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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Miraculous Medal
+ Its Origin, History, Circulation, Results
+
+Author: Jean Marie Aladel
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2013 [EBook #44231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Karina Aleksandrova, Sue Fleming, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: _SISTER CATHERINE LABOURÉ,
+
+The Daughter of Charity, favored with the Vision of the Miraculous
+Medal in 1830. Died December 31, 1876._]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ MIRACULOUS MEDAL
+
+ ITS
+
+ _Origin, History, Circulation, Results_.
+
+ BY M. ALADEL, C.M.
+
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,
+
+ BY P.S.,
+
+ Graduate of St. Joseph's, Emmitsburg, Md.
+
+ ILLUSTRATED.
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ H.L. KILNER & CO.,
+ PUBLISHERS.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1880, BY JOHN B. PIET.
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION.
+
+ TO
+
+ THE MOST COMPASSIONATE VIRGIN MARY,
+
+ MOTHER OF GOD, CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN.
+
+_Oh Mary, conceived without sin, Virgin incomparable, august Mother of
+Jesus, thou who hast adopted us for thy children, and who hast given us
+so many proofs of thy maternal tenderness, deign to accept this little
+book, feeble token of our gratitude and love!_
+
+_Oh! may it be instrumental in attracting and attaching inviolably to
+thee, the hearts of all who read it!_
+
+_O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!_
+
+
+
+
+ _AUTHOR'S DECLARATION._
+
+
+In conformity with the decree of Pope Urban VIII, we declare that
+the terms miracle, revelation, apparition and other expressions of a
+similar nature here employed, have, in our intention, no other than a
+purely historical value, and that we submit unreservedly the entire
+contents of this book to the judgment of the Apostolic See.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLISHER.
+
+
+Since the hour when the Beloved Disciple took the Blessed Virgin to
+his own, the followers of her Divine Son have always cherished a
+reverential affection for her above all other creatures. They have
+regarded her as the ideal of all that is true and pure and sweet and
+noble in the Christian life, and they have honored her as the most
+favored of mortals, the greatest of saints, the masterpiece of the
+Almighty. The peculiar veneration paid to her by the Apostles, was
+caught up by the first Christians, who regarded her with awe because
+of her great dignity; and when she died, her memory was held in
+benediction. But death could not sever her from those who, in the
+person of St. John, had been given to her for her children. She still
+lived for the Church. From the time when the faithful took refuge
+in the Catacombs to the fifth century, when the Council of Ephesus
+solemnly sanctioned the homage paid to her as the Mother of God, her
+intercession was often invoked; and from that day, devotion towards her
+has increased until our own age, when the nations of the earth unite to
+proclaim her Blessed.
+
+Often has Mary given signal proofs of the pleasure she takes in the
+devotion of her clients and of the power she possesses to grant their
+petitions. Graces asked through her mediation have been suddenly
+obtained; wonders in the way of cures and conversions have been wrought
+at her shrines; disasters have been averted; plagues have been made
+to cease; and, to crown all her favors, apparitions have occurred, in
+which she has shown herself, radiant with the lustre of Heaven, to
+her loyal servants; and, in some instances, she has left something
+like the scapular, the Miraculous Medal and the fount in the grotto of
+Lourdes, as memorials of her visit.
+
+These manifestations of her maternal solicitude have of late been more
+frequent, more renowned, and more efficacious than ever. As the end
+draws near and the dangers increase, her anxiety for the sanctification
+of her own bursts its bonds and urges her to find new ways to the
+hearts of men. Among the most recent of these demonstrations, the
+Miraculous Medal is one of the most remarkable. How it originated,
+how rapidly and widely it has circulated, and how gloriously it has
+fulfilled its mission, are told in this book. A more interesting and
+edifying history could not easily have been written. To all children of
+Mary, in America as elsewhere, it will be welcome, and for them this
+edition has been prepared by
+
+
+ THE PUBLISHER.
+
+ May 4, 1880.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE FRENCH EDITION
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The eighth and last edition of THE HISTORY OF THE MIRACULOUS
+MEDAL, extending up to the year 1842, has for a long time been
+out of print. More than once efforts have been made to have a new
+edition published, but until now they have failed. The recent death
+of the Sister who was favored with the Blessed Virgin's confidence,
+has again excited a general desire for the work; for many persons are
+eager to learn the origin of the medal, and others hope to get the full
+particulars of it. For these reasons, the present edition has been
+undertaken.
+
+Believing that it would gratify our readers, we have placed at the
+beginning of the book a biographical sketch of the privileged Sister,
+Catherine Labouré, and to it we have added some notes concerning M.
+Aladel, her Director, who was the author of the previous editions.
+
+These editions of the History presented but a very condensed account
+of the apparition of the Blessed Virgin in 1830; for serious reasons
+induced M. Aladel to suppress many things. He feared especially to
+attract attention to the humble daughter who had transmitted Heaven's
+orders, and who, it was best, should remain unknown to the end of her
+life.
+
+Now, these fears are no longer an obstacle, and we are permitted to
+publish, for the edification of the faithful, all that the Sister
+revealed, at least, all that we still possess of these communications.
+At the time of the last edition, M. Aladel could understand but
+imperfectly the import of the vision of the medal, but certain events
+of subsequent occurrence, have placed this important revelation in a
+clearer light, and fully established its connection with the past and
+the future. We have endeavored to show the designs of Providence, by
+proving that the apparition of 1830 was not an isolated fact; that
+it marked the end of a disastrous period for the Church and society;
+that it was the beginning of a new era, an era of mercy and hope; that
+it was a preparation for the definition of the Immaculate Conception
+as a dogma of faith; in fine, that it was the first of a series of
+supernatural manifestations, which have greatly increased devotion to
+the Blessed Virgin, insomuch, that our age may justly be styled the age
+of Mary.
+
+We have judged it advisable to omit quite a number of miraculous
+occurrences related in the preceding editions, and substitute for them
+others not less authentic, but more recent, thus demonstrating that
+the medal is as efficacious in our days, as it was at the time of its
+origin.
+
+We ask those who may hereafter obtain similar favors, to send an
+account of them, together with satisfactory vouchers of their
+authenticity, to the Superior-General of the Daughters of Charity, rue
+du Bac, 140, or to the Director of the Daughters of Charity, rue de
+Sevres, 95, Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ DEDICATION, iii
+
+ THE AUTHOR'S DECLARATION, v
+
+ PREFACE, vii
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ Sister Catherine, Daughter of Charity--Her Birth--Early
+ Life--Vocation--Entrance into the Community--Apparition of
+ the Blessed Virgin--The Medal--Sister Catherine is sent to
+ d'Enghien Hospital--Her humble, hidden Life--Her Death.
+ 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ Mary's Agency in the Church--This Agency always manifest, seems
+ to have disappeared during the Eighteenth and at the beginning
+ of the Nineteenth Century--Mary reappears in 1830--Motives and
+ Importance of this Apparition--The Immaculate Conception.
+ 42
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine--First
+ Apparition: An Angel Conducts the Sister to the Chapel--Mary
+ Converses with Her--Second Apparition: Mary standing upon
+ a Globe, her hands emitting Rays of Light, symbolic of
+ Grace--Mary orders a Medal to be Struck--Third Apparition: Mary
+ Repeats the Order.
+ 51
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ The Medal Appears--The Welcome it Receives--Canonical
+ Investigation ordered by Mgr. de Quélen--Wonderful Circulation
+ of the Medal.
+ 67
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ Development of the Devotion to the Immaculate Conception--Mgr.
+ de Quélen's Circular.
