, who had 
evidently been in downright ear- 
nest and kept his word; for the 
sign-board was promptly sent to 
her, and she could not contain her 
delight when she saw it hanging 
above the doorway of the little 
store which she hired. 

True to his promise, Abel Day 
came soon again to visit Margue- 
rite, bringing money wherewith to 
pay her month's rent in advance. 
It seemed to do him good to talk 
to her, and his face brightened 
when she told him how many peo- 
ple had already entered the Frog 
Emporium. " And every one, sir, 
who eats a plate of my frogs de- 
clares they are better than an oys- 
ter-stew. And they say, too, that 
the sign-board makes them roar 
with laughter and entices them in 
whether they will or no. O sir ! 
how can I thank you enough for 
what you have done for me ?" 

" Don't speak any thanks," re- 



Marguerite. 



77 



plied Abel. " No, don't speak any ; 
but show your thanks by being 
good and virtuous. 'Tis getting 
down in the world leads so many 
to the bad. Ay, misery is the de- 
vil's best friend. Therefore, my 
dear girl, improve your condition 
as fast as you can. Put money in 
the savings-bank ; then when you 
meet any poor wretch hard up, and 
you have the means to help him, 
do it." 

"Oh! indeed I will," said Mar- 
guerite. " But now please, kind 
sir, let me know the name of my 
benefactor. I wish to know it, that 
I may tell it to the only other 
friend I have on earth Mother 
Catherine. She'll be sure to ask 
me who you are." 

" My name is Abel Day," he re- 
plied. 

" And you live ? Well, perhaps 
I shouldn't ask that, sir. Though 
if I did know your address, I'd slip 
into your kitchen some morning 
bright and early, and cook you a 
nice mess of frogs for breakfast." 
Then, arching her pretty eyebrows : 
'' You live in Fifth Avenue beau- 
tiful Fifth Avenue ?" 

" I do, and yet I don't," answered 
Abel. " I often see myself there, 
dwelling in a marble mansion ; 'tis 
sure to happen so sure that I may 
consider myself already in Fifth 
Avenue." Here, observing a puz- 
xled look upon Marguerite's face, 
" Ah !" he added, " you do not un- 
derstand me. Well, nobody else 
does, either. But never mind. The 
world will wake up some fine morn- 
ing and find the name of Abel Day 
on every lip. And 'tis all coming 
out of here here." At these 
words he tapped his forehead. 
"My fortune will not be built on 
other men's misfortunes; 'twill not 
come through gambling in stocks, 
through swindling, through false- 



hood, through dishonor. But out 
of my brain the great tiling is 
slowly but surely taking shape and 
form which ere long will astound 
the world." 

"Well, truly, sir, I believe you. 
Oh ! I do," exclaimed Marguerite, 
who felt herself carried away by 
his own enthusiasm. " I knew from 
the first moment I laid eyes on you 
that you were an extraordinary 
man." 

4 'Tis often thus," pursued Abel 
musingly. " Genius is not seldom 
recognized by the humble ones of 
earth, when those who dwell in 
high places, with ears and eyes 
stuffed and blinded by prosperity, 
have only fleers and gibes to give." 

"And would it be showing too 
much curiosity," inquired Margue- 
rite, " if I were to ask what is this 
wonderful thing which I doubt not 
will bring you in riches and re- 
nown ? And certainly no one de- 
serves these more than yourself; 
for but for you, oh ! I shudder to 
think what might have become of 
me. My future was dark dark 
dark." 

"And I have brightened it a lit- 
tle. Yet what is what I have done 
compared with what remains to be 
done!" said Abel, speaking like one 
who thinks aloud. " O mystery 
of life ! Why is there so much 
misery around me?" Then, ad- 
dressing Marguerite : " Well, if you 
like, I will be here at four o'clock 
this afternoon, when I shall make 
clear to you what now you do not 
comprehend. But, remember, it 
must be a profound secret ; no 
other human being except yourself 
must know what I am inventing 
no other human being." 

" You will find, sir, that I can 
keep a secret," said Marguerite. 
" So please come at the hour you 
mention." 



Marguerite. 



Punctual to the minute Abel Day 
was at the Frog Emporium, which 
was so thronged with customers 
that he had to wait half an hour 
for the girl. But at length, the last 
frog being sold, off they went to- 
gether ; and as they took their way 
along the streets Marguerite won- 
dered whither he would lead her. 
Would it be to some fashionable 
quarter of the city to some place 
where quiet, well-mannered people 
dwelt? And as her companion did 
not open his lips, she was left to her 
own hopes and conjectures, and 
kept wondering and wondering, un- 
til by and by she found herself, 
with a slight pang of disappoint- 
ment, in Tompkins Square. A few 
minutes later the girl was following 
Abel Day into a third-class board- 
ing-house, and, observing several 
scrawny females making big eyes 
at her as she mounted up to his 
room, which was on the top story, 
he whispered : " They are jealous 
of you, my dear; but pay no atten- 
tion to them, and above all do not 
reveal to any of these Paul Prys 
what I am going to show you." 

Presently they reached the door 
of his chamber, which he hastily 
unlocked, saying to Marguerite: 
" Pass in quick pass in quick "; for 
Abel fancied he heard footsteps and 
voices close behind him. 

Marguerite obeyed and made 
haste into the room ; then, while 
Abel was stuffing paper into the 
keyhole, she threw her eyes about 
her in utter astonishment. 

The apartment was barely half 
the size of her own at the tenement 
building ; nor could it compare 
with it for order and neatness. In- 
deed, 'twas in the greatest disorder. 
Numberless slips of paper were 
strewn over the floor, with queer 
pencil-marks upon them, and the 
wall was covered by the same odd 



drawings, especially near the bed, 
as though Abel did most of his 
brain-work after he retired for the 
night and before he arose in the 
morning. On a shelf by the win- 
dow lay a dust-covered manuscript, 
and beside it a cigar-box half full 
of buttons, dimly visible through a 
spider's web. 

But where was the wonderful 
machine he had told her about ? 

" Here it is," spoke Abel in a 
semi-whisper and drawing some- 
thing out from under the bed. 

"Really! Oh! do let me see," 
cried Marguerite, flying towards 
him. 

" It is almost finished," added 
Abel. " But pray lower your voice, 
for there are listeners outside vile 
eavesdroppers." 

He now went on to explain what 
this curious object was, which look- 
ed like nothing so much as a big 
toy ; for all the girl could perceive 
was a stuffed chicken sitting in a 
box, gaudily painted red, white, 
and blue. 

" You must know," said Abel, 
" that every time a hen lays an egg 
the very first thing she does is to 
turn and look at it, as if to make 
sure it is really laid. Well, now, 
this machine which you behold is 
the Magic Hen's Nest. There is 
a spring bottom to it, so that the 
instant the egg is dropped it will 
disappear. Then, when the fowl 
turns to see if it is there lo ! she'll 
find it isn't there. Whereupon, 
concluding she must have made 
a mistake, like a good creature 
she'll sit down again, and presently 
out'll come egg number two, which 
will likewise vanish through the 
trap. And so on and on and on, 
until well, really, I can't tell what 
may happen in the end, for of 
course there is a limit to all good 
things : the hen may lose her wits. 



Marguerite. 



79 



But if she doesn't if she keeps her 
senses, and if I can force her to 
continue laying and laying why, 
my fortune is made sure, and I'd 
not change places with old Howe 
and his sewing-machine no, indeed 
I wouldn't." 

"Well, I declare!" ejaculated 
Marguerite when Abel was through 
with the explanation. "This is 
certainly a grand idea. Why, one 
hen will do the work of a score 
of hens." 

"Of five hundred," said Abel 
solemnly. " And I wrote some 
time ago to a couple of my ac- 
quaintances on Long Island, advis- 
ing them to sell off every hen on 
their farm except one. But they 
are not willing to follow my advice ; 
and, what's more, they both came 
here last week when I was out, 
and asked all kinds of questions 
about my health. The fools ! But 
never mind ; it's all the worse for 
them, for just as soon as I get out 
my patent down will go the price 
of hens to zero." 

" Well, upon my word, this is 
wonderful, wonderful!" said Mar- 
guerite, kneeling and stroking the 
back of the stuffed chicken. 

" Ay, and I am filled with won- 
der at myself for having invent- 
ed such a thing," continued Abel. 
" But it only shows what the brain 
of man can do. And yet what man 
is able to accomplish now is nothing 
compared with what he will accom- 
plish in the ages to come." 

"Well, what is needed, sir, to 
make this Magic Nest perfect? It 
seems to me to be in good working 
order." 

" Nothing remains to be done 
but to get a live hen and put it to 
the proof; though I have no more 
doubt of its success than I have 
of my own existence.'' 

" Well, do let me be present 



when you make the trial. Will 
you ?" 

" Yes, you may come, for you do 
not laugh and jeer at me like the 
rest of the world ; and, moreover, 
there is something soothing in your 
presence. Oh ! I believe if I had 
had you always by my side this 
Magic Nest would have been ready 
long ago." 

"And when I come again," said 
Marguerite a little timidly, " I'll 
put the room in order may I?" 

Here Abel's brow lowered; but 
quickly the dark look passed away, 
for she was gazing so sweetly at 
him, and he said : " You perceive, 
then, that it is not in order? Well, 
you are right. I live all by myself 
and have no time to sweep and 
dust no time." 

"All by yourself!" repeated 
Marguerite compassionately. 

"Yes; and when evening comes 
round I light my candle a"nd play 
at solitaire, and listen to the cats 
caterwauling on the roof." 

" How lonely !" exclaimed the 
girl. 

" Perhaps it may be. Yet in sol- 
itude one hears and sees strange 
things. I love solitude." 

" Really ?" 

"I do; nevertheless, I own 
'twould be better in some respects 
not to dwell so much by myself. 
Therefore I give you leave to come 
here whenever you please ; yes, 
come and sweep and rummage and 
turn things topsy-turvy, if you like." 

At this Marguerite burst into a 
laugh. 

"Ha! probably you think my 
apartment is already topsy-turvy? 
Well, it only seems so to you ; to 
my eye there is perfect order in all 
this chaos." 

" And the buttons, sir, in yonder 
cigar-box " 

Marguerite did not end the 



8o 



Marguerite. 



phrase ; she hoped he would under- 
stand her, and Abel did. 

" Humph ! you have discovered 
those buttons, eh? Well, they came 
off my clothes. And here let me ob- 
serve, my young friend, the next im- 
portant thing to invent is a suit of 
clothes without any buttons." 

"Well, until you invent one, 
please allow me to sew those but- 
tons on again. Will you ?" 

"Alas!" replied Abel, "the 
shirts and coats and trousers to 
which they once belonged are long 
since worn out ; and now I have no 
clothes left but the clothes I have 
on." 

" Tins was a very fine suit once," 
said Marguerite. " The cloth is ex- 
cellent." 

" Yes, I had it made by a fash- 
ionable tailor; for I intended to 
wear it when I went to visit influ- 
ential people, and try and interest 
them in my in my " 

Here Abel heaved a sigh, while 
a look of deeper gloom shadowed 
his face than the girl had yet ob- 
served upon it. 

" Pray tell me what troubles you," 
said Marguerite. " Do tell me. 
Perhaps I may be able to comfort 
you." Then, as he made no re- 
sponse, she'went on : " Have those 
of whom you sought aid turned a 
cold shoulder upon you ? Have 
they refused to help you with this 
Magic Hen's Nest ? Why, I 
thought, sir, 'twas a profound se- 
cret ; that you had told nobody 
about it." 

" No, no; I don't allude to this, 
but to something else to something 
which I cannot think of without an 
agony of mind I hope God may spare 
you from ever suffering. 1 had for- 
gotten all about it ; I had not thought 
of it for ever so long, till our conversa- 
tion brought it back to me. Oh! do 
let me forget it forget it for ever." 



"I guessed when I first saw you, 
poor dear man, that there was a 
heavy burden on your heart," spoke 
Marguerite inwardly. " Now your 
own lips have confessed it to me. 
Oh! if I only knew you better, I 
might be able to console you." 

She refrained, however, from ask- 
ing again what his cross was ; but 
little doubting that 'twas connected 
in some way with another inven- 
tion, she determined on a future 
occasion to ask him to tell her the 
history of his life. " And who 
knows but I may find the means of 
bringing back the smiles to his 
mournful visage. If I do, 'twill be 
a slight return for all the kindness 
he has shown me." 

Here Marguerite cast another 
glance about the forlorn-looking 
chamber, and wondered how he had 
been able to pay the first quarter's 
rent of her store. " He must have 
pinched himself to do it," she 
thought to herself. "Oh! what 
other man in New York with only 
one suit of clothes would have been 
so generous ?" 

And now, ere she withdrew, her 
feelings got the better of her judg- 
ment, and she burst into a fervent 
expression of thanks for his great 
benevolence and sympathy, and 
hoped that for her sake he had not 
deprived himself of money which 
he really needed. But Abel sharp- 
ly interrupted her. 

" Do not talk thus," he said, " if 
you have true faith in my Magic 
Nest. Poor I may seem, but I 
consider myself rich ever so rich ; 
a mountain of gold is within my 
reach. You ought to be convinced 
of it, yet still you doubt." 

" Oh ! no, no ; I don't doubt it for 
one moment," answered Margue- 
rite, very much confused. " Pray, 
sir, be not offended at my words 
I forgot " ; then, looking up in his 



Marguerite. 



Si 



face, " But I cannot help speaking 
what is in my heart. O sir ! you 
are the dearest person to me in all 
the wide world." 

" Well, come here some evening 
and play at solitaire with me," said 
Abel in a milder tone. " But no, it 
won't be solitaire with you it will 
be two-handed euchre." 

" Oh ! I'll come most willingly. 
True, I know nothing about cards, 
but you can teach me." 

The girl now bade him adieu, 
and his parting words to her were: 

" I will inform you when I am 
ready to experiment with the live 
hen. But, remember, breathe not 
a syllable of it to any human be- 
ing." 

During the week which followed 
this visit to Abel Day's den as 
the other boarders called his room 
Marguerite did not see her bene- 
factor. But daily she looked for 
him, and he was seldom absent 
from her thoughts. He was so 
vastly unlike other people the 
selfish, deceitful herd around her ; 
loving solitude, yet evidently glad 
to have her with him ; poor, yet 
calling himself rich ; full of bright 
hopes, yet a prey to melancholy. 
His very singularities possessed a 
charm for the girl and made her 
long for his coming. 

" He brings me into quite anoth- 
er world," she said ; and while 
she was selling frogs (business at 
the Frog Emporium was increas- 
ing rapidly) Marguerite would in- 
dulge in pleasing reveries about 
good Abel Day. She almost hoped 
that his fortune might not come 
too soon. 

" Yes, I should like him to stay 
awhile longer in his humble home, 
so that I might have a chance to 
make it snug and cosey for him. 
We might pass happy days there 
together happy days." 

VOL. XXVI. 6 



And every morning and evening 
she knelt before her crucifix and 
prayed for Abel. 

But if Marguerite often thought 
of Abel Day, he did not think of 
her ; no, not once during these sev- 
en days. Her presence had indeed 
flashed a ray of light into the dark- 
ness of his soul ; but it was like the 
coming and going of a meteor, and 
the instant she left him he relapsed 
into his sombre mood. The paper 
remained stuffed in the keyhole ; 
ever and anon he would utter a 
word to himself, but 'twas in a 
whisper; and thus from morning 
till night, solitary and silent, he 
passed the time, seated on a bench 
with his hollow eyes fixed upon the 
Magic Nest inventing, inventing, 
inventing; for, although Abel had 
not told Marguerite, there was still 
one little thing wanting to make 
the invention absolutely perfect. 

Then, when dusk approached and 
the first cat began to caterwaul, he 
would get into bed, and there rack 
his brain for hours longer and un- 
till the candle went out. People 
wondered how he managed to live 
without eating ; but a few crusts of 
bread sufficed to keep Abel alive, 
and 'twas one of his odd fancies 
that we might in time bring our- 
selves to live without nourishment. 
"Oh! he is thinner than ever, 
poor dear man," exclaimed Mar- 
guerite, when she saw Abel enter- 
ing her store the next Monday 
afternoon ; and he was carrying a 
hen under his arm. Then, after 
the first warm greeting was over, 
she made haste to prepare a nice 
dish of frogs, which she invited him 
to partake of. But Abel shook his 
head, and it was not until she had 
almost gone on her knees that he 
finally placed the hen in her safe- 
keeping and sat down to the savory 
repast. 



82 



Marguerite. 



" Oh ! I'm so glad you relish my 
frogs ; everybody declares I cook so 
well," said the girl, as she stood 
watching him. 

" The world thinks far too much 
about eating," returned Abel. " It 
is the grossest act humanity can 
perform; and I believe if we tried 
we might exist without food." 

" Well, I hope that day is far off," 
said Marguerite; "for when it ar- 
rives I'll have to close my busi- 
ness." 

/'Ah! true, I didn't think of 
that," said Abel, rising up from the 
table. " But now are you ready to 
accompany me and witness the 
triumph of my Magic Nest?" 

" Yes, indeed I am ; I wouldn't 
miss it for anything," answered 
Marguerite ; and so, telling a cus- 
tomer, who appeared just at this 
moment, that the last Emporium 
frog was sold, not a single one left, 
she closed the store and they de- 
parted. 

"You are happy to-day," observ- 
ed the girl when they had gone 
half-way to Tompkins Square, and 
hearing Abel give a laugh. " Oh ! 
I'm so glad. Let us always try to 
be happy." But even as she spoke 
his countenance settled once more 
into the old look, and, bending down 
(for Abel was rather tall), " Learn 
this truth, my young friend," he 
said : " Nothing lies like a laugh." 

" Oh ! no, no," exclaimed Mar- 
guerite, making bold to disagree 
with him ; " people only laugh when 
they feel happy. Laughter always 
tells the truth. And since I have 
known you, sir, I laugh ever so 
much ; for I have now a good thick 
pair of shoes, and the water cannot 
soak in and wet my feet. And 
don't you see, too, I have a new 
dress ? And I am already laying 
by money in the savings-bank; and 
it all comes from your brilliant idea 



of setting up a Frog Emporium. 
Oh ! yes, yes, I laugh a great deal 
now a very great deal." 

Then, as he made no response, 
she went on: "You are a genius, 
sir, a genius !" 

" Ah ! you recognize in me the 
divine spark ?" murmured Abel, 
his visage faintly brightening. 
" Well, you are the first who has 
done so the very first and you 
shall share in my triumph ; ay, half 
the gold-mine shall be yours." 
Then, after a pause, " Do you 
know," he added, "you may ere 
long be dwelling in Fifth Avenue 
and wearing diamonds and silks; 
though, if you follow my advice, 
you will always dress plainly and 
never change your pretty French 
cap for a fashionable hat full of 
feathers and ribbons." 

"Really!" cried Marguerite, 
whose faith in Abel Day was un- 
bounded. " Living in Fifth Avenue, 
beautiful Fifth Avenue!" And she 
clapped her hands and skipped 
merrily along in front of him. 

But presently from Abel's lips 
burst another laugh, and. this time 
there was something strange and 
wild about it which caused Mar- 
guerite to pause and look around ; 
then, taking his hand, they walked 
on side by side in silence, and oh ! 
how much she wished that he might 
not appear so unhappy. 

At length they reached Abel's 
home; and if Abel's fellow-board- 
ers had stared with astonishment 
the first time they saw him mount- 
ing to his room accompanied by a 
strange young woman, they made 
bigger eyes now as he ascended 
the stairway with a hen under his 
arm ; nor was it easy for Margue- 
rite to keep a grave countenance 
when presently the chicken began 
to cackle ; and the cackling of the 
chicken and the giggling of the in- 



Marswente. 



quisitive females, who were follow- 
ing at a proper distance, made a 
very queer chorus. 

" Let 'em laugh," growled Abel 
after he had entered his chamber 
and fastened the door "let 'em 
laugh; my day of triumph is nigh, 
and then they'll be the veriest syco- 
phants at my feet. But I'll spurn 
them all ; let 'em laugh." 

And now began the trial of the 
Magic Nest; Abel first cautioning 
Marguerite to speak in an under- 
tone, if she had anything to say. 
Gently, as tenderly as a mother 
might handle her baby, the fowl 
was placed in the box ; and forth- 
with she ceased to cackle, while 
the others ceased even to whisper. 
Then, motioning the girl to sit 
down on the bench, Abel stood be- 
side her, awaiting with intense ex- 
citement the laying of the first egg. 
In a couple of minutes his brow 
was wet with perspiration, then his 
whole face became moistened ; and 
when, by and by, after what seem- 
ed an age 'twas only a quarter of 
an hour the hen did lay an egg, 
then rose up to look at it, Abel 
trembled so violently that Margue- 
rite inquired if he were ill. But 
without heeding her question he 
went on trembling and saying, 
"The egg has vanished, vanished! 
and she can't believe her eyes she 
can't believe her eyes !" And now 
for about a minute and a half it did 
really seem as if the hen, concluding 
she had made a mistake, was going to 
proceed and lay another egg, when, 
lo ! she coolly stepped out of the 
box, and, after shaking her feathers, 
( ommenced pecking the bits of pa- 
per scattered over the floor. 

When Abel Day perceived this 
liis head swam a moment; then 
clenching his fists, and his caver- 
nous eyes flashing fire, he sprang 
towards the chicken, and, forgetting 



all about eavesdroppers, he scream- 
ed loud enough to be heard from 
cellar to garret : " I'll force you to 
do your duty ! I will, I will !" 

But, as ill-luck would have it, the 
window was open, and out of it 
flew the hen, so hotly pursued by 
Abel that he came within an ace 
of passing through it too ; which 
had he done, his neck would cer- 
tainly have been broken, for Abel 
had no wings. 

Then, as if to make sport of him, 
the perverse creature perched her- 
self on a neighboring chimney, 
where she set up a loud cackling. 

" Hark, they are mocking me 
again! Hear them, hear them!" 
groaned Abel Day, clapping his 
hands to his head. " And the hor- 
ror, too, is coming over rne again : 
it always comes with those jeering 
voices." 

" I hear nobody. Oh ! I beg you* 
to be calm," said Marguerite, now 
thoroughly alarmed on Abel's ac- 
count. Then, leading him to the 
bench, " What agitates you so r 
dear friend ? Oh ! do, do calm your- 
self and tell me what you fear." 

Abel sank down on the bench,, 
and, after groaning once more r 
" Hark ! hark ! They are mocking 
me," did not utter another word, 
hard though she urged him to 
speak; but, with eyes glued to the 
Magic Nest, he remained dumb and 
motionless. 

Then by and by evening came,, 
and the twilight deepened.^ into 
night, yet still Abel moved not, nor 
opened his lips, unless occasionally 
to heave a sigh. Then the moon 
rose, and as its pale rays streamed 
into the room and fell upon the suf- 
ferer's face, it assumed an expres- 
sion so unearthly that Marguerite 
was filled with awe. 

And now a dreadful, startling 
thought occurred to her: her dear 



84 



Marguerite. 



friend might be mad ! What a 
pang this gave her tender heart ! 
What bright, new-born hopes be- 
came suddenly blasted. How many 
fair castles in the air crumbled 
away into ghostly ruins at the 
thought that Abel Day was mad ! 

" Is it possible," she asked her- 
self, " that this good man he who 
has been so kind to me, whom I 
looked up to as one far, far above 
the cold, heartless world is it pos- 
sible that he is bereft of reason ?" 
And even as Marguerite breathed 
these words she for the first time 
grew conscious of something glow- 
ing in her bosom more ardent than 
friendship for Abel Day. 

" I love him," she murmured " I 
love him. And no matter what 
people may think of me, I'll stay 
by him and nurse him ; I'll be his 
servant and truest friend as long as 
he lives." 

Trying indeed was this night for 
Marguerite oh ! very, very. It 
seemed as if it never would end. 
Nor did day bring any relief to her 
anxiety. The blessed, life-giving 
sunshine shimmered in ; the chim- 
ney-swallows twittered by the win- 
dow ; a stray bee, blown away by 
the morning breeze from his far-off 
hive, flew in and buzzed about the 
chamber; still Abel remained like 
one turned into stone, except for 
the deep-drawn sighs which ever 
and anon escaped his lips. 

And so this day passed, and so 
day followed day, without bringing 
any change in his mysterious con- 
dition. 

Of course Marguerite was not 
with him the whole time. But she 
took care whenever she quitted the 
room to lock the door ; then she 
would hasten with winged feet to 
the Frog Emporium, where she 
would spend four or five hours ; 
then back Marguerite hurried, hop- 



ing and praying that no ill had be- 
fallen Abel during her absence. But 
while she was with the poor man 
she did more than simply watch 
him. The ugly pencil-marks were 
rubbed off the wall ; the floor was 
thoroughly swept ; the cobwebs 
were brushed out of the corners ; 
and many another thing which only 
woman's hand can do Marguerite 
did. On a little table, too (the 
only piece of furniture besides the 
bench and bed), was spread a good, 
substantial meal for Abel to eat the 
moment he felt hungry; and it 
amazed her to see him fasting so 
long. 

We need not say that everybody 
in the house had his curiosity now 
raised to the highest pitch ; and the 
gossiping, prying females shook 
their virtuous heads and muttered 
no complimentary things of Abel's 
faithful nurse. 

" Well, they may say of me what- 
ever they like," said the brave girl. 
" My conscience doesn't reproach 
me; it tells me I am doing right. 
When I was down Abel Day helped 
me, and now, when he is down, I'll 
help him." 

At length, one afternoon, weary 
of the long, unbroken silence of 
the chamber, Marguerite began to 
sing. The song was one she had 
learnt from her mother, and was 
called " Normandie, chere Nor- 
mandie." She had a rich contralto 
voice, and the effect which the me- 
lody wrought upon Abel was some- 
thing perfectly marvellous ; and as 
her face happened to be turned to- 
wards his, she noticed the change 
at once, and her eyes filled with 
glad tears. 

"Glory! glory! I am escaping 
from the infernal regions ; the dark- 
ness and the voices are leaving me. 
Thank God! thank God!" he cried. 
And Marguerite, only too happy to 



Marguerite. 



rouse him out of his lethargy, con- 
tinued singing for well-nigh half an 
hour. Then, placing herself beside 
him on the bench, she gave way to 
her joy in laughter and merry talk, 
while Abel's countenance wore an 
expression almost radiant, and, rest- 
ing one of his hands on her head 
as a father might have done, " All 
is blue sky at last," he said. " I 
feel as I have not felt in many a 
day. Oh ! had I had you always 
with me, the demons would never 
have shrieked in my ears ; your an- 
gelic songs would have driven them 
away." 

" Well, you can't imagine," re- 
turned Marguerite, " how happy it 
makes me to make you happy." 
Then, after a pause : " But now, 
dear friend, I have a favor to 
ask : I wish you to tell me the his- 
tory of your life; for there is a mys- 
tery in it I am sure there is. Do 
tell it to me. Not that I am cu- 
rious, but I firmly believe 'twill do 
you good to let me carry a part of 
the burden which has almost crush- 
ed you down." 

" Fool, fool that I was to live all 
by myself so many years!" spoke 
Abel in a musing tone, and paying 
no heed to her request. " The 
mocking voices cannot abide cheer- 
ful company ; it frightens them 
off." Then, turning to Marguerite : 
" You'll not let them come back, 
will you ?" 

" You are dreaming," answered 
the girl, patting his hand. " Why, 
this room was still as the tomb 
until I began to sing." 

" No, no, it wasn't ; I heard them 
all the while." 

" Well, don't fear them any more. 
I'll stay with you; I'll be your ca- 
nary, your nightingale, your musi- 
cal box," she said with a merry 
laugh. " So pray begin and give 
me a little of your past history ; for 



the sooner you begin the sooner 
you'll end, and then I'll sing an- 
other song." 

" Well, well, to please you I'll do 
anything. Therefore learn that I 
was born in Massachusetts. But 
of my early years I need say very 
little. My father died when I was 
a child ; at the age of fourteen I 
had to shift for myself, and from 
that time on it was a hard struggle 
against poverty. Somehow I didn't 
succeed in anything I put my hand 
to. I tried this thing and that ; I 
tried everything almost, but was al- 
ways unfortunate. And, do you 
know, I believe in luck. Oh ! I do. 
Some are born with it, others are 
not ; and these last will turn out 
failures, be they ever so honest and 
hard-working. Well, undoubtedly 
I belong to the unlucky ones; and, 
what's more, I verily believe there 
is such a thing as having too much 
brains. Why, many a pumpkin- 
headed fellow I used to know is 
to-day a millionaire can't explain 
it, but there's the fact ; while I 
am well, you see what I am, and 
I have reached middle life ; and 
my miserable home" here he 
threw a glance around the room ; 
then, clasping his hands : " But 
dear me, what has happened ? Is 
this my den ? Why, how changed 
it looks !" 

" I have been turning things top- 
sy-turvy," answered Marguerite, 
with a twinkle in her eye. " But 
pray don't stop to admire the 
change. Please go on ; I am so in- 
terested." 

"Well, finally, after trying every- 
thing," continued Abel, "and, as I 
have observed, failing in everything 
I tried, I one day bethought my- 
self of turning inventor. And the 
more I thought about it the more 
confident I felt that I should suc- 
ceed ; indeed, I passed a whole 



86 



Marguerite. 



week in a delightful reverie, where- 
in I saw myself wealthy and famous, 
and all from one single invention. 
Then, when this dreamy, happy 
week was gone by, I set about in- 
venting a Patent Log a thing very 
much needed by mariners ; for the 
present method of determining the 
speed of a vessel is both clumsy 
and unreliable. 'Twas here in this 
chamber, on this bench, I began 
my brain labor, and for a while I 
made excellent progress. But after 
a couple of months I got tired of 
sitting up and took to my bed, 
where I used to lie inventing in- 
venting all day long, and even all 
night too. I seemed to be able to 
do without sleep ; until one even- 
ing oh ! I'll never forget it" 
here he paused and shuddered 
"one evening the room became 
suddenly full of voices. From un- 
der the bed, through the keyhole 
and window, down the chimney, on 
every side of me these horrible 
voices were yelling and screeching, 
'He'll never succeed never 
succeed'; ' Born to ill-luck'; 'All 
time wasted'; 'He'll go to the 
dogs and hang himself!' What hap- 
pened after this terrible moment I 
can't say; I must have gone off in- 
to a fever. I remember nothing. 
All I know is that one day but 
how long afterwards I cannot tell 
I became, 45 it were, alive again, 
and found myself inventing quite 
a different thing namely, the Magic 
Nest, which, as you know, has once 
more proved that I am born to fail 
in whatever I undertake. And 
now, alas ! I don't see how I'll be 
able to earn a living; to confess the 
truth, I have not one dollar left in 
the world." 

" Bah ! Don't be down-hearted 
on that account," said Marguerite. 
" My Frog Emporium is a little 
gold-mine, and you shall need for 



nothing. Why, as I have already 
remarked more than once, I'd have 
been ere now in a wretched plight 
but for you. You stretched out a 
helping hand ; and whatever the 
world may think of you, and what- 
ever you think of yourself I I 
call you a genius." 

When Marguerite had delivered 
this speech, so full of balm to 
poor heart-broken Abel, she rose 
from the bench and flew to the old, 
neglected manuscript. A bright 
idea had flashed upon her 'twas 
an inspiration. She had already 
turned over its pages and found 
them covered with drawings as un- 
intelligible to her as Egyptian hie- 
roglyphics ; but she remembered 
that in one place, written in pencil, 
were the words, " This is Abel Day's 
Patent Log." 

In a moment she was back at 
Abel's side, and, holding up the 
manuscript before him, " I do be- 
lieve," she said, " had I been with 
you when you were laboring on this 
invention, that you would not have 
fallen ill, for I should not have let 
you overtask your brain ; and by 
this time 'twould have been quite 
finished, and you'd have been in the 
eyes of the whole world what I 
know you to be a great, great, 
great man." 

But Abel, instead of replying, put 
his hands to his ears and shivered 
as if he were stricken with cold. 

" O dear friend ! what is the 
matter now ?" exclaimed Margue- 
rite. 

" The very sight of that manu- 
script makes me dread the voices 
the horrid voices. Hark ! one is 
beginning to yell again. It says I 
must hang myself in the end. 
Hark ! Don't you hear it ?" 

" Listen to me, and not to the 
voice," said Marguerite, still hold- 
ing before his eyes the page where- 



Marguerite. 



on was written, " This is Abel Day's 
Patent Log." "Take courage and 
look bolder at this manuscript, 
while I sing for you." 

It was a cheery, jovial song she 
sang. She threw her whole soul 
into it, and it wrought upon Abel 
the happy effect she hoped it would. 
When the song was ended, he bow- 
ed his head and murmured : " O my 
blessing ! my good angel ! How 
much sunshine you bring to me ! 
Already the voice is gone. You 
have indeed power to drive the fiend 
away." 

" Well, now, Abel," answered 
Marguerite, "you whom whom I 
I " Here her tongue faltered. 

But as mother earth cannot re- 
strain the crystal waters murmur- 
ing within her bosom, so it was im- 
possible for the girl to hold back 
the words which were bubbling up 
from the pure fountain of her heart ; 
and presently, with a blushing rose 
on each cheek, she spoke out and 
said : " You whom I love, let me 
ask you to kneel with me and offer 
thanks to Almighty God that I am 
able to drive away your melancholy. 
Yes, let us say a prayer of thanks- 
giving." 

Abel did as she wished, and they 
knelt and prayed together. 

Then, when they had risen from 
their knees, " And now," added 
Marguerite, " I hope you will set 
courageously to work at this Pa- 
tent Log, and while you are thus 
engaged I'll play the nightingale 
and sing my very best ; will you ?" 

Abel's eyes were swimming with 
tears, and, taking her hand in his, 
" You love me ?" he said in tremu- 
lous accents. "Oh! how kind, how 
good it is in you to love me. I 
have been alone since my boyhood 
all alone. Nobody since the far- 
off day when I parted from my mo- 
ther ever spoke to me as you do. 



The world appeared like a desert 
to me. I cared very little for life. 
All was a barren waste on every 
side of me until this hour. But 
now I would not die for anything. 
I wish to live because you live ; and, 
O Marguerite ! my heart would stop 
beating if you were to leave me." 

" But I never will leave you." 

" No, don't. Let us live together^ 
Marguerite, always together ; be my 
wife." 

" Well, now," answered Margue- 
rite, her heart overflowing, yet at 
the same time speaking with firm- 
ness and decision, " you must set 
immediately to work ; a quarter of 
an hour will tye enough for to-day. 
To-morrow you may labor half an 
hour, and perhaps next day an 
hour, until this invention is com- 
pleted ; and, remember, all the while 
you are inventing I'll play the 
lark, the canary, or whatever you 
choose to call me." 

Abel listened to her words, and, 
albeit weak and hardly in a state 
to use his brain, he actually made a 
little progress with his invention 
during the brief space she allowed 
him to work. What unspeakable 
joy it gave Marguerite to think 
that she might be able to restore 
him to full mental health ! " And 
when he does become entirely him- 
self oh ! then then " Here her 
song waxed louder and more melo- 
dious ; for her heart was thrilling 
with a rapture which only the voice 
of music can express. 

Yes, Marguerite, 'twas verily an 
inspiration that caused you to di- 
rect Abel's mind anew to the Pat- 
ent Log; for this is a sane and 
wholesome object whereupon to 
exert his faculties, and not a mad- 
man's dream like the Magic Hen's 
Nest. 

Day by day Abel gained in 
health ; his appetite and sleep re- 



88 



The Bells. 



turned ; he laughed as merrily as 
Marguerite ; and people could 
scarcely believe he was the same 
man. But the girl never relaxed 
her vigilance. So passed away the 
spring and summer ; and when au- 
tumn came round not the fairest 
castle in the air which Marguerite 
had built for herself did surpass 
the bright reality which opened be- 
fore her vision. For, lo ! the Pat- 
ent Log was patented, and its suc- 
cess went beyond Abel's most ex- 
travagant hopes. A mass-meeting 
of ship-owners and merchants was 
held at the Cooper Institute to do 
him honor ; the press lauded him 
to the skies ; the tongue of Fame 
was chiming his name far and wide. 
But, better than all, a cataract of 
gold was rolling into his pocket. 

Of course before long our friend 
changed his quarters ; and, in his 
new and elegant home, right above 
the bed Marguerite hung the cru- 
cifix which Mother Catherine had 
given her; then she and her be- 
trothed went to the Convent of 
Mercy to visit the good nun, who 



wept glad tears when she heard 
their story. 

" Well, I lean upon her as much 
as she leans upon me ; we love and 
help each other in all things," 
spoke Abel. 

"And ahvays, always will," con- 
tinued Marguerite. 

" God bless you, my children !" 
said Mother Catherine. 

A fortnight later the happy cou- 
ple were married; after which 
they sailed on their wedding tour 
across the sea to Normandy. And 
one day, as they were leaving the 
beautiful church of Saint-Ouen, 
whither they had gone to give 
thanks to God for their 'great hap- 
piness, Marguerite spoke and said : 
" I once thought there was no 
country in all the world like 
France ; but now, my dear husband, 
I love America more." 

"And I," returned Abel, "love 
France as much as I do America ; 
for, although I believe good wives 
may be found everywhere, it was 
this sunny land which gave me my 
pretty Marguerite." 



THE BELLS. 

I STAND by Giotto's gleaming tower, 

In gloom of the cathedral's wing, 
And hear, in the soft sunset hour, 

The bells to benediction ring. 
That Duomo boasts : " Stone upon stone, 

Eternally I rise and rise ; 
So, pace by pace, zone over zone, 

I am uprounded to the skies." 
But simpler effort, as direct 

As that of palm or pine, impels 
This wonder of the architect 

To strike heaven's blue with clash of bells. 



The Bells. 89 

Etrurian Athens! long ago 

Thy sister of the Violet Crown, 
In colonnades like carven snow 

All crumbled now, and bare, and brown 
With ashes of dead sunshine sate 

Among her gods, and had no voice 
Potential as their high estate 

To summon to the sacrifice. 
Worth even the Phidian Jove sublime, 

Chryselephantine, and all else 
Of the lost forms of olden time, 

Fair Florence ! are thy living bells. 

O bells ! O bells ! when angels sang, 

Surely though no Evangelist 
Has told a silvery peal first rang, 

And Christian chimes came in with Christ. 
For bells ! O bells ! not brazen horn, 

Nor sistrum, sackbut, cymbals, gong, 
Harsh dissonance of creeds forlorn, 

But your sweet tongues to Him belong. 
Crowning with music as ye swing 

This lily in stone, this lamp of grace, 
Wherever Christ the Lord is King, 

Ye have commission and a place. 

This tower stands square to winds that smite, 

Nor fears the thunders to impale. 
Prince of the Powers of Air! by rite 

Of baptism shall the bells prevail. 
Shine, Stella Maris ! and O song 

Of Ave Mary, and Vesper bells, 
Be drowned not in the city's throng! 

For sad and sweet as Dante tells 
Comes, strangely here, the sense to me 

Of parting for some unknown clime, 
A sense of silence and the sea, 

Charmed by the tryst of star and chime. 

O bells ! O bells ! the worlds are buoyed, 

Like beacon-bells, on waves profound, 
In all no silence as no void 

The very flowers are cups of sound. 
We dream and dreaming we rejoice 

That we, when great Death draws us nigh, 
Hearing, may understand the Voice 

Which rocks a bluebell or the sky ; 
And, with new senses finely strung 

In grander Eden's blossoming, 
May see a golden planet swung, 

Yet hear the silver lilies ring ! 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



OUR NEW INDIAN POLICY AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTY. 



" WHILE it cannot be denied that the 
government of the United States, in the 
general terms and temper of its legisla- 
tion, has evinced a desire to deal gene- 
rously with the Indians, it must be ad- 
mitted that the actual treatment they 
have received has been unjust and ini- 
quitous beyond the power of words to express. 
Taught by the government that they had 
rights entitled to respect, when these 
rights have been assailed by the rapacity 
of the white man the arm which should 
have been raised to protect them has 
been ever ready to sustain the aggressor. 
The history of the government connec- 
tions with the Indians is a shameful re- 
cord of broken treaties and unfulfilled pro- 



We take the above sentences 
from the first report of the Board of 
Indian Commissioners appointed by 
President Grant under the act of 
Congress of April 10, 1869. The 
commissioners, nine in number, 
were gentlemen selected for their 
presumed piety, philanthropy, and 
practical business qualities. None 
of them was a Catholic ; in taking 
their testimony not only with re- 
spect to the general treatment of 
the Indians, but in regard to the 
religious interests of some of the 
tribes, we shall not be suspected of 
summoning witnesses who are pre- 
judiced in favor of the Catholic 
Church. One of the commission- 
ers, indeed, Mr. Felix R. Brunot, 
of Pittsburgh, the chairman of the 
board, appears to have been inspired 
at times with a lively fear and ha- 
tred of the church ; his colleagues 
Messrs. Robert Campbell, of St. 
Louis ; Nathan Bishop, of New 
York ; William E. Dodge, of New 
York; John V. Farwell, of Chica- 
go; George H. Stuart, of Phila- 
delphia; Edward S. Tobey, of Bos- 



ton ; John D. Lang, of Maine ; and 
Vincent Colyer, of New York are 
gentlemen quite free from any pre- 
dilection in favor of Catholicity. 
The passage we have taken from 
their first report relates only to the 
worldly affairs of the Indians. But 
a perusal of the various annual re- 
ports of this board, of the Commis- 
sioners of Indian Affairs, and of the 
Indian agents, from 1869 until 
1876, has convinced us that the in- 
juries inflicted upon the Indians 
have been by no means confined to 
those caused by the avarice and ra- 
pacity of the whites. Sectarian fa- 
naticism, Protestant bigotry, and 
anti-Christian hatred have been call- 
ed in to play, and the arm of the gov- 
ernment has been made the instru- 
ment for the restriction, and even 
the abolition, of religious freedom 
among many of the Indian tribes. 

We are confident that such treat- 
ment is not in consonance with the 
wishes of the American people. 
Have we not been taught, from our 
youth up, that the two chief glories 
of our country were the equality of 
all its citizens before the law and 
their absolute freedom in all reli- 
gious matters ? True, the Indians 
are not citizens, but we have un- 
dertaken the task of acting as their 
guardians, with the hope of ulti- 
mately fitting them, or as many of 
them as may be tough enough to 
endure the process, for the duties 
of citizenship. To begin this task 
by teaching our pupils that religion 
is not a matter of conscience that 
the government has a right to force 
upon a people a form of Christian- 
ity against which their consciences 
revolt and to punish them for at- 



Our New Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



tempting to adhere to the church 
whose priests first taught them to 
know and to fear God, is not mere- 
ly a moral wrong; it is a crime. 

The whole number of Indians in 
the United States and Territories, 
according to the very careful and 
systematic census contained in the 
report of the Commissioner of In- 
dian Affairs for 1875, was 279,333, 
exclusive of those in Alaska. It is 
not a very large number ; the pop- 
ulation of the city of New York 
exceeds it nearly fourfold. The 
Indian Bureau classifies these peo- 
ple under four heads : 

I. 98,108 Indians who " are wild 
and scarcely tractable to any ex- 
tent beyond that of coming near 
enough to the government agent to 
receive rations and blankets." 

II. 52,113 Indians "who are 
thoroughly convinced of the neces- 
sity of labor, and are actually un- 
dertaking it, and with more or less 
readiness accept the direction and 
assistance of government agents to 
this end." 

III. 115,385 Indians " who have 
come into possession of allotted 
lands and other property in stock 
and implements belonging to a 
landed estate." 

IV. 13,727 Indians who are de- 
scribed as " roamers and vagrants," 
and of whom the commissioner, the 
Hon. Edward P. Smith, speaks in 
the following Christian and states- 
man-like language : 

" They are generally as harmless as 
vagrants and vagabonds can be in a civ- 
ilized country. They are found in all 
stages of degradation produced by licen- 
tiousness, intemperance, idleness, and 
poverty. Without land, unwilling to 
leave their haunts for a homestead upon 
a reservation, and scarcely in any way 
related to, or recognized by, the govern- 
ment, they drag out a miserable life. 
Themselves corrupted and the source of 
corruption, they seem to serve by their 



continued existence but a single useful 
purpose that of affording a living illus- 
tration of the tendency and effect of bar- 
barism allowed to expand itself uncur- 
ed," 

or, perhaps, of "affording a liv- 
ing illustration " of the wisdom and 
mercy of a policy which, neglect- 
ing these poor wretches "without 
land," comes down upon other 
tribes, living peaceably and thriv- 
ingly upon reservations " solemnly 
secured to them for ever," takes 
from them their homes and farms, 
and drives them forth to a new and 
desolate land; or, if they resist, ex- 
asperates them into a war that ends 
by adding them to the number of 
" roamers and vagabonds." The 
sanguinary conflict which, as we 
write, is still being waged between 
a portion of the Nez-Perces In- 
dians and the troops under com- 
mand of that eminent " Christian 
soldier," General Howard, is a 
flagrant instance of the manner in 
which Indians of the first and se- 
cond classes enumerated by the 
commissioner are driven into the 
category of "roamers and vaga- 
bonds." We cannot pause to trace 
the history of this our last and 
most needless Indian war ; we pass 
it by with the remark that cine of 
the indirect causes of it, according 
to the report of the Commissioner 
of Indian Affairs for 1874, appears 
to have been the action of the 
" American Board of Commission- 
ers for Foreign Missions," a Presby- 
terian organization, in selling to a 
speculator certain lands within the 
reservation which did not belong 
to the board, but to the Indians 
themselves. 

The Deport of the commissioner 
for 1876 the Hon. J. Q. Smith- 
contains a number of statistical 
tables, an analysis of which will 
aid us in forming a correct concep- 



9 2 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



tion of the present condition of the 
Indians embraced in the commis- 
sioner's third class, as well as a por- 
tion of those in his second class. 
According to these tables which 
contain the latest official returns 
from all the agencies the whole 
number of Indians, exclusive of 
those in Alaska, and of the " roam- 
ers and vagrants," is put down at 
266,151, of whom 40,639 are of 
mixed blood. The latter are for 
the most part the children of In- 
dian mothers and of French, Span- 
ish, and American fathers. No less 
than 153,000 of the whole number 
" come directly under the civiliz- 
ing influences of the government 
agencies," and of these 104,818 
" wear citizen's dress." The aban- 
donment of the picturesque blanket 
for the civilizing coat, the embroid- 
ered buckskin leggings for the plain 
pantaloons, and the gay plume of 
gorgeous feathers for the hideous 
hat, is certainly a mark of progress. 
But when the wigwam is torn down, 
and the log, frame, or stone house 
is erected in its stead, a still more 
decided step towards civilization 
has been taken ; and it may be 
with surprise that some of our rea- 
ders will learn that our " savages " 
have built for themselves, or have 
had built for them, 55,717 houses, 
of which 1,702 were erected during 
last year. 

The progress of education is a 
still further test of the condition of 
these people. There are 367 school- 
buildings upon the reservations ; 
and in these are conducted 63 
boarding-schools and 281 day- 
schools, 23 of the school-buildings, 
apparently, being unoccupied. The 
number of teachers is 437, and of 
pupils 11,328, of which number 
6,028 are males. The amount of 
money expended for education dur- 
ing the year was $362,496, an aver- 



age of $32 per pupil. The number 
of Indians who can read is 25,622, 
of whom 980 acquired that useful 
accomplishment during the year. 
The number of births (exclusive of 
those in the five civilized tribes in 
the Indian Territory) was 2,401, 
and of deaths 2,215. T ne religious 
statistics in this table are evidently 
incorrect in at least one particular. 
The number of church buildings on 
the Indian reservations is 177; the 
number of missionaries " not includ- 
ed under teachers" is 122; and 
" the amount contributed by reli- 
gious societies during the year for 
education and other purposes " was 
$62,076. 

These figures we do not call in 
question, but the " number of In- 
dians who are church members " is 
put down at only 27,215. It is to 
be desired that the compiler of the 
statistics had furnished us with a 
definition of what he understands 
by the words "church members." 
He sets down for the Pueblo agen- 
cy, in New Mexico, for example : 
" Number of Indians, 8,400 ; num- 
ber of church buildings, 19 ; number 
of church members, none /" The 
truth is that all, or nearly all, of 
these Pueblo Indians are Roman 
Catholics, as their fathers were be- 
fore them for more than three cen- 
turies ; and that the 19 " church 
buildings " on their reservation are 
Catholic churches, in which the In- 
dians are baptized, shriven, mar- 
ried, and receive the Holy Com- 
munion ; but in the opinion of the 
honorable commissioner none of 
the Pueblos are " church members." 
So with the Papago Indians in Ari- 
zona, who are 5,900 in number, who 
have a Catholic school, four Ca- 
tholic teachers, and a Catholic 
church, but none of whom, in the 
eyes of the commissioner, are 
"church members." In the seven 



Our New Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



93 



reservations of which the religious 
control has been assigned to the 
Catholic Church there is a popula- 
tion of 24,094 souls and 32 church- 
es, but the commissioner's tables ad- 
mit only 7,010 " church members " 
among this population. The truth 
is, as we shall show, the number of 
Catholic Indians alone is more than 
thrice as large as the whole number 
of "church members" accounted 
for by the commissioner's tables. 
When a human being has received 
the Catholic rite of baptism he be- 
comes a member of the Catholic 
Church ; and from that moment it 
is the duty and the privilege of the 
church to watch over and protect 
the soul thus regenerated. It is be- 
cause the church has wished to dis- 
charge this duty to her Indian chil- 
dren that certain of the sects have 
cried out against her, and even the 
commissioner (Hon. E. P. Smith), 
in his report for 1875, has not been 
ashamed to reproach her. 

"At the seven agencies assigned to 
the care of the Catholics," he remarks, 
" no restriction has been placed upon 
their system and methods of education, 
and no other religious body, so far as I 
am aware, has in any way attempted to 
interfere. I regret to say that this is not 
true, so far as the Catholics are concern- 
ed, of some of the agencies assigned to 
other religious bodies, and in some in- 
stances the interference has been a ma- 
terial hindrance to the efforts of this 
office to bring Indians under control and 
to enforce rules looking toward civiliza- 
tion." 

We regret to say that while, on 
the one hand, the Catholic Church 
lias sought only to continue her 
ministrations to those of her chil- 
dren who were dwelling upon re- 
servations " assigned to other reli- 
gious bodies " a duty which she 
could not neglect nor permit to 
remain unfulfilled on the other 
hand, the most cruel, persistent, and 



petty persecution has been waged 
against Catholic Indians under the 
charge of Protestant agents, for the 
reason that they were Catholics, 
and the most unwarrantable inter- 
ference, opposition, and maltreat- 
ment have been in many instances 
manifested in cases where Catholic 
priests were merely exercising the 
rights they possessed as American 
citizens, and discharging the du- 
ties imposed on them as Christian 
teachers. 

But before we enter upon the 
proof of these unpleasant facts let 
us return to the statistics of the 
commissioner's report, for the pur- 
pose of completing our review of 
the condition of the semi-civilized 
and civilized tribes. The whole 
number of acres of land comprised 
in the Indian reservations as they 
now exist is 159,287,778, of which, 
however, only a very small portion 
(9,107,244 acres, or 14,230 square 
miles) is " tillable " that is, land 
fitted for agricultural pursuits, and 
on which crops can be raised. 
Now, from these figures, which are 
official, a very important truth may 
be deduced. The policy of the 
government, as explained by the 
commissioners in successive reports, 
is to gather all the Indians upon 
these reservations (or upon a few 
of them), to wean them from their 
life of hunting and fishing, and to 
teach them to support themselves 
and their families by purely agri- 
cultural pursuits. The idea may 
perhaps be a good one ; but care 
should have been taken to provide 
ample means for its execution. 
There are, as we have seen, 266,151 
Indians, exclusive of those in Alas- 
ka and of the " roamers and va- 
grants." All these, if the present 
policy of the government be suc- 
cessful, will be finally planted upon 
this region of 14,230 square miles 



Our Neiv Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



of tillable land, and bidden to live 
there, they and their children, for 
ever, earning their bread by the 
sweat of their brow in cultivating 
the soil. Now, 14,230 square miles 
of land is equal only to 28,460 
farms of 320 acres each, or to 56,- 
920 farms of 160 acres each. The 
tradition established by the govern- 
ment, by its original surveys of the 
public lands, by its Homestead Law, 
and by its Land Bounty Acts, is 
that 1 60 acres of land is the nor- 
mal quantity for an ordinary farm ; 
general experience has shown that 
this is none too much. But if the 
attempt were made to arrange the 
266,151 Indians into families of 4 
persons each, and to allot to each 
family a farm of 160 acres, there 
would not be tillable land enough 
" to go round" ; 9,617 families would 
be left out of the distribution. We 
do not mean to say that a farm of 
something less than 160 acres may 
not be found sufficient for the 
maintenance of a family of four 
persons ; but we do wish to call 
attention to the fact that the Indian 
reservations have been now reduced 
so far that only 56,920 farms, of 
1 60 acres each, of "tillable land" 
remain in them. There is the more 
necessity for accentuating this fact 
since even in the last report of the 
commissioner is repeated the sug- 
gestion that the reservations are 
still too large, and that a few more 
treaties might be broken and a few 
more sanguinary wars provoked 
witli advantage, in order to reduce 
further the area set apart for In- 
dian occupation. This suggestion 
is made plausible by the device of 
calling attention to the whole area 
of the reservations 159,287,778 
acres, or 248,886 square miles 
while hiding away in very small 
type, and at the end of an intricate 
table of figures, the fact that 150,- 



180,534 acres, or 234,656 square 
miles, of these lands are wholly un- 
fitted for tillage, and can never be 
made available for agricultural pur- 
poses. 

The number of acres of land cul- 
tivated by the Indians during the 
year covered by the last report of 
the commissioner was 318,194, and 
28,253 other acres were broken by 
them during the year. No less 
than 26,873 full-blood male Indians 
were laboring in civilized pursuits, 
exclusive of those belonging to the 
five civilized tribes in the Indian 
Territory. These people are not 
savages ; they worship God many 
of them enjoying the light of Catho- 
lic truth ; they educate themselves 
and their children ; they live in 
houses and wear decent clothes ; 
they toil and are producers of val- 
uable articles. Let us see, now, 
what is said about these and the 
other Indians less advanced in civ- 
ilization, by their rulers, the suc- 
cessive Commissioners of Indian 
Affairs and their subordinates, the 
agents. When we remark that we 
select our quotations from nine 
volumes of official reports, the rea- 
der will understand that we la}' 
before him only a very few out of 
the numberless proofs of two 
facts : 

1. That the commissioners, while 
repeatedly confessing that the In- 
dians have been most cruelly and 
unwisely wronged in the past, are 
of the opinion that it would be a 
kind and wise thing to wrong them 
a little more in the future. 

2. That the Indians are perfect- 
ly \vell aware of their wrongs ; are 
quite able to formulate them ; are 
often hopeless, from long and pain- 
ful experience, of any effectual re- 
dress for them ; and very frequent- 
ly display a remarkable degree of 
Christian forbearance and forgive- 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



95 



ness in resisting the wanton pro- 
vocations to revolt offered to them. 

" The traditionary belief which large- 
ly prevails," writes the Hon. J. Q. Smith, 
in his report for 1876, " that the Indian 
service throughout its whole history has 
been tainted with fraud, arises not only 
from the fact that frauds have been com- 
mitted, but also because, from the nature 
of the service itself, peculiar opportuni- 
ties for fraud may be found." 

After an exposition of the duties 
of an Indian agent he thus pro- 
ceeds : 

" The great want of the Indian service 
has always been thoroughly competent 
agents. The President has sought to 
secure proper persons for these impor- 
tant offices by inviting the several reli- 
gious organizations, through their con- 
stituted authorities, to nominate to him 
men for whose ability, character, and 
conduct they are willing to vouch. I 
believe the churches have endeavored to 
perform this duty faithfully, and to a fair 
degree have succeeded ; but they expe- 
rience great difficulty in inducing per- 
sons possessed of the requisite qualifi- 
cations to accept these positions. When 
it is considered that these men must take 
their families far into the wilderness, 
cut themselves off from civilization with 
its comforts and attractions, deprive 
their children of the advantages of edu- 
cation, live lives of anxiety and toil, give 
bonds for great sums of money, be held 
responsible in some instances for the 
expenditure of hundreds of thousands of 
dollars a year, and subject themselves to 
ever-ready suspicion, detraction, and ca- 
lumny, for a compensation less than 
that paid to a third-class clerk in Wash- 
ington or to a village postmaster, it is 
not strange that able, upright, thorough- 
ly competent men hesitate, and decline 
to accept the position of an Indian agent, 
or, if they accept, resign the position 
after a short trial. In my judgment the 
welfare of the public service imperative- 
ly requires that the compensation offered 
an Indian agent should be somewhat in 
proportion to the capacity required in 
the office, and to the responsibility and 
labor of the duties to be performed." 

It is impossible to avoid making 
the remark, in this place, that there 



is a class of men who have no 
" families ''; who are ever ready to 
renounce the "comforts and attrac- 
tions of civilization "; who are ac- 
customed to " live lives of anxiety 
and toil "; and who are impervious 
to " suspicion, detraction, and cal- 
umny," while at the same time they 
are ''able, upright, and thoroughly 
competent." If the government, 
when it inaugurated its plan of fill- 
ing the Indian agencies with men 
nominated by " the churches," had 
allowed our bishops to nominate 
agents in proportion to the number 
of Catholic Indians, the chances 
are that the right men would have 
been forthcoming, and the commis- 
sioner would not now be complain- 
ing that, in order to keep an Indian 
agent from stealing, he must be 
paid $3,000 a year. 

" Relief had been so long delayed," 
says the same officer in the same report, 
" that supplies failed to reach the agen- 
cies until the Indians were in almost a 
starving condition, and until the appar- 
ent intention of the government to aban- 
don them to starvation had induced 
large numbers to join the hostile bands 
under Sitting Bull." 

Two other instances of the same 
kind are mentioned ; and a third is 
recorded, in which, owing to the 
failure of Congress to provide mo- 
ney promised by a treaty, '* hun- 
dreds of Pawnees had been com- 
pelled to abandon their agency, to 
live by begging and stealing in south- 
ern Kansas." " In numerous other 
instances," adds the commissioner 
pathetically, " the funds at the dis- 
posal of this office have been so 
limited as to make it a matter of the 
utmost difficulty to keep the Indi- 
ans from starving" and this, too, 
when the same Indians had large 
sums of money standing to their 
credit held " in trust " for them in 
the treasury of the United States. 



Our New Indian Policy and Religioits Liberty. 



A long discussion advocating the 
removal of all the Indians to a few 
reservations although this could 
not be done without violations of 
the most solemn treaties is clinch- 
ed with the cynical remark that 
" there is a very general and grow- 
ing opinion that observance of the 
strict letter of treaties with In- 
dians is in many cases at va- 
riance both with their own best 
interests and with sound public 
policy." 

And these words are from the 
official report of the chief of a great 
bureau in the most important de- 
partment of our government ! Did 
we know what we were about when 
we made these treaties ? If " no," 
we were fools ; if " yes," then we 
are knaves now to violate them 
without the consent of the other, 
the helpless party. " The Indians 
claim," says the commissioner, 
"that they hold their lands by 
sanctions so solemn that it would 
be a gross breach of faith on the 
part of the government to take 
away any portion of it without their 
consent, and that consent they pro- 
pose to withhold." Still, let us do 
it, cries the commissioner ; " public 
necessity must ultimately become 
supreme law." " Public necessity " 
which in this case means private 
rapacity " public necessity," and 
not truth, good faith, and justice, 
must rule. Many tribes are living 
peaceably and doing well, on lands 
solemnly promised to them for ever, 
in various parts of the West; the 
civilized and semi-civilized tribes in 
the Indian Territory are living 
peaceably and doing well on lands 
solemnly promised to them for 
their own exclusive use forever, and 
in some cases bought with their 
own money. But it would be 
more convenient for us to have 
them all together; so let us tear up 



the treaties, and drive all the Indi- 
ans into the one territory. 

From the same report we take 
this paragraph, which is only one 
of very many like it : 

"The Alsea agency, in Oregon, has 
been abolished, but inadequate appro- 
priations have worked hardship and in- 
justice to the Indians. They are requir- 
ed to leave their homes and cultivated 
fields" (for no other reason than that 
white men covet them) "and remove 
to Siletz, but no means are furnished to 
defray expense of such removal or to as- 
sist in their establishment in their new 
home." 

The Board of Indian Commis- 
sioners, in their third annual re- 
port (1871), in view of* the contin- 
ued violation of treaties by the go- 
vernment in compelling tribes to 
remove from the reservations assign- 
ed to them, found themselves con- 
strained to say : 

" The removal of partially civilized 
tribes already making fair progress and 
attached to their homes on existing 
reservations is earnestly deprecated. 
Where such reservations are thought to 
be unreasonably large, their owners will 
themselves see the propriety of selling 
off the surplus for educational purposes. 
The government meanwhile owes them 
the protection of their rights to which 
it is solemnly pledged by treaty, and 
which it cannot fail to give without dis- 
honor." 

But it has failed to give this pro- 
tection in numberless instances, 
and it seems to rest very easily un- 
der the stigma of dishonor thus in- 
curred as, for instance, in the 
case of the Osages, of whom their 
agent, in a report dated Oct. i, 
1870, thus speaks : 

"This tribe of Indians are richly en- 
dowed by nature, physically and morally. 
A finer-looking body of men, with more 
grace and dignity, or better intellectual 
development, could hardly be found on 
this globe. They were once the most 
numerous and warlike nation on this 
continent, with a domain extending 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty, 



97 



from the Gulf to the Missouri River and 
from the Mississippi to the Rocky Moun- 
tains ; but they have been shorn of their 
territory piece by piece, until at last 
they have not a settled and undisputed 
claim to a single foot of earth. It is 
strictly true that one great cause of their 
decline has been fidelity to their pledges. 
More than sixty years ago they pledged 
themselves by treaty to perpetuate peace 
with the white man. That promise has 
been nobly kept kept in spite of great 
and continual provocation. White men 
have committed upon them almost every 
form of outrage and wrong, unchecked 
by the government and unpunished. 
Every aggressive movement of the whites 
tending to the absorption of their territo- 
ry has ultimately been legalized." 

These Osages are nearly all Cath- 
olics, and the agent who thus writes 
of them is Mr. Isaac T. Gibson, a 
Quaker, or an "Orthodox Friend." 
Would it be believed that three 
years afterwards the kind and sym- 
pathizing Friend Gibson was busily 
engaged in inflicting upon the peo- 
ple for whose wrongs he was so in- 
dignant an injury greater than any 
they had yet suffered ? " Enter- 
prising scoundrels" of whom he 
wrote in his report had robbed the 
Osages of everything save their 
faith ; and good Friend Gibson 
tried to rob them of that. How he 
set about the task, and how he fared 
in it, will be told later. 

If this be not enough, look at the 
picture of a model Indian reserva- 
tion drawn by a lawyer of Califor- 
nia, and addressed to J. V. Far- 
well, one of the members of the 
Board of Indian Commissioners. 
He is describing the Hoopa Valley 
reservation : 

" I found the Indians thoughtful, do- 
cile, and apparently eager to enter into 
any project for their good, if they could 
only believe it would be carried out in 
good faith, but utterly wanting in confi- 
dence in the agent, the government, or 
the white man. Lethargy, starvation, 
and disease were leading them to the 
VOL. XXVI. 7 



grave. I found, in fact, that the reserva- 
tion was a rehash of a negro plantation ; 
the agent an absolute dictator, restrain- 
ed by no law and no compact known to 
the Indians. During my stay the super- 
intendent visited the valley. He stayed 
but a few days. We had drinking and 
feasting during this time, but no grave 
attention to Indian affairs ; no extended 
investigation of what had been done or 
should be done. The status quo was ac- 
cepted as the ne plus ultra of Indian po- 
licy. He, too, appears to think that an- 
nihilation is the consummation of Indian 
management. If the reservation was a 
plantation, the Indians were the most 
degraded of slaves. I found them poor, 
miserable, vicious, degraded, dirty, na- 
ked, diseased, and ill-fed. They had no 
motive to action. Man, woman, and 
child, without reference to age, sex, or 
condition, received the same five pounds 
of flour per week, and almost nothing 
more. They attended every Monday to 
get this, making a day's work of it for 
most of them. The oldest men, or stout, 
middle-aged fathers of families, were 
spoken to just as children or slaves. 
They know no law but the will of the 
agent ; no effort has been made to teach 
them any, and, where it does not con- 
flict with this dictation, they follow the 
old forms of life polygamy, buying and 
selling of women, and compounding 
crime with money ad libitum. The tribal 
system, with all its absurd domination 
and duty, is still retained. The Indian 
woman has no charge of her own person 
or virtue, but her father, brother, chief, 
or nearest male relative may sell her for 
a moment or for life. I was impressed 
that really nothing had been done by 
any agent, or even attempted, to wean 
these people from savage life to civiliza- 
tion, but only to subject them to planta- 
tion slavery." 

The official volumes from which 
we are taking our information con- 
tain the successive annual reports 
of the various Indian agents and 
superintendents, who are 88 in 
number, and the reports of many 
councils held between the Indians 
and the Board of Indian Commis- 
sioners, agents, army officers, and 
special commissioners. The Hon. 
Felix R. Brunot, chairman of the 



98 



Our New Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



Board of Indian Commissioners, is 
the Mercurius in many of these 
councils. He does nearly all the 
talking on the side of the govern- 
ment, and before he talks he al- 
ways prays. Thus : " Gen. Smith 
announced that Mr. Brunot would 
speak to the Great Spirit before 
the council began. Mr. Brunot 
offered a prayer." In the interests 
of religion it is to be regretted that 
councils thus begun sometimes ap- 
peared to have been designed for 
the purpose of inflicting new wrongs 
upon the Indians. But we mention 
the councils here only for the pur- 
pose of taking from the reports of 
their proceedings, as well as from 
the annual reports of the agents, a 
very few of the remarks made by 
the Indian chiefs concerning them- 
selves, the government, the agents, 
and the whites generally. The li- 
mits of our space compel us to 
string these together without fur- 
ther introduction : 

RED CLOUD : God raised us Indians. 
I am trying to live peaceably. All I ask 
for is my land the little spot I have 
left. My people have done nothing 
wrong. I have consulted the Great 
Spirit, and he told me to keep my little 
spot of land. My friends, have pity on 
me, if you would have me livelong. My 
people have been cheated so often they 
will not believe. 

BUFFALO GOOD. If you are going to 
do anything for us, do it quick. I saw 
the Commissioner of Indian Affairs at 
Washington, and he told me he was go- 
ing to fix it up, but I have heard that so 
often I am afraid it is not true. I have 
been disappointed, and I think Washing- 
ton is not so much of a chief after all. 
Because we do not fight, he takes away 
our lands and gives them to the tribes 
who are fighting the whites all the time. 

HOWLISH-WAMPO (" the Cayuse chief, 
a Catholic Indian, in dress, personal ap- 
pearance, and bearing superior to the 
average American farmer ") : When you 
told me you believed in God, I thought 
that was good. But you came to ask us 
for our land. We will not let you have 



it. This reservation is marked out for 
us. We see it with our eyes and our 
hearts ; we all hold it with our bodies 
and our souls. Here are my father and 
mother, and brothers and sisters and 
children, all buried ; I am guarding 
their graves. This small piece of land 
we all look upon as our mother, as if 
she were raising us. On the out- 
side of the reservation I see your houses ; 
they have windows, they are good. Why 
do you wish my land ? My friend, you 
must not talk too strong about getting 
my land ; I will not let it go. 

HOMLI (chief of the Walla- Wallas) : 
My cattle and stock are running on this 
reservation, and they need it all. It is 
not the white man who has helped me : 
I have made all the improvements on 
my own land myself. 

WENAP-SNOOT (chief of the Umatillas): 
When my father and motner died, they 
gave me rules and gave me their land to 
live on. They left me to take care of 
them after they were buried. I was to 
watch over their graves. I will not part 
from them. I cultivate my land and I 
love it. 

PIERRE (a young chief) : I do not wish 
money for my land ; I am here, and 
I will stay here. I will not part with 
lands, and if you come again I will say 
the same thing. 

WAL-CHE-TE-MA-NE (another Catholic 
chief, as, indeed, were the three h.s: 
named) : You white chiefs listen to me : 
you, Father Vermeerch, are the one who 
rules my heart. I am old now, and I 
want to die where my father and mother 
and children have died. I see the church 
there ; I am glad to see it ; I will stay be- 
side it and die by the teachings of the 
father. I love my church, my mills, 
my farm, the graves of my parents and 
children. I do not wish to leave them. 
(Happily, the firmness of these Catholic 
Indians, the Umatilla, Cayuse, and Wal- 
la-Walla tribes, carried the day, and they 
were permitted to remain on their little 
reservation). 

TENALE TEMANE (another Catholic 
Indian) : We cannot cheat our own 
bodies and our own souls. If we de- 
ceive ourselves we shall be miserable ; 
only from the truth can we giv ourselves, 
and make our children grow. Of all that 
was promised to me by Gov. Stevens I 
have seen nothing ; it must have been 
lost. 

THE YOUNG CHIEF : What you prom- 



Our Neic Indian Policy znd Religious Liberty. 



ised was not done ; it was as if you had 
taken the treaty as soon as it was made, 
and torn it up. The treaties made with 
the Indians OH all the reservations have 
never been kept ; they have all been bro- 
ken. I do not want to teach you any- 
thing about God ; you are wise and 
know all about him. ^The irony of this 
is exquisite.) 

TASENICK (a Wascoe chief) : The peo- 
ple who are put over me teach me 
worse tuings than I knew before. You 
can see what we were promised by the 
treaty : we have never got anything ; all 
we have we bought with our own money. 
Our Great Father may have sent the 
things promised, but they never got 
here. 

CHINOOK : When we made the treaty 
they premised us schoolmasters and a 
great many other things, but they forget 
them. We never had any of them. They 
told us we were to have $8,000 a year ; 
we never saw a cent of it. 

MACK (a Deschutes chief) : It is not 
right to starve us ; it is better to kill us. 

JANCUST : I cannot look you in the 
face ; I am ashamed : white men have 
carried away our women. What do you 
think? White men do these things and 
say it is right. 

NAPOLEON (a Catholic chief of the Tu- 
Jalip reservation, who " came forward 
with much dignity and laid before Mr. 
Brunot a bunch of split sticks") : These 
represent the number of my people killed 
by the whites during the year, and yet 
nothing has been done to punish them. 
The whites now scare all the Indians, 
and we look now wondering when all 
the Indians will be tilled. 

JOHNNY ENGLISH : We like Father 
Chirouse very well, because he tries to 
do what is right ; when he begins to 
work he does one thing at a time. 

HENRY (a Catholic on the Lumni re- 
servation) : I have been a Christian for 
many years. We have some children at 
school with Father Chirouse ; we want 
our lands for them to live on when we 
are dead. 

DAVID CROCKETT (a Catholic chief): 
I ought to have a better house in which 
to receive my friends. But we want most 
an altar built in our church and a belfry 
on it ; this work we cannot do ourselves. 

SPAR (a young chief) : All the agents 
think of is to steal ; that is all every 
agent has done. When they get the 
money, where does it go to? When I 



99 

ask about it they say they will punish 
me. I thought the President did not 
send them for that. 

PETER CONNOYER (of the Grande 
Rondes): About religion I am a Ca- 
tholic ; so are all of my family. All the 
children are Catholics. We want the 
sisters to come and teach the girls. The 
priest lives here ; he does not get any 
pay. He teaches us to pray night and 
morning. We must teach the little girls. 
I am getting old. I may go to a race 
and bet a little, but I don't want my 
children to learn it ; it is bad. 

TOM CURL : We want to get good 
blankets, not paper blankets. I don't 
know what our boots are made of; if we 
hit anything they break in pieces. 

When, in 1870, President Grant 
announced the inauguration of his 
new Indian policy, the sects saw in 
it an opportunity of carrying on 
their propaganda among the In- 
dians with little or no cost to them- 
selves, and of interfering with, and 
probably compelling the total ces- 
sation of, the work of the Catholic 
Church among many of the tribes. 
To begin with, here were 72 places 
in which they could install the same 
number of their ministers, or lay- 
men devoted to their interests, with 
salaries paid by the general govern- 
ment. Once installed as Indian 
agents, these men would have au- 
tocratic power over the affairs of 
the tribes entrusted to them ; and 
they could make life so uncomforta- 
ble for the Catholic missionaries 
already at work there that they 
would probably retire. If they 
disregarded petty persecutions, the 
agent could compel them to depart, 
since it is held by the Indian Bu- 
reau that an agent has power to ex- 
clude from a reservation any white 
man whose presence he chooses to 
consider as inconvenient, as well as 
to prevent the Indians from leaving 
the reservation for any purpose 
whatever. There were, it was 
known, many Indian agencies at 



/ 

100 



Our Neii' Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



which the Catholic Church had had 
missions for many years, and where 
all, or nearly all, the Indians were 
Catholics. If these agencies could 
be assigned to the care of the sects, 
how easily could the work of con- 
verting the Indian Catholics into 
Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, 
Quakers, or Unitarians be accom- 
plished ! The priests could be 
driven away and forbidden to re- 
turn ; the sectarian preachers would 
have full play ; and the Indian ap- 
petite for Protestant truth could be 
sharpened by judicious bribery and 
intimidation. On the borders of 
the reservation there might be as 
there are Catholic churches and 
Catholic priests ; but the Catholic 
Indians on the reservation might be 
as they have been forbidden to 
cross the line in order to visit their 
priests and to receive the sacra- 
ments. 

The new Indian policy which 
furnished this opportunity was pro- 
bably not original with President 
Grant, and we are not disposed to 
call in question the purity and 
kindness of his motives in adopting 
it. At the time of its inauguration, 
however, he was surrounded by in- 
fluences decidedly hostile to the 
Catholic Church ; and it is proba- 
ble that from the beginning the 
men "behind the throne" had a 
clear conception of the manner in 
which the new policy could be 
worked for the benefit of the sects. 
It was based upon an idea plausi- 
ble to non-Catholics, but which no 
Catholic can ever accept the idea 
that one religion is as good as an- 
other, and that, for example, it 
does not make much difference 
whether a man believes that Jesus 
Christ is God, or that he was sim- 
ply a tolerably good but rather 
weak and vain man. This idea 
has been carried out in practice 



for even to the " Unitarians " have 
been given t\vo Indian agencies : 
those of the Los Pinos and White 
River in Colorado, whose entire re- 
ligious education for 1876, as re- 
ported by the agents, consisted in 
" a sort of Shaker service of sing- 
ing and dancing held for two or 
three days." The chairman of the 
Board of Indian Commissioners, 
Mr. Brunot, appears to have been 
anxious to spread abroad the doc- 
trine of indifferentism among the 
Catholic Indians. Whenever, in 
his numerous " councils," he found 
himself in company with such In- 
dians, he undertook to enlighten 
them after this fashion* 

" A chief said yesterday : ' I don't know 
about religion, because they tell so 
many different things.' Religion is like 
the roads ; they all go one way ; all to 
the one good place ; so take any one 
good road and keep in it, and it will 
bring you out right at last." ..." I 
heard an Indian say that the white man 
has two religions. In one way it looks 
so ; but if you will understand you will 
see it is only one." ..." It is not two 
kinds of religion, but it is as two roads 
that both go the same way." 

We scarcely think it is within 
the province of the federal gov- 
ernment to pay a gentleman for 
preaching this kind of doctrine to 
Catholic Indians. But what was 
the new Indian policy ? It was 
explained by President Grant, in 
his message of December 5, 1870, 
in these words : 

" Indian agents being civil officers, I 
determined to give all the agencies 
to such religious denominations as 
had heretofore established missionaries 
among the Indians, and perhaps to some 
other denominations who would under- 
take the work on the same terms that 
is, as missionary work." 

There is an undesirable lack of 
exactness in these words for, as 
they stand, they might be under- 
stood as promising the agency of 



Our New Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



101 



a tribe to a sect which had estab- 
lished on its territory a missionary 
station years ago, and had subse- 
quently abandoned it. This, how- 
ever, was certainly not the inten- 
tion of the President ; if he intend- 
ed to act in good faith in the mat- 
ter, he proposed, doubtless, to as- 
sign the agencies to churches that 
had established successful missions 
missions actually existing, having 
churches, schools, and converts. 
It is impossible to believe that it 
was the intention of the executive 
to transfer tribes of Catholic In- 
dians to Protestant sects, under 
the pretence that the sects, at 
some remote period, had made 
feeble and fruitless attempts to es- 
tablish missions among them. This, 
however, has been the construction 
placed upon the President's policy 
by the sects; and, strange to say, 
they have experienced no difficulty 
in persuading successive Commis- 
sioners of Indian Affairs to agree 
with them in this interpretation, 
and to carry it out in a manner 
productive of the most wanton 
cruelty and injustice. 

There are seventy-two Indian 
agencies : three in Arizona, three 
in California, two in Colorado, fif- 
teen in Dakota, eight in the Indian 
Territory, one in Iowa, two in 
Kansas, one in Michigan, three in 
Minnesota, four in Montana, five 
in Nebraska, five in New Mexico, 
one in New York, two in Nevada, 
six in Oregon, one in Utah, seven 
in Washington Territory, two in 
Wisconsin, and one in Wyoming. 
According to any fair construction 
of the new policy, no less than for- 
ty of these agencies should have 
been assigned to the Catholic 
Church. In all of them the church 
had had missions for many years; 
in many of them all of the Chris- 
tian Indians, or the great majority 



of them, were Catholics ; in some 
of them the Indians had been Ca- 
tholics for centuries, and their civ- 
ilization was wholly due to the in- 
struction they had received from 
Catholic priests. The following is 
a list of these agencies, with their 
location and the number of Indians 
embraced in each : 



No. of 

/,lil /.I US. 



Name of Agency. Location. 

Yakima Washington 3,000 

Fort Hall Idaho 1.500 

Tulalip Washington 3,9?o 

Puyallup " . 577 

Skokomish " . 875 

Chehalis " . 600 

Neah Bay " . 604 

Colville " . 3,349 

La Point Wisconsin 646 

Pottawattomie Indian Territory . . 1,336 

Flatheads Montana 1,821 

Blackfeet " 14,650 

Papagoes Arizona 6.000 

Round Valley California 1,112 

North California " 

Mission Indians " 5,oo 

Pueblos New Mexico 7,879 

Osages Indian Territory.. 2,823 

Coeur d'Alenes Idaho 700 

Quapams Indian Territory.. 235 

Was, Peorias, etc " " .. 217 

Hoopa Valley California 725 

Pimas and Mariscopas.. Arizona 4-326 

Moquis " I i7 

Warm Spring Oregon 626 

Grande Ronde " 924 

Siletz " 1.058 

Umatilla " 8^7 

Alsea " 343 

Malheur " 1.200 

Nez-Perces Idaho' 2807 

Navajoes New Mexico 9i"4 

Mescaleros " 1.895 

Milk River Montana 10.625 

Crows " 4-200 

Green Bay Wisconsin 1,480 

Chippewas Minnesota 1,322 

Mackinac Michigan 10,260 

Grand River Dakota 6.169 

Devil's Lake " 1,020 

Total "7,585 

Within the jurisdiction of these 
agencies there are 52 Catholic 
churches, 18 Catholic day-schools, 
and 10 Catholic boarding industrial 
schools. The Catholic priests and 
teachers employed among the In- 
dians during the year 1875 num- 
bered 117 ; while for the same year 
the Protestant sects had only 64 
missionaries employed in all the 
agencies under their control. Would 
it not have been supposed that a 



102 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty, 



fair interpretation of the new poli- 
cy of President Grant nay, that 
the only fair interpretation of it 
would have awarded these 40 agen- 
cies to the Catholic Church ? The 
missions of the church, in 1870, 
were in almost uncontested posses- 
sion of these fields of labor. Her 
priests had borne the labor and the 
heat of the day ; asking and expect- 
ing no aid from the state, and re- 
ceiving very little from any other 
source, they had given themselves 
to the work of Christianizing these 
Indians ; and while the sects had 
from time to time made spasmodic 
and desultory attempts at Indian 
missions, our priests and their coad- 
jutors, the sisters of the teaching 
orders, had remained steadfast in 
their self-denying and arduous la- 
bor. But the sects were now in- 
spired with a new and sudden zeal 
for the salvation of the Indians. 
They were not content with the 32 
agencies in which, although there 
were many Catholic Indians, the 
church had not been able to estab- 
lish permanent missions. They set 
up claims to the agencies we have 
enumerated, and it was observed 
that the fervor with which these 
demands were pressed was in exact 
proportion to the richness of the 
reservation and its desirableness as 
a future home for a missionary 
with a large family and with a nu- 
merous corps of needy relations. 
So fierce was their onslaught, and 
so rapidly were their demands con- 
ceded by the then commissioner, 
that, almost before the authorities 
of the church had been informed 
of what was going on, no less than 
32 of the 40 agencies which, by 
any fair interpretation of the Presi- 
dent's policy, should have been as- 
signed to Catholic care, were divid- 
ed among the sects. Fourteen of 
the agencies, with 54,253 Indians, 



fell to the Methodists, the sect 
then, and perhaps now, most in fa- 
vor with the administration ; five, 
with 21,321 Indians, went to the 
Presbyterians ; the same number, 
with 5,311 Indians, were awarded 
to the Quakers ; the Congregation- 
alists received three, with 2,056 In- 
dians ; the Reformed Dutch Church 
were given two, with 6,026 Indians; 
the " American Missionary Asso- 
ciation " (a Congregational society) 
obtained two, witli 2,126 Indians; 
andtheProtestantEpiscopalChurch 
was gratified with one agency, the 
Chippewas of Missouri, 1,322 in 
number, who had beeji Catholics 
all their lives. There remained 
eight of the agencies to which the 
Catholic Church possessed a claim, 
and these were left in her posses- 
sion, not, however, without a threat 
that they also would be taken 
from her a threat already carried 
into execution in one case, the Pa- 
pagoes, a tribe of 6,000, residing in 
Arizona, having been kindly trans- 
ferred to the care of a sect called 
the "Reformed Church." The 
agent of this tribe, in his last re- 
port, says : 

" There is no school at present taught 
among these Indians. The intellectual 
and moral training of the young has 
been, for a long time, in the hands of 
the Roman Catholics, and the school 
hitherto kept by the sisters of the Order 
of St. Joseph." 

The school is now closed, it ap- 
pears; and the "Reformed Church" 
seemingly does not intend to open 
another, as their agent remarks 
that " there is, perhaps, but little 
use to establish schools, or look for 
any considerable advance in edu- 
cation among them." 

The seven agencies still left to 
the care of the church are those of 
Tulalip and Colville, in Washington 
Territory ; Grande Ronde and 



\ 



Our New Indian Policy and Religions Liberty. 



103 



Umatilla, in Oregon ; Flathead, in 
Montana ; and Standing Rock (or 
Grand River) and Devil's Lake, in 
Dakota. These agencies, accord- 
ing to the last report of the Com- 
missioner of Indian Affairs, have a 
population of 12,819 Indians. No 
less than 7,034 of these wear "citi- 
zen's dress"; they have 825 frame 
or log houses ; they have six board- 
ing-schools and three day-schools, 
taught by 19 teachers ; 382 of the 
adults can read; they have 12 
churches, and 7,510, or more than 
half the whole number, are " church 
members." Nothing like this can 
be shown at any of the agencies 
under Protestant control, save the 
five civilized tribes in the Indian 
Territory. The whole of the In- 
dians on the Grande Ronde reser- 
vation 755 in number are so far 
civilized that all of them wear citi- 
zen's dress. They have 375 houses, 
and 690 of them are " church mem- 
bers." Their agent speaks of them 
in glowing terms ; last year, with- 
out receiving a penny of the sums 
due them by the government, they 
not only supported themselves in 
comfort, but were able "of their 
charity " to relieve the necessities 
of two neighboring tribes, the Sal- 
mon River and Nestucca Indians, 
who were starving to death " in 
consequence of the failure of the 
government to fulfil the promises 
made by the honorable Commis- 
sioner Simpson." The parsimony 
of the government compelled them 
to dispense with the services of 
their regular physician ; but, writes 
the agent, " we have been fortunate 
in securing the services of a sister, 
who has, in addition to her duties 
as a teacher, kindly dispensed me- 
dicines with the most gratifying 
success." " The school," he adds, 
" is in a very prosperous condition 
under the efficient management of 



Sister Mary, superior, and three as- 
sistants." 

The Indians on the Tnlalip re- 
servation, 3,250 in number, are 
equally well advanced ; the whole 
of them wear citizen's dress; they 
have 2 boarding-schools, witli 6 
teachers, and 2,260 of them are 
"church members." We look in 
vain for statistics like these among 
the agencies under Protestant con- 
trol ; when there is anything like 
it, it is found in the reports from 
the tribes which have been civiliz- 
ed and Christianized by the Catho- 
lic Church and then stolen away 
by the sects. 

In addition to the 33 agencies 
which belonged by right to the 
church, but were distributed among 
the sects, 30 others were portioned 
out among them, so that, accord- 
ing to the last report of the com- 
missioner, while the church, enti- 
tled to 40 agencies, has but 7, the 
Quakers have 16; the Methodists 
14; the Baptists 2; the Presbyte- 
trians 7 ; the Congregationalists 6 ; 
the " Reformed " 4 ; the Protes- 
tant Episcopalians 9 ; the Unita- 
rians 2 ; the " Free-will Baptists " 
i ; the " United Presbyterians," 
who seem to be disunited from the 
other Presbyterians, i ; and the 
" Christian Union," which is not in 
union with any of the other sects, 
i. If our space permitted, we 
should point out the miserable re- 
sults after a seven years' possession 
of these agencies. The four agen- 
cies under the care of the " Re- 
formed " body, for example, em- 
brace 14 tribes, numbering 17,049 
souls. Among these are the Papa- 
goes, 5,900 in number, already tol- 
erably well-civilized by Catholic 
instruction, and all of whom wear 
citizen's dress. With the excep- 
tion of these, the " Reformers," 
after seven years' labor, have 50 



104 



Our 



Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



Indians who wear citizen's dress, 
2 schools, i church building, and 4 
church members ! As they hove not 
thought it worth while to send out 
any missionaries, one wonders what 
they do with their church building, 
but it is probably used as a store- 
house by the " Reformed " agent. 

The Hicksite Quakers have 5 
agencies in Nebraska, with 4,098 
Indians. They have 392 " church 
members," but 348 of these belong 
to a civilized tribe the Santee 
Sioux, who are 793 strong. After 
seven years of labor the Quakers 
have got only 44 out of the other 
3,300 Indians under their care to 
call themselves "church members." 
In the Hoopa Valley reservation, 
given to the Methodists, there is a 
" school building," but no school, 
no teacher, and no pupils ; there 
is a "church building," but no 
missionary and no "church mem- 
bers." The poor mission Indians 
in California, the children of Catho- 
lic parents for many generations, 
also under the tender care of the 
Methodists, have neither houses, 
nor school, nor church, nor mis- 
sionary. The 6,000 Indians on the 
. Red Cloud agency in Dakota, un- 
der the charge of the Protestant 
Episcopalians, have a "school 
building," but no teacher, no scho- 
lars, no church, no missionary, and 
no "church members." The 3,992 
Cheyennes and Arapahoes in the 
Indian Territory, in charge of the 
Quakers, have a school-house, but 
no church, no missionary, and no 
" church members," and so with 
the rest. 

In selecting a few typical illustra- 
tions of the injustice perpetrated 
by the assignment of tribes of Ca- 
tholic Indians to non-Catholic 
sects, we are embarrassed by the 
richness and plenitude of our 
facts. We mention only two the 



Chippewas of Lake Superior, and 
the Osages. 

The agency of the Chippewas of 
Lake Superior became vacant early 
in 1873, and General Ewing, on the 
1 9th of March of that year, ad- 
dressed a letter to the Secretary of 
the Interior, submitting" that, under 
the Indian policy of President 
Grant, this agency should be as- 
signed to the Catholic Church." 
He accompanied his letter with a 
brief of the facts on which he thus 
claimed the agency for the church. 
The Chippewas number 4,551, and 
3,696 of them w ? ear citizen's dress; 
they have six schools and three 
churches. More than 200 years 
ago the Catholic fathers Dablon 
and Marquette established the 
mission of St. Mary among the 
Chippewas, and the church has 
ever since looked upon them as 
her children. The Catholic mis- 
sions, first permanently established 
among them in 1668, continued in 
a flourishing manner until the year 
1800; they were revived after a 
lapse of 30 years ; and for the past 
47 years they have been continu- 
ously attended by Catholic priests 
one being assigned exclusively 
and continuously to the religious 
instruction, education, and care of 
the Indians. The Indians at their 
own expense have built three Ca- 
tholic churches, at Bayfield, La 
Pointe, and Bad River. The suc- 
cessive reports of the Commission- 
ers of Indian Affairs from 1868 to 
1872 set forth these facts. Praise 
is given in 1868 to Father Chebal 
for the good result of his labors ; 
the agent, writing in 1870, says: 
" The religious instruction has 
been almost entirely under Catho- 
lic missionaries ; 99 out of 100 of 
them are Catholics, and Father 
Chebal has labored industriously 
and successfully among them." 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 105 



The agent, writing in 1871, again 
says : " Most of these people are 
members of the Roman Catholic 
Church. Their pastor has been a 
missionary among them for many 
years, and has labored with the 
zeal for which his church is pro- 
verbial to secure converts. He 
has accomplished much good." 
The report of the agent for 1868 
likewise mentions that the "Rev. 
L. H. Wheeler and his most esti- 
mable lady " had been conducting 
a Protestant mission there " under 
the control of the A. B. C. F. M. 
Society," but that "this society hav- 
ing almost withdrawn their support, 
and further for the purpose of edu- 
cating their own children, Rev. Mr. 
Wheeler has abandoned his mission. " 
The agent in 1869, Lt.-Col. Knight, 
of the army, thus writes : 

"The Chippewas of Lake Superior 
generally have abandoned the heathen 
faith of their fathers. If they have not 
all been made intelligent Christians, they 
have abandoned heathenism. The Ca- 
tholic missionaries are the most assidu- 
ous workers among them, and the lar- 
gest portion of them have espoused that 
religious faith ; yet the Protestant reli- 
gion has its adherents among them. 
Father Chebal, of the Catholic faith, is 
untiring and devoted in his labors with 
them. The Protestant religion is with- 
out a missionary representative, which is 
unfortunate," etc. 

The case, it will be seen, was 
plain. The Catholic missions 
were shown to be the oldest and 
the only successful missions among 
the Chippewas, and " the right 
of the Catholic Church, under the 
policy of the administration, to 
the agency " was incontestable. 
But the agency had already been 
given to the Congregationalists, 
who had never before attempted 
to establish a mission among the 
Chippewas, and whose minister 
knew nothing about the tribe. 
Pressed hard by General Ewing, 



the'secretary referred the matter to 
our pious friend Mr. Brunot, who, 
in an elaborate and most disingenu- 
ous opinion, decided that, although 
the assignment of the agency to the 
Congregationalists might have been 
erroneous, now that it was made it 
ought not to be changed and this, 
too, although the department had 
made similar changes in other in- 
stances, taking, for example, the 
Nez-Perces agency from the Ca- 
tholics, to whom it had been as- 
signed, and giving it to the Metho- 
dists in 1870. General Ewing, un- 
willing to submit to this palpable 
injustice, again addressed the Sec- 
retary of the Interior, reviewing 
the whole question and incontesta- 
bly proving the justice of his claim. 
But all was in vain ; the agency 
remains in the hands of the Con- 
gregationalists, and the Catholic 
Chippewas and their priests are at 
the mercy of men who have no 
sympathy or bond of common feel- 
ing with either. 

The Osages, now in the Indian 
Territory, are and long have been 
almost wholly Catholic. But they 
were assigned to the Quakers, and 
good Friend Gibson, whose pathetic 
lament over the worldly sufferings 
of his protege's we have already 
given, had not been long in charge 
of them ere he issued an edict for- 
bidding Catholic priests or teachers 
to remain on the reservation. Ac- 
customed to oppression and mal- 
treatment of every kind, the Indians 
felt that this last blow was too hard 
to bear without remonstrance, and 
in June, 1873, they drew up and 
signed a memorial to the President, 
asking that " their former Catholic 
missionaries and school-teachers be 
restored to them and allowed to 
again locate in the Osage nation." 
No response was given to this peti- 
tion, and on the 3151 of March in 



io6 



Our Nciv Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



the next year a delegation of the 
tribe, with the governor of the na- 
tion at their head, arrived at Wash- 
ington, and. without assistance or 
suggestions, drew up and presented 
to the Assistant Secretary of the In- 
terior a memorial which it is impos- 
sible to read without emotion. After 
setting forth that the signers of the 
memorial are " the governor, chiefs, 
and councillors of the Great and 
Little Osage nation of Indians, and 
all duly-constituted delegates of 
said nations, "they recount the story 
of their former petition, and say : 

". . . In the name of our people, 
therefore, we beg leave to renew our said 
petition, and to ask that our former Ca- 
tholic missionary, Father Shoemaker, 
and those connected with him in his mis- 
sionary and educational labors among 
our people previous to the late war, be 
permitted to again locate among us. 
We think that this request is reasonable 
and just. Catholic missionaries have 
been among our people for several gene- 
rations. Our people are familiar with 
their religion. The great majority of 
them are of the Catholic faith, and be- 
lieve it is right. Our children have 
grown up in this faith. Many of our 
people have been educated by the Ca- 
tholic missionaries, and our people are 
indebted to them for all the blessings of 
Christianity and civilization that they 
now enjoy, and have for them a grateful 
remembrance. Since the missionaries 
have been taken away from us, we have 
done but little good and have made poor 
advancement in civilization and educa- 
tion. Our whole nation has grieved 
ever since these missionaries have been 
taken away from us, and we have prayed 
continuously that the Great Spirit might 
move upon the heart of our great father, 
the President, and cause him to return 
these missionaries to us. We trust he 
will do so, because in 1865, when we 
signed the treaty of that date, the com- 
missioners who made it promised that if 
iae signed it we should again have our mis- 
sionaries." 

The assistant secretary received 
the memorial, promising to present 
it to the President at once and to 



obtain for the delegation a reply : 
but on the next day Mr. Gibson, 
who had followed them to Washing- 
ton in a state of great alarm, hur- 
ried them away from the capital 
to Philadelphia, and thence home- 
wards, not permitting them to re- 
turn. Immediately after their de- 
parture the petition they had filed 
in the department was missing, 
and its loss was only supplied by 
General Ewing, who had a printed 
copy with the certificate of the 
secretary placed on file. Simulta- 
neously with the mysterious disap- 
pearance of this petition the Com- 
missioner of Indian Affairs receiv- 
ed a paper purporting to come from 
the Osages at home. We dislike 
to use the phrase, but the proof 
is clear that this document was a 
forgery. It purported to be signed 
by twenty-eight chiefs and braves, 
with their "mark"; but, as Gene- 
ral Ewing says, " it was evidently 
got up by interested white men and 
the names of the Indians signed 
without their knowledge." The 
substance of it was that the delega- 
tion which had gone to Washing- 
ton was not to be regarded. Upon 
their return home the delegation 
met their people in council, and 
the result of this conference is re- 
lated in a letter to General Ewing, 
signed by Joseph Paw-ne-no-posh, 
governor of the nation ; Alexander 
Bezett, president of the council ; 
T. L. Rogers, secretary ; and the 
eighteen councillors. The letter 
is too long to be given here. In 
presenting it to the Secretary of the 
Interior, with a full account of the 
whole transaction, General Ewing 
used some very strong, but not too 
strong, language. "Their peti- 
tions," said he, " have not been 
heard, and now, through me as the 
representative of the Catholic In- 
dian missions, they make a final 



Our New Indian Policy and Religious Liberty. 



107 



appeal. The petition of a defence- 
less people for simple justice at the 
hands of a great government is 
the strongest appeal that my head 
or heart can conceive ; and it is of 
course unnecessary for me to urge 
it upon you. It is as plain and 
open as the day ; and if you can 
decline (which I cannot believe) to 
comply with the repeated petitions 
of this people, it is useless for me 
to urge you to it. You must give 
this agency to the Catholic Church, 
or you publish the announcement 
that President Grant has changed 
his policy, and that he now intends 
to force that form of Christianity 
on each Indian tribe that he may 
think is best for each." 

But it was all in vain. Friend 
Gibson carried his point, and, al- 
though he has since been compel- 
led to retire from the agency, it is 
still in the hands of the Quaker or- 
ganization. The population of the 
reservation, according to the last 
report, was 2,679 5 very nearly the 
whole of these are good and faith- 
ful Catholic Christians; but the 
agent reports : " Church members, 
none; churches, none; missiona- 
ries, none !" The Quakers have 
driven away the Catholic priests, 
and have not even taken the trouble 
to send a missionary of their own 
to fill their place. 

But we must make *an end, al- 
though we have only, as it were, 
touched the skirt of our subject. 
Time and space would fail us to 
tell of the priest in California who 
was thrown into prison, brutally 
beaten, and expelled from his flock, 
for the oflence of coming to his old 
mission after the agency had been 
assigned to a Protestant sect ; of 
the bishops who have been denied 
permission to build churches and 
schools on reservations for the use 
of Catholic Indians: of the frauds 



committed by Protestant agents on 
Catholic tribes ; of the mingled 
tyranny and temptation with which 
the Protestant agents have repeat- 
edly assailed our poor Indian 
brethren, making their apostasy the 
condition of their rescue from 
starvation. Are not all these things 
written in the reports of the Indian 
Bureau, in the annals of the Catho- 
lic Indian missions, and in the let- 
ters of our bishops and priests pub- 
lished from time to time ? 

The duty of the Catholic laity 
throughout the United States in 
this business is clear. Happily, the 
way for the discharge of this duty 
has been made easy. It is simply 
to provide generously for the sup- 
port and increase of the work of 
the Bureau of Catholic Missions at 
Washington. This bureau was es- 
tablished in January, 1873 ; it is 
composed of a commissioner, ap- 
pointed by the Archbishop of Bal- 
timore, with the concurrence in 
council of the archbishops of the 
United States ; a treasurer and 
director; and a Board of Control, 
of five members, appointed in like 
manner. The commissioner is a 
layman ; he is recognized by the 
government as the representative 
of the church in all matters among 
the Indians. The treasurer and di- 
rector must be a priest; the pre- 
sident of the Board of Control must 
be a priest ; the other four mem- 
bers are laymen. The salaries of 
the commissioner and of the Board 
of Control are nothing. Their 
work, like that of the directors in 
the councils of the Propaganda, is 
given in charity. " General Charles 
Ewing, the commissioner," says Fa- 
ther Brouillet, " has for over four 
years generously given to the work 
of the bureau his legal services and 
a large portion of his valuable time 
gratuitously. He never made any 



St. Hedivigc. 



charge nor received any pay for his 
services, and on more than one oc- 
casion he has advanced his own mo- 
ney to keep up the work." The di- 
rector and treasurer and two clerks 
are the only persons connected with 
the bureau who are paid, and their 
united salaries are only $i,coo a 
year. The whole expenditures of 
the bureau, for salaries, printing, 
stationery, postage, rent, and travel- 
ling, have not exceeded $1,600 a 
year during the four years of its 
existence all the balance of its 



funds going directly to the benefit 
of the missions. The business of 
the bureau is to defend Catholic 
Indian missions against the organ- 
ized assault which has been made 
upon them. For those desirous of 
aiding so good a work we add the 
information that "all remittances 
to the treasurer of the Catholic 
Indian mission fund should be by 
draft on New York or by post- 
office order, and should be address- 
ed to lock-box 60, Washington, 
D. C." 



ST. HEDWIGE.* 



THE bulwark of Christendom is 
the title which Poland long claim- 
ed and well deserved, even when 
the country now known as that of 
Sobieski and Kosciusko was it- 
self half-barbarous, and, instead of 
being a brilliant, many-provinced 
kingdom, was a disunited confed- 
ation of sovereigns. Among the 
many mediaeval heroes who fought 
the invading Tartars on the east, 
and the aggressive heathen Prus- 
sians on the west, and looked upon 
their victories as triumphs of the 
cross and their death as a kind of 
martyrdom, were two Henrys, " the 
Bearded " and " the Pious," the 
husband and the son of the holy 
Princess Hedwige, Duchess of Si-~ 
lesia and Poland during the first 
half of the thirteenth century. Her 
life, chiefly through her connection 
with other princely houses, was an 
eventful and sorrowful one, and, 

* St. Hedwige^ Duchess of Silesia and Poland. 
By F. Becker. Collection of Historical Portraits. 
No. VIII. Herder & Co., Freiburg in Breisgau 
and Strassburg. 1873. 



towards the last years of it, person- 
ally a checkered one. If God chas- 
tises those whom he loves, the 
mark of grace was surely set upon 
St. Hedwige of Andechs, the aunt 
of St. Elizabeth of Hungary, and 
second daughter of a Bavarian sov- 
ereign whose titles and possessions 
included parts of Istria, Croatia 
and Dalmatia, Swabia, and the 
Tyrol. The life and customs of 
the thirteenth century, the magnifi- 
cence on state occasions, and the 
simplicity, not to say rudeness, ot 
domestic life at ordinary times ; 
the difficulty of communication, 
and consequently the long separa- 
tions between friends and kindred; 
the prominent part of religion in 
all the good works and public im- 
provements of the day ; the tales 
and legends that grew up among 
the people; the traditions which 
there was no one to investigate or 
contradict, and which did duty then 
for newspaper and magazine gos- 
sip; the personal connection be- 



6V. Hcdivigc. 



109 



t\veen the sovereign and his people, 
and the primitive ideal of charity 
unclouded by doubts and theories, 
experiments and "commissions"; 
the summary processes of justice, 
tempered only by the pleadings of 
generous and tender women ; gov- 
ernment in a chaotic state, the 
profession of arms the dominant 
one, private wars at every turn, and 
individual acts of heroism, barbari- 
ty, and charity all alike received as 
a matter of course all this is well 
known, and is equally true of all 
Christian and civilized lands of that 
day. 

But as you went eastward through 
Europe confusion increased and 
manners grew rougher ; primitive 
standards of right and wrong exist- 
ed under the name of the law of 
the strongest ; and whatever gene- 
rosity human nature displayed was 
an untutored impulse, a half-hea- 
then quality guided by a natural 
sense of honor rather than by fixed 
rules of morality. The Slavs, the 
Czechs, and the Magyars were 
magnificent barbarians, as the 
Franks and Teutons of four centu- 
ries earlier had been Christians, 
indeed, and as fiercely so as Clovis 
when he drew his sword at the 
first recital of the Passion and ex- 
claimed, " Would to God I and my 
Franks had been there "; but un- 
restrained and wild, more gene- 
rous than obedient towards the 
church, which they would rather 
endow and defend than curb their 
passions in accordance with its 
teachings splendid material, but 
an unwrought mine. Bishops and 
priests had fallen into loose ways 
among them and lost the respect of 
the people; vassals of the great 
lords, they stood on much the same 
level as the secular clergy at pre- 
sent do in Russia, and the popes 
had long striven in vain to make 



them give up marriage when they 
took Holy Orders. The parish 
clergy were mostly ignorant men, 
often employed in common labor 
to support their families, while of 
teaching monasteries or any places 
where learning was imparted and 
respected there were very few. 

Hedwige came from a well-regu- 
lated country, where church digni- 
taries were the equals of civil ones, 
where the Roman standard was 
paramount, and churchmen were 
looked upon as powerful and learn- 
ed men. Monasteries for both 
sexes abounded; Hedwige herself 
had been brought up by the Benedic- 
tines at Kitzingen, where her special 
friend and teacher, Petrussa, many 
years afterwards, followed her into 
Silesia and became the first abbess 
of the monastery of Trebnitz, near 
Breslau. Hedwige, whose mind 
was from her earliest years in ad- 
vance of her time, and who master- 
ed all the accomplishments of a 
woman of high station at that day 
before she was twelve years old, 
set herself the task of bettering her 
adopted country as soon as she had 
entered it. The men of that time 
knew less than the women ; for their 
education, unless they were des- 
tined for the church, was purely 
military. Ecclesiastics were law- 
yers, doctors, authors, travellers, 
savants, poets, and schoolmasters ; 
while the majority of laymen were 
only soldiers. But the women of 
corresponding birth were taught 
Latin and a good deal of medicine, 
besides household knowledge, em- 
broidery, the national literature, 
music, and painting. For the times 
this was no unworthy curriculum. 
They had a practical knowledge of 
surgery and of the healing herbs of 
the field which, in days when the 
chances of life and death often hung 
on the possibility of reaching or 



1 10 



Sf. 



finding a physician within the radius 
of forty or fifty miles, was a very 
valuable gift and an equally prac- 
tical and useful acquaintance with 
all the details of housekeeping. 
Nothing in those days was " made 
easy "; mechanical contrivances 
for saving time and trouble were 
not thought of; and even the highest 
people worked slowly with their 
hands and did cheerfully without 
the luxuries which a cottage would 
scarcely lack in these days. Hed- 
wige in her later years for she nev- 
er gave up her habits of industry 
often reminded her attendants of 
the maxim, " He that worketh not, 
neither let him eat," and would 
never allow that the rule did not 
apply to sovereigns as well as to 
private individuals. Her own life 
was laborious ; she rose with the 
dawn, winter and summer, and, 
though her devotions took up many 
hours, she yet had enough to give 
to the education of her children, 
the making of vestments for poor 
churches, and of clothes for her 
pensioners. Her virtues, which 
were great and generous, flowed nat- 
urally into the mould of her time ; 
she built and endowed monasteries, 
interceded for prisoners and crimi- 
nals, made daily distributions of 
alms to the poor, nursed the sick 
and leprous in the hospitals which 
she was the first in her adopted 
country to found and secure and 
she brought up a number of orphan 
children. Of these she was so fond 
that when she travelled she took 
them with her in several covered 
wagons. Later on she kept in the 
palace at Breslau, at her own ex- 
pense, thirteen poor men, whom she 
served every day at dinner, just be- 
fore her own meal, and otherwise 
ministered to their wants in mem- 
ory of our Lord and his apostles. 
In fact, her life is a kind of tran- 



script of that of St. Elizabeth of 
Hungary, and even the poetical 
legends of miracles wrought to turn 
away her husband's displeasure, fa- 
miliar to us all through the pic- 
tures of St. Elizabeth and the bread 
turned to roses, have a counterpart 
in Hedwige's life. 

There is a prevalent idea that 
holiness and the present time are 
incompatible, or rather that the 
holiness of which the biographers 
of mediaeval saints admiringly tell 
us is out of place in this century. 
The mistake lies in the frame of 
the picture presented to us. Ho- 
liness is of all times, and is the 
same in substance as it .ever was. 
If, instead of reproducing the beau- 
tiful legends of old, and restoring 
a sort of literary Preraphaelitism 
in the history of the strong and 
wise women of by-gone times, the 
modern biographer were to go to 
the root of the matter and bring 
out in strong relief the common- 
sense virtues, the simplicity and 
faithfulness to natural duties, the 
reliance upon God, and the single- 
minded purpose which distinguish- 
ed the women who are known as 
saints, they would succeed in^ win- 
ning the interest of modern readers. 
These saints were wives, mothers, 
and mistresses, lived and loved, 
sorrowed, rejoiced, and suffered, as 
women have done from the wives 
of the patriarchs down to the good 
women of our own century, perhaps 
of our own acquaintance. They 
were models whom it is praise- 
worthy to copy not pictures held 
up to our gaze as beautiful inacces- 
sibilities. The very rudeness of 
life then should make them more 
human in our eyes ; they made 
mistakes with good intentions; they 
had predilections which savored of 
weakness ; they struggled through 
temptations to final perfection for 



.$/. Hcdwige. 



in 



saintship implies, not the glorifica- 
tion of every act they ever did, but 
the general state of their life and 
soul after they had suffered and 
conquered in the fight that we all 
have to wage with the world, the 
flesh, and the devil. Of the strik- 
ing incidents of a saint's life it is 
best to judge as one would of those 
in the life of any other personage 
of by-gone ages that is, according 
to the standard of the age in which 
he or she lived ; of the root-vir- 
tues which won the saint's canoni- 
zation : by the everlasting standard 
of the Ten Commandments. There 
is no more mischievous error, nor 
one more likely to blind us to the 
good we can draw from the lives 
of men and women who have gone 
before us, than the view which sets 
a barrier between historic holiness 
and every-day life at the present day. 
Hedwige lived in times which 
had their share of wars, inva- 
sions, pestilences, and other such 
stirring events : Poland and Ger- 
many were in a stormy state, and 
the fate of many of her own fam- 
ily was peculiarly stormy; indeed, 
hardly a sensational drama of our 
day could deal in more violent in- 
cidents than did the half century 
through which she lived. Her sis- 
ter Agnes became the wife of Philip, 
King of France, in place of his law- 
ful but divorced wife, Ingeburga, 
and incurred [not only personal 
excommunication as an adulteress, 
but was the cause of the French 
kingdom being laid under an in- 
terdict for more than a year. Her 
elder sister Gertrude, Queen of 
Hungary, was assassinated by a 
political faction in the absence of 
her husband, who had left her re- 
gent. Her two brothers, Henry 
and Egbert (the latter Bishop of 
Bamberg), were the accomplices of 
Otho of Wittelsbach, the suitor of 



Hedwige's only daughter, in the 
murder of Philip, the Emperor of 
Germany, whom he slew to revenge 
himself for the warning the empe- 
ror had given the Duke of Silesia 
against the would-be suitor of the 
young princess; for Otho was as 
cruel as he was brave. For this 
deed the Electors at Frankfort de- 
graded the brothers from their dig- 
nities, titles, and possessions, after 
which Henry exiled himself to the 
Holy Land, where he fought the 
Saracens for twenty years, and Eg- 
bert fled to Hungary, where the 
queen, his sister, gave him a home 
and shelter for the rest of his life. 
Otho was beheaded, his head 
thrown into the Danube and his 
body exposed to the birds and 
beasts of the forest. 

But the punishment of treason did 
not end here ; Hedwige's home was 
destroyed by the indignant aven- 
gers of the emperor, and her father's 
heart was broken at the news of 
his son's crime ; so that of the old 
cradle-land of the family nothing 
but smoking ruins and sad memo- 
ries remained, while a few years 
later she saw her two sons, Henry 
and Conrad, meet in deadly con- 
flict as the heads of two rival par- 
ties in the duchy, the latter defeat- 
ed and pursued by his brother, and 
only saved by his father to die a 
few days later from a fall when out 
hunting. Her husband and her 
remaining son died within three 
years of each other, the latter in 
battle against the invading Tar- 
tars; and, what no doubt pierced 
her heart still more, her husband 
was excommunicated for retaining 
church property in provinces which 
he claimed as his by right of the 
testament of the Duke of Gnesen 
and Posen. The early death of 
three other children must have 
been but a slight sorrow compared 



112 



St. Hedwigc. 



with these trials, and the peaceful 
life of her sister Matilda, Abbess 
of Kit/inger., and of her daughter 
Gertrude, second abbess of Treb- 
nitz the same who escaped be- 
coming the bride of "Wild Otho," 
as he was called could not but 
have made her envy it at times. 
She had had in her youth an incli- 
nation towards the monastic life, 
but gave it up at her parents' de- 
sire, and married, according to the 
customs of her time and claSs, at 
the childish age of twelve. But 
she had seemed from her infancy 
marked out for no common lot; 
she was grave, sedate, and woman- 
ly ; she felt her marriage to be 
a mission and the beginning of 
duties ; she saw at a glance the 
state of neglect and uncivilization 
and the need of betterment in which 
her adopted country stood, and set 
about imbuing her husband with 
her ideas concerning improvement. 
He was only eighteen, and loved 
her truly, so he proved to be her 
first disciple. She began by learn- 
ing Polish, which her husband's sis- 
ter Adelaide taught her, and then 
gathered all the inmates of the pal- 
ace, to teach them prayers and the 
chief doctrines of the faith, in which 
they were very imperfectly instruct- 
ed, although full of readiness, even 
eagerness, to believe. Her father- 
in-law, the reigning duke, fully ap- 
preciated her worth and respect- 
ed her enthusiasm. Her husband 
joined her in plans for founding 
monasteries and building churches 
when it should come to his turn to 
reign over Silesia ; and in the mean- 
while she strove to teach the nobles 
and the people a greater respect 
for the priesthood by herself setting 
the example of outward deference 
towards priests, whether native or 
foreign, ignorant or learned. The 
strangers she always asked to the 



palace, gave them clothes and mo- 
ney for their journey, attended their 
Masses, and sometimes served them 
at table. 

In order to introduce clerical 
learning and morals into Silesia 
and Poland, it was necessary to 
rely upon Germans, as has often 
been the case in other countries, 
where a foreign element has been, 
for some time at least, synonymous 
with civilization. In England Ital- 
ians chiefly, in a less degree Nor- 
mans, and in one signal instance a 
Greek,* brought with them the 
knowledge of church architecture 
and chant, besides secular learning; 
Irish missionaries had 'before that 
helped on the Britons, and Saxons, 
later on, carried the same influence 
across the sea to heathen Germany, 
who in her turn became the evan- 
gelizer of the Slav nations. Still 
later, when Poland was as fervent a 
Catholic country as Germany, an- 
other Hedwige (the name had then 
grown to be a national one) con- 
verted the Lithuanians and became 
the mother of the Jagellon dynasty. 
Here, on the confines of Russia, the 
Latin Church stood face to face 
with the Greek, and the tide of 
progress and conversion was stay- 
ed. Then came the perpetual tur- 
moils with the warlike Turks, till 
religion became rather an affair of 
the knight than of the missionary, 
until that wave of circumstances 
having passed away, and the Turks 
having sunk from the height of 
their military renown to the insig- 
nificance of a mongrel and undis- 
ciplined crowd, the battle between 
faith and scepticism the modern 
form of heathenism has shifted to 
a great degree to the arena of the 
mind. The Lepanto of our day is 
being fought out as obstinately on 

* Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury- 



St. Hedwige. 



paper as that of three hundred 
years ago was on sea ; of its na- 
ture it cannot be as short or as 
decisive, but it is nevertheless the 
counterpart and the only worthy 
one of that romantic and daring 
feat of arms. The struggle in the 
days of Hedwige was in some sense 
much narrower; but though her 
husband and son engaged in it 
rather as blind instruments than 
far-seeing directors, she, with the 
instincts of her sex and her habit- 
ual union with God, helped in it 
as a teacher and missionary. She 
proved her gift for it first upon her 
household, then, in the years of her 
retirement, upon her special charge 
some young heathen girls, natives 
of Prussia, whom she taught her- 
self and provided for in life. One 
of these, Catherine, to whom she 
was god-mother, she married to 
her trusty chamberlain, Schavoine, 
and left them the estate of that 
name after her death. But not- 
withstanding her thirst for doing 
good and her high idea of her duty 
to her subjects, she thoroughly en- 
joyed the quiet of home-life, away 
from the court, and, whenever it was 
practicable, would spend some weeks 
at a time with her young husband 
and her children at Lahnhaus. It 
is here that her memory lives fresh- 
est at present ; here that she tend- 
ed her dovecot, which is brought 
to mind by the yearly market of 
doves, unique of its kind, still held 
at La'hn on Ash-Wednesday ; here 
that she and her favorite doe cross- 
ed the Hedwigsteig, a rough, rocky 
pathway, to the Chapel of the Her- 
mit and the image of the Blessed 
Virgin, which afterwards became a 
pilgrimage-shrine, where the neigh- 
boring peasants came to see her 
and unite in her prayers, so that 
the present village dates back to 
the huts of branches hastily put up 

VOL. XXVI. 8 



around the spreading tree that for- 
merly protected the image ; here 
that she rested on the Hedwigstein, 
or moss-grown boulder, yet remain- 
ing, with her name attached to it ; 
here that she built a chapel dedi- 
cated to St. Nicholas, and estab- 
lished some Benedictine monks; 
and here that in her later years she 
received the confidence of her 
friend, Baroness Jutta of Lieben- 
thal, a pious widow, who founded 
the monastery of that name for 
Benedictine nuns and the educa- 
tion of young girls, and herself be- 
came its first abbess. 

Duke Henry, when he came to 
be sovereign, did not forget his 
plans and promises, but helped her 
generously in the endowment of 
her hospitals, churches, and monas- 
teries. Himself the son of a Ger- 
man princess, he had great faith in 
the influence for good, in morals, 
in agriculture, in learning, of his 
mother's and his wife's country- 
men ; and, according to the custom 
of the time, Hedwige was accom- 
panied on her journey to Silesia, as 
a bride, by an escort of German 
knights, who were not to compose 
a separate court or household for 
her, but to settle in the country 
and make it their home. Such im- 
migration, of course, had its sad as 
well as its good side ; it led to jeal- 
ousies that were neither unnatural 
nor inexcusable, although it also 
leavened the country with some 
useful and healthy habits. It was 
on this delicate question that her 
two sons quarrelled so violently as 
to make it the pretext of a civil 
war ; Conrad, the youngest, being 
passionately attached to the old 
Polish customs and not discrimi- 
nating between these and crying 
abuses, while Henry, the eldest, in- 
herited his father's love for the 
Germans. The old nobility formed 



. Hcdwige. 



a powerful party and rallied round 
Conrad, hailing him as their fu- 
ture national sovereign, although 
his father was still alive and his 
elder brother the acknowledged 
heir. Henry the Bearded had by 
that time retired from public life, 
and divided his possessions be- 
tween his two sons, giving the eld- 
est the city of Breslau and all Mid- 
dle and Lower Silesia, while the 
youngest received the provinces of 
Leubus and Lausitz. The latter 
were less cultivated than the form- 
er, but this was chiefly due to that 
want ofj or remoteness from, German 
influence and immigration ; so that 
the father, knowing his sons' oppo- 
site views on this subject, hoped to 
satisfy each by his partition. Con- 
rad, however, resented the gift of a 
less civilized and extended terri- 
tory, and took this pretext to make 
war on his brother, with the result 
already noted. 

The retirement of Henry, the 
husband of Hedwige, which lasted 
for twenty years or more, was the 
result of a strange form of piety and 
self-renunciation not uncommon 
in the middle ages. The Duke 
and Duchess of Silesia had been 
married twenty-three years, and 
had had six children, three of 
whom died in infancy. A little 
after the birth of the youngest, 
in 1209, Hedwige, still in the bloom 
of her years (she was only thirty- 
iive and her husband forty- one), 
and after many prayers and strug- 
gles, felt herself impelled to dedi- 
cate the rest of her life to God 
only, and, with her husband's con- 
sent, to live separate from him. 
They had always loved each other 
tenderly, and Henry's conduct, 
unlike that of many sovereigns of 
his and of later times, had been ir- 
reproachable ; he looked upon his 
wife as a saint, and upon her wishes 



as commands ; he had allowed her 
to guide his charities and public 
improvements, had followed her 
advice, had trusted to her to bring 
up his children exactly as she 
thought fit, which was more rigor- 
ously and less luxuriously than is 
often the case with royal children 
in a word, had leant wholly upon her. 
To signify his full acquiescence in 
this half-monastic vow, he received 
the tonsure, and, contrary to the cus- 
tom of his class at that time, let his 
beard grow, whence came his sur- 
name, the Bearded. 

Hedwige retired to Trebnitz, 
where she lived in a separate house 
with her own women and the cham- 
berlain Schavoine, who took his 
name from the estate which Henry 
gave her on their separation. Other 
grants of money were also made 
her, and her husband promised his 
countenance and help in any good 
work she should wish to do there 
or elsewhere throughout his pos- 
sessions. They often met in alter 
years, generally at festive ceremo- 
nies for the building or opening of 
churches, and once at the grave of 
their unhappy son Conrad ; and 
Henry himself, though keeping up 
a court and moving from place to 
place, betook himself to prayers, 
study, and good works, having giv- 
en over the government to his sons. 
In his old age he came forth again 
in the character of a sovereign and 
a leader, and, indeed, led a stormy, 
stirring life for a few years before 
his death. 

Hedwige, in this proceeding of 
her retirement, had another object 
in view that is, the example which 
she hoped her voluntary giving up 
of married life would be to the 
married priesthood of Poland and 
Silesia. Such was, to a' great ex- 
tent, the case, and the celibacy of 
the clergy, so long preached in 



St. 



vain, became in a few years the 
rule instead of the exception. 

The Cistercian abbey of Treb- 
nitz, now Hedwige's home, was 
the first institution of its kind for 
women. It was begun in 1200 and 
finished eighteen years later, but 
was ready to be inhabited in 1202. 
It stood in a wooded region, three 
miles from Breslau. The legend 
of its foundation, as commemorated 
in an old rhyme or Volkslicd (peo- 
ple's song), refers it to a vow made 
by Henry, who, while out hunting, 
got entangled in a morass and 
could see no human means of res- 
cue ; but what is certain is that the 
royal couple had long planned and 
looked forward to a monastery for 
women, and the date of the laying 
of the first stone of Trebnitz corre- 
sponds with that of Henry's acces- 
sion to the throne. The building 
was intended to accommodate a 
thousand persons, and was built by 
the hands of convicts and prison- 
ers, even those who were condemn- 
ed to death, whose work on it was 
to be equivalent to the rest of their 
sentence. Hedwige's pity for, and 
kindness to, captives, whether inno- 
cent or guilty, was a conspicuous 
trait of her character; and the un- 
deserved physical hardships of pri- 
soners in those times were enough 
to turn the sympathies of every 
kind-hearted person from justice 
towards the criminal. In the same 
way did the neglected sick, and es- 
pecially the lepers, touch her heart ; 
indeed, all the oldest hospitals in 
Silesia are due to her. 

The neighboring Cistercian monks 
of Leubus cast the leaden plates 
for the roof and the smaller bells of 
the new monastery, in return for 
which Henry gave them two es- 
tates; and the duke himself with 
his foremost nobles inspected the 
progress of the work, and solemnly 



made the round of the land deeded 
to the institution, marking his own 
name on the boundary stones. Bi- 
shop Egbert of Bamberg, Hedwige's 
brother (this was before his dis- 
grace), procured a body of Cister- 
cian nuns of his diocese as a begin- 
ning, and accompanied them him- 
self on their journey to their new 
home. Hedwige's great-uncle, Pro- 
vost Popo of Bamberg, came too, 
and the meeting of these strangers 
with the high clergy of Silesia and 
Poland was, as the old chroniclers 
would have said, " a. brave and 
pleasant sight." The buildings 
were decorated with evergreens, 
and the pomp of jewelled garments, 
clerical and national costumes, ar- 
mor, horses richly caparisoned, em- 
broidered robes and canopies, was 
dazzling. It was the Sunday with- 
in the octave of the feast of the 
Epiphany a sharp, bright winter's 
day ; the cavalcade from the court 
of Breslau, consisting of the duke 
and duchess and their retinue, es- 
corted the nuns and the foreign 
ecclesiastics, while the bishops of 
Breslau and Posen, each with his 
chapter, and the Cistercian abbot 
under whose jurisdiction Trebnitz 
was placed, received the latter at 
the gate of the finished portion of 
the new church. Here the duke 
handed the Abbess Petrussa, Hed- 
wige's old friend and teacher, a 
deed of the property henceforth be- 
longing to the order a docu- 
ment which, like all following ones 
of the same kind, ended with a 
forcible denunciation of any future 
injury to the rights of the abbey. 
" Whoever injures this founda- 
tion, without giving full satisfac- 
tion therefor, shall be cut off from 
the church; and let his everlast- 
ing portion be with Judas, the 
Lord's betrayer, who hanged him- 
self, and with Dathan and Abiron 



n6 



5/. Hedivige. 



whom the earth swallowed up 
alive." 

When the deed had been read, 
and the dedication of the building 
" to the honor of God and of the 
holy apostle Bartholomew " de- 
clared, the clergy, who held torches 
in their hands, threw them on the 
ground, as a sign of all secular 
claims on the possessions of the 
abbey being extinguished ; and 
during this ceremony the solemn 
excommunication against all who 
should injure the monastery was 
read aloud once more. The men 
who had worked at the building, or 
in any way contributed to it, were 
freed from all feudal claims, from 
the obligation to fight, to furnish 
huntsmen, falcons, or horses for the 
ducal household, to work at the 
fields or at the public works, and 
received the immunities and pro- 
tection usual to the vassals of a 
monastery. 

Although Trebnitz was undoubt- 
edly named after the neighboring 
village so called, a story grew up 
of the humorous mispronunciation 
of a Polish word, trzcbanic, by the 
German abbess, when asked by 
Henry if " there was anything else 
she needed ?" The word signifies 
"We need nothing more," and has 
some likeness to the name of Treb- 
nitz; but popular tales such as this 
abound everywhere. Among the 
later gifts to the monastery were 
three villages, bound to supply the 
nuns with honey, wax, and mead 
the first for their "vesper-meal," 
the second for their candles and 
torches, and the third for their 
"drink on holidays." The object 
of the institution, which the origi- 
nal deed set forth as being the se- 
curing of " a place of refuge where- 
in the weaker sex may atone for its 
sins through the mercy of God," 
at once obtained, and other ad- 



vantages also grew up around the 
women's republic of Trebnitz. It 
was soon filled with young girls sent 
there to be educated ; widows came 
either to enter the order or to live 
under its rule and protection as 
out-door members ; women fled 
there to repent, and others to avoid 
temptation ; and lastly came Ger- 
trude, the duke's daughter, to be- 
come a nun within its walls. Seven 
years after its festive opening 
Hedwige herself retired there and 
began the second half of her long 
life by caring for and educating the 
heathen maidens from Prussia. 
Trebnitz was her favorite home un- 
til her death, and the institution 
which was most identified with the 
holy Duchess of Silesia ; but the list 
of great works she and her husband 
set on foot, each of them a starting- 
point of much hidden good, is a 
long one. The parish church of 
Bunzlatt having, with most of the 
town itself, been burnt, she built a 
new one, dedicated to Our Lady. At 
Goldberg, a village near one of the 
royal summer palaces, she found- 
ed a Franciscan convent, intended 
to serve the purpose of a school 
for the neighborhood. Nimptsch, 
her place of refuge during the 
civil war between her two sons, was 
not forgotten ; for while there she 
laid the first stone of a church, and 
almost at the same time began one 
dedicated to St. Andrew for the 
town of Herrnstadt. Her friends 
often remarked on her lavishness in 
building, and asked her whence she 
could expect to draw the means. 
She used to answer confidently : 
" I trust that the heavenly Archi- 
tect who made the world, and my 
dear and faithful husband Henry, 
will not let me be shamed, so that 
I should be unable to finish what I 
have begun with good motives and 
to their honor. Do not be too 



St. 



117 



anxious about ray doings ; all will 
end well with God's help." In 
Breslau, the capital, she built three 
hospitals that of the Holy Ghost, 
that of St. Lazarus (this was for 
lepers), and that of St. Barbara. 
For many years Hedwige's charity 
towards the sick had produced a 
rivalry among all good men, both 
nobles and burghers, to tend and 
care for some sick persons in their 
own houses or in rooms hired or 
built for the purpose ; but her wish, 
always was to found a public hospi- 
tal. The duke gave her a suitable 
piece of land for the building and 
garden; the abbot of the Augus- 
tinians, Witoslaus, gave his lay 
brothers as sick-nurses and his 
choir-monks as overseers and con- 
fessors. Contributions flowed in 
from the rich members of the po- 
pulation, and the first hospital was 
finished in a very short time. The 
third contained what was an im- 
mense luxury in those days a num- 
ber of bath-rooms, open gratis to 
the poor on certain days, and rooms 
where they could be bled, as was 
the custom on the slightest illness. 
All those who came in contact with 
Hedwige caught her spirit of gene- 
rosity, and rich men, lay and eccle- 
siastic, vied with her in founding 
churches and monasteries. Canon 
Nicholas of Breslau, the duke's 
chancellor, obtained Henry's leave 
to endow a Cistercian monastery 
with the estates which the duke had 
given him for his life-time, and 
others followed his example. 

These ceremonies were always 
solemn and the deed of gift publicly 
read, signed, witnessed, and sworn 
to. As much pomp hedged them 
in as was usual in a treaty of peace 
or the betrothal of sovereign prin- 
ces; and, indeed, the foundation of 
churches, though a common occur- 
rence, was looked upon as quite as 



important as any civil contract. In 
1234 a terrible famine, fever, and 
pestilence decimated the land, and, 
among many other Silesian towns 
that possessed as yet no hospital, 
Neumarkt was in special distress. 
Hedwige hurried there and set on 
foot a temporary system of relief 
and nursing, but also entreated her 
husband to build a permanent hos- 
pital for incurables, where they 
might be cared for till their death. 
This he did, and attached to it a 
provostship, the church dedicated 
to the Blessed Virgin, and Pope 
Innocent IV. sent special blessings 
to the Bohemian Benedictine monks 
who were entrusted with the care of 
the sick. Four years later Henry 
built a church in Lowenberg and 
gave it to the Knights of St. John 
of Jerusalem ; this was a month or 
two before his death. But these 
are only a few of the works of this 
generous couple. Many villages 
and remote places obtained benefits 
from them, travelling priests were 
cared for, young girls helped in 
their need and protected or dower- 
ed, many poor families housed and 
fed ; and the famine of 1234 espe- 
cially gave Hedwige an opportunity 
of justifying her title of " Mother 
of the poor." She distributed un- 
heard-of quantities of grain, bread, 
meat, and dried fruits to the peo- 
ple, who came for relief from long 
distances. She gave lavishly, with 
that apparent recklessness that 
marks the charities of saints, smil- 
ingly saying, " We must help the 
poor, that the Lord may have pity 
on our own needs and appease 
our own hunger." She forgave all 
feudal dues for years on her own 
possessions, and looked after her 
employes so diligently that they 
complained that the " duchess left 
them nothing but the leavings of 
the peasants." When she did not 



iiS 



S/, Hedivige. 



distribute her alms in person, the 
poor groaned and wept, and cared 
less for the charity than if it had 
been seasoned by her gracious pre- 
sence. When Breslau was wholly 
burnt down in 1218, and three years' 
distress fell upon the land, she did 
the same and relieved thousands. 
That year was marked by the 
death of the Abbess of Trebnitz, 
Petrussa, and the choice of Prin- 
cess Gertrude as her successor, 
which coincided with the festival 
held to celebrate the entire finish- 
ing of the monastery and the dedi- 
cation of the church. The religious 
ceremonies were followed by a ban- 
quet in the refectory and by games 
for the people in the courtyard. 
Henry was present and rejoiced 
with her; her son's wife, Anna, 
daughter of King Ottokar of Bo- 
hemia, was there with her children, 
one of whom was to fill, but unwor- 
thily, the throne of Silesia. It was 
a family gathering as well as a re- 
ligious feast ; but if, as tradition 
says, Hedwige was then gifted with 
a more than ordinary insight into 
the future, she must have felt sad 
to think of the turmoil that was 
coming and that would part her 
more and more in spirit from her 
husband. 

After the death of his second son, 
Conrad, Henry turned his arms 
against a relation of his own, Duke 
Ladislaus of Gnesen and Posen, 
and came off victorious. His old 
warrior-blood once again stirred in 
him, it was impossible to keep him 
from the excitement of war, and 
Hedwige's entreaties and messages 
were of no avail. She feared the 
excommunication which Pope Inno- 
cent had more than once threaten- 
ed to launch against the restless 
Polish sovereigns, and was relieved 
when he undertook a war against 
the Prussians, who at least were 



heathens, and whose cruelties real- 
ly needed strong repression. Still, 
it was rather the thirst for fighting 
that led the Duke of Silesia against 
them than any exalted motive of 
justice or desire to open the way 
for their conversion. 

The pretext for the expedition 
was the cruelties they committed 
on their inroads into Poland, and 
especially the duchy of Masovia. 
To attack them among their own 
forests and morasses was so hope- 
lessly difficult that the bishops, 
whom the pope had admonished to 
preach a " crusade" against them, 
had hitherto refrained from doing 
so. The event proved the wisdom 
of this inaction ; for after marching 
a large army over the border, under 
the command of Henry of Silesia 
and Duke Conrad of Masovia, with 
whom the bishops with their men- 
at-arms joined forces, the assailers 
found themselves in a network of 
marshes, behind which the assail- 
ed quietly waited. The wearied 
troops had at last to be inglorious- 
ly marched back again, while the 
enemy came out in their rear, made 
a raid into Masovia, carried off 
five thousand Christian captives, 
burnt a thousand villages and ham- 
lets as well as almost every church 
in the province, and drove Duke 
Conrad into Germany for refuge. 
Henry then advised the fugitive duke 
to call upon the German Knights 
of Venice, a military order who af- 
terwards under their grand-master, 
Hermann Balk, settled in Kulmer- 
land and effectually routed and 
conquered the Prussians. The con- 
version of the latter was, therefore, 
a feat of arms rather than a triumph 
of missionary zeal ; and perhaps it 
was less to be wondered at that, af- 
ter only three hundred years' Chris- 
tianity, they should have accepted 
another change in the shape of the 



Sf. Hedwige. 



119 



Lutheran Reformation. The order 
itself, however, was more blama- 
ble, in that it departed, in the per- 
son of its head, the famous Albert 
of Brandenburg, from its old chi- 
valric standard of honor, and went 
over to the " new doctrine," as it 
was called, because this defection 
promised political independence. 
And, again, it strikes one, in reading 
of these thirteenth-century feuds, 
that history repeats itself; for a new 
religious war has sprung up between 
Prussia and Posen, and the two 
civilized races are in much the 
same relative positions, speaking 
broadly, as the two barbarous ones 
were then, although Posen can 
point to a short and dazzling career 
between the two eras of persecu- 
tion. 

It is impossible here to recount 
the various and sad events that led 
up to the death of Henry. He 
died in 1238, at the age of seventy, 
under the ban of excommunication, 
which was only partially removed, 
and deprived to the last of the 
presence of his saintly wife. The 
scene of the return of his body to 
the abbey church at Trebnitz was 
heartrending. The nuns and vassals, 
no less than his widow and chil- 
dren, looked upon him as their stay 
and their protector ; they bewail- 
ed him with genuine grief as their 
benefactor, and buried him with all 
imaginable respect and pomp as 
their founder. Hedwige's life as 
a widow became more penitential 
than before. 

After her death a hair-shirt and 
a belt with small, sharp points turn- 
ed inwards were found on her 
body ; but these she had worn for 
many years before her widowhood. 
Her cloister-life, however, was not 
her only one, for she watched with 
intelligent interest the politics of 
the time, the great events, and even 



the less obtrusive details, whose 
consequences to the cause of good 
might afterwards be manifold ; and 
above all she lived in her son, 
Henry the Pious, a worthy and 
able sovereign, whose reign was to 
be short, stormy, and glorious. 

In January, 1241, the Tartars, 
under their chiefs Batu and Peta, 
having previously desolated Rus- 
sia, fell with nearly three hundred 
thousand fighting men upon Bohe- 
mia, Hungary, Silesia, and Poland. 
The King of Hungary, Bela, was 
beaten by Batu, while Peta besieg- 
ed, took, and burnt Cracow on his 
way to Silesia. The King of Bo- 
hemia, Wenzel, brought as large an 
army as he could to defend his 
frontiers, while Henry gathered 
thirty thousand men in his father's 
city of refuge, Liegnitz, waiting to 
attack Peta on his road to Breslau. 
Trebnitz was in dire confusion ; 
monasteries always fell the first 
prey to the heathen invaders, and 
the nuns judged it prudent to scat- 
ter themselves and claim each the 
protection of her own family, while 
Hedwige, with her daughter, the 
Abbess Gertrude, and her daugh- 
ter-in-law, Anna, shut themselves 
up in the strong castle of Crossen 
on the Oder. Before she left she 
gave her son a scarf, or rather 
sword-belt, embroidered with her 
own hands, which he received as 
an omen of good-fortune, cheering 
her with hopes of his speedy and 
victorious return, while the stricken, 
heroic mother feared but too surely 
that she should never see his face 
again. All Breslau retired within 
the citadel to await the attack, and 
Henry tried to intercept the foe on 
his way. He drew up his army on 
some high ground just outside the 
walls Wahlstatt, a good battle- 
ground, as he judged and himself 
gave the signal to attack the on- 



I2O 



S/. Hcdiuige. 



coming foe. He commanded the 
main body, while lesser brother- 
sovereigns directed the wings ; but 
the irresistible might of numbers, 
which was the chief reliance of the 
Tartars, bore down all opposition, 
as a \vbirl\vind does the densest 
forest. The Poles and Silesians 
fell like heroes, defending them- 
selves and asking no quarter, until 
a cry arose in German, " Strike 
dead! strike dead !" which, wheth- 
er raised by accident or by treach- 
ery, produced a panic by its like- 
ness to the Polish word for " Fly ! 
fly !" The army seemed literally 
to melt away; squadrons broke 
and ran, and a cloud of small, 
sharp Tartar arrows clove the air 
after them ; the Asiatic cavalry 
hunted and trampled down the fu- 
gitives. One of the Polish leaders 
at last succeeded in rallying part 
of the troops, and the fight began 
again with some hopes of victory, 
when the enemy had resort to a 
kind of infernal machine used in 
ancient Indian warfare, the like- 
ness of a gigantic head, which was 
so made as to give out a dense 
smoke and unbearable stench, be- 
sides being in some degree explo- 
sive. The contrivance was held 
by the Christians to be magical 
and devilish, and the Tartars them- 
selves, so dangerous was it to those 
of their own men who had the 
handling of it, only resorted to it 
in the utmost extremity, which 
shows how hard-pressed they were 
on this occasion by the Silesian 
soldiery. But the terrible device 
stood them in good stead this time. 
The panic was renewed, and once 
.more a wild flight and wilder pur- 
suit took place; the leaders, the 
knights, and Henry himself, regard- 
Jess of the flight of their followers, 
fought on long after they knew 
.their fate to be hopeless and death 



certain. One by one the brave fel- 
lows were cut down, the little band 
decreased at every stroke of sword 
or flight of arrows, and the duke, 
with four knights, found himself al- 
most alone on the lost field of bat- 
tle. They urged him to try to 
save his life by flight; he scouted 
the proposal, and told them that 
since God had not willed that he 
should conquer, he would at least 
die. " For the faith, "he said; " at 
least, it will be a martyr's death." 
His charger was killed under him, 
and he fought on foot for some 
time, hewing a lane for himself 
through his enemies. One of his 
knights managed at last- to bring 
him a fresh horse, which he had 
no sooner mounted than his person 
was recognized by hundreds of his 
foes and he was hemmed in on all 
sides. While in the act of lifting 
his sword to cut down a Tartar in 
his front, he was wounded from be- 
hind by a long lance thrust in pre- 
cisely where a joint in his armor 
exposed the shoulder ; the spear 
went right through and pierced the 
lung, and the son of Duchess Hed- 
wige sank dying from his horse. 
The enemy cut off his head, and, 
hoisting it on a spear, paraded it 
before the walls of Liegnitz, sum- 
moning the defenders to surrender; 
but they, guarding Henry's young 
sons, answered back from the bat- 
tlements : " If we have lost one 
duke to-day, we have four yet with 
us in the castle, and these we will 
defend to the last drop of our 
hearts' blood." The next day they 
were relieved by King Wenzel of 
Bohemia, who, however, came too 
late to do anything but hasten the 
departure of the Tartar horde, which 
had suffered severely in the en- 
counter, but rallied soon enough to 
maraud, burn, and sack churches, 
abbeys, villages, etc., throughout 



S/. Hcdwige. 



121 



Hungary and Silesia, Bohemia and 
Mahren, until, one year later, Jaros- 
laus von Sternberg finally routed 
their diminished army under the 
walls of Olmiitz. This roused Ger- 
many and France, and the Christian 
sovereigns combined sent a mighty 
army, under the command of Wen- 
zel of Bohemia, to defend the Aus- 
tro-Hungarian frontiers, whence 
the Tartars retreated, by the same 
road by which they had come, to 
their steppes on the high table-lands 
of Asia. Their traces in Europe, 
however, were not blotted out for 
half a century ; the ruined churches, 
blackened villages, and ravaged 
fields long showed their awful track ; 
and the outward work of Hedwige's 
life would have been well-nigh de- 
stroyed had not the spirit she had 
brought with it remained alive as the 
germ of a future exterior restoration. 

The night of the lost battle, when 
Henry's headless body lay on the 
field, Hedvvige, after a prayer of 
unusual length, woke her nearest 
friend and favorite attendant, and 
said to her : 

" Demundis, this night I have 
lost my only son. He has left me 
as swiftly as a bird flies upwards, 
and I shall never look upon his face 
again." She forbade her to say 
anything of this to the dead man's 
wife and sister until some messenger 
from the army should bring news 
of the battle ; and it was not till the 
third day that Jaroslaus von Jano- 
witz came with the terrible tidings. 
Anna, Henry's young widow, has- 
tened to the field to seek and re- 
cover her husband's body, which 
was so mutilated that she only rec- 
ognized it by the six toes of the left 
foot. The corpse was brought to 
Trebnitzand buried with his father, 
brother, and infant sons in the ab- 
bey church. Hedwige prayed thus 
aloud over his grave : "O Lord ! I 



thank thee that thou hast given me 
such a son, who, as long as he lived, 
loved and honored me truly, and 
never gave me an hour's sorrow. 
However gladly I would have kept 
him by my side on earth, I hold 
him blessed in that, by the shed- 
ding of his blood, he is now united 
in heaven with thee, his Creator. 
With supplication, O Lord ! do I 
commend his soul unto thee." 

Hedwige's life and work were 
drawing to an end. Her last pub- 
lic act was one of charity to the 
dead and comfort to the bereaved 
living. The bodies of many heroic 
defenders of their country had been 
left to rot upon the field of battle. 
She had these gathered together 
and buried in consecrated ground, 
and ordered solemn requiems to 
be sung for the repose of their 
souls, while she made herself ac- 
cessible to every sorrowing widow, 
mother, sister, or orphan of the 
dead soldiers, listened to their com- 
plaints and laments, comforted and 
helped them, and brought God's 
peace once more into their hearts. 
After this she prepared herself to 
die. Her first care was a practical 
one : she set her affairs in order a 
moral duty too often foolishly con- 
founded with worldliness. Then 
she redoubled her devotions, and, 
sending for her chaplain, asked to 
receive Extreme Unction. He de- 
murred, seeing no sign of death 
about her ; but her holiness was so 
well known that he asked her the 
reason of her request. 

"It is a sacrament," she answer- 
ed reverently, " which should be re- 
ceived in full consciousness, that 
we may treat it with due reverence 
and thankfulness ; and I fear that 
sickness would make me receive it 
with little or no preparation, and 
would prevent me from being, as 
far as possible, worthy of this dying 



\ 



122 The Character of the Present Industrial Crisis. 



grace. I shall belong to the sick 
before many days are over, and I 
would fain be strengthened for the 
passage through death to the joy 
of meeting my God." 

Her agony was not long, but she 
seemed to struggle with a fear of 
death and of the devil's tempta- 
tions. When her daughter wished 
to send for Anna, she said : " No ; I 
shall not die before she comes home" 
(she was then absent on a visit to 
her brother, King Wenzel of Bohe- 
mia). Her biographers tell us that 
angels and saints visited her on her 
death-bed. She died with the veil 
of her holy niece, Elizabeth of 
Hungary, wound round her head, 
and held in her hand, and often to 
her' lips, a little ivory image of the 
Blessed Virgin. At the very last 
she was calm and peaceful, blessed 
her daughter and daughter-in-law, 
and every nun in the monastery of 
Trebnitz, her chosen home, and 
died at evening twilight, on the 15th 
of October, 1243. Twenty years 
later the clergy of Silesia, Poland, 
and Bohemia sent deputies to 
Rome to beg for her canonization, 



which Pope Clement IV. proclaim- 
ed almost immediately. Many mi- 
racles through her intercession 
were sworn to by credible witness- 
es, and the neighborhood blossom- 
ed with gracious and beautiful le- 
gends of the sainted duchess, the 
mother of the poor and the guar- 
dian angel of Silesia. The cere- 
mony of transferring her body to a 
shrine in the abbey church at Treb- 
nitz in 1268 was the occasion for 
a national festival ; pilgrims flock- 
ed in from the remotest districts, 
and many foreigners came too. 
Sovereigns and knights, in costly 
robes and armor, walked in proces- 
sion to her altar ; lay and ecclesi- 
astical pomp was showered upon 
and around her remains ; but noth- 
ing of all this was so great a tribute 
as the memory she left, deep in the 
heart of the people, of a model 
wife, mother, mistress, and sover- 
eign, a woman strong in principle, 
truthful in every word and deed, 
charitable yet not weak, merciful 
yet not sentimental, a wise, far- 
seeing, but tender, brave, and 
thoroughly womanly woman. 



THE CHARACTER OF THE PRESENT INDUSTRIAL CRISIS. 



FROM THE REVUE GENERALS. 



EVERY one agrees that "business 
is bad " ; but how many give them- 
selves the trouble to look for the 
causes of this persistent stagnation? 
Some are distressed, others aston- 
ished, by it. The calmer observers 
those who are not dismayed beyond 
measure by a deceptive view from 
the bank of the river of fortune 
seek for comparisons in the crises 
of 1837, 1848, and 1866. 

A gifted writer, who conducts 
with deserved success a technical 



magazine of our country, the 
" Monitor of Material Interests " 
(Le Moniteur des Intercts Materiels), 
has examined this interesting sub- 
ject in a series of remarkable arti- 
cles. . M. George de Laveleye who 
must not be confounded with his 
relative, the professor at Liege 
maintains that the present crisis is 
not transient. He attributes to it 
a permanent character. If the 
reader will follow attentively the 
summary that we are about to give 



The Character of the Present Industrial Crisis. 



123 



of the argument of M. De Lave- 
leye, he will not be too alarmed at 
his conclusion. 

Generally, these crises have had 
the effect of rarefying the capital by 
which the great industrial enter- 
prises were fed ; these, then, de- 
prived of the food which enabled 
them to live, seemed to hesitate ; 
then they shook and fell. But to- 
day what do we see ? Entirely the 
reverse. Money, floating capital, 
unused funds, are more abundant 
than ever; the cash-boxes over- 
flow ; the large banks literally 
sweat with gold ; and this excess, 
this plethora of unemployed capi- 
tal causes the public funds to ad- 
vance and the price of money to 
decrease. It is business that is 
wanting; it is the employment of 
capital that is in default. 

Whence comes this accumulation 
of savings and this inertia of capi- 
tal, and how does it happen that 
new and tempting enterprises do 
not attract it, notwithstanding its 
apparently low price ? M. De Lave- 
leye thus instructs us : 

" All these tempests," says he, speak- 
ing of the crises of 1837, 1848, 1857, and 
1866, "which reproduced themselves at 
almost equal intervals, were periods of 
settlement which marked the impatience 
of the industrial speculation over-excit- 
ed during a period of forty years ; each 
time that it had abused credit, each 
time that there was a disproportion be- 
tween the engagements entered upon 
and the available resources, industrial, 
commercial, and financial Europe re- 
ceived a warning ; credit vanished sud- 
denly ; there was a series of commercial 
or industrial failures ; there was a vio- 
lent contraction in the stock exchanges 
and in business ; there was a slacken- 
ing of new enterprises or of those al- 
ready in hand ; there were more losses 
than one could reckon. But at each of 
these momentary and transitory crises 
a remedy was very quickly found. Thus 
we had free trade and the upward move- 
ment of commercial relations ; we had 



the play of free joint-stock companies ; 
we had the war of secession, which, from 
a European point of view, was a power- 
ful derivative ; finally, during this long 
period we had the discovery of gold 
and silver mines, coming annually to 
swell the stock of metal at the dis- 
posal of business and of speculation. 
Thus these crises were not of long dura- 
tion. It sufficed to let the overworked 
market have time to assimilate the stocks 
of paper or of merchandise from which 
it suffered, to re-establish the equilibrium 
between the current debts, circulating 
capital and credit, and immediately in- 
dustrial and commercial Europe resum- 
ed her progressive march ; the new en- 
terprises which presented themselves ob- 
tained public favor ; the warning was 
forgotten ; the play of credit renewed 
itself; and after a period of enforced 
quiet, which never exceeded three years, 
we felt vibrating anew that febrile ac- 
tivity which, in forty years, has caused a 
veritable transformation of the world." 

This was always the course of 
these crises in the past. To-day 
there is nothing like this; on the 
contrary, " if there be a dispropor- 
tion between undertakings and re- 
sources, it is absolutely the reverse 
of that which marked the preced- 
ing crises : the undertakings are 
almost null, and the resources are 
exaggerated." 

Why ? Because the present cri- 
sis is not merely a transitional cri- 
sis : it is a permanent, final one ; the 
origin of the evil from which the 
industry and the commerce of 
Europe suffer is to be traced to 
other causes than those commonly 
attributed to it. The true origin 
of the crisis, says M. De Laveleye, 
is the withdrawal of capital from 
the operations in which it had been 
employed, and the inactivity and 
unproductiveness to which it has 
been since doomed. At the begin- 
ning of the crisis of 1873 a general 
panic was produced among the 
lenders, whose confidence was pro- 
foundly shaken, and they exerted 



124 TJie Character of tlie Present Industrial Crisis. 



themselves all at once to realize 
their money. The bankers and 
the money-lenders of Europe were 
seized, by a unanimous accord, 
with a desire to have their capital, 
or that which remained of it, in 
their hands " to see their money 
again," as M. De Laveleye says. 
They realized their foreign securi- 
ties ; they retired en masse from the 
industrial enterprises in which 
they were engaged abroad ; and, 
above all, they cut off credit. The 
countries and the establishments 
which lived on credit and on out- 
side capital saw their resources cut 
off and suspended their activity, 
believing, however, that the crisis 
would be only temporary. The 
three principal lending countries 
England, France, and Holland re- 
alized their money, at the price of 
heavy losses on more than one oc- 
casion ; and, under the influence of 
the panic, they contented them- 
selves with keeping it under lock 
and key in their cash-boxes. From 
this resulted a great and rapid de- 
cline in the rate of interest. Bank 
paper fell to one per cent., and the 
lenders upon short bills, with incon- 
testable securities, got but a half 
per cent. This was the result of 
the return of the capital drawn 
back from the foreign countries to 
which it had been lent; the capi- 
talists had but one ambition : they 
wished to be certain that their 
money was running no risk what- 
ever. 

The result of all this was that, 
in every instance where they lived 
on borrowed capital, industrial 
works were stopped and all sorts 
of enterprises were cut short. On 
the other hand, a plethora of capi- 
tal was produced among those who 
had realized, and who could no 
longer find means to employ their 
funds with profit. This is the ex- 



planation and the first characteris- 
tic of the present crisis the accu- 
mulation of capital and the low 
price for the use of money. 

The accumulation is general ; 
but it is principally in the rich 
countries, like England and France, 
that this excess was produced. 
The same phenomenon, however, 
also showed itself in . Austria, 
Italy, Sweden, etc. countries which 
live in part upon foreign capital. 
On the other hand, the countries 
which depended entirely upon this 
capital Turkey, Egypt, Peru, etc. 
were crippled, as they were de- 
prived of the resources which credit 
had previously placed 'at their dis- 
posal. 

Thus, then, nothing happened as 
in the preceding crises, and from 
1873 to 1877 all has been new, the 
phenomena themselves and their 
causes. There would be reason 
for surprise and bewilderment at 
this if one did not admit, with M. 
De Laveleye, that only now has 
ceased the industrial and specula- 
tive movement which has led Eu- 
rope for forty years to send her 
money abroad. New employments 
for capital are very nearly exhaust- 
ed ; new sources of riches have 
been exploited as much as they can 
be. The movement of the last 
forty years, especially active since 
1851, is not merely arrested for a 
moment to resume its march once 
more, as in the previous crises ; it is 
definitely terminated. 

The design of the past movement 
was the economical furnishing of 
Europe and of the world : and this 
equipment is completed, or nearly so. 
But in giving proof of this assertion 
and seeking for its justification, 
M. De Laveleye supplies a very 
clear account of the direct and 
specific causes of the crisis through 
which we are passing. 



The Character of the Present Industrial Crisis. 12; 



"Western Europe," he says " and by 
this generic expression we mean Europe 
rich in capital and feeding great foreign 
enterprises Western Europe has made 
a rude return upon herself. She has re- 
taken her money ; she has made an in- 
ventory of what she possessed abroad, 
and she shows herself solicitous to pre- 
serve, to keep by her, this scattered 
wealth. The first element of the force 
of progress, then, is in default ; the money 
is wanting ; it is hidden ; it is refused. 
Concurrently, what have the borrowing 
countries done since 1873? They have 
abandoned the game and ceased an im- 
possible struggle, which consisted in 
paying to Western Europe a revenue 
which was not produced by the soil or 
by practicable enterprises. They have 
become bankrupt, and the crisis in their 
government funds has opened the eyes 
of the two champions. Each perceived 
that he was ruined : the borrower by be- 
coming indebted without sufficient mo- 
tive ; the lender not only by lending his 
capital upon illusory guarantees, but by 
receiving finally only a part of it, under 
the form of arrearages." 



This is the second cause, 
for the third : 



As 



" It is the depreciation of silver, due 
to the incapacity and the improvidence 
of the Western states, which imagined 
they could make a good stroke of politi- 
cal economy by allowing one of the 
agents of circulation to debase itself. 

" Principal possessors of the stock of 
gold these states have obeyed an egois- 
tic thought in seconding the movement for 
a single metal as currency gold ; a move- 
ment which had for its first effect an in- 
crease in the relative value of their metal- 
lic circulation. But they took no note of 
another very grave consequence of this 
disturbance of equilibrium. 

" When a nominal money submits to 
variations in value as great as those 
which have been noted in silver, it be- 
comes provisionally inapt for its func- 
tions. Commercial enterprises, based 
upon this metal, become extremely dan- 
gerous, and are no longer attempted by 
those who wish to operate only with the 
security attached to studied and matured 
plans. But all the commerce with the 
East is based upon silver, which, for 
these countries, is the nominal money. 
When the value of silver, and, following 



it, the course of exchange, became sub- 
ject to oscillations of ten and fifteen per 
cent., there was no longer any security 
for international commerce. The cost of 
despatching and of selling raw material 
or manufactured goods could no longer 
be precisely fixed ; and the most careful 
merchant became a speculator in spite 
of himself. He then stopped, and by that 
very act he added to the difficulty of the 
situation. The fall in the value of silver 
broke the charm exercised by the con- 
stant augmentation of the stock of metals 
put at the disposal of international en- 
terprises. 

" This is the third element in the ad- 
vance of progress which has disappeared 
in its turn ; and we may thus sum up : 

" i. The lenders are not willing, pro- 
visionally, to enter upon new schemes. 

" 2. The borrowers, weary or feeble, 
are incapable of giving birth to new illu- 
sions. 

" 3. The monetary crisis has added 
its action to these two negative ele- 
ments. 

" So that to-day, after proper delibera- 
tion, people decide to do nothing ; or, at 
least, to do nothing under the former 
conditions of international enterprises." 

But is it admissible that we shall 
do nothing henceforth, and that the 
present situation will prolong it- 
self indefinitely ? No, assuredly ; 
and, so far as this goes, M. De La- 
veleye recognizes with every one 
that the stagnation of business can- 
not endure, that a reaction is inevi- 
table, and that it will come in its 
tinie. 

"But," he hastens to add, "this re- 
turn to activity will not be produced at 
all in the form known and hoped for by 
those who have seen the revivals of spec- 
ulation after the crises of 1837, 1857, and 
1866 ; and this for the logical reason 
that the industrial, commercial, financial, 
and speculative activity of the middle of 
this century has had for its base and aim 
the economical furnishing of the world 
(Toutillage tconomique dn tnonde), and that 
this furnishing is very nearly completed. 

" The base and the object of the former 
activity will no longer exist, or scarcely 
so. We must, then, wait for a profound 
modification in the form and conditions 
of this activity. 



126 The Character of the Present Industrial Crisis. 



" This is why we have called the pre- 
sent crisis a permanent, a final crisis " 
une cris* definitive. 

He goes on to give his reasons 
for this idea, that the economical 
furnishing of the world is finished, 
or so far advanced that henceforth 
we can expect no such develop- 
ment as we have seen in the past : 

" In Holland the great works are done ; 
the drains are continued ; Amsterdam is 
connected with the sea ; international 
communications are established. 

"In Italy, in Spain, the great arteries 
are provided with iron roads, and the 
products of their working are notorious- 
ly below what one could reckon as re- 
muneration upon the capital. The sea- 
ports, the mines, are sufficiently provid- 
ed for in these countries ; the towns, 
there as elsewhere, have their markets, 
their water and gas works, their new 
quarters, their tramways. 

" As for the Pyrenees, they are cross- 
ed ; the Alps also ; and after the tunnel 
already made by Mont Cenis toward 
France, the road in construction through 
Saint-Gothard toward Germany, and the 
very sufficient pass through the Brenner 
toward Austria, industrial activity will 
no longer find any occupation in this 
quarter. 

" In Russia the principal railroad lines 
are completed. 

"The railway system of Prussia is fin- 
ished, and in that country industry is so 
well furnished that she is murdered with 
her own tools ; the means of production 
and of transportation are too vast, and in 
evident disproportion to the possible 
business of the country. 

" Austria is* supplied, and there it 
would be rash to go further. 

" Turkey has railroads. It has been 
difficult enough to construct them ; one 
does not speak of them willingly. 

" The United States have borrowed 
enough from us to establish their sys- 
tem ; it is compact and well provided 
with lines, even opposition lines. That 
country has regained its lost time ; it is 
necessary to watch its steps now that it 
is furnished sufficiently to put itself in 
competition with the industry of Western 
Europe. 

" The Isthmus of Suez is opened. 

" The transatlantic cables are laid. 



" The transformation in the merchant 
marine is three-fourths completed ; the 
sailing ship has disappeared, or at least 
is relegated to the second place ; the 
steamers have the principal trade. 

" On whatever side we turn our eyes 
we see these accomplished results of the 
work of the last forty years. These re- 
sults may not be always excellent from 
the financial point of view ; many errors 
have been brought out, and by the side 
of some brilliant exceptions we must 
count a number of deceptions for the 
capitalists engaged, and for the govern- 
ments which have become needy and in- 
solvent. But, whatever may be the 
financial result, these lands have been 
stirred up and dug out ; the blocks and 
the rails have been laid ; the towns have 
been transformed ; the distances have 
been shortened ; the new apparatus has 
been given in profusion to the rich coun- 
tries, in more reasonable limits to coun- 
tries less open ; everywhere what was 
strictly necessary has been done ; often 
too much has been done." 

Here, very clearly expressed, is 
the result of the forty years of ac- 
tivity which we have had, and this 
result is really the end toward 
which tended the great industrial 
movement that, for so long a time, 
has held minds awake, has kept the 
dockyards, the workshops, the fac- 
tories, the forges at work. This 
end is attained; we see it; and 
among the serious consequences of 
this fact is one which M. De Lave- 
leye exposes with his usual lucidity : 

"Thanks to the facilities of communi- 
cation, to the new routes opened, to 
steam and to electricity, the conditions 
of commerce and industry are changed. 
There is no longer any place, as there 
was at the beginning of this century, for 
the boldness of the manufacturer or the 
trader, counting upon his skill as well as 
on his risk to obtain a large remunera- 
tion due to his audacity, to his special 
knowledge, and to his capital. 

" Between the new and the old com- 
merce and industry there exists the same 
difference as between the wars of the 
empire and the last campaigns of France 
and of Austria. 

" The same causes have produced the 



The Character of the Present Industrial Crisis. 



127 



same results. In war the cannon and 
guns of perfection, the railways and the 
telegraphs, the vast masses of men, have 
produced rapid campaigns, in which 
personal valor and the chances of war, 
going almost for nothing, contributed 
very little to the final result. In indus- 
try the same perfection of apparatus 
has changed the conditions of trade ; 
and the masses of men are replaced by 
the abundance of circulating capital and 
the facility of the means of credit two 
other products of this active period of 
forty years. 

"Only, in war the final result places 
the vanquished at the mercy of his foe, 
who can, as it appears, dictate his laws ; 
in industry and in commerce the final 
gain is not left arbitrarily to the swiftest 
or to the best equipped. He must con- 
tent himself with little ; he is forbidden 
to abuse the victory which, without this 
moderation, will not be long in escaping 
him." 

This is what we have come to; 
and from a purely economic point 
of view we can recognize, with the 
judicious writer who has furnished 
us with the process of the struggle, 
that the most certain consequences 
of all this will be the following : 

" There will be an excess of circulat- 
ing capital, free from employment. 

" Now, as long as this has not been 
the case the product of capital has been 
as follows : 

" From three to four and a half per 
cent, on unquestionable securities of the 
first class. 

" From four and a half to six per 
cent, on real estate security of the second 
class. 

" From six to eight per cent, on loans 
and limited liabilities. 

" From eight to ten per cent, and up- 
wards on industrial, financial, and specu- 
lative ventures. 

" In the future and during a still inde- 
finite period, which cannot fail to be 
long, very long, this scale must be modi- 
fied by the excess of unemployed capital. 

" Unquestionable securities will de- 
scend to three per cent, or below that ; 
those of the second class will bring four 
and a half; men will be happy to make 
six per cent, in manufactures or produc- 
tion ; finally, one can obtain eight per 
cent, only by running wild risks. There 
will be a general change in the rate of 



capitalization, in the sense of lessening 
the interest while increasing the amounl 
of capital. Some exceptions that is to 
say, some happy chances, some skilful 
personal strokes may occur to confirm 
this rule. The general movement, how- 
ever, will, we believe, be that which we 
have indicated." 

But what remains, then, to be 
done ? Little of anything, if we 
wish to attribute to the revival of 
activity, which will come in its own 
time, only the sense and the direc- 
tion which the movement has had 
until now. On the other hand, 
forced to admit that the human 
spirit has not at all gone to sleep, and 
that the inventive genius which the 
Master of all things in his good- 
ness has bestowed upon his humble 
creatures has not in the least di- 
minished, it is necessary also to 
confess that in the future it is the 
unknown which opens before us ; 
and just as, before this century, 
people had not even thought of all 
the beautiful applications of heat, 
electricity, steam, and light which 
have made the material glory of 
our age and of an illustrious galaxy 
of savants, even so to-day we can- 
not say toward what end the efforts 
of humanity might tend to-morrow. 
One Being only knows it he who 
knows all and sees all, he for whom 
the past, the present, and the future 
are but one, he who does not de- 
pend at all on tir%e God, in fact, the 
creator of all that has been, that is, 
and that shall be, the great dispen- 
ser of all good and of all progress; he 
who disposes of man at his will in 
one way or the other, often while the 
latter, in his folly, refuses to abase 
his blind presumption sufficiently 
to recognize him. 

Let us, then, leave to the future 
that which belongs to the future, 
and let us hold ourselves, each one 
for his own account, ready to obey 
the impulse which it may please 
God to give us. 



128 



The Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint-Michel. 



THE LAST PILGRIMAGE TO MONT SAINT-MICHEL. 



WHEN the traveller who is visit- 
ing the beautiful localities of the 
Channel Peninsula quits the south- 
ern faubourg of Avranches a pic- 
turesque little town built of spark- 
ling granite a road, marked by a. 
succession of rapid declivities, 
brings him to the shore of a larg-s 
bay formed by the sinking of the 
coasts of Normandy and Brittany. 
Before him reaches, far away and 
out of sight, the flat extent of sands, 
furrowed by the rivers See, Se"- 
lunce, and Coesnon, whose silvery 
windings the eye can follow to a 
considerable distance. On the 
higher parts of these sands grows a 
fine kind of grass, the poa of the 
salt-meadows, and which, mingled 
with marine plants and sand-weeds, 
furnishes a favorite pasture for 
sheep. The lower and barren por- 
tion of the sands disappears twice 
a day beneath the tide, which at 
times spreads gently and caressing- 
ly over them, while at others it rolls 
foaming in with precipitate fury, as 
if eager to pass its appointed boun- 
dary. At high tide nothing is visi- 
ble but an immense lake, partially 
engirdled with hills; and in the 
distance, like a pyramid of granite, 
sometimes from the bosom of the 
waves, sometimes from the expanse 
of sand, rises a nearly circular rock, 
laden with constructions of various 
kinds intermingled with vigorous 
vegetation, and crowned by large 
and lofty buildings. 

This is the famous Mont Saint- 
Michel : ait ptril de la mer in 
periculo mortis, as our fathers were 
wont to say in their strong and 
simple language, which, like nature, 
speaks in images. 



The first time we saw St. Mi- 
chael's Mount was in sailing from 
Southampton to St. Malo, towards 
four o'clock one bright morning in 
June. The early sunshine lighted 
up the higher part of the rock, with 
all its wealth of natural and archi- 
tectural inequalities, in one blaze 
of gold, while its base lay still in 
shadow. The only illuminated ob- 
ject, rising from a purplish haze, its 
brightness heightened by the blue 
of sea and sky, above, beneath, and 
around, it appeared rather like an 
ethereal vision than anything of 
earth. 

Mount St. Michael ! What me- 
mories are awakened only by the 
name, which is in itself a magical 
evocation of bygone centuries ! 
Here, too, present realities still rival 
the memories of the past. With 
respect to its natural situation, as 
well as the share which human 
hands have had in its formation, 
there is about it much that defies 
comparison. It is at once a nest 
of legends, the home of religious 
thought, of prayer and meditation, 
as well as of learning and the arts. 
Mount St. Michael, being a monas- 
tery, a cathedral, and a fortress, is, 
in its triple unity, a summary of the 
three great elements of the life of 
France during all the poetic, he- 
roic, and religious though stormy 
period of the middle ages. 

Beaten into ruggedness by the 
storms of heaven, and discrowned 
of the golden statue of its patron 
archangel, the summit of the 
mount no longer springs upward 
into space with the same loftiness 
and lightness that used to strike so 
forcibly those who_beheld it for the 



T/ic Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint-Michel. 



129 



first time. The great human work 
thus seems as if arrested in its hea- 
venward climbing; but, like other 
and grander majesties, St. Michael's 
Mount lias been uncrowned with- 
out undergoing any diminution of 
its glory, and it still presents its 
singular threefold aspect to the eye. 
On the western side the rock, 
stern and bare, seems to bid defi- 
ance to the hand of man ; on the 
north a strong wall rises to the 
height of two hundred feet from 
base to battlements, strengthen- 
ed with buttresses and flanked by 
bastions, pierced irregularly with 
pointed windows, and surmounted 
by a series of elegant arcades. To 
the south we find a rich display of 
architectural art, the exuberance of 
which is almost equalled by its 
caprice. Above all, and larger 
than all the rest, rises the church, 
with its forest of granite pinnacles 
and turrets overlooking the distant 
horizons of Normandy and Brit- 
tany, and, to use the language of 
the ancient chroniclers, imposing 
the fear of the archangel on the 
vast expanse of ocean immensi 
tremor oceani. 

In ages long anterior to any of 
its architectural constructions, and 
before the Christian era, this rock, 
much loftier then than now, rose 
from the midst of a vast forest 
which extended from Coutances 
to the rocks of Cesembre beyond 
St. Malo. This forest of Scissey, 
or Chesey (Sissiacum), took its 
name from the goddess Sessia, who 
was invoked at the time of sow- 
ing, and worshipped as the pro- 
tectress of the corn while in the 
ground. The rock itself was call- 
ed Tomba, and also Belenus, the 
name given by the Gauls and 
Druids to their sun-god,* and 

* Belatucadus was also the name of a divinity 
worshipped by the ancient Britons. A rock situat- 
VOL. XXVI. 9 



which was identical with Baal of 
the Phoenicians, Bel of the As- 
syrians, and the Apollo of the 
Greeks. 

On Mount Belenus was a college 
of nine Druidesses, the eldest of 
whom, like the pythoness of Del- 
phi, uttered oracles. f The Romans, 
in the course of their conquests in 
Gaul, made Bel give place to Jove : 
Tomba Belenus became Mons Jovis 
and was sacred to Jupiter. 

In the year 708 Mount Belenus, 
which until that period had form- 
ed a part of the mainland of Ar- 
morica, was suddenly detached 
from it by a terrible catastrophe 
which spread desolation over the 
country. The sea, flowing in with 
tempestuous fury, overpassed its 
limits, submerged the ancient for- 
est, as well as the inhabited parts 
of the coast, and, except when the 
tide is out, made an island of the 
Mount. J It was in this same year of 

ed a little to the north of Belenus still retains the 
name of Tombalaine orTombal^ne, formerly Tuni- 
ba Beleni. Several strange legends linger about 
both these rocks. The ancient poem of Brut, of 
which a MS. copy is preserved in the archivium of 
Mount St. Michael, has the story of King Arthur, 
Sir Launcelot, and Elaine, and makes out the ety- 
mology of the northern rock to be Le Tombe 
(d')Elaine. 

t These priestesses were in the habit of selling to 
the seafaring men who came to consult them ar- 
rows of pretended virtue in calming tempests, if 
thrown into the sea, during a storm, by one of the 
youngest sailors on board. In the ancient Druidit 
poem called A r Rannou, or The Series, where the 
Child says, "Sing me the number Nine, " the Dru- 
zV answers, ". . . Nine Kerrigan with flowers in 
their hair, robed in white wool, dancing around the 
fountain in the light of the full moon." (See De 
Villemarque", Barzaz Breiz, p. 6.) Pomponius Mela 
designates as Garrigena (evidently Kerrigan Lat- 
inized) the " nine priestesses or sorceresses of the 
Armorican Isle of Sein." 

$ Monsieur de la Fruglaye mentions the existence, 
near to Morlaix, of a vast forest which has been 
submerged by the ocean. In a black and compact 
stratum, which is covered for the most part by a 
fine white sand, he found traces of very ancient and 
abundant vegetation : whole trees thrown in every 
direction yews, caks, large trunks, and green moss- 
es. Beneath this layer the soil appeared to be that 
of meadows, with reeds and rushes, etc. Here all 
the plants were undisturbed and in a vertical posi- 
tion, and the roots of the ferns still had their downy 
coating. (See Observations sur Its orig.ncs du 
Mont St. Michel. Maury.) 

A similar, though gradual, sinking of the coast is 



130 



The Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint-Michel. 



708, in the reign of Childebert II., 
that St. Aubert, the first Bishop of 
Avranches, in obedience to a vision 
built there a church dedicated to 
the Archangel St. Michael, and at 
the same time founded a monas- 
tery of clerks regular, who replac- 
ed the two or three hermits who 
had formerly lived in seclusion on 
the Mount. 

This monastery acquired, later on, 
afresh importance under the Dukes 
of Normandy. Duke Richard I. en- 
larged and made of it an abbey of the 
Order of St. Benedict. In 1002 or 
J003, great part of the church and 
surrounding buildings being con- 
sumed by a fire which broke out, 
Duke Richard II. considerably en- 
larged as well as strengthened the 
foundation by the construction of the 
crypt, upon which the new edifice 
was raised. This crypt appears to 
be cut out of the solid rock, and is 
divided in two parts by a wall. 
Its low and vaulted roof is sup- 
ported by massive pillars, round or 
-square. A larger or grander sub- 
terranean vault does not perhaps ex- 
ist, with its space of seventy metres 
in length by twelve in breadth, and its 
three aisles formed by about twenty 
pillars. The roof sustains the 
weight of two stories of building, 
the dormitory over the refectory, 
and the magnificent cloister over 
the Hall of the Knights. * 

The original church soon becom- 
ing too small to contain the numer- 
ous pilgrims who flocked thither, 
the construction of a new one was 
begun by the Abbot Raoul, who, 
in 1048, raised the four pillars and 
the arch of the great tower. The 
nave, and that part of the monas- 



going on on the western coast of France and Eng- 
land, also at Alexandria, Venice, Pola, and the 
coast of Dalmatia, besides other localities. 

*See Itineraire dans ie Mont St. Michel, par 
Edouard Le Hericher. 



tery called La Mci'reiUc, were built 
by his successor, Renaud. 

It was in 1091 that Henry, the 
youngest son of the Conqueror, 
was besieged in the fortress of 
Mont Saint-Michel by his brothers 
Robert and William. After the ex- 
pulsion of the wretched John from 
Normandy, Abbot Jourdain wish- 
ing to preserve the Mount to the 
kings of England, Philip Augustus 
sent against him Guy de Thouars, 
who, after a lengthened siege, be- 
ing unable to take it, set in on fire. 
It suffered severely from another 
conflagration in 1350, when struck 
by lightning during a terrible storm. 
The liberality of Philip de Valois 
restored the church and monastery 
to more than their former splendor. 

Early in the fifteenth century 
Abbot Jolivet surrounded the town 
with fortifications. The English, 
at this time invading France, be- 
sieged Mont Saint-Michel, but were 
repulsed by the brave d'Estoute- 
ville and his companions-in-arms, 
one hundred and twenty-nine in 
all, who successfully defended the 
post entrusted to them when the 
greater part of France had submit- 
ted to the conquerors. 

During the religious wars Mont 
St. Michel was several times at- 
tacked by the Protestants. On the 
Feast of St. Mary Magdalen, July 
22, 1577, a number of them, ha- 
bited as pilgrims and concealing 
their weapons, were admitted with- 
out suspicion into the church, where, 
after hearing several Masses with 
great show of devotion, they di- 
vided into small groups, and, with 
an air of calm indifference, occu- 
pied different parts of the buildings, 
until, secure of their position, they 
murdered such of the guards as 
did not escape by flight or conceal- 
ment, and then fell not only upon 
the garrison but on the monks, 






The Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint Michel. 



even massacring the priests who 
had been saying Mass for them. 

This noble abbey had for more 
than a thousand years an existence 
worthy of its origin. Mingling in 
the religious and warlike history of 
France, it was simultaneously or 
by turns occupied by knights and 
monks ; the abode of faith and 
courage ; an advanced sentinel in 
the direction of England, and thus 
affording protection against the foes 
of this world and of the next, de- 
fending alike with the cross and 
with the sword, and held in vener- 
ation by the whole of Christendom. 

During the ages of faith pilgrims 
came hither by thousands, from all 
lands, braving the danger of these 
treacherous sands, to invoke in this 
his sanctuary the prince and leader 
of the armies of heaven. 

The sacrilegious impiety of mo- 
dern times could no more spare 
St, Michael's Mount than so many 
other holy and beautiful relics of 
the past which it has seen fit to 
mutilate or destroy. The First Re- 
public suppressed the monastery, 
drove out the monks, demolished a 
portion of their church, changed 
the name of Mont Saint-Michel to 
that of Ic Mont Libre, or the Free 
Mount, and turned it into a prison ! 
doubtless in order to prove the 
suitability of its new appellation. 

The first prisoners there were 
the priests of Brittany and Nor- 
mandy. Prayer was thus at least 
not yet banished from its ancient 
abode. In 1811 Napoleon made 
of it a Maison dc Reclusion, which, 
in 1818, became a Maison de Z>/- 
tention, and it was at the same time 
also a state prison. Rarely has 
any place seen more sad and 
strange vicissitudes. The chosen 
dwelling-place of those called to 
serve God in a religious life be- 
came the sink of every crime pur- 



sued and punished by society, and 
the population of Mount St. Mi- 
chael was now recruited not from 
men who had received a holy vo- 
cation, but from courts of assize. 

A decree of 1863, however, re- 
lieved it from this unworthy fate, 
alike saddening to Christians, archae- 
ologists, and poets, and Mont Saint- 
Michel, which now belongs to the 
see of Cotitances, has been con- 
fided by the ecclesiastical admin- 
istration to the charge of twelve 
priests of the Congregation of Pon- 
tigny in the diocese of Sens, who 
carry on the services in its church, 
receive the visitors drawn thither 
by the sanctity or historical inter- 
est of the place, and fulfil the office 
of preachers and missionaries to all 
the parishes of the Channel Islands. 
An orphanage for boys is now flour- 
ishing in the old barracks, and by 
its side are ateliers where painting 
on glass is carried on a kind of 
painting (or staining, rather) which, 
more than any other, has a reli- 
gious object. All this is, so far, a 
return to a better state of things, 
but the solicitude of its diocesan 
does not find it enough, feeling 
that, though much has been done, 
still the present is too unlike the 
past, and earnestly desiring to re- 
store the abbey to its former splen- 
dor. And he will do it yet. Al- 
ready the pilgrimages thither are 
renewed with a fervor worthy of 
ancient days. 

Few things can be more beauti- 
ful and edifying than the holy fes- 
tivities of which the most recent of 
these pilgrimages has just been the 
occasion, and which have left so 
deep an impression on those who 
took part in them, and who follow- 
ed the imposing order of the suc- 
cessive religious ceremonies, stamp- 
ed as they were with the character 
of dignity and grandeur which the 



132 



The Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint-Michel. 



Catholic Church has impressed up- 
on her liturgy and worship. 

From earliest dawn long bands 
of pilgrims, conducted by the priests 
of their respective parishes and pre- 
ceded by their banners, began to 
enamel with picturesque groups 
the white monotony of the sands. 
On arriving at the Mount they 
formed into regular columns and 
slo\vly ascended the steep acclivity 
to the church. Towards nine in 
the morning the Mount presented 
a singular aspect, not unlike a gi- 
gantic ant-hill : the flights of steps 
disappeared under the long proces- 
sions mounting them, while the 
ramparts were as if crenellated with 
the heads of the crowds watching 
for the arrival of the Bishop of Cou- 
tances and Avranches and the Bish- 
op of Bayeux and Lisieux. An in- 
voluntary delay on the part of the 
bishops was for a time the cause of 
extreme anxiety. Anything may 
be feared from this dangerous bay, 
whose shifting sands change their 
direction after every tide, and en- 
gulf the late or unwary traveller in 
an abyss of mud. The first car- 
riage had passed safely on to terra 
firma, but the wheels of the second 
were perceived to be sinking, and 
the horses, terrified at no longer 
finding any footing, were becoming 
so unmanageable that a fatal ca- 
tastrophe would have been almost 
inevitable, had not the men of the 
place hastened to the rescue and 
succeeded by their prompt energy 
in dragging the carriage out of dan- 
ger. 

The two prelates presented them- 
selves at the entrance gate as the 
clock of the great tower began to 
strike eleven, and were saluted by 
acclamations so enthusiastic that it 
seemed as if the whole Mount were 
bidding them welcome. They pro- 
ceeded up the steep lane that winds 



upward between houses that look 
as if piled almost one upon another, 
and which date from three or four 
centuries back, low, square, and 
solid, and having for the most part 
only one story, plunging their foun- 
dations into the rock, and wedged, 
as it were, against each other, the 
better to resist the force of hurri- 
canes and tempests. Here and 
there trees of thick foliage over- 
shadow the narrow, winding ascent, 
which at intervals through some 
unexpected opening shows a vast 
horizon over the waters of the 
Channel, with its lovely islands, and 
the coast of France. 

The procession reached in due 
time the threshold of the ancient 
abbey, and, after a few words of 
warm and respectful welcome spo- 
ken to the bishops by the rever- 
end father prior, entered the church. 

There is something unique in 
the beauty of this basilica which so 
nobly crowns the summit of Mont 
Saint-Michel, and of which the four 
extremities rest on four enormous 
arched vaults founded in the rock. 
It possesses all the essential parts of 
a great cathedral nave,aisles, tran- 
septs, choir, and apse. The nave 
is Roman, the choir Gothic, and 
the aisles Moresque or Byzantine. 
Boldly cut in granite, the archi- 
tecture is as remarkable as the 
site. 

The nave was formerly two hun- 
dred and forty feet in length, but 
underwent an irreparable mutila- 
tion under the First Republic, when 
it was shortened by the cutting 
away of four of its eight transverse 
vaultings. It nevertheless remains 
singularly imposing simple even 
to severity, but relieved by its tri- 
forium and a gallery with deep 
arcades. The collateral arches, 
which are somewhat narrow, have 
the horseshoe form usual in Ara- 



The Last Pilgrimage to Mont Saint-Michel. 



133 



bian architecture; the transepts, 
like the nave, are Roman, but of 
more recent date ; the choir, which 
is of the best period of flamboyant 
Gothic, very delicately sculptured, 
has in the clerestory a square win- 
dow of remarkable richness ; and 
in the apse, which is of granite, 
delicate lines of tracery spring up- 
wards with exquisite lightness. On 
the key-stone of its vaulted roof is 
the escutcheon of the abbey. The 
choir is surrounded by bas-reliefs 
representing the four evangelists, 
and a ship, symbolical of the 
church militant, tossing on an an- 
gry sea which cannot overwhelm 
her, guided as she is by an unerr- 
ing pilot Fluctuat^ non mergitur. 

The noble edifice had on this 
day received an additional decora- 
tion from the number and beauty 
of the banners there displayed, the 
principal of which was a large stan- 
dard in the nave representing the 
archangel St. Michael victorious 
over the dragon. On the balus- 
trade in front of the altar were hung 
the sword and banner of General 
Lamoriciere, with his motto, In 
Deo spes mca. Within the balus- 
trade were erected the two episco- 
pal thrones. The chapel of St. 
Michael, which occupies the left 
arm of the cross, and in which is 
the statue of the archangel, was 
thickly hung with the banners of 
the different parishes represented 
in the pilgrimage. Among their 
mottoes were such as these : Quis 
ut Deus ? Defende nos in pcriculo; 
Deo soli semper Honor ; Deo et Pa- 
tria, etc. Above these floated the 
banner of the Sovereign Pontiff. 
There is in the same chapel some 
rich tapestry, the work and offer- 
ing of the ladies of Avranches 
les Avranchines, as they are prettily 
called in the country. 

In the chapel facing this one, 



and in the left arm of the cross, 
are the two crowns offered to the 
glorious archangel, the one by the 
Holy Father, the other by the 
faithful of France. The latter, re- 
splendent with diamonds and other 
precious stones of great value, is to 
be used next year for crowning the 
statue of St. Michael. 

High Mass having been sung by 
the Bishop of Bayeux, his right 
reverend colleague addressed the 
assembled multitude. Mgr. Ger- 
main, although one of the youngest 
members of the French episcopate, 
is also one of the most eloquent, 
and owes simply to his merit the 
rapidity with which he has risen to 
be chief pastor of one of the most 
religious dioceses of France. As 
chaplain of the Lycfo of Caen, he 
quickly gained the hearts of the 
youth placed under his spiritual 
care ; as cure" of the Cathedral of 
Bayeux, he made his influence felt 
in the whole city ; and now, as Bi- 
shop of Coutances and Avranches, 
the influence for good which has 
marked each step of his career 
finds a wider field of action, of 
which he does not fail to profit. 
With a few words from his discourse, 
which are a summary of the whole, 
we conclude : 

" The days in which we live find 
the church still engaged in a war- 
fare similar to that which St. Mi- 
chael, the champion of God, sus- 
tained against the rebel angels. 
Still the same revolt continues, and 
man has learnt from Satan to de- 
clare, ' Non serviam /' As children 
of God and of his church, let it be 
our happiness, as it is our privilege, 
to obey. God and his church hav- 
ing an authoritative claim on our 
obedience, let us see that ours shall 
resemble that of the blessed an- 
gels, which is loving, intelligent, 
thorough, and prompt." 



134 



New Publications. 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



THE LIFE OF MARIE LATASTE, La}' Sis- 
ter of the Congregation of the Sacred 
Heart. With a brief notice of her sister 
Quitterie. London : Burns & Gates. 
(For sale by The Catholic Publication 
Society Co.) 

The history of the church is marked at 
intervals by the appearance of favored 
souls whose wonderful gifts of the su- 
pernatural order fully attest the holiness 
which our divine Lord has willed should 
be the pre-eminent attribute of his blessed 
spouse. These manifestations of sanc- 
tity in individual souls have, besides, a 
special reference to the wants of those 
times in which they appear. When ra- 
pacity and luxurious wastefulness cha- 
racterized the upper classes of French 
society, Almighty God raised up St. 
Vincent de Paul, the grand apostle of 
charity, to rebuke men's hardness of 
heart towards their poor and suffering 
fellow-creatures. So likewise, in an era 
of spiritual torpor and cowardice, he 
gave to the world that prince of spiritual 
warriors, Ignatius of Loyola, and his de- 
voted band of spiritual heroes to awak- 
en men from their lethargy. Our own 
times are a period of intellectual pride, 
of contempt for spiritual things, and a 
corresponding exaltation of the material 
order ; and divine Providence has seen 
fit to confound this dangerous spirit by 
working great things through weak in- 
struments, and by proposing new devo- 
tions which demand an increased exer- 
cise of faith. As there is nothing more 
opposed to the peculiar spirit of the 
world of to-day than devotion to the 
Real Presence, the Sacred Heart, and the 
Blessed Virgin Mary, so the church di- 
rects the attention of her faithful children 
to these objects of pious veneration with 
renewed fervor, and God himself attests 
her wisdom by many wonderful signs 
having reference to these three goals of 
spiritual life. No doubt it was with 
such intent that he bestowed those ex- 
traordinary favors on the simple peasant 
girl of Mimbaste, Marie Lataste, which, 
studied in the light of worldly philoso- 
phy, confound and bewilder, but which, 
viewed as part of God's supernatural 
economy, cannot fail to edify and en- 
courage the devout Christian. 



Marie Lataste was born in the depart- 
ment of the Landes in 1822, and died a 
lay sister of the Congregation of the 
Sacred Heart in the year 1847 ; so of her 
it may be said that she compressed a 
long career of virtue into a brief compass 
of time, and earned by intensity of work 
the crown which is most frequently won 
by many years of laborious effort. No 
sooner had she made her First Commu- 
nion than our divine Lord began to at- 
tract her most powerfully to himself as 
he exists in the sacrament of the altar. 
As a little girl she had been wilful 
and rebellious, and with difficulty was 
brought to study her catechism and the 
merest rudiments of learning. Indeed, 
her schooling never went beyond the art 
of reading and writing, so that the won- 
derful theological and ascetic knowledge 
which her letters disclose cannot be 
otherwise regarded than as revealed to 
her by God. After her First Communion 
a wonderful change was made manifest 
in her. Thenceforth her sole delight was 
to commune for long hours at a time 
with our divine Lord in the tabernacle, 
to converse familiarly with him, and to 
hold him for ever in her thoughts. She 
was never easy when other occupations 
kept her aloof from him, and when re- 
leased from these she sped to him again 
with all the ardor which could impel a 
loving heart. Nor did our Lord fail to 
reward in a signal manner this intensity 
of devotion to the sacrament of his love. 
One day, towards the close of the year 
1839, as Marie was repairing to the vil- 
lage church to perform her usual acts of 
adoration, a mysterious but irresistible 
force hurried her along ; earthly objects 
faded from her view, the Spirit of God 
filled her soul, and when she entered the 
sacred edifice she beheld our Lord him- 
self upon the altar, surrounded by his 
angels. " She did not," the recital states, 
"see him at first whh perfect distinct- 
ness. A thin cloud, like an almost im- 
perceptible veil, appeared partially to 
conceal him from her sight. ... At last 
Jesus descended from the altar and ap- 
proached, calling her benignamly by 
name and raising his hand to bless her. 
Then she beheld him with perfect clear- 
ness in the brilliant light with which he 



New Publications. 



135 



was invested." "From that moment," 
she said, " the society of mankind has 
never ceased to be displeasing to me ; I 
should wish to fly from them for ever 
and shut myself up in the tabernacle 
with him." Thus did her interior life at 
once ascend to the highest plane of sanc- 
tity, and she, the poor, almost illiterate 
peasant girl, began to experience those 
intimate dealings and relations with our 
divine Lord which are usually deemed 
to be the prerogative of the greatest 
saints of those in whom supreme holi- 
ness goes hand in hand with profound 
knowledge. 

But it is a well-known characteristic 
of the divine economy to select feeble 
instruments for its higher operations and 
manifestations, and in this manner to 
confound human presumption and to 
put our pride of intellect to the blush. 
" Thou hast hidden these things from the 
wise and prudent, and hast revealed 
them to little ones." And if ever it pleas- 
ed Almighty God to show forth his pow- 
er through the humblest of his creatures, 
he seems to delight in doing so at the 
present time. He permits our philoso- 
phers to split hairs over the subtleties 
of evolution, to wander in perplexity 
through the mazy intricacies in which 
they have enveloped themselves, whilst 
he reveals the undreamt wonders of his 
wisdom to the lowly and simple-mind- 
ed. Father Faber has happily designated 
a too common class of Christians as 
''view}'" i.e., holding opinions which are 
but the reflection and expression of their 
petty egotism. Such was not the case 
with Marie Lataste ; she was simplicity 
itself, and our Lord favored her accord- 
ingly. She sat at his feet as meek and 
docile a pupil as ever listened to the 
words of an instructor, and he poured 
into her heart the treasures of his wis- 
dom. It is truly wonderful to read the 
profound sentiments with which her let- 
ters abound, and to reflect that she, a 
girl barely able to read and write, has 
given expression to the most abstruse 
and difficult points of dogmatic theolo- 
gy with correctness, clearness, and force, 
and has left behind her precepts for our 
spiritual guidance which savor of the wis- 
dom and prudence of the most consum- 
mate masters of the spiritual life. Many 
things in her letters may appear strained 
because of the minuteness with which 
she describes her visions of spiritual 
things, unless they are scanned with the 



eye of faith. But both internal and ex- 
ternal evidences of the genuineness of 
the apparitions with which she was 
favored, and of the absolute reliability 
of her statements, are so numerous that 
in the face of them to doubt is to ques- 
tion the validity of all human testi- 
mony. There can be no doubt that God 
has vouchsafed to our generation this 
beautiful picture of a soul thoroughly 
united to himself in order that our pride 
may be abashed, our faith strengthened, 
and our love for him, because of his mani- 
fold mercies towards us, increased. The 
style of the book is attractive, and who- 
ever reads it cannot fail to reap a large 
share of edifying knowledge. 

A POPULAR LIFE OF POPE Pius THE NINTH. 
By Rev. Richard Brennan, A.M. New 
York : Benziger Brothers. 1877. 
THE LIFE OF POPE Pius IX. By John 
Gilmary Shea. New York : Thomas 
Kelly. 1877. 

A LIFE OF Pius IX., DOWN TO THE EPIS- 
COPAL JUBILEE. By Rev. Bernard 
O'Reilly. New York : P. F. Collier. 
1877. 

The appearance within the space of a 
few months of three extended and elabo- 
rate biographies of His Holiness Pius 
IX., some of which have already run 
into two or three editions, is a fact most 
significant of the deep interest which is 
taken by the reading public of America 
in everything connected with the venera- 
ble head of the church on earth. The 
length of years vouchsafed the present 
successor of St. Peter, his own illustrious 
character, and the preternatural malice of 
his enemies have naturally heightened 
the curiosity regarding him of the non 
Catholic portion of the community, while 
his piety, benevolence, and long-suffering 
have endeared him to the hearts of all true 
children of the church. The magnificent 
displays of Catholic sympathy and loyalty 
to the Holy See which everywhere charac- 
terized the celebration of his late episcopal 
Jubilee have also increased the popular 
demand for information concerning the 
life of a man who, morally and officially, is 
acknowledged to be the foremost in 
Christendom. Judging by the volumes 
before us, it will not be the fault of our 
Catholic writers if this laudable desire 
remain long unsatisfied. Each of these 
valuable works, written by gentlemen of 
varied accomplishments and qualifica- 
tions for the task, is, in style, mode of 



136 



Nciv Publications. 



treatment, and selection of matter, differ- 
ent from the others ; yet all present the 
same leading facts and reproduce the 
same vivid scenes which have rendered 
so instructive and dramatic the long and 
eventful life of the Holy Father. 

Father Brennan's book, justly called a 
popular life of the great Pope, is written 
in a simple, concise, yet comprehensive 
manner, with little attempt at ornamenta- 
tion or philosophic deduction. The au- 
thor evidently intended that his work 
should be read and understood by per- 
sons of average intelligence as well as 
by those of higher mental gifts. He has 
therefore aimed at telling the story of 
Pius IX. 's life plainly and consecutively, 
without departing to the right or left, 
except when absolutely compelled to do 
so in order to elucidate what is yet but 
imperfectly understood in the policy 
of the Catholic powers of Europe. 
While stating conscientiously the de- 
tails of a career so full of changes and 
reverses of fortune, he succeeds in plac- 
ing before us the true lineaments of his 
august subject in all their simplicity and 
beauty of expression. This is more par- 
ticularly observable in the chapter on 
"The Supernatural Life of the Pope," 
which will doubtless be read with great 
satisfaction by those who consider the 
Sovereign Pontiff a providential man ; 
and by such as do not, with respect and 
jadmiration. It is to be regretted that 
Father Brennan had not given at length 
an account of proceedings in Rome and 
the Catholic world generally for the past 
few years, thus completing an otherwise 
very full and instructive biography. 

Mr. Shea has also succeeded in pro- 
ducing a very readable life of the Holy 
Father, though we do not think he has 
done full justice to his own merits as an 
accomplished and painstaking writer. 
There are evident marks of haste 
throughout his pages which, though they 
do not seriously interfere with the con- 
tinuity or authority of the work, are apt 
to produce an unsatisfactory impression 
on the minds of critical readers. His 
Life of Pope Pius IX. will, however, 
have its admirers ; for, excepting these 
slight defects, it is a book that will in- 
terest the general reader, no matter what 
may be his opinions or prepossessions, 
written as it is by an intelligent layman 
whose reputation as an author has long 
since been established in this country 
and in Europe. 



The Rev. Father O'Reilly's biography 
is, however, not only more voluminous 
and more ample in its details than either 
of the preceding, but it is enriched by 
copious extracts from encyclical- letters 
and other important documents, the 
proper understanding of which necessa- 
rily belongs to the elucidation of the 
history of Pius IX.'s pontificate. Apart 
from its completeness and elegance of 
style, its chief distinguishing feature is 
the insight it gives us into the policy 
and designs of contemporary rulers and 
conspirators in France, Italy, and Ger- 
many in their attempts on the integrity 
of the church, and their underhand alli- 
ances with the secret societies to effect 
their evil purposes. Only a man who 
has had personal knowledge of the 
actors who figured in the bloody drama 
of " United Italy," and an intimate ac- 
quaintance with their present and pro- 
spective strategy, could unfold to the 
public gaze, in all its base enormity, the 
culpable indifference of the men who 
professed the greatest regard for the 
sovereign of the states of the church, and 
the insidious schemes of the modern 
champions of liberty, whose sole and 
whole object is the disruption of all 
forms of government under which civil 
and religious freedom would be pos- 
sible. This it is that makes Father 
O'Reilly's book not only interesting 
but highly instructive ; for, to a cer- 
tain extent at least, it furnishes us 
with a key to the enigma of European 
Continental politics which we Americans, 
happily removed from kingcraft and 
secret terrorism, so much require. The 
venerable and venerated Chief Pastor of 
the church has been fortunate in his 
American biographers, and we have lit- 
tle doubt that he will find some solace 
in his afflictions in the thought that three 
among our writers have almost simul- 
taneously devoted their pens to record- 
ing the incidents of his life and defend- 
ing his rights as a spiritual and tempo- 
ral sovereign. 

REPORT OF THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE OF 
THE MEDICO-LEGAL SOCIETY UPON 
SCHOOL HYGIENE. New York : Ter- 
williger. 1876. 

Few subjects are of more engrossing 
importance than the conditions requi- 
site for the physical well-being of the 
rising generation ; and as our embryo 
men and women spend a very large por- 



Nczi< Publications. 



137 



tion of their lives in school-rooms, it 
becomes a serious matter to determine 
whether these nurseries of learning are 
constructed in such a manner as to con- 
sist with the highest possible health 
standard. The investigations undertak- 
en by Dr. R. I. O'Sullivan and his fel- 
low-committeemen at the instance of the 
Medico- Legal Society reveal a condition 
which is truly startling. Oxygen is the 
life of our life-blood, and, if it is not sup- 
plied in the requisite quantity, the hu- 
man system becomes predisposed to 
every disease and the foundation of 
a life-time of misery is laid. Yet it is 
notorious that the arrangements of our 
much-vaunted school buildings go far 
short of ensuring a sufficient supply of 
this life-sustaining gas. Much of this 
deplorable lack of suitable arrangements 
is the result of ignorance. Many self- 
constituted sanitarians deem loftiness of 
ceiling to be the main and, indeed, the 
only condition required to ensure proper 
ventilation and a sufficient supply of air. 
They accordingly build without refer- 
ence to horizontal breathing-space, in the 
absurd belief that all foul air ascends 
and is got rid of, some way or other. 
Now, the truth, says the report, is " that a 
lofty ceiling only makes that portion of 
space above the tops of the windows a 
receptacle for foul air, which accumulates 
and remains to vitiate the stratum below." 
This is of itself a proof that a scientific 
supervision of our school buildings is 
the only guarantee we can have that the 
health of the children will be properly 
considered. The quantity of carbonic 
acid gas given off at each expiratory ef- 
fort is far in excess of what our ama- 
teur sanitarians imagine ; and when 
school buildings are erected without due 
regard for the diffusion of this deadly 
emanation, we must not be surprised to 
see our schools filled with pale and 
stunted children. In addition to the 
carbonic acid gas other deleterious ex- 
halations of the human body poison 
crowded rooms, and are especially the 
cause of the peculiarly offensive and 
stuffy odor at which healthy olfactories 
revolt. Who that has entered one of 
our city public school class-rooms, be- 
tween the hours of two and three in the 
afternoon, has failed to experience this 
disagreeable sensation ? Yet physiology, 
as well as common sense, tells us that 
this effete organic matter which is con- 
stantly escaping from the lungs and from 



every pore of the skin is eminently in- 
jurious to health. Not only this, but in 
certain crowded portions of the city the 
adjoining streets and buildings lend 
their quota of noxious effluvia to the 
poisonous agents mentioned. The com- 
mittee visited " one of the newest, best- 
arranged, and best-appointed schools in 
the city, and found it overcrowded and 
unventilated, tainted throughout the halls, 
and at times, by way of the fan-lights over 
the doors in the class rooms, odors arising 
from the latrines in the basement, which 
are emptied only once or twice a week.'' 
In this model school-house only from 
thirty-three to forty-one cubic feet of air 
are allowed to each child, while nature 
vigorously clamors for at least eight 
hundred feet in the twenty-four hours. 

In the second report read by Dr. R. I. 
O'Sullivan we are invited to contemplate 
a picture which but faintly reveals the 
evil effects that the early overcrowding 
exercises in after-days over the adult 
population: "Look around us in pub- 
lic assemblies, and see in those scarcely 
entering middle life the evidence of phy- 
sical decline, the prematurely bald and 
gray, the facial muscles photographing 
the wearied brain and overtaxed ner- 
vous system." Few can fail to realize, 
on due reflection, how much of the terri- 
ble truth of this picture is attributable 
to the bad condition of our school 
houses. The conclusion is plain that 
the judgment of the trained sanitarian 
is of vital importance in the erection of 
school buildings, and that, until the ne- 
cessity of his sage interposition is recog- 
nized by the Department of Public In. 
struction, diseases, the result of early con- 
finement in close and crowded schools, 
which are quite preventible, will con- 
tinue to prevail among us. 

GOD THE TEACHER OF MANKIND : A 
plain, comprehensive explanation of 
Christian Doctrine. By Michael Miil- 
ler, C.SS.R. New York, Cincinnati, 
and St. Louis: Benziger Bros. 1877. 
CATECHISM OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE, for 
Academies and High Schools. With 
the approbation of the Most Rev. J. 
Roosevelt Bayley, D.D., Archbishop 
of Baltimore. Intermediate No. III. 
Benziger Bros. 1877. 
This is a most useful and comprehen- 
sive book, clear and definite in its plan, 
popular and interesting in its style. It 
is divided into two parts. Part I. deals 



I3S 



New Publications. 



with " The Enemies of the Church " 
from the beginning down to our own 
times. These enemies Father Miiller 
sets down in the order of time as " Hea- 
thenism," " Heresy," and "Freemason- 
ry." Part II. is occupied with showing 
what in these days of vague beliefs and 
religious indifferentism it is most im- 
portant to show namely, that God him- 
self is the teacher of mankind, and 
therefore that his voice must be listened 
to and obeyed. The church is the voice 
of God on earth ; consequently, the ever- 
lasting object of the enemies of God is 
to silence and destroy the church. These 
avowed enemies were in the old days 
the heathen ; later on the heretics. A 
deadlier foe than either, and combining 
the evil elements of both, the author 
points out to-day as Freemasons, the 
term covering, of course, all forms of 
secret oath-bound societies. 

Father Miiller's sketch of Freemason- 
ry is very extensive. For his charges 
against the societies comprehended un- 
der that head he relies mainly on Ma- 
sonic documents and publications. Amid 
a vast amount of rubbish and jargon in 
the official rites and ceremonies of Ma- 
sonry is plainly discernible a distinct 
purpose and plan, which can be consi- 
dered none other than the destruction 
of all fixed belief in God and his revela- 
tion, in his church, and in the order of 
society and government founded on that 
belief. To expose this conspiracy agai nst 
God and man for such it is, and nothing 
less is as much a service to any civil- 
ized state as it is to the direct cause of 
religion. On this account we do not 
think that in a book intended as much 
for ordinary readers as for those who 
are better instructed Father Miiller has 
been at all wasteful in the large amount 
of space devoted to this portion of his 
subject. There is a tendency sometimes 
to pooh-pooh Masonry as a convenient 
scarecrow. Yet those who have noted 
the march of events in Europe within 
the century, and particularly within the 
latter half of it, will discover a startling 
resemblance between events as they have 
occurred, and as it was desired they 
should occur according to the pro- 
grammes laid down beforehand by the 
leaders of the secret societies. 

The church does not waste her excom- 
munications, and the fact that these so- 
cieties have been again and again so- 
lemnly condemned by her ought to be 



sufficient warning against an}- Catholic 
joining, not simply societies which are 
avowedly Masonic, but secret societies 
of any kind whatever. A good and law- 
ful society has no need of secrecy. 

The second and more important por- 
tion of the book is taken up with what is 
really a most lucid and careful explana- 
tion of that portion of the .catechism 
which refers more especially to God and 
the church. The questions and answers 
in the catechism are necessarily brief, 
and the explanation of the answers is left 
to the teacher. The teacher, unfortunate- 
ly, is not always as instructed as he or 
she might be, without at all being a 
paragon of learning. For such, as in- 
deed for all, this portion of Father Miil- 
ler's book will be of the greatest assis- 
tance. Here, for instance, is a question 
in the catechism : " How d^o we know 
that Jesus Christ is the promised Re- 
deemer and the Son of God ?" Now, up- 
on a right answer to this and a thorough 
comprehension of the answer depends 
a Christian's faith. The answer in the 
catechism is: "We learn it, i, from the 
mouths of the prophets ; 2, from the de- 
clarations of the angels ; 3, from the tes- 
timony of his heavenly Father ; and 4, 
from his own testimony." A correct 
reply, doubtless ; but simply to give such 
an answer to the ordinary student of 
whatever age is to speak to him almost 
in an unknown tongue, while to saddle 
the average Sunday-school teacher with 
a clear and comprehensive explanation 
of the answer is quite to overweight 
him. 

Father Miiller's explanations attached 
to such questions are excellent. They 
are full without being tedious, and con- 
densed without being obscure. About 
half the second part is very wisely de- 
voted to an exposition of the Ninth Ar- 
ticle of the Apostles' Creed "The Holy 
Catholic Church " which is to be com- 
mended, as, indeed, may be the whole 
book, just as highly to the attention of 
earnest and inquiring non-Catholics as 
of Catholics. As a whole, the book 
serves two great ends : it is a solemn 
warning against the prevalent evils of 
the day, unbelief and hatred of the truth ; 
also, a judicious and able exposition of 
the two great facts in the Christian be- 
lief, God and the church. The work has 
this advantage over more learned trea- 
tises on the same subjects : that while it 
commands the attention of the highest, 



New Publications. 



139 



it is within the comprehension of any 
person of ordinary intelligence. We 
know of no work in English better 
adapted to afford Catholics whose op- 
portunities of study have not been very 
great a clear and intelligent reason for 
the faith that is in them. The catechism, 
noticed at the head, in addition to the 
usual instruction, contains a short form 
of morning and evening prayers, instruc- 
tions for confession, prayers at Mass 
and before and after communion, as well 
as a brief but useful summary of sacred 
history. 

THE GRAMMAR-SCHOOL SPELLER AND DE- 
FINER: Embracing graded lessons in 
spelling, definitions, pronunciation, 
and synonymes ; proper names and 
geographical terms ; a choice selection 
of sentences for dictation ; and a con- 
densed study of English etymology ; 
also ecclesiastical terms, etc. By E. 
D. Farrell. New York: The Catholic 
Publication Society Co. 1877. 
With the exception of Swinton's, there 
is scarcely a speller in general circula- 
tion through the schools of this country 
which is worthy of the name. Whatever 
is valuable in many of them has been 
unscrupulously pilfered, directly or indi- 
rectly, from Sullivan's Spelling-Book 
Superseded, the text-book used in the 
Irish national schools ; and doubtless it 
is all the better for the pupils that it has 
been so. The present work possesses at 
least one merit: it is a brave departure 
from the well-beaten path of the plagia- 
rist. Not that it is completely original ; 
that is impossible ; but it is as nearly so 
as is compatible with utility. It has 
strong marks of individuality in every 
page and lesson, and is evidently the 
production, not of a mere book-maker, 
but of an experienced instructor of 
youth, who has felt, in common with 
other teachers, the necessity of more 
thought in the conception, and system in 
the arrangement, of lessons in orthogra- 
phy. 

We find, after a careful inspection, 
that the work contains information, not 
to be found in similar works, on Anglo- 
Saxon roots, ecclesiastical terms, noted 
names of fiction and of distinguished 
persons ; words relating to various oc- 
cupations and sciences, etc., all of which 
are strict essentials to a useful educa- 
tion. Miscellaneous words and defini- 
tions, Latin roots and English deriva- 



tives, and miscellaneous sentences for 
dictation occupy nearly half the volume, 
the remainder being distributed between 
twenty-six other subdivisions of the sub- 
ject ; and well-informed- and competent 
teachers will say that such an apportion- 
ment of the space is right. 

We have noticed what we consider a 
few imperfections, unimportant, doubt- 
less, but needing emendation viz., on 
page 33 this definition : " Assassinate, 
to attack and murder a person of impor- 
tance." Assassination is not necessari- 
ly restricted to persons of importance. 
The author also takes the trouble to cor- 
rect such pronunciations as pi an' o for 
pi a' no, thrissle for thistle, akraust for 
across. Of what use is the teacher, if the 
book must attend to such matters? He 
also orders us, on page 114, not to pro- 
nounce ge-og jog in the words geogra- 
phy and geometry. There are pupils 
who pronounce these words joggraphy 
and jommetry, we know, and such is evi- 
dently the error against which he wishes 
to guard. These oversights, so preva- 
lent in other spellers, are, fortunately, of 
rare occurrence in this, and a little care- 
ful revision will render the book still 
more worthy of the title, to which it has 
already such strong claims, of the model 
speller of the present day. 

MISSA DE BEATA MARIA ET MISSA IN FES- 
TIS DUPLICIBUS, ITEM IN DOMINICIS AD- 
VENTUS ET QUADRAGESIMA : uti in Grad- 
uali Romano et Ordinario Missse, ab 
illustri Domino Frederico Pustet, S. 
Sedis Apost. typographo, " sub auspi- 
ciis SS. D. N. Pii IX., curante Sacr. Kit. 
Cong." Cum permissu superiorum. 
Opus II. Published by the author, P. 
Ignatius Trueg, O.S.B., St. Vincent's 
Abbey, Beatty P.O., Pa. 
We heartily congratulate all who may 
be interested in the study or execution 
of Gregorian chant upon the production 
of this work. Within a very few years 
the study of the holy chant of St. Gre- 
gory has occupied the attention cf 
church musicians both in Europe and 
America, and many notable efforts have 
been made to restore it to its rightful 
place in the sanctuary. In fact, there is 
a true revival and reformation of church 
music in progress. 

One of the chief difficulties which pre- 
sents itself to the ordinary modern mu- 
sician who acts as choir-master or or- 
ganist is the simple melodic form of the 



140 



New Publications. 



chant with its musical notation as it is 
printed in all authorized office-books. 
Unaccustomed to its tonality, he makes 
wretched work of the phrasing and ac- 
centuation, and his execution is like 
that of a schoolboy spelling his words 
before pronouncing them. Ignorant 
also of its modality, his attempts at har- 
mony are more wretched still. Under 
the hands of such performers the chant 
becomes poor music, without expres- 
sion, in the minor key. 

Translations of the chant into modern 
notation harmonized with a view to giv- 
ing some notion of the distinctive char- 
acter of the various modes, are therefore 
a necessity for all who have not made 
such a thorough study of the chant as to 
enable them to read from the original 
notation and harmonize it at sight. 

The present work of Rev. F. Trueg 
has been composed to supply this want, 
and will be found in many respects to 
be superior to the greater number of 
such translations hitherto published. It 
comprises the three masses of the Graduate 
Romanum as given in the Ratisbon edi- 
tion viz., for feasts of the Blessed Virgin, 
for double feasts, and for the Sundays 
in Advent and Lent, together with the 
responses at Mass. The harmonization 
is arranged in such a manner that it 
serves not only as an instrumental (or- 
gan or string quartette) accompaniment, 
but also, if so preferred, for a vocal exe- 
cution in four parts without instrumen- 
tal accompaniment. Some excellent re- 
marks also accompany it by way of pre- 
face, explaining the notation employed, 
and giving some valuable hints as to the 
proper tempo to be observed. 

We commend its careful study to or- 
ganists and chanters, and trust that it 
may receive such patronage as to war- 
rant the composer in completing his de- 
sign of publishing the entire Graduate 
and Antiphonarium in the same form. 

BLANCHE CAREY ; OR, SCENES IN MANY 
LANDS. By Patricia. New York: 
P. O'Shea. 1877. 

" Blanche Carey was a charming girl 
of twenty-two summers, beautiful and 
accomplished. She had just completed 
her education at a fashionable boarding- 
school, and was gifted with those graces 
which constitute the true characteristics 
of woman. She was the admired of all 
who knew her, the pride of the family 
circle, the delight of society, unrivalled 



in intellectual attainments. If we add 
to these beauty and grace of form, the 
picture is complete." 

Phew! And we are only at the first 
page. What is one to say of so oppres- 
sively perfect a heroine? But " the pic- 
ture" is not " complete " yet ; for in the 
second page the inventory of her qualities 
and accomplishments is continued in 
this thrilling style: "The harp she fin- 
gered with unrivalled skill ; the piano 
keys she swept like a whirlwind " (good 
gracious !), " while she executed on the 
guitar with no less grace and finish." 
We are slightly at a loss to understand 
whether or not this highly-accomplished 
young lady performed all these startling 
feats at once, as the author would seem 
to imply. The picture of a girl " finger- 
ing" the harp with unrivalled skill, 
"sweeping" the piano-keys "like a 
whirlwind," while she " executes " on 
the guitar " with no less grace and fin- 
ish " than a whirlwind presumably, is 
something that certainly possesses the 
merit of novelty. " Finding that she 
was already proficient in music, she 
did not wish to devote further time to 
painting " why, we do not know. How- 
ever, " it's of no consequence/' as Mr. 
Toots would say. 

Blanche goes to Rome and sees the 
Holy Father, who " was quite affable " to 
her, she assures us. Here is one of the 
"Scenes in Many Lands": 

" Our Irish tourists " (Blanche and her 
grandfather, a Mr. O'Rourke) "had al- 
ready made quite a sojourn in Italy, and 
to the old gentleman's astonishment, 
as he entered the coffee-room with his 
granddaughter leaning on his arm, both 
apparently fatigued after a long drive in 
the suburbs " (we are at a loss to under- 
stand whether the writer means by " su- 
burbs " the suburbs of Italy or the su- 
burbs of the coffee-room), " they ob- 
served a young man of prepossessing 
appearance seated at an opposite table, 
gazing at them very earnestly. His tra- 
velling companions were two ladies. 
One of them, though by no means elder- 
ly, might be taken for his mother ; the 
other young, and somewhat coquettish in 
manner evidently his sister from the 
striking resemblance she bore him. Ail 
denoted the air of the Parisian. 

"'That gentleman must be going to 
make our acquaintance,' said Blanche. 
' He must, I imagine, be dying to know 
us. All three are looking at us. I know 



Neiv Publications. 



141 



they are French by the way they drink 



" The party in question rose to adjourn 
to their apartments. As they left the 
room, Frank Mortimer for such was his 
name glanced several times at Blanche. 
She, of course, not condescending to notice 
the supposed curiosity, evc.ded it." 

Artful yet discreet Blanche ! Of 
course she makes his acquaintance in the 
next page we have only reached page 
6 yet, so that it will be seen events 
move rapidly and here is how she 
makes it : 

" Having waited for some moments in 
the pretty boudoir, looking out on a 
veranda of orange-trees not yet in blos- 
som " (we copy verbatim}, " Blanche 
was humming one of her favorite airs, 
' Beautiful Isle of the Sea,' which she 
imperceptibly changed to 'Let each man 
learn to know himself.' Frank entered 
on the words, and seemed slightly confused 
for an instant, but, quickly recovering 
his composure, he addressed his visitors 
with the ease and grace of a debonair." 

" May we not hope to meet ye in Pa- 
ris ?" is one of the questions put by the 
easy and graceful " debonair " to his 
visitors. He falls in love with Blanche, 
of course, though he confesses that he 
" almost fell in love once with a lady from 
South America," and no wonder. " She 
was a most perfect creature in face and 
form ; that delicate cast of countenance 
with an exquisite profile ; hair that 
might be called golden, coiled on the tip 
of her head" 

The parting at the end of the first 
chapter, between Blanche and Frank, is 
net altogether as poetical as it might 
have been made. The train whistle in- 
terferes with it considerably. " A whis- 
tle, and all was confusion; everybody 
astir to get on board. A second one, 
and Frank started to lake leave. He 
tried to speak, but it was impossible. 
His face quivered with emotion. He 
pressed the hand of Blanche in silence, 
and, darting out of the carriage, he en- 
countered Mr. O'Rourke at the door. 
Bidding him a hasty farewell, he was 
soon lost in the crowd. ' What a fool I 
am !' he thought, ' but / am human na- 
ture. Yet is it not a weakness to bow 
to its dictates ? Should I ever meet that 
gifted creature again, I will tell her 
all . . .' He wiped the cold perspiration 
from his forehead, and, with a sigh, tried 
to forget his misery." 



What a fool he was indeed ! Yet he 
said one sensible thing: "'Oh!' said 
Blanche, laughing, ' am I not a favored 
child of fortune? When I go home I 
shall write a novel or some work of fic- 
tion.' 

" Frank Mortimer smiled as the words 
fell from her lips. 'Heaven save you,' 
he said, ' from such a fate !' " 

Frank's prayer was not heard, seem- 
ingly, and the result, we suppose, is 
Blanche Carey. We have not got beyond 
the first chapter of this fascinating " work 
of fiction," and we are not likely to get 
beyond it. The reader may easily judge 
of its attractions by the extracts given, 
which were positively too tempting to 
pass by. 

THE LETTERS OF REV. JAMES MAKER, 
D.D., LATE P.P. OF CARLO W-GRAIGUE, 
ON RELIGIOUS SUBJECTS. With a mem- 
oir. Edited by the Rt. Rev. Patrick 
Francis Moran.D.D., Bishop of Osso- 
ry. Dublin : Browne & Nolan. 1877. 
Seldom do we have an opportunity to 
welcome the appearance of so valuable a 
book as this, which is the embodiment of 
those sentiments, views, and convictions 
that distinguish the modern Irish priest. 
Few men loved his religion and his na- 
tive land with a more intense fervor than 
Father Maher. This double love nour- 
ished his frame, increased his strength, 
stimulated his thoughts, nerved his heart, 
and underlay every thought and action 
of his life. He was a man who simply 
delighted in every opportunity of saying 
a word or doing a deed in behalf of his 
creed or his country. As a controver- 
sialist his enthusiasm made him almost 
bitter, but with that bitterness which is 
born of zeal for the truth. A man of 
stalwart frame and magnificent propor- 
tions, he exercised a magnetic influence 
over his listeners by his presence alone. 
Throughout the entire range of contro- 
versial literature it would be hard to find 
anything equal to his scathing arraign- 
ment of Archbishop Whatcly apropos of 
the Nunnery Inspection bill : " I have my- 
self," he writes, " two sisters and eighteen 
nieces who, following the call of Heaven, 
have selected the religious life. Some 
of them are in convents in England, 
some in Ireland, some in America ; all 
engaged in the noble service of forming 
the tender minds of the children of the 
poor to virtue, for whose sake and the 
sake of their Father in heaven they most 



142 



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willingly surrendered in the morning of 
life all earthly prospects. I well re- 
member what they were under the pater- 
nal roof. I know what they are in the 
cloister. I have never lost sight of them ; 
and as to their happiness, to which I 
could not be indifferent, I have only to 
affirm, which I do most solemnly, that 
I have never known people more happy, 
more joyous, more light-hearted, or with 
such buoyant hopes as good religie-iises. 
Their character, my lord, is unknown 
and will remain a mystery to that world 
for which Christ refused to pray." These 
are the brave words of one of the most 
conspicuous champions of religious free- 
dom, and one of the most determined 
antagonists of the smelling committee 
who strove to insult the purest and no- 
blest of women. His spirit is not dead 
among his confr^. es in the Irish vine- 
yard, for Cardinal Cullen, the nephew of 
Father Maher, and the distinguished 
prelate who has given these inestimable 
letters to the world a near relative of 
the great priest lives to represent every 
feeling and pulse of his heart. 

SPECIALISTS AND SPECIALTIES IN MEDI- 
CINE. Address delivered before the Al- 
umni Association of the Medical De- 
partment of the University of Vermont. 
Burlington. 1876. 

This address of Dr. Henry, though un- 
pretending in form, is exceedingly well 
timed and full of suggestiveness. The 
doctor evidently belongs to the con- 
servative class of his profession, who 
long for the day when eminent respecta- 
bility, which is the escutcheon of the 
medical man in European countries, 
will be fairly won and worn by every 
one who subscribes M.D. to his name. 
As a consequence, he is the bitter enemy 
of every form of quackery and undue pre- 
tentiousness. He certainly handles 
soi-disant specialists without gloves, and 
gives the best of reasons why the com- 
munity should rebel against their as- 
sumption of skill. Too many so-call- 
ed specialists are men who have devot- 
ed their time and attention to a special 
branch of the profession while entirely 
neglecting the others. This is illogical 
and cannot be done. Medicine is a sci- 
ence whose parts are bound together as 
indissolubly as the stages of a reasoning 
process, and whoever imagines that he 
can master one department without a 



knowledge of the others simply follows 
the advice of Dogberry. We have 
oculists and aurists and gynaecologists 
without number who have no knowledge 
of general pathology. This is altogeth- 
er wrong. The true raison d^etre of a 
specialist is that, having profoundly stu- 
died the science of medicine, he finds that 
his natural aptitude or taste draws him 
to one branch of the profession rather 
than to others. In this manner only 
have the prominent and highly-reputed 
specialists in Europe and among our- 
selves won their fame and fortune. Dr. 
Henry, in a clear and trenchant styl e, de- 
monstrates the absurdity of specialties, 
as such. 

MONGRELISM. By Watson F. Quinby 
M.D. Wilmington, Del. : James & 
Webb. 

This curious monogram is worth pe- 
rusing, if for no other reason than the 
fanciful and novel views which it pre- 
sents. The author attributes many of 
our present social evils to mongrelism, 
or the admixture of distinct types of 
men. He finds in the Book of Revela- 
tion the foreshadowing of the natural 
distribution of men into white, red, and 
black, deeming the three similarly col- 
ored horses to be typical of those three 
branches of the human family, while the 
fourth horse, on which sat Death, he con- 
siders to be the emblem of mongrel ia. 
He opposes J. J. Rousseau's idea that 
man's primitive condition was one of 
barbarism, and contends that historical 
and archaeological discoveries prove 
rather a retrogression than an improve- 
ment. The Chinaman is Dr. Quinby's 
ideal of a mongrel. In the land of 
flowers every art once flourished, learn- 
ing was cultivated, the harpist filled the 
air with sweetest strains, and the poet 
sang delicious lays in the beautiful vale 
of Cashmere, till the bane of mongrel 
ism fell on it and all progress ceased. 
Mexico and South America are other 
evidences of the pernicious influence of 
hybridism. The conclusions of the au- 
thor are in many instances sound, but 
his reasoning is too fanciful to satisfy a 
sober-minded reader. His statement 
that the rapid influx of Chinese into our 
midst is fraught with mighty perils is 
well worth pondering over, and no true 
statesman will shun the serious consid- 
eration of this knotty problem. 



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143 



JACK. From the French of Alphonse 
Daudet. By Mary Neal Sherwood, 
translator of Sidonit-. Boston : Estes 
& Lauriat. 1877. 

Another painful story by this gifted 
author. It is cleverly told and the treat- 
ment is highly artistic, showing nil that 
careful finish that French writers bestow 
even on their smallest characters. The 
characters in this story are most of 
them wretched enough. Lovers of the 
real in fiction will find them realistic 
enough. There is a tone of hopeless- 
ness and helplessness in Jack, as in 
Sidonie, that is very disheartening. Ac- 
cording to M. Daudet, a relentless Fate 
would seem to clutch some miserable 
mortals, and hold them till death came 
as a happy release. "The mother cried 
in a tone of horror, 'Dead'?" "No," 
said old Rivals ; " no delivered" are the 
last lines of Jack. 

There is much truth and also much 
untruth in the lesson of the book. So- 
cial surroundings, of course, influence 
very materially the growth, physical and 
moral, of lives. But they are not every- 
thing ; over and above them all is a man's 
own will, and that is the true lever of 
his life. " Jack " only needed a little 
more resolution and nerve to have made 
him a very useful member of society in- 
stead of a nincompoop. As in Sidonie, 
so here, the minor characters are to us 
the most interesting. The humor in 
Jack is unfortunately less in quantity 
and more sardonic in quality than in 
Sidonie. We suppose it is hopeless to 
expect M. Daudet to look for once at 
the brighter side of life and find his 
heroes and heroines among respectable 
people. Meanwhile, we give him all 
praise as a very powerful artist, though a 
very unpleasing one. He is fortunate in 
his American translator. 

MCGEE'S ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY : De- 
voted to Catholic Art, Literature, and 
Education. Vol. I. New York : J. A. 
McGee, Publisher. 1877. 
An illustrated Catholic weekly jour- 
nal, which should successfully compete 
in point of illustration and literary work- 
manship with the numerous non-Catho- 
lic and anti-Catholic we had almost said 
diabolic journals that are so abundant to- 
day, was something greatly needed in this 
country. Various attempts have been 
made in the past to establish such a jour- 
nal. They were so many failures. The vol- 



ume which forms the subject of the pre- 
sent notice is certainly the most successful 
we have yet seen here, and we have great 
hopes that, with an increased patronage, 
which it certainly deserves, it may be 
all we could wish it to be. It has ad- 
vanced very much, both in style of illus- 
tration, in selection of subjects, and 
above all in editorial character and ability 
on its own earlier numbers. 

The publisher has had the good for- 
tune as well as the good sense to secure a 
really able editor in Col. James E. McGee, 
who, in addition to being an excellent 
writer, possesses that sound journalis- 
tic sense and judgment without which 
the very best matter is simply wasted in 
a publication of this kind. Most of the 
illustrated journals of the day are so much 
mental and moral poison, and the deadli- 
est are those that are most generally liked 
and enjoy the widest circulation. To fur- 
nish an antidote to this bane is a good as 
well asabold work, which deserves well 
of Catholics everywhere. We most heart- 
ily wish continued success to the new 
venture. 

THE BIBLE OF HUMANITY. By Jules 
Michelet. Translated from the French 
by Vincenzo Calfa. With a new and 
complete index. New York : J. W. 
Bouton. 1877. 

This is a translation of what may be 
called a sensational romance by Jules 
Michelet, founded on the earliest re- 
cords of various races of the human fam- 
ily, including the Old and the New Tes- 
tament. The author runs riot amidst 
these ancient documents ; and his disor- 
dered imagination misinterprets them 
unscrupulously, denies boldly what does 
not answer his purpose, and invents at 
pleasure, until in the end nothing is left 
on the mind of the reader except the im- 
pression of a defying, scoffing, and volup- 
tuous disciple of M. Voltaire Jules Mi- 
chelet. 

The translation is in good English ; 
we have no reason to think it is not 
faithfully done. 

THE POETICAL AND PROSE WRITINGS 
OF CHARLES SPRAGUE. New edition. 
With a portrait and a biographical 
sketch. Boston: A.Williams & Co. 
1876. 

Mr. Sprague's writings, whether in 
prose or poetry, are of that kind, we 
fear, that are not destined to live long in 



144 



New Publications. 



men's memories, however much imme- 
diate interest and attention they may 
excite at the time of their publication. 
His verse was smooth enough and sweet 
enough as a rule, with little or nothing 
in it to jar on sensitive feelings, and lit- 
tle or nothing in it also to rouse feeling 
of any kind. The present edition is 
handsomely brought out. 

ANNALS OF OUR LADY OF THE SACRED 
HEART. Monthly bulletin of the 
Archconfraternity of Our Lady of the 
Sacred Heart, published with the ap- 
probation of Rt. Rev. Edgar P. Wad- 
hams, Bishop of Ogdensburg. Print- 
ed for the Missionaries of the Sacred 
Heart, by Chas. E. Holbrook, Water- 
town, N. Y. 

We have received the first number of 
this little publication, the object of which 
is best set forth in the words of the dedi- 
cation " to the clergy, religious com- 
munities, colleges, institutions of learn- 
ing, and Catholic societies of America." 
"The Missionaries of the Sacred Heart 
of Jesus established at Watertown ear- 
nestly recommend to the zeal of Catho- 
lics the monthly publication entitled 
Annals of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, 
Its object is to make known and to 
propagate in America, and in the Eng- 
lish possessions, the admirable devotion 
to Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, and, 
through Mary, to lead souls to the Sacred 
Heart of Jesus." The publication be- 
gins with the June number. 

THE CATHOLIC PARENTS' FRIEND. Devot- 
ed to the cause of Catholic education. 
Edited monthly by M. Wallrath, pas- 
tor of the Church of the Immaculate 
Conception, Colusa, California. Num- 
bers for May, June, and July, 1877. 
We think this little publication may 
do great good to the cause of Catholic 
education. We trust it may have an ex- 
tensive patronage. A little more timeli- 
ness and brevity in the articles, and a 
more pointed and direct application of 
them to matters moving around us here 
at home, would add greatly to the value 
and interest of so excellently conceived 
a work. 

WE have received from the Catholic 
Publication Society Co. advance sheets 
of Cardinal Manning's latest volume, 
reprinted from the English plates, which 
were specially furnished to this house 



by the English publishers. It is im- 
possible at so short a notice to deal 
fitly with a work by so eminent an au- 
thor, and touching on a variety of sub- 
jects, each one of which is timely and 
important. Some indication of the value 
of the volume may be gathered from the 
titles of the various papers : " The Work 
and Wants of the Catholic Church 
in England" ; " Cardinal Wiseman" ; 
' French Infidelity" ; " Ireland" ; " On 
Progress" ; '' The Dignity and Rights of 
Labor" ; " The Church of Rome" ; " Cae- 
sarism and Ultramontanism' 1 ; " Ultra- 
montanism and Christianity" ; " The 
Pope and Magna Charta" ; " Philosophy 
without Assumptions," etc., etc. 

BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS RECEIVED. 

SAINT ELIZABETH, QUEEN OF HUNGARY. By the 
author of Life in a Cloister, etc. 

HORTENSE: an Historical Romance. Translated 
from the French. By R. J. Halm. Kelly, Piet 
& Co., Baltimore. 

THE CROWN OF HEAVEN, THE SUPREME OBJECT 
OF CHRISTIAN HOPE. From the German of Rev. 
John N. Stoger, S.J. By Rev. M. Nash, S.J. 
P. O'Shea, New York. 

SELECTIONS from the Imitation cf Christ. SELEC- 
TIONS from the Thoughts of Marcus Aureltus 
A ntoninus. Roberts Bros., Boston. 

STRENGTH AND CALCULATION OF DIMENSIONS OF 
IRON AND STEEL CONSTRUCTIONS, WITH REFER- 
ENCE TO THE LATEST EXPERIMENTS. Translated 
from the German of J. J. Weyrauch, Ph.D., 
Prof. Polytechnic School of Stuttgart. D. Van 
Nostrand, New York. 

TEN YEARS OF Mv LIFE. By the Princess Felix 
Salm-Salm. R. Worthington, New tfork. 

THE FORTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE IN- 
SPECTORS OF THE STATE PENITBNTIARY FOR THE 
EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, FOR THE 
YEAR 1876. Sherman & Co., Philadelphia. 

SIXTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE WOMAN'S BAPTIST 
MISSIONARY SOCIETIES. With the Proceedings of 
the Annual Meetings. Rand, A very & Co., Bos- 
ton. 

NINTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE CLARKE INSTITU- 
TION FOR DEAF MUTES AT NORTHAMPTON, MASS., 
FOR THE YEAR ENDING SEPTEMBER I, 1876. 

ON THE VALUE AND CULTURE OF ROOTS FOR 
STOCK FEEDING. By David Laadreth & Sons. 
McCalla & Siavely, Philadelphia. 

FINAL ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE WOODRUFF SCIEN- 
TIFIC EXPEDITION AROUND THE WORLD. In- 
dianapolis Journal Co., Indianapolis. 

ANNALS OF THE CATHOLIC INDIAN MISSIONS OF 
AMERICA. Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions, 
Washington, D. C. 

INDULGENCFS APOSTOI.IQUES, ou INDULGENCES 
APPLICABLES AUX VIVANTS ET AUX DEFUNTS. 
Que le Saint Pere Pie IX. attache aux Rosaires, 
Chapelets, Croix, etc., qui en ont obtenu le pou- 
voir approuve par 1'autoritd competente. Rome : 
Librsria di Roma. 




OHM 



THE 



CATHOLIC WORLD. 



VOL. XXVL, No. 152. NOVEMBER, 1877. 



THE FREE-RELIGIONISTS. 



I. THE NEW-ENGLANDER. 

THIS pamphlet * of ninety-five 
pages gives an account of the last 
annual meeting in Boston of the 
" Free-Religious Association, its 
object being to promote the prac- 
tical interests of pure religion, to 
increase fellowship in spirit, and to 
encourage the scientific study of 
man's religious nature and history." 
Associations of this kind seem to 
be necessary as safety-valves to a 
certain class of men and women, 
chiefly found in New England, who, 
especially in matters of religion, 
are in a state of effervescence, and 
feel the pressing need at times of 
publicly delivering themselves of 
such thoughts as come uppermost 
in their minds on this and kindred 
subjects. The phenomenon is a pe- 
culiar one, and perhaps in no other 
country could such a variety of 
odd spirits as are usually found 
in these assemblies be convoked. 
Their proceedings are full of in- 
terest to the student of religion and 

* Proceedings at the Tenth A nnual Meeting of 
the Free-Religious Association, held in Boston, 
May 31 and June i, 1877. Boston: Published by 
the Free-Religious Association, 231 Washington 
Street. 1877. 



the mental philosopher, no less 
than to the observer of the phases 
of religious development of some 
of the most active thinkers of this 
section of our country. 

The American mind at bottom is 
serious, clings with deathless tena- 
city to a religion of some sort ; and 
of none is this more characteristic 
than of the descendants of the Pu- 
ritan Fathers. The children of the 
Puritans may be eccentric, at times 
fanatical, and inclined to thrust 
their religious, social, political, and 
even dietetical notions upon others ;. 
but they are men and women who 
think ; they are restless until they 
have gained a religious belief, and 
are marked with earnestness of some 
sort, energy, and practical skill. 
The Puritan race is a thinking, re- 
ligious, and an aggressive race of 
men and women. Whatever he 
may be, there is always in a genu- 
ine Puritan a great deal of positive 
human nature. Let him be under 
error, and his teeming brain will 
breed countless crotchets, any one 
of which he will maintain witli the 
bitterest fanaticism, and, if placed 
in po\ver, will impose it upon oth- 
ers with a ruthless intolerance. 



Copyright : Rev. I. T. HECKBR. 1877. 



146 



The Free- Religionists. 



Give him truth, and you have an 
enlightened faith, indomitable zeal, 
and not a few of the elements which 
go to make up an apostle. The 
main qualities which distinguish 
the typical New-Englander, though 
not altogether the most attractive, 
are nevertheless not the meanest in 
human nature, and we candidly 
confess, though not a drop of Puri- 
tan blood runs in our veins, that 
we have but few dislikes, while we 
entertain many feelings of sincere 
respect, for the New England type 
of man. It is, therefore, with spe- 
cial interest that we read whatever 
offers an insight into the workings 
of the minds of so large, influential, 
and important a class of the Ame- 
rican people. 

II. WHAT IS THE FREE-RELIGION- 
IST MOVEMENT. 

The Unitarian Association did 
not go far enough and fast enough 
to suit the temper of a class of its 
more radical and ardent members ; 
hence the existence of the separate 
organization of" The Free-Religious 
Association." The movement of 
the free-religionists may be said to 
spring from a laudable desire to 
get rid in the speediest way possi- 
ble of the spurious Christianity 
which was imposed upon them by 
their forefathers as genuine Chris- 
tianity and pure religion. 

Suppose they have accomplished 
this laborious task of purification, 
what then ? Have they found 
wherewith " to yield the religious 
sentiment reasonable satisfaction," 
which Mr. Tyndall says " is the 
problem of problems at this hour" ? 
By no means ; this discovery is 
.quite another affair. 

"Hie labor, - 
Hoc opus est." 

They have only reached its start- 



ing point. Let them begin their 
search, and investigate every form 
or scheme of religion that has ex- 
isted among men from the begin- 
ning of the human race ; let them 
speculate on these to their hearts' 
content, and indulge in the fancy 
that they have a mission to invent 
or construct a new religion and 
what then ? Why, they will find, at 
the end of all their earnest efforts, 
that there are, and especially for 
those who have been under the 
light and quickening influences of 
Christianity, but two possible move- 
ments, one a continuous curve and 
the other a tangent. One or the 
other of these lines they \till be in- 
evitably forced to take. If they 
pursue the first and push their pre- 
mises to their logical consequen- 
ces, they will, if intelligent and 
consistent, be led at some point 
into the circle of the Catholic 
Church ; if they follow the latter, 
and have the courage of their 
opinions, they will declare them- 
selves first infidels and then athe- 
ists. The fact is becoming daily 
more and more plain to intelligent 
and fearlessly honest men that there 
is no logical standing ground, we 
do not say between Catholicity and 
atheism for atheism has no logi- 
cal standing position whatever but 
that there is no logical standing 
ground at all outside of Catholicity. 
For Catholicity professes to be, and 
has ever maintained that it is, the 
most perfect manifestation to men of 
the supreme divine Reason, and to 
reject the truths which it sets be- 
fore human reason with the con- 
vincing evidence of their divine 
origin necessarily involves the de- 
nial of human reason itself; conse- 
quently, human reason inevitably 
falls, in the end, with the rejection 
of Catholicity. A man may reject 
Protestantism and claim human 



The Free Religionists. 



reason ; nay, he is bound to repu- 
diate Protestantism, if he holds to 
human reason, for the doctrine of 
" total depravity " taught by ortho- 
dox Protestant sects undermines 
altogether the value of human rea- 
son.* But Catholicity appeals con- 
fidently to human reason for its 
firm support, since its entire 
structure is based upon the infalli- 
bility of human reason in its sphere, 
and the irrefragable certitude of 
its great primary truths. The in- 
terdependent relations, therefore, 
existing between reason and Ca- 
tholicity are essential, and they 
stand or fall together. The way 
that Dr. Holmes has put this ques- 
tion is not, we beg his pardon, the 
right way ; he says : " Rome or 
Reason?" He should have said: 
Rome and Reason. 

There can be no rational belief 
in God, in the immortality of the 
soul, in human responsibility as 
against Christianity, as there can 
be no rational belief in Christianity 
as against Catholicity. Outside of 
the Catholic Church there is only 
nihilism. 

III. THE DRIFTS OF FREE-RELI- 
GIONISM. 

It would be difficult to predict 
the precise course of these " come- 
outers " of the latest date, called 
free-religionists. Some will proba- 
bly stop after having repudiated 
Protestantism, rest upon the truths 
of reason, and, without inquiring 
further, vainly try to satisfy, with a 
species of theism, the great aspira- 
tions and deep needs of their souls ; 
eventually they may fall back on 
old Unitarianism. Others will ven- 
ture to examine, as some before 
them have done, the claims of the 
Catholic Church, and finding that 

* Vide Moehler's Symbolism, 



these are founded on human rea- 
son, that her doctrines perfect the 
truths of human reason, and that 
she alone is adequate to satisfy all 
the wants of the human heart, 
will become in the course of time 
Catholics, and save their souls 
that is, reach their high destiny. 
Another section will, during, per- 
haps, their whole lives, seriously 
amuse themselves with the study of 
Brahminism, Buddhism, and every 
other kind of outlandish religion 
not a vain intellectual amusement, 
except when associated with the 
absurd idea of concocting a new 
religion. While the larger section, 
we fear, will follow the tangent and 
end in nihilism. For although the 
main drift of the religious world 
outside of the Catholic Church, es- 
pecially in the United States, is to- 
wards naturalism ; although the 
face of each free-religionist looks in 
a somewhat different way, yet the 
actual movement of the greatest 
number of these Unitarian dissen- 
ters is apparently in the direction 
of zero. 

Precisely where the president 
of the Free-Religious Association 
stands, to what definite truths he as- 
sents as undeniable, and what con- 
victions he holds as settled, is not 
to be gathered from any of his ser- 
mons, tracts, speeches, and several 
published books. He seems to be 
laboring under the impression that 
he has a mission to bring forth a 
new religion, but thus far he or his 
associates in this illusive idea have 
given to the world no new word in 
religion, or in morals, or in philo- 
sophy, or in politics, or in social 
life, or in art, or in science, or in 
method, or in anything else scibilc. 
Mr. William R. Alger has ventured 
to predict to his free-religionist 
brethren in their last annual gath- 
ering a new incarnation and its 



148 



The Free-Religionists. 



gospel, in which we fail to see any- 
thing new or important, if true. 
" The spirit of science," such are 
the words of his prophecy, " en- 
riched with the spirit of piety, is 
the avatar of the new Messiah." 

Francis Ellswood Abbot, a con- 
spicuous member of the Free-Reli- 
gious Association, as well as one of 
its active directors and the editor of 
the Index, a weekly journal which 
is in some sort the organ of the 
free-religious movement, has, among 
other notable things, come to the 
front and publicly impeached Chris- 
tianity. His indictment contains 
five counts against the Christian 
religion : " human intelligence, hu- 
man virtue, the human heart, hu- 
man freedom, and humanitarian 
religion."* Here are his charges: 
" Christianity," he says, " no longer 
proclaims the highest truths, incul- 
cates the purest ethics, breathes the 
noblest spirit, stimulates to the 
grandest life, holds up to the soul 
and to society the loftiest ideal of 
that which ought to be." f But 
this is neither new nor original; 
for what is the Christianity which 
Mr. Abbot so boldly impeaches? 
Why, in all its main features it 
is that disfigurement of Chris- 
tianity which he has inherited 
from his Calvinistic progenitors, 
and which the Council of Trent im- 
peached, and for the most part on 
the very same grounds as he does, 
more than three centuries ago ; so 
that in each of his articles of im- 
peachment every Catholic to-day 
will heartily join, and to each of his 
charges say : Amen ; Anathema sit! 

What is surprising to Catholics 
is that there should be intelligent 
and educated men living in this en- 
lightened nineteenth century who 
have found out that Calvinism is 

* The Impeachment of Christianity ^ p. 6. 
t Ibid. p. i. 



false, and have not yet discovered 
in the intellectual environment of 
Boston that Calvinism is not Chris- 
tianity. " They do not attack the 
Catholic Church," said Daniel 
O'Connell, in speaking of a similar 
class of men, " but a monster which 
they have created and called the 
Catholic Church." 

But Mr. Abbot is not of the men 
who are content to rest in mere ne- 
gation. In a lecture delivered by 
him in a course under the auspi- 
ces of the Free-Religious Associa- 
tion, entitled A Study of Religion, 
after much preliminary discourse, 
he gives with the heading, " The 
New Conception of Religion," the 
following definition of religion : 
" Religion," he says, " is the effort 
of man to perfect himself. " * Now, 
what is the origin of "man's effort 
to perfect himself "? "Religion," 
he affirms, " appears in its univer- 
sal aspect as the decree of Nature 
that her own end shall be achieved. 
Religion is the inward impulsion of 
Nature, seconded by the conscious 
effort of the individual to conform 
to it," etc.f 

What Mr. Abbot calls " nature " 
and " ideal excellence in all direc- 
tions " is what the common sense 
of mankind has named God. Mr. 
Abbot has no objection to the same 
name ; only he insists that the idea 
of God, which is very proper, 
should be submitted " to the edu- 
cated intelligence of the human 
race." \ " It is," he says, " because 
I do believe in God that I am will- 
ing to submit my belief in him to 
the sharpest and most searching 
scrutiny of science." 

Now, Mr. Abbot admits that if 
you once concede the Messianic 
claim of Christ, " then it is true 
that Catholicism is itself Christian- 



* P. 26. 



tP. 23. 



The Free- Religionists. 



149 



ity in its most perfect form."* He 
therefore stops virtually in his an- 
alysis of religion at the idea of God, 
and, if he believed in the Divinity 
of Christ and did not eschew logic, 
he would have to embrace Catho- 
licity. Mr. Abbot, like many Uni- 
tarians, agrees on this point with P. 
J. Proudhon, but with this differ- 
ence : the Frenchman recedes a 
step, and maintains that " outside 
of Christianity there is no God, no 
religion, no faith, no theology. . . . 
The church believes in God, and 
believes in God more faithfully and 
more perfectly than any sect. The 
church is the purest, most perfect, 
and most enlightened revelation of 
the divine Being, and none other 
understands what is worship. From 
a religious stand-point the Catho- 
licism of the Latin peoples is the 
best, the most rational, and the 
most perfect. Rome, in spite of her 
repeated and frightful falls, remains 
the only legitimate church." Hence 
Proudhon and those of his school 
lay it down as a sine qua non that 
the elimination of the idea of God, 
and of all obligation to any divine 
law, is the condition of all true pro- 
gress. From this we may draw the 
conclusion that Francis E. Abbot is 
on the curve line, and, if he follows 
out his definition of religion to its 
logical consequences, he will surely 
land, whatever may be the sweep of 
his continuous curve, in the bosom of 
the Catholic Church. There is no 
escape from this ultimate result, if 
reason is to rule, except by hastily 
taking the back track, and starting 
on the tangent, and eventually 
plunging with Proudhon into the 
dark abyss of nihilism. Hence 
every sagacious straight-line radi- 
cal cannot but look upon the plat- 
form of the editor of the Index as 

*fs Rjinanism Real Christianity f p. 14. 



the jumping-off place into popery 
for all consistent theists. That 
this is not meant as pleasantry, but 
is written in downright earnestness, 
we quote the conclusion of his lec- 
ture on A Study of Religion, and 
preface it by saying that the lan- 
guage with which he urges his defi- 
nition of religion on his hearers 
finds in every word an echo in the 
hearts of all sincere and instructed 
Catholics, and receives their full 
endorsement. 

" I speak now," he says, " as one who 
believes in religion, thus conceived, from 
the sole of the foot to the crown of the 
head, without apology either for the 
name or the thing, and without the 
smallest concession to the prejudice that 
assails either the one or the other. To- 
day I speak only to the large in heart 
and broad in mind to those who must 
accept science and would fain accept re- 
ligion too. To these I say that science 
itself would lose its fearless love of 
truth, were it not that religion fed its 
secret springs ; that social reform would 
lose its motive and inspiration, litera- 
ture and art their beauty, and all human 
life its sweetest and tenderest grace, did 
not religion evermore create the insatia- 
ble hunger after perfection in the soul 
of man. Bright, cheerful, ennobling, 
stimulating, emancipating, religion is 
the greatest friend of humanity, ever 
guiding it upward and onward to the 
right and the true ; ay, and to all we 
yearn for, if, as we believe, the right and 
the true are indeed the pathway to God." 

But not all free-religionists are 
gifted with so deep, intelligent, and 
healthy an appreciation of the es- 
sence of religion as Francis E. Ab- 
bot, who leaves nothing at present 
to be desired but the courage of 
his convictions -proficiat ! 

There is, however, in the Chris- 
tian Inquirer a revelation made by 
William Ellery Channing, a distin- 
guished nephew of the celebrated 
Dr. Channing, which tells quite an- 
other story. It appears by this ar- 
ticle that the president of the Free- 



ISO 



The Free-Religionists. 



Religious Association, O. B. Froth- 
ingham, had attributed to Mr. 
Charming, one of the speakers in 
the tenth annual assembly, a "po- 
etic Christianity," a " religion in 
the air," an " up-in-a-balloon " reli- 
gion, and in reply to this accusa- 
tion he draws from nature the fol- 
lowing unattractive personal por- 
traits : 

" Let me," says Mr. Channing, " make 
a clean breast of it to you before all on- 
lookers. What you mean by the ' rumors ' 
that I had become ' ecclesiastical in tastes 
and opinions ' I can but conjecture. But 
the simple facts are in brief these : You 
remember how seven years ago, on the 
public platform, and in the reunions of 
the Free-Religionists in dear John Sar- 
gent's hospitable rooms, and in private 
'confabs' with yourself, and W. J. Pot- 
ter, and S. Longfellow, and S. Johnson, 
and J. Weiss, and T. W. Higginson, and 
D. A. Wasson, and F. E. Abbot, etc., I 
tried to preach my gospel, that the -vital 
centre of free religious union is the 
life of God in man as made gloriously 
manifest in Jesus the Christ. And you 
remember, too, how around that centre 
I illustrated the historic fact that the 
great religions of our race arranged 
themselves in orderly groups. For near- 
ly a year I opened my heart and mind to 
the free-religionists and liberal Chris- 
,tians, without a veil to hide my inmost 
holy of holies. But shall I tell you, my 
friend, that when I bade you all farewell, 
in the summer of 1870, it was with sad 
forebodings? And why? The story, too 
long to tell in full, ran thus : One, in his 
wish to be bathed in the sense of ever- 
present Deity, had ceased to commune 
with the Spirit of spirits in prayer. An- 
other, in his repulsion from imprisoning 
anthropomorphism, had abandoned all 
conceptions of a personal God, and so 
lost the Father. A third, in his historic 
purpose to lead a heavenly-human life, 
here and now, gave up the hope of im- 
mortal existence, as a sailor might turn 
from contemplating the cloud-palaces of 
sunset to pull the tarry cordage and 
spread the coarse canvas of his ship. 
And, saddest of all, a fourth, in his bold 
purpose to be spontaneous in every im- 
pulse and emotion, spurned the mother- 
ly monitions of duty so sternly that con- 



science even seemed driven to return to 
heaven, like ' Astraea Redux.' In brief, 
one felt as if the liberal college of all re- 
ligions in council with pantheism, ag- 
nosticism, and atheistic materialism was 
destined to fall flat to dust in a confused 
chaos of most commonplace spiritual 
' knoiv-nothingism.' Such was my dis- 
heartening vision of the near future for 
dearly-loved compeers. And a darker 
valley of ' devastation,' as our Sweden- 
borgian friends say, than I was driven 
into I have never traversed." 

But Mr. Channing goes further ; 
he shows that he has studied the 
religious philosophers of antiquity 
to some purpose, seized their true 
meaning and real drift, and in 
touching language takes his readers 
into his confidence, offering to them 
an insight into his present relations 
to Christianity. 

The following remarkable para- 
graph possesses a thrilling interest 
for Catholics ; and if it affects others 
as it has the present writer on read- 
ing it, they will not fail to offer up an 
aspiration to Him who has given such 
graces to the soul of the man who 
penned it and doubtless to oth- 
ers among the free-religionists that 
he will render their faith explicit 
and perfect it. 

" Once again," he says, " I sought com- 
fort with the blessed company of sages 
and saints of the Orient and Hellas 
with Lao-Tsee and Kung Fu-Tsee ; 
with the writers of the Bhagava-Geeta 
and the Dhamma-Bada ; of the hymns of 
ancient Avesta and the modern sayings 
and songs of the Sufis ; with radiant Pla- 
to and heroic Epictetus, etc., etc. Once 
more they refreshed and reinspirited me 
as of old. But they did something bet- 
ter : hand in hand they brought me up 
to the white marble steps, and the crys- 
tal baptismal font, and the bread and 
wine-crowned communion-table ay, to 
the cross in the chancel of the Christian 
temple and, as they laid their hands in 
benediction on my head, they whispered : 
' Here is your real home. We have been 
but your guides in the desert to lead you 
to fellowship with the Father and his 



The Frce-Rclig ion ists. 



Son in the spirit of holy humanity. 
Peace be with you." And so, my bro- 
ther, once again, and with a purer, pro- 
founder, tenderer love than ever, like a 
little child, I kissed the blood-stained 
feet and hands and side of the Hero of 
Calvary, and laid my hand on the knees 
of the gentlest of martyrs, and was up- 
lifted by the embracing arms of the gra- 
cious elder Brother, and in his kiss of 
mingled pity and pardon found the 
peace I sought, and became a Christian 
in experience, as through a long life I had 
hoped and prayed to be. Depend upon 
it, dear Frothingham, there is on this 
small earth-ball no reality more real than 
this central communion with God in 
Christ, of which the saints of all ages in 
the church universal bear witness." 

IV. THE MEETING. 

But \ve have wandered off some- 
what from our present point, which 
is the proceedings of " the tenth 
annual meeting " of the free-reli- 
gionists in Boston. What is singu- 
larly remarkable among so intellec- 
tual and cultivated a class of men as 
assemble at these gatherings, and 
especially among its select speakers 
and essayists, is that they should 
display so great a lack of true 
knowledge of the Catholic Church. 
If the Catholic Church is not wor- 
thy of serious study, then why make 
it a subject for speeches and essays 
in so important an assembly ? But 
if it be worthy of so much atten- 
tion, why not give it that investi- 
gation which its significance de- 
mands ? We dare not say that the 
leaders among the free-religionists 
are not intelligent men, that they 
have not read considerably. But 
when they charge the Catholic 
Church with heresies which she has 
condemned ; when they attribute to 
her doctrine which she always has 
detested and does detest ; and when 
they blacken her with stale and oft- 
refuted calumnies, and recklessly 
traduce her dearest and best, her 
holiest children, we dare not trust 



ourselves to give expression to what 
comes uppermost in our thoughts. 
Shakspere gives good advice in this 
matter : 

'' Though honesty be no Puritan, 
Yet it will do no hurt." 

We recommend this to the con- 
sideration of our free-religionists. 
It will do them " no hurt " to show 
more of this virtue when speaking 
of the Catholic Church. It be- 
comes those who talk so much 
about science to talk a little less 
about it, and, when the Catholic re- 
ligion is concerned, to give more 
evidence of scientific study. Es- 
pecially does this course become 
men who claim to be public teach- 
ers belonging to a body whose ob- 
ject is " to encourage the scientific 
study of man's religious nature and 
history." 

The first essay, delivered by Wil- 
liam R. Alger, entitled Steps to- 
wards Religious Emancipation in 
Christendom, and published in 
their tenth annual report, will serve 
to illustrate our meaning. Mr. Al- 
ger is a scholar of repute, a man who 
has travelled abroad, written and 
published several books displaying 
extensive reading, refined tastes, 
and high literary culture. He is, 
moreover, a distinguished minister 
of the Unitarian denomination. 
His essay, we have reason to be- 
lieve, was prepared with the usual 
care bestowed upon such papers ; 
for the president of the association, 
in introducing the author, said : 
" The discussion will be opened by 
an essay by Mr. William R. Alger, 
of New York, who has made this 
matter in its historical aspects the 
study of years, and is carefully pre- 
pared to present the result of his 
deepest thought and investigation."* 

P. 82. 



152 



The Free-Religionists. 



In its fourth paragraph the essay 
proposes to give a rough sketch of 
the "doctrinal thought " on which 
in mediaeval times the " intellec- 
tual unity " of the church rested. 
Our limits will not allow us to 
quote it entire, but it is enough for 
our purpose to say and we weigh 
our words before putting them on 
paper that scarcely any one sen- 
tence of this paragraph contains a 
correct statement of the " doctrinal 
thought " of the Catholic Church 
either in the middle ages or in any 
other age. 

Here are some of the statements : 
" The whole human race, descend- 
ed from Adam, who lived five thou- 
sand years before" etc. Mr. Alger 
would convey new information to 
the readers of THE CATHOLIC 
WORLD, if he would give his au- 
thorities for this assertion. Thus 
far, if our authorities do not deceive 
us, the Catholic Church has, in her 
wisdom, left the question of the 
date of man's appearance upon 
this earth to the discussion of chro- 
nologists and to the disputes among 
scientists. 

Again : " The Bible, a mysteri- 
ous book dictated by the Spirit of 
God, containing an infallible record 
of what is most important in this 
scheme of salvation, is withheld 
from the laity" It would also in- 
crease the knowledge of our readers 
if the author had given his autho- 
rities to prove the above charge. 
The testimony of Catholics, if we 
be a judge, is precisely the contrary 
to this accusation. They entertain 
the conviction that it was the most 
earnest desire of the church in the 
period of which Mr. Alger is speak- 
ing to render the Bible accessible 
to all classes of men. Her monks 
devoted themselves to the severe 
manual labor of copying the Bible, 
and engaged in the noble toil of 



translating it into the vulgar tongues 
of various nations, that the people 
might become readers of the Bible. 
She exposed the Bible publicly in 
her libraries, and chained it to their 
walls by the windows, and to desks 
in her churches, in order that it 
might be read by everybody and 
not stolen. The charge is simply 
an old and oft-repeated calumny 
quite unworthy a man of reputed 
intelligence. 

" The actual power or seal of 
salvation is made available to be- 
lievers only through the sacraments 
of the church confession, baptism, 
Mass, and penance legally admin- 
istered by her accredited repre- 
sentatives." There is such an in- 
extricable confusion pervading this 
statement that it is difficult to dis- 
cern its meaning. No one, we 
venture to say, who had mastered 
the " doctrinal thought " of the 
church would have ever penned so 
distracted a sentence on so impor- 
tant a point. One would suppose 
that, according to Mr. Alger, there 
were two sacraments, one " confes- 
sion " and the other " penance " ; 
whereas every Catholic who has 
learned the little catechism knows 
that " confession," the popular term, 
means, in the language of the church, 
the Sacrament of Penance. Then 
what is meant by " baptism legally 
administered by her accredited re- 
presentatives " ? This is not clear ; 
but the whole statement is so con- 
fused in thought and tangled in ex- 
pression that the only hope of un- 
derstanding the author's meaning 
is to give him an opportunity of 
trying again. It would be, among 
ourselves, interesting to read from 
non-Catholic authors the " doctrinal 
thought " of the church on what is 
essential to salvation and what is 
ordinarily necessary to salvation. 
It would also, we are inclined to 



The Free-Religionists. 



153 



think, clear up many of their mis- 
conceptions and do them no little 
good to have correct ideas on so 
important a matter. 

" Those," says Mr. Alger, " who 
humbly believe and observe these 
doctrines shall be saved ; all others 
lost for ever." 

This sentence follows the preced- 
ing one, and the same confusion 
and error underlie both. When 
the ingenuous author of this essay 
has corrected the former sentence 
by reading up on the point involv- 
ed, he will, as a matter of course, 
correct the error contained in the 
latter. 

Passing now over several para- 
graphs containing many charges, we 
regret to say, in unusually bitter 
words, we come to the following : 
" The revival of the Greek learn- 
ing, the study of the works of Plato, 
Aristotle, the classic poets, orators, 
and historians, with their beautiful 
and surprising revelations of genius, 
virtue, and piety, entirely indepen- 
dent and outside of the church and 
Bible, exerted an immense force in 
liberalizing and refining the nar- 
row, dogmatic mind of the Chris- 
tian world, refuting its arrogant 
pretensions to an exclusive communion 
with God and heritage in Providence" 
If the cultivated writer of this essay 
had qualified the phrase " outside 
of the church " as I understand it, 
" exclusive communion " as I view 
it, this sentence might pass ; but, as 
it stands, the position in which the 
Catholic Church is placed is en- 
tirely false, and we refer our read- 
ers to what is said on these points 
under the heading of " The Mission 
of the Latin Race," commencing on 
page 5, in the last number of this 
magazine. 

" Now the Pope," says Mr. Al- 
ger, "excommunicates the empe- 
ror, sets up a rival, foments a re- 



bellion among his subjects, or 
launches the terrible interdict on a 
whole nation, shutting the church- 
es, muffling the bells, forbidding 
confession to the penitent, unction 
to the dying, burial to the dead." * 
Either the author has been impos- 
ed upon by his authorities, or per- 
haps he has not weighed sufficient- 
ly his words. The effect of an in- 
terdict of the Pope is inaccurately 
stated. These are " terrible " mat- 
ters, and one who is reciting histo- 
ry should be careful and exact in 
his specifications. Here, as before, 
he is bound to give his authorities, 
and learned and credible ones, or 
change his language. 

"The repeated gross contradic- 
tions of bishops, councils, and popes, 
their inconsistent decrees reversing 
or neutralizing each other, infallibil- 
ity clashing with infallibility, begat ir- 
repressible doubts." f This sentence 
may pass for a rhetorical flourish, 
but it involves a grave, a very grave, 
a most grave charge, and is backed 
up by no example, or proof, or 
relation of authorities ! These cut- 
ting and slashing assertions where 
conscientious accuracy is required 
and sound scholarship ought to be 
displayed, place the intelligence 
and education of his Boston audi- 
ence in no enviable light. Let us 
have some specimens of "infallibil- 
ity clashing with infallibility " by 
all means : 

" Luther sprang forth with one- 
third of Christendom in revolt at 
his back. . . . But the fundamental 
doctrines of the church scheme 
otherwise remained essentially as 
they had been, unchallenged."! 
What a pity that the theologians of 
the sixteenth century had not known 
that " the fundamental doctrines 
of the church scheme remained es- 



* P. 23. 



t P. 28. 



t P. 



154 



The- Free- Religionists. 



sentially " the same ! The Council 
of Trent, if it had only understood 
this, might have saved its anathe- 
mas. 

" After Luther, then, we see Chris- 
tendom, with fundamental agreement 
of belief , differing, for the most part, 
only in affairs of polity and ritual, 
split into two bodies those who 
rest their belief on the inspired au- 
thority of the church, and those 
who rest it on the inspired author- 
ity of the Bible." * Here again we 
have another fundamental errone- 
ous idea of the church. " Inspir- 
ed " authority is not what Catho- 
lics believe. This language shows 
poor theological training or a loose 
way of handling delicate and im- 
portant points. But on this point 
we shall have more to say. 

" Third," says Mr. Alger, " a revolt of 
common sense against errors with which 
tlie teachings of church and Scripture were 
identified, but which, by the simple lapse 
of time, had been demonstrated to be 
filse. For example, in the twentieth 
chapter of the Book of Revelations it is 
recorded : ' And he laid hold of the 
dragon, that old serpent, which is the 
devil, and cast him into the bottomless 
pit, and shut him up, and set a seal on 
him that he should deceive the nations 
no more, till the thousand years should 
be fulfilled ; after that he must be loosed 
a little season.' This passage was 
thought to fix the date of the Day of 
Judgment. And as the time drew near 
the terror was profound. Throughout 
the generation preceding the year one 
thousand the pulpits of the Christian 
world rang with this frightful text and 
until aivful descriptions of what it implied. 
The fear was as intense as the belief was 
general." 

Has not the author of this essay 
taken some romancer of history or 
some idle tale for his authority in 
the above charge ? When and 
where did the church identify her 
teachings with this error? We 



grow uneasy in asking for authori- 
ties and examples ; and when we 
are given an example of things 
which are said to have taken place 
eight hundred years or more ago, 
no authority is cited to authenti- 
cate the fact. The author may 
have given his hearers " the result 
of his deepest thought," but he is 
too chary of the authorities for his 
"historical study of years." 

" The priests," he tells us, " from 
the first hour scented this enemy 
from afar, and declared war against 
it [physical science], as the meaner 
portion of them still do everywhere. 
In the twelfth century the Council 
of Tours, in the thirteenth century 
the Council of Paris, interdicted to 
monks the reading of works on 
physical science as sinful." * We 
retract having said that Mr. Alger 
cites no authorities; he does in the 
above accusation, but fails to quote 
the decrees or give their language, 
or tell what kind of councils these 
were and what their weight. We 
feel suspicious, and have grounds 
for this feeling, and we demand 
more definite proofs. The charge 
is precise ; let the proofs be equally 
so. Let us have the authentic de- 
crees and ipsissima verba. This is 
asking only fair play. It would 
not be pleasant to find this accusa- 
tion, on serious investigation, a mis- 
conception, or a misinterpretation, 
or perhaps an invented calumny, 
but not by our author. We take 
real pleasure in finding a point in 
which we agree with him. Here 
is one : they are the " meaner por- 
tion," if there be such " priests," 
who "war against" the study of 
" the physical sciences." We know 
of priests who are devoted to the 
study of the physical sciences, and 
some who are distinguished in these 



* P. 30. 



* P. 33- 



The Free-Religionists. 



155 



studies ; but we have no acquaint- 
ance with the " meaner portion" 
who have "declared war against 
physical science." Perhaps Mr. 
Alger has, and, if so, he will inform 
us who they are. 

"Ethnology," he asserts, "multi- 
plies the actors in its drama [that 
of history], and takes the keystone 
from the arch of the church theology 
by disproving tlie inheritance of total 
depravity from one progenitor of all 
men." * Here the author shares 
the error in common with almost all, 
if not all, Unitarians and free-reli- 
gionists. They seem not to be able 
to grasp the idea that the Catholic 
Church, in the CEcumenical Council 
of Trent, condemned the doctrines 
of Protestantism concerning origi- 
nal sin ; and, whatever may be said 
to the contrary, the Catholic Church 
never goes back on her authorita- 
tive decisions. Mr. Alger well says 
that the doctrine of original sin is 
" the keystone of the arch of theo- 
logy "; so much the more reason, 
therefore, that there should be no 
mistake on a point which shapes 
theology almost entirely. And if 
he and his brethren, free-religion- 
ists and Unitarians, could be got 
to understand and acknowledge 
that the Catholic Church has con- 
demned the doctrines of Protestant- 
ism on original sin, as well as " the 
five points of Calvinism" for they 
go together then there would be 
some hope that the gross error of 
identifying Catholicity and Protes- 
tantism as " fundamentally and es- 
sentially the same" on this most 
important subject would be cor- 
rected. The error is an egregious 
one, which is constantly appearing 
in their addresses, sermons, tracts, 
essays, books, weekly papers, and 
journals, and with that error a 



thousand dependent errors would 
disappear. But, alas ! we fear 
that we shall have to regard this 
as hopeless, and resign ourselves, 
for the present generation at least, 
to placing this, with other radical 
errors, among the points of "invin- 
cible ignorance"! May we just 
here be allowed, without being stig- 
matized as one of the " meaner 
portion" of the priesthood, to put 
in a humble demurrer to the unsus- 
tained assertion that " ethnology" 
has " disproven" "one progenitor 
of all men " ? 

If the reader is weary of follow- 
ing up with us this labyrinth of er- 
ror in this not very long essay, he 
will pity the present writer ; for he 
has not touched upon one-tenth of 
the errors which the same short es- 
say holds. We have been careful, 
too, to be silent on language which 
might have come from Exeter Hall 
ranters or from the late Dr. Brown- 
lee, a notorious anti-popery lecturer 
of former days. Indeed, we can 
scarcely allow ourselves the free- 
dom of expressing our feelings of 
indignation at reading such lan- 
guage coming from men who have 
a reputation for polite culture. 
" Men," we say ; for at the close of 
its delivery Mr. Alger's essay was 
endorsed by the president of the 
association as " the admirable essay 
by Mr. Alger, at once a history 
and an argument, a summary of 
facts and also a summary of appre- 
hensions and suggestions, etc."* 
Another speaker pronounced it a 
" most magnificent and masterly 
essay." f We are not over-sensitive 
in matters of this kind, and before 
concluding our remarks we give a 
specimen of the language and spirit 
of the "most magnificent and mas- 
terly essay." 



P. 34. 



p. 40. 



t P. 42. 



156 



The Free-Religionists. 



V. FREE RELIGIONISTS AND THE 
MONKS. 

" Few men," says our estimable writer, 
" dulyfeel what a debt the nineteenth cen- 
tury owes 'to the illustrious founders and 
cultivatorsof science, Aristotle, Archime- 
des, Kepler, Newton, and the hundreds of 
lesser lights in many departments. What 
a beneficent and herculean task they have 
accomplished in breaking the chains of 
false authority, opening the dungeons of 
superstition, removing the incubus of reli- 
gious terror ! Their sunlit and open-air 
minds, in harmonious working connec- 
tion with nature and their race, have 
done much to dispel the baneful power 
of a celibate church, the cloistered and 
mephitic minds of monks and hermits, intro- 
spective dreamers* tyrannical theonzers, who, 
set apart from the living interests of 
men, had woven over Christianity a hor- 
rid web of diseased logic spun out of the en- 
trails of their own morbid brains." 

Let free-religionists honor Aristo- 
tle, Archimedes, Kepler, Newton, 
and other great masters in natural 
science ; they are worthy, and we 
also pay them honor. Let them 
be grateful to those " cultivators of 
science " for all the hidden truths 
which, by their genius and toil, they 
have brought to light, and in this 
we also sympathize. Let them join 
with this class the men of our own 
day distinguished in this line of 
studies : the Herschels, the Faradays, 
the Agassiz, the Quatrefages, the 
Darwins, the Secchis, the Hux- 
leys, the Tyndalls, the Drapers, etc. ; 
they are all worthy of honor and 
gratitude for every new truth which 
they have discovered and made 
known to the world. Not to love all 
truth unreservedly is to renounce 
the light of reason and to repudiate 
God ; for he was God who said, " I 
am the truth." But this grateful 
acknowledgment for the labors of 
cultivators of the sciences by no 
manner of means implies the ac- 
ceptance of every hypothesis or 
theory, put forth by some of them, 



which for the most part are based 
upon insufficient data or spun out 
of misconceptions of religion with 
secret hostility to Christianity. 
For there are men who pass for 
scientists who seem to be actuated 
more by a spirit of opposition to 
religion than a sincere desire for 
the discovery of the secrets of na- 
ture. Hence genuine science has 
to suffer no less than true religion 
from bigots and hypocrites, who 
erect their untenable opinions into 
final decisions of scientific investi- 
gation, and cloak themselves with 
the honorable livery of science to 
put forth the ignoble doctrines of 
materialism. Speculations, how- 
ever brilliant, ought not to pass for 
science, and one must be on his 
guard in our days, lest he allow the 
authority of great names to impose 
upon his credulity the romance of 
science for real science. 

But could not the author of this 
essay honor the really great men of 
science and be content, without 
dishonoring another class of men 
who devoted their gifts and gave 
their toil as enthusiastically at 
least, and with an equal self-sacri- 
ficing spirit, to the contemplation 
and discovery of another, and even, 
in degree, a higher, class of truths ? 
Could he not pay Paul without rob- 
bing Peter? 

Then, again, why this bitterness 
of expression towards the monks ? 
Have these monks no aspirations 
that are holy ? no convictions that 
are sacred ? no rights worthy of 
respect ? Why could not the 
monks with equal liberty lead such 
lives as the highest feelings in their 
souls called them to do as well as 
a Bronson Alcott, a Ralph Waldo 
Emerson, a Henry Thoreau, or 
William R. Alger? What or who 
has given to these Americans the 
liberty to lead such lives as they 



The Free-Religionists. 



157 



chose, and deprived men of other 
climes of this same personal privi- 
lege ? Is it a commendable thing 
for a Sir Isaac Newton to lead a 
celibate life out of devotion to 
mathematics, and a sin for a St. 
Benedict to lead a single life out 
of as pure a devotion, at least, to 
the religion of Christ? If Rever- 
end Ralph Waldo Emerson throws 
up his pastorate over a respectable 
Unitarian congregation, and retires 
to a remote country village to de- 
vote himself to the cultivation of 
literature and whatever he may 
please to think a more useful call- 
ing, in fidelity to his best aspira- 
tions, why may not a Bernadotti of 
Assisi retire from the business of 
a silk merchant, renounce his gay 
companions, and, in obedience to 
the voice of God in his soul, prac- 
tise poverty and turn a religious re- 
former under the name of Francis? 
If Henry Thoreau repudiates the 
calling to be a clergyman not to be 
false to his highest convictions, 
devotes his leisure hours to the 
study of nature and the Greek poets, 
and, living for the most part on 
bread and water, takes up the 
manual labor of making lead-pen- 
cils to meet the cost of his scanty 
support, and in so doing not lose 
cast among the literary brah- 
mins of Boston, why not let, with 
equal freedom, Anthony retire to 
the deserts of Egypt and give him- 
self to divine contemplation and 
tiie making of baskets and mats for 
his innocent way of life, without 
being loaded with a heap of most 
abusive epithets ? Was it heroic 
in Mr. Bronson Alcott to make an 
attempt to realize his ideal of a 
pure and holy life with a few choice 
spirits at Fruitlands, in the State 
of Massachusetts, while it was only 
the "mephitic" action of a "mor- 
bid brain " in a saintly Bernard 



actually to realize the ideal at 
Clairvaux, in the province of Bur- 
gundy in France? Are we to 
praise and never be weary of prais- 
ing the Pilgrim Fathers for aban- 
doning their country, their homes, 
their friends, and their relations to 
come to the wilds of inhospitable 
New England, in order that they 
might worship God according to 
the dictates of their consciences, 
and must we condemn the first 
pioneers in the wilderness who 
plunged into the solitudes of Egypt 
for precisely the same reason, in 
order to fulfil the great aspira- 
tion of their souls to God the pil- 
grim saints of the desert ? Who 
can read the riddle why the aspi- 
ration or effort of the soul to per- 
fect itself is the result of " mephi- 
tic minds " in a Hebrew, or an 
Egyptian, or a Latin, or a Celt, and 
the same aspiration is religious, 
sacred, holy, when found in the 
soul of a New-Englander ? 

Did it not suggest itself to the 
mind of the author of this essay, 
when he perused the passage quot- 
ed against the monks, that he ex- 
posed himself to a flank movement ? 
For where could you find better 
specimens and more plentifully of 
" introspective dreamers " and "ty- 
rannical theorizers " than in the 
State, in the very city, nay, in the 
actual audience which assembled 
at the time to listen to Mr. Alger's 
essay ? 

" O wad some power the giftie gie us, 
To see oursels as others see us ! 
It wad frae monie a blunder free us, 

And foolish notion " 

Why is it that a certain number 
of New England authors, whenever 
they can find an occasion or make 
an opportunity, are sure to cast a 
fling at monks and nuns and a 
celibate priesthood ? Even the ge- 
nial author, Dr. Oliver Wendell 



158 



The Free-Religionists. 



Holmes, not to mention Whittier 
and others, from some yet unex- 
plained cause, will turn bitter and 
his temper grow ruffled when he 
encounters in his literary excur- 
sions a monk or speaks of the celi- 
bate clergy of the church. There 
is no difficulty in acquitting such au- 
thors of intentional malice, but men 
so well bred and of such broad ex- 
perience ought and do know bet- 
ter, and should not blot their oth- 
erwise pleasant pages with foul 
abuse. 

But whence does this acrimony 
spring ? Does it spring from the 
bully who strikes a victim, knowing 
himself safe from a return blow ? or 
is it that the intellectual faculty of 
insight is lacking in these highly- 
gifted authors ? Is this rancor to 
be attributed to their environment ? 
or, finally, is it to be classified by 
some future clerical Darwin as an 
instance of Puritanical " inherited 
habit " ? Be that as it may, Catho- 
lics ask no favors from the oppo- 
nents of the church, but they have 
good reason to look for, and the 
right to demand, fair play, sound 
scholarship where scholarship is 
needed and claimed, and at least 
an average amount of intelligence. 

These monks and let us add also 
nuns, for their aim is identical 
who have as a distinctive principle 
of life the resolve always to tend 
towards perfection, are not perfect 
and make no pretension to being 
saints. For although human na- 
ture is immanently good, there is 
notwithstanding much evil in the 
world, and no class of men or wo- 
men, whoever they may be, is whol- 
ly free from the possibility of de- 
viating from the path which leads 
to their true destiny. That there 
have been among monks and nuns 
hypocrites, fanatics, and those who 
have forgotten the sacredness of 



their calling and given public scan- 
dal everybody knows : "Canker vice 
the sweetest buds doth love." Had 
these incurred the severe animad- 
version of the author of this essay, 
his abusive language might have 
passed unnoticed ; but no qualifica- 
tion is made between innocent and 
guilty the exemplary and scanda- 
lous, one and all, are passed upon 
as the same by a most unsparing 
and unjust sentence. 

But not all free-religionists have 
read the history of the church and 
of the influence of monks upon 
civilization in the light of the au- 
thor of this essay. We cannot fore- 
go the gratification of quoting a 
passage written many years ago by 
one, a speaker in this tenth an- 
nual meeting too, in which he gives 
a different estimate of the church 
and the monks in the precise pe- 
riod of which Mr. Alger has at- 
tempted to draw a rough sketch, it 
is true, but still his intention must 
have been to give a correct pic- 
ture. 

" Truly," says the Rev. William El- 
lery Channing, " the church has been a 
quickening centre of modern civiliza- 
tion, a fountain of law and art, of man- 
ners and policy. It would not be easy 
to estimate how much of our actual free- 
dom and humanity, of our cultivation 
and prosperity, we owe to her foresight 
and just acknowledgment of rights and 
duties. It is easy to ascribe to the cun- 
ning and love of power of priests the 
wonderful sovereignty which this spiri- 
tual dictator has exerted ; but it is proof 
of surprising superficiality that these 
critics do not recognize that only sin- 
cere enthusiasm and truth, however 
adulterated by errors, can give such a 
hold upon human will. The Christian 
Church has been unquestionably the 
most dignified institution which the 
earth has seen. . . . Beautiful have been 
its abbeys in lonely solitudes, clearing 
the forests, smoothing the mountains, 
nurseries of agricultural skill amidst the 
desolating wars of barbarous ages, sane- 



The Free-Religionists. 



159 



tuaries for the suffering. Beautiful its 
learned cloisters, with students' lamps 
shining late in the dark night as a bea- 
con to wandering pilgrims, to merchants 
with loaded trains, to homeless exiles 
their silent bands of high-browed, pallid 
scholars watching the form of Science 
in the tomb of Ignorance, where she lay 
entranced. Beautiful its peaceful armies 
of charity, subduing evil with works of 
love in the crowded alleys and dens of 
cities, amid the pestilences of disease 
and the fouler pestilence of crime, and 
carrying the sign of sacrifice through 
nations more barren of virtues than the 
deserts which have bordered them." 

VI. THE FREE-RELIGIONISTS AND 
THE MYSTICS. 

Mr. Alger must have seen that 
his canvas up to this moment was 
overcharged with sombre colors, 
and to give it a vraisemblance he 
put in the following words : 

" There has been another marked class 
of persons, in the extreme opposite 
sphere of life to those just described a 
class nourished in the inmost bosom of 
the church itself whose very important 
influence has acted in harmony with 
that of science, which seems so wholly 
contrary to it acted to melt away dog- 
matism, free men from hatred and force 
and fraud, and join them in a heavenly 
enthusiasm of accord. I allude to the 
mystics, who cultivated the sinless peace 
and raptures of the inner life of devotion, 
absorption in divine contemplation, ec- 
static union with God. Boundless is 
the charm exerted, incalculable the good 
done, in impregnating the finest strata 
of humanity with paradisal germs by 
Victor, Bonaventura, Suso, Tauler, Te- 
resa, Behmen, Fenelon, Guyon, John of 
the Cross, and the rest of these breath- 
ing minds, hearts of seraphic passion, 
souls of immortal flame. This class of 
believers, devoted to the nurture of ex- 
alted virtue and piety, were the choicest 
depositaries of the grace of religion." 

The general reader would sup- 
pose that this "marked class of 
persons, in the extreme opposite 
sphere of life to those just describ- 
ed," were not, of course, " monks." 



But such is the fact, with the ex- 
ception of two he mentions. Let 
us examine this list. Here is the 
first mystic, Victor. Victor! Who 
is he? Whom does the essayist 
mean ? There was St. Victor of 
Marseilles, who suffered martyrdom 
under Diocletian, July 21, A.D. 303. 
He surely does not mean this Vic- 
tor? Then there was the celebrat- 
ed Abbey of St. Victor, near Paris, 
named after St. Victor of Mar- 
seilles, founded in the first year of 
the twelfth century; he cannot mean 
that? There is no telling, though. 
Then there was Hugh, born in 
Flanders, and Richard, a Scotch- 
man, the latter a disciple of the 
former, both inmates of the monas- 
tery of St. Victor, both illustrious 
by their writings on mystical theo- 
logy, and saintly men. Perhaps he 
means one of these, or both ? Per- 
haps that is not his meaning. If 
it be, then his sentence should have 
run thus : Hugh of St. Victor, or 
Richard of St. Victor. Let us pro- 
ceed ; both of these were " monks." 
St. Bonaventure, disciple of St. 
Francis, was a "monk." John 
Tauler, a disciple of St. Dominic, 
another monk. St. Teresa, a nun, 
a " cloistered " nun, consequently 
as bad, at least, as a " monk." Beh- 
men? Behmen? Jacob Boehme. Oh! 
yes ; a German, a shoemaker not 
to his discredit a Protestant, and 
mystical writer. O blessed saints 
in Paradise ! do not, we beg, lay it 
to our charge of making you "ac- 
quainted with so strange a bed-fel- 
low !" Then comes Fenelon the 
saintly archbishop, the friend, be it 
known, of monks and nuns. Now 
Mm'e. Guyon ; it is singular that 
there is always a strange hankering 
among a class of Protestants after 
Catholic writers of suspected ortho- 
doxy. St. John of the Cross is 
next, and the last, though not least. 



i6o 



The Free-Religionists. 



the Aquinas of mystical theology, a 
Carmelite, a " monk." Now let us 
count up. But we have forgotten 
our beloved Swabian, Henry Suso, 
the Minnesinger of divine love ; and 
lie too was a Dominican, a " monk." 
In sum excluding, of course, the 
Protestant ; for of him it cannot be 
said that he was " nourished in the 
inmost bosom of the church " we 
have six " monks," if you include 
both Hugh and Richard of St. Vic- 
tor in the number, and one " clois- 
tered " nun, all, without exception, 
"celibates," of the eight examples 
selected by our author as " devot- 
ed to the nurture of exalted virtue 
and piety," and "the choicest de- 
positaries of the graces of religion !" 
Six out of eight not a bad show- 
ing for monks and nuns "as the 
choicest depositaries of the graces 
of religion," where a learned author 
has his pick, running over many 
centuries. 

VII. THE FREE-RELIGIONISTS AND 
CHRISTIANITY, OR THE FINAL 
ISSUE, 

It is time to draw these remarks 
to a close, and that, too, without 
even casting a glance at the 
speeches that followed the essay 
which has been under review. 

We did not offer, as our readers 
will have remarked, a refutation of 
the misconceptions, misinterpreta- 
tions, and errors which have been 
pointed out in the essay of Mr. 
Alger. We intentionally abstain- 
ed from doing so until its author 
brings forth his authorities and 
proves his assertions, in obedience 
to a commonly-received maxim 
rightly followed in discussion, 
which says, Quod gratis affirmatur, 
gratis negatur. Besides, the Catho- 
lic Church is in possession, and 
therefore the burden of proof rests 
not on her defenders, but on the 



part of her assailants. Our refuta- 
tions will come soon enough wher 
we have learned that there is some- 
thing to refute. But, that our pur 
pose might not be ambiguous, w 
have italicized, in most instances 
the words which contain the spe- 
cial errors to which we wished tc 
call attention. 

The opponents of the church 
have not changed their mode ol 
attack, but only their weapons 
They no longer charge her with 
atheism, as the early pagans did, 01 
of worshipping the head of an ass 
or drinking the blood of an infant, 
but absurdities and idle tales oi 
the " dark ages " are trumped up 
and laid at her door. 

Just now, as if by a general 
conspiracy, an attempt is made tc 
place the church in a false posi- 
tion, as hostile to reason, science 
education, civilization, liberty, and 
the state. These are the populai 
charges of the day, and these show 
at least that the " gall " of her ene- 
mies is active and " coins slan 
ders as a mint." Counterfeits, how- 
ever, may pass current for a limit- 
ed period, but in the long run they 
are detected and bring upon their 
authors' heads grief and shame, 
Only truth and justice are endur- 
ing and immortal. 

The true position of the Catho- 
lic Church is now, as it ever has 
been, not against but for reason 
and God, science and revelation, 
for education and Christianity, for 
civilization and progress, for liber- 
ty and law, for the state and the 
church ; as against atheism, natu- 
ralism, infidelity, barbarism, license, 
and anarchy. 

Let us have in this free country, 
where all religions to an uncom- 
mon degree are placed on an 
equal footing, a fair and honest 
discussion, avoiding unsupported 



Smoke- Bound. 161 

assertions, refuted charges, and all Until then the Catholic Church 

bigotry. Whichever religion is is in possession of the field, and in 

worsted in such an encounter by the congress of intelligent men 

fair and honest blows, why, let it holds its high place ; for all thor- 

die. If the free-religionists can oughly-instructed minds see clearly 

clear the whole field from Chris- the impossibility of entertaining 

tianity, as they appear to think, and honorable ideas of God without 

invent instead a better religion, being Christians, and of being 

as some fancy, let them do so and Christians and not becoming Ca- 

come on with their new religion, tholics. The real issue, if the 

Give it a fair chance, and, if their free-religionists can be induced to 

new religion proves to be a better look at it, is between Catholicity 

one, let it have a joyful greeting. and nihilism. 



SMOKE-BOUND. 



O COOL east wind ! so moist of breath, 
With strength blow from the sea, 

Loosen the smoky chains that curb 
Our proud hills' sovereignty ; 



Wake in the silent mountain glens, 

Where streams grow dumb with drought, 

The clamor of your lowland home 
The sea-waves' battle-shout. 



Sweep onward with your pennon clouds, 
Marshal your spears of rain, 

Sound in the pines your bugle-call 
Set free our hills again ! 



Hide them for days, if so you will, ' 
In cloudy depths of storm ; 

Wrestle, as human soul should win 
Its strong, immortal form. 



We shall not grieve in such dark veil 

To lose our valley's crown, 
That gaineth so from your pure breath 

But mightier renown. 
VOL. xxvi. ir 



1 62 Smoke-Bound. 

Our hearts shall greet the slanting rain, 
Like blessed water flung; 

Your voice shall the Asperges sing 
The cross-boughed firs among. 



Like sin unshriven these earth-fires 
Hold heart and mountain fast, 

Each day a stronger link is forged, 
A drearier Ircht is cast. 



All day the smoky shadow flings 
Its dream of heaven's blue, 

Its mockery of summer's smile, 
Its vision all untrue, 



Winning, at eve, the sun to spin 

Dull shadow into gold 
Bright meshes of enchanter's web 

O'er hill and valley rolled ; 

Hiding our far-off sunset peaks 
That longest keep day's light 

The temple's porch called Beautiful, 
Steps to a holier height. 

Broad steps whose strength our valley lacks 

To lift our thoughts on high. 
Blow, eastern wind ! give our dim eyes 
Our peaks that mount the sky. 

O moist of breath ! with cloudy lips, 
Quench these dread earthly fires 

That turn our mountain altars all 
To beauty's funeral pyres. 



Upon this stifling chain drop dew, 

Its glamour exorcise, 
That, pure as pardoned soul, our hills 

In Heaven-sent strength may rise. 

Give us anew their morning grace, 
Their midday depths of blue ; 

Open the sunset gates where light 
Of Paradise shines through. 



James of Compostella. 



163 



ST. JAMES OF COMPOSTELLA. 



ALTHOUGH most have heard the 
name of Santiago in Galicia, yet it 
is now a place |that is scarcely 
known. In the days of our infan- 
cy there were still such beings 
heard of as the pilgrims of Com- 
postella, but the silence of the 
present day is well-nigh oblivion : 
and of this famous sanctuary, which 
still exists, there only remains an 
almost forgotten and far-distant 
renown. France has unlearnt the 
very roads which led to the apos- 
tle's tomb; and the Spaniards 
themselves, who will speak to you 
freely of Nuestra Setiora del Pilar, 
scarcely guess that the Madonna of 
Saragossa placed her origin under 
the patronage of St. James, whose 
shrine all Christendom in former 
days bestirred itself to go and visit. 

The apostle venerated at Com- 
postella is St. James the Great, 
whose vocation to the apostolate 
is related in the fourth chapter of 
St. Matthew, immediately after that 
of Peter and Andrew, and where we 
are told that at the call of Jesus 
the brothers forthwith " left the 
ship and their father and followed 
him." According to the most pro- 
bable opinion, Zebedee and his fam- 
ily dwelt at the little town of Saf- 
fa, now called by the Arabs Deir, 
about three miles distant from Naz- 
areth. Andrichomius, in his Thea- 
trum Terrce Sanctce, mentions a 
church there, which some years 
later no longer existed. Their 
prompt obedience indicates the 
generous character which rendered 
the brothers particularly dear to 
their divine Master, and caused 
them to be, with St. Peter, the 
chosen witnesses of scenes and 



miracles at which the other disci- 
ples were not present. The last 
mention made of St. James in the 
Gospel is in the narrative of the 
miracvtlous draught of fishes after 
the Resurrection. The next is in 
the Acts of the Apostles, which 
briefly recounts his martyrdom : 
" Herod . . . killed James, the 
brother of John, with the sword." 
This took place in the year 42. 
Of the nine years which interven- 
ed between the Ascension of our 
Lord and this event the Holy Scrip- 
tures say nothing, and tradition is 
our only source of information. 
According to this, St. James de- 
parted early from Jerusalem, and, 
directing his course towards the 
western countries of Europe, ar- 
rived in Spain, where he preached 
the Gospel and appointed some of 
the first bishops. Here also, ac- 
cording to an ancient and constant 
tradition, he caused to be built at 
Saragossa a church dedicated to 
the Blessed Virgin, known as "Our 
Lady of the Pillar," and, on the 
termination of his sojourn in the 
west, returned to Jerusalem, where, 
a few days after his arrival, about the 
time of the Jewish Passover, Herod 
caused him to be seized and slain.* 

* The fact of St. James having taken this journey 
has been generally considered indubitable, although 
Baronius held it as uncertain. M;<riana, in his 
history, affirms that all written documents were 
destroyed in Spain, first by the persecution of Dio- 
cletian, and afterwards by jthe Moorish invasion 
and its attendant wars. The silence of ancient 
testimony is thus fully explained, and the learned 
Suarez, writing on the subject, says: " It matters 
little that the local histories of the time make no 
mention of this journey of St. James ; for, besides 
that nothing happened in it so extraordinary or no- 
torious that the renown thereof would neces?arily 
spread abroad, Spain had at that period no writers 
careful to collect the facts of her history, and stran- 
gers would not be likely to know anything about it, 
especially as being of a religious nature, concern- 



164 



. James of Compostella. 



It is certain that the apostles 
delayed not in obeying the divine 
command to "go and teach the 
nations"; neither can one explain 
in any other manner how the light 
emanating from Syria so rapidly 
illumined (as even the infidel 
critic, Renan, confesses) the three 
great peninsulas of Asia Minor, 
Greece, and Italy, -and soon after- 
wards the whole coast of the Me- 
diterranean, so that in a short space 
of time the Christian world was 
co-extensive with the Roman Or- 
bis Romanus, or bis Christiamis. St. 
Jerome and Theodoret both af- 
firm that Spain was evangelized by 
some of the apostles. The Gothic 
liturgy, which is considerably an- 
terior to the Mozarabic, and which 
dates from the fifth century, is the 
most ancient interpreter of this 
tradition. " The illustrious Sons 
of Thunder," it says, " have both 
obtained that which their mother 
requested for them. John rules 
Asia, and, on the left, his brother 
possesses Spain." The great doctor 
St. Isidore, who lived in the first 
half of the seventh century, writes : 
"James the son of Zebedee . . . 
preached the Gospel to the peoples 
of Spain and the countries of the 
west." The Bollandists furnish a 
number of additional witnesses.* 
The breviary of St. Pius V. and 
the enactments of Urban VIII. 
corroborate their testimony, the 
Roman Breviary saying also that 
St. Braulio not only compared St. 
Isidore to St. Gregory the Great, 
but declared that he had been 
given by Heaven to Spain as her 
teacher in the place of St. James. f 

ing which men would not trouble themselves at all. 
... If St. Luke had not left in writing the acts of 
St. Peter and St. Paul, many of their journeyings 
would be forgotten, or rest only upon such traditions 
as might be preserved by the churches they 
founded." 

* Tcme vi. Aprilis. 

t In fiist. Sancti Isidori, lect. 20. 



Whatever opinion may be adopt- 
ed with regard to the mission of 
St. James, it does not affect the 
facts relating to the translation of 
his body to the Iberian peninsula. 
The following account of this event 
is given in the curious History of 
Compostella, written previous to the 
twelfth century by two canons of 
that church, and confirmed by a 
letter of Leo III. which is quoted 
in the Breviary of Evreux. The 
facts as there given appear to be 
free from the legendary embellish- 
ments, more or less probable, with 
which, in certain other manuscripts, 
they have been adorned^ 

At the time when the apostle was 
put to death at Jerusalem the per- 
secution was so bitter, and the 
hatred against the Christians so ex- 
treme, that the Jews would not suf- 
fer his body to be buried, but cast 
it ignominiously outside the walls 
of the city, that it might be de- 
voured by dogs and birds of prey. 
The disciples of the saint watched 
for the moment when they might 
carry away his remains, and, having 
secured them, they could not ven- 
ture to re-enter Jerusalem with 
their precious burden, but turned 
their steps toward the sea, and, on 
arriving at Joppa, found a ship on 
the point of sailing for Spain. 
They embarked, and in due time 
reached the northwest coast of 
that country, and landed at the 
port of Iria, whence they proceed- 
ed some distance inland, and bu- 
ried the body of the apostle at a 
place called Liberum Donum, after- 
wards Compostella. His sepulchre 
was made in a marble grotto which 
already existed, and which in all 
probability had been formerly de- 
dicated to Bacchus, as its name 
seemed to indicate. Thus the spot 
received the highest Christian con- 
secration, and the people of Galicia, 



St. James of Compostclla. 



165 



among whom were numerous con- 
verts, held in great veneration the 
tomb of their .apostle. The pagan 
persecution became, however, so 
violent in this province that Chris- 
tianity entirely disappeared from 
it, and was not planted there again 
until after the first victory of the 
Goths. 

The invasion of these barbarians, 
instead of being a misfortune, was 
of the greatest benefit to the coun- 
try, and resulted in prosperity 
which continued through several 
centuries. The favor shown to 
Arianism by some of the earlier 
kings for a time imperilled the 
truth, but it was not long before 
Spain saw the faith of her first 
apostle flourishing in all its purity ; 
and her sons would doubtless have 
flocked to the tomb of him who 
was declared in the Gothic liturgy 
to be the patron of Spain, if the 
same thing had not happened with 
regard to the tomb of the second 
martyr of our Lord as had before 
happened to that of the first. 
When the faith had disappeared 
from Galicia the place of the 
apostle's tomb was forgotten ; it is, 
moreover, possible that the last 
Christians had buried the grotto 
which contained it, that it might be 
hidden from pagan profanation. 
The spot was overgr6wn with un- 
derwood and brambles. Tall for- 
est trees rose around it, and there 
was no trace left of anything which 
could indicate the sanctity of the 
spot. Thus, in the early and bright 
days of the faith in Spain, the 
night of oblivion rested on the re- 
mains of her great patron ; but when 
evil times came upon the land 
God's hour was come for pointing 
out the tomb of his apostle. The 
Gothic kings were about to disap- 
pear, and their sceptres to be wield- 
ed by the followers of Mahomet. 



Invited to fight against King Ro- 
deric, by a competitor to the throne 
of the country to which he thus 
proved himself so great a traitor, 
the Arabs thronged into Spain, 
which in less than ten years they 
entirely conquered. Their domina- 
tion was not always violent and 
persecuting ; a certain toleration 
was at times accorded to the Chris- 
tians ; but, thanks to the proud 
courage of Pelayo and a handful 
of brave men who would not de- 
spair of their country, and who 
could not be driven from the moun- 
tains of the Asturias, war had set 
her foot on the soil of Spain, to 
quit it no more until the utter ex- 
pulsion of the Moors had been 
effected. Galicia, with Leon and 
the Asturias, had the honor of be- 
ing the centre of the national re- 
sistance, and consequently suffered 
from frequent and sanguinary de- 
vastation while the long struggle 
lasted. 

It was in these troubled times 
that the apostle's tomb was brought 
to light. 

Already several kings had estab- 
lished themselves in the northern 
and western parts of Spain. Miron, 
King of the Suevi, had regulated 
the limits of each diocese ; Alfonso 
the Chaste was then king of Leon 
and Galicia ; and Theodomir, a holy 
and faithful prelate, was Bishop of 
Iria. 

Certain trustworthy persons one 
day came to inform Theodomir 
that every night lights of great 
brilliancy were seen shining above 
a wood on the summit of a hill at a 
little distance from the town, and 
that all the neighborhood was il- 
luminated by them. The bishop, 
fearing lest there might be some 
deception or illusion, resolved to 
see for himself, and repaired to the 
place indicated. The prodigy was 



1 66 



St. James of Compostclla. 



evident to all, the lights throwing a 
marvellous splendor; and as this 
continued night after night, the 
bishop caused the trees to be cut 
down on that spot and the brush- 
wood cleared away, after which an 
excavation was commenced on the 
top of the hill. The workers had 
not dug far before they came to a 
marble grotto, within which was 
found the apostle's tomb. 

Theodomir lost no time in repair- 
ins to the court of Alfonso to an- 

O 

nounce the discovery, which caused 
great joy to the pious monarch, who 
saw in it a sign of God's protection 
and a presage of the triumph of the 
Christian arms. He hastened to 
the spot and assured himself by 
personal observation of the reality 
of the facts related to him by the 
bishop. Mariana, the Spanish his- 
torian, says : " After having exam- 
ined all that has been written by 
learned authors for and against the 
matter, I am convinced that there 
are not in all Europe any relics 
more certain and authentic than 
those of St. James at Compostella." 
The first care of King Alfonso 
was to raise a sanctuary on the 
spot where the tomb had just been 
miraculously discovered. Built in 
haste, and at a time when, owing to 
the unsettled state of the kingdom, 
the royal resources were very limit- 
ed, the edifice was of a very hum- 
ble character as regarded both size 
and materials : " Petra et luto opus 
parvum " is the description given 
of it in the Act of Erection of the 
second church, built later by Al- 
fonso III. The king was never- 
theless able to endow it with a cer- 
tain revenue, and to secure a per- 
manent provision to its ministers. 
The archives of Compostella long 
preserved a privilege granted by 
Alfonso the Chaste, in virtue of 
which all the lands with their vil- 



lages, for three miles round, were 
made over to the church. 

Spain was speedily made aware 
of the discovery; the neighboring 
nations, and in particular the Gauls, 
heard of it also, and the faithful 
from both countries flocked in great 
numbers to the tomb, drawn by the 
fame of the miracles which imme* 
diately began to be wrought there, 
and of which Valafrid Strabo, who 
died in the year 849, makes men- 
tion : Plurima hie prcesul patravit 
signa stupenda. 

The relations of Gaul with Chris- 
tian Spain were at that time very 
frequent. The infidels, were the 
common enemy. Charles Martel 
had driven them from Gaul, but 
the struggle that still went on south 
of the Gallic frontiers had an in- 
tense interest for all Christendom. 
Charlemagne was allied in friend- 
ship with Alfonso the Chaste, 
though it is doubtful whether he 
ever made the pilgrimage of Com- 
postella, as some have said. It is, 
however, certain that he joined his 
entreaties to those of the king of 
Leon to obtain from Pope Leo III. 
the transfer of the bishopric of 
Iria to Compostella. This was the 
name already borne by the town 
which had rapidly risen round the 
apostle's tomb, and which was given 
in remembrance of the starlike 
lights which had revealed its local- 
ity Campus Stella. 

The pope granted the request of 
the two monarchs. Compostella 
replaced the bishopric of Iria and 
remained suffragan to the archbi- 
shop of Braga until the town of 
St. James should be raised to the 
metropolitan dignity. King Alfon- 
so, who had no children, offered 
to bequeath his throne to Charle- 
magne, on condition that that mon- 
arch would drive the Moors out of 
Spain. Charlemagne accepted the 



St. James of Compostella. 



167 



terms and crossed the Pyrenees ; 
but the Spanish princes, disapprov- 
ing of Alfonso's proposal, leagued 
together against the emperor, and 
some of them, later on, allied them- 
selves with the Moorish king of 
Saragossa, and destroyed at Ron- 
cesvaux the rearguard of Charle- 
magne's army, in which perished 
Roland, the hero par excellence of 
the lays and chronicles of the time. 

Some time afterwards, when 
Ramira had succeeded Alfonso the 
Chaste, and Abderahman II. was 
King of Cordova, the latter, inflated 
by his successes, sent to demand of 
the Spanish king an annual tribute 
of a hundred young maidens. Ra- 
mira indignantly drove away the 
ambassadors, assembled his troops, 
and declared war. He was defeat- 
ed in the battle of Alaveda, and 
forced to withdraw with the rem- 
nant of his army to a neighboring 
elevation, where the Moor could 
not fail to attack him. The Chris- 
tian monarchy in Spain seemed on 
the very brink of ruin. That night 
the king had a dream, in which the 
apostle St. James appeared to him, 
grand and majestic, bidding him 
be of good courage, for that on the 
morrow he should be victorious. 
The king related his vision to the 
prelates and leaders of his army, 
and made it known to the soldiers 
also. Immediately every heart kin- 
dled with fresh enthusiasm ; the 
little band threw itself upon the in- 
fidel host, while on all sides arose 
the shout, Sant' lago ! Sant' lago ! 
which has ever since been the war- 
cry of Spain. 

The Moors were thrown into 
confusion and completely routed, 
leaving 60,000 of their number on 
the field of battle. It was averred 
that during the whole engagement 
the apostle St. James, mounted on a 
white charger, and bearing in his 



hand a white banner with a red 
cross, was seen at the head of the 
Christian battalions, scattering ter- 
ror and death among the ranks of 
the enemy. Thus was fought, in 
846, the famous battle of Clavijo, 
all the glory of which is due to the 
patron ofjspain. 

After a solemn act of thanksgiv- 
ing to God the army made a pub- 
lic vow, obligatory on all the king- 
dom, to pay yearly to the church 
at Compostella one measure of corn 
and one of wine from every acre of 
land. Immense riches were found 
in the Moorish camp, and these 
were consecrated to the erection of 
t\vo magnificent churches one at 
Oviedo, in honor of the Blessed 
Virgin, and another under the in- 
vocation of St. Michael. 

From this time the devotion to 
the apostle who had shown himself 
the protector and deliverer of the 
country spread far and wide. Pil- 
grims thronged from every quarter 
to his tomb, which became the 
great pilgrimage of the west, the 
pendant to Jerusalem, with Rome 
between the two. 

The humble church erected by 
Alfonso the Chaste was by no means 
suitable to the dignity of the deliv- 
erer of Spain, nor sufficient for the 
ever-increasing number of pilgrims. 
In the year 868 Alfonso III., to- 
gether with Sisenand, then Bishop 
of Compostella, undertook to re- 
place it by a cathedral. " We, Al- 
fonso," it is written in the Act of 
Erection, " have resolved, together 
with the bishop aforesaid, to build 
the house of the Lord and to re- 
store the temple and tomb of the 
apostle which aforetime had been 
raised to his august memory by the 
Lord Alfonso, and which was only 
a small construction of stone and 
clay. Urged by the inspiration of 
God, we are come with our subjects, 



168 



St. James of Compostella. 



our family, into this holy place. 
Traversing Spain through the bat- 
talions of the Moors, we have 
brought from the city of Ebeca 
blocks of marble which we have 
selected, and which our forefathers 
had carried thither by sea, and 
with which they built superb habi- 
tations, which the enemy has de- 
stroyed." 

All the materials for the new 
building were thus gathered togeth- 
er, the slabs and columns of mar- 
ble being of great beauty, but we 
have little information as to its 
architectural style or merit. The 
arts were at that time in a state of 
temporary decay. The edifices of 
the Roman period had for the 
most part perished in the invasions 
of the Goths, the Suevi, and the 
Alani. These nations, after hav- 
ing embraced the faith, were speed- 
ily civilized, and under its inspira- 
tion had raised numerous religious 
buildings which were not without a 
certain grandeur, when the Moor- 
ish conquest of Spain brought 
again an almost universal ruin over 
the land. The influence of the 
climate, the beauty of the Andalu- 
sian skies, softened the fierce cha- 
racter of the victors, and their 
minds speedily received a wonderful 
intellectual development. Never 
did any people make so much pro- 
gress in so short a time, in art, in 
science, in culture of ideas, and 
also in a certain elevation of senti- 
ment. Architecture of great magni- 
ficence and originality made rapid 
advances among them, of which 
the richness always bore the stamp 
of a peculiar tastefulness and deli- 
cacy. 

The vanquished were unable to 
make the same progress, nor were 
they to attain to great results until 
after having received the contact 
of the works of their conquerors. 



These results were arrived at later 
on, thanks to a certain courtesy 
which, outside the war as it were, 
and in times of truce, established 
between the two peoples mutual 
relations and currents of influence 
which left their impress on all the 
creations of genius. 

When King Alfonso commenced 
the cathedral of Compostella, the 
conquest was still too recent and 
the animosity too great between 
the Spaniards and their subduers 
to allow of any amicable inter- 
course or interchange of ideas on 
matters connected with the arts of 
peace. The architecture of the 
close of the ninth century was 
heavy and the forms massive; not 
without grandeur, though for the 
most part devoid of grace. Such, 
doubtless, in its general features, 
was the ancient cathedral of Com- 
postella, which was completed 
about the year 874. Mariana, 
following the statement of Sando- 
val, says that there was held there 
in 876 a council of fourteen bishops, 
who consecrated the new edifice. 
The high altar was dedicated to 
our Lord under the title of St. 
Saviour, that on the fight to St. 
Peter, and that on the left to St. 
Paul, while the ancient altar over 
the apostle's tomb, which reached 
back to a remote antiquity, receiv- 
ed no consecration, it being regard- 
ed as certain that this had received 
it from the first disciples of St. 
James. 

The erection of the cathedral 
gave a new impetus to the pilgrim- 
age, to facilitate which roads were 
made in the south of France and 
the north of Spain. Monasteries 
and houses of refuge were built 
along the wild and lonely defiles of 
the Pyrenees, and bridges thrown 
across the streams and rivers. The 
roads were thronged by the multi- 



St. James of Compostclla. 



169 



tudes, who came, some from simple 
devotion, others to do penance and 
seek pardon of their sins, and many 
also to obtain some particular fa- 
vor the cure of a sickness or the 
success of an undertaking. Great 
was the renown of Monsignor St. 
James, the power of whose inter- 
cession and the splendor of whose 
miracles were held in high esteem 
at Rome. Pope John X., at the 
commencement of the tenth cen- 
tury, sent to his tomb a priest nam- 
ed Zanelus to obtain correct in- 
formation respecting the number 
of pilgrims and the authenticity of 
the numerous miracles ; he was 
also charged to examine the litur- 
gical books of the Goths, respect- 
ing which it had been stated that 
they were full of errors. The bish- 
op, Sisenand, received him with all 
honor, supplied him with every 
means of faithfully acquitting him- 
self of his mission, and convinced 
him of the purity of the ancient 
liturgy of Spain. All the books 
which Zanelus took from thence 
received the Supreme Pontiff's ap- 
proval, the only alteration he re- 
quired being that in the words 
of consecration the Spanish rite 
should conform itself exactly to 
that of Rome. 

Compostella, daily enriched by 
travellers too numerous for her to 
entertain, became a town of ever- 
increasing importance. The church 
especially, to which very costly 
offerings were continually being 
made, which had immense revenues 
and possessed superb domains, was 
in richness and magnificence one 
of the first in the world. Her pre- 
lates, however, did not always make 
good use of their riches. The 
church was then passing through 
deplorable times, and corruption, 
which was invading all besides, 
made inroads also in the sanctuary. 



The bishops of Compostella were 
usually chosen from among the 
noble and illustrious families of the 
kingdom, brought up amid luxury, 
pleasure, and the tumult of arms, 
and, carrying their worldly pre- 
dilections with them to the episco- 
pal throne, they might be seen con- 
stantly in the chase or at the war, 
sometimes driven from their see, 
and, attempting to return by force, 
dying a violent death. One of 
these, Sisenand, unlike his worthy 
predecessor of the same name, was 
in 979 killed at the head of a squa- 
dron while charging the Normans, 
who had invaded Galicia. He 
would have been a good captain ; 
why was he made a bishop ? Com- 
postella owed to him the solid walls 
and strong towers with which he 
fortified the town. His successor, 
Pelayo, being equally unfitted for 
his office, was deposed, and replac- 
ed by a pious priest named Pedro 
Mansorio, upon whom the misdo- 
ings of his predecessors were visit- 
ed. He had the grief of seeing the 
city taken by the Moors, who pro- 
faned and devastated the cathe- 
dral. His immediate successors 
failed to profit by this chastisement, 
and, after three unworthy prelates 
had occupied the see, the enemy 
advanced from the direction of 
Portugal (which they had invaded 
and ravaged) in greater numbers 
than before ; again they besieged 
and took the city, which they set 
on fire and razed the walls. Al- 
man-Zour fed his horse from the 
porphyry urn in the cathedral which 
was used for the baptismal font, 
and which still exists; gave up the 
sanctuary to pillage and destruc- 
tion, throwing down many of the 
pillars, as well as a portion of 
the walls ; and, taking down the 
bells, caused them to be dragged 
by Christian captives to the great 



170 



St. James of Composiclla. 



mosque at Toledo, where they were 
turned upside down and made to 
serve as lamps. He was proceed- 
ing to make havoc also of the apos- 
tle's tomb, when a bright light, 
suddenly emanating from and en- 
veloping it, so terrified the infidels 
that they stopped short in their 
sacrilege, fearing lest they should 
be stricken by the " apostle of Isa " 
(Jesus). An aged monk sat by the 
tomb, alone, and doubtless hoping 
for martyrdom in that spot at the 
hand of the spoilers. Alman-Zour 
asked why he stayed there, and, on 
his answering that he was "the 
friend of Santiago," commanded 
that no one should lay hands upon 
him, and the Mussulmans respect- 
ed the fakir. It is the Moorish 
annals nearly contemporary with 
the events we are noticing which 
mention this incident, and which 
appreciate in a very curious man- 
ner the pilgrimage of St. James, 
describing as follows Shant Jakoh, 
the sacred city of Kalikija (Galicia) : 
" Their Kabah is a colossal idol in 
the centre of the church ; they 
swear 'by it, and come on pilgrim- 
age to it from the most distant 
lands, from Rome as well as from 
other countries, pretending that 
the tomb which may there be seen 
is that of Jakoh, one of the best 
beloved of the twelve apostles of 
Isa. May happiness and the bene- 
diction of Allah be upon him and 
upon our Prophet !" 

The army of Alman-Zour did not 
reap any benefit from its sacrile- 
gious plunder : a contagious mala- 
dy made such terrible ravages in its 
ranks that there were scarcely any 
soldiers left ; he therefore hastened 
his departure from Galicia, but was 
himself also stricken by death upon 
the way. 

It was not possible immediately 
to raise the cathedral from its 



ruins, but the confluence of pil- 
grims never ceased, and the offer- 
ings of Christendom were such as 
to render the hope almost a cer- 
tainty that it would at no distant 
period be worthily rebuilt. 

Towards the year 1038 Ferdi- 
nand, having been made king of 
Castile and Leon, fought the Moors 
in several engagements, defeated 
them in Portugal, and, having dis- 
possessed them of numerous strong- 
holds and fortified places, desired 
to testify his gratitude to the God 
of armies by repairing to Compos- 
tella. There he prayed long at the 
apostle's tomb, and took the resolu- 
tion never to lay down his arms un- 
til he had broken the power of the 
enemy. 