+ 79
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ Extraordinary Graces obtained by means of the Miraculous
+ Medal--Graces obtained from 1832 to 1835--During the year 1835,
+ in France, Switzerland, Savoy, Turkey--From 1836 to 1838, in
+ France, Italy, Holland, &c.--Notre Dame des Victoires--From
+ 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, &c.--From 1843 to
+ 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America.
+ 94
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Progress of the Devotion to Mary crowned by the Definition of
+ the Immaculate Conception--Our Lady of La Salette--The Children
+ of Mary--The Definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+ 261
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Miraculous Medal and the War--The War in the East--The
+ Italian War--The United States--War between Prussia and
+ Austria--Souvenirs of the Commune.
+ 289
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Recent Manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church--Our
+ Lady of Lourdes--Our Lady of Pontmain, &c.--Conclusion.
+
+
+
+
+Table of Engravings of the Miraculous Medal
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ Portrait of Sister Catherine Labouré, the Daughter of Charity
+ favored with the Vision of the Miraculous Medal in 1830.
+ _Frontispiece_
+
+ First Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Labouré, Daughter of Charity, during the night of July 18th,
+ 1830. After a picture painted according to Sister Catherine's
+ directions. Summoned by her Guardian Angel, under the form of a
+ child, emitting rays of light, Sister Catherine arises, follows
+ him to the Chapel, which she finds brilliantly illuminated; she
+ afterwards sees the Blessed Virgin seated in the sanctuary. The
+ picture represents Sister Catherine at the Blessed Virgin's
+ feet, her hands on the Blessed Virgin's knees: "My child,"
+ says the Blessed Virgin, "the times are very disastrous, great
+ troubles are about to descend upon France; the throne will
+ be upset, the entire world will be in confusion by reason of
+ miseries of every description."
+ 53
+
+ Second Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Labouré, November 17th, 1830, first picture. About half-past
+ five in the evening, whilst Sister Catharine is taking her
+ meditation, the Blessed Virgin again appears. She stands upon a
+ hemisphere, and holds in her hand a globe which she offers to
+ our Lord. Suddenly her fingers are filled with most dazzling
+ rings and precious stones. "This globe," says the Blessed
+ Virgin, "represents the whole world and particularly France."
+ She adds that the rays escaping from her hands "are symbols of
+ the graces she bestows upon those who ask for them."
+ 59
+
+ Same Apparition, second picture. "Then," relates Sister
+ Catherine, "there formed around the Blessed Virgin a somewhat
+ oval picture, upon which appeared in golden letters these
+ words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!' and a voice said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model; those who wear it indulgenced will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it on the neck; abundant graces
+ will be bestowed upon those who have confidence.'" At that
+ instant, the picture being turned, Sister Catherine sees on the
+ reverse, the letter M, surmounted by a cross, and beneath this
+ the sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
+ 60
+
+ Medal struck by order of Mgr. de Quélen. 78
+
+ Apparition of the Miraculous Medal to M. Ratisbonne. 205
+
+ Representation of the Miraculous Medal, modelled in accordance
+ with the description given by Sister Catherine Labouré.
+ 272, 273
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SISTER CATHERINE,
+
+ _DAUGHTER OF CHARITY_.
+
+ HER BIRTH--EARLY LIFE--VOCATION--ENTRANCE INTO THE
+ COMMUNITY--APPARITION OF THE VIRGIN--THE MEDAL--SISTER CATHERINE
+ IS PLACED AT THE HOSPITAL D'ENGHIEN--HER HUMBLE, HIDDEN LIFE--HER
+ DEATH.
+
+
+It is an extensively credited assumption, that those who are favored
+with supernatural communications should have something extraordinary
+in their person and mode of life. One easily invests them with an
+ideal of perfection, which, in some measure, sets them apart from
+the majority of mankind. But if, at any time, an occasion occurs of
+proving that such an assumption is erroneous, if we discover in these
+divine confidants weaknesses or only infirmities, we are astonished
+and tempted to be scandalized. Among the Christians who knew St. Paul
+only by reputation, some were disappointed on a closer acquaintance;
+they said his appearance was too unprepossessing and his language too
+unrefined for an apostle. Were not the Jews scandalized that Our Lord
+ate and drank like others, that His parents were poor, that He came
+from Nazareth, and that He conversed with sinners? So true is it, that
+we are always disposed to judge by appearances.
+
+Not so with God. He sees the depths of our hearts, and often what
+appears contemptible in the eyes of the world, is great in His.
+Simplicity and purity He prizes especially. Exterior qualities, gifts
+of intellect, birth and education, are of little value to Him, and when
+He has an important mission to confide, it is ordinarily to persons not
+possessing these qualifications. Thus, does He display His wisdom and
+power, in using what is weak, to accomplish great results. Sometimes,
+He chooses for His instruments subjects that are even imperfect,
+permitting them to commit faults in order to keep them in all humility,
+and convince them that the favors they receive are not accorded their
+own merits, but are the gift of God's pure bounty.
+
+These observations naturally prelude Sister Catherine's biography; they
+explain in advance the difficulties which might arise in the mind of
+the reader at the contrast between a life so simple and ordinary and
+the graces showered upon her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine (Zoé Labouré) was born May 2, 1806, in a little
+village of the Côte-d'Or Mountains, called Fain-les-Moutiers, of the
+parish of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. This last place, particularly dear
+to St. Vincent, was not far from the cradle of St. Bernard, that
+great servant of Mary, nor from the spot where St. Chantal passed a
+part of her life, as if in the soil as well as the blood there was a
+predisposition to certain qualities or hereditary virtues.
+
+Her parents, sincere Christians, were held in esteem. They cultivated
+their farm, and enjoyed that competency which arises from rural labor
+joined to simplicity of life. God had blessed their union with a
+numerous family, seven sons and three daughters.
+
+At an early age, the sons left the paternal roof; little Zoé, with
+her sisters, remained under the mother's eye, but this mother, God
+took from Zoé, ere she had completed her eighth year. Already capable
+of feeling the extent of this sacrifice, it seemed to her as if the
+Blessed Virgin wished to be her only Mother.
+
+An aunt, living at Rémy, took Zoé and the youngest sister to live with
+her; but the father, a pious man, who in his youth had even thought of
+embracing the ecclesiastical state, preferred having the children under
+his own eye, and at the end of two years they were brought home.
+
+Another motive, also, impelled him to act thus. The eldest sister
+thought seriously of leaving her family to enter the Community of
+Daughters of Charity, and the poor father could not bear the idea of
+confiding his house to mercenary hands. And thus, at an age when other
+children think only of their sports, Zoé was inured to hard work.
+
+At the age of twelve, with a pure and fervent heart, she made her First
+Communion in the church of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Henceforth, her only
+desire was to be solely His who had just given Himself to her for the
+first time.
+
+Very soon after, the eldest sister left home to postulate at Langres;
+and Zoé, now little mistress of the house, did the cooking, with the
+assistance of a woman for the roughest work. She carried the field
+hands their meals, and never shrank from any duty however laborious or
+severe.
+
+Moutiers-Saint-Jean possesses an establishment of the Sisters of St.
+Vincent de Paul. Zoé went to see them as often as her household duties
+permitted, and the good Sister-Servant, who loved her much, encouraged
+the child in her laborious life; yet the latter never spoke to the
+Sister of her growing vocation, but awaited, with a secret impatience,
+until her sister (two years her junior) would be able to take charge
+of the house. It was she to whom Zoé confided her dearest desires, and
+then commenced for the two that tender intimacy of life, one of pure
+labor and duty, and whose only relaxations were attending the services
+of the parish church.
+
+The two young girls, thinking themselves able to dispense with the
+servant, dismissed her, and now shared between them all the work. Zoé,
+who was very sedate and trustworthy, watched over everything with
+the utmost vigilance, and took care of her sister with a mother's
+tenderness.
+
+One of her favorite occupations was the charge of the pigeon house,
+which always contained from seven to eight hundred pigeons. So
+faithfully did she perform this duty, that they all knew her, and as
+soon as she appeared they came flying around her in the shape of a
+crown. It was, says her sister, a most charming spectacle--innocence
+attracting the birds, which are its symbol.
+
+In youth, we see her, already modest in deportment, serious in
+character, pious and recollected in the parochial church which she
+regularly attended, kneeling upon the cold stones even in winter. And
+this was not the only mortification she practiced; to bodily fatigue,
+she added from her tenderest youth that of fasting every Wednesday
+and Saturday. It was for a long time without her father's knowledge;
+at length, discovering his daughter's pious ruse, he endeavored to
+dissuade her; but all his reproaches were not able to overcome her love
+of penance, she believed it her duty to prefer the interior voice of
+God to that of her father.
+
+In all this we clearly discern the character of the future Sister,
+with its virtues and defects. On one side, we see true simplicity,
+unselfishness, constant application to the most laborious duties under
+the safeguard of innocence and fervor; on the other, a disposition
+accustomed to govern, and which could not yield without an internal
+struggle.
+
+During this life of rural toil, she never lost sight of her vocation.
+Several times was her hand asked in marriage, but she invariably
+answered that, long affianced to Jesus her good Saviour, she wished no
+other spouse than Him. But had she yet made choice of the Community she
+would enter? It is doubtful, especially when we consider the following
+event of her life, which deeply impressed her, and always remained
+graven in the memory of her dear sister who related it.
+
+Being still in her father's house at Fain-les-Moutiers, she had
+a dream, which we may consider as an inspiration from God and a
+preparation for her vocation.
+
+It seemed to her that she was in the Purgatorian chapel of the
+village church. An aged priest of venerable appearance and remarkable
+countenance appeared in the chapel, and began to vest himself for
+Mass; she assisted at it, deeply impressed with the presence of this
+unknown priest. At the end of Mass, he made her a sign to approach, but
+affrighted, she drew back, yet ever keeping her eyes fixed upon him.
+
+Leaving the church, she went to visit a sick person in the village.
+Here, she again finds herself with the aged priest, who addresses her
+in these words: "My daughter, it is well to nurse the sick; you fly
+from me now, but one day you will be happy to come to me. God has His
+designs upon you, do not forget it." Amazed and filled with fear, the
+young girl still flies his presence. On leaving the house, it seemed to
+her that her feet scarcely touched the ground, and just at the moment
+of entering her home she awoke, and recognized that what had passed was
+only a dream.
+
+She was now eighteen years old, knowing scarcely how to read, much less
+write; as she was doubtless aware that this would be an obstacle to her
+admission into a Community, she obtained her father's permission to
+visit her sister-in-law, who kept a boarding school at Châtillon, and
+there receive a little instruction. Her father, fearing to lose her,
+reluctantly consented to her departure.
+
+Incessantly occupied with thoughts of the vision we have already
+related, she spoke of it to the Curé of Châtillon, who said to her: "I
+believe, my child, that this old man is St. Vincent, who calls you to
+be a Daughter of Charity." Her sister-in-law having taken her to see
+the Sisters at Châtillon, she was astonished on entering their parlor
+to behold a picture, the perfect portrait of the priest who had said
+to her in her dream: "My daughter, you fly from me now, but one day
+you will be happy to come to me. God has His designs upon you, do not
+forget it." She immediately inquired the name of the original, and when
+told that it was St. Vincent, the mystery vanished; she understood that
+it was he who was to be her Father.
+
+This circumstance was not of a nature to quench the ardor of her
+desires. She remained but a short time with her sister-in-law. The
+humble country girl was ill at ease amidst the young ladies of the
+school, and she learned nothing.
+
+It was at this time she became acquainted with Sister Victoire Séjole,
+who was afterwards placed over the house at Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Though
+young, already thoroughly devoted to God and His poor, Sister Victoire
+divined the candor of this soul and its sufferings; she immediately
+begged her Sister-Servant to admit Zoé as a postulant without delay,
+offering herself to bestow particular pains upon her, instructing her
+in whatever was indispensable for her as a Daughter of Charity.
+
+But Zoé could not yet profit by the interest good Sister Victoire had
+taken in her; this happiness was to be dearly bought.
+
+When she acquainted her father with her intentions, the poor father's
+heart rebelled; he had already given his eldest daughter to St.
+Vincent's family, and now, to sacrifice her who for years had so
+wisely directed his household, seemed indeed beyond his strength. He
+considered a means of dissuading her from her plans, and thought he
+had found it by sending her to Paris, to one of his sons who kept a
+restaurant, telling him to seek by various distractions to extinguish
+in the sister's heart all idea of her vocation. Time of trial and
+suffering for the young aspirant, who, far from losing the desire of
+consecrating herself to God, only sighed more ardently after the happy
+day when she could quit the world.
+
+She now thought of writing to her sister-in-law at Châtillon, and
+interesting her in the matter. The latter, touched with this mark of
+confidence, had Zoé come to her, and finally obtained the father's
+consent. Zoé became a postulant in the house of the Sisters at
+Châtillon, in the beginning of the year 1830.
+
+Zoé Labouré was very happy to find, at last, the end of those severe
+trials which had lasted almost two years. The 21st of April, 1830, she
+reached that much desired haven, the Seminary.[1]
+
+ [Footnote 1: St. Vincent desired that the sojourn which the
+ young Sisters make at the Mother House, to be there imbued
+ with, and instructed in, the spirit and duties of their
+ vocation, should be called the Seminary term; he feared lest
+ the word "novitiate," applicable to religious Orders, might
+ cause the Daughters of Charity to be regarded as such.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Behold her, then, in possession of all that had been the cherished
+object of her desires and affections from earliest childhood! Her soul
+could now dilate itself in prayer, and in the joyful consciousness of
+being entirely devoted to the service of its God.
+
+During the whole of her Seminary term, she had the happiness of
+having for Director of her conscience M. Jean Marie Aladel, of
+venerated memory, a priest of eminent piety, excellent judgment and
+great experience, austere as a hermit, indefatigable in work, a true
+son of St. Vincent de Paul. He was a prudent guide for her in the
+extraordinary ways whither God had called her. He knew how to hold
+her in check against the illusions of imagination, and especially the
+seductions of pride at the same time, that he encouraged her to walk
+in the paths of perfection by the practice of the most solid virtues.
+M. Aladel did not lose sight of her, even after she was sent to the
+Hospital d'Enghien. He thereby gained much for his own sanctification
+and the mission confided to him.
+
+Informed by her of God's designs, he devoted himself unreservedly to
+the propagation of devotion to Mary Immaculate, and during the last
+years of his life, to extend among the young girls educated by the
+Sisters of St. Vincent, the association of Children of Mary. He died in
+1865, eleven years before his spiritual daughter.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: The Life of M. Aladel has been published; 1 volume
+ in 12mo. It can be procured in Paris, rue du Bac, 140.]
+
+Three days before the magnificent ceremony of the translation of St.
+Vincent de Paul's relics to the chapel of St. Lazare, a feast which
+was the signal of renewed life for the Congregation of the Mission,
+Sister Labouré was favored with a prophetic vision. The same God who
+had called Vincent from the charge of his father's flocks to make him a
+vessel of election, was now going to confide to a poor country girl the
+secrets of His mercy. Let us give the account of this first impression
+in her own simple language.