After taking the powerful city of 
Coimbra, the capture of which he 
attributed to the protection of St. 
James, the king returned to Com- 
postella laden with booty, which, in 
gratitude for his victory, he pre- 
sented to the church. 

Compostella had now bishops 
worthy of their sacred dignity. In 
1056 Cresconius, who then ruled 
the diocese, presided, at a council 
held there, in his quahty of bishop 
of the Apostolic See. Rome thus 
exercised her influence, and this 
influence was so salutary that Pe- 
lago, a near successor of Cresconius, 
desired to give it a larger place in 
his church. He laid aside the Mo- 
zarabic Rite and adopted the Ro- 
man in the celebration of Mass and 
the recitation of the Canonical 
Hours, accepting at the same time 
all the Roman rules on important 
matters of sacerdotal discipline. 
And Compostella had not long to 
wait before receiving the recom- 
pense of her submission and good- 
will. In 1075, the same year in 
which Ferdinand took Toledo, the 
see of Santiago (for this had be- 



S/. James of Compostella. 



171. 



come the name of the town), which 
had hitherto been suffragan to Meri- 
da, was raised to the metropolitan 
dignity. 

We have now reached the period 
in which, thanks to the liberality of 
the faithful, the cathedral of Com- 
postella was not only raised from 
its ruins, but entirely rebuilt on a 
larger scale and with much greater 
splendor. Gemirez, the first arch- 
bishop of Santiago, was one of its 
greatest prelates. 

The work of reconstruction, 
which had been commenced about 
the year 1082, he not only actively 
continued, but also proposed to the 
chapter to build cloisters and of- 
fices, as well as commodious lodgings 
for those who came on pilgrimage 
from distant lands, engaging for his 
part to pay a hundred marks of 
pure silver towards the expense. 

The sole aim of this prelate was 
the glory of God and the honor of 
St. James, never his own worldly 
advantage ; the people knew this, 
and that the use made of their of- 
ferings was always in conformity 
with their intentions. The times, 
however, were troubled, and the 
archbishop had his share of their 
disquiet. 

Queen Urraca, the sister of Al- 
fonso VI. of Castile and Leon, and 
widow of Raymond of Burgundy, 
claimed as -her right, until her son 
should be old enough to reign, the 
government of Castile and the 
countries dependent on it, while 
her second husband, Alfonso of 
Aragon, repudiated these preten- 
sions. Gemirez, whose influence 
was so great that he might be 
regarded as the real sovereign of 
the country, took the part of Urra- 
ca, and her cause prospered for a 
time, owing to the weight of his 
support; but she ruined her own 
case by her haughtiness and ambi- 



tion ; a rebellion broke out, and the 
prelate narrowly escaped falling a 
victim to the fury of the populace, 
who set fire to the cathedral. 
Happily, the solidity of its structure 
was such as to resist the flames, the 
interior wood-work and fittings, etc., 
only being destroyed, so that not 
many years afterwards, in 1117, we 
find the archbishop, in an address 
to his canons, able to speak of it as 
one of the richest and most beauti- 
ful as well as one of the most il- 
lustrious churches in the world. 

In 1130 Gemirez ended his ca- 
reer, but not until he had lived to 
see the work far advanced towards 
its completion. We hear no more 
of its progress for forty years after- 
wards. The crosses of the conse- 
cration, which are still to be seen, 
are floriated at their extremities, 
and between the arms are the sun 
and moon above, and the letters A 
fl below, some of them bearing 
also a date which appears to be 
that of 1154. 

The pilgrims, who came in con- 
tinuous multitudes, had innumera- 
ble perils to encounter on their 
way. The roads were bad ; the 
countries through which they pass- 
ed often so barren and thinly peo- 
pled that they were in danger of 
dying of hunger ; the highways so 
infested with brigands that in those 
days they were avoided as those in 
the East had been in the time of 
Deborah, every one seeking rather 
the by-ways, which were also beset 
with obstacles of all kinds. St. 
Dominic of Calzada had done well 
to make roads and build bridges, 
but something was still wanting to 
his work, and that was the safety 
of those who travelled by them, 
and who were constantly liable to 
be attacked and despoiled by the 
infidels, to be taken captive, and 
condemned to slavery or death. 



I 72 



. James of Compostella. 



This state of things could not be 
allowed to continue. The Moors 
had their rabitos, or armed fa- 
kirs a sort of warrior-monk to 
protect their pilgrims and defend 
their frontiers; the religious and. 
military orders of the Templars and 
Knights of St. John were covering 
themselves with glory in the East, 
.and Spain could not fail to profit 
.by these examples. The canons of 
.St. Eloi had recently founded a 
'chain of hospices, reaching from 
the frontiers of France to Compos- 
;.tella, specially destined for the re- 
ception of pilgrims, the most con- 
siderable being that of St. Mark, 
on the borders of Leon. These 
places of refuge, which were pro- 
ductive of the greatest good, were 
richly endowed by various princes ; 
but even this was not enough : 
some brave noblemen of Castile 
resolved to devote their whole life 
to the defence and protection of 
the pilgrims. They placed their 
possessions in one common stock, 
and, joining the canons of St. Eloi, 
dwelt with them in a convent not 
far from Compostella. Being ad- 
vised by Cardinal Jacinthus to go 
to Rome and obtain from the Pope 
the confirmation of their institute 
according to the rule of St. Augus- 
tine, they charged Don Pedro Fer- 
nandez de la Puente with this em- 
bassy, and obtained a bull, dated 
July 5, 1175, which regulated their 
manner of life, their duties, and 
their privileges, and created, under 
the title of Knights of St. James, 
a military order, of which Don 
Pedro was the first grand master. 
They wore a white tunic, with a 
red cross in the form of a sword on 
the breast. Their principal house 
was at first the hospice of St. Mark ; 
but the castles and domains which 
were made over to them from time 
to time were so numerous that 



their riches became almost incalcu- 
lable, and their influence and im- 
portance increased in proportion. 
They established themselves at 
Ucles, the better to carry on the 
warfare against the infidel, whose 
terror they had become. We soon 
find them a power in the state, 
the grand master taking rank with 
kings, and at times appearing to 
rule them. Even the simple knights 
had great privileges. It was not 
until the reign of Ferdinand that, 
owing to the skilful management of 
Isabella, the power and influence 
of the order began to decrease. 

Our notice would be incomplete 
without a few words'on the subject 
of the miracles which took place at 
the tomb or by the intercession of 
the apostle. The countless favors 
which have rendered many a cho- 
sen sanctuary justly illustrious will 
never be known ; indeed, their ab- 
sence would make the continual 
faith of the people always asking 
and never receiving ; always believ- 
ing, and yet to be ever disappointed 
and deceived not only inexplicable 
but impossible, whereas it was ab- 
solute and complete ; but exaggera- 
tion, which, even in the world of 
ordinary facts, so frequently goes 
hand in hand with truth, plays still 
more freely with facts which are 
beyond and above the events of 
daily life, and, not being satisfied 
with the simple beauty of miracu- 
lous deliverances, it must fain make 
marvels still more marvellous quit 
the domain of faith for that of 
myths an-d chimera. A MS. of the 
monastery of La Marcha is full of 
the recital of prodigies which a 
faith the most robust would nowa- 
days find it difficult to accept ; and 
Csesar of Heisterbach tells us that 
a young man of Maestricht having 
been condemned and hung on a 
false accusation, commending him- 



/. James of Compostella. 



'73 



self to St. James, was preserved 
alive a whole month hanging from 
the gibbet, where his father found 
him safe and sound at the end of 
that time. Whereupon the people 
of Toulouse, jealous of the glory 
which the renown of this announce- 
ment gave to St. James of Com- 
postella, attributed to their St. 
James a miracle exactly similar. 

In numerous instances the ac- 
counts of the dead restored to life 
have nothing impossible or exag- 
gerated about them, and often in 
their pathos and simplicity remind 
one of those mentioned in the 
Gospel narrative ; for instance, a 
poor woman, by the intercession of 
St. James, obtained a son, who be- 
came not only her greatest comfort, 
but in time her only support. He 
fell ill and died. With a breaking 
heart the mother hastens to the 
apostle's tomb, and in her agony 
of desolation mingles reproaches 
with her prayers and tears, asking 
the saint why he had won for her 
the blessing she had desired, only 
to let her lose it when her need 
was greatest, and herself a thousand 
times more sorrowful than before ; 
and then, full of faith, entreated 
him to obtain from God the life of 
her son. Her prayer was granted, 
and, returning home, she found the 
youth restored. But of a very dif- 
ferent character is the extraordi- 
nary legend related by Guibert, 
Abbot of Nogent, and which we 
quote as a curiosity. A certain 
pilgrim was on his way to Compos- 
tella to perform penance and ob- 
tain the pardon of a crime he had 
committed. On the road the ene- 
my of mankind appeared to him 
under the form of St. James, and, 
telling him that his sin was far too 
great to be remitted by a simple 
pilgrimage, insisted that there was 
only one means of obtaining mercy, 



and that was by the sacrifice of 
his life ; he must kill himself, and 
then all would be forgiven him. 
The pilgrim, who believed that he 
was listening to St. James in person 
and was 'bound to obey him, stab- 
bed himself and died, a victim to 
the fraud of the demon. He ap- 
pears before the tribunal of God, 
and there Satan claims him as his 
prey by a double title : first, because 
of the old crime, which had not 
been remitted; and, secondly, be- 
cause of the new one of which he 
had been guilty in committing sui- 
cide. In vain the poor man pleads 
that he had acted in good faith and 
in the simplicity of his heart ; he 
was in great danger of being con- 
demned. But St. James hears 
what is going on and hastens to 
the scene. He does not intend 
that the evil one should take 'his 
form and name to deceive his pil- 
grims and then have all the profits, 
and pleads that the only way to do 
perfect justice in the affair is to 
put everything exactly as it was 
before Satan had so odiously med- 
dled in the matter, and to send 
back the soul of the unfortunate 
man into his body again. This 
representation, being just, was ac- 
ceded to, and the resuscitated pil- 
grim continued on his way to Com- 
postella, where he confessed with 
great contrition and was absolved 
of all the sins of his past life. 

We must, however, leave the 
realm of legend and return to his- 
torical facts. The anchoretic life 
was at an early period introduced 
into Europe from the East, and 
Spain appears to have been a land 
where hermits especially abounded . 
We often find them mentioned as 
coming on pilgrimage to Compostel- 
la, as St. Simeon and St. Theobald 
in the twelfth century, St. William 
somewhat later, and St. John the 



1 74 



St. James of Compostella. 



Hermit, who built near the cathe- 
dral a place of shelter for pilgrims, 
where he himself received them, 
rendering them all the offices of 
Christian hospitality. 

Another William also came hither 
on pilgrimage, who was an illustri- 
ous personage, though not a hermit ; 
this was the Count of Poitou and 
Duke of Aquitaine, whose past life 
had been anything but exemplary. 
In Normandy and elsewhere he 
had been guilty of grievous misde- 
meanors, for which he desired to 
do penance before his death; and, 
more than this, lie did his utmost, 
by good and upright administra- 
tion, to repair the evil he had done 
before. For this reason Hildebert, 
Bishop of Mans, was not well pleas- 
ed at his setting out for Spain, and 
wrote to him as follows : " We are 
told, most noble count, that you 
have undertaken a pilgrimage in 
honor of Blessed James. We do 
not desire to deny the excellence 
of this, but whosoever is at the 
head of an administration is bound 
to obedience, nor can he free him- 
self therefrom without deserting his 
post, unless, at least, he be call- 
ed to one of greater usefulness. 
Wherefore, very dear son, it is an 
inexcusable fault in you to have 
preferred that which is not neces- 
sary before that which is repose 
rather than labor, and, instead of 
duty, your own will." But the 
great prelate would probably have 
been less severe could he have 
foreseen the holy death of Count 
William, who, on Good Friday, 
after having received the Blessed 
Sacrament, peacefully rendered up 
his soul to God before the altar of 
St. James. 

About the same time a young 
maiden of Pisa, afterwards St. Bona, 
came to Compostella, and there re- 
ceived singular favors and graces. 



Sophia, Countess of Holland,* jour- 
neying thither also, fell into the 
hands of robbers, and through one 
whole night found that she had 
nothing to expect but spoliation 
and death. In the morning their 
resolution was changed ; they threw 
themselves at her feet and entreat- 
ed her pardon, allowing her to pro- 
ceed unharmed on her way. After 
visiting the tomb of St. James the 
princess went to Jerusalem, there 
to spend the remainder of her life. 

At the beginning of the thir- 
teenth century pilgrims from all 
lands had become so numerous 
that it was frequently impossible, 
especially on the feast of the pa- 
tron saint, for all to find even 
standing-room in the cathedral. 
The tumult was indescribable, and 
did not always end outside the 
doors. On some occasions there 
were not only blows but bloodshed,, 
so that Pope Innocent III. wrote 
to the archbishop, saying that his 
church had need of reconciliation, 
and the ceremony was performed 
with water, wine, and blessed 
ashes, f 

Alman-Zour, as we have pre- 
viously mentioned, had caused the 
bells of Compostella to be carried 
to Cordova on the backs of Chris- 
tian captives. In 1229 Ferdinand, 
who had united under his sway 
the kingdoms of Castile and Leon, 
made the conquest of Cordova, and, 
finding the bells in the great mosque, 
he inflicted retaliation on the infi- 
dels by compelling them to carry 
them, on their shoulders, back to 
the place whence they had been 
taken two hundred and sixty years 
before. 

After Louis VII. of France had 
been on pilgrimage to Compostella, 

* See the account as given by John de Beka in 
the Chronicle of Utrecht. 
t Datum Viterbii, XII. Kalend. Junii. 



. James of Compostella. 



175 



we hear of several other sovereigns 
from time to time who did the 
same, among whom was St. Eliza- 
beth, Queen of Portugal. The 
Frieslanders, who had a great de- 
votion to St. James, and attributed 
to his aid a victory they had gain- 
ed over the Saracens, visited his 
tomb in immense numbers ; the 
English did the same, and from the 
time of Edward I.'s marriage with 
Eleanor of Castile, having stipu- 
lated for the safe-conduct of their 
pilgrims, they arrived in such mul- 
titudes that the kings of France 
became uneasy at so great a con- 
course, and made an agreement 
with the king of England that his 
subjects should obtain permission 
of them before proceeding to Com- 
postella. In 1434 this leave was 
granted to about two thousand five 
hundred persons. 

These were the palmy days of 
pilgrims, who were not only well 
received at Santiago, whither they 
brought activity, riches, and life, 
but they were everywhere sheltered 
and protected. No cottager was 
too poor to offer them a resting- 
place or to share his loaf of hospi- 
tality with them. A pilgrim was 
not only a brother come from per- 
haps some far distant land to do 
honor to Monseigneur St. James, but 
he was also, in those days when pos- 
tage was unknown, the walking ga- 
zette, who brought the news of 
other countries, and enlivened with 
his narratives and conversation the 
hearth of the poor as of the rich. 

From the time of the Reforma- 
tion pilgrimages began to decrease. 
England and Germany were the 
first to discontinue them. France 
showed herself less fervent as soon 
as the spirit of rationalistic philo- 
sophy had infected the upper class- 
es of her people, after which the 
Revolution carried down the lower 



ranks into the gulf of irreligion. 
The wars of the empire, the spolia- 
tions of which Napoleon's generals 
were guilty, and consequently the 
deadly hatred which they evoked 
against their nation in the heart of 
every Spaniard, struck the last blow 
at these pious journeyings. Only 
the inhabitants of the country con- 
tinued to visit the shrine of their 
apostle, and even they by degrees 
lost the habit. Pilgrims are now- 
adays but few, excepting only on 
the feast of the patron, and they 
have ceased to be popular at San- 
tiago. If they chance to be poor, 
the townspeople turn a deaf ear 
when they ask an alms " for the love 
of St. James " ; or, should they be 
rich, seek only to turn them to cc- 
count and to lighten their purses. 

Although greatly fallen from its 
ancient splendor, Santiago, former- 
ly the capital of Galicia, and now 
the simple chief town of a judicial 
circuit, still has importance in the 
ecclesiastical order. Her archbi- 
shop is, by right, the first chaplain 
of the crown, and her cathedral 
still subsists in its integrity. She 
has two collegiate and fifteen paro- 
chial churches, though her nume- 
rous convents, pillaged in 1807, and 
subsequently despoiled and sup- 
pressed, are at the present time in- 
habited dwelling-houses, destined 
to inevitable ruin, and throwing an 
additional shadow into the general 
air of melancholy- which now hangs 
over this old city. 

There are but few public build- 
ings of antiquity or interest. The 
streets, with their dark and narrow 
archways, all start, like the threads 
of a spider's web, from the one 
centre occupied by the cathedral. 
Everything wears an aspect that is 
sombre, damp, and cold, augment- 
ed by the hue that the granite, 
of which most of the edifices are 



1/6 



St. -James of Coinpostella. 



built, takes under a climate of such 
humidity that it has given rise to 
the disrespectful saying that this 
city is the sink of Spain. And yet 
the site is picturesque. Seen from 
the neighboring heights, Santiago, 
itself also built upon an elevation, 
with its ancient buildings, walls, 
and towers, presents a very striking 
appearance, and to any one who 
mounts the towers of the cathedral 
the grand girdle of mountains en- 
circling the horizon affords a spec- 
tacle that well repays the trouble of 
the ascent. 

We are in the great square, and 
facing the western front, containing 
the principal entrance of the build- 
ing, which occupies the middle of 
a long architectural line, having at 
its left the episcopal palace, melan- 
choly enough and not in any way 
remarkable, and at its right the 
cloister, with its turrets and pyra- 
midal roofs, and its long row of 
arched windows. This is not the 
cloister of Gemirez, of which no- 
thing remains, but was built in the 
sixteenth century by Archbishop 
Fonseca, who furnished it with a 
fine library, and also added the 
chapter-house and other depen- 
dencies of the cathedral. The clois- 
ter is one of the largest in Spain, 
half Gothic in style, and half Re- 
naissance. 

This western entrance, between 
the cloister and the palace, is call- 
ed El Mayor or El Real the great 
or royal entrance ; not that it mer- 
its the title from any particular ar- 
tistic beauty, but rather from a cer- 
tain effective arrangement. The 
four flights of steps, two large and 
two small, ascend very picturesque- 
ly from the square to the doors of 
the cathedral, allowing a proces- 
sion to spread into four lines, while 
above rise the lofty towers, curious- 
ly adorned with columns, vases, 



balustrades, and little cupolas. You 
see at once that you are not be- 
holding a work which dates from 
the construction of the building, 
although the towers are ancient up 
to the height of the church walls, 
but the upper portion is much 
more recent, and the same is evi- 
dent of the fa9ade, which, occupies 
the space between the towers. 

Proceeding onwards to the left, 
we follow a vaulted passage of the 
twelfth century, bearing the stamp 
of ancient simplicity, until we reach 
the Plaza San Martino, the north 
side of which is formed by the vast 
convent of St. Martin, where, on 
the centre of the front, are placed, 
mounted on their chargers, the two 
warrior saints of France and Spain. 
Here is the market-place, whither 
those should come who wish to 
study favorably the picturesque 
costumes of the peasants of Galicia, 
and, it might be added, to hear 
cries more shrill and louder vocifer- 
ations than it would be supposed 
possible for ordinary human lungs 
to send forth. Before appearing 
at market the sellers of fruit and 
vegetables make an elaborate toi- 
lette, which must be not only neat 
but effective, those who are unable 
to comply with its requirements re- 
maining at home. Side by side 
with the splendid fruits of Galicia 
and fish from river and sea, rosa 
ries, medals, and the scallop-shells 
of St. James are offered for sale. 
The building forms a beautifu 
cross, of which the arms are near 
ly equal to the upright, the tran 
septs having a great development 
The arrangement follows that o 
most of the churches in Spain, th< 
choir being. in the nave and ending 
where the transept begins. Th< 
aspect of the latter is particularly 
grand, being less interrupted thar 
the view along the nave, as th< 



6V. James of Compost ella. 



177 



eye easily penetrates the light trel- 
lis-\vork which makes a passage 
across it from the choir to the Ca- 
pilla Mayor. The rounded arches 
of the three roofs are evidently of 
the close of the eleventh or 
the commencement of the twelfth 
century. The pillars of the aisles, 
with their capitals sculptured in 
foliage, are light and graceful, con- 
trasting pleasingly with the heavy 
mass of the edifice. The triforium, 
which runs round the nave, is com- 
posed of semi-circular arches, each 
containing two smaller ones which 
spring from a slender column in 
the centre. The east end remains 
as it was, with the chapels radiating 
from it, but the pillars and arches 
of the choir have undergone great 
alterations. The Silleria, or en- 
closure of the choir, is ornament- 
ed by a series of religious subjects 
carved by Gregorio Espanol in 
1606. Many of the windows of the 
cathedral are very fine. 

Beneath the Capilla Mayor is 
situated the great object of the pil- 
grimage the subterranean chapel 
containing the tomb of St. James 
and those of two of his first disci- 
ples. The famous statue of the 
apostle is in the Capilla itself, 
above the great altar, which re- 
mains as it was in the time of Al- 
man-Zour. This is a monumental 
altar of richly-wrought marble, or- 
namented with incrustations of sil- 
ver, the working of which occupied 
no less than twenty years. It is 
surrounded by an enclosure of open 
metal-work, gilt, adorned with vine- 
branches and surmounted by an 
immense hojarasco, or canopy, which 
has little to recommend it in an ar- 
tistic point of view, being carved 
and gilt in the height of the style 
churrigueresque. This serves as a 
dais to the statue, and is supported 
by four angels, about whose pon- 
VOL. xxvi. 12 



derous forms no remnant of celes- 
tial lightness lingers. Even the sta- 
tue itself, before which kings and 
princes have knelt, is not free from 
the faults of style inevitable to the 
period. The apostle is seated, and 
holds in his right hand the pilgrim's 
staff, with a gilded gourd and wal- 
let (cum baculo perdque), and in 
his left a scroll inscribed with the 
words, Hie est corpus Divi Jacobi 
Apostoli et Hispaniarum Patroni. 
He wears on his shoulders the pele- 
rine, or pilgrim's mantle, embroi- 
dered with gold and precious stones. 
This cape has the form of those 
worn by cardinals, and has replac- 
ed the ancient one of gold, which 
was carried off by Marshal Ney. 

It is a high honor to be allowed 
to say Mass at the altar of the 
great patron. Bishops and canons 
only have the right. On grand oc- 
casions it is splendidly adorned ; 
the four statues of kings which 
stand behind that of St. James 
then support another small image 
of the apostle of exceeding richness, 
having a nimbus of emeralds and 
rubies, and which is placed in a 
shrine of wrought gold and silver of 
wonderful delicacy. This beautiful 
custodia, which is nearly six feet 
high, was finished in 1544 by An- 
tonio d'Arphe, and is in the style 
designated by the Spaniards Pla- 
teresque. 

Pilgrims are admitted to pay 
their homage to St. James by 
mounting some steps behind the 
altar to kiss the cape or mantle of 
the apostle, as at Rome one kisses 
the foot of St. Peter. There is an- 
other resemblance also to St. Pe- 
ter's at Rome in the long range of 
confessionals, dedicated to differ- 
ent saints, and served by priests 
speaking different languages; for it is 
not until after confession and com- 
munion that the pilgrim can be al- 



I 7 8 



. James of Compostclla. 



lowed any right to the title, or re- 
ceive his brevet or Compostdla, 
which is a declaration written in 
Latin, and signed by the canon-ad- 
ministrator of the cathedral, that 
he has fulfilled all his duties. These 
documents are frequently found 
among family papers, and in cer- 
tain cases constitute a title without 
which such or such possessions 
could not be claimed. 

The treasures of St. James of 
Compostella were formerly renown- 
ed throughout the world ; but 
there seems to have been some ex- 
aggeration respecting their immen- 
sity, as, from all the objects of which 
the French plundered the cathe- 
dral in 1809, they obtained no 
more than 300,000 francs. There 
still remain various rare and curious 
things reliquaries, statues, sacred 
vessels, etc. some of which are of 
great value and antiquity; amongst 
others a crucifix containing a frag- 
ment of the true cross, and which is 
of exquisite workmanship, being also 
one of the most ancient specimens 
of chasing known. The cross is 
wrought in gold filagree, enriched 
with jewels, and resembles that of 
Oviedo, which is said to be the 
work of angels. It bears the in- 
scription : "Hoc opus perfectum 
est era LXOO. et duodecima. Hoc 
signo vincitur inimicus. Hoc sig- 
no tuetur pius. Hoc offerunt fam- 
uli Dei Adefonsus princeps et con- 
jux." 



Among the chapels must be no- 
ticed the Capilla del Pilar, dedi- 
cated to Our Lady in memory of 
her apparition to St. James. This, 
which is behind the high altar, and 
rich in precious marbles and jasper, 
was founded by Arthur Monroy, a 
rich Mexican prelate, whose kneel- 
ing statue on his tomb has a fine 
and attractive expression. Many 
of the other chapels are also re- 
markable ; that of the kings of 
France, of the Conception, of the 
Relics, etc. 

Let us add to these riches of the 
old cathedral a large concourse of 
worshippers at all the services, a 
people profoundly religious, a mag- 
nificent ceremonial, the officiating 
archbishop surrounded by his cler- 
gy, grand and solemn music swell- 
ed by the multitudinous voices of 
the faithful ; let us imagine a vast 
procession beneath these vaulted 
roofs, and the trembling light of the 
tapers illuminating the sombre walls 
as the seemingly interminable train 
of choristers, clergy, and people 
pass along, and we shall have evok- 
ed a scene which, though its like 
may be witnessed in other lands, 
still bears in Spain a peculiar stamp 
of gravity and fervor, and possess- 
es the earnest features and the vig- 
orous relief of which the Spanish 
artists knew the secret, and which 
they have reproduced on their can- 
vas in warm shadows and golden 
lights. 



A Sweet Rivnige. 



179 



A SWEET REVENGE. 



SAINT-SAUVEUR-LE-VICOMTE is 
a dull little town, situated in Co- 
tentin, that long eastern strip of 
the coast of Normandy which ex- 
tends directly in front of the lovely 
isles of Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, 
and Sark. Cherbourg lies to the 
north of it, but we only mention 
that fact en passant ; for the inci- 
dent related in these pages occur- 
red long before the Second Empire, 
long before Cherbourg attracted 
visitors to admire its naval displays, 
long before railways had shortened 
distances and brought the Cotenti- 
nians within daily hearing of their 
"ne plus ultra "of cities inimita- 
ble Paris. The little towns then 
slumbered peaceably amidst their 
corn-fields and apple-orchards; and 
none slept sounder than Saint-Sau- 
veur-le-Vicomte, whose very exist- 
ence was scarcely known beyond 
the limits of its native district. It 
was remarkable, indeed, for noth- 
ing; its church was old and fine, as 
most French provincial churches 
are ; the open space around it form- 
ed the market-place, deserted and 
silent except on market-days; and 
the Grande Rue contained the one 
hostelry of the town the Hotel 
Royale and various stores. 

But there were also a few cross- 
streets, interspersed with flowery, 
bowery gardens, and it is in a house 
situated in one of these that our 
scene is laid. It was a plain, un- 
pretending dwelling, but large and 
exquisitely neat. It had the widest 
local reputation of being the snug- 
gest in winter, the coolest in sum- 
mer, and the most hospitable at all 



seasons of any in Saint-Sauveur-le- 
Vicomte nay, in the whole stretch 
of Cotentin ! The garden behind 
it, too, was famous ; the owners, 
M. and Mine. Dupuis, cultivat- 
ed it themselves with rare en- 
thusiasm and taste. Alphonse 
Karr's world-celebrated flowers 
would have been considered pale 
and scentless beside Mme. Du- 
puis' at least, by the Cotenti- 
nians. And the fruits the peach- 
es and green-gages, the pears and 
grapes it was not believed possi- 
ble that the like could be found 
even in Paris. Let us add that, 
when in their first flush of ripeness 
and bloom, the greater portion of 
these carefully-tended flowers and 
fruits were culled by Mme. Du- 
puis' own hands, and sent forth to 
carry light and beauty, perfume 
and freshness, into every sick-room 
of the little town. 

The- Dupuis were a thoroughly 
worthy couple ; they had married 
young, for love, and had been bless- 
ed with an only child, a daughter, 
good and pretty as her mother, and, 
like her mother, wedded early and 
happily. 

When the episode in their lives 
which is the subject of this little 
story took place, they had passed 
together thirty years of tranquil, 
uneventful felicity. M. Dupuis 
had shortly before sold his busi- 
ness he was a notary and was 
now enjoying a well-earned rest. 
He was a man of sixty, well- 
educated, intelligent, and still 
strong, active, and enthusiastic. 
His plump little wife had just 
completed her fifty-fifth year she 
did not appear to be forty-five. 



i So 



A Sweet Revenge. 



She was of a deeper, more thought- 
ful nature than her husband, but 
nevertheless her sympathy with 
him was unbounded she loved all 
he loved, the same people and the 
same things. She was the type of 
a true wife and of a true Christian. 

Too modest and timid to have 
any personal pretensions, Mine. Du- 
puis' great pride lay in her well- 
ordered home, her exquisitely clean 
house, her nicely-arranged kitchen, 
and, though last, certainly not least, 
in her cook and housemaid, whom 
she considered absolutely unparal- 
leled in their several vocations. 
And it must be allowed that Jean- 
nette and Marianne had, during 
twenty years, fully justified their 
mistress' good opinion of them. 
During all this time the two women 
had constantly studied her every 
wish, and the result was the per- 
fection of domestic economy. 

The family party was completed 
by a large white Angora cat, pro- 
moted since the marriage of Mile. 
Dupuis to the enviable position of 
" pet of the household," and uni- 
versally considered in Cotentin to 
be the most remarkable animal of 
its species. 

n. 

One winter's evening, when the 
snow lay deep in the streets and 
the north wind whistled fiercely 
around the eaves, M. Dupuis' din- 
ing-room looked particularly cheer- 
ful. The heavy tapestry curtains 
were drawn close before the win- 
dows, and a flaming wood fire 
showered sparkles of reflected light 
on the crystal and silver placed on 
the round dining-table, and lighted 
up the portraits of some sober- 
looking personages in powdered 
wigs which adorned the walls. 
The handsome tortoise-shell and 
copper clock, a masterpiece of the 



style Louis Quinze, standing on a 
hanging shelf above the sofa, was, 
perhaps, the best article of furni- 
ture in the room ; the chimney- 
piece was too encumbered with 
porcelain shepherds and shepherd- 
esses, and china jars filled with ar- 
tificial flowers and covered with 
great glass globes, for the taste of 
the present day. Fashion had 
slumbered in Saint-Sauveur-le-Vi- 
comte for many a long year. But 
there was light and warmth, and a 
pervading feeling of comfort, worth 
all the gilded, satin-covered chairs 
and lounges that Parisian taste can 
devise, all the Venetian mirrors 
and Sevres vases that luxury can 
afford. Mme. Dupuis' dining-room 
was certainly rococo and provincial, 
incongruous in some respects, defi- 
cient in harmony, but what sincere, 
cordial hospitality those four walls 
had witnessed ! what pleasant re- 
pasts ! what real good, wholesome 
eating ! what merry toasts had been 
drunk there in claret, in sherry, and 
champagne wines as bright as 
Mme. Dupuis' eyes, and as pure 
and unadulterated as her heart ! 

A second clock, a very ugly one 
it must be confessed, a representa- 
tive of the bad taste of the First Em- 
pire, which stood in the centre of 
the already too encumbered man- 
tel-shelf, marked five minutes past 
six, and Mme. Dupuis was seated 
at the head of her dining-table. 
She was neatly dressed in black 
silk; her dark brown hair, streaked 
here and there with silver threads, 
was arranged in simple bandeaux on 
each side of her temples, and a small 
lace cap trimmed with a few knots 
of pink ribbon concealed the pau- 
city of the " back hair " ; for Mine. 
Dupuis was behind her time. She 
had not "marched with her age," 
and had not yet learned to wear a 
" switch." 



A Sivcet Revenge. 



181 



M. Dupuis, somewhat old-fash- 
ioned in his attire, but scrupulous- 
ly neat, sat opposite to her. At 
an equal distance from each was 
placed a gentleman as old appar- 
ently as the ex-notary, but infinite- 
ly more pretentious in his style 
both of dress and manner. His 
coat and trowsers were of Parisian 
cut ; his beard in the latest mode; 
his voice dictatorial a man of the 
world evidently, and evidently also 
accustomed to think more of him- 
self than of any one else. The 
little party was busily engaged in 
the agreeable duty of eating sundry 
"plats " which diffused a most ap- 
petizing odor. Marianne, madame's 
right hand and faithful aid during 
many long years, waited at table, 
while the beautiful Angora sought 
its fortune around and under. 

" Well, it happened just as I tell 
you," said Mme. Dupuis, as she 
handed her guest a delicious-look- 
ing chop " it happened just as I 
tell you, M. Rouviere. I believed 
that he had gone crazy completely 
crazy ; get down, puss ! He came 
rushing up-stairs, four steps at a 
time, crying at the top of his voice, 
' It's Tom ! it's Tom Rouviere, that 
fellow Tom !' Excuse me, M. Rou- 
viere, but that's his word, you know. 
As for me, I followed, stumbling as 
I went along, killing myself trying 
to make him hear that it was much 
more likely to be M. du Luc in his 
new carriage ; for I knew through 
Mme. le Rendu that M. du Luc 
was to dine to-day at Semonville, 
and, as he never passes through 
Saint-Sauveur without stopping to 
wish us good-day, I had every rea- 
son to believe . . ." 

"O my dear Reine!" interrupt- 
ed M. Dupuis, " what necessity is 
there for telling all that to Rou- 
viere ? He knows nothing about 
M. du Luc and Mme. le Rendu ; 



how can all that interest him ? Be- 
sides, you know that M. du Luc 
never has post-horses to his car- 
riage, so it could not be he." 

" But I believed it was," replied 
madame. 

" Allons ! never mind now, dear," 
returned her husband, " but do 
keep your cat off; she is teasing 
Rouviere." 

"Puss! puss !" cried Mme. Du- 
puis, "come here and behave your- 
self, do. Now, George," she con- 
tinued, "you must acknowledge 
that it was much more natural 
that I should expect to see M. 
du Luc, our country neighbor, than 
M. Rouviere, whom I did not 
know, and from whom you had never 
heard for more than thirty years 
really, now. What do you say, M. 
Rouviere? You shall be judge." 

M. Rouviere, who during this 
dialogue had been silently eating 
and drinking with evident appetite, 
looked up from his plate with an 
expression of impatience anything 
but flattering to the lady. 

"Of course you are right, mad- 
ame," replied he sharply ; " of 
course you are right. But, God 
bless me, madame, I really believe 
that your chops are fried with 
crumbs !" 

Poor Mme. Dupuis started at 
this abrupt interpellation ; her 
good-tempered smile vanished ; 
one might have fancied there was a 
tear in her eye as she answered 
gently : " I am so sorry ! It was I 
who made Jeannette crumb them. 
I thought they would be more deli- 
cate." 

" What heresy !" exclaimed Rou- 
viere. " My dear lady, nobody now 
fries chops in crumbs, just as no- 
body now wears leg-cf-mutton 
sleeves! Gracious heavens ! Provi- 
dence has granted you one of the 
very best articles of food that the 



182 



A Sweet Revenge. 



culinary art is acquainted with 
real, genuine.//'/-^// mutton, pure 
Miols mutton and you fry it in 
crumbs you actually dare to fry it 
in crumbs ! Parbleu! I have sailed 
round the world, but I had to come 
to Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte to see 
Miels mutton fried in crumbs." 

" How sorry I am !" cried poor 
Mine. Dupuis humbly. " Let me 
help you to some sole, M. Rouviere. 
We have a market for fish only 
once a week, but, as M. Dupuis is 
very fond of fish, I have made an 
arrangement with a fisherman from 
Porthail, so that we have a little 
extra ' plat ' every Wednesday, and 
as, most fortunately, to-day hap- 
pens to be Wednesday. . . " 

" Oh ! come, Reine," interrupted 
M. Dupuis, who had been' listening 
with a -very vexed expression of 
countenance to what was passing 
between his wife and his friend, 
" don't go on with all these details ; 
what interest can they have for 
Rouviere ? Well, Tom, tell me, 
now, where were you eight days 
ago at this very hour ?" 

*' Eight days* ago, George," said 
Rouviere, and he stopped eating to 
reflect " eight days ago I was in 
Dublin." 

" In Dublin !" exclaimed Dupuis 
admiringly. " What a fellow !" 

"From Dublin," continued M. 
Rouviere, " I went to London, and 
from London to Jersey, and from 
Jersey here !" 

" And was it when you got to 
Jersey that the happy thought oc- 
curred to you to come and stir up 
your old friend ?" asked Dupuis ; 
and his bright, soft eyes rested af- 
fectionately on Rouviere's face. 

" Yesterday morning, my dear 
boy," replied Rouviere. "There 
was a map of Normandy hanging 
up in the hall of the hotel where I 
was staying, and I was looking at it 



almost mechanically, when suddenly 
I came across the name of Saint-Sau- 
veur-le-Vicomte. ' Saint Sauveur- 
le-Vicomte !' I repeated two or three 
times to myself. ' Isn't that the 
name of the little town where 
George Dupuis used to live my 
friend George? I've a mind to go 
and dine with him, if he be still 
alive.' " 

M. Rouviere seemed to be look- 
ing for something on the table as 
he finished these words. Mme. Du- 
puis, watching every feature, anx- 
iously inquired what he wanted. 

" Some lemon, madame, for this 
sole," replied he. " Marianne 
I think I heard you call her Mari- 
anne," he added, turning towards 
his hostess " Marianne, haven't 
you a lemon?" 

"Here is one," exclaimed Mme. 
Dupuis, rising hastily and running 
to the sideboard. " Now tell me, 
M. Rouviere," she said with her 
pleasant smile, as she laid the le- 
mon by his plate, " have you really 
been going up and down the high- 
ways and by-ways of the world 
during thirty long years, just like 
the Wandering Jew ?" 

" I have indeed, madame," re- 
plied her guest, squeezing the le- 
mon-juice out over his sole. 

" You must have eaten some 
strange things in your travels," 
continued the lady. 

" I rather think so," replied Rou- 
viere, with his mouth full of fish ; 
" things you never heard of ! Ma- 
rianne, my good girl, I smell coffee 
roasting in your kitchen. Now, 
nearly every one, especially here in 
the provinces, roasts it too much 
all the aroma is driven off; run 
quick, that's a good lass, and tell 
the cook Jeannette, isn't it ? that 
the coffee must only be toasted 
just scorched. Do you understand, 
eh ?" 



A Sweet Revenge. 



183 



"Yes, yes, I understand well 
enough," muttered Marianne as 
she went out ; " that fellow seems 
to like nothing!" 

" My dear lady," went on Rou- 
viere, turning to Mme. Dupuis, 
" the very accident I feared for 
your coffee has happened to your 
chicken it is cooked too much, or 
rather it has been cooked too fast. 
It is a great pity, for it was an ex- 
cellent fowl !" 

" Oh ! dear, oh ! dear," exclaimed 
Mme. Dupuis, who was beginning 
to feel a kind of despair thus far 
unknown to her. All her dinners 
hitherto had been subjects of com- 
pliment ; this was quite a new ex- 
perience. " Oh ! dear, oh ! dear, 
how many misfortunes at one time. 
Pray excuse me, M. Rouviere ; you 
came so unexpectedly, you know. 
We had no time to do things well. 
But do, pray, stay a few days with 
us, and you shall see. I promise 
you that everything shall be bet- 
ter." 

" Impossible, madame," replied 
the guest, as he accepted a fine 
snipe done to a turn ; " you are 
very kind, but at nine o'clock this 
evening I must be on the road 
again. Yes, madame, you may 
well say that I have eaten strange 
things," he continued, raising his 
voice. " I've eaten kouskoussou 
under the Arab's tent ; curry that 
incendiary curry on the shores of 
the Ganges; I've dined off the 
frightful tripang in Java ; and in 
China on swallows' nests stewed in 
castor-oil !" 

"Good gracious!" ejaculated 
Mme. Dupuis. 

" What a wonderful fellow !" ex- 
claimed M. Dupuis enthusiasti- 
cally. 

M. Dupuis was unwontedly si- 
lent ; he was evidently exceedingly 
annoyed, and it was pitiful to see 



the deprecating glances his little 
wife directed towards him from 
time to time. He, however, kept 
his eyes fixed steadily on his plate. 

" In Panama," went on Rouviere, 
" I've eaten roasted monkey. But 
what need to enumerate? There's 
nothing edible in creation that I 
have not swallowed. So that I be- 
lieve I may say," here he bowed 
thanks for a second snipe, " there 
does not exist a man under the fir- 
mament of heaven easier to satisfy 
than myself. The Rocky Moun- 
tain Indians those Indians are 
most extraordinarily sagacious 
the Rocky Mountain Indians, I say, 
gave me a surname while I was 
among them ' Choc-ugh-tou-saw,' 
which signifies good-humored sto- 
mach, because I was always satis- 
fied with my dinner !" 

" What a wonderful fellow !" re- 
iterated Dupuis. " Come, Tom, 
try this Burgundy; your throat must 
be dry. What a wonderful fellow, 
to be sure !" 

" Do let me prevail on you to 
take another snipe," said Mme. Du- 
puis, holding up to the guest's ac- 
ceptance a third fine, fat bird; " I'm 
so glad to find that you like them !" 

" No, madame, no, a thousand 
thanks. Yes, I don't deny that I 
am fond of snipes, but, I'm sorry 
I can't deceive you these are not 
just what they ought to be. In the 
first place, they have not been kill- 
ed long enough ; and, secondly, you 
have forgotten to pepper them a 
process absolutely necessary with 
game. But, excuse me, for the last 
half-hour I've been looking at that 
covered dish, wondering what there 
is in it. I really don't believe that 
I have ever felt more curiosity in 
the whole course of my life ; excuse 
me, I must look into it." 

He raised the cover as he spoke, 
peering in with eyes and nose. 



1 84 



A -Sweet Revenge. 



" In the name of all the saints, 
what is it?" he exclaimed, as he 
contemplated the contents and snif- 
fed up the steam. 

" My dear friend," answered Du- 
puis, a little nervously, " it is some- 
thing I had concocted on purpose 
for you it is macaroni." 

"Macaroni! That macaroni!" 
shouted Rouviere, as if never more 
surprised in his life. 

" Yes, M. Rouviere," explained 
Mme. Dupuis, no longer smiling, 
poor little woman ! " This dish 
was inspired by George's friend- 
ship. He remembered that you 
were very fond of Italy, so I sent 
in haste to the grocer's ; he fortu- 
nately had still a small quantity of 
macaroni on hand, and then, with 
the help of my cookery-book for 
Jeannette couldn't manage it I 
made you a plat a Fitalienne" 

" A ritalienne /" repeated George's 
old friend with a sneering laugh. 
" My dear, good lady, that's not ma- 
caroni & ritalienne! Oh ! no, no. 
However, who knows ? it may be 
good to eat all the same. Let us 
try!" So saying, M. Rouviere 
helped himself to a spoonful, while 
his hosts looked on anxiously. 

" Well, how do you like it ?" asked 
George, when the taster, after many 
grimaces, had got down a mouthful. 

"Like it!" replied Rouviere, 
"why, not at all ; you might as 
well try to masticate organ-pipes ! 
It really is something remarkable; 
it's fossil macaroni, petrified mac- 
aroni ! The grocer who sold it to 
you deserves the jail ; 7 shouldn't 
wonder if he belonged to some 
secret society !" 

"Marianne, quick! change M. 
Rouviere's plate," said Dupuis 
sharply for the old servant was 
gazing at her master's friend with 
a very unmistakable expression of 
disgust on her honest face. " My 



dear Tom," he continued, " what a 
bad dinner you have made !" 

"You are jesting," replied Rou- 
viere carelessly ; " at all events, 
your wine is capital." 

" I don't know what to say," 
sighed poor Mme. Dupuis. " I feel 
ready to die with vexation. But, 
dear M. Rouviere," with a pretty 
supplicatory gesture, " do, I beg and 
pray of you, do taste my rice-pud- 
ding." 

" Very willingly, my dear lady," 
answered the terrible guest " very 
willingly; only let me first finish 
eating these green peas, which have 
been very well preserved, and 
would be really perfect had the 
cook spared her butter a little !" 

At this moment the church bells 
began to ring the Angelas, and 
Mme. Dupuis rose precipitately 
from the table. 

" You will pardon my leaving 
you to finish dinner with George," 
said she to Rouviere; "I shall be 
back long before you go." 

" Surely you are not going out 
such an evening as this!" exclaim- 
ed Rouviere. " Why, there's a foot 
deep of snow in the streets !" 

" My wife goes to church every 
evening, winter and summer, at the 
Angelus, no matter what the wea- 
ther," remarked George. " She 
has done so for nearly fifty years, 
and nothing will break her of the 
habit now." 

"Ah ! very well," returned Rou- 
viere. " I hope you like your pas- 
tor, Mme. Dupius ?" 

" Oh.! yes, indeed I do," replied 
the good little woman enthusiasti- 
cally ; " he is a most worthy man. 
Do stay twenty-four hours longer 
with us, M. Rouviere, and I will 
ask him to dine with us; you will 
be glad to know him, I am quite 
sure." 

" So am I," returned her hus- 



A Sweet Revenge. 



185 



band's old chum, with the little 
sneering laugh which seemed to be 
natural to him ; " but I must wait 
for another opportunity." 

" Now, George," said Mme. Du- 
puis, as she tied her wadded hood 
and slipped on the cloak and india- 
rubber shoes which had been plac- 
ed ready for her on a chair, " do beg 
your friend to taste the rice-pud- 
ding; and, M. Rouviere, do try my 
preserves. I make them myself, 
and I really believe that they are 
excellent. Good-by for the pres- 
ent!" 

" Good-by, madame." 

" Hem ! hem !" ejaculated Rou- 
viere as the door closed behind the 
lady, " so ! so ! Now let us look at 
this rice. Your wife's given to 
piety, eh, George ?" 

" Yes, she is a religious woman," 
replied George slowly ; then added, 
with some slight eagerness in his 
manner, " but she never imposes 
her opinions upon any one. She 
never teases me, I can assure you, 
although I do happen to be some- 
what lukewarm about church mat- 
ters. But tell me, Tom" here M. 
Dupuis hesitated and appeared 
embarrassed "don't you find her 
very provincial, very rustic ?" 

" Oh ! no, not at all," answered 
Rouvi6re in a tone which seemed 
to imply the contrary of his words. 

" Yes, you do I know you do !" 
cried George passionately. " But 
what can you expect ? It's not her 
fault ! She has lived in this hole 
all her life. And your unexpect- 
ed visit has excited her upset her. 
She really talked as if she did not 
know what she was saying such 
nonsense, such silly gossip !" 

" Oh ! no, not at all," repeated 
Rouviere, as he steadily devoured 
the rice-pudding. 

" Par bleu ! yes; don't deny it !" 
cried Dupuis peevishly. " It made 



you nervous I saw it did. It irri- 
tated me, I know : it really seemed 
as if she was trying to show you 
her defects. It vexed me more, 
too, because she really has many 
good qualities admirable qualities, 
poor little woman !" 

" My dear George," returned 
Rouviere, pushing away his plate 
and coolly wiping his mouth with 
his napkin, " I don't doubt it in 
the least; her rice-pudding is cer- 
tainly delicious." 

Dupuis at this moment caught 
sight of the pretty Angora with 
one soft white paw laid in silent 
petition on his friend's knee. His 
irritation, with difficulty kept un- 
der so far, instantly boiled over on 
the head of the innocent cat. 
" Get down !" he roared, " get down, 
you brute ! I'll drown that beast 
one of these days ! Take that 
animal away," he continued, turn- 
ing angrily towards Marianne, who 
had just brought in the coffee ; "if 
she comes into this room again, I'll 
throw her out of the window !" 

" Come to me, pussy," said Mari- 
anne in an extra-gentle tone of 
voice, taking the cat in her arms 
and kissing it ; " these Parisian 
gentlemen don't like you, it seems. 
A regular Turk he is, too, turning 
the house topsy-turvy," she mutter- 
ed as she went out of the room, 
scowling over her shoulder at the 
visitor. 

Rouviere had risen from the 
table during this episode, and, tongs 
in hand, was busy with the bright 
wood fire. He smiled maliciously 
when the cat was carried away, 
and, as if in very lightness of heart, 
broke forth in song : 

" ' O bell* alma innamorata ' O 
bell 1 alma innamorata ! ' Tell me, 
George," he interrupted himself to 
say, " have you a good theatre here 
in Saint-Sauveur ?" 



1 86 



A Sweet Revenge. 



"A theatre? That's an idea! 
Well, yes, we have a theatre once a 
year, on the fair-day at mid-Lent !" 

" That's too bad !" laughed Rou- 
viere. " How on earth do you 
contrive to get through your even- 
ings ?" 

"Well, in winter," answered 
George, " we chat by the side of 
the fire, or ray wife and I play at 
piquet ; sometimes two or three 
neighbors come in, and then we 
have a game of whist !" 

"Phew!" whistled the man of 
the world. "With the cure, I'll 
swear," said he presently with his 
customary mocking smile, as he 
planted himself comfortably with 
his back to the blaze and his coat- 
tails gathered up under his arms. 

" Yes," went on George simply, 
apparently unconscious of his 
friend's sneer ; " sometimes with 
the curt. And then in summer I 
water my garden, and Reine and I 
take a walk on the high-road up to 
the top of the hill, or in the wood 
by the river's side ; and then 
well, everybody goes to bed early 
here." 

"Very moral, indeed!" sneered 
Rouviere again, picking his teeth. 

By this time Marianne had clear- 
ed away the dinner things, and, 
after placing a provision of glasses 
and a bottle of brandy, another of 
rum, and a case of liqueurs on the 
table, had finally departed to dine 
in her turn with Jeannette, and to 
confide her observations on the 
obnoxious Parisian to her compan- 
ion's sympathizing ear. 

in. 

"So at last we are alone!" ex- 
claimed Dupuis with a sigh of sat- 
isfaction, as the maid closed the 
door behind her. " Now, Tom, sit 
down and let us drink. Come and 



tell me what you think of this 
brandy. Here's to your health, 
old friend !" filling himself a glass 
of old Cognac and tossing it off 
excitedly. " Do you know how 
many years it is since we last met, 
Tom ? Five-and-thirty, Tom five- 
and-thirty years!" 

" Yes, parbleu /" said Rouviere, 
helping himself to the brandy. "I 
suppose it must be some thirty- 
five years since we parted in the 
diligence yard, Rue Montmartre. 
I remember that we swore eter- 
nal friendship and constant corre- 
spondence. The correspondence 
did not last long less than two 
years, it seems to me but our 
friendship, George, it smouldered 
under its ashes, but it kept alive, 
my boy !" 

The two friends clasped each 
other's hands for a moment si- 
lently. 

"Your brandy is first-rate," re- 
marked Rouviere presently, as he 
finished his petit-verre. 

"You like it? Bravo! Well, 
there are still some pleasant hours 
in life aren't there now, Tom ?" 

"I believe you," answered the 
guest meditatively. 

" Who should know it better than 
you, fortunate fellow as you are ! 
But I say, Tom, how does it hap- 
pen that you have not changed in 
the least ? Not in the least, by 
Jove ! You've remained young and 
handsome. . . . 'I was young and 
handsome !' do you remember how 
magnificently Talma used to say 
that ? Your beard and moustaches 
might belong to an African lion ! 
You make me think of Henri 
Quatre ! But drink, Tom ; you 
don't drink !" 

" My dear old George," said 
Rouviere in a quiet, confidential 
tone of voice, and resting his two 
arms on the table, while he fixed 



A Sweet Revenge. 



187 



his eyes on his friend's flushed 
face " my dear old George, what 
was your reason for burying your- 
self alive in Cotentin ? Tell me." 

" Why do you ask me that, Tom ?" 
cried Dupuis, who suddenly be- 
came serious. " You find me rusty, 
then?" 

" Xo, no ; but what was your rea- 
son ? Tell me in confidence, you 
kno\v." 

" Yes, I am rusty ; I feel it !" 
said poor Dupuis mournfully. " I 
tell you what, Tom, the provinces 
of France deserve all that is said 
against them. They are like those 
springs of mineral waters which 
turn to stone every living creature 
you throw into them ! What rea- 
son had I, do you ask ? Gracious 
heavens ! What is life, Tom, but 
a series of chances ; some fatality 
gets you into a groove, and you are 
pushed on and on until you reach 
your grave. Try this rum, Tom." 

"Do you indulge in such pro- 
longed libations every evening?" 
asked Rouviere. 

" No, never. These are in honor 
of you." 

" So I suspected. This is the 
rum, isn't it? Come, go on, 
George ; I want to hear the rest of 
your Odyssey." 

" Well, Tom," resumed his friend, 
taking a sip at his glass of rum 
and breathing at the same time a 
sigh which was almost a groan, 
"you remember that my prospects 
were pretty bright in Paris. I fully 
intended to buy that solicitor's 
office where I was working it had 
been offered to me on good condi- 
tions; but some family affairs called 
me home here, and here I stayed. 
I don't know how it happened, but 
it is certain that I found a charm 
in tliis provincial life in its futile 
comfort, its indolent habits, its 
tame monotony." 



Here poor Dupuis stopped, that 
he might give vent to an angry- 
gust of self-reproach by punching 
the fire with the tongs ; after a sip 
of rum he continued : " All these 
got possession of me, wound them- 
selves around me like a net, and I 
remained their captive." 

His head bowed itself forward, 
and he sat gazing regretfully on 
the ugly clock in the middle of the 
chimney-piece. 

"All right, George!" laughed 
Rouviere; "you don't say it, but I 
suspect that Madame Dupuis had 
a good deal to do with this final 
catastrophe !" 

"It is true, Tom," replied the 
other, his countenance lighting up 
for a moment ; " and you may be- 
lieve it or not, as you like, but I 
swear that she was a charming 
girl ! Moreover, my dear old mo- 
ther was living then, and it was a 
great pleasure to her to have me 
settle here where we were all born. 
The long and the short of it was 
that I married, bought my father- 
in-law's office, and all was over 
the die was cast ! Take some of 
the Kirschwasser, Tom," he added 
hurriedly, as if his remembrances 
were too painful to be dwelt on. 

" Presently," said Rouviere, a 
smile flickering over his worldly- 
wise face ; " but tell me, first, you've 
not stayed walled up in Saint-Sau- 
veur, I hope, all these thirty-five 
years? You take a run to Paris every 
once in a while, don't you?" 

" Don't mention it," groaned 
Dupuis. " I've not seen Paris since 
I said good-by to you in the Rue 
Montmartre !" 

" Phew !" whistled Rouviere, 
helping himself to the Kirschwas- 
ser. The friends remained silent 
for a time, gazing at the fire. 

" But you used to like to travel," 
exclaimed Rouviere, at last. 



iSS 



A Sii-cct Revenge. 



" And so I do still, my dear 
Tom ; my taste has not changed in 
that respect, I can assure you. But 
what could I do? When I mar- 
ried, my idea was to work steadily 
for fifteen years, and then sell my 
business and live on what I had 
saved. I intended then to take a 
trip to Paris with my wife, after 
that to the Pyrenees I always 
wished so much to see the Pyre- 
nees ! But it was not to be ; as 
the old women say, Man proposes 
and God disposes. We had been 
married just five years when our 
daughter was born. . . ." 

" What's that you say you have 
a daughter?" interrupted his 
friend. 

" A daughter and a grand-daugh- 
ter, Tom," replied George, with an 
inflection in his voice that sounded 
very like pride, and a soft look in 
his eyes; "so you understand that I 
had to stick to my business for ten 
years more, that I might get her a 
dowry ; and then, when at last I did 
sellout well, I was old . . . and I 
couldn't think of anything pleasant- 
er than just to stay quietly in my 
arm-chair ! Didn't I tell you that 
my life has been nothing but a chap- 
ter of accidents from beginning to 
end ? Come, shall we have some 
punch, Tom ? I'll make it." 

" If you will. So you have a 
daughter! And she is married! 
Well married, I hope ?" 

" Well, yes ; her husband is a sub- 
prefect." 

George's voice again took a tone 
of gratified pride, which elicited a 
smile from his observant friend. 

" A sub-prefect ! Bravo, bravissi- 
mo ! But you're putting too much 
lemon into that punch." 

" Do you think so ? And now, 
Tom, that I've made a clean breast 
of it told you all you must ex- 
plain something to me that I never 



could comprehend : how hare you 
contrived to make your modest for- 
tune suffice for nearly half a centu- 
ry's constant travel?" 

"It is easy enough to explain," 
said Rouviere, sitting up straight in 
his chair and becoming very ani- 
mated and somewhat loud as he 
proceeded. " I began life with ten 
thousand francs a year in land ; my 
first operation was to change my 
patrimony into bank-notes, by which 
means I doubled my income ; then 
I invested it in the sinking funds, 
which trebled it. And then, freed 
from every narrow calculation, from 
every family tie, from every social 
trammel, I took my flight into 
space ! Here's to your health, my 
old friend George! Hip! hip! 
hurrah !" 

"What a wonderful fellow!" 
cried George in a paroxysm of ad- 
miration, excited, very probably, 
much more by the brandy and the 
rum and the punch than by Rou- 
viere's comprehension of life and 
happiness. "What energy! what 
grandeur !" 

" I consecrated my youth," con- 
tinued Tom in a declamatory style, 
"to distant adventures, reserving 
Europe for the autumn of life. 
My foot this foot, this very foot, 
George, which now touches yours on 
this carpet has left its print among 
those of the tiger and the elephant 
on the sands of India ! Nay, it has 
even followed those terrible prow- 
lers into their forests of bamboo, 
lofty and solemn as our cathe- 
drals!" 

"Ah! that was something like 
living !" ejaculated Dupuis, who 
listened with almost breathless in- 
terest. 

" Two years later I arrived in 
Canton. What an arrival, ye gods ! 
Never shall I forget the scene. It 
was a lovely summer night. The 



A Sweet Revenge. 



189 



accession of the emperor of the Ce- 
lestials to his ancestral throne was 
being celebrated. Our canoe could 
scarcely force its way among the 
junks and flower-boats, all of them 
decorated with innumerable paper 
lanterns. Fireworks of a thousand 
different hues were reflected, min- 
gled with the stars, in the flowing 
river, and we could watch their 
rainbow tints playing on the porce- 
lain temples that rise on its banks !" 

" What a fairy-like sight ! Hap- 
py, happy Tom !" murmured Du- 
puis. 

"From China," pursued Rou- 
viere, after quaffing off his glass of 
punch, " I sailed for the Americas. 
I travelled about there for several 
years, going to and fro, from north 
to south, from the savannas to 
the pampas, from the great austere 
Canadian woods to the smiling 
Brazilian forests ; sometimes on 
foot, sometimes *on horseback, oft- 
enest in a pirogue. My longest 
stay was in Peru. I could not tear 
myself away from that coquettish 
city of Lima !" 

" Ha ! ha ! traitre, gay deceiver ! 
O Tom, Tom!" laughed Dupuis, 
shaking his head in ecstasy. 

" I turned gamester, too. It is 
impossible for you, George, to con- 
ceive the immense attraction a 
gaming-table possesses in that land 
of gold and silver and jewels. One 
might almost fancy that one of 
those fabulous trees we read of in 
Oriental tales had been shaken 
over the green cloth ! There is 
little or no regular coined money 
to be seen on it, but dull yellow 
ingots, bright golden spangles, fiery 
diamonds, and milk-white, lustrous 
pearls are heaped up there pell- 
mell ! All the treasures of earth 
and ocean seem to be brought 
together on that table, tumbled 
and jostled in dazzling confusion ! 



You can stay whole nights by 
that board nights that fly like 
minutes your eyes fascinated, your 
brain on fire ! Twenty times in 
twenty-four hours you are raised 
to the throne of Rothschild as 
often precipitated down, down to 
Job's dunghill. You become bald, 
you may become mad, but you feel 
what life is you live !" 

" It is true, it is true !" cried Du- 
puis in a state of intense excite- 
ment; "you are right, Tom, there 
is no doubt of that. And to think 
that I have never played at any- 
thing but that blackguard whist at 
a sou the counter ! But go on, 
Tom, go on ; you really electrify 
me !" 

" Everything has its end," con- 
tinued Rouviere, highly flattered by 
the effect he was producing ; " there 
came a day of sadness and discour- 
agement, and I took passage on 
board an American whaler bound 
for the south pole. Yes, my hand 
has touched the frozen limits of 
our globe ; I have contemplated, 
with feelings akin to awe, those 
creatures with human-like faces, 
the morse, on their pedestals of 
ice, recumbent and dreamy as the 
sphinx of Thebes. And in the 
midst of those silent spaces, so 
strangely different from all I had 
hitherto seen, I experienced sensa- 
tions that seemed to belong to an- 
other world. A kind of posthumous 
illusion of being in another planet 
took possession of me. Certainly 
I am much deceived if the days 
and nights I saw in those regions of 
ice do not resemble those in our 
pale satellite. What more shall I 
tell you, my dear friend ? Three 
years after this I found myself in Rio 
Janeiro, whence I returned to Eu- 
rope, after having literally described 
the whole circumference of our 
globe with the end of my walking- 



190 



A Sweet Revenge. 



stick ! And thus passed away my 
youth !" 

M. Rouviere here threw himself 
back in his arm-chair, and stroked 
his beard with a sigh. 

" Every king living might envy 
you, Tom!" cried Dupuis. "But 
tell me more. What have you been 
doing since then?" 

" Since then, George," said Rou- 
viere with nonchalance, " I have 
not travelled; I have merely made 
excursions. First upon the Medi- 
terranean but, pshaw ! it was like 
sailing on the basin in the Tuile- 
ries' garden ! I have visited all 
the countries on its shore. And 
by degrees, as I grew older, my 
circle became smaller, so that now 
I live entirely in Europe, going 
from city to city, according to the 
attraction of the moment. Indeed, 
I may say, my dear fellow, that 
Europe is my property, my do- 
main!" Here the speaker began 
to wax warmer and louder. " Ev- 
ery festival given by nature or man 
in Europe is given to amuse me. 
For me Naples displays her bay 
and her volcano, and keeps open 
her grand theatre, San Carlos; for 
my recreation Paris adorns her 
boulevards and builds her opera- 
house ; to amuse me Madrid has a 
Prado and bull-fights. All the 
great exhibitions were made for 
me, beginning with that of London. 
Evviva la libertct ! Let's drink!" 
So saying, he filled for himself a 
brimming bumper of punch, and 
tossed it off with a very self-satis- 
fied smile. 

"Tom!" cried Dupuis delight- 
edly, " you are a genius ! But you 
have said nothing about the great 
monuments the Alhambra,the Co- 
liseum, the Parthenon." 

" Pshaw! those are your friends!" 
retorted Tom with his peculiar 
sneer. " I've said nothing about 



them because they are dragged 
about everywhere. Who hasn't 
seen them ?" 

There was a minute of silence, 
broken by an emphatic " Ah !" 
breathed not loudly but deeply by 
the excited listener. Starting from 
his seat, and thrusting his hands 
into his pockets, he began hurried- 
ly to pace up and down the room. 
His friend glanced at him uneasily. 

" What's the matter ? What an- 
noys you?" he asked. 

" O Tom, Tom !" cried George, 
still continuing his agitated walk, 
"I blush when I compare your life 
with mine. While your heart has 
counted each pulsation by some 
noble or beautiful emotion, mine 
has stupidly gone on ticking off the 
hours and days and years as calmly 
as a kitchen clock ! Have I really 
lived, tell me?" He stopped in 
front of his friend, gesticulating 
violently. "I was born, and 1 have 
slept, and I have eaten ; but what 
else ? And what has been the re- 
sult ? My intelligence is extin- 
guished ; I have dried up ; I have 
descended in the scale of being, until 
I have come to be on a level with 
the idiot of the Alps, with a shell- 
fish, with an oyster !" 

" Come, come, George, you're go- 
ing too far!" said Rouviere sooth- 
ingly. " Even supposing that you 
no longer possess as much fresh- 
ness of imagination, as much viva- 
city of wit, as you used to have ..." 

"I thought so! I knew it!" in- 
terrupted Dupuis, resuming his hur- 
ried walk backwards and forwards ; 
"you acknowledge that you find 
me rusty !" 

M. Rouviere rose slowly from his 
seat, and, after lighting a cigar, re- 
mained standing with his back 
against the chimney-piece, his eyes 
fixed on his friend, who paused in 
front of him at his first word. 



A Siveet Revenge. 



191 



" Listen to me, George," said he 
seriously, caressing his moustache 
with his fingers as he spoke ; " I 
will be frank with you. You know 
that I always used to be frank with 
you. The impression your house 
made on me when I first entered 
it was, I must confess, a sinister 
one. I seemed to' breathe the air 
of a cemetery in it. I could have 
fancied that I was in one of those 
long-buried dwellings which the pa- 
tient labor of enthusiastic antiqua- 
ries has restored to light -and life. 
While the servant went to call you 
I could not prevent myself from 
examining, with a kind of wonder- 
ing, stupid curiosity, the old-fash- 
ioned furniture, and the pictures, 
and those dismal tapestries worthy 
of figuring in a museum ! I re- 
membered the delicacy of your cha- 
racter, the elegance of your man- 
ners, your intelligent taste, your 
love of art ; and positively I could 
not reconcile the bright memories 
I retained of you with the dull, 
insipid existence of which I had 
the evidence before my eyes. You 
came to me ; I looked at you ; you 
spoke. What was it ? Was my 
sight affected, or my judgment bi- 
assed by the thoughts which were 
literally preying on me at that mo- 
ment ? I can't tell what it was I 
can't explain but your language 
astonished me ! Your forehead ac- 
tually seemed to me to have grown 
narrower! I wiped away a secret 
tear, and I sighed as I should have 
sighed had. I been standing by your 
grave ! I even half spoke the words, 
' This, then, is all that remains of 
my friend !' You're not offended, 
George ?" added M. Rouviere, stop- 
ping short and looking inquiringly 
into his victim's anxious, attentive 
face. 

" Not a bit, Tom ; not a bit," re- 
plied George. " I tell you I felt that 



I had sunk; at least, I suspected it, 
and the suspicion was intolerable. 
I prefer the certainty." He turned 
away with an attempt at a smile, 
and resumed his agitated walk up 
and down the room. 

Rouviere applied himself to the 
fire, put on a new log of wood, 
shovelled up the glowing embers 
and ashes and threw them with 
much care and skill to the back, 
gazed on his work for a minute, 
and, finally assuming again his fa- 
vorite pose, with his back leaning 
against the chimney-piece, started 
the conversation afresh in a lively, 
chatty tone. 

"Let us change the subject," 
said he. " You have sold your 
business ; what do you think of do- 
ing now ?" 

"What do you expect me to 
do ?" cried Dupuis vehemently. 
" I shall finish by dying !" 

" Morbleu ! you had better re- 
suscitate. Let us talk seriously, 
George. When you married you 
created for yourself new duties, 
which you have fulfilled to the 
utmost, honestly and generously. 
You have provided amply for the 
future of your wife and daughter. 
What is there, then, to prevent you 
now from plunging yourself for two 
or three years into the vortex of 
life, and so awaken and reinvigor- 
ate your benumbed faculties ? The 
facilities of travel nowadays are 
wonderful. In the space of two 
years you can run over the whole 
of Europe, and even explore a part 
of Asia and Africa. All the fresh- 
ness and vivacity of thought you 
once possessed will return to you 
when you find yourself in contact 
with the most glorious creations of 
art and nature. In the course of 
two years two years, mark you ! 
you can lay at rest for ever every 
one of those regretful feelings which 



I 9 2 



A Siveet Revenge. 



are now eating out your heart and 
shortening your life ! Choose now : 
suicide or travel ? Remember that 
you are free in your choice you 
are free to do as you like !" 

"Pish!" cried George, turning 
on his heel and pursuing his walk. 
" Is it probable that at my time of 
life I shall set out alone to scour 
the highways of Europe?" 

" But who wants you to go alone ?" 
said Rouviere, going up to him 
and laying a hand on his shoulder. 
" Am not I ready to go with you ? 
My experience, my post-chaise, my 
servant everything I have is at 
your service, George !" 

" Is it possible, Tom ? Are you 
really in earnest ?" exclaimed Du- 
puis, gratified beyond expression at 
this proof of his friend's affection. 
" You really will accompany me ?" 

" I will lead you by the hand, 
my boy !" answered Rouviere gaily ; 
and, falling into step with George, 
the two friends paced the room to- 
gether. " I will spare you the tor- 
ment of guides and ciceroni, and 
all that species of vermin which be- 
sets the tourist. No, don't thank 
me," he continued, when Dupuis be- 
gan to express his gratitude. " The 
thought delights me as much as it 
does you. Your new impressions 
will revive mine of past days. And 
won't it be delicious, George, to 
end our lives as we began them 
participating in the same adventures, 
in the same pleasures, and even shar- 
ing our purses ? Come, now, is it 
settled ?" / 

" My dear friend," replied Du- 
puis, with a slight hesitation in his 
voice, " I will confess to you that 
no project was ever more agreeable 
to me, but . . ." 

"Nobuts! nobuts!" cried Rou- 
viere imperatively; "it is settled! 
We will go direct from this to Paris 
and wait there until the spring. 



The museums and theatres will help 
us to while away the time. I will 
take you behind the scenes ; you 
shall hear Ristori and Patti ! You 
used to love music !" 

" I love it still," said George, 
smiling ; " I play the flute !" 

"So much the better!" cried 
Tom with increasing animation, as 
they continued to pace the room 
side by side ; " so much the better ! 
You shall bring your flute with you. 
What was I saying ? Oh ! yes ; 
well, the winter in Paris that's 
settled ; but at the very beginning 
of spring we'll cross the Pyrenees 
and spend three glorious months in 
Spain. Then we'll ta"ke advantage 
of the summer to visit all the prin- 
cipal cities of Germany; and after 
that we'll get down into Italy by 
Trieste and Venice. What do you 
say to this programme ?" 

" I say," replied Dupuis, stopping 
in his walk and speaking in a strong, 
decisive tone " I say that it opens 
Paradise to me. Give me a cigar, 
Tom. I say that you are right. I 
have lived long enough for others. 
I Jiave offered up a sufficiently large 
portion of my life as a sacrifice. 
Bah ! a man has duties towards 
himself." He lighted his cigar 
and puffed vigorously for a minute 
or two. " Providence has conferred 
gifts on us," he resumed, " for which 
we have to render an account. In- 
tellect, imagination, the feeling of 
the beautiful these are gifts which 
bind us. Savages only ought to be 
capable of such a crime as to allow 
these sacred flames to die out for 
want of nourishment !" 

"Well said!" exclaimed Rou- 
viere exultingly ; " that's my old 
George again ! Now let us strike 
while the iron's hot. Marianne !" 
He went towards the door to open 
it as he spoke. 

"Hush! hush!" cried Dupuis, 



A Sweet Revenge. 



193 



stopping him and speaking under his 
breath ; " what do you want with 
her?" 

" I want to tell her that you are 
going away to-night, and that she 
must look after your portmanteau. 
Marianne !" he called again. 

" Hush, I beg of you !" repeated 
poor George earnestly. " Surely 
we are not going to start to-night ?" 

" At nine o'clock to-night," an- 
swered Rouviere decisively ; " you 
know very well that I ordered 
horses for nine o'clock." 

"Yes, I know," said Dupuis, 
hesitating and embarrassed ; " but 
the night is going to be deucedly 
cold Siberian. I think we should 
do better to wait until to-morrow 
morning." 

" Now, just let me tell you this, 
George," cried the other impa- 
tiently: "if you're afraid of frosted 
fingers or toes, and of a night in a 
post-chaise, you'd better pull your 
night-cap over your ears at once 
and go to bed, and never talk again 
about travelling !" 

" I'm afraid of nothing and of 
nobody," replied poor Dupuis, 
driven to his wits' end; "but the 
truth is this haste rather puts me 
out. I had reckoned upon two or 
three days to look about me and 
to make my preparations." 

" Preparations ! What prepara- 
tions ?" cried Tom in a tone of in- 
dignant surprise. "You need a 
portmanteau and a few shirts and 
stockings, and you have an hour 
before you to get them together, 
and that's more than time enough. 
Come, now, George, no childish- 
ness ; if you defer your departure 
for two or three days, you know 
just as well as I do that you won't 
go at all. I've no need to tell you 
what influences will be brought to 
bear on you, what obstacles will 
rise up before you, to unman you 
VOL. xxvi. 13 



and break down your resolution. 
Believe me, my dear fellow, in such 
cases as this, however you yourself 
may suffer and make suffer, you 
must cut down to the quick or give 
up. . . ." 

*' Once more you are right, Tom," 
said Dupuis after a moment's silent 
thought. "I'm your man; there's 
my hand on it." 

"Marianne!" shouted Rouviere, 
shaking his friend's hand with a 
will. 

" No, no, don't call Marianne,"' 
cried Dupuis hurriedly, and getting 
between Rouviere and the door. 
" I know better than she does what 
I shall need. I shall pack my port- 
manteau myself as soon as my 
wife comes in. It's just eight now," 
looking at the clock ; " she'll not be 
long. Well," he continued with 
some agitation, "I shall have to 
pass a few minutes sad ones they 
will be, I know but my con- 
science reproaches me with noth- 
ing ; . . . and after all, if my cup be 
filled with generous wine, what does 
it matter though the edge be a lit- 
tle bitter ? ... . O Tom!" he con- 
tinued after a moment's pause, dur- 
ing which he seemed to have rous- 
ed his courage, " what a perspec- 
tive you have opened out before 
me what a horizon! Granada! 
Venice! Naples! It is a dream !' 
He glanced at the clock and his 
voice fell. " Five minutes past 
eight ! I would willingly give twenty- 
five louis to be a quarter of an hour 
older a quarter of an hour! I 
know that I am very weak, but ..." 

" Shall I tell your wife for you ?" 
interrupted Rouviere, who was 
watching him anxiously. 

" Well, frankly, Tom, you would 
do me a service," cried Dupuis 
eagerly. 

" Go and pack your trunk, then, 
and I'll settle the business." 



194 



A Siveet Revenge, 



" There's no danger of a scene," 
said George, stopping short near 
the door; "you would be quite 
mistaken in your estimate of her 
character if you feared that." 

" I shall see," returned his friend 
laconically. 

" Tell her that I entreat her to 
keep calm. Tears might unman 
me, but could change nothing in 
my plans." 

" I'll tell her. Go to your trunk." 

" I'm going, Tom." 

He opened the door, hesitated, 
rthen closed it again and came back 
:to the fire-place, near which Rou- 
\viejre was still standing. 

" My dear friend," said he softly, 
"laying his hand on Tom's arm, 
"you will be very gentle with her, 
will you,no4;j ) " 

A kind .smile gleamed in the usu- 
ally cold, sharp eyes of the travel- 
ler, as he looked in his friend's 
anxious, agitated face. 

"Don't be afraid/' he replied; 
" but you don't you desert me 
when I've gone to the front." 

" Desert during the baitle ! You 
don't know me, Tom !" 

" Why, you see," said Tom, " I 
should look wondrous silly if you 
did!" 

" Tom Rouviere," cried Dupuis 
solemnly, " permit me to assure you 
that my mind is made up, and that 
this evening at nine o'clock, come 
what will, I go with you. I pledge 
you my word of honor. Are you 
satisfied?" 

" Go and pack your trunk !" 
laughed Rouviere, taking him by 
the shoulders and pushing him out 
of the room. 

Left to himself, M. Rouviere re- 
turned to the chimney-piece and 
stood over the fire, rubbing his 
hands meditatively, and from time 
to time breaking out into words. 
"Now then, Mine. Dupuis, it's 



between you and me," said he, half- 
aloud, with a kind of chuckle- 
" It's very certain that my princi- 
pal object is to make poor George 
something like himself again, but I 
really sha'n't be sorry to try the 
effect of a thunder-bolt on that 
serene-looking lady !" Here M. 
Rouviere rubbed his hands gleeful- 
ly and laughed heartily; picturing 
to himself, probably, the poor wife's 
consternation and despair when 
he should announce the fatal news. 

" I'm not a Turk," he muttered 
presently " far from it, I'm sure ; 
until now I always believed, like 
every true Christian, that polygamy 
deserved the gallows ; but, hang it i 
only think of a decent man con- 
demned to perpetual communion 
with such a disagreeable creature 
as that old village sauce-pan ! 
Such a life is clearly impossible !" 
A minute's silent thought followed, 
and then M. Rouviere roused him- 
self, and sat down before the fire to 
warm the soles of his feet. But not 
for long. 

"I understood that woman," he 
suddenly exclaimed, starting up 
from his seat and beginning to 
pace rapidly up and down the 
floor " I understood her and judg- 
ed her before I saw her ! I knew 
her to be exactly what she is, from 
her cap to her shoes ! She was al- 
ways odious to me ! Just see with 
what stupid symmetry all this fur- 
niture is arranged : two chairs 
here and two chairs there, every- 
thing square with its neighbor, all 
at equal distances how wearisome! 
That old barometer, too, and these 
absurd curiosities " he stopped, as 
he spoke, in front of the chimney: 
" a stuffed bird, a shell-box, spun- 
glass, and horrid cocoanut cups 
carved by galley-slaves ! They 
absolutely give one the height and 
the breadth and the weight of the 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



195 



woman, both physically and moral- 
ly. Poor George ! an intelligent 
man, too. I was sorry for him, "he 
continued, taking a seat in front of 
the fire, " but I couldn't help it. 
How I pegged into her all dinner- 
time ! Ha, ha, ha! I was as dis- 
gusting as a Kalmuck ! I really was 
ashamed of myself! but, the deuce 
take it ! every one's nerves are not 
made of bronze. M. du Luc ! 
Mme. le Rendu ! and her fish . . . 
and her cat . . . and her curt . . . 
hang it ! I couldn't stand it." 

Here M. Rouviere interrupted 
his monologue for a minute to ex- 
amine the toe of his boot ; satisfied 
that it was intact, he resumed his 
train of thought. 

" No, I really don't believe that 
it would be possible to meet with a 
more perfect type of the humdrum 
existence, the narrow-minded ideas, 
and flat conversation prevalent in 
these provincial mole-hills than 



this dowdy female presents ! That 
good fellow how much he must 
have suffered before he learnt to 
bow his intellect beneath her im- 
becile yoke ! God bless me ! I 
know the whole story. He proba- 
bly struggled hard at first, and 
then, little by little, he was bowed 
and bent and broken, as so many 
others have been, by the continued 
pressure of a feminine will ! Thirty 
years' martyrdom. But, ha! ha! 
Mme. Dupuis, your hour has come ; 
he shall be avenged." 

Here M. Rouviere drew him- 
self up straight in . his chair and 
laughed merrily. " It reminds 
me," continued he half-aloud, " of 
my battle with that old Indian 
woman when I stole her idol while 
she was asleep. What a good- 
for-nothing hussy she was ! Ex- 
traordinary how much old women 
resemble one another all the world 
over." 



[TO BE CONCLUDED NEXT MONTH.] 



A GLANCE AT THE INDIAN QUESTION/ 



LET us begin by considering the 
Indian himself. As soon as he is 
able to stand alone he commences 
that practice with the bo\v and 
arrow which makes him a good 
marksman before he is well in his 
teens. He is tied in his saddle 
before he can walk, and a horse be- 
comes as much a part of his nature 
as if he were a Centaur. While yet 
a child he learns the subterfuges 



* We published last month an article on the In- 
dian question, based chiefly on the official reports 
to and of the Board of Indian Commissioners. We 
publish this month a second article on the same 
question by another writer, one who is personally 
familiar with the matter of which he treats, and 
whose observations and suggestions on so important 
a subject cannot fail to command attention. ED. 
C.W. 



of the chase : the quiet, patient, 
breathless watchfulness, the stealthy, 
snake-like advance, which enable 
him in adult life to crawl, unseen 
and unheard, upon his unsuspect- 
ing victim, to take him at a disad- 
vantage, surprise and kill him with- 
out the risk of a wound. From his 
earliest years he hears the warriors 
of his tribe relate their acts of 
treachery and blood, of rapine and 
violence, and boast of them as 
brave and glorious deeds. He is 
taught to consider treachery cour- 
age, robbery and murder honora- 
ble warfare, and the most renown- 
ed warrior the one who despatches 
his foe with the least possibility of 



196 



A Glance at tJie Indian Question. 



danger to himself. For him re- 
venge is a sacred duty. He hears 
shouts of savage laughter and ap- 
plause greet the warrior who de- 
vises the worst tortures for the mis- 
erable captive. His initiation to 
the order of warriors is a terrible 
ordeal of physical suffering, which 
must be borne without flinching or 
murmuring to ensure the success 
of the candidate. The grossest sen- 
suality is practised openly under 
his childish eyes. He learns to re- 
gard cunning and falsehood as vir- 
tues, and to look upon the warrior 
most skilled in the arts of deceit as 
the greatest hero of his tribe. Un- 
til he has committed some signal 
act of murder, treachery, or rob- 
bery, he is without influence among 
the braves or attractions for the 
squaws. 

All is fair in the wars of Indians, 
either with the white man or foes 
of their own color. The Sioux 
kills the Crow man, woman, or pa- 
poose at the breast at sight. The 
Grow will brain the sleeping Sioux 
equally without regard to age or 
sex. A small party of Minnecon- 
jon Sioux went to the Tongue 
River Cantonment, last December, 
to surrender. They carried a flag 
of truce. Unfortunately, they rode 
into the camp of some Crow scouts 
which was situated within a few 
hundred yards of the cantonment. 
The Crows received them in a 
friendly manner, shook hands with 
them, and while with one hand 
they gave the pledge of amity, with 
the other they poured the contents 
of their revolvers into the breasts 
of the bearers of the white flag. 
The Crows could not understand 
the indignation of the officers and 
soldiers at such an act of treachery 
and cowardice (we regret to say 
that it was not without apologists 
and applauders among white fron- 



tiersmen), but they feared it enough 
to run away to their agency, where 
the leader in the bloody deed was 
the recipient of high honors. There 
he was the hero of the time. 

HOW THE INDIAN IS CIRCUM- 
STANCED. 

Next let us consider the circum- 
stances in which this creature, so 
savagely nurtured and developed, 
is placed. 

We find him in a district of coun- 
try which he believes to be his by 
immemorial right of possession. It 
is the land of his fathers. The 
white man formally recognizes his 
claim by making solemn treaties 
for the transfer of portions of the 
Indian's heritage. The land being 
his, the game is his. The Great 
Spirit created the buffalo for the 
sustentation of his red children. 
The buffalo-hunter enters the In- 
dian's domain, and slaughters the 
buffalo by tens of thousands for the 
robes, leaving the flesh to rot upon 
the plain. Thousands are wanton- 
ly destroyed by wealthy idlers who 
call themselves sportsmen. The 
buffalo supplies the Indian not 
only with food, but with raiment 
and shelter. It furnishes him the 
article of exchange which enables 
him to obtain the necessaries of his 
savage life. The diminution of 
the buffalo means privation, suffer- 
ing, nakedness, starvation to the 
Indian and his family. 

Tl> white man by formal com- 
pact purchases from the Indian 
some certain district, and solemnly 
binds himself to respect the In- 
dian's remaining rights within cer- 
tain prescribed limits, to keep tres- 
passers from entering the now di- 
minished territory, and to ensure it 
to him and his tribe for ever. But 
this does not stop the insatiate ad- 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



197 



venturer, who again crosses the 
newly-defined limit.* The govern- 
ment seems powerless to compel 
its citizens to respect its treaty ob- 
ligations or to punish their infrac- 
tion. The exasperated Indian kills 
some of the trespassers. Would it 
be astonishing that he should do 
so, even if he had been reared 
under the influences of Christian- 
ity instead of those of barbarism ? 
Troops are now sent against the 
Indians. After the sacrifice of a 
greater or less number of brave 
soldiers the hostile tribe is sub- 
jected, compelled to return to a 
quasi-peaceful condition, and to 
consent to a further reduction of 
its territorial limits. Before the 
ink is dry with which the so-called 
treaty is written the adventurer 
again crosses the newly-designated 
boundary. Thus the process goes 
on ad infinitum, or until the In- 
dian, driven from the last foot of 
his ancestral earth, starving, naked, 
the cries of his suffering women and 
children ringing in his ears, is com- 
pelled to accept any terms which 
will give him food and covering. 

THE INDIANS ON THE RESERVA- 
TIONS. 

The Indian is now taken to a 
reservation. Even his removal may 
be a transportation job by which 
some politicaster in New York or 
Boston or friendly Philadelphia, 
who never saw a hostile Indian, 
and who invests no money in the 
enterprise, makes a fortune. From 
this time on he is a means of money- 
making for a crowd of sharpers. 
A scanty supply of bad beef at a 
high price, a little coffee and sugar 
of the lowest grade, with sometimes 
indifferent flour, compose his ra- 
tion. If he happens to be where 

* Audax omnia perpeti, 
Gens humana ruit per vetitum nefas. 



he can occasionally kill a buffalo, 
a deer, or a wolf, his squaw dresses 
the skin, and he takes it to the 
trader's store, where he barters it 
for a little sugar, coffee, or peini- 
can to add to his meagre ration. 
He gets in exchange for his peltries 
what the trader chooses to give 
him. For a calf-robe or a wolf- 
skin he may get a few cupfuls of 
the coarsest sugar, or a tin cup 
worth about ten cents in New York. 
For a fair calf-robe the trader will 
ask three dollars ! " We make eve- 
ry white man rich who comes to 
our country," said Sitting Bull to 
Gen. Miles in the council which 
preceded the fight on Cedar Creek, 
in Montana, last October. The re- 
mark was not without truth, so far 
as Indian traders and reservation 
rings are concerned. 

It is alleged that Indians on re- 
servations have been compelled to 
kill some of their ponies to feed 
their families. We do not person- 
ally know this to be so, but we can 
well believe it. We do know that 
not three years ago the Kiowas and 
Comanches were without flour for 
months; that the beef issued to 
them was miserable. We have seen 
it stated and have been told time 
and again that rations have been 
drawn for numbers greatly exceed- 
ing those actually at the agencies ; 
and, with the developments made 
through the honesty and courage 
of Professor Marsh still fresh in 
our memory, we can well believe it 
also. Is it a subject of special 
wonder that, being the victim of 
such a system, in addition to his pe- 
culiar training, the Indian should 
look upon deceit and robbery as 
not only justifiable but laudable ? 

WHAT WE ASK OF THE INDIAN. 

All men are naturally tenacious 
of their rights of property; the more 



198 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



civilized the community the more 
sacred those rights. The Indian 
has the instinct of property very 
strongly developed. After we have 
subdued, swindled, and reduced 
him to the verge of starvation we 
say to him: " You must now sur- 
render your horses and your arms." 
The earliest ambition of an Indian 
is to possess a fire-arm. He will 
pay thirty to forty ponies for a good 
rifle. Ponies are his currency. If 
the government sells this rifle by 
auction, it will bring perhaps five to 
ten dollars. It is hard for the In- 
dian to see his rifle carried off and 
his horse ridden away by some 
white hunter, "wolfer," or trapper. 
He is very fond of his ponies. No 
consideration of value will induce 
him to part with a favorite horse. 
A friend of the writer saw a squaw, 
with tears in her eyes, cut a lock 
from the mane of her favorite pony 
before surrendering the animal to 
the representative of the govern- 
ment. Thus, we starve the Indian ; 
we deprive him of his arms, with 
which he might kill game to eke 
out a subsistence ; we take away 
his ponies, which furnish him food 
when he is reduced to extremity 
through our fault or failure. What 
Christian people would be content 
under such treatment ? Can we be 
surprised that an untutored savage, 
who cannot understand our clash- 
ing of bureaus, our shifting of re- 
sponsibility, or our red-tape refine- 
ments of official morality, should 
look upon the white man as the 
liar of liars and the thief of thieves, 
and, when he is on the war-path, 
should execute the wild justice of 
revenge on any of the race who 
happens to come within reach of 
his rifle ? Can we be surprised if 
he leaves his reservation and 
chooses to fight to the last rather 
than be the patient victim of such 



a system of injustice and spoliation ? 
It is not astonishing that the In- 
dian should surrender only his 
poorest animals, should hide his 
magazine guns and rifles and give 
up only rusty old smooth-bores or 
arms for which he cannot procure 
fitting ammunition. In our every 
transaction with him we strengthen 
by example the lessons of decep- 
tion he was taught in his child- 
hood. 

INDIAN LIFE AT AN AGENCY. 

An Indian agency is not usual- 
ly a school of morality. Interpre- 
ters, traders' clerks, "squaw-men," 
have what are euphemistically 
termed " Indian wives." It is 
scarcely necessary to say that these 
are nothing more than concubines. 
These poor red slaves are usually 
purchased from their savage sires 
for a blanket, a cheap trinket, a 
pony, or a few cartridges. Some- 
times they are presents given for 
the purpose of making interest with 
influential underlings. Agency life 
has no tendency to elevate the In- 
dian. He lives in idleness and in- 
action. He has nothing to do 
and nothing to hope for. He has 
no future. He must occupy his 
time in some way, and he becomes 
a slave to gambling and sexual in- 
dulgence. Occasionally the young 
men, wearied by the monotony of 
such a life and ambitious of dis- 
tinction, seize upon the first real or 
fancied wrong as a pretext for re- 
volt, fly the agency, and go upon 
the war-path. 

OUR INDIANS IN CANADA. 

Why is it that the Indians who 
give us so much trouble become 
peaceable, and remain so, when they 
settle on the Canadian side of the 
border? There they receive no 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



199 



governmental aid, and are able to 
procure their own subsistence. 
We read of no outrages or robber- 
ies there. It is simply because the 
Indian's rights are respected. He 
has been protected in his rights 
even against the greedy nephews 
of English statesmen who cast 
covetous eyes upon his lands. If 
he is guilty of offence, he is prompt- 
ly and sternly punished. The arm 
of the military is not held back 
when offending Indians are within 
reach of punishment because a mil- 
lion or so has been appropriated to 
be expended for their benefit as 
soon as they can be reported peace- 
able, and because the vultures of 
the ring are a-hungering for the 
spoil. 

THE FRONTIERSMAN AND THE IN- 
DIAN. 

It is difficult for the honest fron- 
tiersman the hardy pioneer who, 
an axe in one hand and a rifle 
in the other, hews himself a farm 
)ut of the wilderness to be just 
toward the Indian. The memory 
massacre of his neighbors or 
relatives, of outrage on defenceless 
women, stirs up, even in gentle 
breasts, a hatred of the red man 
which prompts an undying vendetta, 
which begets a feeling that a re- 
morseless shedding of Indian blood 
to the very last drop would not be 
an adequate punishment for such 
atrocities. There is man^ a worthy 
and otherwise humane and law-abid- 
ing pioneer who believes that dead 
Indians are the only good ones ; 
and such a feeling seizes even the 
strongest advocate of a humane pol- 
icy when he sees the scalp of a 
white woman dangling from the 
girdle of a filthy savage. There 
are men on the frontier, otherwise 
brave and gentle-hearted, who 



would have no more scruple to 
shoot an Indian at sight than to 
kill a prairie-wolf. Peace is diffi- 
cult to keep between two opposing 
elements imbued with correspond- 
ing sentiments toward each other. 
For this state of things the rapa- 
cious Indian rings, the violators 
of treaty stipulations, the ruthless 
adventurers, the horse-thieves, the 
murderers, fugitives from justice, 
respecting no laws, human or divine, 
who infest the Indian country, are 
mainly responsible. An American 
gentleman who spent two years re- 
cently in Manitoba told the writer 
that he found many of the Sioux 
who were engaged in the Minnesota 
massacre living there peaceful and 
contented. " Wearing a red coat," 
said he, " I can travel alone from 
one end of the Territory to the other 
without danger of molestation." 

THE QUAKERS AND THE INDIANS. 

The failure of the Quaker spe- 
cific does not need to be dwelt 
upon. We have had under the 
Quaker management the most se- 
rious and bloody Indian wars that 
have afflicted the frontier for many 
years. Besides, there is scarce- 
ly a wild tribe of which some por- 
tion has not been in a state of hos- 
tility to a greater or less extent. 
There are itching palms among the 
Quakers as well as among the other 
religious denominations. What was 
needed was not men who made 
professions of peace or "made-up 
Quakers," who put on the Friendly 
drab for the occasion but men 
who practised honesty and fair- 
dealing. 

THE ARMY AND THE INDIANS. 

The worst elements of society 
on the frontier " wolfers," buffalo- 
hunters, trappers, guides, scouts, 



2OO 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



contractors, venders of poisonous 
whiskey, and keepers of frontier 
gambling-saloons may and gene- 
rally do desire Indian wars ; for to 
them they are a source of employ- 
ment and profit. Territorial offi- 
cials, their friends and clients, may 
desire a state of hostility, on ac- 
count of the money it causes to be 
expended in their districts, espe- 
cially if authority can be obtained 
to raise special forces. This, in 
addition to opportunities of profit, 
offers a means of augmenting and 
strengthening what is delicately 
termed " political " influence by a 
judicious distribution of patronage. 
It is not very long since a force 
was raised, in a certain frontier 
State, which, during an Indian war 
then raging, did not kill or cap- 
ture an Indian, inflict or receive a 
scratch, or fire a shot. This force, 
which was in service only for a few 
months, cost the country at large 
nearly two hundred thousand dol- 
lars. This was very pleasant for 
the force, very profitable to the 
State. No doubt a repetition of 
the experience would be agreeable 
at any time. It was not very eco- 
nomical or beneficial to the coun- 
try at large. But to suppose that 
the regular army desires wars with 
the Indian tribes is a very great 
mistake. Why should it ? To the 
army Indian wars are neither sour- 
ces of honor nor of profit. To it 
they only mean hard work, no glo- 
ry, increased personal expenditures 
without additional pay. For our 
hard-worked little army receives 
no field allowances. A member of 
the non-combatant branches of the 
military establishment can effect 
more toward his advancement in 
one campaign in Washington than 
can the live, the real soldiers, the 
fighting men, in five lustres of labo- 
rious and dangerous field-service in 



the Indian country. Operations 
against hostile tribes, though at- 
tended by exposure, hardship, suf- 
fering, and dangers to which civil- 
ized warfare presents no parallel, 
with the possibility of death by in- 
describable tortures in the event of 
capture, are not considered "war/' 
by certain gentlemen who sit at 
home at ease and enjoy, if they do 
not improve, each shining hour. 
Hundreds of brave men in blue 
may fall in Indian battle, crushed 
by the mere power of numbers ; but 
this, forsooth, is not " war." It is 
only wounds, or maiming for life 
without hope of recognition or re- 
ward, or death upon a battle-field 
to which glory is denied. 

THE TRANSFER OF THE INDIANS 
TO THE WAR DEPARTMENT. 

The transfer of the Indians to 
the War Department would be ad- 
vantageous, for a time, both to the 
government and the Indian, but it 
would be ruinous to the army. The 
Indian Ring would eventually either 
effect the abolition of the army al- 
together which would be bad 
enough or fill it with the material 
of which Indian traders and reser- 
vation sharks are made which 
would be still worse. The country 
cannot afford to risk the deteriora- 
tion or destruction of a class of of- 
ficials admitted on all hands to 
be among the most honorable and 
trustworthy servants of the govern- 
ment. 

CAUSES OF INDIAN WARS. 

The usual cause of Indian wars 
is want of good faith in carrying 
out the obligations of treaties. It 
is scarcely too much to say that we 
rarely, if ever, carry out treaty stip- 
ulations with Indians. The great 
majority of the people of the United 



A Glance at the Indian Question. 



201 



States wish to treat the Indian not 
only fairly, but kindly, generously, 
magnanimously. Money enough is 
appropriated, if it were judiciously 
and honestly expended. But the 
sums appropriated seem to become 
small by degrees and wonderfully 
less before they reach the Indian. 
It is not the interest of the Indian 
Ring to have the Indian question 
settled. 

The transgression of limits so- 
lemnly agreed upon has been al- 
ready mentioned. The lawless 
classes enumerated above steal In- 
dian ponies and do not scruple to 
kill an unoffending Indian occasion- 
ally. The Indian does not under- 
stand individual responsibility for 
crime. He holds the whole race 
or tribe accountable for the actions 
of one of its members, and avenges 
the killing of his brother on the 
first victim presented to him. 

Indian wars have doubtless been 
caused by more than usually grasp- 
ing traders whose rapacity has made 
the Indians discontented and dri- 
ven them from the reservations. 
We have read, at least, of cases in 
which numbers have been fed on 
paper in excess of the actual num- 
ber present on the reservation. 
We are told that in such cases, 
when an impending investigation 
has made discovery possible, the 
tribe is reported hostile and large 
numbers said to have left the agen- 
cy. The Indians who have lived 
quietly on the reservation, utterly 
unable to comprehend the forcible 
measures about to be adopted, 
suspicious as Indians always are, 
and supposing they are all to be 
killed, leave the reservation and 
go upon the war-path. 

THE FIRST STEP TOWARD PEACE. 

The first step toward bringing 
the Indian to a permanently peace- 



ful condition is to place in his 
country a military force strong 
enough to show him the utter mad- 
ness of keeping up the war. In 
general, a show of sufficient force is 
all that is necessary to bring the 
Indian to subjection. No one un- 
derstands the lesson of force better 
or applies it more readily than he. 
It is the only thing he respects or 
fears. Instead of doing this, how- 
ever, we place in the Indian coun- 
try meagre garrisons, barely able 
to protect themselves, and power- 
less for offensive operations. The 
Indian does not believe our state- 
ments of the numbers we could put 
in the field if we would. He thinks 
we are boasting, or as he plainly 
calls saying anything that is not 
exact truth lying. With the di- 
rectness of mind of a child of na- 
ture, he takes a plain, logical view 
of the situation, and cannot imagine 
that we have strength and do not 
use it, or, at least, exhibit it. Af- 
ter the annihilation of Custer on 
the Little Horn in 1876, and the 
retirement of all forces from the 
country between the Yellowstone 
and the Missouri, except four or 
five hundred infantry, the Indians 
at certain agencies, who sympathiz- 
ed and held constant communica- 
tion with the hostiles, thought they 
had succeeded in killing nearly all 
the white soldiers, and boasted 
that at length the Great Father in 
Washington would have to accede 
to their terms. There should be 
to-day 10,000 men in the Sioux 
country 6,000 infantry, 2,500 tho- 
roughly drilled and disciplined 
light cavalry (not raw boys from 
the great cities who can neither 
ride nor shoot, mounted on un- 
trained horses), and 1,500 light ar- 
tillery with light steel guns easily 
transportable over rough country, 
but possessing considerable com- 



202 



A Glance -at the Indian Question. 



parative length of range. Such a 
force would thoroughly complete 
the work done by the infantry amid 
the snow and ice of the past win- 
ter. It would be the most humane 
and least expensive mode of laying 
the indispensable foundation for 
further work toward the elevation 
and amelioration of the Indian's 
condition. Such a force would 
drive all the Indians between the 
Yellowstone and the British line to 
their agencies, with little, if any, 
loss of life. If the humanitarians 
would end the war with the least 
possible shedding of blood, this is 
the way to do it. When such a 
display of force is made as makes 
resistance hopeless and the In- 
dian will be quick to see it there 
will be an end of Indian wars and 
we may begin the work of civiliza- 
tion in earnest. 

THE MODE AND EXTENT OF INDIAN 
CIVILIZATION. 

We must not try to push the In- 
dian forward too fast. There is 
no use in trying to make the adult 
Indian of to-day an agricultur- 
ist, or to take him far out of the 
sphere in which he was brought up. 
Once the writer happened to be in 
company with a gentleman who 
has given some thought to the 
Indian question, and has had some 
experience of the Indian charac- 
ter, when a feathered and beaded 
warrior made his appearance. He 
was richly dressed scarlet cloth, 
eagle's feathers, profusely-beaded 
moccasins. " It is nonsense to 
expect such a creature as that to 
dig in mud and dirt," said our 
friend. " He would spoil his fine 
clothes and ruin his dainty mocca- 
sins." And there was much wis- 
dom in the remark. The best you 
can do with the adult Indian is 
to make him a stock-raiser. Give 



him good brood mares. Introduce 
good blood among his herds of 
ponies. 'Then find a market for 
his horses. Buy them for the cav- 
alry. Let him raise a certain pro- 
portion of mules, and let the gov- 
ernment buy them for the Quarter- 
master's Department. Encourage 
him to raise beef-cattle enough at 
least for his own consumption ; and 
if you can induce him to raise a 
surplus, buy the surplus for the 
Subsistence Department. Give the 
Indian a fair price for his produce. 
Dash down the monopoly of Indian 
trading. Allow any merchant of 
good standing to trade with the 
Indian, under proper restrictions as 
to exclusion of ammunition and 
spirituous liquors. Let the red man 
have the benefit of free-trade and 
competition. Ammunition should 
be furnished, when necessary, only 
by the Ordnance Department. 

Let the red man also have the 
same liberty of conscience which 
is accorded to the white, the black, 
and even the yellow. Let there 
be no more parcelling out of In- 
dians among jarring sects. Let 
them have. missionaries of their 
choice. 

Compel all children now under 
fourteen years to attend schools. 
Vary school exercises with the use 
of tools in the workshop or agricul- 
tural training in the field. Thus 
you may make some mechanics and 
some agriculturists out of the gen- 
eration now rising. You will have 
more out of the next generation. 
But you cannot make an agricultu- 
rist out of the grown-up Indian, 
nor a mechanic. It is folly to at- 
tempt it. You cannot reconcile to 
our nineteenth-century civilization 
those who have grown up to matu- 
rity with the ideas, manners, and 
morals of the heroic ages. You 
can no more expect Crazy Horse 



Charles Lever at Home. 



203 



to use the shovel and the hoe than 
you could Achilles and Tydides 
Diomed to plant melons or beans. 

THE ONE GREAT REMEDY, AND THE 
HOPELESSNESS OF ITS APPLICA- 
TION. 

The remedy of remedies is com- 
mon honesty in our dealings with 
the Indian, backed by a force 
strong enough and always ready to 
promptly crush any attempt at re- 
volt, and punish speedily and se- 
verely every act of lawlessness 
committed by an Indian. But 
too many are interested in keeping 
up the present system to warrant 
even the slenderest hope of any 
radical change. To put it in crude 



frontier terms : " There is too 
much money in it." Politicasters, 
capitalists, contractors, sub-con- 
tractors, agents, traders, agency em- 
ployes, " squaw-men " or degrad- 
ed whites who live in a state of 
concubinage with Indian women, 
and who are generally tools and 
touters for the traders hosts of 
sinecurists and their friends, find 
" money in it." The links of the 
ring are legion. It is too strong. 
It can shelve or crush any man 
with honesty and boldness enough 
to attack the system. It is too 
strong for the commissioner or the 
secretary. It is to be feared that 
it may prove too strong for the 
country. 



CHARLES LEVER AT HOME. 



THE man whose rollicking pen 
has made more dragoons than all 
the recruiting-sergeants in her 
Britannic Majesty's service; who 
has " promoted" the " Connaught 
Rangers" and Faugh a ballaghs into 
corps (Cttite ; who has broken more 
bones across country than the six- 
foot stone walls of Connemara ; 
whose pictures of that land " which 
smiles through her tears like a sun- 
beam in showers " are as racy of the 
soil as her own emerald shamrock ; 
who has painted Irish girls pure as 
angels' whispers, bright as saucy 
streamlets, and the " boys " a be- 
wildering compound of fun, fight, 
frolic, and " divarshin " ; whose ca- 
reer was as stainless as his suc- 
cess was merited, and whose mem- 
ory is an heirloom was born in 
the city of Dublin in the year of 
grace 1806. Graduating at Cam- 
bridge University, and subsequent- 
ly at the /-niversity of Gottingen, 



his student-life betrayed no symp- 
toms of the mental dan which was 
to distinguish him later on, and, 
save for its Bohemian ism, was ab- 
solutely colorless, and even dull. 
The boy was not father to the man. 
Selecting the medical profession as 
much by chance as predilection, he 
succeeded, during the visitation of 
cholera in 1832, in obtaining an 
appointment as medical superin- 
tendent in the northwest of Ire- 
land, in the districts of Londonderry 
and Coleraine, and for a time con- 
tinued to " guess at prescriptions, 
invent ingredients," and generally 
administer to the requirements of 
afflicted humanity. But the task 
was uncongenial, the life a dead- 
level, flavored with no spice of va- 
riety, uncheckered in its monotonous 
routine. It was a " bad billet, an' 
no Christian man cud live in it, 
barrin' a say-gull or a dispinsiry 
docthor." Doctor Lever ! pshaw ! 



2O4 



Charles Lever at Home. 



Charley Lever ; who ever thinks of 
the author of Harry Lorrequer 
as Doctor Lever? Nevertheless, 
his experiences at this period bore 
him rich fruit in the after-time, and 
in Billy Traynor, " poet, peddler, 
and physician" {The Fortunes of 
Glencore), we have a type of the 
medical men with whom he was 
then associated. " I am the nearest 
thing to a doctor going," says Billy. 
" I can breathe a vein against any 
man in the barony. I can't say 
that for any articular congestion 
of the aortis valve, or for a sero- 
pulmonic diathesis, d'ye mind, that 
there isn't as good as me ; but for 
the ould school of physic, the hu- 
moral diagnostic touch, who can 
beat me ?" The hedge doctor and 
hedge schoolmaster, pedants both, 
are now an institution of the past. 

Charles Lever, however, was not 
destined to blush unseen or waste 
his sweetness on a country practice. 
Appointed to the Legation at Brus- 
sels, he bounded from the dreary 
drudgery of a dispensary to the 
glittering gayety of an embassy, 
from the hideous squalor of the 
fever-reeking cabin to the coquet- 
tish gravity of the palatial sick- 
room. In u Belgium's capital " the 
cacoethes scribendi seized him, and 
the result was Harry Lorrequer. 
He awoke, and, like Lord Byron, 
found himself famous. The dis- 
tinct portraiture, the brilliant style, 
the thoroughly Hibernian ensemble, 
claimed a well-merited success for 
the book, and, written at the right 
moment how many good works 
have perished by being floated on 
an ebb tide ! the public, who had 
hitherto accepted Ireland through 
the clever but trashy effusions of 
Lady Morgan, and the more genuine 
metal of Maria Edgeworth and Sam- 
uel Lover, joyously turned towards 
the rising sun, and, seizing upon 



this genuine bit of shillelah, clam- 
orously demanded a fresh sprig 
from the same tree. The wild clash, 
as exhilarating as " mountain dew," 
the breezy freshness, the gay aban- 
don of society and soldiering, the 
" moving accidents by flood and 
field," acted upon the jaded palates 
of the British public like a tonic, 
and Harry Lorrequer, instead of 
being treated as an entree, became 
respected as the pihe de resistance. 
Harry's appearance on parade with 
the Othello blacking still upon his 
face ; Miss Betty O'Dowd's visit to 
Callonby on the " low-backed car " ; 
her desire of disowning the non- 
descript vehicle, and its being an- 
nounced by her shock-headed re- 
tainer as " the thing you know is 
at the doore " ; the description 
of boarding-house life in Dublin 
sixty years ago ; Mrs. Clanfrizzle's, 
in Molesworth Street the establish- 
ment is still in existence, and may 
be recognized in Lisle House ; the 
" amateur hotel," so graphically de- 
scribed by Mr. Lever; the pic- 
ture of " dear, dirty Dublin" itself: 

" Oh ! Dublin, sure there is no doubtin', 

Beats every city upon the say ; 
'Tis there you'll see O'Connell spoutin 1 

And Lady Morgan making tay " ; 

a night at Howth ; the Knight of 
Kerry and Billy McCabe form a 
succession of sketches teeming 
with vivacity, humor, and wit, and 
dashed off with a pen which almost 
makes a steeplechaser of the reader, 
so exciting and so rapid is the pace. 
To Lever's official career at 
Brussels we are indebted for several 
diplomatic portraits, notably those 
of Sir Horace Upton ( The Fortunes 
of Glencore] and Sir Shally Double- 
ton (A Day's Ride] j the former of 
" a very composite order of human 
architecture, chivalrous in senti- 
ment and cunning in action, noble 



Charles Lever at Home, 



205 



in aspiration and utterly sceptical 
as regards motives, deep enough 
for a ministerial dinner and fast 
enough for a party of young guards- 
men at Greenwich," and the latter 
who could receive a Foreign Office 
" swell " thus : " Possibly your name 
may not be Paynter, sir; but you 
are evidently before me for the first 
time, or you would know that, like 
my great colleague and friend, 
Prince Metternich, I have made it a 
rule tli rough life never to burden 
my memory with what can be 
spared it, and of these are the pa- 
tronymics of all subordinate peo- 
ple; for this reason, sir, and to this 
end, every cook in my establishment 
answers to the name of Honore", 
my valet is always Pierre, my coach- 
man Jacob, and all Foreign Office 
messengers I call Paynter." Upon 
the small-fry of diplomacy Mr. 
Lever is occasionally very severe, 
and his pictures of life at Hesse 
Kalbbratonstadt and similar un- 
pronounceable principalities are as 
amusing as they are possibly real- 
istic. 

The success of Harry Lorreqiier 
set its author at quill-driving in the 
same direction, and Charles C? Mai- 
ley, or The Irish Dragoon, was given 
to the world. The very name 
sounds " boot and saddle " rings of 
the spur and clanks of the sabre. 
What a romance : the high-spirit- 
ed lad who leads his rival to the 
jaws of the grave in the hunting- 
field, and follows him in a ride of 
death against the unbroken front 
of Cambronne's battalions on the 
blood-stained field of Waterloo ! 
What a picture of the old Penin- 
sular days ! What portraits of Le 
petit Caporal, as the French army 
loved to call Napoleon, of the " Iron 
Duke," the gallant Picton, and the 
great captains of that eventful pe- 
riod ! What glimpses of dark-eyed 



seiioritas and haughty hidalgos ; of 
lion-hearted sons of Erin charging 
to the cry of Faugh a ballagh, and 
leading forlorn hopes with saucy 
jokes upon their laughing lips; of 
" Connaught Robbers," as the Con- 
naught Rangers were jocosely call- 
ed, on account of the number of pri- 
soners which they invariably made, 
and for the most part single-hand- 
ed ; of Brussels the night before Wa- 
terloo ; and of the Duchess of Rich- 
mond's celebrated ball : 

" There was a sound of revelry by night, 
And Belgium's capital had gathered then 
Her beauty and her chivalry, and bright 
The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave 
men." 

What pictures of old Ireland of 
Daly's Club-House, the resort of 
the Irish members in College Green, 
still standing, but now converted 
into insurance offices. " I never 
pass the old club," said Sir Thomas 
Staples, the last surviving member 
of the Irish House of Commons, to 
the writer, " without picturing it as 
I remember it, when Grattan, and 
Curran, and Ireland's best blood 
strolled in after a fiery debate, or 
rushed out on the whisper of that 
awful word, 'division.' Very lit- 
tle would restore Daly's to its ori- 
ginal shape ; and who knows but it 
may yet be revived, if repeal of the 
Union be carried ?" Sir Thomas 
Staples is dead some years, and the 
Home-Rule question had not come 
to the front whilst he was yet num- 
bered amongst the living. Shall we 
behold an Irish Parliament sitting 
once again in College Green ? Shall 
Daly's club be restored to its for- 
mer splendor ? Shall we see Mr. 
Butt, Mr. Sullivan, Mr. Mitchell 
Henry, with many other earnest 
sons of Ireland, enrolled amongst 
its members ? 

Who can forget the account of 
Godfrey O'Malley's election, when, 



2O6 



Charles Lever at Home. 



in order to avoid arrest for debt, 
he announced his own death in 
the papers, and, having travelled 
in the hearse to Connemara, reach- 
ed his stronghold in the west, 
where bailiffs and process-servers 
foolhardy enough to cross the Shan- 
non were compelled to eat their 
own writs under penalty of tar 
and feathers, and from whence he 
triumphantly addressed his con- 
stituents, appealing to their sympa- 
thies and support on the very pow- 
erful plea of having died for them ? 
There is a story extant of Jackey 
Barrett which has not travelled far, 
if at all, beyond the walls of Trini- 
ty. Upon one occasion the vice- 
provost was dining off roast turkey 
in the glorious old Commons Hall, 
and next to him sat his nephew, the 
heir expectant to his enormous 
wealth. The turkey was somewhat 
underdone, and the nephew sent 
the drumsticks to be devilled. 
Some little delay occurred, which 
caused the vice-provost to observe 
to his kinsman with a malicious 
grin : " That devil is keeping you 
a long time waiting." " Not half as 
long as you are keeping the devil 
waiting," was the retort. Jackey 
never forgave him. What a crea- 
tion is Mickey Free, that devoted, 
warm-hearted, rollicking Irish fol- 
lower, that son of song and story, 
who, by his own account, sang duets 
with the commander-in-chief in the 
Peninsula, and wore a masterpiece 
of Murillo for a seat to his trousers ! 
Mickey was quoted recently, dur- 
ing a debate in the British House 
of Commons on the Eastern question 
by Major O'Gorman, the jester-in- 
chief, vice Mr. Bernal Osborne, the 
rejected of Irish constituencies: 



; For I haven't a janius for work 

It was never a gift of the Bradies ; 
But I'd make a most illigant Turk, 
For I'm fond of tobacco and ladies." 



The House roared, and even Mr. 
Disraeli, that was, allowed his 
parchment visage to snap into smil- 
ing. Charles Lever informed the 
writer that he originally intended 
Mickey Free for a mere stage ser- 
vant, who comes on with a tray or 
exits with a chair or a table ; but 
upon discovering that Mr. Free had 
made his mark he wrote him up. 
" I never could give a publisher a 
complete novel all at once," said 
Mr. Lever, " although I have been 
offered very large sums of money 
for one ; I always wait to see how 
my public like me, and write from 
month to month, trimming my sails 
to suit the popular br,eeze." 

Charles O'Malley was a brilliant 
success. A spirit of martial enthu- 
siasm inflated the minds of the ris- 
ing generation, until to be a dragoon 
became the day-dream of existence, 
and many an embryo warrior who 
failed in obtaining a commission 
compromised with a cruel destiny 
by accepting the queen's shilling. 
The charm of the book is com- 
plete ; and for break-neck, dashing 
narrative, for wit, sparkle, and 
genuine Irish drollery, interspersed 
here and there with tender touches 
of pathos and soft gray tones of 
sorrow, Charles O'Malley stands unJ 
rivalled, and will hold its own when 
hundreds of so-called Irish roman- 
ces shall have returned to the dust 
out of which they should never 
have emerged, even into a spas- 
modic vitality. 

Perhaps the only smart thing 
ever uttered by King George III. 
was when he taxed Sheridan with 
being afraid of the author of the 
School for Scandal ; and perhaps 
Lever was afraid of the author of 
Charles O'Malley, as he published 
Con Cregan, Maurice Tiernay, Sir 
Jasper Carew, and one or two other 
novels anonymously; but a quick- 



Charles Lever at Home. 



207 



witted public, detecting the ring of 
the true metal, compelled " Harry 
Lorrequer " to stand revealed. No- 
vel followed novel in quick succes- 
sion, Ireland providing the mine from 
which he dug his golden ore ; and 
although he carries his readers to 
fairer climes and sunnier skies, 
somehow or other he contrives to 
land them safely and soundly in 
the "ould counthry " at last. We 
have not space, nor is it our pro- 
vince, to deal with Lever's works 
in detail. No modern productions 
of fiction have gained a greater or 
more popular reputation for their 
writer. By no Irish author is he 
equalled in Irish humor, by no au- 
thor is he surpassed in unwearying 
narrative. The foreign tone infus- 
ed into some of his later produc- 
tions is due to his residence in 
Italy. " You wish to have nothing 
to do, Lever? There is eight hun- 
dred a year; go and do it," said the 
late Lord Derby, bestowing the vice- 
consulship of Spezzia upon him. 
Later on he was promoted to 
Trieste. 

For a time Charles Lever edited 
the Dublin University Magazine, 
then a coruscation of all that was 
brilliant in literature. He resided 
at the village of Templeogue, situat- 
ed in the lap of the Dublin moun- 
tains, with Sugar Loaf at one ex- 
tremity, and Mount Pelier, with its 
ruined castle renowned for the or- 
gies of the infamously-celebrated 
"Hell-fire Club," at the other. 
Templeogue Lodge was the Mecca 
towards which all " choice spirits " 
devoutly turned, and the wit, repar- 
tee, song, jest, and story circulated 
within its walls made the Nodes Am- 
brosiana but dull affairs in compari- 
son. " One little room rises to recol- 
lection, with its quaint old sideboard 
of carved oak, its dark-brown cabi- 
nets, curiously sculptured, its heavy 



old brocade curtains, and all its 
queer devices of knick-knackery, 
where such meetings were once held, 
and where, throwing off the cares 
of life shut out from them, as it 
were, by the massive folds of the 
heavy drapery across the door we 
talked in all the fearless freedom 
of old friendship." There are a 
few still surviving who will recog- 
nize that room, and recall with a 
throb of painful pleasure the nights 
at the little lodge at Templeogue. 

Lever was fond of portraying ban- 
ished heroes, misanthropes men 
who had dug their own graves, or, 
overtaken by some whirlwind of 
misfortune, " gave signs that all was 
lost." The character of Lord 
Glencore is admirably drawn, and 
his life of torture in his mad cry for 
vengeance fearfully vivid. Luttrell 
of Arran is the story of a disap- 
pointed life, from out of which 
springs a bright flower of maiden- 
hood Kate, one of Lever's most 
charming creations. Again, we 
have the Knight of Gwynne, over 
whose gentle head wave after 
wave of hard fortune pitilessly 
breaks, and, driven from the lordly 
home of his ancestors to a sheeling 
by the sad sea wave, he is as 
cheerful in adversity as he was no- 
ble in prosperity. The portrait of 
the fire-eating Bagenal Daly is not 
overdrawn, and the introduction of 
Freeny the robber, although highly 
melodramatic, is not only possible 
but probable. Freeny 's " charac- 
ter " stood remarkably high. He 
would rob a rich miser to save a 
poor family from starvation, and 
his word was as good as his bond ; 
'98 turned many a man upon the 
king's highway who, but for being 
"out," would have lived respecting 
and respected. The Martins of 
Cro 1 Martin is another ghastly 
narrative of the wreck and ruin of 



208 



Char.les Lever at Home. 



a proud old Irish race. It is " an 
owre true " story. A few miles 
outside of the town of Gahvay, on 
the road to Oughterard, stand two 
gaunt pillars surmounted by gran- 
ite globes. The gates have disap- 
peared, as also the armorial bearings; 
but this was formerly the entrance 
to Ballinahinch, the seat of the 
" ould, anshint " Martins, and from 
that gate to Ballinahinch Castle 
was a drive of forty Irish miles. 
The castle, situated in one of the 
loneliest and loveliest valleys in 
Connemara, was maintained in a 
style of regal magnificence, the sta- 
bles, marble-stalled, affording ac- 
commodation for sixty hunters. On 
an island, in the centre of a small 
lake opposite the castle, stands 
a desolate, half-ruined keep, with- 
in the four walls of which such 
of his retainers or neighbors as 
proved refractory were imprisoned 
by " The Martin " of the period. 
Recklessness and improvidence 
scattered the broad acres, mortgage 
overlapped mortgage, and every 
inch of the grand old estate became 
the property of the London Law 
Life Assurance Society. Notably 
the last of the family was Richard 
Martin, commonly known as ''Hu- 
manity Dick," in reference to a 
bill introduced by him into the 
British House of Commons for the 
repression of cruelty to animals. 
Upon the occasion of its introduc- 
tion the English members essayed 
to cough him down. " I perceive," 
said Mr. Martin, " that many of 
you seem troubled with severe 
coughs ; now, if any one gentleman 
will cough distinctly, so that I may 
be able to recognize him, I can 
give him a pill which may, perhaps, 
effectually prevent his ever being 
again troubled with a cough on this 
side of the grave." Mr. Martin's 
prescription was at once effectual. 



With " Humanity Dick's " grand- 
daughter perished the race ; and 
her name is still breathed in Con- 
nemara as a prayer, as one " who 
never opened a cabin-door with- 
out a blessing, nor closed it but to 
shut hope within." The farm-house 
where she was nursed is still fond- 
ly pointed out, and "Miss Martin's 
lep " she was a superb horsewo- 
man is proudly shown to every 
" spalpeen " of an Englishman who 
travels that wild, bleak, and deso- 
late road between Oughterard and 
Clifden. Mr. Lever, with that ma- 
gic all his own, has told the sad story. 
His Mary Martin is but the portrait 
of that fair young Irish girl who 
dearly loved " her people " unto the 
last, and who, in the bright blossom 
of her life, died an exile from that 
western home which was at once 
her idol and her pride. Where but 
in Ireland could this sad and so- 
lemn gathering around the bedside 
of a dying girl take place? 

" And yet there was a vast multitude 
of people there. The whole surface of 
the lawn that sloped from the cottage to 
the river was densely crowded with every 
age, from the oldest to the very infancy ; 
with all conditions, from the well-clad 
peasant to the humblest ' tramper ' of 
the highroads. Weariness, exhaustion, 
and even hunger were depicted on many 
of their faces. Some had passed the 
night there, others had come long dis- 
tances, faint and foot-sore ; but, as they 
sat, stood, or lay in groups around, not 
a murmur, not a whisper, escaped them. 
With aching eyes they looked towards an 
open window where the muslin curtains 
were gently stirred in the faint air. The 
tidings of Mary Martin's illness had 
spread rapidly ; far-away glens down the 
coast, lonely cabins on the bleak moun- 
tains, wild, remote spots out of human 
intercourse, had heard the news, and their 
dwellers had travelled many a mile to 
satisfy their aching hearts." 

This is Ireland. This is the un- 
dying affection of the people for 



Charles Lever at Home. 



209 



the " rale ould stock." This is the 
imperishable sentiment, as fresh at 
this hour as the emerald verdure 
upon the summit of Croagh Patrick. 

In A Days Ride : a Life's Ro- 
mance, Mr. Lever has given us Al- 
gernon Sydney Potts one of those 
romantic visionaries who believe 
in destiny, bow to their .Kismet, 
and, going with the tide, clothe the 
meanest accidents of life in dreamy 
panoply. The adventures which 
befall the Dublin apothecary's son, 
from his ride in Wicklow to his im- 
prisonment in an Austrian fortress, 
are as varied as they are exciting, 
and we are strongly inclined to be- 
lieve that Lever, "letting off "a good 
deal of Bohemia, is at his best in 
the wild vagaries of this reckless 
day-dreamer. Tom Burke tf Ours 
is a dashing military story, as is 
also y^ack Hinton, the Guardsman. 
The (? Donoghue is charmingly 
written and is thoroughly Irish. 
That Boy of Norcotfs is unsatisfac- 
tory. Commencing in Ireland, it 
wanders from the old country with 
the evident intention of returning to 
it ; but a change came o'er the spirit 
of the author's dream, and it bears 
all the imprint of having been has- 
tily written, a changed venue, and 
of being " hurried up " at its con- 
clusion. Sir Brook Fosbrooke, on 
the other kand, bears traces of the 
utmost care, the details of char- 
acter being worked out with mi- 
croscopic minuteness. The old 
lord chief-justice is supposed to 
have been meant for Lord Chief- 
Justice Lefroy, of the Court of 
Queen's Bench in Ireland, who died 
at a very advanced age a few years 
since, in full possession of the as- 
tounding legal acumen which mark- 
ed his extended career at the bar, 
and subsequently upon the bench. 

The writer spent a long-to-be- 
remembered day with Charles Le- 
VOL. xxvi. 14 



ver in the April before his death. 
He was stopping in Dublin at Mor- 
rison's Hotel, Dawson Street. We 
found him seated at an open win- 
dow, a bottle of claret at his right 
hand and the proof-sheets of Lord 
Kilgobbin before him. It was a 
beautiful morning borrowed from 
the month of May; the hawthorns 
in the college park were just be- 
ginning to bloom, and nature was 
young and warm and lovely. 

At the date of our visit he looked 
a hale, hearty, laughter-loving man 
of sixty. There was mirth in his 
gray eye, joviality in the wink that 
twittered on his eyelid, saucy hu- 
mor in his smile, and bon mot, wit r 
repartee, and rejoinder in every 
movement of his lips. His hair 
very thin, but of a silky brown, fell' 
across his forehead, and when it 
curtained his eyes he would jerk 
back his head this, too, at some- 
telling crisis in a narrative when the 
particular action was just the exact 
finish required to make the story 
perfect. Mr. Lever's teeth were 
all his own, and very brilliant, and, 
whether from habit or accident, he 
flashed them upon us in company 
with his wonderful eyes a battery 
at once both powerful and irresis- 
tible. He spoke slowly at first, but 
warming to his work, and candying 
an idea in a short, contagious, mu- 
sical laugh, his story told itself all 
too rapidly, and the light burned 
out with such a glare as to intensify 
the succeeding darkness. Like all 
good raconteurs, he addressed him- 
self deferentially to his auditor in 
the beginning, and as soon as the 
fish was hooked, the attention en- 
thralled, he would speak as if think- 
ing aloud. Mr. Lever made great 
use of his hands, which were small 
and white and delicate as those of 
a woman. He made play with 
them threw them up in ecstasy or 



2IO 



Charles Lever at Home. 



wrung them in mournfulness, just 
as the action of the moment de- 
manded. He did not require eyes 
or teeth with such a voice and such 
hands; they could tell and illus- 
trate the workings of his brain. 
He was somewhat careless in his 
dress, but clung to the tradition- 
al high shirt-collar, merely com- 
promising the unswerving stock of 
the Bruramel period. " I stick to 
my Irish shoes," he said, thrusting 
upwards about as uncompromising 
a " bit of leather " as we have ever 
set eyes on right under our nose, 
"and until a few years ago I got them 
from a descendant of the celebrated 
Count Lally, who cobbled at Let- 
terkenny. There is no shoe in the 
world equal to the Irish brogue." 

" You are ' taking time by the 
forelock,' as we say in the play," 
:said the writer, pointing to the 
rough copy of the Cornhill Magazine, 
in which the story was running. 

" Always at the heel of the hunt," 
he replied. " This is the May num- 
ber, and not corrected yet." 

" I consider Lord Kilgobbin as 
good as, if not better than, anything 
you have written." 

There was unutterable sadness 
in his tone and gesture as he said, 
with a weary sigh : 

" Ah ! I have been tilting the 
cask so long that the lees are com- 
ing out very muddy." 

" Which of your novels do you 
like best?" was asked. 

" Well, my most careful work is 
Sir Brook Fosbrooke, but I prefer the 
Dodd Family Abroad, and all for 
the sake of Carry Dodd, who is my 
ideal of a pure, bright, charming 
Irish girl." 

Further on : 

" You are the same reckless, rol- 
licking, warm-hearted, improvident 
;people as when I left you, and the 
lower orders entertain the same ha- 
tred of Saxon supremacy. I was 



walking down College Green yes- 
terday, and as \ stood opposite the 
old Parliament House, a troop of 
dragoons, in all their panoply of 
glancing helmets, blood-red coats, 
and prancing steeds, trotted past. 
A ragged, tatterdemalion carman 
was feeding a horse only fit for the 
knacker's yard, attached to an out- 
side car, with a wisp of hay. 

" ' What regiment is that ?' I ask- 
ed, partly from curiosity, partly for 
the sake of a conversation. 

" ' Sorra a know I kno\v,' was 
the gruff response. 

" ' Where are they going to ?' 

" Without raising his head, and 
giving a vicious chuck to the hay : 

" ' To h 1, I hope.' 

" I will give you another illus- 
tration," continued Mr. Lever, " of 
how determinedly the lower order 
of my countrymen disparage any- 
thing and everything English. I 
was invited to spend some days 
with the late Lord Carlisle, twice 
your Lord Lieutenant, at Castle 
Howard, in Yorkshire. I had at 
that time an Irish servant, a son of 
Corny Delany, to whom grumbling 
was chronic. As we drove through 
the magnificent avenue beneath the 
extending branches of giant oaks 
and lordly elms, I observed to my 
follower: 'What do you think of 
those trees ?' 

"'I see thim.' 

" ' Are they not splendid ?' 

" ' Och ! threes is threes any- 
where.' 

" ' But the Howards are proud of 
these trees; they are the finest in 
England. Lord Carlisle sets great 
store by them.' 

"'Arrah, thin, why wudn't he 
have the hoighth av fine threes? 
Shure hadn't he the pick av the 
P hay nix Park f 

"I was dining with Judge 

on Sunday, who, as you know, is 
a very diminutive, shrivelled-up- 



Charles Lever at Home. 



211 



looking little man," continued Mr. 
Lever, " and he told me an amus- 
ing story. When attorney-general, 
he purchased an estate in Tippe- 
rary near Clonmel. Shortly after 
the purchase he resolved upon pay- 
ing the place a visit to take a look 
at his recent acquisition. As he 
was proceeding with his agent 
through a boreen which led to 
mearings of his property, he over- 
heard the following conversation 
between two old women : 

" ' Wisha, thin, d'ye tell me that's 
the new landlord, Missis Mulligan ?' 
" ' Sorra a lie in it, ma'am.' 
"'That dawny little bit av a 
crayture ?' 

" 'A leprechaun, no less.' 
" ' Why, begorra, the boys might as 
well be shoo tin at a jacksnife.' " 

Mr. Lever's conversational pow- 
ers were simply marvellous ; his 
anecdotes fell like ripe fruit from 
an overladen tree. In London his 
great delight was a night at the Cos- 
mopolitan Club, Berkeley Square. 
This club is only open upon Wed- 
nesday and Sunday nights during 
the Parliamentary session. The 
members stroll in from eleven 
o'clock at night to about three 
o'clock A.M. Cabinet ministers, 
ambassadors of all nations, mem- 
bers of the legislature, eminent 
litterateurs, Royal Academicians, 
repair thither for a gossip ; and 
here, amidst the best talkers in the 
world, Charles Lever stood pre- 
eminent. As the wits and racon- 
teurs at Will's Coffee House were si- 
lent whilst Joseph Addison talked 
Spectator, so the members of the 
Cosmopolitan maintained a breath- 
less attention when Charles Lever 
talked Cornelius O ' Dowd ; and many 
a man has "dined out considera- 
bly " upon a mot, and has, perhaps, 
established a reputation, by the re- 
tailing of an anecdote recounted 
within the salons of the club by 



the inimitable and fascinating " Har- 
ry Lorrequer." When the writer 
parted with Lever upon that even- 
ing, he felt justifiably elated at be- 
ing enabled to amuse, if not aston- 
ish, the most brilliant man of the 
day, but, upon a rigid self-examina- 
tion, was somewhat disappointed 
upon discovering that, instead of 
his having been engaged in enter- 
taining Lever, Lever had been en- 
tertaining ///>//, and that he had not 
uttered a single sentence out of 
the veriest commonplace. Such 
was the charm of Lever's manner 
that he took you, as it were, from 
out yourself, and for the time in- 
fused his own groove of thought, 
causing your ideas to mingle with 
his and float joyously onward upon 
the glittering current of his conver- 
sation. Lever was a devoted wor- 
shipper of the " sad solemnities of 
whist," playing rubber after rubber 
up to any and all hours. It is re- 
lated that an eminent wearer of the 
ermine, a fellow of Trinity College, 
a gallant field officer, and Lever 
met, dined early, and played whist 
until the hour at which the train 
departed for Kingston by which 
" Harry Lorrequer" was to leave 
en route for London. " Come on 
to Kingston," said Lever, " sleep 
at the Anglesea Arms Hotel, and I 
will not go until the morning boat." 
They played all night and until 
one o'clock next day. Si non e vero 
e ben trovato, but the writer has the 
story from unimpeachable authority. 

Charles Lever's last novel, con- 
cluded shortly before his death, is 
Lord Kilgobbin. Let its unutter- 
ably sad preface speak for itself: 

" To the memory of one whose 
companionship made the happiness 
of a long life, and whose loss has 
made me helpless, I dedicate this 
book, written in breaking health 
and broken spirits. The task that 
once was my joy and my pride I have 



212 



Order. 



lived to find associated with my sor- 
row. It is not, then, without a cause 
I say, I hope this effort may be my 
last. TRIESTE. January 20, 1872." 
It is with a pang of regret that 
we peruse the Cornelius CfDowd 
papers. They are tinged with that 
abominable spirit which is sending 
Italy at the present hour to perdi- 
tion, and we greatly fear that Mr. 
Lever wrote them for the London 
market. He was no bigot, how- 
ever; on the contrary, his life was 
passed amongst Catholics, and his 
dearest and best friends were of the 
true church ; consequently, the pain 
is intensified when we come to 
stand face to face with the fact that 
these papers were, if not the out- 
come of a pecuniary necessity, at 
least the result of a craving for 
money, and the hollow effusions of a 
hirelingpen. His Italian sojourn led 
him gradually away from the more 
kindly tone towards Catholics which 
pervaded his earlier Irish novels. 



Lever and Griffin have been 
compared as writers of Irish fic- 
tion. We would rather have been 
the author of The Collegians than 
of any work of Mr. Lever's. There 
is a virgin simplicity in Gerald 
Griffin's style that " Harry Lorre- 
quer " could not touch ; an atmos- 
phere which he could not breathe ; 
a purity which, while the morale 
of Lever's writings is unimpeach- 
able, is of that order that is so 
rarely attained by the most chaste 
and most elevated amongst our 
writers of fiction. Griffin's Irish 
is not stagy it is real ; so, too, is 
Lever's. But while the former 
paints the portrait, leaving the im- 
agination of the reader to put in 
the finishing touches, the latter 
rubs in a laugh here or a keen 
thrust there, so as to dramatize 
the picture ; and, while it is more 
vivid during perusal, the mind falls 
back upon the other for less excit- 
ing pabulum. 



ORDER. 

FROM A POEM BY ST. FRANCIS D*ASSISI. 

Our Lord Speaks: 

AND though I fill thy heart with warmest love, 
Yet in true order must thy heart love me ; 
For without order can no virtue be. 
By thine own virtue, then, I from above 
Stand in thy soul ; and so, most earnestly, 
Must love from turmoil be kept wholly free. 
The life of fruitful trees, the seasons of 
The circling year, move gently as a dove. 
I measured all the things upon the earth; 

Love ordered them, and order kept them fair, 

And love to order must be truly wed. 
O soul! why all this heat of little worth ? 

Why cast out order with no thought or care ? 
For by love's warmth must love be governed. 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



213 



THE LITTLE CHAPEL AT MONAMULLIN. 



SITUATED in the wildest portion 
of the county of Mayo, Monamul- 
lin, at the date upon which this 
story opens, mustered about forty 
mud-cabins erected here and there, 
and in such positions as were deem- 
ed most suitable, having regard 
to the cruel winds from the ocean, 
and the "bit o' ground" for the 
cultivation of the potatoes. 

A cottage covered with a crisp 
amber thatch, and whitewashed 
to the color of the driven snow, 
held the post of honor in the vil- 
lage. It boasted a flower-garden 
in front and a vegetable patch in 
the rear. Moreover, it was guarded 
by a neatly-cropped privet hedge, 
while a little green gate admitted 
to a red-bricked pathway leading 
to a rustic porch adorned with 
roses that seemingly bloomed the 
whole year round, and a Virginia 
creeper whose leaves were now the 
hue of blood. 

In the front garden, his head 
bared, the rays of the setting sun 
surrounding it as with an aureole, 
' stalked a man attired in the black 
flowing soutane of a Catholic cler- 
gyman. 

Father Maurice O'Donnell, the 
parish priest, was engaged in read- 
ing his office from a tattered and 
dog's-eared breviary. Tall and thin 
almost to emaciation, there was yet 
a wiry swing in his gaunt frame that 
spoke of unfaded vigor, whilst the 
glowing fire in the dark blue eye 
told its own tale. 

" Father Maurice" was loved and 
cherished by his little flock. His 
every want and his wants were few 
enough was anxiously anticipated. 
His patch of oats was tilled, weed- 



ed, cut, and stacked, his cottage 
thatched and whitewashed, his po- 
tatoes planted, his pony treated as 
common property in so far as fod- 
der was concerned, while upon fast- 
days the " finest lump av a salmin" 
or the "illigantest" turbot, ever 
found its way to the back door of 
" The House, " as his humble abode 
was somewhat grandiloquently 
styled. 

Maurice O'Donnell was wrapped 
tip in his flock. In good sooth he 
was their shepherd. Night, noon, 
and morning found him ever watch- 
ful at " the gate in the vineyard 
wall." He was the depositary of 
all their griefs, the sharer in all 
their joys their guide, philosopher, 
and friend. In worldly matters he 
was simple as a child. Living, as 
he did, out of the world, he was 
perfectly contented to learn what 
was whirling round within it from 
the pages of the Nation, from the 
columns of which it was his prac- 
tice to read aloud on Sunday after- 
noon to a very large muster, if 
not to the entire adult population, 
of Monamullin in summer time 
seated in a coign of vantage by 
the sad sea wave, in winter oppo- 
site a rousing turf fire laid on es- 
pecially for the important occasion, 
and with a great display of cere- 
mony by his housekeeper, " an 
ould widdy wumman" rejoicing in 
the name of Clancy, whose husband 
had been lost at sea in the night of 
" the great storm." 

Father Maurice never asked for 
money he had no occasion for it. 
His solitary extravagance was snuff, 
and the most sedulous care was 
taken by the " boys " returning from 



214 



The Little Chapel at Monamnllin. 



Castlebar or Westport to fetch 
back a supply of " high toast, " in 
order that his " riverince's box " 
might stand constantly replenished. 

Upon this particular August 
evening Father Maurice was hur- 
rying through his office with as 
much rapidity as the solemn nature 
of the duty would permit, as a drive 
of no less than seven honest Irish 
miles lay between him and his din- 
ner. 

The even tenor of his life had 
been broken in upon by an invita- 
tion to dine and sleep at the pa- 
latial residence of Mr. Jocelyn 
Jyvecote, a Yorkshire squire, who 
had purchased the old acres of the 
Blakes of Ballinacor, and who had 
recently expended a fabulous sum 
in erecting a castle upon the edge 
of a gloomy lake in the desolate 
valley of Glendhanarrahsheen. In 
his letter of invitation Mr. Jyvecote 
had said : " I am extremely desirous 
of introducing my youngest daugh- 
ter to you, as she has taken it into 
her head to go over to your church ; 
and, since you are so devoted to 
her interests, I beg of you to accept 
this invitation as you would under- 
take a little extra duty." 

To decline would be worse than 
ungracious, especially under the 
peculiar circumstances of the case, 
and it was with a heavy heart, and 
not without a keen debate with Mr. 
Lawrence Muldoon, the " warm " 
man of the village, in which the 
pros and cons were duly and gravely 
weighed, that the worthy priest re- 
plied in the affirmative. While Fa- 
ther Maurice was engaged in pac- 
ing his little garden, Mrs. Clancy, 
his housekeeper, was calmly pre- 
paring for a steady but copious 
enjoyment of her evening meal in 
the kitchen, which from floor to 
ceiling, from fire-place to dresser 
shining again with crockery of the 



willow pattern was, to use her 
own expression, " as nate as a new- 
biled egg." A large brown earth- 
enware teapot had just been pro- 
moted from the hob to a table 
" convaynient " to the window. A 
huge platter of stirabout, with a lump 
of butter oiling itself in the middle, 
stood within easy reach of her right 
hand, while a square of griddle- 
bread occupied a like position upon 
her left, and a wooden bowl full 
of jacket-bursted potatoes formed 
the near background. 

Mrs. Clancy was strong upon tea, 
and in the village her opinion upon 
this as upon most other subjects 
was unwritten law. She was par- 
ticularly fond of a dash of green 
through a full-flavored Pekoe, pre- 
paring the mixture with her own 
fair hands with a solemn gravity 
befitting so serious an undertaking. 
She was now about to try a sample 
of Souchong which had just arriv- 
ed from Westport, and her condi- 
tion of mind was akin to that of an 
analytical chemist upon the eve of 
some exceedingly important result. 

Mrs. Clancy had seated herself 
in that cosy attitude peculiar to 
elderly females about to enjoy, to 
them, that most inviting of all 
meals, and had already ascertained, 
upon anxious reference to the tea- 
pot, that its contents had been suf- 
ficiently drawn, when the door was 
thrust somewhat violently open, 
and Murty Mulligan, the " priest's 
boy," unceremoniously entered the 
sanctum. 

Murty was handy-man and fac- 
totum. He " s\vep out " the chapel, 
rang the bell, attended Mass, 
groomed the pony, dug the pota- 
toes, landed the cabbage, and made 
himself generally useful. 
' Although designated a " boy," he 
had allowed not that he could 
claim any particular option in the 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



215 



matter some forty-five summers 
to roll over his head, every one of 
which, in addition to their attend- 
ant winters, had been passed in 
the peaceful little village of Mona- 
mullin. His travels had never ex- 
tended further than Westport, which 
he regarded as a vast commercial 
seaport a Liverpool, in fact and 
it was his habit to place it in com- 
parison with any city of note that 
might come upon the tapis, extol- 
ling its dimensions and dilating 
upon its unlimited importance. 

Murty's appearance savored much 
of the stage Irishman's. His eyes 
sparkled comically, his nose was 
tip-tilted Mr. Tennyson will ex- 
cuse the application of the simile 
while his mouth was large and al- 
ways open. His forehead was ra- 
ther low, and his ears stood out 
upon either side of his head like 
the orifices of air-shafts. He was 
now arrayed in his bravest attire, as 
he had been told off to drive his 
reverence to Moynalty Castle. His 
brogues were as highly greased as 
his hair, and his Sunday last Mass 
clothes, consisting of a gray 
frieze body-coat with brass buttons, 
a flowered silk waistcoat, corduroy 
knee-breeches, and blue worsted 
stockings, looked as fresh as if they 
had been donned for the first time. 

Not a little vain of the impor- 
tance of his office, combined with 
the general effect of his appearance, 
he swaggered into the kitchen in a 
manner totally at variance with 
his usual custom, as Mrs. Clancy 
was every inch queen of this realm, 
and a potentate who exercised her 
prerogative with right royal des- 
potism. 

The "consait " was considerably 
taken out of Murty by being met 
with an angry, contemptuous stare 
and " What ails ye, Murty Mulli- 
gan ?" 



" It's time for to bring round the 
yoke, ma'am," replied Murty in an 
abashed and respectful tone, eye- 
ing the teapot with a wistful glance, 
as he was particularly partial to a 
cup of the beverage it distilled, 
especially when brewed by Mis. 
Clancy. 

" Well, av it is, bring it round," 
was the tart rejoinder. 

" I dunna how far he's upon his 
office," said Murty. 

"Ye'd betther ax, Murty Mulli- 
gan." 

" I dar'n't disturb him, Mrs. 
Clancy, an' ye know that as well as 
I do meself, ma'am." 

" Well, don't bother me, anyhow," 
observed the lady, proceeding to 
pour out a cup of tea. 

"Is that the tay I brought ye 
from Westport, ma'am?" demand- 
ed Murty, upon whom the sight of 
the rich brown fluid and its pungent 
aroma were producing longing ef- 
fects. 

Mrs. Clancy took a preliminary 
sip with the sound of a person en- 
deavoring to suck a coy oyster 
from a clinging shell. 

" Sorra worse tay I ever wetted," 
she retorted. " There's no more sub- 
stance in it nor in chopped sthraw. 
I'll never take a grain o' tay out 
o' Westport agin sorra a wan." 

" I done me best for ye, anyhow, 
ma'am. I axed Misther Foley him- 
self for the shupariorest tay in the 
town, an' he gim me what's in 
that pot; an', faix, it smells rosy an' 
well." And Murty sniffed, as if he 
would drive the aroma up through 
his nostrils out to the top of his 
head. 

Mrs. Clancy turned to Murty 
with a frowning and ominous as- 
pect, the glare of an intense irrita- 
tion blazing in her face. 

" Do ye know what I think ye 
done, Murty Mulligan ? It's me- 



2l6 



The Little Chapel at Monamidlin. 



belief ye done it, an' if ye tuk the 
buke to the conthrairy I wudn't 
credit ye," placing her arms 
akimbo and fixing him with her 
eye. 

" What is it I done, Mrs. Clancy ?" 
demanded Murty boldly, flinging 
his caubeen upon the floor and as- 
suming a defiant attitude. " What 
is it I done, ma'am ?". 

The housekeeper regarded him 
steadily, while she said in a slow and 
solemn tone of impeachment : 

" Ye got me infayrior tay, an' 
ye tuk a pint out av the change." 

It was Murty's turn to become 
indignant now. 

"I'd scorn for to do the likes of 
so mane an action, Mrs. Clancy. 
There's them that wud do the like, 
but I'd have ye know, ma'am, that 
me father's son wud rather be as 
dhry as a cuckoo, ma'am, nor de- 
mane himself in that way. Yer 
sentiments, ma'am, is very hurtful 
to me feelin's, an' I'd as lieve ye'd 
call me a thief at wanst, ma'am, as 
for to run down me karakter in that 
a- way." 

" I don't want for to call ye no- 
thin', but I repate that " 

" Don't repate nothin', ma'am. 
Av ye wur a man I'd give ye a crack 
in the gob for daarin' to asperge 
me karakter, more betokin all for 
the sake av the filthy lucre av a 
pint of portlier. Portlier, indeed !" 
added Murty. "I'm goin' to-day, 
ma'am, where I'll get me fill av 
port wine, an' sherry wine, and Ma- 
dayrial wine, ma'am ; an' dickins 
resave the word I'll tell ye av the go- 
in's-on at the castle beyant for yer 
thratemint av me this blessed eve- 
nin', Mrs. Clancy." 

This threat upon the part of 
Murty threw the housekeeper into 
the uttermost consternation. The 
proceedings at Moynalty Castle were 
fraught with the deepest interest to 



her ; for in addition to her person- 
al curiosity, which was rampant, it 
was necessary that she should be- 
come acquainted with everything 
that took place, in order to retail 
her special knowledge to her cro- 
nies in the village, who awaited the 
housekeeper's report in eager and 
hopeful expectation. 

Had she burnt her boats ? Had 
she cut down the bridge behind 
her? 

Murty Mulligan's tone was reso- 
lute. 

"Murty, Murty avic! shure it's 
only jokin' I was sorra a more," 
she said in a coaxing way. 

Murty grunted. 

" Shure yer welkim to yer pint 
av " 

Murty confronted her : 

"I tell ye, Missis Clancy, that I 
tuk iiothin', nayther bit, bite, nor sup, 
from the time I et me brekquest till 
I met Misther Fogarty's own boy, 
and he thrated me. Av I tuk a 
pint out av yer lucre, ma'am, I'd 
say it at wanst, wudout batin' about 
the bush." 

" That's enough, Murty ; say no 
more about the tay. They gev ye 
a bad matarial, Murty, an' shure 
that's none o' you're fault. Here," 
she added, pouring out a saucerful 
the saucer being about the di- 
mensions of a large soup-plate 
and presenting it to him ; " put 
that to yer mouth an' say is it 
worth three hapence an ounce ?" 

" Sorra a care I care," growled 
Murty, but in a much softer tone. 

" Thry it, anyhow," urged the 
housekeeper. 

" I don't care a thrancen for tay, 
Mrs. Clancy," said Murty, throwing 
a glance full of profound meaning 
towards a small press in which 
Mrs. Clancy kept a supply of cor- 
dials. 

"Ah!" exclaimed that lady, " I 






The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



217 



see be the twist in yer eye that ye 
want somethin' to put betune yer 
shammy an' the cowld. Ye have a 
long road to thravel, Murty, so a 
little sup o' ginger cordial will warm 
it for ye, avic." And while the now 
thoroughly pacified Murty gently 
remonstrated, Mrs. Clancy pro- 
ceeded to the cupboard, and, pour- 
ing a golliogue of the grateful com- 
pound into a tea-cup, handed it to 
Murty, who tossed it off with a 
smack that would have started a 
coach and four. 

" So ye'll stop the night at the 
castle ?" observed the housekeeper 
in a careless tone. 

" Yis, ma'am." 

" It's a fine billet, Murty." 

" Sorra a finer. Shure it bates 
Lord Sligo's an' Mitchell Hinry's 
beyant at Kylemore; an' as for atin' 
an' dhrinkin', be me song they say 
that lamb-chops is as plentiful as 
cabbages is here, an' that there's as 
much sperrits in it as wud float 
ould Mickey Killeher's lugger." 

" It's a quare thing for Misther 
Jyvecote for to be axin' Father 
Maurice to a forrin' cunthry like 
that, Murty." 

" Troth, thin, it is quare, ma'am ; 
but, shure, mebbe he wants for to 
be convarted." 

"That must be it; an' he'd be 
bet intirely, av Father Maurice 
wasn't there for to back his tack. 
His sermon last Sunda' was fit for 
the Pope o' Room." 

" I never heerd the like av it. 
It flogged Europe. Whisht!" sud- 
denly cried Murty, "who's this 
comin' up the shore ?" 

"It's a forriner," exclaimed the 
housekeeper, after a prolonged 
scrutiny meaning by the term for- 
eigner that the person who was now 
approaching the cottage was not an 
inhabitant of the village. " A fine, 
sotiple boy," she added admiringly. 



" It's a gintleman, an' he has a 
lump av a stick in his hand," said 
Murty. 

" Arrah ! what wud bring a gin- 
tleman here, ye omadhawn?" ob- 
served Mrs. Clancy with some as- 
perity. 

"A thraveller, thin," suggested 
her companion. "He's a bag on 
his back." 

" Troth, it's badly off he'd be for 
thravellin', if he come here for to 
do the like." 

" He's makin' for the gate." 

" He's riz the latch." 

" I'll run out, Mrs. Clancy, and 
bring ye the hard word, while ye'd 
be axin' for the lind av a sack." 

"Ay, do, Murty avic; an' I'll 
have a cup av Dimp*sy's tay wet be 
the time yer back." 

Father Maurice had just finished 
the perusal of his office, and was in 
the act of returning to the house, 
when the stranger approached him. 

" Father Morris?" said the new- 
comer, lifting his hat. 

" Maurice O'Donnell, ^at your 
service, sir," replied the priest. 

" I should apologize for address- 
ing you so familiarly, reverend sir, 
but three or four persons of whom I 
asked my way told me that Father 
Morris was Monamullin, and that 
Monamullin was Father Morris." 

" My people invariably address 
me by my Christian name, and I 
beg, sir, as you are now within my 
bailiwick, that you will continue to 
do so." 

" As I am within your bailiwick, 
I must needs do your bidding, Fa- 
ther Maurice." 

Such a genial, happy voice ! Such 
frank, kind blue eyes ! Such a 
well knit, strong-built figure ! 

The priest gazed at a young 
man of about five-and-tvventy, six 
feet high, with crisp brown cur- 



218 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



ly hair, beard en Henri Quatre, 
broad forehead, and manly, sun- 
burnt neck and face, attired in a 
suit of light homespun tweed, a 
blue flannel shirt very open at the 
throat, a scarlet silk tie knotted 
sailor fashion, and heavy shoes, 
broad-toed and thick-soled. 

" My name is Brown," he said. " I 
am an artist. I have walked over 
from Castlebar. I am doing pic- 
turesquebits of this lovely country 
not your confounded beaten tracks, 
but the nooks which must be sought 
like the violet. I have very little 
money, and needs must rough it. 
This stick and knapsack consti- 
tute my impedimenta, and, like Cae- 
sar, I have carried my Commenta- 
ries before now in my teeth while 
bridging a river by swimming it. 
I asked for the inn, and I was re- 
ferred to Father Maurice." 

" I can answer for it, Mr. Brown, 
that you will find every house in 
Monamullin willing to shelter you; 
and, further, that you will find this 
to be possibly the best. I am 
unfortunately compelled to travel 
seven miles along the coast to-night, 
but will be back, please God, to- 
morrow ; in the meantime my house- 
keeper will try what some broiled 
fish and a dish of ham and eggs 
can do towards appeasing what 
ought to be a giant's appetite. And 
I can answer for the sheets being 
well aired, having pulled the laven- 
der myself in which they are peri- 
odically enshrined." 

Father Maurice ushered his guest 
into the cottage with a welcome so 
genuine that Mr. Brown felt at his 
ease almost ere the greeting had 
died upon the priest's lips, and 
proceeded to hang up his hat and 
knapsack with the air of a man who 
was completely at home. 

The neat little parlor was cosily 
furnished. A genuine bit of Do- 



mingo mahogany stood in the cen- 
tre of the room, and round it half 
a dozen plump horse-haired, brass- 
nailed chairs, with a " Come and 
sit on us, we are not for show " air 
about them peculiarly inviting. A 
venerable bureau, black as ebony 
from age, and brass-mounted, orna- 
mented one corner, and opposite 
to it a plaster-of-paris bust of Pius 
IX, upon a fluted pedestal, while 
the recesses at either side of the 
fireplace were furnished with antique 
book-cases containing a well-thumb- 
ed library of ecclesiastical litera- 
ture, the works of St. Augustine 
being prominently conspicuous. 
Over the mantel-piece hung a por- 
trait of Daniel O'Connell, with the 
autograph of the Liberator in a 
small frame beneath, and at his 
right and left engravings, and of 
no mean order either, of Henry 
Grattan and John Philpot Curran. 
The walls were adorned with co- 
pies of the cartoons of Raphael, 
a view of Croagh Patrick from 
Clew Bay, a bird's-eye glance at 
St. Peter's, and an illuminated ad- 
dress from the inhabitants of Mo- 
namullin to their beloved pastor 
upon the completion of his thirtieth 
year on the mission an address the 
composition of which conferred 
undying renown upon Tim Rafferty, 
the schoolmaster, and begat for the 
boy who wrote it a fame only se- 
cond to that of the erudite peda- 
gogue. 

" You are delightfully snug here, 
Father Maurice," observed his 
guest, seating himself and glancing 
admiringly round the apartment. 
" What a treasure of an antique 
bureau ! Why, the brokers in Lon- 
don are giving any amount of mo- 
ney for such articles; we are all 
running mad over them. If you 
could get it whispered that Dean 
Swift or Joe Addison worked at 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



219 



that desk, it would be worth its 
weight in gold. It's Queen Anne 
now or nothing." 

" You are an Englishman ?" 

" A base, bloody, and brutal 
Saxon !" 

"We have one of your country- 
men residing in this part of the 
country a Mr. Jyvecote." 

The stranger started. " Any of 
the Jyvecotes of Marston Moor, in 
Yorkshire ?" 

" The Jyvecote, I believe. He 
came over here about ten years ago 
to shoot, taking poor Mr. Bodkin 
Blake's Lodge in the valley of 
Glendhanarrahsheen, and " 

" Oh ! do say that word again, it 
is so delightfully soft a cross be- 
tween Italian and Japanese," burst 
in the artist. 

" Glendhanarrahsheen," repeated 
Father Maurice. " We have some 
softer than that. What think you 
of Tharramacornigaun ? But, as I 
was saying, Mr. Jyvecote liked the 
valley so much that he brought his 
family over in the following year. 
Mr. Jyvecote was delighted with 
the place, and he bought the Lodge, 
extended it, and at length deter- 
mined upon building a castle. This 
castle Moynalty Castle he calls it 
was completed about three years 
ago, the bare walls alone costing 
seventy thousand pounds. Except 
the Viceregal Lodge in Dublin," 
added the priest, " there is nothing 
so grand in all Ireland." 

" I must walk over there some 
day. Which way does it lie ?" 

" It's between us and Westport, 
along the coast, almost out upon a 
rock." 

" What a strange idea to put 
such a lot of money into such a 
corner !" 

" Is it not ? It's completely out 
of the world. The nearest railway 
station is fifty miles." 



" Then I forgive Mr. Jyvecote. 
I take off my hat to him. I con- 
gratulate him. O my dear Father 
Maurice!" exclaimed the artist en- 
thusiastically, " you who live in 
such tender tranquillity, with the 
moan of the sea for a lullaby, can 
know nothing of the ecstatic feeling 
attendant upon leaving steam fifty 
miles behind one. It is simply a 
new, a beatific existence ! And so 
Jocelyn Jyvecote is within ten 
miles," he added, more in the tone 
of a person engaged in thinking 
aloud than by way of observation. 

" Are you acquainted with him ?" 
asked the priest. 

" Oh ! yes that is, very slightly." 
There was a decided shade of em- 
barrassment in his manner that 
would have struck an ordinary ob- 
server, but the simple-minded cler- 
gyman failed to notice it. 

" The yoke's at the doore, yer 
riverince, an' if we don't start at 
wanst we'll be'bet be the hill be- 
yant Thronig na Coppagh," shout- 
ed Murty Mulligan, thrusting his 
shock head into the apartment. 

" How unfortunately this hap- 
pens !" exclaimed the priest. " I 
have not slept out of this cottage 
for nearly thirty years, and the very 
night I could have wished to be 
here I am compelled to go else- 
where. However, Mr. Brown, I shall 
leave you in good hands, and be- 
fore I start I must make you ac- 
quainted with my housekeeper." 

Murty had returned to the kitch- 
en considerably baffled. 

" He's goin' for to stop the 
night, Mrs. Clancy," he reported to 
the expectant housekeeper. 

" Who's goin' for to stop the 
night ?" 

" The strange gintleman above." 

"Where is he goin' for to stop, 
I'd like for to know ? Mrs. Doo- 
ly's childre is down wud maysles. 



220 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



The ganger is billeted at Moo- 
ney's " 

" He's goin' to stop here in this 
house. I heerd his riverince axin' 
him." 

"Arrah, baithershinr exclaimed 
Mrs. Clancy incredulously. 

" It's truth I'm tellin' ye, ma'am." 

" Well, may" 

At this moment the voice of 
Father Maurice was heard calling, 
" Mrs. Clancy." 

" Yer wanted, ma'am," cried 
Murty. 

" I'm not fit for to be seen. Slip 
up an" discoorse him, Murty avic, 
till I put on a clane cap an' apron." 

" Mrs. Clancy, you will take good 
care of this gentleman, Mr. Brown, 
till I come back. Show your skill 
in frying eggs and bacon, and in 
turning out a platter of stirabout. 
Don't let the hens cheat him of his 
fresh egg in the morning, and see 
that his bed is as comfortable as 
my own." And seating himself upon 
one side of the low-backed jaunting- 
car, with Murty Mulligan upon the 
other, and with a courteous fare- 
well to his guest, Father Maurice 
rapidly disappeared in the direc- 
tion of the valley of Glendhanar- 
rahsheen. 

Mr. Brown stood in the middle 
of the road gazing after the car, 
his hands plunged into his breeches 
pockets, and a sweet little bit of 
meerschaum stuck in his handsome 
mouth. 

" What a turn of the wheel is 
this ?" he said to himself. " I wan- 
der here into the most out-of-the- 
way place in out-of-the-way Ire- 
land, and I find myself treading 
on the kibes of the very man whom 
of all others I would least care to 
meet. I always thought that Jyve- 
cote was in Kerry, neaf Valentia, 
wiiere the wire dives for America. 
However, seven miles mean utter 



isolation here, and, by Jove ! I'm too 
much charmed with this genial old 
clergyman and his genuine hospi- 
tality to think of shifting my quar- 
ters; besides I'll paint him a 
holy picture, perhaps a Virgin and 
Child, which will in some small 
measure repay him. Nowhere in 
the world would one meet with 
such a reception, save in Ireland. 
Here I am taken upon trust, and 
believed to be an honest fellow un- 
til I am found out, completely re- 
versing the social code. He places 
his house, his all, at my disposal, 
believing me to be a poor devil of 
an artist on tramp a.nd ready to 
paint anything for bread and butter. 
Hang it all ! it makes me feel low 
and mean to sail under the false 
colors of an assumed name, and 
yet it is better as it is much bet- 
ter. Suppose I meet Mr. Jyvecote ? 
He'd scarcely recognize me. I've 
not seen him since our stormy 
interview at Marseilles. Had I 
my beard then? No; it was on 
my way out to Egypt, and that's 
exactly three years ago this very 
month. He had a lot of woman- 
kind with him. Per Bacco ! I sup- 
pose he was making for this place." 

Mr. Brown strolled over to the 
beach, and, seating himself upon a 
granite boulder, smoked on and on, 
buried in thought. The sea was 
as still as a sea in a dream, and 
gray, and mystic, and silent. The 
hush that Eve whispers as Night 
lets fall her mantle was coming 
upon the earth, and the twinkling 
stars began to throb in the blue- 
black sky ; not a speck was visible 
on the billowy plain save a solitary 
fishing-boat, which now loomed out 
of the darkness like a weird and 
spectral bark. 

In such scenes, and in the awful 
quiet of such hours, images and 
thoughts that dare not die are 



The Little Chapel at Monamulhn. 



221 



deposited upon the silent shore of 
memory. The man who sat gazing 
out to sea with his hands clasping 
his knees was Sir Everard Noel, the 
fourth baronet of a good old York- 
shire family, and owner of a fine 
estate between Otley and Ilkley, in 
the North Riding of that noble 
county. He was five-and-twenty, and 
had been his own master ever since 
he attained his majority, until which 
momentous event he had been the 
victim of a peripatetic guardian and 
the Court of Chancery, his father 
having died while he was yet an 
infant, and his mother when he 
had reached the age of nineteen. 
Freed from the yoke of his guar- 
dian, who led him a tour of the 
world, and placed in possession of 
ninety thousand pounds, the accu- 
mulation of his minority, and with an 
income of ten thousand a year, he 
plunged into the giddy whirl of 
London fast life, and for a brief 
season became the centre of a set 
composed of the crhne de la crime, 
the aurati juvenes of that modern 
Babylon. He was liberal to lavish- 
ness, was fascinated with Clubland 
and ("carte", losing his money with a 
superb tranquillity, and addicted to 
turning night into day. He flatter- 
ed the fair sex with the " homage 
of a devotee," and broke hearts as 
he would nutshells. Intriguing 
dowagers fished for him for their 
"penniless lasses wi' long pedi- 
grees," but somehow or other, after 
four seasons, during which he had 
had several hairbreadth escapes, 
he still was single, still healthy and 
heart-whole, but minus his ninety 
thousand pounds. 

During his minority he had 
wooed Art, wisely and well, and 
even while the daze of deviltry was 
upon him he never totally neglected 
her. He painted with more than 
the skill of a mere amateur, and had 



even the best of it in a tussle with 
the art critic of the Times upon the 
genuineness of a Rembrandt which 
had burst upon the market, to the 
intense excitement of the cognos- 
centi. There was a good deal of 
the artist in his nature, and he was 
an immense favorite with the beard- 
ed Bohemians, knights of the brush, 
who voted him a good fellow, with 
the solitary drawback of being un- 
avoidably a " howling swell." 

Four years of wasted life brought 
on satiety, and he turned from the 
past with a shudder, from the pre- 
sent with loathing. He wanted to 
do something, to be interested in 
something, and to shake off the 
sickening aimlessness of his every- 
day life that clung to him like a 
winding-sheet. 

There came a day when the men 
in the smoking-room of the club ask- 
ed each other, " Where the doose 
is Noel ?" when wily matrons 
found their gushing notes of invi- 
tation unanswered ; when toadies, 
hangers-on, and sycophants found 
hisapartments in Half-Moon Street, 
Piccadilly, closed. There came a 
day when club and matron and 
toady thought of him no more. 
The wave of oblivion had passed 
over him and he was forgotten. 
Sic itur ad astra. Away from the 
fatal influences that had, maelstrom- 
like, sucked him into their whirl, 
new thoughts, new impulses, new 
aspirations burst into blosso\o, and 
his old love Art turned to him 
with the radiant smile of the bygone 
time. 

There is red red blood in the 
veins at twenty-five, and white- 
winged Hope ever beckons onwards 
with soul-seductive gesture. He de- 
termined to seek change of scene 
and of thought. As Sir Everard 
Noel, the president of the Four-in- 
Hand Club ; the owner of Katinka, 



222 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



the winner of the Chester Cup; the 
skipper of the Griselda, that won the 
queen's prize at Cowes ; the best ri- 
der with the Pytchley hounds, every 
hotel on the Continent, every village 
in Merrie England, would recognize 
him, and the old toadying recom- 
mence ; but as plain Mr. Brown, an 
obscure artist, with a knapsack on 
his back, he would be free, free as 
a bird, and the summer morning this 
idea flashed across his mind found 
him once again a bright, happy, and 
joyous man. 

Sir Everard Noel was a gentle- 
man of warm temper and great 
energy, prone to sudden impulses 
and unconsidered actions. No 
sooner had he made up his mind 
to go upon the tramp than he start- 
ed ; and, considering that he would 
be less liable to recognition in 
Connemara than in Wales, made 
Galway the base of his supplies, 
and, knapsack on back, containing 
sketching materials and a change 
of flannel, a few days' walking 
brought him to Monamullin in 
glorious health, splendid spirits, and 
prepared to enjoy everybody and 
everything. 

" How much more delightful all 
this is," he thought, "than the 
horrors I have passed through 
horrors labelled pleasures ! Faugh ! 
I shudder when I think of them. 
Let me see, it's ten o'clock ; at this 
hour I would be about half-way 
through a miserably unwholesome 
dinner, spiced up in order to meet 
the requirements of a demoralized 
appetite, or yawning in an opera- 
box, with six or seven long, 
dreary hours before me to kill at 
any price, especially with brandy 
and soda. How delicious all this 
is ! Ho\v fresh, how pure ! What 
a dinner I ate of those rashers and 
eggs ! And such tea ! By Jove ! that 
old lady must have a chest entirely 



for her own consumption. If my 
bed is as comfortable as it looks, I 
shall not awaken till the padre re- 
turns from Jyvecote's. How disa- 
greeable to meet Jyvecote or any of 
the lot ! I never knew any of them 
but Jasper and the father. What 
a glorious old gentleman is Father 
Maurice simple as a child, with the 
dignity of a saint. I had better 
get to bed now, as I shall begin on a 
Virgin and Child for him to-morrow; 
or, if his Stations are daubs, I can 
do him a set, though it will take me 
a deuce of a time. I must visit the 
chapel to-morrow ; I suppose it's 
very dingy." And with a good stout 
yawn Mr. Brown for we shall con- 
tinue to call him by this name until 
the proper time comes turned to- 
wards the cottage. 

Mrs. Clancy met him at the 
door. 

" I was afraid ye wor lost, sir," 
she said as he entered the hall. 

" Not lost, my good lady, but 
found. I suppose you lock the 
doors here earlier than this." 

"Lock !" she exclaimed almost in- 
dignantly " lock indeed ! There's 
not a bowlt nor a bar nor a lock on 
the whole house. Arrah ! whowud 
rob Father Maurice but th' ould 
boy ? an* he'd be afeard. He 
daren't lay a hand on anything here, 
an' well he knows it, God be good to 
us!" 

" I suppose you've been a long 
time with Father Maurice, Mrs. 
Clancy." 

" Only sence me man the Lord 
rest his sowle, amin ! was lost in the 
night av the great storm, nigh fif- 
teen year ago fifteen year come 
the fourteenth av next month, on a 
Frida' night. He was a good man. 
an' a fine provider, an' wud have 
left me warm an' comfortable but 
for the hard times that cum on the 
cunthry be raison av the famine. 



The Little CJiapel at Monamullin. 



223 



Ye might have heard tell of it, 
sir." 

"Oh! indeed I did." 

" Och ! wirra, wirra ! but it was 
an awful time, glory be to God ! 
whin the poor craythurs was dyin' 
by the roadsides and aitin' grass 
to keep the sowles in their bodies, 
like bastes." 

" I was far away then, in China," 
said Brown. 

" That's where the tay cums 
from ; an' very infayrior tay we're 
gettin' now, sir, compared wud 
what we used to get. I can't rise 
more nor a cup out av two spoon- 
fuls, an' well I remimber whin wan 
wud give me layves enough for to 
fill a noggin. Are ye thinkin' 
av Maynewth, sir ?" asked Mrs. 
Clancy, exceedingly desirous of 
some clue as to the identity, habits, 
and occupation of her guest, as it 
would not do to face Monamullin 
with her finger in her mouth. 

" Maynewth ?" he replied. " What 
is Maynewth ?" 

" The collidge." 

"What college?" 

" The collidge where the young 
priests is med." 

"Oh! dear, no, Mrs. Clancy," 
he replied, laughing heartily. " I am 
a painter." 

" A painther !" she said in con- 
siderable astonishment. 

" Yes, a poor painter." 

" Musha, now, but that flogs. An' 
what are ye goin' for to paint ?" 

" Anything that turns up." 

She thought for a moment, hesi- 
tated a little, scrutinized his appa- 
rel, hesitated again, and at length, 
" Wud ye be afther doin' his riv- 
erince a good turn ?" 

" I should be only too delighted." 

" Thin ye might give the back 
doore a cupple o' coats o' paint 
afore ye go." 

The artist burst into an uncon- 



trollable fit of laughter, long, loud, 
joyous, and rippling as that of a 
schoolboy's, again and again renew- 
ed as the irritated puzzle written 
in the housekeeper's face met his 
glance. At length he burst out af- 
ter a tremendous guffaw : 

" I am not exactly that sort of a 
painter, Mrs. Clancy, but I dare say 
I could do it if I tried ; and I will 
try. I am more in that line," point- 
ing to the picture of Daniel O'Con- 
nell suspended over the mantel- 
piece. 

The cloud of anger rapidly dis- 
appeared from Mrs. Clancy's brow 
upon this explanation, and in a 
voice of considerable blandishment 
she half-whispered : 

" Arrah, thin, mebbe ye'd do me 
a little wan o' Dan for the kitchen, 
honey." 

After another hearty peal of 
laughter Mr. Brown most cordially 
assented, and, taking his chamber 
candle a flaring dip retired to 
his bed-room. 

"J/a foi," he gaily laughed, 
"this is homely. Do I miss my 
valet? Do I miss my brandy and 
soda? Do I miss my Aubusson 
carpet, my theatrical pictures, my 
Venetian mirror, or my villanous 
French novel ? Not a bit of it. 
This is glorious ; and what a tub I 
shall have in the morning in the 
wild Atlantic !" 

Father Maurice's guest was up, 
if not with the lark, at least not far 
behind that early-rising bird, and 
out in the gently-gliding wavelets, 
buffeting them with the vigorous 
stroke of a skilful swimmer. The 
ocean on this still, clear morning 
was beautiful enough to attract 
wistful glances from eyes the most 
blast. The cloudless sky was in- 
tensely dark in its blue, as though 
the unseen sun was overhead 



224 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



and shining vertically down. The 
light did not seem of sea or Land, 
but it shone dazzlingly on the low 
line of verdure-clad hills, on the 
cornfields in stubble, causing every 
blade to glisten like a golden spear, 
on the whitewashed cottages, on 
the bright green -hedges, on the 
line of dark rock, and enveloping 
the mountains of Carrig na Copple 
in the dim distance in blue and sil- 
ver glory. The colors of the sea 
were magical, in luminous green, 
purple, and blue ; and out across 
the billowy plain great bands of 
purple stretched away to the sky 
line, as a passing cloud flung its 
shadows in its onward fleecy pro- 
gress. The artist felt all this 
beauty, drinking it in like life-wine, 
till it tingled and throbbed in every 
vein. 

After partaking of a breakfast 
the consumption of which would 
have considerably astonished some 
of his quondam London set, and 
having lighted his meerschaum, Mr. 
Brown set out for a stroll through 
the village, accompanied by half a 
dozen cabin curs, who, having scent- 
ed the stranger, most courteously 
made up their minds to act as his 
escort. The inhabitants of the 
cabins en route turned out to look 
respectfully at him. Children tim- 
orously approached, curtsied, and, 
when spoken to, retreated in laugh- 
ingterror. Matrons gazed and gos- 
siped. A cripple or two touched 
their caps to him, and on every side 
he was wished "good-luck." He 
was Father Maurice's guest, and, as 
a consequence, the guest of Mona- 
mullin. Whitewash abounded eve- 
rywhere ; amber thatch covered the 
roofs ; scarlet geraniums bloomed 
vigorously, their crimson blossoms 
resembling gouts of blood spurted 
against marble slabs. A shebeen 
or public-house was not to be seen ; 



order and peace and happiness 
reigned triumphant. 

" A few trees planted down this 
street if I may call it so would 
make this an Arcadian village. I 
must ask Father Maurice to let me 
have them planted. A fountain, too, 
would look well just opposite that 
unpretending shop. I wonder 
where the church can be ?" 

A man with a reaping-hook 
bound in a hay rope happened to 
be passing, to whom he addressed 
himself. 

" Can you tell me where the 
church is ?" 

" Yis, yer honor ; troth, thin, I 
can." 

" Where is it, please ?" 

" Av it's Mass ye want, Father 
Maurice is beyant at Mo)^nalty 
Castle." 

" I merely want to see it." 

" An' shure ye can, sir ; it's open 
day an" night." 

"But where is it, my man ?" 

" Where is it ? Right foreninst ye, 
thin. Don't ye see the holy and 
blessed crass over the doore ?" 

The chapel was a small, low, cru- 
ciform building, very dingy despite 
its whitewash, and very tumble- 
down-looking. It was surrounded 
by a small grass-plat and a few 
stunted pines. A rude cross with 
a real crown of thorns stood in one 
corner, at the foot of which knelt 
an old man, bare-headed, engag- 
ed in repeating the rosary aloud, 
and two women, who were rock- 
ing themselves to and fro in a fer- 
vor of prayer. Within the church 
the fittings were of the most primi- 
tive description. The floor was 
unboarded, save close to the altar- 
rails ; a few forms were scattered 
here and there, and one row of 
backed seats occupied a space to 
the right. The altar, approach- 
ed by a single step, was of wood, a 



The Little CJiapel at Monamullin. 



golden cross ornamenting the front 
panel, and a series of gilded Gothic 
arches forming its background, 
while the tabernacle consisted of a 
rudely-cut imitation of a dome-cov- 
ered mosque. A picture of the 
Crucifixion hung over the altar 
suspended from the ceiling, and, as 
this was regarded as a masterpiece 
of art by the inhabitants of Mona- 
mullin from time immemorial, we 
will not discuss their aestheticism 
here. The Stations of the Cross 
were represented by small colored 
engravings in mahogany frames, 
and the holy-water font consisted 
of a huge boulder of granite which 
had a large hole scooped out of it. 

" This will never do," said Mr. 
Brown, gazing ruefully at the several 
works of art. " What a splendid 
chance for me ! I shall paint, as 
the old masters did, under direct in- 
spiration. What a sublime sensa- 
tion, when my picture shall have 
been completed, to witness the re- 
verential admiration of the poor de- 
vout people here ! I shall be regarded 
as a benefactor. Fancy my being a 
benefactor to anybody or anything ! 
Heigh-ho!" he sighed, "what a 
glorious little Gothic church, a 
prayer in stone, a portion of the 
money I so murderously squander- 
ed would have built here ! that four 
thousand I flung last March into 
the mire in Paris. Faugh !" And, 
dragged back over the waves of 
Time, he sat down upon one of the 
wooden benches, overwhelmed by 
the rush of his own thoughts. 

Of the length of time he remain- 
ed thus absorbed he made no count. 
The dead leaves of the misspent 
past rustled drearily round his 
heart, weighing him down with a 
load of inexpressible sadness a 
sadness almost amounting to an- 
guish and two hours had come and 
gone ere his reverie was broken. 
VOL. xxvi. 15 



Happening to raise his eyes to- 
wards the altar, he was startled by 
perceiving a female form kneeling 
at the railings, lithe, svelte, and at- 
tired in costly and fashionable rai- 
ment. As he gazed, the young 
-girl finished heryprayers, and, with a 
deep, reverential inclination in front 
of the altar, swept past him with 
that graceful, undulatory motion 
which would seem to be the birth- 
right of the daughters of sunny 
Spain. She was tall, elegantly 
formed, and possessed that air of 
high breeding which makes itself 
felt like a perfume. Her bright 
chestnut hair was brushed tightly 
back from an oval face, and hung 
in massive plaits at the back of her 
head. Her eyes were soft brown, 
her complexion milk-white. 

" What a vision, and in this 
place, too ! That is the best of the 
Catholic religion. The churches are 
always open, inviting one to come in 
and pray. I wonder who she can be? 
Some tourist. Pshaw ! your tour- 
ist doesn't trouble this quarter of 
the globe. To see, to be seen, to 
dress, and wrangle over the bills 
at palatial hotels, means touring 
nowadays. Some county lady, 
over to do a little shopping ; but 
there are no shops, except that 
miserable little box opposite, and 
they apparently sell nothing there 
but marbles, tobacco-pipes, kites, 
and corduroy. Ah ! I have it : 
some inlander coming for a plunge 
in the Atlantic. I suppose I shall 
meet her pony phaeton as I pass 
up through the village. I seriously 
hope I shall. There is something 
very fetching about her, and it pu- 
rifies a fellow to see a girl like that 
at prayer." 

Such were the cogitations of Mr. 
Brown as he emerged from the 
dingy little chapel. Brown was 
not a Catholic. He had been edu- 



226 



The Little. Chapel at Monamullin, 



cated at Eton, and, although in- 
tended for Cambridge, his guar- 
dian took him to Japan when he 
should have been cramming for his 
degree. Of the religion as by law 
established in England, he paid 
but little attention to the forms 
and merely went to church during 
the season to hear some " swell " 
preacher, or because Lady Clara 
Vere de Vere gave him a rendezvous. 
But, with all his faults and follies, 
he was never irreverent, and his 
respect for the things that belong un- 
to God was ever honest, open, and 
sincere. 

He was doomed to be disappoint- 
ed. No pony phaeton disturbed 
the stillness of the village street. 
The curs, which had patiently 
waited for him whilst he remained 
in the church, received him with 
noiseless but cheery tail-wagging 
as he came out, and marched at 
his heels as though he had been 
their lord and master. The chil- 
dren rushed from cabins and 
dropped their quaint little curt- 
sies. The cripples doffed their 
caps, the matrons gazed at him 
and gossiped ; and, although he 
lingered to say a few words to a 
passing fisherman, and somewhat 



eagerly scanned the surrounding 
country, no sign could he obtain of 
the fair young girl who had flash- 
ed upon him like a "vision of the 
night." 

" I shall never see her again," he 
thought; "and yet I could draw 
that face. Such a mouth ! such 
contour! I must ask the padre if 
he knows her, though that is 
scarcely probable; and yet she is 
one of his flock at least, she is a 
Catholic, so there is some hope." 

He returned to the cottage, and 
encountered Father Maurice in 
the garden. 

" I did not like to disturb you at 
your devotions, Mr. 'Brown," he 
said, " but I was only going to give 
you five minutes longer, as the 
salmon grill will be ready by that 
time." 

''How did you ascertain I was 
in the church ?" asked Brown, en- 
tering the hall and hanging up his 
hat. 

" A beautiful young lady told 
me." 

"I saw her; who is she?" ex- 
claimed the artist eagerly. 

" I shall present you to her. 
Here she is. Mr. Brown, Miss 
Julia Jyvecote." 



[TO BE CONCLUDED NEXT MONTH.] 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



227 



THE TWO PROPHETS OF MORMONISM. 



MR. T. B. H. STENHOUSE, one 
of the Scottish converts to Mor- 
monism, was for a quarter of a 
century an elder and missionary of 
the church of the Latter-Day 
Saints. He is the author of the 
most complete and careful history 
of the Mormons in the English lan- 
guage. Although he has " out- 
grown " the faith of Brigham Young 
and Joseph Smith, and disbelieves 
the doctrines which he once preach- 
ed, he writes of his former asso- 
ciates in a tone of moderation and 
good sense, and gives them more 
credit for sincerity than the rest of 
the world will be likely to concede 
them. In the introduction to his 
Rocky Mountain Saints he says : 

"Whatever judgment maybe passed 
upon the faith and personal lives of the 
Mormon Prophet and his successor, 
there will be a general recognition of a 
divine purpose in their history. Under 
their leadership the Mormon people 
have aided to conquer the western de- 
sert, and to transform a barren and deso- 
late region of a hitherto ' unknown 
country ' into a land that seems destin- 
ed at no distant day to teem with mil- 
lions of human beings, and which pro- 
mises to stand pre-eminent among the 
conquests of the republic. It is doubt- 
ful whether any collective body of other 
citizens, unmoved by religious impulses, 
would ever have traversed the sandy 
desert and sage-plains, and have lived 
an age of martyrdom in reclaiming them, 
as the Mormons have in Utah. But this 
has been accomplished, and it was ac- 
complished by faith. That was the Pro- 
vidence of the saints, and it must be 
conceded that, as a means subservient to 
an end, the Mormon element has been 
used in the Rocky Mountain region by 
the Almighty Ruler for developing the 
best interests of the nation, and for the 
benefit of the world at large. " 

The fallacies hidden in these re- 
flections will not escape the notice 



of any thoughtful Catholic reader. 
Mr. Stenhouse has got a feeble 
hold of a great truth, but, embar- 
rassed by the materialistic ideas 
which form so important a part of 
the Mormon philosophy, he does 
not know how to apply it. We 
quote the passage as a striking il- 
lustration of the spirit in which too 
many of our countrymen are inclin- 
ed to judge the history and charac- 
ter of the saints of the Great Salt 
Lake. Americans have a profound 
veneration for material prosperity, 
and hardly find it in their hearts to 
condemn a community which has 
built cities in the remote wilder- 
ness, planted gardens in the midst 
of the desert, taught brooks to run 
across the arid plains, and " devel- 
oped the resources " of one of the 
least promising territories in our 
national domain. Any man, ac- 
cording to the popular theories of 
the emancipation of conscience, 
has a right to make a religion to 
suit himself; and whatever he may 
profess unless, indeed, he should 
chance to concur with about 160,- 
000,000 other persons in professing 
the doctrines of the holy Catholic 
Church, in which case there would 
be a fair presumption that he was 
dangerous to society his fellow- 
citizens are bound to treat his creed 
respectfully and admit the purity 
of his motives.* Hence the world 
honors the founder of a new state, 
even though he may be also the 
founder of a false religion. There 
are 80,000 Mormons in Utah, and 



" Gentiles have often said before me that Mor- 
monism is as good as any other religion, and that 
Mr. Joseph Smith ' had as good a right to estab- 
blish a church as Luther, Calvin, Fox, Wesley, or 
even bluff King Hal'" (TAe City of the Saints, 
by Richard F. Burton). 



228 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



as a community they are rich and 
thrifty. It is not surprising that 
we have heard of late so much ad- 
miring comment upon the genius 
of Brigham Young, so many pre- 
dictions that he will be reckoned 
hereafter among the great men in 
American history. 

It may be worth while to 
clear our minds by a brief sketch 
of the rise and development of 
Mormonism. It is a phenome- 
non too important to be passed 
over, and it has a closer connection 
with the moral and intellectual 
tendencies of the time than most 
of us suspect. The general direc- 
tion of Protestant theology has al- 
ways been towards rationalism and 
materialism. Founded upon the 
denial of everything that man can- 
not perceive by his unaided natural 
powers, it leads irresistibly to the 
rejection of divine interposition in 
worldly affairs and of all manner of 
heavenly revelation. But the hu- 
man mind can no more rest without 
belief in the supernatural than the 
human body can rest upon air. 
Superstition is consequently the 
offspring of infidelity. The ex- 
tremes of negation produce a reac- 
tion of credulity ; the worship of 
Baal alternates with the worship 
of God; we see Protestantism 
swaying perpetually to and fro 
between a cold philosophical 
scepticism and the wildest ex- 
travagances of fanaticism and im- 
posture. A time of general nega- 
tion and intellectual pride is fol- 
lowed by an epidemic of rhapso- 
dies and convulsions. Prophets 
arise ; spirits are seen in clouds of 
light ; conventicles resound with 
the ravings of frenzied sinners and 
the shouting of excited saints ; Swe- 
denborg makes excursions in the 
body into heaven and into hell ; 
the Shakers place Mother Ann on 



yflie throne of the Almighty; the 
Peculiar People look for the direct 
interference of God in the pettiest 
affairs of life, and demand a miracle 
every hour of the day. Mormon- 
ism was the product of such a sea- 
son of spiritual riot. Fifty years 
ago animal magnetism and clair- 
voyance were at their height. The 
pride which refused to worship God 
stooped to amuse itself with ghosts 
and witches. The soul, emanci- 
pated from religion, became the 
slave of magic ; and superstition, 
rejecting the revelations of a lov- 
ing Creator, was almost ripe for the 
instructions of dancing tables and 
flying tambourines. Mesmer had 
excited the learned world with his 
mystic tubs; throngs of prophetic 
somnambulists had prepared the 
way for the oracles of Andrew 
Jackson Davis. In England there 
was even a more chaotic disturb- 
ance of minds than here. Multi- 
tudes on the one hand, disbelieving 
in a personal deity altogether, took 
refuge in pure scepticism. Multi- 
tudes on the other looked for the 
advent of the Lord in power and 
glory, to establish on earth in visi- 
ble form the kingdom foretold by 
the inspired writers. The study 
of the prophecies became an ab- 
sorbing passion of sectaries and 
enthusiasts. They muddled their 
brains with much reading of Isaias 
and the Apocalypse. They made 
it their mission to explain dark 
sayings ; and having placed their 
own interpretation upon the divine 
predictions, they watched the sky 
for signs of their immediate fulfil- 
ment, and found in contemporary 
events a thousand confirmations of 
their crazy fancies, a thousand por- 
tents of the speedy coming of the 
Lord. There was no conceivable 
theological vagary for which they 
did not seek authority among the 



TJie two PropJiets of Mormonism. 



229 



prophets. There was a wide-spread 
revival of the ancient belief in a 
terrestrial millennium, with a faith 
that it was close at hand. Edward 
Irving was setting England and 
Scotland aflame with fiery an- 
nouncements of the Second Ad- 
vent ; fashionable society left its 
bed at five o'clock in the morning 
to hear him preach, for three hours 
at a stretch, on the impending ac- 
complishment of what had been 
foretold; and although it was not 
until a few years later that William 
Miller organized in this country 
the first regular congregations of 
those who expected the speedy end 
of the world, and who sat in white 
robes listening for the judgment 
trump, there is no doubt that the 
general religious ferment which 
preceded this particular hallucina- 
tion was felt simultaneously on 
both sides of the ocean, and pre- 
sented on both sides the same es- 
sential characteristics. 

Naturally this exciting period 
was also a season of powerful Me- 
thodistic revivals. These sensa- 
tional experiences belong, like 
spiritualism and the other delu- 
sions which we have mentioned, to 
what has been called " inspiration- 
al " as distinguished from rational- 
istic Protestantism, and they are 
apt to run their course together. 
Between 1825 and 1830 the revival 
movement was carried to great 
lengths, and its excesses seem to 
have been most marked in Central 
and Western New York just at the 
time when Mormonism arose there.. 
We speak of the revivals as Metho- 
distic only by way of defining their 
character ; they were by no means 
restricted to the Methodist denomi- 
nation. The most famous revival 
preacher of the day was the Rev. 
Charles G. Finney, a Presbyterian ; 
and any one who is curious about 



the spiritual uproar which he car- 
ried through the State with him is 
referred to the chapter on " Fanati- 
cism in Revivals " in the Personal 
Reminiscences ot Dr. Gardiner Spring, 
of the Brick (Presbyterian) Church 
in New York City.* 

It was in such a time, equally 
favorable to delusions and impos- 
tures, that Joseph Smith, the inven- 
tor of Mormonism, made his ap- 
pearance. The accounts of his ear- 
ly life are not satisfactory. His 
origin was obscure. His neighbors 
were ignorant. Little is on record 
except his Autobiography and a 
sketch by his mother, neither of 
which productions is entitled to 
much credit. It is evident, how- 
ever, that he was caught up by the 
religious excitement which raged 
all around him. We are assured 
that on at least two special occa- 
sions during his boyhood he was 
" powerfully awakened " by Me- 
thodist revivalists. His writings 
abound with revival phraseology ; 
his pretended revelations are full 
of the cant-terms of the camp-meet- 
ing; his code of doctrines bears 
traces of the denominational con- 
troversies which were most active 
in Western New York when he 
emerged upon the stage of history. 
In 1827 he was an illiterate and idle 
rustic of twenty-two years, living 
at Palmyra, in Wayne County, New 
York. His parents were shiftless 

* It was one of Mr. Finney's doctrines that when- 
ever we pray with sufficient faith, God, so to speak, 
is bound not only to answer the prayer, but to give 
us the precise thing we ask for ; in other words, 
that we know better than God what is good for us. 
" There are men and women still alive and among 
us, :l says Dr. Spring, "who remember the circum- 
stances of the death of Mrs. Pierson, around whose 
lifeless body her husband assembled a company of 
believers, with the assurance that if they prayed 
in faith she would be restored to life. Their feel- 
ings were greatly excited, their impressions of their 
success peculiar and strong. They prayed, and 
prayed again, and prayed in faith. But they 
were disappointed. There was none to answer, 
neither was there any that regarded." The italics 
are Dr. Spring's. 



230 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



and visionary people, who got 
drunk, and used the divining-rod, 
and dug for hidden treasures, and, 
according to their neighbors, stole 
sheep. Joseph was no better than 
the rest of the family. By natural 
disposition he was a dreamer and 
an adventurer. According to his 
own account, he began to see mi- 
raculous appearances in the air and 
to hear the voices of spiritual mes- 
sengers as early as his fifteenth 
year. It was in one of his seasons 
of " awakening," when, perplexed 
by the contradictions of rival sects, 
he went into a grove and asked the 
Lord which he should follow, in 
the firm persuasion that his ques- 
tion would be answered by some 
physical manifestation. We give the 
Mormon account of the result of 
his experiment : 

" At first he was severely tempted by 
the powers of darkness, which endeavor- 
ed to overcome him ; but he continued to 
seek for deliverance, until darkness gave 
way from his mind. He at length saw a 
very bright and glorious light in the 
heavens above, which at first seemed to 
be at a considerable distance. He con- 
tinued praying, while the light appeared 
to be gradually descending towards him; 
and as it drew nearer it increased in 
brightness and magnitude, so that by 
the time that it reached the tops of the 
trees the whole wilderness for some dis- 
tance around was illuminated in the 
most glorious and brilliant manner. He 
expected to have seen the leaves and 
boughs of the trees consumed as soon 
as the light came in contact with them ; 
but perceiving that it did not produce 
that effect, he was encouraged with the 
hopes of being able to endure its pre- 
sence. It continued descending slowly, 
until it rested upon the earth and he 
was enveloped in the midst of it. When 
it first came upon him it produced a pe- 
culiar sensation throughout his whole 
system ; and immediately his mind was 
caught away from the natural objects 
with which he was surrounded, and he 
was enwrapped in a heavenly vision, 
and saw two glorious personages, who 
exactly resembled each other in their 



features or likeness. He was informed 
that his sins were forgiven. He was al- 
so informed upon the subjects which had 
for some time previously agitated his 
mind namely, that all the religious de- 
nominations were believing in incorrect 
doctrines, and consequently that -none 
of them was acknowledged of God as his 
church and kingdom. And he was ex- 
pressly commanded to go not after 
them ; and he received a promise that 
the true doctrine, the fulness of the gos 
pel, should at some future time be made 
known to him ; after which the vision 
withdrew." * 

Joseph, upon whose word alone 
this narrative rests, relates that when 
he came to himself he was lying on 
his back looking up into the clouds. 
He seems to have accepted cheer- 
fully the condemnation of all exist- 
ing religions, but the vision had no 
other practical effect upon him ; 
as Orson Pratt confesses, his life 
continued to be unedifying, and 
his story of the celestial apparition 
was received with stubborn incredu- 
lity by those who knew his character 
and habits. It was three years be- 
fore he professed to be favored 
with a second visit. Then, he says, 
a white and lustrous angel came 
into his room while he was at pray- 
er, and told him that Heaven de- 
signed him for a great work. 
There was hidden in a certain 
place, to be revealed hereafter, a 
book written upon gold plates, 
which contained " the fulness of the 
everlasting gospel as delivered by 
the Saviour to the ancient inhabi- 
tants " of the American continent. 
This was the Mormon Bible, com- 
monly known now as the Book of 
Mormon from the title of one of 
its divisions. In his Autobiography 
Joseph Smith states that the angel 
was Nephi, author of the First and 
Second Books of Nephi, which 

* Remarkable Visions. By Orson Pratt, one of 
the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ 
of Latter-Day Saints. Liverpool, 1848. 






The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



231 



stand at the head of the Mormon 
scriptures ; but in his Doctrine 
and Covenants he speaks of his 
visitant as Moroni, who wrote the 
last book in the collection and 
placed the gold plates where 
they were afterwards to be found. 
We do not know what explanation 
the Mormons offer of this singular 
discrepancy. The vision was re- 
peated during the night, and Joseph 
was directed to search for the bur- 
ied treasure in a hill near Man- 
chester, a village about four miles 
from Palmyra, in the adjoining 
county of Ontario. He saw, as if 
in a dream, the exact spot in which 
he was to dig. He went to Man- 
chester and found the plates, en- 
closed in a sort of box formed of 
stones set in cement. With them 
" there were two stones in silver 
bows (and these stones, fastened to 
a breastplate, constituted what is 
called the Urim andThummim), and 
the possession and use of these 
stones was what constituted seers 
in ancient or former times, and God 
had prepared them for the purpose 
of translating the book " an idea 
which Joseph borrowed, of course, 
from the Jewish high-priest's "ra- 
tional of judgment," described in 
Exodus, chap, xxviii. Moroni (or 
was it Nephi ?) would not allow 
the plates to be removed yet; but 
he gave Joseph a great many inter- 
esting and comfortable, though ra- 
ther vague, instructions. He open- 
ed the heavens and caused him to 
see the glory of the Lord. He 
made the devil and his hosts pass by 
in procession, so that Smith might 
know them when he met them. 
Once a year Joseph was to return 
to the same spot and receive a new 
revelation. On the fourth anniver- 
sary of the discovery that is, in 
September, 1827 the angel placed 
the plates and the Urim and 



Thummim in his hands, with a 
caution that, he should let nobody 
see them. But he seems to have 
talked freely about his experiences ; 
for, according to his own story, the 
whole country-side was up in arms 
to get the plates away from him. 
He was waylaid and chased by ruf- 
fians with clubs. He was shot at. 
His house was repeatedly mobbed ; 
and when at last he removed to 
Pennsylvania in search of peace, 
carrying the plates in a barrel of 
beans, he was twice overtaken by a 
constable armed with a search-war- 
rant, who failed, however, to find 
what he was looking for. Possibly 
the plates and the constable were 
equally fictions of Joseph Smith's 
imagination. 

Incredulous historians of Mor- 
monism offer various explanations 
of the story which we have thus 
far recounted. They detect in 
Joseph Smith's alleged visions a 
close resemblance to the trance 
state sometimes brought on by 
spiritual excitement among the 
Methodists and other sects who 
make strong appeals to the emo- 
tional nature ; or they refer his 
supernatural exaltation to mes- 
meric clairvoyance; or they see in 
him merely a " spiritual medium, "a 
precursor of the rappers and table- 
tippers who became so common a 
few years later. Others, again, ac- 
count for the whole case upon the 
theory of demoniac possession ; 
while still others suppose that, 
having really discovered some sort 
of metallic tablets, the dreams of a 
disordered mind supplied him with 
the interpretation and the dramatis 
persona* It seems to us hardly 



* Mormon books contain representations of six 
plates of brass, inscribed with unknown figures, 
which are said to have been dug out of a mound in 
Pike County. Illinois, in 1843. Like those which 
Moroni is supposed to have revealed to Joseph 
Smith they are described as bell-shaped and fas- 



232 



The two Prophets of Mormon ism. 



necessary to discuss these various 
explanations, for there is no proof 
of the alleged facts. The whole 
narrative rests upon nothing but 
Joseph Smith's word. It is the 
story told by him in after-years to 
account for the new gospel. There 
is none who shared with him the 
privilege of angelic visitations. 
There is none who saw the great 
light, who heard the mysterious 
voices, who even beheld Joseph 
himself at the moment of the al- 
leged revelations. No one knows 
what became of the golden plates. 
The angel, said Joseph, came and 
took them away again. While they 
remained in the prophet's hands 
they were kept from curious eyes. 
Prefixed to the Book of Mormon in 
the current editions is the " Testi- 
mony of Three Witnesses " Oliver 
Cowdery, David Whitmer, and 
Martin Harris that they were per- 
mitted to see the plates, and that a 
heavenly voice assured them of the 
faithfulness of Smith's translation ; 
but all these three witnesses after- 
wards^ confessed that their testimo- 
ny was a lie. To their certificate 
is appended the testimony of eight 
other witnesses namely, Joseph's 
father and two brothers, four of the 
Whitmer family, and a disciple 
named Page who also profess to 
have seen the plates; but their 
connection with the beginnings of 
the Mormon Church makes it im- 
possible to put confidence in their 
statement. We do not know the 
circumstances under which the 
sight may have been vouchsafed to 
them, and we certainly have no suffi- 
cient reason to believe their word.* 

tened together by a ring. But the evidence that any 
such plates were ever found is not satisfactory, and 
the characters on the published pictures of them 
bear little or no resemblance to those which Joseph 
Smith presented to the world as a fac-simile of a 
part of the Book of Mormon. 

* Many suppose that Joseph Smith and his 
brother Hyrum fabricated plates of some base 



Thus far, then, Mormonism is a 
mere legend. In 1828 it becomes 
historical fact ; and whatever may 
be thought of the prophet's good 
faith in the matter of his early 
dreams and visions, we find it impos- 
sible to resist the conviction that 
henceforth he was only a conscious 
and daring impostor. From this 
time to the day of his death, in his 
acts and his writings, in his shrewd- 
ness, his ambition, and his reckless 
courage planning new settlements, 
fabricating new Bibles, uttering 
forged revelations, nominating him- 
self for President of the United 
States, assuming to command ar- 
mies, running a wild-Cat bank, de- 
bauching women we can see noth- 
ing but a career of vulgar fraud. 
There was wild fanaticism in the 
foundation of the Mormon Church ; 
but it was not on the part of Joseph 
Smith. 

There is proof that about fifteen 
years before this pretended revela- 
tion an ex-preacher, named Solo- 
mon Spalding, a graduate of Dart- 
mouth College, and a resident of 
Crawford County, Pennsylvania, 
offered for publication at a Pitts- 
burgh printing-office a book called 
the Manuscript Found, in which he 
attempted to account for the peo- 
pling of America by deriving the 
Indians from the lost tribes of Is- 
rael. It was a sort of Scriptural 
romance, written in clumsy imita- 
tion of the historical books of the 
Old Testament, and it contained, 
among its other divisions, a Book 
of Mormon. Although announced 
for publication, it never appeared. 



metal and imposed them upon their credulous fol- 
lowers. But if they had gone to the trouble of do- 
ing this it is probable that they would have shown 
them to a number of people, and not confined the 
exhibition to a handful of their immediate associ- 
ates. The mere fact that evidence as to the exist- 
ence of any plates at all is so defective seems to us 
conclusive that there were none not even forged 
ones. 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



233 



The manuscript remained in the 
printing-office for a number of 
years. Spalding died in 1816. The 
bookseller died in 1826. Sidney 
Rigdon, one of the first disciples 
of Mormonism, was a compositor 
in the printing-office, and it seems 
to be pretty well established that 
he made a copy of the book and 
afterwards gave it to Smith. At 
any rate the Book of Mormon, 
when it came from the press in 
1830, was immediately recognized 
as an adaptation of Solomon Spald- 
ing's romance. A great many peo- 
ple had read parts of it during 
Spalding's lifetime, and remember- 
ed not only the principal incidents 
which it narrated, but the names 
of the leading characters Nephi, 
Lehi, Moroni, Mormon, and the 
rest which Smith boldly appropri- 
ated. Spalding's only object was 
literary amusement, with perhaps a 
little harmless mystification. The 
theological teachings incorporated 
with his pretended history were the 
additions of Smith and Rigdon. As 
it now stands the Mormon Bible 
purports to relate the wanderings 
of a Hebrew named Lehi, who went 
out from Jerusalem six hundred 
years before Christ, and, after 
travelling eastward eight years 
" through a wilderness," came to 
the sea-coast, built a ship, got a 
mariner's compass somewhere, set 
sail with his wife Sariah, his sons 
Laman, Lemuel, Sam, Nephi, Jo- 
seph, and Jacob, the wives of the 
four elder sons, and six other per- 
sons, and in due time reached 
America. After the death of Lehi 
the Lord appointed Nephi to rule 
over the settlers, but Laman and 
Lemuel, heading a revolt, were 
cursed, and became the ancestors 
of the Indians. We shall not waste 
much time over this absurd and 
wearisome farrago, a mixture of 



Scriptural parodies, stupid inven- 
tions, and bold thefts from Shak- 
spere and King James' Bible. It 
is intolerably verbose, dragging 
through fifteen books, stuffed with 
gross faults of grammar, anachro- 
nisms, and solecisms of every kind, 
and comprising as much matter as 
four hundred and fifty of these 
pages, or more than three entire 
numbers of THE CATHOLIC WORLD. 
There are wonderful miracles and 
tremendous battles. Vast cities 
are created in North and South 
America. Nations wander to and 
fro across the continents. Priests, 
prophets, judges, and Antichrists, 
with names curiously constructed 
out of those in the Jewish Scrip- 
tures, appear and disappear like 
travesties of the persons in sacred 
history. The Nephites and the 
Lamanites hack and slay each oth- 
er. A republican form of govern- 
ment is instituted, and is assailed 
by monarchical conspiracies. Ne- 
phi, Jarom, Omni, Mosaiah, Mor- 
mon, Moroni, Alma, Ether, and 
other leaders of the Nephites write 
the records of the people upon 
golden plates, and save them for 
Joseph Smith to find in due sea- 
son. Seers give long-winded ex- 
planations of the divine purposes, 
and predict the incidents of the 
beginning of Mormonism, which 
had already taken place when Jo- 
seph Smith brought these predic- 
tions to light. The history of the 
Nephites is supposed to be con- 
temporaneous with the history of 
the Jews, but entirely independent 
of it ; their Scriptures are intended 
to supplement, not contradict, the 
holy Bible. The crucifixion of our 
Lord was announced to these Ame- 
rican Jews by portents and pro- 
phecies, and afterwards the Saviour 
came to the chief city of the Ne- 
phites, showed his wounded hands 



234 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



and feet, healed the sick, blessed 
little children, and remained here 
forty days teaching Christianity. 
Gradually the Lamanites, or In- 
dians, overcame the Nephites. In 
the year 384 a final battle was 
fought on the hill Cumorah (Onta- 
rio County, New York), where 320,- 
ooo Nephites were slain. This was 
the end of the pre-Columbian civi- 
lization of America, little or noth- 
ing being left of the Nephites ex- 
cept Mormon and his son Moroni, 
who completed the records on the 
gold plates and " hid them up " in 
the hill. Such, in brief outline, is 
the Mormon Bible. With the nar- 
rative of the descendants of Lehi, 
however, it contains an account of 
two other emigrations from Asia to 
America namely, that of the Jare- 
dites, who came here direct from 
the tower of Babel, and perished 
after they had stripped the conti- 
nent of timber, and that of a party 
of Jews who followed Lehi at the 
period of the Babylonian captivity. 
The Jaredites came in eight small 
air-tight barges, shaped like a cov- 
ered dish, loaded with all manner 
of beasts, birds, and fishes, and 
driven by a furious wind. The 
voyage lasted three hundred and 
forty-four days, so that, in spite of 
the miraculous gale astern, it was 
probably the slowest on record. 

It would be an endless task to 
point out even a tithe of the huge 
blunders in this fraudulent volume. 
We read of Christians a century 
before Christ, of the Gospel and 
the churches six centuries before 
Christ, of three oceans lying be- 
tween Asia and America, of pious 
Hebrews eating pork, of Jews long 
before the name of Jew was invent- 
ed, of horses, asses, swine, etc., 
running wild all over "the face of 
this continent in the time of the 
Jaredites, although it is certain that 



they were first introduced by the 
Spaniards. Nephi, in giving an ac- 
count of the emigration of his fa- 
ther Lehi, says : " And it came to 
pass that the Lord spake unto me, 
saying, Thou shalt construct a ship 
after the manner which I shall 
show thee, that I may carry thy 
people across these waters. And 
I said, Lord, whither shall I go 
that I may find ore to molten, that I 
may make tools ? . . . And it came 
to pass that I did make tools of the 
ore which I did molten out of the 
rock." Nephi, like St. John, was un- 
able to write down all the things that 
Jesus taught : " Behold, I were about 
to write them all, but the Lord/?r- 
bid it." Alma declares: "And it 
came to pass that whosoever did 
mingle his seed with that of the 
Lamanites did bring the same curse 
upon his seed ; therefore whomso- 
ever suffered himself to be led away 
by the Lamanites were called that 
head, and there was a mark set up- 
on him" Mormon is one of the 
most eccentric in syntax of all the 
scribes: "And Ammaron said un- 
to me, I perceive that thou art a 
sober child, and art quick to ob- 
serve ; therefore when ye are about 
twenty-and-four years old I would 
that ye should remember," etc. 
Nephi " saiv wars and rumors of 
wars." Alma writes: "And when 
Moroni had said these words, he 
went forth among the people, wav- 
ing the rent of his garment in the 
air, that all might see the writing 
which he had wrote upon the rent "/ 
The language of the precious re- 
cords is described as " reformed 
Egyptian," and Nephi explains 
that it " consists of the learning of 
the Jews and the language of the 
Egyptians," though upon what 
principle they are combined we 
are left to imagine. Pressed to ex- 
hibit a specimen of the mysterious 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



235 



characters, Joseph Smith gave what 
purported to be a fac-simile of a 
few lines to one of his disciples, 
who came to New York and sub- 
mitted it to Prof. Anthon. "It 
consisted," says Prof. Anthon, " of 
all kinds of crooked characters 
disposed in columns, and had evi- 
dently been prepared by some per- 
son who had before him at the 
time a book containing various al- 
phabets, Greek and Hebrew letters, 
crosses and flourishes ; Roman 
letters inverted or placed side- 
ways were arranged and placed in 
perpendicular columns ; and the 
whole ended in a rude delineation 
of a circle, divided into various 
compartments, decked with various 
strange marks, and evidently copied 
after the Mexican calendar given 
by Humboldt, but copied in such 
a way as not to betray the source 
whence it was derived." Mormon 
says he would have written in He- 
brew, if the plates had been large 
enough. 

In giving the translation of the 
mysterious books to the world 
Joseph Smith, whose education 
had been sadly neglected, made 
use of an amanuensis. This at 
first was a farmer named Martin 
Harris. The prophet sat behind a 
blanket stretched across the room, 
and, thus screened from profane 
eyes, read aloud from the gold 
plates, by the miraculous aid of the 
Urim and Thummim, the sacred 
text, which the confiding Harris re- 
duced to writing. The sceptical, 
of course, believe that what Smith 
held before him was no pile of me- 
tallic tablets, but merely the manu- 
script of Solomon Spalding, into 
which he emptied from time to 
time a great deal of rubbish of his 
own make. No one, however, suc- 
ceeded in penetrating behind the 
blanket. The work had gone on 



for a year and a half, when Harris, 
tempted by his wife, embezzled 
the manuscript. This was a seri- 
ous loss. Joseph could not repro- 
duce it in the same words, and it 
would not do to risk discrepancies. 
" Revelation " came to his aid in this 
dilemma, and informed him that 
Harris had " altered the words " of 
the manuscript " in order to catch 
him " in the translation. The sto- 
len pages were from the Book of 
Mormon ; he must not attempt to 
replace them ; he should let them 
go, for a narrative of the same 
events would be found in the Book 
of Nephi : 

" And now verily I say unto you that 
an account of those things that you have 
written, which have gone out of your 
hands, are engraven upon the plates of 
Nephi ; yea, and you remember it was 
said in those writings that a more parti- 
cular account was given of these things 
upon the plates of Nephi. Behold they 
have only got a part or an abridgment 
of the account of Nephi. Behold, there 
are many things engraven on the plates 
of Nephi which do throw greater views 
upon mv gospel ; therefore it is wisdom 
in me that you should translate this first 
part of the engravings of Nephi, and 
send forth in this work." * 

Oliver Cowdery now became 
scribe, and the task was finished 
without further accidents, the Books 
of Nephi standing at the head of 
the volume, and the remnant of the 
Book of Mormon, which gives its 
title to the whole collection, com- 
ing near the end of the table of 
contents. Still, the wretched Har- 
ris was not altogether cut off for 
his sin. He owned a farm. When 
the translation was finished Heaven 
uttered, by the mouth of Smith, " a 
commandment of God, and not of 
man, to Martin Harris ": "I com- 

*" Revelation given to Joseph Smith, Jr., May, 
1829, informing him of the alteration of the manu- 
script of the fore part of the Book of Mormon." 
Covenants and Commandments, sec xxxvi. 



236 



The two PropJiets of Mormonism. 



mand thee that thou shalt not co- 
vet thine own property, but impart 
it freely to the printing of the Book 
of Mormon. And misery thou shalt 
receive if thou wilt slight these 
counsels yea, even the destruction 
of thyself and property." So Har- 
ris mortgaged his farm to pay the 
printer, and in 1830 appeared at 
Palmyra, New York, The Book of 
Mormon : an Account Written by 
the Hand of Mormon upon Plates 
taken from the Plates of Nephi. By 
Joseph Smith, Jr., author and pro- 
prietor.* 

Instructed by John the Baptist, 
Smith and Cowdery now went into 
the river and baptized each other 
by immersion. Joseph then or- 
dained Oliver to the Aaronic priest- 
hood, and Oliver ordained Joseph. 
In April, 1830, the "Church of 
Christ " was organized at the house 
of Peter Whitmer in Fayette, Se- 
neca County, New York, the com- 
pany of the faithful consisting only 
of the prophet, his two brothers, 
his scribe, and two Whinners ; but 
in the course of the summer seve- 
ral other converts appeared, and 
Joseph became associated with 
three men of some ability and edu- 
cation, who gave the Mormon creed 
a doctrinal development which the 
founder himself was quite incapable 
of devising. These three were Sid- 
ney Rigdon, Orson Pratt, and Par- 
ley P. Pratt. They were devotees 
of the sensational and inspirational 
school, ready for any new form of 
spiritual extravagance, believers in 
visions, crack-brained students of 
the prophecies. Rigdon had been 
a preacher among the Campbell- 
ites a sect whose fundamental doc- 
trine it is that no precise doctrines 

* Five thousand copies were printed, yet the 
first edition is excessively rare. The later editions 
differ a little from the original. The " third Euro- 
pean edition," which is now before us, was pub- 
lished at Liverpool in 1852. 



are necessary. Read your Bible, 
say they, select your opinions from 
it, don't allow infant baptism, but 
get yourselves baptized by immer- 
sion as often as you commit sin. 
Upon this broad foundation they 
can erect as many different systems 
of theology as they have congrega- 
tions. Rigdon had outgrown the 
latitudinarianism and bibliolatry of 
the Campbellites, and at the time 
of Joseph Smith's appearance he 
was preaching a religion of his own, 
rousing his little Ohio congregation 
with apocalyptic dreams and inter- 
pretations, and bidding them look 
for the instant coming of the Lord. 
Although his name does not appear 
in the roll of the first converts and 
apostles, it is certain that he was 
intimately associated with Smith 
from the beginning; it is certain 
that he embodied his peculiar views 
in the Mormon creed; it is sus- 
pected that he had more than a 
half-share in arranging the original 
machinery of imposture. Parley 
P. Pratt was likewise a Campbellite 
preacher, a man of ardent and pas- 
sionate temperament, restless, elo- 
quent, a brilliant albeit somewhat 
rude orator. Orson Pratt, inclin- 
ing rather towards metaphysical 
speculations than prophecy and 
spiritual excitement, became the 
Mormon philosopher and contro- 
versialist, and to him are attributa- 
ble the extraordinary materialistic 
doctrines which form so important 
a part of the new system.* When 
Smith and his companions began 
to preach it does not appear that 

* Oliver Cowdery was expelled from the church 
some years later for "lying, counterfeiting, and 
immorality," and died a miserable drunkard. Sid- 
ney Rigdon attempted to rule the church by reve- 
lation after the death of Joseph Smith, and, being 
"cut off" at the demand of Brigham Young, led 
away a small sect of seceders. Parley P. Pratt, 
having induced a married woman to become his 
polygamous wife, was killed by the outraged hus- 
band. Orson Pratt is still living, and one of the 
ablest of the Mormon leaders. 



The two Prophets of M or monism. 



237 



they had any scheme of theology 
ready at hand. Moroni and the 
golden plates made up the sum of 
their first teachings. There was 
comparatively little doctrine of any 
kind in the Book of Mormon ; but, 
as Joseph's prophetic pretensions 
found acceptance, it became neces- 
sary for the prophet to announce 
some positive creed. In setting it 
forth, point after point, he appeal- 
ed neither to history nor to reason ; 
" revelation " taught him from day 
to day all that he wished to know; 
and so, little by little, he built up a 
mass of dogma in which it is im- 
possible to discover any regular 
plan. The authoritative handbook 
of Mormon theology as it existed 
in Smith's time is a small volume 
first published in 1835, entitled 
The Doctrine and Covenants of the 
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- 
Day Saints, carefully selected from 
the revelations of God, by Joseph 
Smith, President of said Church. 
It comprises two parts. The first 
consists of seven Lectures on Faith,* 
which need not detain us; the se- 
cond and more important contains 
about one hundred " revelations," 
addressed sometimes to Smith, 
sometimes to one or another of the 
disciples, sometimes to the church, 
and occasionally to sceptical Mor- 
mons who showed signs of becom- 
ing troublesome. They embrace 
counsels and instructions of all 
kinds, for the organization of the 
hierarchy, the preaching of the new 
gospel, the regulation of private 
business affairs, and the manage- 
ment of congregations. Here is a 
sample of a " revelation given in 
Kirtland, August, 1831 " : " Let my 
servant Newel K. Whitney retain 
his store or, in other words, the 



* Although these lectures bear Smith's name, it 
is understood that they were really written by 
Sidney Rigdon. 



store yet for a little season. Never- 
theless, let him impart all the money 
which he can impart, to be sent up 
unto the land of Sion." A few 
days later the voice of heaven spoke 
through Joseph Smith again : 

"And now verily I say that it is ex- 
pedient in me that my servant Sidney 
Gilbert, after a few weeks, should re- 
turn upon his business, and to his 
agency in the land of Sion ; and that 
which he hath seen and heard may be 
made known unto my disciples, that 
they perish not. And for this cause 
have I spoken these things. And again, 
I say unto you, that my servant Isaac 
Morley may not be tempted above that 
which he is able to bear, and counsel 
wrongfully to your hurt, I gave com- 
mandment that his farm should be sold. 
I willeth not that my servant Frederick 
G. Williams should sell his farm, for I 
the Lord willeth to retain a stronghold 
in the land of Kirtland for the space of 
five years, in the which I will not over- 
throw the wicked, that thereby I may 
save some." 

There was a special revelation 
to the prophet's wife, Emma, who 
never quite relished Joseph's pro- 
ceedings : 

" Hearken unto the voice of the Lord 
your God while I speak unto you, Emma 
Smith, my daughter ; for verily I say 
unto you all those who receive my gos- 
pel are sons and daughters in my king- 
dom. A revelation I give unto you con- 
cerning my will, and if thou art faithful 
and walk in the paths of virtue before 
me, I will preserve thy life and thou 
shall receive an inheritance in Sion. 
Behold, thy sins are forgiven thee, and 
thou art an elect lady whom I have call- 
ed. Murmur not because of the things 
which thou hast not seen, for they are 
withheld from thee and from the world, 
which is wisdom in me in a time to 
come. And the office of thy calling 
shall be for a comfort unto my servant, 
Joseph Smith, Jr., thy husband, in his 
afflictions, with consoling words in the 
spirit of meekness." 

She was afterwards styled by 
the saints the Elect Lady, or" Cyria 
Electa," and was " ordained " by 



2 3 8 



The two. Prophets of M or monism. 



Joseph as his scribe in the place of 
Oliver Cowdery. The dogmas to 
be found in this book are few and 
simple. The saints were taught to 
believe in " God the Eternal Father, 
and in his Son, Jesus Christ, and 
in the Holy Ghost"; to. believe that 
men will not be punished for origi- 
nal sin ; that the four saving ordi- 
nances of the Gospel are faith, re- 
pentance, baptism, and the laying- 
on of hands for the Holy Ghost ; 
that the church enjoys still, as it 
did in primitive times, " the gift 
of tongues, prophecy, revelation, 
visions, healing, interpretation of 
tongues, etc." ; that the Bible, " as 
far as it is translated correctly," 
and the Book of Mormon are both 
the word of God ; that " the or- 
ganization of the primitive church 
viz., apostles, prophets, pastors, 
teachers, evangelists, etc." ought 
to be revived ; and that Israel will 
be literally gathered and the ten 
tribes restored, Sion built on this 
continent, the personal reign of 
Christ established on earth, and the 
earth renewed in paradisaic glory. 
Finally, the book contains elaborate 
instructions for the establishment 
of a double priesthood ; that of 
Melchisedech is the higher, and em- 
braces the offices of apostle, Seven- 
ty, patriarch, high-priest, and elder ; 
the other is that of Aaron, and in- 
cludes bishop, priest, teacher, and 
deacon ; it can only be held by the 
lineal descendants of Aaron, who 
are designated by revelation. 

It will be seen how artfully this 
plan of a church was adapted to 
the purposes of Smith and Rigdon, 
supposing them to have been, as 
we have no doubt they were, arrant 
and conscious cheats. There was 
novelty and mystery enough in it 
to attract the fanatical, and there 
was not so very much after all to 
shock their common sense ; while 



the doctrine of continuous revela- 
tion and the prophetic office left a 
door wide open for the introduc- 
tion of other inventions as fast as 
they were found desirable. We 
shall see, further on, what mon- 
strous blasphemies and absurdities 
were in reality adopted as the 
saints became strong enough to 
bear them. 

Noyes, in his History of Amer- 
ican Socialisms, speaks of Western 
New York as " the volcanic region" 
of spiritual and intellectual distur- 
bance. Here sprang up Mormon- 
ism ; here were first heard the 
ghostly rappers ; here raged Miller- 
ism and Second-Adventism ; here 
John Collins founded the Skan- 
eateles community on the basis of 
" no God, no government, no mar- 
riage, no money, no meat" ; here 
arose the "inspired" Ebenezer 
colony, since removed to Iowa ; 
here flourished all manner of Fou- 
rierite phalanxes, wild social ex- 
periments, and extravagant beliefs ; 
here at the present day are found 
the Brocton community, with their 
doctrine of "divine respiration," 
and the Perfectionists of Oneida, 
perhaps the worst of all the 
professors of free-love. In this 
region of satanic activity the Mor- 
mon preachers made disciples so 
fast that Smith was soon encour- 
aged to undertake the " gathering 
of the tribes." He had visited Sid- 
ney Rigdon at Kirtland, Ohio, early 
in 1831, and had a revelation com- 
manding the saints in New York to 
follow him. But in June the town 
of Independence, in Jackson Coun- 
ty, Missouri, was revealed as the 
site of the American Sion, and 
there some hundreds of the faith- 
ful, selling all that they had in the 
East, assembled and laid the foun- 
dation of a temple. With this 
event begins a phase of Mormon- 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



239 



ism the political separation of the 
Latter-Day Saints from the Gen- 
tiles which at once illustrates 
most forcibly its fanaticism and 
accounts for its temporal success. 
Henceforth the leaders had only to 
give the word of command, and the 
people went wherever the finger of 
the prophet pointed, sacrificed their 
lands and houses, broke off domes- 
tic ties, and marched through pain, 
starvation, and death into the 
parched wilderness. The settle- 
ment at Kirtland, however, was re- 
tained ; a revelation even com- 
manded the saints to build there a 
house for Joseph Smith " to live 
and translate in," and another 
great temple for the Lord. This 
was fortunate, because the Mor- 
mons were soon expelled from In- 
dependence by a mob; and when 
Joseph, in obedience to revelation, 
raised an army of two hundred men, 
and, with the title of " commander- 
in-chief of the armies of Israel," 
marched twelve hundred miles on 
foot to reinstate them, his expedition 
was dispersed by cholera and thun- 
der-storms as soon as it reached the 
scene of action. The saints were 
never restored to the homes from 
which they had been driven out ; 
yet to this day they look for a re- 
storation. They refused all offers 
to sell their estates; they hold the 
Missouri title-deeds as the most 
precious of their inheritances ; the 
city of the Great Salt Lake is only 
the temporary home of their exile ; 
and Brigham Young, in his will, 
which was published the other day, 
after giving instructions for his 
funeral, says : " But if I should live 
to get back to the church in Jack- 
son County, Missouri, I wish to be 
buried there." 

It is not our purpose to follow 
the persecuted fanatics in all their 
early migrations. Driven from 



place to place, they came, in 1840, 
to Hancock County, Illinois, where 
the owner of a large tract of wild 
land gave Smith a portion of it, in 
order to create a market for the 
rest. The prophet sold it in lots 
to his followers, at high prices, and 
there, on the bank of the Mississip- 
pi, the Mormons built the city of 
Nauvoo. It was revealed to them 
that they should build a goodly 
and holy " boarding-house," and 
give Joseph Smith and his posterity 
a place in it for ever, and those who 
had money were commanded by 
name to put it into the enterprise 
(" Revelation given to Joseph 
Smith, Jan. 19,1841"). They were 
to build a magnificent temple also; 
they were to organize a military 
force, known as the Nauvoo Le- 
gion ; they were to create, in short, 
within the limits of Illinois, a theo- 
cratic state, with Joseph Smith at 
its head as mayor, general, pro- 
phet, church president, and inspir- 
ed mouthpiece of the divine will. 
The city grew as if by magic. The 
legislature of Illinois granted it a 
charter of such extraordinary lib- 
erality that its officers became prac- 
tically independent of all other au- 
thority. The apostles, sent all 
over America and England, preach- 
ed with such zeal that in the course 
of six years no fewer than fifteen 
thousand believers were numbered 
in the Nauvoo community. Arrest- 
ed several times for , treason, for 
instigating an attempt at murder, 
and for other crimes, Joseph Smith 
was released by Mormon courts 
and set all " Gentile" laws at defi- 
ance. He was absolute in every- 
thing, organizing the government 
upon the most despotic principles, 
yet copying in some things the sys- 
tem and the phraseology of the 
Hebrew nation. His aids and 
counsellors received names and ti- 



240 



The tivo Prophets of 1\I or monism. 



ties imitated from the Bible. Brig- 
ham Young was " the Lion of the 
Lord," Parley P. Pratt was " the 
Archer of Paradise," Orson Pratt 
was " the Gauge of Philosophy," 
John Taylor was " the Champion 
of Right," Lyman Wight was "the 
Wild Ram of the Mountains." No 
one could deal in land or liquor 
except Joseph Smith. No one 
could aspire to political office or 
to church preferment without his 
permission. No one could travel 
abroad or remain quiet at home ex- 
cept by his consent. In Kirtland, 
with the assistance of Rigdon, he 
had started a bank and flooded the 
country with notes that were never 
redeemed. In Nauvoo he amassed 
what was, for that time and that 
region, the great fortune of $1,000,- 
ooo. From the first gathering of 
the saints into communities he had 
made it a practice to use them in 
politics. He had given their votes 
to one party or another as interest 
dictated, and in 1844 he went so 
far as to offer himself for the Pres- 
idency of the United States, and 
sent two or three thousand elders 
through the States to electioneer 
for him. 

As he grew in pride and prosper- 
ity the revelations multiplied, the 
faith became more and more ex- 
travagant, the ceremonies and or- 
dinances of the church more cum- 
brous and more mystical. Moroni 
and Raphael^ Peter and John, visit- 
ed and conversed with him. He 
healed the possessed ; he wrestled 
with the devil. The brethren be- 
gan to prophesy in the temple; 
mysterious impulses stirred the 
congregations ; " a mighty rushing 
wind filled the place"; "many 
began to speak in tongues; others 
saw glorious visions, and Joseph 
beheld that the temple was filled 
with angels, and told the congrega- 



tion so. The people of the neigh- 
borhood, hearing an unusual sound 
within the temple, and seeing a 
bright light like a pillar of fire rest- 
ing upon it, came running together 
and were astonished at what was 
transpiring." * This diabolic mani- 
festation, or alleged manifestation, 
reminds us of the scenes in the 
Irvingite congregations in London 
six years previously, when those 
brethren likewise prophesied in an 
unknown language. But the speci- 
mens of the Mormon " gift of 
tongues " which have been pre- 
served for us are not calculated to 
inspire awe. " Eli, ele, elo, ela 
come, coma, como reli, rele, rela, 
relo sela, selo, sele, selum vavo, 
vava, vavum sero, sera, seri, se- 
rum " such was the style of the 
rhapsodies which inflamed the zeal 
of the Mormon saints. f 

It was discovered that there was 
no salvation in the next world with- 
out Mormon baptism, and, to pro- 
vide for the generations which pre- 
ceded Joseph Smith, every saint 
was told to be immersed vicarious- 
ly for his dead ancestors. There, 
was incessant dipping and sputter- 
ing ; the whole church for a sea- 
son was in a chronic state of cold 
and dampness ; and the recorders 
worked their hardest, laying up in 
the temple the lists of the regener- 
ated for the information of the 
angels. The double hierarchy be- 
came so complicated that long study 
was needed to comprehend it. The 
church offices were multiplied. 
The authority of the president and 
the apostles grew more and more 
despotic. A travelling sho\vman 
visited the West with some Egyp- 
tian mummies. Joseph Smith 
bought them, and, finding in the 

* Autobiography of Joseph Smith, quoted by 
Stenhouse. 

t This is quoted by Capt. Burton, but he does 
not give his authority. 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



241 



wrappings a roll of papyrus, he pro- 
duced a miraculous translation of 
the hieroglyphics as the " Book of 
Abraham." A fac-simile of the 
papyrus was taken to Paris in 1855 
by M. Re"my and submitted to the 
Egyptologist Deveria, who found 
it to consist of a representation of 
the resurrection of Osiris, together 
with a funerary manuscript of com- 
paratively recent date. 

All who have studied the manu- 
facture of American religions and 
social philosophies are aware how 
characteristic of these moral and 
intellectual rebellions is an attack 
upon the Christian law of marriage.* 
The inventions of Joseph Smith 
soon took the usual course, although 
it was probably not until near the 
end of his career that he became 
bold enough to contemplate the 
general establishment of polygamy. 
It appears that as early as 1838 
he had a number of "spiritual 
wives " who cohabited with him, and 
Mr. Stenhouse asserts that " many 
women" have boasted to him that 
they sustained such relations with 
the prophet. This sort of license, 
however, was an esoteric doctrine, 
for the advanced believers only, 
not for the common people. In- 
deed, in 1842, although a practical 
plurality had been for some time 
enjoined by the illuminated, the 
doctrine was formally repudiated 
by a number of elders, apostles, 
and women, who declared that they 
knew of no other marriage than 
that of one wife to one husband. 
In 1845 an appendix on" Marriage" 
was added to the book of Doc- 
trine and Covenants, in which oc- 

* About the time of the invention of Mormonism 
Robert Owen's communistic propaganda was mak- 
ing an extraordinary sensation in America. In his 
"Declaration of Mental Independence' 1 at New 
Harmony, July 4, 1826, Owen declared that man 
had up to that hour been the slave of " a trinity of 
monstrous evils "Irrational Religion, Property, 
and Marriage. 

VOL. XXVI. 16 



curs the following passage : " In- 
asmuch as this church of Christ has 
been reproached with the crime of 
fornication and polygamy, we de- 
clare that we believe that one man 
should have one wife, and one wo- 
man but one husband, except in 
case of death, when either is at lib- 
erty to marry again." Yet it is be- 
yond all question that Joseph long 
before this had been involved in 
serious domestic difficulties on ac- 
count of the jealousy of his true 
wife, Ernma, and he was obliged to 
resort to " revelation " to pacify 
her. The " Revelation on Celestial 
Marriage," which enjoins a plurality 
of wives as a service especially ac- 
ceptable to God, purports to have 
been given at Nauvoo in 1843. It 
contains these sentences : 

"And let mine handmaid Emma 
Smith receive all those that have been 
given unto my servant Joseph, and who 
are virtuous and pure before me. And 
I command mine handmaid Emma Smith 
to abide and cleave unto my servant 
Joseph and to none else. And again 
verily I say, let mine handmaid forgive 
my servant Joseph his trespasses, and 
then shall she be forgiven her tres- 
passes." 

The revelation, however, was kept 
secret until long after Joseph's 
death. Emma, if not satisfied, was 
quieted. The spiritual marriages 
went on, and even the initiated 
continued to deny them. John 
Taylor, the present head of the 
church, held a public discussion of 
Mormonism in the English colony 
at Boulogne in 1850, and stoutly 
denied the doctrine of polygamy, 
although he had at the time five 
wives in Utah. 

It was polygamy that brought 
Joseph to his violent end. He 
had attempted to take the wife of 
a disciple named Law. The hus- 
band rebelled, and with one or two 
other malcontents established a 



242 



The tit>o Prophets of Mormonism. 



paper called the Nauvoo Expositor, 
for the purpose of exposing the 
secret corruptions of the "prophet 
and his chief associates. Only one 
number was printed- Joseph or- 
dered the press to be destroyed 
and the type scattered. Law and 
his party appealed to the autho- 
rities of the county for redress. 
Writs of arrest were issued, and 
set aside by the Mormon courts. 
The government called out the 
militia to enforce the process. An 
armed conflict appeared inevitable, 
when the Mormon leaders surren- 
dered, and Joseph Smith, Hyrum 
Smith, John Taylor, and Willard 
Richards were lodged in the coun- 
ty jail at Carthage. There, on the 
27th of June, 1844, they were at- 
tacked by an armed mob. Hy- 
rum was shot down at the first 
volley and almost instantly expir- 
ed. Joseph, after defending him- 
self with a revolver, attempted to 
escape by the window, and was 
killed by a discharge of musketry 
from the yard below. 

In his lifetime the prophet was 
often denounced and resisted by 
his own followers ; " revelation " 
repeatedly put down revolts ; apos- 
tates in great numbers, including 
the very founders of the church, 
were cut off and given over to Sa- 
tan for questioning the truth of 
Joseph's inspired utterances. But 
his death healed all such quarrels. 
He became in the eyes of his fa- 
natical followers the first of saints, 
the most glorious of martyrs. To 
this day even those who do not 
believe in Mormonism argue that 
Joseph must have believed in it, 
because for its sake he lived a life 
of persecution and submitted to a 
cruel death. The narrative which 
we have briefly sketched is enough 
to show the fallacy of this reason- 
ing. Mormonism gave Joseph 



Smith wealth, power, flattery, and 
sensual delights. It found him a 
miserable, penniless country boy; 
it made him the ruler of a state, 
the autocrat of a thriving commu- 
nity, the head of a harem. There 
never was a time when the choice 
was offered him between worldly 
advantage on the one hand and 
fidelity to his creed on the other. 
To renounce his pretensions would 
have been the ruin of his fortunes. 
Having once entered upon the ca- 
reer of imposture, he had every 
temptation to persevere to the end. 
He was mobbed and exiled and 
imprisoned, not because he believ- 
ed in the Book of Mormon, but be- 
cause he warred upon existing so- 
cial and political institutions ; and 
there was nothing to make his 
death more sacred than that of 
any other cheat and libertine who 
is murdered by masked ruffians in 
a frontier settlement. After his 
death the twelve apostles ruled the 
church, waiting for' the will of 
Heaven to designate by inspiration 
a new leader.* Sidney Rigdon 
claimed the prophetic office, but 
was rejected and driven forth. 
The prime mover in his excommu- 
nication was the senior apostle, to 
whom the accident of rank gave a 
practical precedence in all the af- 
fairs of the church. He taught the 
saints to be patient and expectant, 
to reverence Joseph as their chief 
for all eternity, to be governed by 

* In the " Revelation on Celestial Marriage " 
Joseph Smith is styled " him who is anointed both 
as well for time and for all eternity ; and that, too, 
most holy," and it is added: ''I have appointed 
unto my servant Joseph to hold this power in the 
last days, and there is never but one on the earth 
at a time on whom this power and the keys of this 
priesthood are conferred." Hence a government 
by the quorum of apostles, in the Mormon idea, can 
never be anything but an interregnum. They be- 
lieve that Heaven will not fail to send them a " pro- 
phet, seer, and revelator," and, as Brigham succeed- 
ed Joseph, so they look for some one in the appointed 
time to succeed Brigham. Una avulso, nan deficit 
alter. 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



243 



Joseph's voice, to cease vexing 
themselves about Joseph's succes- 
sor. This was Brigham Young. 

At length the time was ripe and 
the minds of the people were pre- 
pared. On the 24th of December, 
1847, Brigham ascended the pulpit 
to preach. The Gentiles assert 
that he arranged his face and 
dress, modulated his voice, regulat- 
ed his gestures, to imitate the de- 
parted prophet. The effect was 
electrical. The people believed 
that Joseph stood before them. Wo- 
men screamed and fainted; men 
wept ; cries resounded through 
the temple. Here was the succes- 
sor of Joseph at last, and Brigham 
Young was made president of the 
church, and recognized as " pro- 
phet, seer, and revelator." He 
was a man greatly inferior in edu- 
cation to some of the other leaders, 
and lie had done little as yet to 
justify the preference now shown 
him. He was a native of Vermont, 
and one of the early converts. Be- 
fore joining the church he had 
been a painter and glazier. In the 
church he was noted as a stanch, 
shrewd, hard-working, useful broth- 
er, not much troubled with visions 
or theological theories, rarely caught 
up by those tempests of spiritual 
madness whicli used to sweep 
through the congregations. He 
could not have devised the impos- 
ture which Joseph and Rigdon cre- 
ated. He could not have built up 
the elaborate system which they 
constructed out of Old-World re- 
ligions and modern politics. He 
was fierce, and perhaps fanatical, 
but he had little imagination and 
little inventiveness. In the case of 
other early Mormons it was some- 
times doubtful whether they were 
not occasionally deceived by their 
own impostures, hurried along by a 
spirit which they had raised and 



knew not how to control ; but 
Brigham offered no cause for such 
suspicion. He left Mormonism a 
very different thing from what it 
was in 1840, yet he added nothing 
to it. A change had been going on 
insensibly ever since the saints 
gathered at Nauvoo ; a further 
change had been begun by the 
preaching of Orson Pratt; and 
Joseph Smith had originated two 
great movements the introduction 
of polygamy and the removal into 
the heart of the wilderness which 
Brigham was to bring to their term. 
He is the developer, therefore, of 
other men's ideas. 

The notion that the Mormons 
were a chosen and inspired people, 
blessed with revelations not given 
to the rest of the world, and gov- 
erned by the direct and special 
commands of Heaven, necessarily 
implied the establishment of an 
independent political community, 
and it was their disloyalty to the 
state rather than their immoralities 
which roused against them so often 
in the early times the anger of 
mobs and the animosity of the 
civil authorities. The experiment 
of creating a state within a state 
had failed, and Joseph Smith be- 
fore his death had taken the first 
steps towards beginning a new 
settlement in the far West, and 
removing the whole body of his 
disciples to some remote and 
solitary region where neither the 
United States nor any other gov- 
ernment would be likely to inter- 
fere with them. It was Brigham's 
part to lead this extraordinary 
exodus. It began more than a 
year before his formal appointment 
as head of the church ; it was has- 
tened by the fact that warrants 
had been issued in Illinois for the 
arrest of a large number of promi- 
nent saints on a charge of manu- 



244 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



facturing counterfeit money, and 
that, partly on this account, partly 
by reason of the prevalence of 
murders, thefts, arsons, and vari- 
ous other outrages in which the 
Mormons and their opponents were 
about equally implicated, Nauvoo 
appeared likely soon to be the 
theatre of a civil war. An explor- 
ing party had been sent to the 
Pacific coast in 1844. Early in 
February, 1846, the general migra- 
tion began. Rarely has the world 
witnessed such a scene. The great 
temple at Nauvoo had just been 
completed with extravagant splen- 
dor. The city contained 17,000 
inhabitants, and only a small frac- 
tion of their valuable property 
could be disposed of at any price. 
They abandoned all that they could 
not carry, sacrificed their lands and 
houses, collected about twelve hun- 
dred wagons, and, under the com- 
mand of captains of fifties and cap- 
tains of hundreds, crossed the Mis- 
sissippi on the ice and moved into 
the wintry wilderness. We shrink 
from repeating the narrative of 
that horrible march. For more 
than two years they toiled west- 
ward, strewing the path with their 
dead. In winter they camped 
near Council Bluffs, and thence 
Brigham and a body of pioneers 
made their way across the Rocky 
Mountains. The first detachment 
reached the Great Salt Lake in 
July, 1847; the rest followed in the 
summer of 1848. It was a parched, 
desolate, rainless valley, but the 
wanderers hailed it as a haven of 
rest ; they encamped on the bank 
of a small stream, rested their 
weary animals, and without loss 
of an hour began to plough the 
ground, sow the autumn crops, and 
build a dam and a system of irri- 
gating canals. They had escaped 
from the United States as they 



fondly believed, and were on the 
soil of Mexico, where they had no 
doubt they could maintain them- 
selves against the feeble Mexican 
government. But " manifest des- 
tiny " was pursuing them. The 
boundaries of the United States 
were soon extended beyond this 
region by the treaty of Guadalupe 
Hidalgo ; the discovery of gold in 
California destroyed the isolation 
of the new Sion ; it was no longer 
a city hid in the desert, but a rest- 
ing-place on a great route of travel ; 
and the irrepressible conflict be- 
tween the federal republic and the 
absolute theocracy has been stead- 
ily growing sharper and sharper 
ever since. Of the great multitude 
which set out from Nauvoo barely 
four thousand ever reached the 
Great Salt Lake, the rest having 
deserted or dropped by the way ; 
but thousands of converts soon ar- 
rived from England, and in a very 
short time the community was again 
strong and prosperous. In 1849, 
just a year after the treaty of 
Guadalupe Hidalgo, the Mormons 
formally declared themselves " free 
and independent," and decreed the 
erection of the " State of Deseret," 
whose imaginary boundaries en- 
closed the whole of Nevada and 
Utah, and large parts of New Mexi- 
co, Arizona, California, Oregon, 
Idaho, Colorado, and Wyoming. 
To this political fiction they have 
resolutely adhered; and even while 
recognizing, as a matter of pru- 
dence, the de facto organization of 
the United States Territory of 
Utah, they have always maintained 
the de jure existence of their free 
and independent state.* Brigham, 
of course, was chosen governor of 
Deseret, and he held that title to 

* To avoid unpleasantness, the '' Legislature of 
Deseret " annually re-enacts en bloc the laws of 
the territorial legislature of Utah. 



The two Prophets of Monnonisni. 



245 



the day of his death, although, with 
his usual worldly shrewdness, he 
also accepted from Presidents Fill- 
more and Pierce the title of gov- 
ernor of Utah. 

To understand, however, the op- 
position which soon developed into 
such alarming hostility between 
Deseret and the United States, we 
must look at the changes which 
had been taking place in Mormon- 
ism itself. Possibly the early disci- 
ples of Joseph Smith were in the 
main ignorant, peaceable, and well- 
meaning fanatics, but in twenty 
years their character had under- 
gone a transformation. They first 
became quarrelsome, then dishon- 
est, next licentious, and afterwards 
unspeakably cruel and bloodthirsty. 
Joseph Smith lived long enough to 
see the beginning even of this last 
stage of corruption, but it was 
Brigham Young who brought the 
budding immoralities into full flow- 
er. The " Revelation on Celestial 
Marriage " was brought forth at a 
public meeting in Salt Lake City 
on the 2pth of August, 1852, and 
Brigham Young gave a history and 
explanation of it. The original 
manuscript was burned up by Jo- 
seph's real wife, Emma; but Brig- 
ham had a copy. 

" This revelation," said he, "has been 
in my possession many years, and who 
has known it? None but those who 
should know it. I keep a patent lock 
on my desk, and there does not anything 
leak out that should not. . . . The prin- 
ciple spoken of by Brother Pratt this 
morning we believe in. Many others 
are of the same mind. They are not ig- 
norant of what we are doing in our so- 
cial capacity. They have cried out, Pro- 
claim it ; but it would not do a few years 
ago ; everything must come in its time, 
as there is a time to all things. I am 
now ready to proclaim it." 

We do not read that any particu- 
lar sensation was created by the 



announcement. Indeed, the prac- 
tice had already become so com- 
mon that a federal judge, a year 
before this date, had denounced it 
in a Mormon assembly, and made a 
somewhat remarkable appeal to the 
women to put a stop to the horri- 
ble practice : 

" The women were excited ; the most 
of them were in tears before he had 
spoken many minutes. The men were 
astonished and enraged, and one word 
of encouragement from their leader 
would have brought on a collision. 
Brigham saw this, and was equal to the 
occasion. When the judge sat down, he 
rose, and, by one of those strong, ner- 
vous appeals for which he is so famous 
among the brethren, restored the equilib- 
rium of the audience. Those who but a 
moment before were bathed in tears 
now responded to his broad sarcasm 
and keen wit in screams of laughter ; 
and having fully restored the spirits of 
the audience, he turned to the judge and 
administered the following rebuke: 'I 
will kick you,' he said, 'or any other 
Gentile judge from this stand, if you or 
they again attempt to interfere with the 
affairs of our Sion.' "* 

Judge Brocchus, finding his life 
in danger, resigned his office and 
left the Territory. Once avowed, a 
belief in the doctrine was pronounc- 
ed essential to salvation, and the 
practice of it was carried to a depth 
of bestiality which would horrify a 
Turk. All degrees of relationship 
were practically ignored. Incest 
and vicarious marriage became ev- 
ery-day affairs. The saints were 
taught that " when our father Adam 
came into the Garden of Eden he 
came into it with a celestial body 
and brought Eve, one of his wives, 
with him " ; f and such blasphemies 
were coupled with the holiest of all 



* The Mormon Profiket. By Mrs. C. V. Waite. 
Cambridge. 1866. 

t Address by Brigham Young in the Salt Lake 
City Tabernacle. April 9, 1852, four months before 
the publication of Joseph's " Revelation." 



246 



The tii'o Prophets of Mormonism. 



names that the Christian shudders 
to think of them. 

The formal adoption of the doc- 
trine of polygamy, no longer as the 
personal peculiarity of a few lead- 
ers, but as the corner-stone of 
Mormon society, had a result which 
Brigham doubtless anticipated when 
he established it. The separation 
of the saints from the rest of Chris- 
tendom was made complete and 
final. Gentile civilization had forc- 
ed itself upon their mountain re- 
treat, and in the daily contact with 
Christianity and common sense the 
Mormon imposture was not likely 
long to survive. But the institu- 
tion of plural marriage placed be- 
tween the Gentile and the Latter- 
Day Saint a barrier more formida- 
ble than snow-crowned sierras and 
alkali deserts. Social intercourse 
became impossible between the fol- 
lowers of the two rival systems. 
Contempt and horror on the one 
side bred hatred on the other. For 
the polygamous saint, moreover, 
judging after the manner of men, 
there was no repentance. He was 
tied for ever to the church, an out- 
law from all Christendom, liable to 
a long imprisonment if he re-enter- 
ed the pale of society, safe even in 
Utah only so long as he enabled 
the " Governor of Deseret " to defy 
the authority of the United States. 
The polygamist learned to place in 
the prophet all his hopes for this 
world and the next, and to accept 
all his utterances with the docility 
of a child. So Brigham became 
not only a more powerful man than 
Joseph Smith, but beyond doubt 
the most absolute ruler in the en- 
tire world. 

It was now that the Mormon 
theology began to assume its most 
repulsive shape. Cut off from its 
early connection with a form of 
Christianity which, however cor- 



rupt, contained at least a remnant 
of the ancient faith, it sank with 
startling rapidity into the most dis- 
mal abysses of polytheism. To the 
materialistic doctrines which con- 
stituted the foundation and chief 
characteristic of the philosophy of 
Orson Pratt and other primitive 
expounders of Mormonism, was 
added an immense mass of crude 
and incongruous beliefs, not de- 
veloped by any process of logic, 
but simply heaped on by agglome- 
ration. Daily " revelations " brought 
forth daily inconsistencies and ab- 
surdities, under the weight of which 
the truths once professed by Smith 
were gradually buried 'and forgot- 
ten. Hence it is impossible to 
construct for Mormonism anything 
like a theological system. We can 
only state the isolated and often 
contradictory principles which are 
held by the saints at the present 
day, premising that although many 
of them can be traced more or less 
distinctly in the early literature of 
the sect, the most shocking of them 
were little, if at all, known until un- 
der Brigham Young the separation 
of the saints was completed. The 
most startling of Mormon dogmas, 
relieved of extraneous complica- 
tions, is that God is only a good 
man, and that men advance by 
evolution until they become gods. 
There is no Creator, there is no 
creature, there is no immaterial 
spirit. What we call God, says 
one authority, is nothing but the 
truth abiding in man. What we 
call God, says Orson Pratt, is "a 
material intelligent personage, pos- 
sessing both body and parts," like 
an ordinary man. He has legs, 
which he uses in walking, though 
he can move up and down in the 
air without them. He cannot be 
in more than one place at a time. 
He dwells in a planet called Kolob. 



The two Prophets of Mormonism. 



247 



He was formed by the union of 
certain elementary particles of mat- 
ter, self-moving, intelligent, and ex- 
isting from all eternity. All mat- 
ter is eternal. All substances are 
material. The souls of men were 
not created ; they are from eternity, 
like God himself. God eats, drinks, 
loves, hates; his relations with man- 
kind are purely human ; he begets 
existences in the natural way.* 
Before he became God he was an 
ordinary man. He differs from 
other men now only in power. He 
is not omnipotent ; he still increases 
and may continue to increase in- 
finitely. As God is only an improv- 
ed man, so man may come by grad- 
ual progress to know as much as 
God. Indeed, there are already in- 
numerable gods. The first verse of 
Genesis, " In the beginning God 
created heaven and earth," ought to 
read: "The Head God brought 
forth the gods, with the heavens 
and the earth. "f Each god rules 
over a world which he has peopled 
by generation, and the god of our 
world is Adam, who is only another 
form of the archangel Michael ; " he 
is our father and our God, and the 
only God with whom we have to 
do." The Mormons believe in a 
vague way in the Trinity nay, in 
two Trinities, one composed of Fa- 
ther, Son, and Holy Spirit ; the 
other, and older, of " Elohim, Jeho- 
vah, and Adam." The Father and 
Son have bodies of flesh and blood ; 
they occupy space ; they require 
time to move from place to place ; 
but the Holy Spirit (which is the 
mind of the Father and the Son), 



' " You believe that Adam was made of the dust 
of this earth. This I do not believe. I never did 
and I never want to, because I have come to un- 
derstanding and banished from my mind all the 
baby stories my mother taught me when I was a 
child" (Sermon by Brigham Young, Oct. 23, 
1853). 

t Joseph Smith professed to get this version by 
inspiration. 



although his substance is material, 
has no flesh and blood and per- 
meates everything. After death 
the souls of the wicked will be im- 
prisoned in the brutes. The saints 
will inhabit the planets, where they 
will have houses, farms, gardens, 
plantations of manna, and plenty of 
wives, and they will go on marrying 
and multiplying for all eternity. 
When this planetary system is filled 
up, new worlds will be called into 
existence, and in them the faithful, 
gradually developing into gods, will 
revel in the sensual delights of a 
Moslem paradise. 

Surely no such mixture of panthe- 
ism, polytheism, and rank atheism 
was ever devised before ; but we 
have not yet reached the worst. 
It was in 1852 that Brigham pro- 
claimed the doctrine that Adam is 
God, and to be honored and rever- 
ed as such. To this soon follow- 
ed the announcement that Joseph 
Smith was God. In a year or two 
more the doctrine was taught, at 
first cautiously, but after 1856 pub- 
licly and officially, that the only 
God to whom this generation is 
amenable is BRIGHAM YOUNG ! 

The declaration of this appal- 
ling impiety was made in the midst 
of a tempestuous " Reformation" 
which historians will probably 
regard as the culminating point 
of Mormon fanaticism. In the 
autumn of 1856 one Jedediah 
Grant, who stood high in the Mor- 
mon priesthood, began to preach a 
revival in which the most remarka- 
ble practices were public " accusa- 
tions of the brethren" and public 
"confessions of sin." An uncon- 
trollable madness seized upon the 
whole community. Preachers and 
penitents vied with one another in 
disgusting disclosures. The meet- 
ings resounded with wails and 
curses and slanderous charges. 



248 



The two Prophets of Mormonisni. 



Men, women, and children, not sat- 
isfied with laying bare their hidden 
sins, accused themselves of crimes 
they had never committed, and 
called upon the church to punish 
and disgrace them. " Go to Presi- 
dent Young," was the cry of the 
preachers. " Give up all that you 
have to President Young your 
money, your lands, your wives, 
your children, your blood." " Brig- 
ham Young," exclaimed Heber 
Kimball, " is my God, is your God, 
is the only God we shall ever see, 
if we do not obey him. Joseph 
Smith was our God when he was 
amongst us ; Brigham Young is our 
God now." The church authori- 
ties fanned the flame of excitement. 
They sent preachers into every 
ward and every settlement. Thou- 
sands of the saints placed all their 
property in Brigham's hands.* 
Then they became inflamed with 
persecuting zeal. They sacked 
the houses of offenders, whipped 
and mutilated those who spoke 
evil of the church. From such 
outrages it was but a step to mur- 
der. At Brigham's instigation the 
step was taken. In a discourse in 
the Tabernacle in February, 1857, 
he laid down a new law of love. 
We must love our neighbors as our- 
selves. But if we love ourselves, 
we must consent to the shedding 
of our own blood in order to atone 
for our sins and exalt us among the 
gods ; so also it is true love to shed 
our neighbor's blood for his eternal 
salvation. " I could refer you to a 
plenty of instances where men have 
been righteously slain in order to 
atone for their sins. The wicked- 
ness and ignorance of the nations 

* They made it over to him as trustee, retaining, 
however, the use of it. Thus an additional tie 
was made to keep them true to the faith. Brigham 
could at any time take away all that they possessed, 
and if they left the Territory they would have to 
go penniless. 



forbid this principle being in full 
force, and the time will come 
when the law of God will be in full 
force. This is loving our neigh- 
bor as ourselves ; if he needs help, 
help him ; if he wants salvation, 
and it is necessary to spill his blood 
on the earth in order that he may 
be saved, spill it !" " There are sins," 
said he on another occasion while 
the " Reformation " was at its 
height, '* that must be atoned for 
by the blood of the man. That is 
the reason why men talk to you as 
they do from this stand ; they un- 
derstand the doctrine and throw 
out a few words about it. You 
have been taught that doctrine, but 
you do not understand it." Alas! 
understanding came soon enough. 
The Springville murders in March, 
1857, were followed that summer 
by the appalling massacre at the 
Mountain Meadows of one hun- 
dred and twenty peaceable emi- 
grants, men, women, and children, 
on their way to California. The 
midnight assassin went his rounds. 
The church executioners were de- 
spatched upon their awful missions. 
Sinners were sent on errands from 
which they never returned. Apos- 
tasy was punished by the knife or 
the bullet. A Welshman named 
Morris set up as a rival prophet, and 
was shot down in cold blood with 
a number of his deluded followers. 
Gentiles were put to death for pre- 
suming to dispute with Mormons 
over the title to property. A hus- 
band took his wife upon his knee 
and calmly cut her throat to atone 
for her sins. 

"Men are murdered here," said a 
federal judge to the grand jury " coolly, 
deliberately, premeditatedly murdered. 
Their murder is deliberated and deter- 
mined upon by church-council meetings, 
and that, too, for no other reason than 
that they had apostatized from your 



The two Prophets of Mor monism. 



249 



church and were striving to leave the 
Territory. You are the tools, the dupes, 
the instruments of a tyrannical church 
despotism. The heads of your church 
order and direct you. You are taught 
to obey their orders and commit these 
horrid murders. Deprived of your lib- 
erty, you have lost your manhood and 
become the willing instruments of bad 
men." 

Close upon the reign of terror 
established by the " Reformation " 
came the great Mormon rebellion, 
and the march of an army to Utah 
to install the territorial officers ap- 
pointed by President Buchanan. 
Brigham thundered defiance from 
the pulpit ; but on the approach of 
the troops he ordered the whole 
community to leave their homes 
and once more move out into the 
wilderness to build a new Sion. It 
is a wonderful illustration of the 
fanaticism and abject submission 
to which he had brought the peo- 
ple that this order was promptly 
obeyed. Before the " war " was set- 
tled by negotiation no fewer than 
30,000 poor creatures took flight, 
and many of them, being utterly 
destitute, were never able to return. 
The frenzy of the Reformation era 
died out ; the rebellion was quell- 
ed; but the doctrine of blood- 
atonement has not been abandon- 
ed, and to this day the soil of Utah 
is red with human sacrifices. 

With such a savage and brutal 
paganism as the Mormon religion 
thus became under Brigham Young's 
influence it is impossible that Chris- 
tian civilization should ever be at 
peace. The steady resistance 
which it has offered to the authori- 
ty of the United States needs no 
further explanation than we find in 



the constitution of the Mormon 
Church and the fundamental doc- 
trines of the Mormon creed. There 
are chapters in the history of the 
Latter-Day Saints upon which we 
have not thought it necessary to 
linger. The organization of the 
Danites, and the long list of mur- 
ders and other outrages preceding 
the open inculcation of human sac- 
rifices, are among the most impor- 
tant of the events which we have 
thus passed over. They might be 
considered excrescences which time 
would perhaps remove. We have 
confined ourselves to the natural 
and logical consequences of the 
preaching of the two prophets ; to 
the circumstances which throw 
light upon their personal charac- 
ters ; to the facts which may ena- 
ble people to place a juster valua- 
tion than now seems to be current 
upon the elements which they have 
introduced into American society 
and the work which they have ac- 
complished in the Rocky Mountain 
desert. Accepting even the most 
extravagant estimates of the mate- 
rial prosperity of the Mormon set- 
tlements, we think it must be ad- 
mitted that their thrift is a curse to 
the world. And as for Brigham 
himself, cold, calculating, avari- 
cious, sensual, violent, cruel, roll- 
ing in luxury, stretching out his 
hands on every side to grasp the 
property of his dupes, and pushing 
them on from crime to crime, from 
horror to horror, that he might the 
better amass money, he will take 
his place in history not only as a 
worse man than Joseph Smith, but 
as one of the most dangerous mon- 
sters ever let loose upon the world. 



250 To the Wood-Thrush. 



TO THE WOOD-THRUSH. 

How shall I put in words that song of thine ? 

How tell it in this struggling phrase of mine ? 

That strange, sweet wonder of full-throated bliss, 
The wild-wood freedom of its perfectness, 

Faint scent of flowers frail, strong breath of pine, 

The west wind's music, and the still sunshine. 

Could I weave sunshine into words, hold fast 

Day's sunset glow that it might ever last, 

That clothes as with immortal robe each height, 
Rugged and stern 'mid glare of noonday light, 

Softened beneath eve's gracious glory cast 

Like soul released, from strife to sweetness passed 

Were such power mine, so might I hope, perchance, 
In fitting speech to rhyme thy song's romance, 
To sing its sweetness with a note as sweet 
As thine that makes this sunset hour complete 
As voice beloved doth richest joy enhance, 
As swelling organ yearning soul doth trance. 

There is no sorrow set in thy pure song ; 

Thy notes to realms where all is joy belong. 

Thou callest woods grow greener through thy voice, 
The stainless skies in deeper peace rejoice, 

All their best glories through thy singing throng 

Voice of a life that ne'er knew thought of wrong ! 

No martyr life of conquered grief is thine, 
Whose happiness but through old tears can shine; 
So, sure, didst thou in Eden sing ere Eve, 
Our eldest mother, learned for life to grieve, 
When thought was fresh, and knowledge still divine, 
And in love's light no shade of death did twine. 

Our songs to-day grow sweetest through our pain ; 

Our Eden lost, we find it not again. 
Even our truest, most enduring joy 
Earth's twilight darkens with its dusk alloy. 

Soft, -soft the shadow of thy heaven-dropt strain 

Only our weakness dims with sorrow's stain. 

Thou singst, O hermit bird ! of Paradise, 
Not as lamenting its lost harmonies, 

Not as still fair through perfect penitence, 

But as unconscious in first innocence 
Token of time thou art when sinless eyes 
Were homes for cloudless thoughts divinely wise. 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



251 



All tilings that God found good seem yet to fill 

The few sweet notes that triumph in" thy trill ; 
All things that yet are good and purely fair 
Give unto thee their happy grace to wear. 

Sweet speech art thou for sunset-lighted hill ; 

Yet day dies gladlier when thou art still. 

And I, O rare brown thrush ! that idly gaze 
Far down the valley's mountain-shadowed ways 
Where bears the stream light burden of the sky, 
Where day, like quiet soul, in peace doth die, 
Its calm gold broken by no storm-clouds' blaze 
Hearken, joy-hushed, thy vesper song of praise 

That from yon hillside drops, strong carolling, 

A living echo thereto answering, 

Doubling the sweetness with the glad reply 
That drifts like argosy, joy-laden, by. 

Light grows my soul as thy uplifted wing ; 

Heart knows no sorrow when it hears thee sing ! 



THE GOD OF "ADVANCED" SCIENCE. 



" THE fool hath said in his heart : 
There is no God." None but fools 
attempt to blind themselves to the 
irrefragable evidence which com- 
pels the admission of a Supreme 
Being ; and not even these can en- 
tirely succeed in such an endeavor. 
For it is only in the frowardness of 
their heart, not in the light of their 
reason, that they pronounce the 
blasphemous phrase ; their heart, 
not their intellect, is corrupted ; 
so that, notwithstanding the great 
number of avowed atheists who. at 
different times have disgraced the 
human family, one might be justi- 
fied in saying that a real atheist, 
a man positively convinced of the 
non-existence of God, has never 
existed. 

What has led us to begin with 
this remark is an article in the 
Popular Science Monthly (July, 1877) 
entitled " The Accusation of Athe- 



ism," in which the able but unphi- 
losophical editor undertakes to show 
that although modern " advanced " 
science may not profess to recog- 
nize the God of the Bible, yet we 
have no right to infer that this 
" advanced" science is atheistical. 
The God of the Bible is to be sup- 
pressed altogether ; but " advanc- 
ed " scientists, who have already 
invented so many wonderful things, 
are confident that they have suffi- 
cient ability to invent even a new 
God. Our good readers may find 
it a little strange ; but we are not 
trifling. The invention of a new 
God is just now the great postula- 
tum of the infidel pseudo-philoso- 
phers. The less they believe in 
the living God who made them, 
the more would they be delighted 
to worship a mock-god made by 
themselves, that they might not be 
accused of belonging to that class 



252 



The God of ''Advanced" Science, 



in 



their 



of fools who have said 
heart : There is no God. 

Prof. Youmans starts with the 
bright idea that if Dr, Draper had 
entitled his book " a history of the 
conflict between ecclesiasticism 
and science" instead of " between 
religion and science," he would 
have disarmed criticism and saved 
himself from a great deal of philo- 
sophical abuse. We cannot see, 
however, how criticism could have 
been disarmed by the mere adop- 
tion of such a change. The whole 
of Dr. Draper's work breathes in- 
fidelity; it falsifies the history of 
Christianity ; it denounces religion 
as the enemy of science ; and from 
the first page to the last it teems 
with slander and blasphemy ; it is, 
therefore, a real attack upon reli- 
gion. On the other hand, we must 
assume that Dr. Draper knew what 
he was about when he opposed 
"religion" to science; he said just 
what he meant; and this is, per- 
haps, the only merit of his produc- 
tion. If the title of the book were 
to be altered so as to " disarm cri- 
ticism," we would suggest that it 
should be made to read: A mali- 
cious fabrication concerning a fabu- 
lous conflict between religion and 
science. 

Then Prof. Youmans proceeds to 
say that religious people " are 
alarmed at the advancement of 
science, and denounce it as sub- 
versive of faith." This is not the 
case. Religious people are not in 
the least alarmed at the advance- 
ment of science, nor do they feel 
the least apprehension that science 
may prove subversive of faith; quite 
the contrary. They love science, 
do their best to promote it, accept 
thankfully its discoveries, and ex- 
pect that it will contribute to 
strengthen, not to subvert, the re- 
vealed truths which form the ob- 






ject of theological faith. We ad- 
mit, at the same time, that there is 
a so-called "science " for which we 
have no sympathy. Such a pretend- 
ed " science " originated, if we do 
not mistake, in the Masonic lodges 
of Germany, whence it gradually 
spread through England and Amer- 
ica by the efforts of the same secret 
organization. The promoters of 
this neoteric science boast that 
their cosmogony, their biology, 
their sociology, their physiology, 
etc., are " subversive " of our faith ; 
which would be true enough, if 
their theories were not at the same 
time " subversive " of logic and 
common sense. But when we 
show that their vaunted theories 
cannot bear examination, when we 
point out the manifold absurdities 
and contradictions they fall into, 
when we lay open the sophisms by 
which their objectionable assertions 
are supported, and challenge them 
to make a reply, they invariably 
quail and dare not open their 
mouths, or, if they venture to speak 
they ignore criticism with a conve- 
nient unconcern which is the best 
palliation of their defeat. As an ex- 
ample of this we may remind Prof. 
Youmans that we ourselves have 
given a refutation of Prof. Huxley's 
lectures on evolution, and that we 
have yet to see the first attempt at 
a reply. We have also refuted 
defence of Prof. Huxley written by 
Prof. Youmans himself in answer to 
Rev- Dr. W. M. Taylor, and we 
have shown how his own " scienti- 
fic " reasoning was at fault in every 
point; but of course his scientific 
acuteness did not allow him to 
utter a word of reply. No, we are 
not afraid of a " science " which 
can be silenced with so little effort 
Were it not that there is a prevail- 
ing ignorance so easily imposed 
upon by the charlatanism of false 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



253 



science, there would be no need 
whatever for denouncing it : it de- 
nounces itself sufficiently to a logi- 
cal mind. 

Prof. Youmans pretends that the 
difficulty of religious people with 
regard to advanced science is sim- 
ply that of " narrowness or igno- 
rance inspired by a fanatical ear- 
nestness." We are greatly obliged 
by the compliment ! Prof. Youmans 
is, indeed, a model of politeness, 
according to the standard of mod- 
ern progress; but it did not occur 
to him that, before speaking of the 
" narrowness and ignorance " of 
his critics, he should have endea- 
vored to atone for his own blunders 
which we pointed out in our num- 
ber for April. To our mind, a 
man whose ignorance of logic and 
of many other things has been de- 
monstrated has no right to talk of 
the ignorance of religious people. 
And as to " fanatical earnestness," 
we need hardly say that it is in the 
Popular Science Monthly and in 
other similar productions of " sci- 
entific " unbelievers that we find 
the best instances of its convulsive 
exertions. But let us proceed. 



" Atheism," continues the professor, 
"has now come to be a familiar and 
stereotyped charge against men of sci- 
ence, both on the part of the pulpit and 
the religious press. Not that they ac- 
cuse all scientific men of atheism, but 
they allege this to be the tendency of 

; scientific thought and the outcome of 
scientific philosophy. It matters noth- 
ing that this imputation is denied ; it 
matters nothing that scientific men claim 
that their studies lead them to higher 
and more worthy conceptions of the di- 
vine power, manifested through the or- 
der of nature, than the conceptions of- 
fered by theology. It is enough that they 
disagree with current notions upon this 

I subject, and any difference of view is 
here held as atheism. In this, as we 
have said, the theologians may be honest, 
but they are narrow and bigoted." 



Mr. Youmans does not perceive 
the tendency of" scientific" thought 
to foster atheism. Not he ! Dar- 
win's theory of development has 
for its principal object to destroy, 
if possible, the history of creation 
and to get rid of the Creator. This 
Mr. Youmans does not perceive. 
Tyndall, in his Belfast lecture, pro- 
fesses atheism as the outcome of 
scientific philosophy, and, though 
he has offered some explanations to 
screen himself from the imputa- 
tion, he stands convicted by his 
own words. Of this Mr. Youmans 
takes no notice. Biichner ridicules 
the idea that there is a God, and 
teaches that such an idea is obso- 
lete, contrary to modern science, 
and condemned by philosophy as 
a manifest impossibility. Mr. You- 
mans seems to hold that this is not 
genuine atheism. Huxley, to avoid 
creation, gives up all investigation 
of the origin of things as useless 
and unscientific, and the advanced 
thinkers in general are everywhere 
at work propagating the same view 
in their scientific lectures, books, 
journals, and magazines. Yet Prof. 
Youmans wishes the world to be- 
lieve that the tendency of advanc- 
ed scientific thought is not towards 
atheism ! Is he blind ? The man 
who writes Nature with a capital 
letter, who denies creation, who 
contributes to the best of his power 
to the diffusion of infidel thought, 
can hardly be ignorant of the fact 
that what is now called advanced sci- 
ence is, in the hands of its apostles 
and leaders, an engine of war 
against God. But he knows also 
that to profess atheism is bad poli- 
cy, for the present at least. Sci- 
ence, as he laments in many of his 
articles, has not yet advanced 
enough in the popular mind ; peo- 
ple are still " narrow" and " igno- 
rant," and even "fanatic" that is, 



-54 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



their religious feelings and consci- 
entious convictions do not yet per- 
mit a direct and outspoken con- 
fession of the atheistic tendency 
of modern "scientific" thought. 
Hence he is obliged to be cautious 
and to put on a mask. Such are, 
and ever have been, the tactics of 
God's enemies. Thus Prof. Huxley, 
in his lectures on evolution, while 
attacking the Biblical history of 
creation, pretends that he is only 
refuting the " Miltonian hypothe- 
sis." The same Prof. Huxley, with 
Herbert Spencer and many others 
of less celebrity, endeavors to con- 
ceal his atheism, or at any rate to 
make it appear less repulsive, by 
(he convenient but absurd admis- 
sion of the Great Unknown or Un- 
knowable, to which surely neither 
he nor any other scientist will offer 
adoration, as it would be an utterly 
superfluous, unscientific, and un- 
philosophical thing to worship what 
they cannot know. And Prof. 
Youmans himself follows the same 
tactics, as we shall see in the se- 
quel. Hence we do not wonder 
that he considers Mr. Draper's 
words " a conflict between religion 
and science" as unfortunate, and 
only calculated to provoke criticism 
and theological abuse. It would 
have been so easy and so much 
better to say " between ecclesiasti- 
cism and science." This would 
have saved appearances, and might 
have furnished a plausible ground 
for repelling the accusation of athe- 
ism. 

But, says Prof. Yxmmans, " this 
imputation is denied." We answer 
that the imputation cannot be 
evaded by any such denial. If 
there were question of the inti- 
mate convictions of private indi- 
viduals, their denial might have 
some weight in favor of their secret 
belief. Men very frequently do 



not see clearly the ultimate conse- 
quences of their own principles ; and 
it is for this reason that an atheis- 
tic science does not always lead to 
personal atheism. As there are 
honest Protestants who believe on 
authority, though their Protestant 
principle sacrifices authority to 
private judgment, so also there are 
many honest scientists who, not- 
withstanding their admission of 
atheistic theories, believe in God. 
This is mere inconsistency after 
all; and it can only furnish a 
ground for judging of the views of 
individual scientists. 

But our question regards the 
tendency of " advanced scientific 
thought" irrespective of the incon- 
sistency of sundry individuals. 
This question is to be solved from 
the nature of the principles and of 
the conclusions of " advanced " sci- 
ence ; and if such principles and 
such conclusions are shown to lead 
logically to atheism, it matters very 
little indeed that " the imputation 
is denied." This the editor of 
the Popular Science Monthly must 
admit. Now, that atheism is the 
logical outcome of " advanced" 
science may be proved very easily. 
Dr. Buchner, in his Force and Mat- 
ter, gives a long scientific argumen- 
tation against the existence of God. 
The science which led him to this 
profession of atheism is the " ad- 
vanced " science of which Prof. You- 
mans speaks. Has any among the 
advanced scientists protested against 
Dr. Biichner's conclusion ? Have 
any of them endeavored to show 
that this conclusion was not logi- 
cally deduced from the principles 
of their pretended science ? Some 
of them may have been pained at 
the imprudent sincerity of the Ger- 
man doctor ; but what he affirms 
with a coarse impudence they too 
insinuate every day in a. gentler 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



255 



tone and in a more guarded phra- 
seology. Their doctrine is that 
" whereas mankind formerly be- 
lieved the phenomena of nature to 
be expressions of the will of a per- 
sonal God, modern science, by re- 
ducing everything to laws, has giv- 
en a sufficient explanation of these 
phenomena, and made it quite un- 
necessary for man to seek any fur- 
ther account of them." Dr. Car- 
penter, from whom we have borrow- 
ed this statement, adds : " This is 
precisely Dr. B*iichner's position ; 
and it seems to me a legitimate in- 
ference from the very prevalent as- 
sumption (which is sanctioned by 
the language of some of our ablest 
writers) that the so-called laws of 
nature ' govern ' the phenomena of 
which they are only generalized 
expressions. I have been protest- 
ing against this language for the 
last quarter of a century." * 

Mr. Youmans himself implicitly 
admits that " advanced " science 
has given up the old notion of God ; 
and he only contends that scien- 
tists, while disregarding the God 
of theology, fill up his place with 
something better. " Scientific men 
claim that their studies lead them 
to higher and more worthy concep- 
tions of the divine power manifested 
through the order of nature than 
the conceptions offered by theolo- 
gy." Our readers need hardly be 
told that this claim on the part of 
our advanced scientists is prepos- 
terous and ridiculous. For if the 
order of nature could lead to a 
conception of divine power higher 
or worthier than the conception of- 
fered by theology, it would lead to a 
conception of divine power greater 
and higher than omnipotence ; for 
omnipotence is one of the attri- 
butes of the God of theology. But 

* See the whole passage in the Popular Science 
Monthly for November. 1872. 



can we believe that Mr. Youmans 
entertains the hope of conceiving a 
power higher than omnipotence? 
How, then, can he make good his 
assertion ? On the other hand, the 
God of theology is immense, eter- 
nal, and unchangeable, infinitely 
intelligent, infinitely wise, infinitely 
good, infinitely perfect, as not only 
all theologians but also all philoso- 
phers unquestionably admit. Must 
we believe that our scientists will 
be able to conceive a higher intel- 
lect, wisdom, or goodness than in- 
finite intellect, infinite wisdom, or 
infinite goodness ? Will they ima- 
gine anything greater than immen- 
sity, or than eternity? The edi- 
tor of the Popular Science Monthly 
has a very poor opinion indeed of 
the intellectual power of his ha- 
bitual readers, if lie thinks that 
they will not detect the absurdity 
of his claim. 

But there is more than this. " Ad- 
vanced " science has repeatedly con- 
fessed its inability to form a con- 
ception of God. The ultimate con- 
clusion of " advanced " science is 
that the contemplation and study 
of nature afford no indication of 
what a God may be ; so much so 
that the leaders of this " advanc- 
ed " science, after suppressing the 
God of theology, could find noth- 
ing to substitute in his place but 
what they call " the Great Un- 
known " and " the Great Unknow- 
able." Now, surely, the unknow- 
able cannot be known. How, then, 
can these scientists claim that their 
studies lead them "to higher and 
more worthy conceptions of the 
divine power " ? Can they con- 
ceive that which is unknown and 
unknowable ? Have they any means 
of ascertaining that a thing unknow- 
able has power, or that its power 
is divine ? 

Let them understand that if their 



256 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



" Unknowable " is not eternal, it is 
no God ; if it is not omniscient, it is 
no God ; if it is not omnipotent, it 
is no God. And, in like manner, 
if it is not self-existent, immutable, 
immense, infinitely wise, infinitely 
good, infinitely perfect, it is no 
God. And, again, if it is not our 
Creator, our Master, and our Judge, 
it is no God, and we have no rea- 
son for worshipping it, or even for 
respecting it. How can we know 
that these and similar attributes 
can and must be predicated of the 
Unknowable, since the unknowable 
is not and cannot be known ? If, 
on the contrary, we know that such 
a being is omnipotent, omniscient, 
eternal, immense, and infinitely per- 
fect in all manner of perfections, 
then it is obvious (even to Prof. 
Youmans, we assume) that such a 
being is neither unknown nor un- 
knowable. Thus the unknowable 
can lay no claim to " divine pow- 
er " or other divine attributes ; and 
therefore the pretended worship- 
pers of the Unknowable vainly at- 
tempt to palliate their atheism by 
claiming that their studies have led 
them " to a higher and more worthy 
conception of the divine power 
than the conception offered by 
theology." 

As to Prof. Youmans himself, he 
tells us that the divine nature is 
"unspeakable and unthinkable." 
This evidently amounts to saying 
that the divine nature is unknowa- 
ble, just as Herbert Spencer, Hux- 
ley, and others of the same sect 
have maintained. - The professor 
will not deny, we trust, that what 
is unthinkable is also unknowable, 
unless he is ready to show that he 
knows the square circle. Hence 
the remarks we have passed on the 
doctrine of his leaders apply to 
him as well as to them. It is sin- 
gular, however, that neither he nor 



any of his sect has thought of ex- 
amining the question whether the 
" Unknowable " has any existence 
at all. For if it has no existence, 
they must confess that they have 
not even an unknown God, and 
therefore are absolute atheists; and 
if they assume that it has a real 
existence, they are supremely illo- 
gical ; for no one has a right to 
proclaim the existence of a thing 
unknown and unknowable. The 
existence of the unknowable cannot 
be affirmed unless it be known ; 
but it cannot be known unless the 
unknowable be known ; and this 
implies a manifest contradiction. 
To affirm existence is to affirm a 
fact ; and Mr. Youmans would cer- 
tainly be embarrassed to show that 
science, however "advanced," can 
affirm a fact of which it has no 
knowledge whatever. Hence athe- 
ism is the legitimate result of the 
doctrine which substitutes the "Un- 
knowable " in the place of the God 
of theology ; and " it matters noth- 
ing " that this consequence is pro- 
visionally denied by Prof. Youmans. 
Were it not that the horror inspired 
by the impious pretensions of his 
fallacious science obliges him to 
keep within the measures of pru- 
dence, it is very likely that Prof. 
Youmans would not only not deny 
his " scientific " atheism, but even 
glory in its open profession. So 
long as this cannot be safely done 
he must remain satisfied with writ- 
ing Nature with a capital N. 

From these remarks we can fur- 
ther infer that Mr. Youmans' com- 
plaint about the narrowness and 
bigotry of theologians is utterly un- 
founded. There is no narrowness 
in rejecting foolish conceptions, and 
no bigotry in maintaining the rights 
of truth. Theology condemns your 
doctrines, not because they " disa- 
gree with current notions," but be- 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



257 



cause they are manifestly impious 
and absurd. The views you encour- 
age are atheistical. You admit only 
the Unknowable ; and the Unknow- 
able, as we have just proved, is not 
God. Hence the theologians are not 
" narrow " nor " bigoted," but strict- 
ly logical and reasonable, when they 
condemn your doctrines as atheis- 
tical. 

And now Prof. Youmans makes 
the following curious argument : 

" It is surprising that they (the theolo- 
gians) cannot see that in arraigning sci- 
entific thinkers for atheism they are sim- 
ply doing what stupid fanatics the world 
over are always doing when ideas of the 
Deity different from their own are main- 
tained. And it is the more surprising 
that Christian teachers should indulge in 
this intolerant practice when it is re- 
membered that their own faith was 
blackened with this opprobrium at its 
first promulgation." 

Herealongpassageis quoted from 
The Contest of Heathenism with 
Christianity^ by Prof. Zeller, of 
Berlin, in which we are reminded 
that the primitive Christians were 
reproached with atheism because 
they " did not agree with the pre- 
vailing conceptions of the Deity," 
and that " Down with the atheists " 
was the war-cry of the heathen mob 
against the Christians. This sug- 
gests to Mr. Youmans the following 
remarks : 

" It would be well if our theologians 
would remember these things when 
tempted to deal out their maledictions 
upon scientific men as propagators of 
atheism. For the history of their own 
faith attests that religious ideas are a 
growth, and that they pass from lower 
states to higher unfoldings through pro- 
cesses of inevitable suffering. It was 
undoubtedly a great step of progress 
from polytheism to monotheism, . . . 
but this was neither the final step in the 
advancement of the human mind toward 
the highest conception of the Deity, nor 
the last experience of disquiet and grief 
VOL. XXVI. 17 



at sundering the ties of old religious 
associations. But if this be a great nor- 
mal process in the development of the 
religious feeling and aspiration of hu- 
manity, why should the Christians of 
to-day adopt the bigoted tactics of hea- 
thenism, first applied to themselves, to 
use against those who would still further 
ennoble and purify the ideal of the Di- 
vinity ?" 

Thus, according to the professor, 
as the pagans were wrong and stu- 
pid in denouncing the Christians as 
atheists, so are the Christians both 
wrong and stupid in denouncing 
the atheistic tendency of " advanc- 
ed " science ; and the reason alleg- 
ed is that as the pagans did not 
recognize the superiority of mono- 
theism to polytheism, so the Chris- 
tian theologians fail to see the su- 
periority of the " scientific " Un- 
knowable to the God of Christian- 
ity. Need we answer this? Why, 
if anything were wanting to prove 
that Prof. Youmans is laboring for 
the cause of atheism, his very man- 
ner of arguing may be regarded as a 
convincing proof of the fact. For, 
if his reasoning has any meaning, 
it means that as the Christians re- 
jected the gods of the pagans, so 
Prof. Youmans rejects the God of 
the Christians ; and this is quite 
enough to show his atheism, as he 
neither recognizes our God, nor has 
he found, nor will he ever find, an- 
other God worthy of his recogni- 
tion ; for, surely, the " Unthinkable " 
of which he speaks is not an ob- 
ject of recognition. 

On the other hand, is it true that 
the history of Christianity " attests 
that religious ideas are a growth, 
and that they pass from lower 
states to higher unfoldings " ? 
Does the history of Christianity 
attest, for instance, that our con- 
ception of God has passed from a 
lower to a higher state ? But, waiv- 
ing this, it requires great audacity 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



to contend that the theory -of the 
"Unknowable" and of the "Un- 
thinkable " is an unfolding of the 
conception of God. We appeal to 
Prof. Youinans himself. A theory 
of natural science which would lay 
down as the ultimate result of hu- 
man progress that what we call 
chemistry, geology, astronomy, me- 
chanics, electricity, optics, magnet- 
ism, is something " unknowable " 
and " unthinkable," would scarcely 
be considered by him an " unfold- 
ing" of science. For how could 
he " unfold " his thoughts in the 
Popular Science Monthly, if the sub- 
ject of his thought were " unthink- 
able " ? But, then, how can he as- 
sume that his theory of the "un- 
thinkable " is an " unfolding " of 
the conception of God ? God can- 
not be conceived, if he is unthinka- 
ble. We conceive God as an eter- 
nal, immense, omnipotent, personal 
Being. These and other attributes 
of Divinity, as conceived by us, 
constitute our notion of God ; and 
this notion is as unfolded as is con- 
sistent with the limits of the human 
mind. But to " unfold " the con- 
ception of Divinity by suppressing 
omnipotence, wisdom, eternity, 
goodness, and all other perfections 
of the divine nature, so as to leave 
nothing " thinkable " in it, is not 
to unfold our conception, but to 
suppress it altogether. 

As to the flippant assertion that 
the Christian conception of Divinity 
is not "the final step in the ad- 
vancement of the human mind to- 
ward the highest conception of the 
Deity," we might say much. But 
what is the use of refuting what 
every Christian child knows to be 
false? We conceive God as the 
supreme truth, the supreme good, 
and the supreme Lord of whatever 
exists ; and he who pretends that 
there is or can be a " higher con- 



ception of the Deity " has himself 
to thank if men call him a fool. 

We shall say nothing of " intoler- 
ant practices," " stupid fanaticism," 
or " bigoted tactics." These are 
mere words. As to " the aspiration 
of humanity," it may be noticed that 
there is a secret society that con- 
siders its aspirations as the aspira- 
tions of " humanity," and, when it 
speaks of " humanity," it usually 
means nothing more and nothing 
better than its " free and accepted " 
members. This " humanity " has 
doubtless some curious aspirations ; 
but mankind does not aspire to de- 
throne God or to pervert the no- 
tion of Divinity. 

Prof. Youmans accounts for " the 
aspiration of humanity " in the fol- 
lowing manner : 

" It cannot be rationally questioned 
that the world has come to another im- 
portant stage in this line of its progres- 
sion. The knowledge of the universe, 
its action, its harmony, its unity, its 
boundlessness and grandeur, is compa- 
ratively a recent thing ; and is it to be 
for a moment supposed that so vast a 
revolution as this is to be without effect 
upon our conception of its divine con- 
trol ?" 

This manner of arguing is hardly 
creditable to a professor of science ; 
for, even admitting for the sake of 
argument that the knowledge of 
the universe is comparatively " a 
recent thing," it would not follow 
that such a knowledge must alter 
the Christian conception of the di- 
vine nature. Let the professor 
make the universe as great, as 
boundless, and as harmonious as 
possible ; what then ? Will such a 
universe proclaim a new God ? By 
no means. It will still proclaim 
the same God, though in a louder 
voice. For the harmony, beauty, 
and grandeur of the universe reveal 
to us the infinite greatness, beauty, 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



259 



and wisdom of its Creator; and the 
greater our knowledge of such a 
universe, the more forcible the de- 
monstration of the infinite perfec- 
tion of its Creator. Now, this Crea- 
tor is our old God, the God of the 
Bible, the God to whom Mr. You- 
mans owes his existence, and to 
whom he must one day give an ac- 
count of how he used or abused his 
intellectual powers. This is, how- 
ever, the God whom the professor 
would fain banish from the uni- 
verse. Is there anything more un- 
philosophic or more unscientific ? 

But the knowledge of the uni- 
verse, from which we rise to the 
conception of God, is not "a re- 
cent thing." Infidels are apt to 
imagine that the world owes to them 
the knowledge of natural science. 
We must remind them that science 
has been built up by men who be- 
lieved in God. " Advanced" sci- 
ence is of course " a recent thing," 
but it does not " constitute an im- 
portant stage" in the line of real 
progress ; for it consists of nothing 
but reckless assumptions, deceitful 
phraseology, and illogical conclu- 
sions. Three thousand years ago 
King David averred that " the 
heavens show forth the glory of 
God, and the firmament declareth 
the work of his hands." Has ad- 
vanced science made any recent 
discovery in the heavens or on 
earth which gives the lie to this 
highly philosophical statement ? 
Quite the contrary. It is, there- 
fore, supremely ridiculous to talk 
of a " vast revolution" whose ef- 
fect must be " to purify the ideal 
of Divinity." This vast revolution 
is a dream of the professor. 

But he says : 

" Is it rational to expect that the man 
of developed intellect whose life is spent 
in the all-absorbing study of that mighty 
and ever-expanding system of truth that 



is embodied in the method of Nature 
will form the same idea of God as the 
ignorant blockhead who knows and cares 
nothing for these things, who is incapa- 
ble of reflection or insight, and who pas- 
sively accepts the narrow notions upon 
this subject that other people put into 
his head ? As regards the divine 
government of the world, two such con- 
trasted minds can hardly have anything 
in common." 

This is a fair sample of the logi- 
cal processes of certain thinkers " of 
developed intellect." Our profes- 
sor assumes, first, that Catholic theo- 
logians are "ignorant blockheads," 
that they " know and care nothing" 
for natural truths, that they are "in- 
capable of reflection or insight," 
and that they " passively accept" 
what others may put into their 
heads. Would it not be more rea- 
sonable to assume that a " block- 
head" is a man who asserts what 
cannot be proved, as a certain pro- 
fessor is wont to do ? And would 
it be unfair to assume that the man 
who " knows and cares nothing"" 
for truth is one who beguiles his 
readers into error, and, when con- 
victed, makes no amends ? We 
would not say that the professor is 
" incapable of reflection or insight/'' 
for we think that no human being 
can be so degraded as to deserve 
this stigma ; but we cannot help 
thinking that Mr. Youmans " pas- 
sively accepts" many absurd no- 
tions, for which he cannot account, 
except by saying that they " have 
been put into his head" by such 
"developed intellects" as Huxley's^ 
Darwin's, Spencer's, and other no- 
torious falsifiers of truth. 

Professor Youmans assumes also 
that our intellects cannot be " de- 
veloped " enough to form a true 
conception of God, unless we apply 
to " the all-absorbing study of the 
method of Nature," by which he 
means the conservation of energy,. 



260 



The God of ''Advanced" Science. 



the indestructibility of matter, the 
evolution of species, and other 
cognate theories. This assumption 
has no foundation. To form a true 
conception of God it suffices to 
know that the universe is subject 
to continual changes, and therefore 
contingent, and consequently cre- 
ated. This leads us directly to the 
conception of a Creator, or of a 
First Cause which is self-existent, 
independent, and eternal. Modern 
science and " developed intellects" 
have nothing to say against this. 
It is therefore a gross absurdity to 
assume that the study of the method 
-of nature interferes with the old 
conception of God. 

A third assumption of the profes- 
sor is that our notion of divine na- 
ture is " narrow." It is astonish- 
ing that Mr. Youmans could have 
allowed himself to make so mani- 
festly foolish a statement. Is there 
anything " narrow" in immensity ? 
in omnipotence ? in eternity ? in 
infinite wisdom ? or in any other at- 
tribute of the true God ? And if our 
notion of God, which involves all 
such attributes, is still " narrow," 
what shall we say of the professor's 
notion which involves nothing but 
the "unthinkable" that is, nothing 
at all ? 

The professor proceeds to say 
that if a man is ignorant and stupid 
his contemplation of divine things 
will reflect his own limitation. 
This is a great truth ; but he should 
have been loath to proclaim it in a 
place where we find so many proofs 
of his own " limitation." On the 
other hand, it is not from the igno- 
rant and the stupid that our philoso- 
phers and theologians have derived 
their notion of God ; and to confound 
the latter with the former is, on the 
part of a " developed intellect," a 
miserable show of logic. The ig- 
norant and the stupid, continues 



Mr. Youmans, " will cling to a 
grovelling anthropomorphism," and 
conceive of the Deity " as a man 
like himself, only greater and more 
powerful, and as chiefly interested 
in the things that he is interested 
in." To which we answer that the 
stupid and the ignorant of divine 
things are those who do not know 
God, and who maintain against the 
universal verdict of reason that 
God is " unknowable." We defy 
Mr. Youmans to point out a stu- 
pidity and an ignorance of divine 
things which equals that of him who 
pretends to think of the "unthink- 
able." This is even worse than 
"to cling to a grovelling anthropo- 
morphism." Of course our anthro- 
pomorphism is a poetic invention 
of the "developed intellect," and 
therefore we may dismiss it without 
further comment. 

"The profound student of science," he 
adds, " will rise to a more spiritualized 
and abstract ideal of the divine nature, or 
will be so oppressed with a conscious- 
ness of the Infinity as to reverently re- 
frain from all attempts to grasp, and 
formulate, and limit the nature of that 
which is past finding out, which is un- 
speakable and unthinkable." 

To understand the real meaning 
of this sentence we must remember 
that he who wrote it does not ac- 
cept the God of theologians. Sci- 
entific men, as he has told us, claim 
that their studies lead them "to 
higher and more worthy concep- 
tions " of the divine power than 
the conceptions offered by theolo- 
gy. It is obvious, therefore, that 
the " spiritualized and abstract 
ideal of the divine nature " to which 
the profound student of science is 
expected to rise is not the ideal 
recognized by theology. This is 
very strange; for if theology does 
not furnish the true ideal of divine 
nature, much less can such an ideal 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



261 



be furnished by the science of mat- 
ter. Every science is best ac- 
quainted with its own specific ob- 
ject; and since God is the object 
of theology, the ideal of the divine 
nature is to be found in theology, 
not in natural science. Hence " the 
profound student of science " may 
indeed determine the laws of phy- 
sical and chemical phenomena, 
speak of masses and densities, of 
solids and fluids, and of other ex- 
perimental subjects without much 
danger of error, but he has no 
qualification for inventing a new 
ideal of divine nature. The ideal 
of a thing exhibits the essence of 
the thing; and the study of essen- 
ces does not belong to the scientist, 
whose field is confined within the 
phenomena and their laws. The 
best scientists confess that they do 
not even know the essence of mat- 
ter, though matter is the proper 
and most familiar object of their 
study. Yet these are the men who, 
according to Mr. Youmans, should 
know best the essence of God. 

But we should like further to 
know how the " profound student " 
of advanced science will be able to 
rise to a " spiritualized " ideal of 
Divinity. The general drift of mod- 
ern infidel science is towards ma- 
terialism. It teaches that thought 
is secreted by the brain as water is 
by the kidneys, or, at least, that 
thought consists of molecular move- 
ments, and that the admission of a 
spiritual substance in the organ- 
ism of man is quite unwarrant- 
ed. How, then, can a science 
which rejects spiritual substances 
lead its " profound student " to a 
spiritualized ideal of Divinity? It 
is Vnanifest, we think, that all this 
talk is mere jugglery, and the pro- 
fessor himself seems to have felt 
that it was ; for he admits that the 
profound student of science may 



be " so oppressed with a conscious- 
ness of the Infinite as to refrain 
from all attempts to grasp and for- 
mulate and limit the nature of what 
is past finding out." This last ex- 
pression shows that Mr. Youmans 
has no ground for expecting that 
his profound student will rise to 
the ideal of the divine nature, as 
what is " past finding out " will 
never be found, and is not only 
" unspeakable," as he declares, but 
also "unthinkable." The profound 
student of science is therefore, 
doomed, so far as Mr. Youmans 
may be relied on, to remain with- 
out any ideal of God. What is this 
but genuine atheism ? 

Mr. Youmans will reply that his 
profound student will not be an 
atheist, because he will feel " so 
oppressed with the consciousness 
of the Infinite." But we should 
like to know how the profound stu- 
dent can have consciousnessof what 
he cannot think of. And, in like 
manner, if the Infinite is unthink- 
able, how can the profound student 
know that it is infinite? These 
contradictions go far to prove that 
" ignorance " and " stupidity," far 
from being the characteristics of 
Christianity, find a more congenial 
abode in the " developed intellects 
of the profound students of advanc- 
ed science." 

As all errors are misrepresenta- 
tions of truth, we cannot dismiss 
this point without saying a word 
about the truth here misrepresent- 
ed. God is incomprehensible; 
such is the truth. God is unthink- 
able ; this is the error. To argue 
that what is incomprehensible is 
also unthinkable, is a manifest fal- 
lacy. There are a very great num- 
ber even of finite things which we 
know but cannot comprehend. For 
instance, we know gravitation, elec- 
tricity, and magnetism, but our 



262 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



knowledge of them is quite inade- 
quate. We know ancient history, 
though numberless facts have re- 
mained inaccessible to our research. 
We know the operations of our own 
faculties, but we are far from com- 
prehending them. Comprehension 
is the perfect and adequate know- 
ledge of the object comprehended. 
If the cognoscibility of the object 
is not exhausted, there is knowledge, 
but not comprehension ; and as our 
finite intellect has no power of 
exhausting the cognoscibility of 
things, human knowledge is not 
comprehension, though no one will 
deny that it is true and real know- 
ledge. In like manner, though we 
do not comprehend the infinite, yet 
we conceive it, and we know how 
to distinguish it from the finite. 
We know what we say when we af- 
firm that the branches of the hy- 
perbola extend to infinity, that the 
decimal division of ten by three 
leads to an infinite series of figures, 
that every line is infinitely divisi- 
ble, that every genus extends infi- 
nitely more than any of its subor- 
dinate species, and the species in- 
finitely more than the individual, 
etc. Thus the notion of the infinite 
is a familiar one among men ; and 
when Mr. Youmans contends that 
the infinite is unthinkable, he com- 
mits a blunder, and every one of 
his readers has the right to tell him 
that such a blunder in inductive 
science is inexcusable. 

Perhaps it may not be superflu- 
ous to point out, before we con- 
clude, another fallacy of the " de- 
veloped intellect " of the professor. 
He assumes that to form a concep- 
tion of God is to limit the divine 
nature ; for he declares that the 
profound student of science oppress- 
ed with the consciousness of Infin- 
ity ought reverently to refrain 
"from all attempts to grasp, and 



formulate, and /////// the nature of 
that which is past finding out." 
We would inform Mr. Youmans 
that the notion of a thing does not 
limit the thing, but simply ex- 
presses that the thing is what it is, 
whether it be limited or unlimited. 
In all essential definitions some no- 
tion is included, which expresses 
either perfection or imperfection. 
When we say that a being is ir ra- 
tional ^ we point out an imperfec- 
tion, or a defect of further perfec- 
tion ; whereas when we say that a 
being is rational, we express a per- 
fection of the being. Now, since 
all imperfection is a real limit, it 
follows that all denial of imperfec- 
tion is a denial of some' limit, and 
therefore the affirmation of every 
possible perfection is a total exclu- 
sion of limit. Thus omnipotence 
excludes all limit of power, eternity 
all limit of duration, omniscience all 
limit of knowledge, immensity all 
limit of space. We need not add 
that all the other attributes of God 
exclude limitation, as they are all 
infinite. It is evident, therefore, 
that we can " formulate " our no- 
tion of God without " limiting " the 
divine nature ; and that those 
" profound students " of nature 
whose " developed intellect " is 
" oppressed with the consciousness 
of Infinity " strive in vain to pal- 
liate their atheism by " reverent- 
ly (?) refraining from all attempts to 
grasp and formulate " the nature 
of the Supreme Cause. 

We may be told that Prof. You- 
mans, though lie rejects the " God 
of theology," admits something 
equivalent viz., Infinity, the con- 
sciousness of which he feels so op- 
pressive. He also admits that "'re- 
ligious feelings may be awakened " 
in a mind so oppressed by the 
thought of Infinity, and insists that 
"religious teachers ought in these 



The God of "Advanced" Science. 



263 



days to have liberality enough to 
recognize this serious fact, remem- 
bering that human nature is reli- 
giously progressive as well as pro- 
gressive in its other capacities." 
Would not this show that we can- 
not without injustice hold him up 
as a professor of atheism ? We re- 
ply that the accusation of atheism 
preferred against the tendency of 
advanced science has been met by 
the professor in such a manner as 
to give it only more weight, ac- 
cording to the old proverb which 
says that 

Causa pa.trocin.io non bonapejor frit. 

He does not believe in the God 
of theology. In what does he be- 
lieve? In the "unthinkable"! 
This is sheer mockery. But the 
unthinkable is said to be infinite. 
This is sheer nonsense, as we have 
shown. Again, the unthinkable is 
said to awaken religious feelings. 
This is written for unthinkable per- 
sons. The professor, as we have 
already noticed, admires the gran- 
deur of nature, and holds it to be 
"boundless," and therefore infinite. 
This may lead one to suspect that 
the material universe the sun, the 
planets, the stars, heat, light, elec- 
tricity, gravity, and their laws con- 
stitute the " Infinity " with the con- 
sciousness of which the professor is 
oppressed. If this could be sur- 
mised, we might regard him as a 
pantheist. This, of course, would 
not better his position, as panthe- 



ism is, after all, only another form 
of atheism. But if nature (or rath- 
er Nature, as he writes it) is his 
Deity, how can he affirm that such 
a nature is " unspeakable " and 
" unthinkable " ? If nature is " un- 
thinkable," the science of nature is 
a dream ; and if it is " unspeak- 
able," all the talk of the Popular 
Science Monthly is a fraud. 

If Prof. Youmans wishes us to 
believe that " advanced " science 
does not tend to foster atheism, and 
that its foremost champions are not 
atheists, let him come forward like 
a man, and show that, after reject- 
ing the God of theology and of 
philosophy, another God has been 
found, to whom " developed intel- 
lects " offer religious worship, and 
in whom their religious feelings are 
rationally satisfied. Let him give 
us, above all, his " scientific " rea- 
sons for abandoning the God of the 
Bible, in whom we " ignorant block- 
heads " have not ceased to believe ; 
and let him state his "philosophic " 
reasons also, if he has any, that 
we may judge of the case according 
to its full merit. We need not be 
instructed about the " religious 
progressiveness " of mankind, or 
any other convenient invention of 
unbelievers ; we want only to know 
the new God of " advanced " 
science, his nature and his claims. 
When Prof. Youmans shall have 
honestly complied with this sugges- 
tion, we shall see what answer can 
best meet his appeal to the " liber- 
ality " of religious teachers. 



264 



A Legend of Dieppe. 



A LEGEND OF DIEPPE. 



A r.i.ooMY three days' storm has 
prevailed all along the French 
coast. Dull gray clouds hide the 
blue vault of heaven and frown 
upon the tossing waters beneath. 
The fresh, invigorating air, remem- 
bered with delight by all who have 
ever been in Normandy, has given 
place to a damp, chilly heaviness, 
broken occasionally by fierce gusts 
of wind and rain. The fisher-boats 
are all in port, the small ones drawn 
up high on the beach, the larger 
securely anchored. But this is not 
due only to the storm. Even if it 
were the fairest of weather, no 
Dieppe fisherman would set sail to- 
day. It is All-Souls' day the feast 
of the dead, the commemoration 
of the loved and lost ; and who is 
there that has not loved and lost ? 
But among these simple Catholic 
souls one feels that the loved are 
nevey lost. The dead live still in 
the tender remembrance of those 
left behind. Tears shed in prayer 
for the departed have no bitterness. 

But the heartless and ungrateful 
man \vho fishes to-day will be eve- 
rywhere followed by his double a 
phantom fisher in a phantom boat. 
All signs fail him, all fish escape 
his net. Again and again he draws 
it in empty. If he persist, at length 
he thinks himself rewarded. His 
net is so heavy he nearly swamps 
his boat in the endeavor to draw it 
in ; and horrible to "say, his catch 
is only grinning skulls. and disjoint- 
ed human bones. 

At night, tossing on his sleepless 
pillow, he hears the ghostly "white 
car " rolling through the silent 
street. He hears his name called 
in the voice of the latest dead of 
his acquaintance, and dies himself 
before the next All-Souls' day. 



Spite of the bleak and rainy 
weather, all the good people of 
Dieppe, or rather of its fisher sub- 
urb, Le Pollet, are gathered to- 
gether in church. Rude as it is, 
weather-beaten, discolored, gray- 
green, like the unquiet ocean it 
overlooks, Notre Dame du Pollet 
is still grand and picturesque. It 
has suffered both from time and 
desecration, as is seen by its broken 
carvings, empty niches, and ruined 
tombs. The altars are plain, the 
ornaments few and simple. On the 
wall of the Lady chapei hang two 
rusty chains the votive offering, it 
is said, of a sailor of Le Pollet, 
once a slave to pirates. Miracu- 
lously rescued by Our Lady, he re- 
turned to his native place only to 
sing a Te Deum in her chapel and 
hang up his broken fetters therein ; 
then, retiring to a neighboring 
monastery, he took upon himself a 
voluntary bondage which love made 
sweet and light. 

It is the solemn Mass of requiem, 
and almost noon, though the som- 
bre day, subdued yet more by stain- 
ed-glass windows, seems like a win- 
ter twilight. The church is all in 
deep shadow, except the sanctuary 
with its softly-burning lamp, and 
its altar decked with starry wax- 
lights. Black draperies hang about 
the altar, black robes are upon the 
officiating priests. The slow, mourn- 
ful chant of the Dies Ira, sung by 
a choir invisible in the darkness, re- 
sounds through the dim, lofty aisles. 

Motionless upon the uneven 
stone pavement kneel the people, a 
dark and silent mass, only relieved 
here and there by the gleam of a 
snowy cap or bright-colored ker- 
chief; for the fisher-folk, and, in- 
deed, all the peasantry of thrifty 



A Legend of Dieppe. 



265 



Normandy, dress in serviceable 
garb, of sober colors. There is 
one little group apart from the rest 
of the congregation ; not all one 
family, for they are too unlike. 
They seem to be drawn together 
by some common calamity or 
dread. First is an old woman 
perhaps seventy years of age, and 
looking, as these Norman peasants 
usually do, even older than her 
years. The full glow of light from 
the altar falls upon her white cap, 
with the bright blue kerchief tied 
over it. A string of large beads 
hangs from her bony fingers. Her 
eyes, singularly bright for one so 
aged, are raised to the black-veil-' 
ed crucifix, and tears glisten upon 
her brown and withered cheeks. 
Her arm is drawn through that of 
a slender young woman, and near 
them is a little girl, round and 
rosy. All three are dressed nearly 
alike, and all say their beads, 
though not with the same tearful 
devotion. Anxiety and weariness 
are in the young girl's pale but 
pretty face ; and the child looks 
subdued, almost frightened, by the 
gloom around her. 

Behind them kneels a comely 
matron, a little child clinging to 
her gown ; near her two fisher- 
men, one old and gray-haired. 
The other, who is young, has an arm 
in a sling; he kneels ,upon one 
knee, his elbow on the other, and 
his face hidden in his hand. 

They are two households over 
whom hangs the shadow of a ca- 
lamity, perhaps all the greater be- 
cause of its uncertainty. Two 
months ago Jacques Payen and his 
son sailed for the fishery. Jacques 
Suchet and his cousin, Charles 
Rivaud, completed the crew ; for 
Jean Suchet, disabled by a broken 
arm, remained at home with his 
grandmother and sister. The 
season proved unusually stormy. 



Two fishing-boats of Le Pollet 
narrowly escaped the terrible rocks 
of the Norman coast; and one of 
these reported seeing a vessel, re- 
sembling that of the Payens, drift- 
ing past them in a fog, with broken 
mast and cordage dragging over 
the side. They hailed the wreck, 
but heard no reply, and conclud- 
ed that the crew had been swept 
overboard, or possibly had escaped 
in their boat. 

Weeks had passed since this 
vague but terrible intelligence had 
reached the stricken families. Old 
Mere Suchet had at once received 
it as conclusive. She wept and 
prayed for the bold young fishers, 
the hope and comfort of her old 
age. Not so Manon Payen. No 
one' dared condole with her, not 
even her old father, Toutain. Life 
hitherto had gone so well with 
her ! Her husband loved her ; her 
son was her pride and delight ; her 
rosy Marie and little toddling 
Pierre filled her cottage with laugh- 
ter and sunshine. Grief was so 
new and strange and frightful. 
What ! her husband and son taken 
from her at one blow? No, it 
could not be ! It was too dreadful ! 
God could not be so cruel ! Be- 
sides, there were no better sailors 
than the Payens, father and son ; 
none who knew the coast so well, 
with all its perils, its hidden rocks, 
and dangerous currents. Their 
vessel was new and strong; why 
should they be lost; they alone? 
Jean Pinsard was not positive it 
was their vessel he had seen ; how 
could he tell in a fog? No; she 
was sure they were safe. They 
had put in to one of the islands. 
They would not risk a dangerous 
journey in stormy weather just to 
tell her, what she knew already, 
that they were safe. 

To Mere Suchet's Mathilde, the 
betrothed of Jacques Payen> how 



266 



A Legend of Dieppe. 



much better and clearer was this 
reasoning than the submissive grief 
of her pious old grandmother ! 
Young people cannot easily believe 
the worst when it concerns them- 
selves. Mathilde could not pray for 
the repose of the souls of lover, 
brother, and cousin. With the pas- 
sionate, impatient yearning of a 
heart new to affliction, she besought 
the Blessed Mother for their safe 
return. Her brother Jean did not 
try to destroy her hopes, though he 
would not say he shared them. 

As time passed on and brought no 
news of the absent, the hearts of 
these two poor women grew faint 
and sore ; but they refused to ac- 
knowledge it to one another, or 
even to themselves. Their days 
passed in feverish, and often vain, 
endeavors to be cheerful and busy; 
their nights in anguish all the more 
bitter because silent and unconfess- 
ed. On All-Souls' day old Toutain 
and Mere Suchet had wished to 
have a Requiem Mass offered for 
the lost sailors, but Mathilde wept 
aloud at the suggestion, and Manon 
forbade it instantly, positively, al- 
most angrily. 

Manon had borne up well through 
the sad funereal services of the 
church. She smiled upon her little 
ones, and returned a serene and 
cheerful greeting to the curious or 
pitying friends who accosted her. 
All day she had carried the burden 
of domestic cares and duties, while 
her heart ached within her bosom 
and cried out for solitude. Now, 
at night, alone with her sleeping 
babes, the agony of fear and pain, 
so long repressed, takes full posses- 
sion of her sinking heart. Mingled 
with the roar of the treacherous sea 
she hears the voices of husband and 
son, t now calling loudly for help, 
now borne away on the fitful wind. 
She sees their pale faces, with un- 
closed eyes, floating below the cruel 



green water, their strong limbs 
entangled in the twisted cordage. 
Now great, gleaming fish swim 
around them. Oh ! it is too fearful. 
From her knees she falls forward 
upon her face and groans aloud. 
But on a sudden she hears a stir 
without a sound of repressed 
voices and many hurrying feet. 
Hope is not dead within her yet; 
for she springs to the window with 
the wild thought that it is her 
absent returned. No, 'tis but a 
group of fishermen on their way 
to the pier ; but Pinsard stops to 
tell her, with a strange thrill in his 
rough voice, that there is a fishing- 
boat coming into port ! 

Manon screams to her father to 
watch the little ones she must go 
to the pier then flies out into the 
night. It is not raining, and she re- 
turns to snatch her wakened and 
sobbing babe, and wrap him in his 
father's woollen blouse. She does 
not know when Mathilde joins her ; 
she is scarcely conscious of the 
warm, exultant clasp of her hand. 
Jean is there, too, agitated but 
grave. 

As they turn the angle of the 
village street, before them lies the 
open bay. It is past midnight, but 
the pier is crowded. There, truly, 
coming on with outspread canvas, 
white in the struggling rays of a 
watery moon, is the missing ship ! 
They know it well. Upon the bro- 
ken, pebbly shore the two women 
kneel to thank God ; but they can 
only lift up their voices and weep. 

"They are not safe yet," says 
Jean shortly. " The wind takes 
them straight upon the pier. They 
will need all our help." 

The crowd make way instantly 
for the breathless women. The 
light-house keeper stands ready 
with a coil of rope. The fishermen 
range themselves in line, tighten 
their belts, and wait to draw the 



Death of Father Marquctte. 



267 



friendly hawser. Great waves thun- 
der against the long pier, sending 
showers of spray high above the 
pale crucifix at the end against 
which the women lean. Now the 
moon, emerging from a light cloud, 
sends a flood of pale radiance up- 
on the vessel's deck. It is they ! 
Jacques Payen is at the helm; young 
Jacques stands upon the gunwale. 

The light-house keeper throws 
his rope; the fishermen raise their 
musical, long-drawn cry. Jacques 
catches the rope, but in silence ; 
and silently the crew make fast. 

" It is their vow !" cries Manon, 
darting forward among the wonder- 
ing men. " They will not speak un- 
til they sing Te Deum at Notre 
Dame for their safe return." 

Reassured, the men pull in vigor- 
ously, but to no effect. Again, and 
yet again, but the ship does not 
move. A moment since it came 
on swift as the wind ; now it seems 
anchored for ever not fifty yards 



away. They can see plainly every 
object upon the deck, where the 
silent crew stand gazing towards 
the pier. Even Manon and Ma- 
thilde have seized the rope, and 
draw with the strength of terror. 
Breathless, unsteady, large drops of 
sweat standing upon their faces, 
they pause irresolute. Stretching 
her arms towards her husband, 
Manon holds out her babe. 

A white mist rises out of the sea 
and hangs like a veil between them. 
Sad, reproachful voices rise out of 
the waves, some near at hand, 
others far out. An icy wind lifts 
the mist and carries it slowly away, 
clinging for a moment like a shroud 
around 'the crucifix. The cable 
falls slack in the strong hands that 
grasp it. The ship is gone vanish- 
ed without a sound ; but far away 
echoes a solemn chorus, " Have 
pity on me, have pity on me, at 
least you, my friends, for the hand 
of the Lord hath touched me-'' 



ROMANCE AND REALITY OF THE DEATH OF FATHER 
JAMES MARQUETTE, AND THE RECENT DISCOVERY 
OF HIS REMAINS. 