+
+ "It was Wednesday before the translation of St. Vincent de
+ Paul's relics. Happy and delighted at the idea of taking part
+ in this grand celebration, it seemed to me that I no longer
+ cared for anything on earth.
+
+ "I begged St. Vincent to give me whatever graces I needed, also
+ to bestow the same upon his two families and all France. It
+ appeared to me that France was in sore need of them. In fine,
+ I prayed St. Vincent to teach me what I ought to ask, and also
+ that I might ask it with a lively faith."
+
+She returned from St. Lazare's filled with the thought of her blessed
+Father, and believed that she found him again at the Community.
+"I had," said she, "the consolation of seeing his heart above the
+little shrine where his relics are exposed. It appeared to me three
+successive days in a different manner: First, of a pale, clear color,
+and this denoted peace, serenity, innocence and union.
+
+"Afterwards, I saw it the color of fire, symbolic of the charity that
+should be enkindled in hearts. It seemed to me that charity was to be
+reanimated and extended even to the extremities of the world.
+
+"Lastly, it appeared a very dark red, a livid hue, which plunged my
+heart in sadness. It filled me with fears I could scarcely overcome. I
+know not why, nor how, but this sadness seemed to be connected with a
+change of government."
+
+It was strange, indeed, that Sister Labouré, at that time, should have
+these political forebodings.
+
+An interior voice said to her: "The heart of St. Vincent is profoundly
+afflicted at the great misfortunes which will overwhelm France."
+The last day of the octave, she saw the same heart vermilion color,
+and the interior voice whispered: "The heart of St. Vincent is a
+little consoled, because he has obtained from God (through Mary's
+intercession) protection for his two families in the midst of these
+disasters; they shall not perish, and God will use them to revive the
+Faith."
+
+To ease her mind, she related this vision to her confessor, who told
+her to think no more about it; Sister Labouré never dreamed of aught
+but obeying, and in no way did she ever reveal it to her companions.
+
+We find this singular favor mentioned in a letter written by Sister
+Catherine, in the year 1856, at the command of M. Aladel. The year
+she entered the Seminary, this worthy missionary was almost the only
+chaplain of the Community. The Congregation of the Mission, scarcely
+restored at this epoch, counted at its Mother House but nine priests
+in all, and at least half that number were in the Seminary. M. Étienne,
+of venerated memory, was Procurator General, and M. Salhorgne, Superior
+of St. Vincent's two families. If the laborers were few, the deficiency
+was supplied by the devotedness of these few, who multiplied themselves
+for the service of the Community. The Divine bounty has prepared for
+their charity a beautiful recompense.
+
+According to the notes which Sister Catherine wrote later in obedience
+to M. Aladel, the humble daughter during all her Seminary term enjoyed
+the undisguised sight of Him whose presence is concealed from our
+senses in the Sacrament of His love. "Except," said she, "when I
+doubted, then I saw nothing, because I wished to fathom the mystery,
+fearing to be deceived."
+
+Our Lord deigned to show Himself to His humble servant, conformably to
+the mysteries of the day, and, in connexion with this, she mentions one
+circumstance relative to the change of government, which could not have
+been foreseen by human means.
+
+"On the Feast of the Holy Trinity," says she, "Our Lord during Holy
+Mass appeared to me in the Most Blessed Sacrament as a king with the
+cross upon His breast. Just at the Gospel, it seemed to me that the
+cross and all His regal ornaments fell at His feet, and He remained
+thus despoiled. It was then the gloomiest and saddest thoughts
+oppressed me, for I understood from this that the king would be
+stripped of his royal garb, and great disasters would ensue."
+
+When the humble daughter had these forebodings concerning the king, he
+was then apparently at the pinnacle of fortune. The siege of Algiers
+was in progress, and everything predicted the happy success of his
+arms. During the early part of July, this almost impregnable fortress
+of the pirates fell into the power of France; the whole kingdom
+rejoiced at the memorable victory, and the churches resounded with
+hymns of thanksgiving.
+
+Alas! this triumph was to be quickly followed by a bloody revolution,
+which would overthrow the throne and menace the altars. That very
+month, the clergy and religious communities of Paris were seized with
+terror. M. Aladel was greatly alarmed for the Daughters of Charity and
+the Missionaries, but Sister Labouré never ceased to reassure him,
+saying that the two communities had nothing to fear, they would not
+perish.
+
+One day she told him that a bishop had sought refuge at St. Lazare's,
+that he could be received without hesitation, and might remain there
+in safety. M. Aladel paid little attention to these predictions,
+but returning sadly to his house, he was accosted on entering by M.
+Salhorgne, who told him that Mgr. Frayssinous, Bishop of Hermopolis,
+and Minister of Religious Worship under Charles X, had just come,
+begging an asylum from the persecution that pursued him.
+
+These revelations bore an impress of truth which it was difficult to
+ignore; so in feigning to mistrust them, M. Aladel listened with the
+deepest interest. He began to persuade himself that the spirit of God
+inspired this young Sister; and after seeing the accomplishment of
+several things she had foretold, he now felt disposed to give credence
+to other and more marvellous communications she had confided to him.
+
+According to her testimony, the Most Holy Virgin had appeared to her,
+these apparitions were repeated various times, she had been charged to
+acquaint her Director with what she had seen and heard, an important
+mission had been confided to her, that of having struck and circulated
+a medal in honor of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+The third chapter of this volume gives a detailed account of these
+visions, just as they have been transmitted to us from the hand of the
+Sister herself.
+
+Notwithstanding the sensible assurances of the Sister's veracity, M.
+Aladel listened to these communications with mistrust, as he tells us
+himself, in the canonical investigation prescribed in 1836 by Mgr.
+de Quélen; he professed to consider them of little value, as if they
+had been the pious vagaries of a young girl's imagination. He told
+her to regard them in the same light, and he even went so far as to
+humble her, and reproach her with a want of submission. The poor
+Sister, unable to convince him, dared speak no more of the apparitions
+of the Blessed Virgin; she never mentioned the subject to him except
+when she felt herself tormented and constrained to do so by an almost
+irresistible desire.
+
+"Such was the reason," says M. Aladel, "that she spoke to him
+concerning the matter but three times, although the visions were much
+oftener repeated." After thus relieving her heart, she became perfectly
+calm. The investigation also shows us that Sister Catherine sought no
+other confidant of her secrets than her confessor; she never mentioned
+them to her Superior or any one else. It was to M. Aladel Mary had
+directed her, to him only did she speak, and she even exacted of him
+the promise that her name would never be mentioned.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: Verbal process of the investigation made by order
+ of Mgr. de Quélen in 1836, upon the origin of the medal, MS. p.
+ 10.]
+
+After this pledge, M. Aladel related the vision to M. Étienne and
+others, but without designating the Sister's identity, directly or
+indirectly. We shall see later how Providence always guarded her secret.
+
+These celestial communications, we may easily imagine, produced in the
+soul of Sister Labouré profound impressions, which usually remained
+even after she had finished her devotions, and which rendered her in
+some degree oblivious of what was passing around her. It is related
+that after one of these apparitions she rises like the others at the
+given signal, leaves the chapel, and takes her place in the refectory,
+but remains so absorbed that she never thinks of touching the meal
+apportioned her.
+
+Sister Caillaud, third Directress, going her rounds, says bluntly to
+her: "Ah! Sister Labouré, are you still in an ecstasy?" This recalls
+her to herself, and the good Directress, who knows not how truly she
+has spoken, suspects nothing.
+
+Meanwhile, Sister Catherine approached the end of her Seminary term,
+and in spite of her affirmations at once so artless and so exact, her
+Director always refused to credit them. She had the affliction of
+leaving the Mother House without being able to obtain anything, even a
+hope.
+
+It was because the affair was graver than she thought; the supernatural
+origin of the favor he was directed to communicate to the public could
+be contested, and the prudent Director saw that in such a matter he
+could neither exact too many proofs, nor take too many precautions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Labouré was clothed with the holy habit in the month of January,
+1831, and sent under the name of Sister Catherine to the Hospital
+d'Enghien in the faubourg St. Antoine. Here she could continue her
+communications with M. Aladel. This good father did not lose sight of
+her; though apparently giving no credit to his penitent revelations,
+he was studying her carefully to convince himself whether or not these
+visions were the product of a weak, enthusiastic mind and excited
+imagination. But the more he studied her, the more confident he felt
+that there was nothing of this in Sister Labouré. The judgment formed
+of her by the Directresses of the Seminary was, that she had a somewhat
+reserved but calm, positive character, which M. Aladel qualified as
+cold and even apathetic.
+
+This last epithet, however, was not applicable to Sister Catherine,
+in whom her companions, on the contrary, recognized a very impulsive
+temperament. But his opinion proves, at least, that there was no
+excessive imagination. Moreover, she proved herself solidly grounded
+in virtue, whilst no one ever perceived anything extraordinary in her
+demeanor, and especially in her devotions.
+
+Before going to her new destination, Sister Labouré passed some days in
+one of the large establishments of Paris. Wishing to examine the young
+Sister more leisurely, M. Aladel made a pretext of visiting the Sisters
+at this house. The account of these visions had already been circulated
+throughout the Community, and it was known that M. Aladel had received
+the Sisters' confidence; hence, as soon as he appeared, the Sisters
+surrounded him, and each one eagerly plied him with questions. He had
+his eye upon Sister Catherine, who, without being disconcerted, quietly
+mingled her inquiries with the others. The worthy missionary was
+reassured, understanding that the Sister kept her secret.
+
+The last time the Blessed Virgin appeared to Sister Labouré in
+the sanctuary of the Mother House, she said to her: "My daughter,
+henceforth you will see me no more, but you will hear my voice during
+your meditations." And, indeed, during the whole course of her life,
+she had frequent communications of this kind. They were no longer
+sensible apparitions, but mental visions, that she well knew how to
+distinguish from the illusions of imagination or the impressions of a
+pious fervor.
+
+Her mission had not been accomplished in regard to the medal. Some
+months elapsed, and the Immaculate Virgin complained to Sister
+Catherine that her orders had not been executed.
+
+"But, my good Mother," replied Sister Catherine, "you see that he will
+not believe me." "Be calm," was the answer; "a day will come when he
+will do what I desire; he is my servant, and he would fear to displease
+me."
+
+These words were soon verified.
+
+When the pious missionary received this communication, he began to
+reflect seriously. "If Mary is displeased," said he, "it is not with
+the young Sister, whose position prevents her doing anything; it must
+be with me." This thought troubled him.[4] A long time previous, he
+had related these visions to M. Étienne, then Procurator General. One
+day, at the beginning of the year 1832, when they had gone together on
+a visit to Mgr. de Quélen, M. Aladel profited by the opportunity to
+speak to the latter of these apparitions, and especially of his own
+embarrassment, since the Blessed Virgin had complained to the Sister of
+the delay in fulfilling her commands.
+
+ [Footnote 4: Verbal process of the investigation, p. 5.]
+
+Mgr. de Quélen replied that, seeing nothing in it at all contrary to
+faith, he had no objection to the medal being struck at once. He even
+asked them to send him some of the first.
+
+The ravages of the cholera, which had broken out meanwhile, retarded
+the execution of this design until June; the 30th of that month, two
+thousand medals were struck, and M. Aladel hastened to send some of
+them to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Mgr. de Quélen wished to make an immediate trial of its efficacy; he
+was very much troubled concerning the spiritual condition of the former
+Archbishop of Mechlin, Mgr. de Pradt, now on the verge of death; he
+desired his conversion so much the more earnestly, as the death of this
+prelate might be the occasion of scandal and grave disorders, such as
+have accompanied the interment of the constitutional bishop Gregory.
+Providing himself with a medal, he went to visit the sick man. At
+first he was refused admittance, but very soon the dying man repents
+of it, and sends him an apology, with a request to call again. In this
+interview, he testifies to His Grace a sincere repentance for his past
+life, retracts all his errors, and after receiving the Last Sacraments,
+he dies that very night in the arms of the Archbishop, who, filled with
+a holy joy, eagerly imparts this consoling news to M. Aladel.
+
+The worthy missionary sent a medal to Sister Catherine, who received
+it with great devotion and respect,[5] and said: "Now it must be
+disseminated." This was easy to do among the Daughters of Charity, who
+had all heard whispers of these apparitions; the eagerness to receive
+the medals was general, they were distributed freely, and cures and
+conversions multiplied themselves accordingly in all ranks of society,
+so that very soon the medal received the appellation of miraculous.
+
+ [Footnote 5: Verbal process of the investigation.]
+
+A witness of these wonders, the heart of Father Aladel dilated with
+joy, and he believed it his duty to publish a notice of the origin of
+the medal, and thus satisfy all the inquiries addressed him on the
+subject. For the glory of God and Mary, he added an account of all the
+consoling facts that had come to his knowledge.
+
+What said Sister Catherine in hearing of these wonderful occurrences?
+Less than any one; she was astonished; doubtless her joy was great, but
+it was confined within the silence of her heart. Occasionally she sent
+some new message to M. Aladel, begging him to have an altar erected
+commemorative of the apparition, and telling him that many graces and
+indulgences would be attached thereto, and fall most abundantly upon
+himself and the Community.
+
+She urged him also to solicit particular spiritual favors, assuring him
+that he might ask freely, for all his requests would be granted.
+
+But this worthy priest, whose position in the Community, as we have
+already said, was that of simple chaplain, prudently kept silence,
+holding himself in reserve until the favorable moment should arrive
+for him to act. Some years after, M. Étienne, his intimate friend, was
+elected Superior General, and he was made assistant of the Congregation
+and Director of the Daughters of Charity; in concert, they formed the
+design of erecting to the Immaculate Mary an altar more in accordance
+with her maternal bounty and the gratitude of her children. Providence
+itself seemed to co-operate with the execution of their plan, the
+Community receiving from the government just then a present of two
+magnificent blocks of white marble, in recognition of the Sisters'
+services to the cholera patients and their orphans. One was destined
+for an altar, the other for a statue of the Immaculate Mary.
+
+Meanwhile, the number of inmates at the Mother House, the Seminary
+especially, increased daily. The new life infused into the Community
+had awakened many vocations, and the centre of reunion had become
+inadequate in size to its purposes, the chapel particularly was much
+too small. In enlarging it, the architect had a difficult problem to
+resolve: he must respect the sanctuary honored by Mary's visit, and
+yet extend the enclosure. He did so by adding side aisles, on a lower
+foundation, surmounted with galleries. If the edifice, always too low
+and small, gained nothing in the way of art, it has, at least, the
+advantage of preserving intact the exact spot where the Most Holy
+Virgin appeared.
+
+The former altar was taken into the side chapel dedicated to St.
+Vincent, and the holy founder was there represented holding that heart,
+burning with love of God and the poor, as it had appeared to Sister
+Catherine in the vision. A plaster statue of the Immaculate Conception
+occupied temporarily the place over the main altar, destined for the
+marble statue, which for various causes was not solemnly inaugurated
+till 1856.