THE bold and energetic explora- 
tion by the Canadian Louis Jolliet 
and the French Jesuit James Mar- 
quette, in which, embarking in a 
frail canoe, they penetrated to the 
Mississippi by the Wisconsin, and 
followed the course of the great 
river to the Arkansas, gives them 
and their important achievement a 
place in American history. It was 
an expedition carried out by two 
skilled hydrographers familiar with 
the extent and limit of American 
exploration, trained by education 
and long observation to map and 
describe the countries through 



which they passed. Their great 
object was to determine the extent 
of the river, its chief affluents, and 
the nature of the tribes upon it, as 
well as to decide whether it emp- 
tied into the Gulf of Mexico or 
the Pacific. 

In New Mexico, the advanced 
outpost of the Spanish colonies, 
some definite knowledge of the in- 
terior structure of the continent 
prevailed ; but to the rest of the 
world the great watershed of the 
Rocky Mountains, with the valley 
of the Mississippi and Missouri to 
the east and a series of rivers on 



268 



Death of Father Marquette. 



the west, was utterly unknown. 
Mat-queue and Jolliet lifted the 
veil and gave the civilized world 
clear and definite ideas. The two 
learned explorers floated alone 
down the mighty river, whose path 
had not been traced for any dis- 
tance since the shattered remnant 
of De Solo's army stole down its 
lower valley to the gulf. 

Father Marquette was not a 
mere scholar' or man of science. 
If he sought new avenues for civil- 
ized man to thread the very heart 
of tiie continent, it was with him a 
work of Christian love. It was to 
open the way for the Gospel, that 
the cross might enlighten new and 
remote nations. 

No missionary of that glorious 
band of Jesuits who in the seven- 
teenth century announced the faith 
from the Hudson Bay to the Lower 
Mississippi, who hallowed by their 
labors and life-blood so many a 
wild spot now occupied by the 
busy hives of men none of them 
impresses us more, in his whole 
life and career, with his piety, 
sanctity, and absolute devotion to 
God, than Father Marquette. In 
life he seems to have been looked 
up to with reverence by the wildest 
savage, by the rude frontiersman, 
and by the polished officers of gov- 
ernment. When he had passed 
away his name and his fame re- 
mained in the great West, treasured 
above that of his fellow-laborers, 
Menard, Allouez, Nouvel, or Druil- 
lettes. The traditipn of his life and 
labors in a few generations, while it 
lost none of its respect for his me-r 
mory, gathered the moss of incor- 
rectness. 

Father Charlevoix, travelling 
through the West in 1721, stopped 
on Lake Michigan at the mouth of 
a stream which already bore the 
name of " River of Father Mar- 



quette." From Canadian voyagers 
and some missionary in the West 
he learned the tradition which he 
thus embodies in his journal : 

"Two years after the discovery 
(of the Mississippi), as he was going 
from Chicagou, which is at the ex- 
tremity of Lake Michigan, to Michi- 
limackinac, lie entered the river in 
question on the i8th of May, 1675, 
its mouth being then at the extrem- 
ity of the lowlands, which I have 
noticed it leaves to the right as 
you enter. There he erected his 
altar and said Mass. Then he 
withdrew a little distance to offer 
his thanksgiving, and asked the 
two men who paddled his canoe to 
leave him alone for Tialf an hour. 
At the expiration of that time they 
returned for him, and were greatly 
surprised to find him dead. They 
remembered, nevertheless, that on 
entering the river he had inadver- 
tently remarked that he would end 
his journey there. 

" As it was too far from the spot 
to Michilimackinac to convey his 
body to that place, they buried him 
near the bank of the river, which 
since that time has gradually with- 
drawn, as if through respect, to the 
bluff, whose foot it now washes and 
where it has opened a new passage. 
The next year one of the two men 
who had rendered the last tribute 
to the servant of God returned to 
the spot where they had buried 
him, took up his remains, and 
conveyed them to Michilimackinac. 
I could not learn, or have forgotten, 
the name this river bore previously, 
but the Indians now give it no 
name but ' River of the Black- 
gown ' ; the French call it by the 
name of Father Marquette, and 
never fail to invoke him when they 
are in any peril on Lake Michigan. 
Many have declared that they be- 
lieved themselves indebted to his 



Death of Father Marquette. 



269 



intercession for having escaped 
very great dangers." 

Father Charlevoix's fame as a 
historian gave *!iis account the 
stamp of authority and it was gen- 
erally adopted. Bancroft drew 
from it the poetical and touching 
account which he introduced into 
the first editions of his History of 
the United States. 

Yet this was but romance. The 
real, detailed account of the mis- 
sionary's labors, the details which 
let us enter the sanctuary of his 
pious heart, were all the time lying 
unused in Canada. They were in 
the college of Quebec when Char- 
levoix was teaching in that insti- 
tution as a young scholastic ; but if 
he then already projected his his- 
tory of the colony, no one of the 
old fathers seems to have opened 
to him the writings of the early 
founders of the mission. It was the 
same when he returned to make the 
tour through the country under the 
auspices of the government and 
with a view to its development. 

The papers lay unnoticed, and 
when Louis XV. 's neglect of his Ame- 
rican empire neutralized all the gen- 
ius of Montcalm and the gallantry of 
his French and Canadian soldiery, 
the mission of the Jesuit Fathers 
was broken up. The precious ar- 
chives were plundered ; but some 
documents reached pious hands, 
who laid them up with their own 
convent archives, till the Society of 
Jesus returned to the land where 
it could boast of so glorious a ca- 
reer. 

Among these papers were ac- 
counts of the last labors and death 
of Father Marquette and of the 
removal of his remains, prepared 
for publication by Father Dablon ; 
Marquette's journal of his great 
expedition ; the very map he drew ; 
?.nd a letter left unfinished when the 



angel of death sheathed his sword 
by the banks of the Michigan River. 

Father Felix Martin, one of the 
earliest to revive the old Canadian 
mission, received these treasures 
with joy, and has since gleaned far 
and wide to add to our material for 
the wonderful mission labors of the 
Jesuit pioneers. He has published 
many works, and aided in far more. 
With a kindness not easy to repay 
he permitted the writer to use the 
documents relating to Marquette in 
preparing a work on " The Disco- 
very and Exploration of the Missis- 
sippi Valley." 

From these authentic contempo- 
rary documents we learn the real 
story of Father Marquette's last 
labors. As he was returning from 
his voyage down the Mississippi, he 
promised the Kaskaskia Indians, 
who then occupied towns in the 
upper valley of the Illinois, that he 
would return to teach them the 
faith which he announced. His 
health, broken by exposure and 
mission labor on the St. Lawrence 
and the Upper Lakes, was very 
frail, but he had no idea of rest. 
Devoted in an especial manner to 
the great privilege of Mary her 
Immaculate Conception he named 
the great artery of our continent 
The River of the Immaculate Con- 
ception, and v\ his heart bestowed 
the same name on the mission 
which he hoped to found among 
the Kaskaskias. 

To enter upon that work, so dear 
to his piety, he needed permission 
from his distant superior. When 
the permission came he took leave 
of the Mackinac mission which he 
had founded, and pushed off his 
bark canoe into Lake Michigan. 
The autumn was well advanced 
for it was the 251)1 of October, 
1674 and the reddening forests 
swayed in the chill lake winds as 



270 



Death of Father Marquette. 



he glided along the western shore. 
Before he reached the southern 
extremity winter was upon him 
with its cold and snows, and the 
disease which had been checked, 
but not conquered, again claimed 
the frail frame. It could not quench 
his courage, for he kept on in his 
open canoe on the wintry lake till 
the 4th of December, when he 
reached Chicago. There he had 
hoped to ascend the river and by a 
portage reach the Illinois. It was 
too late. The ice had closed the 
stream, and a winter march was 
beyond his strength. His two men, 
simple, faithful companions, erect- 
ed a log hut, home and chapel, the 
first dwelling and first church of 
Chicago. Praying to Our Lady to 
enable him to reach his destination, 
offering the Holy Sacrifice whenever 
his illness permitted, receiving de- 
legations from his flock, the Kas- 
kaskias, the winter waned away in 
the pious foundation of the white 
settlement at Chicago. 

With the opening of spring Mar- 
quette set out, and his last letter 
notes his progress till the 6th of 
April, 1675. Two days after he was 
among the Kaskaskias, and, rearing 
his altar on the prairie which lies 
between the present town of Utica 
and the Illinois river, he offered up 
the Mass on Maundy Thursday, and 
began the instruction of the willing 
Indians who gathered around him. 
A few days only were allotted to 
him, when, after Easter, he was 
again stricken down. If he would 
die iu the arms of his brethren at 
Mackinac, he saw that he must de- 
part at once ; for he felt that the 
days of his sojourning were rapidly 
closing. Escorted by the Kaskas- 
kias, who were deeply impressed 
by the zeal that could so battle 
with death, the missionary reached 
Lake Michigan, on the eastern side. 



Although that shore was as yet un- 
known, his faithful men launched 
his canoe. " His strength, however, 
failed so much," says Father l)a- 
blon, whose words we shall now 
quote, " that his men despaired of 
being able to convey him alive to 
their journey's end; for, in fact, he 
became so weak and so exhausted 
that he could no longer help him- 
self, nor even stir, and had to be 
handled and carried like a child. 
He nevertheless maintained in this 
state an admirable resignation, joy, 
and gentleness, consoling his be- 
loved companions, and encouraging 
them to suffer courageously all the 
hardships of this voyage, assuring 
them that our Lord would not for- 
sake them when he was gone. It 
was during this navigation that 
he began to prepare more par- 
ticularly for death, passing his 
time in colloquies with our Lord, 
with his holy Mother, with his 
angel guardian, or with all hea- 
ven. He was often heard pro- 
nouncing these words : ' I believe 
that my Redeemer liveth,' or 
' Mary, Mother of grace, Mother 
of God, remember rne.' Besides a 
spiritual reading made for him every 
day, he toward the close asked them 
to read him his meditation on the 
preparation for death, which he 
carried about him ; he recited his 
breviary every day; and although 
he was so low that both sight and 
strength had greatly failed, he did 
not omit it till the last day of his 
life, when his companions excited his 
scruples. A week before his death 
he had the precaution to bless some 
holy water to serve him during the 
rest of his illness, in his agony, and 
at his burial, and he instructed his 
companions how to use it. 

" On the eve of his death, which 
was a Friday, he told them, all ra- 
diant with joy, that it would take 



Death of Father Marquette. 



271 



place on the morrow. During the 
whole day he conversed with them 
about the manner of his burial, the 
way in which he should be laid out, 
the place to be selected for his 
interment ; how they should ar- 
range his hands, feet, and face, and 
how they should raise a cross over 
his grave. He even went so far as 
to enjoin them, only three hours 
before he expired, to take his chap- 
el-bell, as soon as he was dead, and 
ring it while they carried him to 
the grave. Of all this he spoke so 
calmly and collectedly that you 
would have thought he spoke of 
the death and burial of another, and 
not of his own. 

" Thus did he speak to them as 
he sailed along the lake, till, per- 
ceiving the mouth of a river, with 
an eminence on the bank which he 
thought suited for his burial, he 
told them that it was the place of 
his last repose. They wished, how- 
ever, to pass on, as the weather 
permitted it and the day was not far 
advanced ; but God raised a con- 
trary wind, which obliged them to 
return and enter the river which 
the father had designated. 

" They then carried him ashore, 
kindled a little fire, and raised a 
wretched bark cabin for his use, 
laying him in it with as little dis- 
comfort as they could ; but they 
were so depressed by sadness that, 
as they afterwards said, they did 
not know what they were doing. 

" The father being thus stretched 
on the shore like St. Francis Xavier, 
as he had always so ardently desired, 
and left alone amid those forests 
for his companions were engaged 
in unloading he had leisure to re- 
peat all the acts in which he had 
employed himself during the pre- 
ceding days. 

" When his dear companions af- 
terwards came up, all dejected, 



he consoled them, and gave them 
hopes that God would take care of 
them after his death in those new 
and unknown countries ; he gave 
them his last instructions, thanked 
them for all the charity they had 
shown him during the voyage, beg- 
ged their pardon for the trouble 
he had given them, directed them 
also to ask pardon in his name of 
all our fathers and brothers in 
the Ottawa country, and then dis- 
posed them to receive the sacra- 
ment of penance, which he admin- 
istered to them for the last time. 
He also gave them a paper on 
which he had written all his faults 
since his last confession, to be given 
to his superior, to oblige him to pray 
to God more earnestly for him. In 
fine, he promised not to forget them 
in heaven, and as he was very kind- 
hearted, and knew them to be worn 
out with the toil of the preceding 
days, he bade them go and take a 
little rest, assuring them that his 
hour was not yet so near, but that 
he would wake them when it was 
time as, in fact, he did two or 
three hours after, calling them 
when about to enter into his agony. 
" When they came near he em- 
braced them again for the last time, 
while they melted in tears at his feet. 
He then asked for the holy water 
and his reliquary, and, taking off 
his crucifix, which he always wore 
hanging from his neck, he placed 
it in the hands of one of his com- 
panions, asking him to hold it con- 
stantly opposite him, raised before 
his eyes. Feeling that he had but 
a little while to live, he made a last 
effort, clasped his hands, and, with 
his eyes fixed sweetly on his crucifix, 
he pronounced aloud his profession 
of faith, and thanked the divine 
Majesty for the immense favor he 
bestowed upon him in allowing him 
to die in the Society of Jesus, to 



272 



Death of Father Marquette. 



e in it as a missionary 'of Jesus 
Christ, and above all to die in it, 
as lie had always asked, in a wretch- 
ed cabin, amid the forests, desti- 
tute of all human aid. 

" On this he became silent, con- 
versing inwardly with God ; yet 
from time to time words escaped 
him : ' Sistinuit anima mea in verbo 
tjitSy or ' Mater Dei, memento mei,' 
which were the last words he utter- 
ed before entering into his agony, 
which was very calm and gentle. 

" He had prayed his companions 
to remind him, when they saw 
him about to expire, to pronounce 
frequently the names of Jesus and 
Mary, if he did not do so himself; 
they did not neglect this; and 
when they thought him about to 
pass away one cried aloud, 'Jesus ! 
Mary !' which he several times re- 
peated distinctly, and then, as if at 
those sacred names something had 
appeared to him, he suddenly rais- 
ed his eyes above his crucifix, fix- 
ing them apparently upon some ob- 
ject, which he seemed to regard 
with pleasure; and thus, with a 
countenance all radiant with smiles, 
he expired without a struggle, and 
so gently that it might be called a 
quiet sleep. 

" His two poor companions, after 
shedding many tears over his body, 
and having laid it out as he had di- 
rected, carried it devoutly to the 
grave, ringing the bell according to 
his injunction, and raised a large 
cross near it to serve as a mark 
for all who passed. . . . 

" God did not permit so precious 
a deposit to remain unhonored and 
forgotten amid the forests. The In- 
dians, called Kiskakons,who have for 
nearly ten years publicly professed 
Christianity, in which they were 
first instructed by Father Mar- 
qnette when stationed at La Pointe 
du St. Esprit, at the extremity of 



Lake Superior, were hunting last 
winter not far from Lake Illi- 
nois (Michigan), and, as they were 
returning early in the spring, they 
resolved to pass by the tomb of 
their good father, whom they ten- 
derly loved; and God even gave 
them the thought of taking his 
bones and conveying them to our 
church at the mission of St. Igna- 
tius, at Missilimakinac, where they 
reside. 

" They accordingly repaired to 
the spot and deliberated together, 
resolving to act with their father 
as they usually do with those whom 
they respect. They accordingly 
opened the grave, unrolled the 
body, and, though the flesh and in- 
testines were all dried up, they 
found it entire, without the skin 
being in any way injured. This 
did not prevent their dissecting it 
according to custom. They wash- 
ed the bones and dried them in 
the sun ; then, putting them neatly 
in a box of birch bark, they set out 
to bear them to our house of St. 
Ignatius. 

" The convoy consisted of nearly 
thirty canoes in excellent order, 
including even a good number of 
Iroquois, who had joined our Al- 
gonquins to honor the ceremony. As 
they approached our house, Father 
Nouvel, who is superior, went to meet 
them with Father Pierson, accom- 
panied by all the French and Indians 
of the place, and, having caused the 
convoy to stop, he made the ordi- 
nary interrogations to verify the 
fact that the body which they 
bore was really Father Marquette's. 
Then, before they landed, he in- 
toned the De Profundis in sight of 
the thirty canoes still on the water, 
and of all the people on the shore. 
After this the body was carried to 
the church, observing all that the 
ritual prescribes for such ceremo- 



Death of leather Marquette. 



273 



nies. It remained exposed under his 
catafalque all that day, which was 
\Vliitsun Monday, the 8th of June; 
and the next day, when all the fun- 
eral honors had been paid it, it was 
deposited in a little vault in the mid- 
dle of the church, where he reposes 
as the Guardian Angel of our Ot- 
tawa missions. The Indians often 
come to pray on his tomb." 

We are not writing his life, and 
will not enter upon the superna- 
tural favors ascribed to his inter- 
cession by French and Indians. 
His grave was revered as a holy 
spot, and many a pilgrimage was 
made to it to invoke his interces- 
sion. 

The remains of the pious mis- 
sionary lay in the chapel undoubt- 
edly as long as it subsisted. This, 
iiovvever, was not for many years. 
A new French post was begun at 
Detroit in 1701 by La Motte Ca- 
dillac. The Hurons and Ottawas 
at Michilimackinac immediately 
emigrated and planted new vil- 
lages near the rising town. Mich- 
ilimackinac became deserted, ex- 
cept by scattered bands of In- 
dians or white bush-lopers, as sav- 
age as the red men among whom 
they lived. The missionaries were 
in constant peril and unable to pro- 
duce any fruit. They could not 
follow their old flocks to Detroit, 
as the commandant was strongly 
opposed to them and had a Recol- 
lect father as chaplain of the post. 
There was no alternative except 
to abandon Michilimackinac. The 
missionaries, not wishing the church 
to be profaned or become a resort 
of the lawless, set fire to their house 
and chapel in 1706 and returned to 
Quebec. The mission ground be- 
came once more a wilderness. 

In this disheartening departure 
what became of the remains of Fa- 
ther Marquette ? If the mission- 
VOL. xxvi. 18 



aries bore them to Quebec as a 
precious deposit, some entry of 
their reinterment would appear on 
the Canadian registers, which are 
extremely full and well preserved. 
Father Nouvel and Father Pierson, 
who received and interred them at 
the mission, were both dead, and 
their successors might not recall 
the facts. The silence as to any 
removal, in Charlevoix and other 
writers, leads us to believe that 
the bones remained interred be- 
neath the ruined church. Char- 
levoix, who notes, as we have seen, 
their removal to Mackinac, and is 
correct on this point, was at Que- 
bec College in 1706 when the mis- 
sionaries came down, and could 
scarcely have forgotten the cere- 
mony of reinterring the remains of 
Father Marquette, had it taken 
place at Quebec. 

Taking this as a fact, that the 
bones of the venerable missionary., 
buried in their bark box, were left 
there, the next question is : Where 
did the church stand? 

A doubt at once arises. Three 
spots have borne the name of Mi- 
chilimackinac : the island in the 
strait, Point St. Ignace on the 
shore to the north, and the extre- 
mity of the peninsula at the south. 
The Jesuit Relations as printed at 
the time, and those which remained 
in manuscript till they were printed 
in our time, Marquette's journal 
and letter, do not speak in such, 
positive terms that we can decide 
whether it was on the island or the 
northern shore. Arguments have 
been deduced from them on either 
side of the question. On the map- 
annexed to the Relations of 1671 
the words Mission de St. Ignace are 
on the mainland above, not on the 
island, and there is no cross or 
mark at the island to make the 
name refer to it. On Marquette's. 



2/4 



Death of Father Marquette. 



own map the " St. Ignace " appears 
to refer to the northern shore, so 
that their testimony is in favor of 
that position. 

The next work that treats of 
Michilimackinac is the Recollect 
Father Hennepin's first volume, 
Description de la Louisiane, publish- 
ed in 1688. In this (p. 59) he dis- 
tinctly says : " Missilimackinac is 
.a point of land at the entrance and 
north of the strait by which Lake 
Dauphin [Michigan] empties into 
that of Orleans " (Huron). He 
mentions the Huron village with its 
palisade on a great point of land 
opposite Michilimackinac island, the 
Ottawas, and a chapel where lie 
said Mass August 26, 1678. The 
-map in Le Clercq's Gaspesie, dated 
'1691, shows the Jesuit mission on 
the point north of the strait, and 
Father Membre, in Le Clercq's 
Etablissement, mentions it as in 
that position. In Hennepin's la- 
ter work, the Nouvel Ddcouverte, 
Utrecht, 1697, he says (p. 134): 
" There are Indian villages in these 
t\vo places. Those who are es- 
tablished at the point of land of 
Missilimackinac are Hurons, and the 
others, who are at five or six arpens 
beyond, are named the Outtaouatz." 
He then, as before, mentions saying 
Mass in the chapel at the Ottawas. 

The Jesuit Relation of 1673-9 
(pp. 58, 59) mentions the "house 
where we make our abode ordina- 
rily, and where is the church of 
St. Ignatius, which serves for the 
Hurons," and mentions a small 
bark chapel three-quarters of a 
league distant and near the Otta- 
was. This latter chapel was evi- 
dently the one where Father Hen- 
nepin officiated in 1678 or, as he 
says elsewhere, 1679. 

The relative positions of the 
Indian villages and the church thus 
indicated in Hennepin's account 



are fortunately laid down still more 
clearly on a small map of Michili- 
mackinac found in the Noirccaux 
Voyages de M. le Baron de La Hon- 
tan, published at the Hague in 
1703. Many of the statements in 
this work are preposterously false, 
and his map of his pretended Long 
River a pure invention, exciting 
caution as to any of his unsupport- 
ed statements. But the map of the 
country around Michilimackinac 
agrees with the Jesuit Relation 
and with Father Hennepin's ac- 
count, and has all the appearance 
of having been copied from the 
work of some professed hydrogra- 
pher, either one of the Jesuit 
Fathers like Raffeix, whose maps 
are known, or Jolliet, who was royal 
hydrographer of the colony. The 
whole map has a look of accuracy, 
the various soundings from the 
point to the island being carefully 
given. On this the French village, 
the house of the Jesuits, the Huron 
village, that of the Ottawas, and the 
cultivated fields of the Indians are 
all laid down on the northern shore. 
In the text, dated in 1688, he says : 
" The Hurons and the Ottawas 
have each a village, separated from 
one another by a simple palisade. . . . 
The Jesuits have a small house, 
besides a kind of church, in an en- 
closure of palisades which separates 
them from the Huron village." 

The publication a quarter of a 
century ago of the contemporaneous 
account of the death and burial of 
Father Marquette, the humble dis- 
coverer of a world, excited new in- 
terest as to his final resting-place. 
The West owed him a monument, 
and, though America gave his name 
to a city, and the Pope ennobled 
it by making it a bishop's see, this 
was not enough to satisfy the yearn- 
ings of pious hearts, who grieved 
that his remains should lie forgot- 



ten and unknown. To some the 
lack of maps laying down the fa- 
mous spots in the early Catholic 
missions has seemed strange: but 
the difficulty was very great. Every 
place required special study, and 
the random guesses of some writers 
have only created confusion, where 
truth is to be attained by close 
study of every ancient record and 
personal exploration of the ground. 
Michilimackinac is not the only one 
that has led to long discussion and 
investigation.* 

Where was the chapel on the 
point ? A structure of wood con- 
sumed by fire a hundred and sev- 
enty years ago could scarcely be 
traced or identified. A forest had 
grown up around the spots which 
in Marquette's time were cleared 
and busy with human life. Twenty 
years ago this forest was in part 
cleared away, but nothing appeared 
to justify any hope of discovering 
the burial-place of him who bore 
the standard of Mary conceived 
without sin down the Mississippi 
valley. One pioneer kept up his 
hope, renewed his prayers, and 
pushed his inquiries. The Rev. 
Edward Jacker, continuing in the 
nineteenth century the labors of 
Marquette missionary to the Cath- 
olic Indians and the pagan, a lov- 
ing gatherer of all that related to the 
early heralds of the faith, tracing 
their footsteps, explaining much that 
' was obscure, leading us to the very 
spot where Menard labored and 
died was to be rewarded at last. 

A local tradition pointed to one 
spot as the site of an old church 
and the grave of a great priest, 
but nothing in the appearance 
of the ground seemed to justify it. 

* The site of the fort in New York attacked by 
Champlain in 1615 has only recently been deter- 
mined, although a number of leading historians 
have_been discussing it for some years. 



275 



Yet, hidden in a growth of low 
trees and bushes were preserved 
proofs that Indian tradition coin- 
cided with La Hontan's map and 
the Jesuit records. 

On the 5th day of May, 1877,016 
clearing of a piece of rising ground 
at a short distance from the beach, 
at the head of the little bay on the 
farm of Mr. David Murray, near the 
main road running through the 
town, laid bare the foundations of 
a church, in size about thirty-two 
by forty feet, and of two adjacent 
buildings. The Rev. Mr. Jacker 
was summoned to the spot. The 
limestone foundation walls of the 
building were evidently those of a 
church, there being no chimney, 
and it had been destroyed by 
fire, evidences of which existed 
on every side. The missionary's 
heart bounded with pious joy. 
Here was the spot where Father 
Marquette had so often offered the 
Holy Sacrifice ; here he offered to 
Mary Immaculate his voyage to ex- 
plore the river he named in her 
honor ; here his remains were re- 
ceived and, after a solemn requiem, 
interred. 

But Father Jacker was a cautious 
antiquarian as well as a devoted 
priest. He compared the site with 
La Hontan's map. If these build- 
ings were the Jesuit church and 
house, the French village was at 
the right; and there, in fact, could 
be traced the old cellars and small 
log-house foundations. On the 
other side was the Huron village ; 
the palisades can even now be 
traced. Farther back the map 
shows Indian fields. Strike into 
the fields and small timber, and you 
can even now see signs of rude In- 
dian cultivation years ago, and 
many a relic tells of their occu- 
pancy. 
.The report of the discovery 



Death of Father Marquette. 



spread and was noticed in the 
papers. Many went to visit the 
spot, and ideas of great treasures 
n to prevail. The owner pos- 
itively refused to allow any excava- 
tion to be made ; so there for a time 
the matter rested. All this gave 
time for study, and the conviction 
of scholars became positive that 
the old chapel site was actually 
found. 

The next step towards the dis- 
covery of the remains of the vener- 
able Father Marquette cannot be 
better told than by the Rev. Mr. 
Jacker himself: 

" Mr. David Murray, the owner of 
the ground in question, had for some 
time relented so far as to declare 
that if the chief pastor of the dio- 
cese, upon his arrival here, should 
wish to have a search made, he 
would object no longer. Last 
Monday, then (September 3, 1877), 
Bishop Mrak, upon our request, 
dugout the first spadeful of ground. 
On account of some apparent de- 
pression near the centre of the an- 
cient building, and mindful of Fa- 
ther Dablon's words, ' II fiit mis 
dans un petit caveau au milieu de fe"g- 
Jise,' we there began our search ; but 
being soon convinced that no dig- 
ging had ever been done there be- 
fore, we advanced towards the 
nearest corner of the large, cellar- 
like hollow to the left, throwing 
out, all along, two to three feet of 
ground. On that whole line no 
trace of any former excavation 
could be discovered, the alternate 
layers of sand and gravel which 
generally underlie the soil in this 
neighborhood appearing undisturb- 
ed. Close to the ancient cellar-like 
excavation adecayed piece of a post, 
planted deeply in the ground, came 
to light. The bottom of that hol- 
low itself furnished just the things 
that you would expect to meet 



with in the cellar of a building de- 
stroyed by fire, such as powdered 
charcoal mixed with the subsoil,* 
spikes, nails, an iron hinge (per- 
haps of a trap-door), pieces of tim- 
ber apparently of hewed planks 
and joists partly burned and very 
much decayed. Nothing, however, 
was found that would indicate the 
former existence of a tomb, vaulted 
or otherwise. Our hopes began to 
sink (the good bishop had already 
stolen away), when, at the foot of 
the western slope of the ancient 
excavation fragments of mortar 
bearing the impress of wood and 
partly blackened, and a small 
piece of birch-bark, came to light. 
This was followed by numerous 
other, similar or larger, fragments 
of the latter substance, most of 
them more or less scorched or 
crisped by the heat, not by the im- 
mediate action of the fire ; a few 
only were just blackened, and on 
one side superficially burned. A 
case or box of birch-bark (line 
quaisse d'escorce de bouleaii), accord- 
ing to the Relation, once enclosed 
the remains of the great missionary. 
No wonder our hopes revived at 
the sight of that material. Next 
appeared a small leaf of white pa- 
per, which, being quite moist, al- 
most dissolved in my hands. We 
continued the search, more with 
our hands than with the spade. 
The sand in which those objects 
were embedded was considerably 
blackened more so, in fact, than 
what should be expected, unless 
some digging was done here after 
the fire, and the hollow thus pro- 
duced filled up with the blacken- 
ed ground from above. Here and 
there we found small particles, 

*A foot or more of soft black soil (humus) on 
the bottom of the cellar refuted the suspicion en- 
tertained by some that this excavation was of more 
recent origin than the ancient buildings. 



Death of Father Marquette. 



277 



generally globular, of a moist, fria- 
ble substance, resembling pure 
lime or plaster-of-paris. None of 
the details of our search being un- 
important, I should remark that 
the first pieces of birch-bark were 
met with at a depth of about three 
and a half feet from the present 
surface, and nearly on a level, I 
should judge, with the floor of the 
ancient excavation. For about a 
foot deeper down more of it was 
found, the pieces being scattered 
at different heights over an area of 
about two feet square or more. 
Finally a larger and well-preserved' 
piece appeared, which once evi- 
dently formed part ofthe bottom 
of an Indian 'mawkawk' (wig- 
wass-makak birch-bark box), and 
rested on clean white gravel and 
sand. Some of our people, who 
are experts in this matter, declared 
that the bark was of unusual thick- 
ness, and that the box, or at least 
parts of it, had been double, such 
as the Indians sometimes, for the 
sake of greater durability, use for 
interments. A further examina- 
tion disclosed the fact that it had 
been placed on three or four wood- 
en sills, decayed parts of which 
were extracted. All around the 
space once occupied by the box 
the ground seemed to be little dis- 
turbed, and the bottom piece lay 
considerably deeper than the other 
objects (nails, fragments of timber, 
a piece of a glass jar or large bot- 
tle, a chisel, screws, etc.) discov- 
ered on what I conceived to have 
been the ancient bottom of the 
cellar. From these two circum- 
stances it seemed evident that the 
birch- bark box had not (as would 
have been the case with an ordina- 
ry vessel containing corn, sugar, 
or the like) been placed on the 
floor, but sunk into the ground, 
and perhaps covered with a layer 



of mortar, many blackened frag- 
ments of which were turned out 
all around the space once occupied 
by it. But it was equally evident 
that this humble tomb for such 
we took it to have been had been 
disturbed, and the box broken in- 
to and parts of it torn out, after the 
material had been made brittle by 
the action of the fire. This would 
explain the absence of its former 
contents, which what else could 
we think ? were nothing less than 
Father Marquette's bones. We, 
indeed, found between the pieces 
of bark two small fragments, one 
black and hard, the other white 
and brittle, but of such a form that 
none of us could determine wheth- 
er they were of the human frame.* 
"The evening being far advanced, 
we concluded that day's search, 
pondering over what may have 
become of the precious remains 
which, we fondly believe, were 
once deposited in that modest 
tomb just in front of what, accord- 
ing to custom, should have been 
the Blessed Virgin's altar. Had I 
been in Father Nouvel's place, it is 
there I would have buried the de- 
vout champion of Mary Immaculate. 
It is the same part of the church 
we chose nine years ago for Bish- 
op Baraga's interment in the cathe- 
dral of Marquette. The sugges- 
tion of one of our half-breeds that 
it would be a matter of wonder if 
some pagan Indian had not, after 
the departure of the missionaries, 
opened the grave and carried off 
the remains pour en faire tie la medi- 
cine that is, to use the great black- 
gown's bones for superstitious pur- 
poses f this suggestion appeared 

* Indians, some of whom are no mean anatomists, 
have since pronounced one of them to be part of a 
vertebra in all probability human. 

t Even at this day our pagan Ojibwas make such 
a use of human bones. They either carry them in 
their "medicine bags" as "manitous" or grind 



2/8 



DeatJi of Father Marquette. 



to me very probable. Hence, giv- 
ing up the hope of finding anything 
more valuable, and awaiting the ex- 
amination by an expert of the two 
doubtful fragments of bone, I car- 
ried them home (together with nu- 
merous fragments of the bark box) 
with a mixed feeling of joy and 
sadness. Shall this, then, be all 
that is left us of the saintly mis- 
sionary's mortal part ? 

" I must not forget to mention 
a touching little incident. It so 
happened that while we people 
of St. Ignace were at work, and 
just before the first piece of bark 
was brought to light, two young 
American travellers apparently 
Protestants, and pilgrims, like hun- 
dreds of others all through the 
summer, to this memorable spot 
came on shore, and, having, 
learned the object of the gathering 
with joyful surprise, congratulated 
themselves on having arrived at 
such a propitious moment. They 
took the liveliest interest in the 
progress of the search, lending 
their help, and being, in fact, to 
outward appearances, the most 
reverential of all present. 'Do 
you realize,' would one address 
the other with an air of religious 
awe, 'where we are standing? This 
is hallowed ground!' Their bear- 
ing struck us all and greatly edified 
our simple people. They begged 
for, and joyfully carried off, some 
little memorials. Isn't it a natu- 
ral thing, that veneration of relics 
we used to be so. much blamed 
for? 

" Some hundred and fifty or two 
hundred of our people witnessed 
the search, surrounding us in pic- 
turesque groups many of them, 

them to powder, which they apply especially to 
their puncturing instruments. In diseases of the 
head the powder of the skull is used ; in the case 
of a sore leg, that of the tibia oi/eviur^ etc. 



though nearly white, being lineal 
descendants of the very Ottawas 
among whom Father Marquette la- 
bored in La Pointe du St. Esprit, 
and who witnessed his interment in 
this place two hundred years ago. 
The pure Indian element was rep- 
resented only by one individual of 
the Ojibwa tribe. 

" On Tuesday our children were 
confirmed, and in the afternoon I 
had to escort the bishop over to 
Mackinac Island. Upon my re- 
turn, yesterday evening, a young 
man of this place entered my room, 
with some black dust and other 
matters tied up in a handkerchief. 
He had tak^n the liberty to search 
our excavation for some little keep- 
sake, taking out a few handfuls of 
ground at a little distance from 
where the box had lain, in the 
direction of what I presume to 
have been the Blessed Virgin's al- 
tar, and at about the height of the 
ancient cellar-floor. The result of 
his search was of such a character 
that he considered himself obliged 
to put me in possession of it. What 
was my astonishment when he dis- 
played on my table a number of 
small fragments of bones, in size 
from an inch in length down to a 
mere scale, being in all thirty-six, 
and, to all appearances, human. 
Being alone, after nightfall, I wash- 
ed the bones. The scene of two 
hundred years ago, when the Kis- 
kakons, at the mouth of that dis- 
tant river, were employed in the 
same work, rose up before my ima- 
gination ; and though the mists of 
doubt were not entirely dispelled, 
I felt very much humbled that no 
more worthy hands should have to 
perform this office. So long had I 
wished and, I candidly confess it, 
even prayed for the discovery of 
Father Marquette's grave ; and now 
that so many evidences concurred 



DeatJi of Father Marqnettc. 



279 



to establish the fact of its having 
been on the spot where \ve hoped 
to find it, I felt reluctant to believe 
it. The longer, however, I pon- 
dered over every circumstance con- 
nected with our search, the more I 
became convinced that we have 
found what we, and so many with 
us, were desirous to discover. Let 
me briefly resume the train of evi- 
dence. 

" The local tradition as to the site 
of the grave, near the head of our 
little bay; the size and relative po- 
sition of the ancient buildings, both 
in the ' French Village ' and the 
Jesuits' establishment, plainly trace- 
able by little elevated ridges, stone 
foundations, cellars, chimneys, and 
the traces of a stockade ; all this 
exactly tallying with La Hontan's 
plan and description of 1688 so 
many concurring circumstances 
could hardly leave any doubt as to 
the site of the chapel in which 
Marquette's remains were depo- 
sited. 

" The unwillingness of the pro- 
prietor to have the grave of a saint- 
ly priest disturbed proved very op- 
portune, not to say providential. 
Within the three or four months 
that elapsed since the first discov- 
ery many hundreds of persons from 
all parts of the country had the 
opportunity to examine the grounds, 
as yet untouched by the spade. 
We had time to weigh every argu- 
ment pro and con. Among those 
visitors there were men of intelli- 
gence and historical learning. I 
will only mention Judge Walker, of 
Detroit, who has made the early 
history of our Northwest the sub- 
ject of his particular study, and 
who went over the grounds with 
the English edition of La Hontan 
in his hand. He, as well as every 
one else whose judgment was worth 
any tiling, pronounced in favor of 



our opinion. The balance stood so 
that the smallest additional weight 
of evidence would make it incline 
on the side of certainty as absolute 
as can be expected in a case like 
this. 

" The text of the Relation, it is 
true, would make us look for a 
vault, or small cellar (un petit ca- 
veau), in the middle (au milieu) of 
the church. But if anything indi- 
cating the existence of a tomb in 
the hollow towards the left side 
and the rear part of the chapel 
were discovered, could we not 
construe those words as meaning 
''within the church'? Besides, it 
must be remembered that Father 
Dablon, who left us the account, 
was not an eye-witness at the in- 
terment ; nor did he visit the mis- 
sion after that event, at least up to 
the time of his writing. 

" We know, then, that Marquette's 
remains were brought to this place 
in a birch-bark box; and there is 
nothing to indicate that, previously 
to being interred, they were trans- 
ferred into any other kind of re- 
ceptacle. In that box they re- 
mained under the catafalco (sous sa 
representation) from Monday, June 
8, to Tuesday, 9 (1677), and in 
it, undoubtedly, they were depo- 
sited in a vault, or little cellar, 
which may have previously been 
dug out for other purposes. The 
box was sunk into the ground on 
that side of the excavation which 
was nearest to the altar, or, at least, 
the statue of the Blessed Virgin, the 
most appropriate spot for the in- 
terment of the champion of Mary 
Immaculate. An inscription, on 
paper, indicating whose bones were 
contained in the box, might have 
been placed within it ; of this the 
piece of white paper we found 
among the bark may be a fragment. 
The poor casket rested, after the 



2 SO 



Death of Father Marqncttc. 



Indian fashion, on wooden sup- 
ports. It may have been covered 
with mortar or white lime, or else 
a little vault constructed of wood 
and mortar may have been erected 
over it. When the building was 
fired, twenty-nine years after the 
interment, the burning floor, to- 
gether with pieces of timber from 
above, fell on the tomb, broke the 
frail vault or mortar cover of the 
box, burned its top, and crisped 
its sides. Some of the pagan or 
apostate Indians remaining in that 
neighborhood after the transmigra- 
tion of the Hurons and Ottawas to 
Detroit, though filled with venera- 
tion for the departed missionary 
(as their descendants remained 
through four or five generations), 
or rather for the very reason of 
their high regard for his priestly 
character and personal virtues, and 
of his reputation as ^.thaumaturgus, 
coveted his bones as a powerful 
' medicine,' and carried them off. 
In taking them out of the tomb 
they tore the brittle bark and scat- 
tered its fragments. The bones be- 
ing first placed on the bottom of 
the cellar, behind the tomb, some 
small fragments became mixed up 
with the sand, mortar, and lime, 
and were left behind. 

" Such seems to me the most na- 
tural explanation of the circum- 
stances of the discovery. Had the 
missionaries themselves, before set- 
ting fire to the church, removed 
the remains of their saintly brother, 
they would have been careful about 
the least fragment; none of them, 
at least, would have been found scat- 
tered outside of the box. That rob- 
bingof the grave by the Indians must 
have taken place within a few years 
after the departure of the mission- 
aries; for had those precious re- 
mains been there when the mis- 
sion was renewed (about 1708?), 



they would most certainly have 
been transferred to the new church 
in 'Old Mackinac'; and had this 
been the case, Charlevoix, at his 
sojourn there in 1721, could hard- 
ly have failed to be taken to see the 
tomb and to mention the fact of 
the transfer in his journal or his- 
tory. 

" Our next object, if we were to 
be disappointed in finding the en- 
tire remains of the great missionary 
traveller, was to ascertain the fact 
of his having been interred on that 
particular spot ; and in this, I think, 
we have fully succeeded. Consi- 
dering the high probability a pri- 
ori, so to say of the Indians' tak- 
ing possession of the' bones, the 
finding of those few fragments un- 
der the circumstances described 
seems to me, if not as satisfactory 
to our wishes, at least as good evi- 
dence for the fact in question as 
if we had found every bone that is 
in the human body. Somebody 
an adult person was buried under 
the church ; buried before the 
building was destroyed by fire ; and 
buried under exceptional circum- 
stances the remains being placed 
in a birch-bark box of much small- 
er size than an ordinary coffin 
who else could it have been but 
the one whose burial, with all its 
details of time, place, and manner, 
as recorded in most trustworthy 
records, answers all the circum- 
stances of our discovery ? 

" Sept. Tth. Went again to the 
grave to-day, and, after searching a 
little while near the spot where 
that young man had found the 
bones, I was rewarded with an- 
other small fragment, apparently of 
the skull, like two or three of those 
already found. Two Indian visi- 
tors who have called in since de- 
clared others to be of the ribs, of the 
hand, and of the thigh-bone. They 



Neiv Publications. 



281 



also consider the robbing of the 
grave by their pagan ancestors as 
extremely probable. To prevent 
profanation and the carrying off of 
the loose ground in the empty 
grave, we covered the excavation 
with a temporary floor, awaiting 
contributions from outside we are 
too poor ourselves for the purpose 
of erecting some kind of a tomb or 
mortuary chapel in which to pre- 
serve what remains of the perisha- 
ble part of the ' Guardian Angel of 
the Ottawa missions.' 

" I shall not send you this letter 
before having shown some of the 
bones to a physician, for which 
purpose I have to go outside. 

" Shcboygan, Mich., Sept. n. M. 
Pommier, a good French surgeon, 
declared the fragments of bones to 
be undoubtedly human and bear- 
ing the marks of fire." 

The result is consoling, though 
not unmixed with pain. It is sad 
to think that the remains of so 
saintly a priest, so devoted a mis- 
sionary, so zealous an explorer 
should have been so heathenislily 
profaned by Indian medicine-men ; 
but the explanation has every ap- 
pearance of probability. Had the 



Jesuit missionaries removed the 
remains, they would have taken up 
the birch box carefully, enclosing 
it, if necessary, in a case of wood. 
They would never have torn the 
birch-bark box rudely open, or 
taken the remains so carelessly as 
to leave fragments. All the cir- 
cumstances show the haste of pro- 
fane robbery. The box was torn 
asunder in haste, part of its con- 
tents secured, and the excavation 
hastily filled up. 

The detailed account of the final 
interment of Father Marquette, the 
peculiarity of the bones being in a 
bark box, evidently of small size 
for convenient transportation, the 
fact that no other priest died at 
the mission who could have been 
similarly interred, leads irresistibly 
to the conclusion that Father 
Jacker is justified in regarding the 
remains found as portion of those 
committed to the earth two centu- 
ries ago. 

It is now for the Catholics of the 
United States to rear a monument 
there to enclose what time has 
spared us of the " Angel Guardian 
of the Ottawa Missions." 

JOHN GILMARY SHEA. 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



MISCELLANIES. By Henry Edward, Car- 
dinal Archbishop of Westminster. 
First American Edition. New York : 
The Catholic Publication Society Co , 9 
Barclay Street. 1877. 
The various papers contained in this 
assortment of miscellaneous articles from 
the pen of Cardinal Manning consist of 
addresses before several Academias or 
other societies, contributions to the 
Dublin Revie~iv, and short essays, most 
of which, we believe, have been before 
published in English magazines or news- 
papers, or in the form of pamphlets. 
They are on current topics of immediate 
interest, well adapted to the times, and 



written in a plain, popular style. One 
general tone of defence and explanation 
of the Catholic cause in respect to mat- 
ters now of conflict and controversy be- 
tween the Catholic Church and her op- 
posers runs through them all, giving a real 
unity of purpose and objective aim to 
the collection, various and miscellaneous 
as are its topics. The most important 
and interesting papers, in which the force 
of the whole volume, of all the cardinal's 
principal works, of the efforts of his en* 
tire career as a prelate in the church, is 
concentrated and brought to bear upon 
the central point of anti-Catholic revo- 
lution, are the first and last. The first 



282 



New Publications. 



one is entitled " Roma Sterna : 'a Dis- 
course before the Academia of the Qui- 
riti in Rome on the 26isth anniversa- 
ry of this city, April 21, 1863." The last 
one is entitled " The Independence of 
the Holy See," and we do not know 
whether or not it was published before it 
appeared in the present collection. It 
has always been characteristic of the 
cardinal's mind, and of the doctrinal 
or polemic expositions of Catholic truth 
put forth by him, to perceive and seize 
the principle of unity. While he was 
still an Anglican archdeacon he em- 
braced and advocated general principles 
of Catholic unity, so far as he then ap- 
prehended them, with remarkable clear- 
ness and precision. These principles 
led him into the bosom of Catholic uni- 
ty, and their complete and consequent 
development in all their conclusions and 
harmonious relations has been the one 
great aim and effort of his luminous and 
vigorous mind since lie became a Catho- 
lic ecclesiastic, both as an orator and as a 
writer. This clear, direct view of the 
logical order and sequence of constitu- 
tive, Catholic principles made him one 
of the most thorough and firm advocates 
of the spiritual supremacy of the Holy 
See, before and during the sessions of the 
Vatican Council. The Papacy, as the 
very centre and foundation of Christian- 
ity, and therefore the principal point of 
attack and defence in the war between the 
Christian kingdom and the anti-Christian 
revolution, has been the dominant idea in 
the mind of Cardinal Manning. The in- 
dissoluble union of the papal supremacy 
with the Roman episcopate, and there- 
fore the dependence of Christendom on 
the Roman Church as its centre, its 
head, the great source of its life, is the 
topic to which at present his attention is 
more specially directed. The Roman 
Church, and, by reason of its near and 
close connection, the Italian Church, as 
the permanent, immovable seat of the sov- 
ereign pontificate, is identified with the 
prosperity of Christendom. The head 
and heart of the Catholic Church are there, 
whereas other members of the great, uni- 
versal society of Christians are only limbs, 
however great and powerful they may be. 
The logical and juridical mind of Cardi- 
nal Manning grasps in its full import 
the whole Roman and Italian question 
of present conflict as the vital one for 
all Christendom. And, as we have said, 
the first and last papers in his volume 



of Miscellanies are of 'permanent value 
and importance, on account of his clear 
and masterly exposition of this great 
controversy. We will quote a few sali- 
ent paragraphs in illustration and con- 
firmation of our opinion on this head : 

" It is no wonder to me that Italians 
should believe in the primacy of Italy. 
Italy has indeed a primacy, but not that 
of which some have dreamed. The pri- 
macy of Italy is the presence of Rome; 
and the primacy of Rome is in its apos- 
tleship to the whole human race, in the 
science of God with which it has illumi- 
nated mankind, in its supreme and 
world-wide jurisdiction over souls, in 
its high tribunal of appeal from all the 
authorities on earth, in its inflexible ex- 
position of the moral law, in its sacred 
diplomacy, by which it binds the nations 
of Christendom into a confederacy of or- 
der and of justice these ^are its true, 
supreme, and, because God has so will- 
ed, its inalienable and incommunicable pri- 
ma y among the nations of the earth. . . . 
The eternity of Rome, then, if it be not an 
exact truth, is nevertheless no mere rhe- 
torical exaggeration. It denotes the fact 
that Rome has been chosen of God as 
the centre of his kingdom, which is eter- 
nal, as the depository of his eternal 
truths, as the fountain of his graces 
which lead men to a higher life, as the 
witness and guardian of law and princi- 
ples of which the sanctions and the fruit 
are eternal. ... I shall say little if I say 
that on you, under God, we depend for 
the immutability not only of the faith in 
all the radiance of its exposition and il- 
lustration, and of the divine love in 
all its breadth and purity and perfec- 
tion ; you are also charged with 
the custody of other truths which de- 
scend from this great sphere of superna- 
tural light, and with the application of 
these truths to the turbulent and unsta- 
ble elements of human society. . 
You are the heirs of those who renewed 
the face of the world and created the 
Christian civilization of Europe. You 
are the depositories of truths and princi- 
ples which are indestructible in their vi- 
tality. Though buried like the ear of 
corn in the Pyramids of Egypt, they 
strike root and spring into fruit when 
their hour is come. Truths and princi- 
ples are divine ; they govern the world ; 
to suffer for them is the greatest glory 
of man. ' Not death, but the cause of 
death, makes the martyr." So long as 



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283 



Rome is grafted upon the Incarnation 
it is the head of the world. If it were 
possible to cut it out from its divine 
root, it would fall from its primacy 
among mankind. But this cannot be. 
He who chose it for his own has kept 
it to this hour. He who has kept it un- 
til now will keep it unto the end. Be 
worthy of your high destiny for His sake 
who has called you to it ; for our sakes, 
who look up to you as, under God, our 
light and our strength " (" Rom. ^Etern.," 
pp. 3-23). These words were spoken 
fourteen years ago, but they are reaffirm- 
ed now by their new republication, and 
the similar language of the closing pa- 
per of the volume. 

In this last paper, on " The Indepen- 
dence of the Holy See," the cardinal 
speaks more particularly and definitely 
of the temporal sovereignty of the Holy 
See. As the spiritual supremacy of the 
Pope, in his office as Vicar of Christ and 
successor of St. Peter, is closely bound 
to his Roman episcopate, and the unity 
of the church depends on the Roman 
Church, the "mother and mistress of 
churches," so the peaceful and uncon- 
trolled exercise of the supremacy de- 
pends on the freedom of the Pope in 
Rome. This freedom is secured only 
by complete independence, which re- 
quires the possession of both personal 
and political sovereignty as its condi- 
tion. This citadel of all Catholic and 
Christian interests being now the very 
object of the most resolute and uncom- 
promising attack and defence the Plev- 
na of the war between the Catholic re- 
ligion and the anti-Christian revolution 
the cardinal, as a wise leader and strate- 
gist, directs his principal efforts to sus- 
tain and advocate the right and necessity 
of the Pope's temporal sovereignty. 
The spoliation of this temporal sover- 
eignty has for its necessary effect, says 
the cardinal, " the disintegration and 
the downfall of the Christian world " 
(p. 860). Consequently, as the cardinal 
continually affirms, the redintegration 
and reconstruction of the Christian 
world require the restitution of that 
same sovereignty. "There is one hope 
for Italy. It is this : that Italy should 
reconcile itself to the old traditions of 
the faith of its fathers, and should return 
once more to the only principle of unity 
and authority which created it " (p. 848). 
" If the Christian world is still to con- 
tinue, what is happening now is but 



one more of those manifold transient 
perturbations which have come through 
these thousand years, driving into exile 
or imprisoning the pontiffs, or even 
worse, and usurping the rightful sove- 
reignty of Rome. And as they have 
passed, so will this, unless the political 
order of the Christian world itself has 
passed away " (p. 804). 

In these last words is presented an al- 
ternative of the utmost consequence and 
interest. Is the perturbation and disin- 
tegration final or transient? If final, the 
church goes back to the state of perse- 
cution, the reign of Antichrist is at hand, 
and the end of the world draws near. 
When Rome falls, the wotld. If the Ro- 
man and Italian people, as such, have 
apostat ; zed, or are about to apostatize, 
then the Roman Church, the foundation, 
sinking in the undermined and cav- 
ing soil beneath it, will bring down the 
whole crumbling fabric of Christendom 
and of the universal world. If, therefore, 
there is any ground to hope that this 
evil day is not yet, but that there is a 
triumphant epoch for the church to be 
awaited, it is of the utmost consequence 
not to exaggerate the present revolution 
in Italy and Europe into a national and 
international apostasy, but to show that 
it is a revolution of a faction whose 
power is but apparent and temporary. 
This is the cardinal's conviction, and a 
large part of his argumentation is direct- 
ed to its proof and support. " Why, 
then, is this gagging law necessary in 
Italy? Because a minority is in power 
who are conscious that they are opposed 
by a great majority who disapprove their 
acts. They know, and are afraid, that if 
men speak openly with their neighbors 
the public opinion of Catholic Italy 
would become so strong and spread so 
wide as to endanger their power. And 
this is called disturbing the public con- 
science. The public conscience of Italy 
is not revolutionary, but Catholic ; the 
true disturbers of the public conscience of 
Italy are the authors of these Italian 
Falck laws. ... I know of nothing 
which has imposed upon the simplicity 
and the good-will of the English people 
more than to suppose that the present 
state of Italy is the expression of the 
will of the Italian people" (pp. 842-47). 

We cannot exceed the limits of a no- 
tice by adding more extracts or giving 
the cardinal's proofs and reasons. We 
trust our readers will seek for them in 



28 4 



New Publications. 



the book itself. As there is ho one 
more intelligently and consistently Ca- 
tholic and Roman in all his ideas than 
the cardinal, so there is no one who can 
so well explain and interpret the same 
to the English-speaking world. He is 
not only a prince of the Roman Church 
bv his purple, but an intellectual and 
moral legate of the Holy See, by his 
wisdom, eloquence, and gentleness of 
manner, to all men speaking the Eng- 
lish language, a sure teacher and guide 
to all Catholics, whose words they will 
do well to read and ponder attentively. 

Before closing we cannot omit indi- 
cating one paper quite different from 
anything we have before seen from the 
cardinal's pen. It is the one on Kirk- 
man's Philosophy -without Assumptions, in 
which the eminent writer shows how 
much he has studied and how acutely he 
is able to discuss metaphysical questions. 
We may remark that this volume has 
been republished in a very handsome 
style and form, and we cannot too em- 
phatically recommend it to an extensive 
circulation. The appendix, containing 
in Latin and English the late splendid 
allocution of Pius IX , whose thunder 
has shaken Europe, adds much to its 
value. This great document is one of 
the most sublime utterances which has 
ever proceeded from the Holy See. St. 
Peter never had a more worthy successor 
than Pius IX. He watches by the tomb 
of the Prince of the Apostles, by God's 
command, as the angels watched by the 
sepulchre of Christ. What better gua- 
rantee could we desire that the sover- 
eignty and splendor of the Papacy will 
come forth in glory from the tomb of St. 
Peter when the long watch is ended ? 

BlBLIOTHECA SYMBOLICA ECCLESI^E UNI- 
VERSALIS. THE CREEDS OF CHRISTEN- 
DOM. With a History and Critical 
Notes. By Philip Schaff, D.D., 
LL.D., Professor of Biblical Literature 
in the Union Theological Seminary, 
New York. In three volumes. New 
York: Harper & Brothers. 1877. 

In -respect to the literary and typo- 
graphical style of execution, this is a 
work worthy of commendation. Its in- 
trinsic value for students of theology is 
chiefly to be found in the contents of the 
second and third volumes, where the 
author has collected the principal sym- 
bolical documents of the Catholic 
Church, both ancient and modern, of 



the Orthodox Orientals, and of the Prot- 
estant denominations classed under the 
generic term "Evangelical." The ori- 
ginal text is given, with English trans- 
lations of documents from other lan- 
guages. Among these documents, those 
appertaining to the Eastern Christians 
have a special interest and importance, 
because more rare and not so easily ob- 
tained as the others. As a book of re- 
ference, therefore, the Bibliothcca Sym- 
bolica deserves a place in every Catholic 
theological library. The author is a 
scholar of extensive erudition, and a 
very painstaking, accurate compiler, 
after the manner of the Germans, and he 
has fulfilled a laborious and serviceable 
task in gathering together and editing 
with so much thoroughness and accura- 
cy the collection of authentic documents 
contained in these two bulky volumes, 
so well arranged and clearly printed as 
to make them most convenient and easy 
for reading or reference. 

The first volume is not without some 
value as a historical account of the ori- 
gin and formation of the symbolical 
documents contained in the other parts 
of the work, especially so far as relates 
to those emanating from Orientals and 
Protestants. One important service his 
scholarly accuracy has rendered to the 
cause of truth deserves to be particularly 
noted the distinct light in which he has 
placed the agreement of the orthodox 
confessions of the East with the doctrine 
of the Catholic Church, cxceptis exdpicn- 
dis, and their diversity from the specific 
doctrines of Protestantism. 

In his treatment of topics relating to 
the Catholic Church the partisan polem- 
ic appears, as we might expect. The 
author professes to follow the maxim 
that "honest and earnest controversy, 
conducted in a Christian and catholic 
spirit, promotes true and lasting union. 
Polemics looks to irenics the aim of 
war is peace." He expresses the wish 
to promote by his work " a better un- 
derstanding among the churches of 
Christ." He declares his opinion that 
" the divisions of Christendom bring 
to light the various aspects and phases of 
revealed truth, and will be overruled at 
last for a deeper and richer harmony of 
which Christ is the key-note" (preface). 
This sounds very well in general terms ; 
yet when the author descends to particu- 
lars and practical questions, it is evident 
that whatever meaning his terms have is 



New Publications. 



285 



only equivalent to the truism that in- 
crease of knowledge is favorable to the 
cause of truth alone, and that the preva- 
lence of truth over error through genuine 
science, sincere conviction, and con- 
scientious obedience to known truth pro- 
duces peace, harmony, and charity by 
uniting the minds of men in one faith. 
" Irenics," in any proper sense, can refer 
onlv to parties who agree in substantials, 
but, through mutual or one-sided misun- 
derstanding, are not aware of it, or to 
those who are in controversy about mat- 
ters which do not really break unity of 
essential doctrine between the contend- 
ing sides, but are carried on with too 
little moderation and candor by vehe- 
ment disputants. There is no " irenics" 
in matters essential and obligatory be- 
tween the right side and the wrong side, 
except the irenics of combat, and no 
peace except that which follows the vic- 
tory of the one over the other. That an 
advocate of the truth of Christ should 
be honest and candid in his argumenta- 
tion against error, and charitable toward 
the persons whose errors he attacks, is 
of course indisputable. Practically, 
when Dr. Schaff finds himself in face of 
the Roman Church, he is obliged to 
recognize that this view of the case is 
the only one possible. If the Catholic 
hierarchy, and all the heads or repre- 
sentatives of the different bodies of the 
so-called orthodox Christians.would con- 
sent to meet together and adopt a con- 
fession in which all should agree as em- 
bracing the essentials of Christianity, 
with a law and order which all should 
likewise consent to establish, a visionary 
believer in progress and the church of 
the future might with some plausibility 
argue that the evolution of a higher form 
of Christianity would be the result. 
But Dr. SchafFs historical mind is too 
much accustomed to look at facts to be 
deluded by such a chimera. "The ex- 
clusiveness and anti-Christian preten- 
sions of the Papacy, especially since it 
claims infallibility for its visible head, 
make it impossible for any church to 
live with it on terms of equality and sin- 
cere friendship." We suppose that the 
view of these pretensions which claims 
for them a divine origin and sanction, 
and that which considers them " anti- 
Christian," can hardly be called " various 
aspects and phases of revealed truth." 
The " exclusiveness " of the claims is a 
point in which we both take the same 



view. The ecclesiastical friendship to 
which the doctor alludes he justly re- 
gards and proclaims an impossibility. 
While the Roman Church, and any other 
church not in her obedience, co-exist, 
there must be polemics. Irenics can 
succeed only when the Roman Church 
abdicates her supremacy, or any other 
church or churches, refusing submission 
to it, yield to her claims. The practical 
issue, therefore, is reduced to this : the 
old and long-standing controversy be- 
tween Rome and Protestantism. Dr. 
Schaff comes forward as a champion of 
Protestantism and an assailant of what 
he is too wary to call by its legitimate 
name of Catholicism, and therefore nick- 
names after the manner of his predeces- 
sors in past ages, calling it " Roman- 
ism " and "Vatican Romanism." 

We agree, then, on both sides, that 
the polemics and controversy must be 
carried on. Yet, on the part of Dr. 
Schaft and those who fight with him, it 
appears that a considerable part of the 
ground we have been heretofore con- 
tending for is evacuated and given up 
to our possession. " And yet we should 
never forget the difference between 
Popery and Catholicism." The issues, 
it appears, are a good deal narrowed, 
and that will facilitate our coming to 
close quarters and to decisive, polemical 
discussion, which we desire above all 
things. Dr. Schaff continues : " nor 
between the system and its followers. 
It becomes Protestantism, as the higher 
form of Christianity, to be liberal and 
tolerant even toward intolerant Roman- 
ism " (p. 209). Probably the collective 
terms in this clause are used distribu- 
tively, as required to make it agree with 
the preceding sentence. This is grace- 
ful, and dignified in Dr. Schaff. Our 
exclusiveness is indeed something hard 
to bear ; we freely admit it. Our apolo- 
gy for it is that we are acting under 
orders from above and have no discre- 
tionary powers. Our own personal and 
human feelings would incline us to open 
the doors of heaven to all mankind in- 
discriminately, and give all those who 
die in the state of sin a purgatory of in- 
fallible efficacy to make them holy and 
fit for everlasting beatitude. Yet as we 
have not the keys of heaven, which were 
given to St. Peter with strict orders to 
shut as well as to open its gates, we can 
do nothing for the salvation of our dear 
friends and fellow-men, except to per- 



286 



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suade them to take the king's highway 
to the gate of the celestial city, and not 
follow the example of green-headed 
Ignorance in the Pilgrims Progress, who 
came by a by-road to the gate, and, on 
being asked by the Shining Ones for his 
certificate, "fumbled in his bosom and 
found none." 

We consider that we have not only 
the higher but the only genuine form of 
Christianity. Dr. Schaff thinks Protes- 
tantism is the higher form simply, and, 
therefore, that Protestants ought to be 
tolerant of our intolerance. This is the 
most dignified attitude he could assume. 
On our part, we agree with Ozanam that, 
in a certain sense, we ought to be toler- 
ant of error i.e., in the concrete, subjec- 
tive sense, equivalent to tolerant of those 
who are in error, charitable, and, to those 
especially who are themselves honorable 
and courteous in their warfare, respect- 
ful. 

Dr. Schaff himself evidently intends 
to act upon his own principles. Toward 
individuals whom he mentions he is 
careful to observe the rules of courtesy. 
In respect to his historical and polemi- 
cal statements and arguments on Catho- 
lic matters in his first volume, we pre- 
sume he speaks according to his opinion 
and belief; and if that were correct, his 
strong expressions would be justifiable, 
even though they might sometimes, on 
the score of rhetoric and good taste, lie 
open to criticism. To call the Papacy 
" a colossal lie " is not very elegant or 
even forcible, and is irreconcilable with 
the author's own statements regarding 
mediaeval Catholicism, as well as with 
the views of history presented by such 
men as Leo and other enlightened Pro- 
testants. All the efforts of the Jesuits to 
bring back schismatics to their former 
obedience to the Holy See are called 
" intrigues." The author relies a great 
deal on strong language, vehement as- 
sertion, and a vague style of deprecia- 
tion of the mental and moral attitude of 
Catholics, which is not 'sustained by rea- 
soning, and, in our view, indicates the 
presence of much prejudice, as well as a 
want of adequate knowledge and consid- 
eration. Men who have a great aptitude 
for history and what may be called book- 
knowledge, among whom Dr. Dollinger 
is a notable instance, frequently fail sig- 
n.dly in treating of matters where logic, 
philosophy, and accurate theology are 
required. Dr. Schaff seems out of his 



proper line when he leaves his purely 
literary work and begins to reason. His 
polemical argument against infallibility 
and the Immaculate Conception is a 
pretty good risumlQi what has been said 
by others on that side, and of what can 
be said. It is all to be found in Catholic 
theologies, under the head of objections, 
and has all been answered many times 
over. The author adds nothing to his 
own cause by his own reasoning, and 
requires no special confutation. On the 
contrary, he weakens his cause and de- 
tracts from its plausibility by the futility of 
his assertions. We will cite one instance 
of this as an example. Speaking of the 
Immaculate Conception, he says : " This 
extraordinary dogma lifts the Virgin 
Mary out of the fallen and redeemed race 
of Adam, and places her on a par with the 
Saviour. For, if she is really free from all 
hereditary as well as actual sin and 
guilt, she is above the need of redemp- 
tion. Repentance, forgiveness, regene- 
ration, conversion, sanctification are as 
inapplicable to her as to Christ himself" 
(p. in). This is one of the most illogi- 
cal sentences we have ever met with. 
Let it be given, though not conceded as 
true, that the dogma places the Virgin 
Mary above the need of redemption. 
The illusion that she is therefore placed 
on a par with the Saviour is illogical and 
false. Adam, before the fall, was above 
the need of redemption, and the angels 
are above it. Are they on a par with the 
Saviour? He is God, they are creatures. 
Whatever he possesses, even in his hu- 
manity, he has by intrinsic, personal 
right ; they possess nothing except by a 
free gift. Moreover, it would not follow 
that regeneration would be as inappli- 
cable to her as to Christ himself. By 
the hypostatic union the human nature 
of Christ shares with the divine nature 
the relation of strict and proper filiation 
toward the Father, for he is the natural 
and only-begotten Son of God. But an- 
gels and men are only made sons by 
adoption, and by a supernatural grace 
which in men is properly called regen- 
eration, because the human generation 
precedes, which merely gives them hu- 
man nature. The Virgin Mary received 
only her human nature by her natural 
generation, and therefore needed to be 
born of God by spiritual grace to make 
her a child of God, and a partaker with 
Christ in that special relation to the Fa- 
ther which belonged to him as man by 



Nciv Publications. 



287 



virtue of his divine personality. More- 
over, sanctification is not inapplicable 
even to Christ, whose soul and body 
were made holy by the indwelling Spirit, 
and therefore, a fortioti, not to Mary, on 
the hypothesis that she needed no re- 
demption. Repentance, forgiveness, 
conversion, are indeed inapplicable to 
her. They are, likewise, inapplicable to 
the angels, were so to Adam and Eve 
before the fall, and would have been so 
to their posterity, if the state of original 
justice had continued, unless they sinned 
personally and were capable of restora- 
tion to grace. 

The freedom from original sin does 
not, however, imply that the Virgin 
Mary was above the need of redemption. 
The covenant of the first Adam was abol- 
ished, and therefore no right to grace 
could be transmitted from him to his de- 
scendant, the Virgin Mary. The attain- 
der by which he and all his descendants 
were excluded from the privileges of 
children and the inheritance of the 
kingdom of heaven was reversed only 
by the redemption. If Christ had not 
redeemed mankind from the fall, the 
kingdom of heaven could not have been 
open to Mary. She owes, therefore, all 
her privileges as a child of God and an 
inheritor of the kingdom of heaven to 
the redemption. Some of these are spe- 
cial and peculiar to herself, and one of 
these special privileges is that she was 
prevented from incurring the guilt of 
original sin by receiving sanctifying 
grace simultaneously with her concep- 
tion and the creation of her soul. She 
was, therefore, redeemed in a more sub- 
lime mode than others, and is more in- 
debted to the cross and Passion of Christ 
and the free grace of God than any other 
human being, and not at all on a par 
with Christ, who is indebted to no one 
but himself. Let this suffice in respect 
to the polemics of Dr. SchafFs work. 
The reunion of all who profess Chris- 
tianity on a new basis is as far off as 
ever as remote as the discovery of a 
way of transit to the fixed stars. The 
learned doctor has prepared a valuable 
collection of documents useful to the 
student, but he has not proposed any 
substitute for the faith and law of the 
Catholic Church which is likely to sup- 
plant them, or even to prove acceptable 
to any large number of Christians under 
any name. Nevertheless, we regard ami- 
cably both himself and his work, and we 



are confident that it will have the good 
effect of promoting a wider and more 
catholic range of investigation among 
Protestant students of theology. 

THE STANDARD ARITHMETIC, FOR SCHOOLS 
OF ALL GRADES AND FOR BUSINESS PUR- 
POSES. No. i. By James E. Ryan. 
New York: Trje Catholic Publication 
Society Co. 

Important changes have been made in 
arithmetical text-books within the last 
twenty years. Each new series of books 
presented a special claim for patronage. 
One contained several chapters previ- 
ously omitted ; another divided the sub- 
ject into mental and written arithmetic ; 
others followed the inductive to the ex- 
clusion of the analytic method. Each 
series may have been an improvement in 
some respects ; but the gain has been 
theoretic and artistic rather than practi- 
cal. The result has 'been to separate 
oral from written arithmetic ; to increase 
the average number of books in a series 
to five ; and to load the elementary works 
with intricate detail and useless puzzles. 

As a rule, a child spends an hour a 
day of school-life in the study of arith- 
metic. This amount of time should suf- 
fice to teach the arithmetical processes 
necessary in ordinary business. Yet the 
majority of pupils never advance beyond 
the ground rules. This results from 
making the text-book the guide. So 
general is this custom that few teachers 
desire to run the risk of changing it, and 
the pupil is compelled to leave school 
before fractions have been reached. He 
carries with him the belief that there are 
two kinds of arithmetic, one mental, the 
other written ; and while he may be able 
to explain an oral example, he can sim- 
ply tell how the written example is done. 
The small number of pupils who reach 
the higher branches suffer from an over- 
dose of commercial economy which can 
only be mastered when they come face 
to face with business affairs. 

The text-books prepared by Mr. James 
E. Ryan afford a remedy for most of 
these defects. The elementary course 
contains all that can be taught to the 
mass of pupils. It includes the funda- 
mental rules, fractions, decimals, deno- 
minate numbers, and percentage. Each 
division contains oral and written work, 
the same analysis being used in both 
cases. The mode of treatment is excel- 
lent. The book includes no more prac- 



288 



New Publications. 






tice work than is absolutely necessary 
to secure facility and accuracy in calcu- 
lation, while the analysis of each step is 
so clear that any pupil can easily com- 
prehend it. 

The chapters treating of fractions are 
cleared of obscure subdivisions, thereby 
dispensing with a mass of unnecessary 
rules for special cases! In addition to 
this improvement the rules for common 
and decimal fractions are made to corre- 
spond. Denominate numbers are treat- 
ed with marked ability. Obsolete weights 
and measures are excluded. The vari- 
ous tables of the metric system are in- 
troduced in connection with the English 
standards. 

A close examination of Mr. Ryan's 
treatise will convince the most exacting 
teacher that it is an excellent arithmetic. 

THE STANDARD ARITHMETIC, FOR SCHOOLS 
OF ALL GRADES AND FOR BUSINESS PUR- 
POSES. No. 2. By James E. Ryan. 
New York : The Catholic Publication 
Society Co., 9 Barclay St. 

This volume begins with simple num- 
bers and carries the pupil through the 
commercial rules. The amount of arith- 
metical knowledge requisite for business 
purposes has grown with the enormous 
growth of insurance, annuities, etc., so 
that it has become necessary to define 
the limits of school instruction. The 
author includes percentage, interest, dis- 
count, partial payments, exchange, profit 
and loss, commission or brokerage, in- 
surance, duties, taxes, equation of pay- 
ments, proportion, involution, evolution, 
mensuration, and progression in the 
regular course. The discussion of the 
equation, mechanics, specific gravity, 
builders' measurements, gauging, alliga- 
tion, life insurance, annuities, stocks 
and bonds, freights and storage, etc., is 
reserved for the appendix. 

In the advanced portions of the work 
analysis and synthesis, or induction, as 
it is now called, are' combined. The 
treatment of each subdivision is so unique 
that it is hardly fair to single out one for 
special praise. Equation of payments, 
however, is made somewhat conspicuous 
by the amount of condensation it has un- 
dergone. In six pages we obtain the in- 
formation which is usually spread over 



twenty. It is safe to say that the best 
scholars leave school without a clear 
comprehension of this subject, partly be- 
cause of the senseless rules laid down, 
but chiefly because of the number of 
them. The chapter on mensuration is 
remarkable. By it the author proves 
that a student may obtain all the know- 
ledge of mensuration requisite for sur- 
veying without studying geometry. 

Oral and written exercises are given 
under even- rule, and the examples are 
so shaped as to test the pupil's know- 
ledge of principles. The appendix con- 
tains a mass of important work of the 
highest value to students qualifying 
themselves for active business. For this 
reason the volume is well adapted to the 
wants of high-schools and academies. 

RECUEIL DE LECTURES, A L'USAGE DES 
ECOLES. Par une Sceur de St. Joseph. 
New York : The Catholic Publication 
Society Co. 1877. 

This is a very useful addition to the 
Catholic Publication Society's excellent 
series of school literature. There is pro- 
bably no living language from which so 
much pleasure and profit can be derived 
as the French. Even if a person does 
not speak it with ease and fluency, it re- 
quires no vast amount of study to be able 
to read it as readily as one's native 
tongue. The first requisite towards a 
knowledge of French is a good text- 
book and grammar. The little volume 
before us answers admirably the first of 
these requirements. It is interesting, 
clear, and constructed on an intelligent 
plan. The instructions for pronuncia- 
tion at the beginning are short but ex- 
cellent, and likely to rest in the memory. 
The exercises begin in a very simple man- 
ner. They are always sensible, and do not 
confuse words and phrases, and jumble 
them together after the Ollendorff plan, 
although they effect the same end, so far 
as the interchange of words, phrases, and 
ideas goes. As the lessons proceed, 
they gradually increase in difficulty, as 
they do in interest, the simpler exercises 
giving place to extracts from the best 
French authors. 

' We think the book in every way well 
adapted for youthful students of French 
who have a teacher. 



THE 



CATHOLIC WORLD 



VOL. XXVL, No. 153. DECEMBER, 1877. 



MR. FROUDE ON THE "REVIVAL OF ROMANISM."* 



' Why is Protestantism standing still 
while Rome is advancing? Why does 
Rome count her converts from among 
the evangelicals by tens, while she loses 
to them, but here and there, an exception- 
al and unimportant unit?" (" Revival of 
Romanism," sect. i. p. 95). 

THESE questions, asked by Mr. 
Froude in his latest-published vol- 
ume, are not new. They have 
been asked by many any time with- 
in the last quarter of a century. 
They are being asked with more 
urgency, if not more alarm, every 
day. They are questions worthy 
of an answer, if an answer can be 
given to them ; worthy, certainly, of 
all consideration from serious-mind- 
ed men. For, if founded in fact, 
they point towards a reversal of 
the three centuries of Protestant 
history; to the failure of Protes- 
tantism as a satisfactory system of 
belief; and, if not to a general re- 
turn of Protestant nations to the 
Catholic Church, at least to the 
speedy and final approach to what 
keen writers and observers have 
long seen coming to wit, the gen- 

* Short Studies on Great Subjects. By James 
Anthony Froude, M.A. New York : Scribner, 
Armstrong & Co. 1877. 



eral recognition that between Ca- 
tholicity and infidelity there stands- 
no debatable ground for Christian 
men. 

The suspicion has been gradual- 
ly growing up in the Protestant 
thinking world a suspicion that 
is fast hardening into a certainty 
that Catholicity is advancing with 
giant strides, while Protestantism is 
surely, if sullenly, receding ; worse 
still, that in spite of all Protestant- 
ism can do, in the pulpit, in the 
press, in the government, in the 
world at large, Catholicity is bound 
to advance, and the process of 
damming it up and shutting it off" 
seems hopeless. " How to com- 
pete with the aggressions of Ro- 
manism" was, in various forms, one 
of the chief subjects of debate be- 
fore the Evangelical Alliance as- 
sembled a few years back in this 
city. A similar subject excited the 
recent Pan- Presbyterian assembly 
at Glasgow. Indeed, it is safe to 
say that, wherever a Protestant as- 
sembly of any kind meets for ami- 
cable consultation and discussion, 
that everlasting skeleton in the 
closet, '' Romanism," will be ex- 



Copyright : Rev. I. T. HECKER. 1877. 



290 



Mr. Fronde on the "-Revival of Romanism." 



posed to view to remind the" plea- 
sant gentlemen assembled that they 
are doomed to die. 

This is only a sign of the times. 
The times were, half a century 
ago, when such a sign was not visi- 
ble ; when Catholicity, as a real, liv- 
ing, active power, was, so far as 
Protestant countries were concern- 
ed, dead and damned beyond hope 
of redemption. There, was a hor- 
ror at the very mention of the 
name of Rome ; a universal Prot- 
estant shudder at the thought of 
the pope ; but Rome and the pope 
were things exploded with the Gun- 
powder Plot and other dark hor- 
rors of a by-gone day. In England 
the chief vestige of Catholicity and 
Catholic memories left showed it- 
self in the annual celebration of 
Guy Fawkes' day and the loyal 
burning of the pope in effigy. 

To-day how changed is the posi- 
tion of Catholicity, not in England 
only, but in all English-speaking 
peoples ; not in all English-speak- 
ing peoples only, but throughout 
the civilized world ! Catholicity 
has experienced a vast " revival," 
to use Mr. Fronde's expression; 
and to any one who has read Mr. 
Froude it will be easy to imagine 
.how that writer would handle such 
.a theme. Mr. Froude dislikes 
many things in this world, but of 
.all things he dislikes Catholicity. 
It is hard for him to write calmly 
on any subject ; on this particular 
subject he raves, even if he raves 
eloquently. His admirers, among 
whom for many things particular- 
ly for the good service his pecu- 
liarly violent temper has done the 
Catholic cause we beg to be num- 
bered, will scarcely accuse him of 
:that passionless tone that is sup- 
posed to belong to blindfolded and 
even-balanced justice. It is not 
.passing beyond the bounds of fair 



criticism, but simply stating what 
ought now to be a sufficiently-es- 
tablished fact, to say that whenever 
Catholicity or anything belonging 
to it crosses Mr. Fronde's vision 
that vision is seared ; the man is at 
once attacked by a species of liter- 
ary insanity a Popomania, so to 
say that renders him incapable of 
cool judgment, and leads him to 
play havoc with all the instincts of 
good sense, the laws of logic, the 
impulses of good nature, and, we 
are sorry to add, the rules of hon- 
esty. Indeed, no man better than 
he affords an example of the re- 
mark of a keen French writer that 
'' it is the happiness and the glory 
of Catholicity to be always served 
by its adversaries ; by those who 
do not believe in it ; ay, by those 
who pursue it with the bitterest 
animosity."* 

These, however, are only so many 
assertions on our part. Mr. Froude 
will afford us ample opportunity of 
justifying them. 

We have no desire to be unjust 
to Mr. Froude. Indeed, he is so 
unjust to himself that an avowed 
enemy could wish for no better 
weapons of attack than those sup- 
plied by Mr. Froude against him- 
self. It is singularly true that Mr. 
Froude is generally the best refuta- 
tion of Mr. Froude. Still, to a man 
of his way of thinking, the ques- 
tions set at the head of this article, 
which he so boldly puts and hon- 
estly attempts to face, must be in 
the last degree not only exasperat- 
ing but seriously alarming. To a 
man who can see nothing more fa- 
tal in this world than Catholicity, 
the confessed advance of Catholi- 
city, in face of, in spite of, and over 
all obstacles, must seem like the 



* Alexandra de Saint-Cheron. Introduction to 
Haiber's translation of Ranke's History of the Pa- 
pacy. Second edition. Paris. 1848. 



J/r. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism.'" 



291 



spread of a pestilence of the dead- 
liest kind a mental and moral 
pestilence: a darkness of the un- 
derstanding, a deadening of the 
heart, a numbing of all man's fine, 
free, and ennobling qualities, a wil- 
ful renouncing of 

" The mighty thoughts that make us men." 

Of course \ve laugh at so prepos- 
terous an idea; but Mr. Froude 
has persuaded himself that Catho- 
licity is all this, and we are trying 
our best to regard him honestly 
and as being honest. Nor does 
he stand alone in his persuasion. 
There are many who go with him 
in his estimate of Catholicity, and we 
have them in view quite as much as 
he in whatever we may have to 
say. And the first thing we have 
to say is this : Is there really a 
"revival of Romanism "? In what 
and where is it reviving? Of course 
we reject the term Romanism, as 
applied to Catholicity. Still, a wil- 
ful man may as well have his way, 
especially where his wilftilness 
costs nothing. We have a more 
important controversy with Mr. 
Froude than a quarrel over names 
and a haggling over words. If 
Romanists we must be from his 
point of view, why Romanists, in 
the name of peace, let us be, to the 
extent at least of an article. Some 
statisticians estimate us at 200,000,- 
ooo. We can afford to be called 
names once in a while. 

Surely Mr. Froude is mistaken. 
If it be true, as a very high author- 
ity * assured us a lew years ago, 
that "in the kingdom of this world 
the state has dominion and prece- 
dence," Catholicity, as a whole, 
fares very badly in the kingdom 
of this world, however high it 
may rank in the next. And strange 
as it may appear to Mr. Froude 

* Prince Bismarck. 



and to Prince Bismarck, Catholics 
have a singular liking for their 
own place in this world ; they lay 
claim to at least as lawful a share 
of the things of this world as 
do Protestants ; and they utterly 
and stubbornly refuse to live on 
sufferance. The attempt to make 
Catholics exist on sufferance, go a- 
begging for their lives, so to say, 
and eat and drink, and" work and 
sleep, and play and pray by the 
gracious favor of certain princes of 
this world, occasions all the trouble 
between Catholics and the states 
governed by such princes. So 
when a "revival of Romanism" is 
talked about we naturally look to 
see how Catholics stand in the 
world ; and the look is not encour- 
aging. 

The " kingdoms of this world " 
are all, or mostly all, dead-set 
against Catholicity. The Catholic 
Church is proscribed in Germany; 
proscribed in Russia; tied down 
in Austria and Italy ; hounded in 
Switzerland ; vexed and tormented 
in Spain and the states of South 
America. Looked at with the 
eyes of ordinary common sense, 
and from a merely worldly stand- 
point, the Catholic 'Church, under 
these governments, which are so 
strong and powerful, and play so 
large and important a part in the 
world, is in about as bad a condi- 
tion as its worst wisher could de- 
sire. By the governments mention- 
ed, with some inequality in the de- 
gree of severity, Catholicity is re- 
garded and treated as at once a se- 
cret and an open foe, whom it re- 
quires every device and strain 
of the law and the resources of 
government to put down. What 
Emerson, in one of his latest and 
best utterances, has said of the as- 
sertion of "moral sentiment "is here 
exactly true of Catholicity : " Cities 



292 



Mr. Fronde on tJic "Revival of Romanism' 



go against it ; the coljf ge goes 
against it ; the courts snatch at any 
precedent, at any vicious forms of 
law to rule it out; legislatures lis- 
ten with appetite to declamations 
against it, and vote it down. Eve- 
ry new assertion of the right sur- 
prises us, like a man joining the 
church, and we hardly dare believe 
he is in earnest." * 

The press is not only against it 
of its own accord, but is suborned 
to be against it. Its supreme Pas- 
tor has literally scarcely a roof to 
cover him in the states that through 
almost all the centuries of the 
Christian era belonged to the 
church, and such a roof as he has 
hangs on the word of a royal f rob- 
ber, who, in turn, holds what he 
has and what he has so ill-gotten 
by the slenderest of tenures the 
breath of a mob. The city that 
witnessed the divinization of pagan- 
ism, its awful and just overthrow, 
the long agony of the Catacombs, 
the building up of Christendom 
on the pagan ruins, the glories 
of the "ages of faith," is to-day 
one of the chief centres of the 
new paganism, which has for its 
deity nihilism. In all the world 
to-day no royal crusader is to 
be found to draw his sword for 
Christ and Christ's cross. The 
race of Charles Martel, of Pepin, of 
Charlemagne, of Pelayo, of God- 
frey de Bouillon, of St. Louis of 
France, of Scanderbeg, of Sobieski, 
of Don Juan of Austria, the race of 
heroes whose swords wrought mira- 
cles at Poitiers, at Jerusalem, at 
Acre, at Rhodes, at Malta, at 
Vienna, at Lepanto, seems to have 
died out, tl:ough a foe as terri- 
ble to Christianity as was ever 

* North American Rn'tttv, Sipt.-Oct., 1877, 
art. on " Perpetual Forces." 

t The word '' royal" has so degenerated in these 
days that we feel no scruple in applying it to Victor 
Emanuel. 



the old pagan North and the Mos- 
lem South and East besieges and 
threatens now the citadel of the 
city of God. It is, perhaps, char- 
acteristic of the age that the only 
one to assume the title of royal 
champion of the cross should be 
the present Russian emperor. It 
is, perhaps, equally characteristic 
of the wicked assumption that it 
should have met with so fearful 
and unexpected a response at the 
hands of the wretched remnant 
of a power that true Christianity 
had crippled, and would have smote 
to the dust had not the division of 
Christendom lent allies from within 
the camp to the ancient foe. Does 
it not look like a just retribution ? 

The Catholic Church stands be- 
tween two revolutions the revolu- 
tion from above and the revolution 
from below. Both alike have de- 
creed its death. The Herods, the 
Pilates, and the rabble, foes in all 
else, are friends in this. Delenda 
est Roma Catholica ! 

This is no fancy picture. We 
are not speaking now of the church 
in herself that consideration will 
come later but of the church as 
she stands towards governments, or 
ra'.her as they stand towards her. 
Even where some comparative free- 
dom is allowed her it is doled out 
gingerly and grudgingly, or given 
under silent or open protest. The 
erection of a free Catholic universi- 
ty in France that is, a university 
independent of the government : a 
government accused, too, of " cleri- 
calism" is the signal for the French 
" republicans," as writers on this side 
of the water insist on calling them, to 
be up in arms. Men laugh to-day 
at the English Ecclesiastical Titles 
Act and the turmoil created by it. 
Yet it moved liberal England in 
1850 till the country rocked with 
the tumult of it. Its author was a 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism" 



293 



liberal leader. He is still living, 
we believe, though it is hard to 
think of Earl Russell living and 
not using his well-remembered 
voice. At all events he was living 
a few years ago, and we heard him 
then liberal as ever. He had 
promised to preside at a meeting 
at Exeter Hall, London, to express 
sympathy with Prince Bismarck and 
the German government in their 
contest with the Catholic Church a 
contest that we shall have occasion 
to refer to in another place. At 
the last moment Earl Russell 
"caught a bad cold" and could not 
appear, but his place as chief 
speaker was nobly taken by 
whom? By a free American citi- 
zen, the Rev. Joseph P. Thompson, 
D.D., formerly of the Church of the 
Tabernacle in this city; and his 
closing advice to Prince Bismarck 
an advice thrice repeated was to 
" stamp out " Catholicity. 

These individual instances are 
only straws, but straws that betoken 
a great deal of wind somewhere. 
Such liberty as the Catholic Church 
has is only conceded to it when 
and where the very character and 
stability of the governments neces- 
sitate its concession. Under such 
circumstances, then, does it not 
sound strange and startling to be 
alarmed at a " revival of Roman- 
ism " ? 

So much for the dark side of the 
picture; and there is no denying 
that it is dark indeed. There is 
light, however, and the light is very 
strong and lovely. If the race of 
royal men and heroes whose swords 
were ever ready to be drawn in 
the cause of Christ seems to have 
quite died out, the race of true 
Catholics has not died with them. 
Royalty, at its best even, was gen- 
erally and almost necessarily a 
treacherous ally to the church. 



The kings have gone from the 
church, but the people remain. In 
face of this universal, protracted, 
bitter, and resolute opposition to 
Catholicity on the part of so many 
great states, we find the church, as 
in the days of the apostles, adding 
daily to her number " those that 
should be saved." Here, too, we 
find, as in all Christian history, the 
greatest and sharpest contrasts 
those contrasts that it baffles hu- 
man ingenuity to explain. The 
Catholic Church is to-day strong- 
est where, according to human cal- 
culation, she ought to be weakest, 
and weakest where she ought to 
be strongest. She flourishes best 
in what three centuries of almost 
total estrangement have made to 
her foreign soil. This it is that so 
puzzles Mr. Froude. 

" The proverb which says that nothing 
is certain but the unforeseen was never 
better verified than in the resurrection, 
as it were out of the grave, during the 
last forty years of the Roman Catholic 
religion. In my own boyhood it hung 
about some few ancient English families 
like a ghost of the past. They preserved 
'their creed as an heirloom which tradi- 
tion rather than conviction made sacred 
to them. A convert from Protestantism 
to Popery would have been as great a 
monster as a convert to Buddhism or 
Odin worship. ' Believe in the Pope !' 
said Dr. Arnold. ' I should as soon be- 
lieve in Jupiter ' " (p. 93). 

This is undoubtedly, in the main, 
a true picture of the result of three 
centuries of apostasy in England. 
As for Dr. Arnold, that learned 
gentleman probably understated his 
belief. He would, if anything, much 
sooner have believed in Jupiter 
than in the Pope. It would be in- 
teresting to know what he thought 
of, say, George IV., as the supreme 
head of the church of which Dr. 
Arnold was so distinguished an or- 
nament, or of Queen Victoria. He 



-94 



Jlfr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism' 



is as good an example as any of 
modern refined and intellectual pa- 
-\mism, and his distinguished son 
is but the natural outcome of the 
influence of such a man's charac- 
ter and teachings, as in another 
way was John Stuart Mill of his 
father. 

" The singular change which we 
have witnessed and are still witness- 
ing," pursues Mr. Froude, " is not 
due to freshly-discovered evidence 
of the truth of what had been 
abandoned as superstition " (p. 93). 
In this, of course, we quite agree 
with Mr. Froude, though, perhaps, 
not exactly in the manner he would 
wish. The truth is the same to- 
day as it ever was. Superstition is 
the same to-day as it ever was. 
Without going into the matter very 
deeply just here, we merely hint 
that Mr. Fronde's " singular 
change " may not be quite so sin- 
gular as he imagines. The change 
to which he alludes is the return of 
a great body of the English-speak- 
ing people to or towards what for 
three centuries England and Eng- 
land's colonies had been educated 
to consider superstition, darkness, 
idolatry even. Certainly Rome 
has not changed within this period, 
as it will be seen Mr. Froude, with 
passionate vehemence, insists. We 
only throw out the hint, then, that 
possibly what was abandoned as 
superstition turns out on closer in- 
spection not to have been supersti- 
tion at all. Truth may be slow in 
coming, but once come it is very 
hard to close one's eyes to it. For 
men who have eyes there is. no 
exercise so healthy and manful as 
honestly to face a great difficulty. 
The modern keen spirit of investi- 
gation we are far from considering 
an unmixed evil, if, indeed, it be an 
evil at all. The closest inquiry is 
compatible with the firmest and 



most whole-hearted faith. The ob- 
jections of sceptics to the doc- 
trines of the church are, when not 
borrowed from the objections of 
the doctors of the church, puny in 
comparison with them. On men, 
however, who do not believe at all, 
the spirit of inquiry, when united 
to earnestness of purpose, is work- 
ing good. Many nowadays, who 
have every whit as profound a dis- 
trust of Catholicity as Mr. Froude, 
are not content with taking for 
granted all that they have been 
taught to believe of Catholics and 
Catholicity. They go to Rome ; 
walk about in it, read it, study it, 
much as they would enter upon 
the investigation of a* disputed 
question in science; and, having 
examined to their hearts' content, 
many of them stay in Rome, while 
most come back with at least re- 
spect for what they formerly detest- 
ed and abhorred. 

It is impossible even to mention 
a few of the names of distinguished 
Catholics within the century, many 
of them converts, and not be struck 
by their mental and moral emi- 
nence. The world cannot afford to 
sneer at men like Gorres, Count von 
Stolberg, Frederic Schlegel, Hiir- 
ter, Ozanam, Lacordaire, Mon- 
talembert, Louis Veuillot, Balmez, 
O'Connell, Brownson, Ives, Ander- 
son, Bayley, Wiseman, Newman, 
Manning, Faber, Ward, Marshall, 
Allies, Mivart, and a host of others 
almost equally eminent, who were 
born leaders of men or of thought, 
who came from many lands, who 
filled every kind of position, and 
who, led by many different lights, 
traversing many stormy and dark 
and difficult ways, came at last to 
Rome, to rest there to the end as 
loyal and faithful children of the 
church. It is men like these who 
ennoble the human race and who 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism'' 1 



295 



leave a rich legacy of thought and 
act to all peoples and to all 
time. To say that such men, most 
of whom came from without, went 
deliberately over to the old "su- 
perstition" because it was supersti- 
tion . will not do. They found 
what they had esteemed dark- 
ness to be light. 

This modern spirit of investiga- 
tion has done and is doing another 
great service to the Catholic cause : 
it is helping to unravel the tangled 
skein of history, to explore dark 
places and drag buried truth to 
light. Lingard's History of Eng- 
land, for instance, really worked, or 
more properly began, a revolution 
in English thought a revolution 
which, unconsciously, Scott's no- 
vels and poems helped greatly to 
popularize. The work set on foot 
by Lingard and the method adopt- 
ed have been well followed up by 
others, and by non-Catholics. Men 
came to try and look at things dis- 
passionately and fairly. The re- 
sult was that certain rooted Eng- 
lish opinions and prejudices began 
slowly to give way. The " glorious 
Reformation," for instance, and the 
" great Reformers " in England ap- 
peared on closer inspection to be 
neither quite so " glorious " nor 
quite so "great " as before. It re- 
quires very exceptional mental, not 
to say moral, courage nowadays to 
present Henry VIII. as a reformer 
of religion, or " good Queen Bess " 
as really good, or as one whose 
"lordly nature was the pride of all 
true-hearted Englishmen."* And 
like in character to the leaders 
were those who went with them in 
their measures of reform. The 
Reformation itself has come to be 
regarded by all intelligent minds, 
whatever be their estimate of Ca- 

* Froude's History of England^ vol. ii. p. 447. 
Scribner & Co. 1870. 



tholicity, as at least not an unmix- 
ed good. " The religious reform," 
says Guizot,* " which was the revo- 
lution of the sixteenth century has 
already been submitted to the test 
of time, and of great social and in- 
tellectual perils. It brought with 
it much suffering to the human race, 
it gave rise to great errors and great 
crimes, and was developed amidst 
cruel wars and the most deplorable 
troubles and disturbances. These 
facts, which we learn both from its 
partisans and opponents, cannot 
be contested, and they form the 
account which history lays to the 
charge of the event." The con- 
stant revelations coming to light 
through the publication of secret 
papers and such like make it per- 
fectly plain that reform, to have 
been at all effectual, should have 
begun with the " Reformers " them- 
selves. As an evidence of how 
thoroughly the sham and rotten- 
ness of the Reformation have been 
exposed, we find Sanders' much- 
derided Rise and Growth of the An- 
glican Schism now accented on all 
sides as only too true. 

Certain it is that a great idol 
of English Protestantism, if not 
quite overthrown, has been very 
much battered and bruised of late 
by iconoclasts who in other days 
would have knelt and worship- 
ped before it. Protestant Eng- 
land is built on the Protestant Re- 
formation ; but if that turns out to 
have been on its religious side so 
very bad an affair, what becomes of 
those who pinned their faith to it? 
That is a thought that is working 
in men's minds, and working good. 
That reform was needed in the 
church and kingdom of England 
prior to the Reformation no man 
will dispute. But real reformation 

* Sl. Louis and Calvin, p. 149. Macmillan &Co. 



296 



Mr. Froude on the "Revival of Romanism" 



should not be a sweeping out of 
one devil to introduce seven more 
unclean. 

"While the truth of history was 
thus slowly forcing its way out, 
there came a sudden shock to the 
mind of the English people a shock 
so severe and stunning in its first 
effects as almost to lead to a reaction 
and a turning again into the old 
ruts. This was the deliberate de- 
sertion of all pretensions to alliance 
with the early church by some 
of the leaders " the ablest " Mr. 
Froude styles them of the Trac- 
tarian movement. These became 
converts to the Catholic faith, and, 
in the slang of the day, " went over 
to Rome." 

The falling away of these men 
from the Anglican Church can 
only be likened to a revolution, a 
yielding of some buttress of the 
British Constitution, which was 
thought to be as impregnable, as 
solid, as lasting as England itself. 
And yet "the intellect which saw 
the falsehood of the papal preten- 
sions in the sixteenth century sees 
it only more clearly in the nine- 
teenth," says Mr. Froude. Possi- 
bly enough ; a distinction, however, 
is to be drawn at "intellect." 

" More than ever the assump- 
tions of the Holy See are perceived 
to rest on error or on fraud. The 
doctrines of the Catholic Church 
have gained only increased impro- 
bability from the advance of know- 
ledge. Her history, in the light 
of critical science, is a tissue of le- 
gend woven by the devout imagi- 
nation." 

We have thus far only quoted 
from the first of fifty-four pages, 
and already we pause to take 
breath. Mr. Froude has a pecu- 
liar manner of putting things. 
Such wholesale and sweeping asser- 
tions are only to be answered in a 



volume or by a simple denial. Of 
course, if the Catholic Church is 
all that Mr. Froude unhesitatingly 
sets her down to be, there is an 
end of the whole question. In 
that case the " revival of Roman- 
ism " is really a grave danger to 
the world ; nay, the very existence 
of " Romanism " i.e., of Catholi- 
city is a menace to human society. 
If the " papal pretensions " are 
" falsehood "; if " the assumptions 
of the Holy See " " rest on error 
and fraud "; if " the doctrines of 
the Catholic Church have gained 
only increased improbability from 
the advance of knowledge " ; and 
if " her history is a tissue of le- 
gend," men who commit them- 
selves to the defence of such a 
monstrosity set themselves at once 
beyond the pale of civilization. Were 
Mr. Froude writing of the Turks 
or of the Mormons he could scarce- 
ly use language more strongly con- 
demnatory. It is probable that, 
with his generous impulses, he 
would find " extenuating circum- 
stances," did he think any needed, 
for Mormon or Turk, which he 
could not concede to a Catholic. 

When Mr. Froude visited this 
country recently on his ill-judged 
and, to him, disastrous mission 
for a mission he called it a critic 
(in the New York World, we be- 
lieve) described his style, very 
happily it seemed to us. as femi- 
nine. Women are not supposed to 
sit down to serious questions of 
wide and general import as calm- 
ly and judiciously as men. They 
argue from the heart rather than 
the head. They like or they dis- 
like, and woe betide the person or 
the cause that they dislike ! Ar- 
gument is thrown away on them. 
They make the most astounding 
statements with the easiest confi- 
dence ; they have a happy faculty 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism" 



297 



of inventing facts ; they contradict 
themselves with placid uncon- 
sciousness, and everybody else with 
scornful vigor ; for logic they have 
not so much a disregard as a pro- 
found contempt, and take refuge 
from its assaults in thin-edged sa- 
tire. This, of course, is only true 
of them when they are out of their 
sphere and dealing with matters 
for which they have a constitutional 
incapacity. 

Mr. Froude, however, is just 
this. Take any one sentence of 
those last quoted ; look at it calm- 
ly ; weigh it in the balance, and 
what do we find ? Take this one : 
" The doctrines of the Catholic 
Church have gained only increased 
improbability from the advance of 
knowledge." With this confident 
statement he leaves the matter. 
There is no doubt, no hesitation, 
no reservation at all on his part. 
A reasonable man will ask himself, 
however : " Is this stupendous 
statement true?" "The doctrines 
of the Catholic Church! What! all 
of them?" Apparently so; Mr. 
Froude, at least, makes no excep- 
tion. " I believe in God, the Fath- 
er Almighty, Creator of heaven and 
earth," is the primary article of the 
Catholic Creed. Has that only 
"gained increased improbability 
from the advance of knowledge "? 
Mr. Froude would hardly say so ; 
indeed, in more places than one 
he takes occasion to sneer at the 
modern scientific gospel. Even 
if Mr. Froude himself said so, 
his Protestant readers who make 
any pretensions to Christian faith 
would scarcely agree with him. 
Belief in the Trinity of God is an- 
other doctrine of the Catholic 
Church ; in Jesus Christ the God- 
Man, the Redeemer of the world ; 
in the Holy Ghost; in the resur- 
rection of the body and life ever- 



lasting. All these are doctrines of 
the Catholic Church. Does Mr. 
Froude pretend to say that they 
have all been swept away by " the 
advance of knowledge "? If he did 
not mean to say this as, indeed, we 
believe he did not why did he say 
it? What are we to think of him ? 
Is this sober writing and a right 
manner of approaching a serious 
question ? In p. 93 he tells us that 
" the doctrines of the Catholic 
Church have gained only increas- 
ed improbability from the advance 
of knowledge." In p. 95 he has 
already forgotten himself, and tells 
us that " the Protestant churches 
are no less witnesses to the immor- 
tal nature of the soul, and the aw- 
ful future which lies before it, than 
the Catholic Church" which is the 
strongest kind of concession of 
what he had just before denied ; 
and forgetting himself again, he 
tells us in a third place (p. 141) 
that the Protestant ministers "are 
at present the sole surviving repre- 
sentatives of true religion in the 
world." This is only one of a 
multitude of instances in which Mr. 
Froude allows himself to run away 
with himself. Passion and preju- 
dice narrow his mental vision, until 
at times it becomes so diseased as 
to result in moral as well as men- 
tal obliquity. 

The same thing is observable in 
the sentence immediately following 
the passage last quoted : " Liberty, 
spiritual and political, has thriven 
in spite of her [the Catholic 
Church's] most desperate opposi- 
tion, till it has invaded every gov- 
ernment in the world, and has 
penetrated at last even the territo- 
ries of the popes themselves" (p. 

94). 

Even Mr. Froude cannot abso- 
lutely blind himself to facts; at 
least, he cannot alter them. He 



298 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism' 



may hate the Catholic Church as 
much as he pleases and it pleases 
him to hate her very much but the 
fact of his hatred cannot convert the 
persecution of herchildren into "lib- 
erty, spiritual and political." Nor 
are we at all begging the question in 
giving the name of persecution to the 
treatment that Catholics are receiv- 
ing at the hands, if not of " every 
government of the world," at least 
of those previously enumerated. It 
is the word, as we shall show, ap- 
plied to the anti-Catholic legisla- 
tion in Germany by candid Protes- 
tants, countrymen of Mr. Froude, 
too, who hate the church and the 
Pope just as resolutely as he, but 
with more apparent show of reason. 
It is too late in the day to argue 
about this matter. There is no 
longer question to an honest mind 
as to whether the Catholics in Ger- 
many are or are not persecuted. 
There may still be question as to 
whether or not the persecution be 
necessary, but there is no dispute 
as to the fact. To talk of the 
"spiritual liberty" of Catholics in 
Germany to-day is simply to talk 
nonsense. But, lest there should 
be any possible doubt regarding 
the matter, it may be as well to 
freshen men's memories a little on 
a point that is intimately connect- 
ed with our whole subject ; for what 
covers Germany covers every land 
where the struggle between the 
Catholic Church and the state is 
being waged. 

The organs of English opinion 
have been very faithful in their al- 
legiance to Prince Bismarck, who 
is such an experienced cultivator 
of public opinion. They are the 
bitter foes of the Papacy and the 
Catholic Church. Nevertheless, 
they have some pretensions to prin- 
ciple, and, when there is no escape 
out of the difficulty, call white 



white, and black black. At all 
events they do not always call black 
white. In Germany, then, accord- 
ing to Mr. Froude, "liberty, spirit- 
ual and political, has thriven in 
spite of the Catholic Church's most 
desperate opposition." While the 
struggle of the German government 
with the Catholics had as yet not 
much more than half begun the 
English Pall Mall Gazette discov- 
ered that 

" There is no parallel in history to the 
experiment which the German statesmen 
are resolutely bent on trying, except the 
memorable achievement of Englishmen 
under the guidance of Henry VIII. . . . 
Like all these measures, the new law 
concerning the education of ecclesias- 
tical functionaries, which is the most 
striking of the number, will apply to all 
sects indifferently, but, in its applica- 
tion to the Roman Catholic priesthood, 
it almost takes one's breath away." 

It may be only natural to find 
the apologist of Henry VIII. and 
Elizabeth describing the revival in 
modern times of " the memorable 
achievement of Englishmen " un- 
der Henry VIII. as " liberty, spiri- 
tual and political." Yet the same 
" experiment " takes away the 
breath, not only of so cool a jour- 
nal as the Pall Mall Gazette, but 
of a much cooler and more influen- 
tial journal still. 

" The measures now in the German 
Parliament, and likely to become law," 
says the London Times, "amount to a 
secular organization so complete as not 
to leave the Pope a soul, a place, an 
hour, that he can call entirely his own. 
Germany asserts for the civil power the 
control of all education, the imposition 
of its own conditions on entrance to 
either civil or ecclesiastical office, the 
administration of all discipline, and at 
every point the right to confine religious 
teachers and preachers to purely doc- 
trinal and moral topics. Henceforth 
there is to be neither priest, nor bishop, 
nor cardinal, nor teacher, nor preacher, 
nor proclamation, nor public act, nor 



Mr. Fronde on tJie "Revival of Romanism" 



299 



penalty, nor anything that man can hear, 
do, or say for the soul's good of man in 
Germany, without the proper authoriza- 
tion, mark, and livery of the emperor." 

Mr. Fronde is perfectly correct 
in saying that such measures have 
been carried " in spite of the 
church's most desperate opposi- 
tion," but whether he is equally 
correct in styling the same thing 
" liberty," spiritual or political, \ve 
leave to the judgment of honest 
readers. The London Spectator, 
writing at the same period, was in 
sore trouble as to the event. 

" Is an age of the world." it asks, " in 
which few men know what is truth or 
whether there be truth, one in which 
you would ask statesmen 10 determine 
its limits? We suspect that a race of 
statesmen armed with such powers as 
Prussia is now giving to her officials 
would soon cease to show their present 
temperance and sobriety, and grow into 
a caste of civilian ecclesiastics of harder, 
drier, and lower mould than any of the 
ecclesiastics they had to put down. . . . 
To our minds the absolutism of the Va- 
tican Council is a trifling danger com- 
pared with the growing absolutism of 
the democratic temper which is now be- 
ing pushed into almost every depart- 
ment of human conduct." 

We shall have occasion to show 
the results of the work of these 
" civilian ecclesiastics " on the Pro- 
testant Church in Germany, parti- 
cularly in Prussia. Even at this 
early stage of the struggle the Lon- 
don Times confessed : 

" We do not anticipate any retrogres- 
sion in the development of Prussia, but 
it seems inevitable that there should be 
some check in the progress of change, 
some slackening in the audacity of le- 
gislation, some disposition to rest and 
be thankful." 

Of the same measure the Prus- 
sian correspondent of the London 
Times wrote : 

" The Catholic dignitaries are not the 
only ecclesiastics opposed to the bill. 



The new measures applying not only to 
the Catholic Church, but to all religious 
communities recognized by the state, 
the Ober-Kirchenrath, or Supreme Con- 
sistory of the Protestant Church in the 
old provinces, has also thought fit to 
caution the crown against the enactment 
of these sweeping innovations." 

" The official papers openly accuse the 
Protestant clergy of becoming the allies 
of the Ultramontanes," says the Pall 
Mall Gazette (Apiil 12, 1873^. " Herr 
Von Gerlach no longer stands alone as 
a Protestant opponent of the chancel- 
lor's policy." 

" This rough-and ready method of ex- 
pelling Ultramontane influences 'by a 
fork ' can hardly fail to suggest to a 
looker-on the probability that, like simi- 
lar methods of expelling nature, it may 
lead to a reaction. Downright persecu- 
tion of this sort (we are speaking now 
simply of the Jesuit law), unless it is 
very thorough indeed more thorough 
than is well possible in the n neteenth 
century usually defeats itself," says the 
Saturday Review. 

But why multiply quotations ? 
Surely those given are enough to 
show that the leading organs of 
English opinion, representing every 
stripe of thought, are quite agreed 
as to what name should be given to 
what Mr. Froude calls the " liberty, 
spiritual and political," in Ger- 
many. We leave the case confi- 
dently in their hands; and Mr. 
Froude apparently thinks the ver- 
dict has gone against him. He de- 
plores the fact that " free England 
and free America . . . affect to 
think that the Jesuits are an injur- 
ed body, and clamor against Prince 
Bismarck's tyranny. Truly, we are 
an enlightened generation "(p. 136). 

What is here true of Germany is 
true also of Russia, Austria (in 
great measure), Italy, Switzerland, 
and other lands. So that if Ca- 
tholicity is really reviving, as Mr. 
Froude alleges, it is reviving under 
the very shadow of death, and in 
face of the combined opposition of 
the most powerful governments. 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism'' 



A revival under such circumstances 
on "lit to extort the admiration of 

O 

Mr. Fronde, who is as true a he- 
ro-worshipper as Carlyle, even if 
he be about equally happy in his 
selection of heroes. In the " Pre- 
liminary" to The English in Ireland 
Mr. Froude propounds his theories 
of might and right : 

" A natural right to liberty, irrespec- 
tive of the ability to defend it, exists in 
nations as much as, and no more than, 
it exists in individuals. ... In a world 
in which we are made to depend so large- 
ly for our well-being on the conduct of 
our neighbors, and yet are created in- 
finitely unequal in ability and worthi- 
ness of character, the superior part has a 
natural right to govern; the in fei tor part 
has a natural right to be governed ; and a 
rude but adequate test of superiority and 
inferiority is provided in the relative 
strength of ihe different orders of human 
beings. Among wild beasts and sava- 
ges might constitutes right. Among rea- 
sonable beings right is for ever tending 
to create might" (vol. i. pp. i, 2). 

As we are not now examining 
Mr. Fronde's theories on govern- 
ment, we only call attention to the 
very hazy nature of the views 
here expressed on a subject which 
of all things should be clear and 
definite. He uses the word right 
without telling us what he means 
by it, whether or not it has an ab- 
solute meaning and force. He 
speaks of " the superior part " and 
" the inferior part " without in- 
forming us in what sense the terms 
are ustd. Superior in what ? In- 
ferior in what? To any rational 
mind it is plain that, just because 
of the inequality of human beings 
"in ability and worthiness of char- 
acter," there must, under a divine 
dispensation, which Mr. Froude 
does not deny, be absolute rules of 
right and wrong for all alike, a 
moral code which shall extend to 
and determine all rights, natural 
or acquired- If not this, right and 



wrong become convertible terms, 
and right and might of course fol- 
low suit, which is really the out- 
come of Mr. Fronde's theory j, 
doctrine that impregnates and in- 
spires all his writings. 

"There neither is nor can be an inher- 
ent pri\-ilege in any person or set of per- 
sons to live unworthily at their own 
wills, when they can be led or driven into 
more honorable courses ; and the rights of 
man if such rights there be are not to 
liberty, but to wise direction and con- 
trol " (p. 2). 

A very plausible-looking doc- 
trine, but a very dangerous one as 
here laid down. An example will 
serve to show the mischievous and 
vicious nature of it. According to 
Mr. Froude, to be a Catholic is " to 
live unworthily." The comment 
suggests itself. 

" Individuals cannot be inde- 
pendent, or society cannot exist. 
. . . The individual has to sacrifice 
his independence to his family, the 
family to the tribe," etc. Why so ? 
Would it not be truer as well as 
nobler to say that the individual 
uses his independence for his fauii- 
ly? 

"Necessity and common danger drive 
families into alliance for self-defence ; 
the smaller circles of independence 
lose themselves in ampler areas ; and 
those who refuse to conform to the 
new authority are either required to take 
themselves elsewhere, or, if they remain 
and persist in disobedience, may be 
treated as criminals "(p. 4)- 

Quite independent of the nature 
and claims of the" new authority," 
so far as Mr. Froude enlightens us. 

" On the whole, and as a rule, superi- 
or strength is the equivalent of superior 
merit. . . . As a broad principle it may 
be said that, as nature has so constituted 
us that we must be ruled in some way. and 
as at any given time the rule inevitably 
will be in the hands of those who are then 
the strongest, so nature also lias allot- 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism'' 1 



301 



ted superiority of strength to superiority 
of intellect and character ; and in decid- 
ing that the weaker shall obey the more 
powerful, ihe is in reality saving them 
Irom themselves, and then most confers 
true liberty when she seems most to be 
taking it away" (pp. 4, 5). 

We hold that ''superiority of 
strength " belongs to " superiority 
of intellect and character," but not 
in Mr. Fronde's sense. This sense 
is obviously that expounded by the 
third Napoleon in the preface to 
his Julius Cczsar viz., that once 
Caesar is established, it is a crime . 
to go against him under any cir- 
cumstances; which is equivalent to 
saying that whatever is, is right. 
It is forgotten by, or not known to, 
these writers that man is prone to 
evil from childhood; that the good 
has always a hard battle to fight ; 
that it does conquer by force of 
' ; superiority of intellect and charac- 
ter," but that it is often, and for a 
long time, borne down by the phy- 
sical superiority of brute strength. 
The history of Christianity is 
the strongest instance we can of- 
fer of the truth of our position. 
Christianity has been struggling 
upwards for nineteen centuries ; to 
human eyes it was often at the point 
of death; on those whom it subdued 
it conferred superiority of intellect 
and of character a superiority 
which they sometimes turned against 
itself and to-day it is struggling 
as fiercely as ever. 

However, let us gauge Mr. 
Fronde by his own standard : that 
superiority of strength goes with 
superiority of intellect and of cha- 
racter. It is a very convenient 
theory as so stated ; but it is apt to 
work t\vo ways. So long as it 
works for Mr. Froude it is very 
natural and explicable. As soon, 
however, as it turns to the opposite 
side it is to Mr. Froude a " phe- 



nomenon." We are as little inclin- 
ed to underrate as to overrate suc- 
cess, though very far from accept- 
ing it as the standard of right. 
One thing, however, will be con- 
ceded by all men : what succeeds 
in face of the most strenuous, long- 
sustained, and powerful opposition ; 
in face of wealth, position, posses- 
sion, numbers, resources, education, 
tradition in a word, of all that 
goes to form and mould and fix 
peoples and their character, their 
history, their mode of thought, their 
national bent what, we say, suc- 
ceeds in face of all this must have 
something in it very much resem- 
bling Mr. Fronde's "superiority of 
intellect and of character." It 
must have an immense vital force 
and strength and reality within it. 
It is hard for any man not to ac- 
knowledge that under such circum- 
stances success approves itself; 
that it came because it deserved to 
come. 

But this is just Mr. Fronde's 
"revival" of Catholicity a fact 
which for him has no adequate ex- 
planation. 

" The tide of knowledge and the tide 
of outward events," he says, "have set 
with equal force in the direction oppo- 
site to Romanism ; yet in spite of it, per- 
haps by means of it, as a kite rises 
against the wind, the Roman Church has 
once more shot up into visible and prac- 
tical consequence. While she loses 
ground in Spain and Italy, which had 
been so long exclusively her own, she is 
gaining in the modern energetic races, 
which had been the stronghold of Pro- 
testantism. Her numbers increase, her 
organization gathers vigor. Her clergy 
are energetic, bold, and aggressive. 
Sees long prostrate are re-established ; 
cathedrals rise, and churches, with 
schools, and colleges, and convents, and 
monasteries. She has taken into her 
service her old enemy, the press, and 
has established a popular literature. 
Her hierarchy in England and America 
have already compelled the state to con- 



302 



Mr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism." 



suit their opinions and respect their 
pleasure ; while each step that is gained 
is used as a vantage-ground from which 
to present fresh demands. Hildebrand, 
in the plenitude of his power, was not 
more arrogant in his claim of universal 
sovereignty than the present wearer of 
the tiara." 

This glowing passage suggests a 
variety of comments. In the first 
place, taking it as a statement of 
facts, it is, coming from Mr. Fronde, 
a most marvellous testimony, to the 
power and growth of the Catholic 
Church within the present century. 
Let us venture to paraphrase his 
outburst, and see how it runs : 

Here are you whom we thought 
dead and buried under your weight 
of superstition, idolatry, absurdity, 
and fraud, an old fossil of mediaeval 
times, deserted, neglected, despised, 
and contemned by the intelligence, 
wealth, and worth of the age, sud- 
denly leaping into new life, and by 
a single miraculous stride coming 
right abreast of, if not ahead of, 
your foes. What have we that you 
have not ? Energy is ours, yet you 
surpass us. Numbers are ours; 
you are stealing them from us. 
Knowledge and learning are ours ; 
your teachers put ours to shame. 
We stole your sees, your cathedrals, 
your monasteries, your convents, 
your schools, your universities all 
that you had of beautiful, and holy, 
and intellectual. You ask them 
not back, but set to work to build 
them anew. Ours is stolen pro- 
perty ; yours is built on the free 
offerings of the poor. We invaded 
the domain of English literature ; 
it was all ours ; we poisoned its 
wells to you ; we invented the 
newspaper to perpetuate the false- 
hoods that we wove about you. 
You have found an antidote to the 
poison; you win over our brightest 
intellects; you make a literature 



of your own which we are compel- 
led to admire and read. You face 
us at every turn, and we may as 
well confess that you beat us at 
many. 

This is really Mr. Fronde's pic- 
ture, not ours. His words mean 
this or nothing. Will it not occur 
to anybody that for a church built 
on "superstition," "falsehood," 
"fraud," "error," "a tissue of le- 
gend," etc., etc., Mr. Fronde's is 
indeed a strange showing so 
strange that if the church were the 
direct opposite of all that he as- 
serts it to be, it could hardly hope 
for more signal or deserved sue- < 
cess ? Does it ever occur to Mr. 
Froude that he mayby some re- 
mote possibility be mistaken in his 
estimate of the Catholic Church? 
that it, if not right altogether, may 
at least be righter than he thinks? 

To some minds, to many and to 
greater and broader minds than 
Mr. Froude's, the doubt has sug- 
gested itself. Some, like Macau- 
lay, face it, acknowledge the won- 
der of it, make no attempt to ex- 
plain the wonder, and stand with- 
out for ever, still wondering. Others 
draw nearer and examine more 
closely, and finally enter in. Here 
is how Mr. Froude views it : 

" What is the meaning of so strange a 
phenomenon? Is the progress of which 
we hear so much less real than we 
thought ? Does knowledge grow more 
shallow as the surface widens? Is it 
that science is creeping like the snake 
upon the ground, eating dust and bring- 
ing forth materialism? that the Catholic 
Church, in spite of her errors, keeps 
alive the consciousness of our spiritual 
being and the hope and expectation of 
immortality? The Protestant churches 
are no less witnesses to the immortal 
nature of the soul, and the awful future 
which lies before it, than the Catholic 
Church. Why is Protestantism standing 
still while Rome is advancing? Why 
does Rome count her converts from 



Mr. Fronde on the 



of Romanism" 



303 



among the evangelicals by tens, while 
she loses to them, but here and there, 
an exceptional and unimportant unit?" 
(P- 95)- 

Mr. Froude has put questions 
here each of which would take a 
volume to answer. We leave them 
to be pondered over by those for 
whom they are chiefly intended, 
and of whose conscientious consi- 
deration they are well worthy. For 
ourselves, we can have no doubt as 
to the answer to be given to each, 
but we are more concerned at pre- 
sent with Mr. Froude's reply. 

First among the causes which he 
assigns as having " united to bring 
about such a state of things " is the 
Tractarian movement in the An- 
glican Church, resulting from the 
" latitudinarianism of the then 
(1832) popular Whig philosophy." 

"The Whigs believed that Catholics 
had changed their nature and had grown 
liberal, and had insisted on emancipat- 
ing them. The Tractarians looked on 
emancipation as the fruit of a spirit 
which \vas destroying Christianity, and 
would terminate at last in atheism. They 
imagined that, by reasserting the autho- 
rity of the Anglican Church, they could 
at once stem the encroachments of po- 
pery and arrest the progress of infi- 
delity. Both Whigs and Tractarians 
were deceiving themselves. The Ca- 
tholic Church is unchanging as the 
Ethiopian's skin, and remains, for good 
and evil, the same to-day as yesterday." 

Yes ; " the same yesterday, to- 
day, and for ever " is the church 
of God. It cannot be the church 
of God and be otherwise. If there 
was any deception Mr. Froude lays 
it at the right door. These men 
were " deceiving themselves. " The 
church gave no intimation of change, 
made no promises, held out no con- 
cessions, thought of no compromise 
in matter of teaching. She cannot 
do so; it is not in her power to 
do so. 



It was the liberal philosophy that 
was chiefly instrumental in bring- 
ing the change about. Men had 
to choose between the fixed doc- 
trines of the Catholic Church and 
the shifting doctrines and intolera- 
ble pretensions of the Anglican 
Church. They rejected both; they 
rejected revelation ; they looked at 
man himself, and attached to him 
certain natural rights which are as 
well expressed in our Declaration 
of Independence as anywhere. 
They would, if they could, strike 
out the Catholics, as was attempted 
here. But it was impossible. They 
could not do it and be true to 
themselves and their principles. If 
liberty of thought, freedom of con- 
science, and the right to worship 
or not to worship God in your own 
way be natural rights of man, they 
necessarily attach to all, whether a 
man call himself Catholic, Protes- 
tant, Jew, or Nihilist. It is a poli- 
tical and practical impossibility in 
these days of divided and clashing 
beliefs to profess liberty, yet seal 
the door to any special form of 
worship ; and Catholicity of all be- 
liefs is dreaded, because, when free 
and untrammelled, it has the ten- 
dency and the force to assimilate 
and receive all into its bosom. The 
result of this partial concession of 
freedom to Catholicity in England 
is thus pictured by Mr. Froude : 

" The Tractarians' principles led the 
ablest of them into that very fold against 
which they had imagined themselves the 
most efficient of barriers. From the day 
in which they established their party 
in the Anglican communion a steady 
stream of converts has passed through 
it into the Catholic ranks ; while the 
Wh : g3, in carrying emancipation, gave the 
Catholics political power, and with pow- 
er the respect and weight in the outer 
world which in free countries always 
attends it." 

It is the attainment of this pow- 



304 



Jlfr. Fronde on the "Revival of Romanism.'" 



er by Catholics that Mr. Frbude so 
bitterly resents. It would be more 
satisfactory if he told us plainly 
what he would have done to Catho- 
lics. Would he deny them votes ? 
To deny them votes is to deny 
them political life. And would he 
deny votes to Catholics only ? Or 
would he grant votes, but compel 
them to use them in one way, and, 
if in one way, in which way? In a 
word, would he allow Catholics to 
exist at all as Catholics, would he 
force them into the old state of 
political slavery, or would he open- 
ly force them into Protestantism 
under the persuasion that Protest- 
antism, no matter of what stripe, 
was better for them ? Though he 
shrinks from saying so himself, the 
latter seems to be the only fair 
practical conclusion to be drawn 
from his words, and in passages al- 
ready quoted he has given us the 
grounds on which he would act, 
and feel justified in acting: "The 
superior part has a natural right to 
govern the inferior part." It is 
plain as between Protestantism and 
Catholicity which Mr. Froude con- 
siders "the superior part." "The 
inferior part has a natural right to 
be governed." " There neither is 
nor can be an inherent privilege in 
any person or set of persons to live 
unworthily at their own wills, when 
they can be led or driven into more 
honorable courses" 

We must interpret Mr. Froude 
by himself, and, judging him by his 
own words, we are led irresistibly 
to the conclusion that had he the 
power he would do all that has 
been done in the past, and even go 
beyond it for all measures have 
thus far proved ineffectual to de- 
stroy Catholicity from the face of 
the earth. 

And here we come to our final 
consideration in the present article. 



Mr. Froude's observations amount 
practically to this : Set Catholicity 
and Protestantism side by side ; 
give them each perfect freedom ; 
Catholicity will infallibly gain, 
Protestantism will as infallibly lose. 
"The phenomenon," he says plain- 
tively, "is not confined to Eng- 
land. ... In America, in Holland, 
in Switzerland, in France, wherever 
there is most political freedom, the 
power of Catholics is increasing." 

Well, what of it? The fault, 
still following Mr. Froude, if fault 
there be, must rest either with Ca- 
tholicity, or with Protestantism, or 
with political freedom. If with Ca- 
tholicity, it is its fault that " wher- 
ever there is most political free- 
dom " its " power is increasing." 

If with Protestantism, it is its 
fault that, where Catholicity is 
placed on an equal political footing 
with it, its power decreases, while 
the power of Catholicity propor- 
tionately increases ; and it is to 
be borne in mind that the power 
of numbers in the distinctively 
Protestant countries is altogether 
against the Catholics. 

If the fault lie with political free- 
dom itself, that with it the power 
of Catholics increases, what are we 
to say or do ? That political free- 
dom and Catholicity go hand in 
hand is the obvious comment, and 
that it is impossible to check the 
advance of Catholicity without at 
the same time contracting political 
freedom. We submit that this is 
the plain and logical deduction to 
be drawn from Mr. Froude's words. 
It is no trick of verbiage. The 
fact is to himself a "phenomenon." 
We are giving now no opinion of 
our own, but simply translating Mr. 
Froude, when we say that by his 
concession -Protestantism cannot 
stand by the side of Catholicity in 
a free air. It must go to the wall. 



To F. W. Faber. 305 

This we have to reconcile with his can strangle it. But we shall show 

other statement that " liberty, that even there it is the only reli- 

spiritual and political, has thriven gion with any vitality in it, and 

in spite of her [the Catholic that all forms of religion which 

Church's] most desperate opposi- claim the name of Christian suffer 

tion, till it has invaded every gov- with the Catholic Church and lose 

eminent in the world." Where it by her losses. We have thus far 

has really invaded governments, by only treated the " revival " in a 

his own confession, " the power of general way. In a future article 

Catholics is increasing." Where it we shall, in company with Mr. 

is cut off, there is Catholicity Froude, examine the specific causes 

strangled, so far as human power which he assigns for the " revival." 



TO F. W. FABER. 

Amico, io vivendo cercava conforto 

Nel monte Parnasso ; 
Tu, meglio consigliato, cercalo 

Nel Calvario. 
-Chiabrera's epitaph at Savona. From the title-page of Father Faber's Paeit r 



TRUE poet of all mountain sight and sound, 
Of barren glen where mighty echoes wake, 
Of eagle-haunted, crag-o'ershadowed lake 
Where loneliness in silent state sits crowned 
And shares her kingdom with no shallow heart : 
True lover of all nature's solemn ways, 
The columned forest's wind-waked song of praise 
Sad chords wherein all deepest joy hath part 
True reader of the primrose' golden tale, 
Finding its glow but shadow of a light 
Wherein who seeks may find the Infinite, 
That doth its mystery so in least things veil 
A seer thou seem'st in thy high mountain place, 
E'er with all holiest visions face to face. 

n. 

Yet wandering content in lowlier ways, 

By brambly lane and lawn-embroidered mere, 

By quiet river in whose waters clear 
The clustering willows and tall towers gaze 
Of minster-town whose ancient bells ring out 

And trail their music through thy thoughtful rhyme 

Like far-off echoes of an older time 
When trembled in their peal no note of doubt. 
VOL. xxvi. 20 



306 To F. W. Fabcr. 

Landless, yet holder of a royal fief 

In all the beauty by rich nature wrought 

Each blossoming hedge-row with an earldom fraught, 

Wide duchies bound in every golden sheaf 

Thine the unchallenged tenure of the whole, 

By right divine of unstained poet-soul ! 



in. 



Still hearkening ever to that low heart-beat 

Of sorrowing earth, whose flowers fade in death, 
Whose silver-threaded rills grow faint for breath, 

Whose wounded birds cry out beneath thy feet. 

Not deaf thy human ear to any plaint 

Of our sad mother whom her sons make weep 
Breaking with cries of hate her quiet sleep, 

Crowding in sunless ways their brothers faint. 

Nor dumb thy poet-voice to speak her woe 

She that hath shivered when mankind stood mute 
Or flung harsh words of evilest repute, 

Veiling her face her Maker's cross below. 

With filial love thy heart 'gainst hers is laid 

Who rears the hills, in keeping holds the dead. 



IV. 



Like cleansing waters touched with heavenly grace 
Thy mountain-consecrated words are shed, 
Lifting our souls to light unshadowed, 

Guiding our footsteps in the holy trace 

Of Him who yet shall make the hills a way 
Exalted paths trod by the clean of heart, 
Shrines for the holy-minded set apart 

Wherein profaner feet unheeding stray. 

All nature wins true loving from thy song 
Fair not alone with her e'er-changing grace, 
But, lighting each dear feature of her face 

The thought of love enduring, pure and strong 

True poet, in Parnassus' shadow still 

Feeling the loadstone of blessed Calvary's hill. 



v. 

To that sad mount how eloquent a guide ! 
Not Hybla's blossoms could so fair beguile 
The wandering bees as thy entreating wile 

Faint souls to climb that seeming arid side. 



To F. W. Fabcr. 307 

With strength them lead'st from seraph-haunted cave 
Where Infinite Might with infinite loving smiled 
From frail, sweet lips of Holy Mary's Child ; 

Anon where pitying palm-trees shadow gave 

To ease the weary exile of their Lord ; 

On through the humble toil of patient years 
Till, mingling with the Magdalen our tears, 

Our heart's poor vase of precious ointment poured 

We stand, God's Mother near, with woe beside 

The love-pierced feet of Jesus Crucified. 

VI. 

The sweetest refuge any soul can know ! 

Where all complaining stills its idle voice, 

And trembling joy bids sorrow soft rejoice 
Finding the living wand, whose staff below 
The living waters lie like mountain spring 

Defiled not in its source, whose shining face 

Gives to e'en homely herbs a resting-place, 
With heaven's blue for their bright shadowing. 
Pure, living source ! wherein who drinks shall thirst 

Not any more. Blest cup of Love Divine ! 

About whose stem the thorny wreath doth twine, 
Grown soft for us since He hath borne it first. 
Cool draught ! wherein no hidden drop of gall 
Makes heaven bitter, and earth's promise all. 

VII. 

Shall poets change for bay the crown divine 

Wreathing the head of Him about whom throng 
Life's tenderest flowers, who holds art's perfect song 

In his pierced hands ? pure gift in holiest shrine ! 

From whose rent side the consecrating flood 

Doth cleanse the poet's thought from earthly stain, 
Him king anointed o'er a grand domain 

By true inheritance of royal blood ; 

In whose wide heart, broken for very love, 
Lies master-key to all true harmonies, 
So tuned, no base, discordant melodies 

Shall jar earth's music saints shall sing above ; 

So tuned, may wake in sweetness weakest string, 

Immortal anthems loyal echoing. 

VIII. 

So keyed thy sacred song, O poet true ! 

With holy joy its very sorrow light, 

So glorified with that love infinite 
That shines as stars in heaven's darkest blue : 



3 o8 To F. W. Fabcr. 

Waslied clean thy earth-born lays in that pure flood 
Thy cloudy mountains hide no fear save one 
Of loving awe ; though in dark gorge the sun 

Falls not, e'en there the Eternal Dove doth brood. 

Thy mountain springs are pure, wherein we dare 
Drink as \ve will, not fearing, so bent down, 
We shall lose sight of heaven's fairer crown 

And find but our own likeness resting there. 

Fresh with a dew bearing no stain of earth, 

Thy hill-paths lead unto our Father's hearth. 



IX. 



With thee, my poet, lie our souls at rest 
In the soft glory of our Mother's smile 
The Maid Immaculate, who could beguile 

Her God to be a child on her pure breast. 

With thee we labor that our little life 

Shall learn to lose itself, that it be found 
In that far, other life eternal crowned 

'Mid hero-saints whose prayers were ours in strife ; 

Humbly with thee, our dearest Lord before, 
Veiled in the little, pale, and helpless round 
Wherewith on earth he chooseth to be crowned, 

We bend with love that yearneth to love more. 

Fond children, at the Father's feet we kneel, 

Finding the love his Spirit doth reveal. 



x. 



O poet! more than Crashaw, saint ! forgive, 
If break my singing in unworthy praise; 
Pardon, if uncouth love in stammering lays, 

Seeking to thank, but give thee cause to grieve. 

Unspoken gratitude is burden sore 

When debt so passing strong of love is owed ; 
Unworthy speaking but augments the load, 

Forgivene'ss making so love's burden more. 

So much to thee I owe ! Along my life 

Thy words like patient, winged seeds are sown, 
So long amid the dark and brambles grown, 

Yet winning bloom at last despite the strife. 

As once for him of Ars thy heart was shrine, 

So mine holds thee, O blessed of Love Divine ! 



Among the Translators. 



309 



AMONG THE TRANSLATORS. 



VIRGIL AND HORACE II. 



"TRADUIRE Horace, et surtout 
le traduire en vers, est meme de- 
venu, depuis soixante ou quatre- 
vingts ans, et chez nous et en d'au- 
tres pays, une sorte de legere in- 
firmite morale, et de douce maladie 
qui prend regulierement un cer- 
tain nombre d'liommes instruits 
an retour d'age ; c'est une envie de 
redevenir enfant, adolescent, de se 
reporter au temps des etudes qui 
nous etaient cheres." To translate 
Horace, says Sainte-Beuve, above all 
to translate him in verse, has become 
within the last sixty or eighty years, 
both in France and abroad, a kind 
of venial moral infirmity, a sort of 
mild fever, which periodically seizes 
a certain number of educated men 
as they find themselves growing old ; 
and it has its source in the long-% 
ing to renew our youth, to live over 
again the time of studies we were 
fond of. 

Like all the sayings of that most 
delicate and spirituel of critics, this 
is so far true that most translations 
of Horace will be found, we think, 
to be the work of men advancing 
in life, and, in the majority of ca- 
ses, to have grown up insensibly 
through a number of years. One 
does not sit down to a version of 
the Odes as to a version of the 
sEneid, beginning at the first line 
and going religiously through in 
order to the end. No ; but we pick 
out an ode here and there, as the 
mood takes us and that fits the 
mood some gay Ad Amphoram or 
Ad Asierien when we are young and 
sprightly, calidus juventd ; a nobler 
Ad Augustum or Ad Calliopen when 
we are older and graver, in the 



time of whitening locks riding in 
the cars, it may be, walking in the 
street, smoking the after-dinner 
cigar; everywhere, in fact, that 
solitude gives us a chance to en- 
tertain the best of all good com- 
pany. We turn it into such Eng- 
lish as we can muster, and print it 
perhaps, or, better still, put it away 
in our portfolio ; Horace must have 
had a prophetic eye on his coming 
translator when he gave that sound- 
est of poetic counsels unless 
Punch's " Don't " be sounder still : 

" Nonumque prematur in annum 
Membranis intus positis" * 

we put it away to be taken up again 
and again, lingered over fondly, 
touched up and polished, until the 
exact word is found for every elu- 
sive epithet, the precise equivalent 
for every tantalizing phrase, and 
the entire ode lies before us, its 
foreign garb bagging, indeed, a little 
here and there, but fitting as snugly 
as our art can make it, and we are 
content. That is a moment of 
such supreme satisfaction, of such 
tranquil triumph, as life but rarely 
yields. Less than any other that 
dabbles in ink has your true Hora- 
tian the fever of the type. His 
virtue is really what virtue, alas ! 
so seldom is in this perverse world 
its own reward. Like Joubert, /'/ 
finqui'ete de perfection bien plus que 
de gloire ; to have hit upori what 
he feels to be a happy rendering is 
glory enough ; enough that he and 
Horace should share his exultation ; 
a felicitous adjective will put him 

" Let them not come forth 
Till the ninth ripening year mature their worth.' 
Horat. Ars Poet., 388, Francis' trans. 



3 io 



Among the Translators 



in good-humor for a week. 'And 
so, before he well knows it, his 
portfolio is nearly full, and the 
notion first dawns upon him the 
duty it almost seems of sharing 
his good fortune with his fellows. 
"Rather would I have written the 
Quern tu Melpomene semel or the 
Donee gratus eratntibi" cried Scali- 
ger, " than to be king of Aragon." 
Rather would I make a perfect 
translation of these or any other of 
the Odes, cries our Horatian, than 
to be king of all Spain, with all 
Cuba libre to boot 

" Quam si Libyam remotis 
Gadibus jungas et uterque Poenus 
Serviat uni." * 

Somewhat in this wise, we fancy, 
have most versions of Horace come 
to be and to be printed ; certainly, 
we incline to think, all the best 
versions. Thus, too, partly for the 
reason M. Sainte-Beuve gives, part- 
ly from the poet's universality and 
the charm which lies in the very 
difficulty of the task an impossi- 
bility Johnson called it, but it is one 
of those " sweet impossibilities " 
which ennoble failure do we count 
so many renderings of single odes by 
famous men. There are few names 
eminent in English letters or states- 
manship that are not thus allied 
to the genial Venusian names, too, 
of the most diverse order. Not 
only poets like Cowper and Mont- 

* "Than if far Cadiz, Libya's plain, 
And either Carthage owned your sway." 
Horat. Carm. ii. 2. 



which begins 



t^ it may be said that this stanza, 



" Latius regnes, avidum domando 
Spiritum quam si," etc., 

furnishes a curious parallel to the words of Holy 
Writ, Prov. xvi. 32 : " He that ruleth his spirit 
[is better] than he that taketh cities/' It is far 
from being the only passage in Horace which in 
spirit, if not in letter, suggests the inspired writers 
so strongly as to tempt one to believe that he must 
have had some acquaintance with them. Cf. Vir- 
gil's Pollio. 



gomery, Chatterton and Byron,* 
essayists like Addison, or drama- 
tists like Congreve, Rowe, and Ot- 
way, but grave historians such as 
Mitford and Merivale, judges like 
Lord Thurlow and Sir Jeffrey Gil- 
bert, philosophers like Atterbury and 
Sir William Temple, bitter satirists 
like Swift, tender sentimentalists 
like " Namby Pamby" Phillips, pro- 
fessors and prime ministers, doc- 
tors and divines, lords and lawyers, 
archdeacons and archtraitors, have 
joined in paying court to the freed- 
man's son. In his ante-room, or 
atrium, prim John Evelyn is jostled 
by tipsy Porson humming somewhat 
huskily one of the bacchanalian 
lyrics to a tune of his town (per- 
haps the Ad Sodales, i. 27, which 
that learned Theban has rendered 
with true Porsonian zest a little 
too much so to quote) ; Warren 
Hastings there meets Edmund Burke 
in friendlier contest than at the bar 
of the House of Commons ; Dr. 
^Bentley takes issue with Archdeacon 
Wrangham over a doubtful reading ; 
Mr. Gladstone leads a poetic oppo- 
sition to Lord Derby in Englishing 
the Carmen Amabceum. In that 
modest ccenacnlum we can greet 
these great men all on a familiar 
and equal footing, made one of 
them for the nonce by the fellow- 
ship of a common taste nay, may 
even flatter ourselves that here, at 
least, we are at their level ; that 
our poet's door may even be open- 
ed to us sooner than to the tallest 
and wisest among them. It is true 
greatness has no prerogative in 
Horace; the meanest may win to 
his intimacy, be admitted to his 

* Byron, however, if we are to take literally the 
well-known lines in Ckildi Harold, can scarcely 
rank with true lovers of our Horace : 

" Then farewell, Horace, whom I hated so, 
Not for thy faults, but mine ; it is a curse 
To understand, not feel, thy lyric flow, 
To comprehend but never love thy verse." 



Among the Translators. 



penetralia, sooner than the mightiest. 
Of all the distinguished names we 
have quoted, few would have had 
much distinction as translators 
alone, though Bishop Atterbury's 
versions, especially that of the Ail 
Melpotnencn, iv. 2, are deservedly 
famous. Hastings' translation of 
the Ad Grosphum, written dur- 
ing his passage from Bengal to Eng- 
land in 1785 (he was going home 
to the famous trial), merits notice 
for its curious adaptation to his In- 
dian experiences : 

" For ease the slow Mahratta spoils 
And hardier Sikh erratic toils, 
While both their ease forego. . . . 

" To ripened age Clive lived renowned, 
With lacs enriched, with honors crowned, 

His valor's well-earned meed. 
Too long, alas ! he lived, to hate 
His envied lot. and died too late 

From life's oppression freed." 

Another verse had perhaps a still 
more personal application ; there 
is but a trace of it in the Latin : 

" No fears his peace of mind annoy 
Lest printed lies his fame destroy 

Which labor'd years have won ; 
Nor pack'd committees break his rest, 
Nor avarice sends him forth in quest 
Of climes beneath the sun." 

The fashion of fitting Horace 
to contemporary persons and events 
was much in vogue in Hastings' 
time and earlier. Creech tells us 
in his preface that he was advised 
"to turn the Satyrs to his own 
times." It was carried out to the 
fullest extent in the well-known 
Horace in London of Horace and 
James Smith. 

Within the past twenty-five or 
thirty years many complete versions 
of the Odes have been put forth, in- 
cluding those of H. G. Robinson, 
the Rev. W. Sewell (printed in 
Bohn's Library), Lord Ravensworth, 
Mr. Whyte Melville, Mr. Theo- 
dore Martin, the late Prof. Coning- 
ton, and the late Lord Lytton. Of 
these, Mr. Martin's, which we should 



feel inclined to pronounce upon the 
whole the best, and the most no- 
table Lord Lytton's, have alone 
been reprinted here. In giving 
this pre-eminence to Mr. Martin's 
work we are perhaps influenced by a 
strong individual liking, amounting 
even to a prepossession, in its favor, 
dating from that very potent time 
Sainte-Beuve speaks of " le temps 
des Etudes qui nous e" talent chores" 
When it first fell into our hands it 
was the only version we had yet 
seen which at all reproduced, even 
to a limited degree, for us its origi- 
nal's charm. By many Prof. Con- 
ington's translation, easy, fluent, and 
in the main faithful just what, from 
his ^neid, one might expect it to 
be will be preferred to Mr. Mar- 
tin's, which it certainly surpasses in 
single odes. As to the worst there 
need be no such doubt. The Rev. 
Mr. Sewell's is not, perhaps, the 
worst possible version of the Odes, 
as one is half tempted to believe 
who remembers how it was recom- 
mended to the readers of the Dublin 
University Magazine long ago 
how we relished that literary execu- 
tion with all boyhood's artless de- 
light in slaughter ! Time, alas ! soon 
sobers that youthful vivacity of 
temper, and, better than yEsop, 
teaches us to respect the frogs 
whom it loves to revenge in kind. 
No ; the possibilities and varieties 
of badness in this direction are un- 
happily too great for that ; but it is 
as bad as need be as need be, let 
us say, for admission to Bohn's Li- 
brary.* Great indulgence is cer- 
tainly to be extended to translators 
of Horace ; much is to be forgiven 
them ; but one must finally draw 

"Why is all the journeyman-work of literature, 
as I may call it, so much worse done here than it is 
in France ? . . . Think of the difference between the 
translations of the classics turned out for Mr. 
Bohn's library and those turned out for M. Nisard's 
collection !" M. Arnold, Essay sin Criticism ', Am. 
ed.,p. SL 



312 



Among the 



Translators. 



the line, and probably most Hora- 
tiuns would feel like drawing the 
line at the Rev. Mr. Sewell. 

It was in the process of pointing 
out this fact to that gentleman, in a 
review of his book in the magazine 
mentioned, that Mr. Martin some 
twenty years ago put forth, we be- 
lieve, the first specimens of his own 
translation, which was completed 
and published some years later. 
Its success was immediate and de- 
served ; for its positive no less than 
its comparative merits were great. 
Mr. Martin was one of the first to 
discern, or at least to put in accept- 
able practice, the true theory of 
translating the lighter odes " a 
point of great difficulty," as he 
truly says. " They are," he adds, 
" mere vers de soritie in vested by the 
language, for us, with a certain state- 
liness, but which were probably re- 
garded with a very different feeling 
by the small contemporary circle to 
whom they were addressed. To 
catch the tone of these, to be light 
without being flippant, to be play- 
ful without being vulgar, demands 
a delicacy of touch which it is given 
to few to acquire, even in original 
composition, and which in transla- 
tion is all but unattainable." The 
graver odes have their own dif- 
ficulties; but the skilful transla- 
tor handles them more easily, we 
fancy, than the gay fluttering 
swarm of laughing Lydias and 
Neaeras that flash athwart their 
statelier pomp like golden butter- 
flies through the Gothic glooms of 
summer woods butterflies whose 
glossy wings, alas ! lose something 
of their down and brilliance at 
every, even the lightest and most 
loving, touch. The thought of a 
poem is always easier to transplant 
into other speech than its form. 
Ideas are essentially the same, 
whatever tongue interprets them 



Homer's Greek or Shakspere's 
English ; but the infinite delicate 
shades of beauty or significance 
added to them by the subtle differ- 
ences of words, by that beauty of 
their own and intrinsic value which, 
as Theophile Gautier puts it him- 
self a master of language words 
have in the poet's eyes apart from 
their meaning, like uncut and unset 
jewels, the deftest, most patient art 
of the translator toils in vain to 
catch. They vanish in his grasp 
like the bubble whose frail glories 
dazzle the eyes and mock the long- 
ing, chubby fingers of babyhood ; 
to render them is like trying to 
paint the perfume. of a flower. 

Now, it is true enough, what- 
ever iconoclasts like Stendhal may 
pretend, that in poetry thought 
cannot be divorced from form ; it 
is the indissoluble union of both 
that makes the poem. Try to 
fancy any really great passage of 
verse expressed in other words, 
even of the same speech, and you 
see at once how important form 
is. Take once more Shakspere's 

" Daffodils 

That come before the swallow dares, and take 
The winds of March with beauty," 

and try to change or misplace a 
single word. One feels instantly 
that any change would be fatal ; it 
almost seems, with such passages, 
as though noble thought and per- 
fect word had been waiting for each 
other from all time until the high- 
priest of Apollo should come to wed 
them. To quote Sainte-Beuve 
again the critic who wishes to 
instruct his readers can scarcely 
quote him too often : " Je concois 
qu'on ne mette pas toute la poesie 
dans le metier, mais je ne conois 
pas du tout que quand il s'agit 
d'un art on ne tienne mil compte 
de 1'art lui-meme et qu'on deprecie 
les parfaits ouvriers qui y excel- 



Among tJie Translators. 



313 



lent."* Yet it is none the less true 
that a poem in which the idea is 
paramount is more susceptible of 
translation than one whose form is 
the chief element of its charm. 
One can imagine Wordsworth's fine 
sonnet on Milton, " Milton, thou 
shouldst be with us at this hour," 
being turned into Latin with com- 
paratively little loss; indeed it has 
been so turned by one of the most 
accomplished of English scholars 
Dr. Kennedy into Alcaics of 
which the purity and finish make a 
fitting casket for that gem of poet- 
ry ; though even here one feels the 
wide difference between the origin- 
al of that immortal line, 

" Thy soul was like a star, and dwelt apart, " 

and the Latin 

" Mens tua lumine 
Fulgebat, ut sidus, remote," 

missing, as we do, the "lovely mar- 
riage of pure words," that in the 
English is itself a poem. But take 
such a bit of verbal daintiness as 
George Barley's " Sweet in her 
green dell the flower of beauty 
slumbers," with its peculiar and 
saisissant rhythm, the perfection 
of verbal music; or Tennyson's 
"Break, break, break," where the 
poetry and undeniable poetry it 
is lies in a certain faint aroma of 
suggestion that seems to breathe 
from the very words, and try to re- 
produce the effect of them in other 
speech. As well try with earth- 
ly tools to rebuild Titania's palace 
of leaf shadows and the gossamer, 
to weave her mantle on any mortal 
loom out of moonbeams and the 
mist. 

Much the same is it to attempt 
to transfer to an English transla- 

" I can understand that we must not make form 
everything in poetry. But why, in dealing with an 
art, we should take no account of the technique of 
that art, should make light of those who excel in 
its tec/iniyue, I do not understand at all." 



tion aught of the peculiar grace 
which invests Horace's lightest 
lyrics with a charm we feel but 
cannot analyze, which resides in 
the choice of epithets, the arrange- 
ment of words, the cadence of the 
rhythm, the metrical form, and 
which yet is something more than 
any or all of these. The noble 
thought which lies embodied in the 
Justum et tenacem propositi virum we 
may not despair of rehabilitating, 
with somewhat of its proper maj- 
esty, in our own vernacular; but 
the shy, fugitive loveliness of that 
wildwood picnic to which the poet 
bids us, to forget the cares of life, 

" Quo pinus et ingens albaque populus 
Umbram hospitalem consociare amant 
Ramis, et obliquo laborat 
Lympha fugax trepidiire rivo, 

what art can coax away from its 
native soil ? Do we find it in 
Francis ? 

" Where the pale poplar and the pine 

Expel the sun's intemperate beam ; 
In hospitable shades their branches twine, 

And winds with toil, though swift, the tremulous 
stream" ; 

or in Creech though Creech is 
here luckier than usual ? 

" Where near a purling Spring doth glide 

In winding Streams, and softly chide 
The interrupting Pebble as it flows " ; 

or in Prout ? 

" While onward runs the crooked rill. 
Brisk fugitive, with murmur shrill " ; 

or in Lord Lytton ? 

" Wherefore struggles and murmurs the rill 
Stayed from flight by a curve in the shore." 

Even Mr. Martin gives it up, and 
presents us, instead of a translation, 
with a couplet which is very pretty 
English verse, but about as far from 
Horace as can be : 

" Where runs the wimpling brook, its slumb'rous 

tune 
Still murmuring as it runs to the hush'd ear of 

noon." 

It is passages such as this especial- 



Among the Translators. 



ly which have caused Horace to be 
called the untranslatable. 

To come from theory to practice, 
it is in the lighter odes, and in 
those parts of all the odes the 
beauty of which in the original lies 
chiefly in expression, that all Hor- 
ace's translators have most con- 
spicuously failed. Take Milton's 
Ad Pyrrham, for example (Ode v.) 
The Ad Pyrrham is not only one 
of the most charming but also one 
of the most difficult of the minor 
odes, and for that reason among the 
oftenest translated. It is one of 
the many w/'//z-pieces wherein 
the inconstant bard seems to have 
taken a somewhat ostentatious de- 
light in celebrating the numerous 
snubbings he had to put up with 
from the no less inconstant fair 
who were the objects of his brief 
and fitful homage. In it, as in the 
Ad Neceram (Epod- xv.) and the 
Ad Earinen (Carm. ii. 8), reproach- 
es to the lady for her perfidy are 
mingled with self-gratulations on 
the poet's own lucky escape and 
sinister warnings to his rival the 
time-old strategy and solace of the 
discarded lover the world over. 
He has been shipwrecked, he says, 
on that treacherous sea of love ; but 
having, the gods be praised ! made 
shift to scramble ashore insafety, and 
got on some dry duds, sits in gleeful 
expectation of seeing his successor 
get a like ducking. The poem is 
simply a piece of mock heroics, for 
the counterpart of which we must 
look to such minglings of cynicism 
and sentiment as we find in the 
poetry of Praed and Thackeray and 
Locker, or, to a less degree, in many 
of Beranger's lighter songs. The 
difference between the modern 
poets and the ancient is that in the 
former the sentiment is real, veiled 
under an affectation of cynicism : 
in the latter it is precisely the re- 



verse. But, bearing that difference 
in mind, the translator may find in 
the methods of the poets named 
some hints for the handling of such 
odes as the Ad Pyrrham. 

But how do the translators treat 
it ? Take Milton's famous version, 
which everybody knows : 

"What slender youth bedewed with liquid odors 
Courts thee on roses in some pleasant cave, 
Pyrrha? For whom bmd'st thou 
In wreaths thy golden hair ? 

" Plain in thy neatness," etc. 

'tis as solemn as a Quaker con- 
venticle. Nor, with reverence be it 
said en passant, is it altogether free 
from graver faults ; undeniably ele- 
gant as it is, this translation has 
had quite as much praise as it de- 
served. It is full of those Latin 
constructions Milton loved " on 
faith and changed gods complain " 
for fidem mutatosqite decs flebit, " al- 
ways vacant " for semper vacuam, 
" unwonted shall admire " for emi- 
rabitur insolens, etc. which are no- 
where more out of place than in a 
translation from the Latin. Some, 
indeed, claim that they carry with 
them and impart a certain flavor of 
the original to those unacquainted 
with it ; but this seems to us a view 
at once fallacious and superficial. 
The office of translation into any 
language is surely to reproduce the 
original in the idiom of that lan- 
guage as nearly as may be ; and 
though the theory, like all theories, 
may be pressed to an excess as we 
think Mr. Morris has pressed it, for 
example, in his translation of the 
jEneid better that than such de- 
formities as 

" Always vacant, always amiable 
Hopes thee." 

It is the suggestion not of Hor- 
ace but of Milton here that is plea- 
sant; it is because Milton's natural 
English style is a highly Latinized 



Among the Translators. 



315 



and involved style that these oddities 
of his translation strike us less than 
in another. Sometimes, too, oddly 
enough for so good a scholar, he 
falls short of the full sense of his 
original. Potenti marts deo, the com- 
mentators tell us, means, not "the 
stern god of sea," but " the god 
potent over the sea "; and " plain in 
thy neatness " for simplex mundi- 
tiis misses the entire significance of 
the latter word, which implies some- 
thing of grace and beauty. " Plain 
in thy neatness " suggests rather 
" Priscillathe Puritan maiden " than 
Pyrrha of the dull-gold hair. Ben 
Jonson's 



" Give me a look, give me a face 
That makes simplicity a grace, 1 ' 



hits Horace's meaning exactly, and 
certainly far more poetically. In- 
deed, we often find in original Eng- 
lish poetry much apter renderings 
than the translators give us. Prof. 
Con in gt on knew this when he went 
to Shakspere for " fancy free " as 
an equivalent for this very word 
vacuum we have been talking of a 
perfect equivalent of its association 
did not make it a little un-Horatian 
and to Matthew Arnold's " salt, 
unplumbed, estranging sea" for the 
very best version we have seen of 
that most puzzling phrase (i. 3), 
" oceano dissociabili." 

This is, perhaps, a digression ; 
but as we set out for a ramble, we 
have no apologies to make. Con- 
ington's version, in the same metre 
as Milton's, only rhyming the alter- 
nate lines, is not all so good as 
" fancy free," though it gains from 
its rhyme a certain lightness lack- 
ing in that of Milton's: 



" What slender youth besprinkled with perfume 
Courts you on roses in some grotto's shade, 
Fair Pyrrha ? Say for whom 
Your yellow hair you braid. 



" So true, so simple ! Ah ! how oft shall he 
Lament that faith can fail, that gods can change, 
Viewing the rough black sea 

With eyes to tempests strange," etc. 

So true, so simple ! We are not 
much nearer to simplex munditiis 
than before. Martin is not here at 
his best, and Francis is unusually 
successful : " dress'd with careless 
art " and "consecrate the pictured 
storm" are felicities he does not 
always attain. Prout is chiefly 
noticeable for yielding to the al- 
most irresistible temptation of a 
false beacon in intentata nites : 

" I the false light forswear, 
A shipwreck'd mariner " ; 

and Leigh Hunt's, though but a 
paraphrase, is surely a very happy 
one : 

" For whom are bound thy tresses bright 
With unconcern so exquisite ?" 

and 

" Though now the sunshine hour beguiles 
His bark along thy golden smiles, 
Trusting to see thee for his play 
For ever keep smooth holiday," 

admirably elude, if they do not 
meet, the difficulties of the Latin. 
But in none of these, nor in any 
other rendering we have seen, is 
there any trace of that nua?ice of 
sarcasm or polite banter we seem 
to taste in the original. The 
only American version we remem- 
ber to have met with is not in this 
respect more successful : 

" In thy grotto's cool recesses, 

Dripping perfumes, lapped in roses, 
Say what lissome youth reposes, 
Pyrrha, wooing thy embrace ? 
Braid'st for whom those tawny tresses, 
Simple in thy grace ? 

" Ah ! how oft averted heaven 

Will he weep, and thy dissembling. 
And, poor novice, view with trembling 

O'er the erewhile tranquil deep, 
By the angry tempest driven, 
Billowy tumult sweep ; 

" Now who in thy smile endearing 

Basks, with foolish fondness hoping, 
To his love thou'lt e'er be open, 

To his wooing ever kind, 
Knowing not the fitful veering 
Of the faithless wind ? 



316 



Ainonsr the Translators. 



Hapless they rash troth who plight thee ! 
On the sacred wall my votive 
Picture, set with pious motive. 

Shows I hung in Neptune's fane 
My wet garments to the mighty 
Monarch of the main." 



It may be said that tins sly spirit 
of badinage which lurks, or to us, at 
least, seems to lurk, in the shadows 
of the lighter odes, like some tricksy 
Faun peering and disappearing 
through the thickets of Lucretilis, 
it is impossible to seize; that when 
we try it "the stateliness of the 
language " interposes itself like a 
wall, and we find ourselves becom- 
ing vulgar where Horace is play- 
ful, flippant where Horace is light. 
Doubtless this is so; what then? 
Because it is an impossibility, shall 
any loyal Horatian balk at it ? It 
is just because of these impossibili- 
ties that translations are always in 
order, and will, to a certain extent, 
always be in demand. Translations 
of other poets pall ; it is conceiv- 
able that a version of Virgil might 
be produced which human skill 
could not better. But no such 
thing being conceivable of Horace, 
every fresh version is a whet to cu- 
riosity and emulation ; each sepa- 
rate ode hides its own agreeable 
secret, every epithet has its own in- 
dividual surprise. Let there be no 
talk, then, of impossibilities ; for our 
own part, to paraphrase what Hal- 
lam says of Lycidas, we look upon 
the ability to translate such odes 
as the Ad Pyrrhath, so as to de- 
monstrate their impossibility, a good 
test of a man's capacity to trans- 
late Horace at all. 

Another nice consideration for 
the translator of Horace is in re- 
spect of metre. Undoubtedly the 
translator who can retain the met- 
rical movement of his original has 
gained so much towards reproduc- 
ing his general effect. But with 
Horace this attempt may as well 






be abandoned at once. The Alcaic 
and the Sapphic stanza, much less 
the Asclepiad or the Archilochian, 
have never yet been, and for obvi- 
ous reasons never will be, natural- 
ized in our English verse, though 
poor Percival thought differently, 
and added one more to a life of 
failures. Tennyson, in his ode to 
Milton, 

" Whose guardian-angels, Muriel, Abdiel, 
Starred from Jehovah's gorgeous armory, 
Tow'r, as the deep-domed empyrean 
Rings to the roar of an angel onset,' 1 

gives us, perhaps, as good Al- 
caics as we have any right to look 
for in English (though " gorgeous " 
is not a very gorgeous dactyl) ; yet 
how different from the Horalian ca- 
dence : 

"jEquam memento rebus in arduis 
Servare mentem, non secus in bonis 
Ab insolenti temperatam 
Laetitia, moriture Delh." * 

As for Sapphics, whether we take 
Canning's Knife Grinder for our 
model or Mr. Swinburne's 

"All the night sleep came not upon my eyelids. 
Shed not dew, nor shook nor unclosed a feather, 
Yet with lips shut close, and with eyes of iron, 
Stood and beheld me," 

we are not much nearer to Hor- 
ace's melody : 

" Scandit seratas vitiosa naves 
Cura, nee turmas equitum relinquit 
Ocior cervis, et agente nimbos 
Ocior Euro." t 

But, at least, following that rule 
of compensation with which all 
good translators are familiar, some 
attempt may be made to suggest 
the metrical variety and richness of 

* " With a mind undisturbed take life's good and 

life's evil, 

Temper grief from despair, temper joy from vain- 
glory ; 

For, through each mortal change, equal mind , 
O my Dellius, befits mortal born." 

Horat. Car in. ii. 3, Lord Lytton's trans. 

t " Fell Care climbs brazen galley's sides ; 
Nor troops of horse can fly 
Her foot, which than the stag's is swifter ay, 
Swifter than Eurus when he madly rides 
The clouds along the sky." 

Carm, ii. 16, Martin's translation. 






Among the 



Translators. 



317 



the Odes by a corresponding vari- 
ety and grace in the English meas- 
ures of the translation. It is here 
that the modern translators excel; 
indeed, it may be said that only 
within the last hundred years have 
translators had this adjunct at their 
command, for it is only during that 
period that English poets have be- 
gun to comprehend and master ful- 
ly the resources and possibilities 
of English metre. Not that the 
earlier poets were at all deficient 
in the metrical sense; that their 
ears were not quick to catch the 
finest delicacies of verbal harmo- 
ny. Not to mention a host of mi- 
nor bards who knew how to marry 
"perfect music unto noble words," 
Milton's lyrics are melody itself. 
There is scarcely a more tunable 
couplet in the language than his 

" Sweetest Shakspere, fancy's child, 
Warbles his native woodnotes wild." 

The open vowels and liquid con- 
sonants fairly sing themselves. Nor 
was it for lack of experiment 
that they failed of 

" Untwisting all the chains that tie 
The hidden soul of harmony " 

in words, as Shelley and Tennyson 
and Swinburne learned to do later. 
The attempt to naturalize the classi- 
cal metres, for example, began at a 
very early period of our literary 
history, and many learned treatises 
were written to prove them your 
only proper vehicle for English 
poetry. Perhaps it was the ill-suc- 
cess of these efforts that made our 
poets so long shy of wandering in 
their metres away from the beaten 
track and the simplest forms. Up 
to the time of Campbell we may 
say that the iambus and the tro- 
chee reigned supreme in English 
verse; the anapest and the dactyl, 
of which such effective use has 
been made by the later poets, were 
either unknown or contemned. 



Suckling's Session of the Poets, the 
metrical intention of which appears 
to be anapestic. shows what desper- 
ate work even the best lyrists could 
make when they strayed after 
strange metrical gods.* 

It may be said, then, that until 
within a comparatively recent pe- 
riod Horace could not be properly 
translated into English verse at all. 
English verse was not yet ready to 
receive so noble a guest. Compare 
Martin's or Conington's versions 
with one of the earlier translations, 
and the truth of this, we think, will 
be apparent at once. Creech, in- 
deed, seems to have had a dim 
notion of the truth, and his version 
shows a perceptible striving for 
metrical effect, at least in the ar- 
rangement of his stanza ; but 
Creech had too little of the poeti- 
cal faculty to make the effort with 
taste or success. Francis for the 
most part is content with the ortho- 
dox measures, and Father Prout was 
perhaps first to bring to the work 
this essential accomplishment of 
the Horatian translator. Front's 
metrical inventions are bold, and 
often elegant ; and his versions, 
though free, are always spirited, 
and often singularly felicitous. 
Among the most striking of his 
metres is the one he employs for 
the Solvitur acris hiems (Carm. i. iv.): 

" Now Venus loves to group 
Her merry troop 

Of maidens, 

Who, while the moon peeps out, 
Dance with the Graces round about 

Their queen in cadence ; 
While far 'mid fire and noise 
Vulcan his forge employs, 

Where Cyclops grim aloft their ponderous sledges 
poise." 

*We do not here forget such songs as Shakspere's 
" Come away, come away, Death," or Ben Jon- 
son's ''See the chariot at hand here of Love," or 
the anapests and dactyls in the madrigals. But 
we think it cannot be gainsaid that the general 
tendency of the earlier poets was to simple rhythms, 
and that the intricate arrangements of rhyme and 
novelties of metre in which modern poets delight 
were little known to them, or, if known, little 
relished. 



313 



Among tJie Translators. 



A paraphrase that, not a transla- 
tion ; but not even Horace could 
find it in his heart to gainsay so 
graceful a paraphrase. Another ef- 
fective metrical arrangement which 
shows off well Front's astonishing 
copiousness of rhyme is that of the 
Quum tu Lydia (i. 13) : 

" But where meet (thrice fortunate !) 

Kindred hearts and suitable, 
Strife comes ne'er importunate, 

Love remains immutable ; 
On to the close they glide 'mid scenes Elysian, 
Through life's delightful vision." 

Mr. Martin is here somewhat 
closer and not less skilful in hand- 
ling his metre : 

' Oh ! trebly blest, and blest for ever. 
Are they whom true affection binds, 

In whom no doubts or janglings sever 
The union of their constant minds ; 

But life in blended current flows 

Serene and sunny to the close." 

Compare with these Francis, who 
is scarcely more literal than Prout, 
and not so literal as Martin : 

" Thrice happy they whom love unites 
In equal rapture and sincere delights. 
Unbroken by complaints or strife 
Even to the latest hours of life." 

Is not the advantage in point of 
poetry altogether on the side of the 
modems, and is it not largely due 
to their superior mastery of rhythm ? 
The passage, it may be said, has 
been paraphrased by Moore in the 
lines, 

" There's a bliss beyond all that the minstrel has 

told, 

When two that are linked in one heavenly tie, 
With heart never changing and brow never cold, 
Love on through all ills, and love on till they 
die." 

Both Mr. Martin and Prof. Con- 
ington have given close and suc- 
cessful attention to this part of 
their task. But it was left for Lord 
Lytton to attempt something like a 
systematic imitation of the Hora- 
tian metres. His plan, as set forth 
in his preface, "was in the first in- 
stance to attempt a close imitation 
of the ancient measure the scan- 
sion being, of course (as in English 



or German hexameters and pen- 
tameters), by accent, not quantity 
and then to make such modifica- 
tions of flow and cadence as seem- 
ed to me best to harmonize the 
rhythm to the English ear, while 
preserving as much as possible that 
which has been called the type of 
the original." Something of this 
kind, no doubt, Milton had in view 
in the measure he took for his Ad 
Pyrrham, and which the Wartons 
and Professor Conington adapted 
to the same purpose after him, the 
latter, however, adding the embel- 
lishment or, as Milton himself had 
called it, the " barbarous jingle " of 
rhyme. Milton's measure (well 
known as that of Collins' " Ode to 
Evening"), which consists of two un- 
rhymed iambic pentameters, follow- 
ed by two unrhymed iambic trime- 
ters or, to be " more English and 
less nice," of two ordinary blank 
verses followed by two three-foot 
verses resembles Horace's metre, 
which the grammarians would tell 
us is the third Asclepiadian strophe, 
" rather," says Prof. Conington," in 
the length of the respective lines 
than in any similarity of the ca- 
dences." Lord Lytton. attempted 
something more, and with only par- 
tial success, though the task, it 
must be owned, was not an easy one. 
Horace, in the Odes and Epodes, 
uses eighteen different varieties of 
metre, ranging from the grave sad- 
ness of what is called the first Ar- 
chilochian strophe, the lovely mea- 
sure in which one of the loveliest of 
all the Odes is written (iv. 7) 

" Diffugere nives ; redeunt jam gramina campis 
Arboribusque comz," * 

to the quick sharpness of the first 
iambic strophe in which the poet 
mauls the unsavory Masvius. And 

*" Fled are the snows ; and the green, reappearing. 
Shoots in the meadow and shines on the tree." 



Among the Translators. 



319 



not only this, but each of these 
metres is used by Horace to express 
widely differing moods of feeling. 
Thus, the same measure which in 
the beautiful lament for Quinctilius 
breathes the tenderest spirit of grief 
and resignation, serves equally well 
to guy Tibullus on his luckless 
loves, to sound " stern alarums " to 
the absent Caesar, or to bid Virgil 
or Varius to " delightful meetings." 
The Sapphic rises to the lofty height 
of the Carmen Seculare or stoops to 
chide a serving-boy for his super- 
serviceable zeal ; is equally at home 
with an invocation to the gods or 
an invitation to dinner ; while the 
Alcaic what subject is there that 
in Horace's hands the Alcaic can- 
not be made to sing ? 

This flexibility of the Latin 
metres Lord Lytton has recognized, 
and sought to meet by a corre- 
sponding variation of his own, " ac- 
cording as the prevalent spirit of 
the ode demanded lively and spor- 
tive or serious and dignified ex- 
pression." Thus, for the Alcaic 
stanza he employs " two different 
forms of rhythm " ; one as in i. 9 : 

" See how white in the deep fallen snow stands 

Soracte ; 

Laboring forests no longer can bear up their burden ; 
And the rush of the rivers is locked, 
Halting mute in the gripe of the frost "; 

the other as in i. 34 : 

" Worshipper rare and niggard of the gods, 
While led astray, in the Fool's wisdom versed, 
Now back I shift the sail, 

Forced in the courses left behind to steer," 

or, with a slight modification, as in 
i- 35 : 

" Goddess who o'er thine own loved Antium reign- 

cst. 

Present to lift Man, weighted with his sorrows 
Down to life's last degree, 

Or change his haughtiest triumphs into 
graves." 

For the Sapphic, likewise, he has 
two varieties; for the statelier odes 
three lines of blank verse and what 
may be called an English Adonic ; 



for " the lighter odes a more sport- 
ive and tripping measure." Thus, 
for iv. 2 he gives us : 

" Julus, he who would with Pindar vie 

Soars, with Daedalian art, on waxen wings, 
And, falling, gives his name unto the bright 
Deeps of an ocean " ; 

for iii. 14 a nearer approach to the 
Knife Grinder jingle : 

" Nothing cools fiery spirits like a gray hair ; 
In every quarrel 'tisyour sure peacemaker : 
In my hot youth, when Plancus was the consul, 
I was less patient." 

Lord Lytton's experiment is full 
of interest to Horatians as, indeed, 
what translation is not ? even the 
worst, even the Rev. Mr. Sewell's, 
maybe of use in teaching the trans- 
lator how not to do it and his 
failures, which are many, are 
scarcely less instructive than his 
successes, which seem to us fewer 
than for so bold an essay could be 
wished ; but both alike are sugges- 
tive of many possibilities. It is in 
the lighter odes that he is least sat- 
isfactory, and we doubt if these can 
be done full justice to without the 
aid of rhyme. Horace's grace of 
form in these is so delicate and ex- 
quisite that it taxes all the resour- 
ces and embellishments of our Eng- 
lish verse to give any adequate idea 
of it. Take, as an illustration of Lord 
Lytton's method, and as giving, per- 
haps, the measure of his success, his 
version of that delicious little land- 
scape, Ad Fonteni Blandusia (iii. 



li Fount of Blandusia, more lucid than crystal, 
Worthy of honeyed wine, not without flowers, 
I will give thee to-morrow a kid 
Whose front, with the budded horn swelling, 

" Predicts to his future life Venus and battles ; 
Vainly ! The lymph of thy cold running waters 
He shall tinge with the red of his blood, 
Fated child of the frolicsome people ! 

" The scorch of the Dogstar's fell season forbears 

thee ; 
Ever friendly to grant the sweet boon of thy cool- 

ness 

To the wild flocks that wander around, 
And the oxen that reck from the harrow. 



Among tlie Translators. 



' 1 will give thee high rank and renown among 

fountains, 

When I sing of the ilex o'erspreading the hollows, 
Of rocks whence in musical fall 
Leap thy garrulous silvery waters." 

This is better because more literal 
than Joseph Warton's unrhymed 
version in the Miltonian stanza, 
with which it may be compared : 

" Ye waves that gushing fall with purest streams, 
Elandusian fount ! to whom the products sweet 

Of richest wines belong, 

And fairest flowers of spring, 
To thee a chosen victim will I slay 
A kid who, glowing in lascivious youth, 

Just blooms with budding horn, 

And, with vain thought elate, 
Yet destines future war ; but, ah ! too soon 
His reeking blood with crimson shall enrich 

Thy pure, translucent flood 

And tinge thy crystal clear. 
Thy sweet recess the sun in midday hour 
Can ne'er invade ; thy streams the labor'd ox 

Refresh with cooling draughts 

And glad the wand'ring herds. 
Thy name shall shine, with endless honors grac- 
ed, 
While in my shell I sing the nodding oak 

That o'er thy cavern deep 

Waves his embowering head." 

It would almost seem as if the au- 
thor of this version had taken pains 
to rub out every Horatian charac- 
teristic. The pretty touch of the 
loquaccs lymphce is thus omitted, 
unless the first line be meant to do 
duty for it, while by such padding as 
" chosen victim " and " endless hon- 
ors " Horace's sixteen lines are di- 
luted into twenty a danger to 
which the unrhymed translator, 
constantly seeking by inversions 
and paraphrases to cover the bald- 
ness of his medium, is peculiarly li- 
able. Whatever may be said to the 
contrary, rhyme compels concise- 
ness, and helps to point quite as often 
as it entices to expansion. Prof. 
Conington's version, in the same 
metre as Warton's, but rhymed in al- 
ternate lines, will be found greatly 
superior to it, and is perhaps, on the 
whole, the best we have seen better 
even than Mr. Martin's, who cannot 
get his Latin into less than twenty- 
four octosyllabic lines. Instead of 
-iving either, let us see if all that is 



essential in Horace cannot be giv- 
en in the same number of lines of 
what is known as the Tennysonian 
stanza, which is somewhat less ca- 
pacious than the Alcaics of the ori- 
ginal, though, by a certain pensive 
grace, peculiarly fitted to render the 
sentiment of this delightful ode: 

" Blandusian fount, as crystal clear, 
Of garlands worthy and of wine, 
A kid to-morrow shall be thine, 
Whose swelling brows, just budding, bear 

" The horns that presage love and strife ; 
How vainly ! For his crimson blood 
Shall stain the silver of thy flood 
With all the herd's most wanton life. 

" The burning Dogstar's noontide beam 

Knows not thy secret nook ; the ox 
Parched from the plough, the fielding flocks, 
Lap grateful coolness from thy stream. 

" Thee, too, 'mid storied founts ray lay 

Shall shrine : thy bending holm I'll sing, 
Shading the grottoed rocks whence spring 
Thy laughing waters far away." 

Though terseness and fidelity are 
two of the chief merits claimed by 
the advocates of the unrhymed 
measures, it is just here that they 
oftenest fail ; and Lord Lytton is 
no exception. Space permits us 
to give but few instances. " Trodden 
by all, and only trodden once," is 
Lord Lytton's version of calcanda 
semel, i. 28 seven English words 
for two Latin, and the sense then 
but vaguely given at best. Fe- 
riuntque summos Fulgura monies is 
in like manner diluted into 

" The spots on earth most stricken by the light- 
ning 
Are its high places." 

Awkwardness of style, too, is a 
much more frequent characteristic of 
Lord Lytton's renderings than we 
should look for either from his own 
command of style or the freedom 
which disuse of rhyme is claimed 
to ensure. For instance, in ii. 2 : 

" Him shall uplift, and on no waxen pinions, 
Fame, the survivor," 

might surely have been bettered ; 
and in the same ode a line in the 



Among the Translators. 



321 



stanza already quoted above, La- 
tins regnes aviduin doinando Spiritum, 
is translated, " Wider thy realm a 
greedy soul subjected," which would 
be scarcely intelligible without the 
Latin. " Bosom more seen through 
than glass" is by no means the 
neatest possible equivalent for per 
lucidior vitro, and such expressions 
as " closed gates of Janus vacant of 
a war," " lest thou owe a mock," 
"but me more have stricken with 
rapture," are scarcely English. 

Nevertheless, with all its faults 
and shortcomings, Lord Lytton's 
essay is in some respects the most 
interesting translation of Horace 
that has yet appeared, and may 
pioneer the way to more fortunate 
results in the same direction. It 
has, at least, the raison d'etre which 
Mr. Matthew Arnold denies to such 
translations as Wright's and Sothe- 
by's Homer ; it has a distinct and 
novel method of its own, and does 
not simply repeat the method and 
renew the faults and virtues of any 
predecessor. The American edi- 
tion, it is worthy of remark, is 
printed in the old-fashioned way, 
with the Latin text to face the En- 
glish an innovation, or, more pro- 
perly, a renovation, which will no 
doubt be welcome to lovers of the 
Venusian, whose love has outlived 
their memory, and who, though loyal 
to the spirit of our poet, are no 
longer so familiar with his letter 
as in the days, the far-off sunny 
days, when Horace was the hea- 
viest task that life had yet laid 
upon us. 

VOL. XXVI. 21 



We have dwelt upon this subject 
at somewhat greater length than we 
intended ; for to us it is full of a 
fascination we should be glad to 
hope we had made our readers in 
some sort share. But it has also a 
practical side which the most fana- 
tical opponent of the classics, the 
most zealous upholder of utilitarian 
education, must recognize and ad- 
mit. As a means of training in 
English composition, as an aid to 
discover the resources of our own 
tongue, there is no better practice 
than translating Horace into En- 
glish verse, with due attention to 
his epithets. That, perhaps, may 
serve in some degree to reconcile 
the practical mind to his retention 
in the modern curriculum, even 
though Homer be kicked out of 
doors and Virgil sent flying through 
the window ; for a practical man is 
none the worse equipped for busi- 
ness in being able to say what he 
means in " good set phrase." To 
be sure it does not ask the pen of 
an Addison to write an order for a 
" hnd. trees, lard," but we dare say 
if Mr. Richard Grant White were 
called upon to make out a bill of lad- 
ing, he would do it none the worse 
for knowing all about the English 
language that is worth knowing, if 
not more than is worth telling. 
There are mysteries in our English 
speech that the Complete Letter- 
Writer, or even the " editorials" of 
the daily newspaper, do not quite 
explore, and some of these our old 
friend Horace may help us to find 
out. Fas est ab hoste doceri. 



322 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



THE LITTLE CHAPEL AT MONAMULLIN. 



CONCLUSION. 



FATHER MAURICE sped upon his 
journey to Moynalty Castle. The 
dinner hour was eight o'clock, but 
he had delayed so long with his 
guest that it took the little pony 
her " level best " to do the seven 
miles within the necessary time. 

" Av we wor wanst beyant the 
Mouladharb berrin' groun' I wud- 
n't care a thraneen ; but sorra a 
step the little pony '11 pass it afther 
dark," observed Murty Mulligan, 
bestowing a liberal supply of whip 
upon the astonished nag, whose habit 
it was to proceed upon her travels at 
her own sweet will, innocent of lash, 
spur, or admonition. 

" Tut, tut ! Nonsense, Murty ! 
Push on." 

"It's thruth I'm tellin' yer river- 
ince. We're at it. See that, now 
curse of Crummell on her ! she 
won't put wan foot afore the other," 
adding, in a whisper full of conster- 
nation : "Mebbe she sees ould Ca- 
sey, that was berried a Munda. 
He was a terrible naygur " 

"Jump down and take her head," 
said the priest. 

" Be the powers ! I'll have for to 
carry her, av we want to raich the 
castle to-night." 

Father Maurice dismounted, as 
did Murty, and, by coaxing and 
blandishment of every description, 
endeavored to induce the pony to 
proceed ; but the animal, with its 
ears cocked, and trembling in 
every limb, refused to budge an 
inch. 

" Och, wirra, wirra! we're bet 
intirely. It's Missis Delaney he 
sees, that died av the horrors this 
day month," growled Mulligan. 



"Silence, you jackass!" cried 
Father Maurice, " and help me to 
blindfold the pony." 

This ruse eventually succeeded, 
and they spun merrily along the 
road, the terrified animal clattering 
onwards at racing speed. 

" This pace is dangerous, Murty," 
said the priest. 

"Sorra a lie in it, yer river- 
ince." 

" Pull in." 

"I can't hould her.' She's me 
hands cut aff, bad cess to her !" 
" Is the road straight ?" 
" Barrin' a few turns, it's straight 
enough, sir." 

The words had hardly escaped 
his lips when the wheel attached 
to the side of the car upon which 
the priest was sitting came into 
contact with a pile of stones, the 
car was tilted upwards and over. 
Father Maurice shot into a thorn 
hedge, and Murty Mulligan landed 
up to his neck in a ditch full of 
foul and muddy water, while the 
pony, suddenly freed from its 
load, and after biting the dust, 
quietly turned round to gaze at the 
havoc it had made. 

" Are ye kilt, yer riverince ? For 
I'm murdhered intirely, an' me illi- 
gant Sunda' shuit ruined complately. 
Och, wirra, wirra ! how can I face 
the castle wud me duds consaled 
in mud ? How can I uphould 
Monamullin, an' me worse nor a 
scarecrow ? Glory be to God ! we're 
safe anyhow, an' no bones bruck'. 
O ye varmint !" shaking his fist 
at the unconscious cause of this 
disaster, " its meself that'll sarve 
ye out for this. Won't I wallop ye, 



The Little Chapel at Monamnllin. 



323 



ye murdherin' thief, whin I catch 
a hould of ye !" 

" Hold your nonsense, Murty. 
How near are we to the castle ?" 

" Sorra a know 1 know, yer riv- 
erince ; the knowledgeableness is 
shuk out o' me intirely." 

"The shafts are broken." 

" Av course th' are." 

" Here, help me to shove the car 
over to the ditch and pile the cush- 
ions under this hedge. God be 
praised ! neither of us is even 
scratched." 

A carriage with blazing lamps 
came along. 

"Hi! hi! hi!" roared Murty, 
" we're wracked here. Lind us a 
hand! We're desthroyedbe a villain 
av a pony that seen a ghost, an' 
we goin' to dine at Moynalty Cas- 
tie.'' 

The carriage belonged to Mr. 
Bodkin, the senior" member for the 
county, who was only too delighted 
to act the Good Samaritan ; and as 
he, with his wife and daughter, was 
bound for^the castle, which still lay 
two miles distant, the meeting 
proved in every respect a fortunate 
one. 

The worthy priest was received 
by his host and hostess with the 
most flattering courtesy, and by 
Miss Julia Jyvecote as though he 
formed part and parcel of her per- 
sonal property. He took Mrs. 
Jyvecote into dinner, and said grace 
both before and after. 

Father Maurice was posi lively 
startled with the splendor and ex- 
quisite taste of the surroundings. 
The room in which they dined 
not the dinner-room, but a delight- 
ful little snuggery, where the an- 
ecdote was the property of the 
table, and the mot did not require 
to be handed from plate to plate 
like an entn'e was richly decorat- 
ed in the Pompeiian style, with walls 



of a pale gray, while the hangings 
were of a soft amber relieved by 
red brown. The dinner was sim- 
ply perfect, the entourages in the 
shape of cut glass, flowers, and 
fruit veritable poems while the 
quiet simplicity and easy elegance 
lent an indescribable charm which 
fell upon the simple priest like a 
potent spell. 

Every effort that good breeding 
combined with generous hospitality 
could make was called into requi- 
sition in order to render the timid, 
blushing clergyman perfectly at 
home ; and so happily did this 
action on the part of his entertain- 
ers succeed that before the lapse 
of a few moments he felt as though 
he had lived amongst them for 
years. 

Mrs. Jyvecote promised to send 
him flowers for the altar, and Julia 
to work an altar-cloth for him. 

" I must go over and pay you a 
visit, father," she said. " I am one 
of your parishioners, although I go 
to Mass at Thonelagheera." 

" I wish you would, my dear 
child ; but I have no inducements 
to offer you, although at present 
perhaps I have." And lie narrated 
the arrival of the guest to whom 
Mrs. Clancy was playing the rfile 
of chatelaine during his absence. 

" Why, this is quite a romance, 
Father Maurice. I must see your 
artist coute que coute, and shall drive 
over next week." 

But fate determined that she 
should drive over the next day. 

When, upon the following morn- 
ing, Father Maurice came to exam- 
ine the condition of his pony, he 
found both the knees barked and 
the luckless animal unfit to travel. 

" We couldn't walk her home, 
Murty, could we ?" he asked of his 
factotum. 

" Och, the poor crayture could- 



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326 



The Little Chapel at Monamulliu. 



Our flo\vers, too, are worth coming 
to .see that is, they are wonderful 
for Connemara. Father Maurice, 
you must ask Mr. Brown to come 
over with you on Monday." 

" Of course, my dear child, of 
course. He'll be enchanted with 
the castle. You'll come, of course, 
Mr. Brown?" turning to our hero, 
who, however, remained silent, al- 
though brimming over with words 
he dared not speak. 

" Then it's au revoir, messieurs T 
gaily exclaimed Miss Jyvecote, as 
she whirled rapidly away. 

It would have surprised some of 
the artist's London friends could 
they have peeped behind the scenes 
of his thoughts and gazed at them 
as naturalists do at working bees. 
It would have astonished them to 
hear him mutter as he watched the 
receding vehicle : " This is just the 
one fresh, fair, unspotted, and per- 
fect girl it has been my lot to meet. 
Such a girl as this would cause the 
worst of us to turn virtuous and 
eschew cakes and ale." 

Mr. Brown had confided in one 
man ere dropping out of Vanity 
Fair. To this individual he now 
addressed himself, requesting of 
him to " drop down to O'Connor's, 
the swell ecclesiastical stained-glass 
man in Berners Street, Oxford 
Street, and order a set of Stations 
of the Cross. You don't know what 
they mean, old fellow, but the 
O'Connors will understand you. 
Let them be first class and glowing 
in the reds, yellows, blues, and 
greens of the new French school 
of colors. I don't mind the price. 
Above all things let them have es- 
pecially handsome frames of the Via 
Dolorosa pattern." The letter went 
on to tell Mr. Dudley Poynter of 
his doings and the calm throb of 
the heart of his daily life. "There 



is not much champagne in it, Dud- 
ley, but there is a body that ne'er 
was dreamed of in your philosophy, 
or in that of the wild, mad wags of 
the smoking-room clique." 

Mr. Brown completed his copy 
of the Liberator, to the intense ad- 
miration of Father Maurice and the 
ecstasy of Mrs. Clancy. The worthy 
priest would not permit its being 
hung in the kitchen, though, but 
gave it the place of honor in the snug 
little sitting-room. It is needless 
to say that the entire population of 
Monamullin, including the cabin 
curs who were now on terms of 
the closest intimacy with the artist 
turned in after last Mass to have 
a look at the " picther 6' Dan." 

" Be me conscience ! but it's Dan 
himself sorra a wan else," cried 
one. 

" I was at Tara, an' it's just as if 
he was givin' Drizzlyeye [Disraeli] 
that welt about his notorious an- 
cesthor, the impinitent thief on 
the crass," observed another. 

" Faix, it's alive, it is. Look at the 
mouth, reddy for to say ' Repale.' " 

" There's an eye !" 

" Thrue for ye ; there's more fire 
in it than in ould Finnegan's chim- 
bly this minit." 

" Troth, it's as dhroll as a pet 
pup's." 

" Stan' out o' that, Mr. OLeary, 
or ye'll get a crack av his fist." 

" Three cheers for the painther, 
boys !" 

These and kindred comments 
flung a radiated pleasure into the 
inner heart of the artist that sanc- 
tum which as yet was green and 
fresh and limpid while the eulo- 
gies, however quaintly and coarsely 
served up, bore the delicious fra- 
grance which praise ever carries 
with it like a subtle perfume. 

" The love of praise, howe'er concealed by art, 
Reigns more or less, and glows in every heart. " 



The Little Chapel at Monainullin. 



327 



Mr. Brown was enamored of his 
new existence possibly with the 
child passion for toyland ; but the 
passion endured, nevertheless, 
strengthening with each successive 
sunrise and maturing with every 
gloaming. An invitation, accom- 
panied by a card, had arrived by 
special messenger for the artist, re- 
questing the favor of his company, 
et ctetera, et ccetera, to which that 
gentleman responded in a polite 
negative, assigning no particular 
reason, but indulging in vague gen- 
eralities. He had thought a good 
deal of Miss Jyvecote, and sat 
dreaming about her by the sea, 
his hands clasped around his knees 
and his beloved meerschaum stuck 
in his mouth sat dreaming, and 
fighting against his dreams fights 
in which fancy ever got the upper- 
most of the rude and real. A long- 
ing crept up out of the depths of 
his heart to see her once again, 
and to travel in the sunlighted 
path of her thoughts. One thing 
he was firmly resolved upon not 
to leave Monamullin without an- 
other interview ; though how this 
was to be brought about he did 
not very well see. Yes, he would 
see her just once more, and then 
stamp the whole thing out of his 
mind. He had been hit before, and 
had come smilingly out of the valley 
of desolation, and so he should 
again, although this was so utterly 
unlike his former experiences. 

Father Maurice was charmed 
with his guest. He had never en- 
countered anything like him so 
bright, so genial, so cultured, so 
humble and submissive, and so 
anxious to oblige. 

" Imagine," said he in cataloguing 
his virtues to Larry Muldoon 
" imagine his asking me to let him 
ring the bell for five o'clock Mass, 
and he a Protestant !" 



The priest and his guest had 
long talks together, the latter 
drawing out his host digging for 
the golden ore of a charming eru- 
dition, which lay so deep, but 
which "was all there." Night 
after night did Father Maurice un- 
fold from germ to bud, from bud 
to flower, from flower to fruit the 
grand truths of the unerring faith 
in which he was a day-laborer, the 
young artist drinking in the sub- 
lime teachings with that supreme 
attention which descends like an 
aureole. Father Maurice was, as 
it were, but engaged in thinking 
aloud, yet his thoughts fell like 
rain-drops, refreshing, grateful, and 
abiding. 

The good priest, although burn- 
ing with curiosity with regard to 
the antecedents of his guest, was 
too thorough a gentleman, had too 
great respect for the laws of broken 
bread and tasted salt, to ask so 
much as a single question. A 
waif from the great ocean of hu- 
manity had drifted into this little 
haven, and it should be protected 
until the ruthless current would 
again seize it to whirl it outwards 
and onwards. Miss Jyvecote be- 
trayed her disappointment in 
various artless ways when Father 
Maurice arrived at the castle with- 
out the artist. " I'm sorry you 
didn't fetch him along bon grd mal 
gr^ father," said Mrs. Jyvecote, 
" as papa goes to Yorkshire next 
week, and Juey can talk of no per- 
son but Mr. Brown." 

Miss Jyvecote blushed rosy red 
as she exclaimed : " What non- 
sense, mamma! You have been 
speaking a good deal more about 
him than I have. You rave over 
his sketch." 

" I think it immense." Mrs. 
Jyvecote affected art, and talked 
from the pages of the Art Journal 



328 



Tlie Little CJiapd at Monamullin. 



by the yard. " His aerial perspec- 
tive is full of filmy tone, and his 
near foreground is admirably run 
in, while his sense of color would 
appear to me to be supreme." 

"Come, until I show you where 
I have hung it," exclaimed Miss 
Juey, leading the priest up a wind- 
ing stair into a turret chamber fitted 
up with that exquisite taste which a 
refined girl evolves like an atmos- 
phere. 

" You have really hung my guest 
most artistically. And such a 
frame ! Where on earth did you 
get it ?" 

" I I sent to Dublin for it to 
Lesage's, in Sackville Street." 

" I have no patience with the fel- 
low for not coming over to see this 
joyous place," said the priest, " and 
I really can't understand his refu- 
sal." 

Miss Juey couldn't understand 
it either, but held her peace. 

According to Murty Mulligan's 
veterinary opinion, the pony was 
still unfit to travel. 

" It's meself that's watchin' her 
like a magpie forninst a marrabone ; 
but she is dawny still, the crayture ! 
an' it wud be a sin for to ax her to 
thravel for a cupple o' days more, 
anyhow, your riverince." 

" Why, her knees are quite well, 
Murty." 

" But she's wake, sir as wake as 
Mrs. Clancy's tay on the third 
wettin' an' I'm afeard for to 
thrust her ; more betoken, yer 
riverince" in a low, confidential 
tone "she's gettin' a bellyful av 
the finest oats in the barony, that 
will stand to her bravely while she's 
raisin' her winther coat." 

Mr. Brown asked Father Mau- 
rice . a considerable number of 
questions anent his visit, and was 
particularly anxious in reference to 
the departure of Mr. Jyvecote. 



" He told me himself that he 
would leave Westport to-morrow by 
the night train for Dublin, in order 
to catch the early boat that leaves 
Kingston for Holyhead." 

Upon the following morning the 
artist, slinging his knapsack across 
his back, started in the direction 
of the Glendhanarrahsheen valley. 

" I want to make a few sketches 
of the coast scenery about May- 
Point," he observed. 

" There is better scenery in the 
Foil Dhuv, about two miles farther 
on ; and, bless my heart ! you'll be 
quite close to Moynalty Castle, and 
why not go in and see their pictures, 
your own especially, in such a 
grand gilt Dublin frame ?" 

Simple priest ! Artful artist ! 

It was a delightful morning that 
was shining over Monamullin as 
the artist quitted it en route to 
May Point, of course. The sea, 
like a great sleeping monster, lay 
winking at the sun, and but one 
solitary ship was visible away in 
the waste a brown speck in a 
flood of golden haze. If young 
gentlemen would only put the single 
" why ? " to themselves in starting 
upon such expeditions, it might 
save them many a heartache ; but 
they will not. Any other query 
but this one. What a talisman 
that small word in every effort of 
our lives ! 

Brown felt unaccountably joyous 
and brave, charmed with the pre- 
sent, and metaphorically snapping 
his fingers at the future. A morn- 
ing walk by the deep and dark blue 
ocean summons forth this sensation* 
You bound upon air; champagne 
fills your veins ; all the ills the flesh 
is heir to are forgotten, all the phan- 
toms of care and sorrow are laid 
"a full fifty fathom by the lead." 

It is a glorious seed-time, when 
every thought bears luscious fruit. 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



329 



He travels merrily onward, now 
humming a barcarolle, now whist- 
ling a fragment of a bouffe, until he 
reaches the gloomy defile known as 
the Valley of Glendhanarrahsheen. 
A turn of the sylvan sanded road 
brings him in sight of the lordly 
turrets of Moynalty ; another turn, 
and lo ! he comes upon no less a 
personage than Miss Jyvecote, who, 
with her married sister, a Mrs. 
Travers, are driving in the direc- 
tion whence he had come. Juey 
was Jehu, and almost pulled the 
ponies upon their haunches on per- 
ceiving our hero. 

" This is a condescension, Mr. 
Brown," she said, presenting him to 
her sister. " Will you take a seat ?" 

" Thanks, no ; I am about to as- 
cend that mountain yonder," point- 
ing vaguely in the direction of the 
range known as the Twelve Pins. 

" Then we shall expect you to 
luncheon at two o'clock." 

" I'm afraid not. I purpose re- 
turning by the other road." 

" What road ? There is no other 
road." 

" Across country." 

" Then you do not intend honor- 
ing us with a visit ?" Her tone 
was vexed, if not haughty. 

Now, he had quitted Monamullin 
with no other intention than that 
of proceeding straight to the castle, 
and yet he replies in the negative. 
Let those better versed in the mys- 
teries of the human heart than I am 
analyze his motives. I shall not en- 
deavor to do so. 

" Don't you think you are acting 
rather shabbily?"she said, preparing 
to resume her drive. 

He laughed. 

" Au plaisir, then !" And with a 
stately salutation, courteous enough 
but nothing more, she swept on- 
wards. 

He watched the phaeton go 



whirling along the white road and 
disappear round a huge fern-cover- 
ed boulder, and his vexation with 
himself grew intolerable. 

"What an ass, what a brute I 
have been ! What could I have been 
thinking about ? Was I asleep or 
mad? Invited to the house, I actual- 
ly refuse to pay the stereotyped visit. 
Why a counter-jumper would know 
better. How charming she looked ! 
And that delicious blush when she 
met me! She seemed really pleased, 
too. What can she think of me ? 
My chance is gone." 

He seated himself on the stump 
of a felled tree in his favorite atti- 
tude, having lighted his pipe. 

" Might I thrubble yer honner 
for a thrifle o' light or a bit of a 
match ?" asked a passing peasant. 

" With pleasure ; take a dozen !" 

The man looked puzzled ; he had 
never seen wax vestas till now. 

" They look mighty dawny, yer 
honner." 

" Do you belong to the castle?" 
asked our hero. Somehow or 
other the castle and its inmates 
were ever uppermost in his thoughts 
now. 

"Yis, sir." 

" Is Mr. Jyvecote at home ?" 

" No, yer honner. I met him this 
mornin' at Billy's Bridge, makin' 
hard for Westport." 

The cards all in his favor, and he 
wouldn't play his hand ! What did 
it mean ? Would he go up to the 
castle, and, announcing himself to 
the chdtelaine, pay that visit which 
conventionality demanded ? No ; 
he had swung into another current, 
and he would not alter his course. 
It was better as it was ay, far bet- 
ter. And there came a sort of de- 
solate feeling upon him, smiting 
him drearily like a dull ache. 
Had he seen the last of her ? Was 
his life henceforth to be unlighted 



The Little Chapel at Monainnllin. 



by the radiance of her presence ? 
Here, in the mystic silence of Glend- 
hanarrahsheen, came the revelation. 
Here did his own secret surprise 
him. He had allowed the image of 
this fair young girl to twine itself 
around his heart, till he now felt 
as if he could fling aside pride, 
reserve, past and futuie, just to 
hear her voice once more, to feel 
the tender pressure of her tiny 
hand. 

And so he sat there dreaming, and 
fighting with his dreams, until his 
tobacco "gave out," and until, 
shaking himself together, he sum- 
moned a supreme effort to help 
him on his road. 

" It won't do to be caught skulk- 
ing here," he thought. 

The soft white shingle drawn from 
the brown-black waters of the lake 
muffle the sound of approaching 
wheels, and, ere he can return to 
a coign of vantage, the phaeton 
flashes past. 

I have already stated that my 
hero was a young gentleman of 
warm temper, great energy, and 
prone to sudden impulses and un- 
considered actions, and on this oc- 
casion he was true to his nature, 
for he shouted " Stop !" with the au- 
thoritative tone of a post-captain 
on a quarter-deck. 

Miss Jyvecote pulled up. 

The artist, glowing with a fierce 
excitement, plunged down the road 
and came up to the vehicle. 

" Miss Jyvecote," he pants, his 
handsome face flushed, his eyes 
flashing, " I don't want you to think 
me a brute. I do not know why I 
acted so rudely this morning. I 
left Monamullin on purpose to 
come and visit you. Father Maurice 
says that open confession is good 
for the soul. You have it now. Do, 
please do forgive me." 

" Hand and glove," she exclaims, 



holding out her coquettishly-gloved 
hand. 

He jumped into the back seat, 
and, in a flutter of joyous commo- 
tion, was whirled to the grand en- 
trance of the castle. 

" You must first come and see 
my picture, Mr. Brown," exclaimed 
Miss Jyvecote, leading the way to 
the turret chamber. 

There was a courteous flattery in 
this that caused the heart of the 
artist to swell in admiring grati- 
tude. 

Later on they visited the gar- 
dens and the conservatories, tast- 
ing green figs and toying with lus- 
cious bunches of bursting grapes ; 
and by and by came the presenta- 
tion to Mrs. Jyvecote, who compli- 
mented him in pre-Raphaelite terms 
upon his greens, grays, opals, and 
blues. 

" We want some one to continue 
the fascinating pages of Hook," 
she said, " and I feel assured, Mr. 
Brown, that next year's Academy 
will see you ' on the line.' " 

After luncheon they repaired to 
the drawing-room, where Mrs. Tra- 
vers indulged in chromatic fireworks 
upon a superb Erard piano ; and 
when she had risen the artist seat- 
ed himself unasked, and sang a lit- 
tle love-song of Shelley's in a bari- 
tone that would have pushed Mr. 
Santleya foutrance. Song was one 
of Mr. Brown's gifts, and his voice 
was cultivated to perfection. A 
deep, rich voice, sweet, sad words, 
with perfect enunciation of every 
syllable mafoi, there are moments, 
and there are moments, and this 
was one of the latter in the life of 
Julia Jyvecote. 

He sang Gounod's Ave Maria as 
that sublime hymn has been rarely 
sung in a drawing-room sang it 
with a religious fervor, and with a 
simple intensity of feeling that 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



331 



wrought its own magic. He/V/V his 
success, and smiled gravely to him- 
self as he bent over the instrument, 
playing the closing chords ever so 
softly, until note after note fainted 
in sheer melody. 

He was asked for Annabel Lee 
for "that love that was more 
than love " but refused. He pos- 
sessed Tom Moore's secret, and, hav- 
ing produced the desired effect, fad- 
ed out like his own last notes. Mrs. 
Jy vecote tackled him upon art, Mrs. 
Travers upon music, and Miss Jyve- 
cote was silent. Somehow or other 
in talking to her he was stupid and 
confused, while in conversing with 
the others he was at his best. 

Pressed on all sides to stop for 
dinner and remain the night, he 
could scarcely refuse, although 
pleading dress and the probable 
anxiety of his host. The first point 
was settled by a declaration upon 
the part of his entertainers that it 
would be a treat to sit down in 
morning toilettes ; the second by 
the despatching of a boy to Mo- 
namullin. Mr. Brown resigned 
himself to his fate and went with 
the stream. 

How beautiful Miss Jyvecote 
looked in the mild radiance of the 
wax-lights which lit up the rooms 
at night wax-lights every where in 
the hands of Ninive dancing-girls, 
Dresden shepherdesses, oxidized sil- 
ver sconces, and girandoles of quaint 
and cunning design. What rapture 
in being seated beside her, engaged 
in turning over the pages of a su- 
perb photographic album too heavy 
for her dainty lap, and resting upon 
his knees ! 

Why does he start and turn pale ? 

Why does Miss Jyvecote gaze at 
him, and with a merry laugh ex- 
claim : 

" Why, Mr. Brown, this photo is 
the very image of you." 



Beneath the photograph were the 
words : 

" To Jasper Jyvecote from Er- 
nest Noel." 

" Three days away from me ! Why, 
it appeared three weeks," exclaim- 
ed Father Maurice, as the artist re- 
turned to the cosy cottage of the 
amber thatch and snow-white walls. 
" I knew you would appreciate the 
Jyvecotes, and I felt that they 
would appreciate you. Have you 
taken any sketches?" 

" One, the lake of Glendhanar- 
rah sheen, which I mean to finish ; 
and then,/#</r<?, I must say adios to 
Monamullin for many a long day." 

" Tut, tut, tut, man ! we can't do 
without you," said the priest; "and 
mind you, Mr. Brown, I'm sure the 
ladies at Moynalty would have 
their likenesses done, and give you 
a good deal of money for them, too 
probably as much as five pounds 
apiece." 

" Five pounds apiece," thought 
the artist, " and Millais getting two 
thousand guineas for a single por- 
trait !" 

"And I'm delighted to tell you, 
rny dear friend, that your O'Connell 
has already got you a job. Mr. 
Muldoon you might have noticed 
his shop nearly opposite the chapel, 
a most flourishing concern is anx- 
ious to have his likeness done, and 
will have his wife and mother paint- 
ed also, as well as his five children 
and his collie ; and if his maiden 
aunt comes over from Castlebar 
he'll throw her in, provided you can 
draw her chaise. So I think," 
added Father Maurice triumphant- 
ly, " I have been doing good busi- 
ness for you in your absence." 

" Splendid, my valued host ! But 
before I can touch these commis- 
sions I must finish the lake." 

" Of course, of course ; there's no 



332 



The Lit fie Chafcl at Monamnllin, 



hurry. But, mind you, Muldoon is 
ready money, and all you young 
fellows in the world require a little 
of that not that you want it here," 
he cried hastily, lest his guest 
might suppose that anything was 
required of him ; " but when you 
take a day in Westport, or per- 
haps as far as Sligo, you'll want 
many little things that couldn't be 
had here for all the gold in the 
Bank of Ireland." 

The three days Mr. Brown had 
spent at Moynalty completely riv- 
eted the fetters which might have 
been easily burst ere the iron had 
grown cold. He endeavored to 
persuade himself that this visit was 
a mere romantic episode in the 
career of an artist a thing to be 
talked of in the sweet by-and-by, 
and to be remembered as a delight- 
ful halting-place in the onward 
journey. He tried to fling dust in 
his mind's eye, and but succeeded 
in closing the eye to everything save 
the glorious inviting present. He 
floated on from day to day in a sort 
of temporary elysium why call it a 
fool's paradise? so tranquil that it 
was impossible pain or sorrow could 
be its outcome. An intimacy sprang 
up in this wild, strange t isolated place 
that a decade of London seasons 
could never have brought to ripe- 
ness, and he felt in the entourages 
of the palatial dwelling as though 
he was in his own old home. He 
rode, walked, boated, drew, and 
sang with Julia Jyvecote. She, too, 
would seem to live in the present, 
in the subtle, delicious conscious- 
ness of being appreciated ay, and 
liked. The small chance of ever 
enjoying a repetition of his visit 
lent a peculiar charm to every cir- 
cumstance, and forbade those ques- 
tionings as to who's who with which 
the favored ones of fortune probe 
the antecedents of the slanders at 



the gates which enclose the upper 
ten thousand. 

From the accident of the photo- 
graph he was playfully christened 
Sir Everard, and it became a mat- 
ter of amused astonishment how 
readily he accepted the title and 
how unvaryingly he responded to 
a call upon the name. 

He quitted Moynalty in a strange 
whirl of conflicting thought. 

" May we not hope to see you in 
London, Mr. Brown?" said Mrs. 
Jyvecote, graciously coming upon 
the terrace to bid him adieu. " We 
go over in April, and our address 
is 91 Bruton Street, Mayfair. I 
know how sorry Mr. Jyvecote will 
be to have missed you*, especially 
as he arrives here to-morrow ; and I 
am also confident that he would be 
anxious to serve you although," she 
added, with a caressing courtesy, 
"a gentleman of Mr. Brown's gifts 
requires no poor service such as we 
could render him." 

" How long do you remain in 
Monamullin, Mr. Brown ?" asked 
Mrs. Travers. 

" Until I finish a sketch of the 
lake here which Miss Jyvecote in- 
tends to honor me by accepting." 

" Oh ! then we shall see much 
more of you." 

" I am compelled to raise the 
drawbridge and drop the portcullis 
upon the hope, Mrs. Travers. My 
working-drawing is here, and " 

" Then if Mohammed will not 
come to the mountain, the moun- 
tain must come to Mohammed. 
I'll drive my sister over to ser- 
vice next Sunday, and see how the 
priest, the painter, and the picture 
are getting on." 

It was a great wrencli to the artist 
to tear himself away, and the sans 
adieux that fluttered after him on 
the evening breeze seemed sad and 
mournful. Was the barrier be- 



The Little Chapel at Monaunillin. 



333 



tween Mr. Jyvecote and himself 
utterly impassable ? Could it not 
be bridged over? He could not 
assume the initiative. He would 
see Jyvecote and his whole race in 
Yokohama first ; and yet what 
would he not do to gain the love of 
the youngest daughter of the house ! 
Anything, everything. Pshaw ! any 
chance of wooing and winning 
such a girl should be through the 
medium of his title, his position, 
and by passing beneath the yoke 
of society. What sheer folly to 
think of her from the stand-point 
upon which he had been admitted 
to her father's house ! As the artist 
he was patronized, as the baronet 
he could be placed ; and yet to win 
her as the artist would just be one 
of those triumphs which lay within 
the chances occasionally vouchsafed 
by the rosy archer. She had been 
silent, reserved, and had seemed 
shy of him. She spoke much of 
a man in the Guards, a chum of 
her brother Jasper ; possibly this 
Guardsman was the man. 

In musings such as these did Mr. 
Brown pursue his work, and the pic- 
ture came to life beneath his glow- 
ing hands. The canvas, with all the 
necessary ttcceteras, had arrived from 
Dublin, the good priest marvelling 
considerably at the pecuniary re- 
sources of his guest. " His little 
all," he thought, " and he's going 
to make it a present to my sweet 
parishioner." 

But a great surprise was in store 
for Father Maurice. 

Mr. Brown had issued instruc- 
tions to his London friend to for- 
ward the Stations of the Cross, free 
of all carriage, to the Rev. Maurice 
O'Donnell, P.P., Monamullin, Bal- 
lynaveogin, County Mayo. 

This order was promptly com- 
plied with, and a lovely autumnal 
evening beheld the whole village, 



curs and all, turn out to speculate 
upon the nature of the contents of 
four gigantic wooden cases which 
were deposited in the little garden 
attached to the priest's cottage. It 
were utterly useless to endeavor to 
describe the/#;w<? occasioned by the 
opening the boxes; the excitement 
rose to a pitch never realized in Mon- 
amullin since the occasion of the visit 
of the Archbishop of Tuam the 
Lion of the Fold of Juda. Father 
Maurice fairly wept for joy ; Mrs. 
Clancy insisted upon doing the Sta- 
tions there and then ; and as each 
picture was brought to light, from 
the folds of wrappers as numerous 
as those surrounding the body of 
an Egyptian mummy, a hum of 
admiration was raised by the as- 
sembled and reverential multitude. 
The good priest, never guessing the 
source from whence the splendid 
gift had emanated, endeavored to 
trace it to Miss Jyvecote a belief 
which Mr. Brown sedulously sus- 
tained and Father Morris, full of 
the idea, chanted whole litanies in 
her praises, scarcely ever ceasing 
mention of her. 

" I'll drive over to-morrow and 
tender her my most devoted grati- 
tude. I'll offer up Masses for her. 
I'll' 

" She will be here to-morrow, fa- 
ther. Mrs. Travers is to drive her 
over. Don't you think we ought 
to see about hanging the Stations ? 
It will please her immensely to see 
them in their places in the church." 

A hanging committee was ap- 
pointed and the work of suspend- 
ing the pictures carried into instant 
execution. The mouldy little edi- 
fice was soon ablaze with gilding 
and glorious coloring, which, alas ! 
but seemed to display its general 
dinginess more glaringly. 

" My poor little altar may hide 
its diminished head," said Father 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



334 

Maurice mournfully, brightening up, 
however, as he added : " But, sure, 
I'll soon have Miss Jyvecote's beau- 
tiful altar-cloth." 

The " castle people" arrived upon 
the following morning and were es- 
corted by the artist to the church. 

" You have come over upon an 
interesting occasion, Miss Jyve- 
cote," he said; "Father Maurice 
has received an anonymous gift 
of a set of Stations of the Cross, and 
he thinks that you can tell him 
something about them." 

Great was the astonishment of 
the simple priest when Miss Jyve- 
cote disclaimed all knowledge of 
the presentation. 

" Why, father, you must think me 
as rich as Miss Burdett-Coutts," 
she cried. " These beautiful works 
of art have cost hundreds of pounds. 
Mr. Brown here will tell you how 
much they cost," turning to that 
gentleman. How often a stray 
shot hits home! Mr. Brown had 
the receipted bill in his pocket at 
that particular moment. 

" They are French," he said, 
evading the question. 

" Consequently more expensive, 
nest ce pas ?" 

" They are not badly done." 

" They are on the 1 borderland of 
high art, Mr. Brown. Why do you 
pooh-pooh them ?" 

Poor Father Maurice was fairly 
nonplussed. All his guesses anent 
the donor fell short, while his sur- 
mises died from sheer inanition. 
It could not be the cardinal. 
Might it be little Micky O'Brien, 
that ran away to sea and was now 
coming home a rich man ? or Pau- 
dheen Rafferty, who was a thriving 
grocer in Dublin ? For the first 
time in his life the parish priest of 
Monamullin felt uneasy, if not un- 
happy. What did it portend ? Who 
could possibly take so serious an 



interest in the affairs of his little 
parish ? Mr. Malachi Bodkin might 
have done so in the olden time, but 
the famine of '48 left him barely 
able to keep up Corriebawn. Sir 
Marmaduke Blake was a scamp 
who racked his tenants and spent 
his money in debauchery. 

" I suppose I shall learn some 
day," sighed the priest. " I must 
be patient, but I wish it was to- 
day." 

After luncheon Father Mau- 
rice's breakfast the artist and Miss 
Jyvecote strolled along the shore. 
The sun seemed to shine with a 
certain sadness, the gray ocean to- 
moan as if in pain, and the shadow 
of the " we shall not meet again " 
to hang over Julia and her compan- 
ion as they seated themselves in a 
secluded nook surrounded by huge 
rocks a spot in which the world 
seemed to cease suddenly. 

"And so you think of leaving?" 
she said after a long silence, dur- 
ing which she drew eccentric cir- 
cles in the sand with the tip of her 
parasol. 

" My^wwi?/says 'yes,' Miss Jyve- 
cote." 

" Does your kismet say whith- 
er ? " 

" It points to that little village 
on the Thames called London." 

" We go to London next month, 
en route to Egypt. My sister Gus- 
sie you never met her who has 
been in Italy with my uncle, is re- 
commended Egypt for her chest. 
Papa received letters yesterday." 

" How long do you think you 
will remain in London ?" 

" Only a day or two." 

" Might I hope to see you ?" 

"Why not? Our address is 91 
Bruton Street, Mayfair." 

"Is is Mr. Delmege, of the 
Guards, going to Egypt ?" 

She looked gravely at him, full 



The Little Chapel at Monamullin. 



335 



into his eyes, as she replied, some- 
what coldly: 

" Not that I am aware of." 

His heart gave one great bound, 
as though a dull, dead weight had 
been suddenly removed. 

" I hope to see your handicraft 
on the walls of the Academy when 
we return." 

" Sabe Dios /" he said, clasping 
his knees with his hands, and gaz- 
ing out across the moaning sea. 

" If you try you will succeed." 

" I have a very poor opinion of 
my own power of success in any- 
thing. I am colorless, purposeless." 

" Neitheronenor the other. You 
have a noble profession, a glorious 
talent, and Father Maurice says 
you have a good heart. With three 
such friends as companions life is 
a garden of flowers." 

" And yet till within the last few 
days I have found it but a desert." 

Then silence fell upon both. 

" Father Maurice will miss you 
dreadfully," she murmured. She 
was very pale, and her dark eyes 
turned upon him with mournful 
earnestness. " He has become so 
much attached to you ; and the 
poor little altar will miss your ar- 
tistic grouping of the flowers. Do 
you know," she added, " I shall 
say an Ave Maria when I visit the 
little church, and for your conver- 
sion ? " 

" Is that a promise, Miss Jyve- 
cote ?" 

"It is." 

"Will you also" he stopped 
suddenly short, and dug his heel in- 
to the sand. 

" The shay is waitin' for ye, Miss 
Jewel, and Missis Thravers isroarin' 
murdher," cried Murty Mulligan, 
thrusting his shock head between a 
cleft in the rocks. 

Brown sprang to his feet and 
offered Miss Jyvecote his arm. 



Neither spoke during the walk to 
the cottage. " If you should hear 
of me through your brother, do not 
think ill of me," he whispered, as 
he handed her into the phaeton. 

"What do you mean ?" she ask- 
ed in as low a tone. 

" Promise me that you will not 
forget Brown, the poor artist." 

" It is scarcely necessary," she 
murmured, as she gave him her 
hand. 

There was a blank at the priest's 
home when the artist left. Father 
Maurice missed him sadly missed 
his hit at backgammon, his gay 
gossip, and his cheery company. 

" He was a rale gintleman," said 
Mrs. Clancy; " he wanted for to give 
me a goolden soverin mebbe 
th' only wan he had but I tuk a 
crukked ha'penny for luck, an' it's 
luck I wish him wherever lie goes." 

" He was the nicest man, an" the 
nicest-mannered man, I ever seen," 
chimed in Murty ; " an'I'miridhread 
that I spoke too rough whin he of- 
fered me menumeration." 

" He promised to come here next 
summer, and he will keep his prom- 
ise," said the priest. 

Mr. Jocelyn Jyvecote was seat- 
ed in the study at 91 Bruton 
Street, engaged in perusing the 
columns of the Times. He had 
slept well, breakfasted well, and 
was thoroughly refreshed after his 
journey, as he had arrived in town 
from the East upon the previous 
day. 

A servant entered with a card 
upon a silver salver. 

Mr. Jyvecote adjusted his eye- 
glass and leisurely lifted the tiny 
bit of pasteboard. " What does this 
mean ?" he cried, letting it fall again. 
"Is the gentleman waiting?" 

" In the 'all, sir." 

" Show him in." 



336 



The Little Cliapel at Monamullin. 



A tall, high-bred-looking young 
man entered. His face was pale 
and he somewhat nervously stroked 
a Henri Qitatre beard. 

" May I ask to what I am indebt- 
ed for this visit from Sir Everard 
Noel ?" demanded Mr. Jyvecote 
haughtily. 

" I shall explain the purport of 
my visit in a few words." 
" Pray be seated." 
" Thanks ! Mr. Jyvecote, there 
was bad blood and bitter feud be- 
tween you and my poor father 
about the Ottley Farm." 

" You need scarcely remind me 
of that, Sir Everard." 

" There is bad blood between us, 
Mr. Jyvecote. You claimed it in 
right of an old lease that could not 
be discovered when the case came 
before the court, and I retain pos- 
session of it by law. The last time 
that we met we met in hot anger, 
and and I used expressions for 
which I am very seriously sorry. 
So long as that farm is in possession 
of either of us it will lead to bad 
feeling, and I came here to-day to 
tell you what I mean to do about it." 
A somewhat less stern frown ap- 
peared upon Mr. Jyvecote's features 
as he listened. 

" Last autumn accident threw 
me into the wildest portion of the 
west of Ireland, a place not un- 
known to you Monamullin." 

" It is within seven miles of 
Moynalty Castle." 

" I am aware of that. I was the 
guest of one of the purest men that 
God Almighty ever made Father 
Maurice O'Donnell." 

" Your estimate is just, Sir Eve- 
rard." 

" His soul is in his work, and his 
simple heart is fragmentary divi- 
ded amongst his little flock. I 
found his church dingy, dilapidat- 
ed, falling. He is worthy of a bet- 



ter building ; he is worthy of any- 
thing," cried the young man enthu- 
siastically. 

Mr. Jyvecote bowed assent. 
" Well, sir, I purpose selling Ott- 
ley Farm, and devoting the proceeds 
towards building a new church for 
Father Maurice O'Donnell. I have 
an offer of three thousand pounds 
for the farm, and here are the plans, 
prepared by Mr. Pugin pure 
Gothic," extracting a roll of papers 
from his pocket and eagerly thrust- 
ing them into the hands of the 
other. 

Mr. Jyvecote leisurely surveyed 
them, while the young man regard- 
ed him with the most eager scruti- 
ny. Suddenly flinging 'them upon 
the table, Mr. Jyvecote rose, and, 
taking Sir Everard Noel's hand, 
shook it warmly. 

" Noel, you are a fine-hearted 
fellow, and a chivalrous one. There 
are not ten pshaw ! there are not 
two men in London who would 
patch. up a feud as you are doing 
to-day. I am better pleased to see 
you in this fine form than the ac- 
quisition of ten farms. Give the 
dear old priest his church, and for 
my daughter's sake I am as stanch 
a Protestant as yourself I'll put up 
an altar. Come up-stairs now, and 
I'll present you to her." 

At this particular moment Miss 
Jyvecote entered the study. Upon 
perceiving our hero she grew dead- 
ly pale and then flushed up to the 
roots of her hair. 

" Mr. Brown," she said holding out 
her hand. 

" You are mistaken, Juey ; this is 
an old enemy and a new friend Sir 
Everard Noel." 

The church was erected at Mon- 
amullin and is a perfect gem in its 
way, the talent of " all the Pugins" 
being thrown into the design. At 



Recent Polemics and Ircnics in Scholastic Philosophy. 337 



its altar Everard Noel received his 
First Communion, and at its altar 
he was united to Julia Jyvecote by 
the proud, happy, and affectionate 
Father Maurice O'Donnell. 



"An" only for to think o' me 
axin' a rale live baronet for to paint 
the back doore," is the constant 
exclamation of the worthy Mrs- 
Clancy. 



RECENT POLEMICS AND IRENICS IN SCHOLASTIC PHI- 
LOSOPHY. 



IT is not always easy to draw the 
line, either in theology or philoso- 
phy, that divides the part which 
has been dogmatically or scientifi- 
cally defined from that which re- 
mains open ground of discussion in 
the Catholic schools. Occasional- 
ly we are aided and favored by a 
new definition, made with supreme 
and final authority by the Holy See, 
which adds something, not to the 
immutability of truth itself, which is 
eternally incapable of the slightest 
alteration, but to the quantity of 
science as fixed and immutable in 
the conceptions of the understand- 
ing intellect. The authority of 
reason may also suffice to add to 
the quantity of certain science by 
inductions from facts made evident 
by experience, which have the force 
of demonstration. But the dogmatic 
definitions are not so numerous 
and frequent as some minds, impa- 
tient of discussion and difference 
of opinion, may desire. Rational 
demonstration, though fully suffi- 
cient to define scientific truth and 
terminate doubt in the understand- 
ing of those who clearly and dis- 
tinctly apprehend it, is not al- 
ways understood sufficiently for 
this purpose even by all intelligent, 
educated minds, at least for a con- 
siderable period. Discussion on 
important points is not, therefore, 
terminated between different Ca- 
VOL. xxvi. 22 



tholic schools, and agreement ii> 
doctrine established, as completely 
and speedily as might be desired 
by those who have a strong sense 
of the importance of unity in theo- 
logical and philosophical doctrine. 
Some, who are animated by a po- 
lemical spirit, are disposed to claim 
for the doctrines of their own par- 
ticular school a greater amount of 
dogmatic or scientific authority 
than that which is generally con- 
ceded to them. They are dispos- 
ed to amplify the import of deci- 
sions or declarations made by the 
authority of the church, to magnify 
the authority of great doctors and 
masters in Catholic science, and to 
extend as far as possible the claim 
of metaphysical or moral certi- 
tude for the doctrines which they 
advocate. Others are animated by 
a more irenical spirit. They de- 
sire to moderate polemical ardor ; 
to control the zeal for the triumph 
of particular systems, and the ex- 
altation of individual masters in 
wisdom, within reasonable bounds ; 
to harmonize all branches of science 
with each other ; to observe the just 
limitations of dogmatic or scienti- 
fic certainty; to extend the range 
of rational science by calm discus- 
sion which has only the attainment 
of truth in view ; and, without com- 
promising orthodox doctrine, to 
leave open and free to argument 



338 Recent Polemics ci)id Irenics in Scholastic PJiilosopJiy. 



oil that domain which has not been 
closed in by any final definition of 
competent authority. The polemi- 
cal and irenical tendencies are not 
in real opposition. They are ele- 
ments capable of combination with 
each other. We do not believe 
that differences of opinion among 
Catholic schools will ever be en- 
tirely terminated or controversy- 
cease. Yet there is always an 
increasing approximation toward 
unity, and the irenical spirit aids 
this movement by diminishing 
misunderstandings and moderating 
controversial ardor. The Holy See 
not only at times decides and ter- 
minates controversies by a judg- 
ment, but also, at other times, re- 
fuses to pronounce judgment, and 
admonishes those who seek to 
stretch too far the import of her 
decisions to respect the liberty of 
opinion and discussion which she 
allows. 

We have an instance of this in 
the subjoined documents respect- 
ing the philosophy of the venera- 
ble and holy Father Rosmini a 
system which has at present a con- 
siderable following and is in very 
decided opposition .to the ideologi- 
cal doctrine of the Thomist school, 
as well as to other parts of the 
common, scholastic teaching. 

ROSMINl'S WORKS, AND THE JUDGMENT OF 
ROME UPON THEM. 

(The following is a translation of the 
official communication which appeared 
in the Osseivatore Romano of June 20, 
1876.) 

MOST ILLUSTRIOUS MARQUIS : 

In No. 136 of your esteemed journal, 
June 14, 1876, I have read with pain an 
article on a little work entitled "An- 
tonio Rosmini and the Civilta Cattolica be- 
fo.e the Sacred Congregation of the Index, 
by Giuseppe Buroni, Priest of the Mis- 
sion." 

You are well aware that the works of 
the distinguished philosopher Antonio 



Rosmini were made the subject of a 
most rigorous examination by the Sacred 
Congregation of the Index from 1851 to 
1854, aQ d that at the close of this exam- 
ination our Holy Father. Pope Pius IX., 
still happily reigning, in the assembly 
of the most reverend consultors and 
the most eminent cardinals, whose 
votes he had heard, and over whom he 
deigned, with a condescension seldom 
shown, to preside in person, after invok- 
ing with fervent prayers the light and 
help of Heaven, pronounced the follow- 
ing decree : "All the works of Antonio 
Rosmini-Serbati, concerning which in- 
vestigation has been made of late, must 
be dismissed ; nor has this same inves- 
tigation resulted in anything whatever 
derogatory to the name of the author, or 
to the praiseworthiness of life and the 
singular merits towards the church of 
the religious society founde^d by him." 

The author of the article referred to 
undertakes to discuss the meaning of the 
words Dimittantur opera-) but, while pro- 
fessing to admit their force, he reduces 
it well-nigh to nothing. For he says: 
" We do not deny that Dimittatur is in a 
certain respect equivalent to Pertnittatvr; 
but to permit that a work may be pub- 
lished and read without incurring ec- 
clesiastical penalty has nothing what- 
ever to do with declaring the work it- 
self uncensurable." Now, by these 
words one is led to suppose that the 
Sacred Congregation, or rather the Holy 
Father, by pronouncing that judgment, 
did nothing more than permit that the 
works of Rosmini ma}' be published and 
read without incurring a penalty. 

But I ask : What penalty did the edi- 
tors and readers of Rosmini's works in- 
cur before those works were subjected 
to so lengthened and accurate a scrutiny ? 
None whatever. What, then, would the 
Sacred Congregation of the Index have 
done by such grave study and labors so 
protracted ? Nothing whatever. And 
to what purpose would the judgment of 
the Holy Father have been given? To 
no purpose whatever. If, then, we do 
not wish to fall into these absurdities, 
we must say that the accusations brought 
against the works of Rosmini were false : 
that in these works nothing was found 
contrary to faith and morals ; that their 
publication and perusal are not danger- 
ous to the faithful. Who can ever sup- 
pose that the Holy Father has set free 
for publication works containing erro- 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 339 



neous doctrines, and liberated the read- 
ers of them from penalty ? To liberate 
from penalty the readers of books infect- 
ed with error would be an act productive 
of greater injury than if a penalty were 
imposed or (assuming its previous ex- 
istence) were maintained in full vigor. 

I might touch on other points of the 
article in question, and show that its 
author has presumed to dive further than 
he ought into a matter which does not 
belong to him. But what I have said 
suffices to make it imperative on me to 
address this letter to you. As it may 
not be known to every one that the Mas- 
ter of the Sacred Palace does not, under 
existing circumstances, revise the jour- 
nals, and as the character and fame of 
the Osservatore Romano might lead to a 
belief that he (the Master of the Sacred 
Palace) has approved of the article in 
question, I think it necessary to declare 
to you that I should never have given 
my consent to the publication of the 
same. Nay, I have to request that you 
will not, in future, receive any articles 
either on the sense of the judgment Di- 
mittatur, or against the learned and 
pious Rosmini, or against his works, ex- 
amined and dismissed. 

I take this opportunity to remind all 
concerned that the Holy Father, from 
the time of the issuing of the Dimittan- 
tur opera, enjoined silence, and this in 
order that no new accusations should 
be put forward, nor, under any pretext, 
a way made for discord among Catho- 
lics : " That no new accusations and 
discords should arise and be disseminat- 
ed in future, silence is now for the third 
time enjoined, on either party, by com- 
mand of His Holiness." 

Who does not see that the seeds of 
discord are sown by traducing the works 
of Rosmini either as not being yet suffi- 
ciently examined, or as suspected of er- 
rors which were not seen either before 
or after so extraordinary an examination, 
or as dangerous ; or by using expres- 
sions which take away all the value or 
diminish excessively the force and au- 
thority of a judgment pronounced with 
so much maturity and so much solemni- 
ty by the supreme Pastor of the church? 

By this it is not meant to affirm that it 
would be unlawful to dissent from the 
philosophical system of Rosmini, or 
from the manner in which he tries to ex- 
plain some truths, and even to offer a 
confutation of them in the schools ; but 



if one does not agree with Rosmini in 
the manner of explaining certain truths, 
it is not on that account lawful to con- 
clude that Rosmini has denied these 
truths ; nor is it lawful to inflict any theo- 
logical censure on the doctrines main- 
tained by him in the works which the 
Sacred Congregation has examined and 
dismissed, and which the Holy Father 
has intended to protect from further ac- 
cusations in the future. 

Believe me, etc., etc., 

Your most obedient servant, 

FR. FRANCIS VINCENZO MARIA GATTI, 

Of the Order of Preachers, 
Master of the Sacred Apostolical Palace. 

JUNE 16, 1876. 

The following appeared in the 
Osservatore Cattolico of Milan, July 
i, 1876 : 

The Sacred Roman Congregation of 
the Index, by a letter addressed to His 
Grace the Archbishop of Milan under 
date of June 20, 1876, and signed by His 
Eminence Cardinal Antonio de Luca, 
Prefect of the Congregation, and the 
Very Reverend Father Girolamo Pio 
Saccheri, of the Friars Preachers, Secre- 
tary, and delivered by his grace in per- 
son to one of the responsible editors of 
this journal in the afternoon of Wednes- 
day, July 28, has enjoined us: 

" i. To maintain in future the most 
rigorous silence on the question of the 
works of Antonio Rosmini ; because, in 
consequence of the authoritative decree 
of the Holy Father {That no new accusa- 
tions and discords should arise and be dis- 
seminated in future, silence is for the third 
time enjoined on either party by command 
of His Holiness), it is not lawful in mat- 
ters pertaining to religion and relating 
to faith and sound morals to inflict 
any censure on the works of Rosmini or 
on his person ; the only thing upon which 
freedom is allowed being to discuss in the 
schools and in books, and within proper 
limits, his philosophical opinions and 
the merits of his manner of explaining 
certain truths, even theological. 2. To 
declare in an early issue of this jour- 
nal that we have not rightly interpreted 
the sentence Dimittantur, which the Sa- 
cred Congregation of the Index thinks 
fit sometimes, after mature and diligent 
examination, to pronounce upon works 
submitted to its authoritative judgment." 



Recent Polonies ami Ircnics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



340 

Full of reverence for the supreme 
authority of the Holy See, and wishing 
to be faithful to our duty as well as to 
the programme of this journal, we, the 
undersigned, responsible editors of the 
Osservatore Cattolico, in our own behalf 
and of all who have written in our col- 
umns on the question aforesaid, intend 
to declare and do hereby declare in the 
most docile and submissive manner pos- 
sible, that 

1. As to the silence now imposed 
we repeat and confirm what we said on 
occasion of reproducing in this journal 
the letter of the Master of the Sacred 
Palace to the editor of the Osservatore 
Romano viz., that it shall be observed. 

2. The sentence Dimiltantur, as used 
by the Sacred Congregation of the Index 
was not rightly interpreted by us. 

ENRICO MASSARA, Priest, 
DAVIDE ALBERTARIO, Priest, 
Editors of the Osseiialore Cattolico. 
MILAN, June 30, 1876. 

Another and more recent in- 
stance is that of the controversy 
concerning the constitution of 
bodies. A letter of the Pope to 
Dr. Travaligni, president of a scien- 
tific society in Italy, commending 
the effort to bring physical and 
medical science into harmony with 
the scholastic philosophy, was in- 
terpreted as giving authoritative 
sanction to a certain doctrine of 
the Thomist school. A professor 
in the University of Lille wrote a 
letter to the Pope on the subject, 
setting forth the differences of 
opinion and the continued contro- 
versies respecting the constitution 
of bodies, and praying for a posi- 
tive decision. In reply to this the 
professor and all others interested 
in these questions were instructed, 
in a letter written and published 
by order of the Holy Father, that 
the Holy See had denned nothing 
in the premises, and that a solution 
of difficulties should be sought for 
by scientific investigation and dis- 
cussion. We have not space for 
the publication of this letter, but 



it may be found in one of the back 
numbers of the Catholic Review of 
Brooklyn (Sept. 22, 1877). 

As for the Rosminian philosophy, 
we agree personally with Liberatore 
and the Thomist school in rejecting 
it as scientifically untenable. Nev- 
ertheless, we have heretofore dis- 
tinctly avowed that in a dogmatic 
aspect it is free from censure, and 
we are glad to see the matter placed 
beyond question, and the contro- 
versy relegated to its proper sphere 
as one debatable only on purely ra- 
tional grounds. The other ques- 
tion is one which has been exten- 
sively discussed in our pages, and 
which we regard as extremely inte- 
resting and important. 

The doctrine proposed and ela- 
borately discussed in the articles- 
formerly published under the title 
" Principles of Real Being " has been 
attacked by a very learned and able 
writer in a German periodical pub- 
lished at St. Louis, on dogmatic 
as well as philosophical grounds. 
This is a convenient opportunity to 
state that we have in manuscript a 
very long and minute defence and 
vindication of the doctrine advocat- 
ed in these articles, written by their 
distinguished author, who is well 
versed not only in scholastic theo- 
logy and metaphysics, but also in 
mathematical and physical science. 
We refrained from publishing his- 
reply to the attack of his antagonist,, 
partly because the discussion was 
too subtle and abstruse for our read- 
ers, and still more from unwilling- 
ness to engage in dogmatic contro- 
versy when there is a risk of per- 
plexing pious minds. In matters 
really dogmatic and pertaining to 
Catholic doctrine we want no com- 
promise or attenuation. We desire 
only the restriction of the argument 
from authority within its actual 
limits, that the discussion of mat- 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 341 



ters purely philosophical may be 
carried on by rational arguments 
alone, without accusations of hetero- 
doxy on either side. In respect to 
the essence and integrity of the 
scholastic philosophy according to 
the system of the two great doctors, 
Aristotle and St. Thomas, we are in 
hearty concurrence with the great 
intellectual movement of the revival 
and restoration of this philosophy 
as the only true and scientific me- 
taphysics to its ancient dominating 
position. We do not, however, 
consider that a blind submission to 
the authority even of St. Thomas is 
reasonable. An author who, like 
Liberatore, professedly aims at 
nothing more than an exact exposi- 
tion of the doctrine of St. Thomas 
undoubtedly renders a service to 
metaphysical science and its stu- 
dents. The writer of this article 
esteems very highly all the philo- 
sophical works of this distinguished 
Jesuit, and has used by preference, 
for several years, his Institutiones 
Philosophic^ ad triennium Accom- 
modate as a text-book of instruc- 
tion. Yet we cannot approve of 
such a complete abdication of ori- 
ginal and independent investigation 
and reasoning as a rule to be fol- 
lowed in philosophical teaching. 
We do not find that the system of 
the strict Thomists is proved in a 
manner entirely satisfactory and 
conclusive, in some of its details, par- 
ticularly in that part which relates 
to the harmony of physical with 
metaphysical science. There is 
such a thing as progress and devel- 
opment in theology and philosophy. 
The opinions of private doctors are 
not final. Neither St. Augustine in 
dogmatic theology, St. Alphonsus 
in moral theology, nor St. Thomas 
in both these sciences and metaphy- 
sics, though declared by the Holy 
See doctors of the universal church, 
were competent to pronounce final 



judgments; since they were not ren- 
dered infallible by the superiority 
of their genius and wisdom, from 
which alone their authority is de- 
rived. Their private doctrine, in- 
asmuch as it passes beyond the 
line of the Catholic doctrine con- 
tained in their works and having its 
own intrinsic authority, has only a 
claim to a respectful consideration, 
with a presumption in its favor. 
In the last analysis all its weight 
consists in the rational evidence 
or proof sustaining it, which is les- 
sened or destroyed by probable or 
demonstrative proof to the con- 
trary. The Jesuit school has al- 
ways insisted on these principles. 
While recognizing St. Thomas as 
master, it has diverged from the 
teaching of the Dominican commen- 
tators on St. Thomas, both in theo- 
logy and metaphysics. Whether 
Suarez and others diverged or not 
from the genuine doctrine of St. 
Thomas, in their controversy with 
writers of the Thomist school, is a 
matter of dispute. The question 
as to what is the real sense and im- 
port of the doctrine of St. Thomas 
or of Aristotle is distinct from the 
question of the material truth and 
evidence of any controverted pro- 
position. The latter is much the 
more important of the two, and rea- 
son alone must decide it, so far as 
it can be decided, in the absence 
of any authoritative definition. If 
philosophy, therefore, is to make 
any progress, and if there is to be 
any real approximation to unity in 
philosophical doctrine among Cath- 
olics, the authority of reason and 
evidence must prevail over all hu- 
man authority, and exclusive devo- 
tion to systems or great names 
must be abandoned, that truth may 
be investigated and brought to 
light. 

The great motive urged by those 
who write in a specially irenical 



342 Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



spirit is to strengthen the combi- 
nation of forces in the Catholic in- 
tellectual army for the polemical 
contest against error and doubt. 
That the sophists of heresy and in- 
fidelity may be confuted and van- 
quished, that those who are erring 
and out of the way may be reclaim- 
ed, that honest seekers after truth 
may be guided to a successful dis- 
covery of this hidden treasure, is 
the great object of Catholic po- 
lemics. The great field of contest 
is the philosophical domain. It 
springs to view at once that agree- 
ment in philosophical doctrine is 
of the utmost importance for the 
success of the Catholic cause in 
this holy warfare. Among those 
who have labored most zealously 
and successfully toward this end, 
the distinguished Jesuit Father 
Ramiere stands pre-eminent. In his 
most recent publication, U Accord de 
la Philosophic de St. Thomas et de la 
Science moderne au sujet de la com- 
position des corps, prepared with the 
aid of another Jesuit specially vers- 
ed in the physical sciences, he has 
made a deeply-studied and masterly 
effort at harmonizing the peripate- 
tic system with the results of expe- 
riment and induction in modern 
chemical science. It is the most 
subtile and acute piece of argumen- 
tation which has ever proceeded 
from his pen. The doctrine of Ar- 
istotle and St. Thomas has hither- 
to been generally supposed to be in 
a diametrical contradiction to that 
of modern chemistry in respect to 
the combination of elements in the 
compound substances. The peri- 
patetic theory has been, on this ac- 
count, abandoned by most of our 
modern authors and professors 
in philosophy. A few, however, 
among whom Liberatore and the 
editor of the Scienza Italiana are 
conspicuous, have exerted all their 
power of subtile analysis to defend 



the Thomist opinion. Another re- 
cent writer, Dr. Scheid of Eich- 
stadt, has endeavored to maintain. 
the same thesis in the most exclu- 
sive sense, and attempts to prove 
that the Thomist theory alone is 
either compatible with the dogmat- 
ic definitions of the church or ade- 
quate to give a satisfactory expla- 
nation of the facts established by 
chemical and physical experiments. 
On the contrary, Dr. Fredault, who 
is a French physician and an advo- 
cate of the general doctrine of" the 
Thomist school on form and matter,, 
maintains that it is inadmissible in 
respect to the constituent elements 
of compound substances. In order 
to facilitate the understanding of 
the subject of controversy, we will 
cite from Father Ramiere's appen- 
dix a part of the Expose 1 parallels des 
deux systemes prepared by a distin- 
guished professor in a Catholic col- 
lege of France at Father Ramiere's 
request. 

Peripatetic School. Chemical School. 

I. WHAT IS A SIMPLE BODY ? 

It is a composition It is a material sub- 
of first matter and stance endowed witk- 
substantial form. determinate forces. 

II. WHAT IS A CHEMICAL BODY FOR IN- 

STANCE, WATER? 

It is a composition It is oxygen and hy- 
of first matter and the drogen combined ia 
aqueous substantial the proportions of 88 
form. to ii. The forces of 

the two components 
remain identical in the 
composition, although 
in the state of combi- 
nation they do not 
manifest all their spe- 
cial characteristics. 

III. HOW ARE THE SIMPLE BODIES EX- 
TRACTED FROM A CHEMICAL COMPOUND ? 



At the moment of 
decomposition the 
substantial form of the 
compound is destroy- 
ed, and replaced by 
the substantial form 
of the components, 



The force of the che- 
mical re-agent destroys 
the combination and 
union of the simple bo- 
dies, which return to 
their primitive state, 
and manifest anew 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 343 



which are produced their proper forces in 
from their own proper all their integrity, 
non-existence (ex ni- 
hilo sui)\ and the sim- 
ple bodies recover their 
former proportions. 

IV. WHAT IS AN ANIMAL BODY THE BODY 
OF A MAN, FOR EXAMPLE OR A PART OF 
SUCH A BODY, AS A BONE, ETC.? 

This body is a com- The human body, 
position of first matter like all bodies, is a 
and a substantial form, composition of mole- 
In man this substantial cules and of parts en- 
form is the rational dowed with chemical 
soul, which gives to the forces which are unit- 
matter its corporeity, ed together by the mu- 
or corporeal being. In tual action of these 
such a way that a bo- forces ; but, during 
dy, taken in the redu- life, these forces are 
plicative sense that subjected and subordi- 
is, inasmuch as it is nated to the vital force 
considered simply as of the soul, which 
body is a composition penetrates them, do- 
of first matter and the minates them, and 
soul, which latter unifies them in their 
gives to the body its vital functions, and 
specific material being, which gives to the en- 
tire body the form of 
a human body, life, 
and sensibility. 

NOTE. Form does 
not meanyffwr*? but the 
determining principle 
of the specific nature 
which this organized 
body possesses as a 
human body. 

V. WHAT PRODUCFS DEATH IN THE ANI- 
MAL BODY AND THE HUMAN BODY ? 

At the moment when Death consists sim- 
the soul departs from ply in the separation 
the body there is pro- of the soul and body, 
duced in it a new sub- and does not exact the 
stantial form, the ca- production of any 
daverous form, which substantial form. The 
by its union with the chemical forces, which 
first matter constitutes are no longer dominat- 
the corpse. But when ed by the soul, act 
the dissolution of the freely, and the disso- 
corpse proceeds gradu- lution of the corpse is 
ally by the effect of nothing but the natu- 
corruption, the cadav- ral result of their ac- 
erous form is succeed- tion. 
ed by new substantial 
forms, produced from 
previous non-existence 
(ex nihilo sui), as nu- 
merous and different 
as are the substances 
resulting from corrup- 
tion, the mephitic par- 
ticles dispersed in the 
air being included. 



The theory here presented under 
the name of the peripatetic, and 
claiming to be the genuine doc- 
trine of Aristotle and St. Thomas, 
is frequently called the theory of 
substantial generations- Under that 
name it has been examined and op- 
posed in the series of metaphysi- 
cal articles in this magazine already 
referred to. It is necessary to ex- 
plain, before proceeding further, 
that the term matter in scholastic 
philosophy denotes, not the com- 
plete material being or body, wheth- 
er simple or compound, such as 
oxygen, water, iron, etc., but mere- 
ly one element or component of the 
material substance viz., the com- 
mon, indeterminate element, which 
is the same in all, having a poten- 
cy or receptivity for every possible 
determination, but no fixed and 
necessary union with any. It is 
the principle of extension, but not 
extended ; the source of inertia 
and all that is passive, yet not a solid 
atom; the subject of qualities and 
active forces, but itself possessing 
no quiddity or quality, and not 
having existence, or the possibility 
of existence, except as joined with 
its compart, the active and deter- 
mining element, joined with it in 
order to make any single material 
substance. This active element is 
called the substantial form, which 
is equally incapable of subsisting 
alone, and therefore has no separate 
being, yet is capable of giving its 
first being to matter, and thus con- 
stituting with it material substance. 
According to the peripatetic theory, 
as stated above, in chemical com- 
binations which produce a new, com- 
pound substance, such as water, no- 
thing remains of the components 
except the material substratum 
or first matter. The determining 
form which gave this matter its 
specific being as oxygen and hy- 



344 Recent Polemics and Ircnics in Scholastic PJiilosopliy. 



drogen are destroyed, and a new 
form, the aqueous, springs forth to 
uive the matter a new first being 
and constitute the substance wa- 
ter. There is, consequently, in 
this and every similar case, the 
generation of a new substance, in 
which the matter is pre-existent, 
but the substantial form is educed 
from the passive potency of the 
matter, ex nihilo si/i, or from ut- 
ter previous non-existence. 

Father Ramiere maintains that 
this theory is the creation of the 
commentators on Aristotle and St. 
Thomas, but does not properly be- 
long to the system of either, and 
can be refuted by arguments drawn 
from the works of both these great 
doctors. This is rather startling 
and contrary to the prevalent sup- 
position. The Thomist writers, 
many of whom are men of the 
most remarkably acute power of 
analysis and thoroughly conversant 
with the works of these great mas- 
ters, honest also and candid with- 
al, have certainly not imputed a 
theory to Aristotle and St. Tho- 
mas which is a pnre invention, or 
without plausible grounds and appar- 
ent reasons. Father Ramiere gives 
an explanation which is at least in- 
genious and merits consideration. 
In the first place, he argues that 
the two doctors of peripatetic phi- 
losophy did not reason from a pri- 
ori principles respecting the com- 
position of bodies. They both 
taught that celestial bodies are 
composed of what they called mate- 
ria.quinta, which is incorruptible 
by reason of the inseparability of 
its form from the matter. The 
separability of matter and form in 
earthly bodies, therefore, belongs 
to them as a peculiar kind of bo- 
dies, composed from what were sup- 
posed to be the four simple ele- 
ments of earth, air, fire, and water. 



The fact that these elements are 
transformed one into the other in 
the transmutation of substances 
led to the conclusion that there 
was a common substratum under- 
lying all, which remained under 
different substantial forms. But 
since chemistry has discovered the 
really simple bodies which are not 
susceptible of mutual transmuta- 
tion, and cannot be resolved into 
other substances by mechanical or 
chemical agents, Father Ramiere ar- 
gues that the very principles enun- 
ciated by Aristotle and St. Thomas 
respecting materia quinta require 
that oxygen, hydrogen, etc.. should 
be placed with it under the same 
category. Moreover, he maintains 
that the permanence of what we 
now know to be simple substances 
and irresolvable in combination, 
was really taught under another 
concept and with different terms 
by Aristotle and St. Thomas ; that 
is, that certain virtualities were 
recognized as remaining and exer- 
cising an active force in the com- 
pound or transformed substance, 
which is incompatible with the 
supposition that only nude matter 
remains, acted upon by a wholly 
different and entirely new active 
force. In regard to the human 
body, in particular, he shows an 
incompatibility between the expla- 
nation of the cause of death which 
St. Thomas gives and the peripa- 
tetic theory. The reason of death 
given by St. Thomas is that con- 
trary forces are combined in the 
human body which are dominated 
by the vital force of the soul only 
to a limited extent and with a 
limited duration. When, by the 
laws of nature, these contrary forces 
begin to free themselves from the 
dominating vital force, decay com- 
mences, and is continued until they 
have freed themselves to such an 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 345 



extent that they destroy the apti- 
tude of the body for receiving the 
mode of being from the soul which 
is called sensitive life. The soul 
then necessarily ceases to inform 
the body, and the two comparts of 
the human substance or essence 
are separated. The soul, being a 
self-subsisting, incorruptible form, 
an immortal spirit, departs to the 
sphere of spirits, and the body is 
dissolved by the force of natural 
decomposition. Now, according 
to the peripatetic theory, the soul, 
being the only substantial form or 
active force in the body, giving to 
the nude first matter of the body 
its first being or physical, corporeal 
existence, must be itself the active 
cause of decay and death. This 
is contrary to the teaching of St. 
Thomas that the soul gives only 
life to the body, and, so far from 
ceasing of itself the vital influx, 
would continue to exert it for all 
eternity, and thus make the body 
immortal, if other and contrary 
forces did not work within the 
body to make it incapable of receiv- 
ing this influx, and thus force the 
soul to abandon it to itself and to 
the power of death. 

Father Ramiere acknowledges 
that it is difficult to make all the 
texts of Aristotle and of St. Thomas 
harmonize with each other, and to 
bring out a completely distinct and 
finished theory from their writings. 
He advances a conjecture, with 
some plausible appearance of proba- 
bility, that some texts found in the 
works of St. Thomas have been in- 
terpolated by disciples who were 
more zealous than honest in their 
efforts to maintain their own sys- 
tem. The same conjecture has 
been made heretofore in regard to 
passages relating to the doctrine of 
the Immaculate Conception. Be 
this as it may, we think it is quite 



sufficient to explain obscurities of 
any kind which are found in the 
dogmatic or philosophical system 
of the Angelic Doctor, that he either 
had not time or any pressing motive 
for a thorough investigation and 
elucidation of the matters in ques- 
tion, or had not the requisite data 
before him for the deductions and 
conclusions pertaining to the case. 
It is more to the purpose to dis- 
cuss the doctrine of the composition 
of bodies on its own merits, using 
all the facts discovered by experi- 
ment, and rational argumentation, 
aided by the light of all previous 
investigations, both physical and 
metaphysical. Left to its own in- 
trinsic probability, the peripate- 
tic theory is sustained by a kind of 
argumentation which seems to be 
more ingenious than conclusive. 
Several of its ablest advocates have 
acknowledged that it is incapable 
of demonstration. It rests its 
claim to acceptance chiefly on ali- 
itnde considerations. And on the 
other side there are certain argu- 
ments which have not yet, so far as 
we know, received a satisfactory 
answer. 

Father Ramiere advances some of 
these with his usual subtlety and 
force, and at the same time with 
the most courteous moderation 
and respect toward his opponents. 

It is admitted as it indeed must 
be, for there is no escape from evi- 
dent facts that a chemical re-agent 
applied to a composite substance 
like water brings back the compo- 
nent elements in their former pro- 
portions. Water gives up its 
eighty-eight parts of oxygen and its 
eleven parts of hydrogen. What is 
the producing cause of these so- 
called new substantial forms which 
invariably make their appearance 
ex nihilo sui? When the soul, which 
is said to be the only substantial 



346 Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



form of the body, leaves it in its 
nudity as first matter, without first 
being, quiddity, or quality, and, as 
it would seem, doomed to annihila- 
tion, what is the cause which pro- 
duces the cadaverous form, that 
suddenly appears to actuate the 
matter and give it being as a 
corpse ? Here Father Ramiere has 
made one of his most dexterous 
logical passes one which it will 
require great dialectical skill to 
parry. The editor of the Scienza 
Italiana replies thus to the question 
as to where these forms come from : 

" Certain forms do not come to 
the subject from an extrinsic cause, 
but spring up within the subject, 
by educing them (traendole) from 
the potentiality of the same sub- 
ject." Father Ramiere desires to 
be informed "what is the object to 
which the active verb traendole is 
referred ; what is that which educes 
these forms from the potentiality 
of the subject?" If no sufficient 
cause can be assigned by which 
substantial forms are educed, the 
theory becomes untenable. 

Father Ramiere devotes a consid- 
erable part of his treatise to a con- 
sideration of the important ques- 
tion, What is the true sense of the 
proposition that the rational soul is 
the form of the human body ? This 
proposition, maintained by Aristo- 
tle and received by sound scholas- 
tic philosophy, has been defined 
as Catholic doctrine by the Council 
of Vienne and by Pius IX. Father 
Ramiere refers to Father Palmieri, 
S.J., the author of a recent philo- 
sophical text-book of high repute, 
who "proves that the Council of 
Vienne by no means intended to 
condemn a doctrine maintained at 
that time and since by perfectly or- 
thodox theologians. The error pro- 
scribed by the council is that which 
ascribes to the human body anoth- 



er vital principle besides the ration- 
al soul." The Catholic doctrine is 
that the soul is forma corporis, in 
the sense that it is the life-giving 
principle of the composite, corpo- 
real, organic structure which con- 
stitutes the human body in its 
physical though incomplete nature,, 
as one compart of the total human 
composite, or complete human na- 
ture. Father Palmieri calls the 
bodily part a complete substance 
but an incomplete nature, as like- 
wise the spiritual part, which is the 
soul. Father Ramiere adheres to 
the common terminology which de- 
nominates each part an incomplete 
substance. As considered in dis- 
tinction from the soul,*it lacks its 
due complement, the vital principle 
which makes it a living body and 
sentient. The soul also, as distinct 
from the body, lacks the comple- 
ment of its inferior vital force, which 
is an eminent kind of sensitive and 
vegetative principle contained in the 
same subject to which the attribute 
of rationality belongs, and giving 
to the subject that is, to the soul 
an exigency for a body as its essen- 
tial compart. The soul and body 
complete each other in the human, 
essence or nature. The body is 
passive and inert in respect to 
every vital force and function, with- 
out the soul. The soul remains in 
a merely potential state in respect 
to its inferior faculties, when sepa- 
rate from the body. In the com- 
posite essence, the human nature 
composed of soul and body, the 
body stands in the relation of ma- 
teria to the soul, the soul in the re- 
lation of forma to the body. Thus 
is constituted the human, rational 
suppositum or persona, and the spe- 
cific essence and unity of the 
human being, of man, according to 
his logical definition as animal ra- 
tionale. We will let Father Ramiere 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 347 



speak for himself, and explain at 
length in his own language what 
his own view is on this important 
topic : 

"Between spiritual substance .and 
body there is a complete opposition, and 
it is consequently absurd to suppose 
that a body can borrow from a spirit that 
by which it becomes body. Since the 
substantial form of a being is. that which 
makes it formally to exist as such, the 
soul cannot be the substantial form by 
which a body exists as body, unless it is 
itself corporeal. It is the same with all 
forms essentially material, and conse- 
quently with all those which belong to 
the essence of the elementary substances. 
These forces, not being in the soul, can- 
not be destroyed when the elements pass 
into the body ; * yet they no longer exist 
in their former state of independence. 
They are seized upon and controlled by 
the superior force of the soul, elevated 
in a certain sort above their natural con- 
dition, and employed as instruments of 
the vivification of the matter of the body. 
Heretofore these elements formed so 
many independent unities ; henceforth 
they become fractions of a whole to 
which the soul must give the specific de- 
termination. Their entire force con- 
tinues to subsist ; their being is not de- 
stroyed ; but, under the domination of a 
new form, it acquires a new formal exis- 
tence. It is thus that the soul is the 
principle of the substantial unity of man. 
It does not destroy the variety of the 
elements, but it unites them ; it does 
not suppress completely their mutual 
opposition, but tempers it so far as to 
establish a condition of harmony. There 
is really but one substantial form in 
man the reasonable soul, because this 
soul alone gives to the entire totality of 
the human being its substantial deter- 
mination ; it alone reduces the diversity 
of elements to unity. It confers upon 
the body, by its union with the same, 

* Note by the author of the article. The im- 
port of this needs some further explanation. Since 
the body is full of various and contrary physical 
forces, these must come either from the soul as the 
active principle giving the materia of the body its 
first being, or from the elements which are the 
chemical components of the blood, bones, and other 
integral parts of the body. The soul cannot fur- 
nish them, because it does not possess them. There- 
fore the elements remain, and the material sub- 
stance remains, and they are not divested of their 
substantial formality. 



something which is not a mere accident 
but a new being, the being of humanity, 
which raises it above all purely corpo- 
real beings, and constitutes it within the 
generic class of rational substances. 

" The modern theory, understood in 
this sense, is in perfect agreement as to 
its substance with the peripatetic doc- 
trine, and safe from all the dangerous ten- 
dencies imputed to it. There is no just 
cause for repeating any longer the ac- 
cusation heretofore made against this 
theory that it suppresses the substantial 
unity of bodies, since, as we have shown, 
so far from destroying this unity it pre- 
sents it as it subsists in various grades, 
proportioned to the relative degrees of 
perfection in substances, much better than 
the other systems. There is even less 
foundation for the pretext that the theory 
in question is in opposition to the defini- 
tions of the church regarding the union of 
soul and body in man. What, in fact, do 
these definitions affirm? That the soul is 
the true form of the human body, which it 
informs and vivifies, not accidentally or 
mediately, but immediately and essenti- 
ally. Now, all this is perfectly verified 
in our theory, which supposes that the 
body receives its life, its specific nature, 
its existence as human body, without 
any interposing medium, from the soul. 
Moreover, its union with the soul, so far 
from being regarded as accidental, is 
shown to be, on the contrary, substan- 
tial, in whatever aspect it is considered, 
whether on the side of the soul or on the 
side of the body : on the side of the soul, 
which without this union would be un- 
able to exercise several faculties proceed- 
ing from its essence ; on the side of the 
body, which receives from this union the 
substantial complement of its elements. 
When, therefore, we examine closely that 
argument which is the strongest, if not 
the only, one sustaining the contrary 
theory,* we perceive that it resolves itself 
into a mere equivocation. The partisans of 
this theory, who sometimes reproach their 
adversaries with equivocating in respect 
to the words ' substantial and acciden- 
tal, 'do not.perceive that they themselves 
commit this fault. They confound that 
which is indispensable to a being that it 
may exist, with that which is indispen- 
sable to it that it may possess the inte- 
grity of its nature. Union with the body 

Viz. .that the modem theory destroys the unity of 
substances, and particularly the unity of the human, 
nature or substance. A utkor of the article. 



Recent Polemics and Ircnics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



is not essential to the soul in the former 
sense, as all acknowledge, but it is cer- 
tainly not allowable to conclude from 
this that it is purely accidental to it. We 
may very justly call substantial, and even 
essential, all that which is exacted by the 
nature of anything. Now, union with the 
body is certainly exacted by the nature 
of the soul, which differs mainly from 
pure spirits by this exigency. Nothing 
could be more contrary to the principles 
of scholastic philosophy than to regard 
that property pertaining to the soul which 
adapts it to be the form of the body as 
a simple accident ; but if this is an es- 
sential property, union with the body 
cannot be considered as purely acciden- 
tal, even admitting that the body is com- 
posed of elements endowed with their pro- 
per forms. Let us apply the same rea- 
soning to the elements, which are them- 
selves made in order to unite themselves 
with other elements, as the soul is made 
in order to unite itself with the body ; 
and by this simple distinction of the two 
senses of the word substantial we shall 
eliminate the doctrinal misunderstanding 
which makes a division between us. 

' How, then, could it happen that this 
division has been so long continued ? It 
is because the distrust of the defenders 
of traditional philosophy has been pro- 
voked by the presentation of the theory 
at the present day generally adopted by 
scientists, as an innovation. This dis- 
trust will have no longer any object, and 
harmony cannot fail to be re-established, 
from the moment when it shall be recog- 
nized that the modern experimental 
science is in perfect harmony with the 
principles laid down by Aristotle and ac- 
cepted by St. Thomas." 

The professor of physics who pre- 
pared the Exposd given in Father 
Ramiere's appendix presents very 
distinctly and strongly what is the 
common sentiment, especially of 
those who are devoted to the study 
of physical science, in our modern 
Catholic schools : 

" The peripatetic system on the com- 
position of bodies is rejected by the 
greater number of Catholic philosophers, 
because this system, considered meta- 
physically, sustains itself solely on equi- 
vocations and the begging of questions 
/Card. Tolomei), and has no demonstrative 



force ( P. Zigliara) ; considered psycholo- 
gically, it gives a handle to materialism ; 
considered in the aspect of the chemical 
sciences, it is in evident contradiction to 
their experimental facts; considered his- 
torically, it has been, so far as its psycho- 
logical part is concerned, always combat- 
ed by the school of Alexander de Hales, 
St. Bonaventure, Scotus, and the Fran- 
ciscans ; was condemned in the thirteenth 
century by all the doctors of the English 
universities, together with a majority of 
those of the Sorbonne ; and in the eigh- 
teenth century was commonly repudiated 
by all the schools, with the exception of 
the most rigid Thomists." 

There is certainly no chance 
whatever that this theory will ever 
regain any considerable sway from 
the mere weight of authority which 
belongs to it from the traditions of 
the past. As Father Ramiere just- 
ly remarks : 

" We must not forget that the present 
discussion appertains to the purely scien- 
tific order, and must consequently be 
definiiivelv decided not bv authority but bv 
reason. So long as the rational argu- 
ments which overturn the theory con- 
trary to our own have not been refuted, 
nothing will be gained by the effort to 
prove from a literal interpretation of 
some texts that this theory belongs to 
St. Thomas. The only interpretation 
admissible in this case is the rational 
interpretation, which clears up obscure 
texts by the perfectly clear principles 
which the holy doctor loudly proclaimed. 
It is thus that we explain many difficult 
passages in the works of the eagle of 
Hippo ; and those who act otherwise, 
far from proving in this way their re- 
spect for him, really inflict an outrage 
on his memory by putting him in oppo- 
sition to himself and to the truth. Let 
us not do a similar wrong to St. Thomas. 
As he was always attentive to correct 
himself even to the end of his short ca- 
reer, we can be sure that, if his mortal 
existence had been prolonged to our 
day, he would not have failed to clear 
up that which remained in obscurity in 
his writings, and to complete, by the aid 
of new discoveries in science, what was 
necessarily incomplete in his theories. 
Let us act in the same manner, and not 
fear to show ourselves more faithful to 



Recent Polemics and Ircnics in ScJiolastic PhilosopJiy. 349 



the spirit of the doctrine of St. Thomas 
than to the letter of a certain number of 
texts found in his writings." 

Father Ramiere could not have 
expected to put an end to the con- 
troversy by his short essay, and, in 
fact, the only immediate result of 
Dr. Fredault's larger work and his 
own briefer piece of argument has 
been to call fortli rejoinders from 
the Scienza Italiana and the Civil ta 
Cattolica. Some of the advocates 
of the peripatetic theory are un- 
questionably as well versed in the 
physical sciences as their oppo- 
nents. Their studies in chemistry 
and other brandies of science have 
made them dissatisfied with the 
prevalent modern theories on the 
constitution of bodies, and they 
have for this very reason sought for 
a more philosophical doctrine in the 
ancient metaphysics. It is not to 
be supposed that they will yield to 
anything short of cogent reasoning, 
or that any agreement in unity of 
doctrine can be produced, unless 
some really solid, satisfactory, and 
conclusive theory is presented with 
such convincing proof and evi- 
dence that it must command gene- 
ral assent. Until this is done 
there is no choice except to con- 
tinue the discussion. If it is in- 
terminable, then all sides must 
agree to differ, and in such a case 
it is quite natural to fall back on 
the authority of great men who are 
supposed to have been gifted with 
extraordinary perspicacity of in- 
tellect, and to have seen into things 
more clearly and deeply than mo- 
dern men are able to do, perhaps 
by the aid of supernatural light. 
If the constitution of bodies is an 
impenetrable mystery, we must be 
content to remain in our ignorance, 
and accept whatever formulas of 
metaphysical or physical statement 
seem to us the best expression of 



the vague and confused notions we 
possess. We are not quite pre- 
pared to accept this situation as 
inevitable, and it is certain that 
not only on the European conti- 
nent, but in England and America 
also, the reviving interest in meta- 
physical studies and the necessity 
of combating materialism will sti- 
mulate an effort toward a more per- 
fect evolution of the truth contain- 
ed in the ancient philosophy by 
the help of mathematical and ex- 
perimental science. It may be 
asked what metaphysics and theo- 
logy have to do with these matters, 
which seem to belong to the do- 
main of physics. We reply to 
this question in the words of Fa- 
ther Ramiere : 

"The question what is in general the 
nature of material beings, and what is- 
in particular the nature of man as apper- 
taining by his corporeal part to the ma- 
terial world, does not belong, at least 
exclusively, to physics ; it is also within 
the domain of philosophy and theology. 
The special object of physics is the 
study of the sensible properties of 
bodies, the observation of the phenom- 
ena by which the different forces with 
which they are endowed manifest them- 
selves, and the determination of the laws 
which regulate the exercise of these 
forces. The investigation of the essen- 
tial properties which enter into the very 
idea of body and distinguish it from spir- 
itual being belongs to metaphysics. And 
since, in man, the body, united with the 
spirit, participates in its destiny ; since, 
in Jesus Christ, the corporeal world has 
been associated to the divine dignity, 
theology cannot give us a perfect know- 
ledge of our destiny and our deification 
by the divine Person who assumed hu- 
manity, without availing itself of the aid 
which is furnished by an exact notion of 
the nature of bodies." 

It seems to us that the real point 
of difficulty and of controversy re- 
specting the " nature of bodies '* 
lies deeper than any of the ques- 
tions proposed by Father Ramiere, 






3 SO Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



and that the whole discussion must 
start from this point in order to be 
thorough and decisive. It is no so- 
lution at all of the question, What 
is the nature of corporeal being ? to 
tell us that bodies are material 
substances endowed with determi- 
nate forces, or composites of such 
substances. The drop of water, 
mechanically divided, gives us only 
minuter and minuter molecules of 
water. But since, chemically di- 
vided, it gives oxygen and hy- 
drogen in composition with each 
other to form these minutest mole- 
cules, there must be in each of 
these molecules others of such mi- 
nute quantity as to elude experi- 
ment, which are composed of still 
smaller distinct molecules of oxy- 
gen and hydrogen. One of these 
molecules of oxygen, considered 
apart from all other corporeal be- 
ings, must be itself constituted by 
smaller molecules or of some more .. 
simple elements. We must come 
at last to these simple elements, 
.and ask the ques'tion, What con- 
stitutes the entity and first actual- 
ity of these elements? Boscovich 
and Leibnitz, two of the most origi- 
nal thinkers of modern times, both 
of them well versed in mathematics 
as well as eminent in metaphysics, 
have presented the theory of simple 
monads, which are dynamic centres 
radiating in space upon each other 
the active forces which produce 
extension, quality, motion, and 
every kind of material substance 
with all their specific differences. 
Father Bayma, in his remarkable 
work Molecular Mechanics, has pre- 
sented the hypothesis that these 
simple elements are each separate- 
ly endowed with only one force 
that is, either the attractive or re- 
pulsive. The laws of molecular 
mechanics have been exposed in 
this treatise with rigid and compli- 



cated mathematical demonstrations. 
The metaphysical part of this hy- 
pothesis has been fully developed, 
so far as its primary and essential 
principles are concerned, in the 
pages of this magazine. The argu- 
ments by which this hypothesis is 
sustained and the contrary ones 
overturned we have never seen 
fairly and distinctly answered. 
Certain objections are made, such 
as these : that a force is not a being 
in itself, but needs a substance to 
support it ; that dynamism takes 
away the reality of matter, that it 
makes material substance like spir- 
itual substance, that it gives no 
basis for extension and continuous 
quantity, etc. We think there is 
some misunderstanding of terms 
and concepts in the minds of those 
who make these objections. We 
understand in this theory such 
terms as " active force " to denote 
not an attribute or product without 
subject or cause, but a principle 
from which force proceeds, which is 
also a passive principle upon which 
active force terminates. It is a real 
being, simple, unextended, not a 
body or a spirit, having position 
but not quantity, marking by its ex- 
istence a point in space, the first 
element of the primary composite 
body or molecule, distinguishable 
in respect to its matter and form, 
but not separable, any more than 
the centre and circumference of a 
circle are separable. It is a sub- 
stance, standing hi se et per se, in 
respect to existence, but expressly 
created for entering into composi- 
tion with similar entities, in order 
to make bodies with the various 
attributes and accidents, active 
powers and passive potencies, which 
experience shows them to possess. 
It is not a spirit, because it has no 
capability of consciousness, intelli- 
gence, or volition, but is simply de- 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 351 



termined by its grade of being to 
act in space by means of motion. 
It is ens mobile* a.\\& the beginning 
of physical quantity, as the point is 
the beginning of abstract quantity 
in geometrical science. As to the 
difficulty of conceiving how exten- 
sion arises without a first material 
continuum to begin with, we think 
this objection is counteracted by 
the arguments proving that such a 
continuum is an absurdity and an 
impossibility. 

The great desideratum in the 
question of matter is to find the 
invariable and indestructible ele- 
ment, which remains, and will for- 
ever remain, the same amid all trans- 
mutations of bodies, the ultimate 
substance endowed with a perpet- 
ual existence in se, and competent 
from its potency and active power 
to be the principle of every possi- 
ble combination and mode of being 
within the limits of the purely cor- 
poreal essence. Such a principle 
seems to be furnished by the theory 
of Boscovich and Leibnitz, as cor- 
rected and developed by Father 
Bayma. The simple beings en- 
dowed with attractive or repulsive 
force proceeding from a centre 
which marks a point in space, and 
having both a form and a mate- 
rial principle which are naturally 
inseparable, are capable of existing, 
each one alone by itself, and ab- 
solutely indestructible, except by 
annihilation. Though utterly use- 
less and inoperative, except as ex- 
isting in multitude and mutually 
acting on each other in their chem- 
ical and mechanical combinations 
they furnish the substratum of every 
kind of matter and form which can 
be predicated of corporeal being as 
fns mobile. The primary molecules 
of the simple bodies formed by the 
first combinations of simple ele- 
ments are so firmly bound together 



that no power of which man can 
avail himself suffices to separate 
tli em, and we may suppose there is 
no power in nature which can 
break up their unity. Nor is there 
any difficulty in supposing that 
God can make bodies of any mag- 
nitude or composite perfection 
which are likewise incorruptible, in 
accordance with the ancient con- 
ception of materia quinta, or celes- 
tial, incorruptible bodies. The rea- 
soning by which this dynamic hy- 
pothesis is sustained and contrary 
theories refuted seems to be ex- 
tremely probable, and even, in cer- 
tain parts, demonstrative, from its 
premises and data. If these in- 
clude all which must be included, 
and nothing pertaining to the es- 
sence and integrity of the matter 
of demonstration is left out, the hy- 
pothesis is sufficient to account for 
all which must be accounted for, 
and by its simplicity recommends 
itself to the mind as proposing 
enough, and no more than enough, 
for a distinct notion of the nature 
of body and its specific difference 
from soul and spirit. Just here, it 
seems to us. comes in the need for 
more full explanation and evolu- 
tion of the theory, and a more 
minute discussion between its ad- 
vocates and those who advocate 
the theories of the rigid peripatetic 
system or the system favored by 
Father Ramiere. We would like 
to see a more complete proof given 
that all which can be predicated of 
material substance, as such, can be 
referred to its nature as ens mobile, 
and accounted for by the two primi- 
tive forces of attraction and repul- 
sion. 

Especially when we consider the 
phenomena of organized, living 
bodies, vegetable and animal, the 
most important questions arise, de- 
manding from each one of the dif- 



352 Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 



ferent philosophical schools the an- 
swers which they are able to fur- 
nish, and an exposition of the w;iy 
in which they seek to harmonize 
this particular portion of their re- 
spective systems with the first prin- 
ciples of philosophy, of physics, and 
of theology. The notions of poten- 
tial matter and substantial form as- 
sume here a new import and pre- 
sent difficulties of the first magni- 
tude, the solution of which in one 
way or another introduces most 
considerable modifications into the 
metaphysics and the theology of 
each different party in the contro- 
versy. 

What is the principle of vegetable 
life and reproduction ? If all the 
facts and phenomena of vegetable 
life can be explained by the laws 
of molecular mechanics and chem- 
istry, the need for a distinct, sim- 
ple form, vital principle, or vege- 
table soul, is removed ; otherwise 
the hypothesis fails to meet the exi- 
gency of the case,, and the reason- 
ing of the peripatetic philosophers 
remains, in this respect, unanswered. 

The question of the animal soul 
stands by itself, and is more impor- 
tant. Molecular mechanics and 
chemical combinations cannot pro- 
duce a sentient subject or account 
for the sensible cognition which ani- 
mals possess. There is certainly in 
the animal a distinct form giving 
to animal nature a potency and a 
power not reducible to attraction 
and repulsion between molecules, 
not a modification of mobility and 
motion. The ingenious scholastic 
theory gives us a formula which 
answers very well as a verbal state- 
ment of the difference between the 
irrational and the rational soul, be- 
tween the brute and man. Accord- 
ing to this theory, the animal soul 
is not a substance, is not capable 
of existing in se, depends on the 



body and is destroyed by its death,, 
is not immediately created, but is- 
educed, ex nihilo sur, from the po- 
tentiality of matter by the physi- 
cal agencies and laws of generation. 
What is startling and puzzling 
about this theory is that it makes 
an organized, material body exer- 
cise sensible cognition. The soul 
is a mere substantial form, higher 
than the aqueous or igneous or ca- 
daverous form, but of the same ge- 
nus. It is educed from the poten- 
tiality of matter, and therefore 
matter is in potency to the sentient 
faculty, as it is in potency to have 
quantity, figure, color, and weight. 
Second causes suffice to evolve from 
its potency this new form of being 
in which it can see, hear, feel, imag- 
ine and remember, simulate many of 
the processes and actions of ration- 
al beings, enjoy and suffer, recog- 
nize friends and enemies, invent 
stratagems, play tricks, exercise 
courage, fidelity, fortitude, and 
constancy in affection, and show 
forth all those remarkable phenome- 
na which make the animal, in one 
point of view, the greatest marvel of 
creation. If the animal soul is not 
a distinct substance, immediately 
created and having existence /// se r 
the peripatetic theory, pure and 
simple, with all its mysteriousaess, is 
preferable to any other, and its 
failure to give demonstration and 
satisfy the ingenium curio sum of 
many searchers into the secrets of 
nature is a necessary consequence 
of the impenetrable mystery which 
shrouds the essence of material be- 
ing. 

If the animal soul is a substance, 
we must admit a grade of being be- 
'tween the corporeal and the ration- 
al natures, an inferior kind of spirit, 
similar to the human <oul in re- 
spect to that which makes it fit to 
be the animating principle of an o;- 



Recent Polemics and Irenics in Scholastic Philosophy. 353 



game body, destitute of intelligence 
and incapable of activity inde- 
pendent of its bodily organs, yet, as a 
substance in itself and a simple be- 
ing, not destructible by corruption. 
It is a maxim in philosophy that 
there is no destruction of any- 
thing once created by annihilation. 
It continues to exist, therefore, af- 
ter the death of its bodily compart. 
If the anima belluina is imperish- 
able, what becomes of it when the 
animal dies? Even the human 
spirit, though capable by its intel- 
lectual faculties of living a separate 
life, has an intrinsic exigency for a 
body which it can animate ; much 
more, then, the anima belluina, 
which is a principle of animal life 
and activity, and nothing more. 
There is nothing superfluous or use- 
less in nature, yet this kind of soul, 
continuing to exist without a body, 
is a useless thing. Moreover, al- 
though the more perfect animals 
manifest qualities which can easily 
be taken to indicate the presence 
of a vital principle which is a dis- 
tinct substance, what shall we say 
of those which can be divided into 
sections, each of which continues to 
live; and of those which approach 
so near to the line of demarcation 
between animal and vegetable life 
that the difference between the two 
seems to reach a vanishing-point, 
and they shade into each other by 
nearly imperceptible gradations ? 

This is enough to show how se- 
rious is the task of reconciling philo- 
sophical parties, and settling the 
disputes about the constitution of 
bodies, matter and form, and all 
their cognate topics, and making a 
perfect synthesis of physics and 
metaphysics. Mathematics come 
in also, with the consideration of 
quantity, space, infinites and infini- 
tesimals, demanding a place in a 
really complete synthetical exposi- 

VOL. XXVI. 23 



tion of fundamental and universal 
philosophy. There is room enough 
for a great genius who shall be a 
continuator of the work of St. 
Thomas. If such a man should 
arise, he would need to have all the 
intellectual gifts and all the know- 
ledge of a great metaphysician, a 
great mathematician, and a great 
physicist, combined under one form. 
There has been but one Aristotle 
and one St. Thomas, and we can- 
not tell whether or no any other 
man like them, or even equal to 
Suarez, will be granted to the sci- 
ence of philosophy. It seems that 
we need some man of that kind to 
deal with the obscurities and am- 
biguities, the new aspects and new 
relations of scholastic metaphysics, 
and with the peculiar mental atti- 
tude and habits of thought and ex- 
pression belonging to our own time. 
The English-speaking part of the 
educated world certainly needs the 
service of some really original 
thinker, as well as learned and acute 
expositor, to make all that is cer- 
tain or highly probable in the 
Thomistic philosophy thoroughly 
intelligible, and to accomplish what- 
ever is requisite and possible in ad- 
vancing this philosophy toward a 
desirable completion. Able and 
learned expositors of the ancient 
philosophy are not lacking in Italy 
and Germany, but it seems to us 
that some higher degree of original 
power of thought and expression 
than is found even in the most emi- 
nent of these authors is desirable 
for the masterly handling of certain 
questions of present controversy. 

Father Ramiere considers that 
the time has come to hope for and 
attempt the construction of " the 
majestic temple of Catholic science, 
whose base is laid in the infallible 
dogmas of faith and the immova- 
ble principles of reason, whose sto- 



354 Recent Polemics and Ircnics in Scholastic FhilosopJiy. 



ries are erected by the co-operat- 
ing labor of observation and rea- 
soning, whose circuit embraces the 
entire expanse of human knowledge, 
in which facts and laws, experimen- 
tal and abstract sciences, the truths 
of the natural and those of the su- 
pernatural order, complete, strength- 
en, and embellish each other by 
their mutual agreement." That 
" complete synthesis, to which all 
the particular sciences are attached 
as branches of a tree to the trunk," 
he considers to have been fifty years 
ago apparently impossible, though 
the conception of it may have been 
latent in some minds, but at present 
to be really within the power of 
combined and rightly-directed in- 
tellectual effort to achieve. 

So far as essentials are concern- 
ed, we are convinced that the 
learned and pious Jesuit is not 
without a solid ground for his en- 
thusiastic prognostication of the 
advancement of Catholic science. 
In respect to the, special topics of 
which we have been writing in the 
present article, we are not very 
sanguine of a speedy adjustment 
of the controversies which divide 
Catholic philosophers and others, 
whether physicists or metaphysi- 
cians, who investigate and argue 
ur.on the nature of material sub- 
stance. There is yet a good deal 
of discussion and controversy to 
be gone through, and we confess 
we are in doubt how far it will 
ever terminate in a conclusive and 
final result. There are limitations 
to human knowledge which are not 
precisely determined. The space 
of the unknowable lies around our 
restricted sphere of the known and 
the knowable. Happily, it is not 
necessary for the substantial so- 
lidity and practical utility of ra- 
tional metaphysics and ethics, much 
less for theological certainty in the 



matters of real moment, that all the 
interesting and abstruse questions 
of controversy between different 
schools should be decided. Ap- 
parent "antinomies of reason "may 
furnish a pretext to the sceptical 
and captious, but they prove only 
the limitation of intellect and rea- 
son, our imperfect and inadequate 
conceptions of the terms and pre- 
mises which we reason about and 
from which we draw conclusions, 
and the defectiveness of language 
as the medium of thought. The 
certainties of reason, of history and 
experience, of the judgments of the 
human conscience, of divine reve- 
lation, of Catholic authority, of the 
common sense of mankind, are 
amply sufficient for refuting every 
kind of infidel or heretical error 
which cloaks itself under a scien- 
tific pretext, and for proving and 
defending all that belongs to sacred 
dogma in faith or morals, or is 
in proximate connection with it. 
Unity and harmony in these things 
need not be disturbed by differ- 
ences and discussions respecting all 
manner of scientific questions. 
We understand that this is what 
Father Ramiere principally aims at, 
and he himself gives a good exam- 
ple of free and earnest controver- 
sial discussion conducted in the 
irenical spirit. We have always 
found his writings luminous, inter- 
esting, and profitable. We trust 
that he and his confreres will con- 
tinue their labors in the same di- 
rection. We shall look also witli 
great interest for the arguments by 
which the learned writers for the 
Civil t a Cattolica and Scienza I tali- 
ana and other advocates of strict 
Thomism maintain their own opin- 
ions. The Sovereign Pontiff, in 
his recent letter to the rector of 
the University of Lille, has declared 
that he desires all learned Catho- 



Tota Pulchra. 



355 



lies " should with one accord, al- 
though they follow different systems, 
turn all their energies to put down 
materialism and the other errors of 
our age." This shows that, in the 
judgment of the Holy Father, agree- 
ment in these matters of actual differ- 
ence is not a necessary condition 
precedent to combined and success- 
ful polemics against materialism and 
the other dangerous errors of our 
time. The Holy Father also ex- 
horts " all whom it may concern " 
not to " scatter their forces by dis- 
puting with one another on ques- 
tions which are matters of free 
opinion." We understand this to 
mean that discussions should not 



degenerate into disputes of that 
kind which is hostile to the spirit 
of unity and charity, and not that 
discussion should be altogether 
abandoned. For, in another para- 
graph, he exhorts learned Catho- 
lics to " keep within the bounds of 
moderation and observe the laws of 
Christian charity while they dis- 
cuss or attack systems in nowise 
condemned by the Apostolic See." 
This may suffice for the present, 
and we trust that our readers who 
hold metaphysical articles in aver- 
sion will tolerate this one, in con- 
sideration of the long time they 
have been spared a similar trial of 
their patience. 



TOTA PULCHRA.* 

CAN God so woo us, nor, of all our race, 

Have formed one creature for his perfect rest ? 
Must the Dove moan for an inviolate nest, 

Nor find it ev'n in thee, O " full of grace " 

In thee, his Spouse ? Or could the Word debase 
His Godhead's pureness when he fill'd thy breast, 
Tho' Moses treasured up, at his behest, 

The typical manna in a golden f vase ? 

Who teach that sin had ever aught in thee, 
Utter a thought the demons may not share 
Not tho' they prompt it in their fell despair : 

For these, while sullenly hating the decree 

That shaped thee forth Immaculate, " All Fair,"* 

Adore it still and must eternally. 



* Cant. iv. 7. 



t Ex. xvi. 33 ; Heb. ix. 4. 



356 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



THE MYSTERY OF THE OLD ORGAN. 



IN one of the least-visited church- 
es of Ghent stands the most curious 
and characteristic thing in it its 
organ : a contrast to the defaced 
wood-work and mouldering Renais- 
sance plaster, to the unused and 
deserted chests in the vestry and 
the few benches in the choir. The 
paintings, the removable carvings, 
even some of the monuments, the 
choir-stalls and the stained-glass 
windows, disappeared long ago ; 
the very name by which the church 
goes in the popular speech is ill- 
omened and mysterious. Old wo- 
men cross themselves and shake 
their heads as they whisper the 
name of the Apostate's church, and 
tradition tells the rare inquirer 
that this was a private chapel, the 
property of a once renowned fam- 
ily, noble and brave, but fierce and 
fanatical, well known in the town 
a inals for centuries, and only struck 
from the roll of citizens and house- 
holders at the end of the great 
Flemish struggle of the sixteenth 
century, when the Protestants left 
Spanish ground for ever and found 
a new country in Holland. The 
disappearance of all valuable ob- 
jects in the deserted church is 
ascribed and perhaps truly to 
many combining causes. Some 
were destroyed during the occa- 
sional image-breaking raids that 
distinguished the wars of the Re- 
formation ; some were sold or car- 
ried off by the family whose pro- 
perty they were, some confiscated 
or stolen by the triumphant Spanish 
government, or by no less indig- 
nant relations of the family, who, 
remaining behind, were anxious to 
prove by deeds their freedom from 



complicity with the apostate and 
fugitive Stromwaels. Such were 
the fragments of information to be 
picked up by any one in whom the 
simple people of the neighborhood 
had confidence ; but whether every 
fragment was historical is another 
question. The church was in a 
lonely quarter of the town, the 
least altered by progress, where 
stood only small shops supplying 
the local wants, which in such pop- 
ulations and such places vary very 
little from those of five or six gen- 
erations ago. A few spacious, 
comfortable houses showed among 
more cramped and less ornamented 
ones, but the aspect of all, if rather 
dead-alive, was very picturesque. 
The church stands in a narrow 
street and far from the house of its 
patrons, now used as a storehouse 
by the few wholesale dealers of 
this quarter, who each have one 
floor. In the attics live a few work- 
men and one or two nondescript, 
eccentric, and inoffensive persons, 
supposed to be pensioners of one 
of the dealers. One of these is a 
bookworm and supposed to know 
much of local legends and history. 
Being very poor, he frequents only 
the public library and such private 
ones as are accessible gratis to 
students ; and when he wants to 
preserve information which he can- 
not purchase in the shape of print- 
ed books, he copies it assiduously 
on miscellaneous paper, recruited 
from old ledgers, bank and regis- 
ter books, large parcels, etc., be- 
sides the little he buys or has given 
to him. His notes thus present a 
very curious appearance, which he 
sometimes complacently connects 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



357 



with the possible researches and 
comments of scholars of two hun- 
dred years hence. One of his many 
little sheaves of manuscript came 
into my hands not long ago while I 
was poking about the neighborhood, 
looking for anything out of the way, 
and I was induced to go and see 
him. He was very shabby and 
commonplace, and a good deal 
smeared with snuff; neither his ap- 
pearance nor his home was in 
keeping with the outward look of 
the houses, and there were no ar- 
tistically-dilapidated surroundings 
to fill out the romantic sketch 
which my imagination had made 
before I was introduced to him. 
Travellers seldom mention their 
disappointments, and always make 
the most of their agreeable surpri- 
ses, so that stay-at-home people are 
often deluded into a belief that 
every one on the European conti- 
nent is more or less like a Dresden 
figure or an actor in a mediaeval 
play. My friend, however substan- 
tial the entertainment might be 
which his manuscript and his nar- 
rative gave me, was decidedly a 
failure personally, but none the 
less was he to me a very important 
and, in a degree, even an interest- 
ing vehicle of information. A free 
translation of his manuscript is all 
that I can give ; as to his absorbed 
manner in speaking, his evident in- 
terest in the past, and his self-for- 
getfulness when he got upon the 
subject of the stories he had dug out 
or pieced together from ancient pa- 
pers, and his own impressions con- 
cerning whatever was uncertain 
these it is impossible to convey to 
others. He asked me first whether 
I had examined the organ in the 
chapel. I had done so, and found 
its case a very beautiful piece of 
carving ; the keys were kept speck- 
less, and the front contained a 



remarkable group of figures, carved 
in wood and painted, representing 
our Lord and the twelve apostles. 
The instrument stood in a high 
tribune looking into the choir, and 
reached by a separate staircase, 
narrow and winding. A carved 
railing gave this tribune something 
of the look of a balcony, but it 
scarcely projected forward into the 
chapel ; the carved front of the 
organ and the gilt pipes were visi- 
ble from below, and a tapestry cur- 
tain hung from an iron rod on each 
side of the instrument, concealing 
the back entrance into the tribune. 
The peculiarity about this organ 
was that it was all but dumb, and 
had never given a satisfactory sound 
since its maker had bid it be silent. 
It emitted some doleful sounds, if 
struck, but for all musical purposes 
it was useless. The situation it was 
in, and the defects in its interior, 
besides a third reason still unfor- 
gotten by the popular mind, ac- 
counted for its having been left 
when the rest of the church trea- 
sures were carried off. As a relic 
of antiquity it was valuable, exhi- 
biting as it does the state of mecha- 
nical art at the beginning of the 
sixteenth century ; but it was still 
more interesting as the tangible 
proof of a story connected with its 
maker, the organist of the church 
in 1505. This my old friend of 
the attic had written out in the 
queer-looking manuscript I have 
mentioned. 

Nicholas Verkloep was born a 
servant of the Stromwaels, and 
brought up in their household in 
the very house where I read the 
story. His parents kept the outer 
gate, and the boy passed through 
the usual stages of service common 
to lads of his position, now a favor- 
ite, now a butt, according to the 



35S 



TJie Mystery of tJie Old Organ. 



humor of his master and each 
member of the family, but all the 
spare time at his command was de- 
voted to music. He haunted the 
churches, and begged his way into 
choirs and libraries, learnt all the 
church music he could pick up by 
his ear, the hints of choristers, and 
the few explanations in the manu- 
script chant-books of the time, and 
at last begged to be allowed to 
blow the organ-bellows at the fam- 
ily chapel. Meanwhile, he joined 
in the services, and drew on him- 
self the notice of the old organist, 
who grew so fond and proud of 
him that he taught him all he knew, 
taught him to play the organ, and 
asked the Count Stromwael to allow 
him to bring the boy up as his suc- 
cessor. Nicholas was fifteen when 
this request was granted, and hence- 
forth he nearly lived in the chapel. 
Not only the music of the organ 
fascinated him ; he grew absorbed 
in studying its mechanism, and 
would crouch for hours within the 
instrument, getting his eyes used to 
the darkness, and learning by heart 
the " feel " of each piece. This 
developed all sorts of oddities in 
him : he grew absent-minded, and 
often unconsciously moved his 
fingers as if at work. Soon after 
he began to make models of various 
parts of an organ, indifferently the 
inside and the outside ; for carving 
seemed as natural to him as me- 
chanical dissection. He had not 
the same conservative feeling about 
things as is common among our 
present musicians, and the fact 
that the Stromwael instrument was 
a hundred and fifty years old, and 
had gone through many repairs as 
time went on and new improve- 
ments succeeded each other, did 
not prevent him from feeling cer- 
tain that he could make a much 
better organ in a very short time. 



His plans were manifold ; the sub- 
ject grew and grew in his mind ; 
the additional stops which he add- 
ed in imagination disgusted him 
with the music he could draw from 
the instrument at present ; and 
while every one in the town was 
excited about the wonderful young 
player who bade fair to be a prodi- 
gy, he himself was impatiently be- 
wailing his drawbacks. 

He told no one but his old mas- 
ter of his hopes and his expecta- 
tions, and this confidant was cer- 
tainly the safest he could have; for 
the old musician was a contented 
and patient man, used to his old 
ways, firm in his old traditions, not 
caring to travel out of his old 
grooves, and rather resentful of the 
idea that what had been good mu- 
sic and perfect mechanism in his 
time should not be good enough 
to satisfy the fastidious taste of a 
young beginner. Yet he was fond 
of his pupil, who used to soothe 
him by the saying that each gene- 
ration had a new door to open and 
a new room to explore in the house 
of knowledge, and that he ought 
not to grudge him his appointed ad- 
vance, any more than Moses grudg- 
ed Josue his succession to the 
leadership. In truth, the old man 
was secretly proud of his clever 
scholar, and, perhaps unconscious- 
ly to himself, expected even more 
of him than the youth did of him- 
self. The two lived together in 
the house of their patron, but had 
little intercourse with the rest of 
the mixed household, more gay 
and more ignorant than themselves, 
and my snuffy old friend nursed 
the belief that he had discovered 
the room which was home to these 
two. It was a small attic chamber 
looking towards the church, and in 
a chest in it had been found rem- 
nants of wood, wire, and leather, as 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



359 



well as some strange-looking mod- 
els and bits of carving, with rough 
sketches on strips of parchment, 
all of which I had seen in their 
case in the museum at the Town- 
hall. On the walls were some 
doggerel Latin verses and some 
rather indistinct marks, which, 
nevertheless, the most learned mu- 
sician in the town had pronounced 
to be, most likely, a sort of musi- 
cal short-hand, understood only 
by its author. All this I also saw, 
and, having no opposite theory to 
uphold, was glad to believe remains 
of Nicholas. 

Now, says the manuscript, there 
were found notes and jottings be- 
sides plans and sketches, and it 
seems plain from these that the 
young organist wished eagerly to 
make a new organ, on which no 
one but himself should work ; in- 
deed, this idea grew to be a mono- 
mania, and he devoted to it all the 
energy and interest which a man 
generally spends on wife, children, 
friends, home, profession, and ad- 
vancement. But the count was an 
obstinate conservative, and scout- 
ed the idea of replacing his time- 
honored family organ by a new 
one, the work of a crazy youth, 
even though he were the best play- 
er and composer that ever breath- 
ed. The old organist and his pu- 
pil had many anxious talks on the 
subject. In those days it was not 
easy to transfer your domicile and 
allegiance to a patron better suited 
to you ; family bondage still held 
good in practical matters ; the 
Stromwaels had given him all the 
home and education h had, and, 
in fact, he belonged to them. Be- 
sides, the count was as proud of 
his human possession as he was of 
his ancient organ, and set as much 
store by the reputation of the mar- 
vellous young musician whom he 



owned as he did by that of his 
best-bred falcon, dog, or horse. 
He would not have given up any 
of these ; they were all ornaments 
to his name, and it was fitting that 
he should not be beneath or be- 
hind any of his townsmen. He 
was not old enough to give room to 
hope for a change of circumstan- 
ces through his death, and Nicho- 
las became every day more discon- 
tented at his prospects. He was 
more reserved, morose, and morbid 
than ever, and as he grew odder 
the more was his music admired. 
Strangers from neighboring towns 
came to hear him play; the towns- 
people begged him to teach their 
sons; women looked up at the 
gallery where he sat with his back 
to them, with eyes that told of as 
ready an inclination to love the 
player as to admire the music; 
wealthy foreigners sent him pre- 
sents of money or jewels, after 
the fashion of the times ; but no- 
thing seemed to elate, or even inter- 
est, him. 

One day, while he was sitting at 
the old organ, poring over his plans 
for a new one, and contrasting the 
existing instrument with the possi- 
ble one, a man lifted the curtain 
which then, as now, covered the en- 
trance to the tribune. He was a 
stranger to Nicholas, and seemed 
elderly ; he was very quietly dress- 
ed in black, and wore a sword. 
The young man looked up in be- 
wilderment, but rose and welcomed 
the unknown, who sat down with 
great composure by his side on the 
wide carved bench in front of the 
organ. He spoke Flemish, but 
Nicholas thought with a foreign 
accent, which, however, he could 
not localize. 

" You will forgive my curiosity," 
he said, " in coming here. I have 
often heard you play from below, 



360 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



and to-day, passing by the open 
door, I came into the chapel in 
hopes of hearing something, but 
met your little blower lying asleep 
on the altar steps, woke him up, 
made inquiries, and decided to 
come up." 

" You are very welcome," said 
Nicholas in a low voice, politely 
but not cordially, and speaking 
with that resignation which well- 
bred but much- tried misanthropes 
have but too much occasion to 
practise in all times and companies. 

" I want to speak of something 
else than mere conventionalities," 
said the stranger abruptly, " and 
I will begin by telling you that I 
quite understand and appreciate 
your distaste to general fellowship 
with your kind; I see no reason 
why I should be an exception, so 
you need not resort to courteous 
commonplaces, i have heard what 
is your aim, and onjy seek you be- 
cause I think I may be of some use 
to you." 

Nicholas looked up, at first ea- 
gerly, then a shadow came over his 
face. Any allusion to future suc- 
cess fired him even against his will, 
but experience had always hither- 
to gone the opposite way. Taking 
the stranger's permission literally, 
he said nothing, but looked at him 
inquiringly. The other went on 
after a pause : 

" I think I can promise you the 
certainty, within ten years, of ac- 
complishing your wish and seeing 
your organ, if not in this place,, at 
least in some other quite as advan- 
tageous. I have oddities and fixed 
ideas myself, and understand them 
in others. In short, it rests mainly 
with you whether you like to accept 
my proposal or not." 

"There are conditions, then?" 
asked Nicholas, whom the belief of 
his time with regard to compacts 



with the devil imbued quite as 
strongly as if he had not been a 
genius, and who, in consequence, 
immediately jumped to the conclu- 
sion that this visit was not wholly 
natural. 

" Yes," said the stranger in his 
metallic voice, unimpassioned but 
compelling attention by some qua- 
lity indefinable to Nicholas' mind, 
yet surely present to his perception, 
"I always hedge in business with 
conditions ; otherwise I should be 
a mere Haroun-al-Raschid, an ex- 
perimenter in benevolence, which, 
though an amiable character, is a 
weak one. I hate weakness and I 
hate foolishness. I judged you to 
be neither fool nor weakling, and 
so sought you out. The conditions 
are very simple : I want you to 
bind yourself to my secret service 
for ten years, and in return I pro- 
mise you the fulfilment of your 
wish at the end of that time. In 
the meanwhile your fame will in- 
crease, your powers as a musician 
will be unrivalled ; you will play 
and compose so as to rouse the jeal- 
ousy of all your profession ; you 
will be in danger, but will never be 
struck down ; you will have full 
time for work and study, yet you 
must always be ready to leave 
everything instantly when I call 
upon you; you will be my right 
hand, but no one will suspect it ; 
but if you once fail in your alle- 
giance to me during these ten 
years, your object will be frustrat- 
ed at the end of that time." 

" But," said Nicholas, who had 
listened, growing more fascinated 
as the stranger spoke, and by his 
eagerness and play of features 
guiding unconsciously the latter's 
fast-increasing promises " but 
what power have you to bring such 
things about? Count Stromwael 
is a great man, besides being ob- 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



stinate and perverse ; how can you 
dispose of his property, and even 
his will?" 

"And how," quickly retorted the 
stranger with a cold smile, " can you 
be so imprudent as to speak thus 
unguardedly of your master's de- 
fects to one whom you saw to-day 
for the first time, and whose name, 
position, and motives are unknown 
to you ? Do you know that you 
put yourself in my power by these 
words? But I will partly answer 
your question. I know something 
of Count Stromwael, and what I 
know gives me the right to offer 
you what I do ; and as I happen to 
want your services they will never 
conflict with your outward alle- 
giance to your patron I make you 
the only proposal, as an equivalent, 
for which you care. If you cared 
for the common things women, 
money, position you would not be 
the person I want ; such vassals 
can be bought by the cart-load, in 
every station in life, from the Coun- 
tess of Flanders or the first lord of 
her household down to the ragged 
beggars or the sleek hypocrites who 
crowd the city. I want you, my 
fancy has chosen you, and I ask 
you will you buy success at the 
price of ten years of your life ?" 

" But why," persisted the eager 
but uneasy Nicholas, "only ten 
years? Why not ask for my whole 
life ?" 

The stranger laughed oddly. 
" And your future life too ?" he 
said. "Yes, I see what you are 
thinking of: that I want your soul. 
I will not deny your imputation ; 
you flatter me by identifying me 
with one whose power is as dread 
as you have been taught to believe 
the devil's to be, but I am quite 
truthful in saying that I do not 
crave more than a promise of ten 
years' faithful and blind service. 



You may, if you can, redeem the 
sacrifice by a long after-life I only 
ask ten years; at your age it is not 
much to give." 

" And if I should die before the 
ten years are over ?" 

The stranger raised his eyebrows, 
but without opening his eyes per- 
ceptibly wider. 

" You insist on continuing the 
parallel?" he asked. " I only said 
ten years of life; if you die you 
escape me, but you lose your 
own chance. What should I want 
with a dead man ? The loss would 
be as much mine as yours." 

"If you can guarantee, as you 
said, that I should be in danger 
but should not be struck down, 
perhaps you can promise me that I 
shall not die till our contract is 
fulfilled on both sides?" 

" My dear friend, one would need 
to be deathless one's self to make 
such a promise. Even a doctor 
could only promise life provided 
such and such circumstances were 
certain." 

" If you can dispose of Count 
Stromwael's will and property," 
said Nicholas doggedly, " you can 
ensure me ten years' life." 

" Is your life dearer to you than 
your success, then ?" 

"No; but the latter depends on 
the former, and if you must hedge 
in business by conditions, / must 
be sure that I do not give you in 
advance all you want without being 
sure of my reward at the end." 

" I should not have expected so 
much foresight in you ; I respect 
you for it. I will see that you have 
this assurance, but how do I know 
whether you will believe in it ? 
You see you are so much shrewder 
than ordinary enthusiasts that I 
may be taking a spy or a critic 
into my service*." 

"I have, never thought about 



362 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



business or guarantees before, be- 
cause I care for nothing but the suc- 
cess of my organ, and only that would 
have made me eager to bind you 
to your promise," said Nicholas, 
still uneasily ; " but since you only 
ask ten years' service, I think I 
may safely say yes." 

The stranger smiled again, as 
oddly as before, and drew out a 
roll of parchment from a little bag. 
" According to tradition, you should 
sign this with your blood," he said, 
"but I shall be quite content if 
you sign it with common ink. 
Here is a horn and a pen ; only 
write your name. But first read the 
bond." 

Nicholas looked suspiciously at 
the stranger, who calmly handed 
him the paper; the latter's face 
showed neither interest nor tri- 
umph. The deed was very simply 
worded : " I, Nicholas Verkloep, 
promise to owe unfailing and un- 
questioning obedience in all things 
to Marcus Lemoinne for the space 
of ten years from this day and 
hour, in return for the success of 
my organ at the end of that time, 
and for all the help he may give 
me in the interval." The date was 
already filled in, being the day on 
which the above conversation took 
place, and the hour was marked 
two hours after noon. Nicholas 
glanced at the clock behind him in 
the chapel ; the hands pointed to 
ten minutes to that hour. The 
stranger followed his glance, qui- 
etly rose from the bench, and turn- 
ing his back upon him, knelt down 
on the narrow board fixed for this 
purpose to the front of the tribune. 

Nicholas quickly turned things 
over in his mind : as to his silence 
about it when the promise was 
signed he had decided ; as to his 
fulfilment of his obligations to the 
letter he was as loyally certain ; 



as to the individual whom this man 
either was or represented he had 
very little doubt. Very few in his 
time would have thought otherwise ; 
perhaps few would have hesitated 
so much after having made up 
their minds not to ask the advice 
of any one either before or after 
the contract was made. Nicholas 
was only an average Christian, and 
had no strong feelings except on 
the subject of his art; everything 
was in favor of his giving ten years' 
life for the success of his scheme. 
As the clock struck the hour the 
stranger rose, touched his shoulder, 
and said, "Well?" 

Nicholas, with something like a 
start, took the pen and* signed his 
name as quickly as he could, where- 
upon the other also wrote in a fair 
and scholarly hand these words : 
" I, Marcus Lemoinne, promise to 
ensure the success of Nicholas 
Verkloep's organ at the end of ten 
years, in return for his obedience 
to me during that time." 

No commonplaces passed at 
parting, and Nicholas went home 
soon after. His old master noticed 
that he was a little more excited 
than usual, and began to make 
plans and preparations with more 
energy, but he was used to these 
phases of mind. The young man 
(he was now twenty-three) procur- 
ed beautiful and costly wood for 
carving, besides ivory, paints, and 
other materials, and set to work on 
a complete model. Now began the 
oddest experiences of his life : his 
mind seemed doubled, for he was 
conscious of a never-ceasing expec- 
tation, an alertness, and a watch- 
fulness hitherto unknown to him. 
In the streets, in church, in bed at 
night, he was always looking for 
Lemoinne or ready to obey his 
summons, yet his attention, when 
he bestowed it on his work, was not 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



363 



disturbed or lessened by this par- 
allel current of thought. His mind 
grew stronger, brighter, quicker, 
more ingenious; his fanatical devo- 
tion to his art increased daily, and 
with it his powers, until his fame 
grew to be just such as the stran- 
ger had foretold. This stimulated 
him further, and he made unheard- 
of progress, so that his old friend 
and teacher was half-crazy with 
joy and pride. The count sent for 
him to play in the hall before his 
guests on a small organ of no great 
power or value, and Nicholas drew 
from it such sounds as the great 
men of the profession could not 
draw from the most magnificent 
church instruments. That they 
were jealous of him he knew, but 
he feared no jealousy, as he court- 
ed no admiration. He refused re- 
peatedly to take advantage of his 
reputation and increase his for- 
tune by travelling to the various 
art-loving cities of the Netherlands 
and of Italy, or even by perform- 
ing in public on great occasions, so 
that the crowds of his persistent 
admirers had to content themselves 
with hearing him at his own old 
organ in the Stromwael chapel. 
Even the popular preachers of the 
day were envious of him. Mean- 
while, he worked first at the model, 
then at the separate pieces of his 
future organ. The count had given 
no permission, nor hinted at any, 
and Lemoinne had made no call 
on his time, but his belief in the 
efficacy of the bond never flagged 
for a moment. It did not occur to 
him to wonder why he never heard 
the man's name mentioned as 
among those who, whether mer- 
chants, artists, or statesmen, had 
public or secret power; his un- 
spoken suspicion of his identity 
prevented all such ideas, but it did 
strike him as odd that for ten 



months after the signing of the 
contract nothing was required of 
him. He felt morbidly that he did 
not belong to himself, and knew 
that, do what he would, a secret 
influence sat within, master of his 
heart and will, master even of his 
dreams, and, he feared, of his art 
also. Was it himself that he put 
forth in his compositions? When 
the ten years were ended he would 
be able to tell, but it was a long 
time to look forward to. Yet dur- 
ing that time his fame would have 
been made, and if his power then 
suddenly deserted him and his sus- 
picions came to be confirmed, he 
could easily retire on his former 
laurels and compose no more. 
Retire at thirty-three ? Well, there 
was the monastery ; many men had 
made a second career, more credi- 
table even than the first, by devot- 
ing their worldly gifts, their wealth, 
and their fame to religious pur- 
poses when circumstances made 
the world distasteful to them at an 
earlier period than usual. If his 
suspicions should be true, an after- 
life of atonement would be fitting, 
and it would give him time for 
studies which he longed to under- 
take, but had no leisure or oppor- 
tunity for at present. The spiritual 
element counted for nothing in his 
calculations ; there were many 
doors still closed in his nature. 
As he wandered in fancy, his fingers 
worked and produced beautiful or 
weird things. The face of Le- 
moinne, so constantly present to 
his mind, often came out in wood 
under his touch, and always, when 
finished, gave him a start of sur- 
prise ; for, surely, that was not the 
expression he remembered ? And 
yet, in carving the likeness, he 
must have had the recollection be- 
fore him? A year after the inter- 
view in the .chapel his old teacher 



364 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



the organist died, and the first 
strange thing that he had ever said 
to his pupil he said on his death- 
bed. 

"My son," he began, as he lay 
with his hand in that of Nicholas, 
" there is one thing I feel I must 
say to you before I go ; it is my 
duty, and young men sometimes 
forget it. With you it is more 
dangerous than with most. Be your 
own master ; do not lose the owner- 
ship of yourself. Men who do 
generally commit crime, and, if the 
slavery be to a woman, they often 
do base, mean things. I have 
sometimes feared that you were 
losing the mastery of yourself, and 
yet at other times I saw you ab- 
sorbed in what has been your only 
idol for twelve years or more." 

" There is no woman that shares 
that idolatry," answered Nicholas 
evasively, starting at the old man's 
anxious looks and awakened in- 
sight. 

" Well," said the dying man, " I 
do not grudge you a wife, but I 
fear any one, man or woman, whose 
influence over you is not entirely 
supported and controlled by rea- 
son. In Gbd's name, Nicholas, 
and as a dying man, I beseech you, 
if you are in any toils, break through 
them as quickly as you can." 

" My dear master," said his pu- 
pil, " when you are in heaven pray 
that I may be guided aright, for I 
shall have lost the only guide on 
earth whose help or advice was of 
use to me." 

" That is no answer, Nicholas," 
said the old man reproachfully and 
wearily ; " but remember what I 
said." 

" Yes, I will remember it," said 
the other in an altered tone, " and, 
if I can, I will heed it." 

After the old man's death Nicho- 
las led a very lonely life, but his 



increasing labors at his organ cheer- 
ed him and occupied his time. 
His fame kept at its high pitch, 
and the jealousy of his brother ar- 
tists was well known. 

Fourteen months after his first 
interview with Lemoinne the latter 
came again, this time to his home 
(possibly the attic before describ- 
ed). Nicholas told him how sur- 
prised he had been at hearing no- 
thing from him for so long. 

"One does not use one's best 
and rarest tools often," said the 
other with his indescribable smile, 
" though the highest price paid for 
them is none the more begrudged 
on that account ; and, again, the 
finest instruments are used to do 
what seems the least important 
work. You know how a glass- 
cutter uses a diamond ? Now, all 
I want you to do is to ride to a 
certain place and deliver this let- 
ter; you will find the horse ready 
saddled at St. Martin's Gate ; you 
have twelve hours to do it in, and 
by daybreak you will find the same 
man ready to take the horse at the 
same place from which you start. 
The fleetest government messenger 
would take sixteen hours ; but I 
know the horse and his powers ; of 
his rider I know enough to make 
me trust him equally." 

The implied trust flattered Ni- 
cholas, who took the letter, and, 
seeing the direction, started a lit- 
tle, but said : " If you say it can be 
done, it can, but the distance would 
take a common rider nearer twenty 
hours than sixteen. Shall I go at' 
once?" 

" Yes, and remember your trust 
goes no further than the delivery 
of this package to whoever opens 
the door of that house to you." 

It would take too long to de- 
scribe the night ride, or even the 
state of mind in which Nicholas 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



365 



found himself while careering along 
at a headlong speed towards his 
goal. This was the first service he 
had performed for his strange mas- 
ter an easy and safe one appa- 
rently, though secret; the man's 
fascination of manner or voice 
which was it? had evidently not 
lessened since his last appearance. 
Nothing special occurred ; he gave 
the letter to a commonplace look- 
ing person at the door of an ordi- 
nary, rather shabby house, and re- 
turned by dawn. As to curiosity 
concerning his errand, it struck 
him as odd that he should feel 
none ; yet he had never been of a 
gossipy turn of mind, and these 
things were, after all, only details 
in the scheme. This business of 
Lemoinne's was probably connect- 
ed with politics, about which he 
cared nothing. He did not see his 
patron again for months, and his 
work progressed wonderfully. 

The next figure which bore the 
man's likeness was that of a physi- 
cian, pouring a liquid from one 
vial into another, and the expres- 
sion was that of absorbed attention. 
The organ-case was to be orna- 
mented with figures representing 
various saints, the patrons of mu- 
sic, of the Stromwaels, of the cha- 
pel, and of the city ; then figures 
typifying the various city guilds; 
then nine figures emblematic of the 
traditional nine choirs of angels; 
but a space was left in the centre, 
just over the key-board, for the 
crowning masterpiece. A rose-tree 
hedge was to run round the instru- 
ment, and the pedals were each to 
be carved so as to represent the 
seven deadly sins, which, by being 
trodden under foot, contribute to 
make the music of the soul before 
God. Fantastic ideas and odd de- 
vices were constantly springing up 
in his brain and being realized be- 



neath his touch, and in these he 
encouraged himself to indulge. In 
one corner of the case, however, 
was to stand a beautiful, dignified, 
venerable figure, the glorified like- 
ness of his old master, with no 
corresponding figure opposite, and 
robed like a prophet, holding a 
tablet on which in letters of gold 
were to be carved in Latin these 
words : " Be master of thyself." 