+
+It was a day of great rejoicing for the Mother House; the statue was
+not a cold, mute representation; ... it was an eloquent image of Mary;
+here had this merciful Mother spoken and promised her graces; daily
+experience had confirmed these promises, and the statue still awakens
+in the hearts of those who come to pray at her feet, the deepest and
+tender emotions. Yes, Mary is indeed here. She speaks to the hearts of
+her children. She makes them feel that she loves and protects them!
+
+Sister Catherine said also to M. Aladel, in the early period of her
+vocation: "The Blessed Virgin wishes you to found a Congregation, of
+which you will be the Superior. It is a Sodality of Children of Mary;
+the Blessed Virgin will shower many graces upon it, and indulgences
+will be granted it."
+
+The reader will see, in the course of the volume, how this work was
+realized, and how admirably Providence has extended the association.
+
+She also told him that the month of May would be celebrated with much
+magnificence, and become universal in the Church; that the month of St.
+Joseph would likewise be kept with solemnity; that devotion to this
+great Saint would greatly increase, as well as devotion to the Sacred
+Heart of Jesus.
+
+So many miracles wrought everywhere and every day, so many signal
+testimonies of Mary's protection, made it an obligation on the
+Community, and especially the Seminary where they had originated, to
+perpetuate so precious a souvenir.
+
+Two pictures were therefore ordered, one representing the vision of
+the medal, the other that of St. Vincent's heart. The artist, wishing
+to depict the Blessed Virgin as accurately as possible, consulted M.
+Aladel as to the color of the veil.----
+
+The missionary's embarrassment was great; he had forgotten this item,
+but attaching more importance to the details than Sister Catherine
+thought, he wrote to her, and under the pretext of warning her against
+the illusions of the demon, he asked her to describe again the Blessed
+Virgin's appearance in the vision of the medal. Sister Catherine
+made this answer: "Just now, my Father, it would be impossible for me
+to recall all that I saw, one detail alone remains, it is, that the
+Blessed Virgin's veil was the color of morning light."
+
+This was just what M. Aladel wished to know, and precisely the only
+thing Sister Catherine could recollect.
+
+These little incidents, regulated by Providence, were not lost; they
+increased the confidence of the wise Director. When the pictures were
+placed in the Seminary, M. Aladel discreetly took measures to have
+Sister Catherine come to see them, just at the very time he would
+be there as if by chance. Another Sister, accidentally meeting them
+there, has a suspicion of the truth, and turning suddenly to the worthy
+Father, she says: "This is certainly the Sister who had the vision!"
+He is greatly embarrassed, and sees no way of extricating himself from
+the difficulty, except by calling upon Sister Catherine to answer. She
+laughed, saying: "You have guessed well," but with such simplicity that
+the other Sister said to the Father: "Oh! I see plainly that it is not
+she; you would not have asked her to tell me."
+
+During the course of her long life, Sister Catherine was subjected to
+trials of this sort.
+
+The details Mgr. de Quélen had received from M. Aladel concerning
+the vision of the medal interested him deeply, and he was anxious to
+become acquainted with the favored Sister. M. Aladel replied that
+the Sister insisted upon remaining unknown. "As for that," said His
+Grace, "she can put on a veil and speak to me without being seen." M.
+Aladel excused himself anew, saying it was for him a secret of the
+confessional.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, miraculously converted in 1842 by the apparition of the
+Miraculous Medal, also ardently desired to speak with the Sister first
+favored by this celestial vision, and he often but vainly entreated her
+Director's permission.
+
+Those around her frequently asked embarrassing questions, or
+expressed their suspicions. When too closely pressed, she found means
+of making the curious feel their indiscretion, so that it was not
+repeated. Moreover, her great simplicity ordinarily disconcerted her
+interrogators.
+
+On several occasions, the Blessed Virgin seemed to aid her; thus, in
+the investigation of 1836, and in the deposition made to the Promoter,
+M. Aladel declared that he had vainly endeavored to persuade Sister
+Catherine to be present, he could not overcome her repugnance; and
+moreover, they would interrogate her to no purpose, she had forgotten
+everything concerning the event.
+
+The same thing happened one day, it is said, in the presence of M.
+Étienne, then Superior General; he could not succeed in making her
+speak, she remembered nothing. It is this which gave rise to the rumor
+in the Community, that the vision was completely effaced from the
+memory of the Sister who had been favored with it.
+
+Thanks to this opinion, Sister Catherine was enabled to remain long
+years truly concealed in her modest duties; employed first in the
+kitchen, then in the clothes-room; afterwards, for nearly forty years,
+she had charge of the old men's ward of the Hospital d'Enghien,
+combining with this duty the care of the poultry yard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She loved these humble duties. Everything was kept in perfect order,
+and for her there was no greater happiness than that of being among
+her poor. At the end of her life, she spoke of it as her chief
+consolation. "I have always," said she, "loved to stay at home;
+whenever there was question of a walk, I yielded my turn to others that
+I might serve my poor."
+
+And this was true. One walk only was she unwilling to forego, that
+which led to the Community, and she knew no other road but that to the
+Mother House. When she could make this visit she never yielded her turn.
+
+Her attraction for silence and the hidden life always kept her in the
+rear, as the place most suitable for her, and most favorable to the
+spirit of recollection. She ceded to none the lowest and most repulsive
+duties of her ward, duties which she termed the pearls of a Daughter
+of Charity; she moved calmly and quietly, avoiding precipitation, and
+when advanced in years, the young Sisters, her assistants, often heard
+from her lips these words: "Ah! my dear, do not be so agitated, be more
+gentle."
+
+She regarded as one of the most cherished souvenirs of her Community
+life, that of her first Sister-Servant, "a dear soul," said she, "who
+every year sent the first fruits of her garden to the indigent families
+of the faubourg, or to her old men. The Sisters were not allowed to
+touch them until this had been done."
+
+This aged Superior was Sister Savard, who never supposed that Sister
+Catherine was favored with especial graces, and particularly with the
+vision of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Our humble daughter Catherine respected and loved all the Sisters under
+whom she served, and never did she utter a word against them; she saw
+only their virtues and good qualities.
+
+"Child of duty and labor, but especially of humility," says her last
+Superior, "Sister Catherine was not truly appreciated except by
+those who studied her sufficiently to perceive the great simplicity,
+uprightness, and purity pervading her soul, her mind, her heart, her
+whole person.
+
+"Never arrogating to herself the slightest merit on account of the
+singular favors with which the Immaculate Virgin had loaded her, she
+said, one day towards the close of her life, when Providence permitted
+a slight allusion to this subject: 'I, favored Sister! I have been
+only an instrument; it was not for myself the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to me. I knew nothing, not even how to write; it was in the Community
+I learned all I know; and because of my ignorance the Blessed Virgin
+chose me, that no one might doubt."
+
+Is not the conclusion inspired by the spirit of St. Vincent, "I have
+been chosen, because being nothing, no one could doubt that such great
+things are the work of God."
+
+Sister Catherine cared little for the esteem or contempt of others.
+Despite her rigid silence, there always hovered over her the suspicion
+that it was she who had seen the Blessed Virgin; no one dared tell her
+so; but in consequence of the suspicion, she was more closely observed,
+and more severely judged than any one else, and if by chance her
+companions discovered in her some slight weakness of nature, or even
+the absence of some heroic virtue, the thought was immediately rejected
+that the Blessed Virgin had chosen so ordinary a person.
+
+The testimony of one of her first companions confirms the impression
+on this point, an impression repeated a hundred fold. This companion
+writes to Sister Dufès: "Having passed six years with Sister
+Catherine, and worked constantly with her one year, it would seem
+that I could cite a great number of details full of interest and
+edification; but I am forced to confess that her life was so simple,
+so uniform, that I find nothing in it to remark. Notwithstanding the
+whispered assurances that she was the Sister so favored by the Blessed
+Virgin, I scarcely credited it, so much was her life like that of
+others. Sometimes, I sought to enlighten myself indirectly on the
+subject by questioning her as to the impression such extraordinary
+occurrences had produced in the Seminary, hoping that her answers would
+betray her, and thereby satisfy my curiosity, but she replied with so
+much simplicity that my hopes were always deceived."
+
+It is true, Sister Catherine had nothing remarkable about her, and yet
+nothing common or trivial.
+
+Her height was above the medium; her regular features bore the seal
+of modesty; and her clear blue eye was indicative of candor. She was
+industrious, simple, and not the least mystical in her spiritual
+exercises; she affected neither great virtues nor particular devotions,
+well pleased to cherish them in the depths of her heart, and practice
+them according to the rule with fidelity and exactness.
+
+After her death, some notes were found written by her own hand during
+one of the annual retreats. Everything in them is simple, solid,
+practical, and there is not one word of allusion to the extraordinary
+graces she had received; even when addressing the Blessed Virgin,
+nothing recalls the familiarity with which Mary had treated her. Here
+are some extracts, in which no changes have been made except those of
+fault-spelling.
+
+ "I will take Mary for my model at the commencement of all my
+ actions; in everything, I will consider if Mary were engaged
+ thus, how and wherefore she would do this, with what intention.
+ Oh! how beautiful and consoling is the name of Mary ... Mary!
+
+ "Resolution to offer myself to God without reserve, to bear
+ every little contradiction in a spirit of humility and
+ penance, to beg in all my prayers that the will of God may be
+ accomplished in me. O my God! do with me as Thou wilt! O Mary!
+ grant me your love, without which I perish; bestow upon me all
+ the graces I need! O Immaculate Heart of Mary! obtain for me
+ the faith and love which attached you to the foot of the cross
+ of Jesus Christ!
+
+ "O sweet objects of my affections, Jesus and Mary, let me
+ suffer for you, let me die for you, let me be all for you and
+ no longer anything for myself!
+
+ "Not to complain of the little contradictions I meet with among
+ the poor, and to pray for those who cause me suffering. O Mary,
+ obtain for me this grace, through your virginal purity!
+
+ "To employ my time well, and not to spend one moment
+ unprofitably. O Mary, happy those who serve you and put their
+ confidence in you!
+
+ "O Mary, Mary, Mary, pray, pray, pray for us, poor sinners, now
+ and at the hour of our death! Mary, O Mary!
+
+ "In my temptations and times of spiritual dryness, I will
+ always have recourse to Mary, who is purity itself. O Mary,
+ conceived without sin!----
+
+ "O Mary, make me love you, and it will not be difficult to
+ imitate you!
+
+ "Humility, simplicity and charity are the foundation of our
+ holy vocation. O Mary, make me understand these holy virtues!
+ St. Vincent, pray, pray for us!
+
+ "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray, pray for us! Deign, O
+ Queen of Angels and of men, to cast a favorable eye upon the
+ whole world ... especially upon France ... and each person
+ in particular! O Mary, inspire us what to ask of you for our
+ happiness!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine lived forty-six years in a large establishment, under
+the direction of five successive Superiors; she was brought in contact
+with many companions of different dispositions and different degrees of
+virtue, consequently the esteem in which she was held varied. If they
+sometimes gave her to understand that her mind was failing, such things
+troubled her little, and she always quietly went her way, receiving
+kindness with grateful simplicity, and ungracious words without
+flinching.
+
+Faithful to the rule with such uniform exactness, that merit seems
+to disappear before habit, she never uttered a word against charity.
+Even when age had given her some privileges over her young companions,
+rarely did she allow herself to blame or advise them; not, at least,
+unless they consulted her, then she advised submission. "Everything
+is in that," said she, "without obedience, Community life is not
+possible." To the very end of her days, her obedience to her Superior
+was as perfect as when she left the Seminary.
+
+We must not, however, suppose that Sister Catherine was of a yielding,
+gentle temperament, to which obedience was natural; no, on the
+contrary, she had a strong will and quick temper. Thoroughly versed in
+household labors, she performed her part with great care and assiduity,
+and directed most scrupulously all that was entrusted to her charge.
+Her impulsive temper sometimes displayed itself in little sallies of
+impatience, the firm tone of her words revealing at times what virtue
+ordinarily caused her to repress. When the first heat was over, she
+immediately repented of it and humbled herself.
+
+It was often observed that this first movement of surprise, just ready
+to escape, was held captive, not by human respect, but by a superior
+will; thus proving that her implicit obedience was due her fidelity to
+grace.
+
+Understanding her nature, we can now form an idea of what Sister
+Catherine suffered from the opposition she experienced in realizing her
+mission; even though these contradictions, especially after the medal
+had been struck, were more apparent than real on the part of her wise
+Director, they were none the less painful to her. Might we not say that
+these trials constituted an interior martyrdom sustained by God and
+known to him alone?
+
+Sister Catherine, despite her strong constitution, was not exempt from
+physical suffering, and her companions were sometimes astonished at the
+simplicity with which she asked for little comforts that a mortified
+soul would have denied itself. These slight defects formed a veil that
+obscured the sight of many, and partially concealed the beauties of her
+soul.
+
+Apparently, the very depths of this simple nature might be read at a
+glance, and yet she faithfully guarded the secrets of God. In her were
+seen, by a singular contrast, prudence and discretion allied to perfect
+simplicity. Thus, whilst some found her a little too thoughtful of her
+health, others observed that on all great feasts of the Blessed Virgin,
+particularly that of the Immaculate Conception, she was either sick
+or suffering acute pain, which trials the humble Sister received as a
+favor from her celestial Mother.
+
+The Superior of the Hospital d'Enghien relates that, one year, when
+Sister Catherine had gone with several of her companions to spend the
+beautiful Feast of December 8th at the Community, on getting into the
+omnibus that evening she fell and broke her wrist. She said not a word,
+and no one perceived the accident. Some minutes after, seeing that
+she held her arm in her handkerchief, Sister Dufès inquired what had
+happened. "Ah! Sister," she quietly replied, "I am holding my bouquet;
+every year the Blessed Virgin sends me one of this sort."
+
+Detachment from the esteem and affection of creatures was still another
+trait characteristic of our dear Sister. God sufficed her; that God
+who had manifested Himself to her in so wonderful a manner, that
+Immaculate Virgin whose charms had ravished her heart, were her sole
+joy and delight. The Blessed Virgin, pointing to the sacred tabernacle
+where her divine Son reposes, had said to her: "In all your trials, my
+daughter, it is there you must seek consolation." Faithful to these
+words of her good Mother, Sister Catherine in moments of trial sought
+the chapel, whence she soon returned to her occupations with renewed
+serenity of soul and countenance ever cheerful. Jesus and Mary alone
+received the confidence of her sufferings and her fervor, so that her
+virtues in a measure were concealed from creatures.
+
+One of the Sisters of the house says that, having often observed her
+closely to discover, if possible, some trace of her communications with
+God, she could find nothing especial except that during prayer she
+did not cast down her eyes, but always kept them fixed upon the image
+of Mary. She remarks, also, that Sister Catherine never wept except
+from great anguish of heart, but many times she saw her shed tears in
+abundance on listening to some traits of protection or some conversion
+obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession, or, as in 1871, at
+the evils afflicting the Church and France.