His life as a solitary artist and 
mechanic was a monotonous one 
to record; even his few tests of 
obedience to Lemoinne were neith- 
er romantic nor terrible. Once he 
was sent in the disguise of a page 
to a court entertainment, with or- 
ders to follow and observe a high 
official of the state (who afterwards 
was proved a traitor and put to 
death accordingly) ; another time 
he was instructed to detain for half 
an hour a professor of one of the 
great universities, by which delay 
the man lost an appointment he 
much coveted ; and another time 
he was sent to a young man of 
great position and wealth, but an 
orphan, to recommend a servant to 
him. From this, however, sprang 
some other circumstances worth 
recording. The young man, Count 
Brederode, took a violent fancy to 
him, visited him at his home, en- 
tered into his hopes and plans, and 
begged him to be a friend and 
brother to him. Nicholas felt drawn 
to the count, but reminded him of 
the difference between their stations, 
and only agreed so far as circum- 
stances would allow. This young 
man was his very opposite bright, 
garrulous, sociable. He always had 
a love affair on hand, and always 
confided it to Nicholas, whose 
words on the subject were never, 
however, very encouraging. He 
wasted his money in a way that 
distressed his prudent friend, and 



3 66 



The Mysttry of the Old Organ. 



his time in a thousand pursuits for 
which he had no better excuse than 
that " gentlemen generally did so 
and so." The best-employed part 
of his day was that which he some- 
times spent watching Nicholas at 
work. At last one day he said 
suddenly : 

" Do you know I am to marry 
Count Stromwael's favorite niece, 
whom he brought up as a sister 
with his own only daughter? And 
upon this occasion I am going 
to ask him a favor, which I am 
sure he cannot refuse: to let you 
put up your organ in place of his, 
which I will take for my chapel in 
the country." 

Nicholas stared at him in silence. 
Was this a roundabout fulfilment 
of Lemoinne's promise, or a wild, 
boyish freak, likely to result in no- 
thing ? 

" Your organ is ' sufficiently far 
advanced to put up and play on, 
is it not ?" 

" It will be in six months." 

" Then six months hence you 
shall transfer your workshop to the 
chapel tribune," said Brederode 
confidently. 

Nicholas said nothing, but the 
other was used to that. The fa- 
mous musician grew more silent 
every day ; things got complicated 
in his mind, and he was always 
puzzling himself. His brain was 
clear only for his work ; at all other 
times he walked in a dream of ex- 
pectation, conjecture, and dread. 
Each day the seemingly light bur- 
den weighed more upon him ; the 
horror of being entangled in con- 
spiracies of which he was ignorant, 
and concerned in wrongs which he 
could neither prevent nor recon- 
cile to himself, haunted him; and 
yet in actual facts there was no- 
thing to complain of, nothing even 
to describe. It seemed incompre- 



hensible to him that Lemoinne 
should have made so solemn an 
appeal and promise for so little re- 
ward, and should have used his 
power so sparingly. The very 
blandness of the passing years made 
him fear some awful test towards 
the last. Meanwhile, Brederode's 
generous, boyish friendship cheer- 
ed and soothed him. But a year 
after he first knew him, and two 
months after Count Stromwael had 
yielded to his nephew-in-law's ve- 
hement pleading for the Verkloep 
organ, Nicholas, at work in the 
chapel, saw him enter with an un- 
usually serious face. The young 
man began to make dark confiden- 
ces on political subjects,- which Ni- 
cholas instinctively repelled, and, 
without knowing why, he said : 

" I entreat you, Count Brede- 
rode, do not make me the reposi- 
tory of plans and intentions that 
may end dangerously for you. I 
wish to know nothing of anything 
which is likely to make the state 
rake up all your habits and intima- 
cies, and use them as the Philis- 
tines did Delilah." 

" I would sooner trust you than 
my own wife," laughed the young 
man, " and no one will suspect such 
a maniac as you are, you know !" 

" If you insist upon it," said Ni- 
cholas sadly, " let me at least so- 
lemnly swear to you, by my hope 
of salvation, that nothing shall 
make me betray you in the slightest 
thing." 

" I would trust you without an 
oath," cried Brederode. 

" Then you are not of the stuff 
of which conspirators are made," 
said Nicholas, "and I wish you 
would retire from a position un- 
suited to you. You have no in- 
terest even in it." 

" None but the fun of secrecy 
and excitement except this," he 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



367 



added more seriously : " that having 
once promised to give others the 
shield of my name and the support 
of my money, I am bound in honor 
not to run away." 

" True, but break with them hon- 
orably and frankly." 

" I cannot." 

" You 7*'/7/not?" 

" No, it is not that ; there are 
other games almost as exciting, but 
my wife's brother is involved, and I 
must stand by him. Let us treat 
it only as an escapade ; I want to 
tell you about it." 

" I repeat my oath, then, and 
pray Heaven to strike me deaf, 
dumb, and palsied before I have 
anything to do in this to your dis- 
advantage." 

" You make it so serious that it 
loses its fun. But . . ." And 
Brederode went on to explain a 
scheme which the spirit of the 
times and its prejudices alone made 
dangerous, but which, if frustrated 
and discovered, surely entailed 
capital punishment. Nicholas lis- 
tened moodily, striving to abstract 
his mind, endeavoring not to take 
in his friend's talk, and all the 
while feeling a miserable conscious- 
ness that, however it might come 
about, he was nearing one of the 
tests of his hateful bondage. The 
day passed, and he still felt uneasy ; 
each step on the stairs frightened 
him ; he could hardly work. At 
night Lemoinne came to see him. 
Few words passed ; Lemoinne bade 
him in the same cool, metallic voice, 
indifferent yet compelling attention, 
denounce Brederode and his fel- 
low conspirators. He pleaded his 
oath. 

" No oath that conflicts with 
your promise is worth anything." 

" But he is my friend, and his 
wife the niece of my patron." 

" No harm shall come to you 



through denouncing him ; your name 
will be unknown. You shall ap- 
pear only as an agent my agent 
and not even Brederode himself 
shall have the chance of upbraiding 
you." 

"But, since you know the whole 
affair, why not act yourself?" 

" I do not know the whole, but 
you do, and I mean you to tell me 
and write it down ; I will sign it 
alone. I am known and have pow- 
er in many places, but it is useful 
to have instruments; I have bought 
mine, and only wish to use what I 
purchased. Sit down and write." 
Nicholas stood sullen and silent. 
" Do you fancy, because your organ 
is partly built and placed, that no 
accident may happen to it ? I can 
do more than you think ; you weigh 
an act with which no one but I 
shall be acquainted against the 
possible destruction of your favor- 
ite, the fall of your ambition, the 
collapse of your whole life." 

" No one can put it to me more 
forcibly than I have done to myself," 
said Nicholas moodily ; " but, un- 
luckily for me, I have a conscience 
left." ' 

" Forget it for twenty-four hours." 

" You do not ask me to forget it, 
but to disregard it, to gag it. I 
know what I lose in breaking my 
bond, and I believe in your power 
sufficiently to be sure that even my 
friend would not have opportunity 
to rebuke me in life." 

" Why do you talk about it ?" in- 
terrupted Lemoinne with the cold 
smile peculiar to him. '" To discuss 
a thing, and weigh p ros and cons, is to 
yield ; you do not reason against 
what you have made up your mind 
to refuse." 

Nicholas gazed at the man in 
horror. Who was he to go thus 
mercilessly to the heart of the 
question, to see his hidden thoughts, 



3 68 



The Mystery of the Old Organ. 



to interpret the secret of all the 
uneasiness he had felt ever since 
his friend had spoken those light 
but fatal words ? Who ? A master 
stronger than himself; one whom 
it was little use to resist now, no 
doubt, since he had not had the 
fortitude to resist him at first. It 
ended in his yielding, but not with- 
out the most terrible self-contempt ; 
self-reproach was nothing to it. 
He wrote what he knew ; as he 
wrote it all came back to him, 
much as he had honestly tried not 
to hear or understand the details. 
Lemoinne alone signed the paper, 
and bade him take it to a certain 
address before morning. 

" If you change your mind or try 
to deceive me, I shall know it," he 
said coldly as he left, " and all the 
difference will be that you will lose 
your hopes, as well -as Brederode his 
life." 

Nicholas did as he was bidden, 
and from that day the little peace 
he had had before fled. The day of 
the execution came, and he could 
not resist going to see his friend 
pay the penalty of his treachery. 
His tongue was parched and his 
eyes bloodshot ; he skulked be- 
hind people in the crowd, and wore 
his cap as low as he could over his 
forehead ; but nothing availed him, 
and when the axe fell he felt as if 
his own soul had been under it in- 
stead of the head of his friend. Fe- 
verishly and recklessly, all but de- 
spairingly, he returned to his work, 
but though his brain and hands had 
not lost their cunning, the impres- 
sions of that day clouded every- 
thing else in his mind, and he had 
no heart for anything. Two years 
sped on, and Nicholas Verkloep, 
with his glowing reputation, was 
more of an enigma than ever ; but it 
would be impossible to describe 
the many phases of his mental de- 



lirium trcmens during that time. 
The organ was near completion, 
and Count Strom wael was now as 
proud of it as the maker. Lemoinne 
visited Nicholas once more before 
the end, and this time at the place 
where the contract was first made. 
It was the same hour, too. He be- 
gan by congratulating him on his 
success so far, then examined the 
carvings, and smiled as he noticed 
his own face repeated many times. 

" And here is Brederode's," he 
said, as he pointed to the figure per- 
sonifying the Choir of Thrones. 
" What made you put him in ?" 

" Because, as you well know, his 
face is always with me," said 
Nicholas, emboldened by his very 
complicity with his terrible master. 
" It was a relief to me to make the 
image a sort of reality, to give tan- 
gible expression to my remorse." 

"Yes ; I see you have made the 
carvings a sort of history of your 
mind : I see the venerable prophet 
and the device he bears ; the rose- 
hedge with the prominent and 
unnaturally-multiplied thorns ; the 
haunting imps of dreams, your own 
face and mine, and so on. It is 
only a year and a few months now 
to the time when our contract ends, 
and hitherto we have kept it well. 
I think it likely we shall not meet 
again till the day is over. Nothing 
but silence now will be your bur- 
den. If you speak of or hint at any- 
thing of our transactions, remember 
the bond is cancelled; but, of course, 
after the expiration of the ten 
years you are free to publish the 
whole." 

He smiled scornfully, and, with 
another expression of admiration 
as to the work, left the tribune. 
It was now that Nicholas put in 
just over the key-board the groups of 
our Saviour and the twelve apos- 
tles (Judas, with the bag of money, 



The Mystery of tJie Old Organ. 



369 



bore Lemoinne's likeness), but, in- 
stead of being, as they are at pre- 
sent, immovable, the figures went in 
and out by a spring hidden among 
the stops, so that at the Consecra- 
tion they could be brought forward, 
and after the Communion return to 
the interior of the organ, in the 
same way as some of the famous 
figures of the clock in Strassburg 
Cathedral. The day of the public 
opening of the completed organ 
came, the tenth anniversary of the 
day of the contract, and the reader 
may imagine all the paraphernalia 
of a great mediaeval fte, half-reli- 
gious and half-secular. 

Lemoinne sat among the guests 
at Count Stromwael's banquet; it 
was the first time Nicholas had 
met him in public. The strange 
man seemed utterly unconscious 
that they had ever met before, and 
his eyes met the organist's fully as 
he complimented him in set phrases 
and handed him a golden gift with 
a small roll of parchment attached. 
Stromwael laughed as he remarked : 

" Is that the title-deed to a mort- 
gaged estate, or a share in one of 
your ships ?" Nicholas clutched it 
in silence and tried to smile ; the 
talk around him seemed to point 
to his strange master being a bank- 
er, but he held to his first suspi- 
cions. As soon as he was alone 
he looked hastily at the hateful 
bond and thrust it into the fire. 
It seemed odd to him that he did 
not yet feel free ; he had expected 
the release to be instantaneous. 
Weeks passed, and still the same 
old watchfulness and uneasiness 
went on. Erederode's face came 
to him more constantly; all his 
faculties were centred in horrible 
recollections and vague and still 
more horrible expectations. All 
Flanders raved about the wonder-' 
ful organ, and requests for similar 

VOL. XXVI. 24 



ones made under his directions and 
supervision poured in from distant 
parts. He vowed to himself never 
to touch such a thing again, or even 
give directions for it ; it was to his 
fancy an accursed thing, associ- 
ated with all the horror and de- 
spair of his life. He refused all 
offers ; and this grew to be even 
more of a mania with him than the 
making of the instrument had been 
before. Now that his dream had 
been fulfilled, he only longed to 
die; his servitude was still unbro- 
ken, though the letter of the bond 
was now a dead letter ; he felt him- 
self miserably fettered, haunted, 
paralyzed. To the rather impe- 
rious demand of Count Strom- 
wael's cousin, himself a powerful 
personage, for an organ with the 
same group of the twelve apostles, 
he returned a flat denial, and nei- 
ther threats nor promises could 
shake him. At last the power of 
the two nobles combined threw 
him into prison ; they made sure of 
reducing him to obedience by vio- 
lence and temporary ill-treatment. 
The prison was what all mediae- 
val dungeons were damp, filthy, 
unhealthy, dark. His food was 
bread and water, and a very scanty 
measure of both. For a month 
he was treated as a criminal, but 
nothing made any impression on 
the moody, prematurely-aged man. 
He had made up his mind that 
only death would make him free, 
only death would make him able to 
explain and excuse himself to his 
dead friend. He cared for no bod- 
ily tortures ; for ten years he had 
suffered a mental hell. His friends 
and his patrons came alternately 
to coax and tempt or to threaten 
and abuse him; he would not yield. 
Neither wealth, marriage, nor a 
patent of nobility tempted him ; 
neither the wheel, the rack, nor the 



370 



The Mystery of the Ola Organ. 



block frightened him. He grew 
weaker and weaker. His eyes saw 
Lemoinne and Brederode all over 
the narrow cell ; the one seemed 
like a fiend, and the other always 
like a corpse, with the head half- 
severed, yet still conscious with a 
kind of ghastly life. Physicians 
examined him and confidently pro- 
nounced him sane, and priests vis- 
ited him and pronounced him cer- 
tainly not possessed, but both 
agreed that something unusually 
terrible must be preying on his 
mind. He never told what he saw 
or felt, and answered all questions 
evasively. At last Stromwael, fu- 
rious at his vassal's obstinacy, 
threatened to put his eyes out and 
prevent him from ever taking plea- 
sure in work again. He only 
said : 

" You cannot take away my sight, 
even if you put out my eyes; would 
to God you could !" 

Before this last measure was re- 
sorted to he received a visit from 
Lemoinne, who, in the calm tone of 
a cynic and a man of the world, 
begged him to reconsider his deci- 
sion. 

"Nothing could tempt me!" 
said Nicholas. " Not even you 
could compel me ; it is not in the 
bond, and I am free." 

" Of course," said the other, smil- 
ing. " I only ask you to yield for 
your own good. Why should you 
object ?" 

" Because the thing is accursed ; 
it has wrecked my life, and I will 
have no more to do with it," said 
Nicholas violently. 

" But you are free now ?" 

" Am I ?" said Nicholas, with 
savage meaning. 

" You do me too much honor," 
said Lemoinne sarcastically, "in. 
believing my power to be supernat- 
ural. Shall I tell you who I am, 



and what was both my object and 
the secret of my influence ?" 

" You can tell what lies you 
like." 

" I dare say your superstition is 
greater than my falsehood," said 
the man with a smile; "and if I 
told you, you would be convinced 
against your will and still remain 
of the same opinion. Well, you are 
free now, and show your freedom 
by throwing away the very gift you 
sold yourself to obtain." 

" If I could undo the past ten 
years," said Nicholas, " I would 
give up not my organ only, but my 
art. But as it is, I shall never be 
free while I live, and I will do no- 
thing that may save or lengthen 
my horrible life a mockery, in- 
deed, of freedom !" 

" If that is your last decision, I 
will say no more," said Lemoinne ; 
"but remember, though our pact is 
over, I am still your friend, and, 
should you wish anything between 
this and death which your jailers 
would deny you, send me word." 

Nicholas looked at him in sur- 
prise and suspicion. 

" Yes, they know me here by the 
same name as you do, and I can 
generally find means to do what I 
wish. It is not the first time I have 
been here or made a like offer to 
a condemned man." 

" I believe you," said Nicholas 
shortly, and his visitor left him. 
Two days elapsed before the threat 
was carried into execution, but the 
prisoner, full of his own trouble, 
hardly dwelt upon the coming trial. 
He prayed 'wildly that the red-hot 
iron which was to take away his 
bodily sight would blot out his 
phantom companions from his men- 
tal vision ; the horrors of his dis- 
turbed brain appalled him more 
than any earthly punishment, and 
his half-description or hints of it to- 



7 he Mystery of the Old Organ. 



371 



one person who visited him con- 
stantly was such that the latter com- 
passionately got leave for one of his 
jailers to sleep with him in his 
dungeon. The day of the horribly 
unskilful torture came, and with 
common iron rods, heated red-hot, 
the famous artist's eyes were put 
out. He writhed and moaned, but 
the bodily pain was only a faint 
image of the agony of his mind. 
Was it madness? Was it possession ? 
Were all the learned men wrong, 
and he alone right, in thinking that 
he carried hell within his brain? 
There was no peace from the gnaw- 
ing remorse of his betrayal of friend- 
ship; no assurance that his repen- 
tance was of avail comforted him ; 
no obstinate affirmations could 
make him feel that the unholy fet- 
ters of his bond were in truth bro- 
ken. It was not his blindness that 
was killing him ; it was his mania. 
He felt life ebbing, and was fierce- 
ly glad, yet at times furious that, 
with such gifts as his, he should go 
prematurely to the grave. A chaos 
of schemes floated through his 
brain and maddened him yet more : 
he saw a long array of the works 
he might have accomplished before 
he died Masses, antiphons, fugues; 
the improvements in the organ- 
stops and the internal machinery 
of the instrument ; a school he 
might have founded if he had 
been content to rely upon his own 
industry and the slow path of trust 
in Providence. He had sold his 
birthright, and what was the farce 
of a ten years' contract, when he 
knew that at this present moment 
even the wreck that was left of him 
was not his own? "If I am still 
his, at least he shall help me once 
more," he thought suddenly, as 
Lemoinne's offer occurred to his 
mind. " I will end this suspense at 
once." He asked the man who 



brought him his meals to tell Le- 
moinne that he wanted him ; and as 
he began the message he watched 
with fear and curiosity to see how 
it would affect the bearer of it. 
Strange ! nothing but a common as- 
sent ; evidently the request was not 
a novel one. Lemoinne came that 
very evening, and Nicholas asked 
him fora sharp knife. He produc- 
ed his own, which Nicholas felt all 
over and took, saying : 

"When you hear of my playing 
on my organ for the last time, come 
to the tribune and claim your knife. 
I shall make the request, and feel 
sure they will grant it." 

" What do you mean to do with 
the knife ?" 

" Nothing which you would dis- 
approve ; but since you say I am 
free, let me prove it by not answer- 
ing this question." 

" I do not press you," said Le- 
moinne with his usual icy smile. 
Nicholas felt the look he could not 
see, and his very heart seemed to 
tighten and writhe within him. 
He had guessed truly ; when he 
asked Count Stromwael to allow 
him to play once more on the or- 
gan before he died for he felt that 
he shoufd not live long, he said 
the request was quickly granted. 
His persecutors fancied that he 
would be less on his guard now,, 
and that somehow, while he pUy- 
ed, they could surprise the secret 
which they wanted to discover. He 
was taken to the chapel atad seat- 
ed before his instrument. Strom- 
wael, his cousin, and Lemoinne.- 
were there, besides other less im- 
portant persons. All watched ea- 
gerly. After half an hyur"fi pisy. 
ing, as divine as the player's 'mind 
was storm-driven and despairing, 
Nicholas asked : 

" Are the apostles out or in ?" 
" In," was the answer. 



372 



The German Element in the Uii+tcd States. 



He pressed a spring and the 
group came slowly out our 
Lord's figure from the centre, and 
those of six apostles from each 
side. Then, with a quick and deft 
touch, he cut something, and a 
snapping sound was heard within ; 
his fingers moved again, the knife 
gleamed, and a wailing sound came 
from the notes on which his left 
arm now leaned ; then, turning 
round with a smile of tiiumph that 
looked ghastly on the blank face 
and mutilated eye-sockets, he said : 

" I am free now. I am ready to 
die." 

Lemoinne quickly took up the 
knife that Nicholas dropped, and 
smiled as if another character- 
play had come to an end and 
he had solved another riddle ; 
Stromwael burst out into wild and 
furious threats of purposeless re- 
venge. Nicholas sat unmoved and 
said : 

" This .organ will be my only 



monument, and, if a man's curse 
can follow another, may mine fol- 
low whoever shall attempt to re- 
move or to repair my organ." 

To this day the instrument 
stands a witness to the tradition of 
its maker's fate ; the group is im- 
movable, and the few sounds the 
notes produce are worse than 
dumbness. Nicholas died two 
months after, in prison, his mind 
more and more delirious each day. 
It is said that, when Lemoinne 
heard of his death, he remarked to 
one of his associates: 

" Tli at man was the most perfect 
tool I ever knew. If I had sworn 
to him that I was a banker, a mer- 
chant, a . usurer, a spy an un- 
scrupulous eccentric, whose one 
mania was the possession of secret 
power, and whose conscience was 
dead to any obstacle he would 
still have believed in his own theory. 
But I own I overshot the mark 
and drove him too far." 



THE GERMAN ELEMENT IN THE UNITED STATES. 



THE social, moral, and* political 
influence of the German- born and 
German-descended population of 
the United States upon their fel- 
low-citizens has already been per- 
ceptible ; that this influence will 
vastly increase in the future is 
highly probable. We may state 
here one of the many reasons for 
this belief. The intellectual and 
political leaders of the Germans in 
America have hitherto mainly con- 
fined their public utterances, in the 
press or on the platform, to the 
German language. The German 
newspapers are very numerous; 
their circulation is large; they are 
written for the most part with much 



ability ; their treatment of social 
and political questions is often 
marked by a breadth of view and 
a soundness of logic too frequently 
wanting in many of their English 
contemporaries. Their influence 
upon the minds of their readers is 
also greater than that wielded by 
the majority of our newspapers 
printed in the English language. 
We have heard this fact attributed 
to the superior honesty with winch 
the German press is conducted ; 
but upon this delicate ground we 
shall not enter. Our point at pre- 
sent is that German thought and 
opinion, as expressed through the 
German periodical press, influence 



TJic German Element in the United States. 



373 



for the most part only the German 
population. Few of us who are 
not Germans read a German jour- 
nal ; what the German leaders in 
politics, morality, and literature are 
saying, day after day, is for the 
most part wholly unknown to the 
rest of us. Occasionally an Ame- 
rican editor translates a leading 
article from a German journal and 
gives it to his readers ; still more 
frequently he avails himself of the 
ideas and the arguments of his 
German contemporaries and repro- 
duces them as his own. 

In the next generation this state 
of things will be modified ; more 
Americans will read German litera- 
ture, and more Germans, or Ger- 
man-Americans, will write in Eng- 
lish journals, speak in English at 
public conventions, and sit in our 
legislative assemblies. The barrier 
of language, which has hitherto 
tended to separate Germans from 
the rest of us to so great an extent, 
will gradually yield and disappear. 
The German language will be 
learned by increasing numbers of 
our non-German citizens; the com- 
mon use of the German language 
by the German-Americans will be 
dropped, and the English tongue 
adopted in its stead, not only in 
business affairs, but in politics, lite- 
rature, religion, and social inter- 
course. The English language has 
made many conquests, but in Ame- 
rica it has only to hold its own. 
It is the language of the country, 
of the legislature, of the courts, of 
the markets and exchanges, and of 
society. Our German citizens must 
acquire it, or enter handicapped 
into all the relations of life. 

The ability with which the Ger- 
man journals here are conducted 
does not prevent nearly the whole 
of them which are not avowedly 
Catholic from being inspired by an 



antagonism to religion. The ge- 
nius of the German mind has little 
sympathy with socialism or com- 
munism, and the theories of social- 
ism and communism find expres- 
sion among our German citizens 
only through the writings or speech- 
es of a few insignificant and unin- 
fluential men in New York and 
some of our other large cities. 
But the German who is not a Ca- 
tholic is most often an atheist ; and 
he differs from the French atheist 
in wishing his wife and children to 
be atheists also. The non-Catholic 
German press faithfully represents 
this phase of the German mind ; 
and it sneers at religion with the 
same pertinacity and often with 
more skill than is shown in a like 
direction by too many of our Eng- 
lish-written newspapers. 

The total immigration into the 
United States from the close of the 
War of Independence to the end of 
1876 was 9,726,455 souls. The 
records of the government do not 
furnish an ethnological classifica- 
tion of all these ; it is only since 
1847 that this classification has 
been made. But every one knows 
that the bulk of our immigrants 
have come from Ireland and Ger- 
many. At the port of New York 
alone the total number of Irish im- 
migrants from 1847 up to Septem- 
ber i of the present year was 
2,009,447 ; of German immigrants 
2,345,486; of all others 1,265,240. 
An estimated classification of those 
arriving before 1847, added to the 
above figures, gives 2,463,598 Irish, 
2,622,556 German, and 1,542,311 
of other 'nationalities. The present 
Secretary of the Interior is the only 
American citizen of German birth 
who has ever held a cabinet ap- 
pointment ; we believe that he is 
the only citizen of German birth 
who has ever sat in the Senate. 



374 



77/4* German Element in the United States. 



But among the senators at the last 
session of the Forty-fourth Congress 
there were seven who were either 
of foreign birth or the sons of for- 
eigners; and in the lower House of 
the same assembly there appears to 
have been but one German to twelve 
naturalized citizens of other na- 
tionalities. The Secretary of the 
Interior owes the prominent politi- 
cal position which he fills less to 
his statesmanlike and philosophical 
acquirements than to his command 
of the English language and to his 
grace and power as a public speak- 
er. No doubt there are among 
our German citizens many who are 
his equals in learning and political 
wisdom, but who are almost wholly 
unknown outside the German-speak- 
ing community, for the reason that 
they confine themselves, on the 
platform or in the press, to the use 
of the German language. The 
coming generation of Americans of 
German descent will not subject 
themselves to this disadvantage ; 
and thus the influence of German 
thought will be widened and deep- 
ened. 

Upon this portion of our subject 
we may as well reproduce in sub- 
stance, although not with literal 
exactness, the observations made 
to us by a German ecclesiastic, a 
member of one of the German re- 
ligious orders which are working 
here with so much zeal and suc- 
cess. In his opinion the German 
element now in the United States 
will ere long be greatly increased 
by a revival of immigration. Im- 
migration from Germany may not 
again attain the vast proportions 
which it reached in 1852-53-54, 
nor during the seven memorable 
years 1866-1872, but it will still be 
very large. All other things being 
equal, the proportion of Catholics 
immigrating from Germany will be 



greater in the future than in the 
past. In looking at the future of 
the country we should reckon that 
the German element here will for 
many years to come steadily and 
rapidly increase. But it is not 
probable that, after the passing 
away of the present generation, our 
German population will so tena- 
ciously retain its distinctive nation- 
al or ethnological features. It will 
become absorbed in, amalgamated 
with, the rest of the community, 
but through this very absorption 
and amalgamation it will leaven 
the whole mass for good or for evil ; 
and most probably the good will 
preponderate. 

In our present German popula- 
tion, especially the younger por- 
tion of it, there is a very percepti- 
ble disposition to be a little asham- 
ed of their German origin. This 
feeling, which has long existed, re- 
ceived a check during and imme- 
diately after the triumph of Ger- 
many over France in 1870 and the 
erection of the German Empire. 
But it has now revived and prevails 
with more force than before. Our 
German citizens feel that the gold- 
en apples of victory have turned to 
ashes in the grasp of the conquer- 
ors. The milliards wrung from 
France have sunk into the ground 
or vanished in the air, and Ger- 
many is poorer than before the 
war much poorer than France, 
which Prince Bismarck imagined 
had been crushed into nothingness. 
All the glory that Germany won by 
her conquest of France in the field 
has been eclipsed by the peaceful 
victory of France a victory the 
effects of which were made mani- 
fest at our International Exhibition 
last year. More serious still than 
this, in the opinion of the learned 
and acute ecclesiastic whom we 
are quoting, is the dislike and con- 



The German Element in t/ic United States, 



375 



tempt with which the iniquitous, 
unnecessary, and tyrannical policy 
of the German government toward 
the church is regarded not only by 
Catholic Germans in America, but 
by those of their non-Catholic com- 
patriots here who are not swayed 
by sectarian hatred of the church. 
This policy is justly regarded as 
at once an evidence of weakness 
and a prolific source of future trou- 
ble, and among the non-Catholic 
German-Americans the remark is 
common that " between the Red- 
coats and the Black-coats the 
Communists and the Catholics the 
empire is in great danger of de- 
struction." For these reasons, and 
other slighter ones, our German 
fellow-citizens are becoming less 
and less disposed to boast of their 
nationality, and more and more in- 
clined to Americanize themselves 
and their children. The "Watch 
on the Rhine" gives place to 
*' Yankee Doodle " ; the suggestive 
inquiry as to the precise locality 
and boundaries of the Faderland 
is not so popular as " Hail Colum- 
bia." Certain considerations of a 
utilitarian nature aid powerfully in 
leading our German citizens in the 
same direction. Their common 
sense enables them to see that their 
own advancement in life, and the 
prosperity and happiness of their 
children, materially depend upon 
their thorough Americanization 
their complete identification with 
the rest of the community in which 
they live. The first step towards 
this end is the acquirement and 
use of the English language, and in 
this the children often outstrip the 
wishes of their parents. In the 
German-American schools, secular 
as well as religious, the study of 
the English language is compulso- 
ry, and necessarily so. The chil- 
dren appear to have^a natural affin- 



ity for the English tongue; they 
acquire its use rapidly and soon 
begin to speak it in preference to 
their native language. It is not 
uncommon to meet with families 
where the parents address the chil- 
dren in German and the children 
reply in English. The truth is 
that the English language as now 
spoken, largely Teutonic in its 
composition and structure, but en- 
riched and softened by Celtic, 
Latin, and Greek accretions, more 
easily adapts itself to the expres- 
sion of the necessities, the emo- 
tions, and the ideas of the age. An 
amusing illustration of this self-as- 
serting power of the English lan- 
guage was afforded by the expe- 
rience of a village in Indiana, on 
the Ohio River, which was settled a 
few years ago by an exclusively 
German colony consisting of about 
three hundred families. Nothing 
but German was at first spoken in 
the houses, but in a very brief 
space of time the language in the 
streets was found to be English, 
and ere long that became the pre- 
vailing dialect of the place, appear- 
ing, as one of the residents said, to 
have sprung up and taken root 
there just as the weeds in the 
fields. 

We should not omit to mention, 
however, a fact which to a very 
large degree tends to show that the 
Americanization of our German 
citizens is not so rapid as it might 
be. Intermarriages between Ger- 
mans, or descendants of Germans, 
and Americans of other descent 
are not regarded with favor by the 
older Germans of the present gen- 
eration, and such marriages are of 
rare occurrence. This is to be de- 
plored, especially for the sake of 
the non-German party. In all the 
domestic virtues the Germans are 
richly endowed. The influence of 



3/6 



The German Element in the United States. 



the mother in the family is supreme 
within certain limits, and this in- 
fluence is almost always exerted 
for good. The German husband 
does not regard his wife as a pretty 
plaything, a fragile and expensive 
doll to be dressed in gay raiment 
and paraded for the gratification of 
her own and his vanity. On the 
contrary, the German husband, if 
at fault at all in this respect, looks 
upon his wife too much in the light 
not merely of a helpmeet, but of a 
servant in whose zeal, industry, and 
faithfulness he can repose the ut- 
most confidence. Americans too 
often make useless idols of their 
wives ; the German husband may 
seem to regard his spouse from too 
utilitarian a point of view. In the 
German household, here as in the 
Fatherland, there is not, as there 
is too often in American homes, 
one bread-winner and one or more 
spenders. The wife, whenever it 
is needful or expedient, not only 
manages the domestic affairs of 
the family with economy, prudence, 
and good sense, but takes a full 
share of the burden of providing 
its income. If one journeys through 
those portions of the West where 
the Germans are largely engaged 
in agricultural pursuits, he will see 
the wife and daughters working in 
the fields alongside of the husband 
and the brothers ; in the towns, 
while the husband is pursuing his 
trade or laboring in the streets, the 
wife is keeping a shop or a beer- 
saloon, or otherwise earning her 
full share of the family income, and 
aiding her husband to -lay up the 
nest-eggs of their future fortune. 
The will of the wife is most fre- 
quently supreme in all domestic af- 
fairs, and even in matters of busi- 
ness ; and this, too, without the 
husband feeling himself at all " hen- 
pecked." His wife is his equal ; 



he shares with her his amusements 
as well as his toils. Nothing is 
more pleasant than the spectacle of 
German families, on fete days or 
on summer evenings, taking their 
pleasure together in the beer-gar- 
dens. The presence of the wo- 
men and children does not lessen 
the gayety of the men; but it pre- 
vents them from excess and com- 
pels propriety of conversation and 
deportment. With these habits, 
and with the gift of living well and 
wholesomely, on plain but abun- 
dant food, without wastefulness, 
the Germans prosper, and they 
acquire competences sooner and 
more generally than other classes. 
When wealth corner, thefr frugal 
and sensible habits of life are not 
laid aside for extravagant display, 
nor is the influence and sway of 
the mother weakened or lessened. 
The daughters, even of the wealthi- 
est and most cultured German fa- 
milies, are taught how to become 
good and useful wives to poor men, 
and are thus prepared for reverses 
of fortune. By some of our Ameri- 
can women these virtues of their 
German sisters may be regarded 
with contempt and dislike ; but 
many American men, we are in- 
clined to think, would lead happier 
lives and escape much pecuniary 
trouble, if they won for themselves 
wives from among the daughters of 
their German neighbors. There 
are but few such marriages now. 
The German parents dislike them ; 
and there is, moreover, a little ig- 
norant prejudice on the American 
side. The next generation or two, 
we trust, will be wiser. 

The limits of our space and the 
scope of our article forbid us to do 
more than merely glance at a branch 
of our subject which is in itself 
worthy of a separate essay the in- 
fluence exerted by our German 



The German Element in tJie United States. 



377 



fellow-citizens upon the rest of us 
by their works in music and in the 
fine arts. Here the barrier of lan- 
guage does not exist ; the genius 
of music and of art is universal. A 
certain degree of cultivation of the 
ear and eye is necessary, of course; 
but, this being attained, the music 
of a German composer, the paint- 
ing, the sculpture, the architecture, 
or the decoration of a German art- 
ist, is appreciated, admired, and 
imitated as well by those ignorant 
of his language as by those of his ' 
own nationality. There is reason 
to believe that American taste in 
music and in art owes vastly more 
to German influence than is gener- 
ally supposed or conceded. Per- 
haps the strongest evidences of 
this would result from a critical ex- 
amination of the extent to which 
German ideas have modified, en- 
larged, beautified, and spiritualized 
our architecture, our dramatic, do- 
mestic, and ecclesiastical music, 
and all those phases of our daily 
life wherein the fine arts play a 
part. 

Among German-American archi- 
tects may be mentioned G. F. 
Himpler, a student at Berlin and 
Paris, and a thoroughly-educated 
master of his art the builder of 
fine churches in St. Louis, Detroit, 
Sandusky, Elizabeth, Rome (New 
York), Atchison, and other places; 
among historical painters, Leutz 
now dead, but whose works at 
Washington and elsewhere have 
given him a national fame Lam- 
precht and Duvenech (the latter a 
native of this country), Biermann 
and Lange ; among decorative 
painters, Thien, Ertle, and Muer ; 
among sculptors and designers, 
Schroeder, Allard, and Kloster 
the latter a very distinguished 
young artist; among German sing- 
ers, as well known here as in Ger- 



many, Wachtel, Hainamns, Licht- 
may, and Tuska ; among actors. See- 
bach, Janauschek, Taneruscheck, 
Lina Meyer, and Witt. 

But we can only hint at these 
things, and hasten on to remark, in 
passing, that our German citizens, 
even more generally and zealously 
here than in Germany, seek to pro- 
vide for and to secure the educa- 
tion of their children. " The first 
thing that a colony of German emi- 
grants settling in America seeks to 
establish is the school," said to us 
a high authority. " If they are Ca- 
tholics, or even zealous Lutherans,, 
the church is built simultaneously 
with the school ; but in every case 
the school must be set up, and the 
children must attend it at whatever 
cost to the parents." 

Thus far we have written of our 
German population as a whole. 
We now turn our attention to that 
portion of it which belongs to our- 
selves i.e., the German Catholics 
of the United States. United with 
us by the bond of faith, their wel- 
fare is especially dear to us, and in 
their spiritual and material pro- 
gress, prosperity, and happiness we 
have a deep and abiding interest. 

Prior to 1845 the German emi- 
gration to the United States had 
been numerically insignificant, and 
consisted chiefly of the peasant 
class. The revolution of 1848 had 
the effect not only of greatly in- 
creasing this emigration but of ma- 
terially changing its character. An 
official report recently made by 
Dr. Engel, Director of the Bureau 
of Statistics at Berlin, states that 
the number of Germans who emi- 
grated to the United States from 
1845 to 1876, both years inclusive, 
was 2,685,430. Dr. Engel remarks 
that a very "large proportion of 
these emigrants (considerably more 
than 1,000,000 of them) were 



378 



The German Element in the United States. 



"" strong men " ; there were few old 
or infirm people among them ; 
those of them who were not adult 
males in the vigor of their manhood 
were chiefly young and middle- 
aged women and children. A 
goodly proportion of these emi- 
grants must now be living among 
us; we know by the census of 1870 
that our German-born population 
even then numbered 1,690,410. 
The German race is hardy and 
prolific ; its women are good mo- 
thers; their thrift, industry, and 
-economical habits enable them to 
live in comfort upon modest re- 
sources ; without being teetotalers, 
they are seldom intemperate. The 
German-born and German-descend- 
ed population of the United States 
at present including in the latter 
class only those whose parents on 
both sides or on one side or the 
other were natives of Germany, 
but who were themselves born 
here is believed to be about 
5,500,000 souls. The great bulk of 
this population is in the Central, 
Western, and Northwestern States ; 
the six States of New York, Illinois, 
Ohio, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and 
Missouri contain nearly two-thirds 
of the whole number.* 

The German Empire as at pre- 
sent constituted contained at the 
latest census (1875) 42,723,242 peo- 
ple. Of these not quite one-third 
are Catholics. Had the immigra- 
tion from the states which now 
form the German Empire borne 
this proportion, we should have in 
the United States a German Catho- 
lic population of about 1,800,000 
souls. But the immigration was 
largely from the Protestant states, 
or from those in which the Protes- 
tants were in the majority. We 
should be satisfied, and more than 

* See THE CATHOLIC WORLD, July, 1877, " The 
European Exodus.' 



satisfied, when we learn that the 
German Catholics in the United 
States, according to the latest and 
most accurate computation, num- 
bered 1,237,563 souls. It is a very 
large number large enough to es- 
tablish the fact that the Catholic 
Germans arriving here have not 
lost their faith, but have preserved 
and guarded it for themselves and 
their children. These 1,237,563 
German Catholics in America are 
not mythical or hypothetical per- 
sons ; in making up the numera- 
tion care was taken to include 
only those who were known as 
practical Catholics, frequenters of 
the sacraments, careful observers 
of their duties as Catholic parents 
or Catholic children. In this con- 
nection we may add some figures 
for which we are indebted to the 
courtesy of a German priest and 
statistician, and on the accuracy 
of which our readers may depend. 
First, however, let us state, upon 
the best authority, that the church 
in America loses very few of her 
German children. We were ex- 
tremely gratified with the unani- 
mous testimony which rewarded 
our inquiries on this matter. It 
very rarely occurs that a young 
German Catholic of either sex 
strays or is stolen from the fold. 
Neither the false philosophy of 
the infidel or Protestant German 
schools, nor the seductions and 
ridicule of their infidel or Protes- 
tant American neighbors, lure them 
from the faith. We have observed 
in our own visits to the German 
churches in New York, especially 
at the early Masses, the large pro- 
portion of male adult worshippers. 
" Our old people, of course, never 
leave us," said a learned German 
priest, " and our young people 
rarely, very rarely, stray away. 
They are faithful in their duties, 



The German Element in the United States. 



379 



and they appear to love their reli- 
gion with all their hearts. When 
they marry and have children, they 
look after them as Catholic parents 
should do. Our parochial schools 
are well attended; our higher 
schools and academies are prosper- 
ous. Our teaching orders, of men 
and women, have their hands full 
of work, and they are almost with- 
out exception well supported. One 
of the bishops in a Western diocese, 
the greater part of whose flock are 
Germans, has the happiness of 
knowing that all the children of his 
people are in attendance either in 
his parochial schools or in other 
schools of which the teachers are 
Catholics." 

Our 1,237,563 German Catho- 
lics in America are ministered to 
in spiritual things by 1,373 Ger- 
man priests. They have 930 
church edifices, while there are 173 
other congregations of them regu- 
larly visited by priests, but as yet 
without church buildings. The 
whole number of Catholic priests 
in the United States, according to 
the Catholic Directory for this year, 
is 5,297, of churches 5,292, and of 
chapels and stations 2,768. Thus 
it will be seen that the German 
priests number a little more than 
one-fourth of our American eccle- 
siastical army. There is a German 
priest for every 900 German Catho- 
lics. How faithfully they dis- 
charge their duties, and how zeal- 
ously the people, on their part, as- 
sist their pastors, may be estimated 
by the fapt that the baptisms by 
these German priests last year 
numbered 71,077 an average of 
more than one each week for each 
priest; and that the number of 
children in the German parochial 
schools was 137,322 an average of 
almost exactly 100 children for 
ach priest. The following table 



will show with approximate exact- 
ness the number of German Catho- 
lic priests and German Catholic 
laymen in the various States or 
dioceses : 

Lay- 
friests. Mtett. 

New York 149 134,100 

Baltimore 103 92,700 

Pennsylvania 75 67,500 

Ohio 200 180,000 

Indiana 132 118,800 

Michigan 33 29,700 

Kentucky 43 38,700 

Wisconsin 1^3 146,700 

Kansas 13 11,700 

Illinois 135 121,500 

Missouri 80 72,000 

Minnesota 74 69,600 

Louisiana 38 34,200 

Other localities 135 120,363 

1.373 i,237,S 6 3 

The education of the juvenile 
portion of this large army of Ger- 
man-American Catholics is partly 
in the hands of the teaching orders 
of the church, male and female ; 
partly in the hands of the parish 
priests ; and partly confided to 
private instructors. The " Ger- 
man Sisters of Notre Dame," for 
example, 923 in number, in 79 con- 
gregations^ have charge of the pa- 
rochial schools and instruct 25,557 
children. They have also 15 aca- 
demies, in which 1,375 pupils are 
receiving higher education ; and n 
orphan asylums with 1,400 children. 
Another branch of the same sisters 
have their houses in 17 congrega- 
tions, and in these 63 teaching sis- 
ters are instructing 9,000 children ; 
they have also 3 academies with 
700 pupils. The German Fran- 
ciscan Sisters, in 19 congregations, 
have 53 teaching sisters educating 
5,700 children ; and one academy. 
The Sisters of the Precious Blood, 
in ii congregations, employ 17 of 
their number in teaching 900 chil- 
dren. The German Dominican Sis- 
ters, whose houses are in New 
York, Williamsburg, and Racine, 
Wisconsin ; and the Sisters of 



380 



The German Element in the United States. 



Christian Charity, at Melrose and 
elsewhere, are among the many re- 
ligious orders chiefly engaged in 
educational work among the Ger- 
man Catholics. Prince Bismarck 
has done us a very good turn with- 
out wishing it. The expulsion of 
the religious orders of men and 
women caused by the persecution 
of the church in Germany com- 
pelled these servants of God to 
seek new homes. Many of these 
orders already had houses in this 
country; driven from Germany, they 
found not merely a refuge but a 
warm welcome and abundant work 
with their brothers and sisters here. 
Others of them, not previously es- 
tablished in this country, and being 
robbed by the paternal government 
of Prussia of all their property, ar- 
rived here in poverty ; but they 
were joyfully received and speed- 
ily supplied with means for com- 
mencing their work in these new 
and inviting fields. The German 
branch of the Christian Brothers 
" Christliche Schulbruder " has 
experienced a marvellous growth, 
and is accomplishing splendid re- 
sults in the primary and higher 
education of the German Catholic 
youth.* 

* Among the Catholic colleges whose teaching 
staff is wholly or mainly German, and whose stu- 
dents are largely of German birth, we may mention 
the Redemptorist Convent and House of Studies at 
Ilchester, Maryland, which has a staff of n learned 
professors ; St. Charles Borromeo's Seminary of the 
Congregation of the Precious Blood, Carthagena, 
Ohio; St. Joseph's College, Cincinnati, conducted 
by the Brothers of the Holy Cross ; Seminary of St. 
Francis of Sales, Milwaukee ; College of St. Lau- 
rence of Brundusium, Calvary, Ohio, conducted by 
the Capuchin Fathers ; St. Vincent's Abbey of the 
Order of St. Benedict, Beatty's Station, Pennsyl- 
vania, with a staff of 25 professors ; St. Francis' 
Monastery, Loretto, Pennsylvania ; St. Francis 
Solanus' Convent of the Franciscan Fathers, Quin- 
cy, Illinois ; St. Joseph's College, conducted by the 
Franciscan Fathers, at Teutopolis, Illinois; Fran- 
ciscan College, Allegany, New York ; St. Ignatius' 
College, Buffalo ; Franciscan Collegiate Institute, 
Cleveland ; Gymnasium of the Franciscan Fathers 
at Cincinnati; St. Joseph's College, Rohnerville, 
California, under the direction of the Priests of the 
Precious Blood ; and St. John's College, conducted 
by the Benedictines, at St. Joseph, Minnesota. We 



A visit to a German Catholic 
church can scarcely fail to be in- 
teresting and profitable to an 
American Catholic. He will see 
much that is edifying and highly 
pleasing. The congregations at the 
early Masses on week-days we 
speak now only of what we have 
ourselves observed in New York 
are generally large and are com- 
posed of a fair share of men ; at all 
the Masses on Sundays the atten- 
dance is still more numerous. On 
days of obligation, other than Sun- 
days, these churches are thronged 
to their utmost capacity ; at the 
nine o'clock Mass on last Corpus 
Christi we saw the great Church of 
the Redemptorists, on Thfrd Street, 
packed from the altar rails to the 
doors, and even the spacious ves- 
tibule filled with kneeling worship- 
pers. On this occasion, as on 
many others, nearly or quite one- 
half of the congregation were men 
a fact which we emphasize, as it 
contradicts the mistaken idea that 
the faith is losing its hold upon our 
men and is mainly cherished only 
by women. There are thirteen 
German Catholic churches in this 
city. The good sense, thrift, and 
wise management of the Germans 
have borne their natural fruit in their 
churches and religious houses as 
well as elsewhere. For example, 
attached to each of the two Ca- 
puchin churches is a large, hand- 
some, and substantial convent for 
the use of the fathers and for their 
schools. We were astonished at 
the extent, the good arrangement, 
and the solidity of these edifices, 
and our astonishment was not less- 
ened when we learned that they had 
both been erected within the last 
ten years. 

may add in this place that thirteen of our sixty- 
eight American prelates are of German birth or de- 
scent. 



The German Element in the United States. 



It would be well, we think, if 
the relations between our German 
Catholics and the rest of us were 
made more close and intimate. 
The bond of faith, we know, unites 
us in all essential tilings; but it 
would be well for us to come near- 
er together in every way. Our 
German co-religionists are worthy 
of all esteem. They are already 
strong in numbers. They will con- 
stantly became stronger. The/W/ 
Mall Gazette recently contained a 
most interesting summary of a re- 
port made by Vice-Consul Kruge 
upon the subject of German emi- 
gration. We quote the following 
portion of this summary : 

"Emigration from Germany, particular- 
ly to the United States, increased steadily 
after the memorable year 1848, and as- 
sumed veiy large proportions immedi- 
ately after the chances of a war between 
Austria and Prussia in 1852 and 1853. 
The largest number of emigrants of any 
year left in summer, 1854, or after the de- 
claration of the Crimean war the Unit- 
ed States alone receiving 215,009 German 
immigrants in that year. There appears 
a considerable falling off from 1858 to 
1864, but already in 1865, when a proba- 
bility of a war between Austria and 
Prussia became more and more visible, 
the number of emigrants began to in- 
crease very much. The years from 1866 
to 1870, most likely in consequence of 
the suspicious relations between France 
and the North German Confederation, 
which ultimately brought on the war in 
1870, give very large figures. Even the 
year 1870 has the large number of 91,779 
emigrants. ' Strange to witness,' says 
Consul Kruge, 'after the close of the 
Franco-German war, when the German 
Empire had been created, and a prosper- 
ity seemed to have come over Germany 
beyond any expectation, when wages 
had been almost doubled, and when, in 
fact, everything looked in the brightest 
colors, a complete emigration fever was 
raging in all pans of Germany '; and the 
years 1871, 1872, 1873 show an almost 
alarming tendency to quit the Father- 
land. This movement would no doubt 
have continued but for the natural check 
it received through the financial and 



commercial crisis in the United States. 
There are however, at present again un- 
questionable signs that a very large emi- 
grating element is smoldering in Ger- 
many, stimulated by political and econom- 
ical e-nbroilments which will break forth 
as soon as sufficient hope and induce- 
ments offer themselves in transatlantic 
countries in the eyes of the discontented 
and desponding Germans. The general 
political aspect and the decline of German 
commerce and industry at the present 
period are, observes Consul Kruge, such 
that an emigration on a large scale must 
be the natural consequence of the ruling 
state of affairs. Among other illustra- 
tions of the causes of a desire on the part 
of the Germans to leave their native land, 
Consul Kruge mentions the religious 
' Kulturkampi,' which, he says, in its 
practical results may, at least up till now, 
be rightly termed an unsuccessful move 
on the political chessboard, and has 
been brought home by degrees to the 
Roman Catholic population in an irritat- 
ing, harassing form. Between the priests 
on the one hand and the Government on 
the other the lives of the Roman Catholic 
peasantry are made one of ' perfect tor- 
ment'; and these people naturally desire 
to leave that country where, rightly or 
wrongly, they believe their religion at- 
tacked or endangered. The relations 
between France and Germany also act 
powerfully to promote emigration, and 
the huge expenses of maintaining the 
army, besides a navy of considerable 
size, contribute to swell the emigration 
tendency of the country. Consul Kruge 
thinks that if the Australian colonies 
care to have the largest portion of the 
coming German emigration, at no time 
have they had a better chance of creating 
an extensive movement to their shores 
than at present." 

These remarks strongly confirm 
the opinions expressed by ourselves 
when writing on the same subject 
four months ago.* But when the 
wave of German emigration again 
rises to its former height, it will 
turn toward this country, as before, 
and not to Australia. Here the 
German population is already so 
large and so well-to-do that the 

* See THE CATHOLIC WORLD, August, 1877, 
"Colonization and Future Emigration." 



382 At the CIiurcJi-Door. 

new-comers will find themselves at return of moderate prosperity to 

home upon their arrival. Espe- the United States will probably 

daily will the United States be at- give the signal for the commence- 

tractive to the German Catholics; ment of the new German exodus; 

for here they will find their exiled and we are scarcely too sanguine in 

priests and nuns, already settled in believing that this return to pros- 

their new homes, with churches and perity will not be delayed much 

schools prepared for them. The longer. 



AT THE CHURCH-DOOR. 

THE city lights still glimmered in the square, 
Shivered with morning's chill the winter air, 
Scarce yet the eastern line of light broke through 
The starlit darkness of the deep skies' blue. 

Upon the sparkling snow clear shadows lay 
The moon flung eastward, as if so the day, 
Whose unseen coming seemed to fill the air, 
They yearning sought with outstretched arms of prayer. 

A sound of bells from far-off towers broke, 
The frosty silence with their pealing woke, 
And answering bells flung back across the sky 
The Christmas morning's glad, earth-echoed cry. 

Dark, muffled figures with quick, constant tread 
O'er glittering ice and snowy pathway sped 
A gathering train, crowding from lane and street, 
To lay love's homage at the Child-Christ's feet. 

A soft gleam from the church's windows fell 

Across the square, as if in peace to tell 

Of light less clouded shining pure within, 

Of peace more eloquent cleansed souls should win. 

As, with %he thronging crowd, my feet drew near 
The open doorway whence the light streamed clear, 
The accents of a language not my own 
Broke through the hurrying footsteps' monotone 



At the Church-Door. 383 

Quick-spoken words of soft Italian speech : 
So far the simple utterance seemed to reach, 
To Roman skies my dreaming thoughts it bore, 
While home's familiar walls new aspect wore. 



Seemed it almost, beneath that dark of dawn, 
As if my feet fell Roman pavement on, 
The lights that twinkled through the open door 
Burning some altar, centuries old, before, 



Whose glow, in truth, fell soft on northern fir 
O'er whose dark shadow shone the face of her, 
The lowly Mother-Maid, Lady of Grace, 
Foligno's Queen watching the holy place. 

And shrined within lay martyr-saint of Rome 

Vial and bones from ancient catacomb 

Of that far city that seemed far no more, 

Whose faith and speech met at the low church-door. 

Seeming that speech true witness of the peace 
Won years ago, when weary earth's release 
The angels chanted in the midnight sky, 
And earth's Redeemer waked with infant cry: 

He who had come the narrow bonds to break 
Of race and nation, who frail flesh did take 
That Jew and Gentile might one Father claim, 
And win all sweetness through one Brother's name. 

Scarce foreign seemed the stranger's vivid word ; 
Nay, rather was it as if so I h^ard 
The Christian speech of some old saintly age 
Claiming in faith an earlier heritage. 

Before one altar soon our knees should bend, 
In one heart's-worship soon our prayers ascend, 
Within those sacred walls our common home 
As children kneel of one true mother Rome. 



One faith was ours, one country all our own, 
Wherein all petty landmarks are o'erthrown : 
Not worshipping as Latin, Saxon, Gaul 
The children of one God who made us all. 



384 -d- Siveet Revenge. 

Ours an inheritance so full and great, 
Each lowliest handmaid clothed in royal state ; 
No heart so poor but that it throne may be 
For Heaven's King in his infinity. 

From Rome this guerdon of our faith we hold : 
What though its light o'er broken seas is rolled? 
Unfaltering it shines through storm-clouds' shade, 
Unfailing beacon ! by God's Spirit fed. 

A foreign faith ! Ay, so, of that strange land 
Whereof as citizens our free souls stand, 
Whose earthly pasture is the church's shrine 
Earth's limits lost within her realm divine. 



A SWEET REVENGE. 



CONCLUSION. 



IV. 

Ax this moment the door-handle 
was touched on the outside, and 
M. Rouviere sprang hastily from 
his chair and stationed himself 
with his back to the fire, look- 
ing very straight and stiff and ag- 
gressive. The door slowly opened 
and Mme. Dupuis entered, push- 
ing out, at the same time, the un- 
fortunate cat which was trying to 
slip in with her. 

" No, no, pussy," said the lady, 
" you got yourself turned out, and 
you must stay out. O the naughty 
men !" she exclaimed, laughingly, 
as she closed the door, " they have 
been smoking." 

" Have we been smoking ?" said 
Rouviere, sniffing. " Bless me ! I 
really believe we have ; it shows 
how absent-minded one can be. 
I hadn't perceived it, so absorbed 
were George and I in our great 
project." 



" What project ?" asked madame 
as she took off her hood and cloak. 
"Are you going to stay with us, M. 
Rouviere ?" 

" Not exactly," replied the guest, 
" but for George and me the result 
is the same. Are you good at 
guessing riddles, madame ?" 

" You are not going to take 
George away with you, are you ?" 
asked the wife, her brown eyes 
resting firmly on his. 

" With your permission, dear 
lady," answered Rouviere, bowing 
with ironical politeness. 

" No, no, it cannot be !" exclaim- 
ed Mme. Dupuis, with a forced, 
flickering smile, looking at him in- 
quiringly and speaking low and 
hurriedly. " You will think me 
very silly to take a joke so serious- 
ly, but I cannot help it. You are 
playing with my life-spring. Tell 
me I pray you tell me, dear M. 
Rouviere, that you are not going 
to take my husband away." 



Revenge. 



,85 



" I shall certainly leave his heart 
with you, my dear lady," answered 
the triumphant friend, " but it is a 
fact that I am going to carry off 
his body for a while. The long 
and the short of it is this : for some 
time past George has been meditat- 
ing a return to the land of the 
living, and he is glad to seize this 
opportunity to start at once, thus 
obviating all minor hindrances." 

Mine. Dupuis listened silently, 
her eyes cast down ; she had not 
taken a seat since her entrance into 
the room, and she continued stand- 
ing, leaning against an arm-chair 
in front of her guest. 

" It is true, then," she murmured 
when Rouviere ceased speaking. 

" Do you hear him ?" cried her 
tormentor, laughing, as a heavy 
thump was heard on the floor of 
the room above them. " The mad- 
cap ! what a row he is making up 
there with his trunk. He's drag- 
ging it about as if it were a trium- 
phal car. Come, now, madanie, you 
really ought not to feel surprised 
that, after living thirty consecutive 
years in Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte, 
a man like George . . ." 

" Do not trouble yourself to 
enter into any explanations I un- 
derstand," interrupted Mme. Du- 
puis dryly. " Where are you taking 
him ?" 

" Why, to tell the truth, my dear 
lady, everywhere ; first . . ." 

" For how long a time ?" again 
interrupted the victim. 

" How long ? Well, a year, per- 
haps, or two years ... at most. 
Ah ! my dear Mme. Dupuis, what 
pleasant hours he is preparing 
for you," continued M. Rouviere, 
who waxed each minute more 
and more vainglorious and jubi- 
lant. " How vastly will your re- 
markable collection of curiosities 
be enriched by his few months of 
VOL. xxvi. 25 



travel ! He will bring you back a 
dozen authentic reliquaries, and as 
many rosaries, blessed by the Holy 
Father himself . . . propria manu ! 
What say you to that ?" 

But Mme. Dupuis had ceased 
to listen; she had thrown herself 
into the arm-chair before her and 
was weeping bitterly. " O my 
God ! my God !" were the only 
words she spoke between her sobs. 

"Good!" growled Rouviere, 
scowling at the unhappy woman 
" the elegiac style. Come, now," hfc 
continued, making a step towards 
her and forcing himself to speak 
gently "come, now, my dear lady, 
you are not reasonable. What is 
all this crying about? A. journey. 
A journey don't kill a man ; am not 
I a proof of that ? And, good God ! 
sailors' wives what dyo they do ? 
Really, this is too bad ; you are 
placing me in a most annoying 
position, madame," suddenly chang- 
ing his gentle tone to one of vexa- 
tion. " You are rendering my mis- 
sion excessively painful." 

" Excuse me, sir," sobbed the 
stricken wife, raising her wet face 
for a moment. "You see I ... I 
can't . . ." She could not go on. 

M. Rouviere began to pace the 
room angrily ; his tactics were 
at a loss, and he found his task 
more difficult than he had an- 
ticipated ; the little "provinciate " 
did not resemble the old Indian 
vixen as much as he had imagined. 
Presently he stopped in front of the 
weeping lady. " You are doing, 
madame," said he sternly, "precise- 
ly what I was instructed to tell you 
George wishes to avoid." 

" Shall I not see him before 
he goes?" asked Madame Dupuis 
with a frightened look, half-rising 
from her seat as she spoke. 

" You shall see him, if you can 
recover your equanimity," replied 



3 86 



A Sivcct Revenge. 



Rouviere; "if you cannot, it will 
be better for you and for him not 
to meet. His resolution is not to 
be changed." 

" Oh ! I will be calm, I promise 
you," exclaimed the wife, great 
drops flowing fast down her pale 
cheeks ; " in a few minutes . . . give 
me a few minutes more ... I can- 
not ... all at once . . . O God ! 
merciful God !" Again she wept 
despairingly. 

"I am compelled to make the 
remark, madame," observed Rou- 
viere harshly, "that all this de- 
spair is quite out of proportion 
with the cause. The deuce take it ! 
I'm not carrying your husband off 
to the war." 

" No, no ; I believe that he will 
come back again," sobbed Mme. 
Dupuis, trying to wipe away her 
tears. 

" You are a pious woman, ma- 
dame, and now's the hour to show 
your piety. Religion does not 
consist in only going to church. 
You are not to think of yourself 
solely in this world." 

" But you see, M. Rouviere," 
replied the good little woman, 
making a great effort to control 
her emotion, "he's not accustom- 
ed, like you, to a life of con- 
tinual fatigue ; his health is more 
delicate than you suspect. You 
will take care of him," she added, 
suddenly seizing her enemy's right 
hand with both of hers "you will 
take care of him, will you not ?" 

"Why, certainly, madame, cer- 
tainly," answered Rouviere a 
trifle more gently ; " you may rely 
on me for that. I promise to bring 
him back to you as fresh and rosy 
as any lad in Cotentin. I give you 
my word of honor. You under- 
stand me, do you not ? But now, I 
beg you, let us have no more tears, 
especially no scene at parting." 



" I will do all you wish me to 
do." And Mme. Dr.puis forthwith 
smiled tearfully on the hard, cold 
man who had so wantonly upset 
her happiness. 

" Look," she cried presently, as 
she wiped away the last hot drops, 
" it can't be perceived that I have 
been crying." 

" That's right, madame ; that's the 
way ! I've great esteem for strong, 
single-hearted women ; for wives 
who are truly Christian and self- 
sacrificing. And now that you've 
recovered your calmness, allow me 
to repeat to you that there really 
never was any reason for such 
great grief. What is a year ? Gra- 
cious heavens ! it is nothing. You 
will probably spend six months of 
it with your daughter, and the re- 
maining six months you will pass 
here in the midst of your remem- 
brances. George wtfl not be more 
than half absent, for everything 
around you will bring him constant- 
ly before you ; you will meet him 
at every step !" 

" Take care, sir, take care !" said 
Mme. Dupuis, shaking her head at 
him with a faint smile, "lest, while 
you seek to comfort me, you in- 
crease the pain, . . . which you 
cannot understand !" 

" I beg your pardon, madame ; I 
understand it perfectly," replied 
Rouviere, an angry gleam lighting 
up his eyes for an instant, " and I 
thought that I Avas proving to you 
that I do." 

" O sir ! believe me, I wish to 
cast no reflection either on your 
intelligence or your kindness; be 
quite sure of that !" 

"Madame!" exclaimed the gen- 
tleman. 

" But there are things," continued 
Mme. Dupuis, giving at last free 
utterance to her feelings " there 
are things which are not to be 



A Sweet Revenge. 



337 



guessed. Have you thought how dif- 
ferent your life has been to ours ? 
You have been very wise ; you 
have never allowed your heart to 
be bound by any of those ties 
whose number and strength are 
only recognized when they come to 
be broken. Yes, you may well say 
that everything here, the very 
hearthstone itself, forms a part of 
our united lives, of our remem- 
brances, making our very thoughts 
the same. Everything around us 
loves us, everything is dear to us. 
. . . So, at least, I believed until 
now ! A few minutes ago how 
dearly I prized the simple objects 
this room contains all so familiar 
to us both during so many years, 
all bearing traces of our habits ; 
each one reminding us of the pro- 
jects, the pleasures, the sorrows we 
have shared together ! And now 
they are nothing to me they can 
be nothing to me but the ruins of 
a false happiness, the wrecks of a 
dream !" 

" Really, madame, you exagge- 
rate strangely," replied Rouviere 
coldly ; " admitting that this jour- 
ney throws a shade over the pre- 
sent, the past, at least, remains in- 
tact." 

" You are mistaken, sir," return- 
ed Mme. Dupuis. " This journey 
is doubtless not much in itself, but 
it answers cruelly a question which 
I have been accustomed to ask my- 
self in secret nearly all my life : 
Is George happy ? No, he was 
not happy; I alone was happy. I 
know the truth at last ! He was 
resigned " she struggled a moment 
to contain her emotion "but he 
was not happy. And yet my heart 
I feel it, I am sure of it was 
worthy of his; in every other re- 
spect I was inferior to him, and I 
felt it bitterly. What companion- 
ship could a mind like his find in 



the conversation of a poor, provin- 
cial girl, ignorant of everything, 
knowing nothing but how to love 
him ?" 

"You undervalue yourself," re- 
marked her attentive listener ; " as 
for me, I declare that the more I 
know you, the better I appreciate 
George's choice of a wife." 

" You flatter me, M. Rouviere," 
replied Mme. Dupuis, smiling ; 
" you see me unhappy, and you are 
generous. I will be so too, and 
forgive you all the pain you have 
occasioned me. ... I have hated 
you for years." 

" Me ? Impossible ! What had I 
done to deserve it ? But first tell 
me " and his voice was quite kind 
and gentle " you feel better now, 
do you not ? I don't know how it 
is, but really you look ten years 
younger !" 

" Possibly," said Mme. Dupuis, 
with a quiet smile; " I think that I 
am a little feverish so much the 
better!" 

" Come, come, cheer up ! And 
tell me, now, what painful part 
have I played in your existence ?" 

" Well, M. Rouviere," she began 
calmly, but became more and more 
excited as she went on, "I need 
scarcely tell you that every woman, 
from the very morrow of her wed- 
ding-day, finds herself in presence 
of a formidable rival her hus- 
band's unmarried life. Nor need 
I explain how difficult is the task 
to make him forget all that he has 
given up for his wife; how almost 
impossible it is to allay his regret 
for the golden age that is gone 
regret which grows stronger as 
those past days recede farther and 
farther into the distance and youth 
fades away. I, sir, soon perceived 
that your name, incessantly on his 
lips, was George's favorite symbol 
of lost pleasures the incarnation 



388 



A 



of all the illusions of by-gone years. 
In his dear thoughts you represent- 
ed liberty, adventure, and the days 
of fleeting sorrows and of infinite 
hopes ; while / I was positive life, 
paltry domestic economy, and daily 
anxiety. / was prose and you were 
poetry. It was with you then that 
I had to struggle, and I did so 
with all my strength and with all 
my soul. Alas ! it was in vain ; 
you were stronger than I. Each 
day George grew more thoughtful, 
and it seemed to me as if every 
one of those moments of sadness 
was a triumph for you. How of- 
ten have I wept secret tears over 
my defects, here, seated by this 
hearthstone, or under the willow- 
trees in our little garden ! But I 
was young then, and God took pity 
on me and gave me my daughter, 
and you were overcome. Now " 
her voice fell and she paused a 
moment "now the angel of our 
home is gone, and victory is once 
more yours." 

"Who knows?" replied Rou- 
viere, his voice strangely hoarse 
and trembling. " The last word is 
not yet spoken. You are going to 
see George. Speak to him. You 
can still prevent his journey." 

" I have promised you that I will 
not try to do so," she answered 
gently. 

" But I give you back your pro- 
mise !" cried her guest vehemently. 
" I will not be your evil genius. 
I am abrupt, madame, selfish too, 
sometimes that's a bachelor's pro- 
fession, you know ; but I am not 
bad pray, believe it." 

" I do believe it," she replied, 
looking him frankly and smilingly 
in the eyes, " but I know George. 
All my efforts would be useless ; 
they would irritate him, and noth- 
ing more. Besides, even if, by dint 
of tears, I could keep him at home, 



I would not do it now. I should 
only be adding another new and 
bitter regret to those which have 
already poisoned his life. And my 
heart would seem to reproach me 
with my victory every time that I 
saw him silent or sad. No; he 
must go !" 

" All you say is true too true," 
said Rouviere after a short pause. 
"There is nothing to reply; you 
are right. But depend on me, ma- 
dame, to shorten his absence." 

" I will depend on you ; thank 
you." She rose from her seat as 
she spoke and offered her hand to 
him. The repentant guest clasped 
it in both of his and kissed it, bow- 
ing low as he did so. At'the same 
moment a loud noise as of some- 
thing falling down the stairs, fol- 
lowed by a great confusion of 
tongues, was heard outside. 

" My God ! what is the matter?" 
exclaimed Mine. Dupuis, pale as 
death. " It is he ; I hear his 
voice !" 

She rushed towards the door, 
but before she could reach it her 
husband entered, boiling over with 
passion, and followed by Marianne. 

" You're an awkward dunce ! Be 
silent, I command you!" he shouted, 
as the maid tried to excuse herself. 
"You can't make me believe that 
you find this trunk, which has no- 
thing but a few shirts in it, too 
heavy for you to carry. The stu- 
pid creature," he continued, turn- 
ing to his wife, " actually let my 
trunk roll from the top to the bot- 
tom of the staircase !" 

" Well, the fact is," cried Mari- 
anne, " ever since you told me that 
you were going to Rome I've lost 
all strength in my arms and legs. 
I've no strength at all. Going to 
Rome, indeed ! What next?" 

" The woman is crazy," said Du- 
puis, red with indignation. " What 



A Sti'cct Revenue. 



389 



business is it of yours, I should 
like to know ?" 

" I don't say that it's my business," 
replied the maid, who was as red 
and angry as her master, " but, all 
the same, it's a queer idea to leave 
mistress here all alone, at her age 
too, while you go to Rome. You'll 
be lucky if you find her again when 
you come back. / won't answer 
for it." 

" Marianne, take care !" cried 
Dupuis, who had listened, speech- 
less with amazement, to his old ser- 
vant's impertinence. "You must 
see that I am far from pleased." 

" I'm not surprised at that," re- 
turned she ; " you're not pleased 
with others, because you're not 
pleased with yourself. That's al- 
ways the way." 

" I dismiss you from my ser- 
vice," cried her master, in a fury. 

"Go down stairs directly, Mari- 
anne," said her mistress sternly. 

" I dismiss you," repeated Du- 
puis ; " though they should be the 
last words I have to speak in my 
own house, they shall be obeyed. 
I dismiss you from my service ! It 
is your fault also, my dear Reine," 
he added when the maid had gone 
from the room ; " you allow your 
servants to be too familiar with 
you. You see the consequence. 
I hope you understand that I have 
dismissed that woman ?" 

"Yes, George," answered the 
lady gently; "I will settle her 
wages to-morrow morning, if you 
do not change your mind." 

"Change my mind!" exclaimed 
her husband. " Am I accustomed 
to change my mind every five min- 
utes ? Am I a weathercock, or do 
you deem me so weakened by age 
that I can submit to be lectured by 
my own servants?" 

" I beg you, dear, not to say an- 
other word on the subject. She 



shall go away to-morrow. But I 
want to know, George, if you have 
all you need. Let me look into 
your trunk, will you ? Men don't 
know much about wearing-apparel, 
and when one is travelling the 
merest trifle that is missing suffices 
to put one out of sorts for the 
whole day. I know that you can 
buy whatever you want, but where's 
the use when you can avoid it ? 
And then, too, I wish to make you 
think of me all the time, you gad- 
about !" 

" Do as you like, love," said 
George; " here are the keys." 

"Well, Tom," he continued, 
when the lady had closed the door 
behind her, " it seems to me that 
she received the news very well 
indeed." 

" Perfectly; do you know, George, 
your wife possesses some great quali- 
ties?" 

" I know she does," returned 
Dupuis, looking inquisitively at his 
friend's serious, almost downcast 
countenance. 

" She is shy and excessively 
timid, and that does her wrong," 
went on Rouviere. 

" I told you so, my dear friend," 
cried Dupuis eagerly. " She was 
afraid of you at dinner. Now, I 
would bet any sum that, the ice 
once broken, you hardly recog- 
nized her." 

" It is true. Under the influ- 
ence of deep emotion for I will 
not conceal that she was at first 
very much affected she found ex- 
pressions, directly from her heart, 
which astonished me." 

"She has plenty of heart, that's 
certain !" exclaimed the gratified 
husband. 

"And you may add," said his 
friend, "that she possesses a most 
refined and elevated mind." 

" I know it, Tom I know it 



390 



A Sweet Revenge. 



well !" cried Dupuis with delight. 
'' I'm not a blockhead, hey ? Do 
you suppose that I should have 
married her, if I had not known all 
that ? And if it had to be done 
again, I should do it again. I am 
not only happy in the woman I 
have chosen, Tom, but I am proud 
of her ! She has some slight defects 
I see them as well as any one 
but, bless me ! of what consequence 
is a little awkwardness, or perhaps 
a few parish prejudices, when you 
find in the same woman the most 
self-sacrificing tenderness, the most 
exquisite good sense and upright- 
ness, the most fervent and unas- 
suming piety in short, all the vir- 
tues that can captivate an honest 
man ?" 

"Ha! ha!" laughed Rouviere, 
slapping him caressingly on the 
shoulder. "An honest man there 
you are ! Well, well ! all right." 

" What do you mean ?" asked 
Dupuis, astonished. 

" I mean," replied Rouviere, 
" that the conclusion of your little 
speech is perfectly clear : thinking 
better about our journey, and esti- 
mating more coolly the value of 
the treasure that remains in the 
house, you have lost the courage to 
leave it. In short, you are about 
to let me go away alone. ... I 
can understand perfectly that it 
should be so." 

"But I swear . . ." cried Du- 
puis. 

" Say no more, say no more," in- 
terrupted his friend. " I under- 
stand it all perfectly, I tell you." 

"You wmmderstand, you mean," 
said Dupuis angrily. " I have 
never, for one moment, forgotten 
my wife's good qualities, but, were 
she ten times the saint she is, it is 
not less true that I have been liv- 
ing the life of a snail. Good hea- 
vens ! 1 shall be better able to ap- 



preciate her many virtues when no 
consciousness of intellectual degra- 
dation is present to spoil my enjoy- 
ment." 

" You are too absurd, George ! 
You make me laugh with your ' in- 
tellectual degradation.' " 

" You did not laugh half an hour 
ago," retorted Dupuis, "when you 
depicted it in colors . . . well, in 
$ colors which not even your friend- 
ship for me could soften." 

" Is it possible that you did not 
perceive that I was jesting ? How 
singular it is that there's not an in- 
telligent man in France who, if he 
is condemned to live in the pro- 
vinces, far from Paris, does not 
fancy that he is becoming idiotic ! 
I had a presentiment that you suf- 
fered from this monomania, and I 
amused myself by exciting it. I 
had been drinking, you know ; let 
that be my excuse." 

" However that may be," answer- 
ed Dupuis, a cold, stubborn ex- 
pression stealing over his face and 
fixing itself there, " I am more than 
ever resolved to travel ; if I hesi- 
tated before, I do so no longer. I 
confess that I was afraid of the ef- 
fect my intention would produce 
on my wife, but her calmness re- 
moves all my scruples." 

" Listen to me, George, I beg 
you," replied his friend earnestly : 
" don't trust too much to appearan- 
ces ; your wife affects a firmness she 
is far from feeling. I know . . ." 

" You know!" interrupted Du- 
puis. " You know that you begin 
to think that I shall be in your way, 
and so you want to cast me over." 

" No, George, no nothing of the 
kind. You don't understand me. 
I sincerely believed, from what you 
said, that you had changed your 
mind. I thought that I was an- 
ticipating your wishes in giving 
back your promise to go with me. 



A Sivect Revenge. 



391 



But if you really persist in your in- 
tentions, all right ... I am de- 
lighted." 

" Here are the horses," bawled 
Marianne, opening the door sud- 
denly and then shutting it with a 
bang. 

" That old woman would take 
my life, if she could," said Rouviere, 
laughing. " Now, then," he con- 
tinued, taking up his cloak, " let's 
gird up our loins. By the bye, I 
think I remember that you never 
can sleep in a coach." 

" I beg your pardon, I can sleep 
perfectly well." 

"So much the better. Allans! 
Bravo ! Are the horses put to, I 
wonder? Does this window look 
out upon the street ?" Rouviere 
opened the sash as he spoke, but 
closed it quickly. " What a wind ! 
It's terrible cold enough to split a 
rock ! Now I think of it, one of 
the glasses of the post-chaise is 
broken. I'm afraid you'll be fro- 
zen to death, George." 

" Don't trouble yourself about 
me," replied Dupuis, putting on his 
overcoat. "I can bear cold like a 
Laplander." 

" All right !" 

The clock at this moment struck 
nine, and Madame Dupuis entered 
the room, carrying a soft India 
shawl suspended from her arm. 
The poor lady was very pale. 

" Everything is ready," she said 
with a trembling voice, " and here 
are your keys, dear. You will see 
that I have added some few little 
things that you had forgotten. 
And here is a comforter for you. 
I've cut my old cashmere shawl in 
two, and half of it will be very 
nice to wrap round your throat; it 
is very warm." 

" How foolish of you to cut 
up your shawl !" cried Dupuis. 
" However, since 'tis done, I ac- 



cept ; but it really was very foolish 
of you." 

" Here is the other half for you, 
M. Rouviere," said madame, pre- 
senting it with a kind smile. 

"For me !" cried Rouviere, tak- 
ing it from her with respectful 
eagerness. " Thank you, thank you 
most sincerely !" 

" You will remember your pro- 
mises, will you not ?" asked the 
lady gently, fixing her eyes on his. 

Rouviere bowed and turned 
away abruptly. 

"You will write to our daugh- 
ter, George ? You will not fail ?" 

" I will write to her to both 
of you often, often," answered 
George in a husky voice, and 
pulling his travelling-cap over his 
eyes. 

" The 1 2th of January !" sudden- 
ly exclaimed Rouviere, who was 
warming his feet at the fire, while 
he examined an almanac placed on 
the chimney-piece. " Is it really the 
i2th of January to-day?" 

" It really is," replied Mine. 
Dupuis. "Why do you ask? Is 
there any particular remembrance 
attached to that date ?" 

" It is a date which interests me 
only," replied Rouviere in a tone 
of infinite sadness. " Five years 
ago this very evening, almost at 
this same hour, I was passing 
through an ordeal I shall never for- 
get. Now, George, are you ready ?" 
he added with abrupt impatience. 

" What kind of an ordeal ? What 
had happened to you? An acci- 
dent?" asked George, with intense 
interest. 

" No, not an accident, but I was 
very ill, which is always a misfor- 
tune and ill in an inn, which is 
horrible." 

" People are ill everywhere," re- 
marked Dupuis sententiously. 

" True ; but the impressions made 



392 



A Su'cct Revenge. 



on you by sickness and death vary 
according to the circumstances in 
which they surprise you; you can 
scarcely conceive how much, un- 
less you have had the experience." 

" Pshaw ! death is death under 
all circumstances ; it is- always 
equally unpleasant !" cried Dupuis. 

"Ah! you think that. ... I 
should like to have seen you . . . 
Well, I'll tell you my story. It 
happened at Peschiera, on the Lago 
di Guardia a lovely country ; we'll 
pass through it, and I'll show you 
the house. I was detained there by 
a fever of a somewhat pernicious 
character. All went on well, how- 
ever, during eight days for I was 
delirious the whole time, and knew 
nothing of what was passing till 
one fine evening, the evening of 
the 1 2th of January, when I sud- 
denly came to myself, so weak in 
body, so anxious in spirit, and at 
the same time with such an extra- 
ordinary lucidity of mind that I 
felt convinced I was at the point 
of death. I have passed through 
many bitter moments in the course 
of my life cruel moments which 
nevertheless I can think of now 
with a kind of pleasure; but when 
I recall to mind my awakening in 
that inn-chamber, a cold shiver 
runs through me; I shudder !" 

Rouviere paused as Marianne 
entered the room ; Mme. Dupuis 
signed to her imperatively not 
to interrupt, and the maid remain- 
ed standing near the door. 

" What did you see that could 
make such a fearful impression on 
you ?" asked George, moving a 
little nearer to his friend. 

"Nothing very horrible; only 
some people who were waiting for me 
to die, an old woman and a young 
doctor who were conversingtogether 
in a corner, and a priest who was 
kneeling at the foot of my bed. 



"They formed to my eye a picture 
whose accessories were the dirty, 
faded curtains of the couch on 
which I was stretched and the 
tarnished, heterogeneous furniture 
of a lodging-house. But the igno- 
ble surroundings, the preparations 
for death even, caused me no emo- 
tion ; what revolted me stirred up 
my very soul to protest was the 
neglect, the brutal lack of charity 
saving the presence of the priest 
the desolate isolation, the void of 
all human sympathy in which I re- 
alized that I was at that moment 
dying. How distinctly I can recol- 
lect the pitiful, suppliant look with 
which I gazed around me, as if try- 
ing to interlink the life 'that was 
escaping me with any, the slightest, 
earthly object; as if seeking to dis- 
cover some sign of interest, of pity 
even, in the impassible faces which 
looked so calmly on me ! My ago- 
nized heart longed for any trifle a 
picture, a vase, a chair which had 
known me, and to which I could say 
farewell. But all was strange." 

" Death never can be agree- 
able," remarked Dupuis crabbedly. 
"When the last hour is upon us 
it is dismal to be alone, I don't say 
the contrary; but I can't see that 
it is more cheerful to be surround- 
ed by a weeping family." 

" I think that you would have 
felt as / felt then," replied Rou- 
viere with melancholy gravity ; "the 
death which God has ordained for 
men the death which most men 
die, which finds consolation and 
resignation in the tears of tender 
regret shed by loving friends that 
death appeared to me, in my solita- 
ry agony, like a sweet, untroubled 
feast. ... I made many a singu- 
lar reflection that night ! But 
come, George, are you ready?" 

" When you will ; . . . but, first, 
what were your reflections ?" 



A Sweet Revenge. 



393 



" Well, to tell you the truth, I 
lost somewhat of my self-sufficien- 
cy. And then I congratulated my- 
self a little less on the path I had 
chosen for my life's journey. Why 
not say it ? The book of life 
seemed suddenly to be opened be- 
fore me, and I read on every page, 
traced by God's own hand, the 
words ' duty and sacrifice.' I had 
rejected that law. Hitherto I had 
only seen its hardships ; now I rec- 
ognized its benefits. I had avoid- 
ed its bonds that I might live in- 
dependently, and exile and isola- 
tion had been my lot. I had fan- 
cied that, by escaping the usual dull 
routine of humble duties, I should 
win for myself a happiness un- 
known pleasures inconceivable to 
the vulgar crowd. Alas ! I found 
that 1 had experienced nothing 
save a loveless youth, a solitary 
old age, and an unlamented death. 
Then, George then I understood 
what an erroneous price we pay 
for the indulgence of our selfish- 
ness." 

" Were you long in this agitated 
state ?" asked Dupuis. 

" Long enough for it to be in- 
delibly impressed on rny memory," 
replied his friend. " When the 
young physician perceived that I 
was looking at him, he arose and 
approached me, and I felt the 
touch of his hand, cold and indif- 
ferent as his heart. I pushed it 
away and closed my eyes. And 
then a vision of my father's death- 
bed flashed before me, distinct and 
clear. I saw again, grouped around 
it, the faithful friends of his youth 
our ancient servants, the old 
doctor, the white-haired priest, 
and, dearest of all, my mother, my 
good mother. They leaned over 
him, they wiped his damp brow, 
they smiled at him through their 
tears ; they had gladdened his life, 



and they were beside him now, to 
cheer and sustain him as he passed 
away ! My dried-up heart melted 
within me as I gazed on this vision 
of a scene I had long since ceased 
to recall, and I burst into tears; 
they saved me !" 

Rouviere stopped, overpowered 
by his emotion, and, covering his 
eyes with his hand, leant forward 
against the mantle-shelf. 

" These recollections are too 
painful," said Dupuis gently. 

" They are painful," replied Rou- 
viere, his voice hoarse and trem- 
' bling, " and everything I see around 
me here awakens them. Oh ! how 
alike these old houses are," he 
continued, speaking to himself and 
looking around the room. " All this 
is familiar to me. There stood my 
mother's little work-table near the 
window, just as that is I always 
found her seated at it when I came 
home for a holiday and there, in 
the chimney-corner, was the great 
arm-chair in which my father al- 
ways sat. And the family portraits 
looked down from the walls just as 
these do. There, as here, the trace 
of two lives closely entwined, never 
to be separated, was visible every- 
where. Why did I not learn by 
their example ? Why was I com- 
pelled to drag my weary, vagrant 
life, my unceasing remorse, all 
over the wide world, ere I could 
comprehend that they were happy? 
Did they know that they were hap- 
py ? I doubt it. How often I 
have heard my father speak with 
envy of the very pleasures I have 
found so hollow ! How often they 
confided to me their mutual griev- 
ances ! And yet when one went 
the other could not stay. Dear 
old father ! dearest mother!" 

" My dear friend !" whispered 
George. 

" And I," continued Rouviere, 



394 



A Sweet Revenge. 



with increasing emotion " I sold 
their home as soon as it was 
empty I had the heart to do that ! 
I sold the room where I was born ; 
I sold all our family traditions ; 
I sold the ancient, faithful friend- 
ships which seemed to adhere to 
the house and soil. I alienated my 
patrimony. ... I riveted the chain 
of egotism I was so eagerly forging. 
I did my work well ; no kind care, 
no friendly companionship will ever 
be the solace of my old age. I have 
nothing to offer in return not even 
the bribe of a legacy. I cannot 
even buy back that humble home ; 
my last days may not be sheltered 
by those walls whose very shadows 
I have learned to love. I may not 
even die there. Come ! let us go," 
he added with vehemence, dashing 
away the tears which suddenly in- 
undated his face. 

"Yes, Tom, we will go" and 
George seized his friend's hand 
" we will go, if you refuse to accept 
a brother's place by my fireside. 
And you, Reine," he said, turning 
to his wife, "dry 'your tears and 
forget this hour's ingratitude. It 
was the first ; it shall be the 
last!" 

"O George, my husband!" 
sobbed the sweet little woman as 
she gave him the kiss of pardon ; 
then, approaching Rouviere with 
gentle grace, she said softly and 
beseechingly : 

" Will not the happiness you have 
restored to us tempt you to remain 
with us ? We should be so glad to 
share it with you !" 

" Madame, dear, good friends," 
stammered the guest. . . . " O 



George ! you have caught me in the 
very snare I spread for you." 

He sank into a chair, overcome 
by his emotion, while George and 
Reine stood by him, clasping his 
hands in theirs. " Oh !" sighed he 
at last, " it is too sweet a dream for 
such a forlorn wretch as I am." 

" He will stay with us!" exclaim- 
ed Mine. Dupuis joyfully. 

"And I will go and make his 
bed in the best blue chamber," 
cried Marianne, wiping her eyes 
with her apron. The poor girl had 
been standingquietly near the door, 
an involuntary listener, during al- 
most the whole of Rouviere's con- 
fession. 

" What ! the deuce ! Marianne !" 
growled Rouviere, rising hastily 
from his seat. 

" I'm going to make your bed, 
sir !" cried Marianne, in great good- 
humor. 

" Very well, then ; but don't let 
the head be lower than the heels, 
my good creature, as you house- 
maids generally manage it. Slope 
it down gently from head to foot, 
mind you, and . . ." He stopped a 
moment, then smilingly resumed : 
" Make it as you will, Marianne ; I'm 
sure it will be first-rate. You 
see," he added, turning toward his 
hosts when Marianne had left the 
room, " how this disgusting egotism 
crops up incessantly ; . . . you must 
try to cu re me of it. Oh ! what a rest 
I'm going to have now," he ex- 
claimed as he threw himself on the 
sofa. ..." Madame, dear madame, 
will you do me a favor? I know 
what the pains of exile are by sad ex- 
perience pray, let the cat come in !" 



The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 395 



THE RECENT PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CONVENTION AND 

CONGRESS. 



THIS convention, which met in 
Boston on the 3d of October and 
continued in session for twenty 
days, was the triennial " Conven- 
tion of the Protestant Episcopal 
Church in the United States of 
America." The bishops sat in a 
house by themselves and conduct- 
ed their proceedings in secret, fol- 
lowing in this the precedent of the 
Anglican Church as well as the cus- 
tom of the Roman Catholic Church 
in its provincial and plenary coun- 
cils. The House of Deputies con- 
sisted of one hundred and eighty 
clergymen and one hundred and 
eighty laymen, representing forty- 
five dioceses, and eight clergymen 
and eight laymen representing 
eight "missionary jurisdictions." 
These sat in public, and a verba- 
tim report of their proceedings is 
before us. Among the lay dele- 
gates were several gentlemen of 
national fame the Hons. John W. 
Maynard, of Pennsylvania; Tho- 
mas A. Hendricks, of Indiana, 
the Democratic candidate for the 
Vice-Presidency at the recent elec- 
tion ; John W. Stevenson, of Ken- 
tucky ; John W. Hunter and L. 
Bradford Prince, of Long Island ; 
Gen. C. C. Augur, U. S. Army; 
Daniel R. Magruder and Mont- 
gomery Blair, of Maryland ; Rob- 
ert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts; 
General J. H. Simpson, U. S. Army; 
Hamilton Fish, Cambridge Living- 
ston, and W. A. Davies, of New 
York ; Morrison R. Waite, of Ohio ; 
and Geo. W. Thompson and Rich- 
ard Parker, of Virginia. It is not 
probable that any of the other sects 
could marshal laymen like these to 



sit in its councils. We mention 
their names because the list af- 
fords some explanation of the fact 
that the social and political influ- 
ence of the Protestant Episcopa- 
lians is vastly out of proportion 
to their numerical strength. At a 
preliminary session, the bishops 
and deputies being together, Dr. 
Williams, the Bishop of Connecti- 
cut, preached a sermon in which 
he introduced a subject that subse- 
quently occupied much of the atten- 
tion of the convention "the most 
threatening social evil of our time, 
the growing lack of sympathy be- 
tween different classes and indivi- 
duals of such classes." " To-day," 
he said, " we see great chasms 
opening everywhere because of 
this, which threatens church and 
state alike with sad disaster." And 
he added : 

" I think those chasms are more en- 
tirely unrelieved and ghastly in this 
country than in almost any other. I 
know that we have not been wont so to 
think or speak, and I know that to say 
this involves some chance of incurring 
severe displeasure ; but I fully believe 
it to be true. In most lands there are 
things I speak of things outside of 
Christian sympathies and labors that 
somewhat bridge over these threatening 
severances. There are ancient memo- 
ries ; ancestral offices and ministries 
that in their long continuance have almost 
becomebindinglaws ; relations, long en- 
during, of patronage and clientship; and 
many other things besides. With us 
we may as well face the fact those 
things have, for the most part, no exist- 
ence. The one only helping thing we 
have still apart from what was just al- 
luded to is political equality. And 
how much virtue has that shown itself 
to have in pressing exigencies and 



396 The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 



emergencies? When, all at once, in 
the late summer months, that yawning 
chasm opened at our feet which appear- 
ed to threaten nearly everything in ordi- 
nary life, how little there seemed to be 
to turn to ! There stood on either side 
contending forces in apparently irrecon- 
cilable opposition, and everywhere 
we heard the cry about rights ! rights ! 
rights ! till nothing else was heard. If 
some few voices dared to speak of du- 
ties they were lost in the angry clamor. 
And yet those voices must be heard. 
Those words about duty on the one side 
and the other must be listened to, if 
ever we are to have more than an armed 
truce between these parties a truce 
which may at any time burst out into 
desolating strife." 

Dr. Williams' remedy was, of 
course, that the Protestant Episco- 
palians should teach the people their 
duties. To do this, however, they 
must first get the hearing of the 
people. But this is just what they 
have failed to get, and will al- 
ways fail in getting certainly so 
long as they provide fine churches 
with eloquent preachers for the 
rich, and a very different order of 
preachers and churches for the 
poor. The Catholic Church, be- 
fore whose altars all distinctions of 
earthly rank and position disap- 
pear, can and does teach the peo- 
ple what their duties are, and she 
does it with effect, since her priests 
speak with authority and by virtue 
of an incontestably divine commis- 
sion two things quite unknown 
among the sects. This is what 
Rev. Hugh Thompson felt and ac- 
knowledged when, in the Episcopal 
Church Congress held in this city, 
lie said : 

" What is the worth of a church in 
this world except as a moral teacher 
except this : to get the Ten Command- 
ments kept on earth ? The church 
canons are usually busy with ques- 
tions affecting garments, gestures, pos- 
tures, and the orthodoxy of the Prayer- 
Book, but rarely do we find any moral 



legislation. There are plenty of in- 
structions to the clergy and bishops, 
and we are led to think what a wicked 
lot of people these clergy and bishops 
must be to need all these laws, and what 
a good and pious laity we must have 
when they have no need of such legisla- 
tion ! The church gives no real expres- 
sion of opinion on the complicated ques- 
tions of marriage, so that one minister 
may bless a union while another would 
not do so under any circumstances. Is 
it right that the church should evade 
such responsibilities as these? The 
church must place itself plainly on re- 
cord. The church must be to a million- 
aire and beggar the same, must demand 
equal justice for all for the railway 
president and the railway brakeman, for 
the worshipper in the gilded temple and 
in the ordinary meeting-house. Such a 
church, with the courage and fearless- 
ness and ability to tell and enforce the 
eternal truth, without fear or favor, is 
what this country is waiting for, and 
would have an influence here unequal- 
led since the days of Athanasius." 

The first two days of the con- 
vention were spent chiefly in rather 
unseemly discussions upon a pro- 
position to print fifteen hundred 
copies of Dr. Williams' sermon, to 
appoint a committee "to consider 
the importance of the practical 
principles enunciated in it," and in 
attempts to begin a debate upon 
three amendments to the constitu- 
tion proposed three years ago by 
the last convention. Much interest 
was excited by some remarks by 
the Rev. Dr. Harwood, of Connec- 
ticut, who thought that one of the 
most pressing duties of the conven- 
tion would be the invention of a 
method whereby clergymen who 
had grown tired of their work 
might be retired without incurring 
disgrace. It is curious to observe 
how the Catholic doctrine, " once a 
priest always a priest," still lingers 
among the laity of this Protestant 
body, while its clergymen, or some 
of them, seem anxious to destroy it. 
Dr. Harwood complained that al- 



The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 397 



though at present the regulations 
of his church permitted any clergy- 
man to " withdraw from the min- 
istry for causes not affecting 
his moral character," nevertheless 
" somewhat of a stigma rests upon 
the man, and people may even 
point to his children and say, 
'There go the children of a dis- 
graced clergyman.' " This state 
of things was found to be " a griev- 
ous burden "; for there were num- 
bers of good fellows who feel that 
" they are out of place in the min- 
istry of the Protestant Episcopal 
Church," and who still continue 
in that service because they fear 
to incur disgrace by leaving it. 
Dr. Harwood drew a pitiful picture 
of the condition of these unhappy 
persons: "They may have chang- 
ed their minds about some doc- 
trine ; they may believe too much 
or too little; they may be drifting 
towards a blank unbelief or to- 
wards a wretched superstition ; 
they may feel that they have mis- 
taken their calling and cannot do 
their work, for neither their hearts 
nor their minds are in it." We 
agree with Dr. Harwood that his 
church would be better off without 
such parsons ; and it is sad to re- 
cord that his proposition, looking 
towards the adoption of a cheap 
and easy, although " honorable," 
method of getting rid of them, was 
not finally successful. 

On the third day of the conven- 
tion the Rev. Dr. De Koven, of 
Wisconsin, brought forward the 
question of changing the name of 
the Protestant Episcopal Church. 
This proposition was made in the 
interest of that section of it which 
follows the Anglican ritualists. 
This section has a real or affected 
horror of the word "Protestant"; 
its members wish to persuade them- 
selves that they are Catholics and 



the wish is very natural and most 
praiseworthy but they are resolv- 
ed never to seek the reality and 
yield to the living authority of the 
Catholic Church. In order to 
avoid this submission, they set up 
the claim that they are themselves 
the Catholic Church, or rather " a 
branch " of it. To make this claim 
a little less absurd the elimination 
of the word " Protestant " would 
be advisable ; and for some time 
past, it appears, an industrious pro- 
paganda for this purpose has been 
carried on. Certain of the bishops, * 
many of the clergymen, and a num- 
ber of the journals of the Protes- 
tant Episcopalians have been en- 
listed in the proposed " reform," 
and its advocates mustered all their 
forces in the convention. Dr. De 
Koven introduced the matter by 
reading a paper adopted in the dio- 
cese of Wisconsin last June, and 
moving a resolution. The paper 
was as follows : 

" Whereas, The American branch of 
the Catholic Church universal [sic] in- 
cludes in its membership all baptized 
persons in this land ; and 

" Whereas, The various bodies of pro- 
fessing Christians, owing to her first 
legal title, do not realize that the church 
known in law as the ' Protestant Episco- 
pal Church ' is, in very deed and truth, 
the American branch of the one Catholic 
Church of God ; therefore, be it 

" Resolved, That the deputies to the 
General Convention from this diocese be 
requested to ask of the General Conven- 
tion the appointment of a constitutional 
commission, to which the question of a 
change of the legal title of the church, 
as well as similar questions, may be re- 
ferred." 

Dr. De Koven accordingly pre- 
sented a motion for the appoint- 
ment of this commission and mov- 
ed its reference to the Commit- 
tee on Constitutional Amendments. 
The absurd side of the assumptions 
made in the preamble is apparent ; 



398 The Protestant Episcopal. Convention and Congress. 



but the ridicule and scorn which 
they excite should not blind one to 
the arrogant claim therein set up. 
It is laughable to assert that a sect 
with less than 270,000 communi- 
cants, and with a history of less 
than a century, claims as its mem- 
bers all the baptized persons in the 
United States, including seven or 
eight millions of Roman Catholics; 
it is still more ludicrous to be told 
that the reason why we and all the 
other " baptized persons " do not 
recognize this sect as our mother 
the church is that up to this time 
she has chosen to call herself by a 
false name. The name the name's 
the thing wherewith to catch the 
conscience of the people ! Let us 
only call ourselves something else, 
and then "all the baptized persons 
in this land " Papists, Presbyte- 
rians, Methodists, Baptists, Mor- 
mons, and all the rest will hasten 
to exclaim, " Our long-lost mother ! 
Behold your children !" This is 
the ludicrous side of the business, 
and it is funny enough. The seri- 
ous side of it is the fact that a 
claim so arrogant should be seri- 
ously presented in a convention 
composed of respectable, and in 
some cases eminent, American gen- 
tlemen. Let us see what became 
of it. 

Dr. De Koven's motion imme- 
diately caused an animated debate. 
An attempt to get rid of it by lay- 
ing it on the table was lost ; and 
after a disorderly and heated dis- 
cussion, in which the president 
seemed occasionally to lose his 
head, the motion for reference to 
the committee was carried. On 
the eighth day of the session the 
committee, through Mr. Hamilton 
Fish, reported that it was " inexpe- 
dient to institute any commission 
to revise and amend the constitu- 
tion of the church," for the reason, 



among others, that such a commis- 
sion would be unlimited in its 
powers and might upset everything. 
On the tenth day another commit- 
tee, to whom had been " referred 
certain memorials and papers look- 
ing to a change in the legal title of 
the church," reported that such a 
change might impair the legal right 
of property in the several dioceses, 
and that it would be better to 
make no change. The two re- 
ports came up for decision on the 
twelfth day of the session, and the 
ball was opened by Dr. De Koven 
in a long and clever speech. He 
proposed the adoption of a new re- 
solution providing for the appoint- 
ment of a commission to consider 
and report upon the best method 
of " removing apparent ambigui- 
ties," and " the setting forth our 
true relations to the Anglican com- 
muniorj as well as to the whole 
Catholic Church." He drew a very 
curious and not at all a pleasant 
picture of his church as at present 
constituted. So far as the laity are 
concerned, anybody may be a lay 
member, if he " merely goes to 
church a few times a year " and 
pays money for the support of the 
minister. '' He need not be bap- 
tized; he need not be confirmed; 
he need not be a communicant. 
He may even be Jew, Turk, or in- 
fidel, if you please, provided he has 
the money qualification which makes 
up the franchise of the church-' 
Here, indeed, is a pitiable state of 
things ; a society composed of 
unbaptized persons can scarcely 
be called a Christian association. 
" Underneath it all," Dr. De Koven 
went on to say, " lies this money 
qualification. The parish elects 
its vestry, and its vestry need not 
be communicants. The vestry and 
parish elect the lay delegates to 
the diocesan convention, and they 



The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 399 



need not be communicants. The 
diocesan convention elects the lay 
members of the standing commit- 
tees, and they need not be commu- 
nicants." The truth is that the rul- 
ing laymen of the sect need not be, 
and probably are not, Christians at 
all, and that they " run the ma- 
chine " for social and political pur- 
poses, just as they would manage a 
club or a political party. If the 
laymen are of this stripe, what can 
be said of the priests ? " Like peo- 
ple, like priest," said Dr. De Koven ; 
" As you go through the land and 
witness the sorrow, the trials, the 
degradation of the parochial clergy, 
you are quite well aware that un- 
derneath all lies this simoniacal 
taint." The bishops are almost in 
.as sad a state. Their councils of 
advice are the standing commit- 
tees ; these may be composed of 
unbaptized men, and the bishops 
have no voice in their nomination ; 
and " thus you have the marvellous 
spectacle of a bishop sitting at the 
head of his diocesan synod, but 
bound by laws which that synod 
(possibly composed of non-Chris- 
tians) makes, and in the making of 
which he has had no voice what- 
ever, either of assent or dissent." 
It could scarcely be supposed, how- 
ever, that evils so great as these 
would be removed simply by a 
change of name, and Dr. De Koven 
found himself at last willing to ad- 
mit as much. He was willing, he 
said, to go on for a while longer 
with the old name, although as long 
as it was retained such evil conse- 
quences would follow. But he in- 
sisted that " the day will come when 
this church shall demand, not that 
an accident of its condition, not that 
a part of its organization, should 
represent it to the world, but that 
its immortal lineage shall represent 
it." 



The church may demand what it 
pleases, and may call itself by what- 
ever name it chooses to invent; but 
its history is written and cannot be 
changed. Men will always know 
that it is the daughter of that crea- 
ture whose father was Henry VIII. 
and whose nursing mother was 
Queen Elizabeth. A delegate from 
Illinois pleaded for the change of 
name, for the reason that he was 
tired of saying on Sundays, " I be- 
lieve in the Holy Catholic Church," 
and all the rest of the week, " I be- 
lieve in the Protestant Episcopal 
Church." Mr. Hamilton Fish de- 
clared that it was "too late to 
change the name of Protestant 
Episcopal," and that if the sect was 
not Protestant it was nothing. His 
great objection, however, was that 
if the change were made the church 
would be in danger of losing its 
property. Finally, on the thirteenth 
day of the session, the resolution 
for the appointment of the consti- 
tutional committee to consider this 
and other changes was voted down 
by a vote of 16 to 51 ; and a sepa- 
rate resolution, that no change 
should be made in the name of the 
church at present, was carried by 
an almost unanimous vote. 

The convention also touched 
upon marriage and divorce, but ra- 
ther gingerly. The House of Bi- 
shops passed a resolution repealing 
the present canon on this subject, 
and adopting the following in its 
place : 

" SFCTION. i. If any persons be joined 
together otherwise than as God's Word 
doth allow, their marriage is not lawful. 

" SEC. 2. No minister of this church 
shall solemnize matrimony in any case 
where there is a divorced wife or hus- 
band of either party still living, and 
where the divorce was obtained for some 
cause arising after marriage ; but this 
canon shall not be held to apply to the 
innocent party in a divorce for the cause 



4OO 



The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 



of adultery, or to parties once divorced 
seeking to be united again. 

" SKC. 3. If any minister of this church 
shall have reasonable cause to doubt 
whether a person desirous of being ad- 
mitted to holy baptism, or to confirma- 
tion, or to the holy communion, has 
been married otherwise than as the word 
of God and discipline of this church al- 
low, such minister, before receiving such 
person to these ordinances, shall refer 
the case to the bishop for his godly 
judgment thereupon ; provided, however, 
that no minister in any case refuse the 
sacrament to a penitent person in ex~ 
treinis. 

" SEC. 4. No minister of this church 
shall present for confirmation or admin- 
ister the holy sacraments to any person 
divorced, for any cause arising after mar- 
riage, or married again to another in 
violation of this-canon, or during the 
lifetime of such divorced wife or hus- 
band ; but this prohibition shall not ex- 
tend to the innocent party where the di- 
vorce has been for the cause of adultery, 
nor to any truly penitent person. 

" SEC. 5. Questions touching the facts of 
any case arising under this canon shall 
be referred to the bishop of the diocese, 
or, if there be a vacancy in the episcopate, 
then to some bishop designated by the 
Standing Committee, who shall thereup- 
on make enquiry by a commissionary or 
otherwise, and deliver his godly judg- 
ment in the premises. 

" SEC. 6. This canon, so far as it affixes 
penalties, does not apply to cases occur- 
ring before its taking effect, according to 
canon iv., title iv." 

From the Roman Catholic point 
of view there are at least two ob- 
jections to this canon. There is 
no authority pointed out whereby it 
may be decided what it is that 
" God's word doth allow " respect- 
ing marriage ; and the permission 
for the re-marriage of one of the 
parties in a divorce is repugnant 
to the rule of the church, and could 
not for a moment be assented to 
by any one who holds the Catholic 
and Christian doctrine of marriage. 
In the debate upon the canon it 
was urged that the second section 
could not be enforced among the 



Indians nor among the negroes ; 
and some of the clergymen objected 
to the section which provides for 
the reference of doubtful cases to 
the bishop. Especial ridicule was 
cast upon the sixth section, which, 
as one delegate expressed it, asserts 
that "the longer a man has contin- 
ued in sin the less sin he has." 
More than one clerical delegate, on 
the other hand, lifted up his voice 
in favor of " greater freedom in the 
matter," and they drew pathetic 
pictures of the sad condition of a 
woman divorced from her husband 
for incompatibility of temper, for 
example, and, under this canon, 
unable to marry again. But at 
length the canon was pas'sed. 

Our readers can scarcely be ex- 
pected to take much interest in the 
other proceedings of the conven- 
tion. There was a debate, lasting 
through several days, upon a pro- 
posed canon for the creation and 
development of orders of deacon- 
esses, or " sisterhoods," in imita- 
tion of our own societies of holy 
women. The bishops wished to 
retain strict control over these pos- 
sible organizations ; the lower 
house desired them to be left quite 
free, or subject only to the super- 
vision of the parish clergyman. 
The two houses could not agree, 
and the matter was dropped. A 
still more tedious debate arose from 
propositions for the adoption of a 
" shortened service," lay preaching, 
and the permissible use of the En- 
glish Lectionary. There was very 
little talk about dogma ; and it is 
noticeable that the quarrels be- 
tween the Ritualists and the Evan- 
gelicals were kept entirely suppress- 
ed during the convention. The 
only doctrinal breeze which animat- 
ed the gathering was caused by the 
introduction of a paper by Mr. 
Judd, of Illinois, which, on the 



The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 401 



whole, is so queer that we reproduce 
it here : 

" Whereas, A majority of the bishops of 
the Anglican communion at the Lambeth 
Conference, held in the year of our Lord 
1867, while solemnly ' professing the 
faith delivered to us in Holy Scripture, 
maintained in the primitive church and 
by the fathers of the English Reforma- 
tion,' did also ' express the deep sorrow 
with which we view the divided condi- 
tion of the flock of Christ throughout the 
world, ardently longing for the fulfilment 
of the prayer of our Lord, "that all may 
be one,'" and did furthermore 'solemn- 
ly record' and set forth the means by 
which ' that unity will be more effectual- 
ly promoted ' ; and 

" Whereas, The Lambeth declaration 
was not only signed by all the nine- 
teen American bishops then and there 
present, but the whole House of Bishops, 
at the General Convention of 1868, also 
formally resolved that they ' cordially 
united in the language and spirit ' of 
the same ; and 

" Whereas, Our fervent prayer, daily 
offered, ' that all who profess and call 
themselves Christians may hold the 
faith in unity of spirit/ cannot receive 
fulfilment unless there be a clear and 
steadfast clinging to ' the faith once for 
all delivered to the Saints' ; and 

" Whereas, The restoration of this 
'unity of spirit' in the apostolic 'bond 
of peace ' among all the Christian peo- 
ple, for which we thus daily pray, ought 
also to be the object of our most earnest 
efforts ; and 

" Whereas, This unity manifestly can- 
not be restored by the submission of 
all . other parts to any one part of the 
divided body of Christ, but must be 
reached by the glad reunion of all in 
that faith which was held by all before 
the separation of corrupt times began ; 
and 

" Whereas, The venerable documents 
in which the undisputed councils sum- 
med up the Catholic faith are not easily 
accessible to many of the clergy, and 
have never been fully set forth to our 
laity in a language ' understanded of the 
people ' ; therefore 

" Resolved, by the House of Deputies of 
the Protestant Episcopal Church in the 
United States of America, Tuat a memo- 
rial be presented to the Lambeth Confer- 
ence at its second session, expressing 
VOL. XXVI. 26 



our cordial thanks for the action of its 
first session in 1867, in which it enjoined 
upon us all the promotion of unity 'by 
maintaining the faith in its purity and 
integrity, as taught by the Holy Sci if lures, 
held by the primitive church, stitnmed vp 
in the crteds, and affirmed by the undisput- 
ed general councils' 1 ; and, in furtherance 
of the good work thus recommended 
and enjoined, we humbly request the 
said Lambeth Conference, by a joint 
commission of learned divines, or other- 
wise, to provide for the setting forth of 
an accurate and authentic version, in 
the English language, of the creeds and 
the other acts of the said undisputed 
general councils concerning the faith 
thus proclaimed by them, as the standards, 
of orthodox belief for the whole church. 
" Resolved, also, That the House of Bi- 
shops be respectfully requested to take 
order that this memorial shall be duly 
laid before the next session of the Lam- 
beth Conference by the hand of such of 
its members as may be present thereat." 

The debate on this paper was 
somewhat amusing. It was point- 
ed out that rather serious con- 
sequences might follow the gene- 
ral dissemination of " an accurate 
and authentic version, in the Eng- 
lish language, of the creeds and the 
other acts of the said undisputed 
general councils concerning the 
faith"; and the awful question was 
asked, " Who is to decide how many 
undisputed councils there have 
been?" But at last the preamble 
and resolution were adopted, and 
we congratulate our Protestant 
Episcopalian brethren upon that 
decision. Many of them clergy- 
men as well as laymen said they 
did not know what even the first 
six O3cumenical councils had de- 
cided. If they now acquire this 
knowledge, they will learn enough 
to convince them that they are 
living in heresy, and that their first 
duty is to seek for admission into 
the church. 

" The Church Congress," which 
commenced its sessions in New 
York on the 3oth of October and 



4O2 The Protestant Episcopal Convention and Congress. 



continued to sit for four days, was 
in some degree a supplement to 
the "convention." At the con- 
gress, however, nothing was to be 
done ; affairs were simply to be 
talked about. In four days much 
can be said : the papers read and 
the speeches made before the Con- 
gress will make a large volume 
when collected. A Catholic would 
arise from their perusal with a feel- 
ing of profound melancholy. He 
would see the blind leading the 
blind and tumbling into the ditch. 
In Protestantism the opinion of one 
man is as good as that of another ; 
views the most discordant may be 
expressed on the same platform, 
and there is no arbiter to pronounce 
with infallible voice what is truth. 
In the congress, for instance, seve- 
.ral of its clerical members took oc- 
casion to lavish praises upon the 
Roman Catholic Church one of 
.them declared that the true spirit 
.of the Roman Catholic Church had 
. always been " tender, true, and 
.noble"; another, a bishop, extolled 
the work of our missionaries among 
.the Indians, saying that they " had 
done the best work," and that their 
conduct was in glorious contrast 
.with that of the missionaries of the 
.sects, who acted too often like 
'" carpet-baggers." These declara- 
tions did not prevent other mem- 
bers when speaking from indulging 
in bitter denunciations of " Roman- 
.ism." Bishop Potter, at the open- 
.ing of the congress, warned the 
members that they must not expect 
.to settle anything; the only good 
to be expected from their discus- 
.sions was such as might follow the 
interchange of opinion. A discus- 
sion on church architecture was 
ended by a minister who said that 
-churches should be built wholly 
with respect to acoustics, and that 
the ideal church would be a plain 



hall where the voice of the preach- 
er could be distinctly heard. The 
question of the relation of the 
church to the state and to society 
was discussed at much length 
some of the speakers arguing for a 
union of church and state, and 
others advocating strict abstinence 
on the part of the church from all 
political affairs. Bishop Littlejohn, 
of Long Island, declared that 

" The most urgent duty of the church 
to the nation was first to vindicate its 
moral fitness to sway all in and around 
it. It should show that its charter was 
divine. It should be able to say to the 
grosser personality of the nation, 'Come 
up higher ; this is the way, walk ye in 
it.' The first duty of the church to the 
national life was to put its own house in 
order. Again, the church having ele- 
vated itself to the level whence it had a 
right to teach and authority to guide, its 
habitual attention should not be diverted 
from its great duties to society and to 
the nation. The church's best work was 
at the root and upon the sap of the so- 
cial tree of life, not with the withered 
and dead branches. It was here that the 
church was to exercise its highest func- 
tions upon society and upon the nation. 
Let it keep before it that one of its high- 
est duties was to show, both to society 
and the individual, that they did not 
derive their personality from each other, 
but from God. There was a warrant for 
such teaching, for it rested upon a theo- 
logical principle. Humanity, in the gen- 
uine whole and in the individual man, 
had its foundation in Christ, and, there- 
fore, for each there was infinite sacred- 
ness, even in Christ himself. But the 
church had instructions for society, and 
especially for American society. It had 
some teaching for those who in dreams 
and in revolutions cried out for liberty, 
equality, and fraternity. By how many 
was this cry raised, even to those who 
would have no sloping sides, no top. 
but all bottom to the social pyramid ! 
It seemed that that was a cry which the 
church might answer. Liberty, equality, 
fraternity ! The land was full of false 
idols under those names. The perver- 
sion was of man ; the movement itself 
was of God. The perversion could be 
brought about by forgetting the move- 



The "Civ lit h Cattolica " on the Fortifications of Rome. 403 



ment itself. God in Christ not only 
willed that all men should be free and 
equal, but he told them in what sense 
and how they were to become so. It 
was by the ministry of the word, not by 
the sword, not by the law, not by ab- 
stract speculation, that man was to learn 
what these things were for which he so 
thirsted. Modern society and the Gos- 
pel must be reconciled, and to do this 
there was no competent authority except 
the church." 

Bishop Littlejohn, when speaking 
of " the church," has in his mind Ins 
own body. That society can never 
accomplish the work he points out ; 



men know that it lias no authority 
to teach them, and those who speak 
in its name speak with divided and 
inconsistent voices. The church 
of God, however, can do tiiis work 
and is doing it. She has no need 
" to vindicate her moral fitness " 
or to "elevate herself to the level 
whence she has a right to teach and 
authority to guide." She had all 
this done for her eighteen hundred 
years ago, when her divine charter 
was given her. And that charter 
never has been and never will be 
revoked. 



THE CIVILTA CATTOLICA ON THE FORTIFICATIONS 

ROME. 



OF 



THERE is no European periodi- 
cal which treats of the great politi- 
cal movements of the day with more 
complete knowledge and consum- 
mate ability and sagacity than the 
Civilta Cattolica, especially in re- 
spect to all that has a bearing on 
the Roman question. In the num- 
ber of October 6 an article of 
great interest takes up the topic of 
the fortifications around Rome and 
Civita Vecchia which have been 
ordered by the Italian government, 
and casts some light on the motives 
which have induced the persons at 
the head of Victor Emanuel's ad- 
ministration to adopt this extraor- 
dinary measure. 

The pretext put forth, that it is 
necessary to protect Rome against 
armed invasion by the reactionary 
party of the clericals, is so ridicu- 
lous that it has deceived no one, 
but has excited the ridicule even 
of the Italian liberals. But one 
probable and credible reason can 
be given for an undertaking involv- 
ing such a great expenditure at a 



time when the finances of the state 
are in such a wretched condition. 
This reason is that the measure 
has been undertaken by the dicta- 
tion of Bismarck, in virtue of a se- 
cret treaty between Prussia and 
Italy, and in view of a proposed 
war of the two combined powers 
against France. The Italian king- 
dom was set up, as is well known 
to all, by Napoleon III. for the 
sake of using its alliance and em- 
ploying its military power to the 
advantage of the French Empire. 
The control of this convenient in- 
strument was, however, wrested 
from the unfortunate emperor by 
his conqueror and destroyer, Bis- 
marck, who has continued to gov- 
ern not only William and his em- 
pire, but Victor Emanuel and his 
kingdom, to the great and increas- 
ing disgust of the majority of Ital- 
ians, including a large portion even 
of the liberals. The intention of 
Bismarck to seize upon the speedi- 
est convenient opportunity of mak- 
ing a new invasion of France has 



404 Ihc "Ch'ilta Cattolica" on tJic Fortifications of Re inc. 



been too openly manifested to ad- 
mit of any doubt. The execution 
of this purpose has been delayed at 
the instance of Russia, in order to 
leave that power more free and un- 
embarrassed for its great enterprise 
of destroying the Ottoman Empire 
and taking possession of Constanti- 
nople. In the Bismarckian scheme 
the war against the Papacy and the 
Catholic Church, against France 
and Austria, is all one thing, with 
one motive and end the exaltation 
of the infidel Teutonic empire on 
the ruins of Latin Christianity and 
civilization ; and the possession of 
Constantinople by the Russians as 
the capital of another great schisma- 
tical empire, dividing with Prussia 
the hegemony of the world, har- 
monizes with this scheme, as plan- 
ned long ago by the two astute and 
powerful chancellors, Gortchakoff 
and Bismarck. 

The papers have been saying of 
late that Bismarck, whose ambitious 
mind triumphs over the shattered 
nerves and dropsical body which 
seem soon about to become the 
prey of dissolution, has been lately 
threatening Europe with a general 
war for the coming vernal equinox. 
This means, of course, that he is 
preparing an equinoctial storm of 
"blood and iron" to mark for ever 
in history the close of his own ca- 
reer as the beginning of a new Eu- 
ropean epoch. The sagacious writer 
in the Civilth considers the order for 
fortifying Rome and Civita Vecchia 
as a strong confirmation of the 
fact of a military alliance between 
the anti-Christian government of 
Italy and the Bismarckian empire, 
and of the probability of an ap- 
proaching war by the two allied 
powers against France. He pru- 
dently abstains from carrying his 
prognostics any further, wittily ob- 
serving that it would be proof of a 
scanty amount of brains if he were 



to attempt anything of the kind. 
We can easily understand that, for 
men writing and publishing in 
Florence, a certain caution and re- 
serve are necessary in the open, ex- 
plicit expression of the hopes and 
expectations which they know how 
to awaken in other minds by a sig- 
nificant silence. Nevertheless, as 
we happily enjoy more liberty of 
speech than is conceded to Italians 
when they happen to be clericals, 
we will run the risk of passing for 
a man of " scarso cervello," and 
give utterance to a few of the con- 
jectures which sprang up in our 
own mind upon reading the re- 
marks of our able contemporary. 

Both the Bismarckian 'and the 
Cavourian political fabrics are in a 
precarious condition. It is perhaps 
less desperate to undertake a haz- 
ardous enterprise on the chance of 
success than to remain quiet with 
the certainty of being swept away 
by the current of coming events. 
Nevertheless, the ruin may be 
hastened, and even directly brought 
about, by the very means which 
are used to avert the crisis, if the 
undertaking is really desperate. 
Perhaps the bete noir which harass- 
es the sleepless nights of the Prus- 
sian, which the servile Italian min- 
ister threatens upon the people 
grumbling at their excessive tax- 
ation, which the political apes of 
French radicalism pretend to dread, 
may be the nightmare of a pro- 
phetic dream. As the unhappy 
victims of a divine fate in the Greek 
tragedies accomplish the direful 
woes foretold at their birth by the 
very means used to avert them, the 
accomplices in the anti-Christian 
conspiracy may bring upon them- 
selves the catastrophe they seem to 
fear a reactionary movement in 
which they will be submerged. If 
Italy consents to incur the un- 
known risks of an alliance with 



Sonnet. 



405 



Prussia, and play the part of a sub- 
servient tool to the insane ambi- 
tion of Bismarck, one of the conse- 
quences may be that her speedily 
and falsely constructed unity will 
be shattered. Russia is at pre- 
sent too deeply engaged in her 
deadly struggle with Turkey to be 
either a formidable ally or ene- 
my to any other great power for 
some time to come, even if she 
comes off victorious in the end. 
In respect to Russia, Austria has 
now her favorable, perhaps her 
last, opportunity to secure her own 
stability and equality by a repres- 
sion of her other antagonist, Prus- 
sia. An invasion of France makes 
Austria, with her army of one million, 
the natural ally of France. There 
are urgent motives which might 
draw England into the same coali- 
tion. And what is there improba- 
ble in the conjecture that one of 
the great events in such a war 
would be the occupation of the 
Pontifical States by the allied troops, 
and the restoration of the pontifi- 
cal sovereignty? If the Pope re- 
covers his royal capital well forti- 



fied, the advantage of the fortifica- 
tions will be his, and make him 
more secure in future against law- 
less invasion of banditti. 

We are not at all certain that a 
prospective triumph of Russia bodes 
so much good to the party of anti- 
Christian revolution as many sup- 
pose. The interest, the safety 
even, of that empire requires of her 
that she should exert all her power, 
and co-operate with every other 
legitimate power exerted in Europe, 
to put down Freemasonry and re- 
store the Christian political order 
in the civilized world. It is very 
probable that when the European 
congress meets, after the present 
cycle of wars, to pacificate Europe 
and readjust the equilibrium of na- 
tions, neither Gortchakoff nor Bis- 
marck will be numbered among liv- 
ing statesmen; and that the catalogue 
of disasters by which the enemies 
of the Holy See are punished will 
be so far completed for the present 
century, as to serve a salutary pur- 
pose in warning and instructing the 
rising and coming statesmen and 
sovereigns of Christendom. 



SONNET. 

THERE is a castle of most royal state, 

Wherein no warder watches from the walls, 
Nor groom nor squire abides in court or halls : 
Silent are they, grass-grown and desolate. 

A thousand steeds a thousand knights await, 
Sleeping, all harnessed, in the marble halls 
Until the Appointed One upon them calls, 
Winding the horn that hangs beside the gate. 

Then shall the doors fly open, and the steeds 

Neigh, and the knights leap, shouting, to the selle, 
And they shall follow him and do such deeds 

All men must own him master. But the spell 
Who knows not and. uncalled, essays the horn, 
Falls at the fated doors and dies forlorn. 



The Irish Hedge-Poets. 



THE IRISH HEDGE-POETS. 



THE music of the ancient Irish 
has been preserved because no in- 
terpreter was needed to translate 
its beauties into another tongue. 
The poetry which accompanied 
the music has well-nigh perished, 
and what remains attracts but little 
attention. For this there are two 
reasons : the students of Celtic 
literature have been few, and of 
those who have endeavored to 
translate its poetry into English 
there are but one or two who have 
succeeded in any fortunate degree 
in retaining the spirit and beauty 
of the original. The best as well as 
earliest collection of Irish poetry is 
Hardiman's Minstrelsy of Ireland, 
bat it is accompanied by feeble and 
conventional translations. A lite- 
ral translation of the poetry would 
make this a most valuable collec- 
tion for the general reader ; as it 
stands, it is only of worth to those 
who can read the original Irish. 
Several other collections, smaller 
and of less value, are in existence, 
but a real and full collection of Irish 
poetry has yet to be made. We 
are aided in the present article by 
two small volumes entitled Munster 
Poetry, collected by John O'Daly, a 
well-known Dublin bookseller and 
antiquarian, and translated, the 
first series by the unfortunate James 
Clarence Mangan, and the second 
by Dr. George Sigurson. They do 
not attempt to deal with the gen- 
eral subject, but only profess to be 
a collection of popular poetry cur- 
rent in Munster from eighty to one 
hundred years ago, and composed 
by the last of the Irish bards who 
sang in their native tongue, and 
were called "hedge-poets." 

The race of bards or hedsce- 



poets whichever title may be pre- 
ferred who sang in their native 
language virtually became extinct 
at the beginning of the present 
century. The history of their lives, 
as well as most of their poetry, ex- 
ists only in tradition, and, but for a 
few incomplete collections, would 
soon vanish for ever. It is not too 
late, however, to form some picture of 
them, and the value of their poetry 
is such as to make us deeply re- 
gret that no more has been pre- 
served. And, even without intrin- 
sic merit, the national poetry of a 
people is always worth preserving. 

During the eighteenth century, 
as is well known, the Celtic Irish 
were at a very low stage of politi- 
cal fortune. The entire subjuga- 
tion of Ireland, for the time, oc- 
curred at the battle of Limerick. 
The flower of the army of Sarsfield 
followed its gallant leader to the 
plains of Mind en, and made the 
reputation of their race as soldiers 
under the French banners. Those 
who remained in Ireland were 
crushed into outward subjection. 
The tyranny of the conquerors, ex- 
asperated by the doubtful and des- 
perate struggle, placed no bounds 
to the humiliation which it endea- 
vored to inflict. The penal laws 
were cruel and barbarous beyond 
those of any nation on record. 
All intellectual as well as religious 
education was denied the Irish peo- 
ple, and it was only by stealth that 
they could gratify their thirst for 
either. 

The spirit of the Celtic popula- 
tion was crushed, but not degrad- 
ed. They were conquered, and 
were aware that another struggle- 
was hopeless for the present. None 



The Irish Hedge- Poets. 



407 



the less they preserved all their 
national feelings. The language 
of the common people in their 
daily intercourse was Irish ; their 
only pride was in Irish tradition, 
and their only poetry was in the 
same melodious tongue. This con- 
tinued long after English was the 
language used for business. It 
must not be supposed that, al- 
though the Celtic Irish were poor 
and deprived of all religious and 
political rights, they were en- 
tirely ignorant or uncultivated. 
The average Irish peasant of the 
last century was likely to have 
more learning than his English 
compeer. The hedge-schoolmas- 
ter was abroad in the land, and 
the eagerness with which Irish pea- 
sant lads sought for knowledge un- 
der difficulties was only second to 
the fervency of their religious faith 
under persecution. The educa- 
tion was not of the most valuable 
or practical cast in all particulars, 
but that it was cultivated so ear- 
nestly is the highest proof of the 
undegraded character of the peo- 
ple. The hedge-schoolmasters 
were more learned in Latin than 
in science, and taught their pupils 
to scan more assiduously than to 
add. The traditionary Irish his- 
tory, the exploits of Con of the 
Hundred Battles, and the prophe- 
cies of Columbkille were expound- 
ed more particularly than the bat- 
tles of Wolfe or Marlborough or 
the speeches of Chatham. This 
was but natural. The Irish then 
felt no share in English victories 
or interest in English literature. 
Poetry was especially a branch of 
learning in those days as it has 
never been since. The hedge- 
schoolmasters were often poets as 
well as pedagogues, and the amount 
of verse produced of one sort 
or another was enormous. Much 



of it was naturally worthless, but 
among the crowd of poetasters was 
here and there a poet who had 
the heart to feel and the tongue to 
express the woes of his country 
and the passions of his own heart 
in the language of nature. The 
hearts of the people answered them, 
and their memories treasured their 
songs. They were no longer bards 
entertained in the halls of the 
great. They were the wandering 
minstrels of the poor, but some of 
them were genuine poets whose 
power and grace were visible under 
every disadvantage. 

In considering the fragments of 
this poetry three things must be 
kept in mind : first, that it has 
been preserved mostly by oral tra- 
dition ; secondly, that it is trans- 
lated from a language whose idiom 
is especially hard to be rendered 
into English; and, thirdly, that the 
lyrical form imposes additional dif- 
ficulties in adequate rendering. 
By far the larger number of the 
productions of the hedge-poets are 
of an allegorical cast. The poet in 
a vision sees a queenly maiden, of 
exquisite beauty and grace, sitting 
lonely and weeping on some fairy 
rath by moonlight, by the side of 
some softly-flowing stream, or by 
the wall of some ruined castle of 
ancient splendor. He is at first 
confounded by her beauty. Then 
he takes courage at her distress, 
and asks whether she is Helen of 
old who caused Troy town to burn, 
or she that was the love of Fion, 
or Deirdre, for whom the sons 
of Usnach died. These are the 
three types of beauty almost inva- 
riably used. The lady replies, in 
a voice that " pierces the heart of 
the listener like a spear," that she 
is neither of these three; she is 
Kathleen ni Ullachan, or Grauine 
Maol, Roisin Dubh, the Little Black 



408 



The Irish Hedge-Poets. 



Rose, or Sheela na Guira, these 
being the figurative names for the 
female personification of Ireland. 
She laments to the poet's ear that 
her heroes brave, her Patrick Sars- 
field, her John O'Dwyer of the 
Glens, are driven across the seas, 
and that she is the desolate slave 
of the Saxon churls. Then she 
rises into a strain, half-despairing, 
half-exulting, that the heroes will 
soon return with help from the 
hosts of France and Spain ; that the 
fires of the Saxon houses shall 
light every glen, and the "sullen 
tribe of the dreary tongue " be 
driven into the sea ; that God shall 
soon be worshipped once more on 
her desolate altars, and the kingly 
hero, her noble spouse, her prince 
of war, shall once more clasp her 
to his arms and place three crowns 
upon her head. This is the out- 
line of almost every one of these 
patriotic visions, and it will be 
seen at once how beautiful was the 
conception and how capable of ex- 
hibiting the highest pathos. The 
Irish minstrels had to sing of their 
country in secret, for the ear of the 
conquering race must not hear of 
their hopes and fears. In this dis- 
guise they would give voice to their 
patriotic passion as to an earthly 
mistress, and their country's woes 
and hopes could be imparted with a 
double intensity. This personifying 
the country in the form of a beau- 
tiful and desolate woman is not pe- 
culiar to Irish poets, but seems the 
form of expression for the passion- 
ate patriotism of all oppressed 
countries. It is common to the 
Italian, the Polish, and the Servian 
poets. 

In the description of the beauty 
of the forlorn maiden one poem 
bears a great resemblance to an- 
other, and those beauties which 
are peculiar to Irish girls are her 



distinguishing features; thus, the 
long, flowing tresses, the coolun, or 
head of fair locks, is often most 
beautifully painted. 

" Her clustering, loosened tresses 

Flowed glossily, enwreathed with pearls, 
To veil her breast with kisses 

And sunny rays of golden curls " 

Sheela ni Cullenan, by Wm. Lenane. 

" Her curling tresses meet 

Her small and gentle feet. 
Her golden fleece the pride of Greece, 

Mis;ht shame those locks to greet." 

" The dew-drops flow down 

Her thick curls' golden brown. 1 ' 

The Drooping Heart, by MacColter. 

" Sunbright is the neck that her golden locks cover." 
The Cuilfhon. 

" Her hair o'er her shoulders was flowing 

In clusters all golden and glowing, 
Luxuriant and thick as in meads ar<x the grass- 
blades 

That the scythe of the mower is mowing " 
Tke Vision of Conor Sullivan. 

From these specimens it may be 
guessed that either blonde beauty 
was more common among Irish 
maidens than now, or that its rarity 
made it doubly prized. It appears 
to have been as much in demand 
as in these days, which have wit- 
nessed the grand rage for fair locks 
at the expense of bleaching-irons 
and Pactolian dye. It is only oc- 
casionally that some poet dares to 
express his preference for cean dubh 
dheelish the dear black head. 

The pure brow of wax in fairness 
and radiance is not forgotten : 

" Whose brow is more fair than the silver bright ; 
Oh ! 'twould shed a ray of beauteous light 
In the darkest glen of mists of the south." 

The Melodious Little Cuckoo. 

Narrow eyebrows finely arched 
were a peculiar mark of distinction. 
For the eyes there is almost a 
whole new nomenclature of com- 
parison and compliment. The pe- 
culiar and most often repeated 
color is "green," which is the un- 
compromising English translation 
of the delicate Irish epithet which 
means 



The Irish Hedge-Poets. 



409 



" The grayest of things blue. 
The greenest of things gray " 

that shade of the most beautiful 
and brilliant eyes well known to 
Spanish as well as Irish poets, and 
which Longfellow and Swinburne 
have not hesitated to describe by 
the naked and imperfect English 
adjective. This is the way in 
which one of these ignorant min- 
strels expresses what he means, and 
renders it with a new grace: 

11 1 gave you oh ! I gave you I gave you my whole 

love ; 
On the festival of Mary my poor heart you stole, 

love, 
With your soft green eyes like dew-drops on corn 

that is springing, 
With the music of your red lips like sweet starlings 

singing." 

Fair Mary Barry. 

A beautiful and apt comparison 
for the sweet, rosy bloom, nowhere 
found in such perfect charm as in 
Ireland, was the apple blossom and 
the berry. 

" On her cheek the crimson berry 
Lay in the lily's bosom wan." 

Slieela ni Cullenan. 

" The bloom on thy cheek shames the apple's soft 
blossom." 

Among the finest and most delicate 
comparisons, however, is this : 

" Like crimson rays of sunset streaming 
O'er sunny lilies her bright cheeks shone." 

The fair one's bosom is declared 
to be like to the breast of the sailing 
swan, to the thorn blossoms, to the 
snow, to the summer cloud, in a va- 
riety of beautiful expressions : 

" Her bosom's pearly light 

Than summer clouds more bright. 

More pure its glow than falling snow 
Or swan of plumage white." 

Beside the Lte, by Michael O'Longen. 

" Her breast has the whiteness 
That thorn-blossoms bore." 

Her hands are pure and white as 
the snow, and never without being 
accomplished in the art of embroi- 
dery. There is scarcely a poem in 



the whole collection in which the 
skill of the heroine in this particu- 
lar is not mentioned. She does 
not play upon the harp. That was 
a manly profession. Embroidery 
was the fashionable accomplish- 
ment for Irish ladies, and the maid- 
en who typified Ireland must be 
pre-eminent in it. 

" Her soft, queenly fingers 

Are skilful as fair, 
While she gracefully lingers 

O'er broideries rare. 
The swan and the heath-hen, 

Bird, blossom, and leaf, 
Are shaped by this sweet maid 
Who left me in grief." 

The voice was that of the thrush 
singing farewell to the setting sun, 
the cuckoo in the glen, or the lark 
high in air. Bird-voiced was the 
universal epithet. The branch of 
bloom, the bough of apple-blos- 
soms, was the whole lovely creature. 

Such were the beauties and ac- 
complishments of the heroines of 
the hedge-poets, largely, doubtless, 
derived from the earlier bards, but 
often exclusively their own. They 
were chiefly applied to the ideal fig- 
ure who represented in her beauty 
and her sorrow their forlorn country, 
but sometimes to the earthly mis- 
tress of flesh and blood whose 
smiles they sought. Seldom any- 
thing so natural and so delicate is 
to be found in any national poetry. 
The false and artificial compliments 
of English amatory poetry, equally 
with the overstrained comparisons 
of Oriental verse, seem tasteless 
and tawdry beside these simple 
blossoms of nature. They give 
out health and perfume, while the 
English love-songs are like wax, 
and the gorgeous verse of the East 
is, like its vegetation, magnificent 
but often odorless. 

Those poems which we have de- 
scribed form much the larger por- 
tion of the remains of the hedge- 



The Irish Hedge-Poets. 



poets ; but there are others, devot- 
ed purely to love, to satire, and 
to lamentation. There are some 
which are a sort of dialogue and 
courtship in rhyme. The min- 
strel " soothers " the damsel with 
all the arts of his flattering tongue. 
He calls her by every sweet name 
he can think of; tells how deep is his 
passion and how renowned he will 
make her by his verse. The rustic 
coquette replies with a recapitula- 
tion of all his faults and failings, 
his poverty, his fondness for drink, 
his disgrace with all his relations, 
and his general unfitness for the 
yoke of matrimony, and then very 
often yields to his flattery and 
goes away with him; or else she 
listens to his string of endearments 
without a word, and then dismisses 
him with stinging contempt. Some- 
times the bard sits down in sorrow, 
generally in a tap- room over an 
empty glass, and details the charms 
of the fair one who has wrought 
his woe ; or sometimes, though rare- 
ly, it is one of the opposite sex, 
who has been driven from home by 
the curses of her kindred, and, sit- 
ting by the roadside, tells her tale 
of woe or despair. Such cases, 
however, are infrequent, and the 
general purity of both theme and 
verse is worthy of all praise. The 
number of lamentations is much 
less than would naturally be ex- 
pected among a people whose ve- 
hemence of grief is noted, and 
where the keener s extemporane- 
ous mourning reached such a 
height of impassioned eloquence. 
From whatever reason, but few ap- 
pear to have been preserved. 
Those that are, however," are char- 
acterized by profound strength and 
pathos. The keen of Felix Mac- 
Carthy for his children is one of 
the saddest lamentations ever put 
into verse. It is entirely too long 



for quotation, but these two verses, 
describing the mother's appearance 
and grief, will show something of 
its genuineness and power : 

" Woe is me ! her dreary pall, 
Who royal fondness gave to all, 
Whose heart gave milk and love to each 
Woe is me ! her 'plaining speech " 

" Woe is me ! her hands now weak 
With smiting her white palms so meek. 
Wet her eyes at noon, and broken 
Her true heart with grief unspoken." 

A lament for Kilcash, or rather for 
its patroness, is also very powerful. 
The romantic love-tales are few 
in comparison with the number 
among the Irish street-ballads of 
to-day. The rich young nobleman 
who falls in love with the pretty 
girl milking her cow, and' the fair 
lady of great estate who picks out 
her lover from the tall young men 
in her own service, make but few 
appearances. The only ballad of 
this kind in the collection is not 
after the usual pattern. The heir 
to "land and long towers white" 
certainly falls in love with a rustic 
maiden, but, instead of flying with 
him on his roan steed and becom- 
ing mistress of his castle, she tells 
him with great prudence that he 
will find other maidens better suit- 
ed to his degree : 

" I'm not used at my mother's to sit with hosts, 
I'm not used at the board to have wines and toasts, 
I'm not used to dance-halls with music bold, 
Nor to couches a third of them red with gold." 

And, in spile of his fervent and elo- 
quent protestations, she refuses to go 
with him. 

Such are the themes and charac- 
teristics of the last age of Celtic 
poetry in Ireland. If we have 
failed to show that the minstrels 
who sang in such poverty and op- 
pression had natural genius of a 
high order, we have not accom- 
plished our purpose. We think 
that true poetry is visible in almost 
all that remains of their produc- 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



411 



lions. Like all sectional and class 
poets, they resembled each other 
very much. The same species of 
imagery, the same terms of thought 
and peculiar epithets, were common 
to them as to the Troubadours, the 
Scandinavian minstrels, and to all 
other classes of poets singing to a 
confined audience and having little 
or no acquaintance with other 
forms of poetry. It is through 
them alone that the voice of the 



Irish people of their day can be 
heard. All other forms of the ex- 
pression of the oppressed race have 
perished. In the music and poet- 
ry of Ireland is made manifest, so 
that the dullest ear cannot mistake 
it, the sorrow of a nation in bond- 
age, tinging all mirth, all hope, and 
all love with an indefinable ca- 
dence of melancholy as plainly as 
in the real outbursts of lamentation 
and despairing cries of woe. 



RELIGION ON THE EAST COAST OF AFRICA. 



THE marvellous success of the 
indomitable Stanley has attracted 
the attention of all to Africa, that 
region of mystery, marvel, and ma- 
laria. The Catholic would natur- 
ally learn something of the work of 
the church in that continent, and of 
the religious condition of its popu- 
lation. But the subject is too vast 
for anything less than a large vol- 
ume, and it will be more profitable 
to confine our attention to the do- 
minions of the Sultan of Zanzibar. 
This region has a double interest. 
Zanzibar is the starting-point of al- 
most every Central African expedi- 
tion. Thence Livingstone, Speke 
and Grant, Cameron, and Stanley on 
two occasions, have struck into the 
interior and made valuable dis- 
coveries. It is also the old centre 
of the East African slave-trade, 
which, though it has received a se- 
vere check, is not yet abolished. 
Moreover, Zanzibar is a microcosm 
a little world in itself. There one 
meets with the Arab, the Hindoo, 
the Persian, the Malagashi, the Ban- 
ian, the Goa Portuguese, the ne- 
gro, and the European. 

The most important portion of 



the Sultan of Zanzibar's territory is 
the islands of which Zanzibar is the 
chief. The name was once applied 
to the whole coast, and it is proba- 
ble that that must have been the 
meaning of Marco Polo when he says 
(on hearsay evidence) that the isl- 
and of Zanzibar is two thousand 
miles round. The term is suppos- 
ed to signify the " Land of the 
Blacks." The island is in about 6 
south latitude, 48 miles long by 18 
broad. It is separated from the 
mainland by a strait only 20 miles 
in breadth. As one approaches 
Zanzibar from the north the coast 
appears bare, rocky, and surround- 
ed by low cliffs. Here dwell some 
wild people, almost completely cut 
off from the more civilized portion of 
the inhabitants, and following de- 
basing and degrading superstitions. 
But as we sail southwards, between 
the island and the main, the shore 
becomes low and flat, the beach cov- 
ered with sand of silvery whiteness, 
and the whole backed by rising 
ground not more than 300 feet 
high, on which grow in rich abun- 
dance cocoanut and other feathery- 
leaved palms. Soft breezes, laden 



412 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



with s\veet odors from the groves 
of spice-trees, blow from the shore. 
The island is rich in fruits ; man- 
gos, oranges, limes, pummalos or 
shaddock, pineapples, ' jack-fruit, 
guavas, bananas, and cashew 
abound. But about four years ago 
a hurricane visited Zanzibar for 
the first time ; almost all the dhows 
in the harbor were wrecked, many 
lives were lost, and the greater part 
of the trees were destroyed. On 
one estate known to the writer only 
four per cent, of the trees remained 
standing, and the ground, strewn 
with palms, was a lamentable sight. 

At the entrance of Zanzibar har- 
bor are several beautiful islands of 
emerald green. One of these, call- 
ed French Island, is used as a bur- 
ial-place for Europeans, and many 
wooden crosses and boards mark 
the last resting-place of seamen of 
the British navy, cut down by the 
fever which is so fatal on this coast. 
The heat is not excessive, seldom 
rising to 90, but there is a feeling 
of depression in the atmosphere, 
and a short residence in this clim- 
ate serves to take the energy out of 
most people. 

Now we arrive at the city of 
Zanzibar, the most important place 
in East Africa. Its name, in the 
native language, is Unguja. For 
miles before reaching the city we 
have seen large white, square build- 
ings close to the shore the country 
residences of wealthy Arabs. The 
appearance is very pleasing, and so 
is that of the city from the sea, as 
similar houses stand near it. These 
are the English, French, American, 
and German consulates, over which 
wave the flags of their respective 
nations; also the sultan's palace, 
the custom-house, and residences of 
rich Arabs and Hindoos. They 
are built of coral covered with the 
whitest plaster, only relieved by regu- 



lar rows of windows, the brightness 
reflected from these houses being al- 
most blinding. But on entering 
the town you cease to wonder at 
the bad name it has earned. With 
scarcely an exception Zanzibar is a 
heap of rubbish ; the narrow lanes, 
or paths which do duty for streets, 
are surrounded by low hovels form- 
ed of earth plastered over wooden 
frames, roofed with palm-leaves, 
and possessing no means of ventila- 
tion but the doorway, the interior 
being consequently dark, stifling, 
and filthy. Many buildings have 
been allowed to go to utter ruin, 
and the very mosques are hardly 
presentable. But the bazaars form 
the sight of the city. They are, 
perhaps, a little wider than the 
other thoroughfares, and the fronts 
of the houses are occupied by small 
stalls, on which are piled articles 
the most incongruous soap, fish, 
plantains, cotton goods, medicine, 
oil, etc. In the midst is seated, 
cross-legged, a fat old Banian, 
stripped to the waist, with his naked 
foot in a basket of grain, or a pret- 
ty dark-eyed girl with a ring in her 
nose. The market produce of all 
kinds is heaped on the ground 
without any attempt at order, and, 
as every one present is screaming at 
the top of his voice in his own lan- 
guage, the Babel of tongues is com- 
plete. 

The government is in the hands 
of the Arabs. This people have 
from time immemorial had trading- 
stations on the coast, but Vasco da 
Gama doubled the Cape of Good 
Hope in 1499, and the Portuguese 
soon superseded the Arabs and 
held the coast for a couple of hun- 
dred years, when the Arabs suc- 
ceeded in dislodging them, and 
they are now confined to Mozam- 
bique and Quilimane, at the mouth 
of the Zambesi. 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



413 



Remains of Portuguese forts are 
scattered up and down the shores of 
the mainland, and the writer assist- 
ed once in whitewashing Vasco da 
Gama's column at Melinda, which 
makes an excellent harbor mark. 
Near the fort at Zanzibar nume- 
rous Portuguese cannon, cast in a 
European arsenal in the present 
century, lie on the ground, a proud 
trophy for the Arabs and a humi- 
liating spectacle for Europeans. 
Fifty years ago Sayid Said, the 
Imatim of Muscat, visited Zanzibar 
and fixed his residence there. At 
his death one of his sons succeeded 
to his African and another to his 
Arabian possessions, the former pay- 
ing an annual tax of forty thousand 
dollars to the Imaum. Sayid Bar- 
ghash, the present sultan, succeed- 
ed his brother Sayid Majid seven 
years ago. He had previously been 
exiled to Bombay at the instance of 
the English, whose protigt Majid 
was. His policy has been one of 
economy and retrenchment. Though 
the government may be called an 
absolute monarchy, yet it answers 
rather to the old feudal constitu- 
tions of Europe in the middle ages, 
the sultan being checked by mem- 
bers of his own and other powerful 
families. 

The Arab statute-book is the 
Koran interpreted by what may be 
called the priesthood. But witch- 
craft is a great power, not only 
with the heathen but also with 
Mahometans, in Africa, and, after 
consulting his sheiks and sherifs, 
the sultan often has recourse to 
the heathen Mganga. One is re- 
minded of the Witch of Endor, Pha- 
rap's magicians, and many of the 
old superstitions which we find 
recorded in the ancient Hebrew 
Scriptures. 

The population of the city may 
be one hundred thousand, and that 



of the remainder of the island ra- 
ther more ; but one cannot decide 
this with any accuracy, as it is 
against Moslem principles to take a 
census. Who are they to count the 
favors of God ? Of the mongrel 
population of Zanzibar the Arab is 
the dominant race, though there 
are few, if any, pure Arabs some- 
times that name being applied to a 
man as black as a negro. But the 
better class of them are fine, hand-' 
some men, splendidly dressed, and 
very dignified and self-possessed. 
They are ignorant, however, big- 
oted, supercilious, and licentious. 
They are also very indolent and 
have few redeeming features. Low- 
er classes of Arabs there are, who 
are soldiers, sailors, traders, and so 
on, and from them are drawn the 
villains who carry on the iniquitous 
slave-traffic. 

There are about seven thousand 
British subjects Banians and oth- 
er Indian peoples. The commerce 
of the East African coast is chief- 
ly in their hands, and they are the 
bankers and represent the moneyed 
interest. Those owning slaves are 
in danger of losing them, if the 
British consul discover the fact ; 
but it is hardly possible for them 
not to trade in slaves, as they are 
always sold with landed properties, 
and without them labor could hard- 
ly be obtained. 

Most of the army, which numbers 
nine hundred, is composed of Be- 
looches, who are a motley set of 
rascals, brutal, lazy, and cowardly. 
But somehow they contrive to live, 
and arm themselves too, on three 
dollars a month, and seem to be 
pretty prosperous. The artillery- 
men are Persians tall, handsome 
men with black moustaches, high 
black sheepskin caps, green tunics, 
and loose trowsers. But their bat- 
tery, which is full of small brass 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



and iron guns overlooking the sea, 
is a poor affair, ridiculous from a 
military point of vie\v, and better 
adapted for firing salutes than for 
purposes of warfare. 

There are about two thousand 
men from the Comoro Islands, but 
no one seems to have anything good 
to say of them. 

The mass of the population is 
composed of blacks from the east 
coast. These are almost entirely 
slaves, and are made to work for 
the support of the lazy Arabs. A 
person acquainted with the country 
easily distinguishes members of the 
different tribes from each other; 
they may be , known by the tribe 
marks mostly punctures in the 
forehead and by their general ap- 
pearance. The slaves are capable 
of much endurance; the writer once 
paid thirty or forty slave women 
eight cents each for a day's work, 
which consisted of walking thirty 
miles, carrying weights on their 
heads half the way. They did not 
seem at all exhausted after this ar- 
duous task. Great cruelties are 
perpetrated in the capture of the 
slaves and in conveying them to 
Zanzibar, but, as a rule, they are 
treated fairly enough when once 
they are received into a family, be- 
ing allowed one day a week to work 
for themselves, besides other extra 
time. 

There are only sixty or seventy 
white people American, English, 
Scotch, French, and German but 
without them the commerce of the 
place would collapse. The chief 
exports are spices, ivory, ebony, 
cocoanuts, and gum-copal. The 
imports are cotton fabrics, pocket- 
handkerchiefs of bright colors, 
crockery, etc. 

The climate of Zanzibar is health- 
ierthan that of the mainland, though 
it is quite bad enough ; the won- 



der is that any one can live there. 
The city lies very low, almost sur- 
rounded by a shallow lagoon, over 
which the water flows at every tide, 
leaving a deposit of reeking filth. 
No attempt at drainage has been 
made ; sanitary reform is totally 
unknown ; and the smell of the 
beach caused Livingstone to sug- 
gest that the name should be 
changed to Stinkibar. The year 
before the great hurricane there was 
a cholera epidemic which is sup- 
posed to have killed ten thousand 
people. Strangely enough, the 
Europeans, who mostly suffer much 
from fevers, were totally exempt, 
and the natives got the notion that 
the devil, who gave them' the cho- 
lera, was afraid to attack the re- 
doubtable Myungoo ; so they some- 
times whitewashed a man who 
showed symptoms of the disease, to 
cheat the devil, but the devil refus- 
ed to be cheated so easily. The 
physical is far superior, however, 
to the moral condition of Zanzibar; 
in fact, the place is a Sodom where 
morality is unknown. 

To arrive at an idea of the reli- 
gious condition of the peoples it is 
necessary to consider each race sepa- 
rately, and try to understand their 
habits and modes of thought. First 
let us take the negro the most nu- 
merous class. Even so we shall be 
generalizing for the different tribes 
and nations of the interior, as dis- 
tinct from each other and the races 
of Europe. 

The writer has had considerable 
opportunities of judging of the 
black man, having served in a 
British man-of-war engaged in the 
suppression of the slave-trade, and 
having for some time been in charge 
of an establishment of liberated 
slaves mostly boys. The negro 
character is a strange series of con- 
tradictions, and it takes some dire 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



415 



to understand him. He is pro- 
foundly conscious of his inferiority. 
An English officer adopted a little 
slave boy taken from a dhow, and 
we taught him a few elements of 
religion, which he eagerly grasped. 
Amongst others he was much 
struck by the idea of a future 
state. One day he was being chaff- 
ed : " Ah ! you nigger thick lips 
flat nose," when he replied : " If 
I'm a good nigger, after I die I 
shall get up again, not black then, 
but white as you are." It was a 
long time, though, before he could 
believe that a negro could rise 
again, though it did not seem un- 
reasonable to him for an Arab or 
white man to rise. 

Passing with this same boy, 
Mumbo, through a graveyard at 
Zanzibar, he pointed to a grave. 
"Who's there?" he said. "Arab 
man," I answered, recognizing it 
to be so from the concrete with 
which the grave was covered. 
" He get up again ?" " Yes," I re- 
plied, after which the boy was 
thoughtful and silent for a while. 
" Who's buried there ?" he repeat- 
ed, pointing to a grave marked by 
a wooden cross. "A Msungu " 
(white man), I answered. " He 



get up again : 



Yes." Another 



pause. "And who's there ?" the boy 
again asked, pointing to a mean 
grave unmarked by cross or stone. 
" A nigger man," said I. " He get 
up again ?" But on replying in the 
affirmative he would not believe it, 
and continued obstinately sceptical 
for some time. 

Selfishness seems to be the most 
prominent feature of the negro 
character. Civilized people mask 
the repulsive feeling, but not so the 
black. Everything is for himself 
and his own present sensual grati- 
fication. They have not a particle 
of gratitude, and if you show them 



kindness or give them a present it 
is considered a sign of weakness, 
and their contempt for their bene- 
factor is apparent. There is no 
word expressive of thanks in the 
Svvahili language, though the 
" Santa " of the Arab, accompanied 
by a bow, the right hand placed on 
the heart, is most graceful and 
pleasing. On taking charge of the 
boys' house, in the benevolence of 
my heart I invested in numbers of 
stalks of bananas a large one can 
be obtained for eight cents and 
distributed them. But no word of 
thinks was heard, and the boys be- 
gan to consider fruit as a right, and 
to grumble if it were not forth- 
coming ; so I grew rather disgust- 
ed and discontinued scattering lar- 
gesse amidst such a graceless set. 
Neither do they show much affec- 
tion. This, perhaps, is hardly to be 
wondered at, as the slave-traffic, 
which has existed from time imme- 
morial, must, by constantly separat- 
ing families, have weakened and al- 
most destroyed all ties of kindred. 
A gentleman well acquainted with 
the people told me that the only 
known affection amongst them was 
that between a son and his mother. 
Several slave boys whom we had 
liberated and kept on board the 
ship, on our leaving the coast were 
wisely sent on shore to the mission, 
only the one of whom I have 
previously spoken remaining. He 
wept piteously and sobbed himself 
to sleep. We were touched, and 
fancied that, after all, we had formed 
too low an estimate of the negro, 
till on waking he appeared to have 
completely forgotten his friends, and 
never spoke of them again. It then 
appeared that his grief had been 
purely selfish ; for, as he phrased it, 
he would have no one " to skylark 
with." " What will you give me ?" 
is the view a negro takes of his 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



neighbor, and in this the Ki-S\vahili, 
and even the Arab, very much re- 
semble him. One's ear soon 
grows familiar with the cry of 
" Lata paca ""Bring pice "pice 
being little Indian copper coins 
which form the currency at Zanzi- 
bar. This question is asked you 
in the streets or country roads, not 
merely by the poor, but even by 
well-to-do people. I was one day 
walking home from a feast to which 
I had been invited by the proprietor 
of a sugar plantation a S wahili man. 
These people are mulattoes, partly 
Arab, but mostly negro. They are 
Mahometans and call themselves 
Arabs. We had been hospitably 
feted, and I was accompanied by a 
brother of my host, a nice-looking 
young fellow, upright as a dart as 
they all are and dressed in the 
graceful long white linen robe which 
they always wear. He was proceed- 
ing to his home, a well-built stone 
house, but before leaving me I was as- 
tonished at his asking in Swahili for 
a few pice ! Doubting my ears, I ask- 
ed a boy who understood English 
what he had said, and he told me 
that I had not mistaken his mean- 
ing ; so I gave him two or three 
coppers, and he went away well 
pleased. 

Negroes are very improvident, 
like most, savage races. They take 
no thought for the morrow not 
from faith, but from utter reckless- 
ness. They are also fond of deser- 
tion for the mere sake of change. 
Slaves sometimes leave their mas- 
ters and hire themselves out for a 
year or two to some one else, re- 
turning afterwards as if nothing had 
happened, and receiving no punish- 
ment, the master fearing that he 
might revenge himself on him or 
desert again, and also arguing that 
it is his nature and that no better 
can be expected of him. I was 



once on a shooting party in the 
Kingani River, and placing one of 
the boats in charge of a quarter- 
master, left with him a Seedee boy, 
or black seaman, to clean the jaws 
of a hippopotamus that I had shot 
on the previous day. I went up 
the river in the other boat with the 
remaining seamen for a day's shoot- 
ing, and on my return in the even- 
ing was informed that the black 
had decamped, and we never saw 
any more of him. In the ship he 
was receiving about four times as 
much pay as he could possibly earn 
elsewhere, and, in addition to this, 
he left clothes and money behind. 
Yet we afterwards learnt that be- 
fore leaving the vessel he had told 
his friends of his intention to run. 

The negro is, in Africa as else- 
where, exceedingly indolent, and, 
nature having provided him with 
abundance of the necessaries of life, 
he indulges his laziness to the full 
when he possibly can that is, in 
his native country or at Zanzibar, 
if he can manage to possess a few 
slaves to work for him. 

He is also obstinate and head- 
strong. Going on shore on the 
beautiful island of Pemba, north of 
Zanzibar, to trade for provisions, 
they were uniformly refused us, 
whatever price we offered. Yet 
next day the natives brought the 
things to the ship, some miles from 
the shore, and offered them for sale. 
A little bit of a boy was so obstinate 
that he would not obey orders un- 
less he chose, even if thrashed with 
a rhinoceros-hide whip ; neither did 
he flinch nor utter a cry under 
punishment. But when he left the 
ship, where he had been petted by 
the sailors, being sent to the French 
Mission, he "was so disgusted that 
the first thing he did was to roll on 
the beach and completely destroy 
his new clothes, and the missionaries 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



417 



were compelled to restore him his 
old sailor costume. Still he sulked, 
and when I left they had not man- 
aged to get him to speak. 

Negroes are subject to sudden 
fits of fury almost amounting to 
madness, and then they cry, shout, 
vociferate, and argue in the most 
ridiculous manner. They love to 
eat and are very greedy, but are still 
more fond of drinking, and in their 
own country begin the day by copi- 
ous potations of beer. However, 
at Zanzibar drunkenness would be 
punished by imprisonment ; and 
that is no trifle, the prisoners being 
placed in a yard enclosed by four 
walls, and receiving no food, unless 
they have a friend to bring them 
some. They are also exceedingly 
depraved, and, when brought into 
contact with the semi-civilization 
of the coast, they become, if any- 
thing, worse than before- A 
stranger is astonished at the cool 
manner in which they enter a 
strange house, if they see the door 
open. They place their spear in a 
corner, set themselves in the best 
place, and talk till they are tired 
(they are especially fond of hearing 
themselves talk), when they rise 
and leave. It is no good trying to 
exclude them ; their curiosity must 
be satisfied, and they insist on see- 
ing and learning about everything 
examining and handling your 
clothes and asking the value of each 
article. 

Negroes have the redeeming fea- 
ture of being mostly good-temper- 
ed and pleased by a very little. 
They delight in a joke, yet their 
wit is of the most elementary char- 
acter. They are exceedingly fond 
of music ; neither does its unvaried 
monotony pall on them. I once 
passed an old man amusing him- 
self by drumming with two sticks 
on a plank; returning after some 
VOL. xxvi. 27 



hours, I found him continuing the 
performance, which he had evident- 
ly kept up all the time. You will 
see them on a moonlight night, or 
even in the daytime, dancing and 
flinging their limbs about in the 
most ridiculous and imgraceful 
manner to the tune of tomtoms and 
fifes ; yet they keep perfect time. 
A circle is formed, and a perform- 
er waltzes rapidly around the inner 
space, looking up to the sky, till she 
becomes giddy and falls into the 
arms of her friends. Whatever 
work they are engaged in, these 
people always sing, and in the 
streets you constantly hear the 
chant of porters, who carry tusks. 
of ivory or bales of goods slung be- 
tween two of them on a pole which 
rests on their shoulders. 

The East African negro has 
been completely debased by cen- 
turies of oppression and slavery. 
"All the good qualities appear 
crushed out of the African race/' 
said an experienced missionary 
at Zanzibar to me. Their religion 
is the same as that of the natives 
of the west coast fetichism. I 
believe this word is derived from 
the Portuguese feitifo, a doing 
that is, of magic. Nature has col- 
ored the black man's thoughts, but 
not with the sublime and beautiful. 
He sees nothing in nature but the 
terrible, vast, threatening, and hos- 
tile. The dense jungle with huge 
trees, concealing poisonous snakes, 
fierce lions, and spotted leopards;: 
the fever-breeding swamp; the de- 
vastating cyclone these have pro- 
duced a feeling of dread, helpless- 
ness, and terror on his debased 
mind. He has but a very vague, 
unformed idea of a Supreme Being, 
and does not at all conceive of the 
spiritual and eternal side of man. 
To him death is destruction. Yet 
he believes that tlie ghost of the 



4i8 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



departed person remains, and he 
always imagines it to be harmful 
and hostile. In fact, he is for ever 
in terror of ghosts and witchcraft, 
and his religion consists in the 
propitiation of natural objects. 
The African's creed may be re- 
duced to two articles : the first 
demonology, or the existence of 
spectres of the dead ; the second 
witchcraft, or black magic. Their 
native superstitions the slaves carry 
with them to Zanzibar or wherever 
they are taken, and so deeply root- 
-ed are these beliefs in their minds 
that I have often been surprised to 
hear negroes who have been Pro- 
testant Christians for years, and 
daily attending public Christian 
^worship, speak of witchcraft in or- 
dinary conversation as much as a 
miatter of course as they would of 
iiny every-day occurrence. For in- 
. stance, missing some pice from my 
drawers, I asked my servant to 
'find out who had taken them. He 
replied that he could not do so, but 
'.that a man had been there years 
..ago who " made plenty witchcraft": 
he would have told me, but now he 
was gone. Some very good Chris- 
tian boys, as I was walking with 
them one day, suddenly dropped 

their voices and told me that it 
was a "plenty bad place." I im- 
agined that fever or ague was in- 
tended, as it was low, marshy 

ground ; but no such thing. They 
had once witnessed some "witch- 

craft " or other there. 

There are Afganga wizards 
.and witches who are partly im- 
postors and partly dupes of their 

own imagination. To these peo- 
ple the negroes have recourse 
in any calamity or sickness. Their 
office is to transfer the evil from 
which they suffer to some one else. 
Of course payment is the prelimina- 
ry no pay, no work. And an Afri- 



can must have present payment ; 
he attaches no value to promises 
of future reward, though ever so 
near. These Mganga endeavor 
to entice ghosts from possessed 
persons and transfer them to some 
inanimate object, striving to effect 
it by music, dancing, and drinking. 
Thus, they nail pieces of cloth to 
trees to coax the devils into them. 
Epileptic fits are very common, and 
it is not astonishing that they 
should regard them as the effect 
of seizure by some external agent. 
On the mainland they attempt to 
discover the workers of magic by 
most cruel ordeals. 

There are also rain-makers. It 
does not require an exceptionally 
weatherwise person to infer what 
the weather will be in a country 
of regular monsoons and seasons ; 
still, they sometimes make a mis- 
take, and then the false prophets 
have to escape as best they can. 

The Arabs have the utmost con- 
tempt for the negroes, and, so far 
from trying to convert them, pur- 
posely leave them to perdition ; if 
they made them Mahometans they 
would be their equals, and this they 
do not at all desire. 

Such is the character and reli- 
gious belief of these unhappy peo- 
ple. We will see later on what the 
church can do for them, but in this 
inquiry one important subject 
must be considered that is, the 
slave-trade. Slavery on the White 
Nile is admirably described by 
Sir Samuel Baker in his Nile 
Basin, and it is much the same on 
the east coast. The petty native 
chieftains are constantly at war 
with each other, the object being 
plunder. They try to surprise a 
neighboring village at night, fire it, 
and surround it with armed men. 
As the luckless inhabitants rush 
out to escape from the flames, 



Religion en the East Coast of Africa. 



419 



their enemies shoot down the men 
and seize the women and children 
for slaves, carrying off the cattle. 
Sometimes a thieving Arab slaving 
party joins one chief who has a 
grudge against a neighboring vil- 
lage, assisting him to destroy it in 
the manner just described and 
sharing the plunder. The Arabs 
then manage to quarrel with their 
allies, and so obtain their goods 
also. 

As long as this state of things 
exists mission work in the interior 
will be impossible. The Protestant 
English mission, under Bishop 
Mackenzie, some years ago estab- 
lished itself in the interior near the 
Zambesi, and gathered together 
some hundreds of natives whose im- 
provement they hoped gradually 
to effect. But a powerful tribe 
attacking the one amongst which 
they dwelt, they had to perform 
the uncongenial task of driving 
off the invaders with their rifles. 
Their friends were saved for the 
time, but many of the missionaries 
had died from fever, and the small 
remainder was obliged to retire. 
Shortly after this the tribe with 
which they had been was swept 
away and destroyed. The slave- 
trade naturally prevents all pro- 
gress and the increase of popula- 
tion. It also weakens all family 
ties, parents killing their offspring 
if they are in want. Great cruel- 
ties are practised, not only in the 
capture of slaves, but in their 
transit to the place of destination. 
The Arabs are very improvident, 
and sometimes, having failed to 
provide sufficient food for their 
caravan, they leave some of the 
slaves in the desert to starve, not 
even removing the yokes by which 
they are fastened together. I was 
told of a woman who was carrying 
a bale of cloth, nnd on the jour- 



ney gave birth to a child. She 
could not carry both the baby and 
the goods ; the latter were the more 
valuable, so the infant was brained 
against the nearest tree and left on 
the ground. 

About four years ago a treaty 
was signed between the Sultan of 
Zanzibar and the British govern- 
ment, by which the importation of 
slaves was prohibited, but the 
Arabs were permitted to retain 
the slaves they already possessed. 
Strong pressure had to be brought 
to bear on the Arabs to compel 
them to sign this treaty ; but even 
now a considerable traffic is carried 
on by the east coast with Arabia, 
Pemba, and Madagascar. The ne- 
groes are crowded into the slave- 
dhows, and their sufferings from 
hunger and filth must be extreme 
on a voyage. Many die and are 
thrown overboard, and the remain- 
der land in a miserably reduced 
condition. But the household 
slaves are treated kindly and well 
fed; this the owner finds politic, or 
the slave might desert. They are ad- 
dressed as " Ndugu-yango " " My 
brother " and considered part of 
the family. 

There are two sorts of slaves in 
the islands the Muwallid, or do- 
mestic, born in slavery, and the 
wild imported slave. The former 
class are much better treated than 
the others. Even young captured 
slaves are not so tractable as they, 
but the older ones are very obsti- 
nate and contrary and given to 
thieving and disorder. Sometimes 
in revenge they attempt the life of 
their master or try to get him into 
serious trouble, yet they are seldom 
punished for it, any more than 
with us a vicious animal would be. 
They are slaves, and it is their na- 
ture, and they themselves give this 
as their excuse when convicted of 



42O 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



the most abominable crimes. But 
slaves often rise to a very impor- 
tant position; and as Abraham sent 
his servant to Mesopotamia to ne- 
gotiate his son's marriage, so slaves 
are entrusted by their masters with 
the command of trading caravans 
to the interior, they preferring to 
remain comfortably at home. Free 
negroes have been known to sell 
themselves for slaves, and, when 
asked about it, to reply : " What 
can a dog do without a master ?" 
Also, slaves often own slaves of 
their own. The pilot of Zanzibar, 
an official of some importance call- 
ed Buckett, was a slave, and, when 
seen habited' in a naval officer's 
old coat and a handsome turban 
on his head, he appeared a person 
of much distinction. 

It is difficult to see how slavery 
can be kept up at Zanzibar, now 
that importation is forbidden ; for 
the annual loss from death and de- 
sertion is thirty per cent., and the 
average annual importation a few 
years ago was estimated at thirteen 
thousand. Slavery, as it has been 
there, is an abominable institution 
and a complete bar to improve- 
ment. 

Though the negro is so ignorant, 
superstitious, and debased, yet it 
has been abundantly shown that 
he is capable of improvement. I 
once visited the well-ordered es- 
tate of Kokotoni, in the north of 
Zanzibar Island, the property of 
Capt. Fraser. I found it in charge 
of an intelligent Scotchman, who 
said that they had about five hun- 
dred laborers resident on the plan- 
tation half men and half women. 
They required them all to marry, 
gave them cottages, provision, 
grounds, and two dollars and a half 
each per month, and they were an 
orderly and well-conducted people. 
The overseer had taught them differ- 



ent trades as that of wheelwright, 
necessary for the work of the estate 
and, though they sometimes de- 
serted in true negro fashion, yet the 
truants were sure to return again. 

At Zanzibar and Bagomoyo, 
twenty-five miles off on the main- 
land, at the mouth of the Kingani 
River, the Societe du Saint-Esprit, 
the parent house of which is in 
Paris, have most flourishing estab- 
lishments. The town house is in 
the centre of Zanzibar, its corru- 
gated iron roof, towering above the 
neighboring buildings, being a con- 
spicuous object. On entering you 
will be greeted in good French by 
very civil negro boys dressed in 
blue blouse and trowsers'and wear- 
ing a black glazed hat. They will 
conduct you to a spacious sitting- 
room decorated with pictures of 
religious subjects, and before long 
the superior, Pere Etienne, appears. 
He is a tall, slight man, and has not 
lost the cavalry swagger which he 
acquired as captain in a Lancers 
regiment, and which forms a strange 
contrast to his black soutane. He 
is a most affable and agreeable 
priest, and conducts one round the 
interesting establishment. There 
is a beautiful little chapel on the 
first floor, and when I was last in 
it the walls were being stencilled. 
In the workshops trades are taught 
to the boys by the lay brethren, 
such as working in metals, carpen- 
tering, and boat-building. The 
pupils belong to the mission, they 
having been either handed over to it 
by the British consul from captured 
slave-dhows, or purchased by the 
mission in the slave-market in the 
old times before slavery was abol- 
ished. At Bagomoyo there is a 
still larger establishment under the 
care of Pere Homer, where about 
ten clergy and the same number of 
sisters have charge of an agricul- 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



421 



tural colony on which are several 
hundred Christian negroes. At first 
the mission did not mean to Chris- 
tianize the natives, thinking that 
they were so degraded that it would 
take several generations to raise 
tli em to that point ; but they found 
them capable of more than was 
originally expected. The mission 
establishment is half a mile from 
the town of Bagomoyo, which con- 
tains about five thousand people, 
but it has the appearance of a 
small town itself. The grounds 
are laid out in a most orderly man- 
ner ; it is a pleasure to walk along 
the straight, well-kept paths be- 
tween fields of maize, millet, and 
sweet potatoes. 

The captain of the ship in which 
I served was one day up the Kin- 
gcini River in his boat, accompanied 
by a young Alsatian lay brother 
from the mission. Shooting a hip- 
popotamus cow, the calf, only a 
week or two old, would not leave the 
mother's carcase, and the captain, 
who had to return to his ship, giv- 
ing money to the brother, advised 
him to obtain assistance and catch 
the little animal, which he present- 
ed to the mission. A few months 
after, as we were visiting the good 
fathers, the lay brother took us to 
a large tank surrounded with a 
fence, which they had formed for 
the accommodation of the hippopo- 
tamus. Standing at the gate, the 
brother called the animal by name, 
and it came snorting out of the 
water, ran up to its master, looking 
up into his face, and followed us 
about the garden and into the 
house like a dog. Here lie was 
fed from a bottle with flour and 
milk. He was taken to the Zoolo- 
gical Gardens at Berlin shortly af- 
terwards, and must have sold for 
at least six thousand dollars. Hip- 
popotami are inimical to the crops 



of rice which grow near the river?, 
as they come on shore in the night 
and devour enormous quantities of 
the young tender shoots, so that 
the fields have to be carefully 
watched. But more dangerous ani- 
mals are found on the coast, and 
Pere Horner told us a story of a 
huge lion which had carried off 
several of their cattle. They con- 
structed a trap of a deserted hut, 
into which they enticed the ani- 
mal, which, finding himself impri- 
soned, aroused all the establish- 
ment from their midnight slumbers 
by his roarings. He was shot by 
one of the brethren. 

The fathers give their guests a 
good dinner of many courses in 
true French style, but one should 
not conclude, as does Stanley in 
his How I Found Livingstone, that 
champagne is their ordinary beve- 
rage. On the contrary, when I was 
there they could offer us nothing 
but a little white mm which had 
been sent them from our ship, and 
the champagne with which they 
welcomed Mr. Stanley was some of 
a small present which they had re- 
ceived. 

Their mode of work is undoubt- 
edly the true one : to get a cer- 
tain number of negroes, isolate 
them as much as possible from the 
licentious society of their heathen 
brethren, and hope of them to 
form the nucleus of a future Chris- 
tian population. 

The Church of England has a 
mission at Zanzibar, and has also 
some settlements on the main- 
land ; and as I had several friends 
there, I know something about it 
from personal observation, and re- 
gret that its members are not Ca- 
tholics, for a more devoted set of 
workers it would be hard to find. 
They have a house on a shainba, or 
estate, two miles from the town, in 



422 



Religion on the East Coast of Africa. 



which there ;ire a number of libe- 
rated slave boys, who are instruct- 
ed in reading, writing, and arith- 
metic, and are taught such trades 
ns carpentering and field labor. 
Dr. Steere, the third bishop of this 
mission, which was set on foot by 
the English universities of Oxford 
and Cambridge at the instance of 
Livingstone, is a linguist, being the 
authority on Swahili, the language 
commonly spoken at Zanzibar and 
on the coast. He has written a 
Swahiii grammar, and translated 
into the language great parts of the 
Bible, prayers, hymns, and school- 
books, and these are excellently 
printed in the mission press by 
some of the pupils, a few of whom 
he took to England to perfect them- 
selves in the trade at a large Lon- 
don printing establishment. All 
the printing done in Zanzibar is 
their work. They have a beautiful 
chapel, where there are daily morn- 
ing and evening services, and these 
are attended by all the establish- 
ment; and I a:n told that many of 
of the boys show great devotion, 
kneeling for a quarter of an hour 
together in the chapel. I am in- 
clined to fear, though, that the Af- 
rican Anglican's notion of religion 
is something which will propitiate 
an angry, hostile power in fact, a 
relic of demonology. " Our Fa- 
ther " has no meaning to one who 
had perhaps been sold to an Arab 
by his parent for a bowl of rice. 
T\vo miles beyond the English mis- 
sion's boys' house is a similar es- 
tablishment for girls- under the 
charge of women. The girls look 
fatter and healthier than the boys, 
a large proportion of whom are 
affected by the terrible skin diseases 
so prevalent amongst the blacks. 

The mission had a devoted young 
clergyman there some years ago, 
who, being possessed of large means 



and wealthy friends, purchased the 
old slave market in Zanzibar, on 
'which a handsome stone church 
with groined roof, and different 
school buildings, were erected. But 
he sacrificed his life, as most of the 
workers of this mission have done, 
by his zeal, and fell a victim to 
fever; his funeral was attended by 
parties from the English men-of- 
war in the harbor, and by some of 
the Catholic missionaries, and many 
of the European residents who 
wished to pay a last tribute of re- 
spect to the memory of a brave 
and devoted, if mistaken, man. He 
once told me that some of his 
pupils asked him a very perti- 
nent question : Why, if the Chris- 
tian religion was one, the French 
and English missions were not 
united ? He evaded it by replying 
that they taught in English, but the 
others in French ! When his death 
was announced in England a young 
clergyman, who had formerly work- 
ed in the same mission, was preach- 
ing for it in an English church and 
exhorting his hearers to give mo- 
ney and, if possible, their personal 
services to the cause. He was as- 
tonished afterwards at a young wo- 
man presenting herself and offering 
herself for the work. Neither pic- 
tures of fever, discomfort, nor death 
could deter her from going to Zan- 
zibar, as I believe ^he afterwards 
did. 

Bishop Steere used to give a 
weekly address in the native lan- 
guage in the city of Zanzibar to 
any w^o chose to attend, and I 
have heard that the rich Arabs 
used to flock to it in crowds, com- 
ing to the bishop's house afterwards 
to discuss the different Christian 
doctrines of which they Iia'd heard. 
But if any Arab became a Christian 
he would probably be assassinated 
by his comrades, so great is their 



Religion on the Easi Coast of Africa. 



423 



bigotry. Singularly, the part of the 
Bible which has most interest for 
an Arab is the genealogies; for, as 
is well known, they are most careful 
in preserving such records, even of 
their very horses. 

The Mahometan residents at 
Zanzibar and on the coast, both 
Arab and Ki-Swahili, go to school 
at seven years of age, and in two or 
three years learn to write, and read 
the Koran. They are also taught a 
few prayers and hymns and some 
Arab proverbs, and this completes 
their education. In two points a 
good Moslem puts ordinary Chris- 
tians to shame in prayer and tem- 
perance. In the East one often 
sees even the poorest people pros- 
trating themselves towards Mecca 
on their praying-mat, and repeat- 
ing the accustomed prayers at the 
stated hours, which occur five times 
a day. I have seen a naked black 
laborer praying in a coal-lighter 
during an interval of work. One 
is reminded of the quaint old Bel- 
gian cities, where it is common to 
see female figures, in their long 
black cloaks, kneeling before a cru- 
cifix in some open space. Tem- 
perance the Arab rigidly observes; 
and how can one expect them to 
become Christians when they daily 
witness the drunkenness of white 
seamen ? In fact, this objection 
has been urged upon me by na- 
tives, and the answer which one 
makes, that our religion does not 
permit drunkenness, is not satisfac- 
tory to them. " If we got drunk," 
they say, " our sultan would put 
us in prison." 

Strict.Mahometans are very Pha- 
risaical. We once had great trou- 
ble with a Mahometan priest or 
schoolmaster who visited our ship. 
He refused the coffee which we 
offered him because it was made 
by a Christian, and would only 



condescend to drink some lime- 
juice out of a glass which we assur- 
ed him had never been used, and 
even this beverage had to be pre- 
pared by his own servant. Some 
Arab gentlemen who accompanied 
him and dined with us, being pre- 
vented from eating anything that 
we had cooked, could get nothing 
but oranges. 

The Hindis are a sect of Ma- 
hometans who are not recognized 
by the Arabs, but the exact nature 
of their differences I have not 
been able to learn. Neither could 
I arrive at the religion of the Ban- 
ians. Their mortality at Zanzibar 
is very great, and you may daily 
see processions of Banian men go- 
ing to the beach beyond the town, 
where they raise a funeral pyre of 
wood, on which their deceased 
friend is consumed, the remains 
being washed away by the rising 
tide. 

On the coast the people are 
much the same as those who in- 
habit the island of Zanzibar. There 
are the lazy, cowardly Belooch 
soldiers and their families, and 
these swashbucklers are thoroughly 
despised and hated. The towns 
are ruled by headmen, who are 
subject to the Sultan of Zanzibar, 
but who enrich themselves by ex- 
tortion. The Washenzi are day- 
laborers, and are barbarians from 
the interior. Banians are always 
found prospering in trade. The 
Ki-Swahili which means people of 
the coast, degenerate Arabs are 
ignorant and vicious. They have 
a great fear and hatred of the white 
man, particularly of the English, 
whom they called Beni Nar Sons 
of Fire. They think that, if once the 
white man's foot has been placed 
on the land, lie is sure to obtain 
possession of it in the end; and in 
this they are not far mistaken. 



424 



Religion on the EasF^Coast of Africa. 



The Wamrina are a coast clan 
even more debased and vicious 
than the latter people, and they 
appear to have little reason. They 
are cowardly and cautious, but 
very cunning, and, as most of the 
inhabitants in those parts, lie habi- 
tually, even when there is no ob- 
ject to be gained thereby. 

There are a number of small 
towns on the coast from Maga- 
doxo, a little north of the equator, 
to Kilwa, the great slave-mart in 
the south. The chief ones are 
Brava, Lamu, Marka, Melinda, and 
Mombas. At both of the latter 
are Portuguese remains, and at 
Mombas is a. Protestant mission 
which at the time of my visit had 
been established thirty years, and 
had cost a large amount of money, 
but had apparently done very little 
good. The celebrated Dr. Krapf, 
who had been four years in Abys- 
sinia, was the first to go there, 
starting from Zanzibar. This was 
in 1844. He was the first to draw 
up a Ki-Swahili grammar, in which 
he was assisted by Dr. Rebmann, 
who arrived two years afterwards. 
Their journeys from Mombas, which 
is situated in 4 south latitude, 
are well known. They discovered 
Kilima Njaro, a snow-clad moun- 
tain 22,814 feet high, only 3 south 
of the equator, and what they heard 
from the natives of vast lakes in 
the interior, where nothing but 
sandy deserts had hitherto been 
supposed to exist, led to the fa- 
mous travels which have exposed 
a new world to the wondering eyes 
of men and opened up new fields 
for the glorious labors of the mis- 
sionary. 



Dr. Rebmann was living near 
Mombas at the time of my visit, 
though old and blind, and, I hear, 
has since died. I did not see him, 
though I started to do so with one 
of the missionaries. I was so dis- 
gusted by this man's narrow sec- 
tarianism in the midst of heathen- 
dom he commencing to abuse the 
mission of his own church at Zan- 
zibar that I preferred to spend 
the night on the river in a boat 
with our seamen rather th^n, with 
my friends, accompany him to the 
Rabai Mission. We came across a 
pamphlet written by them for their 
English supporters, containing a 
lot of pious texts : " Come over and 
help us "; " The fields are'white to 
the harvest"; "A wide door and 
effectual is open," and so on ; but 
it struck us as being great non- 
sense. However, I am told that 
they have since that started a large 
establishment of liberated slaves. 
The Wesleyans have a mission in the 
neighborhood, but of them I know 
nothing, as we did not visit them. 

The Sultan of Zanzibar visited 
England two years ago, offered to 
place his dominions under British 
protection, and has exerted him- 
self to put a stop to the slave-trade, 
though he fought hard against its 
abolition at first, as from it he de- 
rived the principal part of his reve- 
nue. If a stop could be put to 
this evil and peace established in 
the interior, a splendid field for 
mission-work would be the result, 
the black having such respect for 
the superior knowledge and intel- 
lect of the white man that many 
tribes would receive the mission- 
ary with a hearty welcome. 



Nciv Publications. 



425 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY, WITH 
A VIEW OF THE STATE OF THE ROMAN 
WORLD AT THE BIRTH OF CHRIST. 
By George P. Fisher, D.D., Professor 
of Ecclesiastical History in Yale Col- 
lege. New York : Scribner, Arm- 
strong & Co. 1877. 
Dr. Fisher has taken up a line of ar- 
gument of great interest and importance, 
which has employed the minds and pens 
of a number of able writers before him, 
but which cannot be too frequently or 
copiously treated. The author informs 
us in his preface that he has prepared 
the work as now published from a course 
of lectures before the Lowell Institute 
of Boston. The principal portion of his 
argument presents precisely what is 
needed by a large number of educated 
persons in New England, especially in 
Boston, where a reckless, extravagant 
rationalism and neologism, borrowed 
from Germany, are rapidly undermining 
all belief in the genuineness, historical 
truth, and doctrinal authenticity of our 
earliest Christian documents, together 
with those of Judaism. This modern in- 
fidelity saps the historical basis of Chris- 
tianity, that it may be free to criticise it 
as a theory, a mere natural phenomenon, 
a phase of human evolution. Any one 
who turns their own historical and criti- 
cal methods against these sceptics does 
good service to truth. We are pleased 
to recognize the many merits, both in re- 
spect to matter and diction, in the essay 
of the learned professor. The five chap- 
ters on the Roman policy, and Greco- 
Roman religion, literature, philosophy, 
and morals, are admirable. The geogra- 
phical accuracy and distinctness with 
which, as on a map, the Roman Empire is 
graphically delineated, makes a charac- 
teristic and noteworthy feature of this 
part of the work, which is enriched with 
a great number of h;ippy classical quota- 
tions. The succinct review of historical 
Judaism during the important but much- 
neglected period of five centuries imme- 
diately preceding the birth of Christ is 
interesting and valuable. A very able 
critical defence of the genuineness of 
the New Testament history, of the truth 
of the miracles and resurrection of our 
Lord, his superhuman character and 



divine mission, completes a solid and 
unanswerable argument for the histori- 
cal basis of Christianity as a divine and 
supernatural religion. 

The author has shown the conver- 
gence of all the lines of movement 
drawn in the past history of the world 
towards the moment of Christ's appear- 
ance. This is one of the strongest 
proofs of his divine mission, inasmuch 
as it shows that the Author and Ruler of 
the world is also the Author of the Chris- 
tian religion. The complement to the 
argument should point out the diver- 
gence of the lines from the same point 
through the post-Christian times, and 
the work of human regeneration histori- 
cally fulfilled the second and even 
greater proof of the divine legation of 
Christ. The author shows very conclu- 
sively that those destructive critics and 
sceptics who deny the true historical 
idea of Christ as presented in the New 
Testament take away all sufficient 
cause for the effect produced in Chris- 
tianity. 

The foundation for a complete argu- 
ment from cause to effect and effect to 
cause, in the relation between the his- 
torical idea of Christ and the historical 
idea of his regenerating work, is laid by 
establishing his supernatural character, 
mission, and works. Thus far Dr. Fish- 
er gives us complete satisfaction. When 
he proceeds to develop his own concep- 
tion of the true Christian idea the plan, 
namely, of human regeneration, and the 
means for executing the plan we do not 
find it complete and adequate. As com- 
pared with the view heretofore prevalent 
among evangelical Protestants, it is, 
nevertheless, a marked approx ; mation to 
the Catholic idea. We consider that Dr. 
Fisher's argument requires a comple- 
ment, in order to make the historical 
circle embracing all ages and centred 
in Christ perfect in its circumference. 
To explain our statement and adduce 
reasons for it would require many pages, 
and we must for the present refrain from 
anything beyond a mere expression of 
our judgment. 

There is only one passage which we 
have thus far noticed in a perusal of 
nearly the whole of Dr. Fisher's volume 



426 



New Publications* 



which has jarred upon our feelings as 
out of tune with his prevalent mode of 
philosophical candor and historical jus- 
tice. On page 238 it is written : " Pha- 
risaism, like Jesuitism, is a word of evil 
sound, not because these parties had no 
good men among them, but because 
prevailing tendencies stamped upon each 
ineffaceable traits of ignominy." 

We are persuaded that in the great 
number and variety of studies which 
have absorbed his time and attention 
the writer of the foregoing passage has 
never found leisure to read the books 
which would give him the true notion of 
the institute and history of the Jesuits. 
We give him credit for great sincerity 
and love of truth, and yet we cannot 
help thinking that there is still a rem- 
nant of prejudice left in his mind, which 
in this case causes, to use his own words, 
"groundless, gratuitous suspicion, such 
as, in the ordinary concerns of life, is 
habitually repelled by a healthy moral 
nature." 

As a production of learning, philo- 
sophical thought, and literary taste, the 
Beginnings of Christianity deserves, in 
our opinion, a place among the best 
works of New England scholars. We 
will close this notice by an extract which 
shows the philosophical and religious 
tone and quality of the great argument 
presented in the volume : 

" When we look back upon the an- 
cient philosophy in its entire course, we 
find in it nothing nearer to Christianity 
than the saying of Plato that man is to 
resemble God. But, on the path of spe- 
culation, how defective and discordant 
are the conceptions of God ! And if 
God were adequately known, how shall 
the fetters of evil be broken and the 
soul attain to its ideal? It is just these 
questions that Christianity meets through 
the revelation of God in Jesus Christ. 
God, the head of that universal society 
on which Cicero delighted to dwell, is 
brought near, in all his purity and love, 
to the apprehension, not of a coterie of 
philosophers merely, but of the humble 
and ignorant. There is a real deliver- 
ance from the burden of evil, achieved 
through Christ, actually for himself and 
potentially for mankind. How altered 
in their whole character are the ethical 
maxims which, in form, may not be 
without a parallel in heathen sages ! 
Forgiveness, forbearance, pity for the 
poor, universal compassion, are no long- 



er abstractions derived from speculation 
on the attribuies of Deity. They are a 
part of the example of God. He has so 
dealt with us in the mission and death 
of his Son. The cross of Christ was the 
practical power that annihilated artificial 
distinctions among mankind and made 
human brotherhood a reality. In this 
new setting, ethical precepts gain a 
depth of earnestness and a force of 
impression which heathen philosophy 
could never impart. We might as well 
claim for starlight the brightness and 
warmth of a noon-day sun " (p. 189). 
This fine passage is supplemented by 
two condensed statements in another 
place, that the end in view of the plan 
of Jesus was " the introduction of a new 
life in humanity," and the plan itself 
" the establishment of a society of which 
he is the living head " (p. 467). This 
really comprehends the whole Christian 
Idea in germ. Its true and perfect evo- 
lution, and an accurate commentary upon 
it, would present a complete philosophy 
of Christianity. 

DE DEO CREANTE : Prselectiones Schc- 
lastico-Dogmaticje quas in Collegio 
S.S. Cordis Jesu ad Woodstock, Max- 
ima Studiorum Domo Soc. Jesu in 
Feed. Americas Sept. Statibus, habebat 
A.D. MDCCCLXXVI.-VII., Camil- 
lus Mazzella, S.J., in eod. Coll. Stud. 
Praefectus et Theol. Dogm. Professor. 
Woodstock, Marylandiae: Ex Officina 
Typographica Collegii. 1877. Svo, 
pp. XXXV.-935. 

This treatise is a complete exposition 
and defence of the Catholic doctrine on 
creation and its kindred topics as hand- 
ed down in the church by tradition from 
the earliest ages to the present day. As 
the title of the book indicates, the sub- 
ject is considered not merely from a 
dogmatic point of view; all the errors 
of the ancients as well as of their modern 
imitators being taken up in turn and re- 
futed. 'A glance at the general divisions 
of the work will show the wide range of 
topics treated : I. " De Creatione Gen- 
eratim " ; II. " De Angelica Substantia " ; 

III. " De Hominis Origine et Natura " ; 

IV. " De Hominis Elevatione ad Statum 
Supernaturalem " ; V. " De Humanse Na- 
turae Lapsu" ; VI. " De Hominis Novis- 
simis." 

Each of these subjects is developed 
with the greatest detail. Take, for ex- 



New PubhcatiLns. 



427 



ample, the seventeenth proposition in 
the third disputation, on the origin of 
the human race. In the introductory re- 
marks to this proposition the author first 
explains our descent from Adam, tlie 
first man, according to revelation, and 
then devotes some ten pages to a con- 
cise but thorough exposition of Darwin- 
ism and its companion errors. After 
this he lays down the following thesis : 
" Primi parentcs, prout ex divina reve- 
latione constat, non modo quoad animam, 
sed etiam quoad corpus, immediate a 
Deo conditi sunt. Quam certissimam 
veritatem frustra evertere aut infirmare 
nituntur qui nunc audiunt Transformis- 
tae : principium enim quod assumunt 
arbitrarium est, atque experientiae repug- 
nans ; media, quae assignant, ad trans- 
formationem cfficiendam sunt insuffi- 
cientia ; probationes, demum, quas ad- 
ducunt, nihil omnino evincunt." This 
he proves directly by a large array of 
arguments from the Holy Scriptures, the 
fathers and the doctors of the church. 
He then proceeds to show the untena- 
bleness of the opposite theories, demon- 
strating that animals can only be propa- 
gated by others of the same species ; 
that the ablest practical scientists of the 
day have acknowledged the arbitrariness 
of the transformation theory, and that 
many have proved it contrary to known 
facts ; that the means suggested by the 
evolutionists are insufficient to explain 
the origin of man, etc., etc. He intro- 
duces a large and well-marshalled army 
of quotations from American, British, 
and Continental scientists to back up his 
position. 

The divisions of the work and the 
order in which they are treated lay no 
claims to originality, which the author 
has very sensibly considered as worse 
than out of place in a theological text- 
book, since it tends only to perplex the 
student and to introduce confusion into 
the schools of divinity. The fate of wri- 
ters who have, even in our own day, 
adopted a different course proves clearly 
the correctness of this view. Neverthe- 
less, the method pursued in the treat- 
ment of particular questions is at once 
novel and useful, and, as far as we know, 
peculiar to Father Mazzella. As a gen- 
eral rule, theological writers, after hav- 
ing briefly explained the meaning of the 
proposition and touched on the errors 
of their adversaries, enter at once on the 
demonstration. This done, they devote 



a great deal of space to the solution of 
difficulties and the refutation of objec- 
tions ; and it is on this last point espe- 
cially that they rely for making the 
sense of their thesis clear. Father Maz- 
zella has adopted a different mode of 
proceeding. The development of each 
of his propositions contains two distinct 
parts : in the first he presents a complete 
exposition of the subject-matter in all 
its bearings ; in the second he proves 
the point at issue. He starts out by 
giving a summary of the decisions of the 
church regarding the question under 
discussion. Then, if there be any diver- 
sity of opinion amongst Catholic doc- 
tors, he explains each system and notes 
the degree of probability contained in 
it. Finally, ha proceeds to the exposi- 
tion of contrary errors or heresies, and 
of the various senses, false and true, in 
which the doctrine may be interpreted. 
All this opens the way to the second 
part, in which the thesis is proved from 
Scripture, the fathers, and reason, and 
the few difficulties that perhaps remain 
are answered. 

Tins manner of developing a subject 
seems to us to confer a twofold benefit 
on the student : it gives him a clear and 
comprehensive conception of the posi- 
tive doctrine, and at the same time sup- 
plies him with general principles by 
means of which he may readily solve any 
new objections that may chance to arise 
in discussion. It is not sufficient for the 
young theologian to have learned by 
heait a number of proofs, and the an- 
swers to the long string of difficulties 
given in his text-book. He must be im- 
bued with the whole spirit of Catholic 
doctrine, and thus he will form within 
himself a new theological sense, if we may 
use the expression, by which he can 
easily discern what is consonant with, 
and what is repugnant to, the truths con- 
tained in the deposit of faith. Such is 
the result aimed at in Father Mazzella's 
method. Hence he devotes but little 
space to the answering of objections ; for 
he has already disposed of them in the 
exposition of his thesis. Most difficul- 
ties, in fact, arise from a misunderstand- 
ing of Catholic doctrine ; hence it is 
plain that they must readily disappear, if 
the dogmas of the church be clearly ex- 
plained. 

As is proper for a theologian, the au- 
thor makes abundant use of Scripture 
and tradition. Whilst avoiding all 



4 23 



New Publications. 



needless excursions into the fields of 
philology and hermeneutics, he does not 
refuse to handle the difficulties brought 
from these sciences. An instance of this 
is his vindication of the true sense of the 
famous q> GJ in quo in the fifth chapter 
of the Epistle to the Romans. When- 
ever the question under discussion has 
been defined by the church, the decrees 
are carefully given and explained. We 
frequently find a series of definitions on 
the same subject, taken from councils 
held at various periods, proving the won- 
derful unity of the church's teaching in 
various ages. Father Mazzella makes 
frequent use of the fathers and great 
scholastic writers. He generally quotes 
them word for word, thus ensuring con- 
viction as to their real opinion, and fa- 
miliarizing the reader with their peculiar 
modes of thought and expression, tak- 
ing care, however, t6 explain all obscuri- 
ties in the text. 

Every student of theology is aware of 
the importance of mental philosophy in 
our days, when the repugnance of the su- 
pernatural to reason is so loudly and 
boldly asserted. Hence the author con- 
stantly appeals to it, but is careful to 
admit only such opinions as are approv- 
ed by the authority of the schools, taking 
as his guides only St. Thomas and the 
ablest commentators of the Angelic Doc- 
tor, especially Suarez. 

In the third disputation the author has 
made the natural sciences come to the 
aid of theology, especially when treating 
of the Mosaic cosmogony, of the origin 
and antiquity of the human race, etc. 
Certain devotees of modern experimental 
science, whose principles are built on 
mere hypotheses, and who insist on our 
taking mere possibilities as established 
facts, have declared a deadly war against 
revelation. It is difficult to convince 
such men of their errors by appealing to 
pure reason ; for they are in a remarka- 
ble degree wanting in the logical faculty. 
You can overcome them only by oppos- 
ing facts to facts, and by proving that 
their own pet studies contradict their 
theories. This Father Mazzella has 
aimed at doing ; and he supports his 
position by bringing forward a mass of 
facts and disclaimers from the latest 
writings of the ablest scientists. The 
style is clear, simple, and straightforward 
a most necessary quality in a book of 
the kind. Difficult terms are always ex- 
plained, and neither order nor precision 



is ever sacrificed to a show of learn : r.g 
or rhetorical skill. 



MODERN PHILOSOPHY, FROM DESCARTES 
TO SCHOPENHAUER AND HARTMANN. 
By Francis Bowen, A.M., Alford Pro- 
fessor of Natural Religion and Moral 
Philosophy in Harvard College. Xe\v 
York : Scribner, Armstrong & Co. 1877. 

The preface of Prof. Bowen prepossess- 
es us at once in his favor. " No one," 
says he, " can be an earnest student of 
philosophy without arriving at definite 
convictions respecting the fundamental 
truths of theology. In my own case, 
nearly forty years of diligent inquiry and 
reflection concerning these truths have 
served only to enlarge and confirm the 
convictions with which I began, and 
which are inculcated in this book. Ear- 
nestly desiring to avoid prejudice on 
either side, and to welcome evidence 
and argument from whatever source they 
might come, without professional bias, 
and free from any external inducement 
to teach one set of opinions rather than 
another, I have faithfully studied most 
of what the philosophy of these modern 
times and the science of our own day 
assume to teach. And the result is that 
I am now more firmly convinced than 
ever that what has been justly called * 
'the dirt-philosophy' of materialism 
and fatalism is baseless and false. I ac- 
cept with unhesitating conviction and 
belief the doctrine of the being of one 
personal God, the creator and governor 
of the world, and of one Lord Jesus 
Christ in whom ' dwelleth all the fulness 
of the Godhead bodily' ; and I have found 
nothing whatever in the literature of 
modern infidelity which, to my mind, 
casts even the slightest doubt upon that 
belief. . . . Let me be permitted also to 
repeat the opinion, which I ventured to 
express as far back as 1849, that the 
time seems to have arrived for a more 
practical and immediate verification than 
the world has ever yet witnessed of the 
great truth that tha civilization which is 
not based upon Christianity is big with 
the elements of its own destruction" 
(pp. vi., vii.). 

These are sound and wise words, 
which we welcome with peculiar plea- 
sure as emanating from a chair in Har- 
vard University. The scope of Mod- 

* By Carlyle.-Eo. C. W. 



New Publications. 



429 



ern Philosophy is more restricted, as 
the author distinctly premises, than the 
general title indicates. The authors 
whose systems are discussed ex professo 
are Descartes, Spinoza, Malebranche, 
Pasc-.d, Leibnitz, Berkeley, Kant, Schel- 
ling, Hegel, Schopenhauer, and Hart- 
mann. There is also a general discus- 
sion of those great topics of metaphysics, 
the origin of ideas and the nature of the 
universals, of the freedom of the will and 
of the system of positivism, with an ex- 
position of the relation of physical to meta- 
physical science. It is quite proper for the 
learned professor to select a particular 
range in modern philosophy for his lec- 
tures, but we respectfully submit that a 
less general title would have been more 
accurately definitive of his real object, 
and that he identifies too much the 
course of Eurdpean thought with the di- 
rection of certain classes of thinkers. 
The revival of the philosophy of Aristo- 
tle and St. Thomas in modern times is 
certainly worthy of notice, and is exer- 
cising a strong and decisive influence on 
modern European thought. The ques- 
tions of ideology and the universals can 
hardly be adequately presented without 
consideration of their treatment by the 
able modern expositors of scholastic 
philosophy. We do not agree with Mr. 
Bowen in his estimate of Descartes, or 
in his general views of the superiority of 
modern to ancient and mediaeval philo- 
sophy. Neither are we in accordance 
with his special views of ideology. Nev- 
ertheless, we recognize a current of very 
sound and discriminating thought 
throughout his whole course of argumen- 
tation, which tends always toward the 
most rational and Christian direction, 
taking up the good and positive elements 
which it meets with on the way, and re- 
jecting their contraries. The author 
seems to have a subtle intellectual and 
moral affinity for the highest, most spir- 
itual and ennobling ideas of the great 
men of genius, both heathen and Chris- 
tian. Plato, Malebranche, and Leibnitz 
seem to be those with whom he is most 
in sympathy. His most marked antipathy 
is shown for the degrading pessimism 
of Schopenhauer. We feel sure, from 
the tone of his reasoning and the qual- 
ity of his sentiments, that he would find 
the greatest pleasure in the perusal of 
the writings of such Catholic philoso- 
phers as Kleutgen, San Severino, Liber- 
atorc, StJckl, and perhaps m ire than 



all of Laforet, on account of his Platon- 
izing tendencies. 

Mr. Bowen's style is remarkably and 
elegantly classic. He throws a literary 
charm and glow over his discussions 
and expositions of abstruse ethical and 
metaphysical topics which we do not 
often find, except in the works of Ital- 
ian authors, although some who write in 
English are beginning to cultivate this 
style, in which logical severity is combin- 
ed with rhetorical grace. No one could 
write with more modesty and suavity of 
manner, or in a more calm and amiable 
temper. We hope this truly excellent 
volume, in such contrast with the com- 
mon run of jejune and debasing trash 
which passes for science and philosophy, 
will be very much read, especially in 
the neighborhood of Boston, where it is 
sadly needed. 

HISTORY OF THE SUPPRESSION OF THE 
SOCIETY OF JESUS IN THE PORTUGUESE 
DOMINIONS. By the Rev. Alfred Weld, 
S.J. London : Burns & Gates. 1877. 
(For sale by The Catholic Publication 
Society Co.) 

This able work of Father Weld throws 
a flood of light on a very sad and gloomy 
page of history. Never was the Society 
of Jesus so fearfully tried and persecut- 
ed, and never did its virtues shine more 
conspicuously, than in the period referred 
to by the author that is, during the 
twenty years preceding the entire sup- 
pression of the order by Clement XIV. 
in 1773. 

We behold its holy and se'f-sacrificing 
members spreading themselves over the 
New as well as the Old World, making 
countless conquests for Christ, bearing 
every hardship and danger in order to 
teach the truths of faith to the most bar- 
barous tribes and peoples, planting the 
standard of the cross in the most dis- 
tant regions, and watering the seed of 
the Gospel by their blood. Wherever 
they went they gave evidence, in their 
own persons, of the highest apostolic 
virtues. 

God could not but bless the efforts of 
such disinterested and self-sacrificing 
followers of his divine Son, and their 
labors were crowned with astonishing 
success. Take, for example, the history 
of their missions in Paraguay. No 
brighter or more cheering picture was 
ever displayed to the world than the 
fatherly government of the Jesuits over 



430 



A" civ Publications. 



these poor children of the forest. Here 
civilization and religion went hand in 
hand, and peace and prosperity reigned. 
But the very success of the mission- 
aries raised up against them powerful 
and bitter enemies. The more saintly 
they were, the more envy they excited ; 
the more learned and influential, the 
more jealousy arose, until at last their 
enemies vowed their destruction. 

Chief among those enemies, and most 
powerful in his opposition, was Carvalho, 
Marquis of Pombal, the chief minister 
of state under Joseph I., King of Por- 
tugal. Having, by sycophancy, flattery, 
and deception, made himself master of 
this weak sovereign, and always finding 
means to prevent his evil designs from 
becoming known, he labored to destroy 
the authority of the Holy See throughout 
the kingdom of Portugal, and to estab- 
lish, as nearly as possible, a national 
church. He saw that the faithful Society 
of Jesus would be an insuperable obsta- 
cle in his way. He accordingly deter- 
mined on its destruction, or, if he could 
not effect this, at least its expulsion from 
the Portuguese dominions. Knowing 
the high esteem in which the learned 
body was held throughout Europe by 
kings, princes, nobles, and people, and, 
above all, by each succeeding Sovereign 
Pontiff, he made use of every means, and 
means always the most malicious, in 
order to destroy the character and influ- 
ence of the Jesuits. There was no in- 
sinuation too low, no instrument too vile, 
no slander too base, of which he did not 
make use to effect their injury and ruin. 
He spread throughout Europe, especially 
in the principal courts, the grossest li- 
bels (many of them written by himself) 
against the society, and all under the 
hypocritical plea of serving religion, 
law, and order. Every species of tyran- 
ny that human malice, aided by a deeper 
malice, could invent or call into being 
to injure the glorious institute founded 
by that great soldier of Christ, St. Igna- 
tius, Pombai exercised. 

During his ministry nine thousand in- 
nocent persons, many of whom were of 
the noblest families in the kingdom or 
ecclesiastics of the highest character, were 
condemned either to prison or to death, 
without any trial, and often without even 
knowing the cause for which they were 
deprived of their life or liberty. 

The sufferings of the poor Jesuits, 
many of whom had spent the chief por- 



tion of their lives as apostles in South 
America and had been brought back in 
chains to the dungeons of Portugal, 
were of the most harrowing description. 
Not a few died in their wretched prisons, 
and the few that survived at the end of 
eighteen years, when they were released 
by order of the Queen, were but miser- 
able wrecks of their former selves. 

On the day of the queen's coronation, 
May 13, 1777, Francis da Silva, Judge 
of the Supreme Court, pronounced his 
memorable address, in which he thus de- 
nounces, in the name of the whole na- 
tion, the tyranny from which they were 
just freed : " The blood is still flowing 
from the wounds with which the heart of 
Portugal has been pierced by the unlim- 
ited and blind despotism from which we 
have just ceased to suffer. He (Pombal) 
was the systematic enemy of humanity, 
of religion, of liberty, of merit, and of 
virtue. He filled the prisons' and the 
fortresses with the flower of the king- 
dom. He harassed the public with 
vexations and reduced it to miser}'. He 
destroyed all respect for the pontifical 
and episcopal authority ; he debased 
the nobility, corrupted morals, perverted 
legislation, and governed the state with a 
sceptre of iron, in the vilest and most 
brutal manner that has ever been seen 
in the world." 

All the machinations of this politician 
are laid bare, and his miserable agents 
in this fearful persecution exposed to 
view, in this work of Father Weld. He 
does not ask us to take for granted his 
simple declarations, but fortifies even- 
position which he takes by the clearest 
and most undeniable proofs. He has 
had access to authentic documents, which 
he has put to the best use. His style 
is clear and forcible, and in the argu- 
ments which he uses and the proofs 
with which he sustains them he gives us 
a noble, just, and triumphant vindication 
of the great society of which he is a 
member. 

In reading this work we could not 
but call to mind the prophecy of St. 
Ignatius that " the heritage of the Pas- 
sion should never fail the society" " A 
prophecy," says the Protestant writer 
Stewart Rose, " fulfilled up to this time ; 
for they (the Jesuits) are still, as for 
three hundred years past, indefatigable 
in the saving of souls, perversely mis 
represented and stupidly misunder- 
stood." 



Nciv Publications, 



431 



ANTAR AND ZARA, AND OTHER POEMS, 
MEDITATIVE AND LYRICAL. By Au- 
brey De Vere. 

THE FALL OF RORA, AND OTHER POEMS, 
MEDITATIVE AND LYRICAL. By the 
same. London : Henry S. King & 
Co. 1877. (For sale by The Catholic 
Publication Society Co.) 

These two volumes "comprise the 
author's secular poetry previous to the 
' Legends of St. Patrick ' (1872^ together 
with many poems composed before that 
date, though not published." " His reli- 
gious poems will be collected later in a 
separate volume." 

Antar and Zara, with many shorter 
pieces, first appeared in the pages of 
THE CATHOLIC WORLD. It was in those 
pages that the writer made Mr. De Vere's 
acquaintance ; and not a few of our 
readers, probably, are indebted to the 
same source for their introduction to the 
great Catholic poet of the day. To such 
it will be a welcome surprise, as it is to 
us, to find his cultured muse so prolific. 
The variety of themes, too, within these 
volumes affords a frequent ramble "to 
fresh fields and pastures new." The 
poet himself has travelled. With Byron, 
he has " stood on the Alps," and ponder- 
ed in the " City of the Soul, "and basked 
in the "eternal summer" that " yet gilds 
the Isles of Greece." At home, again, he 
has sung Erin's glories and woes as 
though he had taken down the old Bardic 
harp from ' Tara's walls." 

As a poet, however, he shows the 
influence of two other great masters 
than Byron and Moore though some of 
his Irish ballads remind us of the latter. 
He is chiefly a disciple of Wordsworth, 
while he has studied to good purpose 
the scholarly verse of Tennyson. With 
most imitators of Tennyson the classic 
perfections of the Laureate are turned to 
mere affectations. Not so with Mr. De 
Vere, who is equally a scholar himself. 
This scholarly taste, indeed, would have 
prevented him, we are sure, from adopt- 
ing Wordsworth's theory of poetic dic- 
tion, even had Tennyson never arisen to 
recall English poetry from the loose, in- 
accurate style into which his great pre- 
decessors, with the exception of Cole- 
ridge, had thrown so much splendid 
thought. 

This conviction of ours regarding the 
combined influence of Tennyson and 
Wordsworth on our author's poetry is 



confirmed by the discovery that Antar 
and Zara is dedicated to the former by 
" his friend " ; and, again, of the sonnet 
"Composed at Rydal, September, 1860," 
with the two following sonnets "To 
Wordsworth, on Visiting the Duddon." 
Antar and Zara, particularly in the short- 
er metre of Zara's " song," is eminently 
Tennysonian. For example : 

" He culled me grapes the vintager ; 

In turn, for song the old man prayed : 
I glanced around ; but none was near: 
With veil drawn tighter, I obeyed. 

" 'Were I a vine, and he were heaven. 

That vine would spread a vernal leaf 
To meet the beams of morn and even, 
And think the April day too brief. 

" ' Were he I love a cloud, not heaven, 

That leaf would spread and drink the rain ; 
Warm summer shower and dews of even 
Alike would take, and think them gain. 

" ' It would not shrink from wintry rime 

Or echoes of the thunder-shock, 
But watch the advancing vintage-time. 
And meet it, reddening on the rock.' " 

And again : 

"Dear tasks are mine that make the weeks 

Too swift in passing, not too slow : 
I nurse the rose on faded cheeks, 
Bring solace to the homes of woe. 

" I hear our vesper anthems swell ; 

1 track the steps of Fast and Feast ; 
I read old legends treasured well 
Of Machabean chief or priest. 

" I hear on heights of song and psalm 

The storm of God careering by ; 
Beside His Deep, for ever calm, 
I kneel in caves of Prophecy. 

" O Eastern Book ! It cannot change ! 

Of books beside, the type, the mould- 
It stands like yon Carmelian range 
By our Elias trod of old !" 

Here are the sonnets: 

" COMPOSED AT RYDAL. 
" SEPT , 1860. 

" The last great man by manlier times bequeathed 
To these our noisy and self-boasting days 
In this green valley rested, trod these ways, 
With deep calm breast this air inspiring breathed. 
True bard, because true man, his brow he wreathed 
With wild-flowers only, singing Nature's praise ; 
But Nature turn'd, and crown'd him with her bays, 
And said, 'Be thou my Laureate.' Wisdom sheathed 
In song love-humble ; contemplations high. 
That built like larks their nests upon the ground ; 
Insight and vision ; sympathies profound, 
That spann'd the total of humanity : 
These were the gifts which God pour'd forth at 

large 
On men through him ; and he was faithful to his 

charge." 



43? 



New Publications. 



TO WORDSWORTH, ON VISITING THE 
DUDDON. 



" So long as Duddon, 'twixt his cloud-girt walls 

Thridding the woody chambers of the hills, 

Warbles from vaulted grot and pebbled halls 

Welcome or farewell to the meadow rills ; 

So long as linnets pipe glad madrigals 

Near that brown nook the laborer whistling tills, 

Or the late-reddening apple forms and falls 

'Mid dewy brakes the autumnal red-breast thrills ; 

So long, last poet of the great old race, 

Shall thy broad song through England's bosom 

roll, 

A river singing anthems in its place, 
And be to later England as a soul. 
Glory to Him who made thee, and increase, 
To them that hear thy word, of love and peace ! 



" When first that precinct sacrosanct I trod 
Autumn was there, but Autumn just begun ; 
Fronting the portals of a sinking sun. 
The queen of quietude in vapor stood, 
Her sceptre o'er the'dimly- crimsoned wood 
Resting in light. The year's great work was done ; 
Summer had vanish'd, and repinings none 
Troubled the pulse of thoughtful gratitude. 
Wordsworth ! the autumn of our English song 
Art thou : 'twas thine our vesper psalms to sing : 
Chaucer sang matins ; sweet his note and strong ; 
His singing-robe the green, white garb of Spring : 
Thou like the dying year art rightly stoled 
1 online purple and dark vest of gold." 

Wordsworth was a giant at the sonnet. 
His sonnets are, in our judgment, by 
far his best productions, and those in 
which his theory of diction jars one least. 
We congratulate Mr. De Vere on follow- 
ing in the master's footsteps by cultivat- 
ing the sonnet, and without the defects 
of the leader. We are also proud to see 
him disregard the Petrarchian sonnet as 
the only correct type a form in which 
the English language would be sadly 
monotonous, were it never allowed to 
vary the order of rhymes, particularly in 
the minor system. Surely our language 
has every right to a sonnet of its own 
and that flexible. 

We will only add that the objections 
commonly made to Mr. De Vere's poet- 
ryto wit, that it is elaborate and re- 
quires much thought are of no weight 



again$t.his mission as a poet. He aims, 
we presume, at interesting the cultured 
few rather than the uncultured many. 
A poet's highest function is, we say, to 
teach. And a true Catholic poet, like 
our author, can reach intelligences, both 
within and without the church, through 
doors at which " divine philosophy " in 
dull, prosaic garb must knock in vain. 

SADLIER'S ELEMENTARY HISTORY OF THE 
UNITED STATES. By a Teacher of 
History. New York : William H. 
Sadlier. 1877. 

This is a very pleasing and useful 
little manual for children. It presents 
the chief events of the history of this 
country in the form of question and 
answer, giving a prominence much 
needed to the great part which Catholics 
have played in the struggles of the 
Republic, and its material and social de- 
velopment. The plan was well conceiv- 
ed, and has been well executed. It is 
the last work of the enterprising and 
much-lamented young Catholic publish- 
er who was so suddenly carried off at 
the opening of what promised to be a 
most useful and honorable career. 

ANCIENT HISTORY. From the French of 
Rev. Father Gazeau, S.J. Revised 
and corrected, with questions at the 
end of each chapter. By a pupil of 
the Sisters of Notre Dame. First 
American edition. New York: The 
Catholic Publication Society Co. 1877. 

This is another and useful addition to 
the Catholic Publication Society's edu- 
cational series. It is a very interesting, 
clear, and comprehensive history, em- 
bracing the chief powers and peoples of 
ancient times, and ending with the death 
of Alexander the Great and the division 
of his empire. The questions at the end 
of each chapter form an improved fea- 
ture o*n the original, and the translation 
runs as smoothly as could be desired. 




. 

CATHOLIC WORLD. 



VOL. XXVL, No. 154. JANUARY, 1878. 



BETWEEN THE YEARS. 

1877-1878. 

Rogntt, qua ad pacem tuttt, yerttsttletn : et abundant in dilrgentibus te. Ps. cxxi. 



OLD with its sorrow, weary with the load 

Of angry strife and murderous thought of wrong 
It hath with such sad patience borne so long, 

The year draws near the judgment-seat of God. 

Signed at its birth with Heaven's holiest name, 
Blessed with the chrism of self-sacrifice, 
It brought men gifts of more than royal price ; 

Asked in return a pure and generous fame ; 

Life's book it opened at a clean white page 
Whereon fell not the shadow of a stain 
Set in man's hand a consecrated pen 

Whose script should be the future's heritage. 

Lo ! we have written ; shall we dare to see 

The closed book opened in eternity ? 

n. 

Jtsu, Redemptor ! at thy feet we kneel, 

Who burn the tapers round the dying year; 
Rest we beseech for him that lieth here, 

And on the blotted page thy mercy's seal. 

Through this dark night we wait with hope the day, 
Ready the handmaid of thy grace to greet 
Who hear the rhythm of her strong, young feet 

The fair New Year, advancing swift this way. 

Copyright : Rev. I. T. HKCKER. 1878, 



434 Christianity as an Historical Religion. 

Jesus, most patient, does thy morning break ? 
Shall she we wait for, with thy Spirit's breath 
Stir to new life a world that slumbereth ? 

Shall last year's thorns to fleecy blossom wake ? 

Cometh thy kingdom ? Shall thy will be done, 

And Calvary's shade be lost in Thabor's sun ? 



in. 

To thee we look, O Jesus, our true light ! 

With eyes, tear-dimmed, that, straining, gaze along 
The future's ways the past o'ershades with wrong"; 

That dread the glitter of this earthly night, 

Where every star is rivet of a cross. 

Still in the light of Child-blessed Bethlehem 
We feel the portent of Jerusalem, 

We hear the echoes of sad Rama's loss. 

In thee we trust, and in her, crucified, 

Our holy mother Rome, thy spouse divine, 
In whose dear face eternal light doth shine, 

In whose maimed hands thy perfect gifts abide. 

In thee we rest, who know the future thine ; 

Shape thou our deeds unto thy will divine. 



CHRISTIANITY AS AN HISTORICAL RELIGION.* 

THE doctrine of natural develop- ciples, is only one of the evanes- 

ment or evolution may be appre- cent forms, depending for existence 

hended and presented in theoreti- on the body it animates, becoming 

cal form under two diverse phases extinct, like a sound or the trace of 

or aspects. One of these resembles a bird in the air, as soon as death 

the old scholastic theory of the takes place. So, in the theory of 

eduction of forms from the poten- pure natural evolution, history, 

tiality of matter. The indetermi- polity, ethics, theology, science, 

nate something which is almost no- educe themselves from the poten- 

thing takes on all kinds of specific tial," determinable substratum of 

determinations, which chase away humanity, without efficient or final 

and supplant one another, each one causes, in evanescent forms ; and 

vanishing into nothingness like a their animating spirit is no more 

melody when the harp-strings cease than an anima belluina. 

to vibrate. The animal soul, the The other theory may be like- 

liighest of these determining prin- wise illustrated from the same phi- 
losophy, comparing it with the doc- 

* The Beginnings of Christianity. With a . ' J ' . 

View of the State of the Roman World at the Birth trine Of the rational SOW, 11111116- 

of Christ. BY George p. Fisher D.D., Professor diately created, self-subsisting, en- 

of Ecclesiastical History in Yale College, etc. New . * 

York: Scribner, Armstrong & Co. 1877. tering into Composition With body 



Cliristianity as an Historical Religion. 



435 



but not immersed in it ; like a 
swimmer in water, with head and 
shoulders above the surface ; ani- 
mating matter, but dominating over 
it and subordinating it to serve by 
its development and life the higher 
end of the spirit, which readies be- 
yond the temporal and sensible 
toward infinity and eternity. Thus 
all human development though it 
is nature which is developed, though 
natural processes subserve its evo- 
lution, and its history is the history 
of human events, acts, thoughts, 
polities, religions is informed and 
dominated by a superhuman, a di- 
vine spirit, power, action, for a 
.supra-mundane end. 

The true philosophy of history 
is constructed on this theory 
meaning by theory what Aristotle 
and the Greeks meant, not a vis- 
ionary conjecture, but an intel- 
lectual speculation by which the 
mind has true vision of intelli- 
gible realities, as it has of sensi- 
ble objects by ocular vision. This 
true philosophy of history is partly 
identified with theology, or the 
science of God and all that which 
is divine ; not only in so far as theo- 
logy is the highest part of rational 
philosophy, but also inasmuch as it 
transcends reason. The knowledge 
of God and that which is divine 
transcending natural intelligence 
and reason, is the revelation of God 
in and through the Word, who " en- 
lighteneth every man coming into 
this world," and consequently casts 
light on everything pertaining to 
humanity. The creation, destina- 
tion, fall, redemption and glorifica- 
tion of humanity in and through 
the Word, " who was made flesh 
and dwelt among us," is the object 
of Christian theology, to which the 
immediate object of history is sub- 
ordinate. The Incarnate Son of 
God is the central figure in human 



history, its circumference is drawn 
around this centre, and all its di- 
ameters pass through it. 

A number of great historians 
have perceived this truth, and 
made universal history render up 
its testimony, which is sometimes 
latent and sometimes patent, to 
Christ and to his divine work of 
human regeneration. Leo, for in- 
stance, having first convinced him- 
self of the truth of divine revela- 
tion by the study of history, made 
his entire work on the universal 
history of mankind a splendid and 
irrefutable demonstration of Chris- 
tianity. The course of time and 
events before Christ is a prepara- 
tion for his coming. The one great 
event in human history is the di- 
vine Epiphany, the visible manifes- 
tation of God in the Person of the 
Word through his assumed human 
nature, in which he was conceived 
and born of the Virgin, lived 
among men, died, and rose again to 
an immortal and glorious life, for 
the fulfilment of the divine purpose 
in 'creation and the consummation 
of the 1 destiny of mankind. The 
course of time and events after 
Christ is the successive fulfilment 
of this divine purpose, to be com- 
pleted in the final consummation 
at the end of the present order of 
the world. 

In the six centuries immediately 
preceding Christ the preparation 
and convergence of events become 
more distinct and manifest ; the 
features of human evolution are 
more marked ; the progress and 
tendency of the universal move- 
ment are apparently accelerated in 
the direction of the common point 
of convergence; all human affairs, 
the objects of history, seem to rise 
out of its dim horizon, looming up 
in increasing magnitude, like the 
great ships of a squadron hasten- 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



ing from all points of the com- 
pass over a broad sea to their ren- 
dezvous. Before this period the 
expanse of time is to our eye al- 
most like the waste solitudes of 
ocean. Confucius collected some 
remnants of Chinese historical doc- 
uments going back to the ninth 
century B.C. Some imperfect re- 
cords of Hindoo antiquity have 
been brought to light in modern 
researches. Hieroglyphic and cu- 
neiform inscriptions, like traces of 
a caravan on the sand, present to 
the curious modern eye vestiges of 
a remote past. Berosus wrote in 
the reign of Seleucus Nicator, Ma- 
netho in that .of Ptolemy Philadel- 
phia, Herodotus four centuries and 
a half before Christ. Varro, the 
most learned of the Romans, dates 
the beginning of authentic Roman 
history from the first Olympiad, B.C. 
776. Authentic written history 
does not go back as far as Solomon, 
except as we find it in the sacred 
writings of the Old Testament. 
These priceless documents are the 
family records of the house of Naza- 
reth, the genealogy of Jesus Christ, 
the history of his predecessors and 
precursors ; of inchoate Christian- 
ity, of the prophecy and providence, 
the promises and laws, the typical 
rites and preliminary covenants, 
the elementary revelations and the 
other preludes, by which, in divers 
places, times, and manners, the 
Word of God prepared the way for 
his coming upon earth to fulfil all 
prophecy and accomplish the ex- 
pectation of all nations. 

About five centuries and a half 
before Christ the prophet Daniel 
made his celebrated prediction of 
the great period of seventy weeks 
/>., four hundred and ninety years 
from the rebuilding of the temple 
and city of Jerusalem to the Mes- 
sias. This period is marked as the 



one of immediate expectation and 
preparation. As the time of the 
great Prophet drew near the suc- 
cession of the minor prophets in 
Judea ceased. The Jewish people 
became less exclusively isolated, 
and came into relations with other 
nations which were quite new and 
marked with a transitional tenden- 
cy. The Greek Scriptures of the 
second canon, like the writings of 
St. Paul in the New Testament, arc- 
more like the classic works of other 
nations than those of the first 
canon, which are marked with the 
peculiar Hebrew characteristics. 
A diffusion of the Jews, of their 
books and ideas ; a general disse- 
mination of the Greek language and 
literature, a world-wide unifica- 
tion of civilized, and in part of 
barbarous peoples under the Ro- 
man polity ; a remarkable advance- 
ment of the human mind in the 
great works of philosophy, poetry, 
literature, art, and every species of 
civilization ; are the principal se- 
cond and concurrent causes direct- 
ed by divine Providence to fulfil a 
purpose, analogous to the mission 
of St. John the Baptist, among the 
nations predestined to a Christian 
vocation. 

There is nothing in this view 
which favors rationalism. Grace 
supposes nature, and God is the 
author of both. Natural and su- 
pernatural providence are distinct 
but not separate. Rational science 
and revealed doctrine are portions 
of the universal truth which has its 
measure in the divine intelligence 
and its primal origin in the divine 
essence. It is, moreover, charac- 
teristic of the divine operation to 
act on the rule of parsimony in the 
use of means. Where second causes 
are sufficient the first cause does 
not immediately intervene and su- 
persede their action ; where natural 



Clirislianity as an Historical Religion. 



437 



forces are sufficient they are not 
supplanted by those which are su- 
pernatural. What a long period 
elapsed before the earliest of the 
inspired books was written ! How 
few have been the prophets, how 
comparatively few and rare mira- 
cles of the first order ! In the be- 
ginning, religion, the church, the 
whole spiritual order, was identi- 
fied with the common social and 
civil order. The special interven- 
tion of God in the calling of Abra- 
ham, the legation of Moses, the 
entire Jewish system, was a reno- 
vation of the more ancient and 
universal dispensation, confined 
within the limits of one nation, 
protected by special legislation, 
sanctioned by miracles, manifested 
in revelations through inspired men 
and prophets. As the time draws 
near when the church and religion 
were to become once more and 
finally Catholic, the supernatural 
providence of God over the Jewish 
people becomes less extraordinary, 
and his natural providence over 
the other nations more conspicu- 
ous. The great Prophet himself, 
the Messias, the Son of God in 
human form, performs miracles and 
appeals to them, as it were, with 
reserve and reluctance, hides his 
wisdom and power from men, re- 
fuses to exert his dominion over 
men and nature in defence of his 
own life, discloses himself after his 
resurrection to a few only, and de- 
parts, so to speak, incognito from 
the earth to return to his heavenly 
abode with the Father. The gift 
of inspiration, by virtue of which 
the written documents of revela- 
tion are completed, is imparted to 
a small number only; their writings 
fill but a small compass ; within fifty 
years from the opening of the New 
Testament canon by the first Gos- 
pel it is closed by the last book of 



the last of the apostles, St. John 
No new David, or Isaias, or Daniel, 
or Paul, or John is henceforth to 
appear in the church. All this 
shows the purpose of God not to 
oppress the human by the divine 
in the deification of humanity, not 
to supersede the natural by the 
supernatural, or to supplant the 
activity of the human intelligence 
and will by an overbearing divine 
power. The Spirit of God brooded 
over the face of chaos in the be- 
ginning, gradually bringing it into 
form and order, and the same Spi- 
rit has been waving his wings* 
over the waters of human history 
during the entire period of the ex- 
plication of God's creative act in 
time and space through human ac- 
tions and events. Where creative 
power is required i.e., where it is 
the will of God to give being to a 
term educed from non-existence 
and from no pre-existing subject 
God acts alone and immediately 
as first cause with no concurrent 
cause. He has created and con- 
tinues to create all simple sub- 
stances. Where supernatural pow- 
er is required to bring from creat- 
ed substances certain results which 
presuppose a new form of being in 
them above their intrinsic substan- 
tial actuality, or some other aug- 
mentation of their natural force by 
an immediate divine act, God in- 
tervenes directly as the efficient 
cause of the effect produced. He 
is the author of second causes and 
principles, of the first germs of evo- 
lution, of generative powers, of all 
origin, and of all that is called 
in the German language Urweseii. 
He preserves everything, concurs 
with everything, directs everything 
toward proximate, remote, and final 

* Mr. Leeser, a late eminent Jewish scholar and 
minister of a synagogue in Philadelphia, translated 
the original text of Gen. i. n : " The Spirit of God 
mat waving over the face of the waters.'' 



438 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



ends, bringing the creation which 
proceeded from him as first cause 
back to himself as final cause. And 
therefore, whenever there is a suf- 
ficient reason, he intervenes direct- 
ly to overrule the order of second 
causes and the natural laws he has 
himself established. The especial 
reason for this is to prevent the 
thwarting of the legitimate action 
of beings endowed with con-creative 
power, through the illegitimate in- 
terference of other beings endowed 
with the same power. All spiritual 
beings have this con-creative power 
by virtue of intelligence and free- 
will. They may fail to exercise it 
when they should; they may be 
hindered from exercising it by 
equal or superior force. The or- 
der of moral probation requires 
that great freedom of movement 
should be allowed to these forces 
in voluntary efforts and in conflicts. 
But the final cause of this proba- 
tion also exacts that the predeter- 
mined plans of God shall be infal- 
libly executed, and that he shall 
overrule the wills both of men and 
angels for the fulfilment of his own 
sovereign will. 

The natural and the superna- 
tural are, therefore, not separate, 
much less disconnected, least of 
all hostile, in the order of divine 
providence, although they are dis- 
tinct and placed in logical opposi- 
tion to one another. Sacred and 
secular history, religion and civili- 
zation, theology and science, the 
eternal and temporal interests of 
mankind, cannot be separated from 
each other and relegated to mu- 
tually distant or hostile kingdoms, 
like the kingdoms of light and 
darkness in the system of the Ma- 
nicheans. Any view which con- 
siders mankind as separated into 
two divisions of the elect and the 
reprobate by an antecedent de- 



cree, is false. The doctrine that 
the nature of man has become to- 
tally depraved, and that his entire 
rational and physical activity 
develops only sin which tends 
fatally to perdition, is utterly un- 
christian as well as unphilosophi- 
cal. It is only from this doctrine 
that we could deduce a theory by 
which the society of the elect would 
be considered as a separated, 
isolated tribe, a small invisible 
church, without any real relation 
through a spiritual bond with the 
mass of mankind. The Catholic 
doctrine is expressed by the author 
of the Book of Wisdom in these 
beautiful words : " God created all 
things that they might b : and he 
made the nations of the earth for 
health : and there is no poison of 
destruction in them, nor kingdom 
of hell upon the earth. For justice 
is perpetual and immortal."* 

The true philosophy of Chris- 
tianity must, therefore, take into 
view the providence of God over 
the Gentiles, their history, philoso- 
phy, polity, and civilization, in order 
to appreciate the period of prepa- 
ration for the Messias who was the 
expected of the nations. The phi- 
losophy of history, also, must take 
into view the whole cycle of spe- 
cial acts of divine providence re- 
corded in the books of the Old 
Testament, and fulfilled between 
the epochs of the calling of Abra- 
ham and the appearance of the 
Messias in the history of the pecu- 
liar people of God. Mr. Formby. 
with his peculiar originality and 
vigor of thought, has brought out 
into more striking relief than any 
other author we know of the idea 
common to several excellent mo- 
dern writers respecting the posi- 
tion of the two cities, Jerusalem 

* Wisdom i. 14 15. 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



439 



and Rome, in the historical order 
of divine Providence. They are, 
as it were, the two great citadels of 
God, the two great capitals of the 
universal kingdom of Christ. Dur- 
ing the thousand years immediately 
before the Incarnation the city of 
David, the seat of the royal ances- 
tors of Jesus Christ our Lord, was 
the citadel of all the highest inte- 
rests of humanity. All the hopes, 
the whole future destiny, of man- 
kind were in David's royal line, 
the sweet psalmist, the prophet, 
the king of Israel. For seven cen- 
turies God was preparing Rome, 
first the ally, then the arbiter, and 
finally the conqueror of Judea, to 
take the place of Jerusalem, and by 
its world-wide polity to serve as a 
medium for the promulgation and 
extension of the divine religion 
throughout the whole earth. 

The true philosophy of history 
sets aside all theories which are ex- 
clusive on the one side or on the 
other those which exclude the or- 
dinary providence of God over all 
mankind under the natural law, 
and those which exclude his extra- 
ordinary providence over the church 
under the supernatural law and 
includes both under one synthesis. 
The one exclusive view proceeds 
from an a priori theological princi- 
ple resulting in a conclusion with 
which a logical induction from 
facts cannot be reconciled, and 
therefore denies or misrepresents 
the facts. The other proceeds 
from an & priori metaphysical prin- 
ciple with a similar result. The 
one is a pseudo-supernaturalism, 
the other a pseudo-naturalism. The 
first pretends to be the genuine 
spiritual religion, or pure Chris- 
tianity ; the second professes to be 
the genuine rational philosophy, or 
pure science. Both are counter- 
feits of the truth. The best cor- 



rective of these theoretical tenden- 
cies is to be found in the correct 
knowledge and exposition of his- 
tory. Lacordaire lias well said : 
" On nc brfile pas les fails." Facts 
are incombustible ; they cannot be 
made to evaporate in the gaseous 
elements of transcendental meta- 
physics, or vanish in clouds of 
smoke from the pipes of German 
neologists. Each of these make 
their gas or blow their clouds from 
products of their own imagination 
adroitly substituted for facts. Facts 
resist with an invincible inertia 
every combination with false theo- 
ries of supernatural religion. In 
all branches of science pure rea- 
soning and the investigation of 
facts must go together in harmony 
and mutually complete each other. 
Even in divine revelation God is 
careful to present facts with their 
evidence in connection with doc- 
trine, and a large portion of the 
Bible is made up of historical re- 
cords. The divine legation of 
Moses and the divine mission of 
Jesus Christ are great historical 
facts, and they are in synthetical 
connection with all the great events 
and epochs of human universal his- 
tory. In this concurrence and har- 
mony we find the most evident and 
tangible proof and corroboration 
in the order of natural reason of 
the truth revealed by God in Jesus 
Christ, which is the object of di- 
vine faith, and the soul of the com- 
plete substance of Christianity. 

Jesus Christ came on the earth 
at the very juncture of the ages, at 
the moment for crystallization, at 
the epoch of crisis in human affairs, 
when Judaism, Grecian culture, and 
Roman jurisprudence combined 
with Roman valor, were ready to 
blend in a new combination ; when 
the three strands spun by no blind 
fate, but by all-seeing Providence, 



440 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



were ready to be intertwined : the 
pure tradition of the patriarchs, the 
philosophy of the heathen sages, 
the organic polity of the imperial 
legislators an electric cable to 
bind the earth and transmit the 
new movement of divine impulse. 
The Jews preserved and handed 
down the pure doctrine of mono- 
theism, the promise of redemption, 
and the moral law the germ of re- 
vealed doctrine and ethics, which, 
in the state of development, is the 
faith and law of Christianity. The 
Greeks furnished the intellectual 
human culture in philosophy, poet- 
ry, and art, of which the Christian 
religion availed itself, as of a pre- 
cious vase in' which to detain its 
subtle and sublime essence an 
ideal atmosphere for the communi- 
cation of its influence to the minds 
and imaginations of men in all ages 
and countries. Rome opened the 
way for diffusion and unification. 
Immobility in tradition, mobility 
in intelligence, motive power in or- 
ganization, are the characters of 
Jewish, Greek, and Roman civiliza- 
tion, which were united in Chris- 
tianity under a higher and control- 
ling vital force. 

They were each and all temporary 
and insufficient, subject to a law of 
internal decay, evanescent in their 
nature, and about vanishing when 
Jesus Christ came on the earth. 
That he came just in time to su- 
persede them and to begin the uni- 
versal regeneration of mankind; 
that he really did so without any 
purely human and natural means 
which were sufficient causes of the 
effects produced; is a proof that 
the God whose providence rules the 
world sent him to fulfil this mis- 
sion, and that his work was a di- 
vine operation. God's hand alone 
could spin and twine the threads 
of human destiny and make Time's 



noiseless, incessant shuttle weave 
the woof and web into the succes- 
sive figures of historical embroi- 
dery. 

The miracles and resurrection of 
Jesus Christ, historically proved as 
certain, indubitable facts, authenti- 
cate his divine mission ; they stamp 
a divine seal on his credentials as 
the Messias promised from the be- 
ginning of the world. This divine 
legation gives divine authority to 
his word and precepts. Whatever 
he teaches in the name of God is a 
divine revelation,, and whatever he 
commands is a divine law. The 
authentic record of these miracles, 
the record of what Jesus said and 
did ; the authentic account of 
his teaching respecting his own 
person, plan, doctrine, and law 
that is, of the principles and the 
foundation of the Christian reli- 
gion is historical; it is an authen- 
tic testimony respecting facts. The 
authentic record of the actual 
founding of Christianity on the 
principles and plan of the Master, 
by the disciples to whom he en- 
trusted the work of carrying his 
design into effect, is historical. 
This divine design necessarily em- 
bracing all that is contained in the 
idea of a continuity and develop- 
ment of divine providence over hu- 
man affairs and destinies from the 
beginning to the end of the world, 
its actual carrying out through suc- 
cessive ages becomes matter of his- 
tory for the time present in respect 
to times past. Its principles of con- 
tinuity and development, in con- 
nection with the order of provi- 
dence anterior to Christ, and with 
the progress of its movement from 
the apostolic age through the ages 
following, are to be sought for in 
its history, not to the exclusion 
of reasoning from abstract prin- 
ciples, but in connection with 



Cliristianity as an Historical Religion. 



441 



it. The historical documents ot 
the New Testament, considered 
merely as credible testimony and 
apart from their inspiration, are 
of paramount importance in respect 
to the inquiry into the nature of 
the genuine, authentic Christianity 
promulgated and established as a 
world-religion by its Founder and 
his apostles. After these come all 
other documents containing histo- 
rical record or indirect evidence 
respecting the earliest age of the 
Christian religion. In this aspect 
the study of dogmas of faith, of 
laws and rites, of the spirit and the 
organization of Christianity, is di- 
rected toward an historical term. 
The object of the inquiry is to as- 
certain what is Christianity, what 
was its legitimate development, 
where is to be found through all 
ages the real continuation, uninter- 
rupted succession, perpetual life, 
and progressive expansion which 
connote the identity of its essence 
and its specific unity in all its dis- 
tinct moments, as it proceeds from 
its beginning towards its end. Al- 
though its intrinsic truth and au- 
thority are established simultane- 
ously with the exposition of its his- 
torical character, the argument is 
nevertheless distinct, in respect to 
its conclusive force in this direc- 
tion, from the pure manifestation of 
the real essence and nature of the 
religion. The question as to its 
essential constituents and their logi- 
cal connection is logically distinct 
from the question as to its mate- 
rial truth, although they are 
metaphysically one by an insepa- 
rable composition. Christ, mani- 
festing himself in history, is a re- 
velation of the infinite wisdom, 
power, and goodness of God in his 
divine works, which transcend the 
reach of all created and dependent 
forces. It is the Eternal Word 



speakingefficiently, as when he said : 
" Let there be light : and there 
was light." If we can only see all 
objects by this light, through a 
pure medium, we cannot fail to be 
enlightened by the knowledge of 
the truth. 

The able work of Dr. Fisher, the 
title of which is prefixed to this ar- 
ticle, and which was briefly noticed 
in our last number, is based on the 
idea we have set forth in these pre- 
liminary remarks, although we do 
not profess to have given an expo- 
sition of the learned author's pre- 
cise thesis, or ascribe to him a view 
identical in all particulars with the 
one we have presented. We will em- 
ploy his own language for this pur- 
pose, of showing his own individual 
conception of the historical environ- 
ment of Christianity, and the con- 
clusions to which investigation and 
reflection on the great facts and 
events connected with its begin- 
nings have led him. 

"Christianity is an historical religion. 
It is made up of events, or, to say the 
least, springs out of events which, how- 
ever peculiar in their origin, form a part 
of the history of mankind. . . . The Apos- 
tle Paul refers to the birth of Christ as 
having occurred ' when the fulness of 
time was come ' (Gal. iv. 4). 

" His thought evidently is not only that 
a certain measure of time must run out, 
but that a train of historical events and 
changes must occur which have the com- 
ing of Christ for their proper sequence. 
Of the nature of these antecedents in the 
previous course of history he speaks 
when he has occasion to discuss the rela- 
tion of the Mosaic dispensation to the 
Christian, and to point out the aims of 
Providence in regard to the Gentile na- 
tions. It was formerly a mistake of both 
orthodox and rationalist to look upon 
Christianity too exclusively as a system 
of doctrine addressed to the understand- 
ing. Revelation has been thought of as 
a communication written on high and 
let down from the skies delivered to 
men as the Sibylline books were said to 
have been conveyed to Tarquin. Or ii 



442 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



has been considered, like the philosoph- 
ical system of Plato, a creation of the 
human intellect, busying itself with the 
problems of human life and destiny ; the 
tacit assumption in either case being 
that Christianity is merely a body of 
doctrine. The truth is that revelation is 
at the core historical. It is embraced in 
a series of transactions in which men 
act and participate, but which are refer- 
able manifestly to an extraordinary agen- 
cy of God, who thus discloses or reveals 
himself. The supernatural clement does 
not exclude the natural ; miracle is not 
magic. Over and above teaching there 
are laws, institutions, providential guid- 
ance, deliverance, and judgment. Here 
is the ground-work of revelation. For 
the interpretation of this extraordinary 
and exceptional line of historical phe- 
nomena prophets and apostles are raised 
up men inspired to lift the veil and ex- 
plain the dealings of Heaven with men. 
Here is the doctrinal or theoretical 
side of revelation. These individuals 
behold with an open eye the significance 
of the events of which they are witness- 
es or participants. The facts of secular 
history require to be illuminated by phi- 
losophy. Analogous to this office is 
the authoritative exposition and com- 
ment which we find in the Scripture 
along with the historical record. The 
doctrinal element is not a thing in- 
dependent, purely theoretic, discon- 
nected from the realities of life and his- 
torj. These lie at the foundation ; on 
them everything of a didactic nature is 
based. This fact will be impressively 
obvious to one who will compare the 
Bible, as to plan and structure, with the 
Koran. 

" The character of revelation is less 
likely to be misconceived when the de- 
sign of revelation is kept in view. The 
end is not to satisfy the curiosity of those 
who ' seek after wisdom,' by the solu- 
tion of metaphysical problems. The 
good offered is not science, but salva- 
tion. The final cause of revelation is the 
recovery of men to communion with God 
that is, to true religion. Whatever know- 
ledge is communicated is tributary to 
this end. 

" Hence the grand aim, under the Old 
Dispensation and the New, was not the 
production of a book, but the training of 
a people. To raise up and train up a 
nation that should become a fit instru- 
ment for the moral regeneration of man- 



kind was the aim of the old system. . . . 
Under the new or Christian system the 
object was not less the training of a peo- 
ple ; not, however, with any limitations 
of race. The fount of the system was to 
be a community of men who should be 
' the light of the world,' and ' the salt of 
the earth. . . .' 

" The grand idea of the kingdom of 
God is the connecting thread that runs 
through the entire course of divine reve- 
lation. We behold a kingdom planted 
in the remote past, and carried forward 
to its ripe development, by a series of 
transactions in which the agency of God 
mingles in an altogether peculiar way in 
the current of human affairs. There is 
a manifestation of God in act and deed. 
Verbal teaching is the commentary at- 
tached to the historic fact, ensuring to 
the latter its true meaning." 

This is sound and Christian phi- 
losophy, admirably expressed and 
containing many fruitful germs of 
thought. What we have quoted 
may suffice to show that the his- 
torical nature of Christianity is the 
fundamental idea of Dr. Fisher's 
argument in the work under re- 
view. 

He recognizes also a law of his- 
torical and continuous development 
through all time in Christianity as 
resulting from its vital force, which 
differs from the previous historical 
stage in this: that "in the giving 
of revelation, at each successive 
stage, and especially at the con- 
summation, there was an increment 
of its contents," whereas "this is 
not true of Christianity since the 
apostolic age." The touchstone 
and test of normal development, in 
the sense to which the signification 
of the term is restricted when it is 
used of the post-apostolic age, is 
that "it springs out of the primi- 
tive seed " namely, the deposit of > 
revealed truth contained in the 
teaching of Christ and the apostles 
in its state of ultimate complete- 
ness. 

The historical method of deter- 



CJiristianity as an Historical Religion. 



443 



mining the real origin and nature 
of Christianity is contrasted with 
the method which is purely a priori 
and exclusively metaphysical in the 
following passage : 

"The historical basis of Christianity 
marks the distinction between Christian 
theology and metaphysical philosophy. 
The starting-point of the philosopher is 
the intuitions of the mind ; on them as a 
foundation, with the aid of logic, he 
builds up his system His only postu- 
lates are the data of consciousness. In 
Christian theology, on the contrary, we 
begin with facts recorded in history, and 
explore, with the aid of inspired au- 
thors, their rationale. To reverse this 
course, and seek to evolve the Christian 
religion out of consciousness, to trans- 
mute its contents into a speculative sys- 
tem, after the manner of the pantheistic 
thinkers in Germany, is not less futile 
than would be the pretence to construct 
American history with no reference to 
the Puritan emigration, the Revolution- 
ary war, or the Southern Rebellion. The 
distinctive essence of Christianity eva- 
porates in an effort, like that undertaken 
by Schelling in his earlier system, and 
by Hegel, to identify it with a process of 
thought."* 

Farther on in his argument Dr. 
Fisher shows how this perverse 
employment of the d priori method 
has produced the sceptical theories 
of the Tubingen school of criti- 
cism : 

"As regards the credibility of the Gos- 
pel history, it ought to be clearly under- 
stood that the modern attack by Baur, 
Strauss, Zeller, and others is founded 
upon an a priori assumption. It is taken 
for granted beforehand that whatever is 
supernatural is unhistorical. The testi- 
mony into which a miracle enters is 
stamped at once as incredible. Chris- 
tianity, it was assumed, was an evolu- 
tion of thought upon the natural plane. 
At a later day Strauss fell into a mate- 
rialistic way of thinking, which rendered 
him, if possible, more deaf to all the 
evidence which, if admitted, implies the 
supernatural. From the point of view 
taken in the sceptical school, therefore, 

*P. '. 



the New Testament histories, so far as 
they relate to the wonderful works of 
Christ, and his resurrection and mani- 
festation to his disciples after his death, 
must be discredited. But their princi- 
ple, or prejudice, carries the negative 
critics farther. It mustaflect their juda 
ment as to the authorship of the narra- 
tives which record the miracles. It is 
rendered difficult to believe, if not quite 
improbable, that these histories emanate 
from apostles, eye-witnesses of the life 
of Jesus. The myths, or the consciously- 
invented stories, the product of a theolo- 
gical ' tendency ' in the primitive church, 
cannot well be ascribed to the immediate 
followers of Christ. The fact that the 
New Testament histories contain ac- 
counts of miracles also tends to weaken 
and vitiate their general authority, in 
the estimation of the sceptical school. 
That is to say, the credulity of the Gos- 
pel writers, or their willingness to de- 
ceive, as evinced in the supernatural 
elements embraced in their books, makes 
them less entitled to trust in their re- 
cord of ordinary events into which the 
miracle does not enter. . . . 

"Connected with the unscientific as- 
sumption first noticed, other assumptions 
were adopted by the Tubingen school 
which are equally unsound. It was as- 
sumed that Christianity is an evolution 
of thought according to the scheme of 
the Hegelian logic, where it is held as a 
law that a doctrine in an undeveloped 
form must divaricate into two opposite?, 
to be recombined afterwards in a higher 
unity. Thus, it was assumed that Pau- 
linism.and the sharply-defined Judaizing 
system attributed to Peter, were the an- 
tagonistic types of opinion which sprang 
out of the seed of doctrine planted by 
Christ, and which were reunited in the 
old Catholic theology, the evangelical 
legalism of the fathers of the second 
century." * 

This statement is supplemented 
by another succinct and pregnant 
passage containing the elements of 
an argument of great comprehen- 
sion and irrefragable conclusive- 
ness. After affirming that " the 
mythical theory is wrecked upon a 
variety of difficulties which it can- 
not evade or surmount " a state- 

* Pp- 393-39S- 



444 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



ment which has much more force, 
taken in connection with the entire 
context of thorough critical rea- 
soning, than it can show as a mere 
isolated quotation the learned pro- 
fessor proceeds : 

" What is the rationalistic theory of 
the origin of the Christian religion ? It 
is that Jesus, a carpenter of Na/areth, 
with no prestige derived from birth or 
social standing, taught in Galilee for 
about a year for to this period the class 
of whom we speak would limit his pub- 
lic work. From these brief labors, made 
up wholly of verbal instruction, came 
that profound impression of his super- 
human dignity which was made indeli- 
bly upon his disciples, and which his 
crucifixion as a criminal did not weaken, 
and that transforming power which went 
forth upon them, and, in ever-increasing 
measure, upon all subsequent genera- 
tions. The Apostolic Church, the con- 
version of Paul, and his Epistles, the 
narratives of the four Gospels, with all 
that the}' contain, and Christianity, as it 
appears in the history of mankind, all 
spring from that one year of mere teach- 
ing ! The effect is utterly disproportion- 
ate to the cause assigned."* 

We must take notice that the 
author, with a competent know- 
ledge of the theories and argu- 
ments of the German Biblical cri- 
tics, has carefully refuted them, 
and presented solid proofs of the 
genuineness and authenticity of 
the historical books of the New 
Testament, before arriving at this 
part of his argument. He is sum- 
ming up his plea after an exami- 
nation and discussion of evidence. 
His reasoning is not, therefore, 
based on mere hypothesis, but is 
the conclusion of a well-sustained 
thesis, with all the weight derived 
from his precedent proofs. And 
he is therefore logically entitled to 
make the demand that Christianity 
shall be estimated by the historical 
measure, according to the full 

* Pp. 464, 465- 



value of its miraculous facts and 
supernatural qualities, to the exclu- 
sion of any hypothesis which pre- 
tends to be rational but is really 
only fantastic, and therefore un- 
philosophical as well as unchris- 
tian. 

"It is much more consistent with a 
sound philosophy, instead of taking re- 
fuge in an unreasonable denial of facts 
historically established, to seek to com- 
prehend them. At the outset the no- 
tion should be banished that miracles 
are repugnant to nature ; that the super- 
natural is anti-natural. There is one 
system ; and supernatural agency, how- 
ever it ma}' modify the course of nature, 
does no violence to the universal order. 
For there is no such unbending rigidity 
in the course of nature that it cannot be 
modified by the interposition of volun- 
tary agency. A steamship, cutting its 
way through the billows in the teeth of 
wind and tide, moves by the force of ma- 
chinery which is contrived and directed 
by the human will.* The volitions of 
man produce an effect which nature, in- 
dependently of this spiritual force, could 
never occasion. Now, of the limits of 
the possible control of matter by the pow- 
er of spirit, any more than of the essence 
and origin of matter itself, we cannot 
speak. It is a presumptuous affirmation 
that there is no being in the universe 
who can infinitely outdo the power of 
man, vast as it is, in this direction." f 

In this brief and sententious 
manner, with a few heavy and well- 
directed strokes of sound reason, 
the author effectually demolishes 
all the brittle ware of transcenden- 
tal nonsense which calls itself ration- 
alism. We are reminded of a sen- 
tence we once heard uttered by 
that singular genius, Henry Giles, in 
a railway carriage, respecting a mat- 
ter quite different: " Such theories 
are shattered like rotten glass by a 
single thump of common sense." 

We find no reason for quoting 

* We should prefer to say contrived by the hu- 
man intelligence, constructed and directed by the 
human will. 

tP. 4 6s. 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



445 



anything from Dr. Fisher's exposi- 
tion of the historical preparation 
for Christianity in the propaedeu- 
tic system of Judaism. For the 
present we will only refer to the 
notice which he takes of the dis- 
persion of the Hebrews over the 
world at the epoch of the birth of 
Christ, adopting the language of 
Mommsen, which designates Juda- 
ism as " an effective leaven of cos- 
mopolitanism " working in the same 
direction with the imperial Roman 
polity toward a blending of nation- 
alities in the more general solida- 
rity "the nationality of which was 
really nothing but humanity." Of 
fhe providential office of Greece 
and Rome in connection with that 
of Judea he thus speaks : 

" These were three nations of antiqui- 
ty, each of which was entrusted with a 
grand providential office in reference to 
Christianity. The Greeks, whatever 
they may have learned from Babylon, 
Egypt, and Tyre, excelled all other 
races in a self-expanding power of intel- 
lect in ' the power of lighting their own 
fire.' They are the masters in science, 
literature, and art. Plato, speaking of 
his own countrymen, made ' the love of 
knowledge ' the special characteristic of 
' our part of the world,' as the love of 
money was attributed with equal truth 
to the Phcenicians and Egyptians. The 
robust character of the Romans, and 
iheir sense of right, qualified them to 
rule, and to originate and transmit their 
great system of law and their method of 
political organization. Virgil lets An- 
chises define the function of the Roman 
people in his address to ^Eneas, a visitor 
to the abodes of the dead : 

" ' Others, I know, more tenderly may beat the 

breathing brass, 
And better from the marble block bring living 

looks to pass ; 
Others may better plead the cause, may compass 

heaven's face, 
And mark it out, and tell the stars their rising and 

their place ; 
But thou, O Roman ! look to it the folks of earth to 

sway ; 
For this shall be thine handicraft : peace on the 

world to lay, 
To spare the weak, to mar the proud by constant 

weight of war.' 



" Greece and Rome had each its own 
place to fill ; but true religion the spirit 
in which man should live comes from 
the Hebrews." * 

Dr. Fisher places the relation of 
sympathy or affinity between the 
mythological religion and Chris- 
tianity in three things : first, in the 
stimulus and scope given to subjec- 
tive religious sentiments; second, 
in the impulse towards " a goal 
hidden from sight," the object of 
" an unfulfilled demand in the reli- 
gious nature " of men seeking after 
God, whom they, in the language of 
St. Paul on Mars' Hill, at Athens, 
" ignorantly worshipped "; third, in 
a growing "monotheistic ten- 
dency." f 

The topic of the relation of 
Greek philosophy to Christianity 
is handled by the learned author 
in a very judicious and discrimi- 
nating manner, although we are 
disposed to take a considerably dif- 
ferent view of the philosophy of Aris- 
totle as compared with Platonism. 
We are pleased to observe his high 
estimate of the writings of Cicero. 
The chapter on this topic is thus 
introduced : 

" The Greek philosophy was a prepara- 
tion for Christianity in three ways : it 
dissipated, or tended to dissipate, the 
superstitions of polytheism ; it awaken- 
ed a sense of need which philosophy of 
itself failed to meet ; and it so educated 
the intellect and conscience as to render 
the Gospel apprehensible and, in many 
cases, congenial to the mind. It did 
more than remove obstacles out of the 
way ; its work was positive as well as 
negative : it originated ideas and habits 
of thought which had more or less direct 
affinity with the religion of the Gospel, 
and which found in this religion their 
proper counterpart. The prophetic ele- 
ment of the Greek philosophy lay in the 
glimpses of truth which it could not fully 
discern, and in the obscure and uncon- 
scious pursuit of a good which it could 
not definitely grasp." \ 



* P. 66. 



t Pp. 137-139- % P- 140- 



446 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



In treating of " the close relation 
of the Roman Empire to Christian- 
ity " Prof. Fisher notices the ex- 
tension of Roman citizenship, the 
cosmopolitan polity of Caesar, the 
unifying influence of Roman juris- 
prudence, the assimilation of man- 
kind in language and culture by 
the spread of the Romano-Hellenic 
civilization and the Greek and 
Latin languages, travel and inter- 
course, commerce and a general 
mingling of mankind from various 
causes, the mingling of religions, 
and the resuscitation of the idea 
of a common humanity. Without 
overlooking the external agency of 
Rome in paving the way for Chris- 
tianity, the author more distinctly ac- 
centuates another kind of influence : 

"The effect of the consolidation of so 
large a part of mankind in one political 
body, in breaking up local and tribal 
narrowness, and in awakening what 
may be termed a cosmopolitan feeling, 
is in the highest degree interesting. 
The Roman dominion was the means of 
a mental and moral preparation for the 
Gospel ; and this incidental effect is 
worthy of special note. The kingdom of 
Christ proposed the unification of man- 
kind through a spiritual bond. What- 
ever tended to melt down the prejudices 
of nation, and clan, and creed, and in- 
stil in the room of them more liberal 
sentiments, opened a path for the Gos- 
pel. Now, we find that under the politi- 
cal system established by Rome a va- 
riety of agencies co-operated to effect 
such a result. Powerful forces were at 
work whose effect was not limited to 
the creation of outward advantages for 
the dissemination of the religion of 
Christ, but tended to produce a more or 
less genial soil for its reception. We 
have, then, to embrace in one view the 
influence of the Roman Empire in both 
of these relations, in shaping outward 
circumstances, and in favoring a mental 
habit, which were propitious to the intro- 
duction of the new faith." * 

What the author proposes in the 
last clause of this quotation he fiil- 
* p. 42. 



fils in a very satisfactory manner in 
one of the most splendid chapters 
of his work. 

The outline of the historical basis 
of Christianity having been drawn, 
and the principles of the sound 
historical construction of a true 
and logical theory or philosophy of 
the Christian religion established, 
the outline of the actual founda- 
tions, and the first course of the 
great structure itself, determining 
its plan of architecture, next de- 
mands our consideration. In plain- 
er language, the actual "beginnings 
of Christianity " in the apostolic age, 
the earliest history of the religion 
of Christ, in respect to all its consti- 
tutive principles, presents itself for 
examination. What is Christianity 
in its essence, nature, integrity of 
organic constitution, its proper at- 
tributes ; with a due distinction of 
its substance from its accidents, of 
its genuine and normal germs of 
future development from every- 
thing of a parasitic nature or in 
any way abnormal ? This is the 
great question to be studied in the 
authentic records of the antiquities 
of Christianity, with all the light 
and aid which can be obtained from 
every source accessible to research. 

The long-continued, widely-ex- 
tended preparations of divine Provi- 
dence for the great event of the 
coming of the Messias of the Jews 
and Gentiles, the immensity of the 
ground prepared to be the theatre 
of the future Christian history, the 
vast and mighty instrumentalities 
made ready to serve the fulfilment 
of the plan of Jesus and of the 
apostolic mission, all point toward 
something proportionate in gran- 
deur to the grandeur of the inchoate 
order which preceded. The an- 
ticipation of Christ in history de- 
mands a corresponding realization 
of his actual presence and opera- 



To the Witch-HaseL 



447 



lion in the " fulness of time," the 
age of the completion and consum- 
mation of human destinies on the 
earth. Moreover, the stupendous 
miracles, especially the crowning 
one of the Resurrection, which are 
among the first facts and events of 
historical Christianity, logically and 
rationally require that an ideal of 
Christianity shall be presented 
which justifies such an outlay of 
supernatural power, and the posi- 
tion of causes containing such infi- 
nite potential force. The end of 
all previous human history being 
found in the beginning of Chris- 
tianity, the new beginning of all 
human history must be likewise 
found there. If the normal, legiti- 
mate development in later ages is 
tested by its origination from the 



primitive seed planted in the apos- 
tolic age, the nature and qualities 
of that seed must be correctly as- 
certained. If we would recognize 
the true genius of Christianity in 
its real manifestations from the 
days of the apostles to our own, and 
discriminate it from simulated ap- 
paritions, we must know what this 
genius really is, or the original 
error will falsify all subsequent 
processes of judgment and reason- 
ing, like an ambiguous middle in a 
syllogism. 

But we have proceeded as far as 
our limits will permit in the present 
article, and must postpone the con- 
sideration of what was actual Chris- 
tianity in the apostolic age, and of 
the learned author's theory on the 
subject, to a future opportunity. 



TO THE WITCH-HAZEL. 



" Last of their floral sisterhood, 
The hazel's yellow blossoms shine, 
1 he tawny gold of Afric's mind !" 



J. G. WHITTIER. 



No mocking dream art thou of summer sun, 
No fading shadow of the autumn's gold ; 
Thy sunset stars their yellow light unfold 

As some pale planet, when the day is done, 

Giveth unfailing promise of the night 

With its blessed hours of rest, its sparkling fields 
The glittering harvest that the darkness yields 

Of unknown worlds far reaching out of sight. 

In the year's twilight thy pale blossoms shine 
With faithful promise of the winter's night 
The broad, white fields with nameless stars a-light, 

The crystal glitter far outshining thine. 

In the late daylight that about thee lies, 

How soft thy radiance to sun-weary eyes ! 



448 To the Witch-Hazei. 

n. 

The brave arbutus fair foretold the spring 

With gleam auroral of the coming slow 

Of perfect summer's full life's noon-day glow, 
With undimmed sunshine, earth illumining. 
Thy stars, wan hazel, break amid the blaze 

Of gold and scarlet wherewith burn the hills 

As when the pomp of royal burial fills 
The clouded skies that mourn the dying days. 
The gold grows spent, ashen the scarlet fires, 

The night too near for any song of bird ; 

'Mid voice of streams and rustling leaves, foot-stirred, 
The grieving summer's last earth-prayer expires. 
Brighter thy glow as golden pomp .grows sere, 
O pale-hued Hesper of the westering year ! 

in. 

No dreary harbinger art thou of woe, 

Of barren days, and warm life lost in death : 
On heav'n-kissed peaks is born the icy breath 

Whose touch unfolds the flowers of the snow. 

Spring's buds, close-folded, lie along the bare 

And shivering boughs where calls the wild-voiced wind, 
And fine the leafless tracery is lined 

On blue undimmed as summer heavens wear. 

Hearts glow the warmer for the bitter wind, 
Stars are but brighter for the frosty night, 
Of earth despoiled love climbeth holy height, 

New, blossoming paths her feet, untiring, find. 

Thought of thy promise shining in dim skies 

Fills darkest hour with lights of Paradise. 

IV. 

Among thy boughs almost the sound I hear 
Of Christmas bells breaking on wintry gloom ; 
Foretelling so, the glimmer of thy bloom 

The kindliest feast of all the saint-crowned year. 

O happy year ! that for its twilight crown 

Wears the dim radiance of thy peaceful stars, 
Hears song of angels, where no harsh note jars, 

Filling the woods whence latest bird hath flown. 

O waiting bloom ! bud forth thy prophecies, 
Thine earnest of a life fore'er renewed, 
Thy light in darkness, with fair hope imbued, 

Thy golden gift of love's amenities. 

O conjurer's wand ! thy jewelled staff bend low, 

Show the bright waters living 'neath the snow. 



The Wolf- Tower 



449 



THE WOLF-TOWER. 



A BRETON CHRISTMAS LEGEND. 



LONG ago in Brittany, under 
the government of St. Gildas the 
Wise, seventh abbot of Ruiz, there 
lived a young tenant of the abbey 
who was blind in the right eye 
and lame in the left leg. His name 
was Sylvestre Ker, and his mother, 
Josserande Ker, was the widow of 
Martin Ker, in his lifetime the 
keeper of the great door of the 
Convent of Ruiz. 

The mother and son lived in 
a tower, the ruins of which are 
still seen at the foot of Mont Saint- 
Michel de la Trinite, in the grove 
of chestnut-trees that belongs to 
Jean Marechal, the mayor's ne- 
phew. These ruins are now called 
the Wolf-Tower, and the Breton 
peasants shudder as they pass 
through the chestnut-grove ; for at 
midnight around the Wolf-Tower, 
and close to the first circle of 
great stones erected by the Druids 
at Carnac, are seen the phantoms 
of a young man and a young girl 
Pol Bihan and Matheline du Coat- 
Dor. 

The young girl is of graceful 
figure, with long, floating hair, but 
without a face ; and the young 
man is tall and robust, but the 
sleeves of his coat hang limp and 
empty, for he is without arms. 
Round and round the circle they 
pass in opposite directions, and, 
strange to tell, as the legend adds, 
they never meet, nor do they ever 
speak to each other. 

Once a year, on Christmas night, 
instead of walking they run ; and 
VOL. xxvi. 29 



all the Christians who cross the 
heath to go to the midnight Mass 
hear from afar the young girl cry: 
" Wolf Sylvestre Ker, give me back 
my beauty!" and the deep voice 
of the young man adds : " Wolf 
Sylvestre Ker, give me back my 
strength !" 

II. 

And this has lasted for thirteen 
hundred years ; therefore you may 
well think there is a story connect- 
ed with it. 

When Martin Ker, the husband 
of Dame Josserande, died, their son 
Sylvestre was only seven years old. 
The widow was obliged to give up 
the guardianship of the great door 
to a man-at-arms, and retire to the 
tower, which was her inheritance ; 
but little Sylvestre Ker had per- 
mission to follow the studies in the 
convent school. The boy showed 
natural ability, but he studied lit- 
tle, except in the class of chemis- 
try, taught by an old monk named 
Thae'l, who was said to have dis- 
covered the secret of making gold 
out of lead by adding to it a cer- 
tain substance which no one but 
himself knew ; for certainly, if the 
fact had been communicated, all the 
lead in the country would have 
been quickly turned into gold. 
As for Thae'l himself, he had been 
careful not to profit by his secret, 
for Gildas the Wise had once said 
to him : " Thae'l, Thae'l, God does 
not wish you to change the work 
of his hands. Lead is lead, and 
gold is gold. There is enough 
gold, and not too much lead. 



450 



The Wolf -Tower. 



Leave God's works alone ; if not, 
Satan will be your master." 

Most assuredly such precepts 
would not be well received by mo- 
dern industry; but St. Gildas knew 
what he said, and Thael died of 
extreme old age before he had 
changed the least particle of lead 
into gold. This, however, was not 
from want of will, which was prov- 
ed after his death, as the rumor 
spread about that Thael did not 
altogether desert his laboratory, 
but at times returned to his be- 
loved labors. Many a time in the 
lonely hours <pf the night the fish- 
ermen, in their barks, watched the 
glimmer of the light in his former 

cell ; and Gildas the Wise, having 
jbeen warned of the fact, arose one 
might before Lauds, and with quiet 
steps crossed the corridors, think- 
ing to surprise his late brother, 
and perhaps ask of him some de- 
tails, of the other side of the dread- 

ed door which separates life from 

death.. 

When he reached the cell he 
^listened and heard ThaeTs great 
bellows puffing and blowing, al- 
though no one had yet been ap- 
pointed to succeed him. Gildas 
suddenly opened the door with his 
master-key, and saw before him 
little Sylvestre Ker actively em- 
ployed in relighting ThaeTs fur- 
naces. 

St. Gildas was not a man to give 
way to sudden wrath; he took the 
child by the ear, drew him outside, 
and said to him gently: 

" Ker, my little Ker, I know 
what you are attempting and what 
tempts you to make the effort ; but 
-God does not wish it, nor I either, 
,my little Ker." 

" I do it," replied the boy, " be- 
cause my dear mother is so poor." 

"Your mother is what she is; 
has what God gives her. Lead 



is lead, and gold is gold. If you 
go against the will of God, Satan 
will be your master." 

Little Ker returned to the tower 
crestfallen, and never again slipped 
into the cell of the dead Thael ; but 
when he was eighteen years old a 
modest inheritance was left him, 
and he bought materials for dis- 
solving metals and distilling the 
juice of plants. He gave out that 
his aim was to learn the art of heal- 
ing ; for that great purpose he read 
great books which treated of medi- 
cal science and many other things 
besides. 

He was then a youth of fine ap- 
pearance, with a noble, frank face, 
neither one-eyed nor lame,* and led 
a retired life with his mother, who 
ardently loved her only son. No 
one visited them in the tower, 
except the laughing Matheline, the 
heiress of the tenant of Coat-Dor 
and god-daughter of Josserande ; 
and Pol Bihan, son of the successor 
of Martin Ker as armed keeper of 
the great door. 

Both Pol and Matheline often 
conversed together, and upon what 
subject, do you think? Always of 
Sylvestre Ker. Was it because 
they loved him ? No. What 
Matheline loved most was her own 
fair self, and Pol Bihan 's best 
friend was named Pol Bihan. Ma- 
theline passed long hours before 
her little mirror of polished steel, 
which faithfully reflected her laugh- 
ing mouth, full of pearls ; and Pol 
was proud of his great strength, 
for he was the best wrestler in the 
Carnac country. When they spoke 
of Sylvestre Ker it was to say : 
" What if some fine morning he 
should find the secret of the 
fairy-stone that is the mother of 
gold!" 

And each one mentally added: 

"I must continue to be friendly 



The Wolf -Tower. 



451 



with him, for if he becomes wealthy 
he will enrich me." 

Josserande also knew that her 
beloved son sought after the fairy- 
stone, and even had mentioned it 
to Gildas the Wise, who shook his 
venerable head and said: 

"What God wills will be. Be 
careful that your son wears a mask 
over his face when he seeks the 
cursed thing ; for what escapes from 
the crucible is Satan's breath, and 
the breath of Satan causes blind- 
ness." 

Josserande, meditating upon 
these words, went to kneel before 
the cross of St. Cado, which is in 
front of the seventh stone of Caesar's 
camp the one that a little child 
can move by touching it with his 
finger, but that twelve horses, har- 
nessed to twelve oxen, cannot stir 
from its solid foundation. Thus 
prostrate, she prayed : " O Lord 
Jesus! thou who hast mercy for 
mothers on account of the Holy 
Virgin Mary, thy mother, watch 
well over my little Sylvestre, and 
take from his head this thought of 
making gold. Nevertheless, if it 
is thy will that he should be rich, 
thou art the master of all things, 
my sweet Saviour !" 

And as she rose she murmured : 
" What a beautiful boy he would 
be with a cloak of fine cloth and 
a hood bordered with fur, if he 
only had means to buy them!" 

in. 

It came to pass that as all these 
young people, Pol Bihan, Mathe- 
line", and Sylvestre Ker, gained a 
year each time that twelve months 
rolled by, they reached the age to 
think of marriage ; and Josserande 
one morning proceeded to the 
dwelling of the farmer of Coat-Dor 
to ask the hand of Matheline for 
her son, Sylvestre Ker ; at which 



proposal Matheline opened her 
rosy mouth so wide, to laugh the 
louder, that far back she showed 
two pearls which had never before 
been seen. 

When her father asked her if the 
offer suited her she replied : " Yes, 
father and godmother, provided 
that Sylvestre Ker gives me a 
gown of cloth of silver embroider- 
ed with rubies, like that of the Lady 
of Lannelar, and that Pol Bihan 
may be our groomsman." 

Pol, who was there, also laughed 
and said : " I will assuredly be 
groomsman to my friend Sylvestre 
Ker, if he consents to give me a 
velvet mantle striped with gold, 
like that of the castellan of Gavre, 
the Lord of Carnac." 

Whereupon Josserande returned 
to the tower and said to her. son : 
" Ker, my darling, I advise you to 
choose another friend and another 
bride ; for those two are not wor- 
thy of your love." 

But the young man began to 
sigh and groan, and answered : 
" No friendship or love will I ever 
know, except for Pol, my dear com- 
rade, and Matheline, your god- 
daughter, my beautiful play-fel- 
low." 

And Josserande having told him 
of the two new pearls that Mathe- 
line had shown in the back of her 
mouth, nothing would do but he 
must hurry to Coat-Dor to try and 
see them also. 

On the road from the tower to the 
farm of Coat-Dor is the Point of 
Hinnic, where the grass is salt, 
which makes the cows and rams 
very fierce while they are grazing. 
As Sylvestre Ker walked down the 
path at the end of which is the 
Cross of St. Cado, he saw on the 
summit of the promontory Pol and 
Matheline strolling along, talking 
and laughing'; so he thought : 



452 



The. Wolf -Tower. 



" I need not go far to see Mathe- 
line's two pearls. ' 

And, in fact, the girl's merry 
laughter could be heard below, for 
it always burst forth if Pol did but 
open his lips; when, lo and be- 
hold ! a huge old ram which had 
been browsing on the salt grass 
tossed back his two horns, and, 
fuming at the nostrils, bleated as 
loud as the stags cry when chased, 
and rushed in the direction of 
Matheline's voice ; for, as every one 
knows, the rams become furious if 
laughter is heard in their mea- 
dow. 

He ran quickly, but Sylvestre 
Ker ran still faster, and arrived the 
first by the girl, so that he received 
the shock of the ram's butting 
while protecting her with his body. 
The injury was not very great, only 
his right eye was touched by the 
curved end of one of the horns 
when the ram raised his head, and 
thus Sylvestre Ker became one- 
eyed. 

The ram, prevented from slaugh- 
tering Matheline, dashed after Pol 
Bihan, who fled ; reached him 
just at the end of the cliff, and 
pushed him into the sea, that beat 
against the rocks fifty feet below. 

Well content with his work, the 
ram walked off, and the story says 
he laughed behind his woolly beard. 
But Matheline wept bitterly and 
cried : 

" Ker, my handsome Ker, save 
Bihan, your sweet friend, from 
death, and I pledge my faith I will 
be your wife without any condi- 
tion." 

At the same time, amid the roar- 
ing of the waves, was heard the 
imploring voice of Pol Bihan cry- 
ing: 

"Sylvestre, O Sylvestre Ker! 
my only friend, I cannot swim. 
Come quickly and save me from 



dying without confession, and all 
you may ask of me you shall have, 
were it the dearest treasure of my 
heart." 

Sylvestre Ker asked : 

" Will you be my groomsman ?" 

And Bihan replied : 

" Yes, yes, and I will give you 
a hundred crowns. And all 
that your mother may ask of me 
she shall have. But hasten, has- 
ten, dear friend, or the waves will 
carry me off." 

Sylvestre Ker's blood was pour- 
ing from the wound in his eye, and 
his sight was dimmed ; but he was 
generous of heart, and boldly leap- 
ed from the top of the promontory. 
As he fell his left leg was 'jammed 
against a jutting rock and broke, 
so there he was, lame as well as one- 
eyed ; nevertheless, he dragged 
Bihan to the shore and asked : 

"When shall the wedding be?" 

As Matheline hesitated in her 
answer for Sylvestre's brave deeds 
were too recent to be forgotten 
Pol Bihan came to her assistance 
and gaily cried : 

" You must wait, Sylvestre, my 
saviour, until your leg and eye are 
healed." 

" Still longer," added Matheline 
(and now Sylvestre Ker saw the two 
new pearls, for in her laughter she 
opened her mouth from ear to ear) 
" still longer, as limping, one-eyed 
men are not to my taste no, no !" 

"But," cried Sylvestre Ker, " it 
is for your sakes that I am one- 
eyed and lame." 

" That is true," said Bihan. 

" That is true," also repeated 
Matheline ; for she always spoke 
as he did. 

" Ker, my friend Ker," resumed 
Bihan, "wait until to-morrow, and 
we will make you happy." 

And off they went, Matheline and 
he, arm-in-arm, leaving Sylvestre 



The Wolf -Tower. 



453 



to go hobbling along to the tower, 
alone with his sad thoughts. 

Would you believe it ? Trudg- 
ing wearily home, he consoled him- 
self by thinking that he had seen two 
new pearls behind the smile. You 
may, perhaps, think you have never 
met such a fool. Undeceive your- 
self: it is the same with all the men, 
who only look for laughing girls 
with teeth like pearls. 

But the sorrowful one was Jos- 
serande, the widow, when she saw 
her son with only one eye and one 
sound leg. 

" Where did all this happen ?" she 
asked with tears. 

And as Sylvestre Ker gently an- 
swered, " I have seen them, mother; 
they are very beautiful," Josserande 
divined that he spoke of her god- 
daughter's two pearls, and cried: 

" By all that is^ ho^y, he has also 
lost his mind !" 

Then, seizing her staff, she went 
to the Abbey of Ruiz, to consult 
St. Gildas as to what could be done 
in this unfortunate case; and the 
wise man replied : 

" You should not have spoken of 
the two pearls; your son would 
have remained at home. But now 
that the evil is done, nothing will 
happen to him contrary to God's 
holy will. At high tide the sea 
comes foaming over the sands, yet 
see how quietly it retires. What 
is Sylvestre Ker doing now ?" 

" He is lighting his furnaces," 
replied Josserande. 

The wise man paused to reflect, 
and after a little while said : 

" In the first place, you must 
pray devoutly to the Lord our God, 
and afterward look well before 
you to know where to put your 
feet. The weak buy the strong, 
the unhappy the happy ; x did you 
know that, my good woman ? Your 
son will persevere in search of the 



fairy-stone that changes lead into 
gold, to pay for Pol's wicked friend- 
ship and for the pearls behind the 
dangerous smiles of that Matheline. 
Since God permits it, all is right. 
Yet see that your son is well pro- 
tected against the smoke of his 
crucible, for it is the very breath 
of Satan ; and make him promise 
to go to the midnight Mass." 

For it was near the glorious 
Feast of Christmas. 

IV. 

Josserande had no difficulty in 
making Sylvestre Ker promise to 
go to the midnight Mass, for he 
was a good Christian; and she 
bought for him an iron armor to 
put on when he worked around his 
crucibles, so as to preserve him 
from Satan's breath. 

And it happened that, late and 
early, Pol Bihan now came to the 
tower, bringing with him the 
laughing Matheline; for it was 
rumored around that at last Syl- 
vestre Ker would soon find the 
fairy-stone and become a wealthy 
man. It was not only two new 
pearls that Matheline showed at the 
corners of her rosy mouth, but a 
brilliant row, that shone, and chat- 
tered, and laughed, from her lips 
down to her throat ; for Pol Bihan 
had said to her : 

" Laugh as much as you can ; for 
smiles attract fools, as the turning- 
mirror catches larks." 

We have spoken of Matheline's 
lips, of her throat, and of her 
smile, .but not of her heart ; of 
that we can only say the place 
where it should have been was 
nearly empty ; so she replied to 
Bihan : 

" As much as you will. I can af- 
ford to laugh to be rich ; and when 
the fool shall have given me all the 



454 



7 he Wolf -Tower. 



gold of the earth, all the pleasures 
of the world, I will be happy, happy. 
... I will have them all for my- 
self, for myself alone, and I will 
enjoy them." 

Pol Bihan clasped bis hands in 
admiration, so lovely and wise was 
she for her age; but he thought: 
" I am wiser still than you, my 
beauty : we will share between us 
what the fool will give one half 
for me, and the other also; the 
rest for you. Let the water run 
under the bridge." 

The day before Christmas they 
came together to the tower Ma- 
theline carrying a basket of chest- 
nuts, Pol a large jug, full of sweet 
e-ider to make merry with the god- 
mother. They roasted the chest- 
nuts in the ashes, and heated the 
cider before the fire, adding to it 
fermented honey, wine, sprigs of 
rosemary, and marjoram leaves ; 
and so delicious was the perfume 
of the beverage that even Dame 
Josserande longed for a taste. 

On the way Pol had advised 
Matheline adroitly to question 
Sylvestre Ker, to know when he 
would at last find the fairy-stone. 
Sylvestre Ker neither ate chest- 
nuts nor drank wine, so absorbed 
was he in the contemplation of 
Matheline's bewitching smiles ; 
and she said to him : 

" Tell me, my handsome, lame, 
and one-eyed bridegroom, will I 
soon be the wife of a wealthy 
man ?" 

Sylvestre Ker, whose eye shot 
forth a lurid flame, replied : 

" You would have been as rich 
as you are beautiful to-morrow, 
without fail, if I had not promised 
my dear mother to accompany her 
to the midnight Mass to-night. 
The favorable hour falls just at 
the first stroke of Matins." 

" To-day ?" 



" Between to-day and to-mor- 
row." 

" And can it not be put off?" 

" Yes, it can be put off for seven 
years." 

Dame Josserande heard nothing, 
as Pol was relating an interesting 
story, so as to distract her atten- 
tion ; but while talking he listened 
with all his ears. 

Matheline laughed no longer, 
and thought : 

" Seven years ! Can I wait seven 
years ?" Then she continued : 

" Beautiful bridegroom, how do 
you know that the propitious mo- 
ment falls precisely at the hour of 
Matins ? Who told you so ?" 

" The stars," replied .Sylvestre 
Ker. " At midnight Mars and 
Saturn will arrive in diametrical 
opposition ; Venus will seek Vesta ; 
Mercury will disappear in the sun ; 
and the planet without a name, 
that the deceased Thael divined by 
calculation, I saw last night, steer- 
ing its unknown route through 
space to come in conjunction with 
Jupiter. Ah ! if I only dared dis- 
obey my dear mother." 

He was interrupted by a distant 
vibration of the bells of Plouhar- 
nel, which rang out the first signal 
of the midnight Mass. Josserande 
instantly left her wheel. 

"It would be a sin to spin one 
thread more," said she. " Come, my 
son Sylvestre, put on your Sunday 
clothes, and let us be off for the 
parish church, if you please." 

Sylvestre wished to rise, for 
never yet had he disobeyed his 
mother ; but Matheline, seated at 
his side, detained him and mur- 
mured in silvery tones : 

"My handsome friend, you have 
plenty of time." 

Pol, on his side, said to Dame 
Josserande : 

" Get your staff, neighbor, and 



The Wolf- Tower. 



455 



start at once, so as to take your 
time. Your god-daughter Mathe- 
line will accompany you ; and I 
will follow with my friend Sylves- 
tre, for fear some, accident might 
happen to him with his lame leg 
and sightless eye." 

As he proposed, so was it done ; 
for Josserande suspected nothing, 
knowing that her son had promis- 
ed, and that he would not break 
his word. As they were leaving, 
Pol whispered to Matheline: 

" Amuse the good woman well, 
for the fool must remain here." 

And the girl replied : 

" Try and see the caldron in 
which our fortune is cooking. 
You will tell me how it is done." 

Off the two women started ; a 
large, kind mother's heart, full of 
tender love, and a sparrow's little 
gizzard, narrow and dry, without 
enough room in it for one pure 
tear. 

For a moment Sylvestre Ker 
stood on the threshold of the open 
door to watch them depart. On 
the gleaming white snow their two 
shadows fell ; the one bent and al- 
ready tottering, the other erect, 
flexible, and each step seemed a 
bound. The young lover sighed. 
Behind him Pol Bihan in a low 
voice said : 

" Ker, my comrade, I know 
what you are thinking about, and 
you are right to think so ; this 
must come to an end. She is as 
impatient as you are, for her love 
equals yours ; for both of you it is 
too long to wait." 

Sylvestre Ker turned pale with 
joy. 

" Do you speak truth ?" he stam- 
mered. " Am I fortunate enough to 
be loved by her?" 

"Yes, on my faith !" replied Pol 
Bihan, " she loves you too well for 
her own peace. When a girl 



laughs too much, it is to keep from 
weeping that's the real truth." 

v.' 

Well might they call him " the 
fool," poor Sylvestre Ker ! Not 
that he had less brains than an- 
other man on the contrary, he 
was now very learned but love 
crazes him who places his affec- 
tions on an unworthy object. Syl- 
vestre Ker's little finger was worth 
two dozen Pol Bihans and fifty 
Mathelines ; in spite of which Ma- 
theline and Pol Bihan were perfect- 
ly just in their contempt, for he 
who ascends the highest falls the 
lowest. 

When Sylvestre had re-entered 
the tower Pol commenced to sigh 
heavily and said : 

" What a pity ! What a great, 
great pity !" 

"What is a pity?" asked Sylves- 
tre Ker. 

" It is a pity to miss such a rare 
opportunity." 

Sylvestre Ker exclaimed : 

"What opportunity? So you 
were listening to my conversation 
with Matheline ?" 

" Why, yes," replied Pol. " I al- 
ways have an ear open to hear 
what concerns you, my true friend. 
Seven years ! Shall I tell you what 
I think ? You would only have 
twelve months to wait to go with 
your mother to another Christmas 
Mass." 

" I have promised," said Syl- 
vestre. 

" That is nothing; if your mother 
loves you truly, she will forgive 
you." 

" If she loves me !" cried Sylves- 
tre Ker. " Oh ! yes, she loves me 
with her whole heart." 

Some chestnuts still remained, 
and Bihan shelled one while he 
said : 



456 



The Wolf-Toivcr. 



" Certainly, certainly, mothers 
always love their children ; but 
Matheline is not your mother. 
You are one-eyed, you are lame, 
and you have sold your little patri- 
mony to buy your furnaces. Noth- 
ing remains of it. Where is the 
girl who can wait seven years ? 
Nearly the half of her age ! . . . 
If I were in your place I would 
not throw away my luck as you are 
about to do, but at the hour of 
Matins I would work for my hap- 
piness." 

Sylvestre Ker was standing be- 
fore the fireplace. He listened, 
his eyes bent down, with a frown 
upon his brow. 

"You have spoken well," at last 
he said ; "my dear mother will for- 
give me. I shall remain, and will 
work at the hour of Matins." 

"You have decided for the 
best !" cried Bihan. " Rest easy ; I 
will be with you in case of danger. 
Open the door of your laboratory. 
We will work together ; I will cling 
to you like your shadow !" 

Sylvestre Ker did not move, but 
looked fixedly upon the floor, and 
then, as if thinking aloud, mur- 
mured : 

"It will be the first time that I 
have ever caused my dear mother 
sorrow !" 

He opened a door, but not that 
of the laboratory, pushed Pol Bihan 
outside, and said : 

" The danger is for myself alone ; 
the gold will be for all. Go to the 
Christmas Mass in my place ; say 
to Matheline that she will be rich, 
and to my dear mother that she 
shall have a happy old age, since 
she will live and die with her fortu- 
nate son." 

VI. 

When Sylvestre Ker was alone 
he listened to the noise of the 



waves dashing upon the beach, and 
the sighing of the wind among the 
great oaks two mournful sounds. 
And he looked at the empty seats 
of Matheline, the madness of his 
heart ; and of his dear mother, Jos- 
serande, the holy tenderness of all 
his life. Little by little had he 
seen the black hair of the widow 
become gray, then white, around 
her sunken temples. That night 
memory carried him back even to 
his cradle, over which had bent the 
sweet, noble face of her who had 
always spoken to him of God. 

But whence came those golden 
ringlets that mingled with Josse- 
rande's black hair, and which shone 
in the sunlight above his. mother's 
snowy locks ? and that laugh, ah ! 
that silvery laugh of youth, which 
prevented Sylvestre Ker from hear- 
ing in his pious recollections the 
calm, grave voice of his mother. 
Whence did it come ? 

Seven years ! Pol had said, 
" Where is the girl who can wait 
seven years ?" and these words 
floated in the air. Never had the 
son of Martin Ker heard such 
strange voices amid the roaring of 
the ocean, nor in the rushing winds 
of the forest of the Druids. 

Suddenly the tower also com- 
menced to speak, not only through 
the cracks of the old windows 
when the mournful wind sighed, 
but with a confusion of sounds 
that resembled the busy whispering 
of a crowd, that penetrated through 
the closed doors of the laboratory, 
under which a bright light stream- 
ed. 

Sylvestre Ker opened the door, 
fearing to see all in a blaze, but 
there was no fire ; the light that 
had streamed under the door came 
from the round, red eye of his fur- 
nace, and happened to strike the 
stone of the threshold. No one 



The Wolf- Tower. 



457 



was in the laboratory ; still the 
noises, similar to the chattering 
of an audience awaiting a prom- 
ised spectacle, did not cease. The 
air was full of speaking things ; 
the spirits could be felt swarming 
around, as closely packed as the 
wheat in the barn or the sand on 
the sea-shore. 

And. although not seen, they 
spoke all kinds of phantom-words, 
which were heard right and 
left, before and behind, above and 
below, and which penetrated 
through the pores of the skin like 
quicksilver passing through a cloth. 
They said : 

" The Magi have started, my 
friend." 

" My friend, the Star shines in 
the East." 

" My friend, my friend, the little 
King Jesus is born in the manger, 
upon the straw." 

" Sylvestre Ker will surely go 
with the shepherds." 

" Not at all ; Sylvestre Ker will 
not go." 

" Good Christian he was." 

" Good Christian he is no lon- 
ger." 

" He has forgotten the name of 
Joseph, the chaste spouse." 

"And the name of Mary, the 
ever Virgin Mother." 

"No, no, no!" 

" Yes, yes, yes!" 

" He will go !" 

"He will not go!" 

"He will go, since he promised 
Dame Josserande." 

" He will not go, since Matheline 
told him to stay." 1 

" My friend, my friend, to-night 
Sylvestre Ker will find the golden 
secret." 

" To-night, my friend, my fiiend, 
he will win the heart of the one he 
loves." 

And the invisible spirits, thus 



disputing, sported through the air, 
mounting, descending, whirling 
around like atoms of dust in a sun- 
beam, from the flag-stones of the 
floor to the rafters of the roof. 

Inside the furnace, in the cruci- 
ble, some other thing responded, 
but it could not be well heard, as 
the crucible had been hermetically 
sealed. 

" Go out from here, you wicked 
crowd," said Sylvestre Ker, sweep- 
ing around with a broom of holly- 
branches. " What are you doing 
here ? Go outside, cursed spirits, 
damned souls go, go !" 

From all the corners of the room 
came laughter; Matheline seemed 
everywhere. 

Suddenly there was profound si- 
lence, and the wind from the sea 
brought the sound of the bells of 
Plouharnel, ringing the second 
peal for the midnight Mass. 

" My friend, what are they say- 
ing?" 

" They say Christmas, my friend 
Christmas, Christmas, Christmas !" 

" Not at all ! They say, Gold, 
gold, gold !" 

" You lie, my friend !" 

" My friend, you lie !" 

And the other voices, those that 
were grumbling in the interior of 
the furnace, swelled and puffed. 
The fire, that no person was blow- 
ing, kept up by itself, hot as the 
soul of a forge should be. The 
crucible became red, and the stones 
of the furnace were dyed a deep 
scarlet. 

In vain did Sylvestre Ker sweep 
with his holly broom ; between the 
branches, covered with sharp leaves, 
the spirits passed nothing could 
catch them ; and the heat was so 
great the boy was bathed in per- 
spiration. 

After the bells had finished their 
second peal he said : " I am stifling. 



The Wolf- Tower. 



I will open the window to let out 
the heat as well as this herd of evil 
spirits." 

But as soon as he opened the 
window the whole country com- 
menced to laugh under its white 
mantle of snow barren heath, 
ploughed land, Druid stones, even 
to the enoynous oaks of the forest, 
with their glistening summits, that 
shook their frosty branches, saying : 
" Sylvestre Ker will go ! Sylvestre 
Ker will not go !" 

Not a spirit from within flew out, 
while all the outside spirits enter- 
ed, muttering, chattering, laughing : 
"Yes, yes r yes, yes! No, no, no, 
no !" And I believe they fought. 

At the same time the sound of a 
cavalcade advancing was heard on 
the flinty road that passed before the 
tower; and Sylvestre Ker recogniz- 
ed the long procession of the monks 
of Ruiz, led by the grand abbot, 
Gildas the Wise, arrayed in cope 
and mitre, with his crosier in his 
hand, going to the Mass of Plou- 
harnel, as the convent-chapel was 
being rebuilt. 

When the head of the cavalcade 
approached the tower the grand 
abbot cried out : 

" My armed guards, sound your 
horns to awaken Dame Josserande's 
son !" 

And instantly there was a blast 
from the horns, which rang out 
until Gildas the Wise exclaimed : 

"Be silent, for there is my tenant 
wide awake at his window." 

When all was still the grand 
abbot raised his crosier and said : 

" My tenant, the first hour of 
Christmas approaches, the glorious 
Feast of the Nativity. Extinguish 
your furnaces and hasten to Mass, 
for you have barely time." 

And on he passed, while those 
in the procession, as they saluted 
Ker, repeated : 



" Sylvestre Ker, you have barely 
time ; make haste !" 

The voices of the air kept gib- 
bering : " He will go ! He will not 
go !" and the wind whistled in bit- 
ter sarcasm. 

Sylvestre Ker closed his window. 
He sat down, his head clasped by 
his trembling hands. His heart 
was rent by two forces that dragged 
him, one to the right, the other to 
the left : his mother's prayer and 
Matheline's laughter. 

He was no miser; he did not 
covet gold for the sake of gold, but 
that he might buy the row of pearls 
and smiles that hung from the lips 
of Matheline. . . . 

"Christmas!" cried a voice in 
the air. 

" Christmas, Christmas, Christ- 
mas !" repeated all the other 
voices. 

Sylvestre Ker suddenly opened 
his eyes, and saw that the furnace 
was fiery red from top to bottom, 
and that the crucible was surround- 
ed with rays so dazzling he could 
not even look at it. Something 
was boiling inside that sounded 
like the roaring of a tempest. 

"Mother! O my dear mother!" 
cried the terrified man, " I am 
coining. I'll run. . . ." 

But thousands of little voices 
stung his ears with the words : 

" Too late, too late, too late ! It 
is too late !" 

Alas ! alas ! the wind from the 
sea brought the third peal of the 
bells of Plouharnel, and they also 
said to him : " Too late !" 

VII. 

As the sound of the bells died 
away the last drop of water fell 
from the clepsydra and marked 
the hour of midnight. Then the 
furnace opened and showed the 
glowing crucible, which burst with 



The Wolf- Tower. 



459 



a terrible noise, and threw out a 
gigantic flame that reached the 
sky through the torn roof. Sylves- 
tre Ker, enveloped by the fire, fell 
prostrate on the ground, suffocated 
in the burning smoke. 

The silence of death followed. 
Suddenly an awful voice said to 
him : " Arise." And he arose. 

On the spot where had stood the 
furnace, of which not a vestige re- 
mained, was standing a man, or 
rather a colossus; and Sylvestre 
Ker needed but a glance to recog- 
nize in him the demon. His body 
appeared to be of iron, red-hot and 
transparent ; for in his veins could 
be seen the liquid gold, flowing 
into, and then in turn retreating 
from, his heart, black as an extin- 
guished coal. 

The creature, who was both fear- 
ful and beautiful to behold, extend- 
ed his hand toward the side of the 
tower nearest the sea, and in the 
thick wall a large breach was made. 

" Look," said Satan. 

Sylvestre Ker obeyed. He saw, 
as though distance were annihilat- 
ed, the interior of the humble 
church of Plouharnel where the 
faithful were assembled. The offi- 
ciating priest had just ascended 
the altar, brilliant with the Christ- 
mas candles, and there was great 
pomp and splendor; for the many 
monks of Gildas the Wise were 
assisting the poor clergy of the 
parish. 

In a corner, under the shadow of 
a column, knelt Dame Josserande 
in fervent prayer, but often did the 
dear woman turn toward the door 
to watch for the coming of her 
son. 

Not far from her was Matheline 
du Coat-Dor, bravely attired and 
very beautiful, but lavishing the 
pearls of her smiles upon all who 
sought them, forgetting no one but 



God ; and close to Matheline Pol 
Bihan squared his broad shoulders. 

Then, even as Satan had given 
to Sylvestre Ker's sight the power 
of piercing the walls, so did he per- 
mit him to look into the depth of 
hearts. 

In his mother's heart he saw 
himself as in a mirror. It was full 
of him. Good Josserande prayed 
for him ; she united Jesus, Mary, 
and Joseph, the holy family, whose 
feast is Christmas, in the pious 
prayer which fell from her lips ; 
and ever and ever said her heart to 
God : " My son, my son, my son !" 

In the heart of Pol Sylvestre 
Ker saw pride of strength and 
gross cupidity ; in the spot where 
should have been the heart of Ma- 
theline he saw Matheline, and no- 
thing but Matheline, in adoration 
before Matheline. 

" I have seen enough," said Syl- 
vestre Ker. 

" Then," replied Satan, " listen !" 

And immediately the sacred mu- 
sic resounded in the ears of the 
young tenant of the tower, as plain- 
ly as though he were in the church 
of Plouharnel. They were singing 
the Sanctus : " Holy, holy, holy, 
Lord God of Hosts ! The heavens 
and the earth are full of thy glory. 
Hosanna in the highest ! Blessed 
is he that cometh in the name of 
the Lord. Hosanna in the high- 
est!" 

Dame Josserande repeated the 
words with the others, but the re- 
frain of her heart continued : " O 
Jesus, Infinite Goodness ! may he be 
happy. Deliver him from all evil 
and from all sin. I have only him 
to love. . . . Holy, holy, holy, give 
me all the suffering, and keep for 
him all the happiness!" 

Can you believe it? Even while 
piously inhaling the perfume of this 
celestial hymn the young tenant 



460 



The Wolf- Toivcr. 



wished to know what Matheline 
was saying to God. Everything 
speaks to God the wild beasts in 
the forest, the birds in the air, even 
the plants, whose roots are in the 
ground. 

But miserable girls who sell the 
pearls of their smiles are lower than 
the animals and vegetables. No- 
thing is beneath them, Pol Bihan 
excepted. Instead of speaking to 
God, Pol Bihan and Matheline 
whispered together, and Sylvestre 
Ker heard them as distinctly as if 
he had been between them. 

" How much will the fool give 
me ?" asked Matheline. 

" The idiot will give you all," 
replied Pol. 

'" And must I really squint with 
that one-eyed creature, and limp 
with the lame wretch ?" 

Sylvestre Ker felt his heart die 
away within him. 

Meanwhile, Josserande prayed : 
" O ever Virgin Mother ! pray 
for my dear child. As Jesus is 
your adorable heart, Sylvestre Ker 
is my poor heart. . . ." 

" Never mind," continued Bihan, 
" it is worth while 4imping and 
squinting for a time to win all the 
money in the world." 

" That is true ; but for how 
long?" 

Sylvestre Ker held his breath to 
hear the better. 

" As long as you please," answer- 
ed Pol Bihan. ' 

There was a pause, after which 
the gay Matheline resumed in a 
lower tone : 

" But . . . they say after a mur- 
der one can never laugh, and I wish 
to laugh always. . . ." 

" Will I not be there ?" replied 
Bihan. " Some time or other the 
idiot will certainly seek a quarrel 
with me, and I will crack his 
bones by only squeezing him in 



my arms; you can count upon my 
strength." 

"I have heard enough," said 
Sylvestre Ker to Satan. 

" And do you still love this Bi- 
han ?" 

"No, I despise him." 

" And Matheline do you love 
her yet ?" 

" Yes, oh ! yes, . . . but ... I 
hate her !" 

" I see," said Satan, " that you 
are a coward and wicked like all 
men. Since you have heard and 
seen enough at a distance, listen, 
and look at your feet. . . ." 

The wall closed with a loud crash 
of the stones as they came together, 
and Sylvestre Ker saw^that he was 
surrounded by an enormous heap 
of gold-pieces, as high as his waist, 
which gently floated, singing the 
symphony of riches. All around 
him was gold, and through the gap 
in the roof the shower of gold fell 
and fell and fell. 

" Am I the master of all this ?'.' 
asked Sylvestre Ker. 

" Yes," replied Satan ; "you have 
compelled me, who am gold, to 
come forth from my caverns ; you 
are therefore the master of gold, 
provided you purchase it at the 
price of your soul. You cannot 
have both God and gold. You 
must choose one or the other." 

" I have chosen," said Sylvestre 
Ker. " I keep my soul." 

" You have firmly decided ?" 

" Irrevocably." 

" Once, twice, . . . reflect ! You 
have just acknowledged that you 
still love the laughing Matheline." 

" And that I hate her ; . . . yes, 
... it is so, . . . but in eternity I 
wish to be with my dear mother 
Josserande." 

"Were there no mothers," growl- 
ed Satan, " I could play my game 
much better in the world !" 



The Wolf -Tower. 



461 



And he added : 

" For the third time, . . . ad- 
judged !" 

The heap of gold became as tur- 
bulent as the water of a cascade, 
and leaped and sang ; the millions 
of little sonorous coins clashed 
against each other, then all was 
silent and they vanished. The 
room appeared as black as a place 
where there had been a great fire; 
nothing could be seen but the lurid 
gleam of Satan's iron body. 

Then said Sylvestre Ker : 

" Since all is ended, retire !" 

VIII. 

But the demon did not stir. 

" Do you think, then," he asked, 
" that you have brought me hither 
for nothing? There is the law. 
You are not altogether my slave, 
since you have kept your soul ; but 
as you have freely called me, and I 
have come, you are my vassal. I 
have a half-claim over you. The 
little children know that; I am as- 
tonished at your ignorance. . . . 
From midnight to three o'clock in 
the morning you belong to me, in 
the form of an animal, restless, rov- 
ing, complaining, without help from 
God. This' is what you owe to 
your strong friend and beautiful 
bride. Let us settle the affair be- 
fore I depart. What animal do 
you wish to be roaring lion, bel- 
lowing ox, bleating sheep, crowing 
cock ? If you become a dog you 
can crouch at Matheline's feet, and 
Bihan can lead you by a leash to 
hunt in the woods. . . " 

" I wish," cried Sylvester Ker, 
whose anger burst forth at these 
words " I wish to be a wolf, to 
devour them both !" 

"So be it," said Satan; "wolf 
you shall be three hours of the 
night during your mortal life. . . . 
Leap, wolf!" 



And the wolf Sylvestre Ker leap- 
ed, and with one dash shattered 
the casement of the window as he 
cleared it with a bound. Through 
the aperture in the roof Satan es- 
caped, and, spreading a pair of im- 
mense wings, rapidly disappeared 
in an opposite direction from the 
steeple of Plouharnel, whose chimes 
were ringing at the Elevation. 

IX. 

I do not know if you have ever - 
seen a Breton village come forth 
after the midnight Mass. It is a 
joyous sight, but a brief one, as all 
are in a hurry to return home, 
where the midnight meal awaits 
them a frugal least, but eaten 
with such cheerful hearts. The 
people, for a moment massed in 
the cemetery, exchange hospitable 
invitations, kind wishes, and friend- 
ly jokes; then divide into little 
caravans, which hurry along the 
roads, laughing, talking, singing. 
If it is a clear, cold night, the click- 
ing of their wooden shoes may be 
heard for some time ; but if it is 
damp weather the sound is stifled, 
and after a few moments the faint 
echo of an " adieu " or Christmas 
greeting is all that can be heard 
around the church as the beadle 
closes it. 

In the midst of all this cheerful- 
ness Josserande alone returned 
with a sad heart; for through 
the whole Mass she had in vain 
watched for her beloved son. She 
walked fifty paces behind the caval- 
cade of the monks of Ruiz, and 
dared not approach the Grand-Ab- 
' bot Gildas, for fear of being ques- 
tioned about her boy. On her 
right was Matheline du Coat-Dor, 
on her left Bihan both eager 
to console her; for they thought 
that by that time Sylvestre Ker 
must have learned the wonderful 



462 



The Wolf- Toiler. 



secret which would secure him un- 
told wealth, and to possess the 
son they should cling to the mo- 
ther ; therefore there were pro- 
mises and caresses, and " will you 
have this, or will you have that ?" 

" Dear godmother, I shall al- 
ways be with you," said Matheline, 
" to comfort and rejoice your old 
age ; for your son is my heart." 

Pol Bihan continued : 

" I will ne^er marry, but always 
remain with my friend, Sylvestre 
Ker, whom I love more than my- 
self. And nothing must worry 
you; if he is weak I am strong, 
and I will work for two." 

To pretend that Dame Josse- 
rande paid much attention to all 
these words would be false ; for 
her son possessed her whole soul, 
and she thought : 

" This the first time he has ever 
disobeyed and deceived me. The 
demon of avarice has entered into 
him. Why does he want so much 
money ? Can all tne riches of the 
world pay for one of the tears that 
the ingratitude of a beloved son 
draws from his mother's eyes?" 

Suddenly her thoughts were ar- 
rested, for the sound of a trumpet 
was heard in the still night. 

" It is the convent-horn," said 
Matheline. 

" And it sounds the wolf-alarm !" 
added Pol. 

" What harm can the wolf do," 
asked Josserande, " to a well-mount- 
ed troop like the cavalry of Gildas 
the Wise ? And, besides, cannot 
the holy abbot with a single word 
put to flight a hundred wolves?" 

They had arrived at the heath 
of Carnac, where are the two 
thousand seven hundred and twen- 
ty-nine Druid stones, and the 
monks had already passed the 
round point where nothing grows, 
neither grass nor heath, and which 



resembles an enormous caldron 
a caldron wherein to make oaten 
porridge or rather a race-course, 
to exercise horses. 

On one side might be seen the 
town, dark and gloomy ; on the 
other, as far as the eye could reach, 
rows of rugged obelisks, half-black, 
half-white, owing to the snow, 
which threw into bold relief each 
jagged outline. Josserande, Mathe- 
line, and Pol Bihan had just turned 
from the sunken road which branch- 
es toward Plouharnel ; and the 
moon played hide-and-go-seek be- 
hind a flock of little clouds that 
flitted over the sky like lambs. 

Then a strange thing happened. 
The cavalcade of monks was seen 
to retreat from the entrance of the 
avenues to the middle of the circle, 
while the horn sounded the signal 
of distress, and loud cries were 
heard of "Wolf ! wolf! wolf!" 

At the same time could be dis- 
tinguished the clashing of arms, 
the stamping of horses, and all the 
noise of a ferocious struggle, above 
which rose the majestic tones of 
Gildas the Wise, as he said with 
calmness : 

" Wolf, wicked wolf, I forbid you 
to touch God's servants!" 

But it seemed that the wicked 
wolf was in no hurry to obey, for 
the cavalcade plunged hither and 
thither, as though shaken by con- 
vulsion ; and the moon having 
come forth from the clouds, there 
was seen an enormous beast strug- 
gling with the staffs of the monks, 
the halberds of the armed guard, 
the pitchforks and spears of the 
peasants, who had hastened from 
all directions at the trumpet-call 
from Ruiz. 

The animal received many 
wounds, but it was fated not to 
die. Again and again it charged 
upon the crowd, rushed up and 



The Wolf -Tower. 



463 



down, round and round, biting, 
tearing with its great teeth so fear- 
fully that a large circle was made 
around the grand abbot, who 
was finally left alone in face of the 
wolf. 

For a wolf it was. 
And the grand abbot having 
touched it with his crosier, the 
wolf crouched at his feet, panting, 
trembling, and bloody. Gildas the 
Wise bent over it, looked at it at- 
tentively, then said : 

" Nothing happens contrary to 
God's holy will. Where is Dame 
Josserande ?" 

" I am here," replied a mournful 
voice full of tears, "and I dread a 
great misfortune." 

She also was alone ; for Mathe- 
line and Pol Bihan, seized with 
terror, had rushed across the fields 
at the first alarm and abandoned 
their precious charge. The grand 
abbot called Josserande and said : 
" Woman, do not despair. 
Above you is the Infinite Goodness, 
who holds in his hands the heavens 
and the whole earth. Meanwhile, 
protect your wolf; we must return 
to the monastery to gain from sleep 
strength to serve the Lord our 
God!" 

And he resumed his course, fol- 
lowed by his escort. 

The wolf did not move ; his 
tongue lay on the snow, which was 
reddened by his blood. Josserande 
knelt beside him and prayed fer- 
vently. For whom ? For her be- 
loved son. Did she already know 
that the wolf was Sylvestre Ker? 
Certainly; such a thing could 
scarcely be divined, but under 
what form cannot a mother discov- 
er her darling child ? 

She defended the wolf against 
the peasants, who had returned to 
strike him with their pitchforks 
and pikes, as they believed him 



dead. The two last who came were 
Pol Bihan and Matheline. Pol Bi- 
han kicked him on the head and 
said, "Take that, you fool!" and 
Matheline threw stones at him and 
cried : " Idiot, take that, and that, 
and that!" 

They had hoped for all the gold 
in the world, and this dead beast 
could give them nothing more. 

After a while two ragged beggars 
passed by and assisted Josserande 
in carrying the wolf into the tower. 
Where is charity most often found ? 
Among the poor, who are the fig- 
ures of Jesus Christ. 



x. 



Day dawned. A man slept in 
the bed of Sylvestre Ker, where 
widow Josserande had laid a wolf. 
The room still bore the marks of a 
fire, and snow fell through the hole 
in the roof. The young tenant's 
face was disfigured with blows, and 
his hair, stiffened with blood, hung 
in heavy locks. In his feverish 
sleep he talked, and the name 
that escaped his lips was Mathe- 
line's. At his bedside the mother 
watched and prayed. 

When Sylvestre Ker awoke he 
wept, for the thought of his con- 
demnation returned, but the re- 
membrance of Pol and Matheline 
dried the tears in his burning eyes. 

" It was for those two," said he, 
" that I forgot God and my mother. 
I still feel my friend's heel upon 
my forehead, and even to the bot- 
tom of my heart the shock of the 
stones thrown at me by my be- 
trothed !" 

" Dearest," murmured Josse- 
rande, " dearer to me than ever, I 
know nothing; tell me all." 

Sylvestre Ker obeyed ; and when 
he had finished Josserande kissed 
him, took up her staff, and proceed- 



464 



The Wolf-Toiucr. 



ed toward the convent of Ruiz to 
ask, according to her custom, aid 
and counsel from Gildas the Wise. 
On her way men, women, and chil- 
dren looked curiously at her, for 
throughout the country it was al- 
ready known that she was the 
mother of a wolf. Even behind 
the hedge which enclosed the 
abbey orchard Matheline and Pol 
were hidden to see her pass ; and 
she heard Pol say : " Will you 
come to-night to see the wolf run 
round ?" 

" Without fail," replied Mathe- 
line ; and the sting of her laughter 
pierced Josserande like a poison- 
ous thorn. 

The grand abbot received her, 
surrounded by great books and 
dusty manuscripts. When she 
wished to explain her son's case 
he stopped her and said : 

"Widow of Martin Ker, poor, 
good woman, since the beginning 
of the world Satan, the demon of 
gold and pride, has worked many 
such wickednesses. Do you re- 
member the deceased brother, 
Thae'l, who is a saint for having 
resisted the desire of making gold 
he who had the power to do it ?" 

"Yes," answered Josserande; 
" and would to heaven my Sylves- 
tre had imitated him !" 

" Very well," replied Gildas the 
Wise, " instead of sleeping I passed 
the rest of the night with St. Thae'l, 
seeking a means to save your son, 
Sylvestre Ker." 

" And have you found it, fa- 
ther?" 

The grand abbot neither an- 
swered yes nor no, but he began to 
turn over a very thick manuscript 
filled with pictures ; and while 
turning the leaves he said : " Life 
springs from death, according to 
the divine word ; death seizes the 
living according to the pagan law 



of Rome ; and it is nearly the same 
thing in the order of miserable 
temporal ambition, whose inheri- 
tance is a strength, a life, shot 
forth from a coffin. This is a book 
of the defunct Thael's, which treats 
of the question of maladies caused 
by the breath of gold a deadly 
poison. . . . W'oman, would you 
have the courage to strike your 
wolf a blow on his head powerful 
enough to break the skull ?" 

At these words Josserande fell 
her full length upon the tiles, as if 
she had been stabbed to the heart ; 
but in the very depth of her agon) 
for she thought herself dying she 
replied : 

"If you should order' me to do 
it, I would." 

" You have this great confidence 
in me, poor woman ?" cried Gildas, 
much moved. 

" You are a man of God," an- 
swered Josserande, " and I have 
faith in God." 

Gildas the Wise prostrated him- 
self on the ground and struck his 
breast, knowing that he had felt a 
movement of pride. Then, stand- 
ing up, he raised Josserande, and 
kissed the hem of her robe, saying: 

" Woman, I adore in you the 
most holy faith. Prepare your axe, 
and sharpen it !" 

XI. 

In Brittany, when this legend is 
repeated, the relater here adds a 
current proverb of the province : 
" Christians, there is nothing great- 
er than Faith, that is the mother of 
Hope, and thus the grandmother 
of Holy Love, that carries one 
above to the Paradise of God." 

In the days of Gildas the Wise 
intense silence always reigned 
at night through the dense oak 
forests of the Armorican country. 



The Wolf -Tower. 



465 



One of the most lonely places was 
Caesar's camp, the name given to 
the huge masses of stone that en- 
cumbered the barren heath; and it 
was the common opinion that the 
pagan giants supposed to be buried 
under them rose from their graves 
at midnight, and roamed up and 
down the long avenues, watching 
for the late passers-by to twist 
their necks. 

This night, however the night 
after Christmas many persons 
could be seen about eleven o'clock 
on the heath before the stones of 
Carnac, all around the Great Basin 
or circle, whose irregular outline 
was clearly visible by moonlight. 

The enclosure was entirely 
empty. Outside no one was seen, 
it is true ; but many could be 
heard gabbling in the shadow of 
the high rocks, under the shelter of 
the stumps of oaks, even in the 
tufts of thorny brambles ; and all 
this assemblage watched for some- 
thing, and that something was the 
wolf, Sylvestre Ker. 

They had come from Plouharnel, 
and also from Lannelar, from Car- 
nac, from Kercado, even from the 
old town of Crach, beyond La Trin- 
ite. 

Who had brought together all 
these people, young and old, men 
and women? The legend does not 
say, but very probably Matheline 
had strewn around the cruel pearls 
of her laughter, and Pol Bihan 
had not been slow to relate what 
he had seen after the midnight 
Mass. 

By some means or other the en- 
tire country around for five or six 
leagues knew that the son of Mar- 
tin Ker, the tenant of the abbey, 
had become a man-wolf, and that 
lie was doomed to expiate his 
crime in the spot haunted by the 
phantoms the Great Basin of the 

VOL. XXVI. 30 



Pagans, between the tower and the 
Druid stones. 

Many of the watchers had never 
seen a man-wolf, and there reigned 
in the crowd, scattered in invisi- 
ble groups, a fever of curiosity, ter- 
ror, and impatience ; the minutes 
lengthened as they passed, and it 
seemed as though midnight, stop- 
ped on the way, would never 
come. 

There were at that time no 
clocks in the neighborhood to 
mark the hour, but the matin-bell 
of the convent of Ruiz gave notice 
that the \vished-for moment had 
arrived. 

While waiting there was busy 
conversation : they spoke of the 
man-wolf, of phantoms, and also of 
betrothals, for the rumor was 
spread that the bans of Matheline 
du Coat-Dor, the promised bride 
of Sylvestre Ker, with the strong 
Pol Bihan, who had never found a 
rival in the wrestling-field, would 
be published on the following Sun- 
day ; and I leave you to imagine 
how Matheline's laughter ran in 
pearly cascades when congratulat- 
ed on her approaching marriage. 

By the road which led up to the 
tower a shadow slowly descended ;, 
it was not the wolf, but a poor wo- 
man in mourning, whose head was 
bent upon her breast, and who 
held in her hand an object that, 
shone like a mirror, and the bril- 
liant surface of which reflected the 
moonbeams. 

"It is Josserande Ker!" was 
whispered around the circle, be- 
hind the rocks, in the brambles,, 
and under the stumps of the oaks. 

1 'Tis the widow of the armed 
keeper of the great door !" 

"'Tis the mother of the wolf, 
Sylvestre Ker !" 

"She also has come to see. . . ." 

" But what has she in her hand ?" 



4 66 



The Wolf- 7ower. 



Twenty voices asked this ques- 
tion. Matheline, who had good 
eyes, and such beautiful ones, re- 
plied : 

" It looks like an axe. . . . Hap- 
py am I to be rid of those two, the 
mother and son ! With them I 
could never laugh." 

But there were two or three 
good souls who said in low tones : 

" Poor widow ! her heart must 
be full of sorrow." 

" But what does she want with 
that axe ?" 

" It is to defend her wolf," again 
replied Matheline, who carried a 
pitchfork. % 

Pol Bih an held an enormous hol- 
ly stick which resembled a club. 
Every one was armed either with 
threshing flails or rakes or hoes ; 
some even bore scythes, carried 
upright ; for they had not only 
come to look on, but to make an 
end of the man-wolf. 

Again was heard the chime of 
the Matin-bells of the convent of 
Ruiz, and immediately a smother- 
ed cry ran from group to group : 

"Wolf! wolf! wolf!" 

Josserande heard it, for she 
paused in her descent and cast an 
.anxious look around ; but, seeing 
no one, she raised her eyes to hea- 
ven and clasped her hands over 
the handle of her axe. 

The wolf, in the meantime, with 
fuming nostrils and eyes which 
looked like burning coals, leaped 
over the stones of the enclosure 
and began to run around the circle. 

" See, see !" said Pol Bihan, " he 
no longer limps." 

And Matheline, dazzled by the 
red light from his eyes, added : " It 
seems he is no longer one-eyed !" 

Pol brandished his club and 
continued : 

" What are we waiting for ? Why 
not attack him ?" 



"Go you first," said the men. 

"I caught cold the other day. 
and my leg is stiff, which keeps me 
from running," answered Pol. 

" Then I will go first !" cried 
Matheline, raising her pitch-fork. 
" I will soon show how I hate the 
wretch !" 

Dame Josserande heard her and 
sighed : 

" Girl, whom I blessed in bap- 
tism, may God keep me from curs- 
ing you now !" 

This Matheline, whose pearls 
were worth nothing, was no cow- 
ard ; for she carried out her words, 
and marched straight up to the 
wolf, while Bihan stayed behind and 
cried : 

" Go, go, my friends ; don't be 
afraid ! Ah ! but for my stiff leg I 
would soon finish the wolf, for I 
am the strongest and bravest." 

Round and round the circle 
galloped the wolf as quickly as a 
hunted stag; his eyes darted fire, 
his tongue was hanging from his 
mouth. Josserande, seeing the dan- 
ger that threatened him, wept and 
cried out : 

" O Bretons ! is there among 
you all not one kind soul to defend 
the widow's son in the hour when 
he bitterly expiates his sin ?" 

" Let us alone, godmother," bold- 
ly replied Matheline. 

And from afar Pol Bihan added : 

" Don't listen to the old woman ; 
go!" 

But another voice was heard in 
answer to Dame Josserande's ap- 
peal, and it said : 

" As last night, we are here !" 

Standing in front of Matheline, 
and barring the passage, were two 
ragged beggars with their wallets, 
leaning upon their staffs. Josse- 
rande recognized the two poor men 
who had so charitably aided her 
the night before; and one of them. 



The Wolf -Tower. 



467 



who had snow-white hair and 
beard, said : 

"Christians, my brethren, why 
do you interfere in this? God re- 
wards and punishes. This poor 
man-wolf is not a damned soul, but 
one expiating a great crime. Leave 
justice to God, if you do not wish 
some great misfortune to happen 
to you." 

And Josserande, who was kneel- 
ing down, said imploringly : 

" Listen, listen to the saint !" 

But from behind Pol Bihan cried 
out : 

"Since when have beggars been 
allowed to preach sermons ? Ah ! 
if it were not for my stiff leg. . . . 
Kill him, kill him! . . . wolf! wolf! 
wolf!" 

"Wolf! wolf!" repeated Mathe- 
line, who tried to drive off the old 
beggar with her pitch-fork. 

But the fork broke like glass in 
her hands, as it touched the poor 
man's tatters, and at the same time 
twenty voices cried : 

" The wolf! the wolf! Where has 
the wolf gone ?" 

Soon was seen where the wolf 
had gone. A black mass dashed 
through the crowd, and Pol Bihan 
uttered a horrible cry : 

"Help! help! Matheline !" 

You have often heard the noise 
made by a dog when crunching a 
bone. This was the noise they 
heard, but louder, as though 
there were many dogs crunching 
many bones. And a strange voice, 
like the growling of a wolf, said : 

" The strength of a man is a 
dainty morsel for a wolf to eat. 
Bihan, traitor, I eat your strength !" 

The black mass again bounded 
through the terrified crowd, his 
bloody tongue hanging from his 
mouth, his eyes darling fire. 

This time it was from Matheline 
that a scream still more horrible 



than that of Pol's was heard ; and 
again there was the noise of an- 
other terrible feast, and the voice 
of the wild beast, which had al- 
ready spoken, growled : 

" The pearls of a smile make a 
dainty morsel for a wolf to eat. 
Matheline, serpent that stung my 
heart, seek for your beauty. I 
have eaten it!" 

XIII. 

The white-haired beggar had 
endeavored to protect Matheline 
against the wolf, but he was very 
old, and his limbs would not move 
as quickly as his heart. He only 
succeeded in throwing down the 
wolf. It fell at Josserande's feet 
and licked her knees, uttering dole- 
ful moans. But the people, who 
had come thither for entertainment, 
were not well pleased with what 
had happened. There was now 
abundance of light, as men with 
torches had arrived from the abbey 
in search of their holy saint, Gil T 
das the Wise, whose cell had been 
found empty at the hour of Com- 
pline. 

The glare from the torches 
shone upon two hideous wounds 
made by the wolf, who had devour- 
ed Matheline's beauty and Pol's 
strength that is to say, the face of 
the one and the arms of the other : 
flesh and bones. It was frightful 
to behold. The women wept while 
looking at the repulsive, bleeding 
mass which had been Matheline's 
smiling face ; the men sought in 
the double bloody gaps some traces 
of Pol's arms, for the powerful 
muscles, the glory of the athletic 
games; and every heart was filled 
with wrath. 

The legend says that the tenant 
of Coat-Dor, Matheline's poor fa- 
ther, knelt beside his daughter and 



46S 



The Wolf-Toiver. 



felt around in the blood for the 
scattered pearls, which were now as 
red as holly-berries. 

" Alas !" said he, " of these dead 
stained things, which when living 
were so beautiful, which were ad- 
mired and envied and loved, I 
was so proud and happy." 

Alas ! indeed, alas ! Perhaps it 
was not the girl's fault that her 
heart was no larger than a little 
bird's; and yet for this defect was 
not Matheline most cruelly pun- 
ished ? 

"Death to the wolf! death to 
the wolf! death to the wolf!" 

From all sides was this cry heard, 
and brandishing pitchforks, cudgels, 
ploughshares, and mallets, came 
rushing the people toward the 
wolf, who still lay panting, with 
open jaws and pendent tongue, at 
the feet of Dame Josserande. 
Around them the torch-bearers 
formed a circle : not to throw light 
upon the wolf and Dame Josse- 
rande, but to render homage to the 
'white-haired beggar, in whom, as 
though the scales had suddenly 
fallen from their eyes, every one 
recognized the Grand-Abbot of 
Ruiz, Gildas the Wise. 

The grand abbot raised his 
hand, and the armed crowd's eager 
advance was checked, as if their 
feet had been nailed to the ground. 
Calmly he surveyed them, blessed 
them, and said : 

" Christians, the wolf did wrong 
to punish, for chastisement belongs 
to God alone; therefore the wolf's 
fault should not be punished by 
you. In whom resides the power 
of God? In the holy authority 
of fathers and mothers. So here 
is my penitent Josserande, who 
will rightfully judge the wolf and 
punish him, since she is his 
mother." 

When Gildas the Wise ceased 



speaking you could have heard a 
mouse run across the heath. Each 
one thought to himself: " So the 
wolf is really Sylvestre Ker." But 
not a word was tittered, and all 
looked at Dame Josserande's axe, 
which glistened in the moonlight. 

Josserande made the sign of the 
cross ah! poor mother, very slow- 
ly, for her heart sank within her 
and she murmured : 

" My beloved one, my beloved 
one, whom I have borne in my 
arms and nourished with my milk 
ah ! me, can the Lord God in- 
flict this cruel martyrdom upon 
me ?" 

No one replied, not even Gildas 
the Wise, who silently adjured the 
All-Powerful, and recalled to him 
the sacrifice of Abraham. 

Josserande raised her axe, but 
she had the misfortune to look at 
the wolf, who fixed his eyes, full of 
tears, upon her, and the axe fell from 
her hands. 

// was the ivoJf u'ho picked it ?//>, 
and when he gave it back to her he 
said : " I weep for you, my moth- 
er." 

" Strike !" cried the crowd, for 
what remained of Pol and Ma- 
theline tittered terrible groans. 
"Strike! strike !" 

While Josserande again seized 
her axe the grand abbot had time 
to say : 

" Do not complain, you two un- 
happy ones, for your suffering here 
below changes your hell into pur- 
gatory." 

Three times Josserande raised 
the axe, three times she let it 
fall without striking ; but at last 
she said in a hoarse tone that 
sounded like a death-rattle : " I 
have great faith in the good 
God !" and then, says the legend, 
she struck boldly, for the wolf's 
head split in two halves. 



The Wolf -Tower. 



469 



XIV. 

A sudden wind extinguished the 
torches, and some one prevented 
Dame Josserande from falling, as 
she sank fainting to the ground, by 
supporting her in his arms. By 
the light of the halo which shone 
around the blessed head of Gildas 
the Wise, the good people saw that 
this somebody was the young ten- 
ant, Sylvestre Ker, no longer lame 
nor one-eyed, but with two straight 
legs and two perfect eyes. 

At the same time there were 
heard voices in the clouds chant- 
ing the Te Dcum. Why? Be- 
cause heaven and earth quivered 
with emotion at witnessing this su- 
preme act of faith soaring from 
the depth of anguish in a mother's 
heart. 

xv. 

This is the legend that for many 
centuries has been related at Christ- 
mas time on the shores of the Pe- 
tite-Mer, which in the Breton tongue 
is called Armor bi/ian, the Celtic 
name of Brittany. 

If you ask what moral these good 
people draw from this strange story, 



I will answer that it contains a bas- 
ketful. Pol and Matheline, con- 
demned to walk around the Basin 
of the Pagans until the end of time, 
one without arms, the other with- 
out a face, offer a severe lesson to 
those fellows who are too proud of 
their broad shoulders and brute 
force, and gossiping flirts of girls 
with smiling faces and wicked 
hearts ; the case of Sylvestre Ker 
teaches young men not to listen to 
the demon of money ; the blow of 
Josserande's axe shows the miracu- 
lous power of faith ; the part of 
Gildas the Wise proves that it is 
well to consult the saints. 

Still further, that you may bind 
together these diverse morals in 
one, here is a proverb which is 
current in the province: "Never 
stoop to pick up the pearls of 
a smile." After this ask me no 
more. 

As to the authenticity of the 
story, I have already said that the 
chestnut-grove belongs to the may- 
or's nephew, which is one guaranty ; 
and 1 will add that the spot is call- 
ed Sylvestreker, and that the ruins, 
hung with moss, have no other 
name than "The Wolf-Tower !" 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



MR. FROUDE ON THE DECLINE OF PROTESTANTISM.* 



WE have seen what Mr. Froude 
thinks of the " Revival of Roman- 
ism." Let us now see what he has 
to say on a subject nearer his 
heart the decline of Protestan- 
tism. 

He has much to say ; and, to 
use an ordinary phrase, he makes 
no bones about saying it. At the 
outset we would dispose of what 
seems a fair objection.' If, it may 
be urged, you make Mr. Froude 
so very untrustworthy a witness 
against Catholics and the Catholic 
Church, why should he not be 
equally untrustworthy when as- 
sailing Protestantism ? 

The objection is more plausible 
than real. Mr. Froude is a pro- 
fessed Protestant. In the cause of 
Protestantism he is earnest even to 
aggressiveness. He believes in and 
loves it with all his heart and soul, 
as really as he disbelieves in and 
detests Catholicity. He can say 
nothing that is too good of the early 
Protestant Reformers and of their 
" Reform." He doubts about 
nothing, apologizes for nothing, 
attempts to palliate nothing either 
in the Reformers or their Reform. 
He sees nothing in either to apolo- 
gize for or to palliate. He can 
only regret that, so far as Protes- 
tant belief and work and workers 
go, the nineteenth century is not as 
the sixteenth. He is altogether on 
his own ground here ; and we sub- 
mit that the testimony of such a 
man in such a matter is of value, 
the more so when it is confirmed 
to-day by concurrent Protestant 

* Sh,>rt Studies on Great Subjects. By James 
Anthony Froude, M.A. New York: Scribner, 
Armstrong & Co. 1877. 



testimony on all sides. The only 
difference between Mr. Froude and 
the great mass of non-Catholic 
writers on this subject is that he is 
more frank than they, and lays his 
finger unshrinkingly on very tender 
Protestant spots. 

Of the actual state of Protestan- 
tism he has little that is good or 
hopeful to say, with one notable 
exception North Germany which 
will be considered later on. Pro- 
testantism to-day Mr. Froude finds 
weak-kneed as well as weak-head- 
ed. It has not that aggressive 
strength of the early teachers and 
preachers of Reform. The modern 
teachers have lost that pronounced 
faith in themselves and in their 
doctrines, that burning zeal, that 
fierce hatred of Catholicity, of 
falsehood, and of sham, that Mr. 
Froude is pleased to discover in 
the early Reformers. 

"Religion speaks with command," 
he says very rightly. It " lays 
down a set of doctrines, and says, 
' Believe these at your soul's peril.' 
A certain peremptoriness being 
thus of the essence of the thing, 
those religious teachers will always 
command most confidence who 
dare most to speak in positive 
tones." All of which is, of course, 
most true. 

Speaking " in positive tones," 
however, does not necessarily im- 
ply a divine mission, or even an 
erroneous sense of a divine mission. 
It may be bluster ; it may be cal- 
culated lying; it may be the mis- 
taken enthusiasm of a weak intel- 
lect and fervid imagination. To 
be real it must stand the severest 
tests. Of a man who asserts his 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



471 



mission from heaven as a teacher 
of religion something more than 
his own word is demanded, how- 
ever positive that word may be. 
In the preaching and the teaching 
of the truth there is in all ages 
a unity of voice, a community of 
feeling and of purpose, a singleness 
of eye, of aim, of method, a union 
of heart and of soul, that is unmis- 
takable and carries conviction 
with it. There is no change in it ; 
no fleck or flaw. What is new 
agrees with what is old ; is gene- 
rally a consequence flowing out of 
the old. It preaches only one God 
and one law from the beginning. 
It never contradicts itself; it never 
narrows or broadens its moral lines 
to suit the convenience or the 
whim of persons or of nationalities. 
It never compromises with human- 
ity. It enlightens the intellect 
while appealing to the heart of 
man. It makes no divisions be- 
tween men or nations ; no special 
code for this or for that. It is aw- 
ful in its inflexibility ; majestic in 
its calm ; eternal in its vigilance ; 
"the same, yesterday, to-day, and 
for ever." This is living Truth ; 
this is God's ; and he who speaks 
the word of God is known by these 
signs. 

Mr. Froude is at a loss to find 
this spirit now abroad in the world. 
The nearest approach to it he finds, 
oddly enough for him, in the Ca- 
tholic Church. But, of course, that 
is owing to some devilish ingenuity 
of which the Catholic Church alone 
has the secret. As for Protestants, 
" it is no secret," he says, " that of 
late years Protestant divines have 
spoken with less boldness, with 
less clearness and confidence, than 
their predecessors of the last gene- 
ration." "They are not to be 
blamed for it," he adds, and we 
quite agree with him. "Their in- 



tellectual position has grown in 
many ways perplexed. Science and 
historical criticism have shaken po- 
sitions which used to be thought 
unassailable " (p. 99). We point- 
ed out one of those " positions " 
the Protestant Reformation in Eng- 
land but that is not in the contem- 
plation of Mr. Froude. To him, 
even if to him alone, that position 
still stands, " unassailable." 

" Doctrines once thought to carry 
their own evidence with them in their 
inherent fitness for man's needs have 
become, for some reason or other, less 
conclusively obvious. The state of 
mind to which they were addressed has 
been altered altered in some way either 
for the worse or for the better. And 
where the evangelical theology retains 
its hold, it is rather as something which 
it is unbecoming to doubt than as a 
body of living truth which penetrates 
and vitalizes the heart " (p. 99). 

It is to be regretted that Mr. 
Froude does not specify these 
"doctrines." He fails to do so in 
any place, and in such matters, as 
indeed in all, there is nothing like 
accuracy in order to arrive at a 
clear understanding of what is 
wrong. Some of them, however, 
may be easily guessed at. In these 
days it would be hard to discover 
what precise "doctrines" "evan- 
gelical " or any but Catholic theo- 
logians do hold, if hard pushed and 
driven to make an explicit state- 
ment of what they do and what 
they do not believe. The expres- 
sion " evangelical theology " may 
help to enlighten us as to Mr. 
Fronde's meaning. That we take to 
mean a theology based on the Bible 
as the first, final, and only guide to 
man's knowledge of God and all 
implied in that knowledge. This 
view of his meaning is confirmed by 
another passage (p. 100), wherein, 
contrasting the doctrinal position 



472 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



of the Catholic and Protestant, lie 
says : 

" It " (the Catholic Church) " stands 
precisely on the same foundation on 
which the Protestant religion stands 
on the truth of the Gospel history. Be- 
fore we can believe the Gospel history 
we must appeal to the consciousness of 
God's existence, which is written on the 
hearts of us all." 

There is a mistake here which 
will be obvious to any instructed 
reader. There is no more reason 
" to appeal to the consciousness of 
God's existence " for the truth of 
" the Gospel history " than for the 
truth of any other history. As a 
history, history it is and no more, 
to be judged as to its accuracy 
on the known laws of historical 
criticism. It contains a written 
record of events, and stands or 
falls on the truth of what it re- 
cords, just as does Mr. Froude's 
own history. If it can be shown 
that it is false, there is an end of 
it; false it is, and n# man is bound 
to believe it. The foundation of 
Protestantism, as Mr. Froude very 
rightly says, stands " on the truth 
of the Gospel history " that is, on 
the Bible, and the Bible alone. 
Christ, however, did not build his 
church on the Bible, but on Peter, 
the chief of the apostles : " I say to 
thee, Thou art Peter, and upon this 
rock I will build my church, and 
the gates of hell shall not prevail 
against it." Those are very plain, 
strong, and unmistakable words ; 
and in their comprehension lies 
.a fundamental difference between 
Catholics and Protestants. 

Out of this difference comes a 
singular effect, more noticeable in 
these than in former days. Ca- 
tholics reverence the Bible more 
really because more truly than do 
Protestants. Over-reverence is ir- 
reverence. They never made the 



mistake of accepting the Bible as 
the foundation of Christ's church, 
any more than in human affairs we 
should take a history of a common- 
wealth, with the digest of its laws, 
the sayings of some of its wise 
men, their documents to their con- 
temporaries and to posterity, as 
the common \vealth itself. Protes- 
tants withdrew from the body or' 
the church, which may have had, 
and had, sore spots and diseased 
members; they took up the writ- 
ten record and said : Here are the 
laws ; here are the words of Christ ; 
here are the sayings of the fathers ; 
here is truth ; here let us build our 
church anew each one judging 
for himself as to what the church 
was and ought to be. Difficulties 
that were essential to such a posi- 
tion and that are obvious at sight 
arose at once and continued all the 
way down, until at last, in these 
days of all others, there sprang up 
in the very bosom of Protestantism 
a school of assailants of the Bible 
itself. This is the school of mo- 
dern scientists, which rejects reve- 
lation, rejects God, rejects the 
truth of the Bible history, rejects 
Christ rejects, in a word, every- 
thing, save what approves itself to 
it by so-called positive testimony. 
Hence arises the perplexity of the 
"intellectual position" of Protes- 
tant divines, which Mr. Froude 
notices. The very foundation of 
their creed is questioned, and ques- 
tioned at every inch. So, until 
everything is satisfactorily cleared 
up and the "scientists" absolutely 
refuted, Protestantism is in a state 
of dissolution. It has no foun- 
dation on which to stand, while 
Catholics have their living church, 
to which they adhered steadfastly 
from the very beginning, which ex- 
isted, and was called into being, en- 
tirely independent of the Bible, 



Mr. Froude en the Decline of Protestantism. 



473 



and which would have been what 
it is had the Bible never been writ- 
ten at all. So that, per impossibile, 
even were the Bible shown to be 
false, it would not affect the fun- 
damental Catholic position. Of 
course we do not intimate for a 
moment that the Bible is false, and 
that the scientists can prove any- 
thing against it. We only bring 
forward this instance of an essen- 
tial difference between Catholics 
and Protestants, and the effect of it 
on their minds, as showing the rea- 
son why Catholics take the criticism 
of the new school of inquirers very 
calmly, while the result of this criti- 
cism on Protestants is disastrous. 

Catholics are just as steadfast in 
their belief as they ever were; Pro- 
testants are daily becoming less 
and less so. Inquiry, or "criti- 
cism," as it is called, while it 
strengthens, if possible, Catholicity, 
destroys Protestantism. Truth can 
stand all things. " Science and his- 
torical criticism have shaken posi- 
tions which used to be thought 
unassailable " by Protestants, who 
find themselves in the false position 
of being compelled to question or 
reject as false what their fathers 
pinned their faith to Germany al- 
ways excepted, according to Mr. 
Froude. It is a hard tiling indeed 
to preach and teach as divine truth 
a doctrine, or by our very profes- 
sion to subscribe to a doctrine, 
which in our heart we doubt about 
or disbelieve. This is a moral 
phenomenon which Protestantism 
presents to us every day, and in 
no one of its infinite branches more 
.conspicuously than in the Anglican. 

If men are preaching what they 
disbelieve or are in grave doubt 
about, it is simply natural that 
" where truth " (or what was taken 
for truth) " was once flashed out 
like lightning, and attended with 



oratorical thunders, it is now ut- 
tered with comparative feebleness." 

"The most honest, perhaps, are the 
most uncomfortable and most hesitating, 
while those who speak most boldly are 
often affecting a confidence which in 
their hearts they do not feel " (p. 99). 
" From some cause, it seems they" (Pro- 
testant preachers) "dare not speak, they 
dare not think, like their fathers. Too 
many of them condescend to borrow the 
weapons of their adversaries. They an: 
not looking for ivhat is true ; they me look- 
ing for arguments to defend positions -which 
they know to be indefensible. Their ser- 
mons are sometimes sophistical, some- 
times cold and mechanical, sometimes 
honestly diffident. Any way, they are 
without warmth and cannot give what 
they do not possess " (p. 100). 

This is a very heavy indictment ; 
AVC leave to others to judge of its 
truth. It is a mistake, however, to 
.draw the line at "their fathers." 
These men are what their fathers 
have made them. The character- 
istics that mark the present teach- 
ers of Protestantism run down the 
whole line of the Protestant tradi- 
tion. Incoherency and inconsis- 
tency, not to use harsher terms, 
necessarily stamped Protestantism 
fro.m the first.* These character- 
istics are only more apparent to- 
day because the constant fire of 
criticism has exposed and brought 
them more prominently into view. 

The practical results of teaching 
what is necessarily and inherently 
contradictory scarcely need to be 
pointed out. "The Protestant," 
says Mr. Froude, " finding three 
centuries ago that the institution 

* We cannot, in the space of an article of this 
kind, give chapter and verse for every statement we 
may make. Limits forbid this. In saying that in- 
coherency and inconsistency mark the Protestant 
tradition throughout, we are aware that we make a 
very large and very grave assertion. To those who 
feel inclined to doubt its truth we would recom- 
mend as the readiest and fullest confirmation of it 
the very able series of articles on the Protestant 
tradition which appeared last year in the London 
Tablet a. series that, enlarged and carried further, 
we should like to see published in book-form. 



474 



Mr. Fronde on. the Decline of Protestantism. 



called the Church was teaching 
falsehood, refused to pin his faith 
upon the Church's sleeve thence- 
forward. He has relied on his own 
judgment, and times come when he 
is perplexed." The whole story is 
told here. It was too late in the 
day to find that " the Church was 
teaching falsehood." The Chris- 
tian Church can err or it cannot 
err. There is room for no via me- 
dia here. If it can err, it could 
have erred just as easily in the 
first century as in the fifteenth or 
sixteenth. If it could err at all 
there is no necessary reason to sup- 
pose that ft ever was right ; there 
is no belief to be placed in the 
promise of Christ ; there is no be- 
lief to be placed in Christ himself 
more than in any other man. And 
again, if it could err, who was 
right, and who was going to set it 
right? The church being aban- 
doned as a teacher of falsehood, 
there is no hope of escape from 
constant perplexity to the Chris- 
tian mind; for the Bible itself, being 
left to private judgment, is of course 
open to any interpretation that pri- 
vate judgment may be pleased to 
extract from it. And this in itself 
is destruction, quite apart from the 
assaults of hostile criticism. To 
make the church at all, or at any 
time, or by any possibility a teacher 
of falsehood is to strike the divinity 
from it and convert it into a human 
institution of the most monstrous 
assumptions and absurd preten- 
sions. 

Tins is Protestantism, which 
never had any spiritual life in it- 
self. It was from the beginning, 
as it still is, a convenient and very 
powerful political agent, as was 
Mahometanism. Mr. Froude says 
very truly, what all men are com- 
ing to say, that " there is no real 
alternative between the Catholic 



Church and atheism " (p. 100), 
which leaves Mr. Froude and his 
fellow-Protestants in a pleasant po- 
sition. 

In the general perplexity of the 
Protestant mind "the Romanist," 
as Mr. Froude graciously puts it, 
" has availed himself of the oppor- 
tunity." 

" His church stands as a visible thing, 
which appears [appeals?] to the imagina- 
tion as well as the reason. The vexed 
soul, wean r of its doubts, and too impa- 
tient to wait till it pleases God to clear 
away the clouds, demands a certainty on 
which it can repose never to ask a ques- 
tion more. By an effort of will which, 
while claiming the name of faith, is in 
reality a want of faith, it seizes the Ca- 
tholic system as a whole.' Foregoing 
the use of the natural reason for ever- 
more, it accepts the word of a spiritual 
director as an answer to every difficulty, 
and finds, as it supposes, the peace 
for which it longed, as the body which is 
drugged with opium ceases to feel 
pain " (p. 101). 

Such is Mr. Froude's picture of 
conversion to the Catholic faith. 
A man is drugged into Catholicity, 
and remains drugged to the end of 
the chapter. Whenever a gleam of 
his lost reason returns he hurries 
to the confessional box ; his "spir- 
itual director " administers another 
dose, and the drowsy patient slum- 
bers away again content. We do 
not pretend to Mr. Froude's singu- 
lar gift of prescience which enables 
him to read so readily the hearts of 
thousands of men and women who 
to all the world save Mr. Froude 
are intellectually and morally 
strong. He has traced their secret 
emotions and followed them up 
even into the confessional box. He 
has seen the opiate administered 
and satisfied himself of the process. 
To ordinary persons the conversion 
of a man to the Catholic faith is 
the result of a long and most pain- 
ful struggle which only the strong- 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



47 S 



est conviction of right can bring 
about. Leaving him there, depriv- 
ed of " the use of the natural reason 
for evermore," let us see what be- 
comes of those who retain the use 
of their natural reason and all the 
noble gifts and faculties that ac- 
company it. Protestants alone 
see clearly the roads to heaven 
and hell, according to Mr. Froude; 
which road do they take ? 

We have seen the position of 
their preachers. Were we not de- 
prived of " our natural reason for 
evermore," we should describe that 
position as most pitiable, where it 
is not dishonest and intellectual- 
ly immoral. The God of Protes- 
tantism, if we believe its expound- 
ers, is truly a strange being. He 
teaches everything, or he teaches 
nothing, with equal facility and 
pleasing variety. He teaches that 
there are three persons in one God; 
he teaches no such doctrine. He 
teaches that Christ is truly God 
and truly man ; he is rather doubt- 
ful about the matter. He teaches 
the eternity of punishment ; he 
teaches no such monstrous doc- 
trine. He commands that all men 
be baptized in the name of the Fa- 
ther, and of the Son, and of the 
Holy Ghost, if they would enter 
the kingdom of heaven ; he does 
not know of the Father, the Son, 
and the Holy Ghost. His views 
of baptism and its necessity are ra- 
ther mixed. There is no baptism 
unless a man is wholly immersed. 
It is just as good a baptism if a 
man's feet be immersed. It is 
equally good if water be poured on 
a man's head. A man is just as 
fit for the kingdom of heaven, and 
just as good a Christian, if he be 
not baptized at all. God teaches 
that the Blessed Sacrament is really 
and truly the body and blood of 
Christ, and to be adored. He 



teaches that it is only a figure of 
Christ, and that to adore it is to 
commit the sin of idolatry. He 
teaches that man has free-will ; he 
teaches that man has not free-will, 
and that all he can do is worthless, 
heaven or hell being portioned out 
for him from all eternity quite apart 
from his own endeavor. He teach- 
es that good works as well as faith 
in him are necessary for salvation ; 
he teaches that faith alone is neces- 
sary, and that provided a man be- 
lieve right he may do wrong. And 
so on aa infinitum down to the 
grossest and most abhorrent ten- 
ets. 

But this is Protestantism, or reli- 
ance on one's " own judgment." 
One's own judgment is very apt to 
favor one's own self. One's own 
judgment makes a god of self, and 
right and wrong matters of whim, 
appetite, and inclination. Let us 
see its outcome as pictured by Mr. 
Froude. 

In section iv. of his study he 
considers the " Causes of Weakness 
in Modern Protestant Churches." 
The words " modern " and "church- 
es " are themselves contradictory 
of unity and of a church built on 
Christ. He sets out by drawing 
a glowing picture of what the early 
" Reformers " did and what they 
were, which we may let pass as not 
immediately bearing on our present 
purpose. " After the middle of the 
seventeenth century," he says (p. 
in), " Protestantism ceased to be 
aggressive." 

. . . "As it became established it 
adapted itself to the world, laid aside its 
harshness, confined itself more and more 
to the enforcement of particular doc- 
trines, and abandoned, at first tacitly and 
afterward deliberately, the pretence to 
interfere with private life or practical 
business." 

Is this true ? Did Protestant- 



4/6 



Mr. Fronde on tJie Decline of Protestantism. 



ism cease to be aggressive after the 
middle of the seventeenth century? 
We have already said that Mr. 
Froude \vas generally the best refu- 
tation of Mr. Froude. He shall 
be his own judge. 

Did Protestantism cease to be 
aggressive in Ireland, for instance, 
after the middle of the seventeenth 
century? We might bring many 
unimpeachable witnesses on the 
stand to prove our point. Mr. 
Froude will suffice for us, and we 
quote him at some length because 
his words here set forth in the 
strongest contrast what Protestant- 
ism can do to degrade a people, 
and what Catholicity can do to lift 
a people out of the slough of deg- 
radation. Herein we see the spi- 
rits of both in deadly conflict, and 
the lesson of the struggle is a les- 
son for to-day, when the same 
spirits are locked again in strife. 

Writing not of the middle of the 
seventeenth, but of the beginning 
of the eighteenth, century (1709), 
Mr. Froude thus describes the se- 
cond Act against Popery in Ire- 
land : 

" The code of law which was designed 
to transfer the entire soil of Ireland to 
members of the Established Church, and 
reduce the Catholics to landless depen- 
dents, was finally completed. ... By 
the new act every settlement, every 
lease on lives, every conveyance made 
by a Catholic owner since 1704. by which 
any Protestant or Protestants had been 
injured,* was declared void, and the 
loop-holes were closed by which the act 
of that year had been evaded. To de- 
feat Protestant heirs, Catholics had con- 
cealed the true value of their property. 
Children were now enabled to compel 
their fathers to produce their title-deeds 
and make a clear confession. Catholic 



* Mr. Froude probably means the children of 
Catholic parents, who were encouraged by the 
state to apostatize, and thereby enter into the pos- 
session of their family estates ; as otherwise there 
was no legal possibility of a Protestant being injur- 
ed by a Catholic. 



gentlemen had pretended conversion to 
qualify themselves for being magistrates 
and sheriffs, for being admitted to the 
bar, or for holding a seat in Parliament, 
while their children were being bred up 
secretly in the old faith. The education 
of their families was made a test of sin- 
cerity, and those whose sons were not 
brought up as churchmen remained 
under the disabilities. 

" Nor, if words could hinder it, were 
the acts directed against the priests to be 
any more trilled with. Fifty pounds re- 
ward was now offered for the conviction 
of any Catholic archbishop, bishop, or 
vicar-general ; twenty pounds reward for 
the conviction of friar, Jesuit, orunregis- 
tered parish priest. ... It was now made 
penal for a priest to officiate anywhere 
except in the parish church for which he 
was registered, and the last rivet was 
driven into the chain by the compulsory 
imposition of the Abjuration Oath, 
which every priest was made to swear 
at his registration. As if this was not 
enough, any two magistrates received 
power to summon any or every Irish 
subject above the age of sixteen, to offer 
him the oath, and to commit him to pri- 
son if he refused it. They might also, if 
he was a Catholic, ask him where he 
last heard Mass, and by whom it was 
celebrated. If the priest officiating was 
found to have been unregistered he was 
liable to be transported. 

''A fatal clause was added that any 
Protestant whatever who discovered and 
was able to prove before a Protestant 
jury the existence of any purchase or 
lease of which a Catholic was to have se- 
cretly the advantage, should himself be 
put in possession of the property which 
was the subject of the fraud " (pp. 332- 
334).* 

Even Mr. Froude cannot help 
remarking on this last clause that 
" the evasion of a law so contrived 
that every unscrupulous scoundrel 
in Ireland was its self-constituted 
guardian became impossible "; and 
he adds with gratifying frankness : 
" That it was unjust in itself never 
occurred as a passing emotion to 



* The English in Ireland -in the Eighteenth 
Century. By James Anthony Froude, M.A. Vol. 
I. London : Longmans, Green & Co. 1872. 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



477 



any Protestant in the two king- 
doms, not even to Swift, who speaks 
approvingly of what he deems must 
l)e the inevitable result." 

Writing still of the Penal Laws, 
he says that " the practice of the 
courts " in regard to them " was a 
very school of lying and a disci- 
pline of evasion. No laws could 
have been invented, perhaps, more 
ingeniously demoralizing" (p. 374). 

Writing of a period still later in 
the eighteenth century, after the 
Protestant emigration and the ruin 
of Irish trade and industry had been 
brought about by English legisla- 
tion, he thus describes the condition 
of the Irish peasant class, who com- 
posed the bulk of the population : 

" The tenants were forbidden in their 
leases to break or plough the soil. The 
people, no longer employed, were driven 
aw.iy into holes and corners, and eked 
out a wretched subsistence by potato 
gardens, or by keeping starving cattle 
of their own on the neglected bogs. 
Their numbers increased, for they mar- 
ried early, and they were no longer lia- 
ble, as in the old times, to be killed off 
like do:;s in forays. They grew up in 
compulsory idleness, encouraged once 
more in their inherited dislike of labor, 
and enured to wretchedness and hun- 
ger ; and, on every failure of the potato 
crop, hundreds of thousands were starv- 
ing." 

Horrible as such a picture is, it 
is but a faint sketch of the reality. 
All readers of Irish history know 
it, and no student of English legis- 
lation should forget or pass over 
that dark chapter in England's his- 
tory. Our own readers have seen 
the whole system vividly sketched 
in these pages recently in the series 
of papers on " English Rule in Ire- 
land." What, in human nature and 
human possibilities, was to become 
of a people thus submitted to so 
long and unbending and systema- 
tic a course of degradation ? They 



had nothing left but their faitl 1 , 
and the eternal truth of the prom- 
ise that this is the victory which 
overcometh the world ; and that 
our faith shall make us free was 
never more gloriously and won- 
drously made manifest than in the 
case of the Irish people. 

Ignorance was made compulsory 
by this Protestant government. 
The statute law of Ireland forbade 
Catholics to open schools or to 
teach in them. The Irish people, 
of all peoples, have ever had a 
craving for knowledge. What was 
left to them to do ? 

" The Catholics," says Mr. Froudc, 
" with the same steady courage and un- 
remitting zeal with which they had main- 
tained and multiplied the number of 
their priests, had established open 
schools in places like Killarney, where 
the law was a dead-letter. In the more 
accessible counties, where open defiance 
was dangerous, they extemporized class 
teachers under ruined walls or in the 
dry ditches by the roadside, where rag- 
ged urchins, in the midst of their pover- 
ty, learnt English and the elements of 
arithmetic, and even to read and construe 
Ovid and Virgil. With institutions 
which showed a vitality so singular and 
so spontaneous repressive acts of Par- 
liament contended in vain." 

Ignorance is esteemed to be the 
prolific mother of vice. The social 
condition of the Irish people was 
made as bad as legislation could 
make it. Where was the room for 
morality in such a case ? In vainly 
trying to explain away that most 
brutal project of la\v for the mu- 
tilation of the Irish priests, Mr. 
Fronde says (vol. i. p. 557) : " They 
(the Lord Lieutenant and Privy 
Council) did propose, not that all 
the Catholic clergy in Ireland, as 
Plowden says, but that unregistered 
priests and friars coming in from 
abroad, should be liable to castra- 
tion "; and he adds in a note : 



.]//-. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism, 



" Not, certainly, as implying a charge 
of immorality. Amidst the multitude of 
accusations which I have seen brought 
against the Irish priests of the last centu- 
i \. 1 have never, save in a single instance, 
encountered a charge of unchastity. Ra- 
ther the exceptional and signal purity of 
Irish Catholic women of the lower class, 
unparalleled probably in the civilized 
world, and not characteristic of the race, 
which in the sixteenth century was no 
less distinguished for licentiousness, 
must be attributed wholly and entirely 
to the influence of the Catholic clergy." 

Mr. Froude cannot be wholly 
generous and honest in a matter of 
this kind, but what is true in this 
is sufficient for our purpose with- 
out inquiring into what is false. 
It is plain from his own words 
that the one thing that saved 
the Irish people from perdition, 
body and soul, was their Catholic 
faith. Yet this is the man who, hav- 
ing thus testified to the rival effects 
of Catholicity and Protestantism 
on a people, has the effrontery to 
tell us in the '"Revival of Roman- 
ism " that 

" If by this [conversions] or any other 
cause the Catholic Church anywhere 
recovers her ascendency, she will again 
exhibit the detestable features which 
have invariably attended her supremacy. 
Her rule will once more be found in- 
compatible either with justice or intel- 
lectual growth, and our children will be 
forced to recover by some fresh struggle 
the ground which our forefathers con- 
quered for us, and which we by our pu- 
sillanimity surrendered " (p. 103). 

With his own testimony before 
us we may well ask in amazement, 
Of which church is he writing ? It 
would seem as though Heaven, 
which through all ages has looked 
down upon and permitted martyr- 
dom for the faith, had in this in- 
stance called upon, not a tender 
virgin or a strong youth, not an old 
man tottering into the grave or an 
innocent child, to step into the 



arena and offer up their life and 
blood for the cause of Christ, but a 
whole people. And the martyrdom 
of this people was not for a day or 
an hour ; it was the slow torture of 
centuries. A legacy of martyrdom 
was " bequeathed from bleeding 
sire to son." Life was hopeless to 
the Irish people under the Penal 
Laws ; the world a wide prison ; the 
earth a grave. They could only- 
lift their eyes and hearts to heaven 
and wait patiently for merciful 
death to come. This was the su- 
preme test of faith to a noble and 
passionate race, as it was faith's 
supremest testimony. No work of 
the saints, no writings of the fa- 
thers, no Heaven-illumined mind 
ever brought to the aid of faith 
stronger reason for conviction than 
this. As words pale before deeds, 
as the blood of a martyr speaks 
more loudly to men, and cries more 
clamorously to heaven, than all that 
divine philosophy can utter or in- 
spired poet sing, so the attitude 
of the Irish people, so opposed to 
all the instincts of their quick and 
passionate nature, bore the very 
noblest testimony to the reality of 
the Christian religion. A world 
looked down into that dark arena 
and waited for some sign of faltering 
in the victim, for some sign of pity 
in the persecutor. Neither came. 
The victim refused to die or sacri- 
fice to the gods ; the persecutor to 
relent. The struggle ended at 
length through the sheer weariness 
of the latter, and brighter times 
came because darker could not be 
devised. 

Faith conquered. The Irish peo- 
ple arose from its grave, and at 
once spread abroad over the world 
to preach the Gospel and to plant 
the church which for two centuries 
it had watered with its blood. The 
Act of Catholic Emancipation was 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline' of Protestantism. 



4/9 



the first real sign of resurrection, 
and that \vas only passed in 1829. 

So much for Protestantism hav- 
ing " ceased to be aggressive after 
the middle of the seventeenth cen- 
tury." How aggressive are certain 
Protestant powers to-day all men 
know. 

Another thing happened to Pro- 
testantism after the middle of the 
seventeenth century : 

" It no longer produced men conspi- 
cuously nobler and better than Roman- 
ism," says Mr. Froude, " and therefore it 
no longer made converts. As it became 
established, it adapted itself to the 
world, laid aside its harshness, confined 
itself more and more to the enforcement 
of particular doctrines " (of no doctrines 
in particular, we should be inclined to 
say), "and abandoned, at first tacit'y and 
afterward deliberately, the pretence to 
interfere with private life or practical 
business." 

In plainer words, Protestantism, 
having secured its place in this 
world, left the next world to take 
care of itself, and left men free to 
go to the devil or not just as they 
pleased. Mr. Froude faithfully 
pictures the result : 

" Thus Protestant countries are no 
longer able to boast of any special or re- 
markable moral standard ; and the effect 
of the creed on the imagination is ana- 
logously impaired. Protestant nations 
show more energy than Catholic nations 
because the mind is left more free, and 
the intellect is undisturbed by the au- 
thoritative instilment of false principles " 
p. in). 

This strikes us as a very easy 
manner of begging a very impor- 
tant question. However, we are 
less concerned now with Mr. 
Froude's Catholics than with his 
Protestants. 

" But," he goes on, " Protestant na- 
tions have been guilty, as nations, of 
enormous crimes. Protestant indivi- 
duals, who profess the soundest of 



creeds, seem, in their conduct, to have 
no creed at all, beyond a conviclion that 
pleasure is pleasant, and that money 
will purchase it. Political corruption 
grows up ; sharp practice in trade 
grows up dishonest speculations, short 
weights and measures, and adulteration 
of food. The commercial and political 
Protestant world, on both sides of the 
Atlantic, has accepted a code of action 
from which morality has been banished ; 
and the clergy have for the most part 
sat silent, and occupy themselves in 
carving and polishing into completeness 
their schemes of doctrinal salvation. 
They shrink from offending the wealthy 
members of their congregation." (We 
believe we heard concordant testimony 
to this from distinguished members of 
the late Protestant Episcopalian Con- 
vention and Congress.) " They with- 
draw into the affairs of the other world, 
and leave the present world to the men 
of business and the devil." 

Mr. Froude having thus placidly 
handed Protestantism over to the 
devil, we might as well leave it 
there, as the devil is proverbially 
reported to know and take care of 
his own. And certainly, if Protes- 
tantism be only half what Mr. 
Froude depicts it, it is the devil's, 
and a more active and fruitful 
agent of evil he could not well de- 
sire. One thing is beyond dispute : 
if Protestantism be what so ardent 
an advocate as Mr. Froude says it 
is, it is high time for a change. It 
is time for some one or something 
to step in and dispute the devil's 
absolute sovereignty. If this is 
the result of the Protestant mind 
being " left more free " than the 
Catholic, the sooner such freedom 
is curtailed the better. It is the 
freedom of lethargy and license 
which has yielded up even the lit- 
tle that it had of real freedom and 
truth to its own child, Materialism, 
the modern name for paganism. 

" They" (the Protestant clergy), says Mr. 
Froude, '' have allowed the Gospel to be 
superseded by the new formulas of po- 



48 o 



J/V. b'ronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



litical economy. This so-called science 
is the most barefaced attempt that has 
rver fH been openly made on this earth 
to regulate human society without God 
or recognition of the moral law. The 
clergy have allowed it to grow up, to 
t ike possession of the air, to penetrate 
schools and colleges, to control the ac- 
tions of legislatures, without even so 
much as opening their lips in remon- 
strance." 

Yes, because they had nothing 
better to offer in its place. And 
this Mr. Froude advances with 
much truth as one of the causes of 
the " Revival of Romanism " : 

" I once ventured," he tells us, " to 
say to a leading Evangelical preacher in 
London that I thought the clergy were 
much to blame in these matters. If the 
diseases of society were unapproachable 
by human law, the clergy might at least 
keep their congregations from forgetting 
that there was a law of another kind 
which in some shape or other would en- 
force itself. He told me very plainly 
that he did not look on it as part of his 
duty. He could t not save the world, nor 
would he try. The world lay in wicked- 
ness, and would lie in wickedness to 
the end. His business was to save out 
of it individual souls by working on 
their spiritual emotions, and bringing 
them to what he called the truth. As to 
what men should do or not do, how they 
should occupy themselves, how and how 
far they might enjoy themselves, on what 
principles they should carry on their 
daily work on these and similar sub- 
jects he had nothing to say. 

" I needed no more to explain to me 
why Evangelical preachers were losing 
their hold on the more robust intellects, 
or why Catholics, who at least offered 
something which at intervals might re- 
mind men that they had souls, should 
have power to win away into their fold 
many a tender conscience which needed 
detailed support and guidance" (pp. 
112-113). 

One ray of light in the universal 
darkness now enshrouding Protes- 
tantism shines before the eyes of 
Mr. Froude. It falls on the pre- 
sent GeniKin Empire. Here at least 



the weary watchman crying out the 
hours of heaven may call " All is 
well " to the sleepers. Here Pro- 
testanti>ni had its true birth ; here 
it finds its true home. In this 
blessed land lies hope and salva- 
tion for a lost world. But the pic- 
ture is so graphic that we give it 
in Mr. Fronde's own words : 

" As the present state of France," he 
says, " is the measure of the value of the 
Catholic revival, so Northern Germany, 
spiritually, socially, and politically, is the 
measure of the power of consistent Pro- 
testantism. Germany was the cradle of 
the Reformation. In Germany it moves 
forward to its manhood ; and there, and 
not elsewhere, will be found the intel- 
lectual solution of the speculative per- 
plexities which are now dividing and 
bewildering us" (pp. 130-131). 

" Luther was the root in which the in- 
tellect of the modern Germans took its 
rise. In the spirit of Luther this men- 
tal development has gone forward ever 
since. The seed changes its form when 
it develops leaves and flowers. But the 
leaves and flowers are in the seed, and 
the thoughts of the Germany of to-day 
lay in germs in the great reformer. Thus 
Luther has remained through later his- 
tory the idol of the nation whom he sav- 
ed. The disputes between religion and 
science, so baneful in their effects else- 
where, have risen into differences there, 
but never into quarrels " (p. 132). 

" Protestant Germany stands almost 
alone, with hands and head alike clear. 
Her theology is undergoing change. 
Her piety remains unshaken. Protes- 
tant she is, Protestant she means to be. 
... By the mere weight of superior 
worth the Protestant states have estab- 
lished their ascendency over Catholic 
Austria and Bavaria, and compel them, 
whether they will or not, to turn their 
faces from darkness to light.* . . . Ger- 
man religion may be summed up in 
the word which is at once the founda- 
tion and the superstructure of all 
religion Duty ! No people anywhere 
or at any time have understood better 
the meaning of duty ; and to say that is 
to say all " (pp. 134-135). 

* Herein is plainly confirmed the view we took 
of Mr. Froude's theory of might and right in our 
last article, "Mr. Froude on the Revival of Roman- 
ism," Dec., 1877. 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



481 



These glowing periods are very 
tempting to the critic ; but it is a 
mark of cruelty and savagery to 
gloat over an easy prey. We for- 
bear all verbal criticism, then, and 
simply deny in toto the truth of 
Mr. Fronde's statement. It is so 
very wrong that we can only think 
lie wrote from his imagination a 
weakness from which he suffers 
oftenest when he wishes most to be 
effective. Had he searched the 
world he could not have found a 
worse instance to prove his point 
than North Germany. 

Prussia is the leading North Ger- 
man and Protestant state, and in 
various passages Mr. Fronde shows 
that he takes it as his beau-ideal of 
a Protestant power. How stands 
'rotestantism in Prussia to-day ? 

The indications for more than a 
quarter of a century past have been 
that Protestantism in Prussia was 
little more than the shadow of a 
once mighty name. These indica- 
tions have become more marked of 
late years, especially since the con- 
solidation of the new German Em- 
pire. Earnest German Protestants 
are continually deploring the fact; 
the press proclaims it ; the Protes- 
tant ministers avow it, and all the 
world knew of it, save, apparently, 
Mr. Froude. " Protestantism in 
Prussia " formed the subject of a 
letter from the Berlin correspondent 
of the London Times as recently as 
Sept. 7, 1877. His testimony on 
such a subject could scarcely be 
called in question, but even if it 
could be the facts narrated speak 
for themselves. 

" Forty years ago," he says, " the 
clergy of the Established Church of this 
country, including the leading divines 
and the members of the ecclesiastical 
government, almost to a man were un- 
der the influence of free-thinking theo- 
ries. 

VOL. XXVI. 31 



" It was the time when German criti- 
cism first undertook to dissect the Bible. 
History seemed to have surpassed theo- 
logy, and divines had recourse to ' inter- 
preting ' what they thought they could no 
longer maintain according to the letter. 
The movement extended from the clergy 
to the educated classes, gradually reach- 
ing the lower orders, and ultimately 
pervaded the entire nation. At this 
juncture atheism sprang forward to reap 
the harvest sown by latitudinarians. 
Then reaction set in. The clergy revert- 
ed to orthodoxy, and their conversion to- 
the old faith happening to coincide with 
the return of the government to political 
conservatism, subsequent to the troub- 
lous period of 1848, the stricter princi- 
ples embraced by the cloth were syste- 
matically enforced by consistory and 
school. . . . 

" The clergy turned orthodox twenty- 
five years ago ; the laity did not. Tlio- 
servants of the altar, having realized the 
melancholy effect of opposite tenets, re- 
solutely fell back upon the ancient dog- 
mas of Christianity ; the congregations de- 
clined to follow suit. Hence the few 'lib- 
eral ' clergymen remaining after the ad- 
vent of the orthodox period had the con- 
solation of knowing themselves to be in 
accord, if not with their clerical brethren, 
at least with the majority of the educat- 
ed, and, perhaps, even the uneducated, 
classes." 

He proceeds to mention various- 
cases of prominent Lutheran clergy- 
men who denied the divinity of 
Christ, or other doctrines equally 
necessary to be maintained by men 
professing to be Christians, and 
of the unsuccessful attempts made 
to silence them. As the corre- 
spondent says "irreverent liberali 
opinion on the case is well reflected 
in an article in the Berlin Volks- 
Zeitung" which is so instructive 
that we quote it for the especial 
benefit of Mr. Froude : 

" As long as Protestant clergymen are 
appointed by provincial consistories 
officiating in behalf of the crown our 
congregations will have to put up with 
any candidates that may be forced upon 
them. They may, perhaps, be allowed 



482 



Mr. Fronde on 'the Decline of Protestantism, 



to nominate their pastors, but they will 
be impotent to exact the confirmation of 
their choice from the ecclesiastical au- 
thorities. Nor do we experience an)' par- 
ticular curiosity as to the result of the 
inquiry instituted against Herr Hossbach. 
In matters of this delicate nature judi- 
cious evasions have been too often resort- 
ed to by clever accused, and visibly favor- 
ed by ordained judges of the faith, for us 
to care much for the result of the suit 
opened. A sort of fanciful and imagi- 
native prevarication has always flourish- 
ed in theological debate, and the old ar- 
tifice, it is to be foreseen, will be employ- 
ed with fresh versatility in the present 
instance. Should the election of Herr 
Hossbach be confirmed, the consistorial 
decree will be garnished with so many 
" ifs' and ' althoughs' that the brilliant ray 
of truth will be dimmed by screening as- 
sumptions, like a candle placed behind a 
colored glass. Similarly, should the con- 
sistory decline to ratify the choice of the 
vestry, the refusal is sure to be rendered 
palatable by the employment of particu- 
larly mild and euphonious language. 
In either case the triumph of the victori- 
ous party will be but half a triumph. . . . 
It is not a little remarkable that the 
Protestant Church in this country should 
ibe kept under the control of superim- 
posed authorities, while Roman Catho- 
lics and Jews are free to preach what 
'they like. The power of the Catholic 
hierarchy has been broken by the new 
laws. Catholic clergymen deviating from 
the approved doctrine of the Church are 
protected by the Government from the per- 
secution of their bishops. Catholic congre- 
gations are positively urged and instigated to 
Profit by the privileges accorded them, and 
assert their independence against bishop 
and priest. Jewish rabbis, too, are free to 
disseminate any doctrine without being 
responsible for their teaching to spiritual 
or secular judges. Only Protestant con- 
gregations enjoy the doubtful advantage 

of having the election of their clergy con- 

trolled, and the candor of their clergy 
made the theme of penal inquiry. . . . 
And yet Protestant congregations have a 
ready means of escape at their disposal. 
Let them leave the church, and they are 
free to elect whomsoever they may 
choose as their minister. As it is, the 
indecision of the congregations main- 
tains the status quo by forcing libeial 
clergymen into the dogmatic straight- 
waistcoat of the consistories." 



" In the above argument one im- 
portant fact is overlooked," says 
the Times' correspondent. 

"Among the liberals opposed to the 
consistories there are many atheists, 
but few sufficiently religious to care for 
reform. Hence the course taken by the 
consistories may be resented, but the 
preaching of the liberal clergy is not 
popular enough to create a new denomi- 
nation or to compel innovation within 
the pale of the church. The fashionable 
metaphysical systems of Germany are 
pessimist." 

A week previous to the date of 
this letter the Lutheran pastors held 
their annual meeting at Berlin. 
The Rev. Dr. Gran, who is referred 
to as " a distinguished professor of 
theology," speaking of the task of 
the clergy in modern times cer- 
tainly a most important subject 
for consideration said : 

"These are serious times for the 
church. The protection of the temporal 
power is no longer awarded to us to any- 
thing like the extent it formerly was. 
The great mass of the people is either indif- 
ferent ot openly hostile to doctrinal teaching. 
Not a few listen to those striving to 
combine Christ with Belial, and to recon- 
cile redeeming truth with modern science 
and culture. There are those -who dream 
of a future church erected on the ruins of 
the Lutheran establishment, which by these 
enterprising neophytes is a'ready rega dcd 
as dead and gone." 

" The meeting," observes the 
correspondent, "by passing the re- 
solutions proposed by Dr. Grau, 
endorsed the opinions of the prin- 
cipal speaker." And he adds : 

"While giving this unmitigated ver- 
dict upon the state of religion among the 
people, the meeting displayed open an- 
tagonism to the leading authorities of the 
church. To the orthodox pastors the 
sober and sedative policy pursued by the 
Ober Kirchen Rath is a dereliction evn 
more offensive than the downright apos- 
tasy of the liberals. To render their op- 



Mr. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



433 



position intelligible the change that has 
recently supervened in high quarters 
should be adverted to in a few words. 
Soon after his accession to the throne the 
reigning sovereign, in his capacity as 
summits rpiscopus, recommended a lenient 
treatment of liberal views. Though 
himself strictly orthodox, as he has re- 
peatedly taken occasion to announce, 
the emperor is tolerant in religion, and 
too much of .a statesman to overlook the 
undesirable consequences that must en- 
sue from permanent warfare between 
church and people. He therefore ap- 
pointed a few moderate liberals mem- 
bers of the supreme council, accorded an 
extensive degree of self-government to 
the synods, at the expense of his own 
episcopal prerogative, and finally sanc- 
tioned civil marriage and 'civil bap- 
tism," as registration is sarcastically 
called in this country, to the intense as- 
tonishment and dismay of the orthodox. 
The last two measures, it is true, were 
aimed at the priests of the Roman Ca- 
tholic Church, who were to be deprived 
of the power of punishing those of their 
flock siding with the state in the ecclesi- 
astical war ; but, as the operation of the 
law could not be restricted to one 
denomination, Protestants were made 
amenable to a measure which, to the or- 
thodox among them, was quite as objec- 
tionable as to the believing adherents of 
the Pope. The supreme council of the 
Protestant Church, having to approve 
these several innovations adopted by 
the crown, gradually accustomed itself 
to regard compromise and bland pacifi- 
cation as one of the principal duties 
imposed upon it." 

The correspondent ends his let- 
ter thus : 

"When all was over orthodoxy was at 
feud with the people as well as with the 
authoritative guardians of the church. 
Yet neither people nor guardians re- 
monstrated. For opposite reasons both 
were equally convinced they could afford 
to ignore the charges made." 

So important was the letter that 
the London Times made it the sub- 
ject of an editorial article, wherein 
it speaks of " the singular revival 
of theological and ecclesiastical 
controversy, which is observable in 



all directions," having "at last 
reached the slumbering Protest- 
antism of Prussia." It confesses 
that 

"The state of things as described by 
our correspondent is certainly a very 
anomalous one. The Prussian Protis- 
tant Church has, of late years at least, 
had but little hold on the respect and af- 
fections of the great majority of the peo- 
ple ; they are at best but indifferent to 
it when they are not actively hostile. 
We are not concerned to investigate the 
causes of this lack of popularity ; we are 
content to take it as a fact manifest to all 
who know the country and acknowledg- 
ed by all observers alike." 

" German Protestantism was a 
power and an influence," it says, 

" To which the modern world is deeply 
indebted, and with which, now that ul- 
tramontanism is triumphant in the Church 
of Rome and priestcraft is again striv- 
ing in all quarters to exert its sway, the 
friends of freedom and toleration can ill 
afford to dispense. There is no more 
ominous sign in the history of an estab- 
lished church than a divorce between in- 
telligence and orthodoxy. This is what, 
to all appearances, has happened in 
Prussia." 

We could corroborate this by 
abundance of testimony from all 
quarters; but surely the evidence 
here given is sufficient to convince 
any man of the deplorable state 
of Protestantism in Prussia. Why 
Mr. Fronde should have chosen 
that country of all others for his 
Protestant paradise we cannot 
conceive, unless on the ground 
that he is Mr. Froude. " The 
world on one side, and Popery on 
the other," he says, " are dividing 
the practical control over life ;nui 
conduct. North Germany, manful 
in word and deed, sustains the 
fight against both enemies and 
carries the old flag to victory. A 
few years ago another Thirty Years' 
War was feared for Germany. A 



4 8 4 



Air. Fronde on the Decline of Protestantism. 



single campaign sufficed to bring 
Austria on her knees. Protestant- 
ism, as expressed in the leadership of 
J'russia, assumed the direction of 
the German Confederation " (pp. 



And whither does this leadership 
tend ? To the devil, if the Lon- 
don Times, if Dr. Grau, if every 
observant man who has written or 
spoken on this subject, is to be be- 
lieved. The only religion in Prus- 
sia to-day is the Catholic; Protes- 
tantism has yielded to atheism or 
nothingism. The persecution has 
only proved and tempered the Ca- 
tholic Church ; not even a strong 
and favoring government can in- 
fuse a faint breath of life into the 
dead carcase of Prussian Protes- 
tantism. It is much the same 
story all the world over. Mr. 
Fronde sees clearly enough what 
is coming. Protestantism as a re- 
ligious power is dead. It has 
lost all semblance of reality. It 
had no religious reality from the 
beginning. It will still continue 
to be used as an agent by poli- 
tical schemers and conspirators ; 
but in the fight between religion 
and irreligion it is of little worth. 
The fight is not here, but where 
Mr. Froude rightly places it 
between the irreligious world and 
Catholicity, which " are dividing 



the practical control over life and 
conduct." 

And thus heresies die out ; they 
expire of their own corruption. 
Their very offspring rise up against 
them. Their children cry for 
bread and they give them a stone. 
The fragments of truth on which 
they first build are sooner or later 
crushed out by the great mass of 
falsehood. The few good seeds 
are choked up by the harvest of 
the bad, and only the ill weeds 
thrive, until all the space around 
them is desolate of fruit or light 
or sweetness, or anything fair un- 
der heaven. Then comes the hus- 
bandman in his own .good time, 
and curses the barren fig-tree and 
clears the desolate waste. It will 
be with Protestantism as it has 
been with all the heresies ; Chris- 
tians will wonder, and the time 
would seem not to be very far dis- 
tant when they will wonder that 
Protestantism ever should have 
been. It will go to its grave, the 
same wide grave that has swallow- 
ed up heresy after heresy. Gnos- 
ticism, Arianism, Pelagianism, Nes- 
torianism, Monophysitism, Protes- 
tantism, all the isms, are children 
of the same family, live the same 
life, die the same death. The ever- 
lasting church buries them all, and 
no man mourns their loss. 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



A RAMBLE AFTER THE WAITS. 



*' CHRISTMAS comes but once a year, 
So let us all be merry," 

saith the old song. And now, as 
the festal season draws nigh, every- 
body seems bent on fulfilling the 
behest to the uttermost. The 
streets are gay with lights and 
laughter; the shops are all a-glitter 
with precious things ; the markets 
are bursting with good cheer. The 
air vibrates with a babble of merry 
voices, until the very stars seem to 
catch the infection and twinkle a 
thought more brightly. The faces 
of those you meet beam with joy- 
ous expectation ; huge baskets on 
their arms, loaded with good things 
for the morrow, jostle and thump 
you at every turn, but no one 
dreams of being ill-natured on 
Christmas Eve ; mysterious bun- 
dles in each hand contain un- 
imagined treasures for the little 
ones at home. And hark ! do you 
not catch a jingle of distant sleigh- 
bells, a faint, far-off patter and 
scrunching of tiny hoofs upon the 
snow ? It is the good St. Nicholas 
setting out upon his merry round; 
it is Dasher and Slasher and Pran- 
cer and Vixen scurrying like the 
wind over the house-tops. And 
high over all "the poor man's 
music " the merry, merry bells of 
Yule, the solemn, the sacred bells, 
peal forth the tidings of great joy. 
Is it not hard to conceive that 
the time should have been when 
Christmas was not ? impossible to 
conceive that any in a Christian 
land should have wished to do 
away with it should have been will- 
ing, having had it, ever to forego a 
festival so fraught with all holy and 
happy memories ? 



Yet once such men were found, 
and but little more than two cen- 
turies ago. It was on the 241)1 day 
of December, 1652 day for ever 
to be marked with the blackest of 
black stones, nay, with a bowlder 
of Plutonian nigritude that the 
British House of Commons, being 
moved thereto " by a terrible re- 
monstrance against Christmas day 
grounded upon divine Scripture, 
wherein Christmas is called Anti- 
christs masse, and those masse-mon- 
gers and Papists who observe it," 
and after much time "spent in 
consultation about the abolition of 
Christmas day, passed order to that 
effect, and resolved to sit upon the 
following day, which was common- 
ly called Christmas day." Whe- 
ther this latter resolution was 
carried into effect we do not know. 
If so, let us hope that their Christ- 
mas dinners disagreed with them 
horribly, and that the foul fiend 
Nightmare kept hideous vigil by 
every Parliamentary pillow. 

But think of such an atrocious 
sentiment being heard at all in 
Westminster ! How must the very 
echoes of the hall have shrunk from 
repeating that monstrous proposi- 
tion how shuddered and fled away 
into remotest corners and crevices 
as that 

" Hideous hum 
Ran through the arch'd roof in words deceiving '"! 

How must they have disbelieved 
their ears, and tossed the impious 
utterance back and forth from one 
to another in agonized questioning, 
growing feebler and fainter at each 
repulse, until their voices, faltering 
through doubt into dismay, grew 



486 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



dumb with horror! How must 
" Rufus' Roaring Hall " * have 
roared again outright with rage and 
grief over that strange, that unhal- 
lowed profanation ! What wan 
phantoms of old-time mummeries 
and maskings, what dusty and 
crumbling memories of royal feast 
and junketing, must have hovered 
about the heads of those audacious 
innovators, shrieking at them 
what unsyllabled reproaches from 
voiceless lips, shaking at them what 
shadowy fingers of entreaty or men- 
ace ! And if the proverb about ill 
words and'burning ears be true, 
how those crop-ears must have 
tingled ! 

Within those very walls England's 
kings for generations had kept their 
Christmas-tide most royally with rev- 
elry and dance and wassail. There 
Henry III. on New Year's day, 1236, 
to celebrate the coronation of Elea- 
nor, his queen, entertained 6,000 of 
his poorer subjects of all degrees ; 
and there twelve years later, though 
he himself ate his plum-pudding 
at Winchester, he was graciously 
pleased to bid his treasurer " fill the 
king's Great Hall from Christmas 
day to the Day ofCircumcision with 
poor people and feast them." There, 
too, at a later date Edward III. had 
for sauce to his Christmas turkey 
not to mention all sorts of cates 
and confections, tarts and pasties 
of most cunning device, rare liquors 
and spiced wines no less than two 
captive kings, to wit, David of 
Scotland and John of France. 
Poor captive kings ! Their turkey 
though no doubt their princely en- 
tertainer was careful to help them 
lo the daintiest tidbits, and to see 
that they had plenty of stuffing and 
cranberry sauce must have been 

* The Great Hall at Westminster, so called from 
William Rufus, who built it (1097) for a banqueting- 
hall and kept his word. 



but a tasteless morsel, and their 
sweetbreads bifter indeed. An- 
other Scottish king, the first James, 
of tuneful and unhappy memory, 
had even worse (pot) luck soon 
after. Fate, and that hospitable 
penchant of our English cousins in 
the remoter centuries for quietly 
confiscating all stray Scotch princes 
who fell in their way, as though 
they had been contraband of war, 
gave him the enviable opportunity 
of eating no less than a score of 
Christmas dinners on English soil. 
But he seems to have been left to 
eat them alone or with his jailer 
in "bowery Windsor's calm retreat" 
or the less cheerful solit-ude of the 
Tower. It does not appear that 
either the fourth or the fifth Henry, 
his enforced hosts, ever asked him 
to put his royal Scotch legs un- 
der their royal English mahog- 
any. Had Richard II. been in the 
place of " the ingrate and canker- 
ed Bolingbroke," we may be sure 
that his northern guest would not 
have been treated so shabbily. In 
his time Westminster and his two 
thousand French cooks (shades of 
Lucullus ! Avhat an appetite he 
must have had, and what a broiling 
and a baking and a basting must 
they have kept up among them ; 
the proverb x>f "busier than an 
English oven at Christmas " had 
reason then, at least) were not long 
left idle; for it was their sovereign's 
jovial custom to keep open house 
in the holidays for as many as ten 
thousand a day a comfortable ta- 
bleful. It was his motto plainly to 

" Be merry, for our time of stay is short." 

Such a device, however, the 
third Richard might have made his 
own with still greater reason. That 
ill-used prince, who was no doubt a 
much better fellow at bottom than 
it has pleased Master Shakspere to 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



represent him if Richmond had 
not been Queen Bess' grandpapa, 
we should like enough have had a 
different story and altogether less 
about humps and barking dogs 
made the most of a limited oppor- 
tunity to show what he could do in 
the way of holiday dinner-giving. 
The only two Christmases he had 
to spend as king at Westminster 
for him but a royal stage on his 
way to a more permanent residence 
at Bosworth Field he celebrated 
with extraordinary magnificence, as 
became a prince " reigning," says 
Philip de Comines, " in greater 
splendor than any king of England 
for the last hundred years." On 
the second and last Christmas of 
his reign and life the revelry was 
kept up till the Epiphany, when 
" the king himself, wearing his 
crown, held a splendid feast in the 
Great Hall similar to his corona- 
tion." Wearing his cYown, poor 
wretch ! He seems to have felt 
that his time was short for wearing 
it, and that he must put it to use 
while he had it. Already, indeed, 
as he feasted, rapacious Fortune, 
swooping implacable, was clawing 
it with skinny, insatiable claws, es- 
timating its value and the probable 
cost of altering it to fit another 
wearer, and thinking how much 
better it would look on the long 
head of her good friend Richmond, 
who had privately bespoken it. 
No doubt some cold shadow of 
that awful, unseen presence fell 
across the banquet-table and poi- 
soned the royal porridge. 

What need to tell over the long 
roll of Christmas jollities, whose me- 
mory from those historic walls might 
have pleaded with or rebuked the 
sour iconoclasts planning gloomily 
to put an end to all such for ever; 
how even close-fisted Henry VII. 
no fear of his losing a crown, if 



gripping tight could keep it feast- 
ed there the lord-mayor and alder- 
men of London on the ninth Christ- 
mas of his reign, sitting down him- 
self, with his queen and court and 
the rest of the nobility and gentry, 
to one hundred and twenty dishes 
served by as many knights, while 
the mayor, who sat at a side-table, no 
doubt, had to his own share no fewer 
than twenty-four dishes, followed, 
it is to be feared, if he ate them all, 
by as many nightmares; how that 
meek and exemplary Christian mo- 
narch, Henry VIII., " welcomed the 
coming, sped the parting" wife at 
successive Christmas banquets of as 
much splendor as the spoils of some- 
thing over a thousand monasteries 
could furnish forth ; * how good 
Queen Bess, who had her own pri- 
vate reading of the doctrine " it is 
more blessed to give than to re- 
ceive," sat in state there at this fes- 
tival season to accept the offerings 
of her loyal lieges, high and low, 
gentle and simple, from prime min- 
ister to kitchen scullion, until she 
was able to add to the terrors of 
death by having to leave behind her 
something like three thousand dress- 
es and some trunkfuls of jewels in 
Christmas gifts; or what gorgeous 
revels and masques Inigo Jones 
(Inigo Marquis Would-be), Ben Jon- 
son, and Master Henry Lawes (he 
of "the tuneful and well-measured 
song") thereto conspiring made 

* See, for the true character of this much-ma- 
ligned and really lamb-like sovereign, Froude's His- 
tory of England. Yet so harsh is the judgment 
of men it is this very prince of whose robber we 
should say resumption of the church lands the 
Protestant antiquary, Sir Henry Spelman, writes : 
" God's blessing, it seemeth, was not on it ; for with- 
in four years after he had received all this, and had 
ruined and sacked three hundred and seventy-six 
of the monasteries, and brought their substance to 
his treasury, ... he was drawn so dry that Par- 
liament was constrained to supply his wants with 
the residue of all the monasteries of the kingdom, 
great ones and illustrious, ... by reason whereof 
the service of God was not only grievously wounded 
and bleedeth at this day, but infinite works of cha- 
rity were utterly cut off and extinguished.' 1 



488 



A Ramble after Ike Waifs. 



the holidays joyous under James 
and Charles. Some ghostly savor 
of those bygone banquets might, 
one would think, have made even 
Praise-God Barebone's mouth water, 
and melted his surly virtue into 
tolerance of other folks' cakes and 
ale what virtue, however ascetic, 
could resist the onslaught of two 
thousand French cooks ? Some 
faint, far echo of all these vanished 
jollities should have won the ear, 
if not the heart, of the grimmest 
"saint" among them. Or if they 
were proof against the blandish- 
ments of tire world's people, if they 
fled from the abominations of Baal, 
could not their own George Wither 
move them to spare the cheery, 
harmless frivolities, the merry 
pranks of Yule ? Jovially as any 
Cavalier, shamelessly as any Malig- 
nant of them all, he sings their 
praises in his 

"CHRISTMAS CAROL. 

" So now is come our joyful' st feast, 

Let every man be jolly ; 
Each room with ivy leaves is drest, 

And every post with holly. 
Though some churls at our mirth repine, 
Round your foreheads garlands twine, 
Drown sorrow in a cup of wine, 

And let us all be merry. 

" Now all our neighbors' chimneys smoke, 
And Christmas blocks are burning ; 

Their ovens they with bak'd meats choke, 
And all their spits are turning. 

Without the door let sorrow lie ; 

And if for cold it hap to die, 

We'll bury 't in a Christmas pye, 
And evermore be merry. 

" Now every lad is wondrous trim, 

And no man minds his labor ; 
Our lasses have provided them 

A bagpipe and a tabor. 
Young men and maids, and girls and boys, 
Give life to one another's joys ; 
And you anon shall by their noise 

Perceive that they are merry. . . . 

" Now poor men to the justices 

With capons make their errants ; 

And if they hap to fail of these, 
They plague them with their warrants: 

But now they feed them with good cheer, 

And what they want they take in beer ; 

For Christmas comes but once a year, 
And then they shall be merry. . . . 



" The client now his suit forbears. 

The prisoner's heart is eased, 
The debtor drinks away his cares, 

And for the time is pleased. 
Though others' purses be more fat, 
Why should we pine or grieve at that ? 
Hang sorrow ! care will kill a cat, 

And therefore let's be merry. . . . 

" Hark ! now the wags abroad do call 

Each other forth to rambling ; 
Anon you'll see them in the hall. 

For nuts and apples scrambling. 
Hark ! how the roofs with laughter sound ; 
Anon they'll think the house goes round, 
For they the cellar's depths have found. 

And there they will be merry. 

" The wenches with the wassail-bowls 

About the streets are singing ; 
The boys are come to catch the owls, 

The wild mare * in is bringing. 
Our kitchen-boy hath broke his box, 
And to the kneeling of the ox 
Our honest neighbors come by flocks, 

And here they will be merry. 

" Now kings and queens poor sheep-cotes have, 

And mate with everybody ; 
The honest now may play the knave, 

And wise men play at noddy. 
Some youths will now a-mumming go, 
Some others play at Rowland-boe, 
And twenty other gambols moe, 

Because they will be merry. 

" Then wherefore, in these merry days, 

Should we, I pray, be duller? 
No. let us sing some roundelays, 

To make our mirth the fuller ; 
And, while we thus inspired sing, 
Let all the streets with echoes ring 
Woods and hills and everything 

Bear witness we are merry." 

Or Master Milton, again, Latin 
secretary to the council, author of 
the famous Iconoclastes, shield (or, 
as some would have put it, official 
scold) of the Commonwealth, the 
scourge of prelacy and conqueror 
of Salmasius he was orthodox sure- 
ly; yet what of Arcades and Co- 
mus? Master Milton, too, had 
written holiday masques, and, what 
is more, they had been acted; nay, 
he had even been .known more than 
once, on no less authority than his 
worshipful nephew, Master Philips, 
"to make so bold with his body as 
to take a gaudy-day " with the gay 
sparks of Gray's Inn. Alas ! such 

* Riding the -wild mare i.e., playing at see-saw. 
The kneeling of the ox refers to an old English 
superstition that at midnight on Christmas Eve the 
oxen would be found kneeling in their stalls. 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



489 



carnal-minded effusions belonged 
to the unregenerate days of both 
these worthy brethren, when they 
still dwelt in the tents of the un- 
godly, before they had girded on 
the sword of Gideon and gone 
forth to smite the Amalekite hip 
and thigh. Vainly might the men- 
aced festival look for aid in that 
direction. So far from saying a 
word in its favor, they would now 
have been fiercest in condemnation, 
if only to cover their early back- 
sliding; if only to avert any suspi- 
cion that they still hankered after 
the fleshpots. Poor Christmas was 
doomed. 

So, by act of Parliament, " our 
joyful'st feast" was solemnly strick- 
en out of the calendar, cashiered 
from its high pre-eminence among 
the holidays of the year, and de- 
graded to the ranks of common days. 
All its quaint bravery of holly-berries 
and ivy-leaves was stripped from it, 
its jolly retinue of boars' heads and 
wassail-bowls, of Yule-clogs and 
mistletoe-boughs, of maskers and 
mummers, of waits and carols, 
Lords of Misrule and Princes of 
Christmas, sent packing. Then be- 
gan " the fiery persecution of poor 
mince-pie throughout the land ; 
plum-porridge was denounced as 
mere popery, and roast-beef as anti- 
Christian." 'Twas a fatal, a per- 
fidious, a short-lived triumph. The 
nation, shocked in its most cherish- 
ed traditions, repudiated the hide- 
ous doctrine ; the British stomach, 
deprived of its holiday beef and 
pudding, so to speak, revolted. 
The reign of the righteous was 
speedily at an end. History, with 
her usual shallowness,- ascribes to 
General Monk the chief part in the 
Restoration; it was really brought 
about by that short-sighted edict 
of the 24th of December, 1652. 
Charles or Cromwell, king or pro- 



tector what cared honest Hodge 
who ruled and robbed him? But 
to forego his Christmas porridge 
that was a different matter; and 
Britons never should be slaves. 
So, just eight years after it had 
been banished, Christmas was 
brought back again with manifold 
rejoicing and bigger wassail-bowls 
and Yule-clogs than ever; and, as 
if to make honorable amends for 
its brief exile, the Lord of Misrule 
himself was crowned and seated on 
the throne, where, as we all know, 
to do justice to his office, if he 
never said a foolish thing he never 
did a wise one. 

And from that time to this 
Christmas has remained a thor- 
oughly British institution, as firm- 
ly entrenched in the national affec- 
tions, as generally respected, and 
perhaps as widely appreciated as 
Magna Charta itself. Sit on Christ- 
mas day ! A British Parliament 
now would as soon think of sitting 
on the Derby day. To how many 
of their constituents have the two 
festivals any widely differing signi- 
ficance perhaps it would be wise 
not to inquire too closely. Each 
is a holiday that is, a day off work, 
a synonym for " a good time," a 
little better dinner than usual, and 
considerably more beer. Like the 
children, "they reflect nothing at 
all about the matter, nor under- 
stand anything in it beyond the 
cake and orange." " La justice 
elle-meme," says Balzac, "se tra- 
duit aux yeux de la halle par le 
commissaire personage avec le- 
quel elle se familiarise." His epi- 
gram the author of Ginx's Baby 
may translate for us English epi- 
grams, like English plays, being 
for the most part matter of im- 
portation free of duty ; e.g., that 
famous one in Lothair about the 
critic being a man who has failed in 



490 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



literature or art, another consign- 
ment from Balzac when he makes 
Ginx's theory of government epito- 
mize itself as a policeman. So 
Ginx's notion of Christmas, we 
suspect, is apt to be beef and beer 
and Boxing-night with perhaps a 
little more beer. 

Certainly the attachment of the 
British public to these features of 
the day we are considering it for 
the moment in the light in which 
a majority of non-Catholics look 
upon it, apparently, as a merely so- 
cial festival, and not at all in its 
religious aspect (though to a Ca- 
tholic, of course, the two are as in- 
distinguishably blended as the rose 
and the perfume of the rose) has 
never been shaken. If one may 
judge fiom a large amount of the 
English fiction which at this season 
finds its way to the American mar- 
ket and the novels of to-day, 
among a novel-reading people, are 
as straight and sure a guide to its 
heart as were ever its ballads in 
the time of old Fletcher of Saltoun 
if one may judge from much of 
English Christmas literature, these 
incidents of the day are, if not 
the most important, certainly the 
most prominent and popular. 
What we may call the Beef and 
Beer aspect of the season these 
stories are never tired of glorifying 
and exalting. Dickens is the arch- 
priest of this idolatry, which, in- 
deed, he in a measure invented, 
or at least brought into vogue ; 
and his Christmas Stones, as most 
of his stories, fairly reek with 
the odors of the kitchen and the 
tap-room. Material comfort, and 
that, too, usually of a rather ccarse 
kind, is the universal theme, and 
even the charity they are sup- 
posed to inculcate can scarcely be 
called a moral impulse, so much 
as the instinct of a physical good- 



nature well fed and content with 
itself and the world of a good- 
humored selfishness willing to make 
others comfortable, because thereby 
it puts away from itself the dis- 
comfort of seeing them otherwise. 
It is a kind of charity which, in 
another sense than that of Scrip- 
ture, has to cover a multitude of 
sins. 

One may say this of Dickens, 
without at all detracting from his 
many great qualities as a writer, 
that he has done more, perhaps, 
than any other writer to demoral- 
ize and coarsen the popular notion 
of what Christmas is and means ; to 
make of his readers a*t best but 
good-humored pagans with lusty 
appetites for all manner of victuals 
and an open-handed readiness to 
share their good things with the first 
comer. These are no doubt admi- 
rable traits; but one gets a little 
tired of having them for ever set 
forth as the crown and completion 
of Christian excellence, the sum 
and substance of all that is noble 
and exalted in the sentiment of the 
season. Let us enjoy our Christ- 
mas dinner by all means ; let the 
plum-pudding be properly boiled 
and the turkey done to a turn, and 
may we all have enough to spare a 
slice or two for a poorer neighbor ! 
But must we therefore sit down 
and gobble turkey and pudding 
from morning till night? Should 
we hang up a sirloin and fall down 
and worship it? Is that all that 
Christmas means ? Turn from the 
best of these books to this exqui- 
site little picture of Christmas Eve 
in a Catholic land : 

" Christmas is come the beautiful 
festival, the one I love most, and which 
gives me the same joy as it gave the 
shepherds of Bethlehem. In real truth, 
one's whole soul sings with joy at this 
beautiful coming of God upon earth a 



A Ramble after the Waifs. 



coming which here is announced on all 
sides of us by music and by our charm- 
ing nadalct * Nothing at Paris can give 
you a notion of what Christmas is with 
us. You have not even the midnight 
Mass. We all of us went to it, papa at 
our head, on the most perfect night pos- 
sible Never was there a finer sky than 
ours was that midnight so fine that 
papa kept perpetually throwing back the 
hood of his cloak, that he might look up 
at the sky. The ground was white with 
hoar-frost, but we were not cold ; besides, 
the air, as we met it, was warmed by the 
bundles of blazing torchwood which our 
servants carried in front of us to light us 
on our way. It was delightful, I do as- 
sure you ; and I should like you to have 
seen us there on our road to church, in 
those lanes with the bushes along their 
banks as white as if they were in flower. 
The hoar-frost makes the most love- 
ly flowers. We saw a long spray so 
beautiful that we wanted to take it 
with us as a garland for the commu- 
nion-table, but it melted in our hands ; 
all flowers fade so soon f I was very 
sorry about my garland ; it was mournful 
to see it drop away and get smaller and 
smaller every minute." 

It is Eugenie de Gue"rin who 
writes thus that pure and delicate 
spirit so well fitted to feel and 
value all that is beautiful and 
touching in this most beautiful and 
touching service of the church. 
To come from the one reading to 
the other is like being lifted sud- 
denly out of a narrow valley to the 
free air and boundless views of a 
mountain-top; like coming from 
the gaslight into the starlight; it 
is like hearing the song of the sky- 
lark after the twitter of the robin 
a sound pleasant and cheery 
enough in itself, but not elevating, 
not inspiring, not in any way satis- 
fying to that hunger after ideal 
excellence which is the true life of 
the spirit, and which strikes the 
true key-note of this festal time. 

* A peculiar peal of bells rung at Christmas-tide 
on the church-bells in Languedoc doubtless, like 
Noel, from nntalis. 



But Eugenie de Guerin is perhaps 
too habitual a dweller on those se- 
rene heights to furnish a fair com- 
parison ; let us take a homelier pic- 
ture from a lower level. It is still 
in France ; this time in Burgundy, 
as the other was in Languedoc : 

" Every year, at the approach of Ad- 
vent, people refresh their memories, clear 
their throats, and begin preluding, in 
the long evenings by the fireside, those 
carols whose invariable and eternal 
theme is the coming of the Messias. 
They take from old pamphlets little col- 
lections begrimed with dust and smoke, 
. . . and as soon as the first Sunday of 
Advent sounds they gossip, they gad 
about, they sit together by the fireside, 
sometimes at one house, sometimes at 
another, taking turns in paying for the 
chestnuts and white wine, but singing 
with one common voice the praises of the 
Little Jestts. There are very few villages, 
even, which during all the evenings of 
Advent do not hear some of these curi- 
ous canticles shouted in their streets to 
the nasal drone of bagpipes. 

" More or less, until Christmas Eve, 
all goes on in this way among our de- 
vout singers, with the difference of 
some gallons of wine or some hun- 
dreds of chestnuts. But this famous eve 
once come, the scale is pitched upon a 
higher key ; the closing evening must 
be a memorable one. . . . The supper 
finished, a circle gathers around the 
hearth, which is arranged and set in or- 
der this evening after a particular fash- 
ion, and which at a later hour of the 
night is to become the object of special 
interest to the children. On the burn- 
ing brands an enormous log has been 
placed; ... it is called the Suche (the 
Yule-log). ' Look you,' say they to the 
children, ' if you are good this evening 
Noel will rain down sugar-plums in the 
night.' And the children sit demurely, 
keeping as quiet as their turbulent little 
natures will permit. The groups of old- 
er persons, not always as orderly as the 
children, seize this good opportunity to 
surrender themselves with merry hearts 
and boisterous voices to the chanted 
worship of the miraculous Noel. For 
this final solemnity they have kept the 
most powerful, the most enthusiastic, the 
most electrifying carols. 



492 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



'This last evening the merry-making 
is prolonged. Instead of retiring at ten 
or eleven o'clock, as is generally done 
on all the preceding evenings, they wait 
for the stroke of midnight ; this word suf- 
ficiently proclaims to what ceremony 
the}' are going to repair. For ten min- 
utes or a quarter of an hour the bells 
have been calling the faithful with a triple- 
bob-major ; and each one, furnished with 
a little taper streaked with various col- 
ors (the Christmas candle), goes through 
the crowded streets, where the lanterns 
are dancing like will-o'-the-wisps at the 
impatient summons of the multitudinous 
chimes. It is the midnight Mass." 

There you have fun, feasting, and 
frolic, as, indeed, there may fitly be 
to all innocent degrees of merri- 
ment, on the day which brought re- 
demption to mankind. But there 
is also, behind and pervading all this 
rejoicing and harmless household 
gayety, the religious sentiment 
which elevates and inspires it, 
which chastens it from common- 
place and grossness, which gives it 
a meaning and -a soul. The En- 
glish are fond of calling the French 
an irreligious people, because 
French literature, especially French 
fiction, from which they judge, takes 
its tone from Paris, which is to a 
great extent irreligious. But out- 
side of the large cities, if a balance 
were struck on this point between 
the two countries, it would scarcely 
be in favor of England. 

This, however, by way of episode 
and as a protest against this grovel- 
ling, material treatment of the most 
glorious festival of the Christian 
year. As we were about to say when 
interrupted, though Christmas re- 
gained its foothold as a national 
holiday at the Restoration, it came 
back sadly denuded of its follow- 
ing and shorn of most of its old- 
time attractions. So it fared in 
old England. In New England it 
can scarcely be said ever to have 
won a foothold at all, or at best no 



more than a foothold and a sullen 
toleration. Almost the first act of 
those excellent Pilgrim Fathers who 
did not land at Plymouth Rock 
was to anticipate by thirty years 
or so the action of their Parliamen- 
tary brethren at home in abolishing 
the sacred anniversary, which must, 
indeed, have been a tacit rebuke to 
the spirit of their creed. They 
landed on the i6th of December, 
and " on ye 25th day," writes Wil- 
liam Bradford, " began to erect ye 
first house for comone use to re 
ceive them and their goods." And 
lest this might seem an exception 
made under stress, we find it record- 
ed next year that " on ye day caled 
Christmas day ye Gov'r caled them 
out to worke." So it is clear New 
England began with a calendar 
from which Christmas was expung- 
ed. In New England affections 
Thanksgiving day replaces it an 
" institution " peculiarly acceptable, 
we must suppose, to the thrift which 
can thus wipe out its debt of grati- 
tude to Heaven by giving one day 
for three hundred and sixty-four li- 
quidating its liabilities, so to speak, 
at the rate of about three mills in the 
dollar. In the Middle States and in 
the South the day has more of its 
time-old observance, but neither 
here nor elsewhere may we hope 
to encounter many of the quaint 
and cheery customs with which our 
fathers loved to honor it, and which 
made it for them the pivot of the 
year. Wither has told us some- 
thing of these ; let a later minstrel 
give us a fuller picture of what 
Merry Christmas was in days of 
yore : 

" And well our Christian sires of old 

Loved, when the year its course had rolled, 

And brought blithe Christmas back again, 

With all its hospitable train. 

Domestic and religious rite 

Gave honor to the holy night : 

On Christmas Eve the bells were rung ; 

On Christmas Eve the Mass was sung ; 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



493 



That only night of all the year 

Saw the stoled priest the chalice tear. 

The damsel donned her kirtle sheen ; 

The hall was dressed with holly green ; 

Forth to the wood did merry men go 

To gather in the mistletoe. 

Then opened wide the baron's hall 

To vassals, tenants, serf, and all. 

The heir, with roses in his shoes. 

That night might village partner choose ; 

The lord, underogating, share 

The vulgar game of ' post and pair.' 

All hailed with uncontrolled delight, 

And general voice, the happy night 

That to the cottage, as the crown, 

Brought tidings of salvation down. 

' The fire, with well-dried logs supplied, 
Went roaring up the chimney wide ; 
The huge hall-table's oaken face, 
Scrubbed till it shone, the day to grace, 
Bore then upon its massive board 
No mark to part the squire and lord. 
Then was brought in the lusty brawn 
By old blue-coated serving-man ; 
Then the grim boar's head frowned on high, 
Crested with bays and rosemary. . . . 
The wassail round in good brown bowls, 
Garnished with ribbons, blithely trowls. 
There the huge sirloin reeked ; hard by 
Plum-porridge stood and Christmas pye. 
Then came the merry masquers in 
And carols roared with blithesome din ; 
If unmelodious was the song, 
It was a hearty note and strong. 
Who lists may in their mumming see 
Traces of ancient mystery. . . . 
England was merry England then 
Old Christmas brought his sports again ; 
' fwas Christmas broached the mightiest ale ; 
"Twas Christmas told the merriest tale ; 
A Christmas gambol oft would cheer 
A poor man's heart through half the year." 

Let Herrick supplement the pic- 
ture with his 

"CEREMONIES FOR CHRISTMASSE. 

' Come, bring with a noise, 

My merrie, merrie boyes. 
The Christmas log to the firing ; 

While my good dame, she 

Bids ye all be free 
And drink to your hearts' desiring. 

" With the last yeeres brand 

Light the new block, and 
For good successe in his spending 

On your psaltries play, 

That sweet luck may 
Come while the log is a-teending. 

>l Drink now the strong beere, 

Cut the white loafe here, 
The while the meate is a-shredding 

For the rare mince-pie, 

And the plums stand by 
To fill the paste that's a-kneading." 

Does tlie picture please you? 
Would you fain be a guest at the 
baron's table, or lend a hand with 



jovial Herrick to fetch in the 
mighty Yule-log ? Are you longing 
for a cut of that boar's head or a 
draught of the wassail, or curious 
to explore the contents of that 
mysterious "Christmas pye," which 
seems to differ so much from all 
other pies that it has to be spelled 
with a y ? Well, well, we must not 
repine. Fate, which has denied us 
these joys, has given us compensa- 
tions. No doubt the baron, for all 
his Yule-logs, would sometimes have 
given his baronial head (when he 
happened to have a cold in it) for 
such a fire let it be of sea-coal in 
alow grate and the curtains drawn 
as the reader and his humble ser- 
vant are this very minute toasting 
their toes at. Those huge open 
fireplaces are admirably effective 
in poetry, but not altogether satis- 
factory of a cold winter's night, 
when half the heat goes up the 
chimney and all the winds of hea- 
ven are shrieking in through the 
chinks in your baronial hall and 
playing the very mischief with your 
baronial rheumatism. Or do we 
believe that boar's head was such 
a mighty fascinating dish after all, 
or much, if anything, superior to 
the soused pig's head with which 
good old Squire Bracebridge re- 
placed it? No, every age to its 
own customs ; we may be sure that 
each finds out what is best for it 
and for its people. 

Yet one custom we do begrudge 
a little to the past, or rather to the 
other lands where it still lingers 
here and there in the present. 
That is the graceful and kindly 
custom of the waits. These were 
Christmas carols, as the reader no 
doubt knows, chanted by singers 
from house to house in the rural 
districts during the season of Ad- 
vent. In France they were called 
noels, and in Longfellow's transla- 



494 



A Rainble after the Waits. 



tion of one of these we may see 
what they were like : 

" I hear along our street 

Pass the minstrel throngs ; 

Hark ! they play so sweet, 
On their hautboys, Christmas songs ! 

Let us by the fire 

Ever higher 
Sing them till the night expire ! . . . 

" Shepherds at the grange 

Where the Babe was born 

Sang with many a change 
Christmas carols until morn. 

Let us, etc. 

" These good people sang 

Songs devout and sweet ; 

While the rafters rang, 
There they stood with freezing feet. 

Let us, etc. 

" Who by the fireside stands 

Stamps his feet and sings ; 

But he who blows his hands 
Not so gay a carol brings. 

Let us, etc." 

In some parts of rural England, 
too, the custom is still to some ex- 
tent kept up, and the reader may 
find a pleasant, and we dare say 
faithful, description of it in a charm- 
ing English stofy called Under the 
Greenwood Tree, by Mr. Thomas 
Hardy, a writer whose closeness of 
observation and precision and deli- 
cacy of touch give him a leading 
place among the younger writers 
of fiction. 

Very pleasant, we fancy, it must 
be of a Christmas Eve when one 
is, as aforesaid, toasting one's toes 
at the fire over a favorite book, 
or hanging up the children's stock- 
ings, let us say, or peering through 
the curtains out over the moonlit 
snow, and wondering how cold it 
is out-doors with that little perfunc- 
tory shiver which is comfort's hom- 
age to itself there should always 
be snow upon the ground at Christ- 
mas, for then Nature 

" With speeches fair 
Woos the gentle air 
To hide her guilty front with innocent snow "; 

but let us have no wind, since 



" Peaceful was the night 

Wherein the Prince of Light 
His reign of peace upon the world began. 

The winds, with wonder whist, 

Smoothly the waters kist, 
Whispering new joys to the wild ocean. 

Who now hath quite forgot to rave. 
While birds of calm sit brooding on the charmed 
wave " 



at such a time, we say, it would 
be pleasant to hear the shrill voi- 
ces of the Waits cleaving the cold, 
starlit air in some such quaint old 
ditty as the "Cherry-tree Carol" 
or " The Three Ships." No doubt, 
too, would we but confess it, there 
would come to us a little wicked 
enhancement of pleasure in the re- 
flection that the artists without 
were a trifle less comfortable than 
the hearer within. That rogue Ti- 
bullus had a shrewd notion of what 
constitutes true comfort when he 
wrote, Quam juvat immitcs ventos 
audireeubantem which, freely trans- 
lated, means, How jolly it is to sit by 
the fireside and listen to other fel- 
lows singing for your benefit in the 
cold without ! But that idea we 
should dismiss as unworthy, and 
even try to feel a little uncomforta- 
ble by way of penance ; and then, 
when their song was ended, and 
we heard their departing footsteps 
scrunching fainter and fainter in 
the snow, and their voices dying 
away until they became the merest 
suggestion of an echo, we should 
perhaps find for these are to be 
ideal Waits that their song had 
left behind it in the listener's soul 
a starlit silence like that of the 
night without, but the stars should 
be heavenly thoughts. 

These are ideal Waits ; the real 
ones might be less agreeable or 
salutary. But have we far to look 
for such ? Are there not on the 
shelves yonder a score of immortal 
minstrels only waiting our bidding 
to sing the sacred glories of the 
time ? Shall we ask grave John 



A Ramble after the Waits. 



495 



Milton to tune his harp for us, or 
gentle Father Southvvorth, or im- 
passioned Crashaw, or tender Fa- 
ber ? These are Waits we need not 
scruple to listen to, nor fail to hear 
with profit. 

Milton's Ode on the Nativity is, no 
doubt, the finest in the language. 
Considering the difficulties of a sub- 
ject to which, short of inspiration, 
it is next to impossible to do any 
justice at all, it is very fine indeed. 
It is not all equal, however ; there 
are in it stanzas which remind one 
that he was but twenty-one when he 
wrote it. Yet other stanzas are 
scarcely surpassed by anything he 
has written. 

" Yea, Truth and Justice then 

Will down return tc ( icn, 
OrVd in a rainbow ; ana. like glories wearing 

Mercy will sit between, 

Thron'd in celestial sheen, 
With radiant feet the tissued clouds down steering, 

And heaven, as at some festival. 

Will open wide the gates of her high palace hall. 

" But wisest Fate says, No, 

It must not yet be so ; 
The Babe yet lies in smiling infancy 
That on the bitter cross 
Must redeem our loss, 
So both himself and us to glorify ; 

Yet first to those ychamed in sleep 
The wakeful trump of doom must thunder thro* 
the deep, 

" With such a horrid clang 

As on Mount Sinai rang, 

While the red fire and smould'ring clouds out- 
brake. 

The aged earth, aghast 
With terror of that blast, 
Shall from the surface to the centre shake ; 
When at the world's last session 
The dreadful Judge in middle air shall spread 
his throne. 

" The oracles are dumb ; 

No voice or hideous hum 

Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving. 
Apollo from his shrine 
Can no more divine, 

With hollow shriek the steep of Dclphos leaving. 
No nightly trance or breathed spell 
Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the prophetic 
cell. 

" The lonely mountains o'er, 
And the resounding shore, 
A voice of weeping heard and loud lament. 
From haunted spring, and dale 
Edg'd with poplar pale. 
The parting genius is with sighing sent. 
With flower-inwoven tresses torn. 
The Nymphs in twilight shade of tangled 
thicket mourn." 



Seldom has Milton sung in loftier 
strains than this. What a magnifi- 
cent line is that : 

" The wakeful trump of doom shall thunder through 
the deep." 

The poet evidently had his eye on 
that wonderful verse of the Dies 
Ira : 

" Tuba minim spargens sonum 
Per sepulchra regionum, 
Cogit omnes ante thronum," 

but the imitation falls little short 
of the original. Dr. Johnson char- 
acteristically passes this ode over in 
silence perhaps because of his 
opinion that sacred poetry was a 
contradiction in terms. His great 
namesake, and in some respects 
curious antitype, was more gene- 
rous to another poem we shall 
quote Father Southwell's " Burn- 
ing Babe." " So he had written it," 
he told Drummond, " he would have 
been content to destroy many of 
his." 

" As I, in hoary winter's night, stood shivering in 

the snow, 
Surprised I was with sudden heat which made 

my heart to glow ; 
And lifting up a fearful eye to view what fire was 

near, 
A pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air 

appear, 
Who, scorched with exceeding heat, such floods 

of tears did shed 
As though his floods should quench his flames 

with what his tears were fed ; 
' Alas !' quoth he, ' but newly born, in fiery heats 

I fry, 
Yet none approach to warm their hearts or feel 

my fire but I. 

My faultless breast the furnace is, the fuel wound- 
ing thorns ; 
Love is the fire, and sighs the smoke, the ashes 

shames and scorns ; 
The fuel Justice layeth on, and Mercy blows the 

coals ; 

The metal in this furnace wrought are men's de- 
filed souls ; 
For which, as now in fire I am to work them to 

their good, 
So will I melt into a bath to wash them in my 

blood.' 
With this he vanished out of sight, and swiftly 

shrank away, 
And straight I called unto mind that it was 

Christmas day." 

The fire is getting low in the 
grate, the stars are twinkling pak-, 



49 6 



7 he Descent of 



and though the minstrels are many 
we should have been glad to intro- 
duce to the reader grand old St. 
Thomas of Aquin ; silver-tongued 
Giacopone, whose lately-discovered 
Stabat Mater Speciosa is one of the 
loveliest of the mediaeval hymns ; 
rapturous St. Bernard they must 
wait a fitter time. AVe can hear 
but another of our Christmas waits 
one of the most effective English 
poems on the Nativity, considered 
as mere poetry, it has been our for- 
tune to meet. The author is the 
hero of Browning's verses, "What's 
become of Waring?" Alfred H. 
Dommett ; a poet who, perhaps, 
would be better known had he 
been a worse poet. And with this 
we must wish our readers "Merry 
Christmas to all, and to all a good- 
night." 

" It was the calm and silent night ! 

Seven hundred years and fifty-three 

Had Rome been growing up to might, 

And now was queen of land and sea. 

No sound was heard of clashing wars ; 

Peace brooded o'er the hushed domain ; 
Apollo, Pallas, Jove, and Mars 
Held undisturbed their ancient reign 
In the solemn midnight 
Centuries ago. 



" 'Twas in the calm and silent night ! 

The senator of haughty Rome 
Impatient urged his chariot's flight, 

From lonely revel rolling home. 
Triumphal arches, gleaming, swell 

His breast with thoughts of loundless 

sway ; 

What recked the Roman what befell 
A paltry province far away 
In the solemn midnight 
Centuries ago ? 

' Within that province far away 

Went plodding home a weary boor ; 
A streak of light before him lay, 

Fallen through a half-shut stable-door, 
Across his path. He passed ; for naught 

Told what was going on-within. 
How keen the stars ! his only thought ; 
1 he air how calm and cold, and thin ! 
In the soiemn midnight 
Centuries ago. 

' O strange indifference ! Low and high 

Drowsed over common joys and cares ; 
The earth was still, but knew not why ; 

The world was listening unawares. 
How calm a moment may precede 

One that shall thrill the world for ever ! 
To that still moment none would heed ; 
Man's doom was linked, no more to sever, 
In the solemn midnight 
Centunes ago. 

' It is the calm and solemn night ! 

A thousand bells ring out and throw 
Their joyous peals abroad, and smite 

The darkness, charmed and holy now ! 
The night, that erst no name had worn, 

To it a happy name is given ; 
For in that stable lay, new-born, 

The peaceful Prince of earth and heaven, 
In the solemn midnight 
Centuries ago." 



THE DESCENT OF MAN. 



MR. CHARLES DARWIN, in his 
Descent of Man, proposes to himself 
to show that man is nothing more 
than a modified beast, and that his 
remote ancestors are to be found 
among some tribes of brutes. A pa- 
radox of this kind, in a work of fic- 
tion such as Ovid's Metamorphoses, 
would not offend an intelligent rea- 
der ; but in a work which professes 
to be serious and scientific it is ex- 
tremely offensive, for it amounts to a 
deliberate insult to all humanity in 
general and to every human being 
in particular. Mr. Darwin's work 



violates the dignity of human na- 
ture, blots out of our souls the 
image and likeness of our Creator, 
and totally perverts the notions 
most cherished by civil and Chris- 
tian society. This effort does cer- 
tainly not entitle him to credit for 
wisdom. A man of ordinary pru- 
dence, before he undertakes to 
maintain in the face of the public 
a theory which conflicts with a doc- 
trine thoroughly established and 
universally received, would exam- 
ine both sides of the case, and as- 
certain that he is in possession or 



The Descent of Man. 



497 



sufficient evidence to make good 
liis assertions and to defend them 
against the arguments of the oppo- 
site side. Mr. Darwin, on the con- 
trary, seems to have satisfied him- 
self that a man of his eminence in 
natural history had a right to be 
believed, whatever he might ven- 
ture to say, even though he was to 
give no satisfactory evidence in 
support of his views, and no an- 
swer to the objections which he 
ought to refute. 

We do not say that Mr. Darwin 
did not do his best to prove his 
new doctrine on man; we only say 
that he has signally failed in his 
attempt, and that his failure is as 
inexcusable as it is ignominious. 
A man of his ability should have 
seen that the origin of man was 
not a problem to be solved by phy- 
siology ; and he ought also to have 
considered that a man of science 
could only stultify himself by sub- 
mitting to the test of science a his- 
torical fact of which science, as 
such, is entirely incompetent to 
speak. Indeed, we scarcely know 
which to admire most in Mr. Dar- 
win, the serenity with which he 
ignores the difficulty of his philoso- 
phic position, or the audacity with 
which he affirms things which he 
cannot prove. What a pity that a 
man so richly endowed by nature 
has been so entirely absorbed by 
the study of material organisms as 
to find no time for the more impor- 
tant study of philosophy, especially 
of psychology, without which it is 
impossible to form a rational 
theory respecting the origin and 
the destiny of man ! Shall we add 
that a sound scientific theory can- 
not be the outcome of illogical rea- 
soning? And yet it is a plain fact, 
though our advanced thinkers will 
deny it, that Mr. Darwin's logic, to 
judge from his Descent of Man, is 

VOL. XXVI. 32 



as mischievous as most of his as- 
sumptions are reckless. 

It would be impossible within 
the limits of our space to enter 
into a detailed examination of the 
logical and metaphysical blunders 
to which the Darwinian theory 
owes its existence. We shall, there- 
fore, at present confine ourselves to 
a short criticism of the first chapter 
of the work in question ; for, if we 
are not mistaken, every impartial 
reader will be able, after a suffi- 
cient analysis of this first chapter,, 
to judge of the kind of logic tliac 
characterizes the whole treatise. 

Mr. Darwin begins thus : 

" He who wishes to decide whether 
man is the modified descendant of some 
pre-existing form would probably first 
inquire whether man varies, however 
slightly, in bodily structure and in men- 
tal faculties ; and, if so, whether the va- 
riations are transmitted to his offspring 
in accordance with the laws which pre- 
vail with the lower animals. Again, are 
the variations the result, as far as our 
ignorance permits us to judge, of the 
same general causes, and are they gov- 
erned by the same general laws, as in 
the case of other organisms for instance,, 
by correlation, the inherited effects of 
use and disuse, etc.? Is man subject to 
similar malconformations, the result of: 
arrested development, of reduplication 
of parts, etc., and does he display in any 
of his anomalies reversion to some for- 
mer and ancient type of structure? It 
might also naturally be inquired whether 
man, like so many other animals, has- 
given rise to varieties and sub-races, 
differing but slightly from each other, 
or to races differing so much that the}' 
must be classed as doubtful species ?' 
How are such races distributed over the- 
world ; and how, when crossed, do they 
react on each other in the first and suc- 
ceeding generations? And so with 
many other points." 

This preamble, which superficial 
readers may have considered per- 
fectly harmless, contains the seed 
of all the mischievous reasonings 
scattered through the rest of the 



493 



TJie Descent of Ulan. 



work. It comes to this : " If we 
find that man varies, however 
slightly, according to the same laws 
which prevail with the lower ani- 
mals, we shall be justified in con- 
cluding that man is a modified 
descendant of some pre-existing 
form." Now, this assertion is evi- 
dently nothing but clap-trap for 
the ignorant. In the first place, Mr. 
Darwin takes for gran ted that man- 
kind wishes to decide whether man 
is the modified descendant of some 
pre-existing form. This gratuitous 
supposition implies that mankind 
is still ignorant or doubtful of its 
rtrue origin ; which is by no means 
rthe case. We have an authentic 
record of the origin of man; and 
we know that the first man and the 
first woman were not the descend- 
ants of any lower pre-existing form. 
The Bible tells us very clearly that 
God created them to his own image 
.and likeness; and so long as Mr. 
Darwin does not demolish the 
^Biblical history of creation he has 
;no right to assume that there may 
,be the least reasonable doubt re- 
igarding the origin of man. Mr. 
Darwin, it is true, makes light of 
-the Biblical history ; but contempt 
is no argument. On the other 
hand, philosophy and common 
sense, and science, if not perverted, 
unanimously agree with the- Mosaic 

record in proclaiming that the ori- 
gin of man must be traced to a 
special creation. Thus there has 

mever been, nor is there at present, 
among thinking men, any real 

doubt as to the origin of our race ; 
whence we infer that the question 

raised by the Descent of Man is a 
mere fiction which would deserve 
no answer but a smile of pity. 

In the second place, granting 
for the sake of argument that 
there may be an honest doubt 
about the origin of .man, and that 



physiology and other kindred sci- 
ences are competent to answer it. 
would the inquiry suggested by 
Mr. Darwin convince an honest 
doubter that man is the descen- 
dant of a lower animal ? Suppose 
that " man varies, however slightly, 
in bodily structure and in mental 
faculties"; suppose that "such va- 
riations are transmitted to his off- 
spring in accordance with the laws 
which prevail with the lower ani- 
mals "; and suppose that all the 
other conditions enumerated by 
Mr. Darwin are verified would 
we then be justified in concluding 
that " man is a modified descen- 
dant of some pre-exis-ting form"? 
Evidently not. The utmost that 
logic would allow us to grant is 
that the present form of human be- 
ings, owing to the slight variations 
transmitted to us by our human 
ancestors, may exhibit some acci- 
dental features slightly different 
from those which were possessed 
by the primitive men, yet without 
any change of the specific form, 
which must always remain essen- 
tially the same. But Mr. Darwin 
is not content with this. His pe- 
culiar logic allows him to confound 
the accidental and unimportant 
variations that occur within the 
limits of any single species with a 
gradual transition from one spe- 
cies to another a transition which 
science no less than philosophy ut- 
terly rejects. Nowhere in nature 
do we find an instance of such a 
pretended transition. Varieties 
are indeed very numerous, but 
none of them show the least de- 
parture from the species to which 
they belong. The oak emits every 
year thousands of leaves, of which 
each one differs from every other 
in some accidental feature; but 
who has ever seen the oak-leaves 
change into fir-leaves, or fig-leaves, 



The Descent of Man. 



499 



or maple-leaves, or any other leaves? 
If nature admitted such a specific 
change, a thousand indications 
would awaken our attention to 
the fact. The transition, being 
gradual, would leave everywhere 
innumerable traces of its reality. 
There would be all around us a host 
of transitional forms from the fish 
to the lizard, from the lizard to the 
bird, from the bird to the ape, 
and from the ape to man. But 
where do we find such transitional 
forms ? Science itself proclaims 
that they have no existence. Hence 
to affirm the transition from one 
species to another is a gross scien- 
tific blunder, whatever Mr. Dar- 
win and his eminent associates may 
say to the contrary. 

In the third place, even admit- 
ting that a gradual transition from 
one species to another were not re- 
jected by science, Mr. Darwin's 
view would still remain a ludicrous 
absurdity. In fact, the pretended 
transition from a form of a lower 
to a form of a higher species would 
be an open violation of the princi- 
ple of causality ; and therefore, if 
any transition were to be admitted 
at all, it could only be a transi- 
tion from a higher to a lower spe- 
cies. Thus, the transition from a 
human to a brutish form by con- 
tinual deterioration and degrada- 
tion, though repugnant to other 
principles, would not conflict with 
the principle of causality, inas- 
much as deterioriation and degra- 
dation are negative results, which 
may be brought about by mere 
lack of intellectual, moral, and so- 
cial development. But the transi- 
tion from a brutish to a human 
form would be a positive effect 
without a positive proportionate 
cause. The lower cannot generate 
the higher, because to constitute 
the higher something is necessary 



which the lower cannot impart. 
Just as a force 10 cannot pro- 
duce an effect = 20, so cannot 
the irrational brute produce the 
rational man. To assume the 
contrary is to assume that the less 
contains the greater, that empti- 
ness begets fulness in a word, 
that nature is a standing contra- 
diction. 

A full development of this last 
consideration would lead us too far 
from our line of argument, as it 
would require a psychological 
treatment of the subject. We will 
merely remark that rational and ir- 
rational differ not only in degree 
but in kind ; that the human soul 
is not produced by the forces of 
nature, but proceeds directly and 
immediately from God's creative 
action ; and that Darwinism, which 
ignores the soul's spirituality and 
immortality, is, on this account 
also, a monument of philosophical 
ignorance. 

But let us proceed. The au- 
thor considers it an important 
point to ascertain "whether man 
tends to increase at so rapid a rate 
as to lead to occasional severe 
struggles for existence, and con- 
sequently to beneficial variations, 
whether in body or in mind, being 
preserved, and injurious ones eli- 
minated." This is another of Mr. 
Darwin's delusions. It is not in 
the nature of man that the stron- 
ger should murder the weaker. 
Man, as a rule, is benevolent to- 
wards his kind, and even savages 
respect the life of the weak ; where- 
as it is always the stronger that go 
to battle and fall in the struggle. 
Thus a struggle for existence, oc- 
casioned by a too rapid increase, 
would deprive the race of its best 
men and mar its further develop- 
ment. On the other hand, if at 
any time or in any place there has 



5oo 



The Descent of Man. 



been a struggle for existence, it is 
in our large cities that we can best 
study the nature of its results. Is 
it in London, Paris, Berlin, or Vi- 
enna that we meet the best speci- 
mens of the race ? Surely, if there 
is a tremendous struggle for exist- 
ence anywhere, it is in such capitals 
as these ; and yet no one is igno- 
rant that such proud cities would, 
in a few generations, sink into in- 
significance, were they not continu- 
ally refurnished with new blood 
from the country, where the best 
propagators of the race are brought 
up in great numbers and without 
any apparent struggle for existence. 
But we need not dwell any further 
on this point. A struggle for 
existence presupposes existence ; 
and if man existed before strug- 
gling, the origin of man does not 
depend on his struggle. Hence 
the so-called " important point " 
has really no . importance what- 
ever. 

Then he asks : " Do the races 
or species of men, whichever term 
may be applied, encroach on and 
replace one another, so that some 
finally become extinct ?" and he 
answers the question in the af- 
firmative. To this we have no 
objection. We only remark that 
" races " and " species " are not 
synonymous ; hence it is surprising 
how a naturalist of Mr. Darwin's 
celebrity could show the least hesi- 
tation which of the two terms he 
ought to apply to mankind. 

He proceeds to examine "how 
far the bodily structure of man 
shows traces, more or less plain, of 
his descent from some lower form," 
and he contends that the existence 
of such " traces " can be proved, 
first, from the similarity of bodily 
structure in men and beasts; sec- 
ondly, from the similarity of their 
e.nbryonic development ; thirdly, 



from the existence of rudimentary 
organs, which show that man and 
all other vertebrate animals have 
been constructed on the same gen- 
eral model. 

Bearing in mind that Mr. Dar- 
win's object is to prove that there 
are " traces," more or less plain, of 
man's descent from some lower 
form, we cannot help expressing our 
astonishment when we find that he 
has failed to see the necessity of 
grounding his proofs on a secure 
foundation. That the bodily 
structure of man hss some resem- 
blance to the structure of other 
mammals; that all the bones of 
his skeleton can be compared with 
corresponding bones in a monkey, 
bat, or seal; that this comparison 
may be extended to his muscles, 
nerves, blood-vessels, and internal 
viscera; that the brain, the most 
important of all organs, follows the 
same law, etc., etc., are indeed 
well-known facts, from which we 
rightly infer that man is construct- 
ed on the same general type as oth- 
er mammals. But can these same 
facts be considered as "traces," 
more or less plain, of man's descent 
from any lower form ? Mr. Darwin 
says Yes; but instead of giving any 
conclusive reason for his assertion, 
he loses his time in accumulating 
superfluous anatomical and physio- 
logical details which, however in- 
structive, have no bearing upon 
the thesis he has engaged to prove. 

To prove his assumption he 
ought to have made a syllogism 
somewhat like the following : 

Wherever there is similarity of 
bodily structure or development 
there are " traces " of a common ori- 
gin or descent ; 

But man and other mammals 
have similar bodily structures and 
a similar development; 

Therefore man and other main- 



The Descent of Man. 



501 



rials show " traces " of a common 
origin or descent. 

This argument would have left 
no escape to the most decided ad- 
versary of the Darwinian view, if 
its first proposition had been sus- 
ceptible of demonstration. But 
Mr. Darwin, seeing the utter im- 
possibility of demonstrating it, and 
yet being unable to dispense with 
it, resorted to the ordinary trick of 
his school, which consists in assum- 
ing latently what they dare not 
openly maintain; and thus he turn- 
ed the whole attention of his read- 
er to the second proposition, which 
had no need of demonstration, as 
it was not questioned by instructed 
men. Thus the twenty pages of 
physiologic lore with which Mr. 
Darwin in this chapter distracts 
and amuses his readers may be 
styled, in a logical point of view, a 
prolonged ignoratio elenchi an ef- 
fort to prove that which is conced- 
ed instead of that which is denied 
a blunder into which men of sci- 
ence of the modern type are sure 
to fall when they presume to med- 
dle with matters above their reach. 

There is one sense only in which 
it may be affirmed that the similar- 
ity of bodily structure in men and 
lower animals proves their common 
origin, and it is this : that men and 
animals have been made by the 
same Creator on a similar ideal 
type of homogeneous organic ar- 
rangements ; in other terms, that 
their organic similarity proves them 
to be the work of the same Maker. 
Man was destined to live on this 
earth among other inferior animals 
nnd surrounded by like conditions. 
His animal life was therefore to be 
dependent on similar means of sup- 
port, exposed to similar influences, 
and subject to similar needs. It is 
not surprising, then, that he should 
have received from a wise Creator 



an organic constitution similar to 
that of the inferior creatures that 
were placed around him. This 
fully accounts for the similarity of 
the human organism with that of 
other mammals. But to say that 
because the bodily structure of 
man is similar to that of the ape, 
therefore man is the descendant of 
the ape, is as nonsensical as to say 
that because the bodily structure 
of the ape is similar to that of man, 
therefore the ape is the descendant 
of man. How was it possible for 
Mr. Darwin to lay down such an 
absurd principle, and not foresee 
how easily it might be turned 
against his own conclusion ? 

Thus the argument drawn from 
the similarity of bodily structure is 
a mere delusion. It avails nothing 
to say that man is liable to receive 
from the lower animals, and to 
communicate to them, certain dis- 
eases, as hydrophobia, variola, the 
glanders, syphilis, cholera, herpes, 
etc. This fact, says Mr. Darwin, 
"proves the similarity of their tis- 
sues and blood, both in minute 
structure and composition, far 
more plainly than does their com- 
parison under the best microscope 
or by the aid of the best chemical 
analysis." But this is a mistake ; 
for the evidence afforded by the 
microscope as to existing diversi- 
ties cannot be negatived by any 
guesses of ours respecting the com- 
munication of diseases and its con- 
ditions ; it being evident that what 
is obscure and mysterious is not 
calculated to weaken the certitude 
of a fact which we see with our 
own eyes. Nor does it matter that 
" medicines produce the same effect 
on them [monkeys] as on us," or 
that many monkeys "have a strong 
taste for tea, coffee, and spirituous 
liquors," oreven that a certain mon- 
key " smoked tobacco with plea- 



502 



The Descent of Man. 



sure" in Mr. Darwin's presence. 
These and other details of the 
same nature may be interesting, 
but they are no indication of a 
common origin, except in the sense 
which we have pointed out viz., 
that they are the work of the same 
Maker. 

But, says Mr. Darwin, "the ho- 
mological construction of the whole 
frame in the members of the same 
class is intelligible, if we admit 
their descent from a common pro- 
genitor, together with their subse- 
quent adaptation to diversified 
conditions. On any other view 
the similarity of pattern between 
the hand of a man or monkey, the 
foot of a horse, the flipper of a seal, 
the wing of a bat, etc., is utterly 
inexplicable. It is no scientific ex- 
planation to assert that they have 
all been formed on the same ideal 
plan." These words, which occur at 
the end of the chapter we are examin- 
ing, show how little Mr. Darwin un- 
derstands the duty of his position as 
author of a new theory. To say 
that an explanation is not scientific 
is a very poor excuse for setting it 
aside. Science, if not perverted, 
is an excellent thing, but it does 
not profess to give an explanation 
of every subject we may think of. 
Its range is co-extensive with the 
material world, but only with re- 
spect to matter and its modifica- 
tions as known by observation and 
experiment. This means that there 
are numberless things about which 
science is altogether incompetent 
to speak, because such things do 
not fall under observation and ex- 
periment. To pretend, therefore, 
that an explanation which is not 
scientific has no claim to be heed- 
ed by a man of science, is like pre- 
tending that a man of science, as 
such, must remain in blissful igno- 
rance of everything which tran- 



scends experiment and observation. 
Will Mr. Darwin reject historical 
explanations of historical events, 
philosophical explanations of phi- 
losophical conclusions, mathemati- 
cal explanations of mathematical 
questions? The origin of things is 
not a scientific but a philosophic 
problem. Science cannot speak of 
creation, of which it can have no 
experimental knowledge ; it gives 
it up to the philosopher and the 
theologian, who alone know the 
grounds on which it must be de- 
monstrated. The question, then, 
whether mammals have all been 
formed on the same ideal plan, is 
not scientific, and therefore it 
needs no scientific explanation. 
The plea that the explanation is 
not scientific might be held valid, 
if Mr. Darwin had humbly acknow- 
ledged his inability to rise above 
matter, and his incompetency to 
give a judgment in philosophic 
matters ; but his disregard of the 
explanation shows that, when he 
calls it not scientific, he desires his 
reader to believe that it is anti-sci- 
entific or irreconcilable with sci- 
ence; and this is as absurd as if 
he pretended that reason and sci- 
ence destroy one another. 

On the other hand, what shall 
we say of the pretended " scien- 
tific " explanation offered by Mr. 
Darwin ? " The homological con- 
struction of the whole frame in the 
members of the same class is intel- 
ligible, if we admit their descent 
from a common progenitor." Is 
this appeal to a common progeni- 
tor ascientific explanation of the fact 
in question ? If a common proge- 
nitor accounts scientifically for the 
fact, why should not a common 
Creator account scientifically for 
it ? Science that is, Mr. Darwin's 
science does not know a common 
Creator; it knows even less of a 



The Descent of Man. 



503 



common progenitor; and yet it sets 
up the latter to exclude the former, 
and boasts that its gratuitous and 
degrading hypothesis is a " scien- 
tific " explanation ! Yet all true 
scientists aver that no instance has 
ever been found of a transition 
from one species to another; phi- 
losophers go even further, and 
show that such a transition is 
against nature. Hence Mr. Dar- 
win's hypothesis, far from being 
scientific, contradicts science and 
philosophy, observation and expe- 
riment, reason and fact. The de- 
scent from a common progenitor, 
even if it made "intelligible" the 
similarity of different mammals, 
would still be unscientific. The 
ancients accounted for the move- 
ment of the heavenly bodies by 
putting them under the control of 
intellectual agents. This hypothe- 
sis made the astronomical pheno- 
mena intelligible. The fall of heavy 
bodies was accounted for by as- 
suming that all such bodies had a 
natural intrinsic tendency to a cen- 
tral point. This hypothesis, too, 
made the fall <of bodies intelligible. 
Even in modern physics a number 
of hypotheses have been proposed 
regarding light, magnetism, elec- 
tricity, chemical changes, etc., to 
make phenomena intelligible. But 
hypotheses, however satisfactory at 
first, are soon discarded when a 
deeper study of the facts reveals 
new features and new relations for 
which such hypotheses cannot ac- 
count. This is why the hypothesis 
of the descent of all mammals from 
a common progenitor, even if it 
seems to make their homological 
construction intelligible in a man- 
ner, must be rejected. For in 
every species of mammals we find 
features for which the hypothe- 
sis cannot account, and relations 
of genetic opposition by which 



the hypothesis is reduced to noth- 
ing. 

Mr. Darwin says that, " on any 
other view, the similarity of pat- 
tern between the hand of a man or 
monkey, the foot of a horse, the 
flipper of a seal, the wing of a bat, 
etc., is utterly inexplicable." We 
do not see any great similarity be- 
tween the hand of a man and the 
foot of a horse or the flipper of a 
seal, etc. We would rather say, 
with Mr. Darwin's permission, that 
we see in all such organs a great 
dissimilarity. Each of them has a 
special adaptation to a special end, 
and each of them is constructed 
on a different specific pattern. 
Their similarity is therefore gene- 
ric, not specific ; and, accordingly, 
each species must have its own 
distinct progenitors. We might 
make other remarks, but we are 
afraid that we have already taxed 
the patience of the reader to a 
greater extent than the case re- 
quires ; and therefore we will now 
pass to the second argument of the 
author. 

This second argument is drawn 
from the consideration of the em- 
bryonic development. "Man," says 
Mr. Darwin, " is developed from 
an ovule about the 1251)1 of an 
inch in diameter, which differs in 
no respect from the ovules of other 
animals." This is a very reckless 
assertion. For how does Mr. Dar- 
win happen to know that the hu- 
man ovule " differs in no respect " 
from the ovules of other animals ? 
When a man of science lays down 
an assertion as the groundwork of 
his doctrine, he must be able to 
show that the assertion is true. 
Hence we are entitled to ask on 
what foundation our great scientist 
can maintain his proposition. Will 
he appeal to the microscope ? Pro- 
bably he will, but to no purpose ; for 



504 



The Descent of Men. 



he has just declared, as we have seen, 
that the best microscope does not 
reveal everything with sufficient 
distinction. On the other hand, if 
he resorts to the mode of reasoning 
which he lias just employed while 
speaking of diseases that is, if he 
argues from the effects to the caus- 
es he cannot but defeat himself; 
for, as similarity of diseases was, in 
his judgment, a proof of similar 
organic structure, so no\v the dis- 
similarity of the final development 
of two ovules will be a proof that 
the two ovules are really dissimilar. 
One ovule constantly develops into 
a monkey, another constantly de- 
velops into a dog, and a third 
constantly develops into a man. 
Is it conceivable that the three 
ovules are identically the same, so 
as to " differ in no respect " ? We 
do not know what Mr. Darwin will 
reply. At any rate he cannot reply 
on scientific grounds ; for science 
neither knows the intimate consti- 
tution of the ovules, nor is it likely 
ever to know it, as the primordial 
organic molecules baffle the best 
microscopic investigations. 

" The embryo itself," he adds, "at a 
very early period can hardly be distin- 
guished from that of other members of 
the vertebrate kingdom. . . . At a some- 
what later period, when the extremities 
are developed, 'the feet of lizards and 
mammals,' as the illustrious Von Baer 
remarks, ' the wings and feet of birds, no 
less than the hands and feet of man, all 
arise from the same fundamental form. ' 
It is, says Prof. Huxley, 'quite in the 
later stages of development that the 
young human being presents marked 
differences from the young ape.' " 

If these assertions and quota- 
tions are intended asaproof that the 
human ovule " differs in no respect" 
from the ovules of lower animals, 
we must confess that our advanced 
scientific thinkers are endowed 
with a wonderful power of blinding 



themselves. We have two ovules : 
the one develops into hands and 
feet ; the other develops into wings 
and feathers; and yet we are told 
that they are both "the same fun- 
damental form " ! What is the 
fundamental form ? Who has seen 
it ? We are sure that neither Prof. 
Huxley nor the illustrious Von 
Baer has had the privilege of in- 
specting and determining the prop- 
er form of the mysterious organism 
known under the name of ovule. 
Much less have they, or has Mr. 
Darwin, discerned what is funda- 
mental and what is not in its con- 
stitution. They are, therefore, not 
more competent to judge of the 
fundamental sameness of two 
ovules than is the blind to judge of 
colors ; and their view, as founded 
on nothing but presumption and 
ignorance, must be considered al- 
together unscientific. 

The same view is also, as we 
have already shown, eminently tin- 
philosophic. If two ovules are es- 
sentially the same and ''differ in 
no respect" from one another, what 
is it that causes them invariably to 
develop into different specific or- 
ganisms? Does a constant differ- 
ence in the effects countenance the 
idea that they proceed from identi- 
cal causes ? It is evident that a 
theory which resorts to such ab- 
surdities for its support has no 
claim to be accepted, or even toler- 
ated, by lovers of reason and truth. 
The very boldness of its affirma- 
tions, its air of dogmatism, its allega- 
tion of partisan authorities, and its 
contempt of fundamental princi- 
ples prove it to be nothing but a 
flippant attempt at imposition. 

Although Mr. Darwin has insist- 
ed so strongly on the similarity 
between our bodily structure and 
that of the lower animals, and 
although he has endeavored to con- 



The Descent of Man, 



505 



vince us that the human ovule dif- 
fers in no respect from the ovules 
of other animals, yet he is compel- 
led by abundant evidence to admit 
that there is something in man 
which does not exist in the lower 
animals, and something in the low- 
er animals which does not exist in 
man. How does he account for 
these organic differences ? Men of 
science, only twenty years ago, 
would have explained the fact by 
the old philosophical and scientific 
axiom, Omne animal generat simile 
sibi, which means that each species 
of animals has progenitors of the 
same species ; whence they would 
have inferred by legitimate deduc- 
tion that animals of different spe- 
cies owe their specific differences 
to their having issued from progeni- 
tors of different species. This ex- 
planation was universally received, 
as it was supported by an induc- 
tion based on centuries of obser- 
vation, without a single example 
to the contrary. It was, there- 
fore, a truly scientific explanation. 
But twenty years are passed, and 
with them (if we believe Mr. Dar- 
win) the axioms, the logic, and the 
experimental knowledge of all cen- 
turies have disappeared from the 
world of science, to make room 
for higher and deeper conceptions. 
It was not an easy task, that of giv- 
ing the lie to a uniform and perpet- 
ual experience ; but to Mr. Darwin 
nothing is difficult. He needs 
only a word. With one word, 
" Rudiments," he is confident that 
lie will transform the objections of 
the old science into arguments in 
his favor, just as King Midas by 
the touch of his hand transmuted 
everything into shining gold. 

The world has hitherto believed 
that man has only two hands, 
whereas the monkey has four. But 
we must not say this in Mr. Dar- 



win's face. If we did, he would in- 
form us that we are strangely mis- 
taken. Man, lie pretends, belongs 
to the order of quadrumana ; hence 
he has four hands no less than the 
monkey, though two of them are 
used as feet, which may be consid- 
ered as rudimentary or undevelop- 
ed hands. If we were to remark in 
his presence that monkeys have a 
tail, whilst man can boast of no 
such elegant appendage, he would 
immediately confound our igno- 
rance by informing us that we all 
possess a rudimentary tail, which 
might be made to develop and 
grow by mere local irritation. 

In this way he explains all 
the organic differences which sep- 
arate one species from another. 
Every difference is made to depend 
either on the development in man 
of an organ which is undeveloped 
and rudimentary in lower animals, 
or on the development in lower 
animals of some organ which is 
rudimentary and undeveloped in 
man. To explain this theory he 
reasons as follows : 

" The chief agents in causing organs 
to become rudimentary seem to have 
been disuse at that period of life when 
the organ is chiefly used (and this is gen- 
erally during maturity), and also inheri- 
tance at a corresponding period of life. 
The term ' disuse ' does not relate mere- 
ly to the lessened action of muscles, but 
includes a diminished flow of blood to a 
part or organ from being subjected to 
fewer alterations of pressure, or from be- 
coming in any way less habitually active. 
Rudiments, however, may occur in one 
sex of those parts which are normally 
present in the other sex ; and such rudi- 
ments, as we shall hereafter see, have 
often originated in a way distinct from 
those here referred to. In some cases 
organs have been reduced by means of 
natural selection, from having become 
injurious to the species under changed 
habits of life. The process of reduction 
is probably often aided through the two 
principles of compensation and economy 



The Descent of Man. 



of growth ; but the later stages of reduc- 
tion, after disuse has done all that can 
fairly be attributed to it, and when the 
saving to be effected by the economy of 
growth would be very small, are difficult 
to understand. The final and complete 
suppression of a part already useless 
and much reduced in size, in which case 
neither compensation nor economy can 
come into play, is perhaps intelligible by 
the aid of the hypothesis of pangenesis." 

On this passage, which forms the 
main foundation of the Darwinian 
theory of rudiments, much might 
be said ; but we must limit our- 
selves to the following obvious re- 
mark. Science and philosophy rea- 
son on ascertained facts, but do 
not invent them ; whereas Mr. 
Darwin in this very passage, as in 
many others, not only invents with 
poetic liberty all the facts which he 
needs to build up his theory, but 
also violates the laws of reasoning 
by drawing from his imaginary 
facts such conclusions as even real 
f.icts would not warrant. Philoso- 
phy would certainly not allow him 
to assume without proof that " or- 
gans become rudimentary " ; for this 
is not an ascertained fact. Nor 
would philosophy permit the gra- 
tuitous introduction of rudiments 
derived " from the corresponding 
organs of other more developed 
animals " ; for there is no evidence 
that such has ever been the case. 
Nor would philosophy sanction 
" the final and complete suppres- 
sion of a part already useless " ; 
for on the one hand we have no 
means of knowing whether a part 
be really useless, and on the other 
no total suppression of organic 
parts has ever been known to oc- 
cur (except in monsters) within the 
range of any given species. Nor 
would philosophy permit an appeal 
lo the hypothesis of pangenesis or 
to the principle of compensation to 
evade the difficulties of which the 



new theory cannot give a solution ; 
for the hypothesis of pangenesis is 
itself in need of proof, and the 
principle of compensation involves, 
in our case, a begging of the ques- 
tion, inasmuch as it assumes the 
mutability of species the very thing 
which the theory is intended to 
demonstrate. 

But, says Mr. Darwin, perhaps 
the hypothesis of pangenesis would 
make " intelligible " the suppression 
of a useless part. Let it be so, 
though we hold the contrary to be 
true; what then ? Is all hypothe- 
sis to be accepted which would 
make a thing " intelligible " ? The 
succession of days and* nights was 
intelligible in the Ptolemaic hypoth- 
esis ; the loss of a battle becomes 
inteUigible by the hypothesis of 
treason ; the death of an old wo- 
man is intelligible by the hypothe- 
sis of starvation; but no man of 
sense would mistake the hypothe- 
sis for a fact. The truth is that 
Mr. Darwin, before attempting the 
explanation of what he calls " the 
final and complete suppression of a 
part," was bound to prove that the 
absence of such a part was a real 
suppression of the pre-existing part. 
This he has not done ; in fact, he 
had no means of doing it. Hence 
all his reasonings on this subject 
are paralogistic, and his theory of 
rudiments is a rope of sand. 

The preceding remarks are fully 
applicable to the other examples of 
rudiments given by the author in 
the fourteen remaining pages of the 
chapter. Thus, " rudiments of va- 
rious muscles have been observed 
in many parts of the human body." 
We flatly deny the assertion. " Not 
a few muscles which are regularly 
present in some of the lower ani- 
mals can occasionally be detected 
in man in a greatly-reduced condi- 
tion." We answer that such mus- 



The Descent of Man. 



507 



cles are not at all in a reduced con- 
dition, but in the condition origi- 
nally required by the nature of the 
individual. " Remnants of the 
pantiu'itlus carnosus in an efficient 
state are found in various parts of 
our bodies ; for instance, the muscle 
on the forehead by which the eye- 
brows are raised." On what ground 
can this muscle be called a rem- 
nant ? " The muscles which serve 
to move the external ear are in a 
rudimentary condition in man. . . . 
The whole external shell (of the 
ear) may be considered a rudiment, 
together with the various folds and 
prominences which in the lower 
animals strengthen and support the 
ear when erect." Where is the 
proof of such rudimentary condi- 
tion ? " The nictitating membrane 
is especially well developed in 
birds, . . . but in man it exists as 
a mere rudiment, called the semi- 
lunar fold." How is it proved that 
the semilunar fold is a mere rudi- 
ment, and not .a special organism, 
purposely contrived by the hand 
of the Creator at the first produc- 
tion of man ? 

Mr. Darwin goes on making any 
number of assertions of the same 
kind, not one of which is or can 
be substantiated, and yet at the 
end of the chapter closes his argu- 
mentation in the following trium- 
phant words : 

"Consequently, we ought frankly to 
admit their community of descent [of 
man and other vertebrate animals]. To 
take any other view is to admit that our 
own structure, and that of all the ani- 
mals around us, is a mere snare laid to 
entrap our judgment. This conclusion 
is greatly strengthened, if we look to the 
members of the whole animal series, and 
consider the evidence derived from their 
affinities or classification, their geogra- 
phical distribution and geological succes- 
sion. It is only our natural prejudice, 
and that arrogance which made our fore- 
fathers declare that they were descended 



from demi-gods, which leads us to de- 
mur to this conclusion. But the time 
will before long come when it will be 
thought wonderful that naturalists who 
were well acquainted with the compara- 
tive structure and development of man 
and other mammals should have be- 
lieved that each was the work of a sepa- 
rate act of creation." 

This conclusion, though well 
known, and already famous through- 
out the scientific world, is here 
given in the proper words of the 
great naturalist, that the reader 
may see what unbounded confi- 
dence a man of science can place 
in himself and in his speculations. 
All the scientific world, excepting 
a few sectarian unbelievers, is 
against him ; he knows it, and he 
is not dismayed. If you listen to 
him, his opponents are "arrogant "; 
they demur to his conclusion only 
because they pretend to be "the 
descendants of demi-gods." He 
alone is right, he alone understands 
science. Buffon, Cuvier, Quatre- 
fages, Agassiz, Elam, Fredault, and 
a host of other naturalists are evi- 
dently wrong. In fact, all philoso- 
phers are wrong; Mr. Darwin alone 
knows how to interpret scientific 
results; and he is so sure of this 
that he ventures to prophesy his ap- 
proaching triumph over those be- 
nighted naturalists who, though 
" well acquainted with the compa- 
rative structure and development 
of man and other mammals," are 
nevertheless so foolish as to be- 
lieve that each species is the work 
of a separate act of creation. Such 
is his modesty ! 

Perhaps we, too, may be allowed 
to venture a little prophecy. Mr. 
Darwin is not young, and before 
many years, we are sorry to say, 
death will snatch him from us ; his 
scientific friends in England and 
in Germany will shed a cold tear on 
his dead " mammalian structure," 



<;oS 



The Dcsctnt of Man. 



while his spiritual and immortal 
soul will be summoned before the 
God he has insulted in the noblest 
of his creatures, to account for the 
abuse of his talents, and to receive 
the sentence due to those who 
know and disregard truth. Then 
the Descent of Man will soon be a 
thing of the past; and those who 
now sing its praises in all tunes, 
and feign such an enthusiastic con- 
viction of its coming triumph, will 
become the laughing stock of culti- 
vated society, unless they put a 
timely end to their " scientific " 
jugglery. This is the fate which 
the common sense of mankind 
keeps in store for the Darwinian 
theory. 

Mr. Darwin, in formulating his 
conclusion, sums up the whole dis- 
cussion in a single sentence: "To 
take any other view is to admit 
that our own structure, and that of 
all the animals around us, is a mere 
snare laid to entrap our judgment." 
No doubt a "snare "is laid; not, 
however, by the Author of nature, 
but by the author of the Descent 
of Man. The homologousness of 
animal structures does not prove 
a common genetic descent : it only 
proves, as we have shown, that all 
such structures are the work of the 
same Maker; hence the arbitrary 
substitution of a common progeni- 
tor for a common Creator is " a 
mere snare " laid by Mr. Darwin to 
entrap the judgment of the igno- 
rant. We say of the ignorant ; for 
he who knows anything about phi- 
losophy will simply wonder at the 
audacity of a writer who derives 
reason from unreason, and intellect 
from organism; and he who knows 
anything about divine revelation 
u'ill rebuke him for his disregard 
of the Mosaic history, than which 
no document has greater antiquity 
or higher authority ; whereas he 



who knows anything of zoology 
will be scandalized at the impu- 
dence of a man who dares to con- 
tradict in the name of science what 
he knows to be an unquestionable 
fact and a fundamental principle of 
science viz., the unchangeableness 
of species. 

To "strengthen" his worthless 
conclusion Mr. Darwin bids us 
look to "the members of the whole 
animal series" and consider "the 
evidence derived from their affini- 
ties or classification, their geograph- 
ical distribution and geological suc- 
cession." But it must be evident 
to every intelligent reader that the 
considerations here suggested by 
Mr. Darwin are not calculated to 
" strengthen " his position. Be- 
tween the members of the animal 
series there are not only affinities, 
but also specific differences and 
incompatibilities, which a man of 
science ought not to ignore, were 
they ever so embarrassing to his 
inventive genius. And as to the 
"geological succession" of animal 
forms, need we remind Mr. Darwin 
that the geological remains and 
their succession afford the most per- 
emptory refutation of his theory? 
He himself acknowledges that no 
transitional forms from one species 
to another have been dug up from 
the bowels of the earth ; whereas 
his theory requires a succession of 
animal remains of all transitional 
forms and in all stages of develop- 
ment. It would have been wiser 
for him to have kept back all men- 
tion of geology; but, alas! those 
who lay snares for others some- 
times succeed also in entrapping 
themselves. 

This may suffice to give an idea 
of the first chapter of the Descent of 
Jlfa/i, and even of the whole work. 
Everywhere we find the same 
want of rigorous logic, the same 



TJic Descent of Man. 



509 



nbrence of method, the same disre- 
gard of principles, and the same 
abundance of fanciful assumptions. 
Such is not the proceeding of 
science. " I believe," says Prof. 
Agassiz, "that the Darwinian sys- 
tem is pernicious and fatal to the 
progress of the sciences." " This 
system," says Dr. Constantin 
James, " starts from the unknown, 
appeals to evidences which are no- 
where to be found, and falls into 
consequences which are simply 
absurd and impossible. One would 
say that Darwin merely undertook 
to blot out creation and bring back 
chaos."* We cannot, without 
trespassing on the limits prescribed 
to this article, give the scientific 
arguments by which these and 
other eminent writers set at naught 
the assumptions, the reasonings, and 
the conclusions of our eccentric 
"mammalian," iut we venture to 
say that if the reader procures a 
copy of Dr. James' work, and ex- 
amines the Darwinian theory in the 
light of the facts that the learned 
author has culled from physiology, 
palaeontology, and other branches of 
science connected with the history 
of the animal world, he will be fully 
satisfied that the Descent of Man is 
nothing but a congeries of blun- 
ders. 

But we may be asked : How is it 
possible to admit that a theory so 
manifestly absurd should have been 
received with enthusiasm and laud- 
ed to the skies by men of recogniz- 
ed ability and scientific eminence ? 
The answer is obvious. Scientific 
eminence, as now understood, 
means only acquaintance with the 
materials of science, and is no 
warrant against false reasoning. 
" There can be fools in science as 
well as in any other walk in life," 

* /> Darminisine : ou riiommt tingt: Paris, 
'877, page 170. 



says a well-known English writer ; 
" in fact, in proportion to the small 
aggregate number of scientific men, 
I should be disposed to think that 
there is a greater percentage in 
that class than in any other." But 
the same writer gives us another re- 
markable explanation of the fact. 

" I have read," says he, " the writings 
of Mr. Darwin and Prof. Huxley and 
others, and had the advantage of per- 
sonal talk with an eminent friend of 
theirs who shares their views, and I 
have read without prejudice, but failed 
to find that they advanced one solid ar- 
gument in support of their views. I am 
quite certain that, if this controversy 
could be turned into a law-suit, any 
judge on the bench would dismiss the 
case against the evolutionists with costs, 
without calling for a reply. The emi- 
nent friend 1 allude to, himself one of 
the first ofliving mathematicians, and an 
intimate associate of Tyndall, Huxley, 
Spencer, etc., and sharing their views, 
was candid enough to admit that the 
theory was beset with difficulties, that 
quite as many facts were against it as for 
it, that it hardly seemed susceptible of 
proof. And when I asked why he held 
the theory under such a condition of the 
evidence ; why, on the assumption of this 
law, Dr. Tyndall chaffed and derided 
prayer, and Prof. Huxley gnashed his 
teeth at dogma and chuckled over the 
base descent of man, his reply was : ' \\ e 
are bound to hold it, because it is the 
only theory yet propounded which can 
account for life, all we see of life, without 
the intervention of a God. Nature must 
be held to be capable of producing 
everything by herself and within herself, 
with no interference ab cxha, and this 
theory explains how she may have done 
it. Hence we feel bound to hold it, and 
to teach it.' Shade of Bacon ! here is 
science !" * 

These words need no comment 
of ours. We knew already from 
other evidences that a conspiracy 
had been formed with the aim of 

* On the Intrusion of certain Professors of 
Physical Science into the Rtgicn of Faith and 
Mi rnls : An address delivered to the members cf 
ihe Manchester Acadcmia of the Catholic Religion 
L-_- J. Stores Smith, Esq. 



The Descent of Man. 



turning science against religion, 
and we now see its work. We have 
here a candid avowal that the en- 
thusiasm of certain scientists for 
the new theory has its root in mal- 
ice, not in reason, and is kept up, 
though with ever-increased difficul- 
ty, in the interest not of science 
but of a brutal atheism. In fact, 
science has nothing to do with the 
origin of man; and the very at- 
tempt at transforming a historical 
event into a scientific speculation 
clearly reveals the wicked deter- 
mination of obscuring, corrupting, 
and discrediting truth. To carry 
out their object the leaders of the 
conspiracy organized a body of in- 
fidel scientists, doctors, professors, 
lecturers, and journalists ; they took 
hold of the scientific press, which 
was to illustrate the names and 
magnify the merits of such men as 
Moleschott, Louis Buchner, Wolff, 
Von Baer, or suc.h men as Clausius, 
Tyndall, Spencer, and Comte, or as 
Huxley, Draper, and Hackel a 
task not at all difficult, as these 
men, and others whom we might 
name, were all bound together in a 
mutual-admiration society, in which 
the celebrity of each member was 
an honor and an encouragement 
for all the other members, and the 
praises lavished upon each one 
were repaid with interest to all the 
others. Thus they have become 
great scientific oracles, each and 
all ; and by ignoring as completely 
as possible the writings, the dis- 
coveries, and even the existence of 
those men of science who did not 
fall on their knees before the new 
ideas, they succeeded in creating a 
belief that they alone were in pos- 
session of scientific truth, and they 
alone were enlightened enough to 
point out with infallible certainty 
the hidden path of progress. 

Their success, to judge from the 



number and tone of their scientific 
publications, must have been very 
flattering to their vanity. It is prc- 
bable, however, that their noise is 
greater than their success. The 
profligate and the sceptic may, of 
course, relish a theory which assim- 
ilates them to the ape or the hog, 
makes the soul a modification of 
matter, and suppresses God ; but 
the honest, the pure, the thought- 
ful are not easily duped by the low 
hypotheses of these modern think- 
ers. Society in general rejects witli 
disgust a doctrine which aims at 
degrading humanity and destroying 
the bases of morality, religion, and 
civilization. If there is no God, 
rights and duties, the main ties of 
the social body, must be given up ; 
justice will become an unmean- 
ing word, and civil and criminal 
courts a tyrannical institution. If 
man is only a modified beast, if his 
soul is not immortal, if his end is 
like that of the dog, then why 
should the stronger refrain from 
hunting and devouring the weaker ? 
Do we not hunt and kill and eat 
other animals ? Alas! the progress 
of humanity towards barbarism and 
cannibalism is so intimately and 
inevitably connected with Darwin- 
ism that even the most uncivilized 
of human beings would protest 
against its admission. 

That society is still unwilling to 
submit to the dictation of this ad- 
vanced science, and that common 
sense is yet strong enough to si- 
lence the present scientific bluster- 
ing, is a fact of which we find an 
implicit confession in the writings 
and addresses of anti-Christian 
thinkers. Nature, a weekly illus- 
trated journal of science, the Pop- 
ular Science Monthly, and other 
publications of the infidel party, do 
not cease to inculcate the introduc- 
tion of science (materialism, evo- 



The Descent of Man. 



lution, pantheism, etc.) into the 
schools frequented by our children. 
They have found that our schools 
are not godless enough to secure 
the triumph of unbelief: they are 
godless in a negative sense only, 
inasmuch as they ignore God ; but 
now they must be made positively 
godless by teaching theories which 
do away with creation, which deny 
providence, which leave no hope 
of reward, and ridicule all fear of 
punishment in an after-life ; and 
they must be made positively im- 
moral by teaching that man is al- 
ways right in following his animal 
proclivities, as all other animals do, 
and that no human being can be 
justly called to account for his 
doings, it being demonstrated by 
science that what we call "free- 
will " is an organic function sub- 
ject to invariable laws, like every- 
thing else in the material world, 
with no greater freedom to choose 
its course than a stone has under 
terrestrial attraction. These doc- 
trines are widely circulated in 
printed works, but make few con- 
verts, owing to the fact that they 
come too late, and find the minds 
of men already imbued with prin- 
ciples of an opposite nature ; and, 
therefore, it is now proposed to in- 



stil all this poison into the minds 
of the young, who have no antidote 
at hand to counteract its destruc- 
tive action. We hope that this 
new attempt will be defeated; but 
when we see that the attempt is 
considered necessary for a suc- 
cessful diffusion of the false scien- 
tific theories of the day, we can- 
not be much mistaken if we infer 
that the success of such theories 
up to the present time has been 
less satisfactory to the infidel 
schemers than their publications 
pretend. 

As for the Descent of Man, how- 
ever, no amount of sophistry, in 
our opinion, will succeed in mak- 
ing it fashionable. The Darwinian 
theory is utterly unscientific and 
unphilosophical. Common sense, 
geology, and history condemn it ; 
logic proclaims it a fraud ; and 
human dignity throws upon it a 
look of pity and dismisses it with 
ineffable contempt. Mr. Darwin 
may yet live long enough to see his 
theory totally eclipsed and forgot- 
ten, when he will ask himself 
whether it would not have been 
better to devote his talents, his 
time, and his labor to striving to 
elevate rather than striving to de- 
base his kind. 



512 



Mickey Casey s CJiristmas Dinncr-Party. 



RICKEY CASEY'S CHRISTMAS DINNER-PARTY. 



IN a large, gloomy, bald-looking 
house in Merrion Street, Dublin, 
lived a red-faced, red-haired little 
attorney rejoicing in the name of 
Mickey Casey. There is no man 
better known in Green Street than 
Mickey, and no member of the pro- 
fession whose services are more 
eagerly retained by the luckless 
ones whose "misfortunes" have 
brought tl>em within range of the 
" blessing of the recorder." Mickey 
knows the exact moment to bully, 
concede, or back out ; and as for 
the law, it has been said of him 
that there is not a dirty lane or alley 
in the whole of the Acts of Par- 
liament in which he has not men- 
tally resided for the benefit of 
his clientele^ as well as to his own 
especial emolument. When Mr. 
Casey was put up for membership 
of the Law Club, there was much 
muttering and considerable frown- 
ing in the smoking-room of that 
legally exclusive establishment 
while his chances of success were 
being weighed in the balance and 
found wanting; but the election 
being judiciously set down for the 
long vacation, and Mickey having 
offered several of the leading mem- 
bers unlimited shooting over his 
trifle of property in the neighbor- 
hood of Derrymachulish which, as 
all well-informed people are aware, 
lies in the very heart of the County 
Tipperary somehow or other he 
pulled through by the "skin of his 
teeth," and became socially, as he 
was by act of Parliament, a gentle- 
man in the profession. 

Mickey was a cheery little man, 
who loved a drop of the " crayture " 
not wisely but too well, and whose 



whole soul was wrapped up in his 
only child, a daughter, a mincing 
young lady, who was now close 
upon her nineteenth birthday, and 
who bore a most unmistakable re- 
semblance to her sire in the color 
of her hair, her " chancy blue " 
eyes, and a bulbous-shaped vulgar- 
ly termed thumbottle nose. 

"I've spent oceans of money 
on me daughter's education, sir," 
Mickey would exclaim. " Oceans 
Atlantic and Pacific* She's had 
masters and mistresses, and tutors 
and governesses, and short lessons 
and long .lessons, some at a guinea 
apiece, sir yes, begar, a guinea 
for thirty minutes' jingling on a 
piana. But she's come out of it 
well ; I've got her through, and the 
sentence of the court is that she's 
as fine a performer as there is in 
Dublin in- the way of an amatewer." 

Mrs. Casey was a very stout, 
very florid, very untidy lady, whose 
face never bore traces of any re- 
cent lavatory process, and whose 
garments appeared to have dropped 
upon her from the ceiling by 
chance, retaining their original 
pose. The parting of her hair bore a 
strong resemblance to forked light- 
ning, and her nails reminded the 
visitor of family bereavement, so 
deep the mourning in which they 
were invariably enshrined. She, 
in common with her husband, was 
wrapped up in her daughter, and 
lost to every consideration other 
than the advancement of her child's 
welfare and happiness. 

Matilda Casey was spoiled in 
her cradle, spoiled at school, spoil- 
ed at home. Her word was law, 
her every whim gratified, her every 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



513 



wish anticipated. Her parents were 
her slaves. Dressed by Mrs. Man- 
ning, the Worth of Dublin, at fancy 
prices, the newest Parisian toilettes 
were flaunted upon Miss Casey's 
neat little figure, whilst her mother 
went in greasy gowns of antiquat- 
ed date and old-\rorld pattern. 
The brougham was at her beck, 
and Mrs. Casey was flattered be- 
yond measure when offered a seat in 
it. She asked whom she pleased to 
Merrion Street, and many people 
came and went whom her mother 
never even saw. In furtherance of 
her musical talents she had boxes 
at the Theatre Royal and Gaiety for 
any performance it pleased her 
Serene Highness bo select, while she 
forced her father to run the gaunt- 
let of musical societies in order to 
ensure the necessary vouchers of 
admission. 

And yet Matilda Casey was by 
no means a bad sort of girl. Her 
heart was in the right place, but 
her brains were blown out to use 
a homely metaphor by the flat- 
tery and incense which were being 
perpetually offered up at her shrine, 
until she was seized with a mad 
craving to enter the portals of the 
best society. 

Hitherto she had but stood at the 
gate, like the Peri, gazing through 
the golden bars, and was more or 
less inclined to accept her position ; 
but there came a time when she re- 
solved upon endeavoring to force 
her way through. 

The task that lay before her was 
a terrible one a task full of weep- 
ing, and wailing, and mortification, 
and heart-burning, and gnashing of 
teeth. Society in Dublin is as ex- 
clusive as in the Faubourg St. Ger- 
main. The line is so distinctly 
drawn that no person can cross it 
by mere accident. " No trespas- 
sers admitted " is written up in let- 
VOL. xxvi. 33 



ters of cold steel. The viceregal 
" set " won't have the professional 
set, save those whose offices entitle 
them to the entrle, and then they 
are but tolerated. The profession- 
al set won't know the mercantile 
set, and here society stops short. 
A shopkeeper, be his store as large 
as Stewart's and be he as wealthy as- 
Rothschild, has no chance. He is- 
a Pariah, and must pitch his tent 
out in that wilderness peopled by 
nobodies. The great struggle lies; 
with the mercantile people to be- 
come blended with the profession- 
als. This is done by money. Of 
course there are exceptional cases,, 
but such a case is rara avis in- 
ter r is. 

Matilda Casey was in no set.. 
The people with whom she was ac- 
quainted, though not amongst the- 
outcasts, held no position whatso- 
ever. Clerks in the Bank of Ireland! 
residing at Rathmines ; commercial', 
travellers; custom-house employes; 
attorneys of cadaverous practice, r 
of a practice that meant no weight 
in the profession ; needy barristers, 
perpetually kotowing to her father 
for business, and obsequiously civil 
to her as business these people 
with their wives formed her sur- 
roundings, and she was sick of 
them, tired, disgusted, bored to- 
death. Why should she not be ac- 
quainted with the daughter of Mr. 
Bigwig, Q.C., who resided next 
door? Surely she played better 
than Miss Bigwig, and dressed bet- 
ter, and rode in her brougham,, 
while Miss B. trudged in thick- 
soled boots in the mud. She had 
left cards on the Bigwigs upon; 
their coming to Merrion Street, but 
her visit had never been returned,, 
while that shabby little girl, Miss 
Oliver, was for ever in and out there;. 
and what was Miss Oliver's papa 
but an attorney ? 



Mickey Casey s CJiristmas Dinncr-Farty. 



Why was she not at some of the 
balls perpetually going on around 
her ? the rattling of the cabs to and 
from which, during the night and 
morning, kept her awake upon her 
tear-bedewed pillow. 

Why did the Serges, of the firm 
of Serge & Twist, the linen-drapers 
in Sackville Street, leave her out of 
their invitations to their afternoon 
teas? Assuredly they were no 
great swells, and she had driven 
Miss Serge on more than one occa- 
sion in her brougham, and had sent 
Mrs. Serge a bouquet of hot-house 
flowers when that lady was laid up 
with the measles. 

How came it that their social 
circle never increased save in the 
wrong direction ? Had she not 
persuaded her papa to give a brief 
to young Mr. Bronsbill, who was 
possessed of as much brains as a 
nutmeg-grater, and whose advoca- 
cy cost Mr. Casey's client his cause, 
in order to become acquainted 
with his family ? Mr. B. having 
informed her the treacherous vil- 
lain ! that his mother and sisters 
intended to call upon her. 

Had she not thrown open the 
house to Mr. and Mrs. Minnion, 
whom she had met at the Victo- 
ria Hotel, Killarney, the preceding 
summer, in the hope of those de- 
.lightful introductions which the 
artful Mrs. M. had held out 
:like a glittering jewel before her 
entranced and eager gaze? Had 
not Mr. and Mrs. Minnion eaten, 
drunk, and slept in Merrion Street ? 
And whom did they introduce ? A 
.little drunken captain of mili- 
tia, who insisted upon coming 
.there at unlawful hours of the 
might, and in calling for brandy 
and soda-water, as if the establish- 
ment was a public-house, and not 
even a respectable hotel ! 

But Fortune is not for ever cruel, 



and the wheel will turn up a pri/e 
at possibly the least expected mo- 
ment. 

Mickey Casey knew his daugh- 
ter's heart-burning, and strove 
might and main to ease it by even 
one throb. He gave dinner-par- 
ties to the best class of men with 
whom he was acquainted, feeding 
them like " fighting-cocks " upon 
petit diners served by Mitchell, of 
Grafton Street, and giving them 
wines of the rarest vintages from 
the cellars of Turbot & Redmond. 

"Ye'll come to see us again, 
won't ye ?" he would say to his 
guest. " And I say, just bring your 
wife the next time. Me daughter 
will send the brougham cost a 
hundred and fifty at Hutton's 
say Monday next." 

The guest would declare how 
delighted his wife would be to 
make the acquaintance of so charm- 
ing a young lady as Miss Casey ; 
but when the Monday came round, 
and with it a dinner fit for the 
viceroy, the guest would arrive 
wifeless, the lady being laid up 
with a cold, or " that dreadful 
baby, you know," or " visitors from 
the country," and the banquet 
would be served in a lugubrious 
silence, save when the daughter of 
the house ventured upon some cut- 
ting sarcasm anent snobbery and 
stuck-up people. 

Matilda Casey could make such 
a guest wish himself over a mutton- 
chop in his own establishment, in- 
stead of the salmi of partridge or 
plover's eggs served in silver dishes 
at Number 190 Merrion Street: and 
she did it, too. 

" I've news for ye, Matilda," 
exclaimed Casey one evening as he 
took his seat at the dinner-table. 
" I've news for ye, pet. I defended old 
Colonel Bowdler in a case in which 
a servant sued him for wages, and 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



515 



got him off at half-price. He's on 
half-pay, lives with his wife in 
Stephen's Green, and is a tip-top- 
per, mixing with the lord-lieuten- 
ant's household as if they were his 
pwn." 

" Well, and what is that to me ?" 
exclaimed Miss Casey with consid- 
erable asperity. 

" This, me darling : he was so 
pleased at the way I got him out 
on half-pay ha! ha! ha! that 
he and his wife wife, mind ye 
are coming to call on you to- 
morrow." 

Mrs. Casey was never taken into 
account, Matilda being the central 
figure. 

" Pshaw ! I wonder you can be 
such a fool, papa. It's the old 
story," retorted his daughter. 
" This colonel will come here, eat 
our dinners, drink our wine, and 
perhaps drop his wife's card with- 
out her knowledge, as Mr. Neligan 
did as we found out to our morti- 
fication when we went to return a 
visit that was never paid, and were 
politely told by Mrs. Neligan that 
her husband had never even men- 
tioned our names to her." 

" Never fear, Matilda. We're in 
the right box this time. They'll 
be here to-morrow, you may de- 
pend upon it." 

Casey had his own good reasons 
for believing that the colonel would 
bide tryste of which more anon. 
The morrow came, and with it 
Colonel and Mrs. Bowdler. 

The colonel was a chatty, elderly 
gentleman of imposing aspect and 
dyed hair ; his wife a tall, gaunt 
female, with a vulture-like appear- 
ance, and a sort of sergeant-major- 
in-petticoats look the outcome 
of many a hard-fought campaign. 
The colonel had sketched Casey 
and Casey's social desires, and Mrs. 
Bowdler, like the shrewd veteran 



that she was, took in the situation 
at a glance. 

The flutter of excitement at 190 
Merrion Street was intense when 
the thundering knock came to the 
door, accompanied by a crashing 
pull at the bell. 

" Be awfully civil to these people, 
Jemima," whispered the colonel as 
he entered, " and we can forage 
here three times a week. Promise 
them the moon." 

Mrs. Casey fled to her bed- 
room for the purpose of arranging 
her person in a gorgeous mauve 
moire-antique all over grease-spots, 
and Matilda rushed frantically to 
the drawing-room, in order to 
be en pose to receive the welcome 
visitors. 

The coachman, who acted also in 
Ahe capacity of butler, was feverish- 
ly hurried from his den at the 
back of the house, bearing with 
him a gentle aroma of the stable, 
and, even while opening the hall- 
door, was engaged in thrusting his 
arms into the sleeves of a coat 
a perfect suit of mail in buttons. 

"Mrs. Casey at home?" asked 
Mrs. Bowdler. 

" I dunno whether the misthris 
is convaynient, ma'am, but Miss 
Casey is above in the dhrawin'- 
room. Won't yez come in any- 
how?" And the man motioned 
them to ascend with considerable 
cordiality and welcome. 

"Take these cards, please." 

" Well, ma'am, me hands is a 
thrifle dirty ; but av it obliges ye " 
and hastily brushing the fingers of 
his right hand upon the legs of his 
trowsers, he took the extended 
pasteboard in as gingerly a manner 
as if he expected it to explode 
there and then. 

The visitors stood in the hall, 
and so did Luke Fogarty. 

" What am I for to do wud this 



5 l6 



Mickey Casey s Christinas Dinner-Party. 



ma'am?" lie asked, eyeing it with a 
glance full of concern. 

" Hand it to Miss Casey," re- 
plied Mrs. Bowdler. 

" Oh ! that's it, is it ?" And he 
darted up-stairs with an alarming 
alacrity. 

" This is a charming manage" 
said Mrs. Bowdler. 

" A fine open country, my .dear ; 
no concealed enemy." 

" Yez are for to folly me," shout- 
ed Fogarty from the top of the 
stairs. 

Matilda \vas enchanted to see 
them, and ordered sherry and cake. 
Mrs. Bowdler professed herself 
charmed to make Miss Casey's 
acquaintance, and declared she 
quite resembled the lord-lieutenant's 
youngest daughter " And in man- 
ner, too, Miss Casey, you quite re$ 
mind me of her. We are perpetually 
at the Viceregal Lodge, and very in- 
timate with the Abercorns. We are 
asked to everything, and he ! he ! 
he ! it costs us a small fortune for 
cabs." 

" You can have my brougham, 
Mrs. Bowdler." 

"Oh ! dear, no, my- dear young 
lady, that would never do ; but if 
you lend it to me occasionally to 
take out dear Lady Maude La- 
seilles, who is such an invalid. Do 
you know her ?" 

Matilda replied in the negative. 

As a matter of fact, no such per- 
son existed, but it suited Mrs. Bow- 
dler to create her, Mrs. B. be- 
ing a lady who would make a shil- 
ling do duty for half a crown. She 
was a veteran of infinite resources, 
who had borne the burden and heat 
of the day, and who was now bent 
upon taking her change out of the 
world. She had heard of the crav- 
ing to enter the portals of society 
that was devouring Matilda Casey 
the attorney had openly confided 



the fact to the colonel and was 
resolved upon making the most of 
the situation. The Bowdlers were 
hangers-on at the Castle, mere 
hacks, who attended the drawing- 
rooms, the solitary state ball to 
which they were annually invited, 
and St. Patrick's ball with unde- 
viating punctuality. They resided 
in a pinched-looking house in Ste- 
phen's Green, where Mrs. Bowdler 
" operated " the colonel's half-pay 
with the financial ability of a Dude- 
lac, stretching every sixpence and 
racking the silver coin to its final 
gasp. They went everywhere, ac- 
cepting every invitation, "foraging 
on the enemy " as the colonel ex- 
pressed it, giving no return. Trad- 
ing upon his military rank, they 
managed to go about a good deal 
amongst very third-rate people, 
who were glad to have a colonel to 
dinner, and a lady who could talk 
so familiarly of half the peerage as 
his wife. A more singularly worth- 
less or selfish pair was not to be 
found, or a pair who better knew 
how " to work the oracle," than 
Colonel Brownlow Bowdler, late of 
Her Majesty's Fifty-ninth Regi- 
ment of Infantry, and Jemima, his 
consort. 

Mrs. Casey came smilingly into 
the drawing-room and almost em- 
braced Mrs. Bowdler. 

"What will ye take, now ? Sure 
ye must take something. Matilda, 
make Mrs. Colonel Bowdler take 
something. Colonel, you'll take a 
bottle of champagne do, now, that's 
right ; and I'll get a little jelly for 
Mrs. Colonel Bowdler, and then 
Matilda will play for ye. She 
plays lovely." 

" O mamma !" exclaimed Ma- 
tilda. 

" Now, ye know ye do, dar- 
ling." And Mrs. Casey, who is the 
soul of hospitality, joyously deseed- 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



517 



ed to the lower regions, in order to 
send up the delicacies she so 
temptingly set forth. 

"Are you going to the ball the 
Twelfth are giving at the Royal 
Barracks ?" asked Mrs. Bowdler. 

" I am not, Mrs. Bowdler, but I 
wish I was," replied Matilda. 

" Colonel, do you hear that ? Miss 
Casey has not received a card for 
the Twelfth ball. You must take 
care that she gets one." 

" I'll go to Major McVickers at 
once the old rascal and I served 
in India together and see what 
can be done." 

He had been to Major McVickers 
five times already to secure invita- 
tions for himself and wife, but with- 
out success. 

Luke Fogarty entered with an 
enormous silver salver bearing the 
champagne, jelly, fruit, and cake. 
He would have preferred to have 
been behind a runaway horse, ay, 
and down-hill to boot. He regard- 
ed the jelly with a savage eye, mut- 
tering " Woa ! woa!" in an under- 
tone as it shook from the movement 
of the tray, accompanying the excla- 
mation by that purring sound so 
dear to grooms when closely ap- 
plying the curry-comb. 

" Open the champagne, Fogarty," 
said Matilda in a tone of lofty com- 
mand. 

" To be shure I will, miss," re- 
plied the willing retainer, diving 
into the pockets of his trowsers in 
search of an iron-moulded cork- 
screw, which he eventually brought 
to the surface after considerable 
effort. " I'll open it in a jiffy." 

He tortured and twisted the 
wires until he was nearly black in 
the face from sheer exertion, but, 
although yielding to his pressure, 
they still clung perplexingly to 
the cork. 

"Bad cess to thim for wires! 



but they have the fingers nearly 
cutaffo'me. Curse o' the crows 
on them !" making another de- 
spairing effort ; " but I'm not bet 
yit." 

The wire, slipping suddenly aside, 
gave freedom to the cork, which 
bounded gaily against the colonel's 
nose, and, ricochetting, lodged in 
the bosom of Mrs. Bowdler's dress, 
while the froth spurted high in the 
air, descending in seething showers 
upon the gallant warrior's head, 
disarranging the few brown hairs 
which were carefully laid across his 
bald, shining pate, resembling cracks 
upon an inverted china bowl, and 
causing him to utter maledictions 
strong and deep. 

" See that, now !" exclaimed 
Fogarty, clapping his hand on the 
opening of the bottle. " It's livelier 
nor spirits. Hould yer glass, col- 
onel, or the lickher 'ill be lost in- 
tirely." 

" Champagne is my favorite 
wine," said Mrs. Bowdler, tossing 
off her glass without winking. 

" And mine," added the colonel, 
filling it for her again, and then re- 
plenishing his own. 

" Oh ! dear me, I'm so glad to know 
that. Fogarty, bring another bottle. 
We've heaps of it in the cellar 
at ninety-six shillings a dozen a 
top price. You'll always get good 
wine here," said Mrs. Casey. 

" The man who would give his 
guest bad wine ought to be blown 
.from flie muzzle of a gun," observed 
the colonel, plunging at the jelly. 

This came strangely from an in- 
dividual who, whenever he gave a 
visitor a drink, gave it of a liquor 
warranted to kill at fifty yards. 
Young Bangs, of the Tenth, whose 
father instructed him to visit 
Bowdler, was laid up for an entire 
week after a teaspoonful of the col- 
onel's tap. 



5 I8 



]\Iickey Cascys Christmas Dinner-Party. 



The second bottle of champagne 
appeared. 

" Ye'd betther open this combus- 
ticle yerself, gineral," suggested 
Fogarty ; "an mind ye hould on to 
the cork, or it 'ill give ye the slip as 
shure as there's a bill on a crow. " 

" I must introduce your dear 
daughter here to the Dayrolles," 
exclaimed Mrs. Bowdler, "and to 
the Fitzmaurices. You will like 
Lady Fitzmaurice, Miss Casey, and 
I know she will like you" 

" Do you hear thai, Matilda ? 
Now, won't ye play for Mrs. Col- 
onel Bowdle"r ?" 

" I'm a very poor player," sim- 
pered Matilda. 

Nevertheless, she proceeded to 
the piano and dashed off a morceau 
of Chopin with considerable vigor, 
during which the colonel improved 
the occasion by pocketing a bunch 
of grapes and a good-sized cut of 
seed-cake. 

" Bravissima f" he cried, as if in 
rapture. " Lord St. Lawrence mast 
hear that, Jemima ; we must try and 
get him to name a night." 

"We can reckon on Lady 
Howth." 

" Certainly. She's always too 
glad to be asked." 

"And the Powerscourts ?" 

" By the way, that reminds me : 
we owe a visit at Powerscourt, do 
we not ?" 

"I can't say, colonel, until I look 
at ny list. We have such an 
enormous visiting-list, Mrs. Casey,", 
turning to that lady, who was nearly 
caught in a feeble attempt at wink- 
ing at her daughter, in order to 
beget that young person's special 
attention to the delightful conver- 
sation going on between the visi- 
tors, and who was perfectly 'over- 
whelmed with dismay and appre- 
hension lest she should have been 
perceived. " I put my engage- 



ments down alphabetically, and 
he ! he ! he ! I'm so glad to think 
thatjw* are so high on our list." 

The Bowdlers took their depar- 
ture, after having promised to dine 
in Merrion Street on the follow- 
ing day. 

" To-morrow will be Thursday, 
and we dine with the Commander 
of the Forces. Friday we dine at 
Lord Newry's." 

"Never mind, my dear," inter- 
posed the colonel, "I'll come here. 
I'm heartily sick of those fearfully 
ceremonious banquets ; besides," 
he added, " we are not asked here 
every day, and Newry or Strath- 
nairn will be glad to get us when 
they can." 

When Mickey Casey returned 
that evening from his office he 
found his wife and daughter in 
ecstasies over their newly-made ac- 
quaintances. There were no words 
in the English language sufficiently 
strong to convey a tithe of the ad- 
miration they entertained for them. 
Such elegance, such urbanity, such 
distinguished manners, such amia- 
bility ! 

" I'm going to the Twelfth ball," 
cried Matilda, " and to be intro- 
duced to Lady Fitzmaurice and the 
Dayrolles, and dear Mrs. Bowdler 
is going to give a party for me, and 
to ask Lady Howth and Lord St. 
Lawrence and Lord Powerscourt all 
to hear me play. What shall I play ? 
I must begin to practise at once. 
I'll go to Pigott's Jo-morrow for 
something new ///^newest thing 
and I'll get Mrs. Joseph Robinson 
to give me six lessons." 

u I've asked them to dinner 
here," said Mrs. Casey; "and only 
to think, Mick, I " 

" I do wish you'd say Mr. Casey, 
or at all events Michael, mamma," 
burst in Matilda. " You see how 
dear Mrs. Bowdler addressed her 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



519 



husband. You'll find it much more 
genteel." 

" Whatever you say, me darling. 
Well, Mister Casey oh ! I can't do 
that after Micking him for twenty 
years," she cried. "Well, Mick, 
what do you think, but the colonel 
gave up a dinner at the Comman- 
der of the Forces' to come to us on 
Thursday." 

" Thursday, did ye say, Mary ? " 

"Yes." 

" That's awkward ; that's to-mor- 
row, and your brother Tim Rooney 
comes up in the morning to stop 
for a month." 

Mrs. Casey glanced timidly at 
her daughter, who gave a little 
shriek. 

" It will never do, mamma. Un- 
cle Timothy is too rough, too vul- 
gar, and too careless of what he 
says and does, to meet Colonel and 
Mrs. Bowdler. It would destroy 
us at once. You must telegraph 
him, papa, not to come till Friday 
or Saturday." 

" I can't, me honey, for he started 
this morning; and may be it's in 
Tullamore he is while I'd be wir- 
ing to Inchanappa." 

Matilda clasped her hands in a 
sort of mute despair. 

" He cannot dine at this table to- 
morrow," she cried. " I'd rather 
put off the Bowdlers, first." 

" Suppose ye give him an early 
dinner and plenty of liquor, and 
send him with Fogarty to the play." 

" We will want Fogarty, papa. 
His livery opening the door looks 
very genteel." 

" It won't do to insult him. Tim 
has twenty thousand pounds, and 
you're his goddaughter, me dar- 
ling," said Casey. 

" I wonder, if we told him that 
these people were very ceremonious 
and very grand, if he'd consent to 
dine alone," suggested Matilda. 



" That would only rouse Tim, my 
pet," observed Mrs. Casey. " He'd 
just come in on purpose then, and 
if he got a sup in there would be 
no holding him." 

"What is to be done?" cried 
Matilda, starting from her chair and 
pacing the floor with long and 
hasty strides. 

At this moment a short, sharp 
double knock was heard at the 
hall-door. 

"That's Tim," groaned Mrs. 
Casey. 

"A telegraph!" roared Fogarty, 
bursting into the room as if a hu- 
man life depended upon his celerity. 

" Yer in luck, Matilda, my pet ; 
it's from your uncle. Read it." 

It ran thus : 

"From Tim Rooney, ' The Ram's Tail, 1 
Inchanappa, County Tippetary, to Mickey 
Casey, 190 Merrion Street ', Dublin : 

" I can't stir for a couple of days. I 
have to bolus a horse, and Phil Dempsey 
is after drinking a cow on me, the 
blackguard !" 

"What a relief!" cried Matilda 
Casey, throwing herself into an easy- 
chair. 

The dinner at 190 was supplied 
by Murphy, of Clare Street, the 
Gunter, the Delmonico of Dublin. 

" I don't care a farden about the 
price," said Mickey to the smiling 
caterer. " I want it done tip-top, 
and let the ongtrays be something 
quite out of the common ; for Colo- 
nel and Mrs. Colonel Bowdler are 
to dine with us, and me wife is 
very anxious to have everything 
spiffy." 

Mrs. Casey was in a fever of 
preparation the livelong day, wash- 
ing glasses, getting out wine, lay- 
ing the table, while Matilda with 
her own fair hands fitted up the 
fyergne with rare hot-house plants 
and crystallized fruits. 



520 



Mickey Casey s Christinas Dinner-Part} 1 . 



" Papa will take Mrs. Colonel 
Bowdlcr in to dinner, and Colonel 
Bowdler will take you, mamma." 

" Oli ! no, me pet ; I'd rather he'd 
take you." 

" But it's not etiquette." 

" Oh ! bother etiquette, "exclaim- 
ed Mrs. Casey, wiping her face in a 
napkin. 

"It's all very fine to say bother 
etiquette ; but if we do not show it 
now, what will Colonel and Mrs. 
Colonel Bowdler think of us ?" 

The appalling consequences at- 
tendant upon her refusal to be led 
to the banquet by the gallant colo- 
nel smote the mind of Mrs. Casey 
with such considerable force that 
she at once assented to the pro- 
posal, lauding her daughter's fore- 
sight to the very skies. 

" You're a wonderful child, dear ; 
'pon me word, you think of every- 
thing." 

" The colonel will sit here, and 
I'll put this bouquet opposite his 
chair with the menoo card; and 
Mrs. Bowdler will sit here, Fogarty," 
addressing Luke, who was standing 
by with a portion of harness about 
his neck. " Take care that Colonel 
Bowdler gets enough of champagne." 

"Be me faix, thin, Miss Matilda, 
ye'd betther lave out a dozen any- 
how, for he lapped it up yistherda 
like wather," replied that function- 
ary with a broad grin. 

" And see that Mrs. Colonel 
Bowdler's glass is always full." 

" I'm thinkin' she'll see to that 
herself wudout thrubblin'me," mut- 
tered Fogarty. 

"Ask Colonel Bowdler if he'll 
take sherry or Madeira with his 
soup." 

" To be sure he will, miss." 

" I say ask him which he'll take." 

" I'll make bould to say he'll take 
the both o" thim," grinned Fogarty, 
who, with that quick perception 



characteristic of his race, had al- 
ready " measured his man." 

" Be very particular about the 
ongtray." 

" I will, miss, an" the tay-thray 
too." 

" And above all things keep 
sober, Fogarty." 

"He's a teetotaler," chimed in 
Mrs. Casey. "Aren't ye a teeto- 
taler, Luke ?" 

There was a comical expression 
upon Luke's face as he stoutly re- 
plied : " I am, ma'am ; but /';// not a 
bigoted wan," 

At about four o'clock a note ar- 
rived from Mrs. Bowdler. 

" 'Oh ! my gracious, I hope there's 
no disappointment," cried Matilda, 
turning very pale, while dire appre- 
hension was written in the pallid 
features of her mamma. 

" I hope not ; that would be aw- 
ful, me pet." 

The note ran thus : 

"292 STEPHEN'S GREEN, 3.30 o'clock. 

" MY DEAREST Miss CASEY : Our dear 
friend Major Beamish and his charming 
daughter, nearly related to the Beamishes 
of Cork, have just written to say that 
they will dine with us to-day. I must, 
therefore, with the MOST painful reluc- 
tance, ask of you to allow us to cancel 
our engagement to you. I cannot tell 
ypu howr sincerely this grieves me, but 
the B'.'s, though very old friends, are 
people of that haute distinction that one 
cannot treat as one possibly could wish. 

"With kindest regards to your dear 
mamma, and with united kind regards 
from the colonel to all chez vows, I am, 
my dearest Miss Casey, yours affection- 
ately, JEMIMA BOWDLER." 

"This is agonizing!" cried Ma- 
tilda, ready to burst into tears. 

"Our lovely dinner!" moaned 
Mrs. Casey. 

" There is some fatality about 
us." 

" Wan pound five a head with- 
out wine, and seventeen and six 
extra for a pineapple." 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



521 



"Was ever anything so provok- 
ing? It's enough to drive one 
mad !" 

" I suppose Mick must ask in 
the apprentice to eat the dinner, 
as we've to pay for it. Such food 
for to cock up an apprentice with !" 
sighed Mrs. Casey. 

Miss Casey perused the letter 
again, and finding P. T. O. in the 
corner, turned the page and read a 
postscript as follows : 

" P. S. The colonel has just come in, 
and what do you think he has the auda- 
city to suggest ? that we ask your permis- 
sion to bring the Beamishes to your din- 
ner to-day. The colonel has taken such 
a fancy to you, dearest young friend, that 
he treats you as if he had been on inti- 
mate terms for years. He insists upon 
my writing this, but please to blame him 
for this piece of audacity. J. B." 

Miss Casey's joy knew no bounds. 
The Beamishes of Cork, one of the 
oldest families in Ireland such a 
charming addition to the party. 
She would order round the brough- 
am; and drive over to dear Mrs. 
Colonel Bo-.vdler's at once to thank 
her for such a signal mark of kind- 
ness; as for the colonel, she could 
have hugged the gallant veteran 
from sheer gratitude. 

She did not know that the Bow- . 
dlers wished to shelve the hungry 
major and his daughter in a polite 
way, and provide them with a 
sumptuous repast at the expense of 
Mickey Casey. Not she, indeed ; 
so she stepped into her carriage, 
and having driven, first, round to 
the caterer's to order reinforcements, 
proceeded to Stephen's Green, where 
she was received by Mrs. Bowdler 
in a small, dingy front room minus 
a fire, although it was late in De- 
cember and bitterly raw and cold. 

Mrs. Bowdler kissed her, and 
gushed over her, and begged to be 
excused for hurrying her away for 



the tyrant post, as she was com- 
pelled to finish a letter to her 
dearest friend, the wife of the gov- 
ernor-general of India. Miss Ca- 
sey cut short her stay, as in duty 
bound, and Mrs. Bowdler ascended 
to the drawing-room, where three 
or four visitors were assembled 
around a fairly decent fire one of 
the ladies, during the temporary ab- 
sence of the hostess, having sur- 
reptitiously stirred it up to whom 
she imparted the intelligence that 
she had just parted from the gov- 
erness to Mrs. Geoffrey Ponsonby, 
whom that aristocratic personage 
had sent over in the Ponsonby 
brougham with a request that she 
and the colonel would dine in Fitz- 
william Place upon that day, where- 
at the visitors declared that Mrs. 
Geoffrey Ponsonby was evidently 
very desirous of Mrs. Bowdler's com- 
pany, and that it was a very remarka- 
ble instance of her esteem and re- 
gard. 

At 6.30, military time, the com- 
pany arrived, and were ushered 
into Mickey Casey's study in order 
to uncloak. Major Beamish wore a 
short brown wig on the top of a very 
high, a very bald, and very shiny 
head. His eyes were small and 
water}', and his moustache, greased 
with a cheap ointment, lay like a 
solid cushion of hair beneath a 
nose with nostrils as expansive as 
those of a rocking-horse. He was 
attired in a faded suit of evening 
clothes, his shirt-bosom bearing the 
indelible imprint not only of the 
hand of Time, but of the hand of a 
reckless laundress, who hesitated 
not to use her nails upon the sierras 
of its coy and threadbare folds. 

Miss Beamish was a gushing 
maiden of twenty anything, pos- 
sessed of a profusion of frizzly fair 
hair, done in a simple and child- 
like fashion, and bound by a fillet 



522 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinncr-Party. 



of blue ribbon over a vast ex- 
panse of forehead. Her eyes were 
greenish gray, and not quite free 
from a suspicion of a squint. Her 
nose resembled that of her sire, 
and her mouth was almost con- 
cealed by her thin and bloodless 
lips. Her gaunt frame was envel- 
oped in a gauzy substance over a 
pink silk, which betrayed the re- 
cent presence of the smoothing- 
iron. Bog-oak ornaments rattled 
around her neck, at her ears, and 
upon her lean and sinewy arms. 

" Colonel an' Missis Bowhow- 
dler," roared Fogarty, as the 
guests entered the drawing-room. 
" Major an' Missis Baymish." 

" Miss, fellow, Miss," impatiently 
cried the major. 

" Miss Baymish, I mane," adding 
in an undertone : "It's not but she's 
ould enough and tough enough for 
to be a missis tin times over." 

" This is so good of you," said 
Matilda, shaking hands all round, 
'" and so good of dear Mrs. Bowdler 
to give us the pleasure of having 
you." 

" Monstrous fine gal. Right 
good quarters," observed the major 
to the colonel, glancing round the 
room at the superb mirrors, buhl 
cabinets, inlaid tables, rich hang- 
ings, and furniture upholstered in 
yellow satin. 

" You might do worse than take 
this girl. Casey's good for twenty 
thousand," suggested the colonel. 

" If Tibie was once quartered on 
the enemy I'd enlist again I would, 
sir, by George ! I'd take the shil- 
ling from that seductive and dan- 
gerous recruiting sergeant, Hymen," 
exclaimed the major, wagging one 
soiled white glove and posing him- 
self after a gratified and prolonged 
glance in the mirror. 

"Miss Matilda," whispered Fo- 
garty, who had just entered, and 



who was endeavoring to attract 
her attention. " Miss Matilda ! 
Miss Tilly!" 

"What is it, Fogarty?" asked 
Miss Casey at length ; and upon 
perceiving him, " What is it ?" 
she repeated somewhat testily, as 
Mrs. Bowdler was engaged in nar- 
rating a delightful conversation 
with the lady-lieutenant. 

" The masther's clanin' himself, 
an' he wants a lind av yer soap, 
miss, as there's not a screed in the 
house, be raisin' av the misthris 
washin' the glass an' chany wud 
the rest av it." 

The guests filed down in the or- 
der prescribed by Matilda, save 
that she fell to the arm of Major 
Beamish, who overwhelmed her 
with compliments, which only last- 
ed until the soup was served, as 
from that moment his attention be- 
came concentrated upon the deli- 
cacies placed before him, on which 
he opened so murderous and effect- 
ive a fire as almost to paralyze the 
energies of the ubiquitous and per- 
spiring Fogarty, and the solicitous 
attentions of a young lady from the 
kitchen, whose stertorous breath- 
ing made itself heard above the 
din and clatter of knives, forks, 
and conversation, in a distinct and 
somewhat alarming manner. 

" Hi ! some more soup. An- 
other cut of fish. I'll try that en- 
trfa again. Let me have that last 
entree once more. Some turkey 
and ham. Why don't you look 
alive with the champagne? A slice 
of roast beef underdone. Some 
pheasant ; ay, I'll try the wood- 
cock. Jelly, of course." And the 
gallant major kept the servants 
pretty busily engaged during the 
entire repast. 

Matilda was in a shimmer of de- 
light. Her darling hopes were be- 
ing realized at last, and society 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



523 



was budding for her. A colonel 
and his wife, a major and his 
daughter why, what higher rank 
need any person desire? How 
friendly, how gracious, and how 
charmingly they ate and drank and 
praised everything! This was life 
a life worth living; this was that 
delicious glow of which she had 
read in Lothair and other novels 
portraying fashionable existence. 

While these rosy thoughts were 
coursing through her brain a noise 
was heard in the direction of the 
hall, and a man's voice in tones of 
angry expostulation. 

" Your servants are quarrelling, 
Mrs. Casey," observed Mrs. Bowdler, 
holding up her hand to enjoin si- 
lence. 

" It's that Luke Fogarty ; he can't 
keep his fingers off the dishes, and 
the girl is " 

At this moment the individual in 
question burst into the apartment 
with an expression as if some fear- 
ful catastrophe had just happen- 
ed. 

" What is the matter, Fogarty ?" 
demanded Mrs. Casey, glancing 
at her retainer with an inquiring 
eye. 

" We're bet, ma'am," responded 
Fogarty in a half-whisper. 

" What do you mean ?" 

" We're bet up intirely. Misther 
Tim has came." 

Mrs. Casey felt as if she would 
have fainted, while Matilda bit 
her lips till the blood came ; and 
us they were still gazing at each 
other in the direstconsternation, Mr. 
Timothy Rooney entered the apart- 
ment, clad in a bulgy Ulster that 
had known fairs and markets -and 
race-courses for several previous 
years, a felt hat of an essentially 
rakish and vulgar description, his 
pants shoved into his muddy boots 
after the fashion of a Texas ranger, 



while his hands were swollen and 
the color of beet-root. 

"Company, be the hokey crik- 
ey !" he exclaimed, as he advanced 
to embrace the reluctant hostess. 
" Ah ! Mary, ye didn't expect me," 
giving her a kiss that made the glass 
drops upon the chandelier jingle 
again. 

" No, we didn't expect you, Tim," 
gasped his sister. 

" No, of course not. Shure I sent 
ye a telegraph that that villyan of a 
Phil Dempsey drank me best cow 
on me tellin' ye that " 

" Won't you take some dinner in 
your own room ?" interposed his 
niece, now the color of a peony. 

" Come over here and kiss your 
uncle, ye young rogue. Up-stairs, 
indeed ! What would I do that for ?" 

"You are not exactly dressed for 
dinner." 

" Oh ! I've a shirt on under this 
Ulster, and I'll show a bit of the 
bussom, as the man said, never 
fear. Well, Mickey, me hearty, 
how goes it? Put it there," extend- 
ing his beet-root fist to his brother- 
in-law. 

" My brother, a regular charac- 
ter, immensely wealthy ; obliged to 
put up with his ways," explained 
Mrs. Casey, while her daughter re- 
tired with Mr. Rooney, with a view 
to inducing that gentleman to re- 
frain from again putting in an ap- 
pearance. 

" A very fine, joyous son of the 
Emerald Isle," cried the colonel, 
helping himself to champagne. 

" When I was quartered at Dum 
Dum," observed the major, follow- 
ing the good example of his sen- 
ior officer, "we had just such a 
joyous, devil-may-care fellow in the 
Tenth. He resided in the bunga- 
low with me, the compound being 
in common. One morning, while en- 
joying chotohassary " the major 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party, 



:iired his Indian experiences and 
Hindoo acquirements upon all oc- 
< asions " I happened to call my 
kitmagar as well as my consu- 
m a r, who was " 

The narrative was interrupted by 
the entrance of Mr. Rooney and 
his despairing niece. Tim had 
given his face what is commonly 
known as a " Scotch lick," causing 
it to shine again. He was about 
forty years of age, rough-looking 
as a Shetland pony, and a " warm 
man " i.e., the possessor of a few 
thousands in the bank and of a 
well-to-do,, well- stocked farm. 

"I'm tidy enough now, I think; 
at all events, yer friends will be 
aisy en a traveller. Why don't ye 
introduce us, Mick ? Where are yer 
manners?" 

He was presented in due form 
by the abashed Casey, and, after 
having shaken hands with all round, 
commenced a vigorous attack upon 
a slice of tul'bot with his knife, 
plunging that useful instrument 
two or three inches into his mouth 
at every helping, until Miss Bea- 
mish, who was seated opposite, 
shuddered with apprehension. 

"Is there anything the matter 
with ye, ma'am ?" he demanded, upon 
observing a ghastly contraction of 
the muscles of her face. 

" N-nothing," she stammered. 

" Ye haven't got a pain ?" 

" Uncle, help yourself to cham- 
pagne," shrilly interposed Matilda. 

" Pshaw ! get me some whiskey, 
me pet," adding, as he winked fa- 
cetiously upon Mrs. Bowdler, "cham- 
pagne is taydious" 

" By and by, uncle," said the 
agonized girl. 

" A little drop wouldn't harm 
Miss Baymish there, Matty; she 
looks as if " 

"Take some more beef, Tim," 
put in Mrs. Casey. 



' \Vcll, just iv an skelp more, Mary. 
Room fur wan inside, as the man 
said." 

When the ladies had retired Mr. 
Rooney stretched his legs beneath 
the table and his body on the chair 
until liis chin was nearly on a level 
with the table. 

" Now, Mickey, in with the hot 
water, and let the girl put a kettle 
under the pump. Are ye fond of 
sperrits, major?" 

"Well, the fact is that spirits 
don't agree with me." 

" Oh, then, Mickey Casey has 
some that will oil the curls of yer 
wig for ye." 

" When I was quartered at Dum 
Dum," observed the major hastily, 
" there happened to be a very rol- 
licking, gay, charming fellow of our 
mess, who shared my bungalow 
with me the compound being in 
common. One morning I was en- 
gaged at chotohassary and 

" What the dickens is chotohas- 
sary ?" 

" Breakfast, Mr. Rooney." 

" I never heard it called by that 
name before. Go on, you old son 
of a gun." 

" Well, sir," continued the major 
somewhat stiffly, " I had occasion 
to call my kitmagar." 

" Kit who ?" asked Tim. 

"Kitmagar, one of my servants." 

"An Irishman, of course. " 

"No, sir, a Hindoo." 

" Well, this flogs ; are ye listening 
to this, Mickey ?" addressing Casey, 
who had drawn off the colonel. 

" Am I listening to what ?" asked 
the host rather gruffly. 

" To this old fogy here." 

".Really, Mr. Rooney " began 
the offended major. 

" Don't mind him, Major Bea- 
mish," cried Casey, "but pitch in- 
to the claret ; it's Chateau Lafitte of 
a comet vintage. At least, Red- 



Mickey Casey s Christinas Dinner-Party. 



525 



mom! told me so, and lie ought to 
know." 

" It's a very fine wine, Casey a 
soft wine, sir, in superb condition, 
and heated to perfection," observed 
the major, tossing off a glassful and 
quickly replacing the goblet. 

"Goes down like mother's milk," 
added the colonel, following suit. 

" Well, major, go on about Kit 
Megar," urged Rooney. 

" Coffee is in the dhrawin'-room, 
jintlemin," yelled Fogarty, entering. 

"Well, let it stay there, Luke." 

" Shall we join the ladies ?" asked 
Casey, with a society air. 

The colonel looked at the ma- 
jor, the major looked at the colo- 
nel, and both looked at the claret 
jugs. 

"Oh ! hang it all, no," responded 
the major ; " this wine is too good 
much too good." 

" More power to yer elbow, Bay- 
mish ! An old dog for a hard road," 
laughed Tim Rooney. " Eh, Luke, 
this is a knowing old codger." 

Mr. Fogarty, being thus appealed 
to, gave a willing assent : "Up to 
every trick in the box." 

After the gallant warriors had 
sufficiently punished Casey's cellar 
they repaired to the drawing-room. 
As they ascended the stairs they 
compared notes. 

" Did you ever meet such a queer 
customer as this brother-in-law ?" 

" Never. He's the most vulgar, 
insolent blackguard I ever encoun- 
tered." 

" He has lots of money." 

" I wonder does he play loo?'' 

" We can ask him." 

" He'd play a lively game." 

" And could be plucked like a 
green gosling." 

* To the intense relief of the Casey 
family, Mr. Rooney stoutly refused 
to adjourn to the upper regions, 
but remained in the dining-room 



smoking a short clay pipe and 
drinking whiskey-punch. 

Miss Beamish, upon hearing that 
he was enormously wealthy and 
unmarried to boot, began to build 
a castle in Spain, in which she 
figured as chatelaine, while the 
uncultured proprietor was gradual- 
ly toned down by those feminine 
influences which smooth the an- 
gles of the most rugged natures. 

" I do like this child of nature. 
Miss Casey," she gushed; "it is 
sweet to hear the wild bird in the 
full, untutored sweetness of its note. 
Shall we see your uncle again to- 
night ?" 

" I hope .not," was Matilda's 
reply. 

"Oh! why? He reminds me so 
much of an arriere pens/c, a bright 
oasis in the desert of my life, that 
I feel%s if I could but why recall 
recollections that are fraught with 
bitterness, why strike a chord which 
produces but discord ?" letting her 
pointed chin drop upon the bog- 
oak necklet, which responded by a 
dull rattle. 

Matilda played for the major- 
who marked her as the successor of 
the late Mrs. B , wagging his be- 
wigged pate to the music and ap- 
plauding with maudlin vigor. 

"Exquisite! Divine! When I was 
quartered at Dum Dum " And he 
jogged over the same road, to ar- 
rive as far as the consumar, when 
Mrs. Bowdler intimated that it was 
time to leave. 

"But ye won't go without sup- 
per ? Just a sandwich and a glass 
of wine," entreated Mrs. Casey. 

Of course they wouldn't go, and 
they didn't go until they had par- 
tnken largely of both. 

" Never was more charmed in 
my life," exclaimed the colonel, as 
he bade good-night. " Right glad 
I refused Lord Howth." 



526 



Mickey Casey s Christinas Dinner-Party. 



" I thought it was the comman- 
der-in-chief," said Mrs. Casey art- 
lessly. 

" Ahem ! of course, and so it 
was; but I have so many invites, 
you see, that I forget." 

Gentlemen who draw upon their 
imagination for their facts must 
needs possess accurate memories. 

"You'll all dine with us on 
Christmas day," said Mrs. Casey. 

" Oh ! yes, do, please," added 
Matilda. 

" Do, colonel ; do, major, like 
good fellows," urged Casey. 

" Well, really, my dear, I don't 
know what to say," exclaimed Mrs. 
Bowdler, " but I fear we cannot 
get out of going to Lady Meath's." 

" Oh ! hang Lady Meath ; you 
may go to her, I'll come here," 
laughed the colonel. 

"It's fixed," said Casey ;" and 
you, major ?" 

"I couldn't say no to such a 
good offer. When I was quartered in 
Dum Dum " 

"Is this old fogy at it still?" 
asked Tim Rooney, emerging from 
the dining-room into the hall where 
they were now all assembled. 

"We are coming to dine here on 
Christmas day, Mr. Rooney," said 
Miss Beamish, casting a languishing 
look at him. 

" Are ye ? Thin upon me con- 
science ye'll git a tail end of beef 
that will feed you for a fortnight 
wan of me own cows. And all 
Mary here has to do is see 
that the wisps of cabbage is plen- 

*:". 

With great hand-shaking, and a 

general buzz of pleased excite- 
ment, the guests took their depart- 
ure. 

" W T hat a success !" exclaimed 
Matilda, throwing herself on a 
sofa that had been wheeled out of 
the dining-room into the hall in 



order to make room, "except for " 
nodding towards Tim, who was en- 
deavoring to light a bedroom can- 
dlestick with a singularly unsteady 
hand. 

" They all took to him," whisper- 
ed Mrs. Casey. 

" I never got such a turn as when 
he came in. O mamma ! I thought 
I should have died." 

" Well, aren't the Bowdlers nice, 
agreeable people, Matilda?" de- 
manded Mr. Casey. 

" Delightful, exquisite ! Such ele- 
gant refinement. And the Beamishes 
are equally well bred." 

" That major is a downy old 
bird." 

" He is a most perfect gentle- 
man. How he did praise my play- 
ing!" 

The Caseys did not see much of 
the Bowdlers during the next few 
days, the colonel having over-eat- 
en himself, smd his wife being laid 
up with an attack of bronchitis; but 
Major Beamish and his daughter 
were most constant in their atten- 
tions, calling, staying to dinner, go- 
ing to the theatre Casey paying 
for all, cabs included coming home 
to supper, and other attentions 
equally delicate and one-sided. 
The major was very prononcc in 
his manner toward Matilda, who, 
while she accepted his homage, 
did not for a moment imagine it 
meant more than that excessive 
and chivalrous politeness which 
distinguishes the vieux militairc of 
any nationality. 

Miss Beamish lay in wait for 
Tim Rooney, and spun her web as 
deftly as the uncouth movements of 
this desirable fly permitted. She 
adroitly learned his hours for going 
out, and invariably intercepted him. 

" I'm always meeting that wan," 
he observed to his sister. " She's 
for ever in the street." 



Mickey Casey $ Christmas Dinner-Party. 



527 



" She's a very elegant lady, Tim." 

" Elegant enough, but, as tough as 
shoe-leather." 

By degrees, however, the fair 
Circe interested him, and when the 
others were engaged in listening 
with rapt attention to the major's 
oft-repeated story commencing, 
"When I was quartered at Dum 
Dum," Tibie Beamish, eyes plung- 
ed into those of the Tipperary farm- 
er, would hang upon his accents as 
he detailed his own "cuteness" in the 
purchase of a drove of heifers at the 
great fair of Ballinasloe, or how he 
palmed off a spavined pony upon 
a neighboring but less wide-awake 
grazier. 

If a woman wants to win a man, 
let her listen to him, if he be fond 
of narrating his personal experien- 
ces ; and what man does not revel 
in ego ?" 

; 'She is a. nice little girl. Mary, 
andisnot above learning a trifle. I'll 
be bail she could go into Ballinasloe 
fair next October and finger a baste 
as well as thatvillyan Phil Dempsey, 
from the knowledge I give her." 

The spell was working. 

Christmas day came, bright, crisp, 
and joyous. Snow had fallen for 
the previous few days, and was now 
hard and shining in the streets, 
rendering walking somewhat haz- 
ardous and sliding almost unavoid- 
able. 

Colonel and Mrs. Bowdler arriv- 
ed very early at Merrion Street in 
fact, just in time for luncheon and 
by a strange coincidence Major 
Beamish and his daughter dropped 
in almost at the same moment. A 
walk was proposed, but abandoned, 
and the party, broken up into two 
camps, sat chatting around the fires 
in the back and front drawing- 
rooms. 

Everybody is hungry on Christ- 



mas day. Everybody thinks of the 
boiled turkey, Limerick ham, roast 
beef, plum-pudding, and minct- 
pies. Why, then, should the guests 
of Mickey Casey prove an excep- 
tion to the rule ? 

Fogarty announced the dinner 
in a voice that savored of a joyous 
anticipation. He had had a private 
and confidential snack with the 
cook, but merely enough to make 
him wish for more. 

"That's me tail end of beef," 
exclaimed Tim Rooney, as the 
huge mound of golden fatted meat 
was uncovered, behind which the 
host sat in a state of total eclipse 
" that's me tail end, and a lovelier 
baste never nipped grass, nor 
the" 

" Will you carve this turkey, 
Tim ?" interrupted his sister. 

" To be sure I will, Mary; but ye 
must let me do it me own way," 
divesting himself of his coat ami 
proceeding to work with a will. 

" O Tim !" 

"O uncle!" 

" Let him alone," exclaimed Mrs. 
Bowdler, whose teeth were water- 
ing for a slice of the breast. " Such 
a gigantic bird requires to be 
carved sans cfremonie" 

" When I was quartered at Dum 
Dum " began the major. 

" See here, now, me ould codger, 
we've had enough of that sing- 
song." 

The major smiled grimly and 
tossed off a glass of Amontillado. 

" You are a character, Rooney," 
he said. 

Tim acquitted himself admirably, 
cutting the bird and innumerable 
jokes at the same time, many of 
them of a personal nature, such ;;s 
allusions to the gallant major's 
wig, which he called a " jasey," the 
scragginess of Mrs. Bowdler, ai.l 
the rosy tip at the extremity of t r 



528 



Mickey Casey s Christmas Dinner-Party. 



colonel's nasal appendage. How- 
ever, as everybody was in good-hu- 
mor, his facetice passed off without 
exciting ill-feeling, and all we'ht as 
merry as a marriage-bell. 

The dinner had disappeared, and 
the company sat tranquilly over 
the dessert. Tim, having resigned 
his post of honor, returned to his 
chair beside Miss Beamish, to whom 
he whispered' a good deal, to the 
intense amusement of his brother- 
in-law, who declared that Tim 
Rooney. had been hit at last. 

" There's many a true word said 
in jest, Mick, "retorted Tim. Miss 
Beamish hung down her head and 
tried to blush, and, failing in this, 
essayed a cough, which proved 
more successful. 

" Oh ! Tim is an old bachelor," 
cried Mrs. Casey, " and a most de- 
termined one." 

" It's never too late to mend, 
Mary." 

" You'll never mend, Tim." 

"Don't be too sure of that," 
ogling his fair neighbor, who again 
tried a cough, which, however, ter- 
minated in a hoarse gurgle. 

Tim Rooney was possessor of 
t.venty thousand pounds, all in the 
Bank of Ireland. His farm was 
valued at ten thousand, and his 
stock at five thousand more. He 
was Matilda's godfather, and, as a 
matter of course, all these good 
things would revert to her in time. 
It was a standing joke at Merrion 
Street that Tim should get mar- 
ried without delay. 

" Not a bit of it," he would re- 
tort. " I'll keep looking at them 
during the winter, and I'll take 
another summer out of myself." 

His joking now on the subject of 
Miss Beamish was exquisite fun to 
the family of Casey, who enjoyed it 
only as family jokes can be enjoy- 
ed. 



"You'll ask me to the wedding, 
uncle ?" said Matilda. 

" Sure you'll be a bridesmaid, 
Matty." 

"And you'll have to give me a 
new dress, a real Parisian one; 
won't he, Miss Beamish ?" 

Miss Beamish bashfully tittered. 

" When is it to be, Tim ?" asked 
Mr. Casey. 

" Next Thursday, then," he grin- 
ned. 

" That's mighty quick." 

" Delays is dangerous." 

" Right, Tim," cried Casey. " If I 
hadn't asked your sister on the 
Friday, Joe Mulligan, the tailor 
would have " 

" Papa, do see that Colonel Bow- 
dler takes his wine," almost shriek- 
ed Matilda. 

O agony ! he was about inform- 
ing their patrician guests that his 
rival had been a tailor ! 

" Well, see here, Mickey, and see 
here, Mary, and see here, Matty," 
said Mr. Rooney, rising, " I'll give 
ye all a toast." 

"Oh ! toasts are vulgar; are they 
not, Colonel Bowdler ?" interposed 
Matilda. 

" Well, ahem ! except upon spe- 
cial occasions they are not in 
vogue," replied that gallant warrior. 

" Well this is a special occasion, 
arid ayvrv special occasion " Hear ! 
hear! from the host "and wan 
that calls for particular mention ; 
an' it's health, long life, and happi- 
ness to Mrs. Tim Rooney that is 
for to be. Ye must all drink it on 
yer legs." 

Anything to humor Tim, now 
that the Bowdlers and Beamishes 
tolerated him. So with much 
laughing on the part of the gentle- 
men, and much giggling on the 
part of the ladies, the toast was 
drunk with all honor. 

" And now, Mick, Mary and 



Catholic "Circles" for Working-men in France. 



529 



Matty," cried Tim, " I may as well let 
the cat out of the bag. Me and Miss 
Tibie is to be married on Thursday." 

Had a bombshell fallen in their 
midst greater consternation could 
not have shown itself upon the 
countenances of the Casey family. 

" Yer not in airnest, Tim," said 
Casey, endeavoring to smile a sick- 
ly smile. 

" Tim must have his joke," ob- 
served Mrs. Casey, her face as 
white as a sheet. 

" Uncle is so full of fun," titter- 
ed Matilda, dire apprehension in 
every lineament. 

" It's no jest ; is it, Tibie ?" asked 
Tim of his fiancfa. 



" No, Timothy, I am proud to say 
it is not," responded Miss Beamish, 
placing her hand in the arm of her 
lover. 

" And to think I gave that Bow- 
dler a hundred pounds for to lose r.s 
forty thousand," groaned Casey, as, 
seated with his weeping wife and 
daughter, he grimly surveyed the 
wedding-cards of Mr. and Mrs. T. 
Rooney. "This comes of yer in- 
fernal tomfoolery wan tin' to get 
into society that wouldn't touch ye 
with a forty-foot pole. Serve ye 
right." 

"Serve us right indeed !" echoed 
the two ladies. 



CATHOLIC " CIRCLES " FOR WORKING-MEN IN FRANCE. 



IMMEDIATELY after the German 
invasion and the Paris Commune 
there existed already at Paris a 
Catholic " Circle " of working-men, 
distinct, if not in appearance, yet 
in reality, from the associations of 
young apprentices called by this 
name, or tinder the more appropri- 
ate one of Patronages. It was, in 
fact, a working-men's association 
a little Christian republic ; self- 
governing, by means of a council 
chosen from among its own num- 
ber, the members of which council 
were considered as irremovable. 
On its festivals the whole associa- 
tion assembled in the chapel be- 
longing to the circle ; there its 
elected functionaries were received 
into office at the foot of the altar, 
there they made frequent commu- 
nions, and thence, in accordance 
with the customs of the ancient 
confraternities of craftsmen, they 
bore in procession the banners of 
VOL. xxvi. 34 



their patron saints. There were 
formed earnest men, accustomed to 
hear the language of duty, and 
ready to make the sacrifices it de- 
mands, as those of their number 
who died in the war had testified, 
as well as the many -more who did 
not cease to incur, with patience 
and steadfastness, the persecutions 
of their scoffing companions in the 
ateliers. 

This association was the work of 
a religious of the Institute of St. 
Vincent de Paul M. Maignen, Di- 
rector of the Circle of Montpar- 
nasse. The subscriptions of the 
circle, however, which had previ- 
ously sufficed for its support, were 
unequal to the burden incurred by 
its installation, and the external 
subscriptions which had hitherto 
aided it had become few in num- 
ber and small in amount. 

M. Maignen then resolved to 
assemble in council, on the even- 



53O Catholic "Circles" for Working-men in France. 



ing of Christmas day, a group of 
capitalists, among whom were three 
deputies, three well-known writers, 
and three military officers, scarce- 
ly known to each other except by 
name ; but they were all good and 
earnest Catholics, and had, more- 
over, suffered and fought for their 
country. After uniting in prayer 
they resolved to seek, in the defini- 
tions of the church in regard to her 
relations to civil society, the germ 
of the sole social force capable of 
saving France from the consequen- 
ces of her errors; and this force, 
they decided, should be constitut- 
ed in the form of Catholic Circles 
for Working-men, similar to the one 
in which they were met together. 

They began, in the first place, 
by addressing to the Holy Father 
the expression of their resolution, 
to which he granted his benedic- 
tion. In the next they sent, by 
thousands of copies, an energetic 
appeal to all " men of good-will." 
" The revolution," they said, "has 
descended from the brains of (so- 
called) philosophers into the minds 
of the people. Are we to leave 
our misguided working-men to 
perdition a perdition in which 
they will also involve their coun- 
try or, by drawing a supernatu- 
ral strength from the heart of Je- 
sus himself a working-man 
shall we not oppose the associations 
of men who love darkness rather 
than light by the Catholic Associa- 
tion, and meet the lessons of mate- 
rialism by those of the Gospel, and 
a cold cosmopolitanism by the love 
of our country ?" 

Then the little group of men 
who signed the engagement fur- 
ther united themselves by a reli- 
gious bond the daily recital of a 
prayer, and an annual communion 
for the intentions of the work, the 
duties of which the members dis- 



tributed among themselves accord- 
ing to their respective facilities. 

Each section set to work under 
the direction of a chief: the first 
for the general promulgation of the 
work, the second for its founda- 
tions, the third for the creation of 
resources, and the fourth for the 
popular diffusion of its teaching. 
The sections worked independent- 
ly of each other, but met in com- 
mittee when there was any need 
for arranging or deciding as to any 
general plan of action. For the 
purpose of directing and control- 
ling the action of the fourth section 
the committee also appointed a 
council under the name of Je'sus- 
Ouvrier. Thus the work was con- 
stituted in its first committee that is 
to say, the first association of the 
directing class on the principle of 
its first " circle," the Catholic de- 
claration and the division of re- 
sponsibilities, and, lastly, as a sign 
and pledge of the union of the ac- 
tive members of the work, the reli- 
gious bond. 

The association thus organized 
bore marvellous fruit, and in a few 
months the committee found itself 
able to relieve the Cercle Mont- 
parnasse by creating two similar 
ones in the quarters (of evil no- 
toriety) of Belleville and Mont- 
martre, which were chosen with 
the intention of a public expiation, 
and to furnish each of the circles 
with a council of its quarter. 

This was the golden age of the 
work, which was, as it were, crown- 
ed by the high testimony it receiv- 
ed at the Congress of Directors of 
the Catholic Working-men's Asso- 
ciations assembled at Poitiers un- 
der the auspices of Mgr. Pie. It 
obtained also an exceptional e"clat 
from the remarkable eloquence of 
one of its initiators at the Cercle 
Montparnasse the intrepid Count 



Catholic "Circles" for Working-men in France. 



531 



Albert de Man as well as from 
the fact of there being several other 
military officers among them. The 
work appeared to be marked with 
a providential character, having at 
its outset the stamp of trial, fol- 
lowed by that of rapid expansion, 
and possessing another in the saint- 
ly character of its first founder; 
for, although God may be pleased 
to employ unworthy instruments to 
promote his merciful designs, it 
will always be found that, in the 
first instance, they have been de- 
posited, as in a chalice, in a holy 
and devoted soul. 

The impetus was given. The 
large towns of France answered 
the appeal by requesting the ini- 
tiators to form, within them, com- 
mittees like the Directing Com- 
mittee at Paris. The principles of 
the constitution never varied ; i.e., 
Catholic affirmation by the accep- 
tance of the religious bond, and 
the general bases of the work, divi- 
sion of labor among the members 
of the local association, and perio- 
dic communication with the secre- 
tariate general. 

This in a short time was carried 
out at Lyons, Bordeaux, Marseilles, 
Lille, and many other places of im- 
portance, numerous smaller towns, 
and even villages, asking for the 
same institution. And everywhere 
it bore fruit, the formation of a 
committee being in every instance 
followed by the opening of a 
circle. 

At the same time the Council of 
Jtsus-Ouvrier, and, following its 
example, the committees of the 
large tosvns, opened public confer- 
ences in popular quarters, where 
the people were addressed in frank 
and energetic language, inspired 
by the intimate union of religious 
and social faith, and the doctrines 
of liberalism boldly denounced, 



which substitute for the precepts 
"Love one another" and "Bear 
ye one another's burdens " that of 
" To each according to his work :> 
a maxim good enough in itself, but 
which the employer translates into 
" Each one for himself," and the 
employed into " My turn next for 
enjoyment." These declarations, 
repeated simultaneously in all parts 
of France, gave the work a remark- 
able unity of spirit, which was 
amply manifested at the first gen- 
eral assembly of its members, held 
in the spring of 1873. 

Difficulties, however, arose in 
proportion to the progress made. 
Few adherents were obtained from 
among the manufacturing chiefs, 
on whom depends the whole eco- 
nomy of the working-classes ; while 
the committees, formed of men 
little accustomed to study the laws 
of labor, did not well observe its 
divisions, and thus dwindled away. 
That of Paris, to which had been 
allotted the most complete autono- 
my, and which was more especially 
devoted to the general propagation 
of the work, gave way beneath its 
accumulated burden. 

" We then " (to quote the words 
of one of the members in his ad- 
dress to the Congress at Rheims) 
"We then turned our eyes with 
confidence to her who is the help 
of Christians, our ever Blessed 
Lady, resolving to go all together 
and invoke her aid in one of the- 
sanctuaries of France where she 
has most anciently manifested her 
powe/*, and where formerly the 
kingdom was dedicated to her by a. 
solemn vow Notre Dame de Liesse. 
The funds of the Paris committee 
were already exhausted and the 
year only half over. We collected 
ten thousand francs, and unhesi- 
tatingly devoted them to defray the 
expenses of this distant pilgrimage 



532 



Catholic "Circles" for Working-men in France. 



"The committees of the north 
were invited to join it at the head 
of the circles they had formed, and 
on the lyth of August, 1873, twen- 
ty-five hundred pilgrims arrived 
from their respective towns to form 
one procession to Notre Dame de 
Liesse. Half of the number, in 
spite of the fatigues of the way, 
there received Holy Communion, 
and we returned with renewed 
strength and confidence to our 
posts." 

We will not here give a detailed 
account of the toils and progress 
of the year which succeeded the 
pilgrimage. A brief of the Holy 
Father confirmed the constitution 
of the work by the grant of duly 
specified indulgences attached to 
it; it also received the canonical 
protection of a cardinal of the 
church. 

These favors brought a timely en- 
couragement to the promoters of the 
work ; for with its progress its trials 
also increased. Among the most 
painful were those of seeing it mis- 
understood by many persons who 
might have been expected to prove 
its warmest advocates. Some of 
these lost sight of its social char- 
acter, and preferred to seek the 
good of a few individual souls in- 
stead of helping forward a Chris- 
tian restoration of society ; while 
others, again, mistook the part to 
be taken in the committees by the 
upper classes. " Of what use," they 
asked, " is a committee, unless to 
provide resources for an ecclesias- 
tical director ?" 

This is a question which has 
been frequently asked. But it 
must be borne in mind that if the 
circle establishes among its mem- 
bers social fraternity, the director 
could not himself alone represent 
its paternity. To do this would be 
to deter other Christians of the 



upper classes from the unmistak- 
able command they have received 
to exercise this social paternity 
which they have from God in the 
very advantages of their social con- 
dition. 

For why are riches and honors 
bestowed upon the few why the 
benefits of education, of leisure, of 
cultivation of the mind unless it 
be that they are to be consecrated 
to the moral guidance and material 
assistance of the classes who are 
deprived of such advantages? In 
regard to this social paternity, as 
in regard to that which creates the 
family, the priest must be the con- 
secrator : but, in his turn, the father 
who would abandon to the priest 
the charges and responsibilities of 
the dignity which, by divine right, 
is his own, would only disappear 
from among his fellow-men to be 
confounded before the Eternal Fa- 
ther he and the two complaisant 
accomplices of his culpable abdica- 
tion. 

After establishing social fraterni- 
ty by the circles, and social pater- 
nity by the committees, it remained 
to restore the social family that 
is, to associate Christian families in 
the benefits of the work, after hav- 
ing associated in it the Jieads of 
families of various conditions. 

The family is, in fact, the first 
association by natural right, and 
therefore every constitution which 
embraces it and does not take it 
for its foundation is vitiated and 
sterile. The founders of the work 
knew this, and -were, moreover, not 
allowed to forget it by the daily re- 
proaches they received "You are 
destroying the family ; you are 
destroying the parish !" and what 
not. But how to reach the family 
so as to be of service to it instead 
of injurious was not for some time 
made clear. The Circle of Mont- 



Catliolic "Circles" for ^Working-men in France. 



533 



parnnsse, the prototype of the rest, 
bad avoided rather than faced the 
difficulty by disposing of its active 
functions in favor only of its un- 
married members. But this was 
plainly not the solution. 

The solution had, however, been 
discovered, at no great distance 
from Rheims, in the great manufac- 
turing region which has for the 
motive power of its machines the 
waters of the Suippe, for its boun- 
dary the extensive woods which 
form an oasis of verdure in the 
burning plains of Champagne, and 
for its population factory-men, who 
wander, at the bidding of the indus- 
trial fluctuations of the time, to and 
from the looms of the north, of 
Rheims, or of St. Quentin a popu- 
lation exceptionally indigent, since 
the struggle between capital and 
wages, inaugurated by liberalism, 
has become the normal condition 
of the producer and the consumer. 

In the hamlet of Val-des-Bois, in 
the centre of this district, an indus- 
trial family settled about half a 
century ago, and brought with it 
the example of every Christian 
virtue. Kind towards their work- 
men, generous even beyond their 
gains, Messieurs Harmel assem- 
bled around their vast establish- 
ment all the religious and philan- 
thropic institutions by means of 
which it has hitherto been attempt- 
ed to re-establish harmony in the 
world of labor. 

As is but too frequently the case, 
they failed in this attempt com- 
pletely. But they were not daunted, 
nor did they rest satisfied with 
their past endeavors; for, if they 
loved the working-men, they loved 
their Lord still more, and desired 
as earnestly as ever that he should 
reign in the hearts of those in their 
employ. 

Not many years ago it occurred 



to one of them to introduce among 
the population of their factories 
which did not count a single prac- 
tising Christian the principle of 
the Catholic Association. He de- 
termined to ask four men to join 
together to form the nucleus of a 
circle, and three young girls to be 
received as Enfants dc Marie and 
wear the badge. In proportion as 
the associations developed them- 
selves he multiplied them accord- 
ing to the sex, age, and condition 
of each individual ; and this with 
such success that at the present 
time the twelve hundred souls who 
people Val-des-Bois are united in a 
marvellous aggregation of pious 
confraternities, among whose mem- 
bers are made, in the course of a 
year, more than ten thousand com- 
munions, in the intention of mak- 
ing reparation to our Lord for the 
outrages he receives in the modern 
factory. 

Then, also, as earthly goods are 
often increased abundantly to those 
who seek first the kingdom of God, 
the principle of Catholic Associa- 
tion applied to the families of the 
Factory of the Sacred Heart 
(I'Usine du Sacre-Coeur) for it 
bears this name has realized there 
innumerable economical benefits, 
a fact which will not surprise those 
who know the power of this princi- 
ple. Assistance of every kind, 
clothing, food, and fuel at very rea- 
sonable prices, schools free of ex- 
pense to the parents, and occa- 
sional holidays for recreation, have 
brought with them, together with 
economy, the comfort also and 
prosperity of the families. All 
these institutions, economic, chari- 
table, and religious, are governed 
by those personally interested. 
The circle, which brings together 
the fathers of families, is, as it were, 
the centre of this machinery ; and 



534 



Catholic "Circles" for Working-men in France. 



the master, who is its motive power, 
associates with himself not only all 
the members of his own family and 
the chaplain of the factory, but 
also his principal employes, to ful- 
fil the paternal function of a pro- 
tecting and directing committee, 
and so to secure to the association 
the chances of continuance as well 
as the fruits of example. To this 
end delegates are annually ap- 
pointed, who, under the presidency 
of the master, are the guardians of 
the corporation. 

We will give the result of all 
these well-considered combinations 
in M. Harmel's own words :* 

" By the persevering endeavors 
of many years we have attained 
the end at which we aimed. Fami- 
lies are reconstituted, peace and 
love have taken the place of quar- 
rels and disorder around the do- 
mestic hearth ; the mother rejoices 
at the change wrought in her hus- 
band and children ; the father finds 
in a new life the courage and hap- 
piness of labor ; his home is delight- 
ful to him from the respect of his 
children, the ready cheerfulness of 
his wife, and the love of all. Eco- 
nomy has put an end to debts and 
created savings ; the anniversary 
festivals of the family bring back 
that affectionate gayetyand warmth 
which give repose amid the fatigues 
of life, and inspire fresh ardor to 
go bravely on the way. When we 
are in the midst of these good and 
honest faces, transformed by Chris- 
tian influences, we read there con- 
fidence and love, and thank the 
good God who has made the large 
family of Val-des-Bois." Such are 
the experiences there obtained, as 
if to complete those of the Cercle 
Montparnasse. 

* Manuel <fune Corf-oraiien Chrltienne, par 
Lfton HarmeL Tours, Marne, Paris: au Secreta- 
riat de 1'CEuvredesCercles Catholiques d'Ouvriers, 
10 Rue du Bac. 187;. 



Alone among the many excellent 
men who, after the war and Com- 
mune, arose to attempt some means 
of -healing the internal wounds of 
France, the members of the CEuvre 
Ouvriere took a solemn engagement, 
the terms of which were marked 
out with precision. Each member 
affixes his signature to an indivi- 
dual and public act of devoted ad- 
hesion to the doctrines defined by 
the Syllabus of the Errors of Mo- 
dern Society. Preserved, therefore, 
from the liberalism which in reality 
puts oppression into the hands of 
the strongest, and the socialism 
which demands it for the masses, 
they will pursue more 'efficaciously 
than either of these the vindica- 
tion of the popular interests, such 
as the due observance of the Sun- 
day and the protection of the fami- 
ly and home, and, guided by grace 
and supported by prayer, will find 
Christian solutions for all the so- 
cial questions of labor. 

The work of the Catholic circles 
has set on foot a periodical for the 
study and discussion of these ques- 
tions namely, the review which 
borrows its title from one of the 
principles of the work : L' Associa- 
tion Catholique, It is open to all 
questions, but not to all doctrines, 
for a work which, at the head of 
its statutes, invokes the definitions 
of the Catholic Church cannot ad- 
mit the errors which she has con- 
demned. It numbers among its 
contributors some of the best so- 
cial economists and solid Christian 
writers of the time, and thus pro- 
vides weapons of proof to the po- 
lemics of the Catholic press, be- 
sides furthering the great social 
effort made by the association, 
which now reckons three hundred 
circles in all parts of France. 

In conclusion, we would men- 
tion that it must be borne in mind 



The River s Voice. 



535 



that the important part in this good 
work is not the exclusive institution 
of circles, this being only the first 
and one of the different forms un- 
der which the principle is brought 
to act. That principle is the di- 
rection and protection of the work- 
ing-class'es by the higher and more 
educated, and the association of 
the interests of both, as opposed to 
the lamentable antagonism of the 
same different classes which is, in 
our times, the great difficulty of so- 
cial government and the source of 
increasing disorder and conflict. 
These associations are intended to 
react, by every possible means, 
against the erroneous social theo- 
ries so numerous and so impotent 
for good, and to bring into practice 
the only true and effectual social 
law namely, conformity to the so- 
cial duties of Catholics. Our reli- 
gion has remedies for all evils; its 
practice is supreme political and 



social wisdom, and in the alarming 
state of society among the working- 
classes there cannot be, nor ever 
will be, found any other course to 
be adopted than to return to the 
rules of Christian life. It is evi- 
dent, then, how wide a field is open- 
ed by such a desire breaking forth 
in the hearts and minds of fervent 
Christians such as M. de Mun and 
his friends, and it would be impos- 
sible to show in few words all that 
it has produced and is producing 
by the grace of God ; and although 
this work of charity has originated 
in France, and at present exists 
only in France, it may, it is to be 
hoped, give rise to similar laudable 
efforts in all countries, where also, 
among their associations of Catho- 
lic circles for the working-classes, 
shall, as in this country, be raised 
the labarum of Constantine and 
its sacred motto : " In hoc signo 
vinces." 



THE RIVER'S VOICE. 



THROUGH the long hours the day's strong life had flowed 
In sunshine, working good deeds silently, 
In clouds whose shadows set new harmony 

Among the hills God's justice' old abode. 

Through mountain hollows had the wind swept down, 
Turning green leaves to silver in the sun, 
Winning the meadows in broad waves to run 

Where still unlevelled shone their grassy crown. 

The troubled river had no vision borne 

Of gleaming hill and tree-o'ershadowed shore; 
The birches, bending their lost mirror o'er, 

Met but the driven waves' unwilling scorn ; 

Yet heaven's blue the broken waters bore, 

The breeze but strengthened as it hurried o'er. 



536 The River s Voice. 

n. 

Lightening their labor with a careless song, 
Birds o'er the meadow swept with busy wing, 
Flashed in and out the forests' sheltering, 

While clamorous council held the crickets' throng. 
Swift fell the grass beneath the mower's stroke 
To win its perfect ripeness 'ere day's end, 
When should, the harvest bearing, meekly bend 

The mild-eyed oxen 'neath the unwieldy yoke. 

Broken with sound was even the noonday rest 
Shrill-piping locust called imperiously, 
Impetuous bee proclaimed its industry, 

And blue-mailed flies pursued an endless quest ; 

Only from throbbing river rose no song 

Blending its music with life's murmuring throng. 

in. 

Day closed, and busy life lay down to rest. 
A shade that moved not held in cold embrace 
The yielding meadows and the hills' calm face, 

About whose silence burned the cloudless west. 

No leafy murmur rose from darkening wood, 
Hushed the pure gladness of the robins' trill ; 
Called from low covert some lone whip-poor-will 

Only to heighten eve's still solitude. 

The wind asleep, the quiet waters bore 

Vision of sky and mountains' deepening shade, 
And touch of bending birches, softly laid, 

As the still stream gave back their glance once more. 

Clear, through the silence, drifted rippling tones 

The patient river singing to the stones. 

IV. 

So, through the day, had flowed the river's song, 
So borne the stream its burden of strong life 
Spite of its troubled waters' windy strife 
Heaven in its breast and, as it sped along, 
Bearing its loyal service to the sea, 

Praising the stones that gave it voice to sing, 
With constant sweetness, whose soft murmuring, 
Unwearying ever in its melody, 
Was hidden in life's song that filled the day 
With chords confused of labor manifold. 
Only with evening's peaceful skies of gold 
Came the lost music of the river's lay 
Like some brave life whose sweetness but is known 
When holy silence doth world-sounds dethrone. 



Papal Elections. 



537 



PAPAL ELECTIONS. 



THE succession of the Roman 
pontiffs rests on the word of God ; 
other lines of princes may fail, their 
line shall last until the end of the 
world. Still, although there will 
ever be a series of legitimate suc- 
cessors in the Papacy, the manner 
of succession has varied, being left 
to human prudence, which accom- 
modates itself to times and places, 
yet ever under an overruling 
Providence that directs to its own 
ends no less the vices than the vir- 
tues of men. 

The election of a pope is the 
most important event that takes 
place in the world. It affects im- 
mediately several hundred millions 
of Catholics in their dearest hopes 
of religion, and it touches indirect- 
ly the interests of all other people 
on the earth besides. In the pope 
the world receives a vicar of Christ, 
a successor of St. Peter, and an in- 
fallible judge in matters of faith 
and morals. The Papacy was al- 
ways conferred regularly by way 
of election from the chief of the 
apostles, chosen by our Lord him- 
self, to Pius IX., now reigning, who 
was selected by the cardinals of 
the Holy Roman Church on the 
1 7th of June, 1846. Between these 
there have been two hundred and 
sixty popes, if we follow the num- 
ber given by the Gerarchia Catto- 
lica, which is published annually at 
Rome. 

On the 25th of July, 1876, our 
Holy Father, in a discourse to the 
students of the several colleges in 
Rome subject to the Propaganda, 
took occasion to speak quite ear- 
nestly of attempts that were being 
made in Italy to unsettle the minds 
of Catholics on papal elections by 



teaching that they were originally 
popular ones, and that the natu- 
ral right of the laity in them 
(which, it was asserted, had been 
exercised without question for 
twelve hundred years) was arbitra- 
rily and unlawfully taken away 
by Pope Alexander III. The 
errors of this new schismatical 
party may be reduced to two 
points viz., that the share which 
the people were once usually al- 
lowed to take in the election of 
sacred ministers was a right and 
not a privilege accorded by the 

visible head of the church to ages 



of faith and fervor ; and that Alex- 
ander HI. deprived the Romans of 
this right in the election of their 
chief pastor. 

Let us state, in the first place, 
that it is heretical to maintain that 
the laity have a strict i.e., inherent 
or divine right to elect their pas- 
tors, and historically false to assert 
that such a right was ever allowed 
by the rulers of the church or was 
ever exercised by the Christian 
people. The authorities to con- 
firm our statement are so numer- 
ous as to cause almost an embarras 
de richesses. Besides the great col- 
lections which are the common 
sources of ecclesiastical erudition 
the Fathers, the councils, annals, 
papal bulls ; the Bollandists, and 
particularly, as regards papal elec- 
tions, the Propylceum ad septem ta- 
mos Maji ; the works of Thomas- 
sin, Gretser, Bellarmine, and others 
we may cite here Selvaggio's An- 
tiqiiitatum Christianarum Institutio- 
nes, lib. i. par. i. cap. xxi. ; Mamac- 
chi's Or iines et Antiquitatcs Chris- 
tiana, torn. iv. lib. iv.; and Colenzio's 
Dissertation! intorno varic Controller- 



533 



Papal Elections. 



sie di Storia ed Archeologia Eccle- 
siastica, diss. vi. Del preteso dritto 
del popolo cristiano nell' clczione dei 
Sacri Ministri. 

The earliest manner of electing 
the popes was by the votes of the 
Roman clergy cast in the pre- 
sence of the faithful, who assisted 
as witnesses to the godliness of the 
subject proposed, and to testify 
that besides his personal merits he 
was an acceptable person on ac- 
count, perhaps, of his birth, his 
nationality, his appearance, or of 
some other adventitious circum- 
stance which enhanced his popu- 
larity with the great body of the 
people, and would cause him, also, 
to be looked upon with less dis- 
favo r by them who are without. * Al- 
though these elections belonged to 
the clergy and laity of the Ro- 
man Church or we should say, 
rather, to the higher clergy and the 
representatives of the laity the re- 
lative rights or parts of each class 
of electors were not apparently de- 
termined by express enactment, but 
upon grounds of common sense and 
equity ; such, for instance, as that 
Episcopus deligatur, plebe prczsente, 
qua singulorum vitam plenissime no- 
rit, et uniuscujusque actum de ejus 
conversations prospexit,\ or that 
Nullus invitis detur episcopus.\ 
Bellarmine, Sixtus Senensis,| Pe- 
trus de Marca,^[ and Thomassin ** 
prove that the people's part in 
such elections was more perfunc- 
tory than real, since testimony of a 
man's good repute could be other- 
wise obtained, and that even an ex- 
pression of preference was not al- 
ways heeded ; as we learn from the 

* i Tim. iii. 7. 
t Cyprian, Epist. Ixvii. 
% Celestine, Epist. ii. 5. 
De Clericis^ lib. i , cap. vi. 
|| Lib. v. Bibliotk. ad. not. 118. 
1 De Concord, Sacerd. et //., lib. viii. cap. ii. 
** l^et. et Nov. Ecclesice Discipl., par. ii. lib. ii. 
cap. i. 



same Pope Celestine, who wrote to 
the bishops of Apulia and Cala- 
bria: Docendus est populus, non se- 
qucndus ; nosque si nesciunt, eosquid 
liccat quidve non liceat, commoners 
non his consensum prtzbere dcbemus* 
The Roman people, then, did not 
and could not have, except by 
usurpation and abuse, a decisive 
voice in the election of the pope ; 
for such an act is by God's ordinance 
placed beyond the jurisdiction of 
the laity. 

After the martyrdom of St. Fa- 
bian, in January, A.D. 250, the Holy 
See remained vacant for a year 
and a half, until in the month of 
June, 251, Cornelius was raised to 
that post of perilous dignity under 
a tyrant like Decius, who had de- 
clared that he would sooner see a 
new pretender to the empire than 
another bishop of Rome. This 
election, although made almost 
unanimously by all orders, gave 
rise to the first schism, because 
Novatian, who headed the rigorous 
party in the affair of the Lapsi, was 
consecrated bishop and set him- 
self up as anti-pope. We have 
an invaluable testimony to the 
election of St. Cornelius from the 
pen of St. Cyprian : Factus est autcm 
Cornelius episcopus de Dei et Christi 
ejus judicio, de clericorum pane om- 
nium testimonio, de plebis, quiz tune 
adfuit, suffragio ct de sacerdotum an- 
tiquorumetbonorum virorum collegia, 
cum nemo ante se factus esset, cum 
Fabiani locus id est cum locus Petri et 
gradus cathedra sacerdotalis vaca- 
ret.\ From this passage of the 
great Bishop of Carthage we can 
obtain, says Baronius,J a tolerably 
good idea of a papal election in 
the early ages. Prayers were first 
offered up to God to obtain his as- 

* Epist. v. 

t Epist. Iv. No. vii., ed. Tauchnitz, Lipsiac. 1^38. 
t Apud W r oulers^ Hist. Eccl. Camp. , vol. i. p. 
65. 



Papal Elections. 



539 



sistance in making a choice ; the 
desire of the faithful, or rather of 
their representatives, and such tes- 
timony to the worth of the subjects 
proposed as they were prepared to 
give was heard ; the wish of the 
Roman clergy, and their willing as- 
sent to the proceedings, were in- 
quired into and sought ; and after 
maturely weighing the for and 
against, the bishops of the vicinity, 
with any others in communion 
with the Holy See who happened 
to be in Rome at the time, went 
into executive session and gave the 
decisive votes in commitiis suffra- 
gia ferebant. With regard to those 
among the laity who took part in 
these elections, we must observe 
that in the beginning, as long as 
the majority of Christians was com- 
posed of persons who had embrac- 
ed the faith from pure and un- 
worldly motives, whose aim was to 
behold the church prosperous and 
glorious, and whose charity, being 
yet warm, sought not their own 
end but that which is another's* the 
whole body of Christians who had 
reached mature years and belong- 
ed to that sex which alone had a 
voice in the church f gave their 
testimony and assent in favor of 
that one whom it was proposed to 
elect;! but tne evils of anything 
like a popular election in a great 
city were so manifest that at- 
tempts were soon made to leave 
the choice of such on the part both 
of clergy and laity but earlier in 
the case of the latter order to a 
select body or committee, a gene- 
ral suffrage being gradually super- 
seded by the votes of approval 
given by the rich only and the 
high in station., 

i Cor. x. 24. 
ti Tim. ii n. 

JCfr. Alzog's Churck Hist., Papisch & Byrne, 
vol. i. p. 396. 
See Chryscstom, De Sacerdotio, iii. 15. 



We find, perhaps, a germ of this 
even in the earliest times.* The 
Council of Laodicea (A.D. 365) 
clearly desired that the choice 
should be made by some definitely- 
organized body, and not by a mere 
mass-meeting ; St. Leo and the 
Roman council of A.D. 442, and 
again the former in Epist. Ixxxix.cvi., 
expressly mention the " Honorati,' 
the magnates at such elections, f 
The influence of the principal per- 
sonages in a city was not to be 
ignored through the clamor of 
those who too often formed only a 
mob. | A letter of Pope Cornelius 
to Fabius, Bishop of Antioch, has 
fortunately been preserved by Eu- 
sebius, which gives us the exact 
number of the Roman clergy of 
every grade, and a clue || to what 
may have been the Christian popu- 
lation of Rome, in the middle of 
the third century. According to 
these precious statistics, there were 
then belonging to the Roman cler- 
gy 46 priests, 7 deacons, 7 subdea- 
cons, 42 acolytes, 52 exorcists, rea- 
ders, and ostiarii. Fifteen hundred 
widows and orphans were provided 
for by the church, whose children 
composed an immense population 
in the capital of the empire. Hence 
we may rest assured that delibera- 
tions for the election of the Roman 
pontiff could not have been open 
to all of either clergy or laity, but 
must necessarily, in the interests of 
good order, and by reason of the 
small size of places of public meet- 
ings then possessed by the Chris- 
tians, have been confined to a se- 
lect number. 

* See Graziani, Letttra di S. Clemente Prime 
Pafa e Martire at Ctrrinti, . . . corredata di 
note criticke e filologicke, Rome, 1832. 

t Cfr. Devoti, lint. C*., lib. i. tit. v. sect. i. 
par. vii., in note. 

$ See Augustine, Epist. civ ; Synesius, Epist. 
Ixvii. ; liaronius, ad an. 304; Baluze, Muceli., ii. 

103. 

$ H. E., vi. 43- 

| Compare Tertullian, Apol., xxxvii. 



540 



Papal Elections. 



The ancient records of the Ro- 
man Church reaching back to the 
beginning of the early middle ages, 
which have been published by Ma- 
billon and Galletti, show us its 
clergy divided into three distinct 
classes viz., priests, dignitaries, 
and inferior ministers. The priests 
were the seven cardinal suburbican 
bishops and the twenty-eight car- 
dinal-priests; the dignitaries were 
the archdeacon and the seven pa- 
latine judges (prothonotaries-apos- 
tolic) ; the inferior ministers were 
the subdeacons, acolytes, and no- 
taries without office at court. The 
laity was likewise divided into three 
classes viz., citizens, soldiers, and 
commoners; />., the nobility, the 
army, and the Third Estate.* 

After the death of Pope Zozimus, 
on the 26th of December, 418, a 
majority of the clergy and people 
elected the cardinal-priest Boniface 
to succeed him. A serious dispute 
immediately arose. Eulalius, the 
archdeacon, who, as such, had been 
practically the most important per- 
sonage of the Holy See after the 
pontiff himself, and felt indignant 
at having been passed over in the 
election, held possession of the 
Lateran Palace, where he was cho- 
sen pope by a few of the clergy, to 
whose faction, however, all the 
deacons and three bishops be- 
longed, f The fear of future con- 
tests suggested to Pope Boniface 
I., who is described by Anastasius 
as unambitious, of mild character; 
and devoted to good works, to ob- 



Cfr. Novaes, whose voluminous, erudite, and 
orthodox work, the Lives of the Popes, is enriched 
with preliminary dissertations on every subject re- 
lating to the Papacy and the Cardinalate. 

t De Rossi, in his Bullettino di Archeologia 
Ci-istiana, Anna iv., Jan. -Feb., 1866, has given 
the reasons for the preponderating influence which 
the cardinal-deacons had in the affairs of the church, 
and for their frequent succession to the Papacy. 
Indeed, it became in the third and fourth centuries 
an almost invariable rule to elect the archdeacon to 
succeed to the chair of St. Peter. 



tain from the Emperor Honorius, 
in the year 420, a rescript by which 
it was decreed that, in the contin- 
gency of a double election, neither 
rival should be pope, but that the 
clergy and people should proceed 
to another choice. The decree was 
almost textually inserted in the 
canon law. * This difference be- 
tween St. Boniface and Eulaliu?, 
or rather the latter's schism, gave 
occasion to the first interference of 
the secular arm in the election of 
the Roman pontiffs. St. Hilary, 
who was elected in the year 461, 
convened a council of forty-eight 
bishops at Rome, and, among other 
provisions for filling worthily the 
Holy See, declared that no pope 
should ever appoint his oivn successor. 
Despite this recent enactment, Bo- 
niface II. in whose favor, however, 
it must be said that he sought to 
preclude, as even a greater evil 
than a passing violation of the ca- 
nons, the threatened interference 
of the Gothic king, who wanted to 
put a partisan on the papal throne 
called a council at St. Peter's in 
the year 531, and there designated 
the celebrated deacon Vigilius as 
his coadjutor with future succession. 
Subsequently, repenting his action, 
he called another council, and with 
his own hand burned the paper ap- 
pointing him. f 

Although the actual naming of 
his successor by the pope has never 
been tolerated, there have been 
several, and some very opportune, 
cases in which a pope on the point 
of death has recommended a par- 
ticular person, more or less effica- 
ciously, to the body of electors as 
one well fitted to succeed to the 
vacant throne. This was done by 



* Cap. Si duo, viii. dist. Ixxix. 

t Strange to say, Vigilius did, although not imme- 
diately succeed to the Papacy, and is reckoned the 
sixty-first in the series of pontiffs. 



Papal Elections. 



541 



St. Gregory VII., who proposed 
three candidates to the cardinals 
namely, Desiderius, Cardinal-Abbot 
of Monte Casino; Otho, Cardinal- 
Bishop of Ostia; and Hugh, Arch- 
bishop of Lyons and particularly 
recommendad the election of the 
first as the only one of the three 
who was in Italy at the time. De- 
siderius became Pope Victor III. 
Other similar, but not always 
equally successful, recommenda- 
tions were made by popes of that 
era. In order finally to put the 
strongest official check upon the 
election of his own successor by a 
pope, Pius IV., after exposing in 
consistory his age and infirmities, 
reminded the cardinals that he was 
well aware how under his prede- 
cessor, Paul IV., the question was 
mooted whether this could be done, 
and that some theologians and car- 
dinals held to the affirmative, * but 
that he would pronounce in the 
negative, and intended to issue a 
bull as in fact he did, on the 22d of 
September, 1561 f declaring that 
no pope could do so, even with the 
consent of the Sacred College. His 
immediate predecessor had reaf- 
firmed in 1558 an ordinance in- 
creasing the penalties of its viola- 
tion, which had originally been 
passed over a thousand years before 
by Pope Symmachus in a council of 
seventy-two bishops convened at 
Rome in the year 499, forbidding, 
under pain of excommunication 
and loss of all dignities, to treat of 
a successor during the lifetime of 
the reigning pontiff.J From this 
we learn how some of the best and 
greatest popes have tried to frame 
such wise provisions as might 

* See the controversy apud Ferraris, Bibliotheea, 
Art. '' Papa." 

t Const. Prudentcs Bullar. ROM., torn. iv. par. 
8. page 90. 

t Pagi, Bre-'iirium RR, fP., vol. i. p. 129, in 
v.'ta Symmachi. 



assure an untainted election to the 
Papacy; yet they could not succeed 
in every case, because even the 
most stringent laws must be well 
executed to be effective, and must 
find docile subjects to obey them. 
The Romans do certainly appear to 
have been a stiff-necked people 
during many generations; and 
while we think it ungenerous con- 
tinually to throw in their teeth the 
wretched opinion St. Bernard must 
have had of them, as we see by 
his treatise De Consideratione, ad- 
dressed to Pope Eugene III., and 
hardly fair in the annalist Mura- 
tori to transfer so much of the 
blame for factious elections from 
the German emperors to the Ro- 
man populace, the least that even 
their best friend can honestly say is 
that they might have done better* 

The election of the pope, says 
Cardinal Borgia,f was perfectly free 
during the first four centuries, 
being made by the clergy in pres- 
ence of the people; but in process 
of time, as the papal dignity in- 
creased in wealth and splendor of 
temporal authority, it often became 
an object of human ambition, of 
which secular rulers were not slow 
to avail themselves, that by iniqui- 
tous bargains and preconcerted 
plans they might bind, if possible, 
the priesthood to the empire, and 
derive the immense advantage of 
the spiritual power administered by 
a subject or a dependant. The 
first instance of direct interference 
by the state in a papal election 
for the decision in the case of Boni- 
face and the anti-pope was an arbi- 
tration invited by the church ap- 



* In a curious old ballad sung in low French by 
the Scotch in the king's service occurs the con- 
temptuous line, Les Remains bien taut villai* 
mutina.il. Francisque-Michel, Les Eccssais tn 
France. 

t Apologia del Pontificate di Benedetto X., par. 
i. cap. ii. num. 2. 



542 



Papal Elections. 



pears towards the close of the fifth 
century. Odoacer, a Gothic chief 
of the tribe of the Heruli, having 
deposed Romulus Augustulus, in 
whom the Western Empire came to 
an end, was proclaimed King of 
Italy, rejecting the imperial style of 
Caesar and Augustus for a title which 
he expressly created for himself. It 
would seem although even this is 
not beyond dispute that Pope Sim- 
plicius had requested Odoacer, in 
whom the powers of the state were 
now vested, to stand ready, in the 
common interests of order and good 
government; to repress the civil 
commotions which he foresaw were 
likely to arise after his death on the 
election of a successor. However 
this may be, the king went beyond 
a merely repressive measure, and, 
pretending that Simplicius had 
commissioned him to do so, pub- 
lished an edict on the pope's death 
in 483, forbidding the clergy and 
people of Rome to elect a successor 
without his intervention or that of 
his lieutenant, the prefect of the 
praetorium. When, therefore, the 
elective assembly met in St. Peter's 
to fill the vacant see, Basil the 
patrician came forward and claimed 
in his master's name, and by virtue 
of the dying wish and even com- 
mand of Simplicius, the right of 
regulating its acts and of confirm- 
ing the election it might make. 
This pretension was firmly repelled, 
and, disregarding the tyrant, Felix 
III. was elected on March 8, 483. 
Baronius is of opinion that Simpli- 
cius never addressed such a requi- 
sition to the king, but that the story 
of his having done so was fabricat- 
ed a few years later by the party 
of Lawrence, the anti-pope. The 
document purporting to emanate 
from Simplicius was rejected by a 
Roman council in 502 without fur- 
ther investigating its genuineness, 



than by exposing that it lacked the 
pope's signature, and was in any 
case opposed to the sacred canons 
and ipso facto null and void.* On 
November 22, 498, St. Symmachus 
was elected pope, but a minority 
set up a certain Lawrence, and both 
were consecrated on the same day. 
Civil strife was imminent, and, al- 
though the most regular mode of 
action would have been to call a 
council of the provincial bishops, 
delay was too dangerous, and the 
prompt interference of Theodoric 
was asked and submitted to. 

Although this monarch was an 
Arian, he had protected the Catho- 
lics on many occasions,- and had 
for prime minister the celebrated 
Cassiodorus, whose virtues, justice, 
and wisdom were renowned 
throughout Italy. Such considera- 
tions as these must have led the 
Roman clergy to submit a purely 
ecclesiastical matter to the court of 
Ravenna. On the advice of his 
minister the king decided that the 
one who had been first elected and 
had received the greatest number 
of votes should be recognized as the 
legitimate pope. Both conditions 
were verified in Symmachus. His 
first pontifical act was to summon a 
council in the basilica of St. Peter 
on March i, 499, to regulate more 
effectively the mode of future elec- 
tions. Seventy-two bishops, sixty- 
seven priests, and five deacons com- 
posed the council. Three canons 
were drawn up relative to this mat- 
ter. By the first it ; was ordained 
that if any clergyman be convicted 
of having given or promised his 
suffrage for the pontificate to any 
aspirant during the pope's lifetime 
he shall be deposed from his office ; 

* Odoacer, the first king of Italy in olden times, 
become so by violence and usurpation like the first 
king of Italy of modern times, and the first to inter- 
fere in a papal election, was captured in March, 493, 
and put to death by his victorious rival, Theodoric. 



Papal Elections. 



543 



by the second it was provided 
that if the pope die suddenly, and 
a unanimous election cannot be 
reached, the candidate receiving 
a majority of the votes shall be 
declared elected ; by the third im- 
munity from prosecution was pro- 
mised to accomplices who should 
reveal the intrigues of their princi- 
pals to obtain an unfair election.* 

Theodoric the Goth, having 
once been appealed to, now 
thought to take the initiative in the 
election of a successor to John I., 
whom he had left to die of starva- 
tion and neglect on his return from 
Constantinople, where he had spo- 
ken rather according to his con- 
science than in favor of the Arians, 
as the king expected. On his re- 
commendation St. Felix IV. was 
elected pope on the i2th of July, 
526. The Roman clergy and 
senate protested against this stretch 
of royal authority, although they 
had no objection to ttte nominee, 
who was simple, mild, and chari- 
table. The affair was not adjusted 
until a compromise was effected 
under Athalaric, whereby the Ro- 
man clergy by their votes, and the 
Roman people by their assent, were 
to elect the Roman pontiff, who 
would then be confirmed by the 
king as a matter of course. The 
popes were elected in this way 
until the extinction of the Gothic 
kingdom of Italy in the person of 
Teias, who was defeated and killed 
by Narses, general of Justinian, in 
the year 553. The Greek empe- 
ror, having recovered his sway in 
Italy, continued the abuse, to 
which the Romans had submitted 
only through fear of the barbarians, 
and arrogated to himself and suc- 
cessors the right of confirming the 
election of the pope. Hence, as 

*Darras, Central Hittory of the Catholic 
Church, vol. ii. p. 6f. 



Baronius remarks, arose the pru- 
dent custom at Rome of electing to 
the Papacy those members of the 
clergy who had been Apocrisiarii 
i.e., agents or nuncios of the Holy 
See at Constantinople, where it was 
presumed they had Avon the favor 
of the court and become versed in 
matters of state. Thus the right of 
confirmation was reduced in prac- 
tice to a mere formality, although 
in principle ever so wrong. In this 
way were elected Vigilius in 550, 
St. Gregory I. in 590, Sabinian in 
604, Boniface III. in 607, and 
others who were personally known 
to the Byzantine rulers. 

Avarice, or a love of money un- 
der some pretext or another, was a 
besetting sin of the Greeks, and 
from it arose a new and more de- 
grading condition imposed on papal 
elections. The imperial sanction 
was given only on payment by the 
Holy See of a tax of 3,000 golden 
solidi, a sum equal to thirteen 
thousand dollars of our money.* 
The Emperor Constantine Pogo- 
natus, at the request of the papal le- 
gates to the Fourth General Council 
of Constantinople in 681, exempted 
the Holy See from the further pay- 
ment of the tax. He was moved to 
do so by the sanctity of St. Agatho ; 
but he still retained the assumed 
right of forbidding the pope's con- 
secration until his election had been 
confirmed. A few years later, how- 
ever, he granted a constitution to 
Benedict II., his personal friend, 
and to whose guardianship he left 
his two sons, Justinian (II.) and 
Heraclius, in which he for ever 
abrogated this arbitrary law. The 
concession was ungratefully revok- 
ed by Justinian ; and Conon, who 

* Some writers, it must be said, attribute the im- 
position of this odious burden to the Gothic kings. 
Graveson, who agrees with them, says (Hist. Eccl.^ 
torn. ii. page 62) that the money was always dis- 
tributed in alms to the poor. 



544 



Papal Elections, 



was elected on October 21, 686, 
was obliged to ask the consent of 
the exarch of Ravenna, viceroy 
of the emperor, to his consecra- 
tion. This necessity generally 
occasioned a delay of from six weeks 
to two months. The exarchs of 
Ravenna, having command of the 
troops and the key to the imperial 
treasury in the west, felt themselves 
in a position to abuse authority 
and try to set up creatures of their 
own in Rome. Often did the Ro- 
man clergy and many popes protest 
against their irregular acts. The 
choice of Pelagius II., in 578, was 
not submitted to the customary 
ratification, because the Lombards 
around Rome had cut off all com- 
munication with the outer world. 

The historian Novaes says that 
although the Holy See resisted the 
interference of secular princes, yet 
the turbulent spirit of the Romans, 
often stirred up by unscrupulous 
ministers or by the sovereigns them- 
selves, obliged the popes to have 
recourse to these same princes to 
maintain order at their consecra- 
tion. Nothing, we think, better 
confirms the necessity of a tem- 
poral dominion whereby the popes 
can exclude the exercise of foreign 
influence in Rome, and themselves 
vindicate the character of good 
government for which they are 
responsible. Papal elections were 
of an absolutely peaceful nature 
only after Goths, Lombards, Greeks, 
and Germans ceased to support an 
armed force in Rome or its vici- 
nity. Guarantees are deceitful ; 
and a mere personal sovereignty of 
the pope without a territory attach- 
ed would be insufficient to assure 
the independence of the Holy See. 

A very remarkable law found its 
way into Gratian's decree, under 
the name of Pope Stephen, by 
which it is ordained that the newly- 



elected pontiff shall be consecrated 
in presence of the imperial ambas- 
sadors.* The learned are divided 
in their opinion about which pope 
passed this law. Baronius, Pape- 
broch,Natalis Alexander, and others 
attribute it to Stephen IV., elected 
in 816; Pagi inclines to Stephen 
VI., alias VII. ; Mansi to Deusde- 
dit, elected in 615 ; while some 
think that it belongs to John IX., 
because it is found among the acts 
of a council held by him in 898. 
Novaes suggests that this council 
may only have given a more solemn 
sanction to an older law. When 
Eugene II. was elected on the 51)1 
of June, 824, he concerted with 
Lothair, son of the Emperor Louis, 
who had named him King of 
Italy and his colleague in the em- 
pire, to put a stop to cabals and 
disorders among the Roman people. 
He issued a decree enjoining upon 
the Roman clergy to swear fealty 
to the Frarilcish emperors, but with 
this significant reservation: "saving 
the faith that I have pledged to the 
successor of St. Peter " Salva 
fide quam repromisi Domino Apos- 
tolico \ and not to consent to an 
uncanonical or factious election of 
a pope. The same pope also 
voluntarily offered to bind the 
Roman pontiffs to be consecrated 
in the presence of the so-called Rex 
Romanorum, if he were in the city, 
otherwise of his envoy.J Pagi thinks 
that this was done to propitiate in 
advance these growing monarchs 
of the north, and distract them 
from the idea of continuing the 
policy of the Eastern emperors, 
who, as we have seen, would not 
allow the popes to proceed to con- 



* Cap. Quid Sancta, xxviii. Dist Ixiii. 

t Paul the Deacon, apud Pagi (Breviarium, 
KR. PP., torn. i. p. 350). 

\ When a successor to the throne was elected or 
appointed during the emperor's lifetims he was 
called King of Rome or of the Romans. 



Papal Elections. 



545 



secration until their election had 
been confirmed. Eugene's act 
seems to us to have been a sub- 
tle stroke of diplomacy. While 
it flattered, by conveying the im- 
pression that the presence of Caesar 
(as he was pompously called) or of 
his legates gave splendor and mag- 
nificence to the ceremony of conse- 
cration, it disarmed the emperor by 
implying the right of the popes to 
be consecrated at their own con- 
venience; for if his meaning had 
been that the presence of the king 
or of his ambassadors were a ne- 
cessary condition to the legality of 
the act, he would have deliberately 
placed himself and successors in 
the same relation to these new 
rulers that his predecessors had 
been obliged, though under protest, 
to assume toward the emperors of 
the East which is manifestly ab- 
surd. 

Nevertheless, both the Frank 
and Saxon emperors frequently 
claimed the right to something 
more than a mere honorary part 
in papal elections, which led to 
long years of party strife and dis- 
rord between church and state. 
Leo IV., in 847, confirmed the de- 
cree of Eugene, although, on ac- 
count of the Saracens around 
Rome, he was consecrated without 
waiting for the imperial ambassa- 
dors; and the same was the case, 
but without any ostensible reason, 
with Stephen V., alias VI. This 
shows that the presence of the en- 
voys was an honorary privilege, 
which conferred no authority to go 
back of or revise the election itself, 
as Hadrian III., Stephen's imme- 
diate predecessor, expressly affirm- 
ed in a decree given by Martinus 
Polonus,* Mabillon,f and Pagi.J 

* Ad an. 884. 

* In Ord. Rom. cap. xvii. page 114. 

* A'd an. 884. 

VOL. xxvi. 35 



It is but fair to confess that this de- 
cree is not considered authentic by 
all; but what historical document 
has not been called in question by 
some hypercritic or other, espe- 
cially in Germany ? That it is not 
apocryphal is shown by the fact 
that one of Hadrian's successors 
John IX., elected in 898 annulled 
it in view of the peace ensured by 
the presence of the ambassadors,, 
and restored the earlier ordinance 
of Eugene. 

The text of the canon law, andf 
especially the passage Canonico ritu 
ct consuetudine, has been often ap- 
pealed to by Csesarists and Protes- 
tant historians, as though it demon- 
strated that a papal election not 
made according to its requirements- 
was uncanonical and invalid. In. 
the first place, Cardinal Garampi * 
remarks that Eugene's decree was a 
personal privilege Advocaticc given 
to the princes of the Carlovingian 
line ; and in the second place 
Thomassin observes upon John's 
decree f that the imperial ambassa- 
dors were not admitted to the 
election, but only to the subsequent 
consecration ; that they were there 
to overawe the turbulent ; and 
that in time their presence became 
a custom and was looked on as a 
part, so to speak, of the external 
rite of consecration. It had, be- 
sides, become so useful as a repres- 
sive measure against the enemies- 
of the Holy See that it received the 
high sanction of being countenanc- 
ed by the canon law itself. Pope 
Nicholas II., in the eleventh century, 
explained the text Quia Sancta in the 
same sense. It must be said, to the 
discredit of the Othos and the 
Henrys, that they too often slipped 
from the inch of privilege to the ell 

* De Nummo Argtnteo Benedicts ///., pag. 22 
ct scq. 

t yet. et Nov. Eccl. Disci/>I., part ii. lib. ji. cap. 
xxvi par. 6. 



546 



Papal Elections. 



of (pretended) right, and went so far 
as to interfere in a direct and abso- 
lute sense at papal elections, intrud- 
ing some less worthy subjects into 
the Papacy ; but when once these 
occupied the seat of Peter they 
were to be recognized and respected 
on the same principle that the high- 
priests were in the irregular age of 
*he Seleucidse and the Romans 
when they sat upon the chair of 
Moses. Yet even the imperial in- 
.fluence, says Kenrick,* was bene- 
.ficially exercised in several instan- 
ces, particularly those of Clement 
II. and SU Leo IX. Dr. Constan- 
tine Hofler has written a work f re- 
plete with information about the 
German popes and the physical as- 
pect, the morals, manners, and cus- 
toms of the Romans in their time. 
Charles Hemans' books (we can- 
not seriously call them works) on 
Ancient and Medieval Christianity 
mid Sacred Art in Italy, while they 
show considerable acquaintance 
with the best authorities on the 
subject, manifest a detestable ani- 
mus against the Holy See, which 
.shows their writer to be as great an 
adept in the " art of putting things" 
as the far more learned author of the 
eight-volume History of tJie City of 
Rome in the Middle Ages, Ferdinand 
Gregorovius. While the corruption 
of some popes and the depravity of 
the tenth century have been exag- 
gerated by many historians, the 
condition of the Papacy at that 
time is certainly a warning against 
the interference of secular princes 
in the elections; for, as the great 
Baronius remarks (ad an. 900), 
. Nihil penitus Ecclesice Romana con- 
.tingere potest funestius, tetrius nihil 
atque lugubrius, quam si principes se- 



* Primttcy ef the Apostolic Sef, p. 743. 
t Die Deutschen Piiptte, 2 vols., Regensburg, 
1839- 



culares in Romanornm Pontifuuin 
dectiones manus iinmittant* 

In the middle of the eleventh 
century a movement was begun to 
reform the method of conducting 
papal elections, which eventually 
limited them within the legitimate 
circle of ecclesiastical prerogatives, 
totally excluding the direct influ- 
ence of the inferior clergy and the 
aristocratic and popular element of 
the laity. Pope Nicholas II., hav- 
ing assembled a synod of one 
hundred and thirteen bishops in 
the Lateran Palace in the month 
of April, 1059, passed a law 
to the following effect : On the 
death of the pope the .cardinal-bi- 
shops shall first meet in council 
and with the utmost diligence treat 
of a successor ; they shall next take 
joint action with the cardinal- 
priests, and finally consider the 
wishes of the rest of the clergy and 
of the Roman people. If a worthy 
subject can be found among the 
members of the Roman (higher) 
clergy itself, he is to be preferred, 
otherwise a foreigner shall be elect- 
ed ; so that, however, the honor 
and regard due to our beloved son 
Henry, now king, and soon, God 
grant, to be emperor, which we 
have seen proper to show to him 
and to his successors who may 
personally apply for it, be not di- 
minished. If a proper election 
cannot take place in Rome, it may 
be held anywhere else.f In the 
year 1061 another synod was held, 
in which it was distinctly stated 
that the mere fact of election in 
the foregoing manner placed the 
elect in possession of plenary apos- 



* Sec a long and interesting note to the point 
headed, Qunli consequenze discendano dalia con- 
dizione delta china rontana al secolo jr. in Moz- 
zoni's Tavolt Cronclogiche critiche della Storia 
delta Chiesa Universale. Secolo Decimo^ Rome 
1865. 

t Cap. In Nomine Domini, i. dist. xviii. 



How Stcemvykerwold was Saved. 



547 



tolic authority ; consequently, the 
emperor's confirmation was exclud- 
ed, in the sense that without it the 
election was invalid. From this 
period, although the struggle was 
not yet over, the Papacy was com- 
pletely emancipated from any kind 
of subjection to the empire. Alex- 
ander II., successor to Nicholas, 
did not communicate his election 
to the court; and although St. Gre- 
gory VIL, glorious Hildebrand, 
did do so, it was partly from pru- 
dence in view of the excitement in 
Germany occasioned by the setting 
up of the anti-pope Cadolaus in 
resentment for his predecessor's 
neglect, and partly from his sense 
of honor, lest it should be thought 
(since he had taken a principal part 
in enacting the statute of Pope 
Nicholas) that he availed himself 
of an advantage which he had him- 
self created artfully, as suspicious- 
minded persons might think in an- 
ticipation of one day ascending the 



papal chair. He was the last pope 
who ever informed the emperor of 
his election before proceeding to 
be consecrated and enthroned. 
The great Catholic powers still 
continue to exercise a measure of 
influence in these elections, but of a 
purely advisory character, except 
in the case of those fe\v which en- 
joy the privilege of veto, or the 
esclusiva, as the Romans say. At 
the Third General Council of the 
Lateran, held in the year 1179 by 
Alexander III., a most important 
advance was made in the manner of 
holding the elections. The right of 
the cardinals to elect, without refe- 
rence to the rest of the Roman 
clergy or of the people, was affirm- 
ed, and a majority of two-thirds of 
their votes required for a valid 
election. This law was readily ap- 
proved by the bishops and members 
of the council, and incorporated in 
the canon law. where it is found 
among the decretals of Gregory IX.* 



HOW 3TEENWYKERWOLD WAS SAVED. 



A FEW straggling lights gleamed 
pale and fitfully through the stormy 
mist as the travellers came to the 
foot of the principal street in Steen- 
wykervvold on the night of Decem- 
ber 23, 1831. The wind howl- 
ed fiercely and the place was ap- 
parently deserted ; no one was 
found to brave the force of the 
sleety tempest save Floog and his 
companion, and the weather-beaten, 
broken-nosed "Admiral " that once 
did duty as figure-head for a Baltic 
trader of that name, and now stood 
sentinel at the door of Mathias 
Pilzer, the innkeeper, scowling de- 



fiance at the elements. The hail 
had drifted and accumulated in 
heaps against outlying angles of 
walls, and filled the narrow gutters. 
The progress of the travellers, 
which the storm had impeded, was 
now interrupted altogether and 
they came to a dead halt. The 
prospect was indeed discouraging, 
and the cheerless gloom of the situ- 
ation seemed to enter into the soul 
of the boy; for he made a sudden 
movement towards a street doorway 
which afforded a little shelter, and, 
pulling his woollen cap tightly down 
over his eyes, began to cry. 

* Ix., cap. Licet, 6. tie Elect. 



548 



How Stccnii'ykerivold was Saved. 



" Ferret," said his companion, 
" if you don't stop that blubbering 
I'll take you back again to-morrow 
to paint dolls at Mine. Geinmel's ; 
and see," he added somewhat more 
soothingly, as he caught the flicker 
of a candle through Pilzer's win- 
dow, " here we are at the inn." 

The Ferret, thus threatened and 
consoled, brushed away his tears with 
his sleeve, emitting a muffled grunt. 
He had commenced with a howl, 
but, as if finding the pitch too high, 
he lowered it suddenly and ended 
with a sort of guttural, fractured 
sob; then seizing the other by the 
skirt, in this order of procession 
they reached Pilzer's. 

Boreas, Euroclydon, Eolus ! 
whew, you gusty deities, your rude 
familiarities are the reverse of en- 
dearing, and we, alas! have not 
discovered the secret of propitiat- 
ing you. Yet you deepen the en- 
chanted halo encircling the ruddy 
fireside by the very force of con- 
trast, as you wail dismally at the 
door, rattle the window-pane, or 
shriek down the chimney in your 
baffled efforts to effect an entrance. 
The fatigue of their journey was 
soon forgotten by the wayfarers, 
their misery giving way to the pla- 
cid emotions caused by an antici- 
pated enjoyment of the warmth and 
well-earned repose so near at hand. 
There was much to study in 
these two, because there was so 
little to discover. The elder was 
a man whose appearance guard- 
ed with sphinx-like obstinacy the 
secret of his age. He might be 
thirty or he might be sixty no one 
could tell, and it was abundantly 
evident that few cared. He was 
tall and spare, with features which, 
if remarkable at all, were rendered 
negatively so by the absence of all 
salient characteristics, except a 
certain peculiarity about the eyes, 



one of which was brown, and the 
other, the left, a weak, watery gray. 
Such was Floog, the only name by 
which he was known; if he ever had 
any other it is buried with him. 

The other member of the due, 
of whom you have had a glimpse 
already, was nicknamed " The Fer- 
ret," by what authority I cannot 
say probably according to the 
accommodating law of contrariety, 
for there was nothing pertaining to 
him at all suggestive of that spright- 
ly little quadruped. The ideal curve 
of beauty was straightened and flat- 
tened into obtuse angles in his con- 
tour in a way to make old Apelles 
or Phidias lament, how-ever prized 
he might be as a subject for the 
pencil of Teniers. His features, 
too, were wanting in the seraphic 
beam of Fra Bartolomeo's cherubs. 
Nevertheless, in form and feature 
he was sufficiently quaint to make 
one laugh at and love him. At a 
little distance he resembled a well- 
stuffed pillow on short legs. On 
closer view a head was discernible, 
something like those sometimes 
seen on old-fashioned door-knock- 
ers. Large, puffy cheeks, half-hid- 
ing a pretty little turn-up nose, a 
pair of small but bright blue eyes, 
no eyebrows, but an enormous 
mouth, and still more enormous 
chin these belonged to a face in 
hue and texture very like putty, 
and formed altogether a combina- 
tion which, if not very beautiful, had 
this counterbalancing attraction : 
that it was somewhat out of the 
commonplace. 

But no delineation of pen or pen- 
cil could do justice to his expres- 
sion. The wells of laughter and of 
tears, assuredly close beneath the 
surface, were for ever commingling 
in his organization ; and so evenly 
were the external symptoms bal- 
anced that my grandaunt, a close 



Hoiv Stcemvykerwold was Saved. 



549 



observer, who had seen him often 
(and from whom, by the way, we 
had most of these details), could 
not for the life of her tell whether 
he was going to laugh or to cry at 
times when, in fact, he had no desire 
or intention to do either, so inde- 
terminate was his habitual and pas- 
sive expression. 

The wooden hands of Pilzer's 
Dutch clock pointed twenty-five 
minutes past eleven as these itine- 
rants entered. Mine host was half- 
sitting, half-reclining in a large, 
square, straw-bottomed chair just 
inside of and facing the glass door 
that separated the travellers' parlor 
from the front part of his premises. 
On hearing them enter he slowly 
roused from his semi-lethargy, and, 
taking his long pipe from between 
his lips, eyed the new-comers with 
a dubious glance, as if not quite 
satisfied whether they were cus- 
tomers or cut-throats, when Floog, 
drawing nearer to the glass door, 
brought him within range of that 
gentleman's mild eye and reassured 
him. Floog on his part hesitated 
with an embarrassed air, and looked 
cautiously around, as if he had got 
into a coffin-maker's shop by mis- 
take. Presently he plucked up 
courage, and beckoning The Ferret, 
who stood sniffling at the front 
door, to follow him, advanced and 
knocked timidly at the dividing 
door. 

The presiding genius of the " Ad- 
miral " was a very Machiavel of inn- 
keepers. An experience of twenty- 
seven years had taught him a system 
of deportment toward, and treat- 
ment of, his customers measured 
and regulated a sort of mental gra- 
dient, of which the gauge was the 
prospective length of his guest's 
purse; and, to do him justice, he 
seldom erred in his calculations. 
On opening the door and confront- 



ing the strangers it was plainly visi- 
ble that he was about to commence 
at zero in his welcome; for there 
was little prospect of pecuniary re- 
ward in the appearance of the man, 
his speculative gains being ren- 
dered still more doubtful by the 
additional allowance of a liberal 
discount for the appearance of the 
boy. His first word of chilly greet- 
ing removed all misgiving at one 
fell swoop; for, true to his system, 
at zero he began. 

"What do you want at this time 
o' night?" Just then he caught 
sight of a large portmanteau or 
travelling-wallet which Floog on 
entering had deposited on the floor. 
It was a favorable diversion, for no 
sooner had Pilzer espied it than his 
scale ascended two or three de- 
grees, and, without waiting for an 
answer to his first inquiry, he added 
in a slightly altered tone: "What 
can I do for you?" 

"I want lodging for me and 
my nephew," said Floog bravely, 
and with a cheerful disregard of 
syntax. " We can pay for it ; we're 
not tramps." 

"This is a lovely night, and a 
pretty hour of this lovely night to 
come looking for lodging," said the 
innkeeper, with facile irony, at 
which he was an adept ; " but if ye 
are respectable, and can prove it, 
and let me know what brings ye 
here when all honest folk is abed, 
I'll see what I can do." 

If Floog considered the last part 
of this speech with reference to its 
applicability to the maker of it, he 
kept his thoughts discreetly to him- 
self. 

" We are strangers in the town. 
We arrived from Arnhem an hour 
ago, and this is the only public- 
house we can find open. This 
boy's father, Mynheer Underdonk, 
the merchant, died in Amsterdam 



550 



Hoit' Stcemvykerwold was Saved, 



last Thursday, and they sent me a 
letter to bring the boy, and make 
no delay, as they want to make a 
settlement tor him. You see," he 
went on, growing confidential, "my 
brother left home eight years ago 
find no one knew what became of 
him. His poor forsaken wife died, 
and I took care of the orphan." 

All this he uttered rapidly, with 
few pauses, as if he had learnt it by 
heart. So he had. Alas ! poor 
Floog, thou wert no hero, not even 
morally ; but shall we, entrenched 
in a castle of virtue, thrown stones 
at thee ? No, albeit there was no 
more truth in thy story than suited 
thy own purposes. 

n. 

The Ferret was of ancient and 
noble lineage. There, that secret 
is out. Frank like himself, his his- 
torian scorns the subterfuge of 
keeping it till the end for the pur- 
pose of giving Mat to his exit, as 
they do in romances and on the 
stage. He was descended from 
Adam and Eve. This I am pre- 
pared to maintain in the face of the 
world, learned or unlearned. If 
any one wishes to be considered as 
descended from an oyster or an atom, 
we who are not so ambitious shall 
not cavil at their genealogy, but 
hope they find their protoplasms sub- 
jects of pleasant reflection. As for 
my hero, he was of a different breed. 
Whether the bars in his escutch- 
eon were dexter or sinister did not 
concern him and need not concern 
us. Heraldry, in fact, disowned 
him; therein, however, heraldry was 
no worse than his own father. In 
his tenth year he was taken from 
the Asylum for Foundlings and 
indentured to Mme. Gemmel, who 
kept a manufactory of toys at 
Arnhem. On the day of his de- 



parture he went out into the large 
paved yard surrounded by an un- 
broken line of low stone buildings 
his well-known and familiar play- 
ground, the only Arcadia lie had 
ever known. Now that he was to 
bid it and his childish companions 
a long good-by, he felt irresolute 
and the farewell stuck in his throat. 
He tried hard to be brave, while 
little Hans, his inseparable play- 
mate and bedfellow, stood regard- 
ing him with a sullen scowl, as if 
he considered it a personal insult 
to be thus suddenly left alone. 
The poor Ferret was entirely at his 
wits' end and quite dumbfounded. 
Another look at Hans broke the 
unutterable spell; for he saw stealing 
down the chubby cheek of that 
smirched cherub a big tear, mark- 
ing its course by a light streak on 
his smutty little face. Gulping 
down his sobs and forcing back 
the tears that now suffused his own 
eyes, he laid his hand lovingly on 
the shoulder of little Hans, and, 
bending down until their faces were 
on a level, he looked at him, and 
said in a voice broken by varying 
emotions and the poignant sorrow 
of childhood : 

"Don't don't cry, Hans; and 
when and when I earn a hundred 
guilders I will come back for you, 
and we will have lots of puddin' 
and new clothes, and I will buy 
you a pair of new skates." 

Then taking from his trousers' 
pocket all his treasures a large 
piece of gingerbread and a small old 
knife with a broken blade he press- 
ed his little friend to take them, forc- 
ing them into his unresisting hand, 
looked around once by way of final 
adieu, and ran through the passage 
that led to the front hall, where Mme. 
Gemmel's man was waiting for him, 
and left poor little Hans bellowing 
as if his heart would break. 



How Steenwykerwold was Saved. 



551 



The moral supervision exercised 
by Mme. Gemmel over her new 
charge was radical. Its cardinal 
principles were, first, the duty of 
obedience and gratitude, and, se- 
condly, the healthfulness of absti- 
nence. These principles she in- 
culcated by precept and enforced 
in practice by prescribing due pe- 
nalties for their infraction. The 
good lady taught her apprentice, by 
every means within her power, that 
his life-long devotion to her service 
would ill repay her for the inesti- 
mable blessing she conferred in 
removing him from the Foundling 
Asylum and taking him under her 
own fostering roof. She was mind- 
ful of his health, too, for among her 
sanitary tenets was one to the effect 
that butter is injurious to imma- 
ture years ; and this she was in the 
habit of persistently enforcing for 
the special benefit of her charge. 
Inasmuch as temptation is dan- 
gerous, especially to the weak, she 
prudently adopted preventive mea- 
sures by removing at once the 
temptation and the butter when- 
ever he appeared at meals. So 
well did he profit by her discipline 
that after six months' involuntary 
practice of it he determined to run 
away. 

In spite of these drawbacks, in 
spite of the discipline and the dry 
bread, he made famous progress at 
his trade, and felt an artist's glow 
of enthusiasm whenever he finished 
to his satisfaction the staring blue 
eyes and carmine cheeks of his 
waxen beauties. He felt, Pygma- 
lion like, able to fall in love with 
them, could he but find the Pro- 
methean secret not, indeed, that 
his thoughts ever took the classic 
shape, for he had never heard of 
the old Grecian fable ; these were 
only the vague and undefined feel- 
ings of his heart. True it is he 



had little else to love, so that his 
affections, being narrowed down to 
the dolls, increased for them in the 
ratio that it diminished for their 
owner. 

Yet there was one golden hour 
in his leaden existence the hour of 
nine post meridian, when he was 
dismissed to bed. Although be- 
hind her back he sometimes made 
faces at madame, and even went so 
far as to set up an image of her for 
the perverse pleasure of sticking 
pins in it, he forgave all at bed- 
time. After saying his prayers he 
would, with all the ecstasy of which 
his phlegmatic nature was capable, 
jump into his straw pallet, bound 
to solve an abstruse but agreeable 
problem which had engaged his 
thoughts nightly since his advent 
in his new home viz., What to do 
with his first hundred guilders when 
he had earned them? But he never 
got much beyond the disposal of a 
twentieth part of the sum. That 
much he generously devoted to lit- 
tle Hans ; but before he could de- 
cide whether the latter should have 
the skates, a miniature ship, a 
new jacket, or unlimited ginger- 
bread, or all of these good things 
together, his fancies and finances 
became entangled. Hans' face 
shone with guilders; gingerbread 
sailors, in blue jackets, floated se- 
renely away in a big ship till quite 
out of sight ; anon they trooped 
rapidly past his entranced eyes, 
now scurrying all together, now 
slowly one by one ; then there was 
a blank; again starting into view, 
the last fleeting image swept softly 
down the dim vista, fading fading 
gone ! and he was a king in hap- 
py oblivion. 

Thus time passed tardily enough 
with The Ferret, the all-absorbing 
thought of his waking hours now 
being how to escape. 



552 



How Steenwykerwold ivas Saved. 



Among the customers of Mme. 
Gemmel was one who had had several 
business transactions with her. This 
was a peripatetic showman, the de- 
light of gaping children at country 
fairs. His entertainment consisted of 
music (mangled fragments of opera 
airs on a weazened key-bugle) and 
his wonderful and versatile pup- 
pets. These latter, when they had 
become too well known as hunters 
and huzzars, he would transform 
into knights and ladies, or Chinese 
mandarins, as circumstances might 
require or fancy suggest. The 
transforming process was very sim- 
ple ; it consisted merely of supply- 
ing them with new costumes and 
coats of paint at Mme. Gem- 
mel 's. 

This worthy was none other than 
our friend Floog. Even such as 
he have their place in art. They 
are pioneers who lead to the base 
of an aesthetic temple whose dome 
is elevated in circling azure, sur- 
rounded by golden stars. 

In the practice of his art, The 
Ferret it was on whom now de- 
volved the duty of transforming 
Floog's automatons and kindred 
jobs. Whether owing to the satis- 
faction he gave, or to the occult, 
and often unaccountable, influences 
governing our sympathies and an- 
tipathies, certain it is that Floog 
had taken a violent fancy to him, 
and determined to entice him away 
at the first opportunity. The show- 
man's moral sensibilities were, as 
has already been intimated, some- 
what flexible, and yielded too rea- 
dily, I am afraid, to the exigencies 
of the situation. 

Alas ! how rigid are the inexor- 
able verities of history. I cannot 
picture him as I would not even 
as a half-formed Bayard, who, if 
not quite sans peur, might be at 
least sans reproche ; but as I had no 



hand in the formation of his charac- 
ter, I am not the apologist of his 
delinquencies. Did he recognize 
the violation of a right in his con- 
templated procedure? Oli ! no; he 
placed his motive on a high moral 
pedestal, triumphant, unassailable 
the interests of humanity, the wel- 
fare of the boy. He never told us 
how far his own welfare entered 
into his calculations. He felt, 
therefore, no scrupulous qualms as 
to the rectitude of his determina- 
tion. What puzzled him was the 
how- Of that, however, he had no 
notion. Indeed, his thoughts upon 
the subject, so far from assuming a 
practical shape, were ^rather the 
pleasant emotions experienced in 
the contemplation of a cherished 
project, leaving out of sight the 
means of its attainment, even the 
possibility of its realization. A few 
days previous to his appearance in 
Steenwykerwold he left his puppets 
to undergo the customary meta- 
morphosis at Mme. Gemmel's, his 
head full of the pleasing fancy 
of securing The Ferret as a travel- 
ling companion and assistant. Mure 
than all this, he came to regard him 
with a rapture akin to that of an 
enamored lover for the mistress of 
his heart. 

The short winter day was closing 
in misty and chill around Arnhem. 
Away in the northwest the sun 
was setting through yellowish fog 
into the gray cold sea; the restless 
wail of the wind was heard now and 
again, presaging a storm. It was 
about half-past four o'clock in the 
afternoon of this same clay that 
Floog, undaunted by the threaten- 
ing aspect of the weather, and pen- 
sively whistling his musical pro- 
gramme by way of rehearsal, arriv- 
ed at Mme. Gemmel's. He found, 
upon inquiry, that his puppets were 
not quite finished. Wouldn't he 



How Steenwykerwold was Saved. 



553 



wait? She expected them ready 
in a few minutes, and escorted 
him to the workshop in the third 
story, where they found The Ferret 
as busily engaged as his chill nose, 
his numb fingers, and the light of 
t\vo tallow candles would allow. 
His mistress, after an authoritative 
command to her subordinate to 
make haste and finish his work, 
went down-stairs, leaving Floog to 
direct the work as he might see fit. 
The Ferret was shy by nature and 
by reason of his forced seclusion, 
and though the interruption discon- 
certed him a good deal, he made 
pretence of continuing labor with- 
out appearing to notice his visitor, 
whom he had several times seen, 
but never spoken to. Floog, after 
eyeing him a moment, asked if he 
was cold. The answer, though not 
quite courtly, was sufficiently ex- 
plicit : " Yes, I am." "Why don't 
you work down-stairs in the back 
room, where 'tis warmer? " A frown 
passed over the boy's face, but he 
made no reply. " Here," said 
Floog in a kindlier tone, and, tak- 
ing from his pocket a handful of 
lozenges, offered them to The Fer- 
ret, who hesitated a moment, look- 
ing at the donor, and then took 
them with a "Thank you, sir." In 
that moment the child's heart was 
gained and a deep sympathy estab- 
lished between the two, reciprocal, 
self-satisfying. 

Floog was no more a diplomat 
than a hero ; for his next proposal 
was illogical, and would have been 
startling but for the peculiar cir- 
cumstances that rendered it accep- 
table. " Run away from Mme. 
Gemmel and come with me," he 
said. The Ferret did not hesitate 
this time, but answered eagerly : " I 
will; I hate Mme. Gemmel. Let 
us go away now." This ready ac- 
quiescence staggered Floog, who, 



not being prepared for it, was at a 
loss how to proceed. Gathering all 
his faculties to meet the require- 
ments of the crisis, he tried to de- 
vise some means of escape for The 
Ferret; but the more he pondered 
the more undecided he became, till 
at length, in sheer desperation, he 
said: "When Mme. Gemmel 
sends you home with the puppets 
to-night we will go away together." 
With that he hurried down-stairs, 
paid for the puppets, asked Mme. 
Gemmel if she would send them to 
his lodging, stating that he would 
want them for an exhibition early 
the next day. This the obliging 
lady promised to do, whereupon 
Floog took his departure, his agi- 
tated manner escaping the notice 
of the doll-maker, who, although 
she had the vision of a lynx for 
money, to everything into which 
money did not enter as a factor 
was as blind as Cupid. Less than 
two hours after The Ferret, Floog, 
and the precious puppets were all 
in the mail-coach, rattling along for 
freedom and Steenwykerwold. 

As not un frequently happens, 
mere chance afforded a better op- 
portunity than elaborately-concoct- 
ed plans would have done ; for 
when, by appointment, The Ferret 
came, Floog precipitately, and with- 
out taking time to think of their 
destination, hurried with him to the 
coach-yard, where he learned that 
the night coach going north was 
ready to start, and secured passage 
for Steenwykerwold, whither Mme. 
Gemmel would be little likely to 
follow. So they arrived in the 
manner already related, amid hail 
and storm. 

in. 

After a storm comes a calm. 
Who was it that enshrined that re- 
mark in the sanctity of a proverb? 



554 



How Stecnwykerivold was Saved. 



This is like saying that day conies 
after night a truism that most of 
us will believe without the aid of 
any proverbial philosophy. If the 
calm comes not after the storm, a 
person disposed to be critical might 
ask, When does it come ? We will 
leave the solution of this problem 
to interpreters as profound as the 
proverb-maker, and follow the for- 
tunes of Floog and The Ferret. 

Calm had succeeded storm as 
they turned their backs to the hos- 
telry of Mynheer Pilzer and bade 
adieu to its professional hospitali- 
ties. Not the listless calm of sum- 
mer skies, of dreamy fields and 
waters. Clear and cutting, the icy 
air of morning quickened the nerves 
and caused the blood in livelier 
currents to tingle in the veins, so 
that even the sluggish Ferret, winc- 
ing, heightened his pace to a sturdy 
trot to keep abreast of Floog. The 
sun was up, burnishing the chimney- 
pots and sharp gables of the tall, 
bistre-colored houses, and convert- 
ing into rare jewelry the fan- 
tastic frost-wreaths that adorned 
their eaves. Early as it was, the 
Nieu Strasse was astir with pedes- 
trians. The shop-windows, already 
unshuttered, were decorated gaily 
with ivy and palm. Unusual bustle 
and activity were everywhere dis- 
cernible; and why not? Was it 
not Christmas Eve and fete-day at 
Van der Meer Castle? 

It was a beautiful and time-hon- 
ored custom at Van der Meer Cas- 
tle on every Christmas Eve to give 
a party to all the children of the 
neighborhood. Rich and poor, lofty 
and lowly, all were welcome. But 
although all were welcome, all did 
not come. The children of the 
rich, and those who had the means 
of indulging in the season's festivi- 
ties at home, mostly kept aloof, or 
were made to keep aloof, lest they 



should incur by implication a suspi- 
cion of that fearful malady, poverty ; 
for the light of nineteenth-century 
civilization had penetrated the by- 
ways of the world, and even Steen- 
wykerwold had caught some of its 
oblique rays those that distort 
instead of illuminating, by which 
poverty is made to appear as the 
sum of all social crime. Well, then, 
the poor children for many years 
had had the party and banquet all 
to themselves, and such, in fact, was 
the desire of their present enter- 
tainer. 

The proprietor of the place and 
inheritor of its wealth and traditions 
was Leopoldine Van der Meer, who 
had been left an orphan in early 
childhood. I saw her once, and 
can never forget that sweet, serene 
face; for it is ineffaceably stamped 
on my memory. Although time 
had then added another score of 
years to her term of life, and sprin- 
kled with silver the bands of dark- 
brown hair smoothed on either 
side of her placid forehead, still it 
dealt gently with that gentle lady, 
as if the old reaper had thrown 
down his reluctant sickle, unwilling 
to mark his passage by any tell-tale 
furrow, but softly breathed on her 
in passing, lulling her into a more 
perfect repose. At the time when 
the incidents I am relating took 
place, however, she was young and 
fresh and fair beyond expression. 
Her features, clear and well defined, 
possessed the delicate tracery and 
perfection of outline that sculptors 
dream of. Her air and carriage, 
her every gesture, from the move- 
ment of her shapely head to the 
light footfall, all queenly yet unaf- 
fected, might have inspired the 
genius of Buonarotti when he 
painted his wonderful Sibyls, while 
the gentle, half-shy, liquid gray 
eyes, tenderly glancing from behind 



Hoiv Steenwykerivold ?L>CIS Saved. 



555 



their silken-fringed lids, would have 
graced the canvas of Murillo. 

These external graces were but 
tokens of a kindly heart and true 
soul a nature that imparted a 
breath of its own sweet essence to 
all who came within the charmed 
sphere of its influence. The festi- 
val looked forward to with such 
ardent longings by the young ones 
was now near at hand. It was 
Christmas Eve. 

The festival was held in the spa- 
cious banqueting-hall of the castle 
an oblong apartment, across the 
upper end of which extended a 
gallery for musicians, reached by a 
balustraded stairway on either side. 
The walls were gracefully festoon- 
ed with wreaths of bright ever- 
greens 1 gemmed with haws and scar- 
let berries. In the centre stood a 
large table, upon which was placed 
a gigantic Christmas tree, spark- 
ling with a thousand colored crys- 
tals and loaded with every variety 
of toy. 

Floog, who was acquainted with 
the annual custom, desirous of re- 
compensing his youthful friend, 
made haste to conduct him thither. 
The Ferret needed neither intro- 
duction nor credential, his age and 
appearance being sufficient pass- 
ports. He was kindly welcomed 
and ushered in. The grand hall, 
beaming with lustrous lamps and 
adorned with varied decorations, 
dazzled his eyes. The splendor, 
the music, and the toys nearly over- 
powered him, and he stood as if 
fixed in a trance, so like a brilliant 
dream did it all seem, which a stir, 
a breath might dispel. Gradually 
recovering his dazed faculties, he 
began to revel in the thrilling sense 
of its reality yes, real for himself 
as well as for the rest. 

When the children were all as- 
sembled they were marshalled into 



ranks two deep, the girls first, and 
marched twice round the room, 
singing. It was a simple Christ- 
mas carol, the refrain familiar to 
most of them ; for it had been sung 
on similar occasions by similar 
choirs from time immemorial, and 
is, I hope, sung there yet : 

" Christmas time at Van der Meer, 
Love, and mirth, and pleasant cheer ; 
Happy hearts from year to year 
iJail each coming Christmas.'' 

If any misgivings had crept into 
their minds that they were to un- 
dergo the trying ordeal of a regu- 
lar school drill for the delectation 
of patronizing visitors, their appre- 
hensions were soon quieted. With 
the song ended all the formality. 
They appreciated their freedom, 
made the most of it, and abandon- 
ed themselves to unrestrained fun 
in uproarious hilarity. The Ferret 
caught the infection. Though not 
quite recovered from the fatigue of 
the last twenty-four hours, he for- 
got it, forgot his little cares, forgot 
his solitude, forgot all in the blessed 
dissipation of the hour. Unfortu- 
nately, he outdid himself. 

Floog had meanwhile betaken 
himself to the nearest tavern, in- 
tending to come for his little friend 
when the festivities were over. 
He did not retire to bed, but paid 
for a lodging on a settee in the tap- 
room. In a few minutes he was 
sound asleep. How long he slept 
he did not know, but some time 
during the night he awoke with a. 
sudden start. A bell was pealing 
wildly in the still night air. A 
man partially dressed, his heavy 
shoes in his hand, dashed past and 
out into the street. Immediately 
there was commotion, and the sound 
of voices was heard in loud and ea- 
ger discussion. "In another moment 
the tap-room was full of men. 
Floog hurriedly arose, and, joining 



556 



How Stecnivykcrwold was Saved. 



the excited group, they all went 
out. When they came to the tri- 
angular opening formed by the 
confluence of three streets The 
Square, as it was rather inappro- 
priately called they were met by a 
crowd of men and women as anx- 
ious and excited as themselves, 
and all evidently at a loss what 
to do or whither to proceed. 

Louder and more clamorous the 
bell rang out its portentous notes; 
fitfully and frantically it rang in 
the ears of the now aroused popu- 
lace. All at once it would stop 
suddenly, but for a moment only, 
as if pausing to take breath and 
gather fresh strength ; then it would 
recommence wilder than before, 
producing an effect weird and ter- 
rifying. It was the old alarm-bell 
at Van der Meer Castle. 

This bell was very ancient, and 
it hung in a tower behind the cas- 
tle, connected with it by an arched 
causeway. It was placed there in 
feudal times to call together the 
vassals and adherents of the place 
in cases of raid or invasion, if for 
no worthier purpose ; and in later 
times a superstition attached to it 
that its reawakening portended 
some calamity, the nature of which, 
not being specifically stated, was 
left to conjecture, and gave scope 
to the prognostications of the wise- 
acres. Yes, these would say, 
with the self-complacent air of ora- 
cles, when the bell rings it will 
ring the death-knell of our liber- 
ties, and Holland will pass to an 
alien race. This was the interpre- 
tation generally received and ac- 
credited by those who had faith in 
the tradition a goodly number, 
which included almost all the old 
inhabitants. On the other hand, 
many among the junior members 
of the community ridiculed the 
whole thing, scoffed at the prophet- 



ic legend as an old woman's tale, 
and, spurred perhaps by what they 
termed the foolish credulity of the 
elders, who professed an abiding 
belief in it, they rushed to the op- 
posite extreme, even to the extent 
of doubting, at least of denying, 
the very existence of the bell. At 
any rate it had long ago fallen into 
disuse, and those who heard it now 
heard it for the first time. 

In the market square this old 
civic story was anxiously revived 
and earnestly discussed, while the 
ominous import of the ringing was 
speculated upon with troublous 
forebodings, even by the sceptical, 
and its inharmonious clangor add- 
ed tenfold significance to its his- 
tory. In the midst of the tumult 
the crowd swayed with a sudden 
movement, and presently began to 
waver and divide, as a stalwart 
form appeared, forcing a passage, 
and shouting with a persuasive 
vigor heard above the din : " To 
the dike! to the dike!" It was 
Peter Artveldt, the ship-carpenter. 
His words and example had the 
effect of an electric shock on the 
panic-stricken multitude. Shaking 
off their stupor, they followed him 
through the town, echoing his cry, 
"To the dike! to the dike!" and, 
gathering strength as they proceed- 
ed, soon reached the dike, half a 
mile beyond the northern limit of 
the town. 

Imagination had diverted their 
fears, not allayed them ; and, sin- 
gular as it seems, no one thought 
of the dike until the voice of the 
ship-carpenter like a thunder-clap 
sounded a warning of the real dan- 
ger. Up to that moment the dike 
was to them, as it had been for 
generations, the firm and effective 
bulwark of the land. 

Their worst fears were realized. 
The water was flowing through sev- 



How Stecnivykcrii'old was Saved. 



557 



eral fissures in the dike, noiselessly 
stealing in upon the land, until it 
had flooded the ground up to the 
cemetery palings. This was not all 
nor the worst. A hasty survey dis- 
closed the appalling fact that at 
one point the force of the storm 
had sapped the foundation ; some of 
its stones, having been displaced, 
were lying loose in the soft sand and 
ooze. An instant revealed their 
peril and the imminence of the 
danger ; had they been but half an 
hour later nothing could have 
averted their fate Steenwykerwold 
would have been as effectually and 
irretrievably swallowed up by water 
as old Herculaneum was by fire, 
and sadder the story of its chroni- 
clers. 

However, it was not a time for 
reflection, but for action. With 
such implements as in their haste 
they had been able to provide 
themselves after the real nature of 
the danger became known, they set 
to work with a will, aided by the 
invigorating example of Artveldt, 
who with heroic energy put forth 
his strenuous powers and directed 
all their movements. In less than 
ten minutes they had felled four or 
five of the cemetery trees ; breaking 
through the gate, they dragged these 
to the dike, making an effective 
temporary barrier to the advance 
of the cruel waters. Yet to guard 
against a possible recurrence of 
danger from a renewal of the storm 
or any untoward accident, until the 
damage should be permanently re- 
paired, an organized force was ap- 
pointed, divided into squads of 
eight, whose duty it was to watch 
constantly, relieving each other 
every six hours. These precau- 
tions completed, the multitude, in 
the delirious joy of their deliver- 
ance, grew wild with delight and 
manifested symptoms of frantic 



disorder. Here again the ascend- 
ent spirit of Artveldt made itself 
felt. "Brothers," said he, "we 
have finished a brave night's work ; 
let us not undo it by making fools 
of ourselves. No ; we will go 
peaceably to our homes, ;md a 
grateful country will say: 'They 
were as orderly in the hour of tri- 
umph as they were brave in the 
hour of peril.' Posterity will keep 
sacred your memory and look back 
with grateful eyes to this day, and 
every future Christmas will be hap- 
pier for your deed." 

After this speech they were 
ready and willing to obey him. He 
now ranged the men in line of march, 
requesting them not to break rank 
until they reached Van der Meer 
Castle, where it was agreed they 
should disperse ; then, with a long, 
full cheer, they returned triumph- 
antly through the town, and Steen- 
ivykerwold was saved. 

After having been hospitably en- 
tertained at the castle, and thank- 
ing Lady Leopoldine for the timely 
warning whereby the threatened 
disaster was averted, they gave a 
parting salute three hearty cheers 
and then, as agreed upon, quietly 
dispersed. 

At that very time there was com- 
motion within the castle. The 
eventful night was yet to be made 
memorable by another incident, as 
yet known only to its inmates, hav- 
ing been wisely withheld from the 
knowledge of the men who stem- 
med the fateful waters. 

The ringing had some time ceas- 
ed. Now, every one supposed that 
Lady Leopoldine had caused the 
bell to be rung, knowing or divin- 
ing their danger; but such, in fact, 
was not the case. She no more 
than the rest mistrusted the safety 
of the dike. You may imagiiif, 
then, her terror when first she heard 



553 



How Stct)iicykcrii<old ivas Saved. 



the appalling sound. Like a sum- 
mons from the grave it smote her 
ear. Was it a summons from the 
grave ? At first she could scarce 
refrain from thinking that it was, 
so strange and startling on the 
pulseless air of night fell the unfa- 
miliar peal. Again she believed 
herself the victim of some wild hal- 
lucination. She rose at once and 
summoned the servants. 

It was no illusion they had all 
heard it ; they could not choose 
but hear, and it was while listen- 
ing in agonizing suspense that the 
summons of their mistress reached 
them. It was obeyed with more 
than customary alacrity. They all 
rushed pellmell into the hall. Lady 
Leopoldine instantly dismissed her 
own fears and allayed theirs, and 
caused a vigorous search to be 
made. 

The astonishment and alarm of 
the household will perhaps be more 
readily understood when it is re- 
membered that the bell was entire- 
ly inaccessible. The tower was 
about sixty-five feet high, of some- 
what rude construction. Walls of 
large, rough stones to an altitude 
of sixteen feet formed the base. 
Inside of these walls heavy oaken 
buttresses were placed, which had 
the appearance of strengthening 
them, but which in reality formed 
the support of the bell suspended 
above and hidden in a curious 
network of trellised beams. No 
appliances for reaching it were 
visible ; and how it got there was 
a mystery. Indeed, the ringing of 
the bell on that night, as well as 
the bell itself and all its appurten- 
ances, were regarded as very mys- 
terious ; and we may well excuse 
the simple-minded people, not yet 
imbued with modern materialism, 
if they conceived the whole affair to 
be the work of superhuman agency. 



Xo one had entered the cause- 
way from the house, it was evident ; 
no trace of disturbance could any- 
where be discovered. Two of the 
men, the coachman and his assist- 
ant, braver than the rest, volun- 
teered to go into the passage and 
thoroughly examine the premises. 
Providing themselves with lanterns, 
they went round to the old door in 
the rear of the tower. One glance 
convinced them that no one had 
recently gone in that way. The 
bolts were firm in the sockets, 
wedged tight by the rust of a cen- 
tury. With much exertion they 
were forced back, the door was 
unfastened, and the men entered- 
The damp, chill air caused them to 
shudder, and their first impulse was 
to beat a precipitate retreat. Paus- 
ing in doubtful perplexity of their 
next movement, afraid to advance, 
and ashamed to go back, they stood 
near the door, which they had con- 
siderately left ajar, fearing, yet hop- 
ing for some perceptible excuse to 
run. None came. The silence 
was broken only by the flutter of 
some startled bats aloft ; the dingy 
walls alone met their scrutinizing 
gaze as they peered cautiously 
around, the glare of the lanterns 
shooting sharply-defined rays of 
yellowish gray light through the 
humid gloom. The first feeling of 
nervous trepidation past, reason 
asserted itself; they grew accus- 
tomed to the gloom and began to 
explore the passage deliberate- 
ly and carefully. After having 
traversed it the entire length with- 
out making any discovery, they 
were about to retrace their steps 
when their attention was arrested 
by some fragments of mortar or 
plaster lying loosely on the flagged 
pavement about four feet from the 
further end next the house. These 
had the appearance of having re- 



How Stccmvvkcru'old was Saved. 



cently fallen from the wall. Here 
was a probable clue. With renew- 
ed interest they now proceeded to 
examine the wall, and were reward- 
ed by finding a small door, level 
with its surface and nearly conceal- 
ed by a thin coating of plaster. 
On forcing it open they were sur- 
prised to find another passage, par- 
allel with the main one, but so nar- 
row as to admit of entrance only 
by single file. Another door, as se- 
cret as the first, opened from this 
narrow passage into a sort of re- 
cess behind the stairway, which, it 
will be remembered, led to the gal- 
lery in the banqueting-hall. The 
recess was known to the occupants 
of the castle, but never used by 
^hem. Its original purpose may 
have been a subject of momentary 
conjecture, but they did not trou- 
ble themselves much about it, be- 
ing content, if they thought of it at 
all, to consider it an eccentricity 
of some former proprietor. Least 
of all did they dream of its com- 
munication with a hidden passage 
to the bell-tower. Following the 
passage back to the other end, their 
surprise was greatly augmented by 
the further discovery that, instead 
of opening into the main enclosure, 



like the large passage, as they na- 
turally expected, it terminated in a 
sort of square sentry-box, enclosed 
at all sides except thetop in reali- 
ty a large wooden shaft. It was 
no other than what appeared from 
without to be a combination of four 
solid beams. In it hung the bell- 
rope. At the bottom lay the bell- 
ringer, The Ferret, exhausted and 
insensible. 

They carried him out into the 
hall. The mistress of the mansion 
sent at once for a physician, and, 
gently lifting his head, with deli- 
cate hand she chafed the poor pale 
brow and applied restoratives. 
Soon the doctor came, but his ser- 
vices were not needed. 

Another morning dawned. Again 
the slanting daybeams pierced the 
misty levels. The vapor of earth, 
as it felt the ray, was dissolved into 
purest ether, and, restoring to earth 
its grosser particles, ascended calm- 
ly to its native sky. Thus, too, 
The Ferret's Christmas carol, begun 
on earth, was finished in heaven, 
and another voice on that happy 
Christmas morning was added to 
the celestial choir singing, " Glory 
to God on high, and on earth peace 
to men of good will." 



5 Co 



The Year of Our Lord iS//. 



THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 1877. 



THERE is little beyond the Russo- 
Turkish war that will mark this year 
apart from others in the annals of uni- 
versal history. Questions, national and 
international, that we have touched upon 
time and again come up now unsettled 
as ever. It is tedious and profitless to 
go over well-trodden ground ; to repeat 
reflections that have already been repeat- 
ed ; and to attempt a solution of prob- 
lems, social, political, and religious, that 
are still working themselves out. We 
purpose, therefore, in the present review 
to follow up a few of the broad lines that 
have marked the year and given to it 
something of an individual and special 
character. If these are very few, perhaps 
it is the better for mankind. The more 
nations are occupied with their own af- 
fairs the better it is for the world at 
large. 

To begin with ourselves. We had a 
very vexed and very delicate problem to 
solve no less than to determine, on 
the turn of a single disputed electoral 
vote, who was to be our President. The 
circumstances that created this difficulty 
were dealt with in our last year's review ; 
they are in the recollection of our readers. 
On the casting of a single disputed vote 
lay the election to the Presidency of the 
United States. Such a contingency, ac- 
companied as it was by peculiarly aggra- 
vating circumstances, had never before 
arisen in the history of this country. The 
wisest were in doubt what to do ; the coun- 
try was in a fever of expectation. The 
republic was on trial in itself and before 
the world. The written lines of the Con- 
stitution were found inadequate to 
meet so unlooked-for and peculiar a 
matter. It was not the mere fact of one 
disputed vote that was to turn the scale. 
There were many disputed votes, which 
rested with States whose administration 
was not above suspicion. Only in the 
event of all of these turning in favor of 
one of the candidates could the Presiden- 
cy be awarded to him. Any one of them 
going to his opponent who, as far as the 
votes of the people went, had a decid- 
ed and unmistakable majority would 
have settled the question at once. 
There was room and occasion for grave 



doubt on both sides. By mutual agree- 
ment of the representatives of the two 
parties that divide the country, a nation- 
al court of arbitration, supposed to be, 
and doubtless with reason, above sus- 
picion, was appointed to inquire into 
and decide upon the electoral returns. 
The court was chosen from both par- 
ties. It so turned out that a preponde- 
rating vote lay with one party. It might 
have rested with the other. It was a 
matter of accident ; and it is to be hoped 
that, if not exactly a matter of accident, 
it was a matter of honesty that divided 
the court on each moot point into strict 
party lines, with, as final result, an award 
of the Presidency to Mr. Hayes, the Re- 
publican candidate. There the mattft" 
rested. The court had discharged il- 
self of the very delicate task imposed 
upon it, and there was nothing left the 
country and the rival parties to do but 
accept a decision of its own creation, 
which might have gone the other way, 
but did not. It was the shortest way, 
perhaps, out of an immediate and p:e ;s- 
ing difficulty. It was none the less a 
strain on the Constitution and on the 
conscience of the people a strain that 
could not well be stood a^ain. The re- 
public cannot afford to hand this settle- 
ment down to posterity as a lawful and 
satisfactory precedent. The right way 
in which to regard it is as one of those 
unforeseen accidents that occur in the 
history of all peoples, that adjust them- 
selves somehow for the time being, and 
that stand as a warning rather than a 
guide to future conduct. 

The country honestly and wisely ac- 
cepted the decision. Of course ihere 
were sore feelings ; there would have 
been sore feelings in any case ; yet men 
breathed freely when what was a real, a 
painful, and a dangerous crisis was 
over. There are men sensible and pa- 
triotic men : too, as well as a vast multi- 
tude neither patriotic nor sensible who 
are ever ready to despair of the republic 
when events do not turn out exactly as 
they had predicted or desired. Let them 
take comfort. The republic is not yet 
dead ; and it seems to us very far from 
dying. In other days, and perhaps in 



TJic Year of Our Lord 1877. 



561 



other peoples to-day who enjoy the privi- 
lege of a monarchical government, such 
a question would have resulted in a war 
of dynasties. The dynasty of Mr. Hayes 
or of Mr. Tildcn troubles us but little. 
The disaffected ma}' bide their time. They 
still hold their votes, and it is for them 
to see that they are not robbed of them. 
Mr. Hayes has taken to heart the lesson 
of the last elections, which pronounced 
not so much against a party as against 
the administration of his predecessor. 
The present administration has thus far, 
in the main, contrasted well with that 
which went before it. The President 
seems to be a man of right impulses 
and feeling and possessed of a good 
judgment. He has discarded many 
embarrassing associates and evil allies 
political parasites who battened on the 
life-blood of the state. If his moral 
vision is only broad enough to see that 
he is the President not of a party, but of 
a great people, with varied wants and 
some sore troubles and internal difficul- 
ties that need very cautious and delicate 
adjusting; if he honestly and persist- 
ently aims at doing right, the people, re- 
gardless of party, will be with him and 
support him. Thus far he has manifest- 
ly striven to do well. His beginning 
has been good. Trials will doubtless 
come. He has already shown himself 
too good for many influential men in the 
party that voted for him. If he only con- 
tinues to disregard and brave all petti- 
ness, he can safely turn from partisans 
to the people, and the people know how 
to judge and value honesty a quality 
that it was coming to be thought had 
almost died out of politics. 

There have been some indications of 
a revival of business ; but such a revival, 
to be sure and general, must be slow. 
Our people have not yet recovered from 
the demoralizing effect of the rush 
of good-fortune which they so foolishly 
squandered. They look for miracles in 
finance and business,for a revival in aday. 
This cannot well come. The way for 
general prosperity, and that even of 
very moderate dimensions, must be pav- 
ed by a return to general honesty in 
commercial dealings and in private life. 
Public honesty can alone restore public 
confidence, and public honesty is a mat- 
ter of growth, education, and the appre- 
hension and following of right principles. 
It can only come from faith in God and 
;i sense of personal responsibility to 
VOL. XXVI. 36 



God, as true faith in man can only come 
from true faith in God. The religion 
that constantly impresses this upon 
men's minds is the religion that will pre- 
serve and save from all dangers not this 
republic only but every government. 
These feelings, penetrating the hearts of 
the people, will best solve the vexed ques- 
tions between labor and capital, between 
black and white and red and yellow. 
For a right sense of personal responsi- 
bility to God necessarily involves a right 
sense of personal responsibility to one 
another, of the duties we owe to society, 
of the duties we owe to the state. This 
country of all others is open to the free 
workings of religion. Indeed, it is as 
open to the devil as to God ; and if the 
devil, according to some, seems to get 
the best of the battle, it can only be be- 
cause "the children of darkness are 
wiser in their generation than the chil- 
dren of light"; because Christians are 
not really and wholly true to Christ, and 
by their lives do not show forth the faith 
that is in them. 

THE RUSSO-TURKISH WAR. 

In Europe the event of the year that 
calls for most attention is the war be- 
tween Russia and Turkey. On this sub- 
ject we can say little or nothing proba- 
bly that will not have already suggested 
itself to others. All have watched the 
progress of the painful struggle from day 
to day; have formed their own conclusions 
as to the manner in which it has been 
carried on on both sides ; as to the ne- 
cessity of such a war having taken place 
at all ; as to its probable results to both 
parties and to Europe at large. 

At the time of our last review war be- 
tween Russia and Turkey was thought 
imminent. We then wrote and we may 
be pardoned for quoting our own words, 
as some of them, at least, seem to us to 
apply equally well to the present situa- 
tion as follows : 

" If we may hazard an opinion, we 
believe that there will be no war, at 
least this winter. As for the alarm at 
the anticipated occupation of Constanti- 
nople by Russia, while if the Russian 
Empire be not dissolved before the close 
of the present century by one of the 
most terrific social and political con- 
vulsions that has ever yet come to pass 
that occupation seems to lie very much 
within the order of possibilities, we 



562 



TI t c Ycc.r of Oar Lord 18;;. 



doubt much whether it will occur so 
soon as people think. ... It would 
seem to us difficult for Russia to occupy 
Constantinople without first mastering 
and garrisoning Turkey, and Turkey is 
an empire of many millions, whom fa- 
naticism can still rouse to something 
like heroic, as well as to the most cruel 
and repulsive deeds." 

Those words seem to us to have fore- 
cast fairly enough the general aspects 
of the war. The war was declared be- 
cause Russia burned to go to war Rus- 
sia, or the Russian administration. The 
invasion of Turkey by Russia was not a 
thing of the past year. It was foreor- 
dained. It was dreaded from the close 
of the war in the Crimea. The only 
question with the other powers was how 
long or by what means could it be staved 
off. That Russia would invade Turkey 
as soon as she thought she could do so 
without much danger of outward inter- 
ference and with good prospects of suc- 
cess was probably a fixed thought in the 
minds of all men who chose to give a 
thought to the matter. For almost a 
quarter of a century has Russia been 
girding herself for a fight that had be- 
come an essential part of her national 
policy. Within that period, under the 
wise guidance of Prince Gortschakoff, 
she has more than repaired the terrible 

ilosses sustained in the Crimean war. 

.She grew stealthily up to a power and a 
status unexampled in her history. She 
guarded her finances, lived within her 

.means, prospered, refused steadily to 
enter into any embarrassing European 
complications. She saw the European 

.alliance that had crushed her in 1854 
hopelessly dissolve, and a new and 
friendly power rise up and take the lead 
in European affairs. As a military power 
she was looked upon as having only one 
superior, or rival perhaps, in the world, 

. and that her friendly neighbor. So strong 
was she, and so singularly had every 

change in European politics told in her 

, favor, that when her opportunity came, 
with a word, a beck, a stroke of her 

.chancellor's pen, she snapped asunder 

.the iron gyves forged for her and laid on 
her by a united Europe, and no power 
dared whisper a protest. All the world 
saw whither she was drifting. She was 
drifting to the sea, stretching out her 
giant arms to clasp for ever those golden 
shores that she claimed as hers by desti- 
ny. The hour of destiny struck at last. 



The strifes of exhausted nations and 
the jealousies of others left her alone to 
deal with the power that held those 
shores and that to Russia was an heredi- 
tary foe. She proceeded cautiously to 
the last. She did all things with becom- 
ing decorum. She invited the nations 
to a conference, held in the Turkish 
capital, to determine once for all what 
was to be done with the Turk, while she 
mobilized her armies in order to give ef- 
fect to her peaceful protest. 

What the conference of European di- 
plomatists did, or rather did not do, is 
now matter of picturesque history. 
" Death before dishonor !" was the ulti- 
matum of the Turk. " Death, then, be 
it," said Russia, and the new " crusade" 
began. 

It has been a sad ' crusade " for both 
parties, a disastrous one for Russia and 
the Romanoffs, even though there can 
be little doubt as to the final victory of 
Russia. What we may call the great 
Russian illusion has been dispelled by 
this war. It was speedily discovered 
that the feet of the giant who was run- 
ning so swiftly and surely to the goal of 
his ambition were of clay. Why, vic- 
tory invited him, danced before him, 
strewed flowers in his path. It was a 
very race with fortune. To a great mili- 
tary power half the battle was won be 
fore a single engagement worthy of the 
name had been fought. But it has stop- 
ped at that half. Russia is still knock- 
ing at the gates of Plevna, and even when 
Plevna is opened, as it will be probably 
soon, the inglorious victory will have 
been so dearly won that Russia herself 
may, with too much reason, be anxious 
for the peace which she wantonly broke. 

Fortune was too good to Russia at 
the opening of the war. Her smiles 
begat an overweening confidence. The 
destruction of a stubborn and warlike 
race was looked upon as a thing of a 
few months, as a game of war. Reverses 
came fast and thick reverses that were- 
invited. Comparative handfuls of splen- 
did soldiers were sent to destroy armies 
entrenched in natural fortresses. Then 
leaked out a fatal secret. Russia had 
everything but generals and competent 
military officers, or, if she had them, they 
were not with her armies, or were not 
allowed to take the lead. The dress pa- 
rade to Constantinople was speedily 
and effectually checked, and Russia is 
to all intents and purposes as far from 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



that city to-day as she was in the sum- 
mer. 

The details of the campaigns must be 
looked for elsewhere. We can here 
only look at results. There are two or 
three reflections regarding the war itself 
which seem to us worthy of attention as 
affecting other interests than those im- 
mediately engaged in the contest. 

In the first place, the fact of the war 
having been declared at all showed the 
powerlessness of Europe to shape or 
deal with grave questions of interna- 
tional interest when any one strong 
power chooses not to be advised, coerc- 
ed, or led. This practically places the 
peace of Europe in the hands of any 
power. For instance, there is no means 
of preventing Germany from declaring 
war against France to-morrow, should the 
German government so will. Early in 
the year, and at the invitation of Russia, 
the leading European powers sent their 
representatives to Constantinople to 
prevent, if possible, the outbreak of this 
war. These were doubtless experienced 
diplomatists. There is no reason to 
doubt that all of them save, perhaps, 
tlie Russian representative, General 
Ignatieff wished honestly and strove 
by every means in their power to prevent, 
or at least stave off, the war. They failed, 
because it was meant by the strongest 
there that they should fail. The only argu- 
ment to sway Europe to-day is the sword. 

Thus the representatives of united 
Europe, backed by all the vast resources 
of their empires, could do nothing to 
prevent a war which at the outset look- 
ed as though it incurred the gravest con- 
sequences to Europe ; and it may incur 
them still. Why was this? Simply be- 
cause there is no such thing as a united 
Europe. The family and comity of 
European nations was, as we pointed 
out last year in dealing with this very 
subject, broken up by the Protestant 
Reformation. The catholicity of nations, 
which in the order of events would have 
become an accomplished and saving 
fact, from that date yielded to selfish and 
narrow nationalities which made a sepa- 
rate world of each people, bounded by 
their own domain. But humanity is 
greater than nationality, and the world 
wider than a kingdom a tiuth that will 
never be felt until one religion plants 
again in the leading nations of the world 
the great unity of heart and soul that 
God alone can give. 



As for Russia, however, the tide of 
events may turn ; she has lost more than 
she will probably gain even by victory. 
Not in men and money and material 
alone has she lost, but in morale and 
prestige. The czar may return in tri- 
umph to St. Petersburg, but his victori- 
ous ranks will show a grim and ominous 
gap of something like a hundred thou- 
sand of his bravest men, lost in less 
than a year against a foe whom Russia 
despised, and thousands of whom were 
sacrificed to incapacity. A careful esti- 
mate made in September last set the 
daily cost of the Russian army at about 
$750,000. That figure must have since 
increased ; but take it as an average, 
and spread it over eight months, and we 
have the enormous sum of $184,500,000 
as the cost of the campaign from May to 
December. Loans must be raised to 
meet such expenditure, and loans are 
only obtained at high interest. 

Victories bought at such prices are 
dear indeed. Taking the Russian vic- 
tory for granted it is likely after all to 
prove a barren one. The Turk is an 
impracticable foe, and, though the signs 
of his exhaustion are multiplying, he has 
made such a fight as. by force of arms at 
least, to vindicate his title to national ex- 
istence. Indeed, his terms are apt to go 
up instead of down. Loss of money is 
nothing to him, for he has none to lose. 
His empire was bankrupt before the war. 
For trade or commerce he cares little. 
His life is easy and simple. He cares 
for little more than enough to eat, and 
a little of that seems to satisfy him. His 
fatalism robs life of the charm it has for 
other men. He would as lief die fighting 
as not, and he would sooner fight the Rus- 
sian than any other foe. You cannot 
reason with men of this kind. They see 
one thing: that single-handed they made 
a very good fight against a most power- 
ful antagonist; that they have hurt him 
badh', even if they have been worsted. 
The whole struggle can only be likened 
to an attack by a giant on a poor little 
wretch who was thought to be hall-dead. 
If it takes the g : ant six months to thrash 
such an antagonist ; and if during the 
fight the giant gets something very like 
a sound thrashing himself from his 
puny foe ; and if, when both are pretty 
well exhausted, he succeeds in throttling 
the pugnacious little chap at list, the 
verdict of the world will be that there is 
something the matter with the giant, and 



564 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



the self esteem of the little fellow will 
rise proportionately. 

Of course it is idle to speculate on the 
end. Russia has lost so heavily that she 
may insist upon very tangible fruits of 
victory. On the other hand, the war has 
been such a butchery that humanity cries 
out against it, and the European pow- 
ers will undoubtedly strive at the first 
opportunity to make a more effectual 
appeal than before to both the combat- 
ants. Peace rests on this : How much 
will Russia ask ? How much will Tur- 
key concede? How much will the jea- 
lousies of other powers allow Russia to 
tike? questions all of them that are 
sure to be asked, but which we confess 
our inability to answer. 

FRANCE. 

The armed struggle in the East has 
scarcely attracted more universal atten- 
tion than the civil struggle in France. 
France is trying to solve problems that 
touch her very life, and they are prob- 
lems in which all men have a personal 
interest. The French questions are emi- 
nently questions of the day and of the 
age. The struggle going on there is 
one between the elements of society. 
MacMahon, Gambetta, " Henri Cinq," 
"Napoleon Quatre " these are but 
names. The fight is not on them and 
their personal merits or demerits. It is 
at bottom between the men who find the 
" be-all and the end-all here " in this 
world,* and the men who believe that 
there is a God who made this world for 
his own purposes, who is to be obeyed, 
loved, and served, and according to 
whose law human society must conform 
itself, if it would fulfil the end for which 
it was created, have happiness in this 
world, and eternal happiness in the 
next. 

The first class is not restricted to the 
men and women who figured in the 
Commune. These only compose its rank 
and file, and their sin is less, for multi- 
tudes of them sin through ignorance. It 
embraces also the men of the new sci- 
ence, the professors in the atheistic 
universities ; statesmen of the Falk and 
Lasker type ; preachers of the Gospel as 
expounded by Dean Stanley ; philoso- 
phers and scientists, like Darwin or Her- 
bert Spencer, like Huxley and Tyndall, 
like, descending a grade, Professor Fisk 
or Youmans ; women like some we know 



here aJ home, who tread the platform 
with so masculine a stride ; the men of 
"progress" such as Brigham Young 
was, such as, in a more intellectual sense, 
John Stuart Mill was, such as " tribunes 
of the people" like Charles Bradlaugh, 
or his friend M. Gambetta, or Garibaldi, 
are ; poets like Victor Hugo or Algernon 
Swinburne. The men who have the 
teaching power in the secularized and 
secular universities of the day, who 
shape a purely secular education, who 
edit too many of our leading newspapers, 
who preach atheism or blasphemy from 
pulpits supposed to be consecrated to 
the service of Christ, are equally mem- 
bers of this party with the outcasts of 
society and the avowed conspirators 
against order. This it was that gave its 
significance to the late French elections ; 
that induced men to study so cartfully 
the name, character, antecedents, and 
political color of each man elected ; that 
caused to be telegraphed on the very 
da\' of the elections the long files of the 
deputies to England, to Germany, to 
Austria, to Italy, even to these distant 
shores. Why, such a fact as that last 
mentiqned is unexampled. For the time 
being the world centred in France. 

This is a dangerous pre-eminence for 
France. The country is for ever in a 
fever. It is in a constant state of crisis. 
Ministry after ministry is tried, found 
wanting, and thrown aside. The truth 
is the parties cannot coalesce. There is 
a barrier between them that it seems 
cannot be overthrown. The elections 
decided nothing. They left the country 
and parties in much the same condition 
as before. As a matter of fact the con- 
versatives, if any, gained, but the gain 
was too small to indicate the will of the 
country. We doubt if the country has a 
will beyond the desire to be at peace, 
which the contentions of its own parties 
alone threaten. M. Gambetta, the lead- 
er of the radicals, is for ever clamoring 
for a republic. Well, he has a republic ; 
why not make the most of it? He has 
certainly as good a republic as he could 
make. The difficulty with him is that 
the republic which he wishes to lead 
must be founded on the negation of 
Christianity. In France the dividing 
lines between creeds are very clearly 
drawn. Protestantism counts for no- 
thing there, and the little that there was 
of it has gone to pieces. Gambetta's 
betc-noit is "clericalism" i.e., Catholi- 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



505 



city. He would abolish the Catholic 
Church, not merely as an adjunct of the 
state but altogether. No Catholicity 
must be taught in the schools ; that is a 
vital principle with him. The pope 
must have nothing to say to Catholics in 
France. The clergy must receive no 
pav, scanty as it is, from the state. No 
such thing as a free Catholic university 
is to be tolerated. The children of 
France are to be brought up and edu- 
cated free-thinkers, and be made to 
turn out true Gambeitists. In a word, 
the foundation of M. Gambetta's scheme 
for the regeneration of France is to abol- 
ish the Christian religion there. Irreli- 
gion is to be the corner-stone of his re- 
public. 

This is a pleasing prospect for French 
Catholics, and it may be necessary to re- 
mind our able editors who denounce 
"clericalism" so lustily, and see no 
hope for France but in the republic of 
M. Gambetta, that there are still Cath- 
olics in France ; that the bulk of the 
nation is Catholic. It is a pleasing 
prospect, we say, for them to contem- 
plate the suppression of their religion 
at the word of M. Gambetta. Is it very 
surprising that the oracle of the new re- 
public should only bring hatred on the 
very name of republic to men who can 
see in it, as expounded by its oracle, no- 
thing but the most odious tyranny ? It 
was John Lemoinne, if we remember 
rightly, who in the anti-Christian Jour- 
nal des Debats said, on the retirement of 
Mr. Gladstone from office, that religion 
lay at the bottom of all the great ques- 
tions that move the world. If that be so, 
and it is so, why not recognize the fact ? 
Must the French republic which M. 
Gambetta advocates and our republican 
editors on this side advocate be first 
and above all an irreligious despotism? 
Must it begin with religious persecution ? 
M. Gambetta says that it must. 

We are not accusing him wrongful- 
ly. His own words express his mean- 
ing plainly enough. It must be borne 
in mind that the epithet "clericalism," 
in the mouths of French radicals, means 
Catholicity. Every French Catholic 
who believes in and practises his reli- 
gion is a "clerical "; so every Catholic 
who believes and does the same all the 
world over is, in the mouths of anti-Ca- 
tholics an " ultramontane." If there is 
one lurid page in all history that scars 
the eyes of humane and sensible men, it 



is that of the French Revolution the 
most awful revolt, save its offspring, the 
Commune, against all order, human and 
divine, that the world has witnessed. 
Yet "the French Revolution," and none 
other, is M. Gambetta's orijlannn,-. 

Just on the eve of the elections he 
addressed an immense meeting at the 
Cir.jne Am'ricain in Paris. "Amongst 
those present," says the correspondent 
of the London Daily Telegraph, "I ob- 
served the most prominent members of 
the various groups of the Left When 
the great orator of the evening (M. Gam- 
betta) appeared, he was received with a 
shout of welcome, renewed and contin- 
ued for several minutes. There were only 
two cries issued from every lip : ' Vive 
la Republique /' and ' Vive Gambetta /' 
. . . On the latter rising to speak he 
was received with another storm of 
cheers." 

Well, and what had he to say to 
this enthusiastic assembly and to the 
leading deputies of the Left ? We can 
only tind space for a few sentences, 
though the whole speech is instructive, 
as giving the character and aims of the 
man : 

" What is at stake ?" he asked. " The 
question is the existence of universal 
suffrage and of the French Revolution 
(Loud cheers). That is the question." 
This declaration, which was so uproari- 
ously cheered, needs no comment. He 
made a little prophecy, that was unfortu- 
nate for him, regarding the returns of 
the elections. The prophecy turned out 
to be false, even though M. Gambetta 
assured his friends by saying: ' I should 
not risk my credit with you five days 
before the event on a rash statement." 
''The country will say," he thundered 
on, " at the forthcoming elections that 
she wants the republic administered by 
republicans, and not by those who obey 
the voice of the Vatican." He appealed 
to the example of this country, where he 
said, with brilliant vagueness, " law has 
taken the place of personal vanity, and 
conscience that of intrigue." We ac- 
cept the example. There are millions 
of good enough republicans in this coun- 
try who certainly ' obey the voice of the 
Vatican " as faithfully as any " clerical " 
in all France, and who find that voice 
agreeing admirably with the r republi- 
canism. Indeed, that same voice has re- 
cently, with justice and openly, proclaim- 
ed that in the republic the Pope is 



;66 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



more Pope than in any other country ; 
and we have yet to le;irn that the repub- 
lic has suffered any hurt from that de- 
claration. 

'There is no principle," said M. Gam- 
betta, " that binds together the three 
parties which are now opposed to us, 
and the nation will do justice to their 
monstrous alliance. There is but one 
binding force, and that is called cleri- 
calism. Those parties wanted a word 
of order to rally a formidable army 
against us; they found it in Jesuitism." 
And he closed his speech by saying : 

" I feel that what Europe fears most is 
that France should again fall into the 
hands of the Ultramontane agents. I 
fear that the universal suffrage may not 
take su/Ecient account of surprise and 
intimidation. We must look this ques- 
tion in the face, and be able to say to 
Europe, pointing to clericalism, Behold 
the vanquished !" 

As we said, M. Gambetta made a little 
mistake in his prophecy. Catholicity is 
not dead in France ; Catholics are not a 
small fraction of the people, and in the 
government of the country of which 
tuey form so important a part they must 
be taken into account. They will not 
and cannot submit to have convictions 
which are sacred to them disregarded, 
to have necessary and national rights 
trampled under foot at the will either of 
M. Gambetta or of anybody else. He 
assumes altogether too much. What did 
the figures of the election show? As 
M. de Fourtou pointed out in his speech 
in the Chamber of Deputies, November 
14, 1877: The Opposition had flattered 
itself that it would return with four hun- 
dred, and yet it lost fifty votes. " It re- 
quired an astonishing amount of assur- 
ance for the Opposition, after such a 
check, to pretend to claim power in de- 
fiance of the rights of the Senate." 

" The Opposition," he continued, " had 
obtained 4,300,000 and the Government 
3,600,000 votes. France thus dividing her- 
self into two almost equal parties. In- 
stead of striving to oppress the one by 
the other, it would be better to seek a 
common link to bind themselves togeth- 
er. Candidates presented themselves 
to be elected in the name of a menaced 
Constitution, the public peace in jeop- 
ardy, and in the name of modern liber- 
ties and civil societies. But if (he Op- 
position only asked for that, it had no 
adversaries; if it asked for something 



else it had no mandate. (Applause from 
the Right.)" 

There is no denying the force of this 
reasoning. The parties in France 
show themselves almost equal, and the 
only hope of governing the country is by 
mutual concession and good-will. M. 
Gambetta must let the church alone, if 
he is so very anxious for peace. 

Frenchmen not blinded by passion 
might have taken warning from the atti- 
tude of Germany and Italy previous to 
and during the elections. These two 
powers for Italy has now become a sort 
of tender to Germany were earnest for 
the success of the party led by Gam- 
betta. Why so ? What sympathy can 
Prince Bismarck possibly have with 
Gambetta? What sympathy could he be 
supposed to have with a republic of the 
Gambetta stripe, of the red revolution- 
ary stripe, as his next-do6r neighbor, 
while he so dreads his own socialists ? 
The cause of his new-born sympathy 
for a red republic, or a republic of 
any color, is not far to find. It was the 
same sympathy that he had with the 
Commune during the siege of Paris. 
He knows Gambetta, and has had a taste 
of " the tribune's" effective generalship 
and governing qualities. He was in 
France when M. Gambetta made that 
famous " pact with death" of which we 
heard so much and so little came. He 
knows thoroughly -the elements that 
make up the strength, the very explosive 
strength, of M. Gambetta's party, and 
there is probably nothing he would bet- 
ter enjoy than to see the fou furitiix at 
the helm of state once more. A few 
months of the Gambetta regime, and 
Prince Bismarck might say of France, as 
he said of Paris, " Let it fry in its own 
fat." France is now a most dangerous 
foe to Germany negatively so, at least. 
She is growing more dangerous every 
year. Every year of quiet is an enor- 
mous gain to her. She is vastly richer 
than Germany. She can stand the strain 
of her immense army far more easily 
than Germany. She is winning back 
something of the old love and admira- 
tion of the outer world, which she had lost 
on entering into the war with Germany. 
She is patient, laborious, industrious, 
desirous of peace with all the world, and 
day by day becoming more able to main- 
tain that peace even against Germany. 
But a revolution in France would de- 
stroy all this and throw the nation years 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



5 6 7 



behind. And so sure as Gambetta at- 
tained to power a revolution would fol- 
low ; i.e., if he adhered and there is no 
doubt that he would to the programme 
of a republic which he has sketched in 
such bold colors. Once in power, once 
the strong but quiet hand of Marshal 
MacMahon was removed from the helm, 
the ship of the French state, with or 
without Gambetta's will, would go to 
speedy wreck. 

That is why Prince Bismarck so care- 
fully encouraged the Gambetta faction. 
That is why his press thundered against 
a "clerical" government in France. 
That is why the Italian press took up 
the cry, as it explains in great measure 
the mysterious comings and goings be- 
tween the courts of Berlin and the Qui- 
rinal. That is why, if France would 
abide in safety, she must retain her sol- 
dier at the head of affairs, and hasten 
during the next few years of his term to 
heal her internal discords and become 
one heart and one soul. Marshal Mac- 
Mahon has attempted nothing against 
the republic that was confided to his 
safe-keeping. There is yet time, before 
his term of office expires, for all French- 
men to come together and shape their 
government so as to ensure peace, free- 
dom, and order in the future. If they 
cannot do this, the republic is hopeless 
in France. It will go out as its prede- 
cessors have gone out within a century, 
only to make room for a new usurper. 

GERMANY. 

There is every year less likelihood of 
a renewal of the dreaded war between 
(ierm.iny and France. France does not 
want to fight. Even if Germany did want 
to fight she must reckon on a far stron- 
ger and more dangerous foe than she en- 
countered in 1870. Competent military 
critics, like the writer in Blackwood's 
Magazine, whose articles on the French 
army attracted such wide and deserved 
attention, asfert that France, though pro- 
bably unequal to an attack on Germany, 
is rather more than able to hold her own 
against attack. A stronger critic yet es- 
tablishes this fact In his famous speech 
in the German Parliament last April, in 
favor of the increase of one hundred and 
five captaincies in the army an increase 
that was bitterly opposed Count Von 
Moltke said : 

" What the French press does not 



speak out, but what really exists, is the 
fear lest, since France has so often at- 
tacked weaker Germany, strong Ger- 
many should now for once fall upon 
France without provocation. This ac- 
counts for the gigantic efforts France 
has made in carrying through within a 
few years the reorganization of her army 
with so much practical intelligence and 
energy. This explains why, from the 
recent conclusion of peace till to-day, an 
unproportionately large part of the 
French army, chiefly artillery and ca- 
valry, is posted, in excellent condition, 
between Pa^s and the German frontier 
a circumstance which must sooner or 
later lead to an equalizing measure on 
our part. It must also be taken into 
consideration that in France, where the 
contrast of political parties is even 
stronger than with us, all parties are 
agreed on one point viz., in voting all 
that is asked for the army. In France 
the army is the favorite of the nation, its 
pride, its hope ; the recent defeats of the 
army have been condoned long since." 

" The total strength of all these [the 
French] battalions," he said in the same 
speech, " in times of peace amounts to 
487,000 men ; whilst Germany, with a 
much larger population, has but little 
over 400,000 under arms. The French 
budget exceeds the German by more 
than 150,000,000 marks (shillings), not 
including considerable supplementary 
sums that are there required. Even 
so wealthy a nation as the French are 
will not be able to bear such a burden 
permanently. Whether this is done at 
present for a distinct purpose, in order 
to reach a certain goal placed at not too 
great a distance, I must leave unde- 
cided." 

That speech alarmed Europe at the 
time. Yet it was only a plain statement 
of facts which it is as well for Europe to 
look in the face. It may seem strange 
that under the circumstances we should 
feel so sanguine about the preservation 
of peace between these two armed and 
hostile nations. But both want peace, 
and both are too strong to fight. Of 
course the unexpected may always oc- 
cur. France does not disguise her pur- 
pose of revenge, and she means 10 " mak 
siccer" next time. But the gentle hand 
of Time softens the deepest hatreds ; and 
if even this enforced peace can only be 
prolonged the war-fever may die away. 
Politics and administrations will change 



568 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



in both countries. Prince Bismarck 
will not live for ever. The French had 
just as bitter a resentment against Eng- 
land after Waterloo. The resentment 
died with the generation that bore it; 
and only for the evil legacy left by 
Prince Bismarck to the empire the pro- 
vinces of Alsace and Lorraine we could 
fairly hope for better feeling between the 
two peoples at least within a generation. 

The smoke of battle cleared away, 
Germans are beginning to look around 
them and investigate civil affairs in a 
spirit not at all pleasing to a military 
administration. The word of command 
is no longer obeyed so blindly as be- 
fore. Even the cabinet does not move 
to the tap of Prince Bismarck's drum as 
promptly as it was wont. Perhaps, after 
all, the chancellor did not gain so very 
much by his bitter prosecution of Count 
Arnim. There have been some notable 
resignations within the year, and rumors 
even, partially confirmed, and again re- 
newed, of the chancellor's own resigna- 
tion. The opposition increases at every 
election ; and the response of Catholics 
to the men who make vacant the sees of 
their bishops is to return a stronger 
number of representatives to the Parlia- 
ment at each new election. The social 
democrats do the same, and altogether 
the policy of blood and iron appears to 
be in strong disfavor. 

Even the "orthodox Protestants" 
have at last openly revolted against the 
Falk laws, which were good enough for 
Catholics, and right in themselves so 
long as the orthodox Protestants did 
not feel them pinch. They see at last 
that such laws strike at all religion ; that 
a generation brought up under them 
would have no religion at all ; and that 
if they would retain the congregations 
who are so rapidly slipping from their 
grasp and melting away, they must 
strike out those laws from the calendar. 

The persecution of the Catholics goes 
on unrelentingly, but we have no doubt 
that better times are in store. The Ca- 
tholics, as we pointed out, are gaining 
in the Parliament. The administration 
is weakening in unity and in the confi- 
dence of the country. Poverty is press- 
ing upon the people. The emperor, in 
his speech from the throne early in the 
year, was compelled to allude to the con- 
tinued depression of trade and industry. 
He might very easily have given one 
great reason for a large share of that de- 



pression in the vast armaments which he 
finds it necessary to maintain at a ruin- 
ous cost of men, money, and labor to 
the country. As recently as last No- 
vember the London Times, which is cer- 
tainly a friendly critic, in treating of 
" Prussian Finance," took occasion to 
say: " The exaction of the five milliards 
was thought to crush for ever the grow- 
ing wealth of France, and to be almost 
a superfluous addition to the abundant 
exchequer of Germany. . . . At least the 
state was rich for a generation to come. 
Five years have not yet passed since this 
huge mass of wealth was transferred, 
and already we find bankruptcy almost 
the rule among German traders, and 
hear cries rising on all sides of the hard- 
ness of the times and the impossibility 
of bearing much longer the crushing 
weight of taxation. In the hands of the 
government the French milliards seem 
lor the most part to have melted away 
and left budgets which vary only in the 
shifts by which expenses are coaxed into 
an equality with receipts." 

The conclusion at which the writer 
arrives is a very suggestive one, and one 
that it would be well for Germany to 
take to heart : 

" It would be better that Germany 
should be content to remain for a year or 
two not quite prepared to meet the world 
in arms rather than that her citizens 
should find that the country so impreg- 
nably fortified offers them no life worth 
living. A man does not buy Chubb's 
locks for his stable-door when his steed 
is starving." 

Granting that the general peace of 
Europe is preserved during the next 
year, it would not surprise us at all to 
see a complete change of administration 
in Germany, and a consequent rejaxa- 
tion in the laws against Catholics. We 
do hope for this. Even Prince Bis- 
marck must now see that the persecution 
of the Catholics was, in its lowest aspect, 
a political blunder. He miscalculated 
the faith of these German Catholics. 
The beating of his iron hammer has only 
welded and proved and tempered that 
faith, while the world resounded with 
his blows and all men saw that they 
were ineffectual. Thus has the very 
cradle of the Protestant Reformation 
borne noblest witness in our unbe- 
lieving age to the greatness, the strength, 
the invincibility of the faith and the 
church that Luther dreamed he had de- 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



569 



stroyed, out of Germany at least. Here 
is the result, as pictured by an adversary 
of the Catholic faith, within the past 
year: "It pleased Prince Bismarck 
whether, as he himself alleged, in conse- 
quence of the council or not to under- 
take a crusade against the Roman Ca- 
tholic bishops and clergy which, to the 
vast body of their co-religionists all the 
world over, and to many others also, had 
all the look of downright persecution. 
They were challenged, not for submitting 
to the Vatican dogma, but for maintain- 
ing what they had always been accus- 
tomed to regard, before just as well as 
after the council, as the inalienable 
rights and liberties of their church. 
Only one course was open to them as 
ecclesiastics or as men of honor to re- 
sist and take the consequences. Some 
half-dozen bishops have accordingly 
been fined, imprisoned, or deprived ; 
and several hundred we believe over a 
thousand priests have incurred similar 
penalties. Whether the policy embod- 
ied in the Falk laws was or was not a 
wise and a just policy in itself is not the 
point. If we assume for argument's 
sake that it has all the justification 
which its promoters claim for it, the fact 
remains equally certain that no greater 
service could well have been rendered 
to the cause of Vaticanism than this op- 
portune rehabilitation of the German 
bishops. The bitterness of the antagon- 
ism provoked by the Falk legislation 
may be measured by the startling news 
recently given in the German papers, 
that an alliance, offensive and defensive, 
is being formed between the Catholics 
and democratic socialists, who can have 
hardly a single idea in common beyond 
hostility to the existing state." Saturday 
Jteview, February 24, 1877. 

THE CATHOLIC OUTLOOK. 

Of other states there is little that calls 
for special attention here. Italy is link- 
ed with Germany, but Italy can scarcely 
be regarded as a very strong ally. Its 
alliance, however, is useful and neces- 
sary to the leader of the conspiracy 
against the Catholic Church the con- 
spiracy of the kings, into which some 
have entered in a half-hearted way like 
the Emperor of Austria, others with the 
most determined resolve like Prince 
Bismarck and the German emperor. 



These powerful men are doing all they 
can to destroy the Catholic Church ; and 
undoubtedly they impede her growth, 
and harry and harass her in a thousand 
ways. It is easy to say that this is the 
best thing that could possibly happen to 
the church ; that persecution is her very 
soul ; that suffering begets repentance, 
and chastisement purity of life. That is 
all very well and true, but there is an- 
other aspect to the matter. Catholics 
have worldly rights as well as heavenly. 
They are here to live in this world, and 
to live happily and freely, and to do 
their work in it. No prince or govern- 
ment introduced them into life ; no prince 
or government escorts them out of life. 
No prince, or government, or state can 
absolutely claim human life as theirs. 
Life is a free gift of God, to be used 
freely. Government is not divine, save 
in so far as it conforms to the divinity. 
Men are not chattels and tools to be 
used as things of no volition. The gov- 
ernment of a people is only a human in- 
stitution erected for the people, by the 
people, and of the people. It cannot 
lay claim to superhuman power, and 
where it does it is an infamous assump- 
tion. The niinien impcratorum is more 
than a myth ; it is a devil. The " divine 
Caesar" is but a man, and generally a 
very disreputable man. The assump- 
tions of many modern states to absolute 
rule over man states that for the wicked- 
ness of those ruling them have been 
turned topsy-turvy time and again by 
the subjects whom they absolutely ruled 
is a return to paganism, and a very 
artful return. Obey us, it says, and we 
will set you free free from the Chris- 
tian God and the laws that go against 
your nature. Obey us, and you need 
bow the knee to no God ; you need have 
no religious belief or practice ; we will 
abolish sin for you ; you shall marry and 
unmarry as you please, and as often as 
you please ; you shall do what you like 
and have no one to gainsay you. Fall 
down and worship us, and all the king- 
doms of the world are yours. 

This is only a true reading of the pet 
measures of modern governments : of 
the divorce court, of civil marriage, of 
civil baptism, of schools into which 
everything but God may enter. And 
this is the drifting of the age : the Gam- 
betta party in France, the revolutionary 
party in Italy, of which Victor Emanuel 
is the regal tool and ornament ; the 



570 



The Year of Our Lord 1877. 



Bismarck ian and Falk party in Ger- 
many ; the Josephism of Austria ; the 
" free" thought of all lands. It is this 
that is in conflict, eternal conflict, with 
the Catholic Church. It calls itself lib- 
eralism ; it is the tyranny cf paganism. 
It does not threaten the Catholic Church 
alone It only threatens that openly, 
because it feels it its necessary foe ; it 
threatens the world and carries in its 
right hand the social and moral ruin of 
nations. There is no possible mcdus 
vivendi between it and men who believe 
in Christ ; and men who believe in Christ 
form the bulk of all civilized peoples. 
There will be no peace in the world, no 
peace among nations, until religion is 
free to assert itself. While the creeds of 
Christendom<ire still divided there must 
be freedom for all freedom to adjust 
their differences and come back once 
again to the lost unity for which all hon- 
est men sigh. Politics are the affairs of 
a day ; religion an affair of Eternity to 
be settled in Time. It must have free- 
dom to work; and the attempt to restrict 
and restrain that freedom is the secret of 
more than half the troubles that afflict 
mankind. 

This freedom is all that the head of the 
Catholic Church demands. He has no 
other quarrels with princes than this. 
He blesses and loves Protestant England, 
for it recognizes this freedom ; he bless- 
es and loves this country, for it also 
recognizes this freedom. The wonder- 
ful reign of Pius IX. will, in aftsr-time, be 
most memorable for this : that in a deaf- 
ening and confused time, in a time when 
all things were called in question and 
all rights invaded, his voice and vision 
were forever clear in upholding the most 
sicred rights of man, in detecting and 
exposing what threatened them, and in 
maintaining the truth by which the world 
lives, at all hazard and in the face of all 
sacrifice. The truth of which he is the 
oracle is the faith in God that makes men 
free faith in the und)ing church found- 
ed by the Son of God, in its work and 
its mission among men, in the present 
and the future of a human society spread- 
ing over the world and built upon that 
faith. And the world has recognized 
this. It recognizes in the Pope, not be- 
cause he is Pius the Ninth, but because 
he is Pope and head of the Church Ca- 
tholic, the centre of this society, the head 



of Christendom ; for Christendom is 
wider than nations ; it embraces them in 
its arms ; they are children of it, and the 
Pope is their spiritual father. Is not 
this truth plain ? Whither have the eyes 
of the world been turned during the 
year? Less to the bloody battle-fields 
of the East, less to the hearts of Euro- 
pean nations and the courts and cabi- 
nets of kings, than to the sick bed 
in the Vatican. The gaze of many has 
been that of brutal intensity ; the gaze of 
many more, and those not all Catholics, 
has been one of affectionate and tender 
regard. Speculations as to the future 
are not in place here. The Pope, of 
course, will die some day. He has 
stood the brunt of the battle. He has 
lived a great life, given a great example, 
and done great things for the church 
of God. Not a stain, not a breath 
or whisper of reproach, mars that long 
career of mingjed triumph and suffering. 
He has witnessed strange events. He 
has seen the church discarded by all the 
powers that were once her faithful chil- 
dren. He has seen the sacred territory 
of the church invaded and torn from his 
grasp. He sees himself in his old age 
and at the close of a stormy life impris- 
oned in his own palace. He has seen 
the world and the princes of the world 
do their worst against the church of 
which he is the earthly guardian. And 
yet he sees the church spreading abroad, 
growing in numbers and in virtue, borne 
on the wings of commerce and carrying 
its message of peace and good-will to 
all lands. There is no faltering in the 
faith. His eyes have been gladdened, 
even if saddened, by as noble confessors, 
of all grades, rising up to testify to it as 
the church in her history of nineteen 
centuries has ever known. When he 
obeys the last call of the Master he 
has served so well, there will pass from 
this world the greatest figure of the age, 
and as holy a man as the ages ever 
knew. But his work will not pass with 
him. That will remain, and the lesson 
of his life will remain to the successor, 
on whom we believe that brighter times 
will dawn a brightness won out of the 
darkness, and the sacrifice, and the 
storm braved by the good and gentle- 
man who so resoluiely bore Christ's 
cross to the very hill of Calvary and lay 
down on it and died there. 



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NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



MONOTHEISM . The Primitive Religion of 
Rome. By Rev. Henry Formby. i vol. 
8vo. London : Williams & Norgate ; 
New York : Scribner, Welford & Co. 

iS/7- 

This is a very interesting and, in some 
respects, a learned work ; but we are fain 
to confess that we have been disappointed 
in it. If the author, instead of attempting 
to show that the worship of the one true 
God was the early religion of Rome, had 
contented himself with proving it to have 
been professed by the primitive Gentile 
nations in general, we should agree with 
him, and thank him for unfolding in our 
English language the incontrovertible 
truth that polytheism and idolatry are 
but corruptions of great primeval tradi- 
tions collected, preserved, and handed 
down by Noe, and that heathen mytholo- 
gy can be made to bear witness to the 
original idea of the unity and spirituali- 
ty of God. This view of the religious 
errors of the ancients has been held up 
by several eminent writers, and particu- 
larly by two who deserve to be rescued 
from an unjust oblivion by Monsignor 
Bianchini (1697) in La Storia Universal^ 
f ovata con Montttnenti e fignrata co-i Sim- 
l>oli dt'gll Antic hi; and by Abbe Bergier 
(1773) in his Origine des Dieux du Pa- 
ganisme. While we do not accuse our 
reverend author of a want of modesty 
precisely in stating his prime opinion 
about the monotheism of the second 
king of Rome, we do think that he 
v/rites a little too dogmatically and as 
though he had discovered some histori- 
cal treasure-trove wherewith to enrich 
his arguments ; whereas no new docu- 
ments or monuments whatever have been 
brought to light to throw a different or 
brighter ray upon the character of Numa 
Pompilius, in connection with whom, 
moreover, he seems to us to confound 
idolatry and polytheism. We confidently 
believe that the Ca-ltste Numen of Numa, 
on which so great stress is laid, like the 
Dt-us Cptinnts Maxiwus of Tully, or the 
Di'cnni pater <tti/ite honiinum rex of Virgil, 
was nothing more than another form of 
man's continual, almost involuntary, 
protest against the falling away of the 
human r.ice from the worship of the 



Creator, but practically did not betoken 
more than a recognition of one among 
many greater than his fellow-gods. 
While Numa forbade the worship of 
idols in Rome, and consequently pro- 
fessed a less corrupt error than did many 
contemporary rulers, he never asserted 
the unity or, we prefer to say, the out- 
ness ot God. He was a prolific polythe- 
ist, multiplying divinities and introduc- 
ing new superstitions among his people. 
Father Formby has brought up noth- 
ing in his favor unknown to Arnobius, 
Orosius, St. Augustine, and Tertullian. 
This last writer, although he absolves 
Numa from the crime of idolatry, dis- 
tinctly charges upon him a many-parted 
god: "Nam a Numa concepta est curi- 
ositas superstitiosa " (Ap>l. xxv.) 

Our author's present work is an am- 
plification of a smaller one published in 
pamphlet form two years ago, in which 
he shows the " city of ancient Rome" to 
have been " the divinely-sent pioneer of 
the way for the Catholic Church." On 
this subject we cannot too closely agree 
with him, or sufficiently thank him for 
turning towards our students and illus- 
trating for them a side of Roman history 
which is so important. Our own studies 
have always pointed in the same direc- 
tion, and we cannot better conclude this 
notice of Father Formby's work and show 
our sympathy with him than by a brief 
extract from our commonplace book, 
made up many years ago in Rome itself: 

" The celebrated Gallo-Roman poet 
and statesman. Rutilius Numatianus, 
was much attached to the false ancient 
divinities of Rome and no small help to 
the political party of Symmachus, which 
so stubbornly fought St. Ambrose and 
the Christians. The following lint-s from 
his ItincrariiiHi (i. 62 ct set/,) are truly 
beautiful and express a grand idea, but 
one that is still grander in another sense 
than his ; for if a heathen understood it 
to be a blessing in disguise upon the 
conquered peoples of the eartli to be 
brought under the domination of Rome 
on account of the prosperity and civili- 
zation that accompanied her rule, how 
shall not a Christian admire the action 
of divine Providence, preparing the 



572 



civ Publications. 



world for the New Law, and applaud 
those triumphs that brought so many 
countries through the Roman Empire 
into the Ciiurch of Christ. Of Christian 
less than of pagan Rome we shall inter- 
pret the poet's sentiment : 

" ' Fecisti patriam diversis gentibus unam ; 

Profuic invitis. te dominante, cap! ; 
Dumque otfsrs victis patrii consortia juris 
Urbem fecisti quod prius orbis erat.' " 

THE ILLUSTRATED CATHOLIC FAMILY 
ALMANAC for 1878. New York : The 
Catholic Publication Society Co. 

This annual, neat, compact, and per- 
fect in all its mechanical arrangements 
the labor of many busy and well-stored 
minds condensed into a portable form 
has just been issued. To say that it 
equals its predecessors, which have found 
so much favor with the public, would be 
doing it great injustice. In every respect 
it is far superior, and shows palpable 
evidence that its conductors, appreciat- 
ing the growth in public taste as well as 
the increasing desire for reliable infor- 
mation on important Catholic subjects, 
have left no effort untried to satisfy the 
wishes of their readers. This is particu- 
larly noticeable in the illustrations, which 
we consider to be not only good pictures 
but genuine works of art. The portraits 
of Archbishop Bayley, Bishops Von Ket- 
teler and De St. Palais, and the vener- 
able Jesuit Father McElroy are not 
only excellent likenesses of those de- 
ceased prelates, but the best specimens 
of wood-cut portraiture we have yet seen 
on this side of the Atlantic. The other 
engravings, of which there are about a 
dozen, are alike creditable to the artist 
and suitable for the pages of such a pub- 
lication. The reading matter, however, 
will probably most attract the attention of 
the majority of purchasers, many of whom 
will doubtless wonder where a great 
portion of it could possibly have been 
discovered. Thus, in addition to the 
lives of the ecclesiastics above mention- 
ed, and biographical sketches of the 
venerable Sister Mary Margaret Bour- 
geois, Frederic Ozanam, Columbus, and 
others, we have an elaborate History of 
Printing, a description (with fac-similes) 
of " The Earliest Irish Madonna," ac- 
counts of the Libraries of the Bollan- 
dists and of the Eremites of York ; an 
archaeological sketch of the oldest church- 
es of the world, an explanation of the an- 



tique Cross of St.Zachary, a rfsumtrf the 
labors of the Franciscans in California, 
and a well-digested mass of astronomi- 
cal, chronological, and statistical infor- 
mation which cannot help proving of 
incalculable value as matters of refer- 
ence. 

EVIDENCES OF RELIGION. By Louis 
Touin, S.J. New York: P. O'Shea. 
1877. 

There is nothing more gratifying to 
Catholics who watch the progress of 
their religion in this country than to 
find that the church in the United States 
is beginning to supply her own litera- 
ture, and more especially her polemical 
literature, which she needs most of all. 
Within the last few years several contro- 
versial works and books of instruction 
have been written in this country which 
are far better adapted to our people than 
the standard works of foreign authors ; 
and the time, we trust, is not far distant 
when we shall be fully supplied with a 
well-adapted course of polemics of our 
own, and be no longer dependent on the 
writings of men in lands which are 
often more or less out of harmony with 
the American mind. The Evidences of 
Religion is one of the books of which 
we stood most in need, and the wonder 
is that it was not written long before. 
Perhaps, however, it is as well that no 
one attempted it before Father Jouin ; 
for we doubt if any other attempt could 
have been so entirely successful. 

The book is a marvel of condensed 
matter and thought and argument. In 
its 380 octavo pages are summed up the 
philosophical treatise De Certitttdine and 
theological tract De Locis Theologicis ; 
and it contains in addition a refutation, 
short, sharp, and decisive, of the latest 
errors in philosophy, politics, and reli- 
gion. 

Christianity rests on facts, not on mere 
theories. The science of the day pre- 
tends to deal with facts, and in every case 
to accept them, so that in our controver- 
sies with the pseudo-science of the times 
there is nothing more important than to 
bring out clearly and strongly the facts 
on which the certainty of the Christian 
faith rests. This Father Jouin has done, 
and in his book we have the whole 
ground-work on which Christianity is 
based spread out before us in perspec- 
tive ; the outline is complete, though of 



New Publications. 



573 



course, in the limited space which he al- 
lowed himself, he has not been able to 
bring out each detail in full. Yet 
he assures us in his preface that nothing 
essential has been left out, and we have 
verified his assertion. Altogether this 
is just the sort of book, in our opinion, 
that is needed to combat the errors of 
the age, and to serve as an antidote to 
the poison of rank infidelity and materi- 
alism with which the very atmosphere 
around us is charged. 

The author tells us that he designs the 
work more especially as a text-book for 
students in the higher classes of our Catho- 
lic colleges, and we sincerely hope that 
it may be adopted in every Catholic col- 
lege throughout the country. Our Cath- 
olic instructors fully realize the import- 
ance of giving their students a thorough 
grounding in the evidences of their 
religion, and Father Jouin'sbook in the 
hands of a good professor can be made 
the basis of a thorough course of such 
instruction. 

Not alone to students in colleges do 
we recommend the study of this work, 
but to every intelligent educated Catholic, 
who should investigate the reasons on 
which his religion is founded, and be able 
to answer for the faith that is in him. Let 
our Catholic lawyers and doctors and 
business men take it up, and they will 
find in it sufficient to convince them of the 
reasonableness of their creed. It will fur- 
nish them, moreover, with conclusive ar- 
guments against the absurd theories and 
false views of religion which are being 
advanced every day in their hearing. 

The greatest enemy that the Catholic 
Church has to contend with, both with- 
out and within, at the present day, is 
ignorance of her true position and teach- 
ing, and we eagerly invite and encour- 
age every study and investigation that 
may in any way help to dispel it. 

It is to be regretted that so valuable a 
work has not been brought out in a 
worthy manner. It is neither well print- 
ed nor well put together. 

THE NEW VESPER HYMN-BOOK : A com- 
panion to The New Vesper Psalter ; 
containing a collection of all the 
hymns sung at Vespers throughout 
the year (classified according to me- 
tre), set to music, either for unison or 
four voices, with accompaniment, and 
including the best of the plain chant 
melodies, together with the words in 



full, and the versicies nnd responses 
proper to each hymn. The whole 
compiled and edited by Charles Lewis, 
Director of the Cathedral Choir, Bos- 
ton, Mass. Boston : Thos. B. Noonan 
&Co. 

At the present stage of the revival of 
Gregorian Chant, the true song of the 
church, we can commend this little work 
as one which will doubtless be found 
useful in many churches whose organ- 
ists are unable to harmonize the chant 
or the singers to read its proper nota- 
tion. We wish, however, that the edi- 
tor had given all the hymns as found in 
the Vesperale, as the musical airs which 
are substituted are not worthy to sup- 
plant the original melodies. The style 
of notation is that usually adopted in 
translations from the old form of four 
lines and square notes. Could not the 
editor have done better, so as to give to 
those unaccustomed to plain chant some 
idea of its movement and expression? 
There is no mark given to designate ac- 
cented from unaccented notes, and, lack- 
ing this, we defy any one who is not 
familiar with the traditional movement 
of a phrase to give its true expression. 

We think the spacing of notes and 
phrases as given in the old style should 
be preserved that is, the notes upon 
each syllable should be printed close 
together, and a wider and distinct space 
left between syllables and words. An 
intelligent system of writing plain chant 
upon the modern musical staff is yet to 
be invented. We have been told that in 
some places the Tonic Sol-Fa system is 
being attempted, with what success we 
have not learned. 

LOTOS FLOWERS, GATHERED IN SUN AND 
SHADOW. By Mrs. Chambers-Ketch- 
um. New York: D. Appleton & Co. 
1877. 

Mrs. Chambers- Ketchum is already 
known to the readers of THE CATHOLIC 
WORLD through her poems, "Advent" 
and "A Birthday Wish" (appearing un- 
der the name of "Twenty-one" in 
the present collection), published in its 
pages during the present year. Her 
verse is pure in thought and written out 
of a woman's heart full of love and en- 
thusiasm. With true Southern fervor 
she revels in the luxuriant flora of her 
home, and in the landscape of all her 
pictures she takes a dear delight. Even 



574 



Publications* 



so unsightly an object as a Mississippi 
steamboat-landing grows picturesque 
under her hand, and do we not feel soft 
Italian air as we read ? 

" Peaceful stand 

The sentinel poplars in their gold-green plumes 
Bisicle the Enzo bridge. Where late the hoofs 
Of flying squadrons scared th' affrighted land 
The soft cloud-shadows chase each ether now 
O'er violet gardens." 

As with many another poet, the ease 
with which Mrs. Chambers-Ketchum 
writes is at times a snare, leading her 
to accept too readily a hackneyed term 
or word, surrendering after too slight 
a struggle to the tyranny of rhyme. In 
her verse, also, there is sometimes a 
lack of smoothness that would 'set des- 
pair in the hdart of the faithful scanner. 

Was it because our ears were sick 
with a certain slang of "culture" that, 
when we stumbled over Krishna in the 
" Christian Legend," we felt a strong 
desire to banish these Indian immortals 
to that Hades where languished the 
gods of Greece until Schiller called 
them forth to run riot in the field of reli- 
gion as well as of art? And is not the 
term "legend "a strange misnomer, for 
the New Testament narrative of the rais- 
ing of Lazarus? For Mrs. Chambers- 
Ketchum's verse is essentially Christian 
and womanly, and even so short a no- 
tice of it would scarcely be complete 
without a mention of "Benny," who, 
with his kitten and his " baby's sense of 
right," is already dear and familiar to the 
mothers and children of our whole coun- 
try, whose kindly hearts will surely give 
to Benny's mother their sympathy in his 
loss. 

SURLY TIM, AND OTHER STORIES. By 
Francis Hodgson Burnett. New 
York : Scribner, Armstrong & Co. 
1877. 

Unfortunately for our first impression 
of the merit of the little volume of which 
" Surly Tim " is the initial story, we began 
our reading with " Lodusky," attracted 
to it by the locality of the tale, its hill 
people and dialect being a loadstone to 
us, but lately returned from similar sur- 
roundings. But as even in our moun- 
tain Edens we find the trail of the ser- 
pent, so in "Lodusky" we seemed to 
be treading the familiar path of moral ir- 
responsibility and the tyranny of person- 
al magnetism, and we craved the flam- 



ing sword of the archangel to put the 
evil to flight. 

Nor did our impression grow fairer 
on turning to " Le Monsieur de la Pe- 
tite Dame." But in "One Day at Arle" 
and in " Seth " we welcomed truly the 
author's strong and exquisite pathos. 
In these pictures of the sorrow of the 
laboring classes the author draws with a 
pencil full of feeling, working under a 
sky whose hue is the leaden monotone 
of modern French landscape painting ; a 
break of sunshine here and there, but 
the light seems to fall, after all, on earth- 
ly stubble and the dumb, almost soul- 
less faces of patient cattle that know no- 
thing beyond their daily furrow and the 
mute, faithful service they bear a kindly 
hand at the plough. 

We are reminded of the pathos of 
Robert Buchanan's North-Coast verse, 
and we close the little volume sadly, al- 
most as if all human sorrow wherein is 
no Christian joy stood at our thres- 
hold, asking from us an alms we had no 
power to give. 

REPERTORIUM ORATORIS SACRI : Contain- 
ing Outlines of Six Hundred Sermons 
for all the Sundays and Holidays of the 
Ecclesiastical Year ; also for other 
solemn occasions. Compiled from the 
works of eminent preachers of various 
ages and nations by a secular priest. 
With an introduction by the Rt. Rev. 
Joseph Dwenger, D.D., Bishop of 
Fort Wayne. New York and Cincin- 
nati : Fr. Pustet, Typographus Seditf 
Apostolicse. 1877. 

This publication is to be continued in 
monthly parts, each part containing the 
outlines of two sermons for each Sunday 
and holiday for one quarter of the year. 
There will be four volumes of four parts 
each, so that when the work is completed 
there will be eight sermons for each oc- 
casion. 

It will, if it fulfils the promise of this 
first number, be the best and most com- 
plete collection of the kind ever pub- 
lished so far as we are aware. It hardly 
needs to be said that plans of sermons 
such as are here given are very much 
more valuable to a preacher than the ac- 
tual sermons themselves; for there are 
few who can give with much effect the 
words of another, to say nothing of the 
trouble involved in committing them to 
memory. The sermons of great puipit 



New Publications. 



575 



orators are indeed extremely useful and 
deserving of study as models of style ; 
but a few will answer that purpose as 
well as a thousand. 

The work is in English, being designed 
principally for use in this country. It is 
most earnestly to be hoped that it will 
receive the liberal support which it cer- 
tainly deserves. 

NICHOLAS MINTURN. A Study in a 
Story. By J.G. Holland. I vol. I2mo. 
New York : Scribner, Armstrong & 
Co. 1877. 

We prefer Dr. Holland's stories to his 
essays. He possesses fine descriptive 
powers ; his genial humor captivates the 
reader ; his power of analysis is search- 
ing. No one can read Nicholas Minturn 
without recognizing the author's ability 
to lay bare the vices and follies of the 
various classes with whom his hero is 
brought in contact. In doing this, how- 
ever, Dr. Holland is apt to forget their 
redeeming virtues. This is his great 
fault as a novelist. He lacks the power 
to vitalize the subtle traits that appeal to 
our humanity. There is no bond of 
union between his people and us. He is 
unable to centralize our interest. When 
disaster overtakes the ocean steamer 
there is not a single figure to start out 
from the group and wring a groan of 
compassion from us. We listen to the 
wailing of despair and the shriek of ter- 
ror with as much apathy as if it arose 
from a distant battle-field. In all other 
respects the story is far superior to the 
great mass of light literature. 

THE ETERNAL YEARS. By the Hon. 
Mrs. A. Montgomery, author of The 
Divine Sequence, also The Bucklyn 
Sha'g, Mine Own Familiar Friend, The 
Wrong Man, On the Wing, etc. With 
an introduction by the Rev. S. Porter, 
S.J. London : Burns & Gates. 1877. 

The Eternal Years is a republication of 
a series of articles from THE CATHOLIC 
WORLD. A number of thoughtful readers 
of our magazine h;>ve expressed the 
great interest with which they have read 
those articles and their desire to know 
the name of the author. They will be 
pleased to see that they are now pub- 
lished in a volume under their author's 
narr.e. On the I I'm:? will be remember- 
ed as having been one of the most popu- 



lar of the series of sketches taken from 
scenes in European life and incidents of 
travel which we have from time to time- 
published. Mrs. Montgomery possesses 
a very versatile talent as a writer, and 
passes with facility "from grave to gay. 
from lively to severe." Whatever she 
writes is always both instructive and 
pleasing. 

THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL TEACHER'S MAN- 
UAL ; or, The Art of Teaching Cate- 
chism. For the use of teachers and 
parents. By the Rev. A. A. Lambing, 
author of 77/< Orphan's Friend. New 
York : Benziger Brothers. 1877. 
Father Lambing has done for Sunday- 
school teachers what M. Amond, the 
cure of St. Sulpice, and Father Porter 
have done for those engaged in the sa- 
cred ministry of the pulpit. 

This manual, written in a clear and 
popular style, supplies a need that should 
have been more felt than it was. It gives 
those in charge of Sunday-schools a true 
idea of their very important mission, a 
deep sense of the responsibility that 
rests upon them, points out the various 
qualifications necessary for the faithful 
discharge of their duties, and contains 
many useful instructions which will aid 
them in becoming effective catechisers. 

IZA : A STORY OF LIFE IN RUSSIAN PO- 
LAND. By Kathleen O'Meara. Lon- 
don : Burns & Gates. 1877. (New 
York : The Catholic Publication So- 
ciety Co.) 

This book, by a lady who since its 
first appearance has become distinguish- 
ed in the higher walks of literature, has 
been republished at a very seasonable 
time, when the Eastern war, and the no- 
vel pretensions of Russia to be consid- 
ered the friend and protector of oppress- 
ed nationalities, have once more called 
public attention to her barbarous treat- 
ment of the gallant Poles. The scenes 
are laid in Poland ; the characters, which 
are few and clearly drawn, ate Polish 
or Muscovite, and the plot, though sim- 
ple and natural, is well and artistically 
wrought out. The theme of the whole 
story is the oppression of the Polish no- 
bility by the shrewd, keen, and unscru- 
pulous agents of the czar, wherein ihe 
generous, high-spirited and confiding pa- 
triotism of the one class is strongly con- 
trasted with the accomplished villany of 



576 



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the other. Though the superstructure 
is. of course, a work of pure fiction, it is 
based on well known historical facts. 
The entire work is written with great care 
and accuracy as to names, places, cos- 
tumes, and local customs, the situations 
are highly dramatic, and the moral effect 
produced on the reader is healthful and 
salutary. 

THE CATHOLIC WORLD. 

THE attention of readers will be di- 
rected to the advertisement of complete 
sets of THE CATHOLIC WORLD and THE 
YOUNG CATHOLIC as suitable and valu- 
able Christmas presents. Bound vol- 
umes of THE YOUNG CATHOLIC make 
the very best present that could be offer- 
ed to children. The reading matter is 
interesting, the illustrations are really 
excellent, and the puzzles and charades 
afford unfailing amusement for the long 
winter evenings. 

THE CATHOLIC WORLD is now in its 
twenty-sixth volume. It constitutes a 
library, and a most valuable and varied 
library, in itself. In it is everything 
that could be desired. Theology and 
philosophy have their departments, fill- 
ed by men of known and recognized 
competence, master minds indeed in 
those higher sciences. The literary arti- 
cles and reviews are acknowledged by 
the secular press to be unsurpassed in 
power, grace, and strength. The po- 
lemics of the day find their true solution 
in THE CATHOLIC WORLD, which has 
told upon the non-Catholic mind in this 
country as no other magazine or publi- 
cation has been able to tell. There is an 
abundance of fiction and light literature 
in its pages, a fiction that has known 



how to be interesting without bring dan- 
gerous, and good without being dull. 
Many stories that have already made 
their mark in the literary world and 
won deserved fame for' their authors be- 
gan by passing through the columns of 
this magazine. All the leading and ab- 
sorbing questions of the day arc- taken 
up and discussed in it by men tho- 
roughly equipped and fitted for so im- 
portant a lask. Indeed THE CATHOLIC 
WORLD may fairly claim to be a channel 
through which the very best Catholic 
literature of the day, in all its forms, 
passes, a guide to and in all the ques- 
tions of the day, and a compendium 
from year to year of all that is best and 
most worthy of attention in the higher 
sciences, in physical science, in politics, 
in literature, and in art. His Eminence 
the Cardinal has recently kindly taken 
occasion to " congratulate the Catholics 
in America on possessing a magazine 
of which they may be justly proud," and 
trusts " that they will contribute their 
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THE 



CATHOLIC WORLD 



VOL. XXVI., No. 155. FEBRUARY, 1878. 



CEADMON THE COW-HERD, ENGLAND'S FIRST POET. 

BY AUBREY DE VERB. 

THE Venerable Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation contains nothing more touching 
than its record of Ceadmon, the earliest English poet, whose gift came to him in a manner so extraordinary. 
It occurs in the 24th chapter : '* By his verses the minds of many were often excited to despise the 
world, and to aspire to heaven. Others after him attempted in the English nation to compose religious 
poems, but none could ever compare with him ; for he did not learn the art of poetry from man, but from 
God, for which reason he never would compose any vain or trivial poem." . . . " Being sometimes at 
entertainments, when it was agreed, for the sake of mirth, that all present should sing in their turns, 
when he saw the instrument come towards him he rose from the table and retired home. Having done so 
on a certain occasion, ... a Person appeared to him in his sleep, and, saluting him by his name, said, 
' Ceadmon, sing some song for me.' He answered, ' I cannot sing.' " Ceadmon's song is next described : 
" How he, being the Eternal God, became the author of all miracles, Who first, as Almighty Preserver of 
the human race, created heaven for the sons of men, as the roof of the house, and next the earth." 
. . . " He sang the Creation of the world, the origin of man, and all the history of Genesis, . . . 
the Incarnation, Passion, Resurrection of our Lord, and His Ascension." * Ceadmon's poetry is referred 
to also in Sharon Turner's History of tke Anglo-Saxons ; and Sir Francis Palgrave points out the singu- 
lar resemblance of passages in Paradise Lost to corresponding passages in its surviving fragments. 'I o 
the history of Ceadmon Montalembert has devoted some of the most eloquent paragraphs in his admirable 
work, Les Afoittes if Occident see chapter ii., vol. iv., page 68. . 

SOLE stood upon the pleasant bank of Esk 
Ceadmon the Cow-herd, while the sinking sun 
Reddened the bay, and fired the river-bank 
With pomp beside of golden Iris lit, 
And flamed upon the ruddy herds that strayed 
Along the marge, clear-imaged. None was nigh : 
For that cause spake the Cow-herd, " Praise to God !.' 
He made the worlds ; and now, by Hilda's hand 
He plants a fair crown upon Whitby's height : 
Daily her convent towers more high aspire ; 
Daily ascend her Vespers. Hark that strain !" 
He stood and listened. Soon the flame-touched herd!* 
Sent forth their lowings, and the cliffs replied, 
And Ceadmon thus resumed : " The music note 
Rings through their lowings dull, though keard by few ! 

* Bede's Ecclesiastical History of England, p.. 217, Edited by J. A. .Giles, D.C.L. (Henry G. 
Bohn). 

Copyright: Rev. I. Ti.HECKBR. 1878.. 



Ceadmon the Cow- Herd, England's first Poet. 

Poor kine, ye do your best ! Ye know not God, 

Yet man, his likeness, unto you is God, 

And him ye worship with obedience sage, 

A grateful, sober, much- enduring race 

That o'er the vernal clover sigh for joy, 

With winter snows contend not. Patient kine, 

What thought is yours, deep-musing? Haply this 

'God's help ! how narrow are our thoughts, and few ! 

Not so the thoughts of that slight human child 

Who daily drives us with her blossomed rod 

From lowland valleys to the pails long-ranged !' 

Take comfort, kine ! God also made your race ! 

If praise from man surceased, from your broad chests 

That God would perfect praise, and, when ye died, 

Resound it from yon rocks that gird the bay : 

God knoweth all things. Let that thought suffice!" 

Thus spake the ruler of the deep-mouthed kine : 
They were not his ; the man and they alike 
A neighbor's wealth. He was contented thus : 
Humble he was in station, meek of soul, 
Unlettered, yet heart-wise. His face was pale ; 
Stately his frame, though slightly bent by age : 
Slow were his eyes, and slow his speech, and slow 
His musing step ; and slow his hand to wrath, 
A massive hand, but soft, that many a time 
Had succored man and woman, child and beast ; 
Ay, yet could fiercely grasp the sword ! At times 
As mightily it clutched his ashen goad 
When like an eagle on him swooped some thought : 
Then stood he as in dream, his pallid front 
Brightening like eastern sea-cliffs when a moon 
Unrisen is near its rising. 

Round the bay 

Meantime with deepening eve full many a fire 
Up-sprung, and horns were heard. Around the steep 
With bannered pomp and many a dancing plume 
Ere long a cavalcade made way. Whence came it ? 
Oswy, North umbria's king, the foremost rode, 
Oswy triumphant o'er the Mercian host, 
To sue for blessing on his sceptre new ; 
With him an Anglian prince, student long time 
In Bangor of the Irish, and a monk 
Of Gallic race far wandering from the Marne : 
They came to look on Hilda, hear her words 
Of far-famed wisdom on the Interior Life : 
For Hilda thus discoursed: "True life of man 
Is life within : inward immeasurably 
The being winds of all who walk the earth ; 



Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 579 

But he whom sense hath blinded nothing knows 
Of that wide greatness : like a boy is he 
That clambers round some castle's wall extern 
In search of nests the outward wall of seven 
Yet nothing knows of those great courts within, 
The hall where princes banquet, or the bower 
Where royal maidens touch the lyre and lute, 
Much less its central church, and sacred shrine 
Wherein God dwells alone." * Thus Hilda spake ; 
And they that gazed upon her widening eyes 
Low whispered, each to each, " She speaks of things 
Which she hath seen and known." 

On Whitby's crest 

The royal feast was holden : far below, 
A noisier revel dinned the shore ; therein 
The humbler guests partook. Full many a tent 
Glimmered upon the white sands, ripple-kissed ; 
Full many a savory dish sent up its steam ; 
The farmer from the field had driven his calf; 
The fisher brought the harvest of the sea; 
And Jock, the woodsman, from his oaken glades 
The tall stag, arrow-pierced. In gay attire 
Now green, now crimson, matron sat and maid : 
Each had her due : the elder, reverence most, 
The lovelier that and love. Beside the board 
The beggar lacked not place. 

When hunger's rage, 

Sharpened by fresh sea-air, was quelled, the jest 
Succeeded, and the tale of foreign lands ; 
But, boast who might of distant chief renowned, 
His battle-axe, or fist that felled an ox, 
The Anglian 's answer was "our Hilda " still : 
" Is not her prayer puissant as sworded hosts ? 
Her insight more than wisdom of the seers ? 
What birth like hers illustrious? Edwin's self, 
Deira's exile, next Northumbria's king, 
Her kinsman was. Together bowed they not 
When he of holy hand, missioned from Rome, 
Paulinus, poured o'er both the absolving wave 
And knit to Christ ? Kingliest was she, that maid 
Who spurned earth-crowns !" The night advanced, he rose 
That ruled the feast, the miller old, yet blithe, 
And cried, "A song!" So song succeeded song, 
For each man knew that time to chant his stave, 
But no man yet sang nobly. Last the harp 
Made way to Ceadmon, lowest at the board : 

* This thought is taken from St. Teresa. 



5 So Ceadmon the Cow- Herd, England's first Poet. 

He pushed it back, answering, " I cannot sing :" 
Around him many gathered clamoring, " Sing 1" 
And one among them, voluble and small, 
Shot out a splenetic speech: " This lord of kine, 
Our herdsman, grows to ox ! Behold, his eyes 
Move slow, like eyes of oxen !" 

Sudden rose 

Ceadmon, and spake : " I note full oft young men 
Quick-eyed, but small-eyed, darting glances round 
Now here, now there, like glance of some poor bird, 
That light on all things and can rest on none : 
As ready are they with their tongues as eyes ; 
But all their songs are chirpings backward blown 
On winds that sing God's song, by them unheard: 
My oxen wait my service : I depart." 
Tlien strode he to his cow-house in the mead, 
Displeased though meek, and muttered, " Slow of eye ! 
My kine are slow : if I were swift my hand 
Might tend them worse." Hearing his steps the kine 
Turned round their horned foreheads : angry thoughts 
Went from him as a vapor. Straw he brought, 
And strewed their beds ; and they, contented well, 
Down laid ere long their great bulks, breathing deep 
Amid the glimmering moonlight. He, with head 
Propped on the white flank of a heifer mild, 
Rested, his deer-skin o'er him drawn. Hard days 
Bring slumber soon. His latest thought was this : 
" Though witless things we are, my kine and I, 
Yet God it was who made us." 

As he slept, 

Beside him stood a Man Divine and spake ; 
"Ceadmon, arise, and sing." Ceadmon replied, 
" My Lord, I cannot sing, and for that cause 
Forth from the revel came I. Once, in youth, 
I willed to sing the bright face of a maid, 
And failed, and once a gold-faced harvest-field, 
And failed, and once the flame-eyed face of war, 
And failed once more." To him the Man Divine, 
" Those themes were earthly. Sing !" And Ceadmon said, 
" What shall I sing, my Lord ?" Then answer came, 
" Ceadmon, stand up, and sing thy song of God." 

At once obedient, Ceadmon rose, and sang, 
And help was with him from great thoughts of old 
Within his silent nature yearly stored, 
That swelled, collecting like a flood that bursts 
In spring its icy bar. The Lord of all 
He sang ; that God beneath whose hand eterne, 



Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 581 

Then when he willed forth-stretched athwart the abyss, 

Creation like a fiery chariot ran, 

Inwoven wheels of ever-living stars. 

Him first he sang. The builder, here below, 

From fair foundations rears at last the roof, 

But Song, a child of heaven, begins with heaven, 

The archetype divine, and end of all, 

More late descends to earth. He sang that hymn, 

" Let there be light, and there was light "; and lo ! 

On the void deep came down the seal of God 

And stamped immortal form. Clear laughed the skies, 

While from crystalline seas the strong earth brake, 

Both continent and isle ; and downward rolled 

The sea-surge summoned to his home remote. 

Then came a second vision to the man 

There standing 'mid his oxen. Darkness sweet, 

He sang, of pleasant frondage clothed the vales, 

Ambrosial bowers rich-fruited which the sun, 

A glory new-created in his place, 

All day made golden, and the moon by night 

Silvered with virgin beam, while sang the bird 

Her first of love-songs on the branch first-flower'd 

Not yet the lion stalked. And Ceadmon sang 

O'er-awed, the Father of all humankind 

Standing in garden planted by God's hand, 

And girt by murmurs of the rivers four, 

Between the trees of Knowledge and of Life, 

With eastward face. In worship mute of God, 

Eden's Contemplative he stood that hour, 

Not her Ascetic, since, where sin is none, 

No need for spirit severe. 

And Ceadmon sang 

God's Daughter, Adam's Sister, Child, and Bride, 
Our Mother Eve. Lit by the matin star, 
That nearer drew to earth, and brighter flashed 
To meet her gaze, that snowy Innocence 
Stood up with queenly port. She turned : she saw 
Earth's King, mankind's great Father. Taught by God, 
Immaculate, unastonished, undismayed, 
In love and reverence to her Lord she drew, 
And, kneeling, kissed his hand : and Adam laid 
That hand, made holier, on that kneeler's head, 
And spake; " For this shall man his parents leave, 
And to his wife cleave fast." 

When Ceadmon ceased 

Thus spake the Man Divine : " At break of day 
Seek thou some prudent man, and say that God 
Hath loosed thy tongue; nor hide henceforth thy gift." 



582 Ccadmon the Cow- Herd, England's first Poet. 

Then Ceadmon turned, and slept among his kine 
Dreamless. Ere dawn he stood upon the shore 
In doubt : but when at last o'er eastern seas 
The sun, long wished for, like a god wpsprang, 
Once more he found God's song upon his mouth 
Murmuring high joy ; and sought a prudent man, 
And told him all the vision. At the word 
He to the Abbess with the tidings fled, 
And she made answer, " Bring me Ceadmon here." 

Then clomb the pair that sea-beat mount of God 
Fanned by sea-gale, nor trod, as others used, 
The curving way, but faced the abrupt ascent, 
And halted not, so worked in both her will, 
Till now between the unfinished towers they stood 
Panting and spent. The portals open stood : 
Ceadmon passed in alone. Nor ivory decked, 
Nor gold, the walls. That convent was a keep 
Strong 'gainst invading storm or demon hosts, 
And naked as the rock whereon it stood, 
Yet, as a church, august. Dark, high-arched roofs 
Slowly let go the distant hymn. Each cell 
Cinctured its statued saint, the peace of God 
On every stony face. Like caverned grot 
Far off the western window frowned : beyond, 
Close by, there shook an autumn-blazoned tree : 
No need for gems beside of storied glass. 

He entered last that hall where Hilda sat 
Begirt with a great company, the chiefs 
Down either side far ranged. Three stalls, cross-crowned, 
Stood side by side, the midmost hers. The years 
Had laid upon her brows a hand serene, 
And left alone their blessing. Levelled eyes 
Sable, and keen, with meditative strength 
Conjoined the instinct and the claim to rule : 
Firm were her lips and rigid. At her right 
Sat Finan, Aidan's successor, with head 
Snow-white, and beard that rolled adown a breast 
Never by mortal passion heaved in storm, 
A cloister of majestic thoughts that walked, 
Humbly with God. High in the left-hand stall 
Oswy was throned, a man in prime, with brow 
Less youthful than his years. Exile long past, 
Or deepening thought of one disastrous deed, 
Had left a shadow in his eyes. The strength 
Of passion held in check looked lordly forth 
From head and hand : tawny his beard ; his hair 
Thick-curled and dense. Alert the monarch sat 
Half turned, like one on horseback set that hears, 



Ceadmon ike Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 583 

And he alone, the advancing trump of war. 

Down the long gallery strangers thronged in mass, 

Dane or Norwegian, huge of arm through weight 

Of billows oar-subdued, with stormy looks 

Wild as their waves and crags ; Southerns keen-browed ; 

Pure Saxon youths, fair-fronted, with mild eyes 

(These less than others strove for nobler place), 

And Pilgrim travel-worn. Behind the rest, 

And higher-ranged in marble-arched arcade, 

Sat Hilda's sisterhood. Clustering they shone, 

White-veiled, and pale of face, and still and meek, 

An inly-bending curve, like some young moon 

Whose crescent glitters o'er a dusky strait. 

In front were monks dark-stoled : for Hilda ruled, 

Though feminine, two houses, one of men : 

Upon two chasm-divided rocks they stood, 

To various service vowed, though single. Faith ; 

Nor ever, save at rarest festival, 

Their holy inmates met. 

" Is this the man 

Favored, though late, with gift of song?" Thus spake 
Hilda with placid smile. Severer then 
She added : " Son, the commonest gifts of God 
He counts his best, and oft temptation blends 
With powers more rare. Yet sing ! That God who lifts 
The violet from the grass as well could draw 
Music from stones hard by. That song thou sang'st, 
Sing it once more." 

Then Ceadmon from his knees 
Arose and stood. With princely instinct first 
The strong man to the abbess bowed, and next 
To that great twain, the bishop and the king, 
Last to that stately concourse ranged each side 
Down the long hall ; and, dubious, answered thus : 
" Great Mother, if that God who sent the song 
Vouchsafe me to recall it, I will sing ; 
But I misdoubt it lost." Slowly his face 
Down-drooped, and all his body forward bent 
As brooding memory, step by step, retracked 
Its backward way. Vainly long time it sought 
The starting-point. Then Ceadmon 's large, soft hands 
Opening and closing worked ; for wont were they, 
In musings when he stood, to clasp his goad, 
And plant its point far from him, thereupon 
Propping his stalwart weight. Customed support 
Now finding not, unwittingly those hands 
Reached forth, and on Saint Finan's crosier-staff 
Settling, withdrew it from the old bishop's grasp ; 



584 Ccadmon the Coiv-Herd, England's first Poet. 

And Ceadmon leant thereon, while passed a smile 

Down the long hall to see earth's meekest man 

The spiritual sceptre claim of Lindisfarne. 

They smiled ; he triumphed : soon the Cow-herd found 

That first fair corner-stone of all his song ; 

Then rose the fabric heavenward. Lifting hands, 

Once more his lordly music he rehearsed, 

The void abyss at God's command forth-flinging 

Creation like a Thought : where night had reigned, 

The universe of God. 

The singing stars 

Which with the Angels sang when earth was made 
Sang in his song. From highest shrill of lark 
To ocean's deepest under cliffs low-browed, 
And pine-woods' vastest on the topmost hills, 
No'tone was wanting ; while to them that heard 
Strange images looked forth of worlds new-born, 
Fair, phantom mountains, and, with forests plumed, 
The marvelling headlands, for the first time glassed 
In waters ever calm. O'er sapphire seas 
Green islands laughed. Fairer, the wide earth's flower, 
Eden, on airs unshaken yet by sighs 
From bosom still inviolate forth poured 
Immortal sweets. With sense to spirit turned 
Who heard the song inhaled those sweets. Their eyes 
Flashing, their passionate hands and heaving breasts, 
Tumult self-stilled, and mute, expectant trance, 
Twas these that gave their bard his twofold might, 
That might denied to poets later born 
Who, singing to soft brains and hearts ice-hard, 
Applauded or contemned, alike roll round 
A vainly-seeking eye, and, famished, drop 
A hand clay-cold upon the unechoing shell, 
Missing their inspiration's human half. 

Thus Ceadmon sang, and ceased. Silent awhile 
The concourse stood (for all had risen), as though 
Waiting from heaven its echo. Each on each 
Gazed hard and caught his hands. Fiercely ere long 
Their gratulating shout aloft had leaped 
But Hilda laid her finger on her lip, 
Or provident lest praise might stain the pure, 
Or deeming song a gift too high for praise. 
She spake : " Through help of God thy song is sound : 
Now hear His Holy Word, and shape therefrom 
A second hymn, and worthier than the first." 

Then Finan stood, and bent his hoary head 
Above the Scripture tome in reverence stayed 



Ceadmon the Cow- Herd, England's first Poet. 585 

Upon his kneeling deacon's hands and brow, 
And sweetly sang five verses, thus beginning, 
" Cum esset desponsata" and was still ; 
And next rehearsed them in the Anglian tongue: 
Then Ceadmon took God's Word into his heart, 
And ruminating stood, as when the kine, 
Their flowery pasture ended, ruminate ; 
And was a man in thought. At. last the light 
Shone from his dubious countenance, and he spake : 
" Great Mother, lo ! I saw a second Song ! 
T'wards me it came; but with averted face, 
And borne on shifting winds. A man am I 
Sluggish and slow, that needs must muse and brood ; 
Therefore that Scripture till the sun goes down 
Will I revolve. If song from God be mine 
Expect me here at morn." 

The morrow morn 

In that high presence Ceadmon stood and sang 
A second song, and manlier than his first ; 
And Hilda said, " From God it came, not man; 
Thou therefore live a monk among my monks, 
And sing to God." Doubtful he stood "From youth 
My place hath been with kine ; their ways I know, 
And how to cure their griefs." Smiling she answered, 
"Our convent hath its meads, and kine; with these 
Consort each morning : night and day be ours." 
Then Ceadmon knelt, and bowed, and said, " So be it " : 
And aged Finan, and Northumbria's king 
Oswy, approved; and all that host had joy. 

Thus in that convent Ceadmon lived, a monk, 
Humblest of all the monks, save him that slept 
In the next cell, who once had been a prince. 
Seven times a day he sang God's praises, first 
When earliest dawn drew back night's sable veil 
With trembling hand, revisiting the earth 
Like some pale maid that through the curtain peers 
Round her sick mother's bed, misdoubting half 
If sleep lie there, or death ; latest when eve 
Through nave and chancel stole from arch to arch, 
And laid upon the snowy altar-step 
At last a brow of gold. From time to time, 
By ancient yearnings driven, through wood and vale 
He tracked Deirean or Bernician glades 
To holy Ripon, or late-sceptred York, 
Not yet great Wilfred's seat, or Beverley : 
The children gathered round him, crying, " Sing !" 
They gave him inspiration with their eyes, 
And with his conquering music he returned it. 



586 Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 

Oftener he roamed that strenuous eastern coast 
To Yarrow and to Wearmouth, sacred sites, 
The well-beloved of Bede, or northward more, 
To Bamborough, Oswald's keep. At Coldingham 
His feet had rest there where St. Ebba's Cape . 
That ends the lonely range of Lammermoor, 
Sustained for centuries o'er the wild sea-surge 
In region of dim mist ^nd flying bird, 
Fronting the Forth, those convent piles far-kenned, 
The worn-out sailor's hope. 

Fair English shores, 

Despite the buffeting storms of north and east, 
Despite rough ages blind with stormier strife, 
Or froz'n by doubt, or sad with sensual care, 
A fragrance as of Carmel haunts you still 
Bequeathed by feet of that forgotten saint 
AVho trod you once, sowing the seed divine ! 
Fierce tribes that kenned him distant round him flock'ed ; 
On sobbing sands the fisher left his net, 
His lamb the shepherd on the hills of March, 
Suing for song. With wrinkled face all smiles, 
Like that blind Scian upon Grecian shores, 
If God the song accorded, Ceadmon sang ; 
If God denied it, after musings deep 
He answered, "I am of the kine and dumb "; 
The man revered his art, and fraudful song 
Esteemed as fraudful coin. 

Music denied, 

He solaced them with tales wherein, so seemed it, 
Nature and Grace, inwoven, like children played, 
Or like two sisters o'er one sampler bent, 
One pattern worked. Ever the sorrowful chance 
Ending in joy, the human craving still, 
Like creeper circling up the Tree of Life, 
Lifted by hand unseen, witnessed that He, 
Man's Maker, is the Healer too of man, 
And life his school, expectant. Parables 
Thus Ceadmon named his legends. They who heard 
Made answer, " Nay, not parables, but truths;" 
Endured no change of phrase ; to years remote 
Transmitted them as facts. 

Better than tale 

They loved their minstrel's harp. The songs he sang 
Were songs to brighten gentle hearts, to fire 
Strong hearts with holier courage, hope to breathe 
Through spirits despondent, o'er the childless floor 
Or widowed bed, flashing from highest heaven 



Ceadinon the Coiv-Herd, England's first Poet. 587 

A beam half faith, half vision. Many a tear, 

His own, and tears of those that listened, fell 

Oft as he sang that hand, lovely as light, 

Forth stretched, and gathering from forbidden boughs 

That fruit fatal to man. He sang the Flood, 

Sin's doom that quelled the impure, yet raised to height 

Else inaccessible, the just. He sang 

That patriarch facing at Divine command 

The illimitable desert harder proof, 

Lifting his knife o'er him, the seed foretold : 

He sang of Israel loosed, the twelve black seals 

Down pressed on Egypt's testament of woe, 

Covenant of pride with penance; sang the face 

Of Moses glittering from red Sinai's rocks, 

The Tables twain, and Mandements of God. 

On Christian nights he sang that jubilant star 

Which led the Magians to the Bethlehem crib 

By Joseph watched, and Mary. Pale, in Lent, 

Tremulous and pale, he told of Calvary, 

Nor added word, but, as in trance, rehearsed 

That Passion fourfold of the Evangelists, 

Which, terrible and swift not like a tale 

With speed of things which must be done, not said, 

A river of bale, from guilty age to age, 

Along the lamentable shore of things 

Annual makes way, the history of the world, 

Not of one race, one day. Up to its fount 

That stream he tracked, that primal mystery sang 

Which, chanted later by a thousand years, 

Music celestial, though with note that jarred 

(Some wandering orb troubling its starry chime), 

Amazed the nations " There was war in heaven : 

Michael and they, his angels, warfare waged 

With Satan and his angels." Brief that war, 

That ruin total. Brief was Ceadmon's song : 

Therein the Eternal Face was undivulged : 

Therein the Apostate's form no grandeur wore : 

The grandeur was elsewhere. Who hate their God 

Change not alone to vanquished but to vile. 

On Easter morns he sang the Saviour Risen, 

Eden regained. Since then on England's shores 

Though many sang, yet no man sang like him. 

O holy House of Wliitby ! on thy steep 
Rejoice, howe'er the tempest, night or day, 
Afflict thee, or the craftier hand of Time, 
Drag back thine airy arche's in mid spring; 
Rejoice, for Ceadmon in thy cloisters knelt, 
And singing paced beside thy sounding sea \ 
Long years he lived ; and with the whitening hair 



588 Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 

More youthful grew in spirit, and more meek ; 

And they that saw him said he sang within 

Then when the golden mouth but seldom breathed 

Sonorous strain, and when that fulgent eye 

No longer bright still on his forehead shone 

Not flame but purer light, like that last beam 

Which, when the sunset woods no longer burn, 

Maintains its place on Alpine throne remote, 

Or utmost beak of promontoried cloud, 

And heavenward dies in smiles. Esteem of men 

Daily he less esteemed, through single heart 

More knit with God. To please a sickly child 

He sang his latest song, and, ending, said, 

" Song is but body, though 'tis body winged : 

The soul of song is love : the body dead, 

The soul should thrive the more." That Patmian Sage 

Whose head had lain upon the Saviour's breast, 

Who in high vision saw the First and Last, 

Who heard the harpings of ihe Elders crowned, 

Who o'er the ruins of the Imperial House 

And ashes of the twelve great Caesars dead 

Witnessed the endless triumph of the just, 

To earthly life restored, and, weak through age, 

But seldom spake, and gave but one command, 

The great "Mandatum Novum " of his Lord, 

" My children, love each other !" Like to his 

Was Ceadmon's age. Weakness with happy stealth 

Increased upon him : he was cheerful still : 

He still could pace, though slowly, in the sun, 

Still gladsomely converse with friends who wept, 

Still lay a broad hand on his well-loved kine. 

The legend of the last of Ceadmon's days : 
That hospital wherein the old monks died 
Stood but a stone's throw from the monastery : 
" Make there my couch to-night," he said, and smiled : 
They marvelled, yet obeyed. There, hour by hour, 
The man, low-seated on his pallet-bed, 
In silence watched the courses of the stars, 
Or casual spake at times of common things, 
And three times played with childhood's days, and twice 
His father named. At last, like one that, long 
Begirt with good, is smit by sudden thought 
Of greater good, thus spake he : " Have ye, sons, 
Here in this house the Blessed Sacrament?" 
They answered, wrathful, " Father, thou art strong; 
Shake not thy children ! Thou hast many days !" 
" Yet bring me here the Blessed Sacrament," 
Once more he said. The brethren issued forth 
Save four that silent sat waiting the close. 



Ceadmon the Cow-Herd, England's first Poet. 589 

Ere long in grave procession they returned, 
Two deacons first, gold-vested; after these 
That priest who bare the Blessed Sacrament, 
And acolytes behind him, lifting lights. 
Then from his pallet Ceadmon slowly rose 
And worshipped Christ, his God, and reaching forth 
His right hand, cradled in his left, behold ! 
Therein was laid God's Mystery. He spake : 

" Stand ye in flawless charity of God 

T'wards me, my sons, or lives there in your hearts 

Memory the least of wrong or wrath ?" They answered : 

" Father, within us lives nor wrong, nor wrath, 
But love, and love alone." And he : " Not less 
Am I in charity with you, my sons, 
And all my sins of pride, and other sins, 
Humbly I mourn." Then, bending the old head 
Above the old hand, Ceadmon received his Lord 
To be his soul's viaticum, in might 
Leading from life that seems to life that is, 
And long, unpropped by any, kneeling hung 
And made thanksgiving prayer. Thanksgiving made, 
He sat upon his bed, and spake : " How long 
Ere yet the monks begin their matin psalms ?" 
"That hour is nigh," they answered; he replied, 
"Then let us wait that hour," and laid him down 
With those kine-tending and harp-mastering hands 
Crossed on his breast, and slept. 

Meanwhile the monks 

(The lights removed in reverence of his sleep) 
Sat mute nor stirred such time as in the Mass 
Between " Orate fratres " glides away, 
And ''''Hoc est Corpus Afeum." Northward far 
The great deep, seldom heard so distant, roared 
Round those wild rocks half way to Bamborough Head ; 
For now the mightiest spring-tide of the year, 
Following the magic of a maiden moon, 
Had readied its height. More near, that sea which sobbed 
In many a cave by Whitby's winding coast, 
Or died in peace on many a sandy bar 
From river-mouth to river-mouth outspread, 
They heard, and mused upon eternity 
That circles human life. Gradual there rose 
A softer strain and sweeter, making way 
O'er that sea-murmur hoarse ; and they were ware 
That in the black far-shadowing church whose bulk 
Up-towered between them and the moon, the monks 
Their matins had begun. A little sigh 
That moment reached them from the central gloom 
Guarding the sleeper's bed; a second sigh 



590 Confession in the Church of England. 

Succeeded : neither seemed the sigh of pain : 
And some one said, "He wakens." Large and bright 
Over the church-roof sudden rushed the moon, 
And smote the cross above that sleeper's couch, 
And smote that sleeper's face. The smile thereon 
Was calmer than the smile of life. Thus died 
Ceadmon, the earliest bard of English song. 



CONFESSION IN THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND.* 



THE subject of confession has of 
late been brought prominently be- 
fore the British public. We need 
hardly say that a storm of indigna- 
tion has been raised. Parliament 
has been called upon to put a stop 
to a practice which is generally be- 
lieved to be quite at variance with 
the spirit of the Church of England, 
and many of the bishops have pub- 
licly condemned it. It may, how- 
ever, be doubted whether any effect 
has really been produced; for as 
long as clergy are found who claim 
the power of forgiving sin, and as 
long as people feel the need of ab- 
solution, it is certain that confes- 
sion will be practised. 

A Catholic must necessarily look 
on confession, as existing in the 
Anglican communion, with feelings 
of a very mixed nature. On the 
one hand it is impossible not to 
appreciate the sincerity and humi- 
lity evinced by those who volun- 
tarily seek what they believe to be 
a means of grace. It is hard to 
doubt that the habit of self-exami- 

* One of the most recent and significant signs of 
change in the Anglican communion is the move- 
ment in favor of confession. It may be well to in- 
form our readers that the above article is from the 
pen of Mgr. Capel, than whom no man in England 
probably is better fitted from his position, know- 
ledge, and experience to treat of such a subject. 
ED. C. W. 



nation and of watchfulness natu- 
rally resulting from confession must 
have its value ; above all, it seems 
as if we might fairly hope that the 
spirit of obedience and the faith- 
fulness in acting on conviction will 
be rewarded by fuller light and 
knowledge. 

On the other hand, it is equally 
impossible to shut our eyes to the 
great dangers which beset confes- 
sion among Anglicans. In the first 
place, there is the absence of all 
sacramental grace; secondly, of 
training, and even of theological 
knowledge, in the clergy ; and, third- 
ly, those who use confession are in 
an exceptional position, which of 
itself is fraught with peril to the 
soul. 

Of course no Catholic supposes 
Anglican clergymen to have true 
orders. Confession in the English 
communion is simply a conversa- 
tion between two lay people on 
some of the most important sub- 
jects that can occupy the thoughts 
of human beings. There may be 
on either side sincerity, piety, and 
earnestness, but sacramental grace 
there is not. Relations so close 
between two souls are certainly not 
without peril ; we do not speak of 
the danger to morals which the 






Confession in the Church of England, 



591 



Protestant party constantly insists 
upon, and whose existence we can- 
not altogether deny, but of the 
tyranny on the part of the minister, 
and of the unreasonable obedience 
yielded by the penitent to a self- 
appointed guide. 

Those who have looked a little 
into their own hearts, and who 
have reflected on the subtle influ- 
ences which have told on their 
characters, must feel that dealing 
with another soul is no light mat- 
ter ; that the chances of doing harm 
are many and great ; and that spe- 
cial graces are needed by those 
who are called to so sacred an 
office. The need of training, too, 
is obvious ; he who is to be the 
physician of the soul ought to be 
as well acquainted with moral 
theology as a physician should be 
with medical science. Among the 
clergy of the Church of England 
there is an absolute want of theo- 
logical knowledge. It would be 
hard to mention an Anglican book 
on any subject connected with mo- 
ral theology. Anglican clergymen, 
even where they have learnt to be- 
lieve many of the dogmas of the 
Catholic faith, are, generally speak- 
ing, ignorant of the difference be- 
tween mortal and venial sin. Hence 
results a spirit of severity on the 
part of the confessor which tends 
to produce scrupulosity and de- 
pression in the penitent. Converts 
have declared that the first time 
they heard Catholic teaching as to 
the nature of sin it seemed to them 
the most consoling doctrine pos- 
sible. 

It is true that of late years some 
Catholic manuals have been trans- 
lated and "adapted" to the An- 
glican use. In the recent contro- 
versies regarding the Priest in 
Absolution some of the leading 
High-Church clergy have proclaim- 



ed their ignorance of the book, and 
have asserted that experience had 
taught them all that they could 
learn from its pages ; but while 
they were gaining their experience 
what became of the poor souls who 
were the subjects of their study ? 
In the Catholic Church a person 
cannot be said in any way to dis- 
tinguish himself by going to con- 
fession ; he does what has to be 
done if he would save his soul. 
Among Anglicans, although the 
practice is now pretty widely 
spread, the case is very different ; 
the man or woman who goes to 
confession occupies a somewhat ex- 
ceptional position, and is more or 
less considered as a support of the 
church, as one of those through 
whose influence that church is gra- 
dually to be reformed and restored. 

It is hard to get at statistics as 
to the actual strength of the ex- 
treme High-Church party, and even 
among those who call themselves 
High Church there are many shades 
and differences of opinion ; the 
amount of notice which it has at- 
tracted is due rather to the adop- 
tion of practices unknown in the 
Church of England, and to the ear- 
nestness and activity of its clergy, 
than to the great number of its ad- 
herents. If we were to count one- 
tenth part of the members of the 
Church of England as High Church 
we should probably be overshoot- 
ing the mark; and of these it is by 
no means to be assumed that the 
greater number go to confession. 
Personal inquiry in at least one so- 
called centre of ritualism has led 
us to believe that it is the practice 
of a mere minority. 

We believe that the practice of 
confession maybe said to be pretty 
nearly universal in the case of the 
Anglican religious communities 
(which are about thirty in number). 



592 



Confession in the Church of England. 



Many people living in the world 
are accustomed to go to confession 
weekly or fortnightly, and in some 
few London churches the practice 
is probably followed by the ma- 
jority of the congregation ; children 
are trained to it from their ear- 
liest years, and it is boldly pro- 
claimed to be the " remedy for 
post-baptismal sin." 

As far as we can gather from the 
testimony of those who have con- 
fessed and heard confessions as An- 
glicans, we should say that confes- 
sion is often an actual torture to the 
soul ; that penances are often imposed 
altogether without proportion to 
theircause; that a kind of obedience 
unknown among Catholics is claim- 
ed and is rendered. This, after all, 
is the great danger. It will never 
be known till the last day how 
many souls have been kept out of 
God's church by the authority of 
their Protestant " directors." A 
director finds that one of his peni- 
tents begins to think that the Ca- 
tholic Church has claims worthy, at 
least, of being examined. At once 
active works of charity are propos- 
ed as a remedy ; all reading of Ca- 
tholic books, or intercourse with 
Catholic friends or relations, is for- 
bidden ; the director is not afraid 
to say that leaving the Church of 
England is a sin against the Holy 
Ghost, and furthermore will pro- 
mise to answer at the last day for 
the soul that, in reliance on his 
dictum, suspends all search after 
truth and blindly obeys. The mo- 
ment of grace is too often lost; the 
soul holds back and will not re- 
spond to God's call. Too often 
those things which it had are taken 
from it, and the sad result is an 
utter loss of faith. 

A Catholic's interest in the work- 
ing of the Anglican Church is sole- 
ly in reference to the work of con- 



version. Those who in one sense 
are said to come nearest to the Ca- 
tholic Church are often in reality 
the furthest off; for they believe 
Catholic doctrines not because they 
are proposed by a divine authority, 
but because they consider them 
reasonable, or find that they are in 
accordance with the testimony of 
antiquity. Theirreligion is as much 
a matter of private judgment as 
that of the Bible Christian; the dif- 
ference lies in the fact that the 
ritualist exercises his private judg- 
ment over a more extended field 
than the other. 

An Anglican who goes to con- 
fession must be an object of great 
anxiety to a Catholic friend. In 
such a case, at least where the prac- 
tice has been voluntarily and ear- 
nestly adopted, we feel that God is 
calling that soul to his church ; 
that he has awakened in it a sense 
of need, a craving for the grace 
and aid which, generally speaking, 
are only to be found in the sacra- 
ments. We can hardly doubt that, 
if that soul is true to grace, it will 
ere long be in the one true fold ; 
but the position is one of peculiar 
difficulty, and the temptations 
which beset it are of no common 
kind. Minds of a weak order 
naturally yield to anything that 
bears the semblance of lawful au- 
thority ; the conscientious fear to 
go against those whom they believe 
to be wiser and better than them- 
selves ; a peace of mind often fol- 
lows the confession of an Anglican. 
Perhaps it is the natural result of 
having made an effort and got over 
what is supposed to be a painful 
duty; perhaps it is a grace given 
by God in consideration of an act 
of contrition. How is the poor 
soul to discern this peace from the 
effect of sacramental grace? So 
the verv goodness of God is turned 



Confession in the Church of England. 



593 



into a reason for delay and for rest- 
ing satisfied. 

Hitherto we have looked on the 
subject of confession in the Angli- 
can communion chiefly from the 
side of the penitent ; the case of 
the clergy who hear confessions is 
widely different and is beset with 
many difficulties. Generally speak- 
ing, the only question arising in the 
mind of the penitent would be: 
Can I get my sins forgiven by go- 
ing to confession? Of course the 
reality of the absolution turns pri- 
marily on the validity of orders; 
strange to say, a vast number of 
the laity of the Church of Eng- 
land are contented to take the va- 
lidity of the orders of their minis- 
ters as an unquestioned fact. The 
clergy naturally are most positive 
in the assertion that their orders 
are valid ; as the nature and the 
necessity of jurisdiction are alike 
unknown to the ordinary Anglican 
mind, the matter seems pretty 
clear. The laity in the Anglican 
body are not in any very definite 
manner bound by the Prayer-book 
or by any of the authorized docu- 
ments of that body ; there is no- 
thing anomalous in the idea of An- 
glican lay people, especially women, 
going to confession without even 
asking themselves whether the 
practice is in accordance with the 
mind of the communion to which 
they belong. Moreover, High- 
Church Anglicans are avowedly 
bent on improving their church; 
their church is not their guide or 
their mother, but rather an institu- 
tion which has so far fulfilled its 
purpose but imperfectly, and which, 
by a judicious process of reforma- 
tion, they hope to assimilate to an 
ideal existing in their own minds. 
Many conscientious Anglicans 
would therefore deem any objec- 
lion founded on the evident want 

VOL. XXVI. 38 



of encouragement of their views by 
their church as quite irrelevant. 
The Church of England does not 
forbid such and such a practice, 
they would say ; we are convinced 
that it is in accordance with the 
teaching of antiquity, that it is use- 
ful, and therefore we encourage it. 
The clergy, however, are bound 
not only to follow the voice of indi- 
vidual conscience, but to keep cer- 
tain solemn promises by which they 
have voluntarily bound themselves. 
Even if a clergyman be fully con- 
vinced that he possesses the tre- 
mendous power of the keys, it does 
not necessarily follow that he 
should feel at liberty to exercise it 
at all times or in all places. We 
do not go at all into the question 
of Anglican orders, except to re- 
mark in passing that it seems 
strange that the majority of the 
clergy should give themselves so 
little trouble on the subject; they 
know that, to say the least, grave 
doubts as to their position are en- 
tertained by Christendom in gen- 
eral, and yet it is very seldom that 
any one of them takes the same 
trouble to investigate his orders 
that a reasonable man would take 
in regard to his title-deeds, if 
a doubt were thrown on them. 
We believe that the feeling which 
we once heard expressed by a 
clergyman said to be High Church 
is not very uncommon ; being told 
by a friend that there were serious 
reasons for doubting Anglican or- 
ders, and consequently Anglican 
sacraments, he made no attempt to 
defend them, but simply remarked : 
" I don't suppose that God would 
let us suffer for such a trifle." To 
make the position of the Anglican 
clergy clear to our readers, we must 
begin by citing from "The Form 
and Manner of making Priests " 
the solemn words which a Protes- 



594 



Confession in the Church of England. 



tant bishop, "laying his hands up- 
on the head of every one that re- 
.-civeth the order of priesthood," 
pronounces over him : 

" Receive the Holy Ghost for the office 
and work of a priest in the church of 
God, now committed unto thee by the 
imposition of our hands. Whose sins 
thou dost forgive, they are forgiven ; 
and whose sins thou dost retain, they 
are retained. And be thou a faithful 
dispenser of the word of God, and of 
his holy sacraments : In the name of the 
Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy 
-Ghost. Amen." 

By the thirty-sixth canon of 
the Church of England, published 
.and confirmed in 1865, it is requir- 
ed that the following Declaration 
and subscription should be made 
by such as are to be ordained min- 
isters : 

"I, A. B., do solemnly make the fol- 
lowing declaration : I assent to the 
Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, and to 
.the Book of Common Prayer, and of 
Ordering of Bishops, Priests, and Dea- 
cons ; I believe the doctrine of the 
United Church of England and Ireland, 
as therein set forth, to be agreeable to 
the word of God ; and in public prayer 
.and administration of the sacraments, I 
will use the form in the said book pre- 
scribed, and none other, except so far as 
.shall be ordered by lawful authority." 

An Anglican clergyman, again, 
pledges himself at his ordina'tion to 
minister the doctrine and sacra- 
ments and the discipline of Christ 
as our Lord hath commanded, and 
as this church and realm hath receiv- 
ed the same. The subject of confes- 
sion is mentioned three times in 
the Book of Common Prayer, which, 
as our readers may perhaps be 
aware, is the only authorized for- 
mulary of devotion possessed by the 
Church of England. There is no 
separate ritual for the clergy ; the 
Common Prayer is the one compre- 
hensive whole and is in the hands 
of everybody. 



In the exhortation which is ap- 
pointed to be read on the Sunday 
immediately preceding the celebra- 
tion of the Holy Communion, and 
which, by the way, a great many 
regular church-goers seldom or 
never have heard read, the con- 
cluding paragraph runs as follows : 

"And because it is requisite that no 
man should come to the holy commun- 
ion, but with a full trust in God's mercy, 
and with a quiet conscience ; therefore if 
there be any of you, who by this means, 
(i.e., by self-examination and private re- 
pentance,) cannot quiet his own con- 
science herein but requireth further 
comfort or counsel, let him come to me, 
or to some other discreet and learned 
minister of God's word, and open his 
grief; that by the ministry ctf God's holy 
word he may receive the benefit of abso- 
lution, together with ghostly counsel and 
advice, to the quieting of his conscience 
and avoiding of all scruple and doubt- 
fulness." 

The next occasion on which we 
find confession in the pages of tht- 
Prayer-book is the Visitation of 
the Sick. A rubric lays down the 
" priest's " duty in these words : 

" Here shall the sick person be moved 
to make a special confession of his sins, 
if he feel his conscience troubled with 
any weighty matter. After which con- 
fession the priest shall absolve him (if 
he humbly and heartily desire it) after 
this sort: Our Lord Jesus Christ, who 
hath left power to his church to absolve 
all sinners who truly repent and believe 
in him, of his great mercy forgive thee 
thine offences ; and, by his authority com- 
mitted to me, I absolve thee from all 
thy sins, in the name of the Father, and 
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. 
Amen." 

Lastly, in the twenty-fifth of the 
Thirty-nine Articles of Religion, 
which are subscribed by all the 
clergy, we read : 

" There are two sacraments, ordained 
of Christ our Lord in the Gospel that is 
to s.iy, baptism and the Supper of the 
Lord. Those five commonly called sa- 



Confession in the Church of England. 



595 



craments that is to say, confirmation, 
penance, orders, matrimony, and extreme 
unction are not to be counted for sacra- 
ments of the Gospel, being such as have 
grown partly of the corrupt following of 
the apostles, partly are states of life al- 
lowed in the Scriptures ; but yet have 
not like nature of sacraments with bap- 
tism and the Lord's Supper, for that they 
have not any visible sign or ceremony 
ordained of God." 

As the Church of England has 
but one authorized book of devo- 
tion, she has but one book of in- 
struction ; her Homilies are declar- 
ed, in the thirty-fifth of the Thir- 
ty-nine Articles, " to contain a god- 
ly and wholesome doctrine and ne- 
cessary for these times," and it is 
directed that they should " be read 
in churches by the minister dili- 
gently and distinctly, that they may 
be understanded of the people." 

The Homilies are not read in 
churches ; in fact we believe it 
would be safe to assert that they 
are hardly ever read anywhere, and 
we might almost suppose them to 
be obsolete, were it not that every 
candidate for orders signs the state- 
ment that they are "necessary for 
these times." The second part of 
the Homily on Repentance says : 

" And where they (the Roman teach- 
ers) do allege this saying of our Saviour 
Jesus Christ unto the leper, to prove 
auricular confession to stand on God's 
word, ' Go thy way, and show thyself 
unto the priest,' do they not see that the 
leper was cleansed from his leprosy, be- 
fore he was by Christ sent unto the 
priest for to show himself unto him? By 
the same reason we must be cleansed 
from our spiritual leprosy I mean our 
sins must be forgiven us before that we 
come to confession. What need we, then, 
to tell forth our sins into the ear of the 
priest, sith that they may be already 
taken away? Therefore holy Ambrose, 
in his second sermon upon the iiQth 
Psalm, doth say full well : Go s/tow thyself 
nnto the priest. Who is the true priest, 
biit he which is the priest for ever after 
the order of Melchisedech ? Whereby 



this holy Father doth understand that, 
both the priesthood and the law being 
changed, we ought to acknowledge none 
other priest for deliverance from our 
sins but our Saviour Jesus Christ, who, 
being our sovereign bishop, doth with 
the sacrifice of his body and blood, of- 
fered once for ever upon the altar of the 
cross, most effectually cleanse the spiri- 
tual leprosy and wash away the sins of 
all those that with true confession of the 
same do flee unto him. It is most evi- 
dent and plain, that this auricular con- 
fession hath not the warrant of God's 
word, else it had not been lawful for 
Nectarius, Bishop of Constantinople, 
upon a just occasion to have put it 
down. 

" Let us with fear and trembling, 
and with a true contrite heart, use 
that kind of confession which God 
doth command in his Word, and then 
doubtless, as he is faithful and righteous, 
he will forgive us our sins and make us 
clean from all wickedness. I do not say 
but that, if any do find themselves troub- 
led in conscience, they may repair to 
their learned curate or pastor, or to 
some other godly learned man, and show 
the trouble and doubt of their conscience 
to them, that they may receive at their 
hand the comfortable salve of God's 
word ; but it is against the true Christian 
liberty, that any man should be bound 
to the numbering of his sins, as it hath 
been used heretofore in the time of 
blindness and ignorance." 

Such are the scanty devotional 
and dogmatical utterances of the 
Church of England on the subject 
of confession. The only other in- 
struction given to her clergy in 
regard to their duties as confessors 
is to be found in the one hundred 
and thirteenth canon, which treats 
of the presentment of notorious of- 
fenders to the ordinaries. Parsons 
and vicars, or in their absence their 
curates, may themselves present to 
their ordinaries 

" All such crimes as they have in charge 
or otherwise, as by them (being tlie per- 
sons that should have the chief care for 
the suppressing of sin and impiety in 
their parishes) shall be thought to re* 



596 



Confession in the Church of England. 



quire due reformation. Provided always, 
that if any man confess his secret and 
hidden sins to the minister, for the un- 
burdening of his conscience, and to re- 
ceive spiritual consolation and ease of 
mind from him ; we do not any way bind 
the said minister by this our Constitu- 
tion, but do straitly charge and admon- 
ish him, that he do not at any time re- 
veal and make known to any person 
whatsoever any crime or offence so com- 
mitted to his trust and secrecy (except 
they be such crimes as, by the laws of 
this realm, his own life may be called into 
question for concealing the same), under 
pain of irregularity." 

As far as we can gather, the be- 
lief of the. Church of England en 
the subject of confession may be 
summed up in the following propo- 
sitions : 

1. Penance is not a sacrament, 

but 

2. Her'ministers have the power 
of forgiving sins. 

3. This power is exercised after 
confession made by the penitent. 

4. But such confession is not to 
be made, save in case of serious ill- 
ness or of great disquiet of mind. 

5. The absolution of the priest 
is not the ordinary means by which 
sins are forgiven. 

6. The penitent is to be the 
judge in his own case. If he feels 
very much in want of confession, 
he may have it ; if not, he is to do 
without it. His own feeling is the 
only rule in the matter. 

We think our readers will admit 
that the above statements are in 
no way an unfair summary of the 
teaching of the Church of England 
as represented by her formularies. 
Certainly they give no warrant for 
the assertion now made by the 
High-Church party that confession 
is the ordinary remedy for post- 
baptismal sin, or to the practice of 
frequent and regular confession 
which is now so widely advocated 
and followed. Confession is evi- 



dently, according to the teaching 
of Anglicanism, what it has been 
well called by an Anglican, a 
" luxury." Ho\v, it may be asked, 
can men who are pledged to teach 
and maintain the doctrines of the 
Church of England act in direct 
opposition to the instructions which 
she has given them ? We do not 
maintain that those instructions 
have the appearance of being all 
the expression of the same convic- 
tions. There is an apparent dis- 
crepancy existing amongst them ; 
they are not consistent with each 
other. But the one broad fact is 
plain as daylight : they do not 
countenance the present action of 
extreme Anglicans. Lookers-on 
constantly ask, Are these men sin- 
cere ? Why do they not " go over 
to Rome " ? Are they not traitors 
in the Anglican camp ? To these 
questions we can only reply : We 
judge not ; each individual must 
stand or fall to his own master ; 
but we cannot hesitate in saying 
that ritualism as a system is dis- 
honest, and that the position occu- 
pied by its adherents is the most 
untenable that any man can under- 
take to defend. 

If we seek for the reason why 
men whom we are ready to believe 
upright and honorable act in a 
manner which is apparently abso- 
lutely incompatible with their sol- 
emn engagements, it may perhaps 
be discovered by a consideration 
of one of the chief characteristics 
of the Church of England. 

St. Paul speaks of the church of 
Christ as " the pillar and ground 
of the truth." The Church of 
England is essentially a compro- 
mise. Some of her dignitaries even 
look on this as her glory : the High- 
Churchman can find his belief in 
the Real Presence supported by 
her catechism, but the Low-Church- 



Confession in the CJmrch of England, 



597 



man has the black rubric, which is 
equally strong in favor of his opin- 
ion ; her prayers are for the most 
part preserved from the days of Ca- 
tholic piety, and her Articles bear 
the impress of foreign heresy; she 
prays against " false doctrine, he- 
resy, and schism," and devotes one 
of her Articles to the assertion that 
all churches have erred. Her cler- 
gy are required to accept anomalies 
and inconsistencies ; and we can- 
not but do them the justice to say 
that they accept them with great 
equanimity. Every one has some- 
thing to get over : the High-Church- 
man could wish some things alter- 
ed, and the Low-Churchman would 
be glad to see others omitted ; the 
result seems to be that every one 
subscribes with a kind of laxity 
which, if it does not imply a want 
of honesty, at least betrays an ab- 
sence of accuracy and of definite 
conviction. Subscription to arti- 
cles and formularies seems to sit 
very lightly on the Anglican con- 
science ; it is a mere means to an 
end. 

But the Anglican clergyman not 
only pledges himself to the doc- 
trines of the Prayer-book and Arti- 
cles ; he also promises obedience 
to his bishop. Here is something 
apparently definite. In the voice 
of a living bishop there can hardly 
be the same scope for diversity as 
the pages of the Prayer-book afford. 
Generally speaking, the Anglican 
bishops condemn the practice of 
confession; if they were really 
rulers in their communion there 
can be no doubt that the High- 
Church party would long since have 
been extinct. As a fact, the An- 
glican does not obey his bishop ; 
at this very moment one of the 
leading High-Church clergy of Lon- 
don has definitely and deliberately 
refused to obey his bishop by re- 



moving from his church a crucifix 
and a picture of Our Lady, which 
he believes tend to promote devo- 
tion among his flock. 

For the reasons which lead con- 
scientious men to disobey the or- 
dinary whose godly admonitions 
they have engaged with a glad 
mind and will to follow, and to 
whose godly judgments they have 
promised with God's help to sub- 
mit, we must again look to the pe- 
culiar theories of the Church of 
England. It is hardly necessary 
to say that the Church of England 
does not in any way or under any 
circumstances claim infallibility; 
nay, more, she goes out of her \vay 
to deny its very existence. One 
of her Articles asserts that the 
churches of Jerusalem, Alexan- 
dria, Antioch, and Rome have err- 
ed in matters of faith, and another 
follows up this assertion by the 
kindred statement that general 
councils may err, and sometimes 
have erred, even in things pertain- 
ing to God. She indeed daily pro- 
fesses her belief in One, Holy, Ca- 
tholic, and Apostolic Church, but 
she does not inform her children 
where and how the voice of that 
church is to be heard. She con- 
stantly asserts the authority of 
Holy Scripture, but she recognizes 
no authority competent to inter- 
pret Scripture in a decisive man- 
ner. Under the influence of such 
teaching it is not surprising that 
there should exist in the Church of 
England t\vo theories regarding 
authority in matters of faith. One 
is that there is no authority save 
Holy Scripture. Everything must 
be proved by Scripture; and as 
there is no one necessarily better 
entitled than another to explain 
Scripture, this virtually amounts to 
a recognition of the right and duty 
of private judgment to its fullest 



Confession in the CliurcJi of England. 



extent. The other theory is bas- 
ed on belief in the One Catholic 
Church. It admits that our Lord 
appointed his church to teach men 
all truth ; it believes that the voice 
of the church in primitive times 
was the voice of God ; it doubts 
not that at a former period the 
church was guided by the Spirit of 
God, but it holds that supernatu- 
ral guidance to be in abeyance ; it 
recognizes no living voice of the 
church ; it looks forward with a 
vague hope to the reunion of Ca- 
tholics, Greeks, and Anglicans, and 
the possibility in such a case of a 
general couYici! being held, whose 
decisions would bind all Christen- 
dom. In the meantime the church 
is dumb, if not dead, and all that 
can be done is to turn with a rev- 
erent mind to the study of antiqui- 
ty, to an examination of what has 
been handed down from the days 
of pure and undoubted faith. 
This last is the theory of the High- 
Church party in general. To their 
mind a bishop is a necessity ; he is 
required for the conferring of 
orders and for giving confirmation ; 
he is not the centre of sacrificial 
power in his diocese, nor the 
source of jurisdiction; he is not a 
teacher in any other sense beyond 
that in which they are themselves 
teachers; their obedience to him 
is not an obedience to one whom 
our Lord lias set over his flock 
with a special charge to feed his 
sheep as well as his lambs ; it is 
an obedience rendered to one who 
is officially a superior an obedience 
which has no direct reference to 
God, and which is constantly evad- 
ed (it may be in perfect good faith) 
on the principle that " we ought to 
obey God rather than man." 

Another cause which has proba- 
bly much to do with the apparent 
inconsistencies of the High-Church 



Anglican clergy is the fact that 
they are in a great many cases ab- 
sorbed and overwhelmed by an 
amount of active work which leaves 
little leisure for the serious exami- 
nation of their position. It is ad- 
mitted on all sides that the last 
century was a period of spiritual 
apathy and deadness as far as the 
Church of England was concerned. 
The movement of the past forty 
years has not been merely in the 
direction of Catholic doctrine, but 
it has also led to a renewal of zeal, 
to energy and self-sacrifice, which 
we cannot but appreciate. The 
poor, the young, the ignorant, and 
the fallen are cared for with a cha- 
rity whose root is, we trust, to be 
found in the increased knowledge 
of the life and of the love of our 
Lord. But even works of mercy 
have their snares ; a man who is 
toiling night and day among the 
outcast and the poor of great cities, 
who sees the results of his labor in 
the reformed life of many a wan- 
derer, and who also sees pressing 
on him needs which he can never 
fully satisfy, must be sorely tempt- 
ed to turn a deaf ear to all such 
questionings as would stay his 
course. He hears people's confes- 
sions, and he sees them turn to 
God and lead better lives; natu- 
rally he concludes that all is right, 
and he resents any interference 
with a practice which is apparently 
so salutary. 

We have now given a short and, 
we hope, a fair idea of confession 
as it exists at present in the An- 
glican communion. We must add, 
for the information of those who 
have not had the opportunity of 
watching the progress of events in 
England, that the practice of con- 
fession was unknown, or almost un- 
known, in the Anglican communion 
until about five-and-thirty years 



Michael the Sombre. 



599 



ago. It was one of the first fruits 
of that turning back to the old Ca- 
tholic paths which by God's bless- 
ing has led so many souls into the 
Church. The movement still goes 
on ; it has passed through different 



phases, and year by year it brings 
one after another to the very thres- 
hold of their true home ; they enter 
in and are at rest, and find the 
reality of all that they had hitherto 
sought and longed for. 



MICHAEL THE SOMBRE.* 

AN EPISODE IN THE POLISH INSURRECTION, 1863-1864. 



IT is a trite remark that every 
age has produced its heroes, its 
saints, and its martyrs ; but there 
are few amongst us who have suf- 
ficient discernment to recognize 
them when they cross our path in 
life. " Should we know a saint if 
we met him?" asks Father Faber. 
And so if we were to meet the he- 
roine of this tale, quietly working 
in her own village or busy with 
the ouvroir for young girls she has 
just established in her province in 
France, we should be far indeed 
from guessing that we saw with 
our own eyes a woman who had 
equalled, if not surpassed, Joan of 
Arc in heroism, devotion, and cou- 
rage, and who had done deeds 
which would be incredible, if not 
attested by a multitude of living 
witnesses. 

She was born in one of the de- 
partments of France unhappily 
annexed during the war of 1870-71. 
Having lost her mother in infancy, 
she was brought up by her father, 
an old officer under Louis XVIII. 
and Charles X., who educated her 
entirely as a boy. At twelve years 
of age she was a complete mistress 

* This strange narrative, which has never hither- 
to been published in any language, is the autobio- 
graphy of a friend of the Lady Herbert of Lea, who 
has translated it for THE CATHOLIC WORLD 
KD. C. W. 



of the art of fencing, riding, shoot- 
ing, and other manly accomplish- 
ments. Then, fearing lest she should 
be altogether unfitted for the socie- 
ty of those of her own sex, her fa- 
ther suddenly determined to send 
her to a convent, where her extra- 
ordinary cleverness soon enabled 
her to conquer all difficulties, and 
she made the most rapid progress 
in every branch of study. A vein 
of earnest Catholic piety ran 
through her whole character, coup- 
led with an equally earnest devo- 
tion to her country and her king. 
We do not know what family cir- 
cumstances induced her father to 
part for a time from a child on whose 
education he had lavished such 
thought and care. But at eighteen 
we find her established in Poland 
as an inmate of one of its noblest 
families. After two years thus spent, 
during which she acquired a tho- 
rough knowledge of the Polish and 
German languages, she returned 
to France and had the melancholy 
consolation of nursing and assist- 
ing her father in his last moments ; 
after which she was entreated to 

return to the Countess L in 

Poland, and become the adopted 
child of the house, to which she 
consented. So that, when the in- 
surrection in that country broke 



6oo 



Michael the Sombre. 



out in 1863, "Mika,"as she was 
affectionately called by the whole 
family, rejoiced in the opportunity 
it afforded her of repaying the debt 
of gratitude she owed to those who 
had been as her second parents, by 
a devotion which was ready to sac- 
rifice life itself in their service. 

It is an episode in this war 
which we are about to give to our 
readers, and which we think will be 
doubly interesting at the present 
moment, when all eyes are fixed on 
the terrible struggle going on in 
the East. The story is told in the 
heroine's own words. 

It was on the 22d January, 1863, 
that the Poles, in little bands of 
ten or twenty men, met by a cross 
raised in honor of Kosciusko in the 
palatinate of Radom, and made a 
vow to deliver Poland from the 
Muscovite yoke or perish in the 
attempt. Let those who blame 
them remember the intolerable 
persecution which they had patient- 
ly endured for years a persecution 
Avhich deprived them of their faith, 
their language, their rights as 
citizens, and all that men hold 
most dear. 

On the 24th they marched on 
Miechow, having no other arms 
than scythes and sticks and old- 
fashioned fowling-pieces. Led by 
inexperienced chiefs, who, in their 
ardor, fondly imagined that patri- 
otism and a holy cause would car- 
ry the day against military tactics, 
they were foolish enough to attack, 
in broad daylight, a strong body of 
Russians, well armed and superior 
to them in numbers, who occupied 
an almost impregnable position on 
the heights above the town. The 
result may be easily imagined. 
The Poles were repulsed with 
heavy loss, and the Russians, who 
delight in celebrating their triumphs 



by a bonfire, burnt down the town 
and massacred all the Poles who 
came within their reach. 

Ten of the Polish wounded were 
secretly brought to the caslle, 
where we had established a subter- 
ranean ambulance. It was my 
business to dress the wounds of 
these poor fellows, assisted by a 
holy nun, the Mother Alexandra, 
who played too important a part in 
my future history not to be men- 
tioned here. The Count L 

did not approve of the insurrection 
and considered it hopeless from the 
first ; but he would not abandon 
his brave peasants. Towards the 
3oth of this month our couriers 
gave us warning that the. Russians 
were aware of the wounded men 
being under our care, and that they 
were marching on the castle for the 
purpose of burning it down. The 
count refused to fly, saying that his 
place was amongst his own people 
at Syez, of whom he had always 
been both the father and protector. 
But he called me into his counsels, 
and implored me to carry off his 
wife and children and his sister-in- 
law (who lived with us) to Mislo- 
witz, a little manufacturing town on 
the frontier of Silesia and Poland. 
After all it was a false alarm ; and 
after a fortnight's exile, which anxi- 
ety and fear had doubled, a letter 
from the count recalled us. We 
had nearly reached the end of 
our journey when we were attacked 
by a mob of Russian fanatics, who 
endeavored to seize the carriage. 
I was on horseback at the head of 
the little cavalcade, and I managed 
by means of my revolver to keep 
these miscreants at bay. The 
coachman profited by this mo- 
ment's respite to lash his horses 
into a gallop, by which means we 
escaped the ambush and reached 
the castle in safety. 



Michael the Sombre. 



601 



But our tranquillity was not des- 
tined to be of long duration. 
About a fortnight later eight in- 
surgents of the legion called of 
" Despair " sought refuge in our 
house. We concealed them as well 
as we could; but in the middle of 
the night notice was sent us that 
the Russians were on their track 
and had discovered their hiding- 
place. We hastened to send them 
off to a part of the forest where a 
cavern had been prepared to re- 
ceive any such fugitives. They 
reached it in safety, but unhappily 
were betrayed by a peasant to- whom 
the secret had been confided. The 
exasperated Russians again threat- 
ened the castle ; and again the 
count insisted on our flight. On 
our way an alarm was given of 
some sort which so terrified the 
coachman that he threw down his 
whip and fled for his life, leaving us 
and the carriage at the mercy of 
the four horses, which were strong 
beasts and very fresh. Luckily, 
they stood still for a moment, and, 
as I was used to driving, I reas- 
sured the countess and jumped on 
the box. Hardly, however, had I 
taken the reins than the wheels of 
the carriage became wedged in the 
sand. I jumped off the box, and, 
seizing one of the leaders by the 
bridle, urged him forward with all 
my might. The animal made so 
violent an effort that he threw me 
down and dragged me some twen- 
ty paces ; but as I held on for 
dear life, he ended by stopping, and, 
the carriage being thus released, we 
went on as fast as we could, contin- 
ually in dread of pursuit, till we 
reached the house of Countess 

N , who received us with the 

warmest kindness and hospitality. 
Our stay here, however, was not of 
long duration, for my poor friend, 
the Countess L , was in an ago- 



ny to return to her husband, who 
had been left alone in the castle ; 
and so, at the risk of being again 
captured, we returned to Syez. 
Fortunately, this time we had no 
alarms on the road, and the joy of 
the family at their safe reunion was 
as great as their thankfulness. 

But our happiness was short- 
lived. Although the count did not 
take any part in the insurrection, it 
was well known that his sympathies 
were with his people, and this was 
sufficient to make him a marked 
man with the Russian authorities. 
At last we heard from undeniable 
authority that his arrest had been 
determined upon, and that he had 
been already condemned to Sibe- 
ria. Then followed a heartrend- 
ing scene his wife and children 
(whose whole future would have 
been wrecked had his deportation 
been carried into effect) imploring 
him to take refuge in Germany, 
where he had a small property, and 
to remain there till the storm was 
past ; while he clung tenaciously to 
his old home and to his duties as 
a proprietor during the struggle. 
Finally, he yielded to our tears and 
entreaties ; but before leaving he 
sent for me and solemnly com- 
mended his wife and children to my 
care. I swore to defend them or 
to die in the attempt. It was 
agreed that we were to watch our 
opportunity, and, if possible, obtain 
an escort so as to cross the frontier 
and rejoin the count as soon as we 
could. Three days only after his 
departure we received intelligence 
that the Russians were close to our 
gates and were going to insist on 
a domiciliary visit. I flew to the 
count's private room and com- 
menced making an auto-da-ft of 
every compromising letter or pa- 
per 1 could find and of all suspect- 
ed newspapers. Whilst I was fan- 



6O2 



Michael the Sombre. 



the flames the count's sister 
came in, and, seeing what I was 
about, exclaimed with horror : 

" O Mika ! for God's sake stop. 
You don't know what you are do- 
ing. All Arthur's gunpowder is 
hidden and stowed away in that 
chimney !" 

I was almost paralyzed with fear, 
but I said : 

" Fly for your life and get the 
countess and the children out of 
the house." And then, with a fer- 
vent ejaculatory prayer to God, I 
tore the burning papers out of the 
grate before the flames had had 
time to ignite the gunpowder, which, 
luckily for me, had been carefully 
done up in packets and placed in a 
metal box. I managed to drag the 
papers into another fireplace, and 
had time to see that they were all 
burnt, and to conceal the tinder, 
before the Cossacks surrounded the 
house and summoned us to open 
the doors. Their officers made 
the most minute examination of 
everything, but found nothing that 
they could lay their hands on, and 
went away disgusted, while I es- 
caped with a few trifling burns on 
my hands and arms. 

A few days after this scene 

Mine, de I and I were sitting 

talking in the room where we gene- 
rally met and waited before dinner, 
when the countess came in with 
;in open letter in her hand and 
looking more sad and pale than 
usual. " What has happened ?" 
we both exclaimed ; and I added, 
smiling: "Are we condemned to 
the knout ? Or do the Russians re- 
serve us the honor of a hempen 
collar ?" But my dismal pleasan- 
try produced no response, and the 
poor lady silently came and sat 
down by me, taking my hand. 
After a pause she said : 

" Mika, I have been unwittingly 



guilty of a great indiscretion. You 
know how miserably anxious I am for 
news of Arthur's safety. A servant 
whom I had sent to the post, in 
hopes of finding a letter from him, 
brought me back this one ; and, full 
of my cruel anxiety, I tore it open 
without looking at the address, be- 
ing fully convinced it came from 
him." 

" Well ?" I inquired, as she hesi- 
tated to go on. 

" Well, this letter was a terrible 
disappointment. It wasn't from 
Arthur at all, or for me, but for you, 
and from your own family, who. 
dreading the consequences of this 
sad insurrection, insist on your 
immediate return to France." 

" Is that all ?" I asked, smiling. 

" I don't know," she replied. " I 
only read enough to find out my 
mistake, and I was so absorbed by 
my own anxiety that I hardly took 
in the meaning of the words at 
first." 

"But that is not what I ask," I 
rejoined. " I want to know what 
there was in that letter which 
makes you look so sad." 

The countess' eyes filled with 
tears. " I own, Mika, that the 
thought of losing you breaks my 
heart. You know, at the first mo- 
ment of alarm, Miss B and 

Fraiilein F left the children 

and returned to their homes. I 
fancied you would follow their ex- 
ample ; but seeing you so brave 
and so ready to share in all our 
dangers, I had been completely 
reassured, until God allowed this 
letter to fall into my hands." 

" And what have you concluded 
from that letter?" I asked rather 
coldly. 

" I have made up my mind, 
Mika, that it would be the height 
of selfishness on my part to strive 
to induce you to stay on with us in 



Michael the Sombre. 



603 



a country where desolation and 
terror reign supreme ; where we 
are not safe from one moment to 
the other; where neither human 
nor divine laws are respected, and 
where even ladies are not spared 
the lash or the stake. Yesterday, 

as you well know, Countess P , 

for having worn mourning for her 
brother, who had been massacred 
by the Russians, was flogged pub- 
licly in the market-place and hang- 
ed afterwards. Fly, then, my dear- 
est Mika, while there is yet time. 
Already you have done far more 
than your duty. You have risked 
your life over and over again for 
us. I cannot, I must not, exact 
any further sacrifice. Leave us, 
Mika, leave us to our sad fate, and 
may God be with you !" 

Here the poor wife and mother 
hid her face in her hands, and I 
saw great tears coursing down her 
cheeks througli her clasped fingers. 

Mine, de I and the children, 

who had come in during the inter- 
val and had heard their mother's 
words, clustered round me and 
cried too. When I could com- 
mand my own voice I turned to- 
wards the countess and said : 
" Dearest madam ! seven years 
have now elapsed since I first be- 
came an inmate of your home. 
When I arrived here, Poland, if 
not happy, was at least at peace, 
and I reckoned you among the 
limited number of the truly happy 
ones on this earth. You received 
me (I, whom a deep sorrow had 
driven from my native land) as a 
friend, as a child, as a sister ; and 
this affection and consideration for 
me have never failed for a single 
moment. When the insurrection 
broke out your English governess 
left you ; and I think she was right. 
A sacred duty was laid upon her 
that of supporting her old mother, 



who lived entirely on her earnings. 

As to Fraiilein F , that is quite 

another matter. I expected she 
would go away on the very first 
alarm. With Prussians devoted- 
ness does not exist. I believe they 
have tomatoes in place of hearts ! 
As for me, I have only one brother 
in the world, and he is good enough 
to think of me only when his purse 
is empty. I have, therefore, not 

the same excuse as Miss B , still 

less that of Fraiilein F ; for if I 

chose to live independently, the lit- 
tle fortune left me by my father 
would be enough for my wants. If I 
returned to Poland after his death 
it was to find the same disinterest- 
ed love and affection I had left 
there. I have found more than a 
duty to fulfil : I have a debt of 
gratitude to pay; and I thank God 
for the portion he has assigned to 
me." 

"But your family?" again urged 
the countess, whose face began to 
brighten. 

"Since my father and sister 
died," I replied, "I do not con- 
sider I have any family claims. 
Now, listen to me, contessina," I 
continued, clasping her two hands 
in mine. "God has put into my 
heart an inexhaustible treasure of 
devotedness and tenderness. He 
has given me likewise unusual cour- 
age and strength ; and now I thank 
him that he has also given me 
the occasion to employ these, his 
gifts, in your service. Your hus- 
band is in exile ; you are threatened 
in your home, in your children, in 
your property, and by everything 
around you ; and you could ima- 
gine for a moment that, under such 
circumstances, I should go and 
abandon you ! Thank God ! that 
there never has been a stain yet on 
our family name, and my father, an 
old soldier, impressed upon me, 



Michael the Sombre. 



from a child, the strongest feelings 
of duty and honor. I swear, 
therefore, in the sight of God, that 
as long as this war lasts your coun- 
try shall be my country, your 
children shall also be mine, and as 
long as my heart beats not a hair 
of your dear head shall be touched ! 
When happier days arise for Poland, 
and peace shall be restored, then, 
but not till then, I shall remember 
that France is my country, and 
that I have left well-beloved tombs 
on her soil." 

The countess threw her arms 
round me in a close embrace and 
cried on my shoulder. Mme. de 
I looked at me with the sweet- 
est smile. " Thanks, Mika," she 
murmured in a broken voice. " I 
never believed for a moment that 
you would leave us. You !" 

The children seized hold of my 
hands and covered them with kisses. 
It was a moment of the purest hap- 
piness I had known on earth. 

In proportion to the progress 
and extent of the insurrection the 
cruelty of the Russians increased. 
Every day brought new vexations 
or fresh tortures. We lived in 
constant fear, and our position be- 
came really insupportable. Almost 
every noble family in the neighbor- 
hood had fled and left the country, 
and we should long before have 
followed their example had it not 
been for the great distance we were 
from the railroad. The count had 
arrived safely at Dresden, whence 
he wrote imploring his wife to join 
him. But we were at least forty 
versts from the nearest station, and 
to go there without an escort would 
have exposed us inevitably to fall 
into the hands of the Russians, who 
had lately ranked emigration in the 
category of crimes of high treason. 
And how was it possible to form an 
escort? The peasants, in the pay 



of the Raskolnicks (or old believers), 
would refuse to march, and the 
servants would, in all probability, 
have betrayed us. In vain I rack- 
ed my brains to find some way out 
of this difficulty, and every day the 
danger became more imminent. 
Providence at last had pity upon 
us, and disposed events in a way 
which became eventually the salva- 
tion of those so dear to me. 

Every evening, when the rest of 
the family were gone to bed, I went 
alone into the library to answer 
letters, verify the steward's regis- 
ters, and look after the accounts. 
In the absence of the count there 
was no one to see after these ne- 
cessary duties but mySelf, and I 
looked upon them as my right. 
One night, when this work had kept 
me up later than usual, I heard 
some one knocking at the door. 
It was past midnight. I rose to 
open it, very much surprised at 
any one coming to me at that hour, 
and all the more as no servant 
would venture into that part of the 
house at night, as it was reported 
to be haunted. What was my as- 
tonishment at finding the countess 
herself outside the door in a pitia- 
ble state of agitation. 

" O Mika !" she exclaimed, al- 
most falling into my arms as I led 
her to a seat, " I am in the most 
horrible perplexity and anxiety. I 
have just received an entreaty to 
send a despatch instantly to Gene- 
ral B^ , my husband's oldest and 

dearest friend. He is encamped 
with his squadron at Gory, on the 
property of Count Dembinski; and 
he does not know that eight hun- 
dred Russians are in the immedi- 
ate neighborhood and have laid an 
ambush to surprise him. This 
despatch is to warn him of it ; for 
he has only three hundred men 
with him, who will all be cut to 



Michael the Sombre. 



605 



pieces, if he should not be warn- 
ed in time. Who knows ? perhaps 
already it may be too late. But 
you, Mika, who are always so clear- 
headed can you suggest anything? 
Can you advise me what to do ?" 

" But the man who brought this 
despatch," I exclaimed " where 
is he ? Why cannot he go on in- 
stantly to Gory ?" 

" Alas ! it is impossible," replied 
the countess. " He has just gallop- 
ed seven leagues without stopping 
to take breath, and his horse drop- 
ped down dead at the entrance of 
the village. The poor fellow him- 
self is half dead with fatigue and 
exhaustion." 

I thought for a minute or two, 
and then said : 

" Leave the despatch with me. 
I will go and rouse the steward, 
and between us we will find some 
one who will undertake this perilous 
mission." 

" Do you really think so, Mika ?" 

" Yes, I am sure of it," I re- 
plied. 

" Oh ! what a weight you have 
lifted off my heart," said the coun- 
tess joyfully. "Go at once, dearest 
child. I will wait for you, and riot 
go to bed till I have heard the re- 
sult of your consultation." 

When the countess had gone 
back to her own room a terrible 
struggle arose in my heart. I had 
studied the peasants and servants 
well enough to know that in such a 
moment of extreme danger not one 
of them was to be trusted. The 
steward himself did not inspire me 
witii much confidence ; and, besides, 
he was the father of a family. On 
the other hand, the lives of three 
hundred men hung upon the deliv- 
ery of this message. I knelt down 
and prayed with my whole heart 
tor guidance. When I rose my 
iv-olution was taken. The hour 



was come for me to pay my debt 
of gratitude towards this Poland 
which had become so dear to me, 
and perhaps in this way alone 
could I save the family to whom 
I had devoted my life. I wrote a 
few lines to the countess, and then 
went and woke my own maid. 

" Marynia," I said, " in half an 
hour, but not before, you must 
take this note to the countess, who 
is sitting up for me. And if to- 
morrow, when you get up, I am not 
come back, you must take another 
letter to her, which you will find on 
my chest of drawers." 

" But, Holy Virgin of Czensto- 
chowa!" exclaimed the poor girl, 
" you are not going out at this time 
of night?" 

" Yes; I am starting this very in- 
stant." 

" But then I will wake the whole 
house. I won't have you go alone 
at this hour." 

" No, you will stay quiet," I said 
to her in a tone which admitted of 
no reply, " and in half an hour you 
will do what I have told you." 

So saying, I left Marynia to her 
lamentations and went out. The 
first thing I had to do was to put 
on a man's dress I had received 
permission to do this from Rome 
in case of an emergency like the 
present and then, taking my pis- 
tols, which were always ready, I 
went to the stable and picked out 
the best horse I could find, which 
I saddled myself, blessing again the 
education my father had given me, 
that made me independent of any 
assistance. 

The road which I took passed in 
front of the castle. There was a 
light in the countess' room where 
she was waiting for me. Good, 
gentle, loving woman with a child's 
heart ! Twice I saw her shadow 
pass and repass across the ci rtain, 



6o6 



Michael the Sombre. 



and twice my heart failed me. 
This feeling only lasted a minute ; 
but this minute might have been a 
century for the agony concentrated 
in it. There to the left was the 
old castle which held those two 
young women so dear to me, and 
those children whose birth I had 
witnessed and who loved me so 
tenderly. To the right stretched 
the road that was to lead me to Si- 
beria, perhaps, or to a sudden and 
violent death. If at this thought 
my heart failed me, and if for a mo- 
ment I hesitated, God will, I hope, 
have forgiven it. At twenty-four 
years of age one does not fling away 
life without one look back. I 
stopped my horse instinctively, fully 
realizing the almost foolhardinessof 
my attempt. But then my thoughts 
reverted to those three hundred 
brave fellows whose lives I held, as 
it were, in my hand, and, with a sigh 
which was more like a sob, I dug my 
spurs into my beautiful " Kirdjcali," 
who bounded into the air with sur- 
prise and pain, and commenced 
galloping at a furious pace along 
the road a pace I did not even 
try to check, for it seemed to re- 
lieve my bursting heart. Now and 
then I had to lie down on his 
mane to take breath. But by de- 
grees the cold and calm silence of 
the night, and the satisfaction of 
feeling that I was accomplishing a 
great and sacred duty, restored my 
peace of mind. I checked the pace 
of my horse, and after about three- 
quarters of an hour came to a thick 
fir-wood, through which I was quiet- 
ly ambling when Kirdjcali stopped 
suddenly, and I instantly perceived 
the cause. On the edge of the 
wood, about five hundred paces off, 
a great fire was crackling, round 
which were grouped a number of 
men and horses. It was either a 
Russian or a Polish patrol ; but in 



either case my situation was a crit- 
ical one. I had no "safe conduct" 
papers, and no password save for 

General B . I should be taken 

for a spy and hanged without form or 
ceremony. What was to be done? 
Go back ? That would be the 
height of weakness. Take another 
road ? There was no other. Yet 
to go on was undoubtedly to run 
the risk of falling directly into their 
hands. Again 1 lifted up my 
whole heart in prayer; after all I 
had God and the right on my side, 
and so I decided to venture it, feel- 
ing besides that my good Kirdjcali 
had the legs of a race-horse and 
could beat almost any otjier animal, 
if it came to a chase. The moon, 
which till then had guided my 
path, was suddenly hidden behind a 
thick cloud that concealed me from 
the enemy. I made my horse walk, 
and, lying flat on his neck, I went on 
to within fifty paces of the Cossacks 
(for they Avere Russian Cossacks) 
without their dreaming of my vicin- 
ity ; for the soft sand deadened the 
sound of my horse's feet. All of a 
sudden Kirdjcali threw up his head 
and sniffed the wind with ever-wid- 
ening nostrils. And then what I most 
dreaded came to pass. He recog- 
nized some companion of the 
steppes and gave a loud neigh, which 
was answered\instantly by a hur- 
rah from the children of the Don, 
who were on foot in a moment. 
Making the sign of the cross, I dug 
my spurs once more into my poor 
Kirdjcali's flanks, and passed like a 
flash of lightning before the aston- 
ished Cossacks. " Stoj !" (stop) 
they cried with one voice. My 
only answer to this summons was 
to urge on my steed to still greater 
speed. Then they had recourse to 
a more active means of arresting 
my course. Two flashes lit up thl> 
darkness of the night, and one ball 



Michael tJie Sombre. 



Co/ 



whistled past my ear, grazed my 
head, and cut off a lock of my hair 
close to the temple ; the other pass- 
ed through a branch of a tree some 
paces before me. But Kirdjcali 
flew like the wind, and I was soon 
out of the reach of pursuit. As 
soon as I dared I stopped him to 
let him breathe ; five minutes more 
of this furious pace, and the poor 
beast would have dropped down 
dead. 

By the time I had reached Gene- 
ral B 's column it was three 

o'clock in the morning. 

" Who goes there ?" cried the 
sentinel. 

"Military orders," I replied. 

" The password ?" 

" Polska t Volnoszez" (Poland 
and liberty). He let me pass, and 

I was received by M. D , one 

of the general's aides-de-camp. I 
gave him the despatch, which he 
hastened to take to his chief. 
Hardly had he left me, and before 
I had time to rejoice at having ac- 
complished my mission, when a 
discharge of musketry, accompa- 
nied by the savage Russian war- 
cry, was heard to the left. In spite 
of the fearful speed of my ride, I 
had arrived too late ! The enemy 
had almost surrounded the little 
camp. A few minutes sufficed for 
the general to throw himself into 
the saddle and place himself at the 
head of his column. 

"First squadron, forward!" he 
cried in a stentorian voice. 

Not a man stirred. 

"Second squadron, forward!" 
The same result. The poor fel- 
lows, worn out with fatigue, ex- 
hausted from hunger, and total- 
ly unprepared for this attack, re- 
mained, as it were, paralyzed. To 
me this first moment was terri- 
ble; and those who boast of never 
having been afraid the first time 



they take part in a battle either de- 
ceive themselves or they lie. It 
took me a few minutes to master 
my emotion ; but Kirdjcali too 
made a diversion by furious bounds 
and neighing, which proved that 
for him also this was the first bap- 
tism of fire. 

Seeing the demoralization of hi* 
soldiers, the brave general made a 
desperate charge in the very midst 
of the enemy's ranks, followed by 
a handful of dragoons under the 
orders of Count K . I follow- 
ed his movements with my eye in 
a mechanical sort of way, when all 
of a sudden I saw the unhappy 
general staggering rather than fall- 
ing from his horse, while an in- 
fernal hurrah of triumph burst 
from the Russians. Then all my 
fears vanished. I thought of my 
father, and all that was French 
in my blood was roused. I seized 
a sword that lay close by, and 
turning towards the troops, who 
were still hesitating and waver- 
ing, I cried out: "Cowards, if you 
have allowed your chief to be mur- 
dered, at least do not let his dead 
body bear witness of your shame 
by leaving it in the hands of your 
enemies. Come on and rescue it, 
and wash out in your blood the 
stain you have set on Polish honor !" 

Saying those words, and recom- 
mending my soul to God in one 
fervent aspiration, I threw myself 
impetuously into the strife, follow- 
ed by all the soldiers, whom my 
words had roused from their stu- 
por. The whistling of balls, the 
smell of powder, the cries of the 
dying and the dead, and more than 
all the savage howlings of the Rus- 
sians, threw me into a sort of mad 
rage and furious excitement which 
made me insensible to anything 
but a longing for vengeance. 
Every lime I rose in my stirrups 



6o8 



Michael the Sombre. 



i > wit-Id my sword a man bit the 
dust. I felt a sort of superhuman 
strength at that moment, and never 
ceased to strike till I saw the Poles 
driving the defeated Russians com- 
pletely outof the camp, from whence 
they fled in the utmost disorder. 
I woke then as from a horrible 
nightmare, and felt an inexpressi- 
ble disgust and horror at the sight 
of the dead and dying bodies of 
horses and men all round me wel- 
tering in their blood. At that mo- 
ment an orderly officer galloped up 
to me. 

" Sir," he exclaimed, " the gene- 
ral desires you to come to him im- 
mediately." 

" Your general !" I exclaimed joy- 
fully. " Why, I saw him fall with 
my own eyes. He is not dead, 
then ?" 

44 Not yet ; but his wounds are 
mortal, and I fear there is no hope 
of saving him." 

I followed the officer hastily to a 
tent where the poor general was 
lying on a camp-bed. His face 
was literally hacked with sabre- 
cuts; one ball had gone through 
his chest, and the surgeon, who 
was bending over him, was trying 
in vain to stanch the blood which 
was escaping in a black stream 
from this gaping wound. I took 
off my cap and bowed low before 
the dying hero. 

" Sir," he said in so weak a 
voice that I had to bend down my 
ear close to him to be able to hear, 
" I do not know you, and I do 
not remember ever to have seen 
you before ; but whoever you may 
be, may God bless you for what 
you have done this day ! You 
have saved my troops from dis- 
honor, and me from having my 
last moments embittered by the 
crudest sorrow I could ever have 
experienced." 



At this moment a rush of blood 
from his mouth threatened to stifle 
the dying man. When he had a 
little recovered he spoke again : 

" Whence do you come, and 
what is your name ?" 

" I am French, and my name 
is Michael," I replied, blushing 
deeply. Here the general drew off 
a ring from his finger. It was a 
signet-ring used throughout the 
war as a password of command. 

"Take this," he said, "and 
swear to me not to leave my troops 
till the Central Committee have sent 
another officer to take my place. 
This is the last request of a dying 
man, and I feel sure that you will 
not refuse it to me." 

I hesitated an instant. How re- 
veal my secret and explain my 
anomalous position at such a mo- 
ment? The general, striving to 
raise his voice, reiterated his dying 
entreaty : 

" Swear not to leave them !" 

I felt I could not resist any lon- 
ger. 

" I swear it, general, but on one 
condition : that your soldiers con- 
sent to serve as escort to Countess 

L from her chateau to the 

frontier, as she wishes to escape 
with her children and rejoin her 
husband, who is in exile." 

"What! Countess L , Ar- 
thur's wife ?" 

" The same, general," I replied ; 
44 and it was to implore your pro- 
tection for her in her hour of need, 
as well as to convey to you the in- 
formation she had received of the 
Russian ambuscade, that deter- 
mined me to accept this dangerous 
mission." 

"Thanks, my child thanks for 
her and thanks for me. Gentle- 
men," he added, turning to his 
officers, who, silent and sad, were 
standing at the other end of the 



Michael the Sombre. 



609 



tent, " you will obey this young 
officer until my successor be ap- 
pointed from headquarters. This 
is my last order, my last prayer. 
And as long as he, though a stran- 
ger, fights at the head of your col- 
umn, you will not again forget, I 
hope, that the cause for which you 
are fighting is a sacred one, the 
most holy of all causes, for it is the 
cause of God and your country." 

The officers hung their heads at 
this tacit reproach the only one 
addressed to them by the hero 
whom they had allowed to be slain 
in so cowardly a manner. After 
another fainting fit the general 
made me a sign to draw close to 
him. I knelt down by his side. 
" If death spares you," he said, 
"go and tell my poor mother how 
I died. Console her, and try and 
replace me to her ; for I am the only 
thing she has left in the world." 

Here tears filled his eyes, which 
he turned away to hide his emo- 
tion from his officers. The sur- 
geon had just finished dressing 
his wounds, but he shook his head 
sadly as he rose. The general per- 
ceived the movement and said : 

" My poor friend ! you have 
given yourself a great deal of trou- 
ble, and all for nothing; but I am 
just as grateful to you." 

The surgeon wrung his hand, too 
much moved to speak. Then I 
took courage and said : 

"General, when the doctor of the 
body can do no more, and science 
is exhausted, a Christian has re- 
course to another Physician." 

" You are quite right, my child," 
replied the good general gravely; 
" and I have no time to lose, for I 
feel my life is ebbing away every 
moment." 

He made a sign to one of his 
aides-de-camp, and whispered his 
instructions to him, which the lat- 
VOL. xxvi. 39 



ter hastened to obey. He return- 
ed in a few minutes with a young 
Capuchin, who was the chaplain of 
the corps. The officers left the 
tent, and I was,, about to do the 
same when a sudden thought 
struck me. 

"One word more, general. 1 
want three days to make my ar- 
rangements and get my kit ready." 

" Take them, my son ; but do not 
be away longer, for when you re- 
turn I shall be no more here." 

" Not here, perhaps, but in a 
better world," I exclaimed. "God 
bless you, general ! I cannot re- 
place you, but I may perhaps be 
able to show your troops how those 
should fight and die who have had 
General B for their leader !" 

" Thanks, my child, and may God 
bless you ! Adieu !" 

I pressed the hand which the 
dying man held out to me with re- 
spectful tenderness ; and then, hur- 
rying from the tent to hide my 
emotion, I obtained a " safe-con- 
duct " passport, and, remounting 
my horse, stopped at the best inn 
I could find in the next village, 
and wrote a few lines to Countess 
L , not to tell her of the extra- 
ordinary position in which I had 
been placed or the fearful events 
of the past night, but to reassure 
her, and bid her to hold herself 
in readiness for a speedy depar- 
ture, as an escort had been pro- 
mised for her. Thence I rode as 
fast as I could to the convent of the 
Bernardines at Kielce, and asked 
to see Father Benvenuto imme- 
diately that eloquent preacher and 
holy confessor who had lingered 
for twenty years in a Siberian dun- 
geon. He was my confessor, and 
at this moment of all others in my 
life I needed his advice and gui- 
dance. Fortunately for me, he was 
at home, and I instantly told him 



6io 



A Final Philosophy. 



all that had happened, and of the 
almost compulsory promise which 
had been extorted from me by the 
brave and dying general. The good 
old father listened in silence, and 
then said : 

" My child, what you have done is 
heroic and great ; but if you were 
to retur.i to the camp, and had to 
bear alone this terrible secret, it 
would crush you with its weight." 

" But, good God ! what can I 
do?" I exclaimed. "Must I give 
it up and forfeit my word ?" 

"No; because God, in permit- 
ting these extraordinary events, 
had evidently his divine purpose 
for you. You must return and 
fulfil your vow, but you must not 
go alone. More than a month ago 



I asked permission of my superiors 
to be allowed to carry the conso- 
lations of religion to our brave 
troops in the field. This permis- 
sion I received yesterday ; and so 
I can at once precede you to the 
camp, and when you arrive will be 
your safeguard and protector." 

An enormous weight was taken 
off my mind by this proposal. I 
thanked him with my whole heart, 
and he then insisted on my going 
to sleep for some hours; for all 
that I had gone through had near- 
ly exhausted my strength. After a 
good night's rest I woke, refreshed 
in body and relieved in mind, to 
ride to Breslau, where I completed 
my military equipment and then 
returned to the camp. 



[TO BE CONCLUDED NEXT MONTJf.] 



A FINAL PHILOSOPHY.* 



THE war waged by modern 
thought against supernatural reve- 
lation in the name of the so-called 
" advanced " science is looked up- 
on in a different light by Catholic 
and by Protestant thinkers. Catho- 
lic philosophers and divines look 
upon it as a noisy but futile effort of 
modern anti-Christianism to shake 
and overthrow the mighty rock on 
which the incarnate God has been 
pleased to build his indefectible 
church. They know, of course, 
that they must be ready to fight, 
for the church to which they be- 
long is still militant ; but, far from 
apprehending a coming defeat, they 
feel certain of the victory. God is 

* The Final Philosophy ; or, System of Perfec- 
tible Knowledge itsuing from the Harmony of 
Science and Religion. By Charles Woodruff 
Shields, D.D., Professor in Princeton College. 
New York : Scribncr, Armstrong & Co. 1877. 



with them, and, on God's infallible 
promise, the church whose cause 
they serve is sure of her final tri- 
umph. Protestant divines, on the 
contrary, hold no tokens of future 
victories, and look upon infidel 
science not as an enemy whom 
they have to fight, but as an old 
acquaintance, and a rather capri- 
cious one, whom they must try to 
keep within bounds of decency, 
and from whom they may borrow 
occasionally a few newly-forged 
weapons against the Catholic 
Church. Some sincere Protestants, 
considering the tendency of scien- 
tific thought to destroy all super- 
natural faith, saw, indeed, the ne- 
cessity of resisting its baneful in- 
cursions; but their resistance did 
not, and could not, prove success- 
ful. Protestantism is the notorious 



A Final Philosophy. 



611 



offspring of rebellion ; it is not 
built on the rock; it has no claims 
to special divine assistance ; it can- 
not reckon but on human weakness 
for its support ; it is supremely in- 
consistent ; in short, it is no proof 
against the anti-Christian spirit of 
the age, and, what is still more dis- 
couraging, it is fully conscious of 
its progressive dissolution. 

These considerations and others 
of a like nature kept continually 
coming to our mind as we were 
perusing the pages of the singular 
work whose title stands at the head 
of this article. The great object 
of Dr. Shields is to reconcile reli- 
gion with science by means of what 
he calls final philosophy. 

In the introduction to the work 
the author points out the limits 
and the topics of Christian science ; 
the logical, historical, and practical 
relations of science and religion ; 
the possibility of their reconcilia- 
tion, and the importance of their 
harmony to science, to religion, to 
philosophy. The work is divided 
into two parts. The first part is a 
review of the conduct of philoso- 
phical parties as to the relations 
between science and religion; whilst 
the second part propounds and ex- 
plains the philosophical theory of 
the harmony of science and reli- 
gion, as conceived by the author. 
The first part opens with a chapter 
on the early conflicts and alliances 
between science and religion, where 
the author investigates the causes 
of the present disturbed relations 
between religion and science, and 
traces them from the dawn of the 
Greek philosophy to the Protestant 
Reformation ; describes the con- 
flicts of philosophy and mythology 
in the pre-Christian age ; the wars 
of pagan philosophy against Chris- 
tianity in the first centuries of the 
present era: the alliance of theo- 



logy with philosophy in the patris- 
tic age ; the predominance of theo- 
logy and the subjugation of philo- 
sophy in the scholastic age; and, 
lastly, the revolt of philosophy 
against theology in the age of the 
Reformation. 

In a second chapter he describes 
the modern antagonism between sci- 
ence and religion, the conflict in 
astronomy, in geology, in anthro- 
pology, in psychology, in sociolo- 
gy, in theology, in philosophy, and 
in civilization. 

The third chapter, which fills 
more than two hundred pages, de- 
scribes the modern indiffercntism be- 
tween science and religion, under 
the name of " schism " or " rup- 
ture " in all the branches of science 
already enumerated viz., the 
schism in astronomy, in geology, 
in anthropology, etc., to which is 
added the schism in metaphysics. 

In the fourth chapter the author 
examines the modern eclecticism be- 
tween science and religion : eclec- 
ticism in astronomy, eclecticism in 
geology, and so on through the 
other branches of knowledge al- 
ready mentioned. 

The fifth and last chapter de- 
scribes the modern scepticism be- 
tween science and religion : scepti- 
cism in astronomy, in geology, in 
anthropology, and in all the afore- 
said branches of human knowledge,, 
with a conclusion about " effete re- 
ligious culture." 

The second part of the work, 
though much shorter than the first, 
is divided also into five chapters, 
of which the first aims to show that 
philosophy is the natural umpire 
between religion and science, wher- 
ever they are in conflict ; the se- 
cond expounds and refutes the 
positive philosophy : the third ex- 
amines and criticises the absolute 
philosophy ; the fourth states that 



612 



A 'Final PJiilosoplty. 



final philosophy, or a theory of perfec- 
tible science, may bring about the 
conciliation of positivism and ab- 
solutism ; and the last offers a sketch 
of the ultimate philosophy, the sci- 
ence of sciences, derived scientifi- 
cally from their own historical and 
Qogical development, and whose 
characteristic features the author 
thus glowingly describes in the 
closing sentence of his work : 

" The summary want of the age is that 
Jast philosophy into which shall have 
.been sifted all other philosophy, which 
shall be at once catholic and eclectic, 
which shall be the joint growth and fruit 
of reason and faith, and which shall 
:shed forth, through every walk of re- 
search, the blended light of discovery 
.and revelation ; a philosophy which shall 
be no crude aggregate of decaying sys- 
tems and doctrines, but their distilled 
issue and living effect, and which shall 
not have sprung full-born from any one 
mind or people, but mature as the com- 
mon work and reward of all ; a philoso- 
phy which, proceeding upon the unity 
of truth, shall establish the harmony of 
knowledge through the intelligent con- 
currence of the human with the divine 
intellect, and the rational subjection of 
the finite to the Infinite reason ; a philo- 
sophy, too, which shall be as beneficent 
as it is sacred, which in the act of heal- 
ing the schisms of truth shall also heal 
the sects of the school, of the church, and 
of the state, and, while regenerating hu- 
man art, both material and moral, shall 
.at length regenerate human society; a 
philosophy, in a word, which shall be 
the means of subjecting the earth to 
man and man to God, by grouping the 
sciences, with their fruits and trophies, 
. at the feet of Omniscience, and there 
converging and displaying all laws and 
causes in God, the cause of causes and 
of laws, of whom are all things and in 
whom all things consist ; to whom alone 
be glory "(PP. 587, 588). 

These are noble words. It is 
certain that our age is in great 
need of a philosophy at once ca- 
tholic and eclectic, as the author 
very wisely remarks. Bu.t it is our 
firm conviction that if Dr. .Shields 



had studied our great Catholic au- 
thors, he would know that there is 
a philosophy and a theology which 
does already all that he wishes to 
do by his projected final philoso- 
phy, and much better too. We 
praise his excellent intention; but 
we do not think that his project 
has any chance of being carried 
out in a proper manner. We even 
doubt if a new system of philosophy 
can be found so comprehensive, 
coherent, impartial, and perfect in 
all its parts as to justify the high 
expectation entertained by the au- 
thor. 

This new system of philosophy 
cannot be the product of infidel 
thought, as is evident. Hence 
none of the advocates of advanced 
science can have a part in the pro- 
jected work, except as opponents 
whom philosophy shall have to re- 
fute, or as claimants upon whose 
rights philosophy has to pronounce 
its judicial sentence. 

Nor will the new system be the 
product of Catholic thought ; for 
we Catholics are under the impres- 
sion that the world has no need of 
new philosophical systems. As for 
us, we have a philosophy of admi- 
rable depth, great soundness, and 
incomparable precision, which has 
ever successfully refuted heresy, 
silenced infidelity, and harmonized 
the teachings of revelation and sci- 
ence to our full satisfaction. This 
philosophy can, indeed, be im- 
proved in some particulars, and we 
continually strive to improve it: 
but we are determined not to 
change its principles, which we 
know to be true, and not to depart 
from its method, which has no rival 
in the whole world of speculative 
science. 

Who, then, would frame and de- 
velop the new and " final " philo- 
sophy ? Free-thinkers? Freema- 



A Final Pliilosopliy. 



613 



sons ? Free-religionists ? These 
sectaries would doubtless be glad 
l:o dress philosophy in a white 
apron, with the square in one hand 
and the triangle in the other ; for, 
if the thing were feasible, they 
would acquire at once that philo- 
sophical importance which they 
have not, and which they have al- 
ways been anxious to secure, but 
in vain, by their united efforts. 
But then we are sure that they 
would only develop some humani- 
tarian theory calculated to flatter 
the sceptical spirit of the age, and 
to merge all creeds in naturalism 
and free-religion; and this,of course, 
would not do, for the "final philo- 
sophy " should, according to Dr. 
Shields' view, maintain the rights 
of supernatural revelation no less 
than of natural reason. 

Should, then, the great work be 
abandoned to the hands, industry, 
and discernment of the Protestant 
sects ? Men of talent and men of 
learning are to be found every- 
where ; but as to philosophers, we 
doubt whether any can be found 
among Protestants who will be 
honest enough to draw the legiti- 
mate consequences of their prin- 
ciples, when those consequences 
would imply a condemnation of 
their religious system. In other 
terms, if the work were to be en- 
trusted to Protestant thinkers, one 
might, without need of preterna- 
tural illumination, boldly predict 
that the whole affair must end in 
nothing but failure. What can be 
expected of a Protestant thinker, 
or of any number of Protestant 
thinkers, whether divines or phi- 
losophers, but an inconsistent and 
preposterous tampering with truth ? 
Protestantism lacks, and ever will 
lack, a uniform body of doctrines, 
whether philosophical or theologi- 
cal ; it has no head, no centre, no 



positive principle, no recognized 
living authority, no bond of union ; 
it has only a mutilated Bible which 
it discredits with contradictory 
interpretations ; it is neither a 
church nor a school, but a Babel 
confusion of uncertain and discor- 
dant views; and it has no better 
foundation than the shifting sand 
of private judgment. On what 
ground, then, can a Protestant 
apologist force upon modern 
thought those shreds of revealed 
truth which he claims to hold on 
no better authority than his own 
fallible and changeable reason ? 
And what else can he oppose to 
the invading spirit of unbelief? 
Alas ! Protestantism is nothing but 
a house divided within itself, a 
ship where all hands are captains 
with no crew at their orders, an 
army whose generals have no au- 
thority to command and whose 
soldiers have no duty to obey. 
Such a liouse cannot but crumble 
into dust ; such a ship must foun- 
der ; and such an army cannot 
dream of Christian victories, as it 
is doomed to waste its strength in 
perpetual riots, unless it succeeds 
in putting an end to its intestine 
troubles by self-destruction. It is 
evident, then, that " final philoso- 
phy " cannot be the product of 
Protestant thought. 

Dr. Shields seems to have seen 
these difficulties ; for he holds that 
such a philosophy must not spring 
full-born from any one mind or 
people, but mature " as the com- 
mon work and reward of all." 
Here, however, the question arises 
whether this mode of working is 
calculated to give satisfactory re- 
sults. When a number of persons 
contribute to the execution of a 
great work, it must be taken for 
granted that, if their effort has to 
prove a success, they must work 



614 



A Final Philosophy. 



on the same plan and tend in the 
same direction, so that the action 
of the one may not interfere with 
the action of the other. If all men 
were animated by an intense love of 
truth, and of nothing but .truth, if 
they all could agree to start from 
the same principles, if they were 
all modest in their inferences, if 
they were so humble as to recog- 
nize their error when pointed out 
to them, and if some other similar 
dispositions were known to exist in 
all or in most students of science 
and philosophy, Dr. Shields' plan 
might indeed be carried out with 
universal satisfaction. But men, 
unfortunately, love other things be- 
sides truth and more than truth : 
they love themselves, their own 
ideas, and their own prejudices ; 
they ignore or pervert principles ; 
they defend their blunders, and 
even embellish them for the sake 
of notoriety, and they are obsti- 
nate in their errors. On 'the other 
hand, we see that an ignorant pub- 
lic is always ready to applaud 
any philosophic monstrosity which 
wears a fashionable dress; and 
this is one of the greatest obstacles 
to the triumph of truth, as error 
grows powerful wherever it is en- 
couraged by popular credulity. 
Thus error and truth will continue 
to fight in the future as they did in 
the past. The history of philoso- 
phy is a history of endless discords. 
The wildest conceptions have ever 
found supporters, and charlatanism 
has ever been applauded. The 
only epoch in which error had lost 
its hold of philosophy, and was 
compelled to retire almost entirely 
from the field of speculation, was 
when theology and philosophy, 
bound together in a defensive and 
offensive alliance under the leader- 
ship of the great Thomas Aquinas, 
so overpowered the Moorish philo- 



sophers and confounded their ra- 
tionalistic followers that it was no 
longer possible for error to wear a 
mask. Then it was that the prin- 
ciples of a truly "final" philoso- 
phy were laid down, faith and rea- 
son reconciled, and false theories 
discredited. And it is for this rea- 
son that the disciples of error, who 
after the time of the Lutheran re- 
volt have never ceased to attack 
some religious truth, style that scho- 
lastic epoch a dark age. Dark, in- 
deed, for error, which had lost much 
power of mischief, but bright for 
philosophy, which had triumphed, 
and glorious for Christianity, which 
reigned supreme. If any age must 
be called dark, it is the otae we live 
in, owing to the numbers of igno- 
rant scribblers, unprincipled men in 
responsible positions, and illogical 
scientists who disgrace it. 

This state of things is the pro- 
duct of free thought, which has 
disturbed and nearly destroyed the 
harmony of all the sciences, and all 
but extinguished the light of philo- 
sophical principles. The idea of 
employing free thought as an aux- 
iliary for the defence of philosophy 
is so preposterous on its very face 
that none but a sectary or a scep- 
tic could have entertained it. It 
must be pretty evident to all that 
such a course is like introducing 
the enemy into the fortress. Intro- 
duce Draper and Biichner, Tyndall 
and Moleschott, Haeckel and Dar- 
win, Huxley and Clifford into the 
parlor of philosophy, and you will 
see at once how utterly mistaken is 
Mr. Shields if he reckons on them 
for his great work; you will see 
with what self-reliance, arrogance, 
and intolerance they condemn 
everything contrary to their favor- 
ite views. Tell them that they 
must help you to make a u final 
philosophy " which shall reconcile 



A Final Philosophy. 



615 



Scripture and science, Christianity 
and human reason. What would 
they think of such a proposal? 
Would they condescend to answer 
otherwise than by a sneer ? But 
let us admit that they will favor you 
with an honest answer. What will 
they say ? 

Draper would probably remark 
that philosophy cannot undertake 
any such task, as the conflict be- 
tween religion and science has its 
origin and reason of being in the 
nature of things, which is unchange- 
able. 

Biichner would laugh imperti- 
nently at the idea of a God, a Scrip- 
ture, and a religion. 

Tyndall would have nothing to 
do with the scheme ; for modern 
science cannot shake hands with 
revelation without encouraging a 
belief in miracles and in the utility 
of prayer both which things sci- 
ence has exploded for ever, as con- 
flicting with inviolable laws. 

Moleschott would object that 
revelation and science are irrecon- 
cilable, at least, as to psychology ; 
for the study of physiology has 
made it clear that thought consists 
in a series of molecular movements, 
and he is not willing to renounce 
this new dogma of science or to 
modify in any manner his view of 
the question for the sake of a new 
philosophy. 

Haeckel would indignantly pro- 
test against the scheme, for there 
is no philosophy but the Evolution 
of species and the Descent of man ; 
and he would turn to the great 
Darwin, his respected friend, for 
an approving smile. 

The great Darwin would then 
smile approvingly on his loving and 
faithful disciple, and remark that 
Logic, for instance, which is believ- 
ed to be a part of philosophy, and 
his Descent of man are on such 



bad terms that it would be but a 
waste of time to attempt a recon- 
ciliation between them, so he would 
let them alone. 

The talkative Huxley would 
gladly second Mr. Darwin's resolu- 
tion by the further remark that a 
logic or a philosophy which cannot 
be weighed in the balance of the 
chemist, or be verified by the mi- 
croscope, or be illustrated by the 
series of animal remains preserved 
in palaeontological museums, has 
no claims to engage the attention 
of the noble scientists present in 
the room. 

Clifford would scout the idea of 
a philosophy enslaved by theologi- 
cal prejudices. For free thought 
cannot come to terms with theolo- 
gy ; it must combat it in the name 
of progress and civilization with all 
available weapons, and with an 
ardor proportionate to the grandeur 
and importance of the cause. 

This sketch, which is certainly 
not over-colored, might be enlarged 
almost indefinitely by the introduc- 
tion of other living or dead materi- 
alists, pantheists, atheists, theists, 
idealists, free-religionists, etc., 
whose discordant views would have 
to be either accepted, reformed, 
or refuted, as the case may be. 
John Stuart Mill and Comte, Bain 
and Spencer, Kant and Fichte, 
Schelling and Hegel, Hume and 
Hobbes, and a host of other minor 
lights of heterodox thought, would 
have to be harmonized, if possible, 
or else condemned and forgotten. 
But let the dead rest in peace 
and suppose that none but living 
thinkers are to be consulted. A 
dilemma presents itself: either Dr. 
Shields and his co-operators get the 
best of fashionable errors, and re- 
ject them, or not. If not, then a 
final philosophy reconciling revela- 
tion with science will be out of the 



6i6 



A Final Philosophy, 



question. If yes, then the final 
philosophy will be denounced by 
the evicted party as a mass of un- 
scientific and a priori reasoning, a 
counterfeit of mediaeval metaphy- 
sics, a tardy and clumsy attempt at 
resuscitating the discredited no- 
tions of a slavish and intolerant 
past. Newspaper writers, pam- 
phleteers, lecturers, and professors 
would sneer at your final philoso- 
phy, as they now sneer at the scho- 
lastic doctrine ; and the ever-in- 
creasing mass of sciolists, who 
think with the brains of others, 
would take up the sneer and propa- 
gate it even to the ends of the 
world. Thus science and religion, 
so long as human pride and human 
obstinacy are not curbed by the 
keenest love of truth, will remain 
antagonistic, and the present war 
will continue in spite of the " final 
philosophy." 

Dr. Shields very explicitly de- 
clares that he believes in God, in 
Christ, and in the Bible. For this 
we cannot but praise him. Yet 
his book leads thoughtful readers 
to suspect that his faith is still 
undeveloped, uncertain, indefinite, 
and, as it were, in an embryonic 
condition. In fact, religion and 
science, as he conceives, are still 
at war, and revelation must yet be 
reconciled with reason by the aid 
of final philosophy; and this final 
philosophy is a thing of the future. 
What will he believe meanwhile ? 
What will all other Protestants be- 
lieve ? Must they adopt a provi- 
sional scepticism ? This is, in- 
deed, what most of them do ; nor 
can we see that any other course 
is open to them, if they are waiting 
for the final philosophy. But, 
since " without faith it is impossi- 
ble to please God," how will they 
be saved ? The question deserves 
an answer. 



There is a science which teaches 
that man's soul is not immortal, 
not spiritual, not even a substance, 
but only a molecular function, 
which cannot survive the body. 
Must Dr. Shields' disciples remain 
uncertain about this point of doc- 
trine until the final philosophy is 
published ? And there is a science 
which maintains with the greatest 
assurance that what we call " God " 
is nothing more, in reality, than 
nature, or the universe and its 
forces and laws. Must we suspend 
our judgment on this all-important 
subject on the plea that final phi- 
losophy has not yet shed its bril- 
liant light on the question ? And 
there is a science, too, which con- 
tends that the human will, though 
long believed to be free, is never- 
theless determined by exterior and 
interior causes according to a law 
of strict physical necessity which 
admits of no exception. Ought 
we, then, to consider ourselves ir- 
responsible for our deliberate ac- 
tions, till the final philosophy shall 
teach us that we are not mere ma- 
chines, and that the freedom of the 
human will has at last been recon- 
ciled with the general laws of cau- 
sation ? To our mind, a Christian 
divine cannot for a moment admit 
that such a provisional scepticism 
could be recommended as a healthy 
intellectual preparation for the at- 
tainment of truth. Nor could a 
Christian divine fancy for a mo- 
ment that a provident God has 
hitherto left mankind without suffi- 
cient light to understand and solve 
such capital questions as we have 
mentioned, and many others whose 
solution was equally indispensable 
for the moral and the religious 
education of the human race. The 
truth is that mankind has been 
endowed from the beginning with 
the knowlsdge of the principles of 



A Final Philosophy. 



moral science, the laws of reason- 
ing, the precepts of religion, and 
the eternal destiny of the just and 
the unjust. This knowledge was 
transmitted from fathers to sons, 
but was soon obscured by the surg- 
ing of turbulent passions and a 
proud desire of independence. 
The human family soon emanci- 
pated itself from the moral law, 
and learned to stifle the voice of 
conscience by false excuses and 
by worldly maxims. Nations fell 
into polytheism, idolatry, revolting 
superstitions, and barbarism. In- 
deed, a few pagan philosophers, 
still faintly illumined by the rem- 
nants of the primitive tradition, 
attempted the reconstruction of 
human science ; but they were only 
partially successful, and their names 
became famous no less for the 
errors with which they are still 
associated than for vindicated 
truths. Even the Jews, who were 
in possession of an authentic re- 
cord of the past, and could read 
the Law and the Prophets, often 
adopted pagan views, or at least 
mistook the spirit of their sacred 
books by a too material adherence 
to the killing letter. At last Jesus 
Christ, God and man, the light that 
enlightens the world, the new 
Adam, the divine Solomon, came, 
and brought us the remedy of 
which our ignorance and corrup- 
tion had so much need. He gave 
us his Gospel of truth and life, and 
not only restored but increased 
and perfected the knowledge of 
divine and human things ; he found- 
ed his church; and he appointed, 
in the person of his vicar on earth, 
a permanent and infallible judge of 
revealed doctrine. The two hun- 
dred and odd millions of Chris- 
tians who recognize this infallible 
judge know distinctly what they 
ought to believe. They need not 



await the decisions of any " final 
philosophy " in order to be fixed 
on such questions as the origin of 
matter, the creation of man, the 
liberty of the soul, the existence of 
a personal God, and the worship 
acceptable to him. And as to the 
scientific questions, these millions 
very naturally argue that any the- 
ory which clashes with the doctrine 
defined by the church bears in it- 
self its own condemnation, whilst 
all the other theories are a fit sub- 
ject of free discussion by the ra- 
tional methods. This is our intel- 
lectual position in regard to sci- 
ence ; and we venture to say that 
even Dr. Shields could not find a 
better one either for himself or for 
his pupils and friends. But he, 
unfortunately, does not belong to 
the true and living church of 
Christ; he belongs to a spurious 
system of Christianity, which coun- 
tenances intellectual rebellion, and 
which, after having imprudently 
fostered free thought, is now at a 
loss how to restrain its destructive 
influence. Hence he is anxious to 
be on good terms with all free- 
thinkers, in the hope, we assume, 
that, by yielding in a measure to 
the spirit of infidelity, some ar- 
rangement may be arrived at, 
equally acceptable to both sides, 
by which Protestantism, as an old 
but now useless and despised ac- 
complice, may be left to die a na- 
tural death. Thus the " final phi- 
losophy " of Dr. Shields, so far as 
we can judge from the details of 
his work, will put in the same bal- 
ance God and man, revelation and 
free thought, wisdom and folly, 
with the pitiful result that we have 
briefly pointed out. 

Final philosophy, as conceived 
by our author, can be of no service 
to the Catholic, and of no great 
benefit to the Protestant, world. At 



6i8 



A . Final Philosophy. 



any rate a truly "final" philoso- 
phy has scarcely a chance of seeing 
the light in the present century, es- 
pecially through the exertions of 
Protestant divines. The century 
to which we belong, though famous 
for many useful discoveries, is even 
more conspicuous for its great ig- 
norance of speculative philosophy. 
In the middle ages, which were not 
half so dark as modern thinkers 
assume, there was less superficial 
diffusion of knowledge, but a great 
deal more of philosophy. Giants, 
like St. Anselm, Albert the Great, 
St. Thomas Aquinas, had collected, 
sifted, and harmonized the philoso- 
phical lore of all the preceding ages, 
refuted the errors of a presump- 
tuous pagan or heretical science, 
shown the agreement of revelation 
ivith reason, reconciled metaphysics 
with theology, and made such a 
body of philosophical and theologi- 
cal doctrines as would, and did, 
satisfy the highest aspirations of 
deeply-cultivated intellects. It is 
men of this type that could have 
written a " final " philosophy. But 
who are we men of the nineteenth 
century ? Are we not mere pigmies 
when compared with these old mas- 
ters ? Where do we find profound 
metaphysicians and profound theo- 
logians ? Some, of course, are to 
be found in the Catholic Church, 
which alone has preserved the tra- 
ditions of the ancient intellectual 
world ; but we do not think that 
any one of them would consider 
himself clever enough to write a 
""final " philosophy. And should 
such a competent man be found, 
who would care for his doctrine ? 
Scientists would certainly not bend 
to his authority, as they only laugh 
at metaphysics, nor to his argu- 
ments, which they would scarcely 
understand; and unbelievers would 
probably not even listen to him, as 



they would be afraid of being awa- 
kened from their spiritual lethargy. 

On the other hand, to expect 
that a Protestant divine, or a body 
of Protestant divines, will be able 
to compose such a final philosophy 
as Dr. Shields describes in the pas- 
sage we have quoted is the merest 
delusion. Not that there are not 
able and learned men in the Pro- 
testant sects, but because the Pro- 
testant mind is trained to look at 
things in the light of expediency 
more than of principles, and, be- 
sides other disqualifications already 
referred to, it sadly lacks the jewel 
of philosophical consistency. Dr. 
Shields, who holds, as we gladly 
recognize, a prominent place among 
the learned men of his own denom- 
ination, is by no means exempt 
from the weaknesses of his Protes- 
tant compeers. For example, he is 
apt to confound things which 
should be distinguished, and to 
draw consequences which go far- 
ther than the premises ; he fre- 
quently yields to partisan prejudi- 
ces ; he makes false assumptions ; 
he seems ready to sacrifice some 
religious views to modern thought; 
and he misrepresents or misinter- 
prets history. A few references to 
his book will suffice to substantiate 
this criticism. 

Thus, in the very first chapter of 
his work he says that in the first 
age of Christianity there was on the 
side of the church "an apparent 
effort to supplant philosophy " (p. 
31) ; and to prove this he alleges 
that " the apostles had scarcely left 
the church when there sprang up, 
in the unlettered class from which 
the first Christians had been large- 
ly recruited, a weak jealousy of 
human learning, which, it was claim- 
ed, had been superseded in them 
by miraculous gifts of wisdom and 
knowledge." This statement is 



A Final Philosophy. 



619 



captious. From the fact that the 
first Christians, guided by the wis- 
dom of the Gospel, had come to 
despise the absurd fables of pagan 
philosophy, it does not follow that 
they rejected human learning, but 
only that they had common sense 
enough to understand and to fulfil 
the duties of their religious posi- 
tion. On the other hand, to ima- 
gine that "the unlettered class" 
could have thought "of supplant- 
ing human learning " is as ridicu- 
lous as if we pretended that our 
carpenters and blacksmiths might 
conspire to supplant astronomy. 
The author adds that " Clement of 
Rome was held by his party to 
have enjoined abstinence from men- 
tal culture as one of the apostolic 
canons," that " Barnabas and Poly- 
carp were classed with St. Paul as 
authors of epistles which carry their 
own evidence of imposture," and 
that " Hermas, as if in contempt of 
scholars, put his angelical rhapso- 
dies in the mouth of a shepherd." 
We scarcely believe that these three 
assertions will enhance the credit 
of Dr. Shields as a student of his- 
tory. Clement was himself a theo- 
logian and a philosopher ; " his 
party " is a clumsy invention ; 
" apostolic canons " never condemn- 
ed mental culture ; St. Paul's epis- 
tles bear no evidence whatever of 
imposture ; and, as to Hermas, it is 
well known to the learned that he 
put his instructions in the mouth of 
a shepherd, not that he might show 
his "contempt of scholars " for he 
himself was a scholar but because 
his guardian angel, from whom he 
had received those instructions, had 
appeared before him in the garb of 
a shepherd. 

The author says (p. 33) that in 
the age of the Greek Fathers " there 
was a false peace between theology 
and philosophy ; and religion and 



science, in consequence, became 
more or less corrupted by admix- 
ture with each other." This state- 
ment is another historical blunder. 

" The doctrines of St. John were 
sublimated into the abstractions of 
Plato." This, too, is quite incor- 
rect. 

" The Son of God was identified 
as the divine Logos of the schools." 
By no means. The Logos of the 
schools was only a shadow as com- 
pared with the Son of God; the 
Logos of the schools was an ab- 
straction, whereas the Logos of the 
Fathers was a divine Person. 

" Eusebius, Athanasius, Basil, the 
two Gregories, Chrysostom, and the 
two Cyrils did scarcely more than 
consecrate the spirit of the Acade- 
my in the cloisters and councils of 
the church." This statement has 
no need of refutation. The works 
of all the Fathers here mentioned 
are extant, and they eloquently pro- 
test against the slander. But Pro- 
testant authors are anxious to show 
that the Catholic Church was cor- 
rupted from its very first age ; and 
to do this they do not scruple to 
gather lies and misrepresentations 
from all accessible sources, to trans- 
form history into a witness to facts 
that never had an existence. 

" Philosophy," continues the au- 
thor, " became not less corrupted 
through its forced alliance with the 
new theology." Who ever heard 
of a new theology in the patristic 
age ? or of a theology with which 
philosophy could not make an alli- 
ance, except by force, and without 
being corrupted ? 

" If philosophy gauled somewhat 
on its metaphysical side by having 
its own notional entities traced up 
to revealed realities as the flower 
from the germ of reason, yet it lost 
quite as much on its physical side 
through a narrowing logic and exe- 



62O 



A -Final Philosophy. 



gesis which bound it within the 
letter of the Scripture, and turned 
it away from all empirical research ; 
and, consequently, even such crude 
natural science as it had inherited 
from the early Greeks was soon 
forgotten and buried under a mass 
of patristic traditions " (p. 34). 
From this we learn that logic, ac- 
cording to Dr. Shields, " narrows 
the physical side of philosophy," 
and exegesis opposes "empirical re- 
search "! Is it not surprising that 
such assertions could find a place 
in a work which purports to be se- 
rious and philosophical ? And as 
to the "crude natural science " of 
the early Greeks, which was a con- 
fused mass of conflicting guesses, 
does the author believe that it had 
a right to the name of science? or 
that it commanded the respect of 
theologians ? or does he think that 
the Scripture has not a literal sense, 
which contains more truth than all 
the crude natural science of the 
early Greeks ? 

" In geology the speculations of 
Thales, Anaximenes, and Heracli- 
tus, tracing the growth of the world 
from water, air, or fire, were only 
exchanged for the fanciful allegories 
and homilies of Origen, Basil, and 
Ambrose on the Hexaemeron, or 
six days' work of creation." Dr. 
Shields has just complained that the 
Fathers bound science " within the 
letter of the Scripture "; and he 
now complains of Origen abandon- 
ing the literal for the allegorical 
sense ! Such is his need of quarrel- 
ling with the Fathers. We may grant 
that some of Origen's allegorical 
interpretations were rather " fanci- 
ful "; but since such interpretations 
were generally rejected even in his 
own time, it is difficult to understand 
how they could supersede the specu- 
lations of philosophers. As to St. 
Basil and St. Ambrose, however, 



no one who has studied their works 
will dare to maintain that they have 
indulged in fanciful theories. Of 
course they were not professors of 
science but of Christianity; nor 
were they obliged to forsake Moses 
for Anaximenes or Heraclitus, whose 
theories were nothing but dreams. 
Geology, as a science, was yet un- 
born ; and we are certain that, had 
the Fathers embraced the theories 
which they are denounced for ig- 
noring, Dr. Shields or some of his 
friends would have considered the 
fact as equally worthy of censure. 
Such is the justice of certain critics. 

" In astronomy the heliocentric 
views of Aristarchus and Pythagoras 
had already given place to the Pto- 
lemaic theory of the heavens." 
This does not prove that the Fa- 
thers have corrupted astronomy ; it 
shows, on the contrary, that the 
false system of astronomy originat- 
ed in what was then considered sci- 
ence. It is to false science, there- 
fore, and not to false theology that 
we must trace the false explanation 
of astronomical phenomena. 

" In geography, the corruption 
of natural knowledge with false 
Biblical views became even more 
remarkable, and the doctrine of the 
earth's rotundity and antipodes 
which had been held by Plato and 
Aristotle, and all but proved by 
the Alexandrian geometers, was at 
length discarded as a fable not less 
monstrous than heretical." We 
wonder how it could have been 
possible to prove " by geometry " 
the existence of men at the anti- 
podes, and we still more wonder 
how could the doctrine of the 
earth's rotundity, which is a Scrip- 
tural doctrine, be discarded as a 
monstrous and heretical fable by 
men familiar with the teachings of 
the Bible. But what is the fact ? 
Did any of the Fathers suggest that 



A Final Philosophy. 



621 



the words orbis terra, which are to 
be found in many Scriptural texts, 
could be understood to mean any- 
thing but the earth's rotundity? 
Or did any of them maintain that 
the earth's rotundity was a " false 
Biblical view "? The author replies 
by quoting the Topographia Chris- 
tiana of Cosmas Indicopleustes, who 
teaches that the earth is flat. But 
we answer that Cosmas was not a 
father of the church, and that his 
work has never been considered 
" a standard of Biblical geography," 
as the author assumes. The theory 
of this monk was not the result 
of "theological" learning, as Dr. 
Shields imagines, but the offspring 
of Nestorian ignorance and pre- 
sumption. Nor does it matter that 
Cosmas cites " patriarchs, prophets, 
and apostles in its defence as doc- 
trine concerning which it was not 
lawful for a Christian to doubt " 
(p. 35) ; for we know, on the one 
hand, that there is no monstrosity 
which heretics are not apt to de- 
fend obstinately with Scriptural 
texts, and on the other that the 
theory of the Indicopleustes made 
no fortune in the Christian world ; 
which further shows that the theo- 
logical mind was not " inwrought " 
with any such fancies as the au- 
thor pretends to have swayed the 
doctors of the Catholic Church. 
We know, of course, that our old 
doctors did not admit that the an- 
tipodes were inhabited by men ; 
but this scarcely deserves criticism, 
as it is plain that before the discov- 
ery of the new world no serious 
man could take the responsibility 
of affirming a fact of which there was 
not a spark of evidence. 

The author adds : " At the same 
time all the issuing interests of this 
paganized Christianity could not 
but share in its hybrid character. 
Its piety became but a mixture of 



austerity and license." He then 
says that the Christian ritual "was 
a mere medley of incongruous usa- 
ges "; that " the sign of the cross 
became a common charm as well 
as a sacred rite "; that Pachomius 
organized monasteries and nunner- 
ies as sanctuaries of virtue " amid 
a social corruption too gross to be 
described"; that "Christian and 
pagan factions contended for su- 
premacy in the Roman senate " ; 
that " the Lord's day was observed 
by imperial edict on a day devoted 
to the god of the sun," etc., etc. ; 
and he winds up his survey of the 
patristic age by the remark that 
" the patristic type of Christian sci- 
ence has been likened to a twilight 
dream of thought before the long 
night-watches of the middle ages" 
(P- 35> 36). 

It would be useless to ask Dr. 
Shields how he has ascertained 
that Christianity was " paganized," 
and that the sign of the cross had 
become a " charm "; he would tell us 
simply that these gems of erudition 
have been culled by him from Pro- 
testant or infidel books. As to the 
"mixture of austerity and license" 
nothing need be said, for the con- 
tradiction is glaring. That the so- 
cial corruption was " too gross to 
be described :> is not astonishing, 
as the world was still more than 
half pagan ; but to connect social 
corruption with the monasteries 
and nunneries organized by St. 
Pachomius, in order to denounce 
them as a mixture of austerity and 
license, is a proof not only of bad 
taste, but of bad will and of want 
of judgment. The author forgets 
to tell us why the Christian ritual 
should be called "a mere medley 
of incongruous usages " ; and yet, 
as our present ritual does not sub- 
stantially differ from that of the 
patiistic nge, it would have been 



622 



A Final Philosophy. 



easy to point out a few of such 
usages, were it not that their in- 
( ongruity is only a crotchet of 
Protestant bigotism. That the 
Lord's day was observed "by im- 
perial edict " may indeed seem 
scandalous to free-thinkers and 
free-religionists, but not to Protes- 
tant doctors ; for they must know 
that in Protestant countries the 
Lord's day is still observed by a 
law which has the same power as 
an imperial edict. But Protestants 
are perhaps scandalized at the 
Lord's day being kept on the "day 
devoted to the god of the sun " in- 
stead of the Sabbath ; and from 
this they argue that the Church 
of God has been utterly corrupted 
and paganized. If so, then they 
should either prove that the Lord's 
day, the day of Christ's resurrec- 
tion, was the Sabbath, or denounce 
Jesus Christ himself for doing on 
the day " devoted to the god of the 
sun" what he ought to have done 
on the Sabbath. O the Pharisees ! 
We cannot wonder if they despise 
the "patristic type of Christian 
science" as a dream when we see . 
how shamelessly they strive to mis- 
represent the most glorious ages of 
Christianity, and to turn truth it- 
self into poison. 

The few quotations we have here 
made, and the remarks we have ap- 
pended to them, are far from giv- 
ing an adequate idea of the parti- 
san spirit and unreliable statements 
uith which Dr. Shields has filled 
the first part of his book. What 
we have given is only a small sam- 
ple of the rest, and was extracted 
from three pages. Were we to ex- 
tend our criticism to only ten pages 
more, we would find matter enough 
lor a volume. Our author, as near- 
ly all Protestant authors, charac- 
ti-ii/es the scholastic age as one 
of philosophic bondage. Theology 



subjugates philosophy : " The church 
is the only school ; orthodoxy the 
one test of all truth ; the traditions 
of the Fathers the sole pabulum of 
the intellect ; and the system of 
Aristotle a mere frame-work to the 
creed of Augustine." Peter Lom- 
bard " narrowed the circle of free 
thought by putting the authority 
of the church above that of Scrip- 
ture"; Alexander of Hales "ren- 
dered the thraldom of the intellect 
complete by systematizing the pa- 
tristic traditions or sentences with 
Aristotelian logic." Alas ! we know 
only too well that Protestantism 
detests logic as much as the pa- 
tristic traditions. But, then, why 
should a Protestant D.D. under- 
take to harmonize philosophy and 
theology ? Is there any philosophy 
without logic, or any theology with- 
out patristic traditions ? 

Thomas Aquinas " dazzled all 
Europe " ; but Duns Scotus " pro- 
ceeded to evaporate the distinction 
of Aquinas in a jargon which defies 
modern comprehension." This does 
little credit to modern comprehen- 
sion ; for the jargon of Scotus is no- 
thing but the Latin tongue adapted 
to philosophical use. " Philosophy," 
at this time, "could only succumb 
to theology." "In logic any de- 
flection in mere form as well as 
matter was enough to draw down 
the anathemas of the church." Ros- 
cellin " was arraigned as a trithe- 
ist," William of Champeaux "was 
pursued as a pantheist," Abelard 
" was forced to cast his own works 
into the fire, and condemned to 
obscurity and silence." It is evi- 
dent that these facts, and others of 
a similar nature, must fill with hor- 
ror our liberal Protestants and all 
free-religionists, just as prison and 
capital punishment fill with horror 
a convicted criminal. But if Dr. 
Shields condescends to examine 



A Final PItilosopJiy. 



623 



the doctrines of Roscellin, William 
of Champeaux, and Abelard in the 
light of Scripture, as they are faith- 
fully portrayed in reliable works 
(such as St. Thomas' life by Rev. 
Bede Vaughan, for example), he 
will see that all three were guilty 
of heresy, and that they richly de- 
served the treatment to which they 
were subjected. We cannot, of 
course, enter here into a discussion 
of such doctrines; we merely state 
that they have been fully examined 
and debated in the presence of the 
interested parties with all the calm, 
patience, and impartiality which 
characterize the proceedings of the 
Catholic Church. 

As to the singular notion enter- 
tained by Dr. Shields, that philo- 
sophy "could only succumb to 
theology," we wish to tell him that 
no man can be a theologian unless 
he be also a philosopher ; whence 
it follows that philosophy and theo- 
logy are naturally friendly to one 
another, and, if they ever happen 
to disagree, they do not fight like 
enemies, but they state their rea- 
sons like good sisters equally anx- 
ious to secure each other's support. 
Philosophy is like a clear but na- 
ked eye ; theology is the same eye, 
not naked, but armed with a pow- 
erful telescope. Will Dr. Shields 
maintain that the eye succumbs 
when it sees by the telescope what 
the naked eye cannot discover? 
Yet this is the idea latent in his 
notion of philosophy succumbing 
to theology. What succumbs to 
theology is not philosophy, but er- 
ror masked in the garb of philoso- 
phy. The author himself tells us 
that " reason and revelation are 
complemental factors of knowledge, 
the former discovering what the 
latter lias not revealed, and the 
latter revealing what the former 
cannot discover." This is exactly 



what we were saying; for the science 
of reason is philosophy, and the 
science of revelation is theology. 

We would never end, if we were 
to follow our author through the 
five hundred and eighty-eight pages 
of his book. We only add that 
the theological and philosophical 
erudition which he parades through- 
out the whole work has been de- 
rived from the same baneful sources 
from which Dr. Draper collected 
the materials of his History of tin- 
Con flict between Religion and Science, 
and deserves the same heavy cen- 
sure. The late Dr. O. A. Brown- 
son, when Dr. Draper's work was 
published, said of it : " The only 
thing in Dr. Draper's book that we 
are disposed to tolerate is his style, 
which is free, flowing, natural, sim- 
ple, unaffected, and popular. Aside 
from its style, the book cannot be 
too severely censured. It is a tis- 
sue of lies from beginning to end. 
It is crude, superficial, and any- 
thing but what it professes to be. 
It professes to be a history of the 
conflict between religion and sci- 
ence. It is no such thing. It is a 
vulgar attack on Christianity and 
the Christian church, in which is 
condensed the substance of all that 
has been said by anti-Christian 
writers from the first century to 
the nineteenth." We do not say 
that Dr. Shields' intention has been 
to attack Christianity in general as 
Dr. Draper did ; he, on the contrary, 
professes to labor for a reconcilia- 
tion of Christianity and reason. 
But, good as the intention is, the 
book will do as much harm as that 
of Dr. Draper. Its style is as good, 
to say the least, as Dr. Draper's, 
and its subject-matter is well dis- 
tributed and orderly developed ; 
but these and other good qualities, 
instead of redeeming its numerous 
misrepresentations of truth, make 



624 



A Final PJiilosopJiy. 



them more dangerous by adding to 
them a charm against which the 
average reader can ill defend himself. 
Besides, Dr. Draper's work, owing 
to its shameless infidelity, disgusts 
the Christian reader and makes 
him unwilling to swallow the poi- 
son it contains ; whereas Dr. Shields' 
book has such an attractive title, 
professes such a reverence for Scrip- 
ture, and displays such an earnest- 
ness and ingenuity in the holy task 
of reconciling religion with science, 
that the unsophisticated reader (the 
Protestant reader in particular) will 
follow him, not only with great 
pleasure, but also with great doci- 
lity and deference, till he persuades 
himself that religion is now in such 
a state that it needs to be purified 
by philosophy, and that reason 
must be made the umpire between 
revealed and scientific dogmas. 
The consequence is that the au- 
thor's " final philosophy " will serve 
the interests of rationalism rather 
than of religion. The more so as 
the author shows himself well ac- 
quainted with the errors of modern 
thought, some of which he exposes 
and refutes in a truly philosophical 
spirit, and with a talent and ability 
of which we see few instances in 
modern thinkers. We have been 
particularly struck by his powerful 
handling of positivism and absolu- 
tism, not to mention many other 
topics which he has treated in a 
very fair and intelligent manner. 
Had he not taken his stand on the 
shifting ground of Protestant opin- 
ions, he might have achieved a very 
meritorious task. He speaks of 
catholic views, catholic philosophy, 
and catholic spirit as something 
indispensable to carry on the much- 
desired conciliation of natural with 
supernatural knowledge. But what 
can the word "catholic " mean on 
the lips of one who does not listen 



to the Catholic doctors, and who is 
a stranger to the Catholic Church ? 
His " catholic " spirit cannot but 
be a spirit of compromise, and a 
kind of rationalistic eclecticism, 
ready to accept only so much of 
revelation as men will condescend 
to authorize on a verdict of their 
fallible reason, and no less ready 
to sacrifice and ignore as much of 
it as human reason cannot explain 
or harmonize with natural science. 
It is evident that such a spirit can 
lead to nothing but religious scep- 
ticism. And this should convince 
even Dr. Shields that his " final 
philosophy " will never achieve a 
success. The Catholic thinker, if 
he had to compose a final philoso- 
phy, would place himself on much 
higher and much securer ground ; 
he would first range in a series 
all the truths which the Catholic 
Church has defined to be of faith ; 
he would then range in another 
series all the demonstrated truths of 
the natural sciences, and all the 
principles, axioms, and propositions 
of philosophy which are generally 
received by the different schools; 
he would next inquire whether any 
proposition of this second series 
clashes with any of the truths con- 
tained in the first series ; and, as 
he would be unable to find any 
truth of science or of philosophy 
conflicting with any revealed truth, 
he would conclude that the world 
is not just now in need of a final 
philosophy for settling a conflict 
which has no existence except in 
the imaginative brains of scientific- 
charlatans. Dr. Shields may think 
that this course is not calculated to 
secure the alliance of religion and 
science ; but let him read the mag- 
nificent article published by Dr. 
Brownson in his Quarterly Reric\s 
(April, 1875), on Dr. Draper's pre- 
tended history of the conflict be- 



A Great Bishop. 



625 



tween religion and science, and he 
will see his mistake. 

The " final philosophy," as we 
have already remarked, will be of 
no use to the Catholic world. Pro- 
testants may, perhaps, relish it all 
the more. But no class of men 
will, in our opinion, be more grati- 
fied with it than the sceptics, the 



free-thinkers, and the enemies of 
supernatural truth ; for they will 
not fail to see that to set up philo- 
sophy as "umpire" between reli- 
gion and science is to make men 
distrust the doctrines of religion, 
and to prepare, though with the 
best intentions, the triumph of re- 
ligious scepticism. 



A GREAT BISHOP. 



IN writing the lives of saints 
their biographers often forget that 
they are writing history, and telling 
the part which a wise, strong, and 
manly character bore in that his- 
tory. William Emmanuel von 
Ketteler, the late Bishop of May- 
ence, might by many be reckoned 
among saints, so holy was his life 
and so like the primitive Christian 
ideal. But he has another claim 
to fame, as one of the greatest mo- 
dern champions of order against 
socialism, and of the church against 
organized godlessness. The " iron 
bishop," the "fighting bishop," 
were nicknames given him by his 
foes, and, though given in hate and 
derision, they unconsciously set 
forth one side of his powerful cha- 
racter. A man of his reach of 
mind, however humble, could not 
have taken a less prominent part 
and position in the struggle of prin- 
ciple against license of which the 
present religious disturbances in 
Germany are the type. It fell na- 
turally to his share to be the speak- 
er and standard-bearer of the cause 
of church liberties, and the repre- 
sentative of the episcopal order. 
His legal studies and experience, 
as well as his hardy habits and 
magnificent physique, seemed to 
VOL. xxvi. 40 



have prepared him and pointed him 
out among all others for the cham- 
pionship of his party, including all 
the bodily fatigue and mental anx- 
iety incident to such a leadership. 
He was as thorough a man as he 
was an ideal bishop and excep- 
tional orator, and this manliness, 
physical and intellectual, was the 
basis of his simple and grand cha- 
racter. His chosen motto, " Let 
all be as one," is no bad interpre- 
tation of the leading ideal which 
he tried through life to realize : 
church unity and Christian loyalty, 
served by the whole round of his 
exceptional and perfectly-develop- 
ed faculties. Before setting forth 
the fruits of his special studies, and 
examining his life and personality 
from the point of view most im- 
portant in this century of social 
strife, we purpose giving a short 
biographical sketch of the Bishop 
of Mayence. 

He was born on Christmas day, 
1811, at Minister in Westphalia, of 
a noble family, one branch of 
which, embracing the doctrines of 
the Reformation, had in the six- 
teenth century migrated to Poland 
and become hereditary dukes of 
Courland, and a second, remaining 
German and Catholic, had been 



626 



A Great Bishop. 



distinguished by giving more than 
one member to the Order of St. 
John of Jerusalem. His own 
branch, the third, known as that of 
Alt-Assen, was worthily represent- 
ed by his father, a stern, faithful, 
and upright man, an uncompromis- 
ing Christian, and a moralist of 
what our easier age calls the " old 
school." As in every great charac- 
ter, there was something of the 
soldier in Baron Frederick von 
Ketteler of Harkotten, and this 
streak was reproduced in at least 
t\vo of his sons, William and Rich- 
ard. His mother, Clementina, Ba- 
roness von % Wenge of Beck, was a 
woman of superior character, as it 
is noticed that the mothers of re- 
markable men almost invariably 
are, and one of the bishop's biogra- 
phers is certainly entitled to dwell 
as he does, with special force, on 
the fact of the home-training of 
young Ketteler having had more 
real influence in shaping his cha- 
racter than either the schooling he 
got at the cathedral school of 
Minister until he was thirteen 
years of age, or the atmosphere of 
the Swiss Jesuit College at Brieg, 
where he studied until he was 
eighteen. The two most conspi- 
cuous traits in the youth were his 
passion for hunting and sport of all 
kinds, athletic games, Alpine climb- 
ing, and all exercises requiring 
hardiness and disregard of wind 
and weather, and his earnest and 
unobtrusive piety. He was spared 
the trial through which so many 
noble natures pass before fully 
identifying themselves with the 
spirit of the church, whose letter 
they have been early taught to 
obey: he experienced no time of 
doubt, of wavering, of temptation, 
and the modern sore of unbelief 
never seems to have even come 
near his mind. From a youth pass- 



eJ in alternate study and sport 
and a free, out-of-door life he grew 
to a manhood serious and indus- 
trious, with a routine of work al- 
ways hallowed by early prayer and 
daily attendance at Mass, and a 
social position in his native town, 
as counsel or referee for the gov- 
ernment, which was, if not fully 
worthy of his talents, yet sufficient- 
ly honorable as the beginning of a 
professional career. His university 
life had, like that of most young 
Germans, been marked by one 
duel, which seriously displeased 
his father, and his military obliga- 
tions had been discharged, accord- 
ing to the laws as they then 
stood, by his service ae a " one- 
year volunteer " in the local militia. 
His legal career seemed assured, 
though there were many among his 
early friends who foresaw that his 
entering the church was not un- 
likely. The incident that deter- 
mined this change was the outbreak 
of Cologne in 1838, when the first 
note of the coming ecclesiastical 
troubles was sounded by a munici- 
pality that went to the length of 
imprisoning the archbishop, Cle- 
ment von Droste-Vischering*, the 
friend of Stolberg, and the primate 
of the Rhine provinces. 

Ketteler, never averse to Prussia, 
in whose mission to Germany he 
believed, even up to the late Falk or 
May Laws which tore away the veil, 
could, nevertheless, not reconcile 
himself to serve any longer a govern- 
ment that allowed such violations 
of personal freedom and of the prin- 
ciples which underlie that freedom. 
In the autumn of the same year he 
went to the Munich Theological 
College and began his ecclesiastical 
studies. Among his professors were 
DOllinger and Gorres, and others 
whose fame is less European but 
scarcely less great in Germany it- 









A Great Bishop. 



627 



self; and among his fellow-students 
Paul Melchers, the present Archbi- 
shop of Cologne, who, like himself, 
had been a lawyer of great pro- 
mise. Coming at the age of twenty- 
seven to study among a body of 
whom many members were hardly 
more than boys, it may have been 
a hard task to preserve humility 
and charity; yet the verdict of his 
fellow-students, summed up by one 
of themselves, was to the effect that 
Ketteler's simplicity and good-na- 
ture were in every way as marked as 
his intellectual superiority. These 
qualities came out again later in his 
intercourse with his country par- 
ishioners, each of whom, peasants 
as they were, he treated with the 
cordiality and respect of a neigh- 
bor and an equal. He was no 
demagogue, and had no theories 
save the everlasting theories of the 
Gospel and the church ; but, as is 
usually the case, his practice with 
his social inferiors went far beyond 
the noisy and deceiving show of 
equality made by professional agi- 
tators. After four years' study in 
Munich he devoted one year more 
to theological subjects in the epis- 
copal seminary at Miinster, and re- 
ceived holy orders in 1844, when 
he was sent as curate to Beckum, a 
small town in Westphalia. He was 
then thirty-three, and had reached 
half his allotted years ; for it has 
been noticed that his term of ser- 
vice as priest and bishop was also 
thirty-three years. The coinci- 
dence of his last illness having 
lasted thirty-three days also struck 
many persons who are fond of 
these calculations. 

At Beckum, where he was associat- 
ed with two other young priests (one 
of whom, Brinkmann, is now Bishop 
of Miinster), he led a life as near as 
possible to one of his ideals still 
unfulfilled in practice, but only 



postponed in his mind because of 
more urgent and present needs 
the life in common of the secular 
clergy. He and his fellow-curates 
lived in a small house, where each 
had one room besides the common 
gathering-room, and one purse for 
all uses, whether personal or chari- 
table. He and Brinkmann found- 
ed a hospital during their short 
stay, and this grew afterwards to 
very satisfactory proportions ; but 
Ketteler had opportunities of prov- 
ing himself a good nurse under his 
own roof, where his third colleague 
was often bedridden for months 
at a time. His public ministry, 
however, never suffered, and his as- 
siduity at the bedside of his sick 
parishioners and in the confession- 
al at all times, in season and out of 
season, were remarkable. If all 
priests would reflect how momen- 
tous, nay, how awful, is the respon- 
sibility incurred in this matter of 
ever-readiness to hear a man's con- 
fession, they would less seldom de- 
viate from the self-sacrificing exam- 
ple which Bishop Ketteler gave con- 
sistently throughout his life. His 
zeal in this particular was not in- 
ferior, however, to his care of the 
schools which in his public career 
so distinguished him ; and both led 
his diocesan after two years to re- 
move him from Beckum, to- a full 
parish, that of Hopsten. 

His life here was a repetition of 
the life at Beckum; his ministry 
was so efficacious that the spiritual 
life of the parish resembled a per- 
manent "mission," or revival, and 
his active charity had a large field 
for exercise in the famine and the 
fever which visited his people dur- 
ing his incumbency. It is related 
of him that, his sister coming to 
visit him at Hopsten, he proposed 
to take her to see some of his 
friends in the neighborhood, and 



628 



A Great Bishop 



accordingly took her to his poor- 
est people, begging for each a gift 
sorely needed, which resulted in 
her emptying her purse so effectu- 
ally that she had to borrow money 
for her journey home. He provi- 
sioned his parish during the famine, 
and got his rich relations to help 
him in the work ; and in the fever, 
besides his gifts of food, bedding, 
and medicines, and his regular offi- 
ces as their pastor, he literally be- 
came his people's physician and 
nurse. 

It was no wonder that he should 
so have won the respect and trust 
of his neighbors that, even in that 
very Protestant borough of Len- 
gerich, of which his parish formed 
part, he was unanimously returned 
as deputy to the Frankfort Parlia- 
ment in 1848. It was here that he 
first came publicly before Germany 
as an orator and a statesman, and 
that he made that famous speech 
at the funeral of the Prussian dele- 
gates, Lichnowsky and Auerswald, 
murdered during the riots, which 
has become the most popular and 
widely known of any of his discour- 
ses. After his retirement from Par- 
liament, and his attendance in the 
same year at the first meeting of the 
Catholic Union at Mayence, he was 
asked to give a course of lectures 
in the cathedral on the social and 
political problems of the day. It 
is said that Catholics, Protestants, 
and Jews, besides free-thinkers, 
crowded to hear these eloquent 
and exhaustive lectures, and that 
the competition for seats was a 
fitting type of the intellectual stir 
they made in the city. His physi- 
cal endurance was no less marvel- 
lous, and added much to the im- 
pressiveness of the discourses, de- 
livered in close succession, with a 
full, melodious, resounding voice 
under perfect control of the speak- 



er, and carefully husbanded, so that 
neither enthusiasm nor emotion 
should drive it into shrillness or 
sink it into huskiness. That year 
saw the preacher transferred to 
the provostship of St. Hedwige's 
Church in Berlin, which he occu- 
pied only for ten months, but long 
enough to win the love of his city 
congregation as he had that of his 
country parish. His younger bro- 
ther, Richard, who had left the 
army to become a priest, succeed- 
ed him at Hopsten, but left the 
place later to become a Capuchin ; 
he was long known as Father Bona- 
venture. In 1849 Provost Ketteler 
was chosen Bishop of Mayence, 
after a stormy election and dispute 
in the cathedral chapter. The 
first nominee, Doctor Leopold 
Schmid, professor of theology at 
Giesen, the local university, being, 
on grounds of " undue influence," 
strongly disapproved of by a large 
minority of the canons, they and 
their opponents of the majority 
agreed to a re-election and to an ap- 
peal to the Holy See, upon which, 
out of the three names sent in, the 
Pope chose the provost of St. Hed- 
wige. He was not consecrated till 
July, 1850, by the archbishop of 
Freiburg, assisted by the bishops 
of Lmiburg and Fulda. Thence- 
forward one may say that his life was 
entirely a public one, so intimately 
was it connected with the living 
and burning questions of the time. 
Each year the crisis between 
church and state seemed to draw 
nearer ; and, if one may say so, the 
gap between the two has become 
complete since the promulgation 
of the May Laws. In this struggle, 
which lasted all through his episco- 
pate, the state certainly proved the 
aggressor, for the lukewarmness of 
German Catholics in the last gene- 
ration was a proverb; and Ketteler 



A Great Bishop. 



629 



succeeded to a diocese in very dif- 
ferent order from the one he has 
left. Things were working, or ra- 
ther lapsing, into the hands of the 
church's enemies, had they been 
wise enough to wait and watch ; 
by hurrying matters they roused 
the spirit of Catholics, and raised 
against themselves a zealous band 
firmly attached to their faith and 
determined to vindicate its rights 
and liberties. 

Of this band Bishop Ketteler, 
whether as deputy, pamphleteer, 
lecturer, or spiritual guide, was prac- 
tically the head. His first works in 
Mayence were, on a wider scale, 
the repetition of those in Hopsten. 
He instituted reforms and amend- 
ments in every department ; gath- 
ered the clergy together in yearly 
retreats, during which the exercises 
of St. Ignatius, which he held in 
high esteem, were made the basis 
of instruction; founded several Ca- 
puchin convents for the purpose of 
giving missions, especially in the 
country, and one Jesuit college, on 
the occasion of whose establish- 
ment he had to bear the brunt of a 
determined journalistic opposition ; 
set up schools and an orphanage 
for girls under the care of the Sis- 
ters of Mercy, an asylum for repen- 
tant women under the nuns of the 
Good Shepherd, a refuge for ser- 
vant-maids out of employment, a 
community of Poor Clares to visit 
and relieve the poor in their own 
homes, a Boys' Orphanage, Boys' 
Reformatory, and Boys' Refuge, 
several unions and brotherhoods 
to keep the people together and 
preserve them from the snares of 
irreligious associations notably a 
Working-men's Catholic Union 
and last, not least, a school taught by 
the Christian Brothers, which soon 
won such golden opinions that Pro- 
testants by scores withdrew their 



children from the communal schools 
and placed them under the new 
teachers. With rare liberality a 
Lutheran clergyman was allowed 
free access to the school to teach 
these children the religion of their 
parents. The bishop's care for, 
and personal visitation of, the hos- 
pitals also reacted on the manage- 
ment of these institutions, so that 
they were more than ever well 
conducted during his episcopate. 
Though his enemies, despairing of 
finding other sins to lay to his 
charge, accused him of undue 
harshness as a taskmaster in the 
things he required of his clergy, 
this body itself never found fault 
with his zeal for discipline and 
austerity. He counselled nothing 
which he did not perform and, in- 
deed, far surpass ; for, unlike many 
bishops, estimable and even holy 
men, he did not consider his rank 
as exempting him from the most 
ordinary duties of a priest; he sat 
as many hours on regular days in 
the confessional as any country cu- 
rate, and his daily Mass at five 
o'clock was always said in the ca- 
thedral instead of a private house- 
chapel that is, until the last four or 
five years of his life, when old age 
made this indulgence necessary. 
He preached almost incessantly; 
the Sundays in Lent and Advent 
always in his own cathedral, other 
Sundays alternating with his cler- 
gy, and in the evenings of Sundays 
and week-days alike in any church, 
chapel, or even hall, where he was 
asked to further any good cause. 
His confirmation and church-visita- 
tion journeys were remarkable ; he 
returned to the rightful custom of 
confirming, no matter how few the 
candidates, separately in each par- 
ish, instead of lumping many par- 
ishes together in one central cere- 
mony, and this in order that he 



630 



A 'Great Bishop. 



might gain a personal knowledge 
of each place, its needs and work- 
ings. On these occasions he would 
give a preliminary introduction on 
the eve of the confirmation, then 
hear confessions far into the night 
or morning, say Mass early, and 
confess again till he preached the 
sermon and administered the sac- 
rament; in the afternoon inspect 
the schools, catechise the children, 
and visit any sick persons there 
might happen to be; conduct the 
evening service himself and preach 
a second time, the intermediate 
moments being passed again in the 
confessional or in private inter- 
course with any one who asked for 
special advice or comfort. 

His daily life at home was as 
simple, hardy, and frugal as it had 
been at Beckum : he rose at four 
and worked incessantly, yet finding 
time, besides his Breviary, to say 
the rosary and the office of the 
Third Order of St. Francis every 
day. Add to this his writings, his 
minute supervision of the ecclesi- 
astical machinery of his diocese, his 
conferences with political leaders, 
his necessary journeys or excur- 
sions, besides his frequent under- 
taking of the duties of the archbi- 
shop of Freiburg after the latter 
grew too infirm to go on long con- 
firmation rounds, and it will be 
easily seen that he was far from an 
ordinary man. In virtue of his 
office he was entitled to a seat in 
the Upper House (in the grand- 
duchy of Hesse), with the right of 
sending a representative, if he chose, 
which he did, sending one of his 
canons, Dr. Monsang, who, among 
other things, distinguished himself 
by voting for the freedom of the 
Jewish religious bodies, in the mat- 
ter of internal reform, from state 
interference, and for their right to 
receive state aid, provided they 



themselves solicited it. In the Ger- 
man Reichstag, however, where 
Bishop Ketteler represented the bor- 
ough of Tauberbischofsheim, he sat 
in person, and was numbered among 
the members of what was known as 
the Fraction of the Centre, of whom 
Windthorst, his friend, was and is 
the leader. During the two Ger- 
man wars, 1866 and 1870, he, 
though deploring the civil nature 
of the first, according to the tradi- 
tion of the greater part of the West- 
phalian nobility, leaned to the side 
of Prussia, in whose mission to 
unite Germany his belief never 
wavered, and whose influence in 
things purely political he al \vays 
upheld. His very patriotism and 
enlightened views in this direction 
made his firm stand against the 
Prussian aggression on the church 
of more weight and importance a 
fact which his enemies fully appre- 
ciated and often tried to make capi- 
tal of, dubbing him as inconsistent 
with himself. Every one will see 
how one-sided this view was. 

He was so far modern in his ideas 
that he claimed not to have lost 
any of the rights of a citizen by be- 
coming a priest; but the way in 
which he used those rights, civic 
and parliamentary, roused the an- 
ger of men whose interpretation of 
the same principle led them to see 
in a priest nothing more than a 
military serf of the empire. He 
never claimed for the church any 
privilege or any exemption, only 
the full meed of liberty due to any 
other corporation ; the exception 
need not be in her favor, but should 
not be directed specially against 
her. The state and the church 
were separate bodies, indeed, and 
well for the latter that such a doc- 
trine could be conscientiously held ; 
but the very separation involved 
perfect autonomy for the church, 



A Great BisJiof* 



631 



and forbade any interference on 
the part of political authorities, 
while her influence in social ques- 
tions was to be exerted only 
through her direct influence on in- 
dividuals ; for a state under bond- 
age to the church never occurred 
to him as desirable. Meanwhile, 
he labored to carry out his ideal of 
internal church government, a no- 
ble and primitive one, based upon 
the importance of parish organiza- 
tion and of the thorough efficacy 
of the parish clergy, to whom the 
religious orders, in his view, were to 
act as helpers and subordinates. 
To the disuse of ancient church 
laws and customs he attributed the 
troubles that have often come upon 
the church in all times; for he held 
her discipline, and even her ritual, 
to be no less than her doctrine 
under the direct guidance of the 
Holy Ghost. This alone would 
have made him a reformer in a lax 
and lukewarm age, when it was the 
fashion for Catholics themselves to 
join in mild or witty reflections 
upon their own faith, and to re- 
main outwardly in conformity with 
that faith only by habit and by in- 
tellectual sluggishness. But this, 
joined to his powerful zeal in mat- 
ters more prominent and public, 
made him specially the leader of a 
spiritual revival among the people 
of his city, his diocese, and Ger- 
many at large. It was not in vain 
that he sat in the see of St. Boni- 
face; and when he encouraged the 
celebration of his predecessor's 
eleventh centenary, it was fully as 
much to stir up the zeal of his peo- 
ple for church liberty as to honor 
the memory of the great missionary. 
His five journeys to Rome on va- 
rious solemn anniversaries, and no- 
tably that on the occasion of the 
Vatican Council, were the only 
other incidents of his life that re- 



main to be noticed ; on his way 
back from the last, in 1876, when 
the Holy Father received him with 
special marks of esteem and re- 
joiced to have him as a witness of 
his "golden" anniversary, Bishop 
Ketteler fell ill at Alt-Getting, a 
shrine where he had encouraged 
and taken part in many a pilgri- 
mage. He could get no farther 
than the Capuchin convent of Burg- 
hausen, where he died on the i3th 
of July, of typhoid fever; on the 
1 8th he was buried in his own ca- 
thedral amidst the lamentations of 
his clergy and people. The coun- 
try people, to whom he had always 
had a special leaning, and who 
knew him as familiarly as his own 
canons did through his frequent 
presence at and ministry in the 
great Rhine pilgrimages, were loud 
in their expressions of grief; all 
felt that they had lost a father, but 
those whose chief concern was in 
temporal matters felt also that a 
great speaker and thinker had de- 
parted. Of his style, his mode of 
thinking, and the zeal, always burn- 
ing yet never intemperate, which 
he brought to his work even so 
early as 1848, one can judge by 
the famous passage of his speech 
at the funeral of Lichnowsky and 
Auerswald at Frankfort : " Who are 
the murderers of our friends ? Are 
they the men who shot them through 
the breast, or those who clove open 
their heads with their axes ? No, 
these are not the murderers. Their 
murderers are the principles which 
produce both good and evil deeds 
upon the earth, and the principles 
which produced this deed are not 
born of our people. I know the 
German people, not, indeed, by the 
experience of conventions, but by 
that of its inner, daily life. ... I 
have devoted my life to the service 
of the poor people, and the more I 



632 



A Great Bis/top. 



have learnt to know them the more 
have I learnt to love them ; I know 
what a great and noble character 
our German people has received 
from God. No, I repeat it : it is 
not our noble, our honest German 
people who are answerable for this 
wicked deed. . . . The true mur- 
derers are those who, before the 
people, seek to bring into contempt 
and to soil with their low ribaldry 
both Christ, Christianity, and the 
church; those who strive to efface 
from the heart of the people the 
healing message of the redemption 
of mankind > those who do not look 
upon revolution as a sad necessity 
under certain circumstances, but 
erect revolution into a principle, 
and hurry people from revolution 
to revolution ;. . . those who would 
take from the people the belief in 
the duty of man to command him- 
self, to curb his passions, and to 
obey the higher laws of order and of 
virtue, and would, on the contrary, 
make la\vs of those passions and 
therewith inflame the people ; those 
men who would set themselves up 
as lying gods over the people, in 
order that it may fall down before 
them and worship them." 

Ketteler's first well-known speech 
on social subjects was delivered on 
the 4th of October, 1848, at the 
original meeting of the Catholic 
Union at Mayence a body whose 
" congresses " have been held yearly 
since that time, and have been dis- 
tinguished by speeches such as 
those of Montalembert, Dupanloup, 
Manning, Dollinger, before 1870, 
and others whose names are public 
property. His subject was " The 
Freedom of the Church, and the 
Social Crisis"; and says one of his 
biographers, "It is no mean testi- 
mony to his far-sightedness that 
he already foresaw and took part 
in the importance of the social ques- 



tion." His lectures in the cathe- 
dral took in such themes as these : 
"The Catholic Doctrine of Proper- 
ty," " Rational Freedom," " The Des- 
tiny of Man," "The Family, based on 
Christian Marriage," "The Autho- 
rity of the Church, based on Man's 
Need of Authority." Of the im- 
pression these discourses made on 
all classes we have spoken already. 
To show how liberal were his views 
on the form of government, it may 
be mentioned that it was one of 
his axioms that it mattered little 
who ruled, but much hoiv he ruled. 
All forms of legitimate government 
were practically alike to him, though 
his own ideal for Germany was a 
revival of the old unity of confede- 
ration, with the equal representa- 
tion of the burghers and of the 
peasantry by the side of the clergy 
and nobility ; but the manner in 
which the government, no matter 
what it called itself, dealt with 
weighty questions of morals was 
in his view a touchstone. It will 
be seen from this that if his foes 
delighted in calling him the most 
ultramontane of ultramontanes, 
they had no reason, politically 
speaking, to call him retrograde, 
absolutist, or even monarchist. In 
fact, it seems as if one might sum 
up his political character thus : a 
citizen of a free imperial city of 
the middle ages, imbued with the 
keenness of sight and the versa- 
tility of tongue peculiar to the mo- 
dern European politician. 

In 1851 and 1852 a new phase 
of unbelief, dubbing itself "Ger- 
man Catholicism," did its best to 
bewilder the mind of Catholic Ger- 
many, and the bishop plainly w;irn- 
ed his people against it, saying : 
" Though I should incur hereby 
the reproach of intolerance, I must 
warn you against ' German Catho- 
licism,' for it denies the Godhead 



A Great Bishop. 



633 



of Christ, revelation, and redemp- 
tion, and makes itself a god ac- 
cording to its own fancy." In 
1852, in his Lenten pastoral, lie 
touched upon the connection be- 
tween this belief and political radi- 
calism ; also upon the common re- 
proach of rebellion against authori- 
ty or of flattery towards princes 
which these new philosophers were 
constantly bringing against the 
church. "When the church," he 
says, " advises the people to sub- 
mit to the civil power, she is thus 
attacked : ' See the flatterer of 
princes, the protectress of all abus- 
es, the willing instrument of the 
oppression of the people.' When, 
on the other, hand, she reminds the 
state of its obligations, and, under 
certain circumstances, proclaims 
that God is to be obeyed rather 
than man, the spirit of deception 
cries out : ' See the rebel, the seek- 
er after undue authority.' " In 1873, 
when a new attack was made on 
religion by the establishment of 
communal schools, he resisted, by 
writing and preaching, " these in- 
stitutions which contradict all the 
principles of religion, disturb 
Christian education, contradict and 
confuse the understanding and the 
nature of childhood, and damage all 
the interests of the Christian family." 
In 1851, when every government 
in Germany had been more or less 
remodelled, and many fetters of 
old prescription and prejudice had 
been shaken off by the revolution 
of 1844, the bishops of the Upper 
Rhine province came together at 
Freiburg, and presented a memoir 
on church relations with the state 
to the neighboring rulers of Hesse, 
Wiirtemberg, Baden, and Nassau. 
No notice was taken of it, and two 
years later it was repeated with al- 
most the same result, save that in 
Hesse the grand-duke and his 



prime minister, Dalwigk, called a 
convention in 1854, and established 
the liberty and autonomy of the 
church upon a legal basis. Ket- 
teler's pamphlet in the same year, 
three months previous to the con- 
vention, had some influence on the 
course of affairs ; it was on " The 
rights, and the right to protection, 
of the Catholic Church in Germany, 
with special reference to the claims 
of the episcopate of the Upper Rhine 
and the present struggle," and may 
be summed up in this quotation 
from it : " The rights of sovereignty 
are doubtless holy. They belong 
to God's ordinances, and are there- 
fore of God ; but those indefinite, 
boundless, unhistorical, unfounded 
rights of sovereignty stand exactly 
on a level with the equally indefinite, 
boundless, unhistorical, unfounded 
rights of humanity. They are dis- 
torted images of lofty truths, and 
are born of the same fallacy as ab- 
solutism. Once face to face with 
them, the church must either allow 
herself to be ravaged or must be- 
gin a struggle for life and death." 

However well known and widely 
spread were Ketteler's influence 
and writings, the latter partook of 
the local and circumstantial nature 
of most political writings : vhey 
were not solid, dignified, technical 
treatises of theology, nor popular 
and"taking "books ofdevotion, but 
the outcome of present necessities, 
quick and vigorous protests against 
injustice, weapons specially adapt- 
ed to the ever-shifting warfare be- 
tween socialism and religion. His 
pamphlets were mostly short, terse, 
and to the point ; he slept in his armor 
and was always on the watch. He 
speaks of his work in this direction 
with great simplicity to Prof. Nip- 
pold, of Heidelberg: "Besides my 
spiritual ministry in my diocese, I 
follow and observe all the move- 



634 



A- Great Bisliof* 



ments of my time, and cannot help 
meeting with all the injustices 
which men do to one another, not 
always, indeed, of malice prepense, 
but often through misunderstand- 
ings, prejudices, and false repre- 
sentations. Then, if I can spare 
time from my work, I make an ef- 
fort towards clearing up those un- 
fortunate misunderstandings. . . ." 
But though he spoke and felt 
thus modestly about his important 
part in the questions of the day, 
we know how impossible it is for a 
man of his stamp not to rise to his 
natural level. He was born to be 
a leader, and neither necessity nor 
humility could block the path to 
political prominence. Such a man, 
weighted with even more absorb- 
ing work than his, would have 
made time for occupations so natu- 
rally fitted for him ; such a mind, 
even had it been in a less robust 
body, would have overcome dis- 
ease and weakness, and wrested 
from them the power to make it- 
self known. A list of a fe\v of his 
writings will show how universal 
was his watchfulness : Can a be- 
lieving Christian be a Freemason? 
The True Foundations of Religious 
Peace. The Defamation of the 
Church by the Tribune. The Right 
of Free Election of the Cathedral 
Chapter. Germany after the War 
of 1866. The Fraction of the Cen- 
tre at the First German Reichstag. 
Catholics in the German Empire. 
Freedom, Authority, and the Church, 
considerations upon the Great Pro- 
blem of the Day. The Labor Ques- 
tion and Christianity. Liberalism, 
Socialism, and Christianity. The 
General Council and its Influence on 
Our Time. The Doctrinal Infalli- 
bility of the Pope after the Defini- 
tion of the Vatican Council. 

What he has said and written on 
the social question, including the 



subjects of marriage, the family, 
education, and the relations be- 
tween capital and labor, even most 
of his opponents judge to belong 
to the quota of wisest utterances 
extant on the subject. His gift 
of opportunity, or of speaking al- 
ways to the point, has been no- 
ticed already. Here is what a 
German contemporary says of it: 
" The bishop did not devote him- 
self to journalism as a profession, 
for he looked upon his ministry as 
immeasurably more precious and 
higher than political influence. But 
he used it as a weapon at every im- 
portant turning-point of contempo- 
rary German history, when dangers 
threatened the moral order of 
German society, and when the 
rights of the church were violat- 
ed and her institutions hampered ; 
and precisely because his writings 
sprang from instant necessities or 
the peculiarities of the day, they 
were, in the noblest sense of the 
word, timely not productions of 
labored pulpit-wisdom, but the for- 
cible words, piercing through bone 
and marrow, of a powerful voice 
sounding the battle-cry of a mind- 
conflict; of a man whose keen and 
far-sighted look measured the 
heights and depths of the mind- 
disturbances of his day, and shared 
heartily in the joys and sorrows of 
his time." 

It is worth while to notice his 
usual method in these earnest pam- 
phlets. It consisted, as a rule, of 
taking his opponents' own argu- 
ments or " accomplished facts " na- 
kedly as they stood, and carrying 
them on to their strictly legitimate 
but startling consequences. Yet, 
in the whole course of his polemi- 
cal writings, he carefully abstained 
from the least personality. In this 
he might with advantage be taken 
as a model by most schools of poll- 



A Great Bishop. 



635 



tical pamphleteering. Soon after 
his speech at Frankfort his fame as 
an orator was already held so high 
that it suggested the following po- 
etical portrait of him by Bede 
Weber, in a work entitled Histo- 
rico- Political Sketches. This is al- 
most a literal translation : 

" The parish priest of Hopsten 
has a tall and powerful figure, with 
sharply-cut features, in which speak 
a fearlessness impelling him irre- 
sistibly to 'do and dare,'* joined 
to an old Westphalian tradition of 
loyalty to God and church, to em- 
peror and realm. To his discern- 
ing spirit the German nation, in its 
unity, its history, and its Catholic 
traditions, is still living and strong. 
Luther and Melanchthon, Charles 
the Fifth and Napoleon, the Peace 
of Basle and the cowardly Pillers- 
dorf, are nothing in his eyes but 
passing shadows over the black, 
red, and gold shield of the German 
people. From the blood of General 
Auerswald and of Prince Lichnow- 
sky, from the murder of Lamberg 
and Latour, the roses of hope spring 
only more obstinately for him, afTQ 
his tears hang on them only as the 
pearly dew of the dawn of German 
freedom, German loyalty to the 
faith, and German order. He bears 
the great, brave German people, 
with the everlasting spring of its 
virtues, in the innermost depths of 
his heart, and from this union, or 
rather identification, flows the pe- 
culiar pride of his address, which, 
in the evil seething of elements in 
the ' days of March,' still points 
out the means of building up the 
cathedral of the German Church 
sooner and more beautifully than 
the cathedral of Cologne. There- 
fore was it that his words impressed 
his hearers with a resistless might. 

* Have we no word to express shortly the mean- 
ing of the fine German word "Tt'taten-drang" ? 



When I think of the orator Kette- 
ler, I see before me a thorough 
man, who can awake fear in many 
a heart, but whose individuality is 
in itself a right to do so." 

Most of his bitterest opponents 
in the Reichstag acknowledged his 
power in speaking, and respected 
the fearless use he made of his po- 
sition to remind them of their du- 
ties as men, Christians, and law- 
makers ; and when circumstances 
made it impossible for him to com- 
bine his duties as deputy with his 
dignity as bishop, and caused him 
to retire from his place, his pajty 
felt the loss of his voice as much 
as his adversaries rejoiced in their 
deliverance from a parliamentary 
"Son of Thunder." His lectures 
and sermons, even on ordinary days 
and stereotyped subjects, were al- 
ways startling and mind-compelling 
by the manner in which old truths 
were handled and new meanings 
brought out therefrom ; while his 
open-air preaching at pilgrimages, 
where he was often heard by ten 
thousand people, bore an equally 
powerful and peculiar stamp, and, 
though his thoughts were then 
'clothed in simpler language, they 
lacked none of the breadth which 
distinguished his more finished 
speeches. 

In a monthly magazine edited at 
Mayence by the bishop's friends 
Heinrich and Monsang, both digni- 
taries of his cathedral chapter, is a 
review of his life which gives a 
prominent place to his opinion on 
the importance and seriousness of 
social questions : 

" He was deeply and firmly con- 
vinced that political and social 
problems are so inseparably con- 
nected with religious questions that 
any one aiming at defending reli- 
gion from a high stand-point and in 
a comprehensive manner cannot 






636 



'A Great Bishop. 



indifferently pass by these prob- 
lems." 

A newspaper generally opposed 
to his political views, the Catholic 
}\>ifc (or "Opinion "),* speaks in 
the same sense: 

" One of the most noteworthy 
traits in the life and works of Bish- 
op Ketteler is the lively interest 
which he took, by deed, word, and 
writing, in the social question. It 
is precisely in this direction that 
most misunderstandings take place. 
But we would remind the public 
that the attitude of the bishop to- 
wards tlris problem was wholly 
shaped by his Catholic principles 
and his priestly duties. Nothing 
was further from his mind than the 
wish to use the needs of the laborer 
as a basis for political agitation, or 
to carry out any chimerical theo- 
ries of a general millennium. He 
took a part in the labor question, 
because he saw in working-men the 
victims of so-called liberal law- 
givers, and because he found it his 
duty as a pastor to care for the 
poor. These high and noble mo- 
tives were not always appreciated, 
but working-men themselves have 
repeatedly testified their confidence 
in him, and after his death were 
published many gratifying tributes 
from the same source." 

The sense in which he took part 
in this question is again impressed 
on the German public by means of 
the article from which we have 
quoted before namely, that it was 
determined by personal experience 
and a sensitive consciousness of 
his duties as a priest. 

" What he wrote and did con- 
cerning this subject proceeded not 
from mere theoretical interest, still 
less from political reasons, but from 
Christian love and brotherly feeling 

* Katholische Stimme. 



towards the people, especially the 
poorer classes, and from the ardent 
wish to further their eternal and 
temporal welfare, as well as to save 
them, together with the whole of 
society, from the terrible chaos 
towards which we are being hurled, 
if the old maxims and practice of 
Christian charity and justice do 
not prevail against the principles 
of modern liberalism and pseudo- 
conservatism." 

In his political prominence, and 
his fearless handling of questions 
often, under specious pretexts, with- 
drawn from the allowed limits of 
clerical oratory, Ketteler seems to 
invite a comparison with Dupan- 
loup, the Bishop of Orleans, who, 
having fought in the earlier strug- 
gle for freedom of education in 
France, has lived to take part in a 
struggle more vital and less local 
that of the whole field of Christian 
doctrine in arms against systematiz- 
ed revolution. Occasion naturally 
moulds the men it needs; the ma- 
terial of such characters is always 
present, but in the church, as in the 
world, "mute, inglorious Miltons" 
and " village Hampdens " die and 
leave no mark. This explains the 
rush of talent to the rescue of every 
cause seriously imperilled by its 
successful adversaries ; among 
others the cause of the church, 
under whatsoever persecution it 
may chance to suffer. This also 
explains the present superiority, as 
a body, of the German episcopate. 
In the first quarter of this century 
the reconstruction of society in 
France, and the reorganization of 
the church on a basis less majestic 
but more dignified than that of the 
ancien regime, brought about the 
same bristling of great gifts greatly 
used around the threatened liber- 
ties of the church. In Poland, 
during the two insurrections which 



A Great Bishop. 



637 



this century has witnessed, heroes 
rose up naturally wherever there 
was a priest or a bishop ; in the 
late French war, and its sequel, the 
Commune, the martyrdoms and 
Christian stoicism of 1793 were re- 
peated and nearly surpassed, while 
the present more tedious, less bril- 
liant struggle of the church in Ger- 
many has called forth men of iron 
will and fathomless patience to re- 
sist, legally and passively, an active, 
goading injustice. In countries 
where there is no need for it there 
is less of this public display of un- 
usual powers; bishops who might 
be statesmen remain simply ad- 
ministrators, priests who might be 
heroes remain obscure pastors ; in 
literature it is research, learning, 
theology which take up their lei- 
sure time, not public speaking or 
political writing; the silent, health- 
ful life of the church goes on, with- 
out struggle and hindrance, and 
work is done indeed, but it seldom 
becomes known beyond a small 
local circle. And even this hap- 
pens only under the shadow of sup- 
pressed hostility to the church, 
such as there exists at present in 
almost every country; for there have 
been times when, splendid as the 
outward position of the church has 
been, or seemingly unfettered her 
organization, there was at the core 
a spiritual drowsiness which was far 
from honorable. Such a period 
came before the first French Revo- 
lution; another earlier, before the 
German Reformation; another la- 
ter, before Catholic Emancipation 
in England ; and another before 



the late Prussian church laws in 
Germany. There was either secu- 
rity or sovereignty; no shade of 
persecution ; at most a polished 
indifference or a scornful toleration, 
and hence no revival, no earnest, 
quick-pulsing life. 

We have omitted to mention one 
of Bishop Ketteler's most impor- 
tant undertakings that of the theo- 
logical institute in Mayence, to re- 
place the education given to the 
clergy at the local university of 
Hesse, Giesen. The grand-duke 
heartily approved of the plan of 
restoring to the episcopal seminary 
the whole training of the diocesan 
clergy, instead of the taking on, as 
a secondary branch, of a chair of 
theology to Giesen; and the bislTop 
was enabled to carry out his plans 
in this matter, and to leave behind 
him a body of priests, zealous, 
loyal, whole-hearted, and imbued 
with his own spirit. 

Ketteler was in every sense a 
great man, and no less a man of his 
age. He accepted everything as it 
legitimately stands, with no hanker- 
ings after the old order of things, 
no political, or rather romantic, 
longings after forced revivals of by- 
gone conditions; but he took his 
stand firmly on the principle that 
the church has her own appointed 
and immutable place in every suc- 
cessive system, and ought to stand 
by her claim to this place. This is 
the basis whence every member of 
her army should in these days fight 
her battles, and, taking up the new 
weapons, make them his own. Ket- 
teler has shown them the way. 




(Ontario. 



The Old Stone Jug. 



THE OLD STONE JUG. 



A TALE OF THE NEUTRAL GROUND. 



A CENTURY ago on the post-road 
to Boston, and sixteen miles from 
the city of New York, stood a tavern 
called the Old Stone Jug. It was a 
one-story building of dark-colored 
stone, with a single window fronting 
upon the high way aquaint,lozenge- 
shaped window, of thick, dingy glass, 
through which the sun's rays pene- 
trated with difficulty. The chim- 
ney, battered by two generations of 
northwest winds, sagged considera- 
bly to the south ; a frowning rock 
rose close behind the house; and 
altogether the Old Stone Jug wore 
a sinister appearance, which tallied 
well with the stories told about it. 
A band of Indians had come in the 
night-time and massacred the first 
family who dwelt here ; a peddler 
had been seen to enter the door- 
way and never been heard of after- 
wards ; a cavern of fathomless depth 
was said to connect the cellar with 
the rock ; and certain it is that no 
one who had made this spot his 
home had either remained long or 
prospered there, except Peter Van 
Alstyne better known in the town- 
ship of East Chester as Uncle Pete 
who kept the tavern at the open- 
ing of the Revolution. 

But he did well ; the poorer his 
neighbors became, the more light- 
hearted did he grow and the richer, 
and all because the fox which 
prowleth about in the dark was not 
cunninger than Uncle Pete. 

His wife was dead, but he had a 
daughter named Martha, who kept 
house for him, and whom he tender- 
ly loved and strove to bring up in 
his own principles namely, to be 



all things to all men. " For these 
are critical times," he would say, 
" and who can tell, child, which 
side will win ?" 

Martha was just twenty years of 
age, and, if not what we might 
call a handsome girl, had some- 
thing very attractive about her. 
She was tall and graceful and 
abounding in spirits. She knew 
everybody for miles around, and 
everybody knew her;- and if the 
more knowing ones shook their 
heads and looked a little doubtful 
when they spoke of Van Alstyne, 
all agreed that Martha was a fine 
young woman. 

The only member of the house- 
hold besides herself and patent 
was a diminutive negro boy chris- 
tened " Popgun." And at the 
moment our tale begins Popgun is 
perched on the topmost limb of a 
wild-cherry tree hard by, Martha is 
in the kitchen making doughnuts, 
while the publican is standing in the 
middle of the road gazing up at the 
sign-board which hangs immediate- 
ly above the entrance and, consid- 
ering that he painted it himself, 'tis 
not a bad work of art. Here we 
see King George with a crown on 
his head; at the royal feet crouches 
a lion, and around the two figures, 
in big red letters, are the words, 
"God save the King!" 

He was still contemplating the 
features of his sovereign when a 
shrill voice cried down from the sky, 
" Be ready, sir." In an instant 
Uncle Pete's face lost its tranquil ex- 
pression, and putting his hand to 
his ear, so as to catch well Popgun's 



The Old Stone Jug. 



639 



next warning note, he listened at- 
tentively. 

In another minute came the voice 
again: " 'Lisha Williams, sir, on 
Dolly Dumplings." 

" Ho ! Then I must be brisk, for 
the mare travels fast," muttered 
Van Alstyne, hastening toward a 
ladder which lay a few yards off in 
readiness for these occasions. In 
less time than it takes to relate the 
sign-board was turned round, and, 
lo ! in place of King George and 
the lion behold now George Wash- 
ington, holding in his hand a flag 
whereon are thirteen stripes and 
thirteen stars, and circling the 
picture are the words, " God save 
our Liberties." 

"Child, here's 'Lisha coming," 
shouted Uncle Pete, thrusting his 
head into the doorway. 

"Elisha! Indeed!" exclaimed 
Martha, letting drop the cake she 
was rolling in her hands. " Oh ! 
how glad I am. Haven't seen the 
dear boy for an age." Then away 
she flew to make ready for her lov- 
er, or rather for one of her lovers. 
And now, while the girl is putting 
on another gown, let us speak a few 
words about the horseman who is 
approaching. 

Elisha Williams was a young man 
of five-and-twenty, with sandy hair 
and bine eyes, and whose father 
owned a farm half a mile east of the 
inn. He and Martha had been 
friends from childhood, and when 
at length the time came for him to 
think of matrimony there was no 
lass whom he desired more for his 
wife than Martha. 

She was a girl after his own heart : 
not demure and timid and silent as 
a tombstone, but brave and full of 
fun ; he had even known her to pur- 
sue and kill a rattlesnake; and she 
was as fond of a horse as he was 
himself. 



When news came of the fight at 
Lexington Elisha openly took the 
patriot side, bought Dolly Dump- 
lings of Martha's father (a mare so 
given to kicking and jumping fences 
that,although of unstained pedigree, 
Uncle Pete was fain to part with 
her), and now he is one of the most 
daring troopers in the Continental 
army, and is known far and wide as 
The Flying Scout. 

But Elisha was not the only one 
who courted Martlra. He had a 
rival named Harry Valentine, son 
of Doctor Valentine, the most no- 
torious Tory in East Chester ; and 
this caused Elisha not a little anx- 
iety. For, although Martha always 
received him very cordially when 
he paid her one of his flying visits, 
and seemed pleased to hear of his 
exploits, she never would listen 
when he said anything harsh of the 
Tories. 

Elisha's heart was beating quite 
as fast as her own when presently 
he reined in his foaming steed be- 
fore the tavern door. Martha was 
standing on the threshold, looking, 
in his eyes, never so bewitching. 
Between her ringers she held a 
lump of sugar for Dolly Dumplings 
she seemed to care only for 
Dolly ; her long, luxuriant brown 
hair, which flowed loose down her 
shoulders, had a spray of wild 
honeysuckle twined through it 
you might have fancied she had 
been wandering through the woods, 
and that the flowers had got tan- 
gled there by accident. Her cheeks 
were slightly tinged by the sun ; 
but what of it ? They were plump, 
healthy cheeks, adorned by two 
pretty dimples; and Elisha, who 
loved cherries, felt his mouth water 
when he looked on Martha's lips. 

"How is my Martha?" he ex- 
claimed, sliding nimbly off the 
saddle. 



640 



The Old Stone Jug. 



" Your Martha, indeed !" an- 
swered the girl, tossing her head ; 
then with a smile, as he caught 
both her hands : " Well, I'm alive 
and well, and " 

" Not at all pleased to see me, 
eh ?" interrupted Elisha. 

" Delighted to see you," she add- 
ed, a sweet pink blush spreading 
itself with the quickness of light 
over her face. 

"Really? Truly? Ton your 
honor?" cried Elisha, squeezing 
her hands tighter. 

" Come inside and let's have a 
talk," said, Martha, trying to free 
herself from his grasp. But she 
only half tried ; and when presently 
they were seated side by side he was 
still holding fast to her right wrist. 

" What delicious flowers !" ob- 
served Martha, looking down at a 
nosegay which the youth had stuck 
in his belt. " Wild-flowers give no 
such perfume." 

"These are for you," said her 
lover, presenting them to her. 
" They came from Van Cortlandt's 
garden. I spent last night at the 
Manor. Van Cortlandt is a pa- 
triot, and is not ashamed to offer a 
farmer's son hospitality." 

" How delicious !" said Martha, 
bringing the nosegay to her nose. 
" Colonel Delancey's hothouse 
plants cannot surpass them." 

"Delancey! The Tory! The 
Cowboy chief! What do you know 
about his flowers, Martha ?" 

"Harry Valentine brought me a 
magnolia from there a few days ago," 
replied Martha frankly. 

The other murmured something 
to himself, then burst out : " Con- 
found and hang the Tories!" 

Martha was silent a moment, then 
remarked: "Well, however much 
you dislike them, I hope you will 
not harm Harry Valentine, if he 
ever falls into your hands." 



" It being your wish, I will always 
aim a mile above his precious head," 
returned Elisha. 

" You are a good fellow a real 
good fellow; just the same as you 
always were," continued Martha 
tenderly. "Oh! I often think of 
our old frolics together, Elisha." 

" Do you, really? Well, Martha, 
I often think of them too. What 
happy days those were !" 

" Yes, much happier than these. 
O Elisha! you can't think how 
changed everything is since this 
dreadful war began. Not a sloop 
sails up the creek now ; no carri- 
ages pass along the road ; no bees, 
no husking parties everybody is 
gloomy. First this man's barn is 
burnt, then that man's ; and chick- 
ens and horses and cattle are sto- 
len. In short, between the Skinners 
and the Cowboys poor Westchester 
County is fast becoming a desert." 

" Well, for all that it is a glorious 
war, and will end in freeing us from 
England," said Elisha, thumping 
his fist upon his knee. 

" Ay, to be sure it will. God 
save our liberties ! Hurrah for 
the Continental Army !" cried 
Uncle Pete, waddling into the 
house. Then, as he opened a cup- 
board which contained a number 
of bottles of rum and cherry-bounce: 
" Tell me, 'Lisha, how you like 
Dolly Dumplings." 

"Like her? Why, Uncle Pete, 
she's just the best animal that ever 
was shod. Nothing can catch her 
not even the wind." 

" Right, my boy ! Colonel Liv- 
instone, who imported her sire 
from England, and who sold the 
mare to me five years ago, declared 
that she has in her veins the blood 
of the Flying Childers, and you 
know he ran a mile a minute." 

" Father, Popgun is calling," 
said Martha, with a disturbed air. 






The Old Stone Jug. 



641 



''Is he?" And Van Alstyne 
liurried away as fast as possible ; 
but before you could count ten he 
was back again. 

" Too bad, "Lisha," he said, " that 
you must quit us so soon hardly 
time to take one drink. But some 
enemy's cavalry are in sight and 
they're on a trot." Then out he 
went again to fetch Dolly Dump- 
lings. 

" Well, dear boy, may the Lord 
watch over you and keep you safe !" 
spoke Martha, in a tone of deeper 
feeling than she had yet evinced 
toward her lover. The latter gazed 
earnestly in her face a moment, then 
said : " Must I bid good-by and de- 
part in uncertainty ? O Martha 
dear ! tell me what I so long to know: 
will you be my wife ?" 

Her response was : " Elisha, I 
love the brave, and the bravest shall 
win me." 

" Then, by Heaven, I'll be a 
hero !" cried Elisha. These were 
his last words ; in another moment 
he was gone. But ere Dolly Dump- 
lings had galloped fifty paces the 
sign-board was turned round and 
King George came once more in 
view. 

" Who are they, pa Hessians or 
real Britishers?" inquired Martha 
calmly ; for she knew they could not 
overtake Elisha. 

" Hessians, I believe," replied 
Van Alstyne. 

" Detestable creatures !" exclaim- 
ed the girl, withdrawing into the 
house. 

"Don't say that, child. They're 
as good as any soldiers who fight 
for the king; and if they halt here 
they'll leave more than one guinea 
behind them." 

And so they did, for they were a 

party of very thirsty and hungry 

men who shortly arrived ; and for 

the next hour and a half the Old 

VOL. xxvi. 41 



Stone Jug was as busy as a bee-hive. 
Many a bottle of spirits was emp- 
tied, every doughnut and pie was de- 
voured ; and in consideration of his 
being a stanch loyalist they paid 
Uncle Pete without grumbling, al- 
beit the score was rather high. 

"They're gone at last what a 
blessing!" said Martha, while her 
father was counting over the money 
to make sure it was all good coin. 

"Why, how foolish you talk!" 
said happy Uncle Pete. 

"Well, father, I'm in earnest. I 
don't dislike real Britishers or 
Tories ; but these German mer- 
cenaries I do detest." 

"Bah! bah!" growled Van Al- 
styne. " Perhaps to-morrow we'll 
have a band of Continentals or some 
roving Skinners ; then perhaps, day 
after, 'tother side may visit us again. 
Why, child, I'm getting rich out of 
this war." 

" Take one side or the other," 
returned Martha, shaking her head. 
" I'd rather be fair and open, even 
if we made less money." 

" Humph ! We'd be in a pretty 
fix if I did that, child a pretty fix. 
Why, this tavern wouldn't stand a 
week, except for my double-faced 
sign-board ; whereas now George 
Washington might be entertained 
here and depart highly edified, and 
so might King George. The only 
unpleasantness would be if they 
both happened to come at the same 
time. And so, child, you ought not 
to be finding fault." Then, after 
pausing long enough to take a chew 
of tobacco : " And besides," he 
went on, " 'tis not easy in this 
world always to see the clear path 
we ought to follow. Why, you 
yourself are in a fix ; and I don't 
wonder at it, for in this township 
I can't name two honester, jollier, 
more manly fellows than 'Lish.t 
Williams and Harry Valentine. 



642 



The Old Stone Jug. 



And if I were a girl with those two 
boys for sparks, I believe I'd jump 
into East Chester Creek, so that 
neither of 'em might be disap- 
pointed." 

Here Martha's merry laugh rang 
through the house; then, taking 
Elisha's bouquet in one hand and 
Harry's magnolia in the other, she 
stretched forth her arms and stood 
exactly half-way between the two 
love-gifts, and said: "Well, yes, I 
.am in a fix." 

"And a very, very sweet fix," 
.mumbled Uncle Pete, rolling the 
.quid about in his capacious mouth. 
" Many a young wbman might envy 
you." 

" Well, I do wonder how long it 
will last. I must decide one of 
.these days." 

" Don't be in a hurry, child. 
Wait ; have patience. If we are 
beaten and forced to remain colo- 
-nies, marry Harry Valentine ; if 
we secure our independence, then 
vchoose 'Lisha. For 'twill go hard 
with the party that's beaten; their 
land will be confiscated." 

" Dear, darling flowers ! How 

.delicious you are!" said Martha, 

^bringing the magnolia and the 

.nosegay together and pressing both 

;to her lips; and she kept kissing 

them and smelling them, and smell- 

.ing and kissing them, till at length 

her father said : 

" Humph ! they'll soon wilt, if 
you treat the pretty things that 
way." 

" Oli ! I'll get fresh ones afore 

long," answered Martha. " How- 

. ever, I will put these in water. 

They may as well last a few days." 

But a week went by, and then 
.another week, without bringing 
again either of her suitors. The 
weather was delightful, for it was 
early June. The summer heat had 
not yet begun ; and if it were not 



for war, ruthless war, how fair all 
nature would have appeared ! But 
although the meadows were span- 
gled with dandelions and butter- 
cups, the woods scented with dog- 
wood blossoms, and the air full of 
the melody of bobolinks and ori- 
oles, the people of East Chester were 
more depressed than ever. Bob 
Reed's mill had just been burnt by 
the Cowboys ; in revenge the Skin- 
ners had scuttled a Tory sloop 
anchored in the creek ; while some 
miscreants had even made an at- 
tempt to fire St. Paul's Church in 
the village. Bur, sad as all this 
was, nothing caused Martha Van 
Alstyne so much distress as the 
doings at the Old Stone Jug. For 
two whole nights she was kept 
awake and bustling about, attend- 
ing to the wants of a set of pro- 
fane marauders who belonged both 
to the British and American side. 
These villains, sinking all differ- 
ence of opinion, would occasion- 
ally unite to rob friend as well as 
foe ;* and it was to the Old Stone 
Jug they carried their plunder, 
which Uncle Pete would hide in the 
cavern behind the house. 

" Well, don't blame me, child," 
said Van Alstyne. " Remember 
how I am situated. Why, if I had 
refused to conceal those bags of 
gold I'd like enough have been 
hung forthwith ; for among the 
men who were here last night and 
the night before are some of the 
greatest scoundrels in America." 

" Well, I am going to choose my 
husband afore long," answered 
Martha " either Elisha Williams 
or Harry Valentine; and then you 
must abandon this tavern and come 
live with me. For if you stay 
here " 

" O child ! I sha'n't stay after 

* Sparks' Life of A mold \ p. 218. 



The Old Stone Jug. 



64-. 



you're gone. But why marry so 
soon ? Why not wait a while ? at 
least, until we see what Burgoyne 
does with his army, which is large 
and well appointed. He may sweep 
everything before him ; and if he 
does, then you'll see your way 
much clearer, and I'll be the first 
to tell you to wed Harry Valen- 
tine." 

Martha shook her head : " I'll give 
my hand to the bravest, father, no 
matter which side he is on. And it 
is because they are both so good 
and so brave that I hesitate." 

" Well, now, child, if you're not 
careful you may cause the death of 
'em both. Ay, 'tis hard to say 
what wild, foolhardy deed they may 
not attempt in order to win you." 

" Do you think so ?" exclaimed 
Martha, pressing her hand over 
her heart and turning pale. This 
thought had not occurred to her be- 
fore. But it was too late. She had 
already told each wooer that the 
bravest one should have her. 

The girl was inwardly lamenting 
her folly when a voice from the 
cherry-tree cried : " Be ready, sir." 
And immediately she and her father 
listened with all their ears for the 
next call. 

"Red-coats!" shouted Popgun 
in about three minutes. 

" All right," said Uncle Pete, and 
off he went to get the ladder. But 
quick Martha checked him, saying: 
" Why, father, the sign-board is all 
right for Britishers." 

" Oh ! so it is," ejaculated 
Uncle Pete ; then, with a grin : 
"The fact is, child, I'm so used to 
turning it round and round first 
to King George, then to George 
Washington, then back again to 
King George that I'm afraid some 
day I'll make a mistake, and I've 
half a mind to give you charge 
of it." 



" If you do I'll either nail the sign 
fast to the house, or else take it 
away entirely," answered Martha. 

Her parent was still laughing 
at this innocent, unbusiness-like 
speech when the British dragoons 
arrived, and at their head was 
Harry Valentine. 

Harry was a very different look- 
ing man from Elisha Williams: not 
only was he clad in a brilliant scarlet 
uniform, but he had more refined 
features and courtly manners, which 
'seemed to confirm the view that 
Martha's father held namely, that 
the most genteel people were Tories. 
And now, while Harry clasped the 
hand of his sweetheart, the latter 
forgot altogether Elisha's freckled 
but honest face, his sandy hair and 
homespun coat, with naught to dis- 
tinguish him from an ordinary 
citizen save a black cockade and 
eagle feather in his hat, and she 
thought to herself: "Was there 
ever such a magnificent wig as my 
Harry's ! "Tis powdered to per- 
fection ! Dear, darling boy !" 

"Ah! there is the magnolia I 
gave you," said Harry, smiling, as 
they entered the little sitting-room, 
where Martha passed most of her 
time when not engaged in the 
kitchen. 

"How fresh it looks! Yet 'tis :i 
good while since I brought it." 

"An age," returned Martha, eying 
him fondly. 

"And what pretty flowers those 
are yonder !" he continued, looking 
toward the other end of the mantel- 
piece. 

" None could be prettier," said 
Martha in a quiet voice, yet she 
felt the blood stealing over her 
cheeks. 

" From Reverend Doctor Coffee's 
garden, perhaps?" 

"No indeed! They were given 
me by one whom nobody can come 



644 



The Old Stone 



up to one who keeps ahead of 
everybody. Now guess his name!" 

"Oh ! I know that Skinner, 
Elisha Williams," said Harry with 
apparent indifference, but inwardly 
groaning. 

" He is not a Skinner, any more 
than you are a Cowboy. You are 
both in the regular armies," said 
Martha; then, laying her hand on 
Harry's shoulder: "And, Harry, I 
hope, if Elisha is ever your prisoner, 
that you will treat him kindly." 

" For your sake he who in youf 
eyes is ahead of all the rest of the 
world shall have not a single one 
of his red hairs injured," answered 
Harry, making a low bow. " But 
might I venture to ask what vali- 
ant exploit has Elisha performed 
that you say he is ahead of me, his 
open, determined, but honorable 
rival ?" 

" O Harry ! your dear brains 
are running away with you, " said 
Martha. " You speak hastily. I 
only meant that Dolly Dumplings is 
so fleet that not a trooper in the 
king's army can catch Elisha. 
That is all I meant." 

"Is that really all?" exclaimed 
Harry, giving a sigh of relief. 

"Yes, upon my word it is." 

" Well, Elisha must look out," 
continued the young man, his coun- 
tenance beaming once more. " He 
must not presume too much on the 
fleetness of his steed ; for a hundred 
pounds reward has just been offer- 
ed to whoever will capture Dolly 
Dumplings." 

" Indeed ! A hundred pounds !" 
exclaimed Martha. " Well, for all 
that Dolly will still continue to 
show you her heels." 

At this Harry laughed, then said : 
' Martha, I hope the next time you 
see me I'll have a decoration; we 
expect stirring events soon." 
f " O Harry ! pray don't be rash," 



said the girl. " Do, do take care 
of yourself." 

"Stop no preaching, dear Mar- 
tha. I love you too much to heed 
the bullets. You remember you 
said the bravest should possess you ; 
and you are a treasure worth shed- 
ding blood for." 

" Oh ! did I say that ?" Here she 
pressed her hand to her brow. 
"Well, yes, I believe I did. But I 
was a fool, for who can be braver 
than you and Elisha? Who can 
doubt the courage of either of you ?" 

" Well, then, precious Martha, 
why not decide at once between us ? 
Oh ! I assure you 'tis a great trial 
for me, this long uncertainty." 

When he had spoken these words 
Martha turned her eyes upon 
Elisha's nosegay, which, despite the 
water, was beginning to fade ; then 
from the flowers her eyes dropped 
to the floor, while her heart throb- 
bed violently. Then, looking up, she 
was on the very point of uttering 
something of vast moment, when, 
lo! a bullet crashed through the 
window, whizzed close by her head, 
and buried itself in the wainscoting, 
half blinding her with whitewash 
and mortar. 

Immediately there was a great stir 
and confusion in the bar-room, 
where Harry's company were drink- 
ing and smoking their pipes. 

Quick the troopers were on their 
feet and rushing pell-mell out of the 
house, while their horses were paw- 
ing the earth and neighing furiously, 
for " whizz !" " whizz ! " " whizz ! " 
like so many bees the balls were 
flying past them. 

"Good Lord ! here they come, 
and close upon us!" gasped Uncle 
Pete, shaking like an aspen leaf as 
he glanced up the highway, then 
looking toward the sign-board. 
Would he have time to make the 
sign change front ? Momentous 



The Old Stone Jug. 



645 



question ! And on the American 
c;ivalry were coming a whole regi- 
ment on, on, at full speed. But, 
rapidly as they approached, the 
Britishers were too quick for them ; 
every man of the latter was already 
in the saddle, and Martha, although 
seeing but dimly, was giving Harry's 
hand a parting squeeze, heedless 
of the danger she was in and deaf 
to his urgent entreaties to withdraw. 

" No, no, I'm not afraid," she 
said. Nor did she retire until he 
had pressed his lips to her cheek; 
then back she flew into the house. 

Scarcely had Harry put spurs to 
his horse when Uncle Pete his 
movements happily hidden by a 
cloud of dust sprang up the lad- 
der, turned the sign-board round in 
a jiffy, then, pulling from his pocket 
a bit of chalk, drew it thrice across 
George Washington's benign visage. 
After which down he came, or ra- 
ther down he tumbled ; the ladder 
was hastily flung aside, and through 
the doorway after Martha he ran, 
shouting: "Smash the bottles, 
child! Smash a lot of 'em!" 

Poor Martha, who was cleansing 
the mortar from her eyes, was filled 
with amazement at these words. 
Had her parent suddenly lost his 
wits ? Ay, surely he had, for he was 
already hard at work breaking bot- 
tle after bottle, and by the time 
Colonel Glover's regiment, which 
pursued the enemy only half a mile, 
drew up at the Old Stone Jug, two 
pounds ten shillings would not have 
made good the damage which Un- 
cle Pete had wrought to his own 
property. 

"God save our liberties, and 
the devil take King George!" cried 
Van Alstyne as the American colo- 
nel dismounted; then, pointing in- 
dignantly at the sign-board : " Look, 
sir, what the British villains have 
done ! Look !" 



" Ay, disfigured our noble com- 
mander-in-chief," answered the 
officer. 

"But now come, sir, and see what 
they have done inside," continued 
Uncle Pete, foaming at the mouth. 

In a few minutes the tavern was 
crowded with officers and soldiers 
heaping maledictions upon the 
British for having destroyed so much 
excellent rum ; the whole floor was 
reeking with spirits. 

But Uncle Pete, in consideration' 
of his loyalty to the American cause, 
recovered all he had lost, and more 
too ; for the cavalry-men made the 
inn merry until the day was well- 
nigh spent. And when at length 
they departed there was not a more 
contented citizen in the township 
than Peter Van Alstyne. 

" What a narrow escape we had !" 
he said to Martha when they were 
once more alone. 

" Very ; and we may thank God 
'tis all over without one drop of 
blood being spilt," answered the 
girl. 

" Well, no, 'tisn't quite over yet," 
added the publican; then, going 
to the door, he shouted : "Popgun, 
come down." 

Popgun obeyed, but his move- 
ments were slow; he moved like one 
who has the rheumatism, and he 
took double the usual time to de- 
scend the tree. 

" I say, you little black imp," 
growled Uncle Pete as soon as the 
boy got within reach "you little 
black imp, you fell asleep on your 
perch to-day. Now, don't lie ; you 
did, and you're 'sponsible for the 
broken bottles, and the disfigured 
sign, and the bullets in the wall. 
Ay, you're 'sponsible for every 
penny's worth of damage, and now 
I'm going to punish you." 

" O massa ! please don't make 
me dance a hornpipe," said the. 



646 



The Old Stone Jug. 



unhappy boy, whining and wring- 
ing his hands. "Don't! don't! I'll 
never full asleep again no, never." 

" Well, it's a hornpipe I'm going 
to make you dance ; and now begin." 
So saying, Uncle Pete lifted up a 
stout ox-gad and brought it down 
with all his might on Popgun's legs. 
The blow was followed by a pierc- 
ing cry. Martha implored her 
father not to strike him again, but 
Van Alstyne was deaf to her ap- 
peals for mercy, and during several 
minutes Popgun continued to hop 
about like a dancing bear, and you 
might have heard his screams as 
far as East Chester village. 

Finally, Uncle Pete having bro- 
ken the whip over the poor child's 
legs, Martha, who was truly vexed 
at such cruelty, led Popgun into the 
kitchen, intending to console him 
with something good to eat. But 
Van Alstyne, who knew how soft 
her heart was, said : 

" Martha, I positively forbid you 
to give him one mouthful of sweet- 
meats, and not a single doughnut 
or tart. Obey me !" 

The girl made no response, but, 
having fastened the kitchen door 
and brushed a tear out of her eye, 
bade the little sufferer sit down; 
then said : " Now, mind, you are 
to have no sweetmeats and no tarts 
and no doughnuts, so here's some 
honey and a corncake." 

Popgun looked up in her face, 
and Martha was not a little sur- 
prised to see him recovering so 
rapidly from his terrible castiga- 
tion ; so broad was his grin that 
every one of his gleaming teeth 
was visible. 

" I'd like to dance a hornpipe 
every day, Miss Martha," he said, 
"for I love corncake and honey." 

" Do you ? Well, then, you shall 
have plenty." 

But before the urchin besran his 



feast he whispered: " Miss Martha, 
you won't tell anybody if I tell 
you a secret, will you ?" 

" Of course not," answered Mar- 
tha, who was anxious to please him, 
and thus make amends for the bar- 
barous treatment he had received. 

"Well, then, Miss Martha, look 
here." And Popgun stooped, and, 
turning up the rim of his light lin- 
en trowsers, revealed underneath a 
pair of cowskin breeches about a 
quarter of an inch thick ; and 
these breeches had proved a good 
friend to him, for he had danced 
many a hornpipe. 

" Oh ! fie, you naughty boy !" 
exclaimed Martha; arid she was 
strongly tempted to take away the 
honey-jar. But after reflecting a 
moment she burst into a laugh, 
while Popgun tried to laugh too, 
but did not succeed for the honey 
which filled his mouth. 

Never had Martha known so 
much anxiety as during the four 
months which followed Harry Val- 
entine's last visit. Neither of her 
lovers came to see her. Never had 
they stayed away so long before ; 
and whenever any one arrived at 
the tavern with news she would 
listen with rapt attention and a 
sinking heart, fearful lest she might 
hear that some evil had befallen 
them. Often and often Martha 
would turn from her spinning-wheel 
to gaze on the flowers they had 
given her poor faded flowers, 
but more precious now than dia- 
monds in her sight ; and instead 
of keeping them far apart, Martha 
set the nosegay and magnolia near 
together so near that she might 
circle them both in one fond em- 
brace. 

It was an anxious, trying sum- 
mer, too, for the patriots. Wash- 
ington was suffering defeats in 
Pennsylvania; two important posts 



The Old Stone Jug. 



on the Hudson River Fort Mont- 
gomery and Fort Clinton were 
captured by the British ; and Con- 
gress had fled from Philadelphia to 
York. Nothing seemed likely to 
rescue the cause of independence 
from utter ruin, save the army 
under General Gates, which was 
marching to meet Burgoyne ; and 
every breath of rumor from the 
north was eagerly listened to. 

" A crisis is approaching, child," 
Uncle Pete would say, " and I 
guess you'll be able to select your 
husband afore the next moon." 

But Martha had grown too 
down-hearted to heed what her fa- 
ther said, and more than once he 
found tears in her eyes. 

By and by autumn came rich, 
ripe, golden autumn. But in many 
an orchard the apples were left 
unpicked, for the young men were 
gone to the war and the old folks 
had no heart for the labor. The 
blackbirds were flocking, and Mar- 
tha would watch them as they took 
wing for the south, and she felt to- 
ward the little birds as never be- 
fore ; for perhaps in their long jour- 
ney they might pass over Harry and 
Elisha ; in New Jersey, in Dela- 
ware, in Maryland, or even in the 
far-off Carolinas, they might see 
their camp-fires, might hear the 
cannon booming. 

" Sweet birds, you will come back 
in spring-time," she sighed. "Will 
Harry and Elisha come back ?" 

" Child, here is something that 
may cheer you up," said Uncle 
Pete one October evening. The 
girl looked round, and, lo ! he had 
a letter for her. Martha's hand 
trembled as she took it. 

A century ago people did not 
write as often as nowadays; indeed, 
comparatively few knew how to 
read and write. Hence it was not 
so very strange that Martha was 



un.'ible to tell at a glance from 
whom the letter came. Was it 
from Elisha ? or Harry ? or from 
some comrade of theirs imparting 
sad news ? 

Few moments in life are more 
big with keen suspense than the 
moment between the breaking of a 
letter's seal and the reading of the 
first line, when the missive is from 
one very dear to us and far away. 
This interval of time brief as 
three heart-throbs may prove the 
boundary-line where happiness ends 
for ever and dark days begin, or it 
may set us smiling as Martha is 
smiling now ; therefore let us peep 
over her shoulder and learn what 
the glad tidings are : 

"I am coming in three days, dearest 
Martha, to take you to St. Paul's Church 
and make you my darling wife. Now, 
don't say nay. I implore you not to 
break my heart. I have won two deco- 
rations, and am a major, and in all Ame- 
rica nobody loves you more truly than 
your devoted 

" HARRY VALENTINE." 

Although an exceedingly short 
letter, it required some little time 
for Martha to spell it all out ; and 
when she did get to the end she 
was in such a flurry that she could 
barely speak when Uncle Pete ask- 
ed what was the matter. 

" O father ! Harry Valentine 
says he will be here in in three 
days to marry me. And and he 
has won two decorations, and he is; 
a major, and I don't know what to* 
think about it." 

" Humph ! he has risked his life 
twice for you, has he ? Got two> 
decorations ! Well, that ought to- 
count a good deal in his favor." 

" Well, yes, it ought, father." 

"And do you know, child, there 
is a rumor flying about that Gen. 
Gates has found Burgoyne too- 



648 



The Old Stone Jug. 



strong for him, and that he is re- 
treating. Therefore, all things con- 
sidered, I think you may bet on 
King George and marry Harry." 

" O father ! how little you un- 
derstand me," exclaimed Martha 
with a look of reproach. "I may 
seem a flirt, a coquette, but I'm 
not. My heart is not like your 
sign-board, and I have suffered 
more than you imagine from not 
being able to decide between Har- 
ry and Elisha, who love me so 
truly, and each of whom is so wor- 
thy of my love." Then, pressing 
her hands to her bosom : " Poor 
heart!" she cried, "what must I 
do ? Oh ! tell me, what must I 
do ?" Then, hastening into the 
sitting-room, where she kept the 
nosegay and the magnolia, she 
put her lips to Elisha's wither- 
ed love-gift, then carried it off, 
leaving the magnolia alone in its 
glory. But ere Martha reached 
the window, where she meant to 
fling the flowers away, the glass 
which held them slipped from her 
quivering hand, and in an instant 
it lay shattered at her feet. 
. " Well, really, child, you do as- 
tonish me," said her father the 
afternoon of the day when Harry 
Valentine was expected. " You 
can't sleep, you've lost your appe- 
tite, and all because 'Lisha's posy 
dropped on the floor. Why, what 
nonsense !" 

" Well, yes, it is silly," said Mar- 
tha. " One of the two I will wed, 
.and I have made up my mind it is 
to be Harry, and I doubt not 
Elisha will live fifty years and be 
happy too. Any one might let a 
glass break." 

" Ay, ay. I've smashed scores 
of 'em, child, and never knew any 
ill to follow except once, when I 
stumbled and fell on top of the 
.broken bits and cut my finger." 



Martha now made a strong effort 
to dispel the sense of approaching 
evil which for three days had been 
haunting her, and during the next 
hour she kept in good spirits. She 
had on her best gown, there was a 
flush upon her cheeks, and every 
few minutes she would go to the 
foot of the cherry-tree and ask if 
Harry Valentine were in sight. 

" No, miss," answered Popgun 
the last time she put the question 
to him. "But there is a man in 
the cedars yonder making signs; I 
guess he wants to speak with you 
or master. He looks like an In- 
dian." 

Martha did not hesitate to go 
herself and see what the stranger 
wanted ; and after the latter had 
spoken a few words to her and she 
turned to leave him, the bright co- 
lor had fled from her face and she 
trembled. 

A half-hour later a cavalcade of 
gay horsemen arrived at the tavern, 
and, as we may imagine, Van Al- 
styne wondered very much why his 
daughter was not present to greet 
Harry Valentine. He searched all 
through the house for Martha; he 
called her name, but she did not 
answer. Where could Martha be ? 

In the meanwhile Harry, direct- 
ed by Popgun's finger, which point- 
ed to the woods, had set out in 
quest of his love. 

And Martha was soon found ; 
but not, as the young officer had 
fancied she would be, gathering 
chestnuts or wild grapes by the 
brookside, by Rattlesnake Brook, 
where he had first met her five 
years ago oh ! never-to-be-forgot- 
ten day, when she was just emerg- 
ing from girlhood and the first 
down was on his chin; But now 
Harry found her kneeling upon a 
mossy rock, praying. And when 
at the sound of footsteps Martha 



The Old Stone Jug. 



649 



rose up and flew into his arms, 
although transported with delight 
to meet her again, and to feel she 
had yielded him her heart at last 
that heart which it had taken so 
long to win nevertheless a pang 
shot through him when he dis- 
covered a tear on her cheek ; 'twas 
easy to kiss the tear away, but why 
had she been weeping? He asked 
the question, but Martha onlyshook 
her head and said : 

" Remember, dear one, the pro- 
mise you once made me : if Elisha 
ever falls into your hands, you will 
do him no injury. Remember." 

And now evening has come, and 
a -jovial party is assembled in the 
Old Stone Jug. Uncle Pete bestir- 
red himself as never before to do 
his guests honor ; he could scarce 
remain quiet a moment. The best 
his house afforded he gave without 
stint, and 'twas a free gift. Uncle 
Pete intended that his future son- 
in-law should long remember the 
hospitality of this autumn evening. 

Martha was the only one who 
did not make merry. She sat close 
beside Harry Valentine, her eyes 
resting on his manly, sunburnt face ; 
she seemed ready to devour him 
with her eyes, and spoke very little. 

But ever and anon she would 
withdraw her hand from his and 
go peep out of the window. It 
was when she had done this for the 
third time, then come back and 
placed her hand within his again, 
that Harry observed in a tone of 
surprise : 

" Why, my beloved, what, is the 
matter ? Your hand is grown sud- 
denly cold as ice." 

"Is it?" said Martha nervous- 
ly. There were other words quiv- 
ering on her lips, but she held them 
back. In after-years she bitterly 
lamented her silence at this critical 
moment. It was late, yet not too 



late the moon was still a quarter 
of an hour below the horizon and 
when Harry noticed her agitation, 
if she had only been frank with 
him, how different might have been 
the whole current of her after-life 
how very different ! 

And now the sky in the east is 
growing rapidly brighter, and Mar- 
tha's heart is throbbing faster and 
louder so loud that Harry might 
almost have heard it. But 'twas 
not necessary for him to hear the 
beating of her heart in order to dis- 
cover her growing distress. Mar- 
tha was leaning back in the chair, 
her cheeks were become as cold as 
her hand, and her eyes strayed 
from his eyes to the window in a 
wild, fearful way ; then, looking at 
him again, she seemed about to say 
something, but did not, and Harry 
was really becoming alarmed at the 
strange mood she was in, when the 
tavern door was suddenly flung 
wide open, and, as it swept round 
on its hinges, a small, black hand 
passed swiftly over the table. In 
an instant the candles were extin- 
guished, and in the pitchy darkness 
which followed Martha found her- 
self borne away in somebody's 
arms. 

" Now, Martha, you're mine," 
said Elisha Williams exultingly, as 
he bounded like a deer up the road 
to the spot where he had left his 
horse. 

" Be true to me, Martha. Mount ! 
and we'll hie to the Jerseys to- 
gether." 

What the girl's feelings were just 
at this moment 'twere not easy to 
describe. In her ears came a deaf- 
ening uproar from the Old Stone 
Jug quick commands; the neigh- 
ing of steeds ; a voice cried, 
"Fire!" 

Then well, she must have swoon- 
ed ; for when next she became con- 



650 



The -Old Stone Jug. 



srious of anything, Martha found 
herself seated on the saddle-bow, 
Klisha's arm supporting her, and 
Polly Dumplings galloping at ter- 
rific speed along Cusser's Lane. 

And here let us say that the very 
first thought to enter Martha's 
mind was a glad thought. Ay, 
her dark presentiment in regard to 
The Flying Scout had proved utter- 
ly untrue, and she even laughed 
aloud when presently she told Eli- 
sha what her fears for him had 
been. Whereupon he cried : " Me 
dead ! Ha ! ha ! No indeed ! Hur- 
rah for Independence and Martha 
Van Alstyne !" 

Then, while his voice was echoing 
through the woods which lined the 
road on either side frightening an 
owl and rousing a partridge out of 
its sleep Elisha went on to tell 
the great news of Burgoyne's sur- 
render. " I was present, my love," 
he said. " I saw the British colors 
lowered. Hurrah for Martha and 
Independence ! Hurrah ! hurrah !" 

But swift as was Dolly's pace 
her tail, back, and nose formed 
one beeline it was none too swift, 
and she needed all the blood of her 
grandsire, the Flying Childers, to 
save her from being overtaken. On, 
on at a furious rate Harry Valen- 
tine was coming. He led the pur- 
suit; his friends were close behind 
him. And now, we may ask, did 
Martha remonstrate with Elisha? 
Did she urge him to draw rein ? 
to surrender her to the one whom 
she had consented to wed on the 
morrow ? No, indeed. Elisha's as- 
tounding boldness in stealing her 
away from her home when sur- 
rounded by a score of armed men 
drowned every other thought ; veri- 
ly, he was the boldest of the bold. 
The bracing night-air, too, was like 
wine to her throbbing veins, and the 
moon beams shimmering through 



the trees lent a weirdness to the 
scene which prevented Martha from 
thinking calmly about anything. 
She felt as if bewitched. Dolly 
Dumplings appeared like a ghostly 
steed; Elisha was a wizard knight 
bearing her off to his enchanted 
castle ; and not for all the world 
would she have slipped off the sad- 
dle to go back to the Old Stone 

Jug- 
But great changes often come un- 
awares, and in a few minutes every- 
thing changed. It happened thus : 
lying in the middle of the lane, di- 
rectly in front of old Isaac Cusser's 
house from whom the lane takes 
its name was a cow, and_ between 
the cow and the stone wall opposite 
the farmer had piled a load of salt 
hay. Now, had there been a little 
more light, Dolly Dumplings would 
have discovered the animal in time 
and jumped over her. But the 
trees just at this spot threw a broad 
shadow across Dolly's path, and 
naught was visible until the mare 
got within a stride of the obstacle. 
Then she swerved violently to one 
side, and in another moment Mar- 
tha found herself rolling over and 
over in the hay. 

Needless to observe that Elisha 
did his utmost to stay the course of 
Dolly Dumplings. But, once past 
the cow, Dolly had instantly resum- 
ed her headlong gait, and she went 
quite a distance ere she was brought 
to a halt. 

Poor Elisha ! he knew well that 
Martha was lost to him ; yet he 
did not hesitate to return to ap- 
proach within easy pistol-shot of 
where Harry Valentine and his 
friends were assembled round 
about the young woman. The far- 
mer, too, had come out with a lan- 
tern, and Elisha, plunged in de- 
spair, could distinguish the figure 
of Martha standing upright, and he 



The Old Stone Jug. 



could hear her voice, and even fan- 
cied she was laughing ! Was this 
possible ? No, no ! Elisha. would 
not believe his ears ; and he called 
to her to be true to him that he 
would never love another. 

" Martha, Martha, I will always 
love you," he cried. 

" Save yourself ! Do ! do ! Make 
haste !" came back the response to 
his words; and Elisha was slowly 
turning Dolly round when the crack 
of a pistol rang through the forest ; 
'twas followed by a sting in his 
breast; and while the mare continued 
her flight Elisha's life-blood trick- 
led down upon the saddle and left 
red marks along the road. 

But, although desperately wound- 
ed, The Flying Scout was not going 
to be captured, and faithful Dolly, 
who heard the clatter of hoofs be- 
hind her, flew on swifter than ever. 
It was the firm belief of Elisha's 
pursuers that he would turn to the 
right after leaving Cusser's lane and 
take the way to Tuckahoe ; for the 
bridge across the Bronx River, a 
half a mile on his left, had been 
destroyed. Although aware of 
this fact, Elisha nevertheless had 
the audacity to turn Dolly's head 
toward the stream; and down the 
hill which led to it Dolly plunged, 
a dozen bullets whizzing by her. 
Would the Scout venture such a 
leap? From bank to bank was far- 
ther than any horse had ever been 
known to spring. But blood will 
tell Dolly's grandsire was the Fly- 
ing Childers and now like a bird 
she rose into the air, and, lo ! to the 
amazement of the enemy, Elisha 
was landed upon the west side of 
the Bronx. 

Here, as they abandoned the 
ehase, let us go back to Martha 
Van Alstyne. 

It is the morrow morning, and we 
find her once more under her fath- 



er's roof, making ready to repair 
with Harry Valentine to St. Paul's 
Church; for she has promised to 
become his bride, and she cannot 
break her word. Yet at this the 
eleventh hour Elisha holds the 
first place in Martha's heart ; she 
openly rejoices to hear that lie es- 
caped, and even twits her affianced 
husband for not having been able 
to catch Dolly Dumplings, where- 
upon Harry good-naturedly admits 
that not another steed in America 
could have cleared the Bronx at 
one lea]). 

" T wouldn't surprise me in the 
least," Martha said to herself, 
as they were about to set out for 
the village, " if Elisha dashed up to 
the very church door and carried 
me off a second time. But then," 
she added after a moment's reflec- 
tion, " it is not likely to happen; 
no, I must banish him from my 
heart as soon as possible and love 
Harry alone." Here she threw her 
eyes upon her betrothed and in all 
the lovely autumn landscape noth- 
ing was more lovely than those two 
faces as they met. 

But although Martha was strug- 
gling hard to conquer her greater 
love for Elisha, 'twas a difficult bat- 
tle she was waging with herself. 

There are embers which will live 
and glow despite the ashes we heap 
over them ; so even now, while her 
eyes were searching into Harry's 
eyes, while her smile was answering 
his smile, Martha's countenance 
fell anew and she recoiled from 
him. 'Twas at this very moment 
Popgun's voice cried out : 

" Dolly Dumplings 's in sight !'' 

This startling announcement was 
more than Martha could bear with- 
out the deepest emotion. Quick 
she looked up the road ; the astonish- 
ed Uncle Pete and all the others 
did the same, while the girlstretched 



652 



Brother and Sister. 



forth her hands to welcome the one 
who was approaching. Her heart 
was in her throat ; every limb of her 
body quivered. On, on galloped 
the mare. 

In less than two minutes Dolly 
dashed into the midst of the party 
gathered in front of the Old Stone 
Jug. And what a spectacle did she 
present ! She had no rider, and the 
red marks which stained the emp- 
ty saddle were blood-marks ! Oh ! 
surely they were. The wild look, 
too, and the fierce neigh of poor 
Dolly told plainly enough that some- 
thing horrible had occurred. 

It took Martha but an instant to 
decide what to do, and, breaking 
loose from Harry and her father, 
who were vainly striving to calm 
her, she sprang upon the saddle ; 
then, turning to Harry Valentine 
with an expression pen cannot de- 
scribe, " Marry you !" she cried. 
" No, not for the kingdom of 
England !" And away she gallop- 
ed. 



In a remote corner of the grave- 
yard at East Chester is a tombstone 
with the following inscription carv- 
ed upon it : " Here lie the remains 
of Martha Van Alstyne, spinster, 
who departed this life in the year of 
grace 1838, aged 81." These few 
words tell the rest of our story. 
Martha, when she discovered that 
Elisha Williams had been killed, 
never married ; and although no 
man knows Elisha's burial-place, 
his name is not forgotten, and the 
bridge which spans the Bronx River 
at the point where Dolly Dump- 
lings made her wonderful leap is 
called Williams Bridge. 

As late as 1840 the ruirjs of the 
Old Stone Jug were visible on what 
is now known as Schieffelin's Lane; 
Rattlesnake Brook still flows on, 
but the rattlesnakes have long dis- 
appeared ; and here and there stands 
an aged tree beneath whose shade 
Martha and Harry and Elisha used 
to play together in the days when 
George III. was king. 



BROTHER AND SISTER. 

HAPPY those turtle-doves that went, my Queen, 
With you to the temple tho' to death they went. 
Could they have known, they had been full content 

To give their little lives. And well I ween 

Your pitying hand caressed them ; and, between 
The turns you took with Joseph (favored saint !) 
At carrying Jesus, you would soothe their plaint, 

And hold to your heart their bosoms' silver sheen. 

But cherish more my sister-dove and me : 
Carry within your heart, and all the way, 
Our souls to the true Temple. Offered so, 

They cannot perish no, nor parted be : 
For He whom you presented on this day 

Wham you present His own must ever know. 

FEAST OF THE PURIFICATION, 1876. 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



653 



CHRISTIANITY AS AN HISTORICAL RELIGION. 



ii. 



To know the true genius of 
Christianity is the same thing as 
to know the true destiny of man, 
and the actual order of Providence 
by which he is conducted to its 
fulfilment, through the state of his 
earthly probation. The true des- 
tiny of man is supernatural ; his 
end is beyond the earth and the 
present life, which is the place and 
period of origin and transit only, 
where he has his point of depar- 
ture, his impulse of direction, the 
beginning of the movement which 
is to draw a line of endless length 
on the absolute duration and ab- 
solute space of eternity and infi- 
nity. The actual order of Provi- 
dence, within the infinitesimal lim- 
its of time and extension which 
bound man's earthly existence, is 
exclusively determined, as to its 
ultimate end, to this eternal and 
infinite sphere of being, where man 
shares with God, according to the 
mode and measure which is possi- 
ble to his finite nature, the " total, 
simultaneous, and perfect posses- 
sion of interminable life." This is 
precisely what is meant by eternal 
salvation, final beatitude, union 
with God, and all other terms of 
similar import. Any temporal 
good, in comparison with this, is 
trivial. It cannot be an ultimate 
object of God's providence, and 
ought not to be regarded as an 
end by a rational man. These are 
the suppositions, the prcecogtiita, 
from which all Christian philoso- 
phy must take its initial move- 
ment. Dr. Fisher enunciates, there- 
fore, one of the axioms of Chris- 



tianity when he says that in the 
design of the divine religion given 
by God to mankind, " the good 
offered is not science," or, as is 
evidently implied, any other tem- 
poral good, " but salvation." The 
original right to this salvation and 
to the means of attaining it having 
been forfeited in the fall and re- 
stored only through Christ, " the 
final cause of revelation is the re- 
covery of men to communion with 
God that is, to true religion." As 
a consequence from this, " what- 
ever knowledge is communicated " 
and, equally, whatever other good 
is communicated for human per- 
fection in this present state " is 
tributary to this end " (p. 3). The 
whole of human history before the 
Christian epoch, in general, and 
specifically the whole inspired his- 
tory of patriarchal -and Judaean 
religion, being a record of events 
looking towards the coming of the 
Son of God to the earth, the learn- 
ed professor proceeds logically in 
making the statements which fol- 
low : 

"Christianity is the perfect form of 
religion. In other words, it is the abso- 
lute religion, . . . the culminating point 
in the progress of revelation, fulfilling, 
or filling out to perfection, that which 
preceded. ... In Jesus religion is ac- 
tually realized in its perfection. ... In 
Christ the revelation of God to and 
through man reaches its climax. ... In 
Christianity the fundamental relations of 
God to the world are completely dis- 
closed. . . . Through Christ the king- 
dom of God actually attains its univer- 
sal character." ' 

* Pp. 25-27. 



654 



Christianity 'as an Historical Religion. 



Many passages scattered tli rough- 
out the entire work of Dr. Fisher 
repeat, confirm, or amplify these 
general statements of his funda- 
mental conception of Christianity. 
Thus, he says that it " proposed the 
unification of mankind through a 
spiritual bond" (p. 42); that it 
brings God near "to the appre- 
hension, not of a coterie of philo- 
sophers merely, but of the humble 
and ignorant" (p. 189); that it 
"made human brotherhood a reali- 
ty " (p. 190). " From his first pub- 
lic appearance Jesus represented 
himself as the founder and head 
of a kingdom " (p. 443), and this 
kingdom " was to be bound to- 
gether by a moral and spiritual 
bond of union " (p. 444). More- 
over, "his kingdom was to act up- 
on the world, and to bring the 
world under its sway " (p. 456) ; it 
was to " leaven human society with 
its spirit, until the whole world 
should be created anew by its 
agency "; " a world-conquering and 
world-purifying influence," destin- 
ed " for the accomplishment of a 
revolution, the grandest which it 
ever entered into the heart of man 
to conceive it being nothing less 
than the moral regeneration of 
mankind " (ibid.) 

The idea which lies at the foun- 
dation of all these statements is 
nothing else than that which St. 
Ignatius has made the basis of his 
Spiritual Exercises, and which is 
fully developed in the meditations 
on fundamental Christian princi- 
ples which are placed at the be- 
ginning of the series for a retreat 
in books like the Raccolta of Fa- 
ther Ciccolini. On these princi- 
ples is founded the whole system 
of instructions given to ecclesias- 
tics and religious during their re- 
treats, by which they are formed 
for the sacerdotal or religious life 



or renovated in the spirit of their 
state. The very same form the 
basis of the sermons preached at 
the beginning of missions given to 
the fai tli ful in churches, " On the 
End of Man," "On the Value of 
the Soul," " On the Necessity of 
Salvation." That man is the only 
being on the earth who is an end 
in himself, and that all other crea- 
tures, together with all arrangements 
of divine Providence respecting 
this world, are for him ; that the 
chief and ultimate end of man is 
his eternal salvation, and that eve- 
rything else is intended as a means 
for attaining this end ; is the doc- 
trine inculcated and preached in 
all Catholic spiritual books and in 
all sermons, in all theological trea- 
tises, and expositions of Catholic 
philosophy which profess to ex- 
plain the fundamental relations of the 
natural to the supernatural order. 
Any other idea of Christianity than 
this is unworthy of its Author. It 
is a very low and childish view 
which represents the perfection of 
humanity in respect to the politi- 
cal, social, and intellectual spheres 
of the earthly and temporal order 
as the direct object of the mission 
and work of Christ in the world. 
Prceterit figitra hujus mundi. That 
which is transitory cannot be an 
ultimate end. 

There is nothing permanent and 
having an eternal value on the 
earth except the spiritual perfection 
of the human soul and whatever 
appertains to it or is inseparably 
connected with it. The regenera- 
tion and perfection of men in the 
spiritual and divine life is necessa- 
rily the only direct and primary 
object of the theandric work of 
Christ as the mediator between God 
and mankind. His kingdom is in 
the soul, his reign and conquests 
are in the spiritual realm. St. An- 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



655 



gustine explains that difficult state- 
ment of St. Paul, that the Son will 
finally deliver up his kingdom to 
the Father, by means of this Scrip- 
tural conception of the nature of 
his kingdom. This kingdom is the 
multitude of the saved, the complete 
number of the elect, in whose glori- 
fication the special work of the Son 
as creator and redeemer reaches 
its consummation and attains its 
final end. The kingdom is deliver- 
ed up when these souls, in whom the 
reign of Christ is perfectly and 
for ever established by grace and 
divine love, are united with the di- 
vine essence in the beatific vision. 
The initial and temporal conditions 
of the eternal kingdom of Christ, the 
kingdom of heaven, disappear, of 
course, in the fulfilment; as his human 
childhood, life, death, and resurrec- 
tion were transient states or events, 
as the whole of human history is 
transient. In its initial state the 
kingdom of heaven on the earth is 
a preparation for its perfect state, 
which it contains in germ and 
principle, and with which it must 
necessarily have a similitude of na- 
ture. It is therefore only a truism 
to say that the kingdom of Christ is 
spiritual and its bond of unity spi- 
ritual. We may even say that the 
whole universe is a spiritual em- 
pire and its bond of unity spiritual. 
Physical beings, in the ontological 
order are metaphysical, and in the 
order of cognition are logical. All 
the transcendental predicates, which 
really express only phases of the 
same idea; being, unity, truth, and 
good; are, in an analogous sense, pre- 
dicable of God and of everything 
which has or is capable of having 
existence. God is a spirit, and the 
ideal of all beings is in his intelli- 
gence. The Aoyo? evSidSeToZ, 
in the bosom of the Father from 
eternity, and the AoyoS 



uttering the creative word 
whose effect is in time, whose intel- 
ligible expression is in all creatures, 
are one the Word of God. There 
are material substances and forces, 
but their origin is spiritual ; their 
essence and existence are the ex- 
pression of thought ; the space in 
which they move has its foundation 
in the essence of God ; they are an 
adjunct of the spiritual world, and 
are subordinated to it with a view 
to the same end. There are tem- 
poral and contingent things, but 
their duration has a fixed relation 
to the absolute duration of God, and 
to his eternal, immutable decree and 
foreknowledge. Though some things 
are trivial and worthless by com- 
parison with others, and every 
being is infinitely less than God, yet 
nothing is absolutely trivial or 
worthless, and every finite thing 
has infinite relations. Bodies are 
infinitely inferior to spirits, yet they 
are infinitely superior to nothing, 
and not only the grand bodies 
which express in magnitude and 
number an image of the immensity 
of God, but grains of sand and the 
minutest molecules, are terms of 
divine Omnipotence, and their be- 
ing pre-supposes and imitates the 
being of God. God formed the 
body of the first man out of the 
dust of the earth before he breathed 
into him the living soul, and he will 
awaken all human bodies to an ever- 
lasting life from the dust of the 
universal tomb of humanity. The 
Word assumed not only a rational 
but also a corporeal nature into 
hypostatic union with the divinity 
in his own person, and arose bodily 
from the sepulchre to glorify mat- 
ter as well as spirit, and make it a 
gem eternally lustrous and spark- 
ling with, divine splendor. God 
came to this small solar system, a 
mere point in the milky way, to 



656 



Christianity as fin Historical Religion. 



this minute planet, to the insignifi- 
cant country of Judaea, to the little 
village of Bethlehem, to the narrow 
cave of the Nativity, to the humble 
cottage of Joseph and Mary, and 
was born and brought up the son 
of a humble maiden under the 
guardianship of an obscure artisan. 
The future and eternal kingdom of 
heaven with all its splendor, which 
was only made that it may serve as 
a reflection of the glory of the In- 
carnate Word, has its origin from 
these mere points in time and space. 
Things which, isolated and in their 
mere physical quantity, are almost 
nothing receive an infinite value 
through their relations. Nude first 
matter, apart from form, is, as St. 
Augustine says, "fere nihil a be- 
ing not-being." Yet it seems to 
be rigorously demonstrated that the 
active force of every material ele- 
ment is capable of attracting or re- 
pelling other elements in an infinite 
sphere of space around its centre. 
The visible universe, considered as 
having a mere isolated existence 
and motion in space and time, is 
not much, compared with even one 
finite spirit is fere nihil. The in- 
tellectual creation, considered as 
isolated within the bounds of na- 
ture, finite, actually existing only in 
one indivisible now of time, which 
by its gliding from a beginning 
point on an endless line never ac- 
tually draws more than a line of 
finite duration, compared with the 
infinite possibility is not much more. 
All creation, even supposing that 
God continued to extend and mul- 
tiply it for ever, could never be- 
come anything which would not be 
infinitely less than absolute space 
and duration. On the lower sur- 
face of things which faces the no- 
thingness out of which they came 
they participate in not-being and 
resemble nothingness. In their ne- 



gation and privation, they arc not. 
On their upper surface which faces 
the being above them they partici- 
pate with all being, even the high- 
est. That which is lower touches 
by its highest point that which is 
lowest in the higher, and so from 
the bottom to the top. Thte physi- 
cal universe has a sufficient reason 
of being in the intellectual universe, 
the intellectual in the spiritual, and 
the spiritual at its apex touches 
God by the union of the highest 
nature the created nature of the 
Word, with the uncreated, divine 
essence. The universe, notwith- 
standing its intrinsically finite and 
contingent being, receives thus a 
mode and order of relation to the 
infinite and eternal being, giving it 
a species of divinization which ex- 
tends to its least and lowest parts. 
Therefore we say that the whole 
universe is a spiritual empire and 
its bond of unity spiritual. 

This world is a garden of God, 
set apart for the planting and 
growth of human souls. The gar- 
den of Eden, which God planted 
and beautified as the residence of 
the first parents of the human race, 
is a type of the ideal earth as it 
was conceived in the mind of God. 
The redemption, in its ideal form, 
is a work for the restoration of 
paradise on earth, under a modified 
condition suited to the fallen state 
of man, and in its actual results is 
an approximation to this idea. The 
growth of human souls in the re- 
generated and spiritual life is its 
end, and the only thing of absolute 
importance in the sight of God. 
The Creator himself came on the 
earth in human form expressly for 
the sake of fulfilling this divine in- 
tention of bringing souls to the 
completion of their growth in a 
perfect likeness to himself. It is 
needless to quote his own distinct 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



657 



and solemn affirmation of the value 
of the soul, and the worthlessness 
of the whole world beside, in com- 
parison with its highest spiritual 
good. His great work in humanity 
may therefore be fitly summed up 
in the terse and succinct formula 
of " moral regeneration," provided 
that these terms are so defined as 
to give them an adequate extension 
and comprehension. The whole 
plan of God in creating the uni- 
verse, and elevating it through the 
microcosmical being man by the 
Incarnation, must be kept in view ; 
and the nature of the regeneration 
to be effected must be so under- 
stood as to justify the necessity of 
the stupendous and multiplied 
means employed by the divine wis- 
dom in bringing it to actual accom- 
plishment. The universe, and this 
little epitome of creation which is 
man's world, as well, is complex 
and composed of heterogeneous 
parts. The problem of man's des- 
tiny and of the end proposed in the 
plan of the divine creator and re- 
deemer of human nature is, there- 
fore, necessarily complex. If it is 
expressed in a ratio bf simple terms, 
these terms must be virtually equi- 
valent to a great number and a 
great variety, corresponding to the 
complex reality which they denote 
and signify. A simplification of 
our ideas which is not the result of 
a combination of all the elements 
that ought to enter into composi- 
tion, but is produced by the sup- 
pression of some, is a work of de- 
structive and not of constructive 
philosophy. If we interpret, there- 
fore, that spiritual doctrine which 
\ve have laid down in the beginning 
of this argument too literally and 
exclusively, we make a misinter- 
pretation of the sense of Holy 
Scripture and of the writings of 
the saints, and manufacture for 

VOL. XXVI. 42 



ourselves a false and absurd doc- 
trine. 

A philosophy which aims to give 
the spirit a complete riddance of 
matter, and of the whole world be- 
side spiritual existence in its pu- 
rest and most immediate relation 
to God, may arrogate the name of 
spiritual philosophy, but it is a coun- 
terfeit spiritualism. If God desired 
that we should get rid of matter, 
and had no other aim except to 
produce purely spiritual being in 
his own likeness and in participa- 
tion with his own pure essence, he 
would never have created anything 
except spirit, and he would have 
made it at once in that state of per- 
fection which he willed it to pos- 
sess. If this perfection were limit- 
ed to the order of pure nature, 
nothing more was requisite than to 
create a multitude of intellectual 
beings naturally endowed with the 
intelligence and felicity conformed 
to their essence. If they were to 
be elevated to supernatural perfec- 
tion in the beatific vision of God, 
one act of divine power and love 
would suffice to place them at the 
first instant of their creation in the 
term of being, the ultimate perfec- 
tion, the everlasting felicity in the 
possession of the sovereign good, to- 
which they were destined. There 
is no necessity for probation, gradu- 
al progress, or any sort of conditions 
precedent, in order that created 
spirits may be made perfect in cog- 
nition and volition, either natural 
or supernatural, in any finite degree 
and grade of existence and beati- 
tude which God may choose in his 
pure goodness tocommunicate. Still 
less is there any reason, on the 
hypothesis of such an end in crea- 
tion as we suppose, for the existence 
of matter and corporeal beings. 
Matter and body cannot help 
purely intellectual beings to attain 



658 



ChristiaJiity .as an Historical Religion. 



their proper intelligible object. 
The light of glory, and the direct 
illumination which gives the spirit 
an immediate intuitive vision of the 
divine essence, cannot be conjoined 
with any material, corporeal medium 
or organ. Why, then, did not God 
create angels only, and, if he desir- 
ed to elevate creation to the hypo- 
static union with himself, assume 
.the angelic nature ? The only possi- 
ble answer to this question is de- 
jrived from the manifestation which 
God has made, through his works 
and through his word, that his plan 
of creation^ included something be- 
sides the natural and supernatural 
communication of glory and beati- 
tude to created spirits. It was his 
will to create the corporeal, visible 
universe in connection and harmo- 
,ny with the invisible and spiritual 
world. It was his will to place man 
in the middle-point of all creation, 
and to give him a complex essence 
composed of rationality and anima- 
lity, that he might unite in his sub- 
stantial being the highest with the 
lowest imasummis. Moreover, the 
creating Word assumed this nature 
as microcosmical, that in humanity 
he might elevate the entire universe 
and bring it in his own person to 
its acme. 

Even this might have been accom- 
plished instantaneously, without 
probation, without the long proces- 
sion of second causes, without the 
efforts and the pain which the 
struggle toward the ultimate end 
has cost the creature, and to 
which the Incarnate Word subject- 
ed himself when he became obediens 
usque ad mortem, mortem autem cru- 
cis. 

Why the long process from the 
chaos at the beginning toward the 
consummation of the end which 
has not yet been attained ? The 
pnly answer to this question which 



can possibly be given is that God 
chose to make the creature concur 
to its own glorification by the way 
of merit, and to bring the utmost 
possible effect out of created cau- 
sality. This is the reason for the 
probation of the angels and of 
man ; for the full scope given to 
free-will, notwithstanding the inci- 
dental evil which through this ave- 
nue has rushed in upon the fair 
creation of God ; and for the choice 
of the most difficult and painful 
way of redemption and restoration 
through ineffable labors and suffer- 
ings. 

The regeneration of humanity 
must, therefore, take its character 
from the supernatural 'destiny of 
man, his complex nature, and the 
relations in which it places him to 
the complex plan of God which 
takes in all the parts of the uni- 
verse, from the lowest to the high- 
est, and gives the utmost possible 
play to the action of created cau- 
sality. Its chief end is to prepare hu- 
man souls, through the grace and fel- 
lowship of Christ, to share with the 
other sons of Gcd, the holy angels, 
in the glory and beatitude of the 
Incarnate Word in the kingdom of 
heaven. Included in this end of 
beatification in God, which is essen- 
tially the same for all spiritual be- 
ings who attain it, are the distinc- 
tive grades of glory, gained through 
grace and personal merit, in an as- 
cending scale from the souls of in- 
fants to the soul of Jesus Christ, 
by which the celestial firmament is 
decorated. This beatitude in the 
vision of God certainly does not ex- 
clude the secondary and natural be- 
atitude arising from the knowledge 
and enjoyment of the creatures of 
God, and this must therefore be a 
secondary and subordinate end in 
the divine plan. Intellectual cog- 
nition and volition are not organic 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



659 



acts of human nature ; and, there- 
fore, if we believe in the bodily 
resurrection of our Lord and of 
the saints to a glorified corporeal 
life, we must admit the existence 
in the divine plan of some subordi- 
nate end, in view of which man was 
created as a composite being, and 
in view of which, also, the Word as- 
sumed the composite human na- 
ture, which is complete only by the 
union of the spiritual and material 
substances. The glorified body no 
doubt receives a reflected lustre 
from the glorification of the soul. 
But its glorified senses cannot be 
the organs of anything more than 
an elevated and sublimated sensi- 
tive cognition and enjoyment. The 
term of their action is the physical, 
visible creation to which human 
nature partially belongs ; and there- 
fore the final end of man is partial- 
ly identified with the final cause 
for which the vast and everlasting 
visible universe was created. The 
Incarnate Word touches this visi- 
ble, material realm of his creation 
by the bodily part of his human 
nature. The what and the where- 
fore of this almost infinite realm of 
nature we do not pretend to under- 
stand. It is certainly not a mere 
jeu d' esprit of Omnipotence, a cause- 
less or transitory spectacle to ex- 
cite the babyish wonder of the hu- 
man race not yet out of its nursery. 
Jt belongs to the great sphere of 
the divine plan, a segment of one 
of whose great circles is human 
history on this earthly planet. As 
we cannot demonstrate the prob- 
lem of this sphere and its great 
circles, we cannot .completely solve 
the problem of man's destiny on 
the earth. It is an enigma, a mys- 
tery. And, above all, the question 
Cur Deus Homo ? the what and the 
wherefore of the Incarnation, is an 
enigma, a mystery for human rea- 



son, only obscurely manifested to 
faith. Christ in history, universal 
history as having its mot (fenigwe 
in Christ, must consequently pre- 
sent to the believing and enlighten- 
ed mind of the Christian student 
an object of investigation and 
thought A'hich he cannot hope to 
understand and know adequately, 
much less to comprehend. What- 
ever we can know must be learned 
by the manifestation which God 
makes of his wise intentions through 
his word and his works, the instruc- 
tion which he deigns to give us 
by experience, reason, and divine 
faith. 

For what is man being educated 
on the earth, and what did his 
Creator intend to bring him to 
when he came down in person, 
after a long series of precursors had 
prepared the way before him, to 
teach and to do that wrrch could 
be entrusted to no mere creature, 
whether man or angel ? The mani- 
festation of Christ in the history of 
mankind on the earth will make 
known the answer to this question to 
all intelligent beings when this his- 
tory is completed. But this will be 
only at the day of universal resur- 
rection and final judgment. Until 
that day arrives there can only be 
a gradual and incomplete disclo- 
sure and justification of the ways 
of God to men, which are unsearch- 
able and past finding out by human 
wisdom. The Eternal Word, who 
created all things, and directed all 
nations on the earth by his provi 
dence before he assumed human 
nature and died on the cross for 
their salvation, has not ceased, 
since his Incarnation, to carry on 
his work, or confined his care to a 
small number elected out of the 
mass of mankind. Nature has not 
been substantially or totally de- 
praved by the fall, or become the 



66o 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



property of Satan. The Incarna- 
tion is not a mere device and con- 
trivance, to which God was forced 
to resort because he could not 
otherwise pardon the elect, and 
substitute for the eternal punish- 
ment which was due to them an 
eternal reward due to Christ, and 
transferred to them without any 
personal merit of congruity or con- 
dignity. The plan of God for sal- 
vation through Christ is not a mere 
segregation of a certain number of 
individuals from the world, that 
they may devote themselves exclu- 
sively to their sanctification by 
purely interior, spiritual acts 
waiting until death shall release 
their souls from a bodily existence 
which is a mere degradation, and a 
world which is utterly accursed and 
given over to the dominion of the 
devil. Such ideas are exaggera- 
tions and perversions of Christian 
doctrine. They necessarily pro- 
voked a reaction and revolt in the 
minds and hearts of men when- 
ever they were taught ; and there 
has been, consequently, a perpetual 
effort, among Protestants who were 
not willing to abandon Christianity 
altogether, to find some kind of ra- 
tiorial religion which can plausibly 
assume to be the pure, original 
Christianity of Christ. But by eli- 
minating or altering and diminish- 
ing the mysteries and supernatural 
elements of Christianity, they change 
its nature and reduce it to some- 
thing so ordinary and common- 
place that its divinity is lost. The 
ideal Christianity becomes a sort of 
peaceable, orderly, moral, well-edu- 
cated society, in which as nearly 
as possible all men enjoy the com- 
fortable and respectable mode of 
life belonging to the gentry of Eng- 
land, and the poorest class are as 
well off as the ordinary inhabitants 
of a pleasant, old-fashioned New 



England village. That there is 
something attractive about this pic- 
ture we will not deny. But we 
cannot think that the production 
of a state of merely natural well- 
being in society, of commonplace 
human happiness, even supposing 
it founded upon religion, sanctified 
by piety, and tending toward a 
more perfect happiness in the future 
life, was the real, ultimate end 
which our Lord had in view when 
he founded the church. The old idea 
of a millennium which used to prevail 
among the Puritans of New Eng- 
land had something in it very 
beautiful ; but it was only a beau- 
tiful dream, never destined to be 
realized in this world. The philo- 
sophical dream of a golden age, to 
be attained by progress in science, 
civilization, political and social re- 
form, is still more futile. The 
doleful and terrible wail of the pes- 
simist philosophers and poets of 
Germany, which begins to find an 
echo over all the civilized world, 
would be the outcry of a despair 
justified by the whole history of 
mankind, were it not for the light 
which faith casts across the gloom, 
and the solution of the dark enig- 
ma of life which is given by the 
cross on which Jesus died, exclaim- 
ing, " My God, my God, why hast 
thou forsaken me ?" The drama of 
human history is grand and terrible 
and tragic. It has scenes and epi- 
sodes which have a character of 
quiet, delightful, and joyous come- 
dy, but it is a tragedy ; it has been 
so from the first, and will be the 
same to the end. The Son of God 
came on the earth in the very crisis 
of human history, and his human 
life was a tragedy, ending in a sub- 
lime triumph, but a triumph won 
by sorrow, conflict, and conquest. 
All that was tragic in previous his- 
tory culminated in him, and subse- 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



66 1 



quent history can be nothing else 
than the last act of the tragedy 
hastening to the de'nofimcnt, and 
preparing the way for the second 
coming of the Son of Man in the 
clouds of heaven, with great glory, 
to achieve his final triumph. The 
Apocalypse of St. John, in which 
all things that were to come to pass 
in the last age of the world passed 
before his entranced spirit in a 
series of sublime and awful pictures, 
shows that this horoscope is true. 
What for him was a vaticination is 
for us in great part a retrospect, 
by which it is historically verified, 
so far as the scroll of time has un- 
rolled itself, and by which the sim- 
ilar character of that part which 
is still in prospect is surely fore- 
boded. 

Christianity is an historical reli- 
gion. It is the outcome of all pre- 
vious history, and its inspired docu- 
ments alone, in which the genealo- 
gy of its founder is traced back to 
Adam, and the record of the origin 
of the human race preserved, give 
us authentic history of the most im- 
portant facts which underlie all the 
great events and movements of the 
world. This history connects the 
beginning of human destinies with 
the earlier and higher sphere, 
where the history of the intelligent 
creation begins with those great 
events, the trial of the angels, the 
rebellion of Lucifer, and the com- 
mencement of the warfare whose 
seat was transferred to the earth 
by the successful ruse of the ser- 
pent in the temptation of Eve. In 
the expulsion of our weeping pa- 
rents from Eden into the outside 
world, humanity was led by a 
counter strategic movement upon 
the new battle-field, where Satan 
was to be vanquished in fair and 
open war. All the demons, rein- 
forced by all the traitors and de- 



serters they could gain from among 
men, were allowed to pit themselves 
against the sons of God and the 
holy angels, and against the First- 
begotten Son himself when he 
came in the infirmity of human 
nature, as the captain of salvation, 
to become perfect through suffer- 
ings and to lead his brethren by 
the same arduous road to glory. 
Redemption and salvation consist 
essentially in liberation from the 
servitude of Satan ; victory in the 
combat against that mass of false 
maxims, evil principles, and wicked 
men called the world, those low 
and vicious propensities called the 
flesh, and the seducing spirits sent 
forth by Satan to draw men into 
his rebellion against God. Human 
society was organized under the 
law of redemption, in the family, 
in the social, and in the political 
community, in religious commu- 
nion, in order to reconstruct fal- 
len humanity ; to repair the ruin 
effected by the devil ; to oppose a 
barrier against his further aggres- 
sions ; to consolidate a perpetual 
force of resistance and warfare 
against him; and to be the instru- 
ment of the Son of God, the crea- 
tor and redeemer of mankind, in 
effecting the final subjugation of 
the rebellion inaugurated and car- 
ried on by Lucifer. The division 
of nations, the colonization of the 
earth, the foundation of states, of 
industry and commerce, of art and 
science, of culture and civiliza- 
tion, is a divine work. Everything 
good in humanity is from the Word, 
the predestined Son of Man. The 
Book of Wisdom says that it was 
the delight of the eternal wisdom 
to be with the sons of men, and the 
early Fathers dilate on what is ex- 
pressed in the German word Men- 
schenfreundlichkcit) better than in 
any equivalent English term, as an 



662 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



attribute of the Logos. That ad- 
mirable sentiment of the Latin poet, 
Homo sum, el niJiil hiiinani alienum 
a me putt, may be most appropriate- 
ly ascribed to the divine Person 
who joined the human nature to 
his uncreated essence in an indis- 
soluble marriage. The devil is the 
author of nothing on the earth 
which has real being and life, but 
only of error and sin with their 
logical consequences that is, of in- 
tellectual and moral perversion, of 
ruin, decay, and death. His king- 
dom is a graveyard and a realm of 
darkness beneath it. The king- 
dom of the living is the kingdom of 
Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, the 
Lord and Life-giver, who proceeds 
from the Father through the Son. 
The power of Satan on the earth is 
gained by the invasion and treason- 
able surrender of the cities and for- 
tresses founded by the rightful 
King of men, and consists in the 
influence which he usurps in the af- 
fairs of men, in the schism and 
heresy by which he breaks the uni- 
ty of human brotherhood in Christ. 
The apostasy, the false religions, 
the corrupted ethics, the degene- 
rate institutions of the old heathen 
world were schisms and heresies 
against the primitive revelation and 
the patriarchal unity of mankind in 
one true doctrine, worship, and dis- 
cipline. The foundation of Juda- 
ism was a measure which the Lord 
adopted to oppose a bulwark 
against universal apostasy, to pre- 
serve the treasure of revelation and 
grace, and to prepare the way for 
a more perfect organization of the 
universal religion. Without aban- 
doning the other nations, he con- 
centrated his special providence 
upon Israel. And even here the 
history of his own special kingdom 
and peculiar people is altogether 
different from what our human rea- 
son and sentiments would expect 



and wish for, and especially so in 
reference to the epoch when the 
Messias appeared. We cannot un- 
derstand it, unless we recognize the 
universal law pervading the divine 
plan, by which almost unlimited 
play is given to free-will; the con- 
flict of the powers of good and evil 
permitted to run its course ; victory 
and salvation are achieved by la- 
bor, combat, and suffering ; the 
world and humanity are set apart 
as a battle-field, between the Son 
of God, with his brethren by adop- 
tion among angels and men, on one 
side, Lucifer, with his army of apos- 
tate angels and men, on the other 
a battle-field on which the ever- 
lasting destinies of the un'iverse are 
decided for eternity. 

After this long and circuitous di- 
gression we may direct our atten- 
tion now on the specific nature of 
Christianity as an historical reli- 
gion, and consider what organiza- 
tion Jesus Christ gave redeemed 
humanity in the universal church, 
how he embodied the absolute, uni- 
versal religion, what means he 
adopted for achieving the work of 
the moral regeneration and eternal 
salvation of mankind. 

The work undertaken by the In- 
carnate Word in person is evidently 
the continuation of that which he 
began through his ministering an- 
gels, his prophets, and his other 
human agents, and by far the most 
difficult and important part of the 
entire plan of God. Passing over 
his principal theandric work of re- 
demption, we must affirm the same 
with equal emphasis and certainty 
of that which is supplementary to 
it, and by which it is extended to 
its term. In assuming human na- 
ture the Son of God assumed all 
its temporal and eternal relations; 
he grasped and drew into himself 
universal humanity and the whole 
creation. His first and direct ob- 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



663 



ject was the glorification and bea- 
tification of human souls in God, 
but his action toward this end 
drew into its current and impelled 
by its energy all things connected 
with and subordinate to this high- 
est and purely spiritual sphere of 
his creative wisdom. The action 
of Christ in history after his resur- 
rection is necessarily more com- 
plex, more far-reaching and uni- 
versal, more manifest and imme- 
diate, more obviously dominant and 
victorious, more evidently bearing 
on the final and eternal consumma- 
tion of the divine plan in the uni- 
verse through the destinies of man 
and the earth, than it could have 
been before that glorious and deci- 
sive event. Christianity, as an his- 
torical religion, must have more 
comprehension in its actual devel- 
opment than in its inchoate state 
before Christ. While it remains 
true that it is characteristic of the 
pure and perfect religion taught by 
the mouth of its divine Author to 
lead men to an interior, spiritual 
life, to the contemplation and love 
of God, to a paramount desire and 
effort for the salvation of the soul, 
and to bring this way of union with 
God in loving, spiritual brotherhood 
among men down to the level of 
the lowly and the poor in all na- 
tural goods, this idea does not re- 
quire an exclusion of other and 
different aspects of the same reli- 
gion. The specific good proposed 
and placed within reach is salva- 
tion, and not science, art, civiliza- 
tion, political order, social well- 
being, national development, the 
natural progress of mankind, the 
production of a brilliant series of 
great men, extraordinary works and 
events in the temporal order. The 
empires and cities, the grand mo- 
numents, the intellectual master- 
pieces, the entire array of results 
produced by human activity, and 



all the splendor and felicity of the 
men who in outward seeming are 
the most favored and fortunate, are 
transient ; they return to the noth- 
ingness from which they came. 
Nevertheless, they may be made 
tributary to something higher and 
more durable, and what is substan- 
tial and indestructible in and under 
these evanescent forms may sur- 
vive and reappear, like the mortal 
part of human nature, by a future 
resurrection. There is no reason, 
therefore, why Christ, the Incar- 
nate Word, in effecting the regene- 
ration of the human race by means 
and instruments which are natural 
and human, yet not purely natural 
and human, or standing alone in 
their nude and finite essence, 
should not take hold of all human 
things and relations and subject 
them to his own special service. 
There is no reason why he should 
not have secondary and subordinate 
ends indirectly connected with his 
one principal and ultimate object. 
There is no reason why Christiani- 
ty, though not identified with and 
merged in human affairs, should 
not be in intimate relations with 
them all. In fact, there is every 
kind of reason to the contrary, and 
as an historical religion it cannot 
be regarded in any other light. It 
must be in continuity with its own 
past on the same lines. The same 
constructive principles must per- 
vade religion in all ages. The 
same law of curvature must be veri- 
fied in every segment of the circle, 
and all the diameters must be equal. 
Unity is essential to universality. 
The superior courses of stone in 
the building must correspond to 
the inferior, and rest upon them 
and upon the foundation. Chris- 
tianity as an historical religion 
must be of equal dimensions and 
similar structure to the substratum 
furnished by the pre-Christian uni- 



66 4 



Christianity -as an Historical Religion. 



versal history, where, so to speak, 
its sub-cellar, crypts, and basement 
are covered, and in great measure 
buried in inexplorable obscurity, 
beneath the walls of its colossal 
architecture. 

When we consider Christianity 
as a religion in the precise and re- 
stricted sense, and the church as a 
strictly religious society, we cannot 
identify the Christian Church and 
religion so completely with Chris- 
tianity in the wider sense as to con- 
found the central nucleus with its 
environment and atmosphere. We 
must distinguish, accurately and 
carefully, those things which are 
really distinct, though not disunited 
and separate from one another. 
Religion is well defined by Mr. Bar- 
ing-Gould as consisting essential- 
ly in dogma, worship, and disci- 
pline. The church is its organic 
embodiment. The absolute and 
universal religion must of course 
'throw off what was proper only to a 
state of inchoate and imperfect de- 
velopment, and the church must be 
freed from what was proper only 
to a partial and national organic 
constitution. This is a doctrinal 
certitude with an actual verification 
in history. It is needless to prove 
that our Lord never thought of 
making Christianity a mere exten- 
sion of Judaism, and of founding a 
universal kingdom which should 
be an enlargement, co-extensive 
with the world, of David's monar- 
chy, with the institutes of Moses 
.and the religious ceremonial of 
Solomon's temple as the model of 
its civil and ecclesiastical polity 
and its ritual of worship. It is 
equally unnecessary to prove that 
the divine Master thought as little 
of going back to the more ancient 
and simple dispensation of patri- 
archal religion. This would have 
been a regression instead of a pro- 
gression ; a dwindling and dwarf- 



ing of humanity into a second in- 
fancy instead of its expansion into 
adult proportions, similar to the 
absurd imagination of Nicodemus 
in respect to the process of regen- 
eration. The absolute, universal 
religion, by virtue of the law of 
continuity in growth, must neces- 
sarily retain all that which pertain- 
ed to the essence and properties of 
religion as such that is, of religion 
generically and specifically consid- 
ered in respect to human nature in 
a state of probation ; a lapsed con- 
dition ; and in the way of restora- 
tion, through the redemption with 
its law of grace, as revealed by God 
from the beginning. All pertain- 
ing to its integrity and to its acci- 
dents, in so far as any such appur- 
tenance is suited to human nature 
in all ages and nations giving 
greater perfection, adaptation to its 
end, and power in its operation to 
religion must also be considered 
as permanent for a sufficient rea- 
son, viz., that its cause and motive 
are general and persistent, though 
it may undergo modification and 
be subject to variation. Natural 
religion is preserved in revealed re- 
ligion, the patriarchal in the Mo- 
saic, and all these in the Christian 
religion. Precisely how much has 
been preserved, how much modi- 
fied or altered, and in what way, 
how much dropped as obsolete in 
Christianity considered as an his- 
torical religion, must be determined 
historically. We know, however, 
before we examine the historical 
documents of Christianity, that, 
unless God manifests in his actual 
providence a determination to de- 
rogate from constant and general 
laws by introducing an entirely 
miraculous dispensation, we shall 
surely find in historical Christianity 
certain features absolutely requisite 
in a human religion. There are 
such features or characteristics 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



66' 



which in their generic ratio are 
known with certainty, prescinding 
from any information given by the 
actual, objective manifestation 
which Christianity presents in its 
history. It must be adapted to 
human nature that is, it must be a 
religion suitable to a being who is 
not a pure spirit, or one united to a 
body by accidental, extrinsic, and 
temporary relations, but who is 
composed of soul and body in his 
specific and permanent essence. 
It must be adapted to the condi- 
tions in which human nature ex- 
ists in its earthly stage of progress 
toward perfection that is, suitable 
to men who are in multifarious re- 
lations with one another in the 
family, in society, in the state ; re- 
lations both amicable and hostile, 
relations of similarity and of op- 
position, relations of great com- 
plexity and variability. It must be 
adapted to the character of the 
divine Person from whom it pro- 
ceeds ; as the Son of God and the 
Son of Man, united with the Father 
in one essence by the Holy Spirit; 
hypostatically united within his pro- 
per personality subsisting in two 
distinct natures, by the same Spi- 
rit ; sanctified in soul and body 
by this life-giving Spirit; and by 
the same Spirit sanctifying, and 
uniting in himself to the Godhead, 
redeemed humanity. It must be 
adapted to the temporal and eter- 
nal end for which it is intended 
that is, suitable for the instruction, 
sanctification, unification, tempo- 
ral and eternal salvation of all man- 
kind, in all nations and ages; for 
the work of regeneration, individ- 
ual, social, political, intellectual, 
moral, and physical, as an abso- 
lute, universal, world-conquering 
power. 

In order to meet these requisi- 
tions, its spirit and body must be 
essentially and indissolubly united; 



it must be organized in a perfect 
and unequal society of universal 
extension, sovereign independence, 
complex and irresistible forces. It 
must have both divine and human 
attributes, and be vivified by the 
divine Spirit. It must be insepa- 
rably united with its head and 
throughout its members, indefecti- 
ble, immutable, and endowed with 
the plenitude of graces, gifts, and 
powers merited by Jesus Christ for 
mankind and sufficient for the pro- 
duction of the highest degrees of 
human virtue in the greatest possi- 
ble variety. It must be supreme, 
and have all things subordinated 
to its own end, controlled by its 
influence, subservient to its pur- 
poses as instrumentalities of its 
dynamical action. 

As the absolute world-religion, 
its dogma, worship, and discipline 
must vastly transcend the initial 
revelation, elementary ritual, and 
propaedeutic order of Judaism. 
There is a kind of foreshadowing 
of all these features of the king- 
dom of Christ in universal history, 
and there are abundant types and 
prophecies of it in the history and 
inspired documents of the patri- 
archal and Judaic dispensations. 
We need only to confront the idea 
of Christianity, derived a priori 
from the consideration of the plan 
of God manifested in his works 
and word before the time of Christ,, 
with the actual, historical Chris- 
tianity, in order to give this idea 
distinctness, and to add the last 
complement of certitude to our 
judgment that it truly represents 
the reality. Wherever we find ex- 
isting as a concrete, historical fact 
that which realizes in the fullest 
and the highest sense the predic- 
tions of the prophets ; that which 
fulfils in the most perfect manner 
the anticipations of history ; that 
which is the most worthy of the 



666 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



stupendous miracles culminating 
in the resurrection ; that which cor- 
responds in magnitude and gran- 
deur to all the great works of God ; 
that which gives the most sublime 
significance to the destiny of man ; 
that which magnifies in the most 
wonderful way the power and love 
of God and the object of the In- 
carnation there we behold, with 
all the evidence which moral de- 
monstration can furnish, the genu- 
ine, absolute religion, manifest be- 
fore our eyes as historical Chris- 
tianity. Facts interpret prophecy, 
confirm and consolidate the con- 
clusions of reason, determine the 
sense of much that is ambiguous in 
the disclosures of revelation. The 
test of history is therefore safe and 
conclusive in respect to the genuine 
essence and nature of Christianity. 
The application of this test 
shows that Catholic Christianity, 
which alone can claim unbroken, 
unaltered historical continuity and 
universality from the apostolic age, 
is the genuine and absolute reli- 
gion of Christ. Any other species 
is unknown to history as an histori- 
cal religion. The Catholic faith, 
worship, and discipline manifest 
themselves in the church of apos- 
tolic succession at the earliest 
period in which this church is 
clearly and distinctly visible through 
the medium of historical testimony. 
There is no resource for those who 
call in question the identity of 
Nicene Christianity with the apos- 
tolic religion, except in the obscu- 
rity of the century immediately 
following the death of St. John, 
and in the indistinct, incomplete, 
and, as considered separately from 
the traditional supplement and 
commentary, partly ambiguous re- 
cords, allusions, and testimonies, in 
respect to some parts of Christian 
doctrine, worship, and discipline, of 
the New Testament. The nobler 



class of modern Protestant writers 
admit in a general sense the histo- 
rical continuity of the essence of 
Christianity in the Catholic Church, 
placing their own restrictions on 
the definition of that which is es- 
sential as distinguished from the 
non-essential, as well as from ab- 
normal modifications. Those who 
are not of the semi-Catholic school 
are obliged to seek for some tena- 
ble ground on which to maintain 
their claim of fellowship in essen- 
tials with the universal church, in 
a theory of transition from apostoli- 
cal to ecclesiastical Christianity 
during the period lying between 
the close of the first an 4 the end 
of the second centuries. The hinge 
of the question is the institution of 
the episcopate, as a distinct and su- 
perior grade of the Christian pres- 
byterate, with hierarchical autho- 
rity. We do not propose to dis- 
cuss the proofs from Scripture and 
the most ancient historical records 
of the apostolic institution of the 
episcopate, and of what is called 
the apostolic succession of bishops, 
as a principal and immutable part 
of organic Christianity. This con- 
troversy has been exhausted by the 
able writers of the high-church 
school. Professor Fisher presents 
but little in addition to what has 
been urged by the advocates of parity, 
and fully answered in several works 
easily accessible to English readers, 
though his manner of presenting 
his case is such as to make the 
most of it, and shows both critical 
ability and a candid spirit. A re- 
joinder ought to be minute and 
critical like the argument itself. 
As we have not at present time and 
space for this, we prefer to pass it 
over altogether. Our line of argu- 
ment leads us to consider some 
deeper and more universal and at 
the same time more obvious and 
easily apprehended principles of 



Christianity as an Historical Religion. 



667 



bringing the Catholic and Protes- 
tant theories of Christianity to an 
historical issue. , 

The essential nature of Christian- 
ity as represented by one of these 
theories is specifically different 
from what it is as represented by 
the other. According to the lat- 
ter theory, the essence of the 
Christian religion is something ex- 
clusively spiritual and individual. 
The exterior organization is not in 
vital and substantial unity with it, 
but is an habiliment, an extrinsic 
instrument, a vehicle, or a sepa- 
rate medium. One who considers 
that faith, the way of salvation, 
spiritual union with God in Christ, 
are in a separate and independent 
sphere, very naturally and logically 
considers that questions of ecclesias- 
tical organization and government 
are of inferior moment; that sym- 
bols of doctrine, forms of worship, 
and modes of discipline are not 
matters of perpetual and universal 
obligation as founded on divine 
right and law. Such a question as 
that of episcopacy must, therefore, 
appear toliim as among the non- 
essentials ; and even supposing that 
he admits the certainty or proba- 
bility that it is the apostolic form, 
he will see no reason why it should 
be necessary to the being of the 
church, or even to its well-being, 
or why Christians should be divid- 
ed in fellowship on account of mat- 
ters merely belonging to exterior 
order and indifferent forms. 

According to the former theory, 
the spiritual and corporeal parts, re- 
ligion and the church, are after the 
model of human nature and the 
Incarnation, in vital, essential, and 
perpetual unity. The church is 
the way of salvation, the body of 
Christ vivified by his Spirit, the 
medium of union with God. Chris- 
tianity is a sacramental religion. 
The episcopal order has been es- 



tablished and consecrated by Jesus 
Christ to possess and transmit the 
plenitude of sacerdotal grace and 
power received from him as a gift ; 
to preserve and transmit the faith, 
sacramental grace, the pure obla- 
tion of Christian worship, the dis- 
cipline of the New Law in Catholic 
unity. 

A Christianity of the first species, 
loosely organized in an imperfect 
society, could never have been 
transmuted into the second species. 
The specific Catholic Christianity, 
hierarchical, dogmatic, sacramen- 
tal, liturgical, is the historical 
Christianity of the period of the 
first six oecumenical councils, and 
appears at the Council of Nice, in 
the person of the great Athanasius, 
in all parts of the earth, in all the 
saints and doctors, in all writings 
and all monuments, pointing back- 
ward to the past, the era of mar- 
tyrdom, the period of foundation 
and of apostolic labor, as the origin 
and source of its doctrine, disci- 
pline, and worship. A transmuta- 
tion of species in Christianity like 
that which the Protestant theory 
supposes is rationally impossible. 
There is the additional impossibil- 
ity to be taken into account of such 
a great and universal change hav- 
ing occurred without leaving its re- 
cords and traces in history. Chris- 
tianity is an historical religion, and 
the historical Christianity is identi- 
cal with Catholicity. It is the ab- 
solute and universal religion which 
has manifested itself as a work 
which only divine power could 
have produced, in the history of 
the past ; in present history it is 
showing before our eyes its super- 
natural and divine character; and 
the fulfilment of its end in the final 
consummation and triumph of the 
kingdom of Christ will finish the 
last chapter of the Revelation of 
Christ in History. 



668 " There u>as no -Room for TJicm in the Inn." 



"THERE WAS NO ROOM FOR THEM IN THE INN. 

FOOT-SORE and weary, Mary tried 
Some rest to seek, but was denied. 
" There is no room," the blind ones cried. 

Meekly the Virgin turned away, 
No voice entreating her to stay; 
There was no room for God that day. 

No room for her round whose tired feet 
Angels are bowed in transport sweet, 
The Mother of their God to greet. 

No room for Him in whose small hand 
The troubled sea and mighty land 
Lie cradled like a grain of sand. 

No room, O Babe divine ! for thee 
That Christmas night ; and even we 
Dare shut our hearts and turn the key. 

In vain thy pleading baby cry 

Strikes our deaf souls ; we pass thee by, 

Unsheltered 'neath the wintry sky. ^ 

No room for God ! O Christ ! that we 
Should bar our doors, nor ever see 
Our Saviour Availing patiently. 

Fling wide the doors ! Dear Christ, turn back ! 
The ashes on my hearth lie black 
Of light and warmth a total lack. 

How can I bid thee enter here 

Amid the desolation drear 

Of lukewarm love and craven fear ? 

What bleaker shelter can there be 
Than my cold heart's tepidity 
Chill, wind-tossed, as the winter sea? 

Dear Loid, I shrink from thy pure eye, 
No home to offer thee have I ; 
Yet in thy mercy pass not by. 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



669 



THE HOME-RULE CANDIDATE. 

A STORY Of "NEW IRELAND." 

BY THE AUTHOR OF " THE LITTLE CHAPEL AT MONAMULLIN," "THE ROMANCE OF A PORTMANTEAU,' 

ETC., ETC. 

CHAPTER I. 
A NEW IRELANDER. 



''I'M afraid your shooting party 
is spoiled," said my mother, hand- 
ing me a letter across the breakfast- 
table in the well-known hierogly- 
phics of my Uncle Jimmy. 

" I should hope not," I retorted, 
as the expedition in question had 
been looked forward to with con- 
siderable pleasure, on account of 
Harry Welstone, my old chum at 
the Catholic University, having an- 
nounced his intention of " turning 
the head of his dromedary to the 
desert of Kilkenley," the name of 
my ancestral seat, in the snug 
morning- room of which my mother 
and myself were discussing cream, 
tea, new-laid eggs, and crisp rashers. 

My Uncle Jimmy's note, address- 
ed to my mother, his only sister, 
ran thus : 

" UNITED SERVICE CLUB, 

" LONDON, Sept. 10. 
" MY DEAR SUSEY : My old and valued 
iriend, Mr. Fribscombe Hawthorne, the 
member for Doodleshire, is most anx- 
ious to treat Ireland fairly on the Home- 
Rule question. He is well disposed to- 
wards the Green Isle, and the country 
cannot afford to lose an ally in this 
crisis. Freddy [myself], although no 
politician, manages his tenants exceed- 
ingly well, and I should like Haw- 
thorne to learn that at least one Irish 
landlord can live upon his estate with- 
out fear of bullet or bludgeon. Haw- 
thorne leaves to-night, and will stop 
at the Shelborne Hotel, Dublin. Tell 
Freddy to drop him a line, asking him to 
put up at Kilkenley, and to give him 
some of that Sneyd and Barton claret 



which I love, not wisely but too well. 
My enemy is at work on my big toe, but 
I hope to be with you as usual at Christ- 
mas. The grouse were capital, fat and 
large, and I am on the look-out for par- 
tridge. Your affectionate brother, 

" JIMMY L'ESTRANGE. 

"P. S. I forgot to mention that Haw- 
thorne's daughter accompanies him ; you 
had better enclose a note to her. 

"J. L'E." 

" CV//found it !" I cried, " it's 
really too bad of Uncle Jimmy to 
saddle us with some dried-up statis- 
tician and his mummy daughter. 
You must write to him, madre mta, 
saying that I am at Derravanagh 
and beyond reach of post and 
wire." 

" If your uncle wasn't very anx- 
ious about this he would never 
write so urgently; and don't you 
think a little sacrifice is due to 
him ?" 

My mother was in the right. A 
moment's reflection told me that my 
uncle's letter was as forcible as an 
act of Parliament. 

"Besides," added my mother, 
with a cheery smile like a ray of 
sunshine, " this Mr. Hawthorne 
may be a sportsman and enjoy the 
shooting as keenly as Harry Wel- 
stone or yourself." 

My uncle was, or I should say is 
for while I write he is enjoying a 
pipe in the company of Barney 
Corcoran, who stands to him in the 
same capacity as did Corporal Trim 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



to " My Uncle Toby " as thorough 
a gentleman as ever saw the light 
of day. Simple, unassuming, loyal, 
generous, brave, he actually refused 
the recommendation for the Vic- 
toria Cross, in order that a fair- 
haired boy, whose very soul was 
set upon its possession, might re- 
ceive the decoration. Pure-mind- 
ed and good, he is at once, as- Bay- 
ard, sans peur et sans reproche. 

Jimmy entered the army in the 
year 1847, roving about with his 
regiment from clime to clime with 
a superb indifference as to change 
of scene, but with a fervid deter- 
mination to. remain with the gallant 
Thirty-third; and it was only when 
the Crimean war-cloud loomed 
overhead that he resolved upon 
quitting the old corps for one un- 
der orders for the East. One-half 
of the fighting Thirty-third volun- 
teered with him, and the great re- 
doubt at the Alma is steeped in the 
blood of many a gallant fellow who 
chose to follow the fortunes of Jim- 
my L'Estrange. 

Jimmy was badly hit at Inker- 
man, and was sent home invalided, 
to be nursed by my mother. In a 
few months, however, he returned 
to the seat of war, only to be 
knocked over at the taking of the 
Redan, which he entered side by 
side with the dashing Tom Es- 
monde, where, in addition to a 
bayonet thrust in the chest, he was 
made the depositary of a bullet in 
the right leg. This bullet, clumsily 
extracted by an unskilful surgeon, 
constitutes the only decoration my 
uncle deigns to wear, and he car- 
ries it suspended from the steel 
chain attached to a huge gold 
watch formerly in possession of his 
great-grandfather, to whom King 
James presented it ere he rode from 
the disastrous battle-field of the 
Boyne. 



Jimmy has eight thousand pound?; 
lent out at four per cent., and lives 
like a nabob at his London club 
reading the Army and Navy Gazette 
all the morning, gossiping with his 
former companions-in-arms during 
the afternoon, sunning himself in the 
park until dinner-time, and play- 
ing shilling whist up to his wonted 
hour for turning in for the night. 
He spends three months in every 
year at Kilkenley, during which, by 
a judicious course of open air, early 
hours, plain food, and '34 claret, he 
is enabled to undertake the Lon- 
don campaign with renewed vigor 
and vitality. 

Visions of a crabbed, hard-head- 
ed, hard- fact, singularly uninter- 
esting Englishman crossed my mind 
as I helplessly gazed at my uncle's 
epistle of mornings spent in de- 
bating the question of Home Rule 
versus Imperial legislation ; of days 
engaged in qnoting acts of Parlia- 
ment and compiling statistics ; of 
evenings behind the horror of a 
white choker, passed in dissecting 
and arranging these statistics, con- 
verting figures into facts, and facts 
into figures this dreary drudgery 
instead of the delectable society of 
the bright, happy, and joyous Harry 
Welstone, of mornings on the hill- 
side, of days in the turnip-fields 
looking for the identical partridge 
of which my uncle had made hon- 
orable mention in his letter, of even- 
ings whirled through in chatting 
over old times and old associations. 
What cared I for Mr. Butt or 
Home Rule, the land question, 
fixity of tenure, tenant right, and 
such bother ? If my tenants re- 
quired time to pay the rent, they 
got it. If they required help to- 
ward fencing, draining, top-dress- 
ing, or thatching, they got it. If 
they were twelve months in ar- 
rear, they came to my mother to 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



6/1 



plead for them; if over that period, 
they invariably wjited for the an- 
nual visit of my Uncle Jimmy, in 
order to utilize him as ambassador ; 
and my private opinion is, that 
upon one occasion, in order to keep 
up the credit of a family distantly 
related to his valet, Barney Corco- 
ran, he paid the rent himself. I 
dare not hint at such a thing, but I 
feel thoroughly assured that the 
money came out of his o\vn pocket. 
In the end, however, things gene- 
rally came right, and delay in this 
case did not prove dangerous. 

I read my uncle's epistle twice, 
confounded him once, and content- 
ed myself by showering mild male- 
dictions upon the heads of his 
English friends with a fervor that 
bore witness to my feelings of cha- 
grin and disappointment. 

The letters were duly written to 
Mr. and Miss Hawthorne and for- 
warded to the Shelborne. 

" An' yez are not goin' to Derra- 
vanagh ?" asked Ned Clancy, my 
game-keeper, in tones betraying 
the deepest dejection "afther all 
me thrubble wud the -birds, an' the 
dogs blue-mowlded for a set. Be- 
gorra, I dunno what I'll do wud the 
poor bastes. I tould thim we wor 
aff in the mornin', an' now be me 
song it's at home they'll have for to 
stay an' set gruel." 

4 I'm sorry to say I can't go, Ned, 
as I expect an English gentleman 
and his daughter to visit us " ; and, 
wishing to impress him with their 
importance, added : " He is a mem- 
ber of Parliament, and is coming 
over to study the Home-Rule ques- 
tion." 

My addendum failed to produce 
the desired effect. 

" An' much he'll larn here," ob- 
served Clancy with a toss of his 
head. " Av he axes the quollity for 
information, sorra an information 



they have for to give him ; an' if he 
axes the poorer soart, they'll only 
cod him, bad cess to him !" 

Ned Clancy was even more fatal- 
ly " sold " than I by the postpone- 
ment of our visit to Derravanagh ; 
for a certain blue-eyed colleen, the 
daughter of a " warm " farmer liv- 
ing close to the shooting-lodge, had 
succeeded in stirring tender emo- 
tions in the region lying beneath 
Mr. Clancy's waistcoat on the left 
side, which, while productive of joy, 
were equally productive of pain, 
since the sunshine of her presence 
was unhappily counterbalanced by 
the very prolonged shadow of her 
absence. Forty miles lay between 
him and the object of his admira- 
tion ; and although there are but 
seventy thousand four hundred 
yards in forty miles, still it is along 
road for a gentleman to travel, un- 
less he is pretty certain of his wel- 
come, and as yet Ned Clancy had 
"never told his love." 

" Mebbe yer honor wud like for 
to show this English gintleman the 
counthry ; an' shure, in regard to 
scenery, there's no batin' Derryna- 
cushla all the ways be Derravanagh. 
Sorra a finer sight nor the view 
from Ballyknocksheelin hill ; it 
flogs Rooshia, Ashia, an' Africa so 
Misther Corcoran, yer uncle's boy, 
tould me ; an' shure he ought for to 
know, be raisin' av his havin' thra- 
velled all the world, likewise Ara- 
bia." 

" I'm afraid it's a little too far, 
Ned." 

" Far!" he contemptuously ejacu- 
lated " a few dirty mile, an' the 
horses atin' their heds aff. Lily av 
the Valley darted through her stall 
this mornin', an' it tuk me an' a 
cupple more for to hould Primrose." 

This was special pleading with a 
vengeance. 

" Mebbe the gintleman wud take 



6/2 



The Home -Rule Candidate. 



a gun. Give him a lind av Miss 
Uhike, sir. She goes aff soft an'^ 
aisy, an' wudn't rub the dew aff th' 
eyebrow av a grasshopper. Blur 
an' ages, Masther Fred ! for th' 
honor av ould Ireland give him 
a shot. The birds is as thick as 
hayves, an' he cudn't miss thim no 
more nor a haystack ; an' shure," 
he added, "anything he misses I'll 
be on the Ink out for, so betune us 
we'll make it soft anyhow." 

"It's not to be done, Ned; be- 
sides, Miss Hawthorne accompanies 
her father, and she possibly would 
not like to separate from him." 

" Bad cess to thim for wimmen !" 
he muttered, as he tossed the gun 
across his shoulders ; " they spile 
everything. I wish they wor niver 
invinted." 

In the course of post two very 
polite letters reached us, one ad- 
dressed to my mother from Miss 
Hawthorne, the other to myself 
from the M.P., accepting the invita- 
tion and stating that the writer 
would leave Dublin by the one 
o'clock train upon the following 
day, reaching Ballyvoreen station 
at 5.30. 

The letters were excellently well 
written, both as regards style and 
caligraphy, especially that of the 
lady, whom I now felt assured 
must be a distinguished member of 
the Social Science or of the British 
Association. 

" They will be here to-morrow, 
mother. How on earth are we to 
amuse them ? We are in for it 
now, and must do our best to make 
their visit agreeable. I know little, 
and care less, about Home Rule, so 
I'll hand Mr. Hawthorne over to 
Myles Casey, of Loftus Park, who 
opposed our present member. 
Father O'Dowd, too, will give this 
base, bloody, and brutal Saxon 
enough to think about for a dozen 



sessions of Parliament. I'll do my 
part like a man." 

" We must give a dinner-party," 
said my mother with a weary sigh, 
visions of unpacking the family 
plate, which had not seen the light 
of day since my poor father's death, 
floating across her mind's eye. 
"I can drive Miss Hawthorne 
about the country and pay visits." 

" Don't trouble yourself about 
her, mother. She'll be able to 
amuse herself. Show her the old 
quarry at Rathnamon, and she can 
geologize until she's black in the 
face. Or bring her to Carrigna- 
geena, and she'll find ferns to both- 
er her; and if she's a dab at antiqui- 
ties, the old church at Bo'hernacap- 
ple ought to put her on the treadmill 
for a week. There is one tomb- 
stone there that has bewildered Sir 
William Wilde and the entire Royal 
Irish Academy." 

" She may be interested in the 
Home-Rule question," suggested 
my mother with a smile, adding: 
" And perhaps political economy is 
her forte." 

" In that case I'll hand her over 
to Harry Welstone. He can talk 
Adam Smith, Martin Tupper, and 
Stuart Mill. He can enlighten 
her on the land question as well as 
A. M. Sullivan or Mitchel Henry ; 
and he shall do it as sure as my 
name is Frederick Fitzgerald Or- 
monde. Besides, he can imitate 
Gladstone, Bright, Toole, Mathews, 
and Buckstone. He's just the sort 
of fellow to encounter this antedi- 
luvian female, and, if such a thing 
were within the realms of possibili- 
ty, metamorphose her." 

Visitors to a country house, shouH 
the entertainers be not in the habit 
of receiving company, are about 
the severest penances that can by 
any possibility be inflicted. Every- 
thing requires to be turned topsy- 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



67; 



turvy for them beds, bed-rooms, 
furniture, carpets, "fixins'" of ev- 
ery description. The cellar must 
be overhauled and confidential 
conferences held with the cook. 
The " trap " used for knocking 
about the roads and attending 
markets and fairs must be shoved 
aside, and the family coach put 
into formidable requisition. The 
horses must be clipped, while the 
harness is found to be defective 
and a new whip an absolute ne- 
cessity. The very door-mats sug- 
gest renovation. 

As regards Harry Welstone, his 
room and his tub were always 
ready. I would have felt no hesi- 
tation in quartering him on the 
house-top, and the only preparation 
I went in for with reference to his 
visit was a scrupulous overhauling 
of the billiard-table. Having no 
person to practise with except 
Martin Heaviside of the Grove, or 
Captain O'Reilly of the Connaught 
Rangers when home on leave, the 
cushions became more like bags of 
sand than those springy, elastic 
walls from which the' pale white 
or the blushing red ball bounds 
gaily towards the coquettish pock- 
et or the artfully-arranged collis- 
ion of the carrom. With the aid of 
Ned Clancy who, in addition to 
being game-keeper, was a sort of 
Jack-of-all-trades and the usual 
form-nice, I succeeded in impart- 
ing the necessary tone to the table, 
and was satisfied that Harry would 
scarcely fail to appreciate the utility 
of the preparations. 

I felt no anxiety whatever to 
" show off " to the English member 
of Parliament, while I honestly 
confess to a burning desire to ap- 
pear the " correct thing " in the 
eyes of my old college chum ; and 
while I ordered a homely vehicle 
called the shandradan half pilen- 
VOL. xxvi. 43 



turn, half brougham, very old, very 
rickety, and very seedy to meet 
Mr. and Miss Hawthorne upon the 
following day, I turned out my own 
dog-cart, built by Bates, of Gorey 
stained ash, brass-boxed wheels, 
brass-mounted harness, 'possum 
rug, with Lily of the Valley and 
Primrose tandem in order to bowl 
Harry Welstone from Bally voreen 
station to the lodge gate, nine 
miles, in the forty minutes. 

In accordance with preconcerted 
arrangement, I met Harry, hugged 
him, whacked him on the back, 
refreshed him from my flask, rolled 
him in the 'possum rug as though 
the mercury were in the tens below 
zero, and almost yelled with plea- 
sure the entire way back. 

Is any meeting equal to the 
meeting of old school-fellows? 
Ay de mi! no. 

He had grown much stouter 
and much handsomer. His eyes 
were more romantically dark, and 
his black moustache, which I recol- 
lected so well in its struggling 
tooth-brush infancy, was now 
pointed after the fashion of the 
third Napoleon. 

After he had received a cordial 
welcome from my mother I drag- 
ged him up to his room, and there 
we sat talking over Jim Cooper, that 
went to the diggings, and Bobby 
Thyne, now a leader at the Indian 
bar, and Tom O'Brien, who was a 
Jesuit, and Phil Dempsey, whose 
last speech on circuit had elicited 
the warm encomiums of Mr. Justice 
Fitzgerald ; of the Corbet girls, 
and the Walshs' picnic at the 
Dargle, when Harry fell over-head 
into the river in a chivalrous en- 
deavor to pluck a maiden-hair 
fern for Miss Walsh, and a host of 
similar delightful souvenirs, until 
the dinner-bell rang. 

"Harry, my old bird, what will 



6/4 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



you dip your beak into claret or 
the ding-dong?" 

" \VeIl, I stand by the solid li- 
quor, Fred, but the pace is too 
heavy." 

Over our punch we resumed the 
conversation on the olden, golden 
time. Ah ! how weary, as we ap- 
proach the end, to look back at the 
milestones we have passed on our 
journey. Why did we tarry here, 
why not have rested there, why not 
have halted for good and aye? 
With us it was couleur de rose. We 
had no shadows to sadden memory. 
Our gossip was of our college days, 
when life was on the spring and 
every nerve braced for the forth- 
coming struggle. We talked late 
into the night, disregarding dove- 
like messages from the ark an- 
nouncing coffee. 

The next day Harry went on 
a ferreting expedition with Ned 
Clancy, and my mother was too 
deeply immersed in household af- 
fairs to be enabled to take my place 
and go to meet our expected guests ; 
so, with feelings of no very amiable 
description, I threw myself, all un- 
tidy and ill-dressed as I was, into 
the shandradan, and jingled the 
nine miles to Ballyvoreen behind 
,as sorry a pair of nags as ever 
ploughed a nine-acre field. 

I had to wait at the station, as 
of cottrse the train was five-and- 
twenty minutes late, and I was se- 
riously hoping that some unto- 
Avard accident had occurred which 
would retard its progress for four- 
and-twepty hours at the very least, 
when it came creaking and groan- 
ing in. Just as I had anticipated, 
a tall, grim, gaunt, elderly gen- 
tleman alighted, followed by a 
tall, grim, gaunt, elderly young 
lady, with a nose as sharp as a 
shilling razor, wearing her hair in 
wiry curls, and dragging by a long 



blue ribbon a plunging, howling, 
ill-visaged pug. The sight of the 
dog was somewhat of a relief to 
me, as I foresaw the miserable exis- 
tence he was likely to lead with my 
two Skye terriers a counterpart 
of the torture I should be com- 
pelled to endure with his master 
and mistress. 

" Mr. Hawthorne, I presume," 
bowing and lifting my hat. 

He bowed stiffly. 

I repeated the question, fearing, 
perhaps, that he had not heard me. 

" You are mistaken, sir," in freez- 
ing tones. " I am Lord Mulliga- 
tawney." 

"I was mistaken." 

Apologizing fo'r the error, I look- 
ed up the line and perceived in the 
distance for the train was a long 
one a well-dressed, dapper little 
man engaged in lugging a valise 
from beneath the seat of a first- 
class carriage. " This must be my 
guest," thought I, advancing, and as 
I reached the carriage the port- 
manteau came to earth with a 
chuck that nearly precipitated its 
proprietor into an adjacent hedge. 
Following the " leathern conven- 
iency," and with a spring graceful 
as that of a gazelle, a young girl 
alighted from the compartment. 
She was small but exquisitely pro- 
portioned. Her hair, pure gold, 
was wound round the back of her 
head in ponderous plaits. Her eyes 
were of that blue which in certain 
lights cries u check " unto the violet. 
Her nose was straight and delicate- 
ly shaped, but not in the least 
classical. Her mouth was large, 
full, and generous, and adorned 
with flashing white teeth, somewhat 
irregular, it is true, but in their ir- 
regularity lay a special charm all 
their own. She was attired in a 
shepherd's plaid silk travelling dress, 
a Die Vernon hat with a sweeping 



Home-Rule Candidate. 



675 



blue feather almost caressing her left 
shoulder, and her dainty littlehands 
were encased in black kid gaunt- 
leted gloves. Struck by her singu- 
lar grace and beauty, I remained 
staring at her staring like a school- 
boy at a waxen effigy. 

" You are Mr. Ormonde," she 
said laughingly, and advancing to- 
wards me. 

"You are Miss Hawthorne," I 
stammered. 

" I am, and papa, as usual, is 
fussing about our luggage impedi- 
menta you scholars call it nowa- 
days. I knew you from your pho- 
tograph. It is so kind of you to 
come and meet us." She put out 
her hand as she said this in a 
winning, confiding way that was 
fraught with captivation. I bowed 
over the tips of her fingers in re- 
spectful reverence, scarcely daring 
to touch her hand. 

" May I ask where you saw my 
photograph ?" I asked, inwardly 
'hoping she had come across the 
one taken for the Rathaldron hunt, 
in which I figured in full field tog- 
gery, my right hand caressing the 
shoulder of Galloping Bess, my fa- 
vorite hunter. 

" In your uncle's album," she re- 
plied. 

Of course it was that photograph, 
done while at the university, with 
the lackadaisical expression around 
the eyes and a general limpness 
about the form, while my garments 
bore the appearance of having been 
constructed for the celebrated Irish 
giant. If I had had the artist in 
my hands at that particular mo- 
ment, it is possible that I might 
have taken his photograph with 
something akin to a vengeance. 

" Papa, this is mine host." And 
she curtsied towards me after the 
fashion of the ladies at the Court 
of St. James, when hoops were 



worn at the hips and patches and 
powder held their parti-colored 
sway. I grasped the little man by 
the hand, telling him fervently that 
his acquaintance was the greatest 
favor ever bestowed upon me by 
my uncle, that my house was his 
home, together with several similar 
expressions of intense good-will 
and of the liveliest satisfaction. 
How I inwardly anathematized my 
seedy coat, my unkempt beard, and 
above all the jingling shandradan 
with its villanous pair of garrons 
standing at the exit gate ! I be- 
lieve I offered Miss Hawthorne my 
arm to lead her to the vehicle in 
question, calling loudly to Peter 
O'Brien, who acted in the dupli- 
cate capacity of coachman and but- 
ler. Finding that my servant failed 
to respond to the summons, I flung 
open the door of the carriage, and 
was about to hand her into it, when, 
to my utter shame, misery, and 
mortification, I beheld my missing 
retainer rolled up like a ball in the 
space between the seats, fast asleep, 
and snoring like a fog-horn. In a 
blaze of indignation I caught him 
by the coat-collar, with the inten- 
tion of giving him a shake that 
would rattle him into an eel-like 
liveliness; but while in the act of 
inserting my fingers deftly around 
the collar, so as to afford me the 
grip necessary to the effectual car- 
rying out of my intention, he sud- 
denly awoke from his slumbers, 
and, upon perceiving the condi- 
tion of affairs, with the howl of 
a startled wolf, plunged upwards 
with such overwhelming force as 
to cause me to lose my hold, to 
lurch against the step of the car- 
riage, carrom off the open door, 
and lastly, O agony ! O shame ! to 
measure my full length in the dusty 
roadway, whilst a shout of laughter 
from porters, passengers, and by- 



6;6 



The Home- Rule Candidate. 



standers, in which I could detect 
the silvery notes of Miss Haw- 
thorne, greeted my tingling ears. 
I sprang to my feet, full of the in- 
tention of throttling the misguided 
rascal, but was restrained, ban grt 
mal gre, on discovering him upon 
his knees in the centre of a sympa- 
thizing audience, whom he was ad- 
dressing with astonishing volubility 
ere I could possibly interpose. 

" O mother o' Moses ! I was 
.overkem wud sleep; an' shure I'm 
.not for to blame afther all, for 
oiever a sight o' me bed I seen last 
.night till daylight this blessed morn- 
,in'. But shure I'd sit up for a 
.month like a Banshee for his honor, 
av it divarted him. Let me aff 
this watist, Masther Fred, an" I'll 
-carry ye up to bed every night 
in " 

Deeming it advisable to stop this 

dangerous harangue as speedily as 

-possible, as I found myself quietly 

dropping from out of the frying- 

.pan into the fire, and as, in his 

anxiety to make out a good case 

for himself, the rascal was using me 

. as a scapegoat, I sternly bade him 

.look to his horses. 

Finding himself once more ap- 
.proaching the sunshine of favor, he 
hastily scrambled to his feet, and, 
before I could intercept his move- 
ment, had commenced to rub me 
do\vn as if I were one of the quad- 
rupeds under his especial care, ac- 
companying each vigorous rub with 
that purring sound wherein the 
groom proper delights to indulge. 

" Bad cess to it for dirt ! it 'ill 
never come out," he began, as, with 
a slap that brought tears to my 
eyes, he endeavored to remove the 
dust from the back of my coat. 

" Silence, sir ! Go to your box !" 
I shouted, as I handed Miss Haw- 
thorne into the shandradan, plac- 
ing her father beside her, and my 



miserable, humiliated self opposite 
directly beneath the perilous in- 
fluence of her violet eyes. 

" I trust, Miss Hawthorne," I 
blurted, as we started for Kilken- 
ley, " that you are not too deeply 
influenced by first impressions?" 

" Will you permit me to be very 
Irish, and answer your question by 
putting another ? Are you?" 

Despite my late discomfiture, my 
unkempt hair, my glove! ess hands, 
and general seediness, I had suffi- 
cient grace within me to gaze for 
one brief second into her lovely 
eyes until red as a rose was she, 
and reply with a well-toned em- 
phasis : " Most decidedly.'' 

I then, in a disjointed and desul- 
tory way, endeavored to explain 
why so shaky a vehicle had been 
sent to the station ; why Peter 
O'Brien's hat was so brown and 
bore such traces of snail-creeping 
from brim to crown ; why I had 
turned out so shabbily; why the 
horses were so slow in a word, it 
was the old story of qui s'excusc 
s accuse, and my explanations, such 
as they were, will ever remain a 
matter of the profoundest mystery 
to myself, as I never by any possibi- 
lity could recall their tenor to 
my memory. 

I believe that during the drive 
Mr. Hawthorne spoke a good deal 
of my uncle, of London, Parlia- 
ment, late hours, divisions, of the 
Home'-Rule question, and upon 
several other equally agreeable and 
interesting topics, all of which 
seemed to afford the most exquisite 
delight to Peter O'Brien, who sat 
perched sideways upon the box, 
with one eye approvingly upon the 
" mimber " and the other skewise 
upon the road ; but as for me, I 
was so lost in contemplating the 
charms of my ris-a-vis that the 
eloquence of the member for Doo- 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



677 



dleshire was as completely wasted 
as if he were addressing Mr. Speak- 
er himself. 

Miss Hawthorne only spoke 
upon two occasions once to com- 
ment upon the beauty of the foli- 
age at Ballyknoekscroggery, the 
name amusing her immensely, and 
which she endeavored to repeat 
with a child-like glee ; and once to 
ask about my mother but the 
sounds were as music, and my 
ears quaffed the delicious, dreamy 
draught with greedy avidity. How 
those nine miles passed I never 
knew ; they seemed but so many 
yards. 

Peter kept " a trot for the ave- 
nue," and brought us to a stand- 
still with a jerk that spoke volumes 
in favor of the anxiety of the 
screws for a respite from their 
labors. I handed the young and 
lovely girl to my mother, who 
stood upon the steps awaiting 
our approach, and, having escorted 
Mr. Hawthorne to his room, retir- 
ed to my own in a whirlwind of 
new and pleasing emotion ay, 
new and pleasing indeed ! 

I ate no dinner. What cared I 
for food ? Mabel Hawthorne's 
presence enthralled me with an un- 
definable ecstasy. Every gesture, 
every movement seemed fraught 
with a new-born grace, while her 
every word filled my very being as 
with melody. I envied my mother 
that she talked so much to her ; I 
envied Harry Welstone for looking 
so confoundedly handsome and be- 
cause he sat opposite to her ; I en- 
vied Peter when she addressed 
even a " yes " or " no " to him ; I 
envied her father, who called her 
" Mabel " and " darling." Heigh- 
ho ! How I hated the approach 
of that fatal moment when the con- 
ventionalities demanded the with- 
drawal of the ladies a cruel and 



barbarous custom, and I said so. 
She brushed past me as I held the 
door open, her eyes lifting them- 
selves like violets from beneath 
the leafy lashes; and when she had 
glided away on my mother's arm, I 
felt that the light had ceased to 
live in the apartment. I longed 
for a cigar in the stillness of the 
autumn night, surrounded by the 
lordly gloom of nature, and yearn- 
ed for the priceless abandon of my 
own musings. But, as in duty 
bound, I descended to the realities 
and the '34 claret. 

"A good wine, sir," exclaimed 
Mr. Hawthorne, smacking his lips 
and cunningly holding his glass be- 
tween the lamp and his left eye ; 
the right being carefully closed. "A 
grand wine, sir. A comet vintage, 
sir. Mr. Speaker has no wine like 
this; and the Speaker of the House 
of Commons lias the best cellar in 
England, sir." 

Mr. Hawthorne spt>ke solemnly. 
His sentences seemed carefully 
weighed, and were delivered with 
an unctuousness that bespoke con- 
siderable satisfaction with himself. 
He addressed me as if I were the 
Speaker of the House of Commons, 
and as though he were desirous of 
catching my eye. Some persons 
hold you with their eye. It's not 
pleasant. He was one of this class. 

"It's a '34, sir; you are quite cor- 
rect. My poor father was very 
particular about his cellar. I have 
too much of it ; you must permit 
me to send you a dozen at Christ- 
mas." What would I not give her 
father ? 

" On the condition that you wilt 
come and help me to drink it, sir." 

Need I say how profuse were my 
thanks? This was a chance to see 
her in her own home, too. 

" We live in the Regent's Park, 
York Terrace. Our windows com- 



6/8 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



mand a very pleasing prospect. It's 
a nice walk for me to the House, 
and from my roof I can tell by the 
electric light in the clock tower 
whether the House is sitting or not. 
This is of immense importance, as 
to lose a division very often means 
to lose a seat ha ! ha ! ha !" 

I must be forgiven if I joined in 
this melancholy merriment. 

" Full well I laughed, with counterfeited glee, 
At all his jokes, for many a joke had he." 

I kicked Harry Welstone be- 
neath the table as a signal to join 
in, but he maintained a grim, stolid 
silence. He told me subsequently 
that it wasn't to be done at any 
price. 

"You may not possibly have 
heard Mr. Disraeli's last, gentle- 
men," said Mr. Hawthorne, placing 
his left hand inside his waistcoat and 
nourishing the right in my direc- 
tion. " It's ha ! ha ! so very like 
Dizzy that ha! ha! I cannot help 
repeating it." Here he laughed 
" consumedly " for fully a minute. 

The reader is possibly acquaint- 
ed with some one man who cozens 
time by inward chuckles at his own 
conceits. It is a melancholy ordeal 
to have to endure this individual, to 
reflect back his dulness, and to re- 
turn smile for smile. All bores are 
terrors, but the worst class of bore 
is the political ; he is the embodi- 
ment, the concentrated essence, the 
amalgam and epitome of bores. 
He mounts his dreary Rosinante, 
and jogs along, taking acts of Par- 
liament for milestones and the dul- 
lest utterances in the lives of emi- 
nent men as his halting-places, 
quoting long-winded, meaningless 
speeches as epigrams, and paralyz- 
ing his auditory with wooden ex- 
tracts from a blue-book of explod- 
ed theories. His pertinacity is as 
inexhaustible as it is undaunted ; he 



is free from the faintest suspicion 
of self-distrust ; he is a bore within 
a bore. Of course, as the father of 
Mabel, Mr. Hawthorne interested 
me, and I listened with a reverence 
that begat the reputation of a 
shrewd, sensible fellow an enco- 
mium never heretofore passed upon 
me under any circumstance whatso- 
ever. 

" The Right Honorable the senior 
member for the city of Dublin," 
commenced Mr. Hawthorne, after 
his merriment had cooled off a lit- 
tle, " is ha! ha ! a Mr. Jonathan 
Pirn, Quaker, and a laborious 
statistician. The House likes a 
statistician on the budget or in com- 
mittee, but we will not have him in 
debate no, gentlemen, we will not 
tolerate him in debate. A ques- 
tion arose in which I had fruitless- 
ly endeavored to catch the Speaker's 
eye the Speaker is, by the bye, no 
particular friend of mine, as I once 
overruled his decision on a point of 
order ; consequently, I seldom get 
an opportunity of speaking, and 
am compelled to write to the Times. 
Well, gentlemen, as 1 was observing, 
a question came up in which the 
Right Honorable the senior member 
for the city of Dublin felt himself 
interested, and he made a very 
creditable speech, bristling with 
figures quite a surprise to some of 
us ; but it bored us, gentlemen, and 
the House will not tolerate a bore." 

Harry trod upon my toe; my 
boots were tight I involuntarily 
groaned. 

" I perceive that you agree with 
me," said the M.P.; "the affliction 
is terrible." 

"Awful!" said Harry, peeling a 
plum. 

" Well, gentlemen, the Right Hon- 
orable gentleman, the senior mem- 
ber for the city of Dublin, had ha ! 
ha! just concluded his speech. 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



679 



when Mr. Disraeli, who sat upon the 
Opposition benches, said to the hon- 
orable member for Shrewsbury, who 
sat behind him, and placing his eye- 
glass up so " suiting the action to 
the word 

" 'Who is this person ?' 

" ' Mr. Pirn, sir, the senior mem- 
ber for the city of Dublin,' re- 
sponded the honorable member for 
Shrewsbury. 

" ' Oh ! indeed. Dublin used to 
send us a gentleman and a black- 
guard ; this creature is neither." " 

This was not quite so bad, and 
we joined the honorable member 
for Doodleshire in his mirth, which 
continued long after our responsive 
haw-haws had become things of 
the past. 

Mr. Hawthorne, being thus en- 
couraged, was good enough to en- 
liven us with a prolonged descrip- 
tion of his original Parliamentary 
yearnings, his first and unsuccess- 
ful contest, and his subsequent 
triumphant victory a victory which 
we were led to believe was unpar- 
alleled in the annals of electioneer- 
ing struggles, and one that caused a 
thrill of dismay all along the entire 
line of the great conservative party. 
We were solemnly inducted into 
the forms of the House, from the 
entrance of a newly-fledged mem- 
ber to his maiden speech. We 
were initiated into the mysteries of 
the " Opposition benches," the 
" gangway," the " table," the " bar," 
the duties of the "whip" and the 
" tellers," the modus operandi as re- 
gards notices of motion and divi- 
sions, the striking of committees, 
and the rules of Parliament gener- 
ally, until we were surfeited // nau- 
seam. These pleasing preliminaries 
having been satisfactorily gone 
through, Mr. Hawthorne very oblig- 
ingly proceeded to give us brief 
biographical sketches of Gladstone, 



Bright, Disraeli, Northcote, Har- 
tington, and other leading men of 
that august assembly, dilating upon 
the peculiarities in their style and 
the mistakes in their several Parlia- 
mentary careers, until I wished him 
in the drawing-room. The win- 
dows were open, and across the 
sensuous night-glow came sweet, 
soothing strains from the piano, 
now in low. wailing cadences soft 
and sorrow-laden as the cry of the 
Banshee, now in the dashing bril- 
liancy, the dan of those chromatic 
fireworks which none but the most 
skilled pyrotechnist dare handle 
save a deux mains. 

" Miss Hawthorne is at the piano," 
I ventured, in the earnest hope that 
her father, in the pride of parental 
fondness, might suggest an adjourn- 
ment. 

" Yes, yes," coolly and imper- 
turbably. 

" She plays divinely." 

" Rubinstein, who gave her les- 
sons at I'm ashamed to say how 
much per lesson, said she was his 
best amateur pupil. But, as I was 
observing, Mr. Gladstone pronoun- 
ces some words very strangely ; for 
instance, issue he always pronounces 
' issew,' and Mr. Bright invariably 
says ' can't ' for 'cawnt.' " 

After a dissertation of about half 
an hour's duration upon the Mar- 
quis of Hartington's lisp, the un- 
wieldy oratory of Ward Hunt, Mr. 
Roebuck's ' no,' and Mr. Whalley's 
' heaw, heaw," I again hinted at an 
adjournment, and on this occasion 
with a view to a general move, sug- 
gested the billiard-room. 

" Ah ! no, my dear sir, we over- 
worked members of the legislature 
value too much the delightful tran- 
quillity of our claret to ' rush things,' 
as they say in America. We must 
make hay while the sun shines. 
How many nights during the com- 



68o 



Tlie Home-Rule Candidate. 



ing session shall I not have to snap 
at my food with the ting! ting! of 
the division-bell ringing in my ear! 
How often have I just raised my 
soup to my lips, when ting ! ting ! 
and away into the House or to the 
division-lobby, and back to find it 
cold. Fish ! ting! ting!" playfully 
tapping a wine-glass with his des- 
sert-knife by way of illustration. 
4i Entree ! ting ! ting ! And as for 
wine, I have been compelled, ay, six 
nights out of the seven, to gulp it, 
gentlemen. Fancy gulping claret 
as a navvy tosses off a quart of ale. 
Festina lente, young gentlemen. 
Make haste slowly with your din- 
ner and your post-prandial wine ; 
the pace of the tortoise is the win- 
ning, and assuredly the most pleas- 
ant, one." 

Harry Welstone, who had been 
sipping his claret in dogged silence, 
suddenly started from his chair, and 
exclaiming, " By Jove ! she's plnying 
Les Baisers a" Amour ; excuse me, 
Fred," hurriedly quitted the apart- 
ment, leaving me in a condition of 
the deepest dejection, and writhing 
under the dreary torture of the 
Parliamentary souvenirs of the mem- 
ber for Doodleshire. 

"I ha! ha! call to mind another 
mot of Mr. Disraeli's; not at all a 
bad one, either," continued the 
M.P., deliberately attacking a fresh 
decanter of claret attacking it in 
that steady, methodical way which 
indicated a determination to re- 
duce it by slow degrees to the last 
extremity. "Dizzy says a thing, 
sir, in a quaint, dry way peculiarly 
his own Multum inparvo I call it 
and he looks so demure, seated up- 
on the Opposition bench in his short 
black velvet coat, and caressing 
his daintily-booted left foot upon his 
right knee. One night during the 
last session a very particular friend 
of mine, Sir Brisbane Bullflier, the 



junior member for Hants, happened 
to ask him what he thought of Mr. 
Gladstone. Dizzy turned his gaze 
toward the government benches, and 
coolly surveying the prime minis- 
ter, who was parrying an adroit 
question, said, as he calmly survey- 
ed him : 

" ' Mr. Gladstone is a man with- 
out a single redeeming vice.' ' 

My heart was in the drawing- 
room, where I now imagined Harry 
Welstone leaning with his elbows 
upon the piano and his chin upon his 
hands (his favorite position when 
my mother played for him), gazing 
at Mabel I had commenced to 
think of her by this gracious and 
winsome name uttering sotne of his 
daring facetice, and being rewarded 
by a glance from those bewildering 
violet eyes, while I, bound in the 
iron fetters of a vile conventional- 
ism, was compelled to listen to " I 
thus addressed the Speaker: 'Mr. 
Speaker, sir,' " or, " I called for a 
division, sir, and insisted upon 
explaining to the House my mo- 
tives for adopting this somewhat 
daring and untoward course," 
and " Would you believe it, sir, the 
Times never noticed my speech up- 
on thechurch disestablishment ; it is 
positively amusing ha! ha! ha!"; 
his face bore no traces of the amuse- 
ment in question " and that con- 
temptible rag, the Daily Telegraph, 
merely mentioned that the honor- 
able member for Doodleshire said a 
few words which were inaudible 
this, sir, to a speech that cost me 
three weeks in the preparation and 
three hours in the delivery." This 
sort of thing under ordinary cir- 
cumstances, would have been dry 
and prosy enough, but under the 
special conditions of the case it be- 
came simply unbearable. 

I suggested cigars ; he didn't 
smoke. A Bras Mouton instead 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



68 1 



of Chateau Lafitte ; he preferred 
the existing vintage. Coffee I 
dared not venture upon, and I re- 
linquished the hopeless struggle 
with a weary sigh. He was there 
for the evening, and in that spot he 
would remain until the contents of 
the decanter had disappeared. 

" Do you take an active part in 
politics, Mr. Ormonde?" he asked 
after a prolonged silence, during 
which I had the dismal satisfaction 
of hearing the strains of a valse bril- 
lante, accompanied by an occasion- 
al ripple of laughter, wafted in 
through the windows. 

" None whatever." 

"No?" uttered in a tone almost 
of dismay. 

" No, sir. Our country is in the 
hands of an Orange clique, who will 
not allow a Catholic to hold a po- 
sition of any consequence what- 
ever. The representation is, as a 
matter of course, in their hands, 
and the family of De Ruthven have 
supplied the members since the sack- 
ing of Drogheda under Cromwell, 
and will continue so to do, although, 
perhaps, under the fecent Ballot 
Act some outsider may get a chance. 
There are but two Catholics in 
the grand panel. I am one of them, 
and was never even summoned 
to attend until I threatened to 
horsewhip the high sheriff. My 
colleague is what we call in this 
country a 'Cawtholic ' that is, one 
who invariably votes with the Or- 
ange party, and who would drink 
the great, glorious, pious, and im- 
mortal King William in preference 
to the health of Pius the Ninth." 

" You have done away with that 
absurd toast," said Mr. Hawthorne. 

" Not at all, sir; it is given at 
every dinner-party in the country, 
and it was once given in this very 
room." 

" In this room ? Why, I thought 



you Ormondes were always out-and- 
out papists." 

" And so we have been, and so 
we are. I'll tell you how it hap- 
pened. My father God be merci- 
ful to him ! was always noted for 
his hospitality, and one evening, 
after a hard run with the Boherna- 
breena hounds, he invited the hunt, 
at least as many as were in at the 
death, home to dinner, sending a 
boy across the bog with the news 
to my mother." 

'" I haven't much to offer you to 
eat, gentlemen,' he said, ' but 
we'll make it up in the liquor.' 

k ' About twenty gentlemen rode 
over here, and, after having dined 
in a scratch sort of way, they 
plunged on the claret this iden- 
tical wine." 

" It is too good for fox-hunters," 
observed my guest. " Such liquid 
nectar is for brain-workers like me." 

" After a very joyous carouse 
one of the party, called 'Orange 
Dick,' a Mr. Templeton, of Ash- 
brooke Hall, about ten miles from 
this, a deputy lieutenant and J.P., 
stood up and asked permission to 
propose a toast. The permission 
was freely accorded by my father, 
and full bumpers were called for. 
When the glasses were all filled and 
the company on their feet, Mr. 
Templeton gave the memory of the 
great, glorious, pious, and immortal 
King William, which was received 
with three times three, my father, 
to the astonishment of one or two, 
joining in. 

" ' Now, gentlemen, 'said my father, 
'I drank your toast; you'll drink 
mine. Fill your glasses.' 

" They required but little induce- 
ment to do as he bade, and in an 
instant were in readiness. 

" ' To your feet, gentlemen.' 

' This order having been com- 
plied with for it was given as such, 



682 



The Hvnic-Rnle Candidate. 



and not as a request my father 
shouted in a voice of thunder : 

" ' Here's to the sorrel nag that 
broke King William's neck.'" 

Mr. Hawthorne was about to 
enter into the question of the 
Hanoverian succession, and had 
already briefly sketched the career 
of the Prince of Orange, when 
Peter entered, and, approaching me 
as though he were treading upon 
eggs, whispered in a voice which 
betrayed a vigorous razzia upon 
the decanter, and sufficiently loud 
to make itself distinctly overheard : 

" The sooner the punch is riz 
the betther, sir; the kittle's gettin' 
cowld an' the mould fours is run- 
nin' low." 

Inwardly cursing the fellow's 
garrulity, I proposed to my guest 
that we should join the ladies. 

" Begorra, yez may save your- 
selves the thrubble, gintlemin, for 
it's in their beds th' are "; here he 
lowered his voice into a whisper 
solely addressed to my ear: "The 
young leddy axed me confidintial : 
' When will he be comin' to the 
dhrawin'-room ?' sez she. 

" ' Not till he's had his five,' sez I. 

"'What five?' sez she. 

"'Tumblers av punch, miss!' 
sez I. " An' didn't I do well, Mas- 



ther Fred, for to keep up the credit 
av' the family ?" 

My hands clenched involuntarily, 
preparatory to making themselves 
acquainted with the body of my 
blundering retainer, when Mr. 
Hawthorne, upon whom the fatigue 
of the journey, and perhaps his Par- 
liamentary reminiscences, had pro- 
duced a somniferous effect, sug- 
gested following the good example 
of the ladies a proposition which I 
joyfully acceded to. I assisted 
him to his bed-chamber, where, after 
listening to a very lengthened and 
no doubt excessively profound dis- 
quisition upon a proposed amend- 
ment in the Irish Poor .Law Act, 
I left him to " nature's sweet re- 
storer," and, gruffly refusing to par- 
take of a night-cap with Harry 
Welstone, lighted a cigar and went 
out into the night. 

What a revolution had taken 
place in my existence within a few 
hours ! Behind yonder lighted 
casement a young girl was prepar- 
ing for rest, the very thoughts of 
whom, but a short while back, were 
a source of mortification and cha- 
grin, and now love and light and 
joy beckoned me towards her* 
drawing me to her by a chain of 
roses. 



TO PE CONTINUED. 



A Child- Beggar. 683 



A CHILD-BEGGAR. 

Soul, from thy casement look, and thou shall see 
How he persists to knock and wait for thee ! 

LOPE DE VEGA, Longfellow" 1 $ Translation. 

THERE knocketh at thy door to-night 

A tender little hand. 
Without the portal, waiting thee, 

Two feet, way-weary, stand. 
So oft to-night that hand hath knocked, 

So often been denied ; 

wavering soul ! ope thou thy house, 
Bid this child-beggar bide. 

Without the bitter moonlight casts 

Cold glitter on the snow ; 
With icy fingers 'mid the boughs 

The wind wakes sounds of woe ; 
Unclouded is the light of stars 

Filling the frosty blue ; 
Yet, heedless of the winter chill, 

A childish voice doth sue : 

" Open, dear love, and let me in, 

The. world without is cold ; 
In the warm shelter of thy heart 

I pray thee me enfold. 
Weary I wander forth to-night, 

I knock at many a door, 

1 call, but seems my voice too weak 

To rise the bleak wind o'er. 

" A little exile here I stand, 

Begging an easy grace 
Beside thy hearth this- biting night 

A little resting-place." 
O patient voice ! O weary feet ! 

O soul ! be thou beguiled, 
Thy bolts undo, thy bars let fly, 
Keep Love no more exiled. 
\ 

'Tis Love that knocks and begs for love 

In that soft, childish tone, 
Who pleads a beggar at thy gate, 

Whose right is -thy heart's throne. 



A Child-Beggar. 

Open, dear heart, and do not fear; 

With him can enter in 
Not any ill nay, from his hand 

Thou shalt all blessing win. 

Though heaped thy house with treasure rare 

Ah ! do not Love deny ; 
He may not seek thee any more, 

Scorning to-night his cry. 
And do not fear that thou shalt find 

A little rosy elf 
With laughing eyes that look through tears 

That pity but himself. 

No fretful, pouting lips are his 

Who waiteth at thy gate ; 
No querulous tone shall dim his voice 

Who knocks so long and late ; 
His are no folded rainbow wings 

Wherewith he may ensure 
His safe retreat when his weak faith 

No longer shall endure. 

He bears no burden of barbed shafts ; 

A cross his quiver is, 
And of a crown of thorns his brow 

Beareth the cruelties ; 
His feet are pierced with wounds whose stain 

Lies on the moonlit snow, 
And in his tender baby hands 

Twin blood-red roses blow. 

Beneath the cross and crowning thorn 

Infinite peace doth shine. 
Ah ! open quick. O doubting heart ! 

Let in this Love Divine. 
Have thou no fear of heavy cross 

His shoulders bear its weight; 
The thorny wreath with sharp, strong touch 

Shall joy undreamed create. 

These infant lips shall bless thy tears, 

This tender voice give peace ; 
The hand that begs thy grace to-night 

Shall sign thy woe's release. 
He asks so little, gives so much, 

And sigheth to give more 
Who, patient in the wintry world, 

Stands knocking at thy door. 



TJie hies of Lerins. 



68; 



Hasten, my soul, let Him not wait ; 

Fling thy heart's portal wide; 
Bid thou this weary little Child 

Fore'er with thee abide. 
Kneel thou a beggar at his feet 

Who begs to-night of thee ; 
No alteration knows this Love 

Born of eternity. 



THE ISLES' OF LERINS. 



There like a jewel in the Midland Sea 
Far off discerned, the isle of Lerins hangs 
Upon the coast of Provence, no fit haunt, 
As from its beauty might at first appear, 
For summer revel or a moonlit masque, 
But where in studious cloister Vincent lived 
And taught, and, in the simple panoply 
Of Catholic tradition armed, struck down 
The heretics. 

FABER. 



THE town of Cannes, to which so 
many English and Americans resort 
on account of its delicious climate, 
its healing air, and the lovely shores 
where grow the olive and the vine, 
lias, too, its balmy atmosphere for 
the soul. All the " neighboring 
heights are clothed with the mystic 
lore of mediaeval saint and chapel, 
the waves of the azure sea still 
seen? to move to the holy impulses 
that once sxvept the air, and across 
the beautiful bay are two fair isles at 
the entrance St. Marguerite, asso- 
ciated in most persons' minds with 
the prison in which was confined 
the mysterious Man of the Iron 
Mask, but once was more happily 
peopled with 

" Virgins good 
Who gave their days to heaven " ; 

and St. Honorat, the Happy Isle 
(hcata ilia insula), as it was once 
railed, famous for its ancient monas- 
tery, that played so glorious a role 
in ihe religious history of Gaul. 



These are the isles of Lerins, two 
gems of that collar of pearls thrown 
by God around the Mediterranean 
Sea, to quote St. Ambrose, where 
once those who would escape from 
the perilous charms of the world 
found refuge. 

The island of St. Honorat is now 
occupied by the Cistercians, and 
early one morning, soon after our 
arrival at Cannes, we went in search 
of. the boat they send to the main- 
land every day for their necessary 
supplies. We were so fortunate as 
to find on board a young monk of 
great intelligence, who was well 
versed in all the traditions of Lerins 
and the surrounding region. He 
kindly volunteered to become our 
guide, and proved an invaluable one. 
The islands are between two and 
three miles distant, and we were 
about an hour in crossing. A sail 
on those blue waters, in sight of 
their shores of radiant beauty, is 
always a delight, but especially so 
on a lovely day such as we had 



686 



TJte hies of Li! r ins. 



chosen, in the middle of October, 
with just air enough and what 
soft air it was! to ripple the sea 
and make it give out a thousand 
flashes from the tiny waves. We 
first came to St. Marguerite, which 
is the largest of the islands. It is 
seven kilometres in circumference, 
oval in shape, and almost entirely 
covered with maritime pines. It 
looks indeed like a gem, this eme- 
rald isle rising out of the sea of 
dazzling gold. It is said to have 
once borne the name of Lero, from 
some person of ancient times whose 
prowess excited the admiration of 
his contemporaries, and the sister 
isle took the diminutive of this 
name Lerina. St. Honorat is said 
to have overthrown the temple of 
the deified Lero, and perhaps built 
the church early -erected here in 
honor of the illustrious virgin 
martyr of Antioch. An old legend 
says when he retired to the neigh- 
boring isle his sister Margaret 
came here to live, and gathered 
around her a. community of pious 
maidens, to whom the sea, as it 
were, offered its mystic veil. As 
Lerina was interdicted to women, 
she begged St. Honorat to visit her 
frequently, and complained that her 
wish was so seldom gratified. On 
the other hand, the saint feared 
that he held converse with his sister 
too often, and thought such visits 
disturbed his recollection in prayer. 
At length he told her he should re- 
strict his visits to a periodical one, 
and selected the time when the 
cherry-trees should be in bloom 
meaning, of course, once a year. 
Margaret wept and entreated, but 
nothing could change his resolution. 
Then she declared God would be 
less inflexible, and, in answer to the 
prayers she addressed to him, a 
cherry-tree planted on the shore 
put forth its snowy blossoms every 



month. Honorat no longer felt 
disposed to resist, and whenever he 
snw their white banner on St. Mar- 
guerite's Isle he crossed the water, 
which became solid under his feet. 

This island is also said to have 
afforded a secret asylum to the 
monks called to the contemplative 
life, or who wished to pass some 
time in utter solitude. Little is 
known of these lofty contemplatives, 
but it is believed that it was here 
St. Vincent of Lerins wrote his im- 
mortal work, the Commonitorium. 
St. Eucher also dwelt here for a 
time, and here received letters from 
St. Paulinus of Nola, who, like him, 
had abandoned the world. 

It is melancholy that an isle, 
once consecrated to virginal purity 
and holy contemplation, should Ire- 
come a place of expiation for crimi- 
nals, and that the most noted of its 
prisoners should almost efface the 
memory of St. Vincent and St. 
Margaret. 

St. Honorat is justbeyond the isl- 
and of St. Marguerite. It is a low, 
flat island, also oval in form, only 
about a mile in length, and three 
kilometres in circumference. 

" Parva, sed felix mentis Lerina, 
Quam Paraclito, Genito, Patrique 
Rite quingenti roseo dicarunt . 

Sanguine testes " 

Lerins is small in extent, but il- 
lustrious by its glory ; five hundred 
martyrs have worthily consecrated 
it to the Father, the Son, and the 
Holy Ghost by shedding their no- 
ble blood, says Gregorius Cortesi- 
us. Along the edge is a line of 
low, craggy rocks, called monks or 
brothers, which protect the shore 
from the encroachment of the waves. 
At the east are some little islets, 
the largest of which bears the name 
of St. Fereol, who, according to 
tradition, was here martyred by the 
Saracens and received burial. 



The hies of Lt'rins. 



687 



The numerous trees that former- 
ly grew on St. Honorat gave it the 
poetic title of the aigrette de la mer, 
but they are all gone except a few 
olives in the centre, and a girdle of 
pines along the shore which protect 
the interior from the winds inju- 
rious to vegetation, and serve as an 
agreeable promenade. But no, 
there is one more tree it is rather 
a monument the ancient palm of 
St. Honorat, which stands before 
the door of the conventual church. 
" Honor thy paternal aunt, the 
palm-tree," says the prophet of Is- 
lam, " for she was* created in Para- 
dise and of the same earth from 
which Adam was made !" Let us 
especially honor this legendary 
palm ; for if we understood, as the 
rabbis say Abraham did, the lan- 
guage of its leaves, that never cease 
their mysterious murmuring, even 
on a windless day, what a page in 
the history of the church we should 
learn ! 

A legend tells us that the island 
in ancient times was infested with 
venomous serpents, .of which a 
frightful picture was drawn by the in- 
habitants of the mainland to retain 
St. Honorat at Cap Roux, whither 
he at first went on retiring from the 
world. When the saint arrived at 
Lerina, and beheld their number 
and size, he prostrated himself on 
the ground and cried to the Lord 
to exterminate them, and they all 
died at once. Their bodies infect- 
ing the air, the saint climbed a palm- 
tree and prayed to Him who had 
led him into this solitude, and the 
waves of the sea immediately rose 
and swept over the isle, carrying 
off the serpents that covered it. 

This miracle of the palm, as it is 
called, is attested by St. Hilaire, 
who passed several years as a monk 
at Lerins, and speaks of the num- 
bers of serpents that still .infested 



the neighboring shores. At all 
events, this isle, like Ireland, is free 
from them to this day, though they 
are to be found on St. Marguerite, 
which is not saying much for the 
gallantry of St. Honorat. This 
palm-tree has always been regard- 
ed with great veneration, and the 
legend was represented on the 
old shrine of St. Honorat the saint 
in the palm-tree, and the waves 
sweeping the serpents into the sea. 
And on the arms of Lerins the ab- 
batial crosier is placed between two 
palms. 

Under the care of St. Honorat 
and his disciples the aspect of the 
island was before long so changed 
that St. Eucher, one. of the first to 
inhabit it, says: "Watered by 
gushing fountains, rich with ver- 
dure, brilliant with flowers, odorous 
with sweet perfumes, and with de- 
lightful views on every side, it 
seems to those who inhabit it the 
very image of heaven toward which 
tend all their desires." And Isi- 
dore, the monk, speaking of its 
eternal verdure, exclaims: " Pnl- 
chriorin to to non est locus or be Lerina ' 
No, the universe presents not a 
more beautiful spot than Lerins. 

But it appears that the holy 
cenobites suffered greatly at first 
from the want of pure water," and 
at length they came one day and 
prostrated themselves at St. Hono- 
rat's feet, beseeching him to ob- 
tain by his prayers what nature had 
refused to the island. " Go, breth- 
ren," he replied, "and dig perse- 
veringly in the centre of the isle 
between the two palms. [It ap- 
pears there were two then, as on 
the arms.] God, who has created 
the living springs of the earth, is 
sufficiently powerful to grant what 
you ask with faith." The monks 
set to work with ardor, and dug till 
they came to a solid rock, without 



688 



The Isles of Lc'rins. 



finding water or the least sign of 
humidity. Discouraged, they re- 
turned to St. Honorat, who order- 
ed them to attack the live rock and 
confide in the Lord. They return- 
ed obediently to the task, and suc- 
ceeded in excavating a few feet 
deeper, but still without any re- 
sult, and they finally requested 
permission to try another spot ; but 
St. Honorat went with unshaken 
faith to the place and descended 
into the pit. After praying to the 
Lord he smote the rock thrice in 
the name of the Holy Trinity, and 
an abundant stream gushed forth. 
Such is the tradition of Lerins, 
founded on the testimony of SS. 
Eucher and Hilaire, who both lived 
with St. Honorat. St. Eucher says 
the waters rose to the surface and 
spread over the land around. 
There is nothing miraculous in the 
present appearance of the well, but 
an old farmer of this region, who 
has been down several times to 
clean it out, says the water issues 
from four different points, as from 
the extremities of a cross. It is 
now covered with a little rotunda, 
and over the entrance is an inscrip- 
tion in Latin to this purpose : 

" The leader of the hosts of Is- 
rael made sweet the bitter waters ; 
his rod brought forth a stream from 
the rock. Behold here the foun- 
tain that sprang up from the hard 
rock, the sweet water that welled 
from the bosom of the sea. Hono- 
rat smote the rock, and abundant 
waters gushed forth, thus renew- 
ing at once the prodigies Moses 
wrought with the tree and the 
rod." 

Everywhere on the island are 
debris of all kinds hewn stones, 
old cement, bricks of Roman type, 
fragments of inscriptions, etc. The 
soil is red and stony. The centre 
is partly cultivated, and bears a 



few grapes, olives, and vegetables. 
The Cistercians, who have been 
here eight years, have built a new 
convent near one end, which in- 
cludes part of the old abbey and 
St. Honorat's palm. This is en- 
closed by a high wall, as if they 
were not girt about by the great 
deep, and beyond this wall no wo- 
man is permitted to go. Even the 
Duchess of Vallombrosa, the great 
benefactress of the house, has been 
allowed to enter but once, and 
then as part of a suite of a prin- 
cess to whom the pope had given a 
special permission. But there arc- 
some low buildings without the 
walls where pilgrims can f find shel- 
ter, even those of the obnoxious 
sex, and be provided with refresh- 
ments. There are about fifty 
monks in the community, one of 
them a novice of sixteen, who look- 
ed like an anachronism in his Cis- 
tercian robes. Near the monastery 
is an orphan asylum containing 
about thirty boys under the care of 
Brother Boniface. They are taught 
trades, and for this purpose there 
are joiner's shops, a printing estab- 
lishment, etc., on the island. 

While the monks were attending 
some rite we made the entire cir- 
cuit of the island, following the 
path among the odorous pines on 
the shore, calm, peaceful, and em- 
bowered as the arcades of a clois- 
ter. These tall pines are aslant, as 
if bent by the winds, and the foli- 
age, high up in the air, shelters 
from the sun, without excluding 
the sea breeze or obstructing the 
view. Everywhere was the flash 
of the waves, and the mysterious 
sound of the waters that gently 
broke upon the shore of this hap- 
py isle, mingled, as in the olden 
time, with the solemn measure of 
holy psalmody. It was delightful 
to wander in this lone aisle of na- 



The Isles of Ltrins. 



689 



ture, and drink in the beauty of sea 
and land, and give one's self up to 
the memories that embalm the 
place. 

It was early in the fifth century 
when St. Honorat established him- 
self here. He belonged to a patri- 
cian race, and his father, to divert 
his mind from religious things, sent 
him at an early age to the East with 
his brother Venance, who was of 
a livelier turn. Venance, however, 
soon yielded to Honorat's moral 
ascendency, but died at Messenia, 
and the latter returned sorrowfully 
to Gaul with St. Caprais, his spi- 
ritual guide, who had accompanied 
them. For some time he lived as 
a hermit in a cave at Cap Roux. 
Then he came to Lerins, where 
numerous disciples gathered around 
him who are now numbered among 
the most eminent churchmen of 
Gaul. Maxime, Bishop of Riez, 
Hilary of Aries, Jacques of Taren- 
taise, Vincent of Saintes, Fauste of 
Riez, Ausile of Frejus, were all 
formed in his school of Christian 
philosophy. St. Eucher, whom Bos- 
suet calls " the great Eucher," here 
forgot his noble birth and attained 
the sanctity which raised him to 
the see of Lyons. Salvian, sur- 
named " the Master of Bishops," 
and styled " the Jeremias of his 
age," on account of his lamenta- 
tions over the woes and corruptions 
of the world, here wrote his trea- 
tise on the government of God. 
Cassian, after long journeys and 
great sorrows, spent a year at Le- 
rins before he founded the abbey 
of St. Victor at Marseilles. St. 
Patrick, according to the tradition 
of the island, passed long years 
here in prayer and frightful auste- 
rities. St. Vincent of Lerins here 
wrote those works which have made 
him an authority in the church. 
St. Ca2sarius also, who became one 
VOL. xxvi. 44 



of the most influential bishops of 
southern Gaul, and St. Loup of 
Troyes, who inspired so much de- 
ference in Attila, the Scourge of 
God, were among the first disciples 
of St. Honorat, and many more, 
some of whom have left no name 
on earth, but whose names are 
written in the Lamb's Book of Life. 
" How many assemblies of saints 
have I seen in this isle!" cries St. 
Eucher " precious vases, which 
spread abroad the sweet perfume 
of their virtues." And St. Sido- 
nius Apollinaris, with a bolder 
figure, says : 

" Quanto ilia insula plana 
Miserit ad coelum monies !" 

How many lofty mountains rise 
toward heaven from this low isle ! 
And St. Cresarius of Aries : " Happy, 
blessed isle of Lerins, thou art 
small and level, but from thee have 
risen innumerable mountains !" 
Over forty saints are mentioned by 
name in the Litany of Lerins, be- 
sides the hundreds of martyrs who 
are invoked. 

Salvian thus alludes to the pa- 
ternal rule of St. Honorat : " As- 
the sun changes the aspect of the 
firmament by its splendor or ob- 
scurity, so joy and sadness are dif- 
fused among those who, under his. 
paternal guidance, aim at heaven 
and devote themselves to the an- 
gelic functions. If Honorat suffers, 
all suffer; restored to health, all 
return to new life." 

Lerins became so renowned as a 
school of theology that, in the sev- 
enth century, there were three thou- 
sand and seven hundred monks, 
and the Christian world sent here 
to obtain its bishops and the di- 
rectors for its monasteries. It was 
in this century that St. Aygtilph 
established here the rule of St. 
Benedict. In the eighth century, 



690 



The Isles of Lcrins. 



when the Saracens invaded the isl- 
and, more than five hundred monks 
fell victims to their hatred of Chris- 
tianity. Eleuthere, by the aid of 
King Pepin, restored the ruined 
buildings, but the enemy returned 
again, committing fresh ravages, 
and, indeed, devastating the island. 
These attacks at length became so 
frequent that the pope granted in- 
dulgences to all who would aid in 
defending it against the infidel. 
Whosoever devoted himself to this 
.good work for the space of three 
.months acquired the same indul- 
gences as a pilgrim to the Holy 
Places at ' Jerusalem, and minor 
ones were accorded to those who 
-sent substitutes. In 1088 was erect- 
,ed the lofty citadel, which is still 
the most prominent object on the 
island, as a retreat for the monks 
in time of danger. It was con- 
.nected with the abbey by a subter- 
ranean passage. This is now a 
picturesque ruin. It is on the eas- 
.tern shore of the island, and rises 
directly out of the water. The 
massive walls of hewn stone have 
acquired a soft, mellow tint that 
.contrasts admirably with the sky 
and sea. They are scarred with 
many a cannon-ball that tells of 
more than one rude assault. 

Here and there are narrow loop- 
holes, and high up in the air is a 
line of battlements that still seem 
to defy both the sea and the Moor. 
There was formerly a drawbridge, 
and nothing was lacking necessary 
to sustain a siege. This strong- 
hold formed part of a line of signals 
along the sea-coast. It was four or 
five stories high, and contained four 
kitchens, several chapels, thirty-six 
cells for the monks and five for 
strangers, with cisterns, and every- 
thing to render it a complete mon- 
astery as well as castle. The Pere 
Antonin was our guide around this 



interesting ruin. It is entered by a 
spiral staircase, which brought us 
into a small court or cloister with 
several galleries around it, one 
above the other, communicating 
with the different stories, sustained 
by pillars of marble, porphyry, and 
granite. Old fragments of carved 
capitals, and inscriptions, some Ro- 
man, some Christian, were scatter- 
ed here and there. In the centre 
is an immense cistern, paved with 
marble, which contains a never-fail- 
ing supply of water. This was 
constructed by Gastolius de Grasse, 
who, having lost his wife and chil- 
dren, retired to the island to con- 
sole himself with the thought of 
heaven and eternal reunion, devot- 
ing his whole fortune to the poor 
and the improvement of the monas- 
tery. The old chapter-room is ut- 
terly ruined. Its arches were blown 
up by some Scotchman in his at- 
tempts to find the supposed trea- 
sure of St. Honorat, and the rank 
grass is growing from the accumu- 
lated soil. There is the old refec- 
tory with its crumbling pulpit, and, 
in the next room, the lavatory of 
calcareous stone, like an ancient 
sarcophagus, where the monks 
washed their hands before entering 
the refectory. On it is graven in 
Latin: "O Christ! by thy right 
hand, which can cleanse us within 
and without, purify our souls, which 
this water cannot cleanse." Then 
there is the chapel which once con- 
tained the relics of SS. Honorat,* 
Caprais, Venance, Aygulph, etc., 
and the three sacred altars to which 
indulgences were attached at the 
request of the Emperor Charles V. 
The chapel of Notre Dame de Pi- 
tie, or of the dead, was used for do- 
mestic purposes by some layman 
who held the island after the Revo- 



* The remains of St. Honorat are now in a church 
at Cannes. 



The Isles of Ldrins. 



691 



lution, and the place where once 
rose the solemn requiem and the 
odor of incense was now filled with 
the fumes of a kitchen. We went 
up, still by the spiral staircase, to 
the battlements. Here we looked 
down on the whole island. Before 
us was stretched the neighboring 
shore with fair towns and villages 
from Cannes to Nice, with the pur- 
ple mountains in the background. 
On the other hand, in the distance, 
rose the mountains of Corsica. 
And all around was the sea that 
bathes the shores of so many storied 
lands. 

With increased means of defence 
the prosperity of the abbey revived. 
It had the exclusive right, confer- 
red by the counts of Provence, of 
fishing in the surrounding waters. 
It owned numerous priories all 
along the coast from Genoa to Bar- 
celona, as well as in the interior. 
And it continued to be a centre 
from which radiated light, and 
many a person escaped from the 
Mare Magnum of the profane world 
to this haven of spiritual rest. We 
read that Bertrand, Bishop of Fre- 
jus in the eleventh century, retired 
to St. Honorat (as the bishop of 
Valence has recently done) and 
died here in the odor of sanctity. 
For those who wished to lead the 
eremitical life there were formerly 
many cells around the island. How 
dear this holy retreat was to its in- 
mates may be seen by a letter 
from Denis Faucher, whose duties 
retained him from the isle, to his 
superior : " My thoughts turn eager- 
ly towards Lerins. Sad, I bewail 
my long exile. In spite of my oft- 
renewed entreaties, you defer my 
deliverance. A cruel grief tor- 
ments my desolate soul. I love 
not these magnificent palaces. Let 
kings inhabit them. For them, 
they gleain with marble ; for me, 



the desert and the lonely shore. 
That little isle suffices for my hap- 
piness." 

Around the island were seven 
small chapels, or oratories, mostly 
on the shore, to which, like the 
seven stations at Rome, great in- 
dulgences were attached. These 
were successively visited by the pil- 
grims as a preparation for receiving 
the Holy Eucharist. 

The tombs of the saints, the holy 
chapels, the soil impregnated with 
the blood of the martyrs, and the 
wondrous history of the island, gave 
it a glorious prestige that made it 
not only a resort for pilgrims, but 
even the dead were brought across 
the waters, with crucifix and lan- 
terns held aloft in the boats, and 
chants mingling with the sad mur- 
mur of the waves, to be laid in this 
consecrated isle. Many remains of 
their marble tombs are still to be 
found. 

We, too, made the stations of 
the seven holy chapels, though 
they are mostly in ruins. That of 
the Holy Trinity, in the eastern 
part of the island, is the most an- 
cient. Its walls of massive stones 
are still erect. It is a Romanesque 
chapel, with three bays, the remains 
of an ancient porch, and vaults 
beneath for recluses or the dead. 
But the windows are gone, and 
rank weeds grow in the interior. 

Only a few traces remain of St. 
Cyprian's chapel ; not St. Cyprian 
who shed his blood at Carthage, 
but St. Cyprian of Lerins, surnamed 
the Magician, who is honored 
September 26. 

Further on, among the rocks on 
the shore, is the legendary cave 
known as the Baonmo de tAbbat, 
only accessible by going down into 
the water and wading through a 
narrow crevice between two tall 
rocks. It was here, when St. For- 



692 



The Islfs of Lt'rins. 



caire and his five hundred compan- 
ions were martyred by the Sara- 
cens, that two of the monks, Co- 
lomb and Eleuthere, fled in terror 
to conceal themselves. But they 
could still hear the vociferations 
of the infidel, and, their eyes being 
opened, could see the souls of their 
brethren ascending to heaven, con- 
ducted by the angels. Ravished 
by this spectacle, Colomb cried out 
with holy enthusiasm : " Let us go 
forth to be crowned like them. 
Let us fly to the Lord !" Eleu- 
there still shrank with fear, but 
Colomb went boldly out to share 
the glory* of his brethren. Eleu- 
there afterwards gathered together 
the monks who had escaped, and 
became abbot of Lerins. Hence 
the name of the Abbot's Cave, 
given to the place of his conceal- 
ment. 

Nearly opposite, in the centre of 
the island, is the octagon chapel 
of the Transfiguration, or St. Sau- 
veur, with a star-shaped vault. It 
is twenty feet in diameter and 
twelve high. It has been rudely 
restored by the bishop of Frejus, 
and has an ancient stone altar 
pierced with holes, as if for the 
passage of liquids. Some consider 
this chapel the ancient baptistery. 
The sailors call a neighboring inlet 
the Caranquo d Sant Saonvadou, or 
Crique de St. Sauveur. 

Several of these chapels were 
used in the construction of bat- 
teries by the Spaniards in the seven- 
teenth century, as that of St. Pierre 
on the southern shore, near the 
remains of which is an old votive 
altar to Neptune with the inscrip- 
tion : Neptvno Veratia Montana. 

The walls of St. Caprais are 
partly standing. This saint is still 
invoked in our day for rheumatism. 
A t portion of his relics, hidden at 
the .Revolution, is religiously pre- 



served at Charteves, in the dio- 
cese of Soissons, and is the object 
of pilgrimages on the 2oth of 
October. " Qi/a: saucta Caprasi 
rita scnis /" says St. Sidonius Apol- 
linaris What an admirable life is 
that of the aged Caprais ! 

The chapel of St. Porcaire and 
the Five Hundred Martyrs, on the 
place where they were buried, has 
recently been repaired, and Father 
Boniface says Mass there every 
morning. Over the altar is a paint- 
ing of St. Porcaire pointing to hea- 
ven and encouraging his brethren. 
The seventh chapel, St. Michael's, 
is within the walls of the Cistercian 
convent. 

The isles of Lerins have been a 
place of pilgrimage for more than 
a thousand years. They were al- 
ready frequented when Pope Euge- 
nius II. came here early in the 
ninth century to venerate the traces 
of the saints and martyrs. When 
he landed on the shore of St. 
Honorat, he put off his shoes and 
made the tour of the island in his 
bare feet. He consecrated the 
church, blessed the whole isle, and 
granted those who visited it with 
the proper dispositions between 
the eve of the Ascension and Whit 
Monday all the indulgences to be 
gained by a pilgrimage to Jerusa- 
lem, as well as smaller ones to 
those who came here at other sea- 
sons, with the exception of those 
.who had been guilty of striking 
their parents or violating their mar- 
riage vows. In accordance with 
his wish, all who had gained the 
indulgence used to receive a palm 
in testimony thereof. These pil- 
grimages were called, in the lan- 
guage of the country, Romipeta. 
All the towns on the neighboring 
coast were numerously represented 
here at the Grand Pardon. Twen- 
ty-seven nobles are mentioned as 



The Isles of Lc'rins. 



693 



coming once from Aries. Pilgrims 
even came from Italy. The old 
records tell how fifty-three came 
from Pisa to offer thanks for their 
miraculous escape after being taken 
by the corsairs. But the annual 
pilgrimage from Rians was the 
most famous, and has been cele- 
brated in a quaint old Provencal 
ballad that is delightfully redolent 
of the age. It consisted of the 
greater part of the villagers, and 
to sanctify the journey, they used to 
halt at all the places of devotion 
along the road. Every one of 
these places had its holy legend 
that, like a fragrant flower, embalm- 
ed the way. At Cotignac they 
paused to drink at the miraculous 
fountain of St. Joseph 

Voou ana boiro \ la sour9O 
Doou benhurux Sant Jaous^ 

which, say the people, sprang up to 
quench the extreme thirst of a poor 
simple country laborer, named 
Caspar, to whom the compassion- 
ate St. Joseph appeared under the 
form of an aged man, and pointed 
out the spot where water could be 
found a spot since widely known 
as a place of miraculous cures and 
abundant spiritual favors. 

Then the pilgrims ascended the 
hill of Verdala, near Cotignac, to 
pray at the altar of Nouastro Damo 
de Graci. This is quite a noted 
chapel. It was visited in 1600 by 
Louis'XIV. and his mother, Anne 
of Austria, for whom a new road 
was expressly constructed, still 
known as the Chemin de Louis Quar- 
to rze. He hung his cordon bleu on 
the Virgin's breast, and Anne of 
Austria founded six Masses in the 
chapel. The king afterwards sent 
here copies of his marriage con- 
tract and the treaty of the Pyre- 
nees in a magnificently-bound vol- 
ume, by way of placing these im- 



portant transactions under the pro- 
tection of our great Lady ; and 
when his mother died he founded 
Masses here for her soul, and set 
up a marble tablet with a comme- 
morative inscription. Pope Leo X. 
conferred indulgences on this cha- 
pel. 

At the village of Arcs, or near it, 
the pilgrims turned aside to vene- 
rate the remains of the beautiful 
St. Rossoline, who sprang from the 
barons of Villeneuve and Sabran. 
Her cradle in infancy was surround- 
ed by a supernatural light. The 
miracle of the roses was renewed 
in her favor to avert the anger of 
her father, who was weary of the 
importunity of beggars at his castle. 
At the age of seventeen she buried 
her youth and beauty in the Char- 
treuse of Celle Roubaud, and was 
consecrated deaconess by the bish- 
op of Frejus in 1288, which gave 
her, by an exceptional privilege to 
the nuns of this house, the right 
of reading the Gospel in church. 
Hence she is represented in art, 
not only with the crown of roses 
wherewith she was crowned on the 
day of her sacred espousals, but 
wearing a stole. She spent the re- 
mainder of her life in transcribing 
the sacred books, in order, as she 
said, to be always holding in- 
tercourse with God, and, as she 
could not preach in public, aid in 
propagating the Gospel. She held 
the office of prioress for a time, 
but, at her own request, ended her 
days as a recluse. While she was 
breathing her last St. Hugh of Lin- 
coln and St. Hugo of Grenoble ap- 
peared and incensed her cell, and 
she died with Deo gratias on her 
lips. 

An old ballad tells how, after her 
death, St. Rossoline delivered her 
brother, Helion de Villeneuve, a 
crusader, who had been taken pri- 



6 9 4 



The Isles of Lerins. 



soner by the Saracens. She ap- 
peared to him in his dungeon, loosed 
his heavy chains, opened the doors, 
and conducted him to the sea- 
coast, where, spreading her veil on 
the waters, they both placed them- 
selves thereon, and so came safely 
to Provence. Helion now happen- 
ed to fall asleep, and when he 
awoke his sister was missing. He 
thought she had gone home to an- 
nounce his arrival, but, when he 
came to the manor-house, learned 
she had for some time been dead. 
Her tomb became noted in Pro- 
vence, and was one of the stations 
where pilgrims loved to pay their 
vows. 

Our villagers next came to Fre- 
jus to see the image of the Holy 
Child Jesus venerated in the ca- 
thedral. At Esterel the prior gave 
them refreshments under the great 
chestnut-trees near the inn. Cannes 
welcomed them with the ringing of 
bells, and went out to meet them 
in procession : 

" Canno, villo maritimo 
Remplido d^ zfelo e d'estimo 
Per leis pe"lerins de 1 Rians 
Seis campanos souanoun toutos 
Per faire la proucession." 

Then they came with 

41 Allfgresso 
Dins leis UPS dJ Ltrins? ' 

It seemed to them like entering 
Paradise. They went to shrift, 
visited the seven chapels, and final- 
ly came to the church of the glouri- 
ous Sant Hounourat, where they re- 
ceived the Holy Eucharist and 
their palms. Besides the latter, 
they also carried away, as the custom 
was, some sprigs of a marine plant 
still known as the herbo doou par 
doun the herb of the Pardon or 
Indulgence. This is the cineraire 
maritime, common on the shores of 
the isle, which has hoary, pinnatifid 



leaves and a flower that grows in 
panicles. 

On their way home the pilgrims 
went to pray at the tomb of Sant 
Armenian, a great miracle-worker 
at Draguignan, specially invoked 
for those who have lost their rea- 
son. But we shall speak of him 
further on. Arriving home, they 
were met by their fellow-townsmen 
and led in triumph to the church, 
when Benediction was given, thus 
ending the pilgrimage. 

The expense of the journey, or 
the gradual lukewarmness of the 
people, at length diminished the 
number from Rians, and finally the 
pilgrimage ceased altogether, till a 
failure of the crops induced the 
town to revive it partially by send- 
ing a yearly deputation as its re- 
presentative. 

There is a na'ive legend of one 
Boniface who lived at Oraison a 
simple, upright man whom lack of 
worldly wisdom had reduced to such 
want as to force him to become the 
swineherd of a wicked usurer, nam- 
ed Garinus, who was blind. For 
six successive years he had visited 
Lerins at the time of the Grand 
Pardon, and, when the seventh ar- 
rived, he humbly begged permis- 
sion of Garinus to go and gain the 
indulgence. Garinus refused, and, 
lest the swineherd should secretly 
join the other pilgrims, he carefully 
fastened him up. Boniface's grief 
increased as the feast of Pentecost 
drew near. The eve arrived, but 
he was prevented from keeping 
even a lonely vigil by an overpow- 
ering drowsiness. 

Suddenly the sound of music 
awoke him, and, opening his eyes, 
he found himself before the altar 
of the church of Lerins. When the 
stations were made and the divine 
offices were over, the monks, as 
usual, distributed the palms among 



TJie Isles of Ldrins. 



695 



the Roviina. Boniface also ap- 
proached with the others to receive 
his, and then retired to an obscure 
corner of the church, where he soon 
fell sound asleep. When he awoke 
he found himself once more in the 
prison where he had been confined 
by his master. The rest of the pil- 
grims from Oraison arrived three 
days after, and, not knowing the 
state of affairs, complimented the 
usurer on his kindness to his ser- 
vant. He denied having given 
Boniface permission to go, and 
summoned him to his presence. 
The swineherd related with great 
simplicity what had happened to 
him. Garinus was at once aston- 
ished and affected by the account, 
and besought Boniface to give him 
the palm he had brought from the 
holy isle. Taking it reverently 
in his hands, he applied it to his 
eyes, and at once not only recover- 
ed his sight, but the eyes .of his 
soul were likewise opened. 

But to return to the history of 
the island. The abbey was secu- 
larized in 1788 soinq say on ac- 
count of the luxuries and excesses 
of the monks. But the inventory 
shows how few luxuries they really 
had not more than the simplest 
villagers now possess. The monks 
withdrew to their families. Not 
one was left to guard the graves of 
the martyrs and continue the pray- 
ers of so many ages. The last pri- 
or of Lrins, Dom Theodule Bon, 
died at his sister's residence in 
Vallauris. The people of Cannes 
used to say of him : Moussu lou 
Priour es Bouan cti noum et dt fach 
M. le Prieur is good by name 
and good by nature. 

In 1791 the island was sold at 
public auction, and the purchaser's 
daughter, who had been an actress, 
came here to reside. O isle of 
saints ! ... In 1856 Mr. Sims, 



an Anglican minister, bought it. 
He showed some respect for the 
ancient monuments, and had begun 
to restore the citadel when he died. 
The bishop of Frejus bought it 
in 1859. Two bishops, several dig- 
nitaries of the church, and a num- 
ber of priests came over to take 
possession of the island. A great 
crowd awaited them. The clergy 
(those of Cannes bearing the relics 
of St. Honorat) advanced toward 
the old church, chanting the mourn- 
ful psalm, Deus, venerunt gentes, 
many verses of which were so par- 
ticularly applicable. The walls so 
long profaned were blessed, and 
the crowd prostrated themselves 
while the Litany of Lerins was sol- 
emnly sung. Some agricultural 
brothers of the Order of St. Francis 
were established here for a time. 
On the eve of the feast of St. Cap- 
rais (St. Honorat's spiritual guide) 
the bishop blessed the chapel of 
St. Porcaire and the Five Hundred 
Martyrs, which had been restored, 
and Mass was said amid the ruins 
of the old church of St. Honorat. 

There are several places of great 
interest on the mainland, associat- 
ed with the saints of Lerins, all of 
which we devoutly visited as a 
part of our pilgrimage. One is 
Cap Roux, at the western termina- 
tion of the Bay of Cannes, always 
dear to the monks of the isle on 
account of the baume, or cave, on 
the western side of the cliff, in- 
habited for some time by St. Ho- 
norat after his return from the 
East, and still called by his name. 
The ascent to this grotto is rather 
dangerous, and at the foot was 
once an oratory where pilgrims 
stopped to pray before undertaking 
the ascent. They used to cry : 
" Sancte Maguncti!" perhaps be- 
cause they associated the name of 



696 



TJw Isles of Ldrins. 



this saint of Lerins with the Pro- 
ven gal word m'aganti, as if they 
would say, Saint I-cling-to, as they 
seized hold of the sides of the 
cliff. 

Denis Faucher, the monk, graved 
an inscription in Latin verse over 
the entrance to the Baume de St. 
Honorat, which may thus be ren- 
dered : " Reader, in Honorat, our 
father, thou wilt find an example 
of lofty virtue and reason to ad- 
mire the wonderful gifts of God. 
Others visit the holy places and 
seek afar off the noble models they 
have not at home. The renown of 
Honorat renders sacred every place 
he approached, though now devoid 
of his presence. Behold this re- 
treat, once almost inaccessible to 
the wild beasts, now rendered so 
famous by the holy bishop as to 
attract innumerable visitors from 
every land." In the cave there 
lias been for centuries an altar for 
celebrating the Christian mysteries. 
At the left is a well that rarely 
fails, even in the greatest drought. 
At the right is a hollow in the 
rock like the impress of the human 
form, called by the people the 
Couche de St. Honorat. Over it is 
also an inscription by the same 
monk: "Illustrious pontiff, from 
the height of heaven reveal thy 
august presence to him who seeks 
thy traces upon earth." 

Another cave in the side of the 
mount near the sea was inhabited 
for a time by St. Eucher, to whom 
his wife, Galla, came to bring food 
while he gave himself up to con- 
templation. An angel revealed to 
the people of Lyons where he lived 
concealed, and they sent messen- 
gers to ask him to be their bishop. 

St. Arrnentaire, who was bishop 
of Embrtm in the middle of the 
fifth century, being deposed by the 
council of Riez, retired to Cap 



Roux. It was he who slew the 
dragon that infested the neighbor- 
hood of Draguignan. The fame of 
his sanctity led to his being chosen 
bishop of . Antibes, but his body 
was, after his death, brought back 
to Draguignan and placed in a 
church he himself had erected in 
honor of St. Peter. The concourse 
to his tomb was formerly very 
great, as we have seen in the case 
of the pilgrimage from Rians. 

There were hermits at Cap Roux 
as late as the eighteenth century, 
and pilgrims used to go there 
in procession, chanting the litany 
of Lerins, to implore the cessation 
of some scourge. Now f it is only 
visited from time to time by a soli- 
tary devotee, or some naturalist to 
study the flora and the formation 
of the rocks, who pauses awhile at 
the cave and drinks at the foun- 
tain. 

About a league west of Cannes, 
above Cap Roux, is Mt. Arluc, 
which rises out of the plain of La- 
val. It belongs to the tertiary for- 
mation, and looks so artificial that 
it has often been regarded as a 
tumulus made by the Romans, who, 
according to tradition, had an in- 
trenched camp here to protect the 
Aurelian road * that ran through 
the plain, as well as the galleys on 
the coast. After the submission 
of the province to the Roman do- 
mination a temple was built here 
in honor of Venus, who could not 
have desired a fairer shore, in sight 
of the very sea from which she 
sprang. Her altar was surrounded 
by trees to veil her unholy rites, 
and the mount took the name of 
Ara-luci altar of" the sacred wood 
whence the name of Arluc. This 
consecrated grove was cut down 
by St. Nazaire, abbot of Lerins, 

* Near Cap Roux is an inlet called Aurele from 
the old Roman road along the shore. 



The Isles of Lerins. 



697 



who knew the importance of de- 
stroying these high places of the 
Gentiles. To him, too, the waves 
beneath were always whispering of 
love, but not profane love. They 
spoke of "love eternal and illimi- 
table, not bounded by the confines 
of the world or by the end of time, 
but ranging beyond the sea, beyond 
the sky, to the invisible country far 
away." And he set up an altar to 
the Infinite One, and beside the 
church built a monastery, which he 
peopled with holy maidens under 
the direction of Helene, a princess 
of Riez. One of the first abbesses 
bore the name of Oratorie. It was 
to her St. Cesaire of Aries address- 
ed two of his essays : one on the 
qualities that should be possessed 
by those who have the direction of 
souls ; the other on the text, "O the 
depth of the riches both of the wis- 
dom and the knowledge of God !" 
About the year 677 St. Aygulph, 
abbot of Lerins, rebuilt or enlarged 
this monastery at the request of 
several noble ladies of the region, 
and, the house having perhaps been 
depopulated by the Saracens, a 
colony of nuns came here from 
Blois under the care of St. Anga- 
risma. When the holy abbot was 
martyred, Angarisma, learning the 
fate of her spiritual father, went 
with the sisterhood to venerate his 
remains. The monks who had es- 
caped described the sufferings and 
constancy of the martyrs, and show- 
ed their mangled remains. One of 
the nuns, named Glauconia, who 
was blind, applied the right arm of 
St. Aygulph to her eyes and at once 
recovered her sight. Whereupon 
the abbess begged for his body, but 
in vain. The arm which had re- 
stored Glaucoma's sight was given 
to her, however, and they carried it 
with them to Arluc. St. Aygulph is 
invoked in this region still, under 



the name of St. Ai'gou, for diseases 
of the eye, and a statue of him is 
to be seen at Chateauneuf in the 
chapel of Notre Darne de Brusc. 

The nuns of Arluc fled several 
times before the Saracens, but we 
read of the monastery in the tenth 
century, when St. Maxime, of the 
illustrious family of De Grasse, 
came here in search of Christian 
perfection. She was afterwards 
sent to found a house at Calliau, 
where part of her remains are still 
preserved. 

In the life of St. Honorat there is 
an interesting legend of one of the 
nuns of Arluc, named Cibeline, the 
daughter of Reybaud, a lord of 
Antibes. She had been married in 
early life, but lost her husband soon 
after, and was still renowned for 
her beauty when she became infect- 
ed with leprosy. St. Honorat ap- 
peared to Reybaud in a dream and 
said to him : " Give me thy daugh- 
ter as a bride." He had the same 
vision three times, which at last so 
impressed him that he took Cibe- 
line with him and went to Lerins 
to relate it to the holy abbot Por- 
caire. The latter at once compre- 
hended its spiritual significance 
and said to Cibeline : " Wilt thou, 
out of love to God and devotion to 
St. Honorat, lead henceforth a pure 
life and take the sacred veil in the 
monastery of Arluc?" Cibeline then 
confessed this had been the earliest 
desire of her heart, and that she re- 
garded her disease as the judgment 
of God for having violated the vow 
she had made in yielding to world- 
ly persuasions and wedding the 
husband she had lost. St. Porcaire 
then took pure water, in which he 
plunged holy relics, and ordered 
her to bathe therein. She was in- 
stantly cured of her leprosy, and 
her father led her to Arluc and 
consecrated her to God. 



6 9 8 



TJte Isles of Lfrins. 



Arluc probably took the name of 
St. Cassian, by which it is now 
more generally known, in the four- 
teenth century, when it fell under 
the jurisdiction of the abbey of St. 
Victor at Marseilles, which Cassian 
had founded. Nor is the name in- 
appropriate for this mount that 
stands in sight of the places ren- 
dered sacred by St. Honorat and St. 
Eucher, for whom Cassian had so 
great an admiration as to cry in 
one of his books on the ascetic 
life dedicated to them : " O holy 
brothers ! your virtues shine upon 
the world like great beacon-lights. 
Many saints will be formed by your 
example, but will scarcely be able 
to imitate your perfection." 

Cassian has been regarded as a 
saint in Provence, and the people 
of Cannes used to make a romerage, 
or pilgrimage, to the chapel that 
took his name at Arluc, on the 23d 
of July, the festival of St. Cassian. 

When the Revolution arrived the 
republicans wished to sell the 
mount, and two hundred soldiers 
were sent to strip the chapel. The 
number was none too large, for at 
the news the people of Cannes 
sounded the tocsin and went in 
crowds to the rescue. The very 
women were armed. One in par- 
ticular aimed her reaping-hook at 
the neck of the leader. They bore 
triumphantly away the relics and 
ornaments, but the chapel and land 
were sold some time after to nine 
men belonging to Cannes. St. 
Cassian, or Arluc, is still crowned 
with oaks, as in the time when 
Venus held sway there, though 
Bonaparte, when in the vicinity, 
had many of them cut down. 

The monastery of Arluc gave its 
name to a village on the sea-shore 
at the mouth of the Siagne. This 
stream, in which the monks of L- 



rins once had the sole right to fish, 
derives its name from the Proven- 
cal word saignos or siagnos, given 
to the cat-tails that grow so abun- 
dantly on its banks. On the Sia- 
gne is the hamlet of Mandelieu, on 
land which once belonged to St. 
Consortia, the daughter of St. Eu- 
cher. She gave her fortune to 
works of charity, and founded here 
a hospital under the invocation of 
St. Stephen. And there is a cape 
on the coast, near La Napoule, 
called Theoule, from another 
daughter of St. Eucher, named 
Tullia. When St. Eucher aban- 
doned the world and retired to 
Lerins he took with him his two 
sons, Veran and Salonius, leaving 
his wife, Galla, and her two daugh- 
ters on his domains near La Na- 
poule, where Tullia, who died 
young, was buried. 

Such are the memories associat- 
ed with the isles of Lerins, for 
many of which we are indebted to 
the interesting work by M. 1'Abbe 
Alliez. We made a second visit 
to St. Honorat before leaving 
Cannes, to take a farewell look at 
the old donjon on the shore, the 
holy palm in the cloister, and the 
ruined chapels. When we left the 
isle several of the white-robed 
monks accompanied us to the 
shore, and, on looking back from 
our swiftly-receding boat, we saw 
two of them still standing at the 
foot of a huge cross among the sad 
pines. . . . 

" O satis nunquam celebrata tellus ! 
Dulce solamen, requiesque cordis ! 
Coelitum sedes procul a profani 
Turbine vulgi !" 

O land that can never be suffi- 
ciently praised! Sweet consola- 
tion, repose of the heart ! Haven 
sheltered from the tempests of a 
profane world ! 



In Retreat. 699 



IN RETREAT. 

" BREAK, my heart, and let me die ! 

Burst with sorrow, drown with love ! 
Lord, if Thou the boon deny, 

Thou wilt not the wish reprove." . . 

Whence that piercing, burning ray, 
Seem'd to reach me from the light 

Where, behind the Veil, 'tis day-; 
Where the Blessed walk by sight? 

Thine, 'twas thine, O Sacred Heart ! 

Mercy-sent that I might see 
Something of the all Thou art, 

Something of the naught in me. 

Ah ! I saw Thy patient love 
Watching o'er me year on year ; 

Guarding, guiding, move for move 
Always faithful, always near : 

Saw Thy pardon's ceaseless flow 
Evermore my soul bedew ; 

Washing scarlet white as snow,* 
Sere and blight to morning-new : 

Saw this self how weak, how base ! 
Still go sinning, blundering, on ; 

Thankless with its waste of grace, 
Wearied with the little done. 

Then I murmur'd : " O my King! 

What are all my acts of will ? 
Each best effort can but bring 

Failure and confusion still ! 

" This poor heart, which ought to burn, 

Smoulders feebly ; yet may dare 
Offer Thine one last return 
One fond, fierce, atoning prayer ? 

* 1$. i. 18. 



700 



Prcaclurs on the Rampage. 



" Let it break, this very hour 

Burst with sorrow, drown with love ! 
For if Thou withhold thy power, 
Thou wilt not the wish reprove." . . 

Pass'd that moment : but, as fall 

Lovers' whispers, answer'd He ; 
"Daily die* with thy Saint Paul. 
Die to self and live to Me." 



SEPTEMBER, 1877. 



PREACHERS ON THE RAMPAGE. f 



MEN who are by no means opti- 
mists are apt unconsciously to al- 
low themselves to get a dim im- 
pression that the world is becom- 
ing better, more kindly, more char- 
itable, and that we are approximat- 
ing a time when, by the pure influ- 
ences of increased material appli- 
ances and " well-regulated human 
nature," the hatreds and strifes 
both of nations and sects will have 
measurably ceased. The delusion 
is a pleasant one, but it is none the 
less a delusion, and will not endure 
the slightest contact with the sharp 
edge of fact. In this nineteenth 
century, notwithstanding the peace 
society, more human beings have 
lost their lives by war than in any 
other since the advent of our Lord. 
In this, the freest, the most pros- 
perous, and, so far as the masses 
are concerned, the best-instructed 
of all Christian countries, we have 
but had breathing time since one 
of the bloodiest civil wars on re- 
cord. In the lull (protracted by 
war and its results) many Catho- 
lics seem to have become in like 

* i Cor. xv. 31. 

t Report of the Joint Special Committee to in- 
vestigate Chinese Immigration. Washington, 
1877. 



manner possessed with an unde- 
fined notion that the people who 
made the Penal Laws and execut- 
ed them have become imbued with 
a milder spirit toward the church ; 
that Know-nothingism is a thing of 
the past, the virtue of the cry of 
" No Popery " dissipated, and the 
fell spirit of the Native American 
party utterly extinct. 

Those who think thus will see 
cause to awake from their dream 
on examining the volume whose 
title heads this article. In October, 
1876, a Joint Special Committee of 
three senators and three members of 
the Lower House sat in San Francis- 
co for the purpose of procuring 
testimony in regard to the advisa- 
bility of restricting or abolishing 
the immigration of Mongolians 
to this country a question which 
has been for some time exciting at 
least a considerable section of the 
inhabitants of our Pacific coast. 
Whether truly or falsely we cannot 
say, but the impression is produc- 
ed that the Catholic, and more 
particularly the Irish Catholic, pop- 
ulation of California has ranged it- 
self in hostility to the Chinese. If 
this be true we should be very sor- 



Preachers on tJic Rampage. 



ry for it, knowing full well that by 
any such action foreigners of all 
sorts, more especially Catholics, 
are simply supplying whips of 
scorpions with which they will be 
lashed on the outburst of the next 
campaign (under whatsoever name 
it may be known) conducted on 
principles of hostility to them. On 
its face it looks altogether likely 
that so plausible a movement as 
this opposition to the Chinese 
should take with a laboring class 
not very well posted in the princi- 
ples of political economy, and we 
know that the large majority of 
white laboring people are in San 
Francisco Catholic, while certainly 
a great many of them are Irishmen. 
Their priests are too few and have 
too much to do to give them lec- 
tures on Say, Smith, and Ricardo ; 
and it is no part of their duty, still 
less would it be a pleasure, to in- 
struct them how they shall view 
purely political issues, whether lo- 
cal or national. Repeating, then, 
that we cannot but deem it a ter- 
rible blunder for their own sakes, 
and utterly against their own real 
interests, that these people should 
so range themselves against the in- 
flux of the Chinese, we have cer- 
tainly no right to dictate to them 
how they shall vote or on what 
side they shall exert any influence 
they may have ; and we must add 
that they seem to err (if error there 
be) in very good company, and 
plenty of it, since both political 
parties have in their national plat- 
forms endorsed the views said to 
be held by the Irish Catholics of 
California, as did also both Repub- 
licans and Democrats in the last 
campaign of the Golden State. 

This report contains the sworn 
testimony on the subject at issue of 
one hundred and thirty witnesses ; 
but we only call attention to the 



evidence of some of the preachers, 
and that, too, not on the general 
merits of their testimony or con- 
cerning Chinese immigration at all, 
but on account of the Vatinian ha- 
tred which they have gone out of 
the way to display towards Catho- 
lics, and the deadly venom they 
exhibit towards Irishmen espe- 
cially. For just as women are 
sometimes most bloodthirsty during 
a war, far outdoing in rancor the 
combatants themselves, so would 
preachers seem to be the least cha- 
ritable of the human species to 
have, as Dean Swift well remarked, 
"just enough religion to make 
them hate, and not enough to make 
them love, one another." The first 
of these worthy representatives of 
Christian charity and disseminators 
of the truth is a certain Rev. O. 
W. Loomis, in the employ of the 
Presbyterian Board of Foreign 
Missions, who takes occasion to 
say : " Unlike some others who come 
to America, as we have been told 
(and who manage to get to the ballot- 
boxes very soon), they [the Chinese] 
are not sworn to support any foreign 
hierarchy and foreign ecclesiastical 
magnate who claims the whole earth 
as his dominion" (p. 417). While 
the English of this sentence is very 
far from clear, yet the animus of 
the whole is so patent that he must 
needs be a very stupid fellow in- 
deed who does not perceive that 
Catholics are aimed at. Wheth- 
er Mr. Loomis " has been in- 
formed" that Catholics come to 
America, or that they reach the 
ballot-boxes early, or that they 
are sworn to support a foreign hier- 
archy, or that the Chinese are not 
under such obligations, is far from 
being as limpid as " bog-water," and 
it is to be hoped that, in his in- 
structions to his neophytes, he sel- 
dom degenerates into such want of 



702 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



perspicuity ; still more would it be 
desirable that he should confine 
himself more strictly in his usual 
ministrations to the truth and to 
matters within his own knowledge 
than he does when before the com- 
mittee and on oath. 

It is distinctly false that Catho- 
lic foreigners, in coming to this 
country, make a business of getting 
to the ballot-boxes any sooner 
than the law allows them to do. 
It is equally mendacious, if he 
means to assert the same thing of 
any one set of Catholics as a spe- 
cific nationality. If the statement 
were as true as it is false, scurrilous, 
and malicious, that " man of God " 
could not possibly know more than 
a few individual instances, and 
could not predicate the fact as true 
of a whole nationality, any more 
than the writer (who happens to 
have known in his life four instan- 
ces in which young Americans voted 
without having attained their ma- 
jority) would be justified in slan- 
derously describing the young men 
of the United States as in the habit 
of perjuring themselves in order 
to anticipate the right of elective 
franchise. But our friend, though 
on oath, never blinks in fact, he 
has, while on oath, gone out of his 
way to drag in the above state- 
ment, and is only prevented from 
taking the bit in his teeth and ca- 
reering madly over the whole plain 
of anti-Catholic bigotry by being 
checked peremptorily with the in- 
formation furnished him by Repre- 
sentative Piper: "77/a/ is entirely 
foreign to the matter at issue.' 1 

As to the assertion that Catholics 
swear allegiance to the Pope in 
any sense that would interfere with 
their fealty to any temporal rule or 
government, its absurdity has been 
so often, so ably, and so clearly 
demonstrated that it is only per- 



sons of the third sex who at this day 
pretend to believe it. We will give 
even Mr. Loomis credit for appre- 
ciating the distinction between the 
loyalty which his people owe to 
the confession of faith, their synods 
and presbyteries, and that which 
they owe to the government of 
the land. We wish we could in 
conscience credit him with as much 
candor as ability and knowledge in 
the premises ; for a great deal of 
his testimony proves him to be by 
no means one of those persons 
whom we pass by as being enti- 
tled to a "fool's pardon." Did it 
never occur to this man, and to 
others of his way of thought or ex- 
pression, that this oath o"r obliga- 
tion of two hundred million Catho- 
lics must be of very little avail 
might, in short, quite as well not 
have been taken if its only re- 
sult is to land the Pope here in the 
fag end of the nineteenth century, 
in the Vatican, without an acre of 
land over which he can exercise 
temporal jurisdiction, while Catho- 
lics all over the world, with the 
numbers, the power, and the means 
to restore him, if they had but the 
will, lie supinely by, not making a 
move, either as governments or as 
individuals, in his behalf? That 
bugbear is too transparent for use; 
people can no longer be scared 
by it ; it is high time to excogitate 
another and a more plausible one, 
if you are still bent on war with 
the Pope. For our own part, we 
would recommend the propriety of 
a change; but that change should 
be to the culture of Christian 
charity, the practice of the golden 
rule, not forgetting the command- 
ment which people of Mr. Loomis' 
persuasion call \\\Q ninth. Ah ! Mr. 
Loomis, hatred springs apace fast 
enough among men without any 
necessity for its culture on the 



Preachers on tJie Rampage. 



part of professing religious teach- 
ers. 

Again, the same professor of the 
doctrine that " the earth is the 
Lord's," that " we are all his chil- 
dren," and that " we are all one in 
Christ," announces : " / was a Na- 
tive American on principle, and I 
believe that America should belong to 
Americans" (p. 464). This is bad, 
in our opinion, but it is English, it 
is intelligible, and it is no doubt 
true as an utterance of his indivi- 
dual sentiment. The set of prin- 
ciples referred to have twice been 
adjudged by the voice of the Ame- 
rican people, and condemned on 
both occasions as anti-American, 
opposed to the genius and tradi- 
tions of our people, and subver- 
sive of the aims which made us 
one of the foremost nations of the 
earth. Mr. Loomis, or any other 
man, has an inherent right to be- 
lieve in them, if he so list ; but we 
question much his discretion in 
dragging his enunciation of politi- 
cal principles into his sworn evi- 
dence on the Chinese question, 
and we doubt much whether a 
knowledge that such is his belief 
would be calculated to enhance 
the regard of the Chinese, among 
whom he states that he is an 
evangelist, for either the philan- 
thropy or the hard sense of their 
coryphaeus. 

That there may be no doubt 
about the intensity of his virulence 
against the church, he returns to the 
charge ; and, strangely enough, it 
is the samecommitteeman that now 
goads him on who, on the previous- 
ly-mentioned reference to foreign 
hierarchs, stopped his mouth by 
stating that his opinions on that 
subject were not at issue in the ex- 
amination. 

" Ques. You spoke about these Irish 
as people coming here who have sworn 



703 

allegiance to some foreign potentate. 
To whom have you reference ? 

"Aiis. I refer to the Roman Catholics. 

" Ques. Do you, then, think Chinese 
immigration less dangerous to our insti- 
tutions than that of Roman Catholics? 

"Ans. I think so; decidedly less. 
The Chinese do not purpose to inter- 
meddle with our religious rights. They 
have no hierarchy. They are not sworn 
to support any religious system. They 
are mixed up at home. They have no 
one religion. They may be Mahome- 
tans. 

" Ques. You think they are less dan- 
gerous than European Christians of a 
certain persuasion ? 

" Ans. I think they are less dangerous 
than Roman Catholics. 

" Ques. Are they less dangerous than 
Europeans? 

" Ans. Whether they be Europeans or 
of any other nationality, providing they 
are Romanists. 

" Ques. Suppose the Chinese should 
become Catholics ; then they would be- 
come dangerous? 

" Ans. I think so. 

" Ques. The Roman Catholics are not 
Christians, then? 

"Ans. They are Christians, but not 
Protestant Christians. They are Roman 
Catholic Christians. I make a wide dis- 
tinction between Protestants and Ro- 
manists " (p. 469). 

Thus this man, professing him- 
self an ambassador of Christ, deli- 
berately puts himself on record as 
holding that pagans who know no- 
thing of Christ's atonement, and 
who, in his phrase, worship idols, 
are preferable to those who have 
had invoked upon them the name 
of God in baptism, who believe in 
the Divinity, bow at the name and 
hope to be saved by the merits of 
Jesus. Could the spirit of the most 
malevolent odium theologicum go fur- 
ther ? Would such an assertion be 
believed of any ignorant commu- 
nist, much less of one who claims 
to be a minister of Christ, were it 
not contained in print in the re- 
port of a Congressional committee ? 
If the man believes so little in the in- 



704 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



fluence of the religion of the Saviour 
whom he preaches as his statement 
would indicate, it is his duty at once 
to resign, and relieve the society 
which supports him of the burden of 
a salary which he cannot conscien- 
tiously earn. " Believe," said the 
apostle, " in the Lord Jesus Christ, 
and them shalt be saved!" "Not 
enough," says Rev. Loomis ; "you 
must be additionally a Protestant, 
or a belief in the Saviour will profit 
you no whit." Has any man yet 
ever had a clear definition of that 
term, " Protestant " ? Thomas a 
Kempis and St. Vincent of Paul, 
St. Augustine and St. Charles Bor- 
romeo, the glorious cohort of mar- 
tyrs and confessors, would be dan- 
gerous citizens of the United States 
compared with Ah Sin and Fan 
Chow ! This is certainly infor- 
mation of an unlooked-for kind, 
and the man competent to impart 
it does not usually hide his light in 
the dreary pages of a Congressional 
committee's report. He says him- 
self that he has been a missionary 
since 1844. By consequence he 
must have attained to a good age, 
and the great wonder to us is that 
a man of such astoundingly original 
views has not heretofore made his 
mark upon an age always anxious 
'" to see or hear some new tiling." 

The assertion that Catholics pur- 
pose to interfere with the rights of 
Protestants or other unbelievers, 
implied in the statement that the 
Chinese have no such intention, is 
both too indefinite and too futile 
for discussion. Catholics in all 
countries, but more especially in 
English-speaking countries, have 
for the past two hundred .years 
had all they could manage to be 
allowed to follow the dictates of 
their own faith, free of legal pains 
and penalties, to have any time to 
spare for concocting plans against 



the civil or religious rights of 
others. In the only English-speak- 
ing state that they founded they 
established liberty of conscience, 
which statute was abolished by the 
friends of Mr. Loomis just as soon 
as they had the power. 

But Mr. Loomis assigns reasons 
in favor of the superior desirability 
of pagan over Christian immigra- 
tion, and the prominent ones seem 
to be that they have essentially no 
religion or rather, that they have 
fifty; that they have no hierarchy ; 
that, in fact, they do not support 
any religious system to sum it up, 
that they are mixed up at home! 
How ill does not the adversary of 
mankind brook the distinctive unity 
of the church of God ! Like Pha- 
rao's magicians, everything else 
he can counterfeit or imitate; but 
the unity of the church is too much 
for him. Common sense teaches 
the most ignorant, that if our Sa- 
viour founded any church at all he 
founded one, and not four hundred 
jarring and jangling conventicles. 
Probably this is the gravamen. 
The Catholic, strong in the one- 
ness of his church, and stanch in 
the conviction that everything not 
of it must be a sham emanating 
from the father of lies, will not be 
perverted by Mr. Loomis, charm 
he never so wisely ; while, on the 
other hand, a lot of pagans, espe- 
cially of pagans who were "consid- 
ably mixed up at home," might fur- 
nish grist for Mr. Loomis' peculiar 
gospel mill, with due toll for the 
miller. As with the apostle before, 
so this preacher now differs with 
the Saviour, who said and thought 
that there should be " one fold and 
one Shepherd" Absit blasphemia ! 
but the sects all differ widely both 
from the Master, his apostles, and 
the church, with which he promised 
to abide for ever. 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



705 



Lest, however, any Catholic 
should lay to his soul the flattering 
unction that his American birth 
might eliminate him from the gene- 
ral unfitness of Catholics for citizen- 
ship in the United States or from 
an entire appreciation of the institu- 
tions of his native country, Mr. 
Loomis is very careful to inform us 
that it does not matter whether 
they be Europeans or of any other 
nationality ; if they are Catholics, 
they are not so fit for immigration to 
this country, still less for the exer- 
cise of citizenship, as if they were 
" heathen Chinese" Here is a man 
who declaims against Catholics and 
denounces them for purposing to 
interfere with the rights of those 
who disagree with them in religious 
views, and in the same breath 
argues the unfitness of a population 
of possibly nine millions for citi- 
zenship in his own country, they 
being at the time all residents, 
mostly citizens and largely natives, 
merely because they belong to the 
old religion the religion of Charles 
Carroll of Carrollton. " Resolved," 
said the meeting, " that the earth be- 
longs to the saints." "Resolved," 
added the same body, " that we are 
the saints." Did it ever by chance 
occur to our friend of decidedly 
original, if limited, intellect that 
Senator Casserly lives in his own 
town, and is looked upon, with 
some reason, as a representative 
man, very well posted upon Ameri- 
can institutions, and that it would 
be very hard to persuade the peo- 
ple of the United States of any 
latent disability on the part of that 
senator to appreciate or support 
them? Mr. Loomis makes a great 
distinction between a Catholic and 
a Protestant, and no doubt the 
difference is considerable ; but the 
chasm is by no means as great as 
that which separates the Christian 
VOL. xxvi. 45 



from the bigot, and it is hard for us 
to put Mr. Loomis in the ranks of 
the former. Abcat Loomis. 

Rev. W. W. Brier, after describ- 
ing himself as " a Presbyterian 
minister by profession, who makes 
his living by raising fruit," pro- 
ceeds thus: 

" Ques. Would a reasonable restriction 
of Chinamen be an advantage or not? 

" Ans. If a restriction is to be made in 
respect to China, it ought to be made 
upon people who are far worse for us 
than Chinese. I would trade a certain 
nationality off for Chinamen until there 
was not one of the stock left in trade" 
(P- 575). 

Other portions of his evidence 
show that he herein refers to the 
Irish as inferior to the Chinese. 
How he regards the latter is 
shown by his response to the sug- 
gestion of a possible danger result- 
ing from the presence of sixty thou- 
sand Chinamen in the State, with- 
out any women of their kind, viz. : 

" Ans. The fact is, they are laborers, and 
I regard them very much in the light I 
do any other thing we want to use 
horses, mules, or machinery " (p. 577). 

When asked if he would be will- 
ing to give the Chinese a chance 
to overrun California, he says : 

" Ans. Why not? As well as to give 
the Irish a chance I My real opinion is 
that we would be better off without any 
more foreigners (p. 580). 

" Ques. Are you quite willing there 
shall be no laws to prevent this State 
from becoming a Chinese province? 

" Ans. My opinion is that there is a 
great deal worse class of foreigners in 
our land, who have all the rights of citi- 
zenship and everything else " (p. 581). 

That a man saturated to the 
heart's core with such bitter preju- 
dices against any portion of God's 
children should have, under any 
circumstances, engaged in the work 
of saving souls may seem strange, 



706 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



and we shall not here go into the 
explication, which would detain us 
from our subject ; but it is by no 
means surprising that such a per- 
son should fail of success as an 
evangelist and devote his time 
and prejudices to fruit-raising. He 
describes himself as a successful 
fruit-grower, and we have good au- 
thority for believing that " no man 
can serve two masters." Not that 
he has given up preaching by any 
means ; for he tells of his minister- 
ing in the vineyard, which means 
with people of his stamp deliver- 
ing on Sunday an essay or so 
something after the fashion of a 
screed from the Spectator, and tak- 
ing leave of all practical religion 
till the next Sunday. Of the minis- 
trations of the Catholic priest go- 
ing in and out daily among his pa- 
rishioners, preparing this one for 
death, comforting that one bereav- 
ed, advising and warning the vi- 
cious, alleviating want and encour- 
aging all he knows as little as his 
own mules. It appears by his evi- 
dence that he hires at times as many 
as sixty-five or seventy Chinamen, 
and, as he confessedly regards them 
in the same light as so much ma- 
chinery, it is by no means to be 
wondered at that he should prefer 
men who will submit to be so re- 
garded. The Chinaman possibly 
may, certainly the Irishman will 
not ; and, upon the whole, we should 
think very much less of an Irish- 
man if. he had proved a favorite 
with such a specimen fossil as Rev. 
Brier. The Irishman is quick, full 
of life, strong, prone to resent an 
insult, courageous, and of all men 
least likely to allow himself to be 
trampled upon, ignored, or regard- 
ed in the same light as the mules 
and horses about the place. Fur- 
ther, it is more than likely that, in 
an encounter of wit with an Irish- 



man, Rev. Mr. Brier would not 
come out first ; and it is a dead 
certainty that Brier's view of reli- 
gion would appeal as little to the 
Irishman's sympathies as it proba- 
bly does to those of the reader. 
Taking, then, everything into ac- 
count, we are not surprised that 
this person should not like Irishmen, 
but we do wonder that he should 
not have the grace to conceal the 
hypocrisy involved between his 
own ostensible profession on the 
one side, and his utter disregard of 
the dignity of humanity, of the 
value of the human soul, on the 
other. Under such shepherds it is 
no wonder that the flock becomes 
scattered, and, while we do not wish 
well to Protestantism at any time 
(for individual Protestants we en- 
tertain the most kindly feelings), it 
would be impossible for us to wish 
the system worse than that the 
watchmen upon the walls of the 
fortress founded by Luther and 
Calvin may all have the osseous 
heart, the hypocritical profession, 
and the eocene brain of Rev. Mr. 
Brier. Calvinism is disintegrating 
very rapidly, in all conscience ; it 
needs but a few more years of the 
ministrations of such reverend 
gentlemen as this to give it the 
final quietus. 

Why, even Chinamen have in 
this century been touched by the 
progressive spirit of the age. They 
emigrate, are found in California, 
the Sandwich Islands, Australia, 
Singapore, etc. They have opened 
their ports to foreigners, and are 
sending their young men to be edu- 
cated both in the United States 
and in Europe. And here we have 
the Rev. Mr. Brier who would 
build up in these United States a 
Chinese wall of exclusion, who 
would have Japan and China re- 
turn to their ancient policy of non- 



Preachers on tJie Rampage. 



707 



intercourse, and who, if he had his 
way, would cause this great coun- 
try to join them who says delib- 
erately that the United States 
would be " better off without any 
more foreigners." He is a credit 
to the college that educated him, 
the State that bred him, and the 
religion he professes ! Exeat Brier. 
Rev. S. V. Blakeslee is an or- 
thodox Congregational minister, 
acting now as editor of the Pacific, 
which he describes as " the oldest 
religious newspaper on the coast." 
Contrary to the former two min- 
isters, he is bitterly opposed to 
Chinamen, and is only less ran- 
corous against them than he is 
against the hated Irish Catholics. 
We give parts of his examination, 
omitting much that would but lead 
us over ground already trodden : 

" Ques. Is there any other class of for- 
eign labor that you think has a tendency 
to render labor disreputable? 

" Ans. Yes, I mean all whom we regard 
as inferior ; to whom we consign the 
work all who are really inferior. 

" Ques. What race would you put in 
that category ? 

" Ans. If I were to mention names, I 
'believe the Americans generally regard 
the Irish as very much inferior ; yet I be- 
lieve if the priests were out of the way, 
if Romanism were out of the way, the 
Irish would be equal to any people on 
earth. As it is, they are inferior in in- 
telligence, inferior in morality " (p. 1035). 

In another portion of his testi- 
mony he complains that the peo- 
ple of his town (Oakland), with 
forty thousand inhabitants, have by 
no means the supply of Congre- 
gational and other Protestant 
churches which in the East would 
be considered necessary, and is 
asked : 

" Ques. There are many Catholics, are 
there not? 

" Ans. Oh ! Catholics can hardly be 
said to go to church. They do not go to 



listen to a sermon ; they do not go to get 
instructed (p. 1037). 

" Qiifs. Do the Irish assimilate with the 
American people? 

" Ans. They do, if they are Protestant ; 
but the priests mean to keep them sepa- 
rate, and mean to keep them as a power 
in America under their control" (p. 1041). 

As to his knowledge of Catho- 
lic practice and belief, the follow- 
ing will suffice, viz. : 

" Ques. Have you as much prejudice 
against an American or German Catho- 
lic as against an Irish Roman Catholic ? 

" Ans. If you ask, is my judgment 
more in approval of an American or 
German than of an Irish Catholic, I 
should say it was, because I do not find 
that the priest can control the German : 
as he can the Irish Catholic. 

" Ques. Does the priest control them 
for evil or for good ? 

"Ans. I think that a great many 
priests teach them that the end justifies 
the means, and that to tell a lie for mo- 
ther church is honest. 

" Ques. Did you ever hear one preach 
that? 

" Ans. Well, they were so near it it's 
all the same, probably ; but they did not 
use those words. 

" Ques. Have you heard them preach ? 

" Ans. No, sir ; they don't preach 
much. They will stand a long time, go- 
ing through a performance, and ring a 
little bell for a man to rise and kneel 
down, and then they will rise up again, 
but they don't preach much !" 

The reader will observe the 
marked contempt with which those 
to whom we consign the work are 
regarded as being really inferior. . 
Why, in the eyes of this exponent 
of Christian doctrine and re- 
publican practice, labor, and those 
who do it, are quite as disreputable 
as used to be, in their own region, a , 
class known as poor white trash. 
Now, from the conditions of this 
world in which we are placed, 
there can never, by any possibility, . 
come a time (as there never has 
hitherto been one) in which it will 
not be incumbent on two-thirds of 



;o8 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



earth's inhabitants to earn their 
bread in the sweat of their brow. It 
is God's decree, man's destiny, and 
a large proportion of the one-third 
who in any age of the world have 
managed to exempt themselves 
from the consequence of the fiat of 
the Omnipotent in respect to labor, 
have done so by taking advantage 
of the honesty or simplicity of their 
fellow-men. They or their ances- 
tors must have converted to their 
own use more than their share of 
the soil, the common heritage of 
the human race and the source of 
all wealth. There are not wanting 
at this day those who consider the 
laws which perpetuated the right 
to such original seizures unjust, 
and it is just such despisers of the 
laborer and appropriators of his 
work as this reverend gentleman 
who unwittingly give the greatest 
occasion for discontent to those 
who fancy themselves aggrieved by 
the existing condition of things. 
We are neither communists nor 
agrarians, but we see that, even 
in this happy country, it will be 
very possible to convert the labor- 
ing class into such by subjecting 
them to the scorn of such men as 
this witness, causing them to feel 
that they are regarded as really in- 
ferior, and incidentally exciting the 
envy which the sight of ranches of 
seventy-six thousand acres of land 
in the hands of one individual is 
calculated to produce. Such con- 
tempt of the laborer is un-Ameri- 
can, to say nothing of its entire 
lack of Christianity, and to us it 
seems that no men of any nation- 
ality or religion could be so in- 
jurious to the real interests of any 
country as those entertaining it- 
We do not say that we would trade 
the Rev. Mr. Blakeslee/^r a China- 
man, but we hope and believe that 
there are few Americans of his way 



of thinking in regard to labor, and 
trust that soon there will be none 
of that stock left. The preamble 
to the Declaration of Indepen- 
dence must have long ceased to be 
remembered, and Christianity will 
be in her last throes, ere such 
views shall obtain ; and we have 
confidence in the permanence of 
this republic, with an abiding faith 
that God will be with his church. 

We will not bandy words with 
Mr. Blakeslee as to his opinion 
that Americans generally regard 
the Irish as inferior in intelligence 
and morality. It is one of those 
lump statements which impulsive 
or prejudiced men sometimes make 
about a whole nation in' the heat 
of conversation, but which seldom 
find their way into sworn testimony. 
We are American to the manner 
born, and we not only do not be- 
lieve the fact, but, so far as both 
reading and intercourse with our 
countrymen have enabled us to 
form an opinion, we should assert 
the direct contrary. There is, we 
well know, about all our large cities 
a class corresponding to the " hood- 
lums " of San Francisco (and we 
are sorry to add that they are 
nearly all Americans) who fancy 
that their mere accidental birth 
upon this soil has not only elevated 
them above all other nationalities, 
but raised them above the necessi- 
ty of work. We can lay no stress 
on the opinions of this class. By 
all other Americans not influenced 
by hatred of the church, and, in- 
deed,, by many who do not regard 
her favorably, we have always 
heard remarked (and statistics will 
prove) the almost entire immunity 
of the Irish from the crime of fce- 
ticide ; their large generosity to 
their friends and relatives, as prov- 
ed by the proportionately larger 
amounts of money yearly transmitted 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



709 



by them to the old "country ; their 
unconquerable industry; the chas- 
tity of their women, though, by 
their condition in life, more expos- 
ed to temptation than perhaps any 
other body of females in the world. 
It is denied by nobody that where 
a soldier is wanted the Irishman is 
always on hand, and that he com- 
pares very favorably with the sol- 
dier of any other nation. As to 
intelligence, Mr. Blakeslee must 
surely be poking some mild fun 
at us under the sanctity of his oath. 
If he had ever tried to get the ad- 
vantage of the most illiterate Irish- 
man in conversation, if he had ever 
heard or read a true account of the 
result to any one who did so, he 
would not, for shame's sake, ap- 
pear making the wild assertion 
that the Irishman is deficient in 
intelligence. The common expe- 
rience of any local community in the 
United States will at once brand 
the statement with its proper stamp, 
for which three letters are quite 
sufficient. 

But here comes the real gist of 
Mr. Blakeslee's charge of immo- 
rality and stupidity against the 
countrymen of Swift and Burke, of 
Wolfe Tone and O'Connell, of 
Moore and John of Tuam. "If," 
says he, "it were not for Roman- 
ism, they would be in course of 
time a very excellent people." In 
other words, if they would cease to 
be what they are, if they would sit 
under the ministrations of Rev. 
Blakeslee and his like, if they would 
now give up the religion from which 
centuries of persecution and penal 
laws have failed to dissever them, 
they might finally come to have as 
thorough-paced a contempt for la- 
bor and as strong a belief in the 
inferiority of the laborer as this 
reverend gentleman himself. " Pad- 
dy," says Mr. Blakeslee, " you are 



a Papist, you are an idolater, you 
are very immoral, and you have 
very little sense. Will you be good 
enough now to become a Congre- 
gationalist ?" The Irishman's blood 
boils, fire flashes from his eye, the 
church militant is roused in him, 
and away runs Rev. Blakeslee, more 
than ever convinced of the infe- 
riority of the mean Irish and their 
imperviousness to the charms of 
Protestantism ! 

Among the ephemeral sects of 
the day, depending, as they do, on 
the temporary whims or idiosyn- 
crasies of the individuals who 
" run them," there is apt to arise a 
fashion in morality, so that it is 
something not unlike fashion in 
ladies' dress very different this 
season from what it was the last. 
Now, these sects are loud and 
noisy, making up in vehemence for 
what they lack in numbers, logic, 
and authority. Just now, and for 
some years past, the sin which it is 
the fashion to decry to the neglect 
of all others is that of drunken- 
ness, which the church has always 
held to be a great scandal amongst 
men and a sin against the Al- 
mighty. But, while the church has 
received no new light on the sub- 
ject, the various sectaries have 
erected "drinking" into the one 
typical, the sole crying vice, the 
incorporation of all the other sins. 
A man is now practically " a moral 
man," provided he does not use 
liquor ; and no other crime, short 
of murder, is, in the eyes of the 
Protestant community, so damning 
as is addictedness to drink. There 
is no doubt but that, in the early 
part of tins century, liquor was 
drunk by the Irish to too great an 
extent. There is just as little 
doubt that a great change for the 
better has come over the Irish in 
this regard, and that the good work 



710 



FrcacJic-rs on the Rampage. 



is still going on. But the Irish at 
no time exceeded the Scotch in 
their consumption of liquor, nor 
did they ever equal either the 
Danes or Swedes, both thoroughly 
Protestant nations. But if you give 
a man a bad name you may as well 
hang him ; and the same holds good 
of a nation. It suited the secta- 
rian temperance orators to select 
the Irish as the " shocking exam- 
ple " among nations, and falsely to 
attribute the exaggerated drunken- 
ness which they represented as 
then existing to the influence of 
the church. Such a cry, once well 
set going from Exeter Hall and 
the various Ebenezer chapels, is 
not easily quelled ; and as it is much 
easier for most men to take their 
opinions ready made than to frame 
them for themselves, there does re- 
main on the minds of a large num- 
ber of people a lurking distrust of 
the sobriety of the individual Irish- 
man, and a general belief that 
drunkenness is his peculiar and 
besetting national vice. The sta- 
tistics of the quantity of ardent 
spirits consumed in Ireland since 
the year 1870, as compared with 
the quantities used in England, 
Scotland, or Wales, will convince any 
one who desires to know the truth ; 
and we are not writing for those who 
are content to defame a people by 
the dishonest repetition of a false 
cry. These tables prove that, man 
for man, the consumption referred 
to is in Ireland not so much as in 
Scotland by over three gallons, in 
England by nearly two gallons, and 
in Wales by a little less than in 
England. So long, however, as 
Sweden overtops the consumption 
of the highest of them by the an- 
nual amount of two and a half gal- 
lons per man, and Catholic Ireland 
holds the lowest rank as a consumer 
of ardent spirits, we have no hope 



that it will " suit the books " of sec- 
tarian temperance agitators to call 
attention to the facts. It is much 
easier to defame than to do justice, 
and by this craft many people nowa- 
days are making a livelihood. Yet 
this false charge of a vice which be- 
trays by no means the blackheart- 
edness involved in many others 
which, bad as it is, is by no means so 
heinous as .defrauding the laborer 
of his hire, swindling the poor of their 
savings, watering stocks, accepting 
bribes, etc., etc., and which is not 
even mentioned in the decalogue 
is the only one that could at any 
time have been charged with a de- 
cent show of plausibility against 
the Irish as a nation, or against the 
individual Irishmen whom we have 
in this country. We ourselves 
must admit that we thoughtvthere 
was some truth in it, till we search- 
ed the statistical tables to find out 
the facts, and we here make to the 
Irish people the amende honorable 
for having misjudged them on the 
strength of the cry of sectarian 
demagogues. 

Going to church can, in the mind 
of Mr. Blakeslee, mean only one 
thing i.e., goingtohear a sermon 
and so he says that " Catholics can 
hardly be said to go to church." Cer- 
tainly the prime object of a Ca- 
tholic in going to church is not to 
listen to a sermon, nor should it be 
so. It is hardly worth while to at- 
tempt to enlighten a man like Mr. 
Blakeslee, who himself habitually 
sheds light from both pulpit and 
press ; but if we are to take the 
knowledge he seems to possess of 
the Catholic Church as a specimen 
of the information he diffuses on 
other points, what rare ideas must 
not his hearers and readers attain 
of matters and things in general! 
Yet he is a man who professes to 
have made a theological course, 



Preachers on the Rampage. 



711 



which should involve not only the 
study of the doctrines and practi- 
ses of his own sect, but also, to some 
slight extent, of the remaining sects 
of Protestantism, to say nothing of 
the church on which two hundred 
million Christians rest their hopes 
of salvation. He knows no more 
of the celebration of the Blessed 
Eucharist in the Church of Rome 
than to describe it as "going through 
a performance and ringing a little 
bell for a man to rise and kneel down ' ' ; 
and yet the fellow does not hesitate 
to announce what is the doctrine 
and what the practice of the church 
nay, to hold himself forth as a 
champion against her tenets, as 
though he were divinely commis- 
sioned to instruct thereon. To see 
ignorance is at all times unpleasant ; 
blatant ignorance combined with 
assumption of knowledge is doubly 
nauseous; but the supereminent 
degree of loathing is only excited 
when ignorance or conceit of know- 
ledge elevates itself into the chair 
of the spiritual guide and denoun- 
ces what it in no whit understands. 
Be these thy gods, O Israel? Sure- 
ly it is not to hear the lucubrations 
of men of this stamp that any sane 
people would go to church. We 
can only wish to the sheep of such 
a pastor increase of knowledge, 
decrease of prejudice, and an en- 
larged ability to tell truth on the 
part of their shepherd ! We re- 
peat that Catholics do not go to 
church primarily or solely to hear 
a sermon. But they do go there 
to join in spirit at the celebration 
of the divine Sacrifice, to pray 
to God for grace to assist them 
through life, to make and strength- 
en good resolutions, and to obey 
the command of the church. We 
all believe that the devout hearing 
of one Mass is far more valuable 
than the hearing of all the sermons 



ever delivered or printed since the 
sermon on the Mountain of Beati- 
tudes ; and we lay no stress what- 
ever on the best formulae of words 
ever strung together by the inge- 
nuity even of the most pious and 
learned of mere men, when com- 
pared with the expiatory sacrifice 
of Christ's body and blood, institut- 
ed by him and celebrated, not mere- 
ly commemorated, by the priest to 
whom he has given the power. 
Should it ever happen and as the 
mercy of God is infinite, and his 
ways past finding out, it is not im- 
possible that this poor deluded 
man should be brought to a know- 
ledge of the truth, with what shame 
and confusion of face would he not 
read his ignorant and impudent 
travesty of the worship of God in 
his church ! 

If there be, as there doubtless are, 
other Protestants who get their in- 
struction about Catholics from Mr. 
Blakeslee and his like, and who 
believe with this witness that the 
priests mean to keep them (the Ca- 
tholics) as a power in America under 
their (the priests') control, it would 
not be, and is not, worth our while to 
attempt to argue the point with such. 
They will so believe, like the rela- 
tives of Dives, though one rose from 
the dead to confute them. Ephra- 
im is joined to his idols; let him 
alone ! But we appeal to the Catho- 
lic voters of this country, of Ameri- 
can or foreign birth, to answer : Has 
your bishop or parish priest ever un- 
dertaken to dictate to you how you 
should vote ? Has your vote, on what- 
ever side given, interfered in the 
slightest degree with your status in 
the church? Do you know of a 
single instance in which one or the 
other of these things has taken place ? 
We cannot lay down a fairer gauge. 
If these things take place they can- 
not occur without the knowledge of 



712 



Freaclurs on the Rampage. 



those among whom they are done 
and upon whom they are practised. 
They are Americans, and it is a 
free country. Long ere this would 
the country have rung with the 
proof, had any such been forth- 
coming. Mr. Blakeslee's lying 
charge meant, if it meant anything, 
that Catholics were to be kept apart 
as a political power; for neither 
we nor any other Catholic desires 
or hopes otherwise than that the 
church, as a religious body, shall, till 
the end of time, be kept separate 
and apart from all the sects of Pro- 
testantism, which we believe to be 
heresy and schism. 

One would naturally always 
rather give an adversary the credit 
of having honestly mistaken the 
facts than be obliged to consider 
him a wilful slanderer and falsifier. 
But there are circumstances in 
which the assertion made is so 
patently false, or has been so often 
thoroughly refuted, that, though the 
heart would fain take refuge in the 
former course, the brain refuses to 
accept any but the latter. Such a 
case occurs where Mr. Blakeslee 
says that " a great many priests teach 
them that the end justifies the means, 
. . . that to tell a lie for mother 
church is honest." Every Catholic 
who has learned his catechism 
knows that this is not so. We believe 
that he knew it was not so when 
he said it, but that his own innate 
malevolence against the church, and 
the spirit of the father of lies 
speaking through him, compelled 
him to the utterance of this vile 
slander. For which great sin may 
God forgive him : he stands in sore 
need of it. 

But after all, if Satan is so easily 
caught on a cross-examination as 
he on this occasion allowed his 
servant to be, we need not stand in 



much dread of his lies. The same 
man whose lips are not yet dry from 
saying on oath that the priests teach 
their people to tell lies, when asked 
if he ever heard any single priest 
so teach, shuffles out of it thus 
his own words need no comment 
from us : 

" Ans. Well, they were so near it; 
it's all the same, probably ! They didn't 
use those words ! 

" Ques. Have you ever heard them 
preach ? 

"Ans. No, sir ! 

We, on the contrary, think that it 
was not all the same ''''probably," 
and heartily thank his satanic ma- 
jesty for his negligence in failing to 
inspirit his servant with the know- 
ledge that, in order to be believed, 
in swearing as to what priests preach 
in their sermons, it is necessary to 
be able also to swear that the 
witness has heard at least one such 
sermon. Valeat Blakeslee. 

Other preachers testified ; and 
when the question arose as to Ca- 
tholic foreigners, more especially 
Irish Catholic, all betrayed the 
cloven hoof, though some veiled 
their hatred in much more seemly 
words than did others. It had 
been our intention to examine 
their testimony, in so far as it 
touched the church, seriatim; but 
further reflection induces us to be- 
lieve that from these few pages the 
reader can learn sufficiently the 
depth of the ignorance and the 
extent of the hatred of these, blind 
leaders of the blind. If the reward 
in heaven be exceeding great to 
those whom all men shall hate, re- 
vile, and despitefully use, surely the 
glory of Catholics, and of Catholic 
Irishmen especially, will be great in 
the next world; for certainly they 
are not loved of men in this. 



A Little Sermon. 713 



A LITTLE SERMON. 

FROM " THE LITTLE FLOWERS OF ST. FRANCIS." 

THE Poor One of Assisi trod one day 
Bevagna's road, and, praying by the way 

His heart seraphic, like the choirs above, 

Filled with the sweetness born of heavenly love 

Lifting his eyes, that loved the earth's fair face, 
He saw, thick gathered in a bosky place, 

A host of birds that flitted to and fro, 

Filling the boughs with twittering murmur low. 

" Wait here, my brothers," fell in gentle speech ; 
" Unto this multitude needs must I preach : 

" Here by the wayside, good Masseo, bide 
Till I these little birds have satisfied." 

Into the field he passed, the flowers among, 
Where, on the bending stems, the songsters swung. 

Gathered the winged things about his feet, 
Dropped from the boughs amid the grasses sweet : 

Reverent dropt down to listen to God's word, 
Silenced their song that his Poor One be heard. 

Touching with his gray robe their eager wings, 
St. Francis softly stilled their flutterings. 

Sedate they sat with crested heads alert, 

The near ones nestling in their brother's skirt. 

" My little birds, ye owe deep gratitude 
To God, who has your forms with life imbued, 

" And ever in all places should ye praise 
Your Maker, who in love keeps you always, 

" Since by His hand to you is freedom given 
To fly where'er ye will, on earth, in heaven : 



714 A- Little Sermon. 

" Since from his strong and loving hand ye hold 
Your double garments guarding you from cold : 

" Since, that no evil blight fall on your race, 
He gave in Noe's ark your sires a place. 

" And unto him deep gratitude ye owe 
For this pure air whence life itself doth flow. 

" And then ye sow not, neither do ye reap, 
Yet God for you doth plenteous harvest keep; 

" The streams He gives you, and the limpid spring 
Where ye may drink of waters freshening; 

" He gives the hills and valleys for your rest, 
The great-armed trees where each may make his nest. 

"And, since ye cannot spin nor sew, his care 
Weaves the soft robes ye and your fledglings wear. 

" How much he loves that doth so richly give ! 
Praise him, my little birds, all days ye live ! 

" So keep ye well from sin of thanklessness, 
And God keep you, whom let all creatures bless !" 

Bowed all the little birds their heads to earth, 
Oped wide their bills, and sang with holy mirth 

Their Deo gratias when St. Francis ceased, 
Yet rose not till his hand their wings released 

With Christian cross signed in the happy air, 
Giving the songsters leave to scatter there. 

Softly, so blessed, the grateful birds up-soared 
And marvellous music in their flight outpoured : 

Looked not at earth, nor him they left behind, 
Parting in ways the holy cross had signed. 

Singing they cleft the quarters of the sky 
Type of St. Francis' mission wide and high : 

Type of his little ones who nothing own, 
Whose humble trust is in their Lord alone 



Nezv Publications. 

So nourished as their brother birds are fed, 
Whose great Creator doth their table spread. 



715 



Listening the lessening chant, St. Francis smiled, 
Praising his Lord for joy so undefiled. 

From the French of F. A. Ozanam. 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



THE KNOWLEDGE OF MARY. By the Rev. 
J. De Concilio, Pastor of St. Michael's 
Church, Jersey City, author of Catho- 
licity and Pantheism. New York : The 
Catholic Publication Society Co., 9 
Barclay Street. 1878. 
We must apologize to Father De Con- 
cilio for being late with our notice of his 
book. Our excuse is, simply, lack of 
time for its perusal anything but lack 
of desire ; for, on learning that the au- 
thor of Catholicity and Pantheism a work 
that has won unstinted and generous 
praise from all competent critics, and es- 
tablished the fame of its author as a pro- 
found philosophical thinker was en- 
gaged upon a work about the Blessed 
Virgin, we hailed the promised boon 
as a feast, both intellectual and de- 
votional, of the rarest kind. And are we 
disappointed? On the contrary, our 
most sanguine expectations are sur- 
passed. 

Father De Concilio tells us in his pre- 
face that this new book is " a necessary 
part " of his former work on Catholicity 
and Pantheism, " though it may seem to 
have very little to do with it." " For 
Mary," he says, "is the best refutation of 
pantheism, the universal error of our 
time. The substance of this error is to 
absorb the finite in the infinite, and, con- 
sequently, to abolish, to do away with, 
all created agency. Now, Mary, as we 
shall prove, represents created agency in 
its grandest, sublimest, and most mag- 
nificent expression. She represents cre- 
ated agency in all the mysteries of God 
relating to the creature. She is, there- 
fore, the best and most convincing refu- 
tation of pantheism, the rock against 
which the mighty waves of this universal 
error must exhaust their force." Again : 



"Pantheism, in pretending to exalt hu- 
manity, degrades it and deprives it of 
everything that causes its glory. Mary, 
the grandest specimen of human nature, 
exhibits human personality in its most 
colossal proportions, and is the glory, 
the pride, the magnificence of our race." 

We quote these passages from the au- 
thor's preface, because they furnish the 
key-note'to the whole work. 

The volume opens with an admirable 
"Introduction," showing how Christi- 
anity was needed to bring fallen man to 
the knowledge and love of God, and how 
" the world owes Christianity, along with 
its results, to Mary" ; also, how the same 
instrument must bring back the know- 
ledge and love of God to-day, lost again 
as they have been in great part ; whence 
"the necessity of true, accurate, solid 
knowledge of Mary." Then follow the 
five books into which the essay is divided, 
tlie chapters of each book being subdi- 
vided into articles. This arrangement 
at once gives conciseness to the argu- 
ment, and much relieves the strain upon 
the reader's thought. 

The first, second, and fourth books are 
the most important: the first dealing 
with " Mary's place in the divine plan of 
the universe " ; the second with " the 
grandeur of Mary's destiny"; and the 
fourth with " the consequences of Mary's 
dignity relatively to God, to the human 
race, and to herself." The third bock 
treats of " the perfections of Mary in 
general," and its arguments will be 
readily admitted by the reader who has 
accepted those of the preceding books ; 
the fifth, again, elucidates " Mary's merit 
and glory," which no one will question 
who agrees with the fourth book. 

Father De Concilio shows himself a 



716 



New Publications, 



master by the easy strength with which 
he expounds the divine plan of the uni- 
verse, and the place which the Incarna- 
tion holds therein. The eight articles of 
his first chapter are thus recapitulated : 

" End : The greatest possible manifes- 
tation and communication of divine 
goodness. 

" Preliminary means : Creation of sub- 
stances, spiritual, material, and compo- 
site angels, matter, and men. 

" Best means to the object : The hypo- 
static union of the Word with human 
nature. 

"Effects of the Incarnation with regard 
to God : Infinite glory and honor. 

" With regard to created nature : Uni- 
versal deification. 

"With regard to personalities: Deifi- 
cation of their nature in Christ, and 
beatific union with the Trinity through 
their union with Christ by sanctification. 

" God foresees the fall, and permits it 
in order to enhance these effects by re- 
demption." 

We do not at all wonder at a reviewer 
in the Chicago Interior complimenting 
our author on " profound scholarship in 
Catholic theology." "The book," he 
says, "is bold to familiarity in describ- 
ing with scientific particularity and clear- 
ness of outline the constitution of the 
Holy Trinity as defined by Catholic 
theologians." We do, however, wonder 
that this writer, if a believer in revela- 
tion, should go on to compare Father De 
Concilio to a chemist analyzing " a py- 
rite of iron," and still more that he 
should declare his " ideas as grossly an- 
thropomorphic as it is possible to be"(!) 
Would this critic call the Bible anthropo- 
morphic? He says nothing about our 
author's theology of the Incarnation un- 
less he mean to hit at that as " anthropo- 
morphic." It is precisely about the In- 
carnation that Protestants are utterly at 
sea. When the reviewer adds: "We 
can understand, after examining this 
book, the character of Catholic devotion 
to Mary as we never understood it be- 
fore," we are compelled to reply : " Then 
your understanding of it is a greater 
mistake than ever before, unless you 
have first come to realize the Catholic 
doctrine of the Incarnation with its bear- 
ings ; and if that were the case you would 
avow it, for you could not remain a Pro- 
testant another hour." 

Let any Protestant of sufficient educa- 
tion read the first of these five books 



earnestly and prayerfully, and he will 
have to acknowledge that his hitherto 
Christianity, be it what it may, is di- 
vided toto cash from Catholic Christianity 
the totttm ccelum being precisely his 
lack of that " knowledge of Mary " which 
is inseparable from an intelligent belief 
in the Incarnation. 

The Catholic student will be specially 
interested by the way in which Father 
De Concilio treats of Mary's " co-opera- 
tion." She is set forth and in a clearer 
light than ever before by any book in the 
English language as the great " repre- 
sentative personality" of our race. It is 
in this capacity that she consents to the 
Incarnation and Redemption. " A God- 
Man was necessary to expiate for the sins 
of mankind. But that was not sufficient. 
According to the law of wisdom, men- 
tioned in our last argument, God was 
ready to help human nature' to that ex- 
tent as to effect the Incarnation and pro- 
duce the God-Man ; but God required, 
also, that mankind should do all it could 
towards its own redemption. It could 
not give the God who was to divinize the 
acts of human nature ; it could not ac- 
tually effect the union between human 
nature and the divine person of the 
Word ; but it could freely and delibe- 
rately offer the nature to be united for 
the express purpose and intent of suffer- 
ing ; and this offering could only be made 
by means of a representative human person 
full)' conscious of the necessity of expi- 
ation, of the conditions required by it, 
and of the consequences resulting there- 
from " (pp. 77, 78). 

Again (pp. 78, 79) : "The consent of 
Mary was required in the plan of God in 
order to elevate created personality to the 
highest possible dignity, and thus to ful- 
fil the end which God had proposed to 
himself in exterior work." This pur- 
pose, he goes on to say, was not com- 
pleted by God " taking human nature, to 
be his own nature, and to be God with 
him." ..." Human personality does 
not exist in Christ, and receives no 
honor from him. There is one person in 
him, and that is divine." ..." Mary, 
therefore (p. 80), fulfils the office of cre- 
ation, and especially of created person- 
ality, in its most sovereign act the act 
which this personality would have elicit- 
ed in Jesus Christ, if it had been in 
him. Human nature, such as it was in 
Christ, could not give itself, because to 
give is a personal act, and God wished 



New Publications. 



717 



to carry to its utmost extremity the com- 
munication of goodness, that human 
nature should give itself in order to be 
made partaker of the responsibility and 
attribution of the effects of that mysteri- 
ous union." 

Having thus shown the inestimable 
importance of Mary's consent to the In- 
carnation, our author proceeds to point 
out "the extent or comprehensiveness" 
of that consent to wit, that " in giv- 
ing her consent to the Incarnation and 
redemption " she " not only agreed to 
become the Mother of Jesus Christ the 
Redeemer, . . . but also to become a 
co-sufferer with him ; so that Mary's 
Compassion was to accompany, to go 
hand in hand with, Christ's Passion, 
both being necessary for the redemption 
of mankind, according to the plan se- 
lected by God's wisdom." 

Here is something new to us, but very 
delightful to discover, since it glorifies 
Our Blessed Lady so much more than 
the ordinary view of her Dolors. We 
knew that " she consented to undergo 
all the anguish and sorrow and martyr- 
dom consequent upon her from the sac- 
rifice and immolation of her divine 
Son," and thus " join her Compassion to 
his Passion, in order to redeem man- 
kind " ; that, in this sense, she " con- 
sented to become the corredemptrix of the 
human race." But it had not occurred 
to us that " all this, implied in her con- 
sent, was neces'sary as that consent it- 
self." 

Our author here quotes Father Faber's 
theory about Mary's privilege of being 
" corredemptrix " the term by which 
saints and doctors call her and shows 
that the gifted Oratorian, in his ex- 
quisite book on Mary's sorrows (The 
Foot of the Cross), <: has not done justice 
to the subject." He even quarrels with 
Faber's " co-redemptress " as a "substi- 
tution " for the ancient " corredemptrix," 
whereas it would appear but a transla- 
tion that is, as Faber uses it. We feel 
sure, too, that the English word may 
mean the full equivalent of the Latin. 
But, at all events, Father Faber's theory 
is that Mary's dolors were among the 
unnecessary sufferings of the Passion. 
" Indeed," he says, " they were literally 
our Lord's unnecessary sufferings. 
. . . Her co-operation with the Pas- 
sion by means of her dolors is wanting, 
certainly, in that indispensable neces- 
sity which characterizes the co-operation 



of her maternity." To this Father De 
Concilio remarks that Father Faber 
" had an incomplete idea of the office of 
Mary as to redemption," and objects to 
the doctrine of " unnecessary sufferings" 
as " theologically inaccurate, to say the 
least." " The Passion of Christ," he 
says, " must be considered as a variety 
of sorrows co-ordained by the unity of the 
sacrifice the beginning of which was the 
maternal womb, in which the Incarnate 
Word placed himself in the state of a 
victim, and the termination Calvary, 
where the grand holocaust was consum- 
mated." And, after establishing this 
point, he proceeds to prove that Mary's 
Compassion was " among the necessary 
elements of the redemption." He 
brings to light, both from the Fathers and 
from reason, " a principle in the econo- 
my of our redemption," whereby God 
had to supply, indeed, a means of in- 
finite merit (through the Incarnation), 
but, equally, had to exact from humanity 
all that itself could do towards atone- 
ment. From this principle he deduces 
three consequences: 

First. That " our Lord's humanity was 
to suffer as much as ... would bear 
a kind of proportion to the offence and 
realize the principle that human nature 
was to do as much as possible towards 
its own redemption." Whence, obvi- 
ously, " the distinction of necessary and 
unnecessary sufferings in the life of our 
Lord " is untenable. 

Second. That "human nature was re- 
quired to do more than suffer in Christ. 
It was required to deliberately and will- 
ingly offer up that human nature to be 
united to the Word of God for the pur- 
pose of redemption, by means of a re- 
presentative of the whole human race." 
Whence " the necessity of Mary's con- 
sent to the Incarnation and redemp- 
tion." 

Third. That " it was necessary that the 
highest representative of human person- 
ality, the human head of the race, should 
be subject also to the highest possible mar- 
tyrdom which a human person may be sub- 
ject to, as a reparation coming from 
a human personality, and unite it with 
the sufferings of the humanity of the 
Word, and thus bring its own meed of 
suffering required by God's wisdom for 
our ransom." " This was necessary," 
he adds, "because in our Lord humani- 
ty suffered as a nature, not as a person- 
ality. " 



7i8 



tc' Publications, 



From these deductions, then, the au- 
thor concludes that " Mary's Compas- 
sion is a necessary element of the re- 
demption, and Mary is really and truly 
the corredemptrix of the human race." 
But, of course, he is careful to add that 
" Christ alone redeemed us truly, really, 
and efficaciously, because he alone could 
give infinite value to those sufferings, 
and, therefore, he is the only Redeemer. 
Mary is the corredemptrix, but only in 
the sense just explained." "Those," 
he says, " who are afraid to think Mary's 
sufferings necessary for our redemption 
are thinking only of the infinite value 
required for our sacrifice. Mary has 
nothing to do with that. In speaking of 
her co-operation we limit ourselves to 
speaking of what was required from 
human nature and human personality 
as their mite towards redemption, in- 
dependent of the infinite worth to 
be given only by Christ's infinite per- 
sonality." 

To us, we must joyfully avow, this 
elaborate argument for Mary's greater 
glory appears irrefragable. 

What specially delights us in the 
fourth book, again, is to see our heaven- 
ly Mother proved the " channel " and 
" dispenser " of all grace. This, also, is 
an unspeakable gain to us. And we 
need not say that if, on the one hand, our 
learned theologian has invested his 
Queen with a sublimity and an awe 
that makes us feel how unworthy of her 
notice is our best of love and service, 
he has inspired us, on the other hand, 
with more confidence than ever in her 
tenderness and power. 

Those, too, of our readers who have 
a turn for contemplation and have 
thought much on Our Lady will meet in 
these pages with many an idea which 
has come into their minds before, and 
which, perhaps, they have been afraid to 
disclose, or even harbor. Such will join 
with us in revelling over the logic which 
makes blessed certainties of these ex- 
quisite guesses. 

In conclusion, we are quite unable to 
express our thanks to Father De Con- 
cilioforhis magnificent book. But he 
does not need our gratitude. She whose 
champion he is will not fail to fulfil in 
his regard the promise which to him 
must be so precious : Qui elucidant me 
vitam atemam habcbitnt "They who 
make me shine forth shall have life 
everlasting." 



WHY A CATHOLIC IN THE NINETEENTH 

CENTURY? By William Giles Dix. 

New York: The Catholic Publication 

Society Co., 9 Barclay Street. 1878. 

The author of this essay once contri- 
buted to THE CATHOLIC WORLD a 
thoughtful article called "The Roman 
Gathering." (See CATHOLIC WORLD, 
May, 1868.) He was then a Protestant. 
It is consoling to find him no longer 
among those who, while forced to envy 
the Catholic Church, remain outside 
her communion on the strength of some 
hazy theory or from a superstitious 
dread of using their reason. Having 
come, by God's grace, to see the truth 
himself, he aims at making others see it 
equally clearly. He shows very forcibly, 
and in simple language, " that the New 
Testament, and the Protestant version 
of that, proves these propositions : 

" I. Christ founded a church. 

" II. Christ founded one church, one 
only : not a corporation of national church 
es, not a federal union of churches, but 
literally one church. 

"III. That one church of Christ was 
intended to be the only spiritual guide, 
on earth, of Christians. 

" IV. That [this] church had the prom- 
ise of endurance and of guidance until 
the end of the world. 

" V. That [this] church was the begin- 
ning of the church known historically 
as the Catholic Church." 

Of course this is very old ground; but 
Mr. Dix goes over it in a way that ought 
to induce earnest Protestants of any de- 
nomination to follow him. 

Here is an excellent hit : 

" A word is in many mouths Ultra- 
montane intended to represent extreme 
views of papal rights. Now, I care not 
whom you select among the defenders 
of the powers of St. Peter and his suc- 
cessors, you will find the attributes 
ascribed by any such writer to the suc- 
cessors of St. Peter not so strong as the 
single commission of our Lord to his 
apostles recorded in the New Testament. 
The most ultramontane writers that I know 
of are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. 
The only difficulty which any one finds in 
the interpretation of the words of our Lord 
referring to his church is because those 
words are so plain and direct. They so 
clearly set forth the amplest prerogatives 
ever claimed for the Church of Christ 
that many people seem to believe that 
they cannot mean what they seem to 



New Publications. 



719 



mean, and, therefore, must be explained 
away. " 

We hope this short essay will meet 
with the success its ability deserves. We 
regret, however, to say that while the 
plainness of its language is a great point 
in its favor, its style is open to improve- 
ment. 

THE MIRROR OF TRUE WOMANHOOD. A 
Book of Instruction for Women in the 
World. By Rev. Bernard O'Reilly. 
New York : Peter F. Collier. 1878. 

Dr. O'Reilly continues to lay Catho- 
lics under obligation to his fluent and 
versatile pen. He has a keen instinct 
for what is wanting in Catholic popular 
literature, and this large and handsome 
volume fills a niche in the Catholic 
household that was too long left empty. 
Women in the world are apt to be over- 
looked by spiritual writers, or the works 
intended for them are of a character not 
well adapted to attract the average wo- 
man of the world, however good she may 
be. They rreed something to take hold 
of their homes and their hearts, and to 
enter into their ordinary daily life. This 
Dr. O'Reilly's excellent volume aims at 
doing, and, we trust, will succeed in do- 
ing. It is a work of practical sugges- 
tion, illustrated and annotated, so to 
say, by examples from the lives of wo- 
men in all ages and in every station of 
life. A tender heart, a practical mind, 
and a pious soul speak in every line. It 
is the mother first of all who is chiefly 
instrumental in shaping the life of man. 
If she is good and pure and high-mind- 
ed, a constant example of the height and 
greatness of those noblest of estates, wife- 
hood and motherhood, the chances are al- 
together in favor of her children following 
her example. She is their great safeguard, 
their earthly guardian-angel until they 
are properly launched upon the sea of 
life, and even after that period her heart 
follows them and her virtues live in 
their memory and their lives. It is be- 
cause so many women neglect this high 
office that so many children go astray. 
Virtue belongs to no class ; it is common 
to all Christians. The truest nobility is 
a Christian life, which is open to all. 
The object of his book is well described 
by Dr. O'Reilly in the "Introductory": 
" It is precisely because women are, by 
the noble instincts which God has given 
to their nature, prone to all that is most 



heroic that this book has been written 
for them. It aims at setting before their 
eyes such admirable examples of every 
virtue most suited to their sex, in every 
age and condition of life, that they have 
only to open its pages in order to learn 
at a glance what graces and excellences 
render girlhood as bright and fragrant as 
the garden of God in its unfading bloom, 
and ripe womanhood as glorious and 
peerless in its loveliness and power 
as the May moon in its perfect fulness 
when she reigns alone over the starry 
heavens." We cannot too earnestly re- 
commend The Mirror of Tine Woman- 
hood to women of every class, station, 
and time of life. 

SHAKSPEARE'S HOME: Visited and De- 
scribed by Washington Irving and F. 
W. Fairholt. With a letter from Strat- 
ford. By J. F. Sabin. With etchings 
by J. F. and W. W. Sabin. New York : 
J. Sabin & Sons. 1877. 

This is an interesting little volume. 
A fair idea of its contents may be gath- 
ered from the title. The etchings are 
carefully executed, and are full of pro- 
mise. 

WHAT CATHOLICS DO NOT BELIEVE. A 
Lecture delivered in Mercantile Li- 
brary Hall, on Sunday evening, Dec. 
16, 1877. By Right Rev. P. J. Ryan, 
Bishop of Triconia, and Coadjutor to 
the Archbishop of St. Louis. St. 
Louis : P. Fox. 1878. 

It was a happy thought to publish this 
lecture in pamphlet form ; for the matter 
which it contains is worthy of wide dis- 
semination and close study. Bishop 
Ryan has here presented some admira- 
ble points in an admirable manner to 
the consideration of fair-minded men 
who are interested in the doings and the 
faith of the Catholic Church. He has 
taken up a few of the chief current ob- 
jections against the church, set them 
strongly forward, and then disposed of 
them in a manner that wins admiration 
as much for its honesty and calmness as 
for its completeness and skill. We un- 
derstand that it has provoked much dis- 
cussion in St. Louis, in the public press 
and elsewhere. Such discussion can 
only do good. We strongly recommend 
the pamphlet to Catholic and Protes- 
tant alike. It is interesting for its own 



720 



Nr?v Publications. 



sake ; it will be of great use to the Ca- 
tholic who is thrown into non-Catholic 
society ; it will relieve the fairly-dispos- 
ed Protestant mind of some inherited 
darkness and much foolish misconcep- 
tion. 

PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED. 

THE WRITTEN WORD ; or. Considerations on the 
Sacred Scriptures. By William Humphrey, Priest 
of the Society of Jesus. 

THE CHRISTIAN REFORMED IN MIND AND MAN- 
NERS. By Benedict Rogacci, of the Society of 
Jesus. Translation edited by Henry James Cole- 
ridge, of the same Society. 

THE ART OF KNOWING OURSELVES; or, The 
Looking-Glass which does not Deceive. By Fr. 
John Peter Pinamonti, S.J. With Twelve Con- 
siderations on Death, by Kr. Luigi La Nuza, S.J., 
and Four on Eternity, by Fr. John Baptist Manni, 
S.J. 

LIFE OF HENRI PLANCH AT, Priest of the Con- 
gregation of the Brothers of St. Vincent de Paul, 
etc., etc., One of the Hostages Massacred by the 
Commune at Belleville, May 26, 1871. By Maurice 
Maignen, Member of the Congregation of Brothers 
of St. Vincent de Paul. Translated from the French, 
with an Introductory Preface, by Rev. W. H. An- 
derdon, S.J. 

A VISIT TO THE ROMAN CATACOMBS. By Rev. 
J. Spencer Northcote, D.D. 

MEDITATIONS. From the Spanish of Rev. Fr. 
Alonso de Andrade, S.J. 



ERLESTON GLEN. A Lancashire Story of the 
Sixteenth Century. By Alice O'Hanlon. 

[All the above are published by Burns & Oates, 
London, and are for sale by The Catholic Publication 
Society Co.] 

PENITENTIARY SERMONS. By Rev. Theodore 
Noethen, Catholic Chaplain. Albany: Van Ben- 
thuysen Printing-House. 1877. 

THE TOWER OF PERCEMONT. A Novel. From 
the French of George Sand. New York: D.Apple- 
ton & Co. 1877. 

THE SCHOLASTIC ALMANAC for the year of our 
Lord 1878. Compiled by J. A. Lyons. Notre 
Dame, Ind. : The Scholastic Printing-Office. 

To THE SUN. A Journey through Planetary 
Space. From the French of Jules Verne. By Ed- 
ward Roth. Illustrated. Philadelphia: Claxton, 
Remsen & Hafielfinger. 1878. 

IRELAND : As She Is, As She Has Been, and As 
She Ought To Be. By James J. Clancy. New 
York : Thomas Kelly. 1877. 

NEW IRELAND. By A. M. Sullivan, Member of 
Parliament for Louth. Philadelphia: J. B. Lip- 
pincott & Co. 1878. 

LIVES AND TIMES OF ILLUSTRIOUS AND REPRE- 
SENTATIVE IRISHMEN. By Thomas Clarke Luby, 
A.B., T.C.D. Part II. New York: Thomas 
Kelly. 

HOLY CHURCH, THE CENTRE OF UNITY ; or, 
Ritualism Compared with Catholicism : Reasons 
for Returning to the True Fold. ByT. H. Shaw. 
London : R. Washbourne. 1877. 



THE 



CATHOLIC WORLD 



VOL. XXVI., No. 156. MARCH, 1878. 



IRELAND IN 1878. 



A HISTORY of Ireland still re- 
mains to be written ; nor has there 
been even an attempt to collect 
some of the chief materials for such 
a work. Ten centuries of almost 
continuous conflict since the Dan- 
ish incursions, or seven since the 
Anglo-Norman settlement and the 
destruction or dispersion of the 
national archives, are sufficient to 
account for the absence of any full, 
authentic, or valuable Irish history. 
From Giraldus Cambrensis in the 
twelfth century to Froude in our 
day, there have never been want- 
ing subsidized, and even able, 
writers to defame and revile the na- 
tive population and laud the Eng- 
lish rule in Ireland. Nor, on the 
other hand, has there been any 
lack of enthusiasts whose patriot- 
ism, more ardent than their erudi- 
tion is profound or exact, is ever 
ready to excuse or defend the na- 
tives and execrate the Anglo-Nor- 
man and Saxon tyrants and de- 
spoilers. Even in Ireland it is 
difficult to obtain reliable informa- 
tion regarding the country ; while 

Copyright : Rev. I. 



outside of it such aim is impossible 
of attainment. The dispersion cf 
the Irish race during the last thirty 
years has been greater in extent 
and over a larger area of the globe 
than any exodus of humanity known 
to history. These millions have 
carried the traditions of their coun- 
try's wrongs, and the dismal tales 
of the misgovernme/it of Ireland, 
to the uttermost ends of the earth, 
exaggerating, perhaps, the oppres- 
sion of their persecutors, and de- 
picting in touching sympathy the 
glowing virtues of the victims. The 
largest contingent of this Irish emi- 
gration has enriched the United 
States of America, where partiality 
has culminated in alternate praise 
and censure of the Irish race. The 
circumstances under which most of 
these people reached the American 
shores were truly tragic and appal- 
ling, and are well-nigh forgotten by 
the older portion of the generation 
now passing away. 

The estimated population of Ire- 
land in 1845 was 8,295,061, which 
made it then one of the most dcnse- 

T. HECKER. 1878. 



7 2i 



Ireland in 187?. 



ly peopled countries in Europe. In 
the autumn of that year the potato 
crop, one of the chief products of 
the country and the staple food of 
three-fifths of the people, failed, in- 
volving a loss estimated by Mr. 
Labouchere, the British minister, 
of eighty million dollars, or sixteen 
millions sterling. This failure in 
1845 was followed by successive 
blights of the potato-crop in 1846 
and subsequent years, causing what 
is called the Irish famine, and with 
it the great emigration, which 
brought an increase of millions of 
citizens to the United States. There 
had been an Irish immigration in 
America from the earliest days of 
the colony to Maryland, for exam- 
ple, in the seventeenth century ; 
but the Irish famine of 1845-49 
marks the opening of the great in- 
flux of Irish into the United States 
and Canada. 

We propose to consider the so- 
cial and industrial condition and 
the political and religious prospects 
of Ireland in 1878, making the eve 
of the famine, in 1845, the basis of 
comparison. We write from Ire- 
land, with tilt amplest knowledge 
of our subject, and, as we hope, 
having no object in view save a full 
and clear statement of the main 
facts necessary for its elucidation. 
We have travelled over every pro- 
vince, every county, every parish, 
every locality of its soil ; are inti- 
mate with every phase of its his- 
tory and every section of its popu- 
lation, and feel every throb of its 
national life. Yet we invite the 
fullest criticism of our attempt to 
discuss the present condition of 
Ireland from a scientific, a truthful, 
and an impartial stand-point. No- 
where out of Ireland is such dis- 
cussion more desirable or more 
difficult than in the United States. 
The republic contains about the 



same number of Irish, by birth or 
by descent, that remain in the old 
country. The emigrants of the 
famine period left under dire pres- 
sure, the origin of which is not 
fully understood abroad. In the 
forty-four years 1801-1845 the 
population of Ireland increased 
from 5,216,329 to 8,295,061, or by 
3,078,732 persons an increase of 
fifty-nine per cent. Emigration 
was throughout that period incon- 
siderable ; in the decade 1831-41 
it was only 403,459, or about 40,000 
a year ; in the next four years it 
fell to little over half that average ; 
while in the year 1-843, when 
O'Connell led the great agitation 
for repeal of the Union, only 13,026 
persons left the country, being the 
lowest on record. Although the 
potato blight appeared in 1845, it 
was not until 1847 that the 'horrors 
of the famine and of emigration 
assumed their most awful aspect. 
In the single year 1847, that of 
O'Connell's death, there was a loss 
of population of 262,574, or three 
per cent., by the conjoint action of 
emigration and the excess of deaths 
over births ; while in the next four 
years the aggregate decrease readi- 
ed 1,510,801 persons little short of 
nineteen per cent, of the whole po- 
pulation. The following, table ex- 
hibits the estimated population at 
the middle of the year relating to 
our inquiry : 



YEAR 




DECREASE. 






PERSONS. 


PER CEXT. 


i8 4S 


8.295,061 








1846 


8,287,848 


7) 21 ? 


O.og 


i8 47 


8,025,274 


2^2,574 


3-' 


1848 


7,639,800 


385,474 


4.8 


1849 


7, 2 56,3'4 


3^3-43 


5-0 


1850 


6,877.549 


378,765 


5-' 


1851 


6,5M.473 


363.076 


5-t 


1861 


5,778,415 


736058 


"3 


1871 


5,395,007 


383,408 


6.6 


1875 


5.3<-9,494 


85,513 


I.O 


1876 


5,321,618 








1877 


5,338,906 









Ireland in 1878. 



723 



Over the whole period from 1845 
to 1875 population decreased, but 
the rate of decline diminished 
after 1851. In the thirty years 
there was a loss of 2,973,443 near- 
ly 100,000 annually, or thirty-six per 
cent, of the inhabitants. The year 
1876 is memorable as the starting- 
point of reactionary improvement. 
For the first time during a genera- 
tion emigration has so diminish- 
ed that the natural increase of 
births over deaths added 10,352 to 
the population in 1876, and 17,288 
in 1877. Increase must hence- 
forth be the normal law of popu- 
lation, but it is never again likely 
to reach the rate it attained in the 
thirty years 1801-31, when it ex- 
panded about fourteen per cent, 
each decade, or an increase of 
nearly one in seven every ten 
years. 

We are now to inquire into the 
main causes of these terrible calami- 
ties, strange and conflicting expla- 
nations of which are advanced by 
public writers in the United States 
and other countries. One flippant, 
fertile, and accepted theory is the 
peculiar proneness of the Irish to 
contention and disunion a theory 
generally credited as sound by 
those ignorant of history or those 
prejudiced against the Irish race. 
We shall adduce a few broad and 
suggestive facts in disproof of this 
theory. Can any nation exhibit a 
nobler proof of unity than the Bre- 
hon laws, or Seanchtts Mor, which 
prevailed universally in Ireland 
for centuries before the Christian 
era, until revised by St. Patrick 
and the Christian kings, and which 
continued in force throughout the 
country, save the small patch call- 
ed the Pale, until the seventeenth 
century, while the traditions and 
principles of that code yet influ- 



ence the people after a lapse of 
twenty to five-and-twenty centu- 
ries ? And so as regards the tena- 
city with which, for ages, the people 
have adhered to the use of the Gael- 
ic or native tongue, still spoken by 
little short of a million of the in- 
habitants, after the Greeks, the Ro- 
mans, the French, the Spaniards, 
the Britons, and the Scotch have 
mainly abandoned the primitive 
tongues of their ancestors. All 
pagan Ireland was converted to 
Christianity by one man an exam- 
ple of unity and docility without 
parallel in the history of the human 
race. Ireland, like France, Eng- 
land, and other countries, was rav- 
aged by the Danish and Norse 
invaders, yet the Irish defeated and 
expelled them in 1014, long before 
the Gauls or the Saxons had ban- 
ished or crushed them in Norman- 
dy or in England. Towards the 
close of the twelfth century the 
Anglo-Normans found partial foot- 
ing in Ireland, yet for seven hun- 
dred years the native race have 
opposed their rule, and oppose it 
to-day an example of unity and 
persistency unsurpassed in the 
world. The English, the Scotch, 
and most of the nations in the 
north and northwest of Europe 
abandoned their ancient faith and 
accepted the Protestant Reforma- 
tion, at the bidding of their sove- 
reigns, in the sixteenth century ; 
while Catholic Ireland, in defiance 
of penal laws that plundered pro- 
perty, denied education, reduced 
the people almost to barbarism, and 
sent them to the scaffold for ad- 
herence to their church, has re- 
mained, through centuries of suf- 
fering, loyal to conscience, and by 
unity, fidelity, and perseverance 
lias effected the overthrow of the 
Protestant Church Establishment 



724 



Ireland in 1878. 



of the Tudors. Proud and great 
memories these for the Irish na- 
tion memories sufficient to dis- 
prove the shallow and unfounded 
charge that to disunion, peculiar 
to their race, must be attributed 
the sad and chequered history of 
the country. While if we turn to 
all other kingdoms at correspond- 
ing- periods, even to the present 
time, we find analogous internal 
strife and domestic political fac- 
tions as numerous and as intense 
as any in Ireland. England, Scot- 
land, the several British colonies, 
France, Germany, Italy, Spain, 
Holland, and the United States 
were quite as much torn by inter- 
nal dissension as Ireland, and are 
so at the present day ; so that this 
hypothesis is wholly unfounded 
and quite inadequate to account 
for the disastrous decadence, or at 
least want of progress, of Ireland, 
compared in many respects with 
other countries. 

The causes of Irish discontent 
and comparative social backward- 
ness are remote, chronic, and cu- 
mulative. From the arrival of the 
Anglo-Normans in 1 1 69 to the defeat 
of the Irish in the Williamite war, 
near the close of the seventeenth 
century, one clear purpose was kept 
in view by the aliens the extirpa- 
tion of the natives from ownership 
and even occupancy of the soil. At- 
tainders, escheatments, plantations, 
transplantations, and settlements 
all had the same purpose. Penal 
Laws, the Court of Wards, and dire 
persecution had driven the Catho- 
lic natives from proprietorship, and 
almost from occupancy, of the soil. 
Cupidity led many Cromwellian 
and planter landlords to baffle the 
Penal Laws and pocket the higher 
rents offered by popish recusants. 
Protestants of the humbler classes 



complained that the protection 
promised and due to them as of 
right in the English interest was 
denied and defeated by the planter 
and palatine landlords in prefer- 
ring popish tenants whose lower 
standard of living and degraded 
social caste enabled them to pay a 
higher rent than Protestant tenants, 
who claimed, by right of class, a 
better mode of living. Thus robbed 
and deprived of their estates, de- 
nied leases, and rackrented by mid- 
dlemen and others, the mass of the 
Irish people before the famine 
were mere squatters on the soil, 
neither owners nor, in any true 
sense, occupiers. 

Catholics were emancipated in 
1829 and rendered admissible to 
almost all the offices in the state ; 
they obtained an instalment of edu- 
cational concession in 1831, and a 
modification of the grinding op- 
pression of the tithe system and the 
Protestant Church Establishment 
a few years afterwards ; a Poor 
Law, directed by a London board, 
was passed in 1838, and corporate 
reform was granted in 1840; but 
these and other remedial measures, 
in operation for a few years, could 
effect little towards the elevation 
of a people impoverished and de- 
graded by centuries of foreign and 
crushing legislation. 

From an economic and industrial 
stand-point the condition of Catho- 
lics, in relation to land, was the 
chief cause of the wretchedness of 
the country. The agricultural la- 
borers were in the lowest social 
state in Europe, scarcely excepting 
the Russian serfs. Employment 
was precarious and rarely secured 
a higher average wages than six- 
pence to eightpence a day, or 
scarcely a dollar a week. From 
Connaught a large number went to 



Ireland in 1878. 



725 



England for some weeks at the 
hay, corn, and potato harvests, 
where they earned what paid the 
rent of the cabin and the potato- 
plot ; while many of the cotters and 
small farmers were little better in 
position. A few facts from the cen- 
sus of 1841 and 1851 will suffice to 
illustrate the large number and the 
terrible fate of these classes, as in- 
dicated by the grades of house 
accommodation before and after 
the famine : 





184 


T. 


185 


t. 


TION. 


HOUSES. 


FEZ 
CENT. 


HOUSES. 


PER 
CENT. 


First class 


31,333 


2.1 


39,370 


3-3 






16.4 


292,280 


24.3 


Third class 


574,^86 


39- 


588,440 


48.9 


Fourth (cabin) class 


625,356 


42.5 


284,229 


=3-5 


Total 


1.472 739 


IOO. 


i, 204 ,3 '9 


IOO. 













Here we see that, seemingly in 
ten but really in five years, no less 
than 341, 127 fourth-class houses 
mud, sod, or stone, thatched cabins 
with only a single apartment were 
swept away, inhabited by that num- 
ber of families, which included 
about 1,800,000 persons; wliile the 
table of population above given 
shows that in these years the esti- 
mated decrease was 1,780,588 a 
striking concurrence between both. 
Another proof as regards the class 
swept away is found in the follow- 
ing table of agricultural holdings, 
grouped by extent, in 1841 and 
1851: 



HOLDINGS. 


1841. 


1851. 


Not exceeding one acre 


Not known. 


37,728 
88,083 


Five to fifteen acres 
Fifteen to thirty acres 


252.799 
79,342 
48,625 


191,854 
141,3" 
149 090 








Total 


691,203 


608,066 









Excluding the very large number 
of holdings under an acre not as- 
certained in 1841, we find the dis- 
appearance in that decade, or rather 
in half of it, of 222,353 tenements 
between one and five acres, which 
represents a diminished population 
of 1,200,000 persons. The de- 
crease of 60,945, in the tenements 
from five to fifteen acres, represent- 
ing about 320,000 people, is por- 
tion of this same subject. If we 
now turn to another head of evi- 
dence we find that the population 
was thinned from the least educat- 
ed classes. The census of 1841 
returned fifty-three per cent, of the 
whole population, aged five years 
and upwards, as illiterate, being 
unable to read or write, while the 
return for 1851 showed a decrease 
to forty-seven per cent; and 
turning to the great decrease in the 
percentage of the Irish-speaking 
population between 1841 and 1851, 
we find similar results. Lastly, 
the creed census demands atten- 
tion. 

The first taken in Ireland was 
that by the Royal Commission of 
Public Instruction in 1834, when, 
of a population of 7,954,100, it 
was found there were 6,436,000, 
or 80.9 per cent., Catholics; while 
the followers of the intruded 
Anglican Church, established for 
three centuries, numbered only 853,- 
160, or 10.7 per cent. The ad- 
herents of the Scotch Presbyte- 
rian Church, endowed by the state, 
though not established, 643,058, or 
8.1 per cent.; and all other Pro- 
testant dissenters mustered only 
21,822 or 0.3 per cent. Between 
1834 and 1845, when the pota- 
to blight first appeared, the popu- 
lation had increased from 7,954,- 
100 to 8,295,061, during which 
period of eleven years there are 



726 



Ireland in 1878. 



ample evidences to prove that the 
Catholic element underwent a lar- 
ger increase than the Protestant, so 
that we may fairly assume the whole 
population in 1845 to have been 
thus composed : 

PER CENT. 

Catholics 6,760,475 815 

Protestants 1,534,586 18.5 

, Total 8,295,061 too. 

These millions of Catholics, em- 
ancipated only sixteen years, were 
the descendants of the natives who 
for over six centuries had bat- 
tled against English domination; 
whose estates and lands had been 
wrested from them and given to 
soldiers and adventurers from Eng- 
land and Scotland "the scum of 
both nations"; whose ancient church 
had been despoiled of her property ; 
to whom education was denied 
and the profession of their faith 
made penal; whose manufacturing 
industries were suppressed by Eng- 
lish laws ; who were excluded from 
all offices, civil and military, and 
from all social rank and distinction, 
and denied not alone a seat in 
Parliament for 137 years, 1692 to 
1829, but from 1727 to 1793, a period 
of 66 years, the right to vote. 

Such is a broad outline of the 
main facts concerning the popula- 
tion of Ireland in 1845, as to quan- 
tity and quality. We must, how- 
ever, supplement these by a few 
particulars. 

From one-third to one-half the 
rental of the kingdom went to ab- 
sentee and alien landlords, who 
spent it in England or on the Con- 
tinent. The imperial taxes borne 
by Ireland were in excess of her 
capacity and in violation of the ar- 
ticles of the Act of Union. All the 
state departments had their head- 
quarters in London, while Ireland 



had slender share either in the 
appropriating or the enjoyment of 
those taxes. The local taxation, 
through grand jury and other cess, 
was enormous, but levied and ap- 
propriated by the country gentry, 
all predominantly Protestant. The 
county officers, the grand jury, 
the jail, the lunatic asylum, in- 
firmary, and poor-law union boards 
were almost exclusively Protes- 
tant. The corporations, reform- 
ed by statute in 1840, were still 
Protestant. One or two Catholic 
judges had reached the bench, 
as O'Loghlen, and many Catho- 
lics were pressing to the front 
at the bar and in medicine, while 
in all the professions, in trade, and 
in commerce Catholic influence 
was beginning to be felt. Catho- 
lics had, it is true, only trifling 
share in the administration of the 
government and the laws. They 
had little representation in the 
magistracy or on the grand juries; 
while jury-packing was the normal 
condition of the administration of 
justice. The Orange system, stim- 
ulated by the triumph of Catholic 
emancipation, was rampant and ag- 
gressive at the prospect of social 
equality. 

Yet, amidst such disadvantages, 
Ireland, in the two or three years 
before the famine, presented a 
moral and political spectacle such 
as the modern world had never 
witnessed. O'Connell, the greatest 
political leader of this century, led 
the millions of Irish people in their 
demand for justice to Ireland. He 
claimed the restoration of the leg- 
islative independence of Ireland 
as it existed from 1782 to 1801, or 
a repeal of the Act of Union. His 
efforts towards that object, the mil- 
lions who rose to support him, and 
the moral, intellectual, and national 



Ireland in 1878. 



727 



sympathy that his demand elicited, 
are perfectly well known. The 
famine appeared in 1845 and blast- 
ed the whole agitation, while 
O'Connell died at Genoa, May 
15, 1847, when the country that 
he wildly, passionately loved was 
in the throes of the famine, the 
horrors of which O'Connell vainly 
endeavored to avert by appeals for 
substantial relief to the British 
government. The present prime 
minister of England, the Earl of 
Beaconsfield, declared in the House 
of Commons, in reference to Ire- 
land, on the opening of the famine, 
that for a country with an absentee 
proprietary, an alien established 
church, and a population starving 
or fleeing the country, most Eng- 
lishmen can see but one remedy, 
and that revolution. 

The great Irish famine, contra- 
ry to popular opinion, was exceed- 
ed by many visitations of the 
kind in India and elsewhere, and 
perhaps equalled by some that 
had occurred even in Ireland, so 
far as extent of mortality is con- 
cerned; but, measured by the ag- 
gregate of its social and economic 
effects, no such disaster is record- 
ed in history. The mortality was 
considerably less than was suppos- 
ed that is, of deaths caused di- 
rectly by starvation, suffering, and 
sickness arising out of the famine. 
Dysentery, diarrhoea, fever, cholera 
all supervened. Workhouse ac- 
commodation failed, notwithstand- 
ing the utilization, as auxiliary hous- 
es, of nearly all the idle and abandon- 
ed stores in cities and towns, and of 
large numbers of rural mansions 
deserted by the country gentry. 
All the habits, feelings, and tradi- 
tions of the Irish nation were op- 
posed to a poor-law. Passed in 
1838, although a poor-law had 



been in operation in England from 
1601, it was only in 1847, the third 
year of the famine, that the last of 
the 131 Irish work-houses was 
opened, in Clifden, Connemara, 
and then by mandamus of the 
Queen's Bench. In 1844, the 
year before the appearance of the 
potato blight, there were only 113 
workhouses open, with an aggre- 
gate of 105,358 paupers relieved 
that year at an expense of $1,085,- 
336. In 1847 the number reliev- 
ed in the workhouses, auxiliaries 
included, was 417,139, or nearly 
fourfold, while the expenditure was 
$3,214,744, or threefold. The en- 
tire Poor-Law Act and the work- 
house system utterly broke down 
under pressure of the mass of des- 
titution. That act was adminis- 
tered from Somerset House, Lon- 
don, under an English commission, 
from 1838 to 1847. All the lead- 
ingofficers, assistant commissioners, 
and others were sent from Eng- 
land to carry out a law amongst 
a people of whose feelings and so- 
cial circumstances they were tho- 
roughly ignorant, and to their race 
and faith were totally opposed. 
That act expressly denied out-door 
relief, in any form or towards any 
destitution, how acute soever, in 
Ireland; while out-door relief was 
the general and normal form of 
poor relief in England for centu- 
ries, and continues so at present. 
The law was framed so as to throw 
the whole influence of its adminis- 
tration into the hands of the land- 
lords and magistracy, or their 
agents, the vast majority of whom 
were planters and Cromwellians, 
hostile in faith and feeling to the 
destitute classes. A temporary 
Poor Relief Extension Act, passed 
June 8, 1847, was necessitated, or 
the destitute classes must have 



728 



Ireland in 1878. 



seized in self-defence the cattle, 
corn, and other edibles abounding 
in the country to prevent starvation. 
Out-door relief was permitted, but 
should be administered solely in 
food ; while the able-bodied recipi- 
ents were subjected to severe tests 
of stone-breaking or other unpro- 
ductive labor. The tenth section 
of this act was the infamous quar- 
ter-acre clause, which declared that, 

" If an}' person so occupying more than 
the quarter of a statute acre (less than 
thirty-five yards square) shall apply for 
relief, or if any person on his behalf shall 
apply for relief, it shall not be lawful for 
any Board of Guardians to grant such re- 
liff, within or without the workhouse, to 
any such person." 

This horrible clause gave the 
alternative of death or the surren- 
der of their cabins, cottages, and 
small farms to the tens, the hun- 
dreds of thousands who occupied 
the humbler allotments and home- 
steads in Ireland. If they refused 
to surrender possession to the land- 
lord, they perished, relief being de- 
nied them ; while if they yielded, 
the crowded workhouse, with a 
weekly mortality of twenty-five in 
every one thousand inmates, preci- 
pitated them from the trap-coffin, 
often unshrived and always un- 
shrouded, into the common fosse 
without a semblance of Christian 
burial. As an adjunct to the 
quarter-acre clause, and further 
to effect the clearance of the mass 
of the laboring and industrious class- 
es, urban as well as rural, occupiers 
rated at under twenty-five dollars 
who surrendered their holdings, 
whether held on lease or otherwise, 
to their landlords, were, with their 
families, assisted to emigrate, two- 
thirds of the expenses of the same to 
be borne on the rates of the elec- 
toral division, the other third by 



the landlord. And to complete 
and give effect to these provisions 
for the death or the extermination 
of the population, the landlords 
were secured, by a radical change 
in the act of 1838, a monopoly in the 
whole administration of relief. Un- 
der that act each Board of Guardians 
consisted of three-fourths elected 
members and one-fourth ex-officio 
members, being magistrates resi- 
dent in the union ; whereas, by an 
amendment introduced into the act 
of 1847 the proportion of ex-officio 
members is doubled, being increas- 
ed from one-fourth to one-half the 
whole strength of the board. With 
a full moiety of the members of the 
landlord class, the territorial influ- 
ence through the multiple vote, 
which gives rated property from 
one to six votes, and also voting 
by proxy, the land magnates are 
always able to command, if not a 
majority, at least a large number, of 
seats amongst the elected guardians, 
and thus secure dominance in the 
administration of the whole poor- 
law. 

Under the original act of 1838 
the incidence of the poor's rate 
was divided equally between the 
occupier and the owner, while oc- 
cupiers whose tenements were below 
twenty-five dollars annual valuation 
were exempt, the rate being charg- 
ed to the landlord ; and, moreover, 
a clause declared that any contract 
made between owner and occupier 
which would release the former 
from liability to a moiety of the 
poor's rate was null and void. The 
landlord added, of course, the rates 
to the rent, save in the case of 
the small number of tenants hold- 
ing under lease, so that the whole 
cost of relief fell on the occupier; 
while a clause in the Poor Law 
Amendment Act passed hi 1849 re- 



Ireland in 1878. 



729 



pealed the annulling provision of 
the act of 1838, and legalized the 
enabling power of the tenant to 
contract himself, under compul- 
sion, out of the protection secured 
to him that property should bear a 
moiety; of the cost of poor relief. 
We may mention that the savage 
quarter-acre clause continued in 
operation from 1847 until partially 
repealed in 1862, a period of fifteen 
years, during which it quenched 
many a hearth, dismantled thousands 
of roof-trees, and sent more than a 
million of the Irish race to the 
grave or as scattered exiles over 
the face of the globe. In 1862, its 
fell purpose fulfilled, it was par- 
tially repealed, to the extent that 
destitute persons, although occu- 
piers of a quarter of an acre of 
land, may be relieved, but in the 
workhouse only j so that still a cot- 
ter with forty perches of a garden, 
or a small farmer, suffering under 
temporary distress from failure of 
crop, sickness, or accident, must 
either surrender his little holding 
and enter the workhouse, or starve 
under the scheme of legal charity 
devised to extirpate the Irish from 
the soil of which their ancestors 
had been robbed through ages. 

We write fact and law, and repu- 
diate all but sober statement in our 
attempt to illustrate the present po- 
sition of the Irish people. In the 
most acute throes of the famine, 
July 22, 1847, an act was passed 
for the punishment of vagrants and 
persons offending against the laws 
in force for the relief of the poor 
in Ireland an act worthy of the 
worst days of Nero or Diocletian. 
Let us inquire what was the condi- 
tion of the country when this act 
was passed. At the end of Febru- 
ary that year there were 116,321 
inmates in receipt of relief in the 



workhouses, and in July there were 
10,000 cases of fever, apart from 
other terrible diseases, in those in- 
stitutions, the mortality being enor- 
mous. Under the Temporary Relief 
Act there were issued, July 3, rations 
equal to the support of 3,020,712 
persons. Yet the Vagrant Act in- 
flicted imprisonment in a common 
jail and hard labor for a month 
upon any person "placing himself 
in any public place, street, highway, 
court, or passage to beg or gather 
alms," with the same punishment 
for removing from one poor-law un- 
ion, or even one electoral division, 
to another for the purpose of relief. 
More than half the population were 
then in receipt of relief, a vast 
portion of them being engaged upon 
relief works, which necessitated the 
migration to considerable distances 
of the male heads of families. Yet 
a clause in this act imposed impri- 
sonment for three months, with 
hard labor, for desertion or wilful 
neglect of a family by its head 
desertion that might have arisen 
from removal for some miles to 
another union or electoral division, 
in order to provide food for them. 

Ireland was one uncovered la- 
zar-house in 1847. We write from 
vivid and painful remembrance of 
personal travel of 5,000 to 10,000 
miles yearly, in an official capacity, 
over the most afflicted of the fa- 
mine-stricken districts, from Water- 
ford round to Sligo, during that 
and subsequent years up to 1858. 
We visited every workhouse, every 
auxiliary, every fever hospital, eve- 
ry relief depot, every soup-kitchen, 
every centre of public works, by 
way of relief, every missionary sta- 
tion for proselytizing purposes, 
every ragged-school, every jail, 
and made a minute personal survey 
of the most distressed localities in 



730 



Ireland in 1878, 



the south and west of Ireland in 
1847 and throughout the famine. 
Holding an important commission 
from the government, we had ac- 
cess to and command of sources of 
reliable information open to few, 
while we had personal communica- 
tion with the chief officers of seve- 
ral public departments that enabled 
us to understand thoroughly the 
precise condition of the suffering 
classes throughout the whole pe- 
riod of acute distress in Ireland. 
Charged, unsolicited, by the gov- 
ernment with a special inquiry 
connected with the condition of the 
destitute and criminal classes which 
embraced the whole kingdom, ow- 
ing to experience acquired during 
the famine period, we visited offi- 
cially every county, every diocese, 
every poor-law union, every parish 
in Ireland, and willingly place the 
results of that experience before 
the readers of THE CATHOLIC 
WORLD. The history of the famine 
is yet to be written, and, if not soon 
prepared, the records of personal 
experience will be lost, and a relia- 
ble account of it rendered impossi- 
ble. When political factions in the 
United States traduce the Irish 
race, and when factions in the se- 
veral British colonies do likewise, 
as regards .Irish immigrants, they 
do so ignorant, it is to be hoped, 
of the precise circumstances under 
which these immigrants reached 
those countries during pressure 
of the famine. We have treated 
the amount of decline of popu- 
lation in Ireland, and the social 
quality of that decline, in this 
article. The decrease" of popula- 
tion directly through the famine 
is, as we have said, exaggerated. 
The census commissioners of 1851 
set down the deaths from extraor- 
dinary causey between 1841 and 



1851, or rather from 1845, as fol- 
lows : 

Deaths from fever 222,029 

Deaths from dissentery and diarrhoea I 34-35S 

Deaths from cholera 35,989 

Deaths from starvation 21.770 

Total 414,143 



These figures, sad and enormous 
as they are, we are prepared to show 
are an entire understatement of 
the true facts of the case. The 
whole condition of society below 
the middle classes was disorganized 
and demoralized. Panic and para- 
lysis seized the" entire population. 
The dependent perished at home 
or in the workhouses, while those 
with means to emigrate fled the 
country. Flying from famine, fever, 
and pestilence, these reluctant emi- 
grants, numbers of whom perished 
before settlement, have helped to 
lay the foundation of the prosperity 
of the United States and of the 
British colonies. The author of 
the Record of the O'Connell Cente- 
nary, describing the character of the 
early Irish emigrants, says, with 
great truth and force : 

" Snatched from rough rural labor, 
little skilled in handicraft, a very large 
number wholly illiterate, and many un- 
able to speak any tongue save the 
native Gaelic ; nearly half of them fe- 
males, without that cultured training in 
domestic service required by other coun- 
tries ; a heavy, helpless juvenile element 
hanging on them ; intensely clannish, yet 
removed from those tribal and religious 
standards of morality and social life 
which powerfully influence the Irish a 
home ; memory saddened with the re 
collection of the roofless cabin and the 
loved little ancestral farm lost for ever, 
the dead who had been starved at home 
or fell in fever, the dear relatives who 
sought the shelter of the workhouse, but 
through whose trap-coffin they were pre- 
cipitated into the famine fosse without 
shroud or requiem ; and the uncertainty of 
despair as to the living remnant of the 



The Blessed Virgin. 



family left behind agonized by such 
feelings, the millions were hastily de- 
ported on the shores of America, 
Australia, and New Zealand, objects of 
sympathy and affection to the generous, 
of pity to the benevolent, of alarm and 
horror to the timid, of contempt to the 
misanthropic, and of scorn and hatred to 
the enemies of the race and faith of the 
Irish nation. Never before was specta- 
cle so sad, so gigantic, so appalling sub- 
mitted to the contemplation of humani- 
ty ; the history of Ireland was dramatized 
throughout Christendom, and its tragic 
story personated on every hospitable 
shore on both hemispheres, when Moore's 



prediction was literally and amply ful- 
filled : 

' ' The stranger shall hear thy lament on his plain ; 
The sigh of thy harp shall be sent o'er the deep. ' ' ' 

We have given an outline sketch 
of the condition of Ireland just be- 
fore and irr the early stages of the 
famine ; in our next we shall en- 
deavor to trace what progress she 
has made from that sad period to 
her present improved position in 
1878. 



THE BLESSED VIRGIN. 



LIKE chants which fade yet linger still to bless, 
While float their formless notes of joy or dole, 
So thought doth grieve for words beyond control, 
That to itself it may thy charms confess, 
And tell each grace with joyous eagerness, 
As did the morning stars their anthems roll, 
Or as the angels greet a ransom'd soul. 
Such tongues alone could paint the loveliness 
Which o'er thy face in sad, sweet beauty smiled ; 
As though in unseen wingings, ever near, 
The Dove had coo'd a legend in thine ear 
Of some rare tenderness to grief beguiled 
Perchance of love which bought redemption dear, 
With all its cost of sorrow to thy Child. 



732 



A)noiig the Translators. 



AMONG THE TRANSLATORS. 



VIRGIL AND HORACE III. 



THE work of translation seems in 
an odd way to enlist that mimetic 
impulse which is so strong an ele- 
ment of human nature, and which 
is- really at the bottom of so much 
of human rivalry. To wish to do 
as much as others in any given 
line of effort is but an after-thought, 
a secondary motion of the mind; 
the initial instinct is to do the same 
as they. That men do not rest 
at this ; that they are not content 
with merely duplicating what they 
see done about them, like the late 
lamented Mr. Pongo ; that they are 
for ever seeking " to better their 
instruction," is due to that further 
instinctive yearning for perfection 
which helps to differentiate them 
from Mr. Pongo, and interferes so 
sadly with many most ingenious and 
scientific schemes for recreating the 
universe without a Creator. All 
literatures, it may be said, all poets, 
begin with translation that is, with 
imitation of some other literature 
or poet. Alcaeus and Sophron, no 
doubt, are but Horace and Theocri- 
tus to the unknown who went be- 
fore them; Homer is first, doubt- 
less, only because we know not the 
greater than Homer rapt from us 
by the irrevocable years whom 
Homer may have copied, as Virgil 
copied Homer. 

This, however, is a law of litera- 
ture which was known as long ago 
as the days of Solomon, at least. 
What is not so obvious, and even 
more curious as well as more to the 
present point, is why translators 
under certain conditions should be 
so fond of repeating one another in 
regard to any particular bit of work. 



For a generation or so some one of 
the poets who are the favorite ob- 
jects of the translator's zeal will be 
neglected and seemingly forgotten. 
Then some day appears a version 
which attracts attention and gets 
talked of, 2J\&,presto! a dozen pens 
are in eager chase to rival or sur- 
pass it. Now it is Homer which is 
thus brought into notice, and we 
have Professor Newman, Lord Der- 
by, Mr. Wright, Mr. Worsley, Mr. 
Dart, Professor Blackie, Mr. Bry- 
ant what muse shall catalogue 
the host? giving us in quick suc- 
cession and in every kind of metr^ 
their versions of the Iliad or Odys- 
sey, or both ? Again it is Virgil, and 
within a brief interval Professor 
Conington, Mr. Morris, and Mr. 
Cranch have done the sEneid 
into English. Or once more Hor- 
ace sways the hour, and in a twink- 
ling or thereabouts a dozen trans- 
lations of the Odes are smoking hot 
from the press on the critic's table, 
and bewildering him to choose 
among their various merits. With- 
in the last half-century, nay, within 
the last twenty-five years, we have 
seen just this revolution. Is it be- 
cause our own is so peculiarly one 
of those transitional periods in the 
history of a literature which are 
most favorable to translation in- 
deed, most provocative of it ; one 
of those intervals when the national 
imagination is, as it were, lying 
fallow after the exhaustion of some 
great creative epoch, and intellectual 
effort takes chiefly the form of criti- 
cism, which in one sense translation 
is ? Well, such generalizations are 
as perilous as they are fascinating 



Among the 



and we must not yield to them too 
rashly. In this case, if we did yield, 
we should be told, no doubt, that 
translation was no more a peculiar- 
ity of a transitional period than of a 
creative one ; that the notion of such 
divisions in the history of a litera- 
ture is preposterous and but an- 
other invention of the arch-enemy, 
like comparative philology and the 
Eastern question, to set the mildest 
and wisest of sages even ourselves, 
beloved reader thirsting for each 
other's blood ; or that, finally, an 
epoch which has produced Tenny- 
son and Browning, De Vere and 
Arnold, Swinburne, Morris, and 
Rossetti, and let nothing tempt 
us back to our own side of the At- 
lantic, where poets grow like pump- 
kins, big and little, in every garden 
patch ; yet surely, if originality 
goes for anything, we may add 
Tupper that a time so prolific of 
poetic genius is not to be counted 
a transitional period at all. 

This, or something like it, we 
should no doubt hear, if we ventur- 
ed upon putting forth as our own 
the enticing proposition we have 
but modestly thrown out as a sug- 
gestion to the reader. And if we 
were not withheld by that provi- 
dential want of time and opportu- 
nity which so often saves us from 
our rasher selves, we should no 
doubt go on to make the venture 
even now : to assert that, in spite of 
Tennyson and Browning, in spite 
even of Matthew Arnold in one 
sense a truer voice of his time than 
either of them in spite of the pagan 
and mediaeval renaissance piloted 
by that wonderfully clever coterie 
of the Rossettis, the present can in 
no sense be called a creative epoch 
in our literature, as we call creative 
the two epochs of which Shakspere 
and Wordsworth are, broadly speak- 
ing, the representative names re- 



Translators. 



733 



presentative, however, in different 
ways and in widely different de- 
grees ; that it is, on the contrary, a 
true transitional period, as the period 
of Pope and Dryden was transitional, 
and for analogous reasons ; and that, 
because it is so, the art of transla- 
tion flourishes now as then. Nor 
should we forget, in saying this, the 
numerous translations which mark- 
ed the Elizabethan era. But it is 
to be noted that while all, or near- 
ly all, the then extant classics were 
turned into English before the close 
of the Elizabethan era, transla- 
tions of any one of them were not re- 
peated, and precisely for this reason : 
that the age, being a creative epoch, 
made its main effort in the direc- 
tion of knowledge, and not of criti- 
cism sought to acquire ideas, and 
not to arrange them, as was the 
case with the translating periods 
which came after it. Then, too, it 
was the virtual beginning of our 
literature, when translation, as we 
have said, came natural to it. 
Chaucer two hundred years before 
was a creative poet, if the term may 
be used, in a time that was not 
creative, a time that was not his ; a 
time whose sluggishness not even 
his pregnant genius could inform; 
Chaucer was the glad premature 
swallow of a lingering, long- delay- 
ing spring, whose settled sunshine 
came to us only with Spenser's 
later bird-song, 

" Preluding those melodious bursts that fill 

The spacious times of great Elizabeth 
With sounds that echo still." 

Milton may be said to have con- 
cluded, as Spenser preluded, that 
mighty time, without fairly belong- 
ing to it. They belonged rather to 
each other. " Milton has owned to 
me," says Dryden, " that his origi- 
nal was Spenser." They were the 
epilogue and the prologue of that 
mighty opening chorus of our lite- 



734 



Among the Translators. 



rature, in which the translators, 
too, had their parts, but only as 
prompters to the great singers, to 
help them to add to their native 
melody here and there some sweet- 
ness of a foreign note. 

The time of critical translation, of 
translation for its own sake, as an art, 
came in only with Dryden perhaps, 
on the whole, the greatest of the 
transition poets. Then, too, transla- 
tors began first to repeat each other's 
work. Before the year 1580 most 
of the classic poets had been trans- 
lated into English verse. They 
were not duplicated, because, as 
we have said, the time wanted first 
of all the knowledge of them, and it 
was not fastidious as to the shape 
in which it came. For a hundred 
years after its appearance Phaer's 
version of the dLneid had no rival. 
Then came Vicars', only to disap- 
pear almost as quickly. Doubly 
lapped in lead, it sank at once in 
that Stygian pool where Dulness 
tries the weight of her favorites, 
and there it has since remained, like 
Prospero's book and staff, drowned 

" Deeper than did ever plummet sound." 

Undeterred by this untoward 
fate, John Ogilby brought out his 
translation soon after, first at Cam- 
bridge and again in London, "adorn- 
ed with sculptures and illustrated 
with annotations " " the fairest edi- 
tion," grave Anthony a Wood assures 
us, " that till then the English press 
ever produced." This gorgeous 
work, pronounced by Pope to be 
below criticism, nevertheless went 
through four editions before de- 
scending to the congenial fellow- 
ship of Vicars under the forgetful 
wave a proof how much a good 
English version of the &neid was 
desired. Ogilby had been a danc- 
ing-master, and perhaps learned 



in his profession to rival Lucilius, 
who 

" In hora saepe ducentos 
Ut magnum versus dictabat stans pede in ur.o." * 

At all events, although he took to 
literature late in life he was past 
forty before he learned Latin or 
Greek he was a prodigious author, 
as we learn from the Dunciad : 

" Here groans the shelf with Ogilby the great.'' 

Besides translating remorselessly 
everything he could lay hands on, 
from Homer to ysop, he found time 
to write various heroic poems, and 
had even completed an epic in 
twelve books on Charles I., when 
fate took pity on his fellows and 
sent the great fire of London to the 
rescue. Phillips, in the Thcatruin 
Poetarum, styles Ogilby a prodigy, 
and avers that his " Paraphrase on 
^sop's Fables " " is generally con- 
fessed to have exceeded whatever 
hath been donebefore in that kind, "f 
As Milton's nephew can scarcely 
be suspected of a joke, we must 
conclude that this is not one of the 
critical judgments which Milton 
inspired. Nevertheless, Ogilby's 
translations and paraphrases pro- 
cured him a " genteel livelihood " 
which many better poems have 
failed to do for their authors. 

Neither Vicars nor Ogilby, how- 
ever, was of sufficient note, nor 
had their labors sufficient vitality, to 
set the current of translation fairly 
going. That was reserved for Dry- 
den, whose famous work came out 
in 1697. Dryden had all thequali- 

* " Who, perched on one foot, as though 'twere 

a feat, 

Some hundreds of verses an hour would repeat." 
Horat , Sat. i. 4, 9. 

t A couplet from this great work is quoted in the 
Dunciad : 

" So when Jove's block descended from on high 
(As sings thy great forefather, Ogilby), 
Loud thunder to its bottom shook the bog, 
And the hoarse nation croaked, "God save King 
Log!" 



Among the Translators. 



735 



fications necessary to ensure him 
a full harvest of imitation and ri- 
valry at once. He was the most 
famous poet and critic of his day, 
and in either capacity had found 
means to excite abundance of jeal- 
ousies and resentments. Moreover, 
his change of religion, and the 
vigor with which he had espoused 
the Catholic cause in his Hind ami 
Panther, made him many additional 
enemies. So it is not to be won- 
dered at that when, as Pope puts it, 

" Pride, malice, folly, against Dryden rose 
In various shapes of parsons, critics, beaux," 

the parsons led the onslaught. 
First came Parson Milbourn, " the 
fairest of critics," who printed his 
own version side by side with the 
one he found fault with, and whom 
Dulness also promptly claimed for 
her own. Then Dr. Brady, giving 
over to his worthy coadjutor, Tate, 
for the nonce the herculean task of 
promoting Sternhold and Hopkins 
to be next to the worst poets in the 
world, devoted himself to the equal- 
ly gigantic labor of proving that 
there was a work he could translate 
more abominably than the Psalms. 
His version in blank-verse, "when 
dragged into the light," says Dr. 
Johnson, "did not live long enough 
to cry." Then Dr. Trapp, the Ox- 
ford professor of poetry majora 
viribus audens rushed to the at- 
tack and did the ^Eneid into, if 
possible, still blanker verse than 
his predecessor's. It was he who 
said of Dryden's version " that where 
Dryden shines most we often see 
the least of Virgil." This was true 
enough ; and it was, no doubt, to 
avoid the like reproach that the 
good doctor forbore to shine at 
all. On him was made the well- 
known epigram apropos of a cer- 
tain poem said to be better than 
Virgil : 



" Better than Virgil ? Ve, perhaps ; 
But then, by Jove, 'tis Dr. Trapp's !' 



This is only another form of Bent- 
ley's famous judgment: "A very 
pretty poem, Mr. Pope, but you 
must not call it Homer." The doc- 
tor has had no better luck than his 
fellows. 

" Olli dura quies ocu'os et ferreus urguet 

Somnus ; in auernam clauduntur lumina ncctem."* 

These efforts of the parsons, 
however, were no doubt inspired 
at least as much by odium theologi- 
cum as by the genuine impulse of 
emulation. The first true exem- 
plification of this came about 1729 
with the version of Pitt,f whose 
choice of Dryden's couplet was a 
direct challenge. Johnson's esti- 
mate of the success of this rivalry 
is not, on the whole, unfair or, at 
least, as fair as such comparisons 
often are. " Dryden," he says, 
"leads the reader forward by his 
general vigor and sprightliness, 
and Pitt often stops him to contem- 
plate the excellence of a single 
couplet; Dryden's faults are forgot- 
ten in the hurry of delight, and 
Pitt's beauties neglected in the lan- 
guor of a cold and listless perusal ; 
Pitt pleases the critics and Dryden 
the people ; Pitt is quoted and 
Dryden read." Dryden, however, 
is probably oftener read nowadays 
than Pitt is quoted. It is some- 
thing to be a poet after all, and in 
the exchange of translation we 
allow for the purity of his metal 
and the beauty of his coinage. 
Most of us would rather have the 
gold of Dryden, though it fall a 

* " And iron slumber fell on him, hard rest weighed 

down his eyes, 
And shut were they for ever more by night that 

never dies." 
/Entid^ x. 745-7,6, Morris' translation. 

t The translation of the Earl of Lauderdale ap- 
peared before Pitt's, but it was really completed be- 
fore Dryden's, and the latter had the use of it in 
MSS. in preparing his own, as he admits in his pre- 
face. Some three or four hundred of the earl's lines 
were adopted by Dryden without change. 



736 



Among the Translators. 



piece or two short in the reckoning, 
than the small change of Pitt, though 
every silver sixpence and copper 
farthing be accounted for. 

Other translations of the ALneid 
there were during the eighteenth 
century, among them one by an- 
other Oxford professor of poetry, 
Hawkins, but none have survived. 
Pope's translation of Homer, which 
was published soon after Pitt's 
sneie/, diverted attention to the 
Greek poet, and gave him with trans- 
lators a pre-eminence over his Latin 
rival which only within a few years 
he can be said to have lost. Pope 
had no imitators, however, till long 
after. Even more absolutely than 
Dryden he swayed the sceptre of 
poetry in his time; and the pre- 
sumptuous wight who had ventured 
to challenge his sovereignty or to 
measure strength with " that poeti- 
cal wonder, the translation of the 
Iliad, a performance which no age 
or nation can pretend to rival," 
gods critical gods and men and 
booksellers would have laughed to 
scorn. It is true, Addison, that 
most uneasy " brother near the 
throne," was shrewdly suspected of 
meditating such a design under the 
cloak of his friend and follower, 
Tickell, and even went so far as to. 
publish so ran the current gossip 
of the coffee-houses a version of 
the first book of the Iliad in Tick- 
ell's name. But the scheme stop- 
ped there; Pope's triumph was too 
splendid and overwhelming, and his 
great work calmly defied competi- 
tion, until the spell of his honeyed 
couplet was broken, and Cowper 
could find a hearing for his pon- 
derous Miltonic periods, a full half- 
century after Pope's death. The 
battle which soon thereafter came 
to be joined between the partisans 
of the Popian and Cowperian me- 
thods both of them, as Mr. Arnold 



assures us, really on a complete 
equality of error had the effect of 
keeping Homer in the foreground 
and Virgil in the shade, despite the 
praiseworthy versions of the latter 
by Simmons in rhymed couplets 
about 1817, and Kennedy in blank- 
verse some thirty years later, until 
the critical furore created by the 
appearance of Prof. Conington's 
sEneid about ten years since once 
more turned the tide and brought 
our Mantuan to the front. 

Conington's translation, by the 
novelty of its metre, the freshness 
of its treatment, the spirit of its 
movement, its union of fidelity and 
grace, took the public ear and at 
once won a popularity which, if we 
may judge from the fact that a new 
edition has been lately advertised, 
it has not yet lost nor is destined 
speedily to lose. Moreover, its pe- 
culiar metre gave rise to a discus- 
sion among the critics, which has 
no doubt had its share in bringing 
out the two additional versions by 
Mr. Crancfo and Mr. Morris at 
brief intervals after Professor Con- 
ington's, the former at Boston, the 
latter in England and reprinted 
here. . Each of these three versions 
has that " proper reason for exist- 
ing " in novelty of method and 
manner which Mr. Arnold de- 
mands, and without which, indeed, 
multiplied translations are but cum- 
berers of the book-stall and a wea- 
riness to the flesh. Of Mr. Cranch 
this assertion may sound a trifle 
odd, since his work upon its face 
presents little that is new. In 
place of the galloping octosylla- 
bics of Prof. Conington or the re- 
surrected Alexandrines of Mr. 
Morris, he offers us only the fami- 
liar blank-verse which Kennedy 
and Trapp and Brady used, or 
misused, before him ; he has no 
theories to illustrate, but translates 



Among the Translators. 



737 



his author as faithfully as he knows 
lio\v, and his rendering is neither 
bo exceedingly good nor so exces- 
sively bad as to give it any claim 
to originality upon that score. But 
then it is the first American trans- 
lation of Virgil, and that is surely 
novelty enough. 

For as each age, so every coun- 
try, looks at a classic author through 
spectacles of its own. " Each age," 
as Conington well says in his pre- 
face, "will naturally think that it 
understands an author whom it 
studies better than the ages which 
have gone before it " ; and it is for 
this reason, he adds, " that the great 
works of antiquity require to be 
translated afresh from time to time 
to preserve their interest as part of 
modern literary culture." But it 
is not alone that each age -will un- 
derstand an author better than pre- 
ceding ages ; it will understand him 
differently; it will see him in an- 
other light, from far other points 
of view, modified and interpreted 
by its own spirit. What Heyne 
says of the poet is in a measure 
true of the translator that he has 
the genius of his era, which must 
necessarily qualify his work. We 
have sometimes fancied even .that 
this business of translation was a 
kind of metempsychosis through 
which the poet's soul shall speak 
to many different times and lands 
through forms and in voices chang- 
ing to suit the moods of each. This, 
of course, is only one of those fan- 
tastic notions which a writer must 
sometimes be indulged in, if he is 
to be kept in reasonable good-humor. 
But we think we may venture to 
say that two nations translating for 
themselves what antiquity has to 
say to them will insensibly find its 
utterances modified for each of 
them by their natural modes of 
thought. Nay, may we not go 
VOL. xxvi. 47- 



further and say that no t\vo human 
minds will find precisely the same 
message in Homer or Virgil or 
Horace so infinite are the grada- 
tions of thought, so innumerable 
the shades of meaning and sugges- 
tion in a word. Of Virgil this is 
especially true; for he has, says 
Prof. Conington, "that peculiar 
habit, . . . common to him and 
Sophocles, of hinting at two or 
three modes of expression while 
actually employing one." 

It is just for this reason that re- 
peated translations of a great au- 
thor are not only useful but de- 
sirable ; that, to quote Conington 
again, " it is well that we should 
know how our ancestors of the Re- 
volution period conceived of Vir- 
gil ; it is well that we should be 
obliged consciously to realize how 
we conceive of him ourselves." How 
true this is no one can fail to per- 
ceive who contrasts Dryden's me- 
thod in any given passage with Co- 
nington's. The sense of Virgil 
may be given with equal exactness 
by each we say may be, which is- 
rather stretching a point, for, in re- 
spect of verbal fidelity, the two ver- 
sions are not to be compared the- 
interpretation may be equally poet- 
ical, but there will remain a subtle- 
something which stamps each, and 
which we can only say -is the flavor 
of the time. Or, again, compare- 
the Abbe" Delille's French version^ 
with Dryden's English perhaps a 
fairer comparison; for both are- 
equally free, though by no means 
equally acquainted with their au- 
thor, and both to a certain extent 
belonged to the same school of com- 
position. Nor are they so very far 
apart as they seem in. point of time ;. 
the century or so which divides- 
them was a very much longer pe- 
riod in England than in France. 
Charles II. was nearer to Louis- 



738 



Among iJie Translators. 



XV. than to George III. in point 
of taste. Yet how different from 
Dryden's Virgil, or from any Eng- 
lishman's, is Delille's, even though 
lie does not find in his text such 
enchanting gallicisms as Jean Reg- 
nault de Segrais could twist out of 
the lines, 

" Ubi templum illi centumqite Sabseo 

Thure calent arse, sertisque recentibus ha- 
< lant " : * 

" Dans le temple oil toujours quelque Amant irrite 
Accuse dans ses voeux quelque jeune BeauteV' 

This is an extreme case, no 
doubt, and there are Frenchmen 
even who would not be beyond 
laughing at it. We are not to for- 
get, as we laugh at it ourselves, that 
Segrais was not unknown in the 
Hotel Rambouillet, and that al- 
though his own poetry was not all 
of this order, not even his sEneid 
Saint-Evremond liked it he also 
wrote novelswhich not even the Ho- 
tel Rambouillet could read. But 
Avhen that really able man and ac- 
complished scholar, Cardinal Dti 
Perron, turns Horace's. lines in the 
charming farewell to Virgil (Carm. 



" Ventorumque regat Pater 
Obstrictis aliis prater lapygia," 

irnto this sort of thing : 

" Ainsi des vents 1'humide Pere 
Ton cours heureusement temperc, 
Tenant ses enfants emplumcz 
Si bien sous la clef enfermez 
Excepte 1'opportun Zephyr," 

'we have a version which no doubt 
seems correct and poetical enough 
to a Frenchman, but to an English 
mind suggests nothing so much as 
a damp and aged poultry-fancier 
ilocking up his chickens in the hen- 
house out of the rain. And a coun- 
tryman of the cardinal can make 

*" There is her temple, there they stand an 

hundred altars meet, 

Warm with Sabaean incense smoke, with 
new-pulled blossoms sweet." 

sEneid, i. 415-416, Morris' trans. 



nothing more of the " laughing 
eyes " of Dante's Piccarda : 

" Ond' ella pronta e con occhi ridenti" * 

than 

" L'ombre me repondit d'un air satisfait .'" 

as though the celestial phantom 
had been a small girl bribed with a 
tart to answer. To the post-aca- 
demic Gaul, shivering in the chaste 
but chilly shadow of that awful 
Pantheon of the verbal proprieties, 
the " Marguerite aux yeulx rians 
et verds " whom his forebears loved 
to sing would be but a green-eyed 
monster indeed. Ronsard's paro- 
dies of Pindar were no worse than 
Ambrose Philips' travesties of the 
deep-mouthed Theban the spar- 
row-hawk aping the eagle and not 
much worse, indeed, than West's or 
even Wheelwright's, or any other 
imitation of the inimitable that we 
have seen. But the badness of the 
one is thoroughly French and of 
his time, even to his bragging that 
it was his noble birth which ena- 
bled him to reproduce Pindar, 
wherein Horace, for lack of that 
virtue, had failed ; the badness of 
the other as thoroughly English 
and of his age. And what more 
salient instance could be given of 
this natural difference in mental 
constitution, in " the way of look- 
ing at things," than Voltaire's treat- 
ment of the scene in Hamlet 
where the sentinel answers the 
question, " Have you had quiet 
guard?" by the familiar household 
idiom, " Not a mouse stirring " ? 
" Pas un souris qui trotte " the au- 
thor of Zaire makes it, and pro- 
ceeds to inform his countrymen 
that this Shakspere was a drunken 
savage. 

* " Whence she with kindness prompt 
And eyes glistering with smiles," 

Carey gives it, which is certainly English, but 



Among the Translators. 



739 



Now, while there is no such radi- 
cal difference between English and 
American ways of thought as be- 
tween English and French ways, 
there is still difference enough to 
justify us in giving place to Mr. 
Cranch's blank-verse sEneid, as 
being a priori another thing from 
the English blank-verse ALneids of 
forty or one hundred and forty 
years ago. So, without more ado, let 
us repeat that these three versions 
of the last decade are sufficiently 
unlike one another or any that have 
gone before to warrant attentive 
notice. 

In choosing for the vehicle of 
his attempt the octosyllabic line 
the well-known metre of Scott's 
Marmion Prof. Conington turned 
his back intrepidly on all the tradi- 
tions. Scarcely any rhythm we 
have would seem at first blush 
worse fitted to give the unlearned 
reader an adequate idea of the son- 
orous march of the Latin hexame- 
ter or of the stately melody of Vir- 
gil's verse, of the dignity of his senti- 
ments, or the noble gravity of his 
style. For him who uses such a 
metre to render the sEneid one 
half anticipates the need of some 
such frank confession as that Ron- 
sard, in a fit of remorse, or per- 
haps a verbal indigestion over his 
own inconceivable pedantry, puts 
at the end at the end, mark you 
of one of his never-ending series of 
odes : 

" Les Francois qui mes vers liront, 
S'lls ne sont et Grecs et Remains, 
En lieu de ce livre, ils n'auront 
Qu'un pesant faix entre les mains" 

which for our present purpose we 
may paraphrase : My excellent 
reader, if you don't know Virgil as 
well as I do, you will find very little 
of him here, and if you do you will 
find still less. But Professor Con- 
ington soon puts away from us all 



such forebodings. He gives us, in 
spite of his metre, for the most part, 
in rare instances, by the help of it, 
a great deal of Virgil more, on the 
whole, than almost any other of the 
poet's translators. He has put the 
story of the sEneid'mto bright and 
animated English verse which may 
be read with pleasure as a poem for 
itself, and is yet strictly faithful to 
the sense and spirit of its original, 
as close as need be wonderfully 
close in many parts to its language, 
often skilfully suggestive of some of 
the most salient peculiarities of its 
form, and only failing conspicuous- 
ly, where all translations most con- 
spicuously fail, in rendering the 
poet's manner, because the manner 
of any poet and we mean by man- 
ner that union of thought and form 
of the poet's way of seeing with his 
way of saying things which is the 
full manifestation of his genius 
only failing here because this part 
of any poet it is next to impossible 
to reproduce in a foreign tongue, 
and because the vehicle chosen by 
Prof. Conington, so opposite in every 
way to Virgil's vehicle, increased 
that difficulty tenfold. But a trans- 
lation of a longnarrative poem is not 
like the translation of a brief lyric. 
Is the former to be written for 
those who understand the original 
and care for no translation, or for 
those who,, not understanding the 
original, ask first of the translator 
that he shall not put them to sleep, 
and, second, that he shall give them 
all that his author gives as nearly 
as possible in the same manner? 
Two of these demands Prof. Con- 
ington 's version fully meets, and it 
comes as near to the third as was 
consistent with a metre which gave 
him the best chance of combining 
the other two. If any translation of 
Virgil can hope to be popular it is 
his; and we hold -to the belief 



; 4 o 



Among the Translators. 



that it will share with Dryden's, 
which, if only for its author's sake, 
will live, the affections of the ////- 
latined English reader for long to 
come. 

As might be expected, it is in 
battle-pieces and in scenes of swift 
und animated action, to which 
Scott's metre naturally lends itself, 
and with which it is as naturally 
associated, that this version chiefly 
excels. Take, for example, the on- 
set in the eleventh book 

" Meantime the Trojans near the Wall, 
The Tuscans and the horsemen all, 

In separate troops arrayed ; 
Their mettled steeds the champaign spurn, 
And, chafing, this and that way turn ; 
Spears bristle o'or the fields, that burn 

With arms on high displayed. 
Messapus and the Latian force, 
And Coras and Camilla's horse, 

An adverse front array ; 
With hands drawn back they couch the spear, 
And aim the dart in full career ; 
The tramp of heroes strikes the ear, 

Mixed With the charger's neigh. 
Arrived within a javelin's throw, 
The armies halt a space ; when, lo I 
Sudden they let their good steeds go 

And meet with deafening cry ; 
Their volleyed darts fly thick as snow, 

Dark-shadowing all the sky." 

The Latin could scarcely be giv- 
en with more spirit or closeness ; 
though in neither respect does 
Morris fall short of his predeces- 
sor, from whom in manner, how- 
ever, he differs toto 



' But in meanwhile the Trojan folk the city draw 

anigh, 
The Tuscan dukes and all their horse in many a 

company 
Well ordered ; over all the plain, neighing, the steed 

doth fare, 
Prancing and champing on the bit that turns him 

here and there. 
And far and wide the lea is rough with iron harvest 

now, 
And with the weapons tost aloft the level meadows 

glow. 
Messapus and the Latins swift, lo 1 on the other 

hand, 
And Coras with his brother-lord, and maid Camil- 

la's band, 
Against them in the field ; and, lo ! far back their 

arms they fling 
In couching of the level spears, and shot-spears 

brandishing. 
All is afire with neigh of steed* and onfall of the 

men. 
And now, within a spear-shot Gome, short up they 

rein, and then 



They break out with a mighty cry and spur the 
maddened steeds ; 

And all at once from every side the storm of spear- 
shot speeds, 

As thick as very snowing is, and darkens down the 
sun." 

It would be hard to say which 
version is closer to the original. 
Conington leaves out the epithet 
celeres which Virgil bestows on 
the Latins, and also a graver omis- 
sion that brother whom Virgil 
makes attend him like his shadow 
(et cum fratre Coras) in every battle- 
field of the sEneid. This frater- 
nal warrior Morris gives us, in- 
deed, but not very intelligibly, as 
Coras' "brother-lord." On the 
other hand, although Morris ren- 
ders the Latin line for line, he is 
not so concise as Conington, who 
puts Virgil's fifteen hexameters into 
twenty of his short lines as opposed 
to fifteen of Morris' long ones. 
Virgil has nothing of Morris' " iron 
harvest " ; here 

" Turn late ferreus hastis 
Horret ager, campique armis sublimibus ardent " 

we should give Conington the pre- 
ference, while Morris excels in 
rendering the verse : 

" Adventusque virum fremitusque ardescit equo- 
rum." 

In Morris' version four words 
are to be specially noted : folk t 
dukes, maid, and very. They con- 
tain the key to his method, and we 
shall recur to them again. 

Our American's blank-verse here 
helps him to no greater degree of 
fidelity than either of his rivals, 
while even patriotism must own his 
version, as compared, with theirs, a 
trifle tame : 

" Meanwhile, the Trojan troops, the Etruscan 

chiefs. 

And all the cavalry approach the walls, 
In order ranged. The coursers leap and neigh 
Along the fields, and fight against the curb, 
And wheel about. An iron field of spears 
Bristles afar, and lifted weapons blaze. 



Among the Translators. 



741 



Upon the other side the Latins swift, 

Messapus, Coras, and his brother come, 

.Also Camilla's wing ; in hostile ranks 

They threaten with their lances backward 

drawn, 

And shake their javelins. On the warriors press. 
And fierce and fiercer neigh the battle steeds. 
Advancing now within a javelin's throw, 
Each army halted ; then, with sudden shouts, 
They cheer and spur their fiery horses on. 
From all sides now the spears fly thick and fast 
As showers of sleet, and darken all the sky." 

The word " cavalry " here is too 
modern in its associations to suit 
us entirely, nor strikes us as highly 
poetical. 

** Wave, Munich, all thy banners ware, 
And charge with aH thy chivalry ," 

is the way Campbell put it. Again, 
the rendering of the line Adven- 
tusque virum fremitusque ardescit 
equorum is less exact than Morris', 
if not than Conington's, and much 
less poetical than either ; and were 
it not for the printer's aid, we 
should be unable to tell such blank- 
verse as " Messapus, Coras, and 
his brother come, also Camilla's 
wing," from the very prosiest of 
prose. Mr. Cranch,like Prof. Con- 
ington, omits Camilla's attribute of 
virginis though that is, perhaps, 
better than to call her, as Dryden 
does, a " virago" and turns Virgil's 



snow into sleet, no doubt having in 
mind Gray's 

" Iron sleet of arrowy shower 
Hurtles in the darkened air,'' 

or the " sharp sleet of arrowy show- 
er " in Paradise Regained, 

It may be of interest to set side by 
side with these English translations 
the French version of Delille. It 
will show us, at least, where Mr. 
Morris went, perhaps, for his " iron 
harvest ": 

" Mais deja les Troyens, deja les fiers Toscans 
Pour attaquer vers I.ausente ont deploye" leurs 

rangs; 

Ils marchent ; le coursier de sa tSte hautaine 
Bat 1'air, ronge le frein, et bondit dans la plaine ; 
Les champs sont he'risse's d'une moisson de fer, 
Et chaque javelot fait partir un eclair. 
Et Messape, et Coras et son valeureux frere, 
Et la chaste Camille et sa troupe legere, 
Se presentent ensemble. On voit de toutes pans 
Et s'alonger la lance et g'agiter les dards. 
Sous les pas des guerriers les champs poudreux 

gemissent ; 

Et soldats et coursiers de colere fremissent. 
Enfm, a la distance oil le trait peut porter, 
Les partis ennemis viennent de s'arrtter : 
On s't'crie, on s'clance, et d'un essor rapide, 
Chacun pousse en avant son coursier intre'pide. 
Pius presses que la neige au retour des hivers 
Des nuages de traits en obscurci les airs," 

In a future number we purpose 
concluding our present examination 
and taking a final leave of the 
translators. 



742 



TJie Home- Rule Candidate. 



THE HOME-RULE CANDIDATE. 

A STORY OF " NEW IRELAND." 

BY THE AUTHOR OF U THE LITTLE CHAPEL AT MONAMULLIN," " THE ROMANCE OF A PORTMANTEAU, 

ETC , ETC. 

CHAPTER II. 

NEW IRELAND AND YOUNG ENGLAND. 



How glad I felt when morning 
came, as it brought me nearer to 
seeing our fair guest! I gathered 
a bouquet for her, wet with the 
kisses of the lingering night-dew. 
I flatter myself that my bouquets 
are constructed with a tender re- 
gard for tone. I have sat for hours 
in Paris, upon an upturned empty 
basket in the Marche aux Fleurs, 
watching the fleuristes deftly com- 
posing those exquisite poems in 
color which serve to render flowers 
a charming necessity. . Upon this 
occasion I selected blood-red gera- 
niums as the outer edge, with nar- 
rowing circlets of stefanotis and 
mignonette, the whole enshrined in 
a bower of maiden-hair fern. How 
lovely she looked when I presented 
them to her at breakfast ; how en- 
chanting her transparent complex- 
ion, that flushed as she spoke, and 
crimsoned when she was spoken to ! 
Alphonse Karr speaks of a similar 
indefinable charm in his own de- 
lightful way : " Elle avail ce charme 
poetiquement virginal, qui est la plus 
grande beautd de la femme" Alas ! 
my bouquet had been forestalled 
by the gift of a Veritable last rose 
of summer which Harry Welstone 
had culled while I was engaged in 
imparting some finishing touches 
to my rather bristly hair. The 
words " too late " to meet me on 
the very threshold of my new ca- 
reer! It was truly disheartening. 

She was attired in a tightly-fit- 



ting dress of pure white, adorned 
by a series of coquettish blue rib- 
bons, the edgings being of the 
same color. Her cavalier collar 
and gauntlet cuffs finished a toi- 
lette which almost recalled my Vir- 
gil, as I could hardly refrain from 
exclaiming " O Dca certe /" 

" Might I ask, if it is not an unpar- 
liamentary question, Mr. Ormonde, 
at what hour you allowed poor papa 
to retire to his bed ? Was it late 
last night or early this morning?" 
she asked with a droll archness. 

" Well, it was rather late, Miss 
Hawthorne ; but as your father was 
good enough to favor me with 
some exceedingly interesting pas- 
sages in his senatorial career, the 
time galloped by at a break-neck 
pace and we took no note of it." 

I had already learned to play 
the hypocrite. O Master Cupid ! 
and this was thy first lesson. 

" Is my memory mocking me, or 
did I hear awful mention of Irish 
whisky ?" she laughed. 

This enabled me to explain the 
blunder of my retainer in his de- 
sire to uphold the honor of the 
family, and to exonerate myself 
from the soupfon of having neglect- 
ed her society for that of the bottle. 
Peter's ideas upon the family status 
seemed to afford her the liveliest 
merriment, and she laughed the sil- 
very laugh with which, old play- 
goers tell me, Mme. Vestris used to 
brins down the house. 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



743 



" Peter is a character, then ?" 

" You will find that out before 
very long, Miss Hawthorne." 

" I do so love characters !" 

I ran over my characteristics like 
a flash, and found them of the bald- 
est and mildest nature. Not a 
single strong point came to the 
rescue, not a liking or a disliking. 
Pah ! what a dull, drowsy weed; what 
a prosy, colorless nobody. 

" Peter is a great admirer of the 
fair sex," said my mother. " You 
must see him on Sunday standing 
at the chapel gate ' discoorsin' ' the 
pretty girls as they pass in to last 
Mass." 

" Is he a bachelor?" 

" Oh ! yes. I have often asked him 
why he doesn't marry, and his in- 
variable reply is, ' I'd rayther keep 
looking at them.' ' 

" Perhaps I might have a chance," 
said Miss Hawthorne, with a deli- 
cious coquetry in her manner. 

" Not a bit of it, my dear ; he 
would not ally himself to a Saxon 
for a crock of gold." 

" He is a hard-hearted wretch, 
then," laughed our guest, "and I 
shall not endeavor to make a con- 
quest." 

Little did she imagine that she 
might have uttered Vent, vidi, vici at 
that particular moment. A poor 
triumph, though a paltry victory. 
I did not feel myself worthy of pow- 
der and shot. 

Harry Welstone kept gazing at 
Miss Hawthorne from out his su- 
premely handsome eyes. How I 
envied him those deep, dark, cor- 
sair-like organs of vision, inwardly 
railing against my own heavy blues ! 
He chatted with her upon every 
conceivable topic, planning excur- 
sions, arranging her boating, rid- 
ing, walking, and even the songs 
she was to sing, disposing of her 
time to his own especial advantage, 



and leaving me helplessly out in 
the cold with the prosy member 
for Doodleshire. I could not find 
a solitary topic to speak upon ; at 
least, just as I had summoned up 
courage to " cut in," as they say at 
whist, the wind had shifted and 
the current of the conversation had 
taken another turn, leaving my dis- 
abled argosy high and dry. I had 
spent my most recent years in the 
secluded valley of Kilkenley with 
my mother, my horses, and my 
dogs. I had seen little or nothing 
of the whirl of the world, and was 
so purely, so essentially local as 
to be almost ignorant of what was 
going on in the outer circle of life. 
Of course I read the Freeman s 
Journal generally two days old 
when it reached us and then I 
merely glanced at the hunting fix- 
tures or the sales of thoroughbreds 
at Farrell's or Sevvell's. Of course 
I had done some reading; and of 
a lighter kind the Waverley Novels 
and Dickens, the Titanic Thack- 
eray and a few unwholesome 
French effusions ; but of late I had 
read nothing, and, as a conse- 
quence, was local to a contemptu- 
ous degree. In what did Peter, 
my own servant, differ from me ? 
Merely in the perusal of a few 
books. He was a better judge of 
a horse and but why proceed ? My 
reflections were all of this melan- 
choly cast as I listened to disser- 
tations upon Chopin, Schubert, and 
Wagner, upon the novelists and 
poets of the period, upon Gains- 
borough hats and Pompadour floun- 
ces, upon the relative merits of 
Reve d'Amour and Ess' bouquet. 
Harry and our fair young guest 
kept the shuttlecock going be- 
tween them, and I was forced to 
bear the burden of my own igno- 
rance in a stolid, stupid silence. 
One chance was offered me which 



744 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



I took as I would a six-foot wall 
flying. The question of horses 
came upon the tapis > and I vaulted 
into the saddle. I rode down 
Harry and scarcely spared Miss 
Hawthorne ; nor did I draw rein 
until I had described the run of 
last season, from meet to death, 
winding a " View-halloo !" that ac- 
tually caused the teacups to ring 
upon their saucers. This blew off 
my compressed excitement, and, 
although very much ashamed, I felt 
all the better for it. My foot was on 
my native heath, and I showed her 
that my name was McGregor. 

" What are you going to do with 
Mr. Hawthorne to-day?" asked my 
mother. 

" What are you going to do with 
Miss Hawthorne, mother?" I re- 
torted. 

"Oh! Harry Welstone and I 
have arranged all that. You are 
not in the baby-house." 

This was gratifying intelligence 
with a vengeance. I was told off 
as bear-leader to the prosy Parlia- 
ment man, while Harry was to re- 
vel in the radiance of Miss Haw- 
thorne's presence. This was grill- 
ing. And yet what could I do or 
say? My hands were tied behind 
my back. I was host, and should 
pay deference to the respected rites 
of bread and salt, the sacred laws 
of hospitality. A sacrifice was de- 
manded, and in me was found the 
victim. 

" Could we not manage to unite 
our forces?" I suggested, in the 
faint, flickering hope that a compro- 
mise might be effected. 

"Impossible!" said Harry. 

I could have flung my teacup at 
his head. 

"And why not, pray?" I asked 
in a short, testy way. 

"Because you are to take Mr. 
Hawthorne over to Clonacooney, 



and to talk tenant-right and land- 
lord-wrong with old Mr. Cassidy ; 
then, when exhausted there, you are 
bound for the model farm at Rou- 
serstowh, and any amount of steam- 
ploughing and top-dressing; then 
you can pay a flying visit to Phil 
Dempsey's hundred-acre field, and 
show the Saxon the richness of the 
land he has invaded ; then you 
are to call for Father O'Dowd, 
where you can coal and do Home 
Rule ; and then you may come 
home to dinner, where we shall be 
very happy to receive you." And 
Harry laughed loudly and long at 
my utter discomfiture ci discomfi- 
ture written in my rueful counte- 
nance in lines as heavy as those 
laid on the grim visage of Don 
Quixote by Gustave Dore. 

"You are very kind, Welstone a 
most considerate fellow. Why not 
have arranged for Knobber, or the 
other side of the Shannon sayBal- 
lybawn, or Curlagh Island?" 

The iron had entered my soul. 

"Is not this arrangement a very 
heavy tax upon Mr. Ormonde's 
good-nature ?" exclaimed our fair 
guest, graciously coming to the 
rescue, addressing my mother, who, 
par parenthese, expressed herself 
perfectly charmed with Miss Haw- 
thorne. 

" Tax ! my dear child ? On the 
contrary, it is just the sort of day 
my son will thoroughly enjoy : go- 
ing about the country, talking se- 
cond crops, turnips, and the price 
of hay and oats. He is devoted to 
all that sort of thing, and I doubt 
if even his duties of gallantry to 
you, Mabel, would get the better of 
his devotion to Mine. Ceres." 

I was about to blurt out some- 
thing that might possibly have com- 
promised me on all sides, when, as 
luck would have it, the M.P. en- 
tered. 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



745 



He stalked into the room as if 
the division-bell were ringing, and 
took his seat.as though below the 
gangway, bowing gravely to the 
assembled House. He lifted his 
cup as he would a blue-book, and 
handled his knife as an act of Par- 
liament. 

"You will ahem! I'm sure ex- 
cuse my being a little late " with 
a preparatory cough " but the 
late sittings of last session have 
totally unfitted me for bed until 
the wee sma' hours." 

" Surely, papa, you are not going 
to carry the House of Commons 
hours into the romantic glens of 
Kilkenly?" 

" I admit that I ought not to do 
so, my dear, but, as a great states- 
man once observed I, ahem ! quite 
forget his name at this particular 
moment habit is second nature ; 
and were I to retire early, it would 
ha ! ha ! be only for the purpose of 
quarrelling with one of my best 
friends, my best friend Morpheus." 

" You must find the fatigues of 
Parliament very great," said my 
mother. 

" Herculean, madam. My corre- 
spondence, before I go down to the 
House at all, is a herculean task, 
and one in which I am very consi- 
derably aided by my daughter." 

" Oh ! yes," she laughed ; " I can 
write sucn diplomatic letters as ' I 
beg to acknowledge receipt of your 
communication of the blank in- 
stant, which shall have my very 
best attention.' Papa's constitu- 
ents invariably hear from me in 
that exact phraseology by return of 
post. I have a whole lot of such 
letters, as the Americans say, 'on 
hand.' " 

" If it were not for the off-nights, 
madam," continued the member for 
Doodleshire, " Wednesdays and Sa- 
turdays, I should seriously think 



of accepting the Chiltern Hundreds, 
which is a gentlemanlike way of 
resigning a seat in the House." 

" And on the off-nights poor 
papa devotes himself to me," ex- 
claimed Mabel; "and I always ac- 
cept invitations for those nights, so 
the only chance he has for sleep is 
during the recess." 

I wondered who her friends 
might be, what they were like, 
where they resided, and if the men 
were all in love witli her. She had 
upon three distinct occasions refer- 
red to a Mr. Melton, and somehow 
the mention of this man filled me 
with a grim foreboding. 

" We take too much sleep. We 
should do with as little as possible, 
and divide that by three. Sleep is 
waste of time. Sleep is a sad nui- 
sance, a bore. It is born in a yawn 
and dies in imbecility," cried Harry, 
suddenly bursting into vitality. 

" Is it thus you would designate 
Nature's soft nurse, sir?" demanded 
Mr. Hawthorne in a severe tone. 

" This comes very badly from 
Mr. Welstone," said my mother, 
" who requires to be called about 
ten times before he will deign to 
leave off sleeping." 

" You should see the panels of 
his door actually worn away with 
knuckle-knocking," I added. 

" In the country I sleep because 
there's nothing else to do. I get 
up early! What for? To see the 
same mist on the same mountains, 
and the same cows in the same 
field, and the same birds in the 
same trees ; though, mot (Thonneur, 
I was up and out this morning at 
eight o'clock, and played Romeo 
to Miss Hawthorne's Juliet at least, 
so far as a garden and a balcony 
could do it." 

" Who ever heard of a Romeo by 
daylight ?" I exclaimed sarcasti- 
cally. 



746 



TJie Home -Rule Candidate. 



" Let's see what that love-strick- 
en wretch does 'neath the sun's 
rays. We all know what he says 
and does in the pale moonlight." 

"He kills Tybalt," I interposed, 
not utterly displeased in being 
able to show Mabel that I was on 
intimate terms with the Bard of 
Avon. 

" And buys a penn'orth of strych- 
nine," added Harry with a grin. 

" We know a gentleman who 
plays Romeo to perfection," ob- 
served Mabel. "Such a handsome 
fellow ! And the dress suits him 
charmingly." 

How I hated this Romeo ! 

" A Mr. Wynwood Melton." 

I knew it before she had uttered 
the words. 

"An actor?" I drawled in a care- 
less sort of way. 

" Oh ! dear, no ; he's in the For- 
eign Office, and a swell. He is 
nephew or cousin I don't know 
which to- Mr. Gladstone or some 
other great chief." This with an ani- 
mation that sent a thrill of despair- 
ing jealousy to my very soul. 

" He is ahem ! a very promis- 
ing young man, a great favorite of 
ours, and will make his mark. He 
is destined for the House. You'll 
meet him, Mr. Ormonde, when you 
come over. He is ha ! ha ! ha ! 
rather a constant visitor," with a 
significant glance in the direction of 
his daughter. 

She flushed crimson. The deep 
scarlet glowed all over her like a 
rosy veil. That blush tolled the 
death-knell of my hopes. Our eyes 
met; she withdrew her glance, as I 
haughtily outstared her. 

" He is a great favorite of pa- 
pa's," she murmured, almost apolo- 
getically. 

" And how about papa's only 
daughter?" laughed my mother. 

" Papa's only daughter admires 



him very much thinks him very 
handsome, very nice, very cultivat- 
ed, very clever, et voil<* tout." 

" What more would papa's only 
daughter have ?" 

A quaint little shrug, and a dain- 
ty laugh. 

" A thousand things," she said. 

From that moment I marked 
down Melton as my foe as the man 
who had dared to cross my path. 
Not that I hoped for success, or 
could ever hope for it ; yet to him 
she had evidently surrendered her 
heart, and he must reckon with me. 
Meet him ! Rather ! I would now 
accept the invitation to London 
for the sole purpose of falling foul 
of Melton. It would be such ex- 
quisite torture to see them together ; 
such racking bliss to behold them 
pressing hands and looking into 
each other's eyes. What pleasur- 
able agony to look calmly on while 
those nameless frivolities and gen- 
tle dalliances by which lovers bridge 
the conventionalities were being 
performed beneath my very nose ! 
Ha! ha! I would close with Mr. 
Hawthorne's offer and make ar- 
rangements for proceeding to' town,' 
as he would persist in calling the 
English metropolis, at the earliest 
possible opportunity consistent with 
his, and Melton's, convenience. 

" Miss Hawthorne," suddenly 
exclaimed Harry, " do tell us some- 
thing more about this Romeo. 
You have only given us enough to 
make us wish for more. What is 
he like ?" 

" Will you have his portrait in 
oil or a twopenny photo ?" she 
laughed. 

" Let us strike ' ile ' by all means. " 

" Imprimis that's a good word 
to begin with he is tall." 

" Good !" 

" Graceful." 

" Good again !" 



The Homc-Riilc Candidate. 



747 



" Dignified-looking." 

" Brarissimo .'" 

" Parts his hair in the centre." 

" I don't care for that," said 
Harry. 

" It becomes Aim." 

"Possibly. Pray proceed. His 
eyes ?" 

" Gray." 

"Nose?" 

" Aquiline." 

" Beard.? men parting their 
hair in the centre wear beards." 

"Henri Quatre." 

" Hands ?" 

"Small and white." 

I threw a hasty glance at mine; 
they were of the same hue as the 
leg of the mahogany breakfast-table 
at which we were seated. Sun 
and saddle had done their work ef- 
fectually. 

" Does he smile ?" 

"Why, of course he does." 

" Now," said Harry, "upon your 
description of his smile a good deal 
may depend." 

"I object to this line of cross- 
examination," said my mother. 

" I consider the subject has been 
sufficiently thrashed already," I 
added. Truly, I was sick of it. 

" I shall throw up my brief, if I 
do not get an answer to my ques- 
tion." 

" I shall tell you by and by, Mr. 
Welstone." 

" By and by will not do." 

" Well, then, Mr. Melton's smile 
is like a sunbeam. Are you satis- 
fied now?" 

" Mr. Hawthorne," said Harry, 
turning to the M.P., "this is a 
very bad case." 

" I'm afraid ha ! ha ! ha ! that 
it looks somewhat suspicious," was 
the significant reply. 

'' If you mean " Mabel began. 

" I don't mean what you mean," 
laughed Harry. 



"What do you mean?" she ask- 
ed. 

"What do you mean?" he play- 
fully retorted. 

At this juncture Peter O'Brien's 
shock head appeared at the open 
window, through which he uncere- 
moniously thrust it, announcing, in 
no very delicate accents : 

" The yokes is ^vaynient." 

" That's a fine morning, Peter," 
exclaimed Miss Hawthorne, rising 
and approaching the window. 

"Troth, it's that same, miss, 
glory be to God ! It's iligant weath- 
er intirely for the craps." 

"We've cut all our corn in Eng- 
land, Peter." 

"See that, now," gloomily ; but, 
brightening up, he added : "Sorra 
a haporth to hindher us from cut- 
tin' it long ago, av it was only ripe 
enough." 

"An Irish peasant will never ad- 
mit Saxon superiority in anything," 
said my mother, placing her arm 
about Mabel's waist. " What 'yokes' 
have you out to-day, Peter ?" 

"The shay for you, ma'am, and 
the young leddy there; though I'm 
afeared it's not as nate as it ought 
for to be, be raisin av a rogue av a 
bin a red wan, full av consait 
an' impidence makin' her nest 
right-" 

" Here, Peter," I cried, to put a 
stop to these hideous revelations, 
"get my car round at once." I 
could have strangled him. 

As all English visitors to Ireland 
are possessed of a frantic desire to 
experience the jolting of an Irish 
jaunting-car, I ordered my own spe- 
cial conveyance round, also from the 
workshop of Bates a low, rakish - 
looking craft, with a very deep 
well for the dogs when going out 
shooting, and bright yellow cordu- 
roy cushions ; an idea of my own, 
and upon which I rather piqued 



748 



TJic Home-Rule Candidate. 



myself. Harry Wei stone and the 
ladies came to the doorsteps to see 
us off, and while he explained the 
beauties of the chariot to Miss 
Hawthorne I endeavored to ini- 
tiate her father into the mysteries 
of clinging on, advising him not to 
clutch the front and back rail so 
convulsively, but rather to allow 
his body to swing with every mo- 
tion of the vehicle, and above all 
things to trust to luck. 

" Lave yourself as if ye wor a 
sack o' male, sir," suggested Peter, 
who was charioteer, " or as if ye 
had a sup in. Sorra a man that 
was full ever dhropped off av a car, 
barrin' Murty Flinn ; an' shure that 
was not his fault aither, for it was 
intirely be raisin av a bargain he 
med wud a lump av a mare he 
was dhrivin' at that time." 

"Who was Murty Flinn, Peter ?" 
asked Miss Hawthorne. 

" A dacent. boy, miss, that lives 
beyant at the crass-roads a rale 
hayro for sperits," was the prompt 
response, accompanied by a semi- 
military salute. 

"And how did he fall off the 
car?" 

" Troth, thin, mavournecn, it wasn't 
Murty that fell aff av the car, so 
much as that the car fell aff av 
Murty ; an' this is how it happened : 
Murty was comin' from the fair av 
Bohernacopple, where he wint for 
to sell a little slip av a calf, an' 
afore he left the fair he tuk seve- 
ral gollioges av sperits, an' had a 
cupple uv haits wud Phil Clancy, 
the red-hedded wan not Phil av 
Tubbermory an' he was bet up 
intirely betune the whiskey an" the 
rounds wud red Clancy, so that 
whin he cum for to make for home 
he was hard set for to yoke the 
mare, an' harder set agin for to 
mount to his sate on the car. But 
Murty is the persevarionist man ye 



ever laid yer two purty eyes on, 
miss, an' he ruz himself into the 
sate afther a tremendjus battle; and 
th' ould mare, whin she seen that 
he was comfortable, tuk the road 
like a Christian mare. Well, Murty 
rowled backwards an' forwards, an' 
every joult av the car ye'd think 
wud sind him on the crown av his 
caubeen; but, be me song, he was as 
secure as a prisner in Botany Bay, 
an' it's a sailor he thought lie was, 
up in a hammock no less. Well, 
miss, the night was a little dark 
an' the road was shaded wud threes, 
an' whin they cum to th' ould 
graveyard at Killencanick never a 
fut the mare 'ud go farther. 

" ' What's the matther wud ye ?' 
axed Murty; but sorra an answer 
she med him. 

"'Are ye bet,' sez he, 'an' you 
so far from home ?' She riz a cup- 
pie av kicks, as much as to say, 
' Ye hit it off that time, anyhow, 
Misther Flinn !' 

" ' Did ye get a dhrink at the 
fair beyant, Moria?' the little 
mare's name, miss. She shuk her 
lied in a way that tould him that 
she was as dhry as a cuckoo. 

" ' Musha, musha, but that was 
cruel thratemint,' sez he. ' What's 
to be done at all, at all ?' 

"Well, miss, he thought for a 
minit, an' he sez : ' Moria, we're 
only two mile from the Cock an' 
Blackberry, an' I'll tell ye what I'll 
do wud ye : you carry me wan mile, 
sez he, 'an' I'll carry you th' other.'" 

This proposition on the part of 
Murty Flinn was received with a 
peal of ringing laughter from Miss 
Hawthorne, who, with flashing eyes 
and an eager expression of delight- 
ed curiosity, begged of Peter to 
proceed. 

" Av coorse, miss," replied the 
gratified Jehu. "Well, ye see the 
words was hardly acrass his mouth 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



749 



whin, cockin* her ears an' her tail, 
th' ould mare darted aff as if she 
was runnin' for the Cunningham 
Coop at Punchestown, an' Murty 
swingin' like a log round a dog's 
neck all the voyage; an'theminnit 
she come to the milestone tindher 
Headford demesne she stopped 
like a dead rabbit. 

" ' Where are we now ?' axed 
Murty. 

" She sed nothin', but rouled the 
car up to the milestone an' grazed 
it wud the step. 

" ' Well, yer the cutest little cray- 
ture,' sez Murty, ' that ever wore 
shoes,' sez he ; ' an', be the powers, 
as ye kept yer word wud me, I'll 
keep me word wud you.' And he 
rouled aff av the car into the middle 
o' the road, while th' ould mare 
unyoked herself as aisy as if it was 
aitin' hay she was insted av un- 
doin' buckles that riz many a blis- 
theron Murty's fingers; for the har- 
ness was rtwtrairy, and more be- 
token as rusty as a Hessian's bag- 
gonet. When Murty seen the mare 
stannin' naked in the road, he med 
an offer for to get up, but he was 
bet intirely be raisin av the sup he 
tuk, an' he cudn't stir more nor 
his arms; but the ould mare wasn't 
goin' for to be done out av her 
jaunt in that way, so she cum over, 
an' sazin' him savin' yer presence, 
miss be the sate av his small- 
clothes, riz him to his feet, an', wud 
a cupple av twists, dhruv him be- 
tune the shafts av the car, an' in a 
brace av shakes had him harnessed 
like a racer. 

" ' I'm reddy now, ma'am,' sez 
Murty, mighty polite, for he seen 
the whip in one av her forepaws 
'I'm reddy now, ma'am ; so up wud 
ye, an' I'll go bail we'll not be long 
coverin' the road betune this an' 
the Cock an' Blackberry.' 

" Well, miss, th' ould mare mount- 



ed the car, an' Murty started aff as 
well as he cud ; but he was bet up 
afther runnin' a few yards, an' he 
dhropped into a walk, but no soon- 
er he done it than he got a welt av 
the whip that med him hop. 

" ' What are ye doin ?' sez he, an' 
down cums the lash agin be way av 
an answer. 

" ' How dare ye raise yer hand 
to a Christian ?' sez he. A cupple 
av welts follied this. 

" Til not stan' it !' he bawled ; but 
the more he roared an' bawled the 
heavier th' ould mare welted, an' 
he might as well be spakin' to the 
Rock o' Cashel. 

" ' Hould yer hand!' he roared, 
thryin to soothe her 'hould yer 
hand, an' ye'll have a bellyful av 
the finest oats in the barony ould 
Tim Collins' best crap. Dhrop the 
whip, an* sorra a taste av work ye'll 
do till next Michaelmas. I can't 
thravel faster, Moria, be raisin av a 
corn,' and the like ; but the mare 
had him, an' she ped off ould scores, 
an' be the time they kem to the Cock 
an' Blackberry poor Murty was bet 
like an ould carpet, an' he wasn't 
fit for to frighten the crows out av 
an oat-field. An' that's how it all 
happened, miss." 

"And did he give Moria the 
drink ?" asked Miss Hawthorne. 

" He sez he did," replied Peter, 
with a peculiar grin ; " but the peo- 
ple that owns the public-house sez 
that he niver darkened their doore, 
an' that he was found lying undher 
the yoke near the crass-roads, wud 
th' ould mare grazin' about a half 
a mile down the road. But it's a 
thrue story," he added with some- 
what of solemn emphasis. 

"Si non e vero e ben trovato," laugh- 
ed our guest, as she waved us a 
graceful adieu. 

It was one of those lovely morn- 
ings nowhere to be found but in 



750 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



Ireland : the dim, half-gray light, 
the heavily-perfumed air, the still- 
ness that imparted a sort of sad so- 
lemnity to the scene, the glorious 
tints of green on hill and hollow 
that mellowed themselves with the 
sombre sky, a something that in- 
spires a silence that is at once a re- 
source and a regret. I became 
wrapped up in my own thoughts 
so much so that, although I held 
the " ribbons " I was scarcely 
aware of the fact, and it was only 
the exclamation from Peter: "Blur 
an' ages ! Masther Fred, luk out for 
the brudge " a narrow structure, 
across which it was possible to pass 
without grazing the parapet walls, 
and nothing more that brought me 
to my senses. My guest, in spite 
of the earnest instructions of Peter, 
was clinging frantically to the rails 
at either end of the seat, and, in- 
stead of allowing his body to swing 
with the motion of the vehicle, was 
endeavoring to sit bolt upright, as 
though he were in the House of 
Commons and in anxious expec- 
tation of catching the Speaker's 
eye. Upon arriving at the foot 
of Ballymacrow hill Peter sprang 
to the ground an example fol- 
lowed by myself; but Mr. Haw- 
thorne retained his seat, as there 
was plenty of walking in store for 
him, and my horse could well en- 
dure the weight of one, when the 
weight of three would make a very 
essential difference in so steep a 
climb. 

Peter, reins in hand, walked be- 
side the " mimber," and in a few 
minutes was engaged in"discoor- 
sin' " him. 

" Home Rule ? 3orra a wan o' 
me cares a thraneen for it, thin." 

"What is a thraneen?" asked 
Mr. Hawthorne, eager for informa- 
tion all along the line. 

" A thraneen is what the boys 



reddies their dhudeens wud," was 
the response to the query. 

" I am still in ignorance." 

" Wisha, wisha ! an* this is a 
mimber av Parliamint," muttered 
Peter, "an' he doesn't know what 
a thraneen manes, an' the littlest 
gossoon out av Father Finnerty's 
school beyant cud tell him " ; adding 
aloud: "A thraneen is a blade av 
grass that sheeps nor cows won't 
ait, an' it sticks up in a field ; 
there's wan," suiting the action to 
the word, plucking it from a bank 
on the side of the road, and pre- 
senting it to the member for Doo- 
dleshire. 

" And so you are not a Home- 
Ruler, my man ?" 

" Sorra a bit, sir." 

" Then what are you ?" 

" I am a repayler. I'm for teeto- 
tal separation; that's what Dan 
O'Connell sed to Drizzlyeye." 

" What did Mr. O'Connell say to 
Mr. Disraeli ?" asked my guest in 
very Parliamentary phraseology. 

" I'll tell ye. ' What is it yez want 
at all, at all, over beyant in Hiberni- 
um ?' sez Drizzlyeye. ' Yez are al- 
ways wantin' somethin,' sez lie, 
4 an' what the dickens do yez want 
now ?' 

" ' I'll tell ye what we want,' says 
Dan, as bould as a ram. 

" ' What is it, Dan ?' sez Drizzly- 
eye. 

" ' We want teetotal separation,' 
sez Dan. 

" ' Arrah, ge lang ou' a that,' sez 
Drizzlyeye. ' Yez cudn't get along 
wudout us,' sez he. 

" ' Cudn't we ?' sez Dan. ' Thry 
us, Drizzlyeye,' sez he. ' How did 
we get on afore?' 

" ' Bad enuff,' sez Drizzlyeye 
'bad enuff, Dan. Yez were always 
batin' aich other and divartin' yer- 
selves, and, barrin' the weltin' Brian 
Born gev the Danes at Clontarf, 



The Home- Rule Candidate. 



751 



bad cess to the liaporth yez ever 
done, Dan. England is yer best 
frind. We always play fair,' sez 
he. 

" ' How dar ye say that to me ?' 
sez Dan, takin* the Traity av Lim- 
erick out av his pocketbuke. ' Luk 
at that documint,' sez he, firin' up ; 
'there's some av yer dirty work; 
an' I ax ye square an' fair,' sez Dan, 
in a hait, for he was riz, ' if the 
brakin' av that wasn't as bad as 
anything yer notorious ancesthor 
ever done?' alludin' to Drizzlyeye's 
ancesthor, the impenitint thief. 

" ' That's none of my doin', Dan,' 
sez Drizzlyeye, turnin' white as a 
banshee. 

" ' I know it's not,' sez Dan ; ' but 
ye'd do it to-morrow mornin',' sez 
he, ' an' that's why I demand the 
repale an' a teetotal separation." 

" ' Begorra, but I think yer right, 
Dan,' sez Drizzlyeye." 

" Such an interview could not 
possibly have occurred," observed 
the practical Englishman. 

" Cudn't it?" with an indignant 
toss of the head. " I had it from 
Lanty Finnigan, who heerd it from 
the bishop's own body-man." And 
Peter, giving the horse a lash of the 
ivhip, dashed into the laurestine- 
bordered avenue leading up to 
the cosey cottage wherein resided 
the "darlintest priest outside av 
Room," Father Myles O'Dowd. 

Father O'Dowd's residence was 
a long, single-storied house, white- 
washed to a dazzling whiteness, and 
thatched with straw the color of the 
amber wept by the sorrowing sea- 
bird. A border of blood-red gera- 
niums ran along the entire fafade, 
and the gable ends were embower- 
ed in honeysuckle and clematis. 
A rustic porch entwined with Vir- 
ginia creeper jealously guarded the 
entrance, boldly backed up by the 
"iligantest ratter in the barony" 



in the shape of a bandy-legged ter- 
rier, who winked a sort of facetious 
welcome at Peter and bestowed a 
cough-like bark of recognition upon 
me. The parlor was a genuine 
snuggery, "papered with books," 
all of which, from St. Thomas of 
Aquinas to Father Perrone, were of 
the rarest and choicest theological 
reading. Nor were the secular 
authors left out in the cold, to 
which the well-thumbed volumes 
of the Waverley Novels and the 
immortal facetice of Dickens bore 
ample testimony. A charming 
copy of Raphael's masterpiece stood 
opposite the door, the glorious eyes 
of the Virgin Mother lighting the 
apartment with a soft and holy ra- 
diance, while the fresh and rosy 
flesh-tints of the divine Infant be- 
spoke the workmanship as being 
that of a maestro. A portrait of 
Henry Grattan hung over the 
chimney-piece, and facing it, be- 
tween the windows, a print of the 
review of the volunteers in Col- 
lege Green, while some dozen valu- 
able engravings, all of a sacred 
character, adorned the walls in 
graceful profusion. A statuette of 
the Holy Father occupied a niche 
. specially prepared for it, and an 
old brass-bound rosewood bureau, 
black as ebony from age, sternly as- 
serted itself in defiance of a hustling 
crowd of horse-hair-seated chairs ; 
a shining sofa a little the worse for 
the wear, and presenting a series of 
comfortless ridges to the unwary 
sitter, and a genuine Domingo ma- 
hogany table bearing an honest 
corned beef and cabbage and " boil- 
ed leg with " completed a picture 
that was at once refreshing and in- 
vigorating to behold. 

" Shure he's only acrass the bog, 
Masther Fred," exclaimed Biddy 
Finnegan, the housekeeper, with a 
joyous smile illuminating the very 



752 



The Home- Rule Candidate. 



frills of her old-world white cap, 
"an' I'll send wan av the boys for 
him. He'd be sore an' sorry for to 
miss ye, sir. An' how's the mis- 
thress God be good to her! an' 
the major, whin ye heerd av him ? 
It's himself that's kindly and dhroll." 
And Biddy, dusting the sofa, re- 
quested the member for Doodle- 
shire to take a " sate." 

"Won't ye have a sup o' some- 
thin' afther yer jaunt, Masther 
Fred, or this gintleman ? Och ! 
but here's himself now." 

Father O'Dowd had been attach- 
ed to Imogeela since his ordina- 
tion a period of thirty years, dur- 
ing twenty-five of which he was 
its devoted parish priest. Respect- 
fully declining the promotion in 
the church which his piety, erudi- 
tion, and talents claimed for him 
as their natural heritage, he clung 
with paternal fondness to his little 
parish, ministering to the spiritual 
wants of his flock with an earnest 
and holy watchfulness that was re- 
paid to the uttermost by a child- 
like and truthful obedience. To 
his parishioners he was all, every- 
thing guide, philosopher, friend. 
He shared their joys and their 
sorrows, their hopes and their fears. 
He whispered hope when the sky 
was overcast, urging moderation 
when the sun was at its brightest. 
He had christened every child and 
married every adult in the parish ; 
and those, alas ! so many, lying be- 
neath the green grass in the church- 
yard of Imogeela had been sooth- 
ed to their long, long rest by the 
words of heavenly consolation from 
his pious lips. Ever at his post, 
the cold, bleak nights of winter 
would find him wending his way 
through rugged mountain-passes, 
fording swollen streams, or wading 
treacherous bogs to attend to the 
wants of the sick and dying, while 



a granite boulder or the stump of 
a felled tree, the blue canopy of 
heaven overhead, has upon many 
memorable occasions constituted 
his confessional. A profound 
scholar, a finished gentleman, and, 
despite his surroundings, a good 
deal a man of the world, I was 
proud, exceedingly proud, to be en- 
abled to present to Mr. Hawthorne 
so true a specimen of that order 
which Lord John Russell had been 
pleased to describe as " surpliced 
ruffians." 

The priest entered, a smile illu- 
minating his expressive face like a 
ray of sunlight. Stretching forth 
both hands, he bade me welcome, 
exclaiming : "Ah ! you have made 
your pilgrimage at last ; you come, 
as old Horace hath it, inter silvas 
Academi quarere verum. How is 
your excellent mother ? I receiv- 
ed your joint epistle, and I hope 
you got my promissory note, due al- 
most at sight." 

Father O'Dowd was about fifty- 
five or fifty-six ; hale, handsome, 
and muscular; his silken, snow- 
white hair and ruddy complexion, 
with his lustrous, dark blue eyes 
and glittering teeth, giving him an 
air of genial cordiality pronounce- 
able at a single glance. Tall, sun- 
burnt, and powerfully built, he 
carried that solidity of gesture and 
firmness of tread sometimes so 
marked in muscular Christianity. 
I saw with feelings of intense plea- 
sure that my guest was both pleas- 
ed and impressed an impression 
strengthened by the cordial greet- 
ing which the worthy priest ex- 
tended to him. 

" Welcome to Ireland, Mr. Haw- 
thorne. It's about the best thing 
Strongbow ever did for me the 
pleasure of seeing a friend of my 
dear young friend's here. Collec- 
tively you Saxons hate us; individu- 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



753 






ally you find us not quite the law- 
less savages the Pall Mall Gazette 
and Spectator would make us. 

"We want to know you better," 
said the M.P. 

" Ah ! that's the rub. You don't 
know us, and never will know us ; 
but we know you. Englishmen 
come over to Ireland, believing 
that a real knowledge of the coun- 
try is not to be acquired from news- 
papers, but that a man must see 
Ireland for himself. They come ; 
they go; and all they pick up is a 
little of our brogue. We never can 
hope for much more than what 
Lucan calls concordia discors." 

" I believe if Ireland were to take 
the same stand as Scotland " 

" Scotland me no Scotland," 
laughed Father O'Dowd. 

" Scotland is contented and 
thrifty." 

" And Ireland is poor and proud. 
I tell you, Mr. Hawthorne, that we 
have a big bill of indictment against 
you that I fear may never be set- 
tled in my day. Why should not 
Scotland be contented ? Is she 
not fed on sugar-plums ? Is there 
not a sandy-haired Scotchman in 
every position worth having, from 
the cabinet to the custom-house ? 
Do you not develop all her indus- 
tries, and pat her on the back like a 
spoiled child ? Are not your roy- 
al family ipsis Hibernicis Hiberniores, 
or, if I freely translate myself, more 
Scotch than the Scotch themselves ? 
Why should she not be contented 
and prosperous when she gets 
everything she asks for?" 

" But you ask too much, rever- 
end sir." 

" It is scarcely asking too much 
to ask for one's own." 

4< Surely yours are at best but 
ahem ! sentimental grievances, and 
the House makes every ahem ! 
effort at conciliation." 

VOL. XXVI. 48 



" We can stand hard knocks and 
square fighting, and possibly feel 
all the better for it ; but when you 
speak of conciliation and all that 
sort of thing we get on our edge 
at once, as we know that we are 
going to be bamboozled." 

" But surely you will admit that 
we have done a good deal for the 
country. See the Church Disestab- 
lishment Act and the Land Act." 

" Only two patches on our rag- 
ged coats, my dear sir. We want 
independence, and that you won't 
give us ; nor will you offer us a quid 
pro quo, as you did with Scotland, 
because you know we would not 
accept it. No, Mr. Hawthorne, 
we'll have to fight you for this, and 
our Irish members must do the Mrs. 
Caudle for John Bull, and give him 
sleepless and wretched nights in the 
big house at St. Stephen's." 

" Have you any fault to find 
with the administration of the 
laws ?" 

" Fault ! When we find ourselves 
gagged and fettered by a miserably 
weak administration, and hedged in 
by a set of uncertain and floating 
laws, we begin to think about right- 
ing ourselves. You send us a lord- 
lieutenant who knows as much 
about Ireland as he does of Bunga- 
roo who comes over with a hazy 
idea that there's some one to be 
conciliated and some one to be 
hanged; a chief-secretary who knows 
less ; an attorney-general who, if 
active, means a necessity for 
strengthening the garrison ; and a 
commander of the forces who pants 
for a chance of manoeuvring his 
flying columns over our prostrate 
bodies. But here comes Biddy Fin- 
negan with a cutlet of mountain 
mutton, and I can give you a drop 
of the real mountain dew that never 
paid the Saxon gauger a farthing 
duty or, at least, if we had our 



754 



The Home-Rule Candidate. 



rights, ought not, according to Peter 
O'Brien." And he laughed. "These 
subjects are much better worth 
discussing than English misrule. 
Quantum est in rebus inane." And 
ushering Mr. Hawthorne to a seat 
upon his right hand, he proceeded 
to do the honors with a courtly 
grace blended with a fascinating 
hospitality. 

"'That poteen has its story. As 
I have already told you, it never 
paid duty. A friend of mine was 
anxious that I should keep it on 
tap, as he constantly comes this 
way. It is somewhat difficult to 
obtain it now, as the excise officers 
are, like you members of Parlia- 
ment, particularly wide awake." 
The M.P. bowed solemnly in recog- 
nition of the compliment. "At 
last, however, he managed to drop 
on a man, who knew another man, 
who knew another man, in whose 
cabin this particular crayture was 
to be found. My friend ferreted 
him out, and, upon asking the price 
per gallon, was informed by the 
manufacturer that he would only 
charge him eighteen shillings. 

" ' Eighteen shillings !' exclaimed 
my friend. ' Why, that's an enor- 
mous price.' 

" ' Och ! shure,' replied the other, 
with a droll look perfectly indescri- 
bable, ' I cudn't part it for less, as 
the dutys riz. ' ' 

It took a considerable time to 
drive the point of Father O'Dowd's 
fictitious narrative and the illicit 
distiller's rejoinder into the head of 
the member for Doodleshire ; and 
when he did manage to grapple it, 
wishing to lay it by in order to re- 
tail it in the House, it was found 
impossible to get him completely 
round it, as the word " riz " invari- 
ably balked him, and it is scarcely 
necessary to observe that his An- 
glican substitution failed in every 



way to improve the story. The cut- 
lets were deliciously tender, and 
the potatoes in their jackets so 
mealy and inviting that the Saxon 
fell to with a vigor that fairly as- 
tonished me. As dish after dish of 
the diminutive shies disappeared, 
and potato after potato left its 
jacket in shreds behind it, 1 con- 
gratulated myself upon the signal 
success of this visit. 

" My drive gave me an appetite, 
father," he said. " I haven't eaten 
luncheon for many months. In the 
House 1 generally pair off with 
some friend to a biscuit and a glass 
of sherry ; but here I have ahem ! 
eaten like a navvy." 

" I'm delighted to hear you men- 
tion the drive as the cause of the 
appetite; for I must endeavor to 
induce you to repeat it and help 
me to eat a saddle of mutton that 
will be fit for Lucullus on Thurs- 
day." 

"I am in Mr. Ormonde's hands." 

I was in an agony another day 
from Mabel ! 

"Oh ! Ormonde will do as I di- 
rect him ; and I'll tell you what we 
must conspire about to-night to in- 
duce the ladies to drive over. I 
should be very pleased to show 
Miss Hawthorne a little this side 
of the county." 

I breathed again. 

"You shall have my vote," said 
the M.P. ; "and, if I might dare 
suggest an amendment to the sad- 
dle, it would be in ' chops.' " 

" We might do the swell thing," 
laughed the padre^ " and have two 
disb.es an entree ; how magnifi- 
cently that sounds ! In any case I 
can say with Horace : 

" Hinc tibi copia 
Manabit ad plenum, benigno 
Ruris bonorum opulenta cornu." 

" I have ahem ! almost forgot- 
ten my Horace," sighed our guest. 



The PIomc-RuIc Candidate. 



755 



" One might say to you, as was 
said to the non-whist-player, What 
an unhappy old age you are laying 
up for yourself, Mr. Hawthorne !" 

" Well, reverend sir, so long as a 
man has the Times he can defy 
ennui ; every leader is an essay." 

" You cannot commit the Times 
to memory." 

" I read it every day, sir," was 
the pompous reply. 

" Apropos of the Times, they 
tell a story of Chief-Baron Pigott 
which is eminently characteristic. 
He is one of the most scrupulous, 
painstaking men the world ever 
saw, who, sooner than do a criminal 
injustice, would go over evidence 
ad nauseam and weigh \\\o. pros and 
cons, driving the bar nearly to dis- 
traction. One day a friend found 
him upon the steps of his house 
superintending the removal of a 
huge pile of newspapers. 

"'What papers are those, Chief- 
Baron ?' he asked. 

" ' The London Times. 1 

" ' Do you read the Times regu- 
larly?' 

" ' Oh ! dear, yes.' 

"'Did you read that slashing 
leader on Slight's speech ?' 

" ' No ; when did it appear ?' 

"'Last Thursday.' 

"'Oh! my dear friend, I shall 
come to it by and by; but at pre- 
sent I am a year in arrear' ' 

" Am I to understand that he 
intended to read up to that 
speech ?" 

" Certainly. This will illustrate 
the man. At his house in Leeson 
Street, Dublin, the hall-door was 
divided into two, and a knocker at- 
tached to each door. The chief- 
baron has been known to stand for 
hours, pausing to consider which 
knocker he would rap with, fearing 
to act unjustly by the unutilized 
one." 



" I can scarcely credit this," ex- 
claimed the member. 

"Oh! you'll hear of stranger 
things than that before you leave 
Ireland." And the merry twinkle 
in the priest's eye dissipated any 
doubts still lingering in the pon- 
derous mind of the learned member 
for Doodleshire. 

" That story is worthy of our 
ahem ! charioteer." 

"Who? Peter O'Brien? What 
good company the rascal is ! Of 
him one can safely say with Pub- 
lius, Comes jueundus in via pro vehi- 
culo est. Peter would lighten any 
journey. What was the subject of 
the debate to-day ?" 

" Well ahem ! he gave us a new 
and original version of A Strange 
Adventure with a Phaeton" And 
the little man chuckled at his wit. 

" I know the story," said Father 
O'Dowd. " It is one of Peter's 
favorites, and it takes Peter to 
tell it." 

" From the phaeton he plunged 
into Home Rule." 

" Freddy," addressing me, "you 
must get Peter to tell our English 
friend here the story of how ' ould 
Casey done Dochther Huttle out 
av a guinea'; it's racy of the 
soil." 

" There are ahem ! some words 
of his that I cannot exactly fol- 
low. They are Irish, but they 
have quite a Saxon ring about 
them, which evidently shows the 
affinity in the languages." 

" And a further reason for unit- 
ing us. You English will never 
rest content until a causeway is 
built between Kingstown and Holy- 
head, garrisoned for the whole sixty 
miles by a Yorkshire or Shropshire 
regiment one that can be depend- 
ed upon." 

" That idea has been mooted in 
the House before now; I mean the 



756 



Outside St. Peter's. 



ahem ! connection of the two 
countries by a tunnel." 

" So you would bind us in the 
dark, Mr. Hawthorne?" 

" Ha ! ha ! ha ! Father O'Dowd, 
that is so good that I must book it 
here," tapping his forehead in a 
ghastly way. " Don't be surprised 
if it is heard in the House. We 
a^e very witty there." 

" If there is any wit in the House 
of Commons we send it to you. 
But I doubt if there is a sparkle of 
repartee among all the Irish mem- 
bers even. I've seen a French mot 
rehashed, with the epigram left out 
in the cold, and an Irish story with 
the point striking somewhere in 
Tipperary." 

" Tipperary is very Irish, is it 
-not ? They speak the Irish lan- 
guage there, and run their vowels 
into each other." 

u You are right, sir ; that is the 



place where you'd get your two /'s 
knocked into one." 

Mr. Hawthorne saw this, and, 
although the laugh was against 
him, enjoyed it amazingly. Father 
O'Dowd could hit from the shoul- 
der, but could also pick up his 
prostrate foe with the delicacy of a 
woman. When creed or country 
came up, one found a stalwart 
champion in the worthy priest, 
who could meet his adversary with 
shillelah or polished steel, as the 
requirements of the case demand- 
ed. 

" Finish that glass of wine, and 
let me show you a set of the finest 
boneens in the county." ' 

" Boneens ? What are boneens ?" 

" This is more of your Saxon ig- 
norance," laughed Father O'Dowd, 
as, followed by Mr. Hawthorne and 
myself, he led the way in the direc- 
tion of the stable-yard. 



TO PE CONTINUED. 



OUTSIDE ST. PETER'S. 

How grand the approach ! The dome's Olympian disc 

Albeit has sunk behind the huge facade. 
Lo ! with its cross the sentinel obelisk 
Salutes as on parade. 

'"Hewn from the red heart of primeval granite," 
It says, " among the monuments which man 
Reared to outmass the mountains of his planet, 
I was, ere Rome began. 

"" By no dark hieroglyphs my sides are storied ; 

My titular god, in Heliopolis, 
In the world's morning burned into my forehead 
The signet of his kiss. 



Outside St. Peter 's. 757 

" Converted like an ancient scroll rewritten, 

What heeds the Sun of Righteousness my date ? 
I lift his symbol on my brow, dawn-smitten, 
And at his portal wait !" 

And the twin fountains leap in joy, and twist 

Their silvery shafts in foaming strength amain, 
Whose loosening coil is whirled into a mist 
Of sun-illumined rain. 

Therein the bow of promise tenderly, 

A Heart in glory, palpitates and glows ; 
And musically, in words of melody, 

The crystal cadence flows : 

" Ho ! fallen ones, Eve's sorrowing sons and daughters ! 

In our lustration nothing is accurst ; 
Ho ! come ye, come ye to the living waters, 
Whoever is athirst." 

The colonnaded, stately double-porch 

For world-wide wanderers stretches arms of grace ; 
The bosom of the universal church 

Draws us to her embrace. 

In their white silence the apostles look 
Benignantly upon us. Waving hands 
Of welcome if our tears such vision brook 
In midst the Master stands. 

" Humanity," he pleadeth, " heavy laden, 

Come unto me, and I will give you rest ! 
Through this, my portal, to the nobler Eden 
Enter, and be possessed !" 

'Tis Easter ; and they sing the risen Christ 

How jubilant St. Peter's wondrous choir ! 
But now no vision of the Evangelist, 
Preceding throne and tiar, 

Is borne amid the mystic candlesticks ; 

No waving feathers flash with starry eyes ; 
In the gold chalice and the gold-rayed pyx, 
For paschal sacrifice, 

No pontiff consecrates the elements; 

And dost remember, in the olden time, 
How heaven was stormed with silver violence 
That trumpet-burst sublime, 



758 Outside St. Peter s. 

Like cherubim in battle? Or, all sound 
Tranced for the elevation of the Host, 
How tingling silence thrilled through worlds profound. 
Where moved the Holy Ghost, 

And then Rome rocked with bells ? If such things were, 

They are not now. But we are strangely wrought 
And vibrant, answering like a harp in air 

The impalpable wind of thought. 

O'er the Campagna's wastes of feverous blight 

I've watched St. Peter's mighty dome expand 
In soaring cycloids to the infinite, 

When heaven was blue and bland. 

When storm was on the mountains and the sea, 

Have seen its whole empyreal glory tost 
Like shipwreck on a wild immensity, 

That heaved without a coast. 

But it was grand through all. From far or near, 

It seemed too vast for heresies or schisms ; 
No colored glass, within its hemisphere, 

Breaks white light as with prisms. 

I have dreamed dreams therein : of charity 
Wide as the world, impartial as the sun ; 
That on such Sion, in fraternity, 

Might all men meet as one. 

Dreams ! Yet one cross, one hope we scarce can err 

May, must all wanderers to one fold recall : 
The Apostles' Creed, the bunch of precious myrrh, 
Can purify us all. 

"I have builded on a rock !" His word symbolic 
He will make plain the Eternal cannot fail : 
" Earth shall not shake ray One Church Apostolic, 
Nor gates of hell prevail V* 



French Home Life. 



759 



FRENCH HOME LIFE.* 



PHILOSOPHERS, theologians, and 
political economists alike are 
agreed that the family is the basis 
of society and the type of govern- 
ment. Home life and teaching, 
therefore, is the most important 
tiling in youth, and of whatsoever 
kind it is, so will be the behavior in 
riper years of the generation brought 
up in its precepts. If parents did 
their duty, the state would need few- 
er prisons ; or, as a Chinese proverb 
more tersely puts it, "If parents 
would buy rods, the hangman would 
sell his implements." Individual 
effort, however heroically it may 
make head against the stream, has 
but a hard and uncertain task in 
an atmosphere the very reverse of 
Christian and Scriptural, and in the 
teeth of laws becoming every day 
more and more antagonistic to the 
Ten Commandments. Still, since 
the spirit of the age has almost 
put on one side, as obsolete, the 
ideal of reverence for age and ex- 
perience, and the respect due to 
parents, husbands, masters, and su- 
periors, the preservation of the 
worthy traditions of Christian home- 
life falls necessarily to the hands of 
families themselves. We have to 
live not up to or within the laws, 
but beyond them, and to train our 
children not only as good and obe- 
dient citizens but as earnest and 
practical Christians. Not only in 
one country is this the case, nor 
even among the countries of one 
race, but everywhere, from modern- 
ized Japan to Spain, from Russia to 
the reservations cf friendly Indians. 

* La Vif Domcstique. ft MotMei ft *es Rtglis 
ifnfres les documents originaux. Charles de 
Ribbe. Paris: Edouard Baltcnareck. 



There is one country, however, 
whose modern literature and prac- 
tice for a century and a half has 
been a synonym for looseness of 
teaching, for disregard of family 
ties, honor, authority, and restraint, 
for every element brilliantly and 
fatally disintegrating, for every 
moral and philosophical novelty. 
France is perhaps the nation most 
misrepresented and maligned by 
her public literature at least the 
France whose delinquencies have 
been so shamelessly and with seem- 
ing enjoyment dissected before our 
eyes by her novelists and satirists. 
The sound body on whose surface 
these sores break out is ignored ; the 
old tradition, rigid and artificial in 
many points, but made so by the 
very license of court and city 
which for ever assaulted its simpli- 
city, is overlooked, and the decent, 
quiet, and strongsubstratum of man- 
liness, truth, and purity underlying 
the froth of vice in the capital and 
the large towns is forgotten. 

The first French Revolution was 
prepared by atheistical epicures, 
the airy and refined unbelievers of 
the court of Louis XIV. and XV. ; 
and though turbulent masses here 
and there caught the infection, and 
with cruel precision put in practice 
against the court nobility the theories 
about which the latter so compla- 
cently wrote essays and epigrams, 
yet the rural populations still be- 
lieved in God and virtue the evil 
had not struck root among the 
body of the nation. The infidelity 
of the present century has complet- 
ed the task left unfinished by 
Voltaire and Rousseau ; newspapers 
have carried doubt and arrogance 



760 



French Home Life. 



among the simple people of the 
country; the laws of partition 
have destroyed many homesteads 
once centres of families, and driven 
people into crowded and unhealthy 
cities ; the example of a noisily pro- 
minent class of self-styled leaders 
has carried away the senses of 
otherwise sober and decent men ; 
the* increase of drunkenness has 
further loosened family and home 
ties ; politics have become a mere 
profession, instead of the portion 
allotted by duty to the collective 
body of fathers of families, and so 
the old ideal is vanishing fast. 
Frenchmen of the right sort look 
despairingly into the far past of their 
own country, and into the history 
of foreign nations English, Ameri- 
can, Dutch, Hanoverian for models 
of pure living, respect for authority, 
law-abidingness, and attachment to 
home. Some have set themselves 
to study Hindoo, Chinese, and 
Egyptian models, and to put together 
from the Proverbs and Ecclesiastes 
of Solomon, and the exhortations 
of Plato and Cicero, an ideal code 
of home-life; some have gathered 
together and published with loving 
regret the memorials of French life 
at its purest, of the patriarchal 
ideal which survived even till the 
seventeenth century the age, pre- 
eminently, of great Frenchmen and 
women, and of which some shadows 
lingered into our own century. 
From the naif advice of Louis IX., 
the saintly king of France, to his 
son and daughter, Philip and Isabel, 
to the family registers of small yeo- 
men of Proven9al valleys and the 
grave admonitions of a judge to his 
newly-married daughter just before 
the French Revolution, the same 
spirit breathes through the dying 
addresses of Christian fathers of 
families in what we only know as 
infidel and immoral France. "The 



seven thousand who bowed not the 
knee to Baal" were always repre- 
sented, though the licentious courts 
of the Valois and the Bourbons 
threw a veil over the virtues of the 
country; not one class alone, but 
all, from the titled proprietor to the 
small tradesman and struggling me- 
nager, or yeoman, contributed its 
quota of redeeming virtue. But 
it is noticeable that the majority 
of these upright men were poor. 
They could not afford to be idle ; 
they had large families to support ; 
they had their patrimony to keep 
in the family, and, if possible, to in- 
crease. All the customs that we are 
going to see unrolled before us, the 
sentiments expressed, the simple, 
dull, serious life led, are utterly 
alien from anything we call techni- 
cally French. We shall be surpris- 
ed at every page, but less so if we 
remember that this patriarchal life 
was generally spent in the country, 
and cften in mountainous regions 
and severe climates. While reading 
of these scenes some may be re- 
minded of a story placed in a sin- 
gular region in the south of France, 
the Camargue, not far from Aigues- 
Mortes in which Miss Bowles has 
embodied the characteristic traits of 
a magnificent, healthy, hardy, and 
upright race. One of these Proven- 
gal farms had much in common 
with some described in that book. 
The reason which makes the au- 
thor ofZtf Vie Domestique choose the 
Courtois family register as the first 
subject of his two volumes is that it 
is the latest that has come to his 
knowledge; and reproducing, al- 
most in our own generation, the 
traits of a vanished society, it is of 
more interest and of greater weight 
as a possible model. The author 
of it, descended from a family of 
lawyers and judges at least two 
hundred years old, died in 1828, 



French Home Life. 



761 



and his descendants still live in the 
valley of Sault one of those natu- 
ral republics not uncommon in 
mountainous districts retired from 
the outer world, faithful to ances- 
tral tradition, and governing them- 
selves patriarchally according to 
their old and never-interrupted 
communal liberties. There is a 
vast field for research, and more for 
meditation, in the liberties of the 
old mediaeval states north and 
south of the Pyrenees; it is start- 
ling to see what bold claims the 
parliaments of Aragon and Navarre 
could enforce, and their Spartan 
disregard of the kingly office unless 
joined to almost perfect virtue. 
But centralization, the genius of 
our time, has ruthlessly declared 
that sort of liberty antiquated, and, 
after the decay of the despotism 
which the fifteenth and sixteenth 
centuries began, the liberty of the 
individual was insisted on rather 
than that of the commonwealth. 

The valley of Sault was ori- 
ginally independent of any feudal 
duties, and though later on its 
lords, the D'Agoults, paid homage 
and fealty to the counts of Pro- 
vence and then to the counts D'An- 
jou, they still retained the sove- 
reign rights of coinage and inde- 
pendent legislation. The country 
is rocky and woody ; for, though 
reckless wood-cutting decreased 
the forests round this commune, 
Sault itself remained a forest oasis, 
which the provident inhabitants 
have tried to perpetuate by plant- 
ing young oaks on the barren slopes 
of their hills. The Courtois were 
assiduous planters of trees, and a 
grove of fairly-grown oaks formed a 
background to their farm buildings. 
Quantities of aromatic herbs grow 
in this neighborhood, and their 
distillation into essences forms an 
industry of the country. But the 



beauty that Sault chiefly lacks is 
that of water; for, though not far 
from the famous fountain of Vau- 
cluse, there is no local stream of 
any importance. This is Alpine 
scenery without Alpine torrents. 
But, on the other hand, Sault has 
a sulphur spring, as yet only locally 
famous, and the meadows are green 
and moist. The principal natural 
curiosity of the valley is the Avens, 
a kind of rifts in the earth, like 
craters, which, at the rainy season, 
gape open and absorb floods of 
rain, leaving only a small portion 
to feed the Nesque, a tiny tributary 
of the Rhone. Beech, birch, and 
maple abound, and pasturage forms 
a surer road to fortune than agri- 
culture. Yet the small freeholds 
are pretty equally divided, and the 
more advanced among the inhabi- 
tants have very clear and approved 
notions of practical farming. The 
custom of selling or exchanging the 
paternal acres was, till the last 
quarter of a century, unknown, or 
at least abhorred ; and a local tra- 
dition dating hundreds of years 
back had established a modified 
right of primogeniture one of the 
sons, generally but not necessarily 
the eldest, devoting himself to the 
care of his aged parents, the settle- 
ment of his sisters, the manage- 
ment of the farm, and the accumu- 
lation of a reserve fund from his 
income for the unforeseen necessi- 
ties of the younger branches of the 
family. His portion in money was 
sometimes double, according to the 
Mosaic precedent, but it was under- 
stood that the Support of the 
House (such was the phrase) 
should use his advantages only for 
the general benefit of the family, 
and also that his wife's dowry 
should nearly cover the deficit 
caused by the marriage and dow- 
ries of his sisters. 



762 



French Home Life. 



Those simple people knew noth- 
ing of laws, such as shameful ex- 
cesses have made necessary in An- 
glo-Saxon countries, for the protec- 
tion, against the husband and fa- 
ther, of the wife's fortune and 
children's inheritance. Antoine de 
Courtois, one of these model yeo- 
men of southern France, looked 
urion any alienation of ancestral 
property, or even any use of capi- 
tal, as sheer robbery of his descend- 
ants, and says in his family regis- 
ter : " To sell our forefathers' land 
is to renounce our name and dis- 
inherit our children. Never be- 
lieve that it can be replaced by 
other property, and remember that 
all those who have been ready to 
exchange their ancestors' for other 
land have ruined themselves. . . . 
If our farm is well managed, it will 
always bring in more than six per 
cent. Any other land you could 
buy would not bring in three per 
cent., and would ruin you to im- 
prove it. You would have a de- 
creased capital and no income, and 
it would break your heart." 

The description of the home- 
stead is interesting. The buildings 
included the master's house, with 
ten rooms on the ground-floor, 
eight others on the first floor, three 
granaries above, with a dovecote, 
and three cellars below ; a farmer's 
house, a shepherd's, hay-barns and 
stables, a courtyard and fountain, 
a garden and orchard with over a 
hundred fruit-trees, a fish-pond, 
fifty bee-hives, and two hundred 
sheep. He had rebuilt much of 
this himself, and spent ten thou- 
sand francs on the work ; and in 
laying some new foundations he 
had put his wife's and children's 
names below the corner-stone. 
As to farm management, he em- 
phatically preferred and advised 
self-work with hired help, instead 



of renting the place on shares or 
otherwise to a farmer with a use- 
less family. He gave very judi- 
cious rules for sowing, hoeing, har- 
vesting, etc., and impressed upon 
his son the profit to be derived 
from bees, and the increased value 
of land of a certain kind, if planted 
with young oaks. Work lie con- 
sidered the only condition of hap- 
piness, as well as the road to com- 
fort, and he said he would sooner 
see his sons shoemakers than idlers. 
The family profession was the law, 
though he himself in his youth stu- 
died medicine, successfully enough 
in theory, but not in practice, since, 
after losing his first patient, his 
scruples and disgust ended by forc- 
ing him to leave his calling. The 
business of a notary public was the 
one he recommended to his son in 
the choice of a profession ; his fa- 
mily tradition led him in this groove, 
where, indeed, he had been preced- 
ed by some of the greatest men in 
France. 

This choice of a state is so much 
a matter of custom .or of personal 
inclination that we must carefully 
discern between things in the Cour- 
tois family which were models and 
things of indifference. Their mo- 
ral qualities alone are universal 
types ; their local customs, worthy 
in their own circumstances, would 
probably be utterly unfit for a 
country and race so different as 
ours. But Courtois' native town, 
of which he was mayor for nearly 
twenty years, gives an example less 
rare in foreign countries than in 
either England or the United 
States that of supporting an insti- 
tution containing an archaeological 
museum, a botanical collection, 
and a collection of local zoology 
and mineralogy, besides a library 
which occupies a separate building, 
the whole under the care of a mem- 



French Home Life. 



763 



ber of the French Archaeological 
Society, M. Henri Clirestian an 
example which it would be well if 
our own towns of three thousand 
inhabitants (Sault has no more) 
would be public-spirited enough to 
follow. It is not the lack of money 
that debars small rural towns of 
such advantages ; they generally 
contrive to keep three or four bar- 
rooms going, a dancing-hall, a Ma- 
sonic hall, an annual ball and sup- 
per, half a dozen discreditable 
places for summer picnics, and oth- 
er things either useless and showy 
or downright disreputable. In- 
stead of paying money year by year 
for the gratification of folly and 
temptation to vice, and putting 
money in the pockets of men who 
deliberately trade on their fellow- 
men's weakness or wickedness, why 
not pay a subscription the full be- 
nefits of which they reap them- 
selves not for one day or night 
only in a year, but every day ? 
Where there is a library in a small 
town, what books are most nume- 
rous? Trashy novels vilely illus- 
trated, and Saturday newspapers 
with their ignoble, misleading, im- 
moral tales and cuts. What a con- 
trast to many a French, Italian, 
German village of three to five 
thousand inhabitants, or even to 
some of the island-villages of North 
Holland, remote and unvisited as 
they are ! 

Antoine de Courtois was the na- 
tural outcome of the secluded do- 
mestic atmosphere in which his 
family had grown up. The doc- 
trines that led to the excesses of 
the Reign of Terror for we must 
not confound the legal and rightful 
reforms of 1789 with the bloody 
fury of 1793 and the abuses that 
hurried on the great dislocation of 
society, had not reached his val- 
ley. In all lands where the local 



land-owners had remained at home 
and identified themselves with their 
neighbors, keeping only as a badge 
of their superiority a higher stan- 
dard of honor and bravery, there 
was no revolt against the gentle- 
men. If any village followed the 
example of the large cities, it was 
sure to be owing to some scape- 
grace who had left home and learnt 
a more successful rascality among 
the tavern politicians of some seeth- 
ing city, and then come back to 
play Robespierre on his own small 
stage. f Courtois married in the 
midst of the Revolution, in 1798, 
and quietly took up the task of his 
brother Philip, who had died sud- 
denly without leaving any children, 
and whose wife, though only a 
bride of a few months, devoted 
herself all her life to the family 
interests. Antoine, always humane 
and charitable, had given shelter to 
two of the revolutionary commis- 
sioners, pursued by enemies of an 
opposite faction then uppermost, 
for which he was speedily denounc- 
ed by an informer and imprisoned. 
His widowed sister-in-law travelled 
to Nice and besought the interfer- 
ence of the man he had formerly 
saved the young Robespierre. A 
respite, then a pardon, was granted, 
and Antoine retired for a short 
time to Nice, sheltering himself be- 
hind his nominal profession of me- 
dicine, until one night the informer 
who had betrayed him came trem- 
bling to his door, begging him to 
save his life. He fed and clothed 
him, and gave him money to set 
him on his way, as well as a pro- 
mise to turn his pursuers from his 
track should he be examined. 

Such a man acted as he believ- 
ed, and might say the Lord's 
Prayer with a clear conscience. 
His equable temperament, and his 
firm reliance on reason as the cor- 



French Home Life. 



ner-stone of morality, are very un- 
like what we attribute to the typi- 
cal Frenchman emotional, unre- 
liable, fantastic, or affected; the Pa- 
risian has blotted out all worthier 
types from our sight. His advice 
to his children on their duty of 
consulting reason and moderation 
in all things, and sternly repressing 
mere inclination or passion, goes 
so far as to seem exaggerated and 
to banish from life even its most 
legitimate pleasures. But he knew 
the corruption pressing upon his 
retreat, besieging it and luring it, 
and to extreme evils he opposed 
extreme remedies. Besides, ancient 
custom sanctioned, or at least col- 
ored, his advice as to marriage, in 
which matter not only his daugh- 
ters but also his son were not to 
choose for themselves, but let their 
mother choose and decide for 
them. He required his children 
to be wise beyond their years, and 
would fain have put "old heads on 
young shoulders "; but the fright- 
ful license he saw around him 
made the recoil only natural. Men 
had need to be Solomons in early 
youth, when hoary heads degrad- 
ed themselves to play at Satyrs. 
Among other precepts and there 
is not one that could not be match- 
ed out of Proverbs and Ecclesi- 
astes he insisted on the duty of 
neither borrowing nor lending; 
his teaching was inflexible on this 
point. " Better go shirtless than 
borrow money " was his maxim. 
In these days of lax and indiscrimi- 
nate pity for all misfortune such 
advice sounds selfish and harsh ; 
it belongs to the conscience of 
each man to interpret it and make 
exceptions. As to the borrowing 
we might be inclined to say, " Never 
under any circumstances " ; but as 
to the lending there may be ex- 
ceptions. In the first you fetter 



yourself, than which nothing is 
less wise ; in the second you incur 
no obligation, and, if you can afford 
to lose the sum lent, there is an 
additional excuse. Courtois' ob- 
jection was founded on the prin- 
ciple he set forth elsewhere, that 
your property is not your own but 
your posterity's, and that you have 
no right to diminish it. If he had 
had any other and absolutely per- 
sonal property, the objection would 
have been no doubt qualified. In 
many cases he showed by his own 
example that he had no objection 
to give, and to be helpful to his 
neighbor according to his ability. 
He was rigidly opposed' to the 
reading of novels, to games of 
chance, to balls and theatre-going; 
one could almost fancy one's self lis- 
tening to an old Puritan on this 
subject. But in this respect who 
is more of a Puritan than St. Je- 
rome in his instructions to Paula 
for the education of her daughter ? 
Reading consisted, with Antoine 
de Courtois, chiefly of the Scrip- 
tures and of the Following of 
Christ, that universal book of de- 
votion, with Chateaubriand's then 
recently-published Ge'nie du Chris- 
tianisme. The later development 
of Christian literature, less florid 
than Chateaubriand, might have 
added other books in his own lan- 
guage to his restricted library, but 
they hardly existed in his day. 
For instance, he would have sym- 
pathized with Joubert, who wrote : 
" Whenever the words altars, graves, 
inheritance, native country, old 
customs, nurse, masters, piety, are 
heard or said with indifference, all 
is lost." 

The practical and physical ad- 
vantages of virtue were always be- 
fore his eyes, and he never ceased 
showing his children how sensible 
and rational are the laws of God. 



French Home Life. 



765 



They preserved health and gave 
success; they ensured happiness 
and kept peace. Honesty is not 
only the first duty of man to his 
fellow, but is the safest road for 
one's self, and brings with it the con- 
fidence, the respect, and the love 
of one's neighbors. On the sub- 
ject of drunkenness it is worth 
while to note what a Frenchman, 
one of a nation of wine-drinkers 
who, it is said, are so sober as op- 
posed to a nation of ale and spirit 
drinkers and of a generation long 
preceding any agitation on the 
temperance question, says in his 
solemn advice to his children : 

" Nothing is more contemptible than 
drunkenness, and, in order that it may 
be impossible for you to fall into this 
sin, I advise you never to drink wine. 
Water-drinkers live longer and are 
stronger and healthier. Be sure of this : 
it is easy to accustom yourself to drink 
no wine, but, once the habit of drinking 
wine is formed, it costs a good deal to 
satisfy it, and often painful efforts to re- 
strain it within the bounds of modera- 
tion. I never drank wine till I was 
five-and-thirty, and I should have done 
better never to drink any. Wine 
strengthens nothing but our passions ; 
it wears out the body and disturbs the 
mind." 

He recommended work, not only 
as a duty but as the essential con- 
dition of happiness, and no one 
knows how true this is but those 
who have tried to do without regu- 
lar employment. One often hears 
people wonder why so-and-so, be- 
ing so rich, continues in business, 
and slaves at the desk instead of 
enjoying the fruits of his wealth. 
Nothing is more natural, unless a 
man has a taste strong enough to 
form an occupation, such as Schlie- 
mann had from his boyhood, and 
was able to indulge after he earn- 
ed money enough by business to 
prosecute researches in the East. 



The leisure that some people re- 
commend is only idleness under a 
veil of refinement, and no man or 
woman can be rationally happy un- 
less through some special occupa- 
tion which towers above all others. 
Doing a score of things, and giving 
an hour or so to each, never brings 
any result worth mentioning; de- 
voting all your spare time to one 
pursuit strengthens the mind even 
where it is not needed to support 
the body. "If you have no pro- 
fession," says Antoine de Courtois, 
"you Avill never be anything but 
useless men, a burden to yourselves 
and a weariness to others." 

Domestic economy is another car- 
dinal virtue of this thrifty French 
farmer, and the rule he prescribes 
that of laying by one-sixth of one's 
income to form a reserve fund, so 
as not to encroach on one's capi- 
tal for repairs or other unexpected 
expenses is worthy of notice. Go- 
ing to law, especially among rela- 
tions, he utterly abhors, and ad- 
vises his son, in cases of dispute, to 
have recourse to the arbitration of 
some mutual friend. On one oc- 
casion, when he was compelled to 
go to law against a neighbor, he 
mentions the suit as that of "our 

mill against 's meadow," and 

takes the first opportunity to do 
his adversary a personal favor, 
carefully distinguishing between 
the individual and the cause. In a 
word, all the elements of discord 
and dissolution most familiar to 
ourselves, and too unhappily com- 
mon to cause any surprise, or even 
to elicit more than languid blame, 
are, in this family register, studi- 
ously held up to execration. 

Family affection, again, was not 
restricted to the brothers and sis- 
ters ; it included all relations, and 
was supposed, whenever necessary, 
to show itself in practical help. 



French Home Life. 



Uncles and aunts were second fa- 
thers and mothers; god-parents 
were more than nominal connec- 
tions ; cousins were only another 
set of brothers and sisters. A 
maiden aunt, Mile. Girard, call- 
ed in the affectionate patois of 
Provence "our good tata," helped 
to bring up Antoine's children, and 
her brothers, far from wishing her 
to follow her first impulse, and, on 
account of her feeble health, take 
the veil in some neighboring con- 
vent, argued with her in favor of 
home life and duties. She died at 
the age of fifty-two, a holy death, 
as her life had been useful, humble, 
and charitable. Courtois himself 
considered marriage the natural 
state of man, and said that, for his 
part, he thought " there was no 
true happiness, and perhaps no sal- 
vation, outside of the married 
state." But he looked upon it as 
so much a means to an end that 
he deprecated the interference of 
personal inclination against such 
practical considerations as health, 
virtue, becoming circumstances of 
fortune and stacion. He wisely 
said that one was only the steward 
of one's own property, and was 
bound to hand it on unimpaired to 
one's posterity; yet it is possible 
that he had too little confidence 
in the probably wise choice his 
children would make for themselves. 
It is true that the choice of mates 
by the parents provides in each 
generation a balance to the inabil- 
ty of the parents to choose for them- 
selves in their own case a sort of 
poetic retribution ; and it is true 
also that men and women at the 
age of parents with marriageable 
children have just come to that 
maturity and perfection of judg- 
ment which enables them to be 
good guides to their sons and 
daughters while the latter are still 



in that chrysalis state when obe- 
dience is the wisest course. But 
such an education as he had given 
them should have made them more 
capable of discernment than others, 
and in his precepts there is per- 
haps as much of old tradition as 
of reaction against the subversive 
theories which were rending French 
society in pieces. How else in- 
terpret such a sweeping assertion 
as this: "A father is the only man 
a young girl need not fear " J a 
withering comment, indeed, on the 
general state of society. On the 
important subject of marriage and 
its duties Mine, de Lamartine, the 
mother of the poet, has -a beau- 
tiful passage in her journal, written 
at Milly, near Macon, at a small 
country house, whose orchards, 
meadows, and vineyards brought in 
the small income of six hundred 
dollars a year. On this she had a 
large family of sons to bring up 
and workmen to pay, yet the family 
life was as dignified and as calm as 
Abraham's with his vast possessions. 
Her husband she calls a peerless 
man, "a man after God's own 
heart," and, as is often the case 
with the fathers of brilliant men, 
his character stands contrasted 
with that of the poet, as the oak by 
the side of the willow. The father 
of Macaulay was infinitely superior 
in his moral character to his amia- 
ble, genial, and gifted son a man of 
iron, austerely upright, and a rock 
on which to depend, " through thick 
and thin," but not what the world 
calls charming. Here is Mme. 
de Lamartine's judgment, worthy 
to be graven in the heart of every 
bride as she leaves the altar : 

"I was present to-day, 5th Feb., 1805, 
at a taking of the veil of a Sister of Mer- 
cy in the hospital at Macon. There was 
a sermon, in which the candidate was 
told that she had chosen a state of pen- 



French Ho ] tic Life. 



767 



ance and mortification, and, as an em- 
blem of this, a crown of thorns was put 
upon her head. I admired her self-sac- 
rifice, but could not help remembering 
also that the state of the mother of a fam- 
ily, if she fulfils her duties, can match 
the cloistered state. Women do not 
think enough of it when they marry, but 
they really make a vow of poverty, since 
they entrust their fortune to their hus- 
bands, and can no longer use any of it 
except what he allows them to spend. 
We also take a vow of chastity and obe- 
dience to our husbands, since we are 
hereafter forbidden to seek to please or 
lure any other man. Over and above 
this we take a vow of charity towards 
our husbands, our children, our servants, 
including the duty of nursing them in 
sickness, of teaching them as far as we 
are able, and of giving them sound and 
Christian advice. I need not, therefore, 
envy the Sisters of Mercy ; I have only 
faithfully to fulfil my duties, which are 
fully as arduous as theirs, and perhaps 
more so, since we are not surrounded by 
good examples, as they are, but rather 
by everything which would tend to dis- 
tract us. These thoughts did my soul 
much good ; I renewed my vows before 
God, and I trust to him to keep me al- 
ways faithful to them." * 

Her life was serious and busy : 

" I go to Mass every morning with my 
children at seven. Then we breakfast, 
and I attend to some housekeeping 
cares ; then study, first the Bible, then 
grammar and French history I sewing 
all the while. . . . My chief object is to 
make my children very pious and keep 
them constantly in full occupation." 

They had family prayer, too, and 
she says in her journal : 

" It is a beautiful custom and most use- 
ful, if one would have one's house, as 
Scripture recommends, a house of breth- 
ren. Nothing is so good for the mind 
of servants as this daily partaking with 
their masters in prayer and humiliation 
before God, who recognizes neither su- 
periors nor inferiors. It is good for 

* In regard to the heroic virtue that can be prac- 
tised in the married state there can be no question. 
As little can there be any question that in the scale 
of perfection the religious is the higher state. 
ED. C. W. 



the masters to be thus reminded of 
Christian equality with those who are 
their inferiors in the world's eyes, and 
the children are thus early taught to 
think of their true and invisible Father, 
whom they see their elders beseech with 
awe and confidence." 



The Courtois family were cousins 
of the Girards, one of whom, Philip 
de Girard, invented a flax-spinning 
machine in 1810, and many other 
mechanical improvements. In 1823 
his father's property was in danger 
of being sold at auction, and, hav- 
ing no capital but his genius, he 
made a contract with the Russian 
government, binding himself to be- 
come chief-engineer of the Polish 
mines for ten years. He thus saved 
his patrimony. A new town grew 
up around one of the factories es- 
tablished in Poland on his system, 
and took his name, Girardow ; the 
present emperor has given the town 
a block of porphyry as a pedestal for 
the founder's statue. He, too, was 
of the old French stock, a dutiful 
son and sincere Christian, schooled 
in tribulation in his own country, 
but, notwithstanding his many dis- 
appointments as an inventor, happy 
enough to have been buried in his 
own old home. 

A better-known name is that of 
the D'Agtiesseau family, a remark- 
able house, both for inherited piety 
and genius. The great chancellor 
of this name was a model son to a 
model father, and all his own chil- 
dren were worthy of him. Perhaps 
the La Ferronnays are equally fortu- 
nate ; as far as their family life is 
revealed in A Sister's Story, it seems 
cast in the same mould. Fc\\, 
however, so prominent, and there- 
fore so open to temptation, as the 
D'Aguesseaus have given such a 
sustained example of high virtue. 
The chancellor, whose family, al- 
ways connected with the law. dated 



French Home Life. 



authentically from the end of the 
fifteenth century, was dangerously 
fortunate in his public career. At 
twenty-two he was advocate-gene- 
ral to the Parliament of Paris, and 
procurator-general at thirty-two, 
an orator famous all over France, 
a historian, a judge, a philosopher, 
and a writer. His name was sy- 
nonymous with several important 
laws. He held the seals of the 
chancellorship for thirty-two years, 
and died in 1751, over eighty. His 
linguistic studies embraced Hebrew 
and Arabic rare acquirements at 
that time and he was also a good 
mathematician. His own saying, 
which he applied to his father, is 
no less true of himself : " The way 
of the righteous is at first but an 
imperceptible spot of light, which 
grows steadily by degrees till it 
becomes a perfect day." Another 
of his maxims was that "public re- 
form begins in home and self-re- 
form." His children's education 
was his greatest solicitude, even 
among his public duties, and one 
gets an interesting glimpse of him 
in Mme. d'Aguesseau's letters de- 
scribing the business journeys of 
inspection on which he had to go, 
and which he made with his family 
in a big coach. The mother would 
open the day by prayer, and the 
sons then studied the classics and 
philosophy with their father, while 
even the hours of leisure were 
mostly filled up by reading; for 
the chancellor wisely taught his 
boys to choose subjects of interest 
out of school-hours, that they might 
not identify reading with compul- 
sory tasks. School teaching he 
considered only as a basis for con- 
tinued education by one's self, and 
his ideal of his daughter's educa- 
tion was the union of domestic 
deftness with scientific study. This 
daughter, in her turn, left to her 



sons advice such as truly proved 
her to be a mother in Israel. His 
wife he enthroned as a queen in his 
heart and his home, and would 
smile when others rallied him on 
his domestic obedience. He trust- 
ed to her for all home matters and 
expenses ; and such women as she 
and those she represented were fit 
to be trusted. 

The seventeenth century was es- 
sentially the age of great women in 
France, and the early part of the 
eighteenth still kept the tradition. 
Mme. de Chantal had a manly soul 
in a woman's body, and yet proved 
herself as good a housekeeper as 
an administrator of her. son's es- 
tate while a minor. Prayer, work, 
and study went hand in hand in 
these women, and the D'Aguesseaus 
were only shining representatives 
of whole families and classes of no- 
ble wives and mothers. They re- 
mind one of some Scotch mothers 
and homes, in districts where old 
customs still abide ; where servants 
are part of the family, yet never, in 
all their loving and rude familiarity, 
approach to a thought of disrespect 
or disobedience ; where there is in- 
tense love but no demonstration ; 
where honor and truth are loved 
better than life, and simplicity be- 
comes in reality the most delicate 
and grave courtesy. D'Aguesseau 
loved farming as his chosen recrea- 
tion, and vehemently denounced 
the rising prejudice of the young 
who were ashamed of their father's 
simple homestead and refused to 
live such rustic lives. The Hebrew 
ideal than which no finer has ever 
been invented was his absolute 
standard of home-life, and how his 
father's character answered to it 
we shall presently see. The publi- 
cation of this manuscript biography 
and other domestic writings of the 
chancellor was due only to long- 



French Home Life. 



769 



continued pressure, and his sons 
consented only with the hope of 
doing good to a perverse genera- 
tion. In these days, when people 
are rather flattered than otherwise 
to see their names in print, even if 
it be only in a local sheet, many 
may wonder at this reticence which 
denoted the delicacy of this excep- 
tional family. Whether the publi- 
cation did good we can hardly 
judge ; it must have helped to stop 
some on a downward career, or at 
least strengthened the weak re- 
solves of some few struggling against 
the current. 

The elder D'Aguesseau had sin- 
gular natural advantages such as 
the majority lack, but much of this 
happy temperament was probably 
the result of generations of clean, 
temperate, and orderly living, such 
as his forefathers had been famous 
for. His son traces a portrait of 
him which seems to unite the pri- 
mitive Christian with the ancient 
Roman : 



" Exempt from all passion, one could 
hardly tell if he had ever had any to fight 
against, so calmly and sovereignly did 
virtue rule over his soul. I believe the 
love of pleasure never made him lose a 
single instant of his life. It even seemed 
as if he needed no relaxation to balance 
the exhaustion of his mind, and, if he al- 
lowed himself any at rare intervals, a lit- 
tle historical or literary reading, a short 
conversation with a friend, or a chat with 
my mother was enough to strengthen his 
mind for more work ; but these relaxa- 
tions were so few and far between that 
one would have thought he grudged 
them to himself. Ambition never dis- 
turbed his heart ; for himself, he had 
never had any, and in his children's 
careers he looked only for opportuni- 
ties for them to serve their country and 
avoid idleness and luxury, which he 
considered a perpetual temptation to 
evil. How could avarice come near a 
soul so generous ? . . . Twenty years' 
labor on public works and thirty-one in 
the council never suggested to him the 
VOL. xxvi. 49 



idea of asking for anything.* . . . He 
died at the age of eighty-one, never hav- 
ing received any extraordinary gratuity, 
pension, or grant. Even his salary, in 
spite of his share in the distribution of the 
public treasury, was always the last to be 
paid. Mr. Desmarets, finance minister, 
said to me one day as we were walking 
in his garden: ' I must say your father 
is an extraordinary man. I found out 
by chance that his salary has not been 
paid for some time, though he needs it 
Why did he not tell me? He sees me 
every day, and he knows there is no one 
I would oblige sooner than him.' I 
answered with a laugh that the salary 
never would be paid, if he waited for my 
father to ask for it, for he well knew that 
the word ask was the hardest in the 
world for my father to utter. . . . What 
defects could a man have who was so 
insensible to pleasure, ambition, even 
legitimate self interest ? Nearly all hu- 
man weaknesses are the results of these 
three passions, . . . and Despreaux was 
only literally in the right when he said 
of your grandfather : ' Such a man makes 
humanity despair.' He did not know 
justice only through the discernment of 
his mind ; he felt it as the natural in- 
stinct and impulse of his heart, spite of all 
prejudices and predilections. Diffident 
of his own judgment, he feared the illu- 
sions of a first impulse and the snares 
of a hasty conclusion. Wisely lavish of 
his time in listening to causes and read- 
ing the memoranda of his clients, he was 
never contented till he had got to the 
smallest details of the truth, for to 
judge aright was the only anxiety or 
disturbance of mind he ever experienc- 
ed. Mindful only of things in the ab- 
stract, he wholly lost sight of names and 
persons ; and if in the exercise of his 
functions he was ever known to give 
way to emotion, it was only on behalf of 
endangered justice, never of individuals 
as such. In this there was no obstina- 
cy or arrogance. Zeal for justice and 
love of truth would often so move him 
that he was unable to contain his thoughts, 
and would admonish others of the dan- 
ger of trusting too much to what is erro- 
neously called common sense, though it 
be so rare a gift ; of the duty of learning 

* He refused the chancellorship when Boucherat 
gave up the seals, but did his work effectually as 
commissioner of finance and overseer of public work 
in the south and west of France between 1650 and 
1690. 



770 



French Home Life. 



accurately the principles of justice, and 
of forming one's judgment on the expe- 
rience of the wisest men." 

His gentleness and patience, his 
prudence and discretion, were no less 
conspicuous ; his son says further : 
" No one knew men better, and no 
one spoke less of them." His gen- 
tjeness was a companion virtue of 
his courage. Apparently timid, he 
was yet impassible ; neither moral 
nor physical danger awed him. 

" From this mixture of justice, pru- 
dence, and bravery resulted a perfect 
equipoise as little in danger from varia- 
tions of temper as from tempests of pas- 
sion. . . . He was always the same, al- 
ways himself, always lord of his thoughts 
and feelings. Hence that groundwork 
of moderation that kept him in an at- 
mosphere so serene that pride never 
puffed him up, nor weakness degraded 
him, nor extreme joy upset him, nor im- 
moderate sorrow depressed him. Duty, 
ever present to his mind, kept him with- 
in the bounds of the most solid wisdom, 
and one might epitomize his character 
thus : he was a living reason, quickening 
a body obedient to its lessons and early 
accustomed to bear willingly the yoke of 
virtue." 

Of lesser qualities, having these 
greater ones, he could not be des- 
titute, and in his daily life, his eating 
and drinking, his recreations, his 
domestic relations, he was equally 
steady and perfect. He disliked 
dinner-parties especially, as involv- 
ing a loss of time, though, if oblig- 
ed to be at them, he never went 
beyond the frugal portion equiva- 
lent to his home meals ; he drank 
so little wine that it scarcely co- 
lored the water with which he mix- 
ed it; and as to display, he was 
such an enemy to it that he would 
use only a pair of horses where his 
colleagues and subordinates osten- 
tatiously used two pair. He was sick- 
ly of body, but retained his gentle 
and equable temperament through- 



out his life ; his servants found him 
too easy to serve, so careless was he 
of his personal comfort ; his friends, 
few but sincere, found in him an- 
other self, so forgetful was he of 
his interests in theirs. In conver- 
sation he repressed his natural 
turn for pleasantry, because he de- 
spised such frivolous talents; but 
his esprit pierced his gravity at 
times, and he was always a hearty 
laugher. Piety was inborn in him, 
and his faith was as childlike as 
his morals were pure. Scripture 
was his favorite reading, the Gos- 
pels especially, and his grave devo- 
tion in church was a rebuke to 
younger and more thoughtless men. 
He laid aside a tenth of his in- 
come for the use of the poor, whom 
he looked upon collectively as an 
additional child of his own ; and a 
famine, or local distress of any 
kind, always found him with a re- 
serve fund ready to help the needy. 
On the other hand, he practised the 
strictest domestic economy, and on 
principle shunned all display beyond 
what was necessary for simple com- 
fort and the respect due to his official 
position. We might go further in 
this eulogium, but, having pointed 
out the steadiness of character 
which was peculiar to him, we 
need not enlarge on qualities 
which he shared with many weaker 
but still well-meaning men. All 
real saints are first true men ; 
wherever an element of weakness 
crosses the life of a servant of God 
there is a corresponding flaw in 
his perfection. The death of Hen- 
ri d'Arguesseau was worthy of his 
life ; the consideration for others, 
the solicitude for some poor clients 
whose interests he feared would 
suffer through the time lost in for- 
malities after his death, the strong 
reliance on God, the frequent re- 
petition of the Psalms, " the pos- 



French Home Life. 



771 



sessing his soul in patience," which 
distinguished his dying hours, all 
pointed to the " preciousness" 
which it must have worn in God's 
sight. 

The Chancellor d'Aguesseau 
walked in his father's footsteps. 
Among his teachings to his son, 
who at nineteen was leaving home, 
he insists especially on the study 
of Holy Scripture, supplemented 
by a practice of marking and bring- 
ing together in writing all such pas- 
sages as relate to the duties of a 
Christian and a public life, to serve 
as a body of moral precepts for his 
own guidance. Others, he says, 
have commented upon Scripture in 
this direction, but he does not ad- 
vise his son to follow them in their 
methods, for " the true usefulness 
and value of this sort of work is 
only for the person himself, who 
thereby profits at his leisure, and 
imbues himself with the truths he 
gathers." In his book, Reflections 
on Christ, he says : " The charac- 
teristic of Gospel doctrine is that 
it is as sublime, while it is also as 
simple, as one, as God himself. 
There is but one thing needful : to 
serve God, to imitate him, to be 
one with him. This truth includes 
all man's duties." Simplicity and 
uprightness, singleness of purpose 
and love of truth, were for him the 
practical synonym of religion. His 
father's death he calls " simple and 
great " ; Job's eulogium he empha- 
tically points out as having been 
that of " a man simple and upright, 
fearing God and eschewing evil." 
Other moralists, public and pri- 
vate, have harped, not unnecessa- 
rily, on the same string. The Pro- 
venyal poet, Frederick Mistral, adds 
another element to the definition 
of goodness work. Brought up 
on a farm, among all the interests 
and details of agriculture and the 



vintage, in a household whose head 
was his father and teacher, and 
where daily family prayer and read- 
ing in common ended a day of hard 
work, he was a strong and rustic 
boy. All old customs were in 
vogue : the father solemnly blessed 
the huge Yule-log at Christmas, 
and then told his children of the 
worthy doings of their ancestors. 
He never complained of the weath- 
er, rebuking those who did in these 
words : " My friends, God above 
knows what he is about, and also 
what is best for us." His table 
was open to all comers, and he had 
a welcome for all but idlers. He 
would ask if such and such a one 
was a good worker, and, if answer- 
ed in the affirmative, he would say : 
" Then he is an honest man, and I 
am his friend." The men and 
women on the farm were busy, 
healthy, strong, and pious. The old 
man had been a soldier under Na- 
poleon, and had harbored proscrib- 
ed and hunted fugitives in the Reign 
of Terror. His adventures were a 
never-ending source of interest to 
his family, his hired men, and to 
strangers. We are perhaps wrong 
in saying so, but there is always a 
tendency, when we see or hear of 
such men, to say : " There are none 
such now." Certainly there are 
fewer, but in every age the same 
lament has been raised. The " good 
old times," if you pursue them 
closely, vanish into the age of fa- 
ble; yet in hidden corners one may 
always find some of their represen- 
tatives, and goodness, alas ! has al- 
ways been exceptional. M. Taine, 
in his Sources of Contemporary 
France, wisely says : " In order to 
become practical, to lord it over 
the soul, to become an acknowledg- 
ed mainspring of action, a doctrine 
must sink into the mind as an ac- 
cepted, indisputable thing, a habit, 



772 



French Home Life. 



an established institution, a home 
tradition, and must filter through 
reason into the foundations of the 
will ; then only can it become a 
social force and part of a national 
character." Unfortunately, it takes 
centuries, or at least generations, 
to produce such results; but the 
continual and unchanging teaching 
'of religion, running parallel to, and 
yet distinct from, all local changes 
of circumstance, may often supply 
much of this natural tradition. In 
the sixteenth century Olivier de 
Serres, in a manual of agriculture, 
touches on the duties of a land- 
holder, and the old principles of 
the Bible are revived in his ar- 
chaic French. He bids masters, 
" according to their gifts, exhort 
their servants and laborers to fly 
sin and follow virtue." 

" He (the master) shall show them 
how industry profits every business, spe- 
cially farming, by means of which many 
poor men have built houses ; and, on the 
other hand, how by neglect many rich 
families have been ruined. On this sub- 
ject he shall quote the sayings of the 
wise man, ' that the hand of the diligent 
gathers riches,' and that the idler who 
will not work in winter will beg his 
bread in summer. Such and like dis- 
courses shall be the ordinary stock of 
the wise and prudent father of a family 
concerning his men, whence also he will 
learn to be the first to follow diligence 
and virtue, and to let no word of blas- 
phemy, of lasciviousness, of foolishness, 
or of backbiting ever pass his lips, in 
order that he may be a mirror of all 
modesty." 

Gerebtzoff's History of Ancient 
Russian Civilization gives curious de- 
tails of the patriarchal rules of life 
in that country, the respect lavish- 
ed on parents and elders, the early- 
imbibed love of truth, and the fa- 
miliar use of proverbs embodying 
these doctrines. Why do these 
things seem new to us, or at least 
why is their repetition so necessary ? 



St. Marc Girardin, lecturing at the 
Sorbonne thirty years ago on the 
fifth chapter of Proverbs, distrusted 
the effect on his audience of youths 
" of the period." He handled the 
subject manfully, but so well that 
his audience caught his own en- 
thusiasm and rained down ap- 
plause on those noble, ancient He- 
brew maxims, so dignified in theory, 
so beautiful in practice. But if the 
world would not listen to such 
teaching, the same precepts would 
meet it unawares in the books cf 
classic writers in the Republic of 
Plato, in the speeches of Cicero, 
the Politics of Aristotle, in the laws 
of Solon. The ancients 'constantly 
startle us with their maxims of 
more than human virtue ; much of 
their heathen teaching puts to 
shame the practice of their pseudo- 
Christian successors. Those among 
them who do not uphold piety, fil- 
ial respect, obedience, and faith be- 
long to a time when literature as 
well as morals was degenerating; 
but it would have required a Sar- 
danapalus in literature to teach 
unblushingly what Rousseau taught 
to the most polished society of 
Europe. All law is contained in 
the Ten Commandments, and in 
China, relates one of the mission- 
aries whose " letters," unpreten- 
tious as they are, are the greatest 
help to science, a committee of 
learned men, on being ordered to 
report flaws in Christian doctrine, 
said they had considered well, but 
dared not do it, for all the essen- 
tial doctrine was already contain- 
ed in their own sacred books, the 
King. Again, Christian practice in 
old times revived the precept of 
Deuteronomy to bear the com- 
mandments " on the wrist, and en- 
grave them on the threshold of the 
house and the lintel of the door" 
(Dent. vi. 6-9). In Luneburg, 



French Home Life. 



773 



Hanover, a farm-house built in 
1000, and which for six hundred 
years has been in the family of its 
present owner, a small yeoman, 
Peter Heinrich Rabe, has this text 
over the door : " The blessing of 
God shall be thy wealth, If, mind- 
ful of naught else, thou art Faith- 
ful and busy in the state God has 
given thee, And seekest to fulfil 
all thy duties. Amen." English 
and Dutch, German and French, 
houses have more or less such 
decorations and reminders on their 
walls ; churches abounded with 
them, and men and women wore 
illuminated texts as jewels. The 
immutable law of which Cicero, in 
his Republic, gives a definition 
worthy of the Bible, and to deny 
which, he says, is to fly from one's 
self, deny one's own nature, and be 
therefore most grievously torment- 
ed, even if one escapes human 
punishment ; the law of conscience, 
of which a Chinese family register 
says : " Nothing in the world should 
turn your heart away from truth 
one hair's breadth," and " If you 
set yourself above your conscience, 
it will avenge itself by remorse ; 
heaven and earth and all the spi- 
rits will be against you " ; the law 
which Pere Gratry resumed in 
three passages of Scripture: "In- 
crease and multiply, and possess the 
earth," " Man is put on earth to 
set order and justice in the world," 
and " Seek first the kingdom of 
God and his justice, and all things 
else shall be added unto you "; the 
law which Garron de la Beviere, a 
victim of the Revolution, though 
himself a sincere advocate of lib- 
erty, translates thus : " He who 
knows not how to suffer knows not 
how to live " ; that law which 
does not deal only in magnificent 



generalities, but carries its dignity 
into the smallest details of practi- 
cal life, so that Pere de Ravignan 
could apply it from the pulpit of 
Notre Dame to the sore point of 
a fashionable audience whom he 
startled by asking if they paid their 
debts that law was the shield and 
the groundwork of the heroic old 
family life of French provinces. 
Simple tradesmen and untaught 
peasants lived under it as blame- 
lessly as gentlemen and statesmen, 
and taught their sons the same tra- 
ditions, the same honesty, the same 
truth, the same deference to their 
conscience, the same fear of evil 
for evil's sake, and not for the pun- 
ishments it involves or the misfor- 
tunes it often brings on. The cus- 
tom of keeping family registers is 
a very old one ; even before St. 
Louis' famous instructions to his 
children it was common : Bayard's 
mother left him a similar manual, 
and people of all conditions made 
a practice of it. From these docu- 
ments, and the sentiments written 
in them from time to time by fa- 
thers for the guidance of their 
children, M. de Ribbe has col- 
lected many memorials of domestic 
life in France chiefly in remote and 
happy neighborhoods, but also in 
more populous and disturbed ones ; 
and the sameness of the precepts in 
all is less strange than the likeness 
they bear to those of the Chinese 
family books, which date back 
often more than 2,000 years. He 
has found in the recently-discover- 
ed papyri in Egyptian tombs the 
same eternal rules, set forth in 
language almost equal to the simple 
grandeur of the Bible, while the 
Hindoo hymns and books of morals 
teach in many instances the same 
truths in nearly the same words. 



774 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



DR. DRAPER AND EVOLUTION. 



AT a meeting of Unitarian min- 
isters held at Springfield, Massa- 
chusetts, on the nth of October, 
1877, Dr. J. W. Draper delivered a 
lecture on " Evolution : its Origin, 
Progress, and Consequences." Prof. 
You mans publishes it in the Popu- 
lar Science Monthly, with the remark 
that "some passages omitted in the 
lecture for want of time are here 
introduced"; which means, so far 
as we can understand, that Dr. 
Draper, before allowing the publi- 
cation of his lecture, retouched it, 
and introduced into it some items, 
views, or considerations which the 
lecture delivered to the Unitarian 
meeting did not contain, but which 
he considered necessary as giving 
the last finish to his composition. 
It seems, in fact, that the doctor 
must have felt a little embarrassed 
in the performance of the task 
which he had accepted ; for he 
well knew that in speaking to a 
body of sectarian ministers he could 
not make the best use of the ordi- 
r;..ry resources of free-thought with- 
out breaking through the barriers 
of conventional propriety; and he 
himself candidly informs his hear- 
ers that, when he received the re- 
quest to deliver this lecture before 
them, he was at first disposed to ex- 
cuse himself, giving the following 
reason for his hesitation : " Hold- 
ing religious views which perhaps 
in many respects are not in accord- 
ance with those that have recom- 
mended themselves to you, I was 
reluctant to present to your con- 
sideration a topic which, though it 
is in truth purely scientific, is yet 
connected with some of the most 
important and imposing theological 



dogmas." This was, perhaps, one 
of the motives (besides the want of 
time) why in the delivery of the 
lecture some passages were omitted 
which have subsequently found 
their way into the pages of the 
scientific monthly. 

It would be interesting to know 
what " imposing theological dog- 
mas " Dr. Draper considered it to 
be his duty to respect while lectur- 
ing before a Unitarian .audience. 
Unitarians do not generally over- 
load their liberal minds with dog- 
mas. Their creed is very short. 
They simply admit, as even the good 
Mahometans do, that there is one 
God. This is all. What that one 
God is. they are not required to 
know ; their denial of the Holy 
Trinity leaves them free to con- 
ceive their God as an impersonal 
being, a universal soul, or a sum 
total of the forces of nature. On 
the other hand, their denial of ec- 
clesiastical authority and of the in- 
spiration of the Scriptures leaves 
them absolutely free to disbelieve 
every other dogma and mystery of 
Christianity. It seems to us, there- 
fore, that Dr. Draper, who had n^ 
need, and certainly no inclination, 
to descant on Trinitarian views or 
to defend the inspiration of the 
Bible, ought not to have feared to 
scandalize the good souls to whom 
lie was requested to break the 
bread of modern science. It is 
clear that only an unequivocal pro- 
fession of scientific atheism could 
have been construed into an of- 
fence ; and even this, we fancy, 
would have been pardoned, for the 
sake of science, by the easy and 
accommodating gentlemen whose 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



775 



"liberality of sentiment " triumph- 
ed at last over Dr. Draper's hesita- 
tion. 

Whether or not the assembled 
Unitarian ministers were satisfied 
with the lecture, and converted to 
the scientific views maintained by 
the lecturer, we do not know; this, 
however, we do know : that Dr. 
Draper's reasoning and assertions 
about the origin, progress, and con- 
sequences of evolution, even apart 
from all consideration of religious 
dogmas, are not calculated to com- 
mand the assent of cultivated in- 
tellects. 

The lecture begins with the state- 
ment that two explanations have 
been introduced to account for the 
origin of the organic beings that 
surround us; the one, according 
to the lecturer, " is conveniently 
designated as the hypothesis of 
creation," the other as " the hypo- 
thesis of evolution." This state- 
ment, to begin with, is incorrect. 
It may, indeed, be very "convenient" 
for Dr. Draper to speak of creation 
as a mere hypothesis: but the device 
is too transparent. The creation or 
original formation of organic beings 
by God is not a hypothesis, but an 
historical fact perfectly established, 
and even scientifically and philoso- 
phically demonstrated. Evolution, 
on the contrary, as understood by 
the modern school, is only an empty 
word and a dream, unworthy of the 
name of scientific hypothesis, under 
which sciolists attempt to conceal 
its absurdity. In fact, even the 
little we ourselves have said on this 
subject in some of our past numbers 
would amply suffice to convince a 
moderately intelligent man that the 
theory of evolution has no real 
scientific character, is irreconcilable 
with the conclusions of natural 
history, and has no ground to stand 
upon except the worn-out fallacies 



of a perverted logic. To call it 
" hypothesis " is therefore to do it 
an honor which it does not deserve. 
A pile of rubbish is not a palace, 
and a heap of blunders is not a hy- 
pothesis. 

" Creation," says Dr. Draper, " re- 
poses on the arbitrary act of God ; 
evolution on the universal reign of 
law." This statement, too, is en- 
tirely groundless. Creation is zfree 
act of God; but a free act needs 
not to be arbitrary. We usually 
call that arbitrary which is done 
rashly or without reason. But an 
act which forms part of an intellec- 
tual plan for an appointed end we 
call an act of wisdom ; to call it 
" arbitrary " is to falsify its nature. 
If Dr. Draper admits that there is 
a God, he ought to speak of him 
with greater respect. But, omitting 
this, is it true that evolution "re- 
poses on the universal reign of law" ? 
By no means. We defy Dr. Draper 
and all the modern evolutionists to 
substantiate this bold assertion. 
Not only is there no universal law 
on which the evolution of species 
can repose, but there is, on the 
contrary, a well-known universal- 
law which sets at naught the specu- 
lations and stultifies the pretensions 
of the Darwinian school. The law 
we refer to is the following : In the 
generation of organic beings there 
is no transition from one species to 
another. This is the universal 
law which rules the department of 
organic life; and it is almost incon- 
ceivable how a man who is not re- 
solved to injure his scientific repu- 
tation could so far forget himself 
and his science as to pretend a 
blissful ignorance of this known 
truth, in order to propagate a silly 
imposture exploded by philosophy 
and contradicted by the constant, 
unequivocal testimony of nature 
itself. 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



Had we been present in the Uni- 
tarian audience when the doctor 
uttered the assertion in question, 
we doubt if it would have been 
possible for us to let him proceed 
further without interruption ; for 
the recklessness of his doctrine 
called for an immediate challenge. 
When a man, in laying down the 
foundations of a theory, takes his 
stand upon the most evident false 
premises, he simply insults his 
hearers. Why should an intelligent 
man accept in silence such a glar- 
ing absurdity as that " evolution 
reposes on the universal reign of 
law" ? Why should he not rise and 
say : " I beg permission, in the name 
of science, to contradict the state- 
ment just made, and to express my 
astonishment at the want of con- 
sideration shown to this learned 
assembly by the lecturer"? How- 
ever contrary to the received usages, 
such an interruption would have 
been highly proper and meritorious 
in the eyes of a lover of truth. 
But, unfortunately, the assembled 
ministers had no right to remon- 
strate. They had requested the 
doctor to lecture, and to lecture on 
that very subject ; they knew be- 
forehand the doctor's views con- 
cerning evolution ; and they were 
not ignorant that his manner of 
reasoning was likely to exhibit that 
disregard of truth of which so many 
striking instances had been discov- 
ered in his history of the conflict 
between religion and science. The 
assembled ministers were simply 
anxious to hear a bit of genuine 
modern thought ; hence, whatever 
the lecturer might think good to 
say, they were bound to listen to 
with calm resignation, if not 
with thankful submission. 

Dr. Draper told them, also, that 
the hypothesis of evolution de- 
rives all the organisms which we 



see in the world " from one or a 
few original organisms " by a pro- 
cess of development, and " it will 
not admit that there has been any 
intervention of the divine power." 
But when asked, Whence did the 
original organisms spring ? he re- 
plies : "As to the origin of organ- 
isms, it (the hypothesis) withholds, 
for the present, any definite ex- 
pression. There are, however, 
many naturalists who incline to 
believe in spontaneous generation." 
Here we must admire, if not the 
consistency, at least the sincerity, 
of the lecturer. He candidly ac- 
knowledges that, as to the origin 
of organisms, the theory of evolu- 
tion " withholds, for the present, 
any definite expression." This 
phrase, stripped of its pretentious 
modesty, means that the advocates 
of evolution, though often called 
upon to account by their theory 
for the origin of organic life, and 
though obliged by the nature of the 
case to show how life could have 
originated in matter alone "with 
no intervention of the divine pow- 
er," have always failed to extricate 
themselves from the difficulties of 
their position, and have never of- 
fered an explanation deserving the 
sanction of science, or even the at- 
tention of thoughtful men. The 
axiom Omne vivum ex ovo still stares 
them in the face. They cannot 
shut their eyes so as to lose sight 
of it. At the same time they can- 
not explain the origin of the ovum 
without abandoning their princi- 
ples ; for if the first ovum, or 
vital organism, is not the product 
of evolution, then its existence 
cannot be accounted for except 
by the intervention of the divine 
power, which they are determined 
to reject ; and if the first vital or- 
ganism be assumed to have been 
the product of evolution, then they 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



777 



cannot escape the conclusion that 
it must have sprung from lifeless, 
inorganic matter a conclusion 
which few of them dare to main- 
tain, as they clearly see that it is 
absurd to expect from matter alone 
anything so cunningly devised as 
is the least seed, egg, or cell of 
a living organism. To confess, 
therefore, that the evolution theory 
cannot account for the origin of 
the primitive organisms is to con- 
fess that the efforts of the evolu- 
tionists towards banishing the in- 
tervention of the divine power and 
suppressing creation have been, 
are, and will ever be ineffectual. 

But this legitimate inference was 
carefully kept out of view by thelec- 
turer, who, not to spoil his argument, 
hastened to add that " many natural- 
ists incline to believe in spontane- 
ous generation." This, however, 
far from making things better, will 
only make them worse. It is only 
when a cause is nearly despaired 
of that the most irrational fictions 
are resorted to in its defence. 
Now, spontaneous generation is an 
irrational fiction. Even in our 
own time, when the world is full of 
organic matter, and when the 
working of nature has been sub- 
jected to the most searching in- 
vestigations, the spontaneous for- 
mation of a living organism with- 
out a parent of the same species is 
deemed to be against reason ; for 
reason cannot give the lie to the 
principle of causality, by virtue of 
which nothing can be found in the 
effect which is not contained in 
its cause. Hence very few natu- 
ralists (though Dr. Draper calls 
them many} are so reckless as to 
support, or countenance by their 
example, a belief in spontaneous 
generation. Nothing would be 
easier to them than to imitate Dr. 
Draper by assuming without proof 



what is not susceptible of proof; 
but, although some scientists have 
adopted this convenient course, 
few have dared to follow them, be- 
cause the inadmissibility of spon- 
taneous generation has been con- 
firmed by the best experimental 
methods of modern science itself. 
Now, if this is the case in the pre- 
sent condition of the world, and 
with such an abundance of organic 
matter, how can any one, with any 
show of reason, maintain that in 
the remote ages of the world, and 
before any organic compound had 
made its appearance on earth, cells 
and seeds and eggs burst forth 
spontaneously from inorganic mat- 
ter without the intervention of the 
divine power ? 

At any rate, if it would be pre- 
posterous to assume that inert, 
lifeless, unintelligent matter has 
the power of planning and making 
a time-piece, a sewing-machine, 
a velocipede, or a wheelbarrow, 
how can a man in his senses as- 
sume that the same inert, lifeless, 
and unintelligent matter has the 
power to plan, form, and put to- 
gether in perfect harmony, due 
proportion, and providential order 
the organic elements and rudiments 
of that immensely more complicat- 
ed structure which we call an ovum 
or a seed, with its potentiality of 
life and growth, and its indefinite 
power of reproduction ? And 
who can believe that the same 
inert, lifeless, and unintelligent 
matter has been so inventive, so 
crafty, and so provident as to de- 
vise two sexes for each animal 
species, and to make them so fit 
for one another, with so powerful 
an instinct to unite with one an- 
other, as to ensure the propagation 
of their kind for an indefinite se- 
ries of centuries ? 

We need not develop this argu- 



778 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



ment further. Books of natural 
history are full of the beauties and 
marvels concealed in millions of 
minute organisms, which proclaim 
to the world the wisdom of their 
contriver, and denounce the folly 
of a science which bestows on 
dead matter the honor due to the 
living God. Evolution of life 
under the hand of God would have 
a meaning; but evolution of life 
" without the intervention of the 
divine power " means nothing at 
all, as it is, in fact, inconceivable. 

Dr. Draper quotes Aristotle in 
favor of spontaneous generation. 
The Greek philosopher, in the 
eighth book of his history of ani- 
mals, when speaking of the chain 
of living things remarks : " Nature 
passes so gradually from inanimate 
to animate things that from their 
continuity the boundary between 
them is indistinct. The race of 
plants succeeds immediately that 
of inanimate objects, and these 
differ from each other in the pro- 
portion of life in which they parti- 
cipate ; for, compared with mine- 
rals, plants appear to possess life, 
though when compared with ani- 
mals they appear inanimate. The 
change from plants to animals is 
gradual ; a person might question 
to which of these classes some ma- 
rine objects belong." This doc- 
trine is unobjectionable; but we 
fail to see its bearing on sponta- 
neous generation. Aristotle does 
not speak here of a chain of beings 
genetically connected, nor does he 
derive the plant from the mineral, 
or the animal from the plant. On 
the other hand, even if we granted 
that Aristotle " referred the primi- 
tive organisms to spontaneous gen- 
eration," we might easily explain 
the blunder by reflecting that a 
pagan philosopher, having no idea 
of creation, could not but err when 



philosophizing about the origin of 
things. 

We need not follow our lecturer 
into the details of the Arabic phi- 
losophy. When we are told that 
the Arabian philosophers " had re- 
jected the theory of creation and 
adopted that of evolution," and 
that they reached this conclusion 
" through their doctrine of emana- 
tion and absorption rather than 
from an investigation of visible na- 
ture," we may well dismiss them 
without a hearing. Dr. Draper 
seems to be much pained at the 
thought that a religious revolt 
against philosophy succeeded in 
"exterminating" such progressive 
ideas so thoroughly that they " ne- 
ver again appeared in Islam." But 
that which causes him still greater 
disgust is that " if the doctrine of 
the government of the world by 
law was thus held in detestation by 
Islam, it was still more bitterly re- 
fused by Christendom, in which 
the possibility of changing the di- 
vine purposes was carried to its 
extreme by the invocation of an- 
gels and saints, and great gains ac- 
crued to the church through its 
supposed influence in procuring 
these miraculous interventions." 
These words, and others which we 
are about to quote, must have given 
great pleasure to the assembled 
Unitarian ministers ; for we all 
know that to throw dirt at the 
church is a task singularly conge- 
nial to the natural bent of the sec- 
tarian mind. But, be this as it 
may, whoever knows that our lec- 
turer is the author of the history of 
the conflict between religion and 
science, so truly described by the 
late Dr. Brownson as " a tissue of 
lies," will agree that Dr. Draper's 
denunciations deserve no answer. 
When a man undertakes to speak 
of that of which he is absolutely 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



779 



ignorant, the best course is to let 
him blunder till his credit is en- 
tirely gone. The reader need not 
be informed that Christendom never 
opposed the doctrine of " the gov- 
ernment of the world by law," and 
never imagined that there was a 
" possibility of changing the divine 
purposes " through the invocation 
of angels and saints; whilst, if 
"miraculous interventions " brought 
" great gains to the church," the 
fact is very naturally explained by 
the principle that "piety is useful 
for all things," and that God's in- 
tervention cannot be barren of be- 
neficial results. But Dr. Draper, 
who does not understand how 
God's intervention is compatible 
with the universal reign of law, 
denies all miracles, and denounces 
the church as a school of deceit, 
superstition, and hypocrisy, his ha- 
tred of miracles being his only 
proof that all miracles are frauds. 
His assumption is that, because the 
natural order is ruled by law, there- 
fore no supernatural order can be 
admitted ; which, if true, would 
equally warrant the following : Be- 
cause bodies gravitate towards the 
centre of the earth, therefore no 
solar attraction can be admitted. 

The papal government, Dr. Dra- 
per assures us, could not tolerate 
"universal and irreversible law." 
How did he ascertain this ? Per- 
haps he thought that the papal 
government was embarrassed to re- 
concile irreversible law with mira- 
cles. But the popes never taught 
or believed that a miracle was a 
reversal of law ; they only taught 
that the course of nature, without 
any law being reversed, was sus- 
ceptible of alteration, and that this 
alteration, when proceeding from a 
power above nature, was miracu- 
lous. We fancy that even Dr. Dra- 
per must concede this, unless he 



prefers to say with the fool that 
"there is no God." 

" The Inquisition had been in- 
vented and set at work." To do 
what ? To overthrow the " uni- 
versal and irreversible law "? Cer- 
tainly not. What was it, then, called 
to do ? 

" It speedily put an end, not 
only in the south of France but all 
over Europe, to everything sup- 
posed to be not in harmony with 
the orthodox faith, by instituting a 
reign of terror." It is scarcely ne- 
cessary to remark that what the 
lecturer calls " a reign of terror " 
was nothing but self-defence against 
the murderous attacks of the Albi- 
genses and other cut-throats of the 
same dye, who were themselves the 
terror of Christendom a circum- 
stance which Dr. Draper should 
not have ignored. But whilst the 
Inquisition caused some terror to 
the enemies of Christian society, it 
actually restored the reign of law 
and secured the benefits of reli- 
gious peace to countries which, but 
for its remedial action, would have 
sunk again into a lawless barbar- 
ism. And if the Inquisition " put 
an end to everything contrary to 
the orthodox faith," no thoughtful 
man will find fault with it. False 
doctrines are a greater curse than 
even armed rebellions. Dr. Dra- 
per will surely not complain that 
the United States "put an end " to 
the rebellion of the Southern Con- 
federates, though they were gallant 
fellows and fought for what they 
believed to be their right. But, 
while he finds it natural that thou- 
sands of valuable lives should have 
been destroyed for the sake of the 
American Union, he pretends to 
be scandalized at the punishment 
which the Inquisition, after regular 
trial, inflicted on a few worthless 
and contumacious felons for the 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



sake of religious and civil peace 
and the preservation of the great 
Catholic union. Such is the deli- 
cacy of his conscience ! Then he 
continues : 

" The Reign of Terror in revolutionary 
France lasted but a few months, the 
atrocities of the Commune at the close 
of tbe Franco-German war only a few 
days ; but the reign of terror in Christen- 
dom has continued from the thirteenth 
century with declining energy to our 
times. Its object has been the forcible 
subjugation of thought." 

This is how Dr. Draper mani- 
pulates history. It would be su- 
perfluous to inform our readers 
that there has never been a reign 
of terror in Christendom, except 
when and where Lutherans, Cal- 
vinists, Anglican Puritans, or infi- 
del revolutionists held the reins of 
power, and crowned their apostasy 
by tyrannical persecution, by plun- 
dering, and burning, and murder- 
ing, and demolishing, and prostitut- 
ing whatever they could lay their 
hands on, with that diabolical 
fiendishness and cool brutality of 
which we had lately a new instance 
in the Paris Commune here men- 
tioned by the lecturer. This very 
mention of the Commune, and of 
the reign of terror inaugurated by 
it, is a blunder on the part of 
Dr. Draper. The heroes of the 
Commune belong to his school ; 
they are infidels; they are men 
whose thought has not been "sub- 
jugated " by the church ; and to 
confess that their ephemeral tri- 
umph constituted a reign of terror 
amounts to a condemnation of un- 
subjugated thought and a vindica- 
tion of the principle acted on by 
the church, that from unbridled 
thought nothing can be expected 
but discord, confusion, and vio- 
lence. Yet Dr. Draper, who is a 
profound chemist, knows how to 



make poison out of innocent drugs ; 
and whilst the church aimed only 
at preserving the loyalty of her chil- 
dren from the attacks of heresy 
and the snares of hypocrisy, the 
doctor depicts her as " subjugating " 
thought. This is just what might 
be expected. The snake draws 
poison from the same flowers from 
which the bee sucks honey : 

Spesso del serpe in seno 
II fior si fa veleno ; 
Ma in sen dell" ape il fiore 
Dolce liquor si fa. 

Metasfasio. 

We have dwelt longer than we 
intended on this subject, which is, 
after all, only a digression from 
the principal question ; yet Dr. 
Draper furnishes us with the op- 
portunity of a further remark, 
which we think we ought not to 
omit. He says : " The Reforma- 
tion came. It did not much change 
the matter. It insisted on the Mo- 
saic views, and would tolerate no 
natural science that did not accord 
with them." On this fact we argue 
as follows. If the reason why Ca- 
tholics rejected certain theories 
was that they were " under a reign 
of terror," and that their thought 
had been " forcibly subjugated," it 
would seem that the Protestants, 
whose thought could not be subju- 
gated, who laughed at the Inquisi- 
tion and were inaccessible to ter- 
ror, should have embraced those 
long-forbidden theories, were it 
only for showing to the world that 
they had broken all their chains 
and recovered unbounded liberty. 
What could prevent them from 
throwing away the book of Gene- 
sis and reviving the Arabian theo- 
ry of evolution ? Had they not 
rejected other parts of the Bible ? 
Had they not freed themselves from 
the confession of sins, explained 
away the Real Presence, set at 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



781 



naught authority, and inaugurated 
free-thought ? The truth is that 
they could not resuscitate a theory 
for which they could not account 
either by science or by philosophy, 
and which would have involved 
them in endless difficulties. It is 
common sense, therefore, and not 
reverence for the Mosaic views, 
that compelled them to abide by 
the Biblical record of creation. 
The consequence is that men of 
common sense had no need of be- 
ing " forcibly subjugated " to the 
Mosaic views, and that the Inqui- 
sition had nothing to do with the 
matter. Hence Dr. Draper's de- 
clamation against the Inquisition 
was entirely out of place in a lec- 
ture on evolution. But his bias 
against the church led him still 
further. He wanted to denounce 
also the Congregation of the Index ; 
and as he knew of no book on evo- 
lution condemned by it, he charg- 
ed it with having condemned the 
works of Copernicus and Kepler. 
The reader may ask what these 
two great men have done for the 
theory of evolution. The lecturer 
answers that " the starting-point in 
the theory of evolution " among 
Christians " was the publication 
by Copernicus of the book De Rcvo- 
lutionibus Orbium Ccelestium." At 
this we are tempted to smile ; but 
he continues : 

" His work was followed by Kepler's 
great discovery of the three laws that 
bear his name. ... It was very plain 
that the tendency of Kepler's discovery 
was to confirm the dominating influence 
of law in the solar system. ... It was, 
therefore, adverse to the Italian theo- 
logical views and to the current reli- 
gious practices. Kepler had published 
an epitome of the Copernican theory. 
This, as also the book itself of Coperni- 
cus, was placed in the Index and for- 
bidden to be read." 

It is evident that these statements 



and remarks have nothing to do 
with the subject of evolution, and 
that they have been introduced 
into the lecture for the mere pur- 
pose of slandering " the Italian 
theological views " which were the 
views of the whole Christian world, 
and of decrying the Congregation 
of the Index, which opposed as 
dangerous the spreading of an 
opinion that was at that time a 
mere guess, and was universally 
contradicted by the men of science. 
Dr. Draper ignores altogether this 
last circumstance, and remarks 
that " after the invention of print- 
ing the Index Expurgatorius of pro- 
hibited books had become essen- 
tially necessary to the religious 
reign of terror, and for the sti- 
fling of the intellectual develop- 
ment of man. The papal govern- 
ment, accordingly, established the 
Congregation of the Index." It is 
a great pity that we have no room 
here for instituting a comparison 
between the intellectual develop- 
ment of the Catholic and of the 
Protestant or the infidel mind. 
Such a comparison would show 
whether the Index Expurgatorius has 
stifled our intellectual development 
as much as Protestant inconsisten- 
cy, and the anarchy of thought 
which followed, have stifled that of 
other people. We are still able, 
after all, to fight our intellectual 
battles and to beat our adversaries 
with good arguments, whereas they 
are sinking every day deeper into 
scepticism, and know of no better 
weapons than arbitrary assumption, 
flippancy, and misrepresentation. 

The lecturer goes on to say that 
Newton's book substituted mechani- 
cal forcefor the finger of Providence ; 
and thus " the reign of law, that 
great essential to the theory of evo- 
lution, was solidly established." 
This sentence contains three er- 



782 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



rors. The first is that the New- 
tonian theory of mechanical force 
suppresses Providence. The sec- 
ond is that the reign of law was 
not solidly established before the 
publication of Newton's work. 
The third is that the establishment 
of the law of mechanical forces 
lends support to the theory of evo- 
lution. Is this the result of " in- 
tellectual development," as under- 
stood by Dr. Draper? Newton, 
whose intellect was undoubtedly 
more developed than that of the 
lecturer, did not substitute mecha- 
nical force for the finger of Provi- 
dence, but continued to acknow- 
ledge the finger of Providence as 
the indispensable foundation of his 
scientific theory. Nor did he im- 
agine that his theory was calculat- 
ed to establish the reign of law. 
The reign of law was already per- 
fectly established, so much so that 
it was on this very ground that 
Newton based his deductions. Fi- 
nally, neither Newton, nor any 
really " developed intellect," ever 
confounded the mechanical with 
the vital forces so as to argue from 
the law of gravitation to the law of 
animal propagation. From this 
we can form an estimate of the in- 
tellectual development of man by 
free-thought. The lecturer blun- 
ders in philosophy by contrasting 
law against Providence ; he blun- 
ders in history by attributing to 
Newton the discovery of the reign 
of law ; and he blunders in logic 
by tracing the theory of evolution 
to a mere law of mechanics. 

Further cm Dr. Draper gives a 
sketch of Lamarck's theory. La- 
marck was Darwin's precursor. He 
advocated the doctrine of descent. 
According to him, organic forms ori- 
ginated by spontaneous generation, 
the simplest coming first, and the 
complex being evolved from them. 



"So far from meeting with acceptance," 
says Dr. Draper, " the ideas of Lamarck 
brought upon him ridicule and obloquy. 
He was as much misrepresented as in 
former days the Arabian nature-philoso- 
phers had been. The great influence of 
Cuvier, who had made himself a cham- 
pion of the doctrine of permanence of 
species, caused Lamarck's views to be 
silently ignored or, if by chance they 
were referred to, denounced. They were 
condemned as morally reprehensible 
and theologically dangerous." 

The fact is, however, that there 
had been no necessity of " misrep- 
resenting " Lamarck's ideas, and 
that his infant Darwinism was con- 
demned not only as morally repre- 
hensible and theologically danger- 
ous, but also as scientifically false. 
Cuvier had certainly the greatest 
influence on the views regarding 
this branch of knowledge ; but his 
influence was not the result of a 
Masonic conspiracy, as is the case 
with certain modern celebrities, but 
the honest result of deep know- 
ledge and strict reasoning ; for men 
were not yet accustomed to believe 
without proofs, and scientists had 
not yet forgotten philosophy. 

Dr. Draper tells his audience 
that Geoffrey St. Hilaire " became 
the opponent of Cuvier, and did 
very much to break down the in- 
fluence of that zoologist." Yes ; 
but did he succeed in his effort ? 
Did he destroy the peremptory ar- 
guments of the great zoologist? 
Did he convince the scientific world, 
or make even a score of converts ? 
No. The influence of Cuvier re- 
mained unimpaired, and evolution 
did not advance a step. Then Mr. 
Darwin came. Mr. Darwin is, we 
have reason to believe, the mouth- 
piece or chief trumpeter of that in- 
fidel clique whose well-known ob- 
ject is to do away with all idea of a 
God. Owing to this circumstance, 
he was sure to have followers. A 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



783 



few professors in Germany, and a 
few others in England, proclaimed 
with boldness the new theory ; 
they wrote articles, delivered lec- 
tures, printed pamphlets in his 
honor; his works were widely ad- 
vertised and strongly recommend- 
ed ; and the curiosity of the public, 
which had been raised by all these 
means, was carefully entertained 
by the scientific press. People 
read Darwin and smiled ; read 
Wallace, the friend of Darwin, and 
were not converted ; read Huxley, 
the great Darwinian oracle, and re- 
mained obdurate. Only two class- 
es of men took to the new theory 
professors of unbelief and simple- 
tons. Thus Darwinism in Europe, 
in spite of the great efforts of its 
friends, has been a failure. Here 
in America the same means have 
been employed with the same ef- 
fect. No sooner was anything pub- 
lished in England or Germany in 
support of the new theory than 
some worthy associate of the Euro- 
pean infidels republished it for the 
American people. New original 
articles were also added by some 
of our professors; and even Mr. 
Huxley did not disdain to devote 
his versatile eloquence to the en- 
lightenment of our free but be- 
nighted citizens concerning the 
subject of evolution. What has 
been the result ? Are the Ameri- 
can people converted to the new 
doctrine? No. They laugh at it. 
The failure of Darwinism is as con- 
spicuous and as complete in Ameri- 
ca as it has been in Europe. 

Has Dr. Draper, after all, con- 
verted any of the Unitarian minis- 
ters who attended his lecture ? We 
think not ; and the lecturer him- 
self seems to have felt that his words 
fell on sceptical ears and failed 
to work on the brains or touch 
the hearts of his hearers. Towards 



the end of his lecture he exclaims : 
" My friends, let me plead with you. 
Don't reject the theory of evolu- 
tion !" It is manifest from this ex- 
hortation that the audience, in the 
. opinion of the lecturer himself, was 
still reluctant to accept the theory. 
Had the lecturer thought otherwise, 
he would have said : " My friends, 
I need not plead with you. You 
have heard my arguments. I 
leave it to you to decide whether 
the theory of evolution can be re- 
jected by intelligent men." This 
language would have shown the 
earnest conviction of the lecturer 
that he was right, and that his rea- 
sonings were duly appreciated and 
approved. But to say, " Don't re- 
ject the theory," is to acknowledge 
that the arguments had not com- 
manded the assent of the intellect, 
and that no other resource remain- 
ed than a warm appeal to the good- 
will of the hearers. Such an ap- 
peal, in a scientific lecture, may 
seem out of place ; but it is in- 
structive, for it reads us to the 
conclusion that even Dr. Draper 
was convinced of the futility of his 
attempt. 

The only argument which we 
could find in his lecture in support 
of the Darwinian theory is so 
puerile that we believe not one of 
the assembled ministers can have 
been tempted to give it his adhe- 
sion. After pointing out that " each 
of the geological periods has its 
dominating representative type of 
life," the lecturer introduces his ar- 
gument in the following form : 

" Perhaps it may be asked : ' How can 
we be satisfied that the members of this 
long series are strictly the successive 
descendants by evolution from older 
forms, and in their turn the progenitors 
of the latter? How do we know that 
they have not been introduced by sud- 
den creations and removed by sudden 
extinctions?' Simply for this reason: 



784 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



The new groups make their appearance 
while yet their predecessors are in full 
vigor. They come under an imperfect 
model which very gradually improves. 
Evolution implies such lapses of time. 
Creation is a sudden affair." 

O admirable philosophy ! The 
predecessors were still vigorous 
when the successors made their ap- 
pearance ; therefore the former 
were the progenitors of the latter ! 
And why so ? Because " evolution 
implies lapse of time," whilst " crea- 
tion is a sudden affair " ! Even a 
child, we think, would see that 
such reasoning is deceptive. But, 
since Dr. Draper is bold enough to 
take his stand upon it, we must be 
allowed to ask him two questions. 

First, admitting that " creation 
is a sudden affair," does he believe 
that God could not create the suc- 
cessors before the disappearance of 
their predecessors ? If God could 
do this, what matters it that crea- 
tion is " a sudden affair " ? And if 
God could not do this, what insu- 
perable obstacle. impeded the free 
exertion of his power ? 

Secondly, is there no alternative 
between genetic evolution and cre- 
ation strictly so-called ? If between 
these two modes of origination a 
third can be introduced, the doc- 
tor's argument falls to pieces. 
Now, " production " from pre-exist- 
ing materials (earth, water, etc.) in 
obedience to God's command is 
neither genetic evolution nor crea- 
tion strictly so-called, and need 
not be " a sudden affair." And this 
mode of origination is just the 
one which seems more clearly 
pointed out by the Sacred Scrip- 
tures;* and therefore it should 
not have been ignored' by the lec- 
turer, if he wished to argue against 

* Dixit etiam Deus : Producant aqua reptile 
nnima viventts, et volatile sut>er terrain. . . . 
ProducAt terra animant viventem in genere 
* . . . et factutn est ita. Gen. i. 20, 24. 



the Scriptural record. Why did he, 
then, keep out of view this excel- 
lent explanation of the origin of 
species? Is it because it was con- 
venient to conceal a truth which 
could not be refuted ? 

Thus the only reason by which 
Dr. Draper attempts to prove the 
theory of evolution is a demon- 
strated fallacy, and the theory fails 
to the ground, in this sense, at least : 
that it remains unproved. But if 
every attempt at proving it involves 
some logical blunder, if it implies 
contradictories, if it is based on un- 
scientific assumptions, as is evident 
from the argumentations of Darwin, 
Huxley, Youmans, and Other ad- 
vanced writers on evolution, and if 
history, geology, and philosophy 
unitedly oppose the theory with 
arguments which admit of no reply, 
as is known to be the case, then we 
must be allowed to conclude that 
the theory, besides being unproved, 
is fabulous and absurd. 

Dr. Draper, after citing some 
controvertible facts, of which he 
gives a yet more controvertible ex- 
planation from the Darwinian as- 
sumptions, says : 

"Now I have answered, and I know 
how imperfectly, your question, ' How 
does the hypothesis of evolution force 
itself upon the student of modern sci- 
ence? ' by relating how it has forced it- 
self upon me ; for my life has been spent 
in such studies, and it is by meditating 
on facts like those I have here exposed 
that this hypothesis now stands before 
me as one of the verities of Nature." 

Yes. The student of modern 
science, if he is unwilling to admit 
creation, must appeal to evolution, 
and call it " one of the verities of 
Nature "; but, though he may call 
it a " verity," he also admits that it 
is a mere " hypothesis," by which 
the origin of organisms cannot be 
accounted for and against which a 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



785 



host of facts and reasons are daily 
objected by science and philoso- 
phy. 

" In doing this I have opened 
before you a page of the book of 
Nature that book which dates 
from eternity and embraces infin- 
ity." Is this a " verity," a hypoth- 
esis, or an imposture ? 

" No council of Laodicea, no 
Tridentine Council, is wanted to 
endorse its authenticity, nothing 
to assure us that it has never 
been tampered with by any guild of 
men." This is an allusion to the 
declarations of councils regard- 
ing the authenticity of the Bible. 
Does, then, modern science trans- 
form educated men into sorry 
jesters ? If so, why does not Mr. 
Draper derive the monkey from 
the gentleman ? 

" Then it is for us to study it as 
best we may, and to obey its gui- 
dance, no matter whither it may 
lead us." Yes, it is for us to study 
the book of nature as best we may ; 
but we must not forget that the au- 
thor of this book is God, and that 
God does not contradict in the 
book of nature what he teaches in 
the book of Genesis. It is for us 
" to obey its guidance." Yes ; and 
therefore it is not for us to pervert 
its evidences, as Dr. Draper does, 
in order to exclude " the interven- 
tion of the divine power." 

As to " whither it may lead us " 
we have no doubts ; but the lectu- 
rer seems to believe that it may 
lead in two opposite directions. 
Here are his words : 

" I have spoken of the origin and the 
progress of the hypothesis of evolution, 
and would now consider the consequen- 
ces of accepting it. Here it is only a 
word or two that time permits, and very 
few words must suffice. I must bear in 
mind that it is the consequences from 
your point of view to which I must al- 
lude. Should I speak of the manner in 
VOL. XXVI. 50 



which scientific thought is affected . . . 
I should be carried altogether beyond 
the limits of the present hour. The con- 
sequences ! What are they, then, to you ? 
Nobler views of this grand universe of 
which we form a part, nobler views of 
the manner in which it has been devel- 
oped in past times to its present state, 
nobler views of the laws by which it is 
now maintained, nobler expectations as 
to its future. We stand in presence of 
the unshackled, as to Force ; of the im- 
measurable, as to Space ; of the unlimit- 
ed, as to Time. Above all, our concep- 
tions of the unchangeable purposes, the 
awful majesty of the Supreme Being be- 
come more vivid. We realize what is 
meant when it is said : 'With him there 
is no variableness, no shadow of turn- 
ing.' Need I say anything more in com- 
mending the doctrine of evolution to 
you ?" 

These are, then, the consequen- 
ces " from the point of view " of 
the Unitarian ministers, as the 
lecturer very explicitly declares. 
As to the consequences " from the 
point of view " of advanced scien- 
ists, the lecturer gives only a hint, 
because, had he spoken of the 
manner in which scientific thought 
is affected, the lecture would have 
proved rather too long. It is ap- 
parent, however, that the " verity '* 
or the " hypothesis " which leads 
the Unitarians to a " Supreme Be- 
ing" can lead Dr. Draper and 
the scientific mind to some- 
thing different, according to the 
manner in which scientific thought 
is affected. We may well say, al- 
though Dr. Draper preferred not 
to say it, that it leads to atheism or 
to pantheism ; for the new " verity" 
was invented with the aim of escap- 
ing "the intervention of the divine 
power " and of subjecting every- 
thing in the world to the " universal 
reign " of an abstraction called 
" Law." Dr. Draper himself tells 
us, as we have just seen, that the 
book of Nature (with a capital N) 
" dates from eternity and embraces 



786 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



infinity"; and surely, if the world 
is eternal and infinite, Nature is 
everything, and a personal God be- 
comes an embarrassing superfluity. 
It seems, then, that Dr. Draper, 
when he mentions the divine power 
or the Supreme Being, does not 
speak the language of his " scien- 
tific " conscience, but the language 
wliich he considers to express the 
convictions of the Unitarian body. 
Perhaps it would have been more 
in keeping with the requirement of 
the subject, if he had frankly stat- 
ed the " consequences " which he, 
as a scientist, would draw from the 
" verity " he had proclaimed ; but, 
as he may have feared that a frank 
statement would have created a 
little scandal, we are inclined to 
acquit him of the charge of "scien- 
tific " dishonesty the more so 
as the consequences which he de- 
duces, taken in connection with 
the rest of the lecture, give a suffi- 
cient clue to the private views of 
the speaker. 

It is difficult, however, to under- 
stand how the acceptance of the 
theory of evolution can lead to 
" nobler views of this grand uni- 
verse," or to " nobler views of the 
manner in which it has been de- 
veloped," or to " nobler views of 
the laws by which it is now main- 
tained." To us these " conse- 
quences " are incomprehensible; 
for is it nobler to view this grand 
universe as a mere mass of matter 
than to view it as full of the di- 
vine power of which it is the work ? 
or is it nobler to derive man from 
the brute than to view him as the 
son of God and the image of his 
Creator ? On the other hand, the 
laws by which the universe is now 
maintained are in direct opposition 
to the theory of evolution, as all 
men of science confess ; hence a 
view of such laws suggested by the 



theory of evolution must be a false 
and contradictory view, and Dr. 
Draper, when calling it a " nobler 
view," amuses himself at the ex- 
pense of his audience. Fancy an 
assembly of grave men listening in 
silence to such rhetoric ! and fancy 
a professor of materialism serious- 
ly engaged in the highly scientific 
business of beguiling such a grave 
audience ! 

It is no less difficult to under- 
stand how the theory of evolution 
makes us " stand in presence of 
the unshackled, of the immeasur- 
able, and of the unlimited." These 
epithets do not designate God, for 
it is manifest that the theory of 
evolution has no claim to the 
honor of showing God as present 
in his creatures; nor can they be 
applied to the universe, for it is 
not true that the universe is " un- 
shackled as to Force, immeasurable 
as to Space, and unlimited as to 
Time " ; and, even were it true, it 
would not be a " consequence " of 
evolution. What do they mean, 
,then? 

But the most unintelligible of all 
such "consequences" is that by 
the acceptance of the theory of 
evolution "our conceptions of the 
unchangeable purposes, the awful 
majesty of the Supreme Being be- 
come more vivid." What " pur- 
poses " can the Supreme Being 
have formed with reference to a 
universe which is not subject to 
"the intervention of the divine 
power " ? Is it wise to entertain 
purposes which one has no power to 
carry out ? Or is the " Supreme 
Being " of Dr. Draper so unwise 
as to cherish purposes which must 
be defeated by <; universal, irrever- 
sible law "? We strongly suspect 
that his "Supreme Being" is no- 
thing but the universe itself, and 
that it is for this reason that he 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



787 



writes force, Space, and Time witli 
capital letters, thus forming a mock 
Trinity "unshackled, immeasurable, 
and unlimited," but consisting of 
material parts and controlled by 
the laws of matter, with which 
"" there is no variableness, no sha- 
dow of turning." If so, then Dr. 
Draper has no God but the uni- 
verse, the sun, the moon, and the 
stars, light, heat and electricity, 
gravitation, affinity, and motion ; 
and this is "the awful majesty" 
before which he bends his knee in 
scientific adoration. 

Having drawn these devout 
" consequences " for the edification 
of the meeting, the lecturer, with a 
happy stroke of audacity, asks his 
hearers : " Need I say anything 
more in commending the doctrine 
of evolution to you?" As if he 
said : " Do you expect that an in- 
fidel has anything more to say in 
favor of your Supreme Being ? 
Have I not given you a sufficient 
proof of deference and self-abne- 
gation by putting together a few 
equivocal phrases in honor of your 
divinity? Need I torture my brain 
any longer for the sake of a view 
which is not mine?" But, fortu- 
nately for Dr. Draper, a sudden 
recollection of the fact that Unita- 
rianism and infidelity agree in re- 
jecting the authority of the Index 
Expurgatorius suggested to him 
the following words : 

" Let us bear in mind the warning of 
history. The heaviest blow the Holy 
Scriptures have ever received was in- 
flicted by no infidel, but by ecclesiastical 
authority itself. When the works of 
Copernicus and of Kepler were put in 
the Index of prohibited books the sys- 
tem of the former was declared, by what 
called itself the Christian Church, to be 
' the false Pythagorean system, utterly 
contrary to the Holy Scriptures.' But 
the truth of the Copernican system is now 
established. There are persons who de- 
clare of the hypothesis of evolution, as 



was formerly declared of the hypothesis 
of Copernicus, ' It is utterly contrary to the 
Holy Scriptures.' It is for you to exam- 
ine whether this be so, and, if so, to find 
a means of reconciliation." 

\Ve do not doubt that the lectu- 
rer honestly believes what he says 
about the " heaviest blow " inflict- 
ed on the Holy Scriptures. But 
we would inform him that the Con- 
gregation of the Index does not 
make definitions of faith, and 
that its authority, however respec- 
table, is disciplinary, not dogmatic. 
If he consulted our theologians, he 
would learn that not even oecume- 
nical councils are considered infal- 
lible as to the reasons by which 
they support their decisions, but 
only as to the decisions themselves. 
Much less can the theologians of 
the Index bind our judgment by 
giving expression to their theolo- 
gical views. The books which 
they forbid are forbidden ; but the 
reasons for which they are forbid- 
den are not all necessarily incon- 
trovertible, and this suffices to 
show that it is not " the Christian 
Church " that declared the Coper- 
nican system contrary to the Holy 
Scriptures, for the church never 
defined such a point ; such a de- 
claration was the expression of a 
theological view which was then 
common, but which had no dog- 
matic consequences and could give 
no " blow " to the Holy Scriptures. 
Dr. Draper remarks that evolution, 
too, has been declared to be " con- 
trary to the Holy Scriptures." 
The fact is true ; but he should 
have added that the same hypothe- 
sis has been refuted by philosophy 
as a logical blunder, and rejected 
by science as a monstrous falsehood. 
Hence the two cases are not similar. 

" Let us not be led astray," continues 
Dr. Draper, " by the clamors of those 
who, not seeking the truth and not car- 



;88 



Dr. Draper and Evolution. 



ing about it, are only championing their 
sect or attempting the perpetuation of 
their profits. My friends, let me plead 
with you. Don't reject the theory of 
evolution. There is no thought of mod- 
ern times that more magnifies the unut- 
terable glory of Almighty God !" 

How edifying ! how pathetic ! 
but how ludicrous on the lips of an 
unbeliever ! For the God of the 
lecturer is no creator, as creation 
is inconsistent with the pretended 
eternity of matter ; he is not omni- 
potent, for he cannot work mira- 
cles ; he is not provident, for Dr. 
Draper rejects all intervention of 
the divine power in the govern- 
ment of the universe, and says 
that "the capricious intrusion of a 
supernatural agency has never yet 
occurred " ; whence we see that God, 
according to him, would be an in- 
truder, and even a capricious one, 
if he dared to meddle with the af- 
fairs of the material, moral, or in- 
tellectual world. Such being the 
God of the evolutionist, who does 
not see that the only meaning 
which can be legitimately attached 
to Dr. Draper's words is that the 
theory of evolution " magnifies the 
unutterable glory of almighty mat- 
ter " and does its best to suppress 
Almighty God ? 

He gives another grave warning 
to his clerical hearers : 

" Remember, I beseech you, what was 
said by one of old times : ' Ye men of Is- 
rael, take heed to yourselves what ye in- 
tend to do. And now I say unto you, if 
this counsel be of men it will come to 
naught ; but if it be of God, ye cannot 
overthrow it, lest haply ye be found to 
be fighting against God.' Shall I contin- 
ue the quotation ? ' And to him they all 
agreed.' " 

This quotation from a speech of 
Gamaliel in the Jewish council 
would be appropriate, if the evo- 
lutionists, like the apostles, had 



wrought public miracles to prove 
their divine mission. In the case 
of the apostles all tended to prove 
that they were right, and that God 
was on their side. They spoke 
languages that they had never 
learned, they cured the sick with- 
out medicine, by a word or by 
their shadow, and filled the city 
with wonders which their enemies 
could not deny. When Mr. Dar- 
win or Dr. Draper shall give us 
like evidences of their divine mis- 
sion, we will " take heed to our- 
selves what we intend to do " with 
their doctrine; but, as things are 
now, everything compels us to look 
on them as emissaries and minis- 
ters of the kingdom of darkness. 
We cannot put in the same balance 
evolution and creation ; for all the 
weight would be on the side of the 
latter. A dream, a nonentity, an 
unscientific fiction, a paralogism, 
have no weight ; whilst effects 
without causes, conclusions with- 
out premises, phrases without 
meaning, weigh only on the con- 
science of modern thinkers, but 
without affecting in the least the 
balance of truth. Thus we are not 
afraid that we "be found fighting 
against God " while fighting for 
creation against evolution. The 
matter is too evident to need fur- 
ther explanation. 

We are tired of following Dr. 
Draper through his tortuous rea- 
sonings, and the reader is probably 
equally tired. On the other hand, 
there is little need of exposing the 
mischievous glorification of modern 
science in which the lecturer in- 
dulges in the interest of his materi- 
alistic views. When we are told 
that " profound changes are taking 
place in our conceptions of the 
Supreme Being," or that " the doc- 
trine of evolution has for its foun- 
dation not the admission oi inces- 



After Castel-Fidardo* 



789 



sant divine intervention, but a rec- 
ognition of the original, the immu- 
table fiat of God " of a God, how- 
ever, who did not create matter, 
and who must respect the domin- 
ion of universal and irreversible 
law under pain of being stigmatiz- 
ed as a "capricious intruder" or 
when we are told that " the estab- 
lishment of the theory of evolution 
has been due to the conjoint move- 
ment of all the sciences," and that 
*' Knowledge, fresh from so many 
triumphs, unfalteringly continues 
her movement on the works of 
Superstition and Ignorance," we 
need no great acumen to under- 
stand the meaning of this " scien- 
tific " slang. Declamation is the 
great resource of demagogues and 
charlatans. Unfortunately, there 
are charlatans and demagogues 
even among the doctors of science, 



and their number, though small, is 
apt to increase in the same propor- 
tion as their vagaries are diffused 
among the rising generation. Ca- 
tholics, thank God ! are less expos- 
ed to seduction than sectaries who 
have no guide but their inconsis- 
tent theories ; but even Catholics 
should be on their guard lest they, 
too, be poisoned by the foul and 
infectious atmosphere in which 
they live. Indeed, all the modern 
errors have been refuted ; but when 
a taste for error becomes predomi- 
nant, and such fables as evolution 
are styled " science," then human 
weakness and human pride are 
easily drawn into the vortex of 
scepticism ; and then we must be 
watchful and pray, for the time is 
at hand when even the elect, as the 
Gospel warns us, shall be in danger 
of seduction. 



AFTER CASTEL-FIDARDO. 
A SOLDIER'S LETTER. 

FROM THE ITALIAN. 

WOUNDED, my friend, and dying, 
Waiting the end, I lie 

A sword-cut in my right leg, 
A ball in my left thigh ; 

Dying, and ever hoping 
And in that hope I die 

One day not here to see you, 
But in our home on high. 

Of this our earth all thought now 
For me has useless grown, 

All its bright days are ended, 
Its last dark shadow thrown. 



After Castel-Fidardo. 

For my dear faith so freely 
My blood with joy I gave, 

And for the Holy Father, 
His earthly realm to save. 

Content am I, and fortunate, 
My duty to have done ; 

And valorous too, as truly 
Became the church's son. 

Yet no\v our dear Lord calleth, 
And in his hands I leave 

My cause so dearly cherished : 
May he all loss retrieve 

Who will not me abandon, 
Nor valiant comrades mine, 

Nor yet his church, nor Vicar 
Who guards his spouse divine ! 

Dear friend, to me be pitiful ; 

Pray unto God for me ; 
Leaving the world, this charity 

I beg so earnestly. 

This world I leave untroubled, 
Save by this one regret : 

That none of mine are near me 
Kind eyes that would be wet 

With tears of long-tried loving. 

My friends, in mercy pray 
For my poor soul, that draweth 

So near eternal day ! 

A kiss my blood has tinted 

I beg each one receive 
That now I send you, waiting 

From life a last reprieve ; 

Hoping one day to give you 
The blessed kiss of peace 

In our dear, common country 
Fair-shining Paradise. 

E'en as I am, earth leaving, 
Your true and loving friend, 

So shall I be in heaven 

With love that knows no end. 



Michael the Sombre. 



79 1 



MICHAEL THE SOMBRE. 

AN EPISODE IN THE POLISH INSURRECTION, 1863-1864. 

CONCLUSION. 



ON my arrival at the camp I 
found Father Benvenuto already 
installed as head chaplain and 
everything prepared for my recep- 
tion. The poor general had died 
only two hours after my departure. 
He had been buried at Gory ; but 
his soldiers, having heard that the 
Russians intended to dig up his 
body in order to mutilate it in their 
barbarous fashion, dug up the coffin 
and carried it to Koniec-Pol. 

The Russians, furious at finding 
the grave empty, hanged the parish 
priest of the village for having 
given permission for the removal 
of the body. The mother of the 
priest, who was seventy-five years of 
age, was dragged to the foot of the 
gibbet, and, like the Mother of 
Dolors, was made to assist at the 
execution of her only son. When 
they tried to remove her she fell 
down dead. Her soul had flown 
to heaven after that of her boy. 

No sooner had I entered on my 
new duties than I determined to 
start immediately with my squa- 
dron to protect Countess L 's 

flight. But General C , at the 

head of the Russian garrison from 
Kielce, never ceased pursuing and 
attacking us, harassing our march 
day and night; so that it was not 
for fifteen days after my departure 
from the castle that I was enabled 
to carry out my plan. My troops, 
who always saw me with a frown, 
which I had adopted to keep them 
at a greater distance, had nicknam- 
ed me "Michael the Sombre," and 
I signed all orders in that name. 



After repeated marches and 
counter-marches we managed at 
last to escape from our enemies, and 
arrived one evening at Syez after a 
forced march of ten hours. I en- 
camped my men in a field about 
twenty minutes from the castle, 
whither I galloped, accompanied 
only by my orderly, whom I left at 
the outer gates to keep watch, while 
I asked an audience of Countess 

L for " Michael the Sombre." 

A footman admitted me directly 
without recognizing me in the least, 
and took me into a room where a 
lamp with a dark-green globe pre- 
vented any object from being eas- 
ily distinguished. Overcome with 
fatigue, I threw myself into an arm- 
chair. I was full, however, of 
thankful emotion. God had in- 
deed heard my prayer and brought 
me back in safety to be the preser- 
ver of those whom I held so dear. 
The door opened ; the countess and 
her sister appeared, and began by 
the usual formal words of welcome 
and courtesy, asking me to be seat- 
ed for I had, of course, risen on 
their entrance. As I did not an- 
swer, and continued looking at them 
with my eyes full of tears, they sud- 
denly looked up too, and, with a 
joint cry, threw themselves into my 
arms. I had suffered terribly from 
hunger, cold, and fatigue during the 
past fortnight ; but that moment 
of intense joy made me forget 
everything. Five minutes after I 
was surrounded by all the children; 
the youngest had scrambled up on 
my knees and thrown her arms 



792 



Micliael tlie Sombre. 



tiglitly around my neck; Sophia 
had seized my helmet, and, putting 
it on before the glass, compared 
herself to Minerva. Stanislas had 
unhooked my sword, and Stephen 
was trying to take off my spurs. 
Half the night was spent in telling 
one another all that had passed in 
that eventful fortnight ; and al- 
though I made light of my difficul- 
ties and position, yet I saw that 
the poor countess could hardly 
bear to realize what I must still go 
through before I was released from 
my command. 

This, however, was not a moment 
for doubt or hesitation. It was 
necessary to move immediately 
before the Russian spies could give 
the alarm ; so that by daybreak the 
following morning the countess' 
carriage, escorted by my flying 
column, started on the road to the 
frontier. Fortunately, we were 
not molested on the way, and, 
when we arrived at about a quarter 
of a mile from Myszkow, I halted 
my soldiers, and. putting on the or- 
dinary dress of a civilian, I accom- 
panied the ladies to the station and 
busied myself with their passports, 
tickets, and baggage with all the 
feverish anxiety of one who strove 
to forget the terrible ordeal through 
which I had yet to pass before I 
should be able to rejoin them. 
When the train came up I brought 
the ladies out on the platform, and, 
having procured a special compart- 
ment for them, made them get into 
it with the children. Then at last 
I could breathe freely. No one had 
discovered them they were safe ! 
"Adieu!"! exclaimed, as I shook 
hands with them at the carriage- 
door. " You are now out of dan- 
ger, for which I thank God with my 
whole heart. You will tell the 
count that I have fulfilled my pro- 
mise to him, will you not ? And 



you will not forget me ?" I added 
with a faltering voice. 

They looked at me as if stupe- 
fied. " But, Mika," exclaimed the 
countess, " we cannot go without 
you ! You must be joking. It is 
not possible for you to stay behind. 
What on earth is there to detain 
you ?" 

" You forget," I replied as calm- 
ly as I could, " my promise to the 
dying general; my vow to remain 
with his troops until replaced, if he 
would only grant me this escort ; 
Poland, which I have sworn to de- 
fend." 

" But this is dreadful !" murmur- 
ed the poor countess. " How can 
we enjoy our liberty, purchased at 
such a price ?" 

Mme. de I said nothing. 

She was as white as a sheet ; her 
hand tightened on mine, and she 
fixed her eyes on me as if she were 
turned into stone. More fully 
than the countess did she realize 
the full peril of the position. I 
was broken-hearted ; but, fearing 
lest this scene should attract the 
attention of the officials or of any 
Russian spies, I left the carriage- 
door under pretence of having for- 
gotten something. When I return- 
ed the train was already moving 
out of the station. The countess 
rushed to the window and wrung 
my hand convulsively for the last 
time. She could not speak. My 
eyes followed the receding train 
with a feeling of despair in my 
heart. It was carrying off all I 
loved best on earth, and I was 
alone. All of a sudden I heard my 
name called out with a cry of an- 
guish from the carriage, and then, I 
think, for a moment I lost con- 
sciousness, as if struck by light- 
ning, and remained motionless and 
stunned. Till that moment I had 
not realized the full bitterness of 






Michael the Sombre. 



793 



the sacrifice. I woke from this 
kind of stupor to hear voices in 
hot dispute behind me. I turned 
round and saw a Polish soldier, 
covered with dust and in a tattered 
uniform, struggling with two of the 
porters of the railroad, who were 
trying to stop him. 

" What do you want to do ?" I 
exclaimed. " Who are you looking 
for?" 

" Michael the Sombre," replied 
the soldier. 

" I am the man," I replied quiet- 
ly, drawing him aside out of the 
station to a part of the road where 
we could talk without being heard. 

"O sir! make haste," the poor 

fellow cried. " Generals O , De 

la Croix, and Zaremba are fight- 
ing at Koniec-Pol and are being 
overwhelmed by the superior forces 
of the enemy. If they be not rein- 
forced by two o'clock they will all 
be cut to pieces." 

I instantly sent off a messenger 
to General Chmielinski to warn 
him of the danger; and then, with- 
out giving myself time to put on 
my uniform, I buckled my sword 
over my black coat, and galloped as 
hard as I could to the scene of ac- 
tion. I divided my squadron into 
three columns, and sent each, under 
the command of an officer, in three 
different directions. The Russian 
sentinels consequently gave the 
alarm on three sides at once, and 
the Russians, fancying themselves 
surrounded by a large force, were 
seized with an uncontrollable panic 
and fled in the direction of Shepca; 
Chmielinski's column, advancing 
exactly in that direction, met them, 
and the three infantry companies of 
which they were composed were lit- 
erally cut to pieces. During the 
charge a ball had passed through my 
boot and wounded me in the right 
leg. Father Benvenuto was at my 



side in a moment and had me remov- 
ed to Chezonstow, where the good 
Mother Alexandra, of whom I have 
before spoken, was at the head of 
the ambulance. She gave me up 
her own cell and would allow no 
one but herself to nurse me. Dur- 
ing my illness a division arose 
among my troops. They dispersed ; 
some went home, others joined a 
corps under the orders of Lange- 
wiecz, while the remainder followed 
Norbut. When sufficiently recover- 
ed from my wound, finding I was 
still too lame for active service, I 
accepted a mission for the Central 

Polish Committee at P , but was 

unable to obtain my release. From 

thence I started for N , where I 

made my will and a general con- 
fession, and then started again for 
the front, having my passport drawn 
up under the name of Michael 

L . This time I enlisted as a 

common soldier under the orders 
of General Sokol. After the first en- 
gagement I was appointed quarter- 
master and interpreter to a French 
officer, Ivon Amie, dit De Cha- 
brolles. On the next brush we had 
with the enemy I was promoted to 
be sub-lieutenant for having rescued 
the national flag from a Russian. 
Between Secemin and Rudnick we 
were attacked by six hundred Rus- 
sians with two field-pieces. We 
were only two hundred and fifty 
men, with no cannon. Chabrolles, 
in his mad zeal, rushed forward, 
pistol in hand, and fired straight at 
the men who were loading their 
guns at only twenty paces off. 
Then he turned to give an order, 
and the enemy's fire (both pieces 
being pointed in his direction) car- 
ried off part of his shoulder. Re- 
gardless of his wound, he cheered 
on his men by word and deed, and 
they were on the point of captur- 
ing the guns when a Cossack thrust 



794 



Michael the Sombre. 



him through and through with his 
lance. I was by Chabrolles' side 
and fired at his adversary, who fell 
before he had had time to draw 
out his weapon. This sad office 
devolved upon one of our own men. 
Chabrolles, when falling, gave me 
his hand. " My brother," he said 
faintly, " if you get back to France 
go to Paris and see my mother. 
She is at 37 Rue Clerc au Gros 
Caillou. Tell her that her son has 
died as a brave Christian should 
die." Unable to reply, I tore my 
crucifix out of my breast and pre- 
sented it to him. He made a last 
effort, kissed it with fervor, made 
the sign of the cross, and expired, 
his eyes raised to heaven. 

Our detachment was then entire- 
ly defeated. In vain I tried to 
rally our men ; they fled in the ut- 
most disorder. With a few braver 
spirits than the rest I managed, at 
least, to protect our retreat. I was 
just beginning to congratulate my- 
self on our escape when a Cossack, 
with his lance at rest, rode straight 
at me. I had fired off my last pistol. 
With one hand I seized my sword 
to parry the charge ; with the other 
I pressed my crucifix to my breast. 
The lance turned aside, went through 
the sleeve of my uniform and out 
at my back without touching my 
flesh. If I never believed in a mira- 
cle J should at this moment, when 
I realized that I was really unhurt, 
although death had seemed so in- 
evitable. In this terrible fight we 
lost, besides Chabrolles, Major Za- 
chowski and Captains Piotraszkie- 
wicz and Krasmicki. At the close 
of the day I was promoted to be 
lieutenant of the Uhlans. 

One day I was ordered to con- 
vey some arms and ammunition to 
a distant outpost, and loaded the 
bottom of a britzslca with about 
twenty guns and swords and fifty 



revolvers. I was in plain clothes, 
and my orderly, Badecki, acted as 
coachman. The road was suppos- 
ed to be quite safe. Judge, then, of 
our fright when we discovered a 
large body of Russian cavalry rid- 
ing directly towards us. It was 
too late to think of beating a re- 
treat. A shudder passed through 
me ; for it was the worst kind of 
death which threatened us not a 
glorious one on the field of battle, 
but a slow torture, or else to be 
hanged on the nearest tree. I 
prayed with my whole heart for 
deliverance, and felt that the hand 
of God alone could save us. After 
this moment of recollection calm 
again fell upon me and my pre- 
sence of mind returned. Theofficer 
who commanded the corps came up a 
few seconds after and asked me who 
I was and where I was going. I 
replied " that I was the German 
tutor of Princess Ikorff (a Russian 
lady), and that I was going to Kiel- 
ce to buy books." My story was 
confirmed by my Berlin accent ; 
and as at this moment the Prus- 
sians were in odor of sanctity with 
their brethren, the Russians, the 
officer simply bowed and let us pass 
without interruption or suspicion. 
But the last Cossack of the band 
drew near to the carriage-door. 
" Noble Sir !" he exclaimed in 
that cringing voice which is na- 
tural to the race, " give me some 
kopecks to drink your health." 
In the state of excitement I was 
in I did not think of what I was 
doing, and threw him three ducats 
instead of kopecks. The poor fel- 
low was so amazed that he hasten- 
ed to show his gratitude after the 
Cossack fashion that is, by kissing 
my feet- and calling me by every 
imaginable title : prince, duke, etc. 
This was a terrible moment for me. 
The guns were under my feet, only 



Michael the Sombre. 



795 



hidden by a slight covering of hay, 
the least displacement of which 
would have exposed them. God, 
in his mercy, did not allow it, and 
my Cossack, after a thousand obei- 
sances and calling down on my 
head every blessing from St. George 
and St. Nicholas, left me and rejoined 
his companions. I arrived at my 
destination without further alarms, 
my heart filled with thankfulness 
to Him who had so mercifully pre- 
served us from the worst of deaths. 

About the beginning of Septem- 
ber Gen. Iskra was attacked by a 
strong corps, and I was sent off to 
his relief with about one hundred 
men. The Russians were repulsed ; 
but we lost in this skirmish our 
Italian doctor, M. Vigani, and M. 
Loiseau, a French officer of artil- 
lery. During the night the Rus- 
sians, having received reinforce- 
ments, returned to the attack. We 
were too few in numbers and too 
exhausted to attempt to fight, and 
retreated on Pradla. During this 
retreat my horse, which belonged 
to a private in the corps, made a 
false step and fell. I had fired the 
last barrel of my revolver, and one 
of my legs had got doubled up un- 
der my horse, which made me pow- 
erless. At this moment a Cossack 
galloped straight at me. I felt that 
my last hour was come, and re- 
commended my soul to God. 

" Yield thyself, rebel !" he cried 
out in bad Polish. 

" A Frenchman dies, but never 
yields," I replied. 

My enemy hesitated for a mo- 
ment, and then lowered his sword, 
which he had already raised to cut 
me down. 

" Listen," he said : " In the Cri- 
mea a Frenchman who had me at 
his mercy spared my life; for his 
sake I will spare thine. But give 
me all the money thou hast." 



I threw my purse to him, which 
contained about twenty roubles. 
The Cossack helped me to rise, 
and then said : 

" Now fly for thy life ; for my 
comrades are at hand, and they will 
not spare thee !" 

During the whole war this was 
the only instance of humanity I 
ever heard of on the part of the 
Cossacks, and I gladly record it 
here. 

The following day Princess Elo- 

die C came to the camp, at the 

head of a deputation of Polish la- 
dies, to thank me for my devotion 
to the cause of Poland. 

One day I was sitting, sadly 
enough, under a pine-tree. My 
troops, silent and sombre, were 
warming themselves by a great fire. 
For two days we had eaten noth- 
ing. As for me, I was thinking of 
the absent, and felt terribly lonely. 
When I looked up I saw two beau- 
tiful, intelligent heads watching me, 
as if saying : " Are we, then, noth- 
ing to you we who have shared 
all your sufferings and dangers ?" 
They were my two only friends 
and companions : Al-Mansour, my 
Arab horse, and Caesar, my faithful 
Newfoundland dog. I got up and 
caressed them both. " O my best 
friends!" I exclaimed, "you will 
be with me till death, and if you 
survive me you will mourn for me 
more than any one else." And as 
I kissed them my eyes filled with 
tears. Al-Mansour laid his head 
on my shoulder, and Caesar licked 
my hand. They were my only 
comfort. One minute after a cou- 
rier arrived to beg for reinforce- 
ments. Gen. Iczioranski was fight- 
ing at Piaskowa-Scala. I whistled 
to Caesar, who was an excellent 
bearer of despatches, and would 
even fight to defend them, and fas- 
tened a note under his collar. Then, 



796 



Michael the Sombre. 



showing him the direction he was 
to take, I cried : " Hie quickly, 
Caesar ! and return as soon as you 
can." And the dog started off like 
a shot. 

We mounted and galloped to 
Piaskowa-Scala. The action was 
short, and we managed to free 
Iczioranski, who was surrounded 
on all sides. At the very moment 
when the Russians were giving 
way Al-Mansour bounded with 
me up in the air, gave a terrible 
cry, and fell. I had hardly time to 
get my feet out of the stirrups. 
He had been shot by a ball in the 
chest. The poor beast had a mo- 
ment of convulsion, and then turn- 
ed his beautiful, soft eyes towards 
me, as if to implore my help ; then 
his legs stiffened and he trembled 
again all over. I bent over him 
and passed my hand through his 
thick and beautiful mane, calling 
him for the last time ; and then 
... I covered my face with 
both hands and sobbed like a little 
child. Al-Mansour had been a 
real friend to me. I had had him 
when quite young and unbroken; 
I had trained him entirely myself, 
and from Breslau to Warsaw I 
defy any one to have found a more 
beautiful or intelligent animal. I 
alone could ride him ; he never 
would allow any one else on his 
back. For four years I had ridden 
him every day. The countess had 
given him tome, and I had brought 
him with me to the camp. Alas ! 
he was no longer the splendid 
beast which used to excite the ad- 
miration of everybody in the castle 
stables. Fatigue and privations of 
all kinds had reduced him to a 
skeleton, so that his old grooms 
would not have known him again. 
I only loved him the more ; and it 
used almost to break my heart 
when I saw him, for want of hay, 



oats, or even straw, eating the bark 
of trees to deaden the pangs of his 
hunger. He loved me as much as 
I loved him. I used to talk to him, 
and he understood me perfectly 
and answered me after his fashion. 
Although people who read this 
may laugh at me, it was yet a fact, 
which I am ready to maintain, that 
when I was wounded Al-Mansour 
had tears in his eyes ; and noth- 
ing on earth will ever efface his 
memory from my heart. 

Another anecdote which I must 
relate here refers to a lad a very 
child whom I had in my squad- 
ron, and whose name was, Charles 

M . At fifteen years of age he 

was a perfect marvel of cleverness, 
and had received, besides, an excel- 
lent education. He was born in 
Paris, his father being a Polish ex- 
ile, and. his mother, after twenty 
years' residence in France, still 
yearned for the arid plains and 
marshes of Poland. " Boze e 
Polska /" (God and Poland) 
those were the first words she 
taught her boy to pronounce ; 
and Charles could never separate 
his worship of one from the other. 
This double love, strengthened by 
all the surroundings of his child- 
hood, became in him a kind of 
fanaticism. When the insurrection 
broke out in Poland Charles was a 
boarder in the Polish college of 
Batignolles. He was just fifteen. 
From that moment his life became 
a continual fever. To go to Po- 
land to fight, and, if necessary, to 
die for the soil of his fathers were 
the thoughts which took such pos- 
session of the lad that they became 
irresistible. He saved from his 
pocket-money and from whatever he 
gained in prizes the sum necessary 
for the journey, and, when he 
thought he had enough, he escaped 
from the college, leaving a note to 



Michael the Sombre. 



797 



explain his intentions, and, after 
many difficulties, arrived at the 
camp. 

I was then in command of the 
second squadron of Uhlans, under 
Gen. Sokol. Charles came straight 
to me to be enrolled. I flatly re- 
fused to accept him, saying he was 
too young and too weak to bear 
arms. 

" What does it matter if one's 
arm be weak," he exclaimed, " if 
hatred for our oppressors drive my 
blows home ? It is true that I have 
only the height of a child, but in 
my love for Poland I have the 
heart of a man, and I will fight like 
a man !" 

I remained inflexible. At that 
moment the general came into my 
tent and asked what was the ques- 
tion in dispute. I told him. After 
a moment or two of reflection he 
turned to me and said : 

" You must accept him. I am 
apt to judge of character by peo- 
ple's heads; and this one is fill- 
ed with indomitable energy and 
courage." 

Charles was consequently enlist- 
ed, to his intense joy. I got him a 
little pony, and arms proportioned 
to his size, and he fought by my 
side like a lion in every encounter. 

After the fight at Piaskowa-Scala 
we returned to the camp, having 
fortunately found some provisions. 
The night was so dark that we 
were obliged to light torches, which 
the soldiers carried at certain dis- 
tances. Passing before a pine-tree, 
the new horse I was riding suddenly 
shied and nearly threw me. I look- 
ed to see what had frightened him, 
and discovered a black object 
hanging from a branch of the tree. 
I called a soldier to bring his torch, 
that we might find out what it was. 
The light fell on the hanging form ; 
it was my dear dog, Caesar. On the 



trunk of the tree was fastened a 
paper with this inscription : " We 
hang the dog until we can hang 
his master." I was thunderstruck. 
Al-Mansour, Caesar, both my friends 
in one day, perhaps at the very 
same hour ! " Nothing, then, is left 
to me!" I exclaimed with bitter- 
ness, feeling that my poor dog was 
quite cold " nothing, not even 
those poor faithful beasts who loved 
me so much." 

" Yes," said a voice in my ear, 
" a countryman is left to yo-.i, and, 
if you will, a friend!" 

I turned round; it was little 
Charles, who was holding out his 
hand to me with looks full of sad- 
ness and sympathy. I pressed the 
child's hand. "Charles!" I ex- 
claimed, " we will try and avenge 
them." And spurring my horse, I 
left the fatal spot far behind me in a 
few minutes. 

A day or two later we went to 
join the larger corps of General 
Chmielinski at the camp at Ted- 
czyjowa. When I say " camp " I 
make a mistake. None existed; 
we had only a few miserable tents 
and hardly any baggage. The men 
slept by parties of ten in the woods, 
on the cold ground, with such cov- 
erings or sheepskins as they could 
get together ; many had only cloth 
cloaks. At break of day the rt- 
veil sounded, ordinarily at the en- 
trance of some glade where the ve- 
dettes could embrace a wide space. 
At the first bugle sound the sol- 
diers emerged from the forest. 
The men were gentle and sad. 
The indomitable and calm energy 
of their souls was reflected on their 
faces, though blanched with cold 
and worn with hunger and suffer- 
ings of every description. They had 
a kind of interior brightness in 
their look that cast over them a 
sort of sacred halo, before which I 



Michael the Sombre, 



believe the veriest sceptic would 
have bowed with reverence. These 
men were all possessed with one 
idea : to die for their faith and 
their country. Nothing else, in- 
deed, was left for them. The strug- 
gle was becoming more hopeless 
every day, and they knew it ; yet 
they never dreamt of giving it up. 
The roll-call over and the sentries 
relieved, Father Benvenuto came 
in the midst of us, and every knee 
was bowed before the sacred sign 
he bore the sign of our redemp- 
tion. There was indeed something 
glorious in that prayer in the open 
air, joined in audibly by all those 
men, united in one thought and in 
one wish, who were fighting with 
the certainty of eventual defeat, 
but who only asked of God the 
grace not to falter or turn back 
from the path which duty and the 
love of their country had marked 
out for them, albeit that path 
might have no issue but exile or 
death. Happy were those who fell 
in battle ! They went at once to 
swell the glorious army of martyrs. 
The others, when not hanged, chain- 
ed in a long and mournful proces- 
sion, were sent to Siberia after 
that terrible word of farewell ad- 
dressed to fathers and mothers, and 
wives and children, gathered sob- 
bing by the roadside : " Do nie wid- 
zenia .'" Never to meet again. 
Many of these poor fellows were 
fastened to an iron bar, sometimes 
ten of them together, and car- 
ried off in the direction of Kiew. 
Those who survived the horrors of 
the march or the lash of their dri- 
vers were taken across Greater Rus- 
sia. A "soteria," or company, of 
Cossacks surrounded these inno- 
cent men on every side as they toil- 
ed on and on, loaded with chains 
and treated worse than the vilest 
criminals. The lance and the 



whip were the only answer to pleas 
of exhaustion or sickness. A re- 
signed silence was the sole refuge 
from the brutality of their escort, 
whose only orders were not to spare 
the blood of those Polish dogs. Any 
complaint brought down a hail- 
storm of blows on the unfortunate 
victims, even when not followed by 
death. Truly, the sufferings endur- 
ed by the Poles will never be 
known till the day when all things 
shall be revealed. 

When we arrived at the camp we 
found that Father Benvenuto had 
preceded us by four or five hours. 
He had been commissioned to re- 
ceive about one hundred volun- 
teers who had arrived that morning 
from Galicia. The greater part of 
them were dressed in the gray 
konttisz (or Bradenburg great- 
coat), with the large leathern gir- 
dle of a g/ral (a mountaineer). On 
their heads they wore the roqatka 
(a kind of square cap, something 
like the czapka of the Lancers). 
They generally had a common 
fowling-piece with two barrels, and 
a little hatchet in their waistbands. 
Each had a canvas bag and a 
hunting-pouch. These might be 
considered as the flower of the 
flock. They were mostly students 
from Lemberg and Cracow. Others 
were peasants dressed in short 
tunics with scythes in their hands. 
These were the kopynicry (or mow- 
ers), half-soldiers, half-peasants, 
and famous in all the struggles of 
Poland. Besides these there were 
men of every age and condition of 
life, but all animated with the same 
patriotic spirit : citizens, villagers, 
Catholics, Protestants, Jews even, 
some wearing black coats, others 
workmen's blouses. Their arms 
were as varied as their costumes : 
parade swords, sabres blunted in 
the great wars with Napoleon, old 



Michael the Sombre. 



799 



muskets of Sobieski's days, hal- 
berds, and even old French weapons. 
Some had only hunting-knives and 
sticks. This curious assemblage 
of discordant elements, which any- 
where else would have seemed gro- 
tesque, assumed under the circum- 
stances an imposing, and even a 
touching, character. 

At the extreme end of the glade 
Father Benvenuto was praying be- 
fore a great Christ stretched on his 
cross. When he rose he fastened an 
amaranth and white flag (which was 
the Polish banner) to the end of a 
lance. This flag bore on one side 
the picture of Notre Dame de Czen- 
stochowa, the patroness of Poland ; 
on the other a Lithuanian cavalier 
with the white eagle. He fixed the 
lance in the ground before the 
cross, and then made a sign to the 
volunteers to lay down their arms 
and draw near. When each had 
taken his place the good priest re- 
mained for a moment in silent 
prayer and recollection. His thin 
cheeks with their prominent cheek- 
bones, his long white beard, his 
forehead furrowed with wrinkles 
and glorious wounds, and his tall 
and commanding figure gave him 
an appearance of energy, strength, 
and majesty which impressed the 
beholders with deep and affection- 
ate veneration. 

"Brothers!" at last he said, 
"" it is a holy and yet a fearful 
cause to whicli you are about to 
devote yourselves. It is one be- 
yond mere vulgar or animal cou- 
rage ; and before you enroll your- 
selves in our ranks before, in fact, 
you engage yourselves any further 
in the matter it is right you should 
know and fully realize what awaits 
you and what is expected of you." 

The patriots listened respectful- 
ly, their heads bare, standing be- 
fore the crucifix and the banner. 



Around them, and as if to protect 
them, stretched the virgin forests, 
those fortresses of the Polish in- 
surgents, while the sun shed its 
pale rays over the whole scene. 

" What you have to expect," con- 
tinued the good father, "is this: 
You will suffer daily from hunger, 
for we have no stores ; you will 
have to sleep on the bare ground, 
for we have no tents ; you will 
have to march more often with 
bare feet than with shoes and 
stockings ; you will shiver with 
cold under clothes which will be 
utterly insufficient to protect you 
from the rigors of this climate. 
If you are wounded, you will fall 
into the hands of the Muscovites, 
who will torture you. If you are 
afraid and refuse to go forward, 
your own comrades have orders to 
shoot you." 

"We are prepared for every- 
thing," they replied simply. 

The good father continued : 

" Have you a family ? They 
may as well mourn for you before- 
hand ; for we have no leave in our 
ranks, except to go to the mines of 
Siberia or to death. Have you 
reconciled yourselves to God ? I 
can only lead you to death and 
prepare you to meet it. Are you 
ready to die for your country ?" 
He paused, and then added : "There 
is still time to draw back. I can 
facilitate your return to your homes. 
Weigh the matter well before you 
decide." 

" No, no !" they exclaimed with 
one voice, " we will not turn 
back. We wish to fight to-day, to- 
morrow when you will but to 
fight and die for our country. A 
cheer for Poland ! Another cheer 
for our Mother !" 

"My brethren," began the ven- 
erable priest again, " do not give 
way to illusions. You are lost if 



8oo 



Michael the Sombre. 



you imagine that you can conquer 
the enemy in a few months. Woe 
be to us all if we forget that it is a 
giant's struggle in which we are en- 
gaged, and that a whole generation 
must perish before we can expiate 
the sins of our fathers ! Therefore 
I ask you again : Are you ready to 
march to battle, knowing that in 
the end you must be defeated, that 
you must be overpowered by num- 
bers, and that you have nothing 
to hope for either in victory or de- 
feat nothing, not even glory, which 
lays its crowns of laurel on the 
graves of the brave ?" 

Here his voice faltered ; but, mas- 
tering his emotion, the venerable 
old man, lifting his eyes to heaven 
and stretching out his hands to- 
wards the crucifix, exclaimed with 
almost superhuman enthusiasm : 
"O my God! them who knowest 
the hearts of all men, give to these 
thy servants the spirit of courage, 
self-sacrifice, and faith. Blot out 
the memory of our beloved Warsaw 
from their hearts, and with it the 
remembrance of their mothers, their 
sisters, their betrothed ! Let them 
henceforth see naught but the glo- 
rious army of martyrs and their 
mother Poland, torn and blood- 
stained. Let their ears be closed 
to all whispers of home, and be 
open only to hear the laments of 
the widows and orphans, the groans 
from the depth of the dungeons, 
the cries which the east wind brings 
us across Muscovy from the Sibe- 
rian mines ! May they have but 
one thought, one wish, one will to 
pursue and annihilate this Russian 
vampire, which for nearly a cen- 
tury has fastened on the breasts of 
our Virgin of Poland, and has be- 
come drunk with her tears and with 
her blood !" 

" May God hear and grant thy 
prayer!" replied the volunteers 



with one voice. " What thou wili- 
est we will ; what thou command- 
est we will do. Lead us to death 
or to torture ; we will not shrink 
from either." 

A look of deep joy lit up for a 
moment the old man's face and 
made him seem as one inspired. 
He blessed the banner, and then 
gave out the Polish national hymn, 
Boze cos Polske przesz tak licznie 
wieki, of which the following is 
an English translation :* 



O God ! who gave Poland her wonderful dower 
Of faith through long ages, of strength and of 

glory. 
And now spreadst that faith like a shield o'er an 

hour 
The saddest and darkest of all in her story 

CHORUS. 

Great God ! to thine altars we suppliants come ; 
Give us back the blest freedom of faith, hearth, 
and home. 



O thou who, in pity, and touched by her fall, . 
Still strengthens! thy children to fight in thy 

name. 
And showeth the world, 'midst her sorrow and 

thrall, 
The deeper her suffering, the brighter her fame ; 

in. 

O God ! whose all-powerful arm can o'er- 

throw 
The proudest of kingdoms, like huts built on 

sand, 

Avert from thy children these dark clouds of woe. 
Raise the hopes of the Poles ; give them back 
their dear land. 



Give back to old Poland her bright days of yore, 
To her fields and her cities the blessings of 
peace. 

Give plenty, give freedom, give joy as before ; 
Oh ! cease to chastise us and fill us with grace. 



O merciful God ! by thy marvellous might 
Keep far from us slaughter and war's fierce de- 
spair ; 

'Neath the sway of the angel of peace and of light 
Let all be united in love and in prayer. 

Great God ! to thine altars we suppliants come ; 
Give us back the blest freedom of faith, hearth, 
and home. 

* The translation is from the graceful pen of 
Lady Georgiana Fullerton. 



Michael the >V inbrc. 



80 1 



The soldiers, kneeling, repeated 
this in chorus, and, rising, gave an- 
other cheer for Poland. Then 
Gen. Chmielinski, who was stand- 
ing to the right of Father Benve- 
nuto, turned to them and said: 
" Now, my children, go and rest 
and recruit your strength. You 
will need it all ; for the enemy we 
have to fight is strong and numer- 
ous, and many among us will ap- 
pear before God to-morrow." 

The soldiers did as they were 
bid, and prepared themselves to 
pass the night as comfortably as 
they could, feeling that it was in- 
deed the last many would spend 
on earth. I was going to do the 
same when I was sent for by Gen. 
Sokol, whom I found talking over 
plans with Gen. Chmielinski. 

" Lieut. LT ," he said to me, 

" we are very anxious for exact in- 
formation as to the amount of the 
Russian force. Are you tired?" 

" Yes, but not enough to refuse 
a perilous mission. What is there 
to be done ?" 

"To go with a picked body of 
men on whom you can rely, and re- 
connoitre the Russian strength and 
position ; but, for heaven's sake, be 
very prudent. You know the full 
extent of the danger." 

" Yes. Thanks for having cho- 
sen me," I replied ; and, bowing to 
the two officers, I withdrew and 
told Badecki to have my horse 
saddled immediately. Whilst I 
was looking to the loading of my 

pistols young Charles M came 

up. 

" Lieutenant," he exclaimed, 
" you are going to reconnoitre the 
Russian army ?" 

" Yes," I replied. " Why do you 
ask ?" 

" Will you let me go with you ?" 

" No, my boy. To-morrow's 
fight may be a serious one, for 
VOL. xxvi. 51 



v.-hicli you will need all your 
strength." 

The poor little fellow made a 
wry face, but went and lay down 
again at the foot of a tree. I only 
took with me Badecki and an old 
soldier named Zeromski, who had 
distinguished himself in the cam- 
paign of 1830. He had an austere 
and severe countenance, which, 
however, brightened into the sweet- 
est and gentlest smile possible 
when you spoke to him. He was 
as laconic as a Spartan and kept 
himself always aloof; but under 
fire his bravery was heroic, and 
almost amounted to rashness. His 
comrades had nicknamed him 
Stalowy-serce (heart of steel). 

We reconnoitred the enemy's po- 
sition without being discovered,, 
and were returning towards the 
edge of the camp, when my horse 
stumbled against the root of a tree 
and fell on one knee. My orderly, 
Badecki, looked at me anxiously,, 
shook his head, coughed, sigh- 
ed, and turned uneasily in his sad- 
dle. 

u What on earth is the matter^ 
Badecki?" I exclaimed. "One 
would think you were sitting on a 
wasp's nest." 

" Lieutenant," he answered, 
sighing, " it is because your horse 
stumbled just now." 

" Well, and what is that to you ?'* 
I replied. 

" Don't you know, lieutenant, 
that if a horse stumbles before a 
battle it forebodes misfortune to his 
rider ? I always remarked that in 
the campaign of 1830." 

" Oh ! you believe that, do you ?" 
I said, smiling. "And you, Zerom- 
s kj have you remarked it too ?" 

" No, I have not done so my- 
self, but I have been always told 
so." 

Arrived at the camp, I hastened 



8C2 



MicJiael the Sombre. 



to give in my report to General So- 
kol. He thanked me warmly, and 
added : 

" Now is your opportunity, lieu- 
tenant, to win your captain's epau- 
lets." 

"Yes, general, or a good sabre- 
cut. I hope it may be one or the 
ot,her." 

Sokol laughed and said : 

" It is certain that, if these un- 
licked cubs of Russians are as nu- 
merous as you say, they will give 
us trouble." 

Leaving the general's quarters, I 
went and wrapped myself up in my 
bear-skin, and, throwing myself un- 
der a tree, fell asleep in a moment. 
J was completely worn out with fa- 
tigue. 

Only two hours later, however, I 
was awakened by the sentries being 
relieved. The day had just dawn- 
ed. The first thing which recur- 
red to my memory was Badecki's 
words. I had a sort of presenti- 
ment that they would turn out to 
be true. After a few moments offer- 
vent prayer I took out my pocket- 
book and made a slight sketch of 
the spot where the battle would 
most likely be fought, and where, 
perhaps, that very night they would 
dig my grave. I wrote a few lines 
with the sketch, folded them up, 
and directed it. 

Scarcely had I made my last 
preparations in this way than our 
advanced posts gave the signal that 
the enemy was approaching. It 
was part of the army of Gen. 
C , and consisted of two bat- 
talions of infantry, several soterias 
of Cossacks and dragoons, and 
four pieces of artillery. They 
numbered upwards of three thou- 
sand men. We had only twelve 
hundred, many of whom were but 
raw recruits. 

Very soon every soul was on the 



alert and armed. Father Ben- 
venuto was the first to appear. 

" My children !" he cried, " many 
amongst us will fall this day. You 
are all, thank God ! prepared for 
whatever may be his will. Kneel, 
and I will give you all a last abso- 
lution and benediction." 

Every one knelt with the vene- 
rable priest, who prayed for a few 
minutes in a low voice and com- 
mended us all to God. Then, ris- 
ing, he added with emotion : 

" My children, I absolve you 
and bless you all, in the name of 
the Father, and of the Son, and of 
the Holy Ghost." 

"Amen!" we all responded, and 
rose filled with fresh strength and 
courage. 

" Let every one of you do his 
duty," continued he; "that is all I 
will say at this moment to patriots 
who wish to free our dear and holy 
Poland or die in the attempt." 

The men went silently to take 
each his place in the ranks. Gen. 
Zaremba was to assume the chief 
command that day. 

" What will do us the most mis- 
chief and paralyze our operations," 
he said, " are those field-pieces. If 
they had not those cannon we 
should win." 

Count S , captain of artillery, 

came forward. " If you will give 
me leave, general, I will go and 
spike their guns. Are there two 
hundred men amongst you who 
will follow me to certain death? 
Let them make the sacrifice of 
their lives for the safety of all." 

Nearly a thousand men volun- 
teered for this terrible service, 
though they knew perfectly well 
that, in all probability, not one 
would return alive. 

" Well," exclaimed the general, 
" we are twelve hundred men ; let 
us draw lots." 



Michael the Sombre. 



803 



A few minutes later the two 
hundred, favored by fate and their 
own heroism, separated themselves 
from the rest and gathered round 
their intrepid leader, forming what 
might well be called the phalanx of 

death. Charles M burst into 

tears at not having been one of 
those selected. 

" Don't be afraid," I said to him; 
" to-day we shall all be equally fa- 
vored." 

The general then disposed of his 
small force in the best manner he 
could. He desired no one to fire 
a single shot till the enemy was 
within one hundred paces. Those 
among the sharpshooters and zou- 
aves who had breech-loaders were 
to reserve their second shots till 
those who had only single-barrelled 
guns were reloading. In the event 
of confusion or defeat I was order- 
ed with my Uhlans to charge the 
fugitives, always taking care to 
double back with my column be- 
hind the fusileers. These dispo- 
sitions having been made, and dis- 
tinct orders given to each corps, 
we all remained at our posts in si- 
lence, awaiting the enemy's ap- 
proach. On they came, in the 
well-known serried masses of the 
Russian troops, and not a shot was 
fired till they arrived at the ap- 
pointed distance. Then, with a 
shout and a sharp cry, the signal 
was given, our men fired, and up- 
wards of one hundred Russians 
fell. So unprepared were they for 
this sudden discharge that the men 
behind the front rank fell back, in 
spite of the efforts of their officers, 
and, scattering to the right and left, 
became the victims of my Uhlans 
or were cut to pieces by the 
scythes of the kopinicry. Then 
the Russians in their turn fired, 
and twenty of our Poles fell. This 
was the moment chosen by Count 



S and his two hundred heroes 

to dash in amidst the Russian ar- 
tillery and try and silence their 
cannon. Passing through the Rus- 
sian ranks like a flash of lightning, 
the count and my brave old Zerom- 
ski succeeded in spiking two of 
their field-pieces. Whilst ramming 
in his gun a ball broke the count's 
arm ; the next took off his head. 
Zeromski had his head broken by 
the butt-end of a musket, and fell 
at the very moment when he had 
succeeded in spiking a gun to the 
cry of " Niech zeja Polske /" (Hur- 
rah for Poland !) 

We could not look on in cold 
blood and see the horrible massa- 
cre of these two hundred. Com- 
rades and all with one accord 
threw themselves into the enemy's 
ranks. The voice of our officers 
fell on dead ears ; we were engag- 
ed in a hand-to-hand fight with 
equal fury on both sides. Now 
and then, when our Poles gave way 
before superior numbers, the Rus- 
sian artillery had time to load their 
remaining guns, and when our poor 
fellows came back to the charge 
they were simply mowed down be- 
fore the heavy fire that opened 
upon them. But still no one 
thought of self-preservation, only 
how to deal the hardest blows. 
All strategy or tactics had become 
impossible, and officers and men 
alike fought inch by inch for 
their lives. From the first mo- 
ment when the fighting had be- 
come general I was attacked by a 
quartermaster of dragoons. We 
both fought with swords ; but I 
was so exhausted that I could 
hardly keep my saddle, and all 
I could do was to try and parry 
the strokes of my adversary. All 
of a sudden a violent cramp seized 
my right arm ; but at that critical 
moment I heard the voice of little 



804 



Michael the Sombre. 



Charles behind me : " Hold on for 
a minute longer !" he cried ; and, 
galloping with his pony across a 
heap of dead, he fired off his pistol 
close to the head of my enemy, 
who dropped without a word. But 
at the same instant I saw the 
heroic child stagger and turn 
deadly white ; a ball had struck 
him in the chest. 

" Adieu, lieutenant ! Adieu, 
brother !" he murmured, as he slip- 
ped off his horse to the ground. 
" My poor mother ! How she will 
cry ! My Lord and my God, have 
mercy upon me !" 

Those were his last words. I 
bore him on my shoulders, and car- 
ried him out of the field of battle, 
and laid him down under a tree. 
I put my hand on his heart; it had 
ceased to beat. The generous 
child had died to save me. He 
had a beautiful smile on his face, 
and two tears glistened on his 
cheeks. I closed his eyes, and, kiss- 
ing his forehead, said : " Sleep in 
peace, my brave boy ! If I survive 
this day I will carry these tears to 
your poor mother." 

I called two of the pioneers, and 
told them to dig a separate grave 
for poor Charles, that his body 
might not fall into the enemy's 
hands ; and then, jumping on the 
horse of a Cossack who had just 
been killed, I threw myself again 
into the fray. All my strength had 
come back. I" fought like one pos- 
sessed ; and this over-excitement 
lasted till I felt the cold steel going 
through me. A Cossack had thrust 
his lance into my left breast. I lift- 
ed up my heart to God for one mo- 
ment, and then fell, pressing my 
crucifix convulsively. My order- 
ly, seeing me fall, carried me off 
rapidly to a carriage which was 
already full of wounded men. 
Thanks to Father Benvenuto, who 



never ceased watching over me, I 
came back to life again and met 
the loving and sisterly eyes of 
Mother Alexandra, who again in- 
sisted on my sharing her cell. I 
was in great danger for five days, 
and, if I did not sink under my suf- 
ferings, it was owing to the devot- 
ed care of which I was the object. 
One night my secret was well-nigh 
discovered. Mother Alexandra 
had been called away to some other 
patient and had left me to the care 
of a young sister. My fever ran 
high, and, being delirious, I tore off 
the bandages from my wound and 
threw them away. Frightened at 
my state, the sister luckily ran to 
fetch Mother Alexandra, exclaim- 
ing : " Come as quickly as you can ; 
the lieutenant is dying !" She flew 
back to me, and remained alone by 
my bedside. Her presence calmed 
me at 'once, and I allowed her to 
bandage me up again and stop the 
blood, which had burst out in 
streams from the wound. 

In the same house we had forty- 
five wounded from this battle, 
wherein the Poles had displayed 
prodigies of valor. The Russian 
loss was very great, and if they 
were not altogether crushed, it was 
owing to their numerical superior- 
ity. As it was, they retired in 
good order, for we had not suffi- 
cient men to follow them in their 
retreat. When I was allowed to 
go out of my cell I went to see my 
comrades. I helped the sisters in 
dressing their wounds, and, when 
my strength would allow me, I used 
to read aloud to them as we sat 
round the stove. At the end of a 
month, out of forty-five wounded 
thirty-two were convalescent. 

At the end of six weeks I 
felt myself strong enough to bear 
the motion of a horse, and so ac- 
cepted a mission for my old gene- 



MicJiael the Sombre. 



805 



ral, who, by the orders of the Central 
Committee, came to take the com- 
mand of the forces in the place of 
General Iskra, who had been con- 
demned to death for high treason. 
As ill-luck would have it, on this 
occasion my usual good-fortune 
deserted me and I fell into the 
hands of a Russian patrol, who 
seized me, tied my hands behind 
my back, and marched me off to 
the little town of Kielce. As I was 
still very weak and walked with 
difficulty, they accelerated my 
march by blows from the butt-ends 
of their muskets. At Kielce I was 
taken straight to the headquarters 

of Gen. C . All Polish soldiers 

who had fallen into the hands of 
this brute since the beginning of 
the war had been hanged. From 
the window, close to which I had 
been placed, I could see the gibbet, 
with two shapeless bodies hanging 
from it on which birds of prey were 
already feasting. The sight filled 
me with horror, and feeling sure 
this time that my last hour was at 
hand, I recommended my soul to 
God, made a fervent act of contri- 
tion, and prepared myself as well as 
I could to die. 

The general came in for the 
usual interrogatory, and frowned 
when he looked at me. 

" You are from the rebel army ?" 
he exclaimed in bad Polish. 

" I do not know any rebels, " I 
replied proudly. " I am of the 
army of the Crusaders." (We call- 
ed the war a Crusade, and all of us 
wore a white cross sewed on our 
uniforms.) 

At this reply General C 's 

face darkened and, with a furious 
gesture, he made a step toward me. 

"Do you know," he cried, "to 
what fate you have exposed your- 
self by falling into my hands?" 

"Yes, perfectly," I replied, turn- 



ing my head in the direction of the 
dead bodies. 

" And you are not afraid ?" 

" No. I belong to a nation which 
does not know the feeling." 

" Yet you are very pale. " 

"Oh!"' I replied eagerly, "do 
not think it is from fear. Six weeks 
ago I was wounded in an engage- 
ment with your troops, and to-day 
I have gone out for the first time." 

Here the Muscovite smiled. 

" What is your age ? Nineteen ? 
Do you know that there are very 
few Poles as young as you are who 
would face death in this way with- 
out a shudder ?" 

" But I am not a Pole ; I am 
French." 

" Do you speak the truth ?" 

" I never lie," I replied, present- 
ing him my man's passport. 

He examined it carefully. 

" This saves you," he said at last, 
beginning to be almost civil. "We 
have not yet the right to hang the 
French, even though they may 
have fought with the rebel troops. 
I shall send you with an escort 
across the frontier of Silesia ; but 
if ever you again set foot on Russian 
soil you will be hanged without 
mercy and without shrift." 

I was sent out of his presence, 
escorted by two Cossacks, thorough- 
ly unlicked bears, who had orders 
to shoot me on the least suspicious 
movement on my part. I had 
the pleasure of these gentlemen's 
society in a third-class carriage 
during the whole journey from 
Myszkow to Szczakowa that is, 
for four mortal hours. You can 
imagine, therefore, that I did not 
breathe freely till I had stepped out 
of the carriage and found myself 
once more on Silesian soil, released 
from their attentions. 

I felt now that my vow had been 
kept and my promise fulfilled. I 



8o6 



The late Dr. T. W. Marshall. 



had shed my blood for Poland, and 
any further effort on my part would 
have been worse than useless. 

I determined, therefore, to rejoin 
the countess and her children, who 
were at that moment at the waters 
of Altwasser. I pass over the joy 
of our reunion. We soon went on 
to Dresden for the winter, and once 
more that happy family were to- 
gether, though in exile. 

I heard soon after that Father 
Benvenuto had been struck by a 
ball in the heart at the battle of 
Swientz-Krszysz, at the very mo- 
ment when he was lifting up the 



crucifix to bless his soldiers. The 
memory of this saint will be for ever 
revered in Poland, and in the hearts 
of all those who had the happiness 
of knowing him. With his heroic 
death I close my account of this 
episode in a war which, however 
mistaken on the part of those who 
first conceived so hopeless an at- 
tempt, was carried on to the last 
with a faith, a courage, and a patriot- 
ism that deserve to be immortaliz- 
ed in the history of any country, 
and will redound to the eternal 
honor of this persecuted and un- 
happy people. 



THE LATE DR. T. W. MARSHALL. 



THE renaissance of English Ca- 
tholic literature has been a growth 
of the last quarter of a century. 
From the time when Dr. Newman 
became a convert to the church 
there has been a continual stream 
of the most ardent Catholic litera- 
ture, didactic, controversial, and de- 
votional. Of devotional works we 
need hardly speak at all, since 
they are much the same in all Ca- 
tholic countries, and are mostly 
modelled on one spirit of one faith. 
Of works which are didactic it is 
superfluous to say anything, for all 
teachers of the Catholic faith teach 
the same thing. But of works 
which are controversial it is desi- 
rable to take notice, because they 
indicate the peculiar spirit of the 
age, the nature of the anti-Catho- 
lic opposition, and the growth or 
the decay of old prejudices. There 
is probably no literature in any 
country in the world which is so 
full of original lines of pure con- 
troversy as that of the mod- 



ern English school of Catho- 
lic converts. Nor is there any 
difficulty in accounting for this 
fact. When we remember that 
English converts have stepped 
across that huge gulf which divides 
old-fashioned Protestantism from 
Catholicity ; that they have brought 
with them from the " Establish- 
ment" the most perfect knowledge 
of all the arguments which can be 
devised against the acceptance of 
" the faith " ; that they are often 
highly educated men, who have 
been as " intellectually " as they 
have been " spiritually " convert- 
ed we should be surprised if they 
did not sometimes write controver- 
sy with both a newness and a rich- 
ness of intuition. 

For example, let us take the great 
Dr. Newman, whose vast stores of 
digested learning often sparkle or 
are sweetened with delicious touches 
of the perception of the humorous 
a boon to his readers which is 
not only due to his wit but to the 



The late Dr. T. W. Marshall. 



807 



drolleries of the old heresy which 
he has left. Or let us take Dr. 
Faber that " poet of Catholic 
dogmas," as a Protestant lady has 
described him and note the ex- 
quisite appreciation with which 
he contrasts Catholic truths with 
their denial or their imitation in 
Protestantism. These two writers 
could not have written as they 
have done unless they had been 
brought up as Protestants. They 
might have been equally luminous 
and profound; they might have 
wanted nothing of Catholic sci- 
ence; but their appreciation of 
contrast, which is one of the es- 
sentials of humor, could not have 
been nearly so developed. 

Yet, delightful as it would be to 
dwell on the rich gifts of these two 
writers the profound Newman 
and the poetical Faber it is with 
reference to another writer that 
we would say something at this 
time to one who has but recently 
passed away. Dr. T. W. Marshall, 
who twice visited the United States, 
and who gained great repute as a 
lecturer, was among the most gift- 
ed of the controversialists in some 
senses he was unique who have 
contributed to English Catholic 
literature. We are not speaking 
of his learning, though this was 
considerable; nor of his reason- 
ing power, though this, too, was 
very striking; for there are many 
English Catholic writers who, both 
in learning and in reasoning, may 
be esteemed to have surpassed Dr. 
Marshall ; but we are speaking of 
him as a " pure controversialist," 
as one who made controversy his 
sole pursuit, or who, at least, will 
be always remembered as a polem- 
ic, and this both as a speaker and 
as a writer. Now, in the capacity 
of a polemic of a " popular " po- 
lemic we have affirmed that Dr. 



Marshall w;is unique ; and let us 
indicate briefly in what respects. 

We have spoken at the begin- 
ning of the immense advantage 
which is possessed by those Catho- 
lics who attetnpc to write contro- 
versy when their first years have 
been passed in the camp of the 
Anglican " Establishment," and so 
they have learned all its secrets. 
Dr. Marshall was " bred and born " 
an Anglican. He was the de- 
scendant of a long line of Protes- 
tants. He was educated at two 
English public schools, and subse- 
quently spent three years at Cam- 
bridge ; emerging from the uni- 
versity to " take orders " in the 
Establishment, and soon becoming 
incumbent of a parish. Finding 
his lot cast in a pleasant rural dis- 
trict, where he had but very few 
clerical duties, he devoted his 
spare time to the study of the Fa- 
thers ; and, while reading, he made 
copious notes. The present wri- 
ter, who had the happiness to be 
his pupil, remembers well with 
what avidity he used to devour the 
big tomes which he borrowed from 
the not distant cathedral library. 
Finding, as he read on, that the 
Fathers were "strangely Roman 
Catholic," that " they most dis- 
tinctly were none of them Protes- 
tants," he may be said to have read 
and to have written himself into the 
faith, which he embraced the mo- 
ment that he realized it. And no 
sooner was he received into the 
Catholic Church than he devoted all 
his talents to the proving to Eng- 
lish Protestants the truths of which 
lie himself wasconvinced. Christian 
Missions was his first great work, 
though it had been preceded by more 
than one brilliant pamphlet ; and My 
Clerical Friends and Protestant Jour- 
nalism followed in much later years. 
Besides these works there was the 



8o8 



Ike late Dr. T. W. Marshall. 



unceasing contribution to more 
tli an one of the English Catholic 
papers, to several magazines or 
periodicals, and also to a few secu- 
lar weeklies. It may be remem- 
bered with what raciness, and at 
the same time with what depth, he 
used to punish "our Protestant con- 
temporaries " for their inventions 
and their puerilities about the 
church. His series on the " Rus- 
sian Church "was especially brilliant, 
and produced much sensation among 
High-Churchmen. But his many 
other series, such as " Fictitious 
Appeals to a General Council," 
" Sketches of the Reformation," 
" Two Churches," " Modern Sci- 
ence," were all deserving of most 
careful digestion, and produced 
their due effect upon Anglicans. 
It was when probing the Ritualists, 
week after week, with the most 
terrible weapons of Catholic logic, 
that Dr. Marshall was seized with 
his last illness, and he laid aside 
for ever that pen which, for thirty 
years, had been the dread of many 
insincere Protestants. 

If we examine critically into the 
merits and demerits of this accom- 
plished theologian and controver- 
sialist, we shall find three points in 
particular which mark him off from 
other men, and which render him, 
as we have said, unique. First, he 
had the capacity of uniting exten- 
sive learning with a lightness, even 
a gayety, of style ; weaving scores 
of quotations into a few pages of 
easy writing, without ever for a 
moment becoming dull. He play- 
ed and he toyed with any number 
of quotations, as though he had 
them all at his fingers' ends; and 
he " brought them in " in such a 
way that, instead of cumbering his 
pages, they made them more di- 
verting and light. Let it be asked 
whether this one particular art is 



not worthy of universal imitation? 
Nine out of every ten of even good 
polemical writers " drag their quo- 
tations in by the head and shoul- 
ders," or hurl them down upon the 
pages as though they had been 
carted with pitchforks and had to 
be uncarted in similar fashion. A 
lightness and a tripping ease in the 
introduction of quotations is one of 
the most captivating of gifts ; for 
it takes the weight off the learning, 
the drag off the style, the " bore " 
off the effort of controversy. It 
would be very easy to name half a- 
score of good books, vastly learned 
and admirably fitted for the shelves, 
which are simply rendered unread- 
able by that after-dinner sleepiness 
which comes from too heavy a ta- 
ble. Now, is it not desirable that 
even wise men should make a study 
of this art of trippingly weaving 
quotations ? for, as a matter of fact, 
a quotation badly used might just 
as well not be used at all. Dr. 
Marshall made quotations a grace 
of his style, instead of an interrup- 
tion of his text; and so neatly did 
he " Tunbridge-ware" them into 
his pages that they fitted without 
joint and without fissure. This is, 
we think, a great merit ; and if Dr. 
Marshall had done nothing more 
than suggest to learned writers that 
it is possible to quote immensely yet 
trippingly, he would have rendered 
a service to all polemics. He has 
been, perhaps, ;< an original " in this 
respect ; or, if not an original, he 
has at least been unique in the ex- 
cellence of the practice of the art. 

The second feature in his writ- 
ings which strikes us as admirable 
is an individuality in the neatness 
of expression. Short sentences, 
quite as pithy as short, with a calm 
grace of defiant imperturbability, 
make his writings equally caustic 
and gay. Scholarly those writings 



The late Dr. T. W. Marshall. 



809 



certainly are ; they have all the 
honeyed temperance of art and 
much of the perfection of habit. 
No one could write as Dr. Mar- 
shall could write unless he had 
made writing his study. No doubt 
style " is born, not made " ; but 
most styles are better for education, 
and we could name but few writers 
of whom we could say that their 
style was apparently more natural 
than it was acquired. Of Dr. New- 
man it might be said " the style 
is the man," for there is a person- 
al repose in his writings ; and we 
could imagine Dr. Newman, even if 
he had not been a great student, 
still writing most beautifully and 
serenely. "The perfection of Dr. 
Newman's style is that he has no 
style " was a very good remark of a 
learned critic; but then we cannot 
talk of such very exceptional men 
as giving a rule for lesser writers. 
Now, Dr. Marshall had a very 
marked style. It was ease, with 
equal art and equal care. The 
care was as striking as the ease. 
This, it will be said, proves at once 
that Dr. Marshall was not what is 
called " a genius." Well, no one ever 
pretended that he was. A man 
may be both admirable and unique 
without having one spark of real 
genius ; and a man may have graces 
of style, with highly cultured arts 
of fascination, and 'yet be no more 
than just sufficiently original to at- 
tract a marked popular attention. 
Few men attain even to this stan- 
dard; and certainly, as writers of 
controversy, very few men even ap- 
proach to it. What we assert is that 
to be " controversially unique " a 
writer must be exceptional in 
certain ways, and especially in the 
two ways we have particularized 
namely, light quoting and light 
writing. We return, then, to the 
opinion that for neatness of phrase- 



ology; for the "art," if you will, 
of suave cuttingness ; for the clever 
combination of the caustic with the 
calm, of the profoundly indisputa- 
ble with the playful, Dr. Marshall 
was really remarkable. He could 
say a thing quietly which, if rob- 
bed of its quietness, would have 
been, perhaps, a veritable insult. 
Perhaps it was the more pungent 
because quiet ; and here we touch 
the third and last of the literary 
characteristics which we propose 
to notice briefly at this time. 

" Milk and gall are not a pleas- 
ing combination," observed a gen- 
tleman who was an Anglican at 
the tirne after reading Our Pro- 
testant Contemporaries. He add- 
ed that he did not care for 
milk he was too old to find it 
sufficiently stimulating but he ob- 
jected to gall, at least when it was 
directed against some favorite con- 
victions of his own mind. Most 
persons will agree with this old 
gentleman, who, however, became a 
convert to the church. Yet it may 
be said that there are two apolo- 
gies which may be offered for this 
defect if defect, indeed, it be of 
"milk and gall." First, let it be 
remembered that the keen percep- 
tion of the ridiculous, which is 
generally a characteristic of supe- 
rior minds, finds its richest explora- 
tion in what, from a certain point 
of view, may be regarded as those 
immense fields of folly which are 
popularly denominated English Pro- 
testantism. To the humorous mind 
there is nothing so humorous as 
the mental gymnastics of Protes- 
tants. To suppress this humorous 
sense becomes impossible to any 
writer who does not look on gloom 
as a duty. Dr. Newman only sup- 
presses it in this way : that his huge 
mind works above the mere play- 
ground, or avoids it as too provoca- 



8io 



The late Dr. T. W. Marshall. 



live of games. He descended into 
it once in Loss and Gain, and he 
became fairly romping towards the 
close; now and then, too, we can 
detect the laughing spirit which 
only veils itself, for decorum, in his 
grave writings ; but he feels pro- 
bably that his weapons are too 
sharp to need satire, for he is not 
a controversialist, but a reasoner. 
When he does, for the moment, 
write satire, he shows what he 
could do, if he would ; but we 
are glad that the normal attitude 
of his mind is rather didactic than 
playful. 

Of lesser writers we cannot ex- 
pect that their discrimination should 
be hampered by a grave sense of 
doctorship ; it is not necessary that 
they should sit in professors' chairs ; 
they are writing for the million, 
whose perceptions of what is true 
must be aided by their perceptions 
of what is false. Moreover, the 
English mind, not being normally 
humorous which is a great na- 
tional loss in all respects requires 
to be -jolted and jerked into an at- 
titude which would be most useful 
for the intelligence of truth. If we 
could only get Englishmen to see 
the comedy of heresy, they might 
soon want the gravity of truth ; 
but they are constitutionally dull 
in apprehending those fallacies 
which southern peoples can see 
through in a moment. Now, a wri- 
ter who can teach Englishmen to 
laugh at their Protestantism, to ap- 
preciate its anomalies and its shams, 
to see the difference between a par- 
son and a priest, between ten thou- 
sand opinions and one faith, and 
generally to get rid of morbid 
sentiment and prejudice, and to 
look at things in a thoroughly 
healthful way, has " taken a line " 
which is as salutary for feeble 
souls as is bright mountain air for 



feeble bodies. Dr. Marshall used 
to laugh with Protestants at their 
shams much more than he used to 
laugh at the victims. But it is true 
that there was sometimes an acer- 
bity in his remarks which gave of- 
fence to those who loved not the 
humor. Could this be helped ? 
Be it remembered that acerbity, in 
the apparent mood of expression, 
is often more intellectual than it is 
moral ; it is simply an attitude of 
conviction, or it is the natural vex- 
ation of a profound religious faith 
which cannot calm itself when pro- 
testing against folly. Nor do we 
think it at all probable that, if there 
were no gall in controversy, more 
converts would be made to the 
truth. And, after all, what do we 
mean by the word " gall " ? Is 
humor gall ? Is satire gall ? Is 
even acerbity, when it is obvi- 
ously but vexation, a fatal undo- 
ing of good ? Much will depend 
on the mood of the reader. Some 
readers like spice and cayenne 
even in their " religious " oppo- 
nents. Most readers know that 
mere literary temperament cannot 
make a syllogism out of a fallacy. 
All readers distinguish between 
caprices of temperament and the 
attitude of the reason and the 
soul. It is only on account of the 
mental babes among Protestants 
that it is to be regretted that all 
Catholics are human. For the 
ordinary, strong reader a good 
dash of human nature is much 
better than is too much of "the 
angel." Take mankind for what 
they are, and we like the honesty 
of the irritation which sometimes 
puts the gall into the milk. It 
might be desirable that our first 
parent had not fallen. If he had 
not fallen we should not have had 
controversy. But since he has 
fallen, and since we must have 



Papal Elections. 



811 



controversy, we must also of neces- 
sity have gall.* 

We have only to express regret 
that so useful a writer as Dr. Mar- 
shall has passed away out of the 
ranks of controversialists. As a 
speaker, too, Dr. Marshall was most 
delightful ; indeed, he spoke quite 
as well as he wrote. At the time 
when he was in the United States 
it was thought by some persons that 
Dr. Marshall was quite th'e model 
of a speaker ; for he was at once 
gentle and commanding, refined 
yet highly pungent, scholarly yet 
most easy to be understood. These 
praises were allowed by every one 
to be his due. We have, then, to 
lament the loss of a really richly- 
gifted Catholic, who, though an 



Englishman, was cosmopolitan. 
And when we remember that such 
men as Dr. Marshall (with Dr. 
Faber, or Mr. Allies, or Canon 
Oakeley) were born Protestant in- 
tensely Protestant Englishmen, we 
can appreciate what was involved 
in their conversion to the church, 
both in the intellectual and in the 
purely social sense. Conversion 
means more than a change of con- 
viction to such Englishmen as have 
been brn of Protestant parents ; it 
means the revolution of the whole life 
of the man, as well as of the whole 
life of the Christian. Such men 
seem to be born over again. When 
they have passed away we can say 
for them, with as much hope as 
charity, Requiescant in pace. 



PAPAL ELECTIONS. 



n. 



IN the twelfth century the car- 
dinals of the Holy Roman Church 
were in full and undisputed posses- 
sion of the right of electing the 
Sovereign Pontiff; and although the 
exercise of this right is commonly 
attributed to the Sacred College, 
only from the passing of the famous 
decree of the Third Council of La- 
teran, in 1179, beginning Licet de 
vitanda discordia in electione Romani 
Pontificis (cap. vi. de Elect.}, it 
rather supposes the cardinals to be 
already the sole papal electors, and 
merely determines what majority of 

* As for " gall," there is, according to the writer's 
own showing, more of fallen than regenerate hu- 
manity in it. The less gall, then, the better. The 
Holy Father has recently favored the Catholic 
press by selecting St. Francis de Sales as its patron 
saint. The more closely writers adhere to the 
saint's spirit the nearer they will approach their 
divine model, and the more abundant will their 
labors be in good fruits. ED. C. W. 



their votes shall constitute a valid 
election.* Factious and semi-ig- 
norant persons have often protest- 
ed against this exclusive right of 
the cardinals to elect the visible 
head of the church. Of such a 
kind was Wycliffe, whose diatribe, 
Electio Papce a cardinalibus per dia- 
bolum est introducta, wa^ condemned 
by the Council of Constance (artic. 
xl. sess. viii.) ; and Eybel, whose 
errors were exposed by Mamacchi, 
under his poetical name of Pisti 
Alethini, as a member of the Acade- 
my of the Arcadians. f 

In early times, when the pope 
died at Rome the cardinals met to 
elect a successor in the Lateran 
or the Vatican basilica, or in the 

* Marchetti, Critica al fleury, vol ii. p. 193. 
t Ad auctorem of use. Quid est Pafaf vol. ii. 

P. 112. 



812 



Papal Elections. 



cathedral of any other city in which 
they might have determined to hold 
the election. Conclave is the term 
used exclusively for many centuries 
for the place in which the cardinals 
meet in private to elect a pope ; 
but it was used in the early mid- 
dle ages of any room securely shut,* 
just as, among the ancient Romans, 
conclave was a covered and enclosed 
apartment or hall that could be 
fastened with a lock and key cum 
clavi. Long before the pontificate 
of Gregory X. the cardinals who 
assembled for a papal election met 
in some part of a large and noble 
building generally the sacristy of 
a cathedral where they transacted 
the business of the day, and return- 
ed after each session to their pri- 
vate abodes. The gloss Nullatenus, 
on the decree of Alexander III., 
says that if two-thirds the majori- 
ty required of the cardinals will 
not agree upon a candidate, they 
should be closely confined until 
they do includantur in aliquo loco 
de quo exire non valeant donee consen- 
serint and mentions several popes 
elected after the cardinals had been 
subjected to a reasonable duress. 
This is precisely the conclave. It 
was not, however, until the year 
1274 that the mode of procedure in 
a papal election was settled after 
the incursions of the barbarians 
and the many vicissitudes to which 
the Holy See then became subject 
had deranged the earlier and apos- 
tolic manner and the. rules and 
regulations of the modern conclave 
were published. After the death 
of Clement IV. in Viterbo, on Nov. 
22, 1268, the eighteen cardinals 
composing the Sacred College met 
there to elect his successor ; but not 
agreeing after a year and a half, al- 
though the kings of France and 

* Du Cange, Gloss., ad verb. 



Sicily, St. Bonaventure, General of 
the Franciscans, and many influen- 
tial, learned, and holy men came in 
person to urge them to compose 
their differences and relieve the 
church of her long widowhood, 
they were all got together one day, 
by some artifice, in the episcopal 
palace, which was instantly closed 
upon them and surrounded with 
guards. Even this imprisonment 
did not change their temper, and 
after some further delay the cap- 
tain of the town, Raniero Gatti, 
took the bold resolution of remov- 
ing the entire roof and otherwise 
dilapidating the edifice, in , hopes 
that the discomforts of the season, 
added to their confinement, might 
break the stubbornness of the ven- 
erable fathers.* This move suc- 
ceeded, and a compromise was ef- 
fected am.ong the discordant cardi- 
nals on the yth of September, 1271, 
in virtue of which the papal legate 
in Syria, Theobald Visconti, Arch- 
deacon of Liege, was elected. This 
was not the first time that extra- 
ordinary and almost violent mea- 
sures had been taken to bring the 
cardinals to make a prompt elec- 
tion. At Viterbo the captain of 
the town coerced their liberty ; at 
Naples the commandant of the cas- 
tle bridled their appetite when, 
after the death of Innocent IV., in 
1254, he diminished day by day the 
quantity of food sent in to them 
cibo per singulos dies imminuto until 
they agreed upon a worthy sub- 
ject.f 

Gregory X., who was so singu- 
larly elected at Viterbo while far 
away in Palestine, called a gene- 
ral council, which met at Lyons on 
May 2, 1274. Five hundred bi- 
shops, over a thousand mitred 
abbots and other privileged eccle- 

* Maori, Hierolexicon, ad verb. Conclave. 
t Biondo da Forli, lib. vii. decad. 2. 



Papal Elections. 



siastics, the patriarchs of Constan- 
tinople and Antioch, the grand 
master of the famous Knights of St. 
John of Jerusalem, the kings of 
France and Aragon, besides am- 
bassadors from Germany, England, 
Sicily, and other important nations, 
took part in it. The pope was re- 
solved to establish the manner of 
electing the Roman Pontiff on a 
better principle, and now drew up 
a constitution which, in spite of 
considerable opposition from the 
cardinals, was read between the 
fourth and fifth sessions, and finally 
received the approbation of the 
fathers. This is substantially the 
code that still regulates the con- 
clave. The original constitution, 
which had been suspended by 
some popes and not observed by 
the cardinals in several elections, 
was introduced into the body of 
canon law * by Boniface VIII., 
in order to impress it, if possible, 
with a more solemn and perpetual 
obligation of observance ; and when 
some of the cardinals, incensed at 
the transfer of the see to Avignon, 
maintained that, despite all this, the 
Sacred College could modify or 
abolish it at discretion, it was con- 
firmed by the General Council of 
Vienne and their factious spirit re- 
proved. This conciliar decree has 
also a place in the canon law, 
where it is found among the Cle- 
mentines (Ne Romani, 2 de elect.} f 

* Cap. Ubi fericulum. 3 de Elect, in 6. 

t Ne Romani electioni Pontificis indeterminata 
opinionum diversitas aliquod possit obstaculum vel 
dilationem afferre ; nos, inter caetera praecipue at- 
tendentes, quod lex superioris per inferiorem tolli 
non potest, opinionem adstruere, sicut accepimus 
satagentem, quod constitutio felicis recordationis 
Gregorii Papz X. praedecessoris nostri. circa elec- 
tionem prsefatam edita in concilio Lugdunensi, per 
coetum cardinalium Romanee ecclesiit ipsa vacante 
modificari possit. corrigi vel immutari, aut quicquam 
ei detrahi sive addi, vel dispensari quomodolibet 
circa ipsam seu aliquant ejus partem, aut eidem 
etiam renunciari per cam tanquam veritati non 
consonam de fratrum nostrorum consilio reprobamus, 
irritum nihilominus et inane decernentes, quit-quid 
potestatis aut jurisdictionis, ad Romanum, dum 



" Where the danger is known to 
be greatest," says the preamble to 
Pope Gregory's constitution, " there 
should most care be taken. How 
many risks and what great incon- 
venience a long vacancy of the 
Holy See entails is shown by look- 
ing back upon the disorders of 
other days. It is, therefore, wise 
that, while diligently engaged in re- 
forming minor evils, we should not 
neglect to provide against calamity. 
Now, therefore, whatever our pre- 
decessors, and particularly Alex- 
ander III., of happy memory, have 
done to remove a spirit of discord 
in the election of the Roman Pon- 
tiff, the same we desire to remain 
in full force ; for we do not intend 
to annul their decrees, but only by 
our present constitution to supply 
what experience points out to be 
wanting." 

The whole decree may be di- 
vided into fifteen paragraphs, which 
are called the Fifteen Laws of the 
Conclave. They are summarized 
as follows : 

On the death of the pope the 
cardinals, having celebrated for 
nine days his obsequies in the city 
where he died, shall enter the con- 
clave on the tenth day, whether 
absent colleagues have arrived or 
not, and be accompanied by a 
single attendant, whether lay or 
clerical, or at most, in case of evi- 
dent necessity, by two attendants. 
The conclave shall be held in the 
palace last occupied by the pope, 
and there the cardinals must live 
in common, occupying a single 
spacious hall not cut off by cur- 
tains or partitions, and so carefully 
closed on every side that no one 
can secretly pass in or out. One 
room, however, may be cut off for 

vivit, Pontificcm pertinentis (nisi quatenus in con 
stitutione prxdicta permittitur) coetus ipse duxcrit 
eadem vacante ecclesia exercendum, etc. 



814 



Papal Elections. 



private purposes reservato libero 
ad secretam cameram aditu but no 
access shall be allowed to any car- 
dinal, nor private conversation with 
nor visits to him, except from those 
who, by consent of all the other 
cardinals, may be summoned to 
consult on matters germane to 
the affair in hand ; nor shall any 
one send letters or messages to 
their lordships or to any of their 
familiars, on pain of excommunica- 
tion. A window or other opening 
shall be left in the hall of conclave, 
through which the meals are intro- 
duced, but it must be of such a size 
and shape that no human being 
can penetrate thereby. If, after 
three days from the opening of the 
conclave, no election has been 
made, the prelates appointed to at- 
tend to this shall allow each cardi- 
nal no more than one dish at din- 
ner and supper during the next 
five days, after which only bread 
and water until they come to a con- 
clusion. The cardinals shall take 
nothing from the papal treasury 
during the vacancy of the see ; but 
all its revenues are to be carefully 
collected and watched over by the 
proper officers. They shall treat 
of nothing but the election, unless 
some imminent danger to the tem- 
poralities of the Holy See may de- 
mand their attention ; and, laying 
aside all private interests, let them 
devote themselves entirely to the 
common weal ; but if any cardinal 
shall presume to attempt by bribes, 
compacts, or other arts to entice 
his brethren to his own side, he 
shall suffer excommunication, nor 
shall any manner of agreement, 
even if sworn to, be valid. If a 
cardinal draw off from the con- 
clave, or should he retire from mo- 
tives of health, the election must 
still proceed; yet, if he recover, 
he 'shall be readmitted. Cardinals 



arriving late or at any stage of the 
proceedings, as also those who may 
be under censures, shall be receiv- 
ed. No one can give his vote out- 
side of the conclave. Two-thirds 
of the votes of all the electors pre- 
sent * are requisite to elect; and 
any one not radically disqualified! 
is eligible to the Papacy. The 
feudal superiors of the territory 
and the municipal officers of the 
city in which the conclave is held 
are charged to observe these regu- 
lations, and shall swear in presence 
of the clergy and people to do so. 
If they fail to do their duty they 
shall be excommunicated, be de- 
clared infamous and lose their fiefs, 
and the city itself shall be inter- 
dicted and deprived of its episco- 
pal dignity. Solemn funeral ser- 
vices are to be held in every im- 
portant place throughout the Ca- 
tholic world as soon as news ar- 
rives of the pope's death ; prayers 
are to be recited daily and fast 
days appointed for the speedy and 
concordant election of an excellent 
pontiff. 

In this provident constitution of 
Gregory X. are contained in brief 
the rules and regulations which 
have ever since governed the con- 
clave. In a few points, however, 
its severity has been relaxed, par- 
ticularly by Clement VI. in the 
bull Licet de Constiiutione, dated 
December 6, 1351; and in others 
some small modifications have been 
introduced, in accordance with the 
manners and customs of a more re- 
fined age, by Gregory XV. (Ludo- 
visi, 16211623) i n n ' s comprehen- 
sive ceremonial. J Thus Clement 

* Voting by proxy is not recognized in the con- 
clave. 

t Such, for instance, is a woman, a manifest here- 
tic, an infidel i.e., one who is not baptized. 

t C<rremonia.le continens ritus electionis Ro- 
mani Pontificis, cui prttfiguntur Constitutiones 
Pontr/icier, et Conciliorum decreta ad earn retn 
pertinentia. Romz, 1622, in 410. 



Papal Elections. 



815 



VI. (De Beaufort, 1342-1352), while 
recommending the greatest frugal- 
ity at table during the seclusion of 
the conclave, removed the alimen- 
tary restrictions and left it to the 
cardinals themselves to select the 
kind, quality, and amount of their 
food, but forbade the prandial civ- 
ilities of sending tidbits from one 
table to another. The same pope 
allowed each cardinal to have his 
bed enclosed by curtains, and to 
have two attendants, or conclavists, 
in every case. The monastic sim- 
plicity of a common sleeping-room 
was done away with in the sixteenth 
century, when each cardinal was 
allowed the use of a separate cell, 
which Pius IV. commanded should 
be assigned by lot. When a cardi- 
nal's name and number have been 
drawn, his domestics upholster it 
with purple serge or cloth, if their 
master was created by the late 
pope ; but if by a former one, with 
green a difference in color that 
was first observed in the conclave 
for the election of Leo X. A few 
articles of necessary furniture, such 
as a bed, table, kneeling-bench, 
and a couple of chairs, complete 
the interior arrangements. On the 
outside of -his cell each cardinal 
affixes a small escutcheon embla- 
zoned with his arms, which serves 
as a substitute for that vulgar mod- 
ern thing called a door-plate. 
While great care is still taken to 
hinder suspicious communications 
between the conclave and the outer 
world, it is no longer prohibited to 
visit a cardinal or member of his 
suite, although the colloquy must 
be held at some one of the entries, 
and whatever is spoken be heard by 
the prelates doing duty there. In- 
stead of the single small window 
more like an oubliette than any- 
thing else which Gregory prescrib- 
ed, openings in the shape of pivo- 



tal or revolving wooden frames, like 
those used in nunneries and called 
tours in French, were adopted at the 
suggestion of Paride de' Grassi, 
master of ceremonies to Leo X. 
Eight of them are always connect- 
ed on different sides with the hall 
of conclave, wherever it may be. 
The ten days before the conclave 
can open begin from the very day 
of the pope's death ; but sometimes 
a much longer time has elapsed as, 
for instance, after the death of 
Alexander VI., when the violence 
of Caesar Borgia and the presence 
of a French army in Rome occa- 
sioned a delay of thirty days ; and 
again, when Cardinal Ferreri was 
arrested on his way from Vercelli 
to the conclave by the Duke of 
Milan, his loyal colleagues waited 
for him eight days beyond the usu- 
al time. The conclave in which 
Julius III. was elected in 1550 was 
not opened until nineteen days af- 
ter his predecessor's death, to oblige 
the French cardinals, who had not 
yet all arrived at Rome. In early 
ages, before it became customary to 
give the hat to occupants of episco- 
pal sees other than the seven sub- 
urbican ones, and when cardinals 
were strictly bound to reside /'// 
curia i.e., to live near the pope of 
whose court they were the princi- 
pal personages there was generally 
no necessity for a considerable de- 
lay. Anastasius the Librarian * 
says that Boniface III., in the year 
607, made a decree forbidding any 
one to treat of a future pope's elec- 
tion during the lifetime of the liv- 
ing one, or until three days after 
his death ; but, as Mabillon sho\vs,f 
this three days' delay was observed 
in the Roman Church long before 
the seventh century, as appears from 
the despatch sent to the Kmperor 

Lib. Panti/., torn, iv., in fitd Bout/. 
t Mm. //W..cap. xvii. p. 112. 



8i6 



Papal Elections. 



Honorius after the death of Pope 
Zosimus in the year 418. It is not 
known when it began to be observ- 
ed as a law. In many cases an 
election took place either on the 
very same day that a pope died or 
on the following one, particularly 
during the era of persecutions and 
in the tenth and twelfth centuries, 
when the seditious disposition of 
the populace and the factions of 
rival barons made any unnecessary 
delay extremely hazardous. During 
the fifteenth, sixteenth, and follow- 
ing centuries the conclaves have 
generally been short, averaging 
about two weeks each. But during 
the greater part of the middle ages, 
after the supremacy of the Sacred 
College during the vacancy of the 
Holy See was undisputed, and the 
cardinals had little to fear from 
princes or people, their own dissen- 
sions often occasioned an interreg- 
nurii of months, and even years, to 
the discredit of their order and the 
scandal of the Christian world. 

The election should take place 
in Rome, if possible, because Rome 
is, or ought to be, the ordinary resi- 
dence of the Sovereign Pontiffs ; 
but both before and after Pope 
Gregory's constitution many elec- 
tions have been held elsewhere, ac- 
cording as the Curia was in one 
place or another. Urban II. was 
elected in Terracina ; Calixtus II. 
in Cluny ; Lucius III. in Velletri ; 
Urban III. in Verona; Gregory 
VIII. in Ferrara; Clement III., Al- 
exander VI., Honorius III. in Pisa ; 
Innocent IV. in Anagni ; Alexan- 
der IV. and Boniface VIII. in Na- 
ples ; Urban IV., Gregory X., and 
Martin IV. in Viterbo ; Innocent 
V. in Arezzo ; Honorius IV., Celes- 
tin V., and Clement V. in Perugia. 
During the stay of the popes in 
France John XXII., Benedict 
XII., Clement VI., Innocent VI., 



Urban V., and Gregory XI. were 
elected at Avignon. John XXIII. 
was elected at Bologna, and Martin 
V. at- Constance, since whom all his 
successors, except Pius VII., have 
been elected in Rome. The law of 
Gregory X. commanded that the 
conclave should be held there 
where the last pope died Statuimus 
uf, si eundem pontificem in civitate, 
in qua cum sua curia residebat, diem 
claudere contingat extremum, cardi- 
nales omnes conveniant in palatio, in 
quo idempontifex habitabat because 
in one sense, as of ancient Rome, 

. . . Vejos habitante Camillo, 
Illico Roma fuit ; 

and of modern Rome, Ubi Papa, ibi 
Roma. When, however, he was ab- 
sent only on some extraordinary 
occasion, the election was to be 
held in Rome itself, no matter 
where he died. Gregory XI., who 
brought back the see from Avignon, 
intending to return to France on 
business and to better his health, 
but wishing to assure an Italian 
election and the permanent re- 
transfer of the Holy See to Rome, 
made a decree on March 19, 1378, 
ordering a majority of the cardi- 
nals, should his death occur during 
his absence, to meet in any part of 
Rome, or, if more convenient, in 
some neighboring city, and there 
elect a successor. Clement VIII. 
restricted the place of holding the 
conclave to Rome alone, in a bull 
issued October 6, 1529, on occasion 
of his journey to Bologna to crown 
the Emperor Charles V., and in 
another one, dated August 30, 1533, 
when going to France to confer 
with Francis I. 

When Pius IV. had a mind to go 
to Trent and preside in person at 
the council, he declared on Sep- 
tember 22, 1561, that a papal elec- 
tion should one become necessary 



Papal Elections. 



817 



by his death while away was to 
be held in Rome, unless it were 
under an interdict, in which case 
in Orvieto or Perugia. Clement 
VIII., when going to Ferrara to 
receive back the fief which had 
reverted to the Holy See on the 
death of Alphonsus d'Este, de- 
clared on March 30, 1598, that, 
should he die before returning, the 
subsequent election was to be held 
nowhere but in Rome. Long usage, 
continued up to the beginning of 
the present century, has consecrated 
the. Vatican as the most proper seat 
of the conclave. The first pope 
elected there was Benedict XI. in 
1303, and the next was Urban VI. in 
1378. When Honorius IV., of the 
great house of Savelli, died where 
he had lived and held his court, in 
his family mansion on the Aventine, 
some remains of which are seen 
near the convent of Santa Sabina, 
the cardinals, in scrupulous observ- 
ance of the first law of Gregory's 
constitution, met there and elected 
his successor, Nicholas IV., on Feb- 
ruary 22, 1288. Eugene IV. in 
1431, and Nicholas V. in 1447, were 
elected in the Dominican convent 
of the Minerva, the great dormitory 
of the friars being fitted up for the 
cardinals, and the election itself 
being held in the sacristy behind 
the choir, over the door of which a 
large fresco painting and a Latin in- 
scription commemorate the event. 
There were several projects on 
foot in the seventeenth century to 
establish with every possible con- 
venience, and in accordance with 
the prescriptions of the Roman 
ceremonial of election, a hall of con- 
clave which should serve for all fu- 
ture occasions. The venerable La- 
teran and the more modern Qui- 
rinal each had its advocates, and 
Pius VI. is said by Cancellieri to 
have intended the vast and magni- 
VOL. xxvi. 52 



ficent sacristy building which he 
erected alongside of St. Peter's 
for such a purpose ; but his imme- 
diate successor was elected in Ven- 
ice on account of the French trou- 
bles, and all of his successors have 
been elected in the Qtiirinal pa- 
lace. 

On the pope's death the Sacred 
College, or apostolic senate of Rome, 
succeeded to the government of 
the States of the Church. All the 
officers of the government were 
instantly suspended until provi- 
sion was made to carry on the pub- 
lic business. Only the chamber- 
lain of the Holy Roman Church, 
the grand penitentiary, and the 
vicar-general, who are always car- 
dinals, continued to exercise their 
powers by a privilege granted to 
them by Pius IV. The chamberlain 
(camerlengo) was the executive or 
head of the government, acting as 
a quasi-sovereign, and was conse- 
quently honored with a special 
guard and allowed to coin money 
stamped with his family arms and 
the distinctive heraldic sign of the 
vacancy of the see, which is a pavil- 
ion over the cross-keys. With him 
were associated three other cardi- 
nals, each for three days at a time, 
one from each of the three orders, 
beginning with the dean, the first 
priest, and first deacon, and so on 
in turn of seniority. The secre- 
tary of the Sacred College, who is 
always a prelate of very high rank, 
was prime minister and transacted 
all the correspondence and other 
relations of the cardinals with for- 
eign ambassadors and the repre- 
sentatives of the Holy See at for- 
eign courts. Clement XII. pro- 
vided that if the chamberlain and 
grand penitentiary should die dur- 
ing the conclave, the cardinals are 
to elect a successor to him within 
three days; but if the cardinal-vi- 



8i8 



Papal Elections. 



car die, the vicegerent, who is al- 
ways a bishop in partibus, succeeds 
ex-officio to his faculties. The 
Sacred Congregation of Rome are 
privileged to transact business of 
small importance through their 
secretaries, and even to finish af- 
fairs of whatever importance, if at 
"the pope's death they were so far 
advanced as to need only the secre- 
tary's signature. 

If a cardinal fall ill and choose 
to remain in conclave, provision is 
made to. take his vote; but he may 
retire, if he wish, losing his vote, 
however, which cannot be given 
outside of the conclave or by 
proxy. If he recover he is oblig- 
ed in conscience to return, because 
it is a duty of his office, and not 
a mere personal privilege, to take 
part in papal elections. All car- 
dinals, unless specially deprived by 
the pope before his death of the 
right of electing and of being elect- 
ed, can vote and are eligible, even 
if under censures. Thus, cardinals 
De Noailles and Alberoni were in- 
vited to the conclave at which 
Innocent XIII. was elected ; but 
cardinals Baudinelli-Saoli and Cos- 
cia had been deprived, the one by 
Leo X. and the other by Clement 
XII., of what is called in canon 
law the active and passive voice. 
The cardinals may elect whom 
they please; nor is it necessary to 
be either a member of the Sacred 
College or an Italian to become 
pope. In former ages the choice of 
subjects was more confined than 
it is at present ; for we learn from 
the acts of a council composed 
chiefly of French and Italian bish- 
ops, convened at Rome in 769 by 
Stephen III., alias IV., to con- 
demn the anti-pope Constantine, 
who was not even a cleric, that no 
one who was not either a cardinal 
priest or deacon could aspire to the 



Papacy Nullus unquam pncsumat 
. . . nisi per distinctos gradus ascen- 
dens, diacomis aut presbyter cardina- 
lisfactusfuerit, adsacrumpontificatus 
honor em promoi'eri* 

Nevertheless, in view, presumably, 
of the greater good of the church, 
many persons have since been 
elected who did not answer to this 
description. This was the case with 
Gregory V. in 996 ; Sylvester II. in 
999; Clement II. in 1046; Dama- 
sus II. in 1048 ; Leo IX. in 1049 ; 
Victor II. in 1055 ; Nicholas II. in 
1058; Alexander II. in 1061 ; Ca- 
lixtus II. in 1119; Eugene III. in 
1145; Urban IV. in 1261; Grego- 
ry X. in 1271; Celestine V. in 
1294; Clement V. in 1305 ; Urban 
V. in 1362, and Urban VI. in 
1378, since whom no one not a 
cardinal has been elected, although 
several have come near being cho- 
sen. At the conclaves at which 
Adrian VI. and Clement VII. 
were elected Nicholas Schomberg, 
a celebrated Dominican and arch- 
bishop of Capua, received a num- 
ber of votes; and as late as the 
middle of the last century, at the 
conclave from which proceeded 
Benedict XIV., Father Barberini, 
ex-general of the Capuchins and 
apostolic preacher, was repeatedly 
voted for. No matter what may 
have been a man's previous condi- 
tion, he can be elected ; and there 
are not a few instances of persons 
of ignoble birth or mean antece- 
dents having been exalted to the 
Papacy, which they have illustrated 
by their virtues or their learning: 
" Choose the best, and him who 
shall please you most of your mo- 
ther's sons (children of the Catholic 
C/iurc/i), and set him on his father's 
throne " f (as vicegerent of God in 
his kingdom on earth). 

* LabW, Concil.^ torn. vi. col. 1721. 
t 4 Kings x. ^. 



Papal Elections. 



819 



However, since Sixtus V. (1585- 
1595), who is said to have been a 
hogherd in his youth, all the popes 
have belonged to noble families ; for, 
says Cardinal Pallavicini, the cele- 
brated Jesuit and historian of the 
Council of Trent, nobility of birth, 
although no necessary condition, 
adds dignity and splendor to the 
pontificate reca grandecoro ed 
ornamento al pontificate.* But then 
he belonged to a princely family 
himself and wrote two centuries 
ago. 

Almost every European nation- 
ality has had a representative on 
the papal throne ; but for several 
centuries the Italians have jealous- 
ly guarded its steps from any one 
but themselves, and perhaps with 
reason so long as the pope was 
temporal sovereign of a large part 
of the Peninsula. Adrian V., of 
Utrecht (1522-1523), was the last 
foreigner ever allowed to wear the 
tiara, and he for his relations with 
the powerful emperor Charles V., 
rather than for his undoubted vir- 
tues and learning; and yet so great 
was the indignation of the Ro- 
mans when his name was announc- 
ed that the cardinals were insulted 
and some of them maltreated as 
they left the conclave. But if a 
Hollander might be tolerated for 
some grave political reasons not 
a Frenchman under any condition. 
In the conclave of 1458 the worth- 
iest subject to very many of his 
brethren seemed the Cardinal d'Es- 
touteville, Archbishop of Rouen 
the same who built the magnificent 
church of San Agostino at Rome. 
But Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes ; 
so when there was a fine chance of 
his getting the requisite number of 
votes, Orsini and Colonna, as heads 
of the Roman party, deliberately 

Hist.ofAltx. VII. 



turned the tide in favor of Piccolo- 
mini, although his record was bad 
and his health not good. When 
Clement V. (Bertrand de Got, arch- 
bishop of Bordeaux, 1505-1514) 
was elected, he summoned the 
Sacred College to Lyons to assist 
at his coronation. When the order 
reached the cardinals old Rosso 
Orsini, their dean, rose and said : 
" My venerable brethren, soon we 
shall see the Rhone but, if I know 
the Gascons, the Tiber will not soon 
see a pope again." And so D'Es- 
touteville, with all his wealth and 
learning and high connections, was 
made to feel that 



Necdum etiam causse irarum saevique dolores 
Exciderant animo. 



Gregory X. prescribed that a 
strict watch should be kept over 
the conclave wherever it might be 
held. When held in Rome the re- 
presentatives of the noblest fami- 
lies have a principal part in main- 
taining order in the city and pro- 
tecting the cardinals from any kind 
of interference. The marshal of 
the Holy Roman Church and guar- 
dian of the conclave watches over 
the external peace and quiet of the 
Sacred College. This is one of 
the highest offices held by a lay- 
man at the Roman court. It is 
hereditary, and belonged for over 
four hundred years to the great 
baronial family of Savelli until its 
extinction. It passed in 1712 to 
the princely family of Chigi. The 
very ancient and now ducal family 
of Mattei was charged with pre- 
serving the peace of the Ghetto and 
Trastevere. For this purpose it 
used to raise and equip a small 
body of troops which was kept up 
as long as the conclave lasted. 
The majordomo of the late pope is 
ex-officio governor of the conclave 
since the time of Clement XII. 



820 



Papal Elections. 



(Corsini, 1730-1740). Although he 
also exercises some external juris- 
diction, he is more particularly re- 
quired to attend to the domestic 
wants of the cardinals and preserve 
order within the palace where the 
conclave may be held. Delega- 
,tions from the various colleges of 
the Roman prelacy apostolic pro- 
thonotaries, auditors of the pope, 
clerks of the chamber, etc. taking 
their orders daily from the gover- 
nor, are to be stationed at one or 
other of the Ruote, or turnstile win- 
dows, during the whole of the con- 
clave. Prizlati, says Pius IV.,* ad 
custodiam condavis deputati, sub poena 
perjurii et suspensions a divinis, max- 
ima et exquisita diligentia utantur in 
inspiciendis ac perscrutandis epulis, 
aliisve rebus, ac personis conclavi in- 
trantibus, ac de eo exeuntibus, ne sub 
earum rerum vdamine litertz, aut note, 
vel signa aliqua transmittantur. 

In the sixteenth and seventeenth 
centuries, when every species of 
gambling and games of chance was 
practised with frenzied passion in 
Italy, it was very common in Rome, 
although prohibited under severe 
penalties by Pius IV. and Gregory 
XIV. as a sort of sacrilege, to bet 
on the cardinals whose " backers " 
thought they had a chance of being 
elected. 

* Const. In eligendis Bullar. Rom., torn. iv. 
part ii. pag. 145. 



The collect Pro eligendo Pontifice 
that God may grant a worthy 
pastor to his church is said at all 
Masses throughout the world from 
the beginning of the conclave until 
news arrives of the pope's election. 
In Rome there is a daily proces- 
sion of the clergy from the Church 
of St. Lawrence /;/ Damaso to St. 
Peter's basilica (if the conclave be 
held in the Vatican), chanting the 
litany of the saints and other pray- 
ers. When the procession arrives 
there a Mass de Spiritu Sancto is 
said by a papal chaplain in a 
temporary chapel fitted up near 
the main entrance to the con- 
clave. The singing is by 'the papal 
choir. 

The literature, if we may call it so, 
of papal elections is varied and ex- 
tensive. Besides the letters, bulls, 
and conciliar decrees of twenty- 
eight popes from Boniface I. in 419 
to Pius IX., there is a host of 
writers on the subject, some of 
whom are distinguished for piety 
and learning, while others are noted 
for their hatred of the Holy See. 
Almost every conclave from Clem- 
ent V.'s down has had its chroni- 
cler or historian. The oldest 
special treatise extant on a papal 
election is one written by Cardi- 
nal Albericus, a monk of Monte 
Cassino, in 1050 De Election* 
Romani Pontificis, liber. 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



THE HOLY CAVE OF MANRESA. 



DIGITUS DEI ESTHIC t 



IT is difficult to bring it home to 
one's mind that Manresa is a place 
of petty industries and striving for 
worldly gain ; that it ever had a 
hand in war or bloodshed, or, in- 
deed, ever took any active part in 
the turmoil of ordinary life ; for its 
very name has for more than three 
hundred years been almost syno- 
nymous with solitude and ascetic 
piety, on account of the Santa Cu- 
eva, or Holy Cave, so celebrated 
throughout the Christian world, 
where, amid the ecstasies of divine 
contemplation and the severities of 
the most rigorous penance, St. Ig- 
natius de Loyola laid the founda- 
tion of the Society of Jesus, and by 
the infusion of supernatural light, 
to use the expression of the Con- 
gregation of the Rota, composed 
his famous Spiritual Exercises a 
work which, said St. Francis de 
Sales two hundred years ago, " has 
given as many saints to the church 
of God as it contains letters." 

But Manresa is, in fact, a busy, 
thriving place of about fifteen thou- 
sand inhabitants, on the direct 
railway line from Barcelona to 
Zaragoza. It is a centre of indus- 
try, and contains a number of cot- 
ton and woollen mills by no means 
in harmony with its mediaeval walls 
and towers that rise up out of the 
plain, gray and time-worn, and 
with many a mark of ancient con- 
flict. For it is a walled town, and 
was in existence before the Roman 
conquest. We should say a'/y, for 
so it has been styled ever since the 
ninth century, at least ; and Don 
Jaime of Aragon, by a diploma of 



April 22, 1315, conferred on it, for 
its loyal services, the perpetual ti- 
tle of buena y leal cindad. Nay, 
more, after Marshal Macdonald 
came here in 1811, and burned 
five hundred houses and factories, 
and slaughtered many of the in- 
habitants with a ferocity almost 
unequalled, the Spanish Cortes gave 
it the qualification of muy noble y 
muy leal city (for these Spanish 
towns have their gradations of ti- 
tled rank, of which they are as 
jealous as an ancient hidalgo of 
his family quarterings), on account 
of the bravery of the people, who 
rallied in their desperation and 
madness, and, pursuing the enemy, 
amply avenged their dead in true 
national fashion. 

We arrived at Manresa after 
dark, and, as there was not a single 
vehicle at the station, we gave our 
travelling-bags to a porter, and 
followed after him on foot through 
narrow, ascending, tortuous, dimly- 
lighted streets to the Fonda de 
San Domingo, very Spanish in 
character, with a court full of dili- 
gences and stables on the ground 
floor, and an enormous dining-room 
above, out of which opened the 
bed-rooms at least, ours did. 
This was by no means favorable to 
repose, for the hilarity of its habi- 
tue's was kept up to a late hour, to 
say nothing of the singing and 
music in the neighboring streets. 
This would not have surprised us in 
Andalucia, but in an industrious 
place like Manresa we expected to 
find that labor had laid its repress- 
ing hand on the fpeople, as is so 



822 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



often the case with us in the north. 
But the elastic temperament of the 
race causes a rebound as soon as 
the hour of toil is over. Then the 
dance and the song have their 
time, and castanets and the tam- 
bour take the place of the shuttle 
.and the spindle." Manresa is noted 
for the publication of romanceros, 
ballads, and complaintes, illustrat- 
ed with coarse engravings, which 
are sold under the general name of 
pliegos. This kind of literature is 
a key to the character of the peo- 
ple, and therefore not without its 
interest ; but the sound of these 
jolly songs in such a place, and at 
so late an hour, was, it must be 
confessed unreasonable as we may 
appear very much to our disgust ; 
for not only were we fatigued with 
our journey, but our thoughts were 
continually wandering off to the 
lonely cave and its mystic tome. 

We were up betimes in the morn- 
ing, notwithstanding, and, seeing 
the tower of a church from our 
window, we hurried out ; for all 
through Spain, as in Italy, if there 
is anything worth seeing in a town, 
it is certainly the churches. How- 
ever, it was not a question of art 
with us, though by no means insen- 
sible to the grand in architecture 
or to the beautiful in painting and 
sculpture. The church we soon 
came to had given its name to the 
Fonda. It was the church of St. 
Dominic, an edifice of the four- 
teenth century, formerly connected 
with a Dominican convent. It is a 
grim, mouldy church, with a tomb- 
like atmosphere about it and, in- 
deed, it is partly paved with me- 
morial stones of those who sleep in 
the damp vaults below. But it was 
quiet and solemn, and there was a 
certain grave simplicity about it 
peculiar to the Dominican churches 
in Spain. A priest was saying 



Mass in subdued tones at the very 
altar where St. Ignatius once saw 
the glorious Humanity of our Sa- 
viour at the elevation of the Host,, 
and a few people were kneeling 
here and there on the flag-stones, 
praying devoutly. St. Dominic 
and the dog with a flaming brand 
still seemed to be keeping watch 
and ward over the place, though 
his children are banished from his 
native land. The adjoining con- 
vent often gave St. Ignatius hospi- 
tality, and it was at one of its win- 
dows, after being tempted to de- 
spair in view of his sins, that he ex- 
claimed : " Lord, I will t not do 
aught that will offend thee !" He 
often made the Via Crucis in the 
cloisters, bearing a large wooden 
cross on his shoulders from station 
to station, shedding floods of tears 
over the divine Sufferer. This 
cross is still religiously preserved, 
and bears the inscription : 

Enecvs A 
Lohola porta 
bat hanc crv 
cem, 1522 

Ignatius de Loyola bore this 
cross, 1522. 

We found Manresa exceedingly 
picturesque by daylight, rising 
abruptly, as it does, out of the val- 
ley of the Llobregat on one side 
and that of the Cardoner on the 
other. The railway station is at 
the foot of the eminence, with the 
river between, and the effect of the 
steep cliffs, crowned by the noble 
and loyal city, is very striking. 
Directly opposite, as if it sprang 
out of the mount, rises the Seo, a 
venerable cathedral of the four- 
teenth century, beautifully mellow- 
ed and embrowned by time. Fur- 
ther to the left are the spires of the 
Carmen and the tower of San Mi- 
guel ; while at the right, but lower 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



823 



down, built into the very side of 
the cliff, so that it seems like a con- 
tinuation of it, is the church of the 
Jesuits, with the Santa Cueva which 
gives celebrity to the city. One 
would like to see the Holy Cave in 
its primitive simplicity; but such 
was the devotion of pilgrims who 
came here in thousands after the 
canonization of St. Ignatius that, 
to save it from being carried off 
piecemeal, it was found necessary 
to place some safeguard around it, 
and it is now enclosed within the 
walls of the church. 

Crossing the bridge that leads 
from the station, and walking along 
the opposite bank beneath the long 
arms of the umbrageous plane-trees 
for five minutes, we turned to the 
left, and, going up a short street, 
found ourselves directly beneath 
the overhanging cliff, which is tap- 
estried with vines and the delicate 
fronds of the maiden-hair, kept 
green and fresh by little cascades 
of clear water that come trickling 
down the rocks with a pleasant 
murmur, glittering like the facets 
of a thousand jewels in the bright 
morning sun. Here is the Holy 
Cave, though no longer open on 
the side of the valley, towards 
which turn with interest so many 
hearts from the ends of the earth. 
We passed beneath the church 
walls, with its long line of sculptur- 
ed saints, of rather coarse work- 
manship in the Renaissance style, 
but producing a striking effect from 
the valley below. One more turn 
to the left up a steep path, and we 
were on the terrace leading to the 
entrance. A statue of St. Ignatius 
is over the door. One always re- 
cognizes his striking physiognomy, 
with the noble dome of solemn 
thought that crowns it, and we sa- 
luted it with reverence and love, as 
we had done in many a strange 



land, as a symbol of the paternal 
kindness we had met with from the 
order to which he has bequeathed 
his spirit. 

The church consists of a single 
aisle, with four small chapels on 
eacli side, and a latticed gallery 
above for the inmates of the resi- 
dence. There is nothing remarka- 
ble about it, and, in fact, it was 
never completed according to the 
original plan, owing to the sup- 
pression of the order in Spain. 
Seeing an open door on the gospel 
side of the sanctuary, we went di- 
rectly towards it and found our- 
selves in a long, narrow passage 
lined with portraits of the Jesuit 
saints, and, at the further end, 
a doorway secured by a strong iron 
grating, above which is graven : 

SANTA CUEVA. 

Finding the grating ajar, we 
pushed it back, and, descending 
three stone steps, found ourselves 
in the Holy Cave. It is long and 
narrow, being about thirty feet in 
length, seven in width, and about 
the same in height. A small octa- 
gon window is cut through the 
wall that closes the original en- 
trance, and there is a feeble lamp 
hanging before the altar, but neith- 
er gives light enough to disperse 
the gloom, and, as there was no one 
in the cave, it was as silent and 
impressive as a tomb. You could 
only hear the pleasant rippling of 
the water over the rocks without. 
The pavement is the solid rock, 
and the upper part of the cave is 
in its rough state, but the lower 
part of the walls is faced with mar- 
ble, and jasper, and a series of 
bas-reliefs that tell the history of 
the saint. An inscription on the 
wall says : 

" In this place, in the year 1522, 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



St. Ignatius composed the book of 
Exercises, the first written in the 
Society of Jesus, which has been 
approved by a bull from his Holi- 
ness Paul III." 

At the right, as you enter, is a 
projection, or shelf, in the wall, on 
wJiich the Spiritual Exercises were 
written, and there is a cross hol- 
lowed in the rock where the saint 
used to trace the holy sign before 
beginning to write. One's first im- 
pulse is to kiss the ground where 
his holy feet once stood, and pray 
where he so often prayed. St. Ig- 
natius said he learned more in one 
short hour of prayer in the cave of 
Manresa than all the doctors in 
the world could have taught him. 
Here, like St. Jerome, trembling 
before the judgments of God, he 
used to smite his breast with a 
hard stone. Here he wept over 
the sufferings of Christ, with whose 
bodily Presence he was often fa- 
vored, as well as the presence of 
the angels and their Queen. "Flow 
fast, my tears," wrote he in this 
very place, " break forth, my heart, 
in bitter sighs, that I may weep 
worthily over the sorrows of my 
Saviour ! O Jesus ! may I die before 
I cease to have a horror of sin. 
God liveth, in whose sight I stand ; 
for while there is breath in me, and 
the spirit of life in rny nostrils, my 
lips shall not give utterance nor 
my heart consent to iniquity." * 

A phalanx from his right hand is 
preserved here in a crystal reli- 
quary, set in gold and jewels, on 
which is graven the Scriptural ex- 
clamation of Pope Paul III. after 
reading the Constitutions of St. Ig- 
natius : 

Digitus Dei est hie. Paulus III. 
The finger of God is here ! . . . 

* Spiritual Exercises. Second Day. 



Over the altar is a large bas-re- 
lief of the saint, kneeling before 
a cross in the Holy Cave and gaz- 
ing up at the Virgin, who, enthron- 
ed on a cloud, is dictating to him 
the Spiritual Exercises, according 
to the constant local tradition. 
This relief is framed in black mar- 
ble with white mouldings, and on 
each side are angels of white mar- 
ble playing on musical instruments. 
These, as well as the other sculp- 
tures, were done by Francisco 
Grau, a Manresan artist of local 
celebrity. Among the others is 
one in which St. Ignatius, arrayed 
like the Spanish caballero he was, 
with sword in hand, is keeping his 
vigil before the altar of Our Lady 
of Montserrat. In the next he is 
giving his rich garments to a beg- 
gar, coming down from the mount. 
Beyond is the miracle of the Pozo, 
of which we shall speak further on, 
and many such. 

There were, at the time of our 
visit, four Jesuit Fathers in the ad- 
joining Casa, and a daily service 
was held in the Santa Cueva. 
Many indulgences are attached to 
the place, on the usual conditions, 
granted by Pope Gregory XV. and 
other pontiffs. The cave, of course, 
was regarded from the time of St. 
Ignatius as a place singularly fa- 
vored by Heaven. In his day it 
belonged to Don Fernando Rovi- 
ralta, a great friend of the saint. 
He lived to be over a hundred 
years of age, and at his death he 
bequeathed it to his nephew, Don 
Mauricio Cardona, who sold it 
January 27, 1602, to the Marquesa 
de Ailona, who in the following 
year gave it to the Jesuits. As 
soon as it fell into their possession 
means were used to ornament it, 
and in the course of time a Casa de 
retire was built adjoining, with a 
church intended to be one of the 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



825 



finest in Catalonia. The Countess 
of Fuentes, a native of Manresa, 
gave one thousand escudos to or- 
nament the Holy Cave. Don 
Pedro Osorio, commissary-general 
of Lombardy, came here on foot 
from Barcelona when seventy years 
of age, and presented eight thou- 
sand escudos for the same purpose. 
And finally the crown took it 
under its protection, and Philip V. 
gave it a valuable chalice on which 
were graven the royal arms. Not 
only Don John of Austria, but seve- 
ral of the kings of Spain, came here 
to visit a place of historic as well as 
religious interest, for the mysteri- 
ous influences that have gone out 
of this Holy Cave have been a 
power in the world. The public 
documents of Manresa show the 
devotion of the Christian world to 
have been such that some days in 
the year 1606 there were more 
than a thousand visitors, many of 
whom came from a distance. They 
used to carry away with them 
pieces, of the Holy Cave, which 
they preserved as relics. A frag- 
ment was sent to Queen Margaret 
of Austria, who had it set in gold 
surrounded by rubies and diamonds, 
and wore it on festivals of great 
solemnity,. 

When St. Ignatius came to Man- 
resa there were only about a thou- 
sand families in the place, it hav- 
ing been reduced by wars and pes- 
tilence to one-fourth its former 
size. It is said that he stopped at 
the bridge leading to the city to 
pray at the chapel of Nuestra Seflora 
de la .Guia Our Lady of Guid- 
ance and was there supernatu- 
rally directed to the cave. It was 
then surrounded by shrubs and 
brambles, and was almost inacces- 
sible. Though so near the city, it 
seemed retired, for it lay towards 
the broad valley, and was shaded 



by thorn-bushes and the cistus 
which gave it an aspect of solitude. 
The pavement was uneven, and it 
was much smaller than at the pre- 
sent day. The birds of the air 
made it their home, and water 
trickled down the walls. The first 
thing the saint did was to prostrate 
himself on the ground and kiss it, 
then, with a sharp stone, trace a 
cross on the wall, still to be seen. 

From the windows of the passage 
now leading to the Santa Cueva is 
the same landscape St. Ignatius 
had before him from the mouth of 
the cave; only in his day the coun- 
try was wilder, and therefore more 
beautiful, if possible, and there 
were no factories, no railway, in 
the valley to disturb the peaceful 
solitude. It is certainly a land- 
scape of surpassing beauty, and we 
could imagine his exaltation of 
soul in gazing at it; for St. Igna- 
tius had the soul of a poet and was 
a great admirer of nature. He 
loved to walk in the meadows and 
gardens, to observe the form, color, 
and odor of flowers ; and from 
time to time, when at Rome, used 
to go forth on his balcony to look 
at the starry heavens, as if to re- 
fresh his soul. 

Directly beneath the cliff is the 
swift-gliding stream, and, beyond 
it, a hill crowned with the tower 
of Santa Catalina, then dark with 
sombre pines and gigantic oaks, 
but now descending in gentle ter- 
races covered with the silvery olive. 
At the left opens the smiling valley 
of the Llobregat, covered with per- 
petual verdure, once called the Valle 
del Paraiso the Vale of Paradise 
and in the distance, against the 
bluest of heavens, rise the marvel- 
lous pinnacles of Montserrat, the 
sacred mountain of Spain. 

Over the present entrance to the 
Holy Cave is an ancient stone cru- 



826 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



cifix, once part of the famous 
Cruz del Tort, at which St. Igna- 
tius so often went to pray. On the 
eve of his festival, 1627, the Christ 
was seen, to the astonishment of 
every one present at Vespers, to 
exude blood, first from the side, 
then- from the hands and feet, and 
finally from the thorn-crowned 
head. We went to visit the cross 
from which it was removed for pre- 
servation. On leaving the Santa 
Cueva we kept on, up the side of 
the hill, by a circuitous road the 
saint must often have trod, then 
towards the east by an old narrow 
street. We passed a crucifix in a 
niche, with red curtains before it, 
and a hanging lamp. Just beyond 
came several peasants with scarlet 
Catalan caps, broad purple sashes, 
blue trowsers, black velvet jackets, 
and alpargatas laced with wide 
blue tape across their white stock- 
ings. They were driving mules 
that looked as gay as their owners, 
with their heads streaming with 
bright tassels and alive with tink- 
ling bells. We soon came to a 
house on which was a fresco re- 
presenting the Virgin appearing to 
St. Ignatius. Just opposite this 
was a terrace on the edge of the 
hill, where stood the Cruz del Tort, 
a lofty stone cross with several 
stone steps around the base. It 
was on these steps that St. Igna- 
tius, while praying here one day, as 
he was accustomed to do, and shed- 
ding floods of tears, had the mystery 
of the Holy Trinity made cleartohim 
by some vision which he compares to 
three keys of a musical instrument. 
His eyes were opened to a new 
sense of divine things. His doubts 
fell off like a garment. His whole 
nature seemed changed, and he felt 
ready, if need were, to die for what 
was here made manifest to him. 
On the cross is this inscription : 



Hie habvit St. Ignativs 
Trinitatis visionem, 1522. 

While we were saying a prayer 
at the foot of the cross a peasant wo- 
man, who was passing by, stopped 
to tell us how San Ignacio came 
here to do penance and had a vis- 
ion of God. The terrace occupies 
an opening between the houses 
which frame an incomparable view 
over the valley of the Llobregat,. 
with the solemn turrets of Mont- 
serrat in full sight. The tall gray 
cross against that golden sky, with 
the Vale of Paradise spread out at 
the foot, is certainly one of the 
most ravishing views it is possible 
to conceive. Steps descend from, 
the cross, winding a little way 
down the side of the cliff, which is 
covered with ivy, to a pretty foun- 
tain fed by clear water bubbling 
from the rocks. 

Turning back from the Cruz del 
Tort, and passing through the sub- 
urbs, we soon came into the city 
among streets that looked centuries 
old. We passed San Antonfo in a 
niche, and soon came to a small 
Plaza with a painting of St. Domi- 
nic at the corner, and in the cen- 
tre a stone obelisk with a long in- 
scription, of which we give a literal 
translation : 

" To Ignatius de Loyola, son of Bel- 
tran, a native of Cantabria, the founder 
of the Society of Jesus, who, in his thir- 
tieth year, while valiantly fighting in de- 
fence of his country, was dangerously 
wounded, but being cured by the special 
mercy of God, and inspired with an ar- 
dent desire to visit the holy places at 
Jerusalem, after making a vow of chasti- 
ty, set forth on the way, and, layihg aside 
his military ensigns in the temple of 
Mary, the Mother of God, at Montserrat, 
clothed himself in sackcloth, and in tliis 
state of destitution came to this place, 
where with fastings and prayers he wept 
over his past offences, and avenged 
them like a fresh soldier of Christ. In 
order to perpetuate the memory of his- 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



827 



heroic acts, for the glory of Christ and 
the honor of the Society, Juan Bautista 
Cardona, a native of Valencia, bishop of 
Vich, and appointed to the see of Tor- 
tosa, out of great devotion to the said 
father and his order, dedicates this stone 
to him as a most holy man to whom the 
whole Christian world is greatly indebt- 
ed, Sixtus V. being pope, and Philip II. 
the great and Catholic king of Spain." 

On another side is the follow- 
ing : 

"This monument, having been over- 
thrown during a time of calamity, has 
been restored and commended to pos- 
terity by the most noble ayuntamiento 
of the city of Manresa, out of ineffaceable 
love, Pius V. being Sovereign Pontiff, 
Carlos IV. king, and Ignacio de la Jus- 
ticia governor of the city. 1799." 

Bishop Cardona, the first to set 
up this monument, was an able 
writer of the golden age of Spanish 
literature, and a man of such vast 
knowledge that he was employed 
by Philip II. in the formation of 
the royal library at the Escorial. 
He was a great admirer of St. Ig- 
natius, and left an inedited manu- 
script, now in the National Library, 
entitled Laus St. Ignatti. 

While we were standing before 
this obelisk we were agreeably con- 
vinced that, notwithstanding all the 
ravages of pestilence and the mas- 
sacres of the French, the good and 
loyal city was in no danger of be- 
ing depopulated ; for the doors of a 
large edifice on one side of the 
square opened, and forth came a 
swarm of boys that could not have 
been equalled, it seemed to us, 
since the famous crusade of chil- 
dren in the thirteenth century. 
They came from a school in what 
was once the Jesuits' college, built 
out of the ancient hospital of Santa 
Lucia, where St. Ignatius used to 
minister to the sick, and sometimes 
seek shelter himself. This was what 
we were in search of. Connected 



with the college is the modern 
church of St. Ignatius, and from 
one side of the nave you enter the 
old church of the hospital, which 
has been carefully preserved. Here 
we found the Capilla del Rapto, a 
small square chapel, opening into 
the aisle and covered with frescos. 
It is so called because it was here 
St. Ignatius lay rapt in ecstasy from 
the hour of complines on the eve of 
Passion Sunday till the same hour 
on the following Saturday. It was 
during this wonderful withdrawal 
into the spiritual world that the 
foundation of the Society of Jesus 
was revealed to him, as is stated in 
an inscription on the wall. For 
more than two centuries a solemn 
octave has been annually celebrat- 
ed here in commemoration of this 
divine ecstasy. Beneath the sim- 
ple altar lies the saint in effigy, 
wearing the coarse robe which made 
the gamins cf that day call him El 
Saco, or Old Sackcloth, till they 
found out he was a saint. Over 
the altar is a painting of the Rapto, 
in which, unable to endure the vi- 
sion of Christ Glorified with mortal 
eyes, St. Ignatius is mercifully rapt 
in ecstasy. Angels bend around 
him, holding the banner of the 
Holy Name that has become the 
watchword of the Society. //; hoc 
vocabitur tibi nomen. On one side of 
the chapel he is represented ca- 
techising the children, and on the 
other he stands in his penitential 
garments, exhorting the patients of 
the hospital, while some lord, 
doubtless Don Andres de Amigant, 
is kneeling to him in reverence. 

The original pavement of stone 
is covered with a wooden floor to 
preserve it, but a brass plate, on 
which is inscribed the name of 
Jesus, is raised to show the spot 
where the saint's head lay in his 
ecstasy. The stone is worn with 



828 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



kisses, and has been partly cut 
away by pilgrims. Behind the 
chapel is the room where he used 
to teach children the catechism, 
and there is the same old stone 
stoup for holy-water that was used 
in his day. Here, too, is an inscrip- 
tion :- 

Serviendo en este Hospital 
Ignacio a gloria Divina, 
Ensenaba la Doctrina 
En las piedras de este umbral. 

A few months after his arrival at 
Manresa St. Ignatius fell ill and 
was taken to this hospital among 
the poor with whom he now identi- 
fied himself. But Don Andres de 
Amigant, a nobleman of the place, 
soon had him removed to his own 
house, where he and his wife nurs- 
ed him till he recovered. It was a 
pious custom of theirs to take two 
patients from the hospital every 
year, and tend them as if our Sa- 
viour in person. For this Don 
Andres was styled " Simon the 
Leper " by the wits of Manresa, 
and Dona Ines, his wife, was called 
Martha. -This admirable charity 
had been practised in the family 
nearly two hundred years. It ap- 
pears by a MS. in possession of 
the Marquis de Palmerola, its pre- 
sent representative, that a remote 
ancestor of his, Caspar de Ami- 
gant, introduced the practice into 
his family in 1364, out of devotion. 
He added two rooms to his house, 
where he kept two poor patients, 
providing every remedy and means 
of subsistence, and, as soon as they 
recovered, diligently sought out 
others to supply their places, that, 
as he said, so religious an exercise 
might never be wanting in his 
family. How faithful his descend- 
ants were to so holy a practice ap- 
pears from the statement that Juan 
de Amigant in 1478, having, " ac- 



cording to his custom," received 
a woman named Ignes Buxona 
into his house, she bequeathed to 
him when she died, having no re- 
lations, the patronage of the bene- 
fice of San Francisco in the Seo of 
Manresa. 

Many traditions concerning St. 
Ignatius have been preserved in 
this pious family. A cross has 
been recently discovered on the 
wall of the chapel of S. Ignacio 
enfermo during some repairs, simi- 
lar to that in the Santa Cueva. 
And there is a curious old family 
painting commemorating his illness 
in the house. The convalescent 
saint is represented sitting up in 
bed, supported by the left hand of 
Don Andres, who with his right 
offers him a cup of broth. Behind 
are Dona Angela, his mother, Dona 
Ines, his wife, and all the other 
members of the household, each 
one with some restoring dish in 
hand. In front of the bed is the 
inscription : 

Stvs 
Ignativs 
de Loyola 

lang 

vens 

that is, St. Ignatius ill. 

At the foot of the bed is another: 

Haec omniaevenervnt 22 Ivlii anno 1522. 

All these things took place July 
22, 1522. His illness, by this, ap- 
pears to have occurred about four 
months after his arrival at Manresa. 

The honor of having St. Ignatius 
was disputed by many noble fami- 
lies of the place. In the patio of 
one of the houses he sometimes 
visited, in the street called Sobre- 
roca, is a picture of him, now in- 
dulgenced by the diocesan au- 
thority. 

The college of St. Ignatius was 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



829 



founded in 1603. The ayuntami- 
ento of Manresa, touched by a dis- 
course during the Lent of 1601 at 
the Seo, purchased the ancient 
hospital of Santa Lucia, and estab- 
lished the Jesuits here soon after. 
The college became a flourishing 
institution, and they were before 
long able to build a new church 
and adorn the precious chapel of 
the Rapto. 

When Carlos III. issued the de- 
cree for the expulsion of the Jesu- 
its, April 3, 1767, the residence at 
Manresa was at first overlooked, 
and the fathers, as usual, celebrated 
the octave of the Maravilloso Rapto. 
On the very day it ended, April n, 
the eve of Palm Sunday, at the 
same hour when St. Ignatius awoke 
from his mysterious trance, crying : 
"Ay Jesus! Ay Jesus!" the ven- 
erable fathers were seized and car- 
ried away amid the tears of the citi- 
zens to Tarragona, where they 
were put on a vessel of war, and, 
with nine hundred from Aragon, 
were transported to Ajaccio. The 
island of Corsica had on it at one 
time three thousand Jesuits who, 
for no crime, had been barbarously 
torn from their native land. Among 
them were the venerable Pignatel- 
li and several who were eminent 
for letters. But on the 15111 
of August, 1769, Napoleon Bona- 
parte was born at Ajaccio, who prov- 
ed the scourge of Spain. 

The churches of the Jesuits 
were dismantled and the tempo- 
ralities sold. The vestments and 
sacred vessels were given to poor 
churches of the diocese, but even 
these were mostly sold afterwards 
to help to defray the expenses of 
the war of independence. The 
chalice of Philip V., given to the 
Santa Cueva, was, however, saved. 

Manresa has the glory of having 
been the first city in Catalonia to 



sound the war-cry against Bona- 
parte, and by the battle of Bruch, 
in which a handful of men rout- 
ed the French army, to convince 
Spain that the Great Captain's 
troops were not invincible. After 
the French had captured Tortosa 
they came to Manresa, and the 
house of the Santa Cueva was turn- 
ed into a barrack and the church 
into a stable. With the restoration 
of the Bourbons returned the Jesu- 
its. At Manresa the people rang 
the bells, and went out to meet 
them with cries of Viva la Com- 
pania ! The mules were taken from 
their carriages, and men drew them 
to the Seo, where the clergy and 
people with tears of emotion chant- 
ed the TtDeum. On July 25, i8i6 
they were reinstated in their for- 
mer places, the keys of the Santa 
Cueva were presented to them in a 
silver basket, and on the 3151 
of July the festival of St. Ig- 
natius was celebrated with solemn 
pomp in the Seo, with a congratu- 
latory discourse on the restoration 
of the society. 

Manresa has always been a reli- 
gious city, as is to be seen by the 
number of solidly-built churches 
and the remains of its monastic in- 
stitutions. When St. Ignatiusquitted 
the place it is said there was hard- 
ly a person left unconverted. And 
when he was canonized there was 
a general explosion of joy, exhi- 
bited in Spanish fashion by dances, 
comedies, Moorish fights, illumina- 
tions, fire-works, salvos of artillery, 
triumphal arches and bowers all of 
which contrast strangely with the 
penitential life of thesaint in hiscave. 

There is something very friendly 
and cordial about the people. In- 
quiring our way to the Seo of an 
old woman, she said as she pointed 
it out : " Go with God ; may he 
preserve you from all ill." 



830 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



We went on through the steep, 
narrow streets, which are often 
hewn out of the rock. The houses 
show traces of war and violence, 
and would be gloomy but for the 
galleries and hanging gardens with 
flowers and orange-trees. The wo- 
men were gossiping from balcony 
to balcony. The plazas were lively 
with trade. Everywhere was an 
interesting picture of Spanish life. 
In one place we passed a group 
of women around a well, washing 
at a huge tank, beating their clothes 
with wooden paddles, all laughing, 
all talking, all looking up with a 
flash of wonderful expression in 
their brown faces. 

The Seo is an immense Gothic 
edifice, the first stone of which was 
laid October 9, 1328, but the crypt 
is several centuries older. The 
nave is of enormous width, which 
gives it an air of grandeur, and 
there are some fine stained win- 
dows, though greatly injured by 
the French. It is gloomy, but, 
when lighted up for a solemn ser- 
vice, presents an imposing appear- 
ance. There are queer Saracens' 
heads on the walls of the choir, and 
steps lead to one of those subter- 
ranean churches full of solemn 
gloom so favorable to meditation 
and solitary prayer. 

Among the notable things to be 
seen at Manresa is the Pozo di 
Gallina, where took place what is 
called the primer milagro of St. Ig- 
natius. Tradition says, as he was 
crossing the principal street of the 
city, called Sobreroca, on his way 
from the Carmen to the hospital of 
Santa Lucia, he met a child crying 
for fear of her mother, because the 
hen she was carrying home had es- 
caped and fallen into an old well 
close by. Touched by her grief, 
the saint paused a moment, as if in 
prayer, and, while he stood, the 



water in the well rose to the brim, 
bringing with it the hen, which 
with a smile he restored to the 
child and went on his way. An 
oratory was afterwards built here, 
and the healing virtues of the wa- 
ter such is the power of charity 
have often been experienced by 
the people of Manresa, as is testi- 
fied by the inscription from the pen 
of the learned Padre Ramon Sola : 

Disce, viator, amor quid sit quo Igna- 
tius ardet 

Testis aqua est, supplex hanc bibe, doc- 
tus abi. 

S. Ignacio de Loyola 
en el afio del Sefior de 1522 
hizo aqui el primer milagro 
sacando viva a flote hasta el 
borde una gallina ya ahogada. 

This favored hen naturally be- 
came an object of special care, and 
it seems to have become the ances- 
tress of an illustrious breed which 
kings did not disdain to have set 
before them at table. 

We can fancy this gallina resuci- 
tada laying now and then an egg, as 
Hawthorne says of the Pyncheon 
hens, " not for any pleasure of her 
own, but that the world might not 
absolutely lose so admirable a 
breed." Brillat-Savarin pretended 
that the redeeming merit of the 
Jesuits was the discovery and intro- 
duction of the turkey into Europe.* 
Had he only known of this race of 
hens, rendered meet for the palates 
of princes by their great founder, 
they might have had an additional 
title to his approbation. Father 
Prout, speaking of the Jesuits being 
accused of having a hand in every 
political disturbance for the last 
three hundred years, compares 
them to Mother Carey's chickens, 

* Turkeys were introduced into France by the 
Jesuits in 1570, in which year they were first eaten 
at M^zieres, department of Ardennes, at the mar- 
riage of Charles IX. and Elizabeth of Austria. 



The Holy Cave of Manresa. 



831 



which always make their appear- 
ance in a storm, and, for this rea- 
son, give rise to a belief among 
sailors that it is the fowl that has 
raised the tempest ! How ominous, 
then, was this Spanish hen of Man- 
resa ! We could not find out wheth- 
er there are any scions of this time- 
honored race still living in their 
ancestral coops, or whether they 
were all suppressed with the order 
as dangerous to the state ; but we 
do know that six of the breed three 
/0/Avand three pollas in a line di- 
rect from the famous hen, were, in 
the beginning of the year 1603 (the 
miracle of the Pozo, it must be re- 
membered, took place in 1522), 
sent to her Catholic majesty, Queen 
Margaret of Austria, who received 
them with as many demonstrations 
of pleasure as would have been 
consistent with royal etiquette in 
Spain. 

We trust no supposititious egg 
was ever smuggled into the nest of 
this illustrous gallina to deteriorate 
the breed. Pere Vaniere, a learned 
French Jesuit of note in the last 
century, has described in an able 
Latin poem, part of which has been 
translated by Delille, the sorrows 
of a poor old hen when she found, 
for instance, that she had hatched 
a brood of ducks, which became 
the torment of her life by their 
inclination for 'water. As Hood 
has it : 

" The thing was strange a contradiction 
It seemed of nature and her works, 
For little chicks beyond conviction 
To float without the aid of corks." 

Imagine, then, the woes of this ma- 
ternal hen, in her new-fledged pride 
of race, should any Moorish or 
Guinea fowl taint her ennobled 
Spanish blood ! 

There is a hotel at Manresa, 
called the Chicken, of about the 
same stamp as the San Domingo, 



though Mr. Bayard Taylor, whose 
experience in such matters trans- 
cends ours, satisfied himself that, 
"although the Saint has altogether 
a better sound than the Chicken, 
the Chicken is really better than the 
Saint!" 

It was one of St. Ignatius' favo- 
rite devotions, while at Manresa, to 
visit the sanctuary of Our Lady of 
Viladordis, on the banks of the 
Llobregat, about three miles from 
the city. The last time he went 
there he gave his hempen girdle of 
three strands to the tenant of a 
neighboring farm-house who had 
often offered him hospitality, and 
assured him that as long as he and 
his posterity should continue to aid 
the poor they would never lack the 
means of a decent livelihood, and, 
though they might not attain great 
wealth, they would never be re- 
duced to absolute poverty ; which 
prophecy has been fulfilled to the 
present day, for the family still 
continues to exist. In this rural 
church a solemn jubilee is celebrat- 
ed every year on Whitmonday in 
memory of St. Ignatius. Over the 
altar is a picture of the saint inscrib- 
ed : " St. Ignatius, founder of the 
Jesuits, in the year 1522, the first 
of his conversion, frequented this 
church of Our Lady ot Viladordis, 
and here received singular favors 
from Heaven, in memory of which 
this devout and grateful parish de- 
dicates this portrait, Feb. 19, 1632." 

In 1860 Queen Isabella II., the 
great-granddaughter of Carlos III., 
came to Manresa, and, after visiting 
the Santa Cueva, expressed a wish 
to the city authorities that a monu- 
ment so important in the religious 
history of Spain, and associated 
with the chief glory of Manresa, 
should be carefully preserved. 
This excited fresh interest. Spon- 
taneous contributions from the tie- 



832 



Thf Holy Cave of Manresa. 



votes tie S. Ignacio flowed in for the 
restoration of the church and the 
ornamentation of the cave. To 
the former was transferred the 
miraculous image of Nuestra Senora 
de la Guia, before which St. Igna- 
tius often used to pray. Pope Pius 
IX, conferred new indulgences on 
the Holy Cave, and its ancient 
glory had already revived when 
the revolution of September, 1868, 
broke out, overthrowing the royal 
government and compelling the 
Jesuits once more to take the road 
of exile. But the bishop of the 
diocese has watched over the cave, 
and it continues to be visited by 
pilgrims from all parts of the world. 
A visit to the Santa Cueva marks 
an era in one's life ; for it is one of 
those places that produce an inef- 
faceable impression on the soul. 
Thank God! there are such places 
where the claims of a higher life 
assert themselves with irresistible 
force. Who that ever made a re- 
treat with the Spiritual Exercises in 
hand has not turned longingly to 
the Holy Cave in which they were 
written ? Followed there, they seem 
to acquire new significance and au- 
thority. Wonderful book, that for 
three hundred years has on the 
one hand been regarded with ad- 
miration and love, and on the other 
been the object of distortion and 
abuse ! Some have gone so far as 
to declare it a book of servilism 
and degradation ; others, more 
happy, look upon it as an inexhaus- 



tible mine of wise directions in the 
practice of virtue. The sons of St. 
Ignatius have never ceased to medi- 
tate on the little volume which em- 
bodies the religious experience of 
their founder. They cherish it the 
more for giving them so large a 
draught in the chalice of ignominy, 
and they carry it with them through 
the wilderness of this world, as the 
children of Israel did the ark, to 
ensure their happy progress in the 
spiritual life. Pope Paul III., in 
his bull Pastoralis Officii, says : 
"Out of our apostolic authority 
and certain knowledge, we approve, 
we praise, we confirm by this docu- 
ment these teachings and ' these 
spiritual exercises, exhorting in the 
Lord, with all our might, the faith- 
ful of both sexes, one and all, to 
make use of these Exercises, so full 
of piety, and to follow their salutary 
directions." 

Manresa may well be proud of 
her Holy Cave, for it was here the 
great soul of St. Ignatius was tem- 
pered for his vast undertakings. 
But he did not indulge in any 
spiritual dalliance. His work once 
planned, he went boldly forth to 
achieve it. 



Forth to his task the giant sped ; 
Earth shook abroad beneath his tread, 
And idols were laid low. 



1 India repaired half Europe's loss ; 
O'er a new hemisphere the cross 

Shone in the azure sky, 
And, from the isles of far Japan 
To the broad Andes, won o'er man 

A bloodless victory !" 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



833 



THE MIRACLE OF SEPTEMBER 16, 1877, 



ABRIDGED FROM THE FRENCH OF M. HENRI LASSERKE. 



IN the month of August, 1874, 
Canon Martignon, previously curd- 
archipretre of Algiers, arrived at 
Lourdes. He was a man of about 
forty years of age, and while in 
Africa had been attacked by an 
affection of the chest which entire- 
ly deprived him of the use of his 
voice ; he had therefore crossed 
the Mediterranean to seek healing 
in the city of Mary. 

At the rocks of Massabielle he 
prayed, drank of the miraculous 
font, and bathed in the piscina, 
but without obtaining the cure he 
sought. 

Not disheartened, he resolved to 
make a novena. This, too, was un- 
accompanied by any change for the 
better. 

" Well, then," he said, " I will 
make a novena of weeks." And 
he took up his abode at Lourdes 
for sixty-three days. 

On the sixty-fourth day, finding 
himself in absolutely the same 
state, he left for Pau, to seek a 
temporary alleviation in the mild- 
ness of its climate. But soon re- 
proaching himself for having quit- 
ted Lourdes, and regarding his 
having done so as an act of weak- 
ness and a want of faith, and, more- 
over, possessing in the depth of 
his heart a conviction that sooner 
or later the Blessed Virgin would 
grant his prayer, he returned to the 
sacred grotto and took up his 
abode in the town. 

An invalid, he constituted him- 
self the guide and guardian of the 
sick and suffering. Pilgrims who 
of late years may have spent any 
VOL. xxvi. 53 



time at Lourdes will recollect 
having seen there a priest, still 
young, with a long, light beard, a 
distinguished countenance, with a 
bright earnestness and sweetness 
in the expression of the eyes ; a 
tall, slight figure, the chest some- 
what narrowed and the shoulders 
bent by suffering a priest who 
led the blind, assisted the lame and 
infirm, to the piscina, and spent the 
whisper of his failing voice in 
cheering and consoling the afflicted. 
This was the Abbe Martignon. 

" If Our Blessed Lady does not 
cure me this time," he would say, 
smiling, "I have made up my mind 
for a novena of years, then a nove- 
na of centuries ; and after that I will 
stop." 

He had the joy of seeing several 
of the sick of whom he had been 
the guide and stay miraculously 
cured ; but he himself, though ex- 
periencing at times some slight al- 
leviation, did not obtain the com- 
plete recovery he sought. 

Did he at last feel that there was 
some secret resistance on the part 
of the Blessed Virgin to grant the 
favor he solicited ? We do not 
know ; but it seemed to us that, 
while his faith continued the same 
and his charity ever on the in- 
crease, the virtue of hope was with 
him gradually turning into that of 
resignation or, to speak more ac 
curately, that he was postponing his 
hope. Happy to remain in this 
corner of the earth, on which the 
feet of the Queen of Heaven had 
rested, and to pray daily at the 
sacred grotto, he did not begin the 



834 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



novena of years and of centuries of 
which he had smilingly spoken. 

" I stay here," he would say, 
" at the disposal of Our Lady of 
Lourdes, like a person sitting in 
an ante-chamber waiting for an au- 
dience. She will hear me when she 
pleases. My turn will come ; I 
shall have my hour or minute, and 
will take care not to let it escape 
me." 

For this hour and this minute he 
waited three years. Then, a few 
months ago, he felt an impulse 
within him urging him to knock 
.again at the heavenly gate. He 
resolved to make a novena which 
should end on the Feast of Our 
Lady of the Seven Dolors. He had 
not observed that, this being a mova- 
,ble feast, the first day of the nove- 
jia would this year (1877) coincide 
with the Nativity of the Blessed 
Virgin,* and that his prayer would 
thus go, as it were, from the birth 
-of Mary to the last sigh of Jesus 
from the cradle of the Mother to 
.the sepulchre of her Son. 

Had the Abbe Martignon been 
cured he would have returned to 
Algeria; and we imagine that if at 
first the Blessed Virgin refused his 
request, it was because she had no 
intention of so soon granting leave 
of departure to such a servant. 
Neither God nor his priest were los- 
ing anything by this refusal. When 
such and such a temporal blessing 
that is to say, the copper coin is 
denied to our prayers, it is because 
the gold and the rich increase are be- 
ing laid up in store for us, either 
in this world or the world to come. 
Besides, a new mission had been 
imposed on the ardent zeal and 
charity of the Abbe Martignon : 



* The Feast of Our Lady of Dolors is on the jd 
Sunday of September. This Sunday, in 1877, fell 
on the i6th i.e., the ninth day after the Nativity of 
Our Lady, which is on the 8th of September. 



one which flowed naturally from 
the function to which he devoted 
himself of consoling the afflicted. 

From the commencement of his 
sojourn at Lourdes he had found a 
man more suffering than the sick 
and more tried than the ordinarily 
afflicted, and to him also he had 
ministered aid and support. He to 
whom we allude the Abbe Pey- 
ramale had had the signal honor of 
receiving a message from heaven, 
and of accomplishing, in spite of 
every obstacle, the divine command. 
But the Blessed Virgin, doubtless 
reserving for him a higher place, 
had said: "I will show him how 
much he must suffer for love of 
me " ; and the most unlooked-for 
troubles had been sent to torture 
his heroic heart. 

By a strange contrast he was at 
the same time on Calvary and on 
Thabor. While his name was cele- 
brated throughout Christendom, 
while he was blessed by the people 
whose beloved father and patriarch 
he was, he had also, especially dur- 
ing these latter times, the bitter 
pain of being misjudged, forsaken, 
and obstinately persecuted in that 
matter which he had most at heart 
in his zeal for the Lord's house. 
Like the Cyrenian, he was the man 
bearing the cross, and his robust 
shoulders were bruised and bleed- 
ing beneath the sacred burden, 
while around his sufferings, as 
around those of his Master, many 
shook their heads, saying : " He has 
been the instrument of Mary; let 
her now help and deliver him!" 

When, at the time of the appari- 
tions, now nearly twenty years ago, 
he had asked Our Lady to make 
roses bloom in the time of snow, 
she, who was in that same place to 
work so many miracles, refused this 
one, and to the priest whom she 
had chosen replied by the austere 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



835 



word, " Penance." The illustrious 
Abbe Peyramale, the priest of the 
Immaculate Conception, had thus 
been condemned to suffer. It was 
he of whom, for some years, the 
Abbe Martignonwas the filial com- 
forter and the friend of every hour. 

It is not our purpose here to 
dwell on the sorrows beneath the 
weight of which sank the venerable 
cure of Lourdes; we would only 
call to mind that, when the basili- 
ca of the grotto was completed and 
enriched with the gifts of all the 
world the basilica which was to be 
the point of arrival for the proces- 
sions commanded by Our Lady he 
undertook to rebuild the parish 
church, which ought to be their 
point of departure. 

He died at his work, without 
having been able to complete it, 
and having more than once an- 
nounced his death as a sort of ne- 
cessity a last sacrifice on his part 
in the interest of the house of 
God. 

The unfinished church had stop- 
ped at the height of the arches. 
Aid on which he had been led to 
rely had failed him, and his efforts 
had been impeded by inconceivable 
hostilities. 

" I shall not enter the promised 
land," he would say; " I shall only 
see it afar off. / must die to repair 
the ruin. When I am here no more, 
all difficulties will be smoothed. 
My death will pay all " sorrowful 
words, which brought tears to his 
eyes and to the eyes of those who 
loved him! We ourselves had the 
sad consolation of being present 
at his departure. God chose the 
Feast of the Nativity of Our Blessed 
Lady to open the gates of eternity 
to her faithful servant. 

Around the death-bed of Mgr. 
Peyramale were his brother and 
other relations, his vicaires, friends, 



and those of his flock who had 
been able to penetrate into his 
room. Among this tearful family 
was the Abbe Martignon, broken 
down with grief, and scarcely think- 
ing of himself, his malady, or his 
cure, or yet of his novena to Our 
Lady of the Seven Dolors, which, 
tby a curious coincidence, was to 
begin that same day. 

Mgr. Peyramale, after a long 
agony, had just rendered his last 
sigh to earth and his immortal 
soul to God. In that hour of grief 
and desolation his friend, while 
raising his heart to her who is the 
Consolatrix Afflictorum, recollected 
his promised novena. 

What was passing in his mind ? 
Kneeling by that bed and holding 
in his the lifeless hands of the cure 
of Lourdes, he remained for some 
time bowed down in silence. Then, 
rising, he said to some of those 
present : " I have just said the first 
prayer of my novena to Our Lady 
of Sorrows, and made my request 
for a cure, in presence of these holy 
remains ; and I conjure Our Lady 
of Lourdes to permit that in her 
own name, and on the ninth day, our 
friend may himself transmit to me 
the answer"; adding: "The choice 
God has made of the 8th of Septem- 
ber to call to himself the Priest of 
the Apparitions sufficiently author- 
izes me to associate his first remem- 
brance (souvenir) with my humble 
supplication." 

Side by side with a great sorrow 
a great hope from this moment en- 
tered in and possessed the heart of 
the sick priest. The thought of 
recovery did not, assuredly, lessen 
his grief for the loss of his friend ; 
but seeing himself henceforth alone 
in France, it was a happiness to 
him to know that his protector was 
in heaven, and that it would be 
doubtless owing to the intervention 



8 3 6 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



of that friend, next to that of God 
and Our Blessed Lady, that he 
should receive' the favor so long 
solicited. 

He spoke of this with conviction. 
It seemed to him that, with such 
an intercessor, the Blessed Virgin 
would, on the ninth day, put herself 
in some sort at the disposal of his 
prayer. He even wrote to Paris, 
to the Rev. Pere Picard of the As- 
sumption, to tell him of his hope. 
Already he spoke of what he would 
do when he was cured, and how he 
would employ himself in furthering 
the unfinished work of the cure of 
Lourdes. He prayed with fervor ; 
friends joined him in his novena; 
and thus the time went on until 
Saturday, the i5th of September 
the eve of the ninth day. 

On this Saturday,* in the morn- 
ing, he received a telegram to tell 
him that M. and Mme. Guerrier 
were on their way to Lourdes, and 
to ask if he would kindly meet them 
at the station with a carriage. 

M. and Mme. Guerrier were ut- 
terly unknown to him. A letter 
only, which he had received from 
the cure of St. Gobain twenty-four 
hours before the telegram, informed 
him that Mme. Guerrier had for 
several years been suffering from a 
very serious illness, and was start- 
ing for Lourdes to seek a cure, full 
of faith that it would be granted. 
This lady and her husband were 
earnestly recommended to the Abbe 
Martignon, as this was their first visit 
to the city of the Blessed Virgin. 

The canon gladly undertook this 
act of charity, and went to the sta- 
tion in good time to meet the three 
o'clock train. Leaving him for a 
time occupied with his Breviary in 
the waiting-room, we will relate by 
what series of circumstances M. 
and Mme. Guerrier were brought 
to Lourdes on that day. 



M. Edouard Guerrier, judge of 
the peace at Beaune, married, about 
fifteen years ago, Mile. Justine Biver, 
a religious and excellent lady. Her 
father was a distinguished physician, 
and her two brothers occupied high 
commercial positions, one being 
general director of the Company of 
St. Gobain, and the other director 
of the celebrated glass manufac- 
tories of St. Gobain and Chauny. 

God had blessed this union with 
three children, healthy and intelli- 
gent, to whose training and educa- 
tion their mother devoted herself, 
bringing them up especially in the 
love of God and of the poor. 

Thus passed eleven years of un- 
broken happiness. In 1874, how- 
ever, a dark cloud suddenly over- 
shadowed this clear sky. The 
health of Mme. Guerrier broke 
down rapidly, and violent head- 
aches, frequent faintings, and in- 
creasing weakness were succeeded 
by a general state of paralysis, 
which seized successively several 
important organs of the frame. 
The spine and lower limbs became 
powerless, and the sight dim and 
enfeebled. The sufferer was una- 
ble to sit up in bed, and obliged to 
remain always lying down. Finally 
the lower limbs became not only in- 
capable of movement but insensible 
to pain, so that, if pinched or prick- 
ed, they remained without feeling. 
During the long fits of fainting it 
often seemed as if life must become 
extinct. Death was knocking at 
the door, and mourning had al- 
ready entered the home lately so 
bright with happiness. 

Unable to continue the educa- 
tion of her children, the poor mo- 
ther could only assist them in 
their religious duties. Night and 
morning they knelt at her bedside, 
adding to their prayers an earnest 
petition for her recovery. 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



837 



In this state Mme. Guerrier had 
continued about two years, when 
Alice, her eldest girl, was about to 
make her First Communion, on 
April 2, 1876. This great day con- 
stantly occupied the thoughts of 
this Christian mother. She thought 
of it for her child, and also a little 
for herself. It seemed to her as if, 
in coming to take possession of this 
young heart, the compassionate Sa- 
viour would surely bring some relief 
to her own great needs, and leave in 
the house some royal token of his 
visit and sojourn there. Had he 
not, on entering the house of Si- 
mon Peter, healed the sick mother- 
in- law, enabling her to rise and serve 
him ? 

"I am certain of it," she said. 
*' On that day I shall get up and 
walk." 

Alice made her First Communion 
on the appointed day ; and in the 
evening the priest who had prepar- 
ed her, and a few members of the 
family, were assembled at dinner. 
No change, however, had taken 
place in the state of the sick lady, 
and her place was remaining empty, 
as for so many months past, when, 
at the moment the party were 
about to sit down to table, sudden- 
ly recovering her lost powers, she 
rose, dressed, and came to take her 
place amid her family circle. . Her 
sight was clear, the spine had re- 
covered its strength, and she walk- 
ed and moved with the same ease 
as before her illness. 

The priest intoned a hymn of 
thanksgiving, all present answer- 
ing. Every one felt that He who 
that morning had given himself in 
the divine Banquet was invisibly 
present at the family feast. Dur- 
ing the night Mme. Guerrier's 
sleep was calm and profound ; but 
in the morning, when she attempt- 
ed to rise, her limbs refused their 



service, having fallen back into 
their helpless state. Was it, then, a 
dream or an illusion ? Was it an 
effect of the nerves, the imagination, 
or the will ? 

The day of her daughter's First 
Communion He would not disap- 
point the mother's hope and faith. . . . 
But afterwards he willed her to un- 
derstand that, for purposes known 
to him alone, she was still to bear 
the weight of her trial. The in- 
tolerable headaches returned no 
more, the faintings ceased, and the 
sight remained clear and distinct. 
From this day the resignation of 
Mme. Guerrier, already very great, 
became greater still. Her soul 
as well as her body had received 
grace from on high. The dim- 
ness of vision which had hidden 
from her the faces of her hus- 
band and children had disappear- 
ed before the breath of Heaven, 
and, although she remained infirm 
and always stretched upon her bed, 
she was filled with thankfulness 
and joy. From the beginning of 
her illness she had never seen her 
aged parents. She lived at Beaune, 
in the Cote d'Or, and they at St. 
Gobain, in the department of 
Aisne, one hundred and forty 
leagues away, and, Dr. Biver being 
then in his eighty-second year, any 
journey was a difficulty to him. 
His daughter longed to see him 
once more, and from April to Sep- 
tember this longing continued to 
increase. In vain the exceeding 
risk as well as difficulty of travel- 
ling in her state was represented to 
her ; she at last persuaded her hus- 
band to consent to the imprudent 
undertaking upon which she had 
set her heart. 

As the physicians had foreseen, 
the journey very seriously aggra- 
vated Mme. Guerrier's sufferings, 
which increased to such a degree 



838 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



that, even after some weeks of re- 
pose, it was impossible for her to at- 
tempt to return to Beaune. The 
slightest movement often brought 
on an alarming crisis. 

The consequence of such a state, 
under existing circumstances, was 
nothing less than the breaking up 
of the family. The husband, on 
account of his duties as judge of 
the peace, was compelled to reside 
at Beaune, while the condition of 
his wife rendered it impossible for 
her to quit St. Gobain. She had 
asked to have her children with 
her, and thus, between every two 
audiences, when possible, M. Guer- 
rier took a journey of one hundred 
and forty leagues and back, in 
order to spend a few days with 
those who made all the happiness 
of his life. 

Nearly a year passed in this way. 
A moment of improvement was 
constantly watched for which 
might permit Mme. Guerrier to 
travel ; but this moment was waited 
for in vain. On the contrary, the 
paralysis was beginning to affect 
the left arm, and the thought of 
her journey thither made that of 
the homeward one very alarming. 

Last August, M. Guerrier being 
at St. Gobain in the same painful 
state of hope deferred, his wife as- 
tonished him by saying : " My dear, 
I wish to make a pilgrimage to 
Lourdes. I shall be cured there. 
You must take me." 

M. Guerrier, seriously alarmed at 
this proposal, energetically with- 
stood an idea which he believed 
could not be acted upon without a 
fatal result. 

" My dear wife, you are asking 
impossibilities," he said. " Think 
what it has cost us for having, 
eleven months ago, yielded to your 
wishes by attempting the journey 
from Beaune to St. Gobain ! Re- 



member that from that time you 
have not even been able to bear 
being carried into the garden or 
drawn a few paces in a sofa-chair. 
And yet you would venture to tra- 
vel across France, to a part of the 
country where we are utter stran- 
gers, with the pleasant prospect of 
being unable to get away again \ 
Do not think of it, dearest ! It 
would be tempting God and run- 
ning a risk that would be simply 
madness." 

" I am certain that I shall be 
cured at Lourdes," was the an- 
swer, " and I wish to go thither." 

It was a struggle of reason 
against faith and hope, and, both 
parties being resolute, the struggle 
lasted for some days. Mme. Guer- 
rier's faith, however, communicated 
itself to her two brothers; they ad- 
vised her husband to grant her 
wish, and he, weary of contention, 
at last gave a reluctant consent. 
Provided with a medical certificate 
as to the state of his wife's health, 
he requested of the minister a few 
weeks' leave of absence, in order to 
take her to the Pyrenees. 

It was on Saturday, the 8th of Sep- 
tember, Feast of the Nativity, that 
the journey was resolved upon. 

M. Guerrier felt, however, no 
small anxiety at the prospect (in 
case his worst fears should be real- 
ized) of finding himself in a place 
where, knowing no one, he could 
expect no aid or support beyond 
the services to be had at hotels. 

" If only," he said, " I knew of 
any one there who could guide us 
a little ! I shrink from this plunge 
into the unknown." 

On the loth or nth of Septem- 
ber the Abbe Poindron, cure of St. 
Gobain, saw, announced in a news- 
paper, the death of Mgr. Peyra- 
male, and in the account given of 
his last moments observed the 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



839 



name of the Abbe Martignon. He 
went immediately to M. Guerrier, 
and said : " You will have some 
one at Lourdes to receive and 
direct you. I know Canon Martig- 
non, and am writing to recommend 
you particularly to his kind care. 
On the way telegraph to him the 
hour of your arrival. He will be 
prepared for it." 

The exact time of the dreaded 
departure was then fixed for Wed- 
nesday, the 1 2th of September. It 
was arranged that the travellers 
should stop at Paris for a day's re- 
pose, and that the rest of the jour- 
ney should, if possible, be made 
without another halt until they 
reached Lourdes. An invalid car- 
riage was engaged of the railway 
company to be in readiness. 

Great was the anxiety of the 
family. . . . The children, however, 
rejoiced beforehand, implicitly be- 
lieving that their mother would be 
cured: Marie, the youngest, who 
never remembered seeing her other- 
wise than in bed and infirm, ex- 
claimed : " Mamma will come back 
to us like another mamma, and we 
shall have a mamma who can 
walk." 

"And, "joined in little Paul, who 
in this respect had sometimes en- 
vied other children of his acquain- 
tance, " mamma will be able to take 
us on her lap." 

"Yes," said Alice, "she will 
come back quite well." 

In order to spare Mme. Guer- 
rier's aged father the uncertainties 
and anxieties which preceded the 
decision, he had not been told what 
was in contemplation until every- 
thing was arranged, and the only 
thing that remained was to obtain 
his consent. 

The venerable physician was 
deeply moved on hearing from his 
daughter her intention of visiting 



that distant sanctuary to seek from 
the Mother of God a cure which 
human science had proved power- 
less to effect. He consented with- 
out hesitation, and, when the mo- 
ment of departure arrived, raised 
his hands over his afflicted child in 
a parting benediction. 

The journey was painful. At 
Paris it was not without great diffi- 
culty that Mme. Guerrier was trans- 
ported to the house of her brother, 
M. Hector Biver. 

Their brother-in-law, M. Louis 
Bonnel, professor at the lycte at 
Versailles, met them there. " I 
have just ascertained," he said, 
" that Henri Lasserre is at Lourdes. 
I knew him formerly ; he is a friend 
of mine. Here is a letter for him." 
And thus it was that the writer 
of the present account was enabled 
later to learn all its details. 

Notwithstanding the courage of 
the sick lady, her prostration was 
so complete when the train entered 
the station at Bordeaux that her 
husband dared not allow her then 
to go further, and insisted on her 
again taking a day's repose. 

On Saturday, the i5th of Sep- 
tember, the travellers arrived at 
Lourdes. The Abbe" Martignon 
was at the station, having prepared 
everything necessary. Two porters 
bore Mme. Guerrier to a commo- 
dious carriage, and the three re- 
paired to the furnished apartments 
of Mme. Detroyat, where the abb 
had engaged a room. This room 
was on the first or second story, 
and the helpless state of Mme. 
Guerrier rendered it absolutely ne- 
cessary that she should have one 
on the ground floor. The canon 
had not been made aware of this, 
and was consequently in much per- 
plexity. 

" Do not be uneasy," said Mme. 



840 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



Detroyat. " You are very likely to 
find a room that Will suit you, 
close by, at the house of M. La- 
vigne." 

M. Lavigne is the owner of a 
very pleasant house, surrounded by 
shrubs and flowers. The garden 
gat opens on the highroad which 
passes through Lourdes and forms 
its principal street. The house is 
in the lower part of the town, be- 
tween the citi and the station. 

M. Lavigne, with the greatest 
kindness, put his house at the dis- 
posal of the pilgrims, and thus 
they were soon installed in a large 
room on the ground floor, tempo- 
rarily transformed into a bedroom 
and opening into the garden. 

After resting for a time they re- 
paired to the grotto; M. Guerrier 
having engaged two men-servants 
to assist him in lifting his wife from 
the carriage to the foot of the statue 
of Mary Immaculate. It was then 
about five o'clock. There it was 
that we first saw Mme. Guerrier. 
Her husband gave us the letter of 
M. Louis Bonnel, and thus we be- 
came acquainted with the trials of 
this family. 

The prayer of Mme. Guerrier 
was ardent and absorbed. Mo- 
tionless and fixed, as if in ecstasy, 
her gaze never quitted the material 
representation of the Holy Virgin, 
who had appeared where now her 
image stands, and whom she had 
come so far to invoke. Every- 
thing in her countenance and as- 
pect expressed faith and hope. 

Before setting out Mme. Guer- 
rier had received absolution, and as 
much as possible disposed her soul 
for the reception of the great grace 
she implored. She was ready. 
Her husband, though a practical 
Christian, was still a little behind- 
hand. Burdened as he had been 
with all the weight of temporal 



anxieties, he had not been quite so 
active in arranging for his spiritual 
needs. With an exceeding watch- 
fulness he had attended to every- 
thing relating to the comfort of his 
charge, but the preparation of him- 
self he had delayed, awaiting for 
this, the decisive moment and the 
latest hour. 

At Lourdes this hour came. 

Late in the evening he request- 
ed the Abbe Martignon to hear his 
confession. As he had all along 
intended, he desired on the mor- 
row to receive Holy Communion 
with his wife. 

And thus in the sacrament of 
penance, after the avowal of his 
faults, he had the consolation of 
pouring out his troubles and deep 
anxieties into the sympathizing 
heart of his confessor. The details 
of these confidences are the secret 
of God, but this we know well : that 
the confessor, who is God's lieute- 
nant for the time, and who, in the 
name of the Father of all, pro- 
nounces the words of pity and par- 
don, often experiences, more fully 
than other men, the sentiment of 
deepest compassion. And great 
was the compassion of the Abbe 
Martignon for the misfortune of 
this distressed husband, for the suf- 
ferings of the wife, and the mourn- 
ing of their family. He put aside 
all consideration of himself to think 
only for them. Not that he forgot 
his own sufferings, or the bright 
hope with which he was looking 
forward to the morrow ; on the 
contrary, he remembered this ; but 
a thought of a higher order, which 
had already presented itself to his 
mind, recurred to him now, and he 
at once acted upon it. 

" Let your wife have confidence," 
he said to his penitent, " and do 
you have confidence as well. I 
saw her when she was praying this 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



841 



evening at the grotto. She is one 
of those who triumph over the 
heart of God and compel a mira- 
cle." Then, telling him about his 
own novena, he added : " To-mor- 
row, then, at eight o'clock I shall 
celebrate the Mass which is my 
last hope ! . . . Well, say to Mme. 
Guerrier that not only will I say 
this Mass/<?r her, but that, if I am 
to have a share in the sensible answer 
which I solicit, I give up this share to 
her, I make over to her intention 
all the previous prayers of this no- 
vena, and / substitute her intentions 
for mine, so that, if the answer is to 
be a cure, // shall not be mine but 
hers. Let her, before she goes to 
sleep to-night, and to-morrow on 
awaking, associate with her prayers 
the name of Mgr. Peyramale, and 
at eight o'clock come, both of you, 
to my Mass at the basilica. I have 
good hope that something will hap- 
pen." 

In accepting with simplicity such 
an offer as this M. and Mme. Guer- 
rier could not measure the heroism 
and the extent of the sacrifice which 
the Abbe Martignon was making 
in their favor. For this the know- 
ledge of a long past was necessary 
a past of which they knew nothing. 

The sick lady did not fail to 
mingle in her prayers the name of 
Mgr. Peyramale, and towards eight 
o'clock in the morning she was 
taken to the basilica to be present 
at the last Mass of this novena, her 
feeling of assured confidence in her 
recovery being singularly strength- 
ened by the noble act of self-de- 
nial made in her favor. 

Since the previous day the crypt 
and upper church had been filled 
by the pilgrims from Marseilles. It 
would have been difficult to carry 
a sick person through the dense 
multitude, especially one to whom 
the least shock or movement caus- 



ed suffering and fatigue. One of 
the first chapels on entering was 
therefore chosen in which to say 
the Mass. It happened to be the 
first on the left, dedicated to Ste. 
Germaine Cousin. 

Mme. Guerrier heard the Mass 
seated on a chair, her feet, abso- 
lutely inert, being placed on a prie- 
dieu in front of her. 

While reading the epistle the re- 
membrance of Mgr. Peyramale sud- 
denly presented itself with extra- 
ordinary clearness before the mind 
of the celebrant, when he came to 
the last lines, and saw these words, 
whose striking fitness impressed 
itself irresistibly upon him : 

" The Lord . . . hath so magnifi- 
ed thy name this day that thy praise 
shall not depart out of the mouth 
of men, who shall be mindful of 
the power of the Lord for ever ; for 
that thou hast not spared thy life 
by reason of the distress and tribu- 
lation of thy people, but in the 
presence of the Lord our God thou 
hast repaired our ruin" * 

" I must die to repair the ruin," 
had often been the words of Mgr. 
Peyramale. 

At the moment of the Elevation 
all were kneeling except the para- 
lyzed lady. In her powerlessness 
she was compelled to remain re- 
clining, the sacred Host being 
brought to her where she lay. 

Scarcely had she received the 
Blessed Sacrament when she felt 
in herself a strange power which 
seemed as if impelling her to rise 
and kneel, while an inner voice 
seemed to command her to do so. 

Near to her knelt her husband, 
absorbed in prayer and thanksgiv- 

* Hodie nomen tuum ita magnificavit, ut non re- 
cedat laus tua de ore hominum, qui memores fucrint 
virtu t is Domini in sternum, pro quibus non peper- 
cisti aniraac tuae propter angustias et tribulationem 
generis tui, sed subvenisti ruinz ante conspectum 
Dei nostri (Epistle in the Mass of Our Lady of 
the Seven Dolors, third Sunday in September). 



842 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



ing after Communion. He heard 
the soft rustling of a dress, looked 
up, and saw his wife kneeling by his 
side. 

Respect for the holy place alone 
prevented the exclamation of won- 
der that rose to his lips. Instinc- 
tively he looked towards the altar 
it was at the moment of the Dominus 
vobiscum and his eyes met those of 
the priest, which were radiant with 
joy and emotion. At the Last 
Gospel Mme. Guerrier rose with- 
out effort and continued standing. 
As for her husband, he could 
scarcely remain upright, his knees 
trembled so. He gazed at his wife, 
afraid to speak to her or to believe 
the testimony of his senses, while 
she remained praying and giving 
thanks in the greatest calmness and 
recollectedness of spirit. 

The priest laid aside his sacred 
vestments and knelt at a corner of 
the altar to make his thanksgiving, 
with what fervor may be imagined. 

The sign he had asked had been 
given, luminous and unmistak- 
able, on the ninth day, when, at the 
Mass said by himself, the request- 
ed answer came which by an heroic 
act of charity he had transferred to 
another. Whatever may have been 
the joy of the recovered lady, that 
of the priest was greater still. His 
friend, the Cure Peyramale, now in 
heaven, had already begun to mani- 
fest his presence there, while the 
circumstances attending the mira- 
cle seemed to show that Mary her- 
self took in hand the glorification 
of the faithful servant who had 
been here below the minister of her 
work. 

Neither the Abbe Martignon nor 
those who had accompanied him 
had then paid any attention to the 
details of the little side-chapel in- 
to which a hand more delicate and 



strong than that of man had led 
them ; and yet the stones, the 
sculptures, and inscriptions there 
were so many voices which repeat- 
ed the same name. It was the 
first chapel on entering, and the 
commencement of the basilica. 
Under the window, on three large 
slabs of marble, is inscribed an 
abridged account of the eighteen 
apparitions, including the message 
with which Bernadette was charged 
by Our Blessed Lady : " Go and 
tell the priests that I wish a chapel 
to be built to me here " a mes- 
sage which indicated the mission 
and the person of him who had 
dug the foundation and laid the 
first stone. 

Above the great arch which 
forms the entrance to this chapel 
is inscribed the -word." Penitence" 
the answer to the request for roses 
to bloom in February, and which 
spoke of suffering ; while on the 
right of the altar, over the smaller 
arch leading to the next chapel, 
the sculptor has represented Simon 
the Cyrenian bearing the cross of 
Jesus. 

On the altar is carved the young 
shepherdess saint (also of the 
south of France) who seemed best 
to typify the favored child of 
Lourdes namely, the pure and in- 
nocent Ste. Germaine Cousin. Ber- 
nadette was wont to say : " Of all my 
lambs I love the smallest best." 
Ste. Germaine is represented with a 
lamb at her feet, while behind her 
is the dog, symbol of Vigilance, Fi- 
delity, and Strength, these virtues 
recalling the energetic pastor who 
had never suffered persecution to 
touch the child of Mary. 

If, in granting this cure, Our 
Lady of Lourdes had not intended 
specially to associate with it the- 
remembrance of her servant, would 
she not have chosen another mo- 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



843 



ment than this ninth day, asked for 
beforehand, another//*?^ than this 
significative chapel, and another cir- 
cumstance than the last Mass of the 
novena made by that servant's in- 
timate friend? In all these deli- 
cate harmonies of detail we seem 
to perceive the divine hand. 

We resume the narrative. 

After her act of thanksgiving 
Mme. Guerrier rose from her knees, 
calm and serene, without the least 
excitement, physical or moral, but 
still radiant from the heavenly con- 
tact, and, turning to her husband, 
she said: "Give me your arm, 
dear; let us go down." 

Still fearing that what he saw 
was too good to last,'M. Guerrier 
wished to summon the porters. 

" No," said the Abbe Martignon ; 
"let her walk." 

Taking her husband's arm, she 
pressed it for a moment to her 
heart, full of happiness and grati- 
tude ; then, with a firmer step than 
he, descended the two steps of the 
chapel and crossed the nave. 

The Marseilles pilgrims throng- 
ed the church, singing the power 
of the Immaculate Mother of God, 
not knowing that close beside them, 
in a little side-chapel, during the 
stillness of a Low Mass, that benig- 
nant power had just been put 
forth. 

On leaving the basilica Mme. 
Guerrier descended with ease the 
twenty-five steps of the stone 
flight at the foot of which the car- 
riage was waiting. 

The coachman gazed at Mme. 
Guerrier in amazement and re- 
mained motionless, until, on a sign 
from her husband, he got down 
and opened the door. 

"No," said the cured lady; "I 
wish to go to the grotto." 

"Certainly; we will drive there." 



" Not at all. Your arm is enough. 
I will walk." 

" She is cured," said the Abbe 
Martignon; "let her do as she 
wishes." 

So, all together, they walked to 
the grotto. 

Here Mme. Guerrier made hei 
second act of thanksgiving before 
the image of Mary Immaculate. 
Then, after drinking of the miracu- 
lous spring, she went to the pis- 
cina, in which, though cured, she 
wished to bathe. After this im- 
mersion she lost entirely a certain 
stiffness which had remained, and 
which had somewhat impeded the 
free play of the articulations. 

She made a point of returning 
on foot to the town, the carriage 
preceding at a slow pace ; but 
about half-way the Abbe Martig- 
non said, smiling : " Madame, you 
are cured, but I am not ; and I 
must own that I can go no further. 
In charity to me let us get into the 
carriage." 

"Willingly," she replied, and, 
hastening to it, she sprang lightly 
in. 

They traversed Lourdes, until, a 
little below the old parish church, 
they turned into the Rue de Lan- 
gelle, and stopped near the rising 
walls of the new one. 

Mme. Guerrier and her com- 
panions alighted, and, descending 
some steep wooden steps, entered 
the crypt. Here was a tomb, as 
yet without inscription. She sprin- 
kled some holy water over it with 
a laurel spray that lay there, and 
then knelt down and made her 
third act of thanksgiving by the 
venerated remains of Mgr. Peyra- 
male. 

During the week which had fol- 
lowed the death of this holy priest 
no pilgrimage had appeared in the 
mourning town. It was on this 



844 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



same day of glory that the first, that 
of Catholic Marseilles, came to pray 
at his tomb, and thus the first crown 
(from a distance) placed upon it 
bears the date of the event we have 
just related : " Les Pelerins Mar- 
seillais, 16 Septembre, 1877." 

When M. and Mme. Guerrier 
returned to the house of M. La- 
vigne great was the joy of those 
who had so kindly received them. 
They regarded this miracle as a 
benediction upon their house, and 
heard with deepest interest the de- 
tails of what had taken place. 

"Madame," then said M. La- 
vigne, " are you aware into what 
place exactly Providence led you 
in bringing you to us ? ... You 
are in the house which was the 
presbytery of Lourdes at the time 
of the apparitions ; and you occupy 
the room in which M. le Cure Pey- 
ramale questioned Bernadette and 
received from her mouth the com- 
mands of the Blessed Virgin." 

After remaining some days at 
Lourdes M. and Mme. Guerrier 
returned to St. Gobain. The jour- 
ney was rapid and without fatigue. 
Passing over its earlier details, we 
quote the following portions of a 
letter from M. Guerrier, now be- 
fore us : 

" When we reached Chauny my 
wife's younger brother, M. Alfred 
Biver, was waiting for us at the 
station, full of anxiety ; for, in 
spite of the letters and telegrams, 
he could not believe. What was 
his surprise when my beloved wife 
threw herself into his arms ! a 
surprise from which he could not 
recover, and which drew from him 
repeated exclamations during the 
drive of fourteen or fifteen kilome- 
tres from Chauny to St. Gobain. 
We drove rapidly, for we were ea- 
ger to reach home. How long the 
way appeared ! At last there was 



the house ! It was then about five 
in the evening. We saw the whole 
family waiting for us, great and 
small : sisters, sisters-in-law, ne- 
phews, nieces, and, above all, our 
dear little ones all were at the 
door, eager to make sure that their 
happiness was real. 

" Ah ! when they saw their moth- 
er, sister, aunt alight alone from 
the carriage and .hasten towards 
them, it was a picture which no 
human pencil could paint. What 
joy ! what tears ! what embraces ! 
The mother of my Justine was 
never weary of embracing the 
daughter whom Our Lady of 
Lourdes restored to her upright, 
walking with a firm step cured. 

" Detained by his eighty-three 
years, her father was in his sitting- 
room up a few stairs. We mount- 
ed ; he was standing at the door, 
his hands trembling more from 
happiness than age, and his noble 
countenance glistening with tears. 

" ' My daughter ! . . .' 

" Mme. Guerrier knelt before him. 
' Father,' she said, ' you blessed 
me when, incurably afflicted, I 
started for Lourdes ; bless me now 
that I return to you miraculously 
cured as I said I should. . . .' 

" And, as if nothing were to be 
wanting to our happiness, it so 
happened that this very day was 
the * fete of her who returned thus 
triumphantly to her father's house. 
What a glad feast of St. Justine we 
celebrated ! 

" But this is not all. The family 
had its large share ; the church also 
must have hers. The excellent cure 
of St. Gobain, the Abbe Poindron, 
had obtained from the lord bishop 
of Soissons authority to have so- 
lemn benediction in thanksgiving 
for the incomparable favor that had 
been granted to us. 

" On the day after our arrival, 



The Miracle of September 16, 1877. 



84* 



therefore, we repaired to the parish 
church, through crowds of awe- 
struck and wondering people. The 
bells were ringing joyously, and the 
church was full as on days of great 
solemnity. Above the congrega- 
tion rose the statue of Notre Dame 
de Lourdes, and, facing it, a place 
was prepared for her whom Mary 
had deigned to heal. The priest 
ascended the pulpit, and related 
simply and without comment the 
event that was the occasion of 
the present ceremony, after which 
some young girls, veiled and clad 
in white, took upon their shoulders 
the statue of Our Lady of Lourdes, 
and the procession began ; my dear 
wife and myself walking immediate- 
ly behind the image of our hea- 
venly benefactress, amid the enthu- 
siastic singing of hymns of praise 
and the triumphal sound of the 
organ. . . . Then the Te Deum 
burst forth. Our Lord God was 
upon the altar. ..." 

If earth has festivals like this, 
what must be the festivals of Para- 
dise ? 

Here we would fain close our 
narrative, leaving the hearts of our 
readers to sun themselves in these 
heavenly rays. But in this world 
there is no light without a shadow. 



In the letter we have just quoted 
M. Guerrier, after speaking with 
fervent gratitude of the heroic 
charity of Canon Martignon, says 
how earnestly he and his are pray- 
ing for the restoration of his health. 
Alas ! these prayers are not yet 
granted. A few weeks after the 
event here related he left Lourdes 
for Hyeres, being too ill to return, 
as he had desired, to his own arch- 
bishop in Algiers. 

In the midst of her joy Mme. 
Guerrier has a feeling very like re- 
morse. " Poor Abbe Martignon !" 
she lately said to us ; " it seems to 
me as if I had stolen his cure." 

No ! This lady has, it is true, 
received a great and touching fa- 
vor ; but assuredly a still more sig- 
nal grace was granted to that holy 
priest when he was enabled to per- 
form so great an act of self-renun- 
ciation and charity an act which 
bestows on him a resemblance to 
his divine Master, who said : " Great- 
er love than this no man hath, to 
lay down his life for his people." 
Let us not presume to pity him, 
for he has chosen " the better part." 

May his humility pardon us the 
pain we shall cause him by pub- 
lishing, contrary to his express 
prohibition, this recent episode of 
his life ! 



846 



Pius the Ninth. 



PIUS THE NINTH. 



IN the afternoon of Thursday, 
February 7, our Holy Father, Pope 
Pjus IX., died. 

In his person passes away one 
who to two hundred millions of 
spiritual subjects was the greatest 
figure of the age, and who to all 
the rest of the world, if not the 
greatest, was certainly the most 
conspicuous. The history of the 
last thirty years that larger history 
that takes within its scope the whole 
human family rather than this or 
that nationality or people will in 
after-times centre around him. It 
will be seen that he has had a hand 
in shaping it, though to-day it may 
seem that that hand was brushed 
rudely aside or lifted only in impo- 
tent menace against the irresistible 
movements and the natural aspira- 
tions of the age. Time is a great 
healer and revealer of truth ; and 
time will deal gently and justly with 
the memory of Pius IX. When the 
smoke of the long battle that has 
been raging in Europe, and more 
or less over all the world, during 
the last half-century, shall have 
finally cleared away, and men's 
eyes be better prepared to regard all 
things honestly, truth, now obscur- 
ed and hidden, will come to light, 
and the persistent action, misnam- 
ed reaction, of Pius IX. will ap- 
pear to have been the truest wis- 
dom and the soundest policy. 

The field, of which this wonderful 
life is the central figure, is so vast, its 
lights and shadows so changing, its 
surface so diversified, and the events 
with which it is crowded are so many 
and so great, that one shrinks from 
attempting to picture it even faintly. 
Yet we cannot, even with the brief 



time allowed us, permit the Holy 
Father to go to his grave without 
a tribute of admiration and respect 
for his memory, however inade- 
quate that tribute may be. Into 
the minute details of his life we do 
not purpose here to enter. These 
are already sufficiently well known, 
and there are ample sources of in- 
formation from which to gather 
them. We purpose rather passing 
a rapid glance over the most promi- 
nent events that mark the career 
of the Pope, that give it its signifi- 
cance and make of it one of the 
most remarkable in history. 

Whoever attempts to deal with 
Pius IX., with a view to what the 
man was, what he achieved, what 
he failed to achieve, the meaning, 
the purport, and the influence of 
his life, must necessarily regard 
him in a twofold aspect : first, as a 
temporal prince, a man occupied 
with human and secular affairs ; 
secondly, as the supreme head of 
the Catholic Church, the vicar of 
Christ on earth, and the father of 
the faithful. As the one his life 
was a failure, outwardly at least. 
He has gone to his grave shorn 
of all his earthly possessions and 
dignities ; and his successor will 
enter into office much as the first 
pontiff entered, with no authority 
save that bequeathed him by his 
divine Master. As the second as 
supreme pastor of the church 
Pius IX. yields to none of his illus- 
trious predecessors in point of mo- 
ral and real dignity and grandeur. 
This is the strange and significant 
contrast in the man's life : the de- 
cadence and utter loss of the tem- 
poral power and principality of the 



Pius the Ninth. 



847 



church under his reign, with a 
contrary deepening and strength- 
ening of the bonds that bind him 
to the faithful as their spiritual fa- 
ther and guide. In both these as- 
pects we shall look at him : as a 
prince who failed in much that he 
attempted, and as a spiritual ruler' 
who grew stronger by his very 
losses ; under whom the church has 
marvellously, almost miraculously, 
developed; and who leaves it to- 
day in a spiritually stronger condi- 
tion than perhaps it has ever been 
in. As a temporal sovereign there 
may have been greater popes than 
he; as a spiritual, few, if any, have 
surpassed him. And much, very 
much of the growth of the church 
within the period of his troubled 
reign is undoubtedly to be attri- 
buted to the personal influence of 
the pontiff, to his own high exam- 
ple of virtue and burning zeal, and 
to the keen eye he had for the 
church's truest interests and wel- 
fare. 

He was ushered into a revolu- 
tionary epoch, in a time when dis- 
aster was heaped upon the church 
and on civil society. Lacordaire 
says of himself: "I was born on 
the wild and stormy morning of 
this nineteenth century." The same 
is true of him who became Pius IX. 
He was born at Sinigaglia, May 
13, 1792, while Louis XVI. and 
Marie Antoinette were prisoners 
and waiting for the scaffold to re- 
lease them from their woes. Na- 
poleon I. had not yet arisen. The 
United States had not much more 
than come into being. Joseph II. 
ruled and reigned in Austria. 
France was in the hands of the 
progeny of Voltaire. Sardinia did 
not exist. Catholic Ireland did 
not exist politically. Australia was 
almost an unknown land. It was 
a period of moral earthquakes. 



The progeny of Voltaire were very 
active in the propagation of their 
doctrines ; and Italy, which for cen- 
turies had been the battle-ground 
of kings and the theatre of petty 
rival factions, offered an inviting 
soil for the evil seed. In 1793 
the heads were struck off from 
Louis and his queen ; the Goddess 
of Reason was enthroned in Notre 
Dame; and the reign of "liberty, 
fraternity, equality " began and end- 
ed with " death." 

Then came that grim child of the 
Revolution, Napoleon, and chang- 
ed everything. He had an eye to 
religion, and he wanted a sort of 
tame pope whom he might use as 
a puppet. Italy felt his iron heel, 
and things went from bad to worse 
there. It saw the pope, with others 
of its treasures, carried off by this 
rough-and-ready conqueror. In 
1805 this same conqueror had him- 
self crowned " King of Italy " 
king of a kingdom which did not 
exist, save as a pillage-ground for 
whoever chose to enter. In 1808 
the Papal States were " irrevocably " 
incorporated with the French Em- 
pire. So decreed the omnipotent 
conqueror. Where is his empire 
now ? Where was it and where 
was he a few years afterwards ? 
He was eating his heart out at St. 
Helena; his empire had vanished; 
and the pope whom he had cap- 
tured and imprisoned was back in 
Rome. 

ROME PREPARED FOR REVOLUTION. 

All this time the young Giovanni 
Mastai-Ferretti was pursuing his 
studies as conveniently as he could 
under such circumstances. We do 
not recall these events in the ear- 
lier life of the boy idly, but with 
a very distinct purpose : to show 
that when in 1846 Pius IX. was ele- 



Pius the Ninth. 



vated to the Papacy, and to the 
guardianship of the church's tem- 
poralities, he stepped into no bed 
of roses. He stepped, on the con- 
trary, into a very hot-bed of revolu- 
tion a revolution that, with less or 
more of secrecy, had overspread 
Europe, and that found its most 
convenient as well as its most ne- 
cessary centre of attack in Rome 
and in the Papal States. Italy had 
long been the prey of Europe. 
The people had suffered terribly 
from foreign invasions. They suf- 
fered almost equally from home in- 
trigues and jealousies. With all 
this the popes had nothing to do. 
It was simply a repetition of the 
history of the Italian peninsula 
from the disruption of the Roman 
Empire down. The outer bar- 
barians were always knocking at 
her gates and trampling on her 
soil, invited there by native quar- 
rels. 

It is necessary to bear these 
things well in mind, in order to 
judge rightly of the difficulties 
against which Pius IX. had to con- 
tend. He was elected to an impov- 
erished and disturbed principality, 
to a centre of revolution in an era 
of revolution. All Italy groaned 
with trouble. The people were 
ripe for any mad-cap scheme which 
should profess to better their con- 
dition. There was revolution in 
the air, all around them, all over 
the world. There were burning 
ideas afloat of people's rights, and 
people's wrongs, and people's fu- 
tures. Schemes of regeneration for 
the human race were abundant as 
the schemers; and some of these 
were very keen, far-sighted, and 
resolute men. Mazzini was one of 
them. His policy was simple 
enough, and it is the policy of all 
his followers to-day : For the peo- 
ple to rule you must first destroy the 



rulers kings ; before destroying 
the kings, who (in Europe at least) 
are the representatives of authority, 
you must destroy the priests who 
preach submission to lawful autho- 
rity. Death to the priests ! death 
to the kings ! and then, long live 
the people ! 

That, we believe, is a fair pre- 
sentation of the Mazzini pro- 
gramme for the regeneration of 
Italy and of the rest of the world. 
It has its fascinations for empty 
minds and empty stomachs, and 
the masses of the people, particu- 
larly of the Italians, just about the 
time of which we write had both 
empty minds and empty stomachs. 
The people of the Papal States, in 
common with the people of all the 
other Italian States, and, indeed, of 
states generally, were not in the hap- 
piest condition possible. Wars and 
foreign invasions and constant tur- 
moil from day to day are not the 
best agents of good government. 
So Pius IX. came to an uneasy 
throne. 

PIUS IX. AS A POLITICAL REFORMER. 

The cry of the Roman people, of 
the whole Italian people, as of all 
people just then, was for reform. 
They wanted a share in the gov- 
ernment ; and there was no harm 
in that. The new pontiff began 
his reign by at once setting about 
practical reform. His scheme was 
excellent. The details of it must 
be found elsewhere. Practically 
it amounted to letting the people 
have a just and rational share in 
the government. It was not uni- 
versal suffrage. But the Papal States 
were not the United States ; and 
there are intelligent and patriotic 
men in the United States even who 
begin to doubt about the actual 
efficacy of universal suffrage as a 



Pius the Ninth. 



849 



panacea for all political or social 
evils. It is not long since Mr. 
Disraeli laid down the daring doc- 
trine in the English House of Com- 
mons that universal suffrage was 
not a natural right of man, to 
which doctrine nobody seemed to 
object. The Pope, then, set ear- 
nestly and practically to work at 
every kind of reform. He set on 
foot a scheme of government which 
should admit the laity to their 
lawful place in civic functions. 
He looked to the laws of com- 
merce, which were in a very bad 
.state. He struck at vicious mono- 
polies, in return for which the mo- 
nopolists struck viciously at him. 
He was very careful about the 
finances, his treasury being low in- 
deed, or rather non-existent. He 
advised the people, who, under 
the impulse of a steady conspiracy, 
seized every opportunity at the be- 
ginning of his reign of getting up 
festivals in his honor, to spend 
their money at home, or hoard it 
for an evil hour, or devote it to 
some charitable or educational 
purpose. He was clement to po- 
litical offences. He was kind and 
charitable to the oppressed Jews of 
Rome, and removed their civil disa- 
bilities before England thought of 
doing so. 

All this is matter of fact, beyond 
question or dispute. It was recog- 
nized by the outer world. All the 
crowned heads of Europe, with the 
exception of Austria and the Italian 
principalities, who found themselves 
in a position of painful contrast, 
sent their hearty congratulations to 
the Pope ; and the voice of New 
York non-Catholic New York 
joined in with them. The Pope 
was, for the time being at least, 
the most popular man in the 
world as well as in Italy. And 
he deserved his popularity, for he 
VOL. xxvi. 54 



was real and resolute in what he 
attempted. 

WHY HE FAILED AS A REFORMER. 

How, then, came the sad sequel ? 
Why did all this fail? Pius IX. 
looked even beyond the Papal 
States in his political schemes. He 
wished for a united Italy. He 
was a true Italian. He proposed a 
confederation of the Italian States, 
which, without infringing on any 
people's rights, should constitute 
one Italy, show a united front to 
the foreigner, and remove all ex- 
cuse for foreign interference. Why 
was this, too, a failure ? 

Because it was intended that it 
should be a failure. Because the 
men who used the clamor for re- 
form as an agitating force among 
the people wanted nothing so little 
as actual reform, least of all in the 
prince of the church. Good gov- 
ernment was what most they feared ; 
for good government makes, as far 
as government can make, people 
happy and well off and reconciled 
to order. But order and content- 
ment among the people were pre- 
cisely what Mazzini least desired. 

Pius IX. was in heart and soul 
and act a reformer of reformers. 
As a temporal ruler he desired 
nothing in this world so much as 
the welfare and happiness of his 
people, and he took all honest means 
to bring about that happiness and 
welfare. But he was met at the 
outset by a strong and wide-spread 
conspiracy a conspiracy that had 
existed long before his time, that had 
laid its plans and arranged its mode 
of action, and that was ready to do 
any diabolical deed in order to 
carry its purpose through. The 
very willingness of the Pope to con- 
cede reforms helped it. It took 
him up and petted and played with 



Pius the Ninth. 



him. The clubs that roamed the 
streets and shouted themselves 
hoarse with Viva Pio Nona ! and 
Viva Pio Nona solo! were instru- 
ments of the conspirators. The 
offices which the Pope threw open 
to the laity were seized upon by 
conspirators. His guards and sol- 
diers were corrupted and led by 
corrupt officers and generals. Some 
of the clergy even felt the contami- 
nation. Ministry after ministry 
was tried and changed, and only 
succeeded in exasperating the minds 
of the people, as it was intended 
they should. The Pope had faith 
in human nature, and could not 
believe but that the honest mea- 
sures which he devised for the bene- 
fit of his subjects would be honestly 
accepted by them. Although he 
knew of the conspiracy against his 
throne and against society, perhaps 
he scarcely realized its depth and 
intensity. The horrible assassina- 
tion of De Rossi undeceived him, 
and the reformer and gentle prince 
had to fly for his life and in dis- 
guise from his own subjects. 

TRIUMPH OF THE REVOLUTION. 

Not two years of his reign have 
passed, and the Pope is already an 
exile at Gaeta. Pandemonium 
reigned in Rome. It was not the 
secret societies alone who brought 
all this about. They were aided 
by some, at least, of the crowned 
heads of Europe ; and Palmerston, 
as infamous a politician as ever 
conspired against the right, was 
hand and glove with them, ably 
seconded by Gladstone, whose re- 
cent attack on the Pope cannot 
have surprised those who remem- 
bered his political career. Mean- 
while Piedmont was creeping to the 
front in Italy, and though at first 
Mazzini was as thoroughly opposed 



to Charles Albert as to the Pope 
and the priests, the conviction 
grew Upon the conspirators that 
kings might sometimes be utilized 
as well as killed, and that Italy 
might, for the time being at least, 
be united under the Sardinian. 
This conviction only came slowly, 
and there was a man at the head 
of affairs in Piedmont who was 
keen in reading the signs of the 
times, and who never missed a 
chance. Cavour utilized the se- 
cret societies, and the secret so- 
cieties utilized Cavour. In like 
manner Louis Napoleon, then com- 
ing to the front in France, utilized, 
and was in turn utilized By, them. 
Palmerston, Cavour, Louis Napo- 
leon, a dangerous and powerful 
triad, were with the conspirators, 
while Austria blundered on with 
characteristic stupidity, actually 
courting the fate which has since 
overtaken it. 

It may be said that we concede 
too much power to the secret so- 
cieties. Who and what are they 
after all ? A handful of men work- 
ing in the dark, led by crack-brain- 
ed enthusiasts who write inflamma- 
tory letters and publish silly pamph- 
lets at safe distances from the scene 
of action. They are more than 
this, however. They are well or- 
ganized, and they trade on real 
wrongs and disaffection too well 
grounded. Certainly, in the earlier 
period of the Pope's reign men 
were far from being, as a whole, 
well governed in Europe. They 
were not at rest ; they had not been 
at rest from the beginning of the 
century. Reforms from their ru- 
lers came very slowly and grudg- 
ingly. The conspirators possessed 
all the daring of adventurers, and 
spread out a political El Dorado 
glittering before the hungry eyes of 
bitter and disappointed men. In 



Fins t/ie Ninth. 



such a state of affairs the wildest 
chimeras seem possible to the com- 
mon mind, and in this lies the real 
strength of secret societies, which 
find their growth cramped only 
where men are freest and best off, 
as among ourselves. 

A fair idea of what the reign of 
" the people " meant may be gather- 
ed from the state of Rome while 
the pontiff was in exile at Gaeta. 
It was cousin-german to the reign 
of the Commune in Paris in more 
recent days. And for this the Pope 
was driven from his own city. 
These were the reformers who 
could not be satisfied with the Holy 
Father's rational measures of real 
reform. These were the " heroes " 
honored by England, by the Unit- 
ed States, by all the enlightened 
and advanced men of all lands. It 
was for opposing and condemning 
these that Pius IX. is regarded by 
enlightened non-Catholics as a re- 
actionist of the worst type, a foe to 
progress, an enemy to popular lib- 
erties. A government of assassins 
was preferred by the world, or at 
least by a very large portion of it, 
to the mild and beneficent sway of 
Pius IX. For condemning cut- 
throats he is against the spirit of 
the age ; and for refusing to honor 
men like Mazzini and Garibaldi 
men who openly professed and 
caused to be practised murder as 
a necessary political instrument 
he is condemned as one who re- 
fused to recognize the progressive 
spirit of the times in which we live. 

THE POPE AND LOUIS NAPOLEON. 

While the Pope was at Gaeta, 
and while Rome was in the hands 
of what, without fear of contradic- 
tion, may be described as the vilest of 
vile rabbles, the baleful star of Louis 
Napoleon was rising over France. 



He was false from the very begin- 
ning to the Pope, and the Pope un- 
derstood him. Hut he was tricky 
and adroit. He had the born con- 
spirator's liking for mystery and 
secrecy and intrigue. He sec-incd 
by nature incapacitated to speak 
and act openly. He never was 
a friend to the Pope. By means 
that are already known and 
stamped in history he came to- 
the lead of what, in spite [of all 
vicissitudes and awful changes,, 
remained at heart a Catholic- 
nation. The trickster realized his 
position and trimmed his sails ac- 
cordingly. He cared nothing for 
the Pope or for Catholicity ; but 
the French people did. Moreover, 
the protection of the Pope and 
French predominance in Italy was 
a part of the Napoleonic legend, 
and likely to advance his own 
cause. French cannon, then, and 
French bayonets cleared the way 
for the return of the Pope to Rome. 
Not France, Catholic France alone, 
but all the world, had been shocked 
at the awful excesses perpetrated 
by the revolutionists in Rome, as 
was the case earlier still at the out- 
break of the first French Revolu- 
tion. France only anticipated Eu- 
rope in its action by staying the 
reign of blood. 

Louis Napoleon thenceforth as- 
sumed the character of protector 
of the interests of the Holy See. 
He was the persistent enemy of 
those interests. He was altogether 
opposed to ecclesiastical rule in an 
ecclesiastical state. This friend 
and protector of the Pope labored 
all his political life, and used the 
great influence of a Catholic na- 
tion, to bring about what has since 
been consummated: the robbery of 
the States of the Church, the in- 
vasion of the Holy See, the Pied- 
montese ascendency in Italy, and 



8 5 2 



Pius the NintJi. 



the reducing of the head of the 
Catholic Church to a political ci- 
pher in his own states. Yet intel- 
ligent men are surprised at the in- 
gratitude displayed by Pius IX. 
towards Louis Napoleon ! Pius IX. 
loved France ; he despised the dis- 
honest trickster to whose hands the 
fate of so noble a nation was for a 
time committed. He despised him, 
for he knew him with that instinc- 
tive knowledge by which all honest 
and open natures detect duplicity 
and fraud, under whatever smiling 
guise they may appear. Some good 
qualities the man may have had. 
Open honesty was not one of them. 
Some regard for the Catholic reli- 
gion he may have had. He never 
allowed it to interfere with his 
schemes or with the schemes of 
those of whom after all he was a 
tool, never a master. Louis Na- 
poleon knew perfectly well that 
the Pope understood him and his 
schemes. 

THE POPE AGAIN AS A REFORMER. 

Pius IX. returned to Rome in 
1850. He immediately set to work 
to repair the losses which his sub- 
jects had sustained during his ab- 
sence. He proceeded in his work 
of reform. Within seven years 
he succeeded in clearing off the 
enormous debt with which the 
country had been saddled. The 
French commission, of which M. 
Thiers was a member, appointed to 
examine and report on the politi- 
cal wisdom and practical value of 
the institutions granted to his 
states by Pius IX., reported to the 
Republican Government (1849) : 

" By a large majority your commis- 
sion declares that it sees in the motu 
proprio (the Pope's decree reorganizing 
the government of the Pontifical States) 
a first boon of such real value that 



nothing but unjust pretensions could 
overlook its importance. . . . We say 
that it grants all desirable provincial 
and municipal liberties. As to poli- 
tical liberties, consisting in the power 
of deciding on the public business 
of a country in one of the two assem- 
blies and in union with the execu- 
tive as in England, for instance it is 
very true that the motu proprio does not 
grant this sort of political liberty, or 
only grants it in the rudimentary form 
of a council without deliberative voice. 

"... That on this point he (the Pope) 
should have chosen to be prudent, that 
after his recent experience he should 
have preferred not to reopen a career ol 
agitation among a people who have 
shown themselves so unprepared for 
parliamentary liberty, we do not know 
that we have either the right or the cause 
to deem blameworthy." 

And Palmerston, whose testimony 
is surely as unbiassed as that of 
Thiers, said of the same act in 
1856: 

" We all know that, on his restoration 
to his states in 1849, the Pope published 
an ordinance called iiiotu proprio, by 
which he declared his intentions to be- 
stow institutions, not indeed on the large 
proportions of a constitutional govern- 
ment, but based, nevertheless, on popu- 
lar election, and which, if they had only 
been carried out, must have given 
his subjects such satisfaction as to ren- 
der unnecessary the intervention of a 
foreign army." 

We have gone into this matter 
of reform and home government in 
the Papal States at some length, 
because it is precisely on this 
ground of all others that the tem- 
poral power of the popes is attack- 
ed. Priests are unfit to rule, it is 
said ; their business is with the 
souls of men, to tend to spiritual 
wants. They should have no con- 
cern with the things of this world. 
This may be all very well, and is a 
very convenient way of disposing 
of rights and properties which do 
not belong to us. If the invasion 
of the Papal States and their occu- 



Pius the Ninth. 



S53 



pation by a hostile power is justi- 
fied on the ground that the Pope 
was a priest, and, because a priest, 
unfit to rule his subjects, that at 
least is intelligible. We have 
seen, however, that Pius IX. was 
in heart and in act a wise and 
just ruler, who aimed at doing no- 
thing but good, and who did no- 
thing but good, to his people, but 
who was steadily prevented from 
doing all the good he wished and 
attempted to do by conspiracy at 
home and abroad. Had he been 
left alone to work out the constitu- 
tion he framed, to carry through 
the reforms he proposed and enter- 
ed upon, it is beyond question that 
the States of the Church would have 
been more happily governed and 
more peacefully ordered than any 
states in the world. But he was 
prevented from ruling as he wished 
as well by the opposition of govern- 
ments, such as those of Palmer- 
ston, Cavour, and Louis Napoleon, 
as by the organized conspiracy 
within his own domains a conspi- 
racy that sprang from causes with 
which he had had nothing to do, 
which assailed him because by his 
very position he was the symbol 
and type and fountain-head of all 
earthly order, and which would. not 
be reconciled to good. He trod 
on volcanic ground from the be- 
ginning. All that a good man could 
do to dissipate the evil elements 
he did. But the conspiracy abroad 
and the conspiracy at home were 
too much for him. Indeed, the ex- 
istence of the Papacy as a temporal 
power always depended on the 
sense of right and the good-will 
of men. There have been a few 
fighting popes in other days ; 
but as a matter of fact the Pa- 
pacy has always been a power 
built essentially on peace; and if 
powerful enemies insisted on in- 



vading it, it was always open to 
them. The pope, like the Master 
whose vicar he is, is " the prince 
of peace." 

It is needless here to enter into the 
details of the intrigues and events 
that led up to the invasion of the 
Papal States, and to their forced 
blending into what is called united 
Italy. We cannot here go into the 
question as to when invasion is 
necessary and justifiable. Com- 
mon sense, however, is a sufficient 
guide to the doctrine that no inva- 
sion of another's territory or pro- 
perty is justifiable or necessary, un- 
less the holder of that property is 
incapable ; unless that property has 
been and is being grossly abused ; 
unless those who live on that pro- 
perty invite the invasion on just 
grounds ; and unless the invader 
can guarantee a better holding and 
guardianship of the property, a re- 
form in its administration, a sa- 
cred regard for rights that are sa- 
cred. If any man can show us 
that any one of these conditions 
was fulfilled by the Sardinian in- 
vasion of the Papal States, we are 
open to conviction. Nor in this 
matter are we taking the rights and 
property of the church as some- 
thing apart from ordinary rights 
and property, though they are so. 
We base our whole opposition to 
this most infamous usurpation and 
robbery on known and accepted 
natural rights common to all pro- 
perty and holders of property. It 
is useless to tell Europe that it sol- 
emnly sanctioned a sacrilege. Eu- 
rope has forgotten the meaning of 
the word sacrilege. It has still 
some sense of what robbery and 
wrong mean, though constant prac- 
tice in robbery and wrong and nefa- 
rious proceedings has so blunted 
its moral sense that it can always 
readily connive at the wrong, espe- 



854 



Pins the Ninth. 



cially when the wrong is done to 
the Catholic Church. 

We invite all honest men to con- 
trast the condition of the Papal 
States to-day, under the present 
Italian regime, with their condition 
under the Papal regime. They 
cannot show that that condition is 
bettered. All Italy is in a chronic 
state of legal and secret terrorism. 
There was no terrorism under Pius 
IX. The people groan under taxes 
such as in their worst days they 
never had to sustain. Parliamen- 
tary representation and freedom of 
election in Italy is a farce. As for 
the social and moral effects of the 
invasion, they have been dwelt 
upon so often and are so patent 
that they need no mention here. 
Pius IX. failed as a political leader 
and ruler, not because he was not 
a wise and just and benevolent ru- 
ler, but because, as we said, it was 
intended that he should fail. The 
combinations against him were too 
powerful. The wonder is that he 
withstood them so long. But his- 
tory will faithfully record that the 
last ruler the last, at least, as things 
are at present of the temporalities 
of the church was the best and 
most just prince in Europe, and 
the one who cared most for the 
material and moral advance of his 
people. 

PIUS IX. AS HEAD OF THE CHURCH. 

So much for one aspect of the 
Pope's life and character. It is a 
sad and a saddening one the one 
in which he is most bitterly and 
unjustly assailed. Thus far the story 
has been one of a long and disas- 
trous failure. We turn now to look 
at him in his greater character as 
Pontiff and High-Priest of the Ca- 
tholic Church 

Here the heart lifts, the eyes 



grow dim, the pen falters, as we 
glance across the ocean and see 
the meek old man who has done 
so much for the church, who has 
served her so faithfully, who has 
given her so high and holy an ex- 
ample of undaunted faith, of burn- 
ing zeal, of universal charity, of 
meekness and long-suffering, laid 
out at last on the bier to which the 
eyes of all the world turn in sor- 
rowing sympathy and respect. In 
this is his true triumph. In the 
midst of universal disaster the 
great and mighty church, which 
was entrusted to him in a condition 
that was truly deplorable, so far as 
its existence in the various states 
of the world went, has gathered 
together its strength, has renewed 
its youth like the eagle, has flown 
abroad on the wings of the wind to 
the uttermost parts of the earth. 
In 1846 how stood the church in 
Europe ? In England the Ecclesi- 
astical Titles Bill had not yet been 
passed. The Act of Catholic Eman- 
cipation had only been granted in 
1829. Ireland was still a political 
nonentity. Catholicity in France 
was suffering under the worst fea- 
tures of the Napoleonic Code. In 
Austria it was strangled by Joseph- 
ism. In all places it was under a 
ban. In the United States and 
Australia it was still almost a 
stranger. 

WONDERFUL GROWTH OF THE 
CHURCH. 

But a new spirit was awakening 
among men. The American Revo- 
lution was productive of important 
results to mankind. The French 
Revolution, which followed, gave a 
startling impetus to these. All 
over the world men were rising 
to a new sense of their natural 
rights. The awakening found ex- 
pression in deplorable and revolt- 



Pius the Ninth. 



855 



ing excesses here and there, but 
there were some right principles 
under the mass of extravagances 
and chimeras afloat. These princi- 
ples good, earnest Catholics hasten- 
ed to grasp and utilize. They beat 
the progeny of Voltaire, they beat 
the liberal philosophers, the apostles 
of liberty, equality, and fraternity, 
with their own weapons. They 
gave the right and lawful meaning 
to those words and would not sur- 
render their claims. Thus uprose 
O'Connell, who gave the cue and 
the lead to so many other illus- 
trious champions of civil and reli- 
gious liberty. O'Connell roared 
and thundered in England, and 
made himself heard over the world. 
Montalembert and Lacordaire and 
the unfortunate De Lamennais 
took up the great Irish leader's cry 
in France. Gorres sharpened his 
pen in Germany. Balmes arose in 
Spain. Brownson was won over in 
the United States. Louis Veuillot 
found the antidote to his infidel 
poison, and the school of Voltaire 
found one of their doughtiest war- 
riors heart and soul in the Catho- 
lic ranks. A crowd of men, equal- 
ly illustrious or nearly so, sprang 
up and around these leaders. Ca- 
tholic laymen took heart, entered 
zealously into good works and po- 
litical life, and many a one lent his 
powerful pen and voice to the ser- 
vice of the church, in places often 
where the priest could not well 
enter. Catholicity assumed, if we 
may so say, a more manly and aggres- 
sive tone. The children of Voltaire 
were wont to laugh at it as a thing 
of cassocks and sacristans. They 
were astonished to find the young, 
the enthusiastic, the noble entering 
on what was veritably a new cru- 
sade, and defending their faith 
courageously and ably wherever 
they found it attacked. What Pius 



IX. had attempted in his temporal 
dominions had actually and, as it 
were, spontaneously come to pass 
in the spiritual domain. The laity 
assumed their lawful place in the 
life of the church. The Holy Fa- 
ther encouraged them in every way 
possible ; and his aged eyes have 
been gladdened by witnessing in all 
lands a new army of defenders of 
the faith growing up and disci- 
plined, and daily increasing in 
numbers, strength, and usefulness. 

He saw the faith in France and 
in the German states revive won- 
derfully. Able and zealous bishops 
were appointed ; the education of 
the clergy, on which he always in- 
sisted with especial vehemence, was 
very carefully cultivated. Bands 
of missionaries followed the newly- 
opened rivers of commerce and 
carried the faith with them to new 
lands. The Irish famine of 1846- 
1847 sent out a missionary nation 
to the United States, to Australia, 
to England itself. Priests went 
with them, or followed them, and 
in time grew up among them. 
While Sardinia was confiscating 
church property, destroying mo- 
nasteries and institutions of learn- 
ing, and turning priests and monks 
out of doors, England and her pos- 
sessions and the United States 
were beginning to receive them, 
and, in accordance with the princi- 
ples of their government, letting 
them do their own work in their 
own way. 

And so the church has gone on 
developing with the greatest im- 
petus in the most unpromising soil. 
Already men say wonderingly that 
it is strongest and best off in 
Protestant lands. Pius IX. had 
the happiness of creating the hier- 
archy in England, in the Unit- 
ed States, and in Australia, in 
the British possessions wherever 



856 



Pins the Ninth. 



the faith is to-day reputed to be 
in the most flourishing condition. 
But all this has not come about by 
accident. There was a very active, 
keen, and observant man at the 
head of affairs. It is wonderful 
how the Pope, with the troubles 
that were for ever pressing upon 
him regarding the affairs of the 
Papal States, could have found time 
to attend to those wider concerns 
of the universal church. But if he 
loved Rome and its people with a 
love that was truly paternal, his 
first care was always for the church 
of which he was the guardian. 
His heart was in every work and 
enterprise for the advancement of 
the faith. His eye was all-seeing. 
His prayers were unceasing. 

GREAT EVENTS OF THE PONTIFI- 
CATE. 

The definition of two great dog- 
mas marks the pontificate of Pius 
IX. and will make it memorable 
for ever in the annals of the church : 
the dogma of the Immaculate Con- 
ception of the Blessed Virgin Mo- 
ther, and of the Papal Infallibility. 
The last was a death-blow to schism 
and heresy. We do not mean that 
schism and heresy will die out be- 
cause of it. But it roots them out 
of their holes; and henceforth they 
will know that over them hangs a 
voice, not often used, indeed, or 
idly, but which, once it has uttered 
its last and final and solemn de- 
cision, is irrevocable. The scenes 
that Rome witnessed in its last de- 
clining days as the city of the popes 
will dwell in the memory of men. 
The bishops of all the earth, in 
numbers unprecedented, flocking 
to what was vainly thought to be 
the rocking chair of Peter, was per- 
haps one of the most striking testi- 
monies to a scoffing and unbeliev- 



ing age of the immense vitality of 
the faith, of the vastness, the splen- 
dor, and renown of the Catholic 
Church. A more solemn testimony 
still was the joyful acceptance by 
the faithful of the dogma of Papal 
Infallibility, which, it was thought 
by those who knew not the Catho- 
lic faith, would rend the church 
asunder. The canonization of the 
martyrs of Japan, the thronging of 
the bishops and faithful to Rome 
on the occasion of the various ju- 
bilees, and the crowning event of 
last year, when all the Catholic 
world assisted at the celebration of 
the fiftieth episcopal jubilee of Pius 
IX., are other events that mark 
this great pontificate with signifi- 
cance and splendor. These last 
were as much personal tributes to 
the man as of respect to the su- 
preme head of the church, and they 
showed, if aught were needed to 
show, that Pius, stripped of his do- 
minions, bereft of his possessions, 
imprisoned in the Vatican, lived 
and reigned as, perhaps, no other 
pope lived and reigned in the hearts, 
not of a small section of his people, 
but of all the great church that 
covers the earth. 

THE POPE'S PERSONAL CHARACTER. 

One feature of all others marks 
the character of Pius IX. Per- 
sonally the meekest and most 
yielding of men, he was always fill- 
ed with the sense of his position 
and his sacred charge. We do not 
mean that as Pope he was proud, 
overbearing, intolerant. He was 
anything but that. But in all that 
touched the faith and the sacred 
prerogatives that had been placed 
in his pure hands he was simply 
inflexible. He would not yield a 
jot of them. He would not com- 
promise. He would not tempo- 



Pius the Ninth. 



857 



rize. A singularly open, honest, and 
frank character, ready to trust all 
men, he seemed to scent out dan- 
ger from afar off when it threaten- 
ed what was dearer to him than 
life life was always a small matter 
in his eyes the chair of Peter and 
the faith of Christ. The utteran- 
ces of his bulls and encyclical let- 
ters, the speeches that he deliver- 
ed, sometimes off-hand, on impor- 
tant subjects, bear all one tone, 
never contradict one another. They 
are resolute and bold and breathe 
authority throughout. He saw from 
the first the movement of the age, 
and that it was moving in a false di- 
rection. The movement was, in one 
word, towards a complete rejection 
of divine authority, of divine revela- 
tion, and consequently of the church 
as a divine institution, and of all au- 
thority save such as men choose to 
set up for themselves. From his 
first papal allocution to the Sylla- 
bus of Errors to be condemned, he 
always struck at this spirit, and 
this spirit recognized its vigilant 
foe and master. Hence the rage 
with which his utterances were re- 
ceived in the courts of Europe; and 
by the infidel press. But he never 
swerved from his course. He was 
never weary of condemning what 
he knew to be wrong; and the state 
of public opinion to-day regarding 
rights that were once held as sa- 
cred even by large and powerful 
non-Catholic bodies is a sufficient 
vindication, if any were needed, of 
the pontiff's course. Rights, natu- 
ral and supernatural, are every- 
where invaded. The cloister is 
desecrated. The home is threat- 
ened with disruption by divorce 
and an easy marriage that is no 
marriage. Innocent infants are no 
longer consecrated to God. " Free " 
thought finds its issue in " free " 
religion, and free religion means 



no religion. The sense of right 
has yielded to the sense of force. 
Education is handed over to infi- 
dels. This is the larger growth 
of the conspiracy that swept away 
the States of the Church only by 
way of a beginning to a wider 
sweeping that was to desolate the 
earth. 

All this was what Pius IX. felt 
coming on and resisted to his last 
breath. He guarded the church 
well, and, if human judgment be al- 
lowed to follow him, he goes before 
his divine Master with a clean 
heart and untroubled conscience, 
having done his work thoroughly. 
We shall miss that majestic figure 
from our busy scene. We shall 
miss the grand old man seated 
prophet-like on the now bare and 
barren rock of Peter, the storms of 
the earth roaring around and threat- 
eningtooverwhelmhim, and hecalm 
and unmoved, his head lifted above 
them clear and lovely in the white 
light of heaven. We shall miss the 
face that we all know as we know 
and cherish the picture of a father : 
with its large, bright eyes, its sweet 
lips, and that smile that could only 
come from a heart free from guile 
and clear from constant commun- 
ings with heaven. Set the men of 
the age beside him, and see how 
they dwarf and dwindle away. 
Set Cavour, Louis Napoleon, Bis- 
marck, Thiers, Palmerston, those 
known as the greatest among the 
leaders of men, by Pius IX., and 
what a contrast ! The story of 
the struggle that he waged is told 
in this. Ages stamp themselves in 
the men they deify. In brutal, de- 
based, but "civilized " pagan Rome 
statues were set up to men like 
Nero and Domitian and Claudius 
and Diocletian ; and these were the 
gods of the degenerate Romans. 
The gods of to-day, the idols of 



858 



New Publications^ 



the people, are the men we have 
mentioned above and the lower 
brood of the Mazzinis, Garibal- 
dis, Victor Emanuels, Gambettas. 
To the worshippers of these heroes 
Pius IX. was a despot and a 
ruler of a brood of despots, an 
enemy of the human race. The 
gown of the cleric has become the 
garb of ignominy and darkness ; 
the blood-red cap of the revolu- 
tionist the beacon of liberty and 
light. The intellectual stream of 
Voltaire and the Voltairists, the 
men of " science " of to-day, filters 
down into the mud and blood cf 
the rabble. These dainty gentle- 
men prepare the dynamite, leav- 
ing others more ignorant to fire 
it. This is the progress that Pius 
IX. stigmatized, and these the 



lights of the age whom he con- 
demned. But his work has been 
effectual. He guarded the vine- 
yard of the Lord. He made 
straight its paths. He weeded it 
well and watered it, if not with his 
heart's blood, with the labors and 
sufferings of a long life that never 
knew rest or thought but of good 
to the whole human race. He has 
left to the world the example of a 
life of unspotted virtue, of large 
and wise charity, of undaunted 
courage and zeal, of meekness and 
childlike simplicity. He goes to 
his grave amid the tears and bene- 
dictions of the mightiest body on 
earth, followed by the sorrowing 
sympathy of all who esteem piety, 
honor integrity, and admire cou- 
rage. 



NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



MORNING OFFICES OF PALM SUNDAY, 
HOLY THURSDAY, AND GOOD FRIDAY. 
Together with a Magnificat for Holy 
Saturday and a few selections for the 
Tenebrae Function. Arranged and 
edited by Edwin F. MacGonigle, St. 
Charles' Seminary, Overbrook, Pa. 
The publication of this work is anoth- 
er comforting evidence of the reality of 
the revival of a better taste amongst 
church musicians, and of the demand of 
church people for a style of music at the 
divine offices which, at least, shall not 
outrage every sentiment of religious 
reverence and respect which they have 
for the house of God. 

Although giving but few selections 
from the vast number of sentences, an- 
thems, etc., enjoined to be sung during 
the great week, the choice made proves 
that there is a more general knowledge 
of the Rubrics than has hitherto prevail- 
ed amongst church musicians, and a con- 
sequent desire to produce the offices of 
the church in their entirety. It will also 
serve a purpose to us a very desirable 
one which is to turn the attention of 
choir-masters and organists to the 



sanctioned chant melodies for the Holy- 
Week services, which are, in our judg- 
ment, after long experience, quite un- 
equalled by any musical melodies that 
were ever written. 

We fail to see any possible reason for 
a harmonized morceau de musique to take 
the place of the cantor's chanting of the 
Recordare at the Tenebm function, nor 
can we discover any special merit in the 
composition itself. The works of Sig. 
Capocci seem to us to be better suited 
for exhibition at one of our " Vesper 
Series" concerts at Chickering and oth- 
er halls than for practical use in 
choro before an altar unless, indeed, 
the hearing of a musical concert is to be 
the proper and most edifying manner of 
satisfying the precept of hearing Mass 
devoutly, or of piously assisting at Ves- 
pers and Benediction. 

Can the editor give any authority for 
the whining Fa$ in the first member of the 
cadence of the Benedictus, No. i, here 
treated as Do$. ? Sig. Capocci may have 
so written it ; but then he ought to have 
known better. 

Those who use concerted music for 



New Publications. 



859 



their church services, and who possess 
capable singers, will no doubt be pleas- 
ed to add this publication to their col- 
lection of " church music." 

A VISIT TO THE ROMAN CATACOMBS. By 
Rev. J. Spencer Northcote, D.D., can- 
on of Birmingham. London : Burns 
and Gates. 1877. (For sale by The 
Catholic Publication Society Co.) 

This book is another proof of the un- 
tiring attention that Canon Northcote 
continues to devote to the object of his 
special studies the Roman Catacombs, 
to which, as he modestly tells us, he 
first applied himself in 1846. The length 
of time that he has devoted to the sub- 
ject, his diligence, scholarship, and per- 
fect orthodoxy, make him the standard 
authority among English-speaking Ca- 
tholics on all matters connected with 
those wonderful subterranean cemeteries 
which are inexhaustible mines of trea- 
sure to students of Christian antiqui- 
ties, and points of attraction to all really 
learned, as well as to some ignorant 
and conceited, visitors to Rome. The 
traveller to the Tiber and the Seven 
Hills who does not visit the Catacombs 
has not seen one of the three Romes, 
and returns with a very inadequate 
knowledge of the Eternal City. A study 
of the Roman Catacombs is as necessary 
to enable one to understand the manners 
and customs of the early Christians, and 
to appreciate the various stages of the 
doctrines and practices of the church 
from apostolic times to the period that 
followed the triumph of religion under 
Constantine, and its splendid develop- 
ment of ritual and of ceremonial during 
the middle ages, as the careful exami- 
nation of the deeply-planted roots of a 
mighty oak is wanted to show the lover 
of nature how so noble a tree grows up 
the monarch of the forest, " and shoot- 
eth out great branches, so that the birds 
of the air may lodge under the shadow of 
it" (Mark iv. 32). 

We are glad to learn from the preface 
of this short but interesting and instruc- 
tive Visit to the Roman Catacombs that a 
second and enlarged edition of the Ro- 
ma Sotleranea of the same author, pub- 
lished in conjunction with Rev. W. R. 
Brownlow in 1869, and which will con- 
tain the substance of De Rossi's recently- 
issued third volume, is in preparation. 
We shall heartily welcome it. The pre- 



sent little book contains a great amount 
of information in a convenient, attrac- 
tive, and well-written form. 

MATERIALISM : A Lecture by P. J. Smyth, 
M.P., M.R.I. A., Chev. Leg. d'Hon. 
Dublin : Joseph Dollard. 1877. 

This is a strong and outspoken de- 
fence of Christianity by a layman from 
the lecture platform against the attacks 
of materialism on religion as address- 
ed to popular assemblies under the 
cloak of science. The lecture reaffirms 
the primitive convictions of the soul 
and the common consent of mankind 
against the unsupported assertions of 
the modern materialist school. The Irish 
people have heroically withstood the as- 
saults made against their religious faith 
assaults more cruel and persistent than 
have been even charged upon the Span- 
ish Inquisition and that, too, from a na- 
tion which boasts of being the champion 
of religious liberty. It is a cheering 
sign to see that they are fully able to 
defend their faith with personal intelli- 
gent conviction against the materialism 
of the demagogues of science. Ireland 
has a class of thoroughly-educated lay- 
men, and when religion is invaded from 
every quarter, as it is in our day, it is 
time that men who have deep and strong 
religious feelings should speak out 
in words which are fraught with the 
power of intelligent conviction and in 
tones which will make themselves heard. 
Mr. Smyth's lecture is solid, manly, and 
eloquent, and we hope to hear from him 
again and often. 

RECORDS OF A QUIET LIFE. By Augus- 
tus J. C. Hare, author of Walks in 
Rome, etc. Revised for American 
readers by William L. Gage. Boston : 
Roberts Brothers. 1876. 

The author of this volume, in present- 
ing the picture of the Hare family, la- 
bored under the impression that he was 
revealing a model life to the public. 
Confined to non-Catholics, perhaps he 
and the writer of the American preface 
were not mistaken, and this class of 
readers will derive profit from its peru- 
sal. The Hares were Anglican clergy- 
men, in charge of parishes, and with 
families. The volume furnishes pictures 
of the performance of their parochial 
duties, the life of their family circles, 



86o 



Neiv Publications. 



and the characteristics of their members. 
The Hares were^above the common run 
of men of their class in intellectual 
gifts and scholarly attainments. They 
appear to have done their best to fulfil 
the duties of their position with the 
incoherent fragments of Christian truth 
which their sect teaches. A Catholic 
feels after reading this volume as if 
he had been passing through a picture- 
gallery of second-class artists. Our 
counsel to^non-Catholic readers is: read 
these Records, and then take up the 
Life of the Cure of Ars, or The In- 
ner Life of Pere Lacordaire, or A 
Sister's Story, or The Life of Madame 
Swetchine, and you will understand, if 
not fully appreciate, our meaning. 

Is THE HUMAN EYE CHANGING ITS FORM 

UNDER THE INFLUENCES OF MODERN 

EDUCATION ? Edward G. Loring, M.D. 
New York. 1878. 

This is a very clever brochure upon a 
very vexed question namely, does com- 
pulsory education of the young under 
certain bad hygienic and dietetic condi- 
tions produce ocular deformity, and is 
such deformity hereditary? Dr. Loring 
produces certain eminent German ocu- 
lists who state that myopia (near-sight- 
edness) is certainly hereditary. The doc- 
tor only partially agrees with the Ger- 
man savants whom he cites, and believes 
that no organ having reached its highest 
state of perfection, as has the human eye, 
can be changed by hereditary transmis- 
sion, unless under conditions that affect 
the human organism as a whole, and that 
it would take ages to accomplish this 
under the most favorable conditions. 
The doctor explains why educated 
Germans as a rule are myopic by stating 
that the German forcing system for chil- 
dren under fifteen is radically wrong, 
and, moreover, that Germans as a nation 
are not fond of out-door sports. He fur- 
ther argues that their manner of cooking 
and sanitary arrangements are bad ; all 
which, under certain conditions, will tend 
to produce hereditary myopia. Ameri- 
cans, it is stated, exhibit in some respects 
an inclination to follow the German plan 
rather than adhere to the traditional edu- 
cational system of our ancestors of the 
English race. 



Children, the doctor argues, must not 
be pushed in their studies until after fif- 
teen, at which period the danger from 
over-use of the eye is diminished ; and it 
is thus that watchmakers, type-setters, 
and other artisans who continuously use 
their eyes upon minute objects have 
better sight than the studious profession- 
al man or laborious scientific worker. 
We may sum up the article in a few lines 
when we say that nothing good, either 
physical or mental, can accrue from forc- 
ing young minds beyond a certain ex- 
tent, and that we have reached, possibly 
passed, the ultimum in our present sys- 
tem of education. Encourage, as far as 
possible, out door sports, and let the 
heavy mental work be done after four- 
teen. Give our children air and light, 
lest harm be done to the race. 

AN AMERICAN ALMANAC AND TREASURY 
OF FACTS, STATISTICAL, FINANCIAL, 
AND POLITICAL, FOR THE YEAR 1878. 
Edited by Ainsworth R. Spofford, 
Librarian of Congress. New York 
and Washington : The American News 
Company. 

Few persons in this country are more 
competent to compile a volume such as 
this than the Librarian of Congress. 
H imself a practical bookseller, he brought 
years of the necessary experience to his 
aid. The results of this experience are 
manifest in the intelligently-arranged 
and trustworthy volume before us. It 
contains a vast amount of really useful 
information, on agriculture, politics, 
banks, finances, libraries, the census, 
chronology, commerce, the post-office, 
gold and silver coinage, education in 
fact, on every practical subject about 
which persons need ready and accu- 
rate information. Its statistics can be re- 
lied on as trustworthy. It is preceded by 
a short " History of Almanacs," in which 
Mr. Spofford enumerates several that 
have appeared of late years, though he 
has forgotten to mention the Illustrated 
Catholic Family Almanac, now in its 
tenth year. This, we presume, was an 
oversight ; for, if we are not mistaken, it 
has been a guide to some of the statis- 
ticians in Washington with regard to 
the statistics of Catholic colleges and in- 
stitutions of learning conducted by Ca- 
tholics. 



AP The Catholic world 

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