+
+Solidly pious in the midst of companions apparently more so, we see
+nothing indeed in our humble Sister to distinguish her from others.
+Only one especial circumstance has been remarked, the importance
+she attached to the recitation of the chaplet. Let us hear what her
+Sister-Servant says on this point--
+
+"We were always struck," writes Sister Dufès, "when saying the chaplet
+in common, with the grave and pious manner in which our dear companion
+pronounced the words of the Angelical Salutation. And what convinced
+us of the depth of her respect and devotion was the fact that she,
+always so humble, so reserved, could not refrain from censuring the
+indifference, the want of attention, which too often accompanies the
+recitation of a prayer, so beautiful and efficacious."
+
+Her love for the two families of St. Vincent, far from diminishing with
+age, only incited her to employ continually in their behalf the sole
+influence at her disposal, prayer; regularly every week, she offered a
+Communion to attract the benediction of Heaven upon the Congregation of
+the Mission; her prayers for her Community were incessant.
+
+Sister Catherine always retained the same duty at the Hospital
+d'Enghien; with truly admirable solicitude, she nursed the old men
+entrusted to her, at the same time not neglecting the pigeon house,
+which recalled the purest and sweetest joys of her childhood. The young
+girl of former days, whom we have seen with her dear pigeons hovering
+round her, was now a poor Sister, quite aged, but none the less
+attentive to her little charge.
+
+Sister Catherine was, then, the soul of the little family in charge of
+the hospital. During these later years, the number of our Sisters had
+increased considerably, and consequently the administration of the two
+houses, d'Enghien and Reuilly, being very difficult for one person, an
+assistant was sent me for the hospital. If Sister Catherine had not
+for years been moulded to obedience and abnegation, it would have been
+hard to her quick, impulsive nature, to recognize the authority of a
+companion so much younger than herself; but far different were the
+thoughts of this humble Sister, who always endeavored to abase herself.
+
+ "She was the first to tender her perfect submission. 'Sister,'
+ said she, 'be at ease, it suffices that our Superiors have
+ spoken; we will receive Sister Angélique as one sent from God,
+ and obey her as we do you.' Her conduct justified her words.
+
+ "Although Sister Catherine guarded rigorously the supernatural
+ communications she had received, she occasionally expressed her
+ views to me on actual occurrences, speaking then as if inspired
+ by God.
+
+ "Thus, at the time of the Commune, she told me that I would
+ leave the house accompanied by a certain Sister, that I would
+ return the 31st of May, and she assured me I need have no
+ fears, as the Blessed Virgin would take my place and guard the
+ house. At the time, I paid very little attention to the good
+ Sister's words.
+
+ "I left, indeed, and realized, contrary to my plans, and
+ without a thought on the subject, all that Sister Catherine
+ had predicted. On my return from the Community, May 31st, I
+ expressed my anxiety concerning the house, which had been in
+ the hands of the Communists, and, it was said, plundered.
+ Sister Catherine endeavored to reassure me, repeating that the
+ Blessed Virgin had taken care of everything, she was confident
+ of it, for the Blessed Virgin had promised her.
+
+ "We found on our arrival that this Mother of mercy had, indeed,
+ guarded and saved all, notwithstanding the long occupation of
+ our dear house by a mob of furies, whose Satanic pleasure was
+ to destroy.
+
+ "One circumstance in particular struck me most forcibly; these
+ wretches had made useless efforts to overthrow the statue of
+ Mary Immaculate placed in the garden--it had withstood all
+ their sacrilegious attempts.
+
+ "Sister Catherine hastened to place upon the head of our august
+ Queen the crown she had taken with her in our exile, telling
+ the Blessed Virgin she restored it in token of gratitude.
+
+ "Many times did Sister Catherine thus reveal her thoughts to
+ me with the simplicity of a child. When her predictions were
+ not realized, she would quietly say: 'Ah! well, Sister, I was
+ mistaken. I believed what I told you. I am very glad the truth
+ is known.'[6]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Persons favored with supernatural communications
+ are not thereby preserved from error. They may be deceived in
+ misunderstanding what they see or hear, they may be duped by
+ the illusions of the demon, they may involuntarily mingle their
+ own ideas with those which come from God, and they may fail in
+ transmitting with accuracy what has been revealed to them. We
+ must also remark that prophecies are frequently conditional,
+ and their accomplishment depends upon the manner in which the
+ conditions are fulfilled; so that, when the Church approves
+ these private revelations, she does nothing more than declare
+ that, after grave examination, they may be published for the
+ edification of the faithful, and that the proofs given are
+ sufficient to ensure belief.
+
+ To the Sacred Writers alone belongs the privilege of
+ infallibility in receiving and transmitting divine
+ inspirations.]
+
+ "Meanwhile, time fled, and our good Sister often spoke of her
+ approaching end. Our venerated Superiors began to feel anxious
+ about losing her, and the Superior General one day sent for
+ her to come to the Community that he might receive from her own
+ lips certain communications which he considered very important.
+
+ "Sister Catherine, to whom this was wholly unexpected, was
+ almost speechless with amazement. On her return, she expressed
+ to me her emotion, and, for the first time, opened her heart
+ to me concerning that which she had formerly so much feared to
+ reveal.
+
+ "This repugnance had vanished; seeing herself on the borders
+ of the tomb, she felt constrained to make known the details
+ which she thought buried with the venerated Father Aladel,
+ and she expressed great grief that devotion to the Immaculate
+ Conception was less lively and general than it had been.
+
+ "These communications, moreover, were for myself alone; I
+ did not impart them to the other Sisters. It is true, the
+ greater number were informed of this pious secret, but they
+ never learned it from Sister Catherine herself. All they could
+ observe in connexion with it was her ardent love for Mary
+ Immaculate and her zeal for the propagation of the Miraculous
+ Medal, also that, when she heard one of our Sisters express
+ a desire to make the pilgrimage to Lourdes or some other
+ privileged sanctuary of Mary, she could not refrain from
+ saying, somewhat impetuously: 'But why do you wish to go so
+ far? Have you not the Community? Did not the Blessed Virgin
+ appear there as well as at Lourdes?' And a most extraordinary
+ fact is, that, without having read any of the publications
+ concerning this miraculous grotto, Sister Catherine was more
+ familiar with what had taken place there than many who had made
+ the pilgrimage. Leaving these incidents aside, never did she
+ utter a word calculated to give the impression that she had
+ any part in the singular favors the Blessed Virgin had lavished
+ upon our humble chapel at the Mother House.
+
+ "Since opening her heart to me, this good companion had become
+ very affectionate; it was a rest for her, a consolation to
+ find some one who understood her. Our worthy Father Chevalier,
+ Assistant of the Congregation of the Mission, occasionally
+ visited her to receive her communications concerning the
+ apparition. One day, he spoke to her of the new edition he was
+ preparing of the notice of the medal. 'When M. Aladel's edition
+ of 1842 appeared,' replied Sister Catherine, 'I said to him,
+ truly, that he would never publish another, and that I would
+ never see another edition, because it would not be finished
+ during my lifetime.' 'I shall catch you there,' replied M.
+ Chevalier, who expected it to appear very soon. But unforeseen
+ difficulties having retarded the publication, he subsequently
+ recognized that the good Sister had spoken rightly.
+
+ "From the beginning of the year 1876, Sister Catherine alluded
+ very frequently to her death; on all our feast days, she never
+ failed to say: 'It is the last time I shall see this feast.'
+ And when we appeared not to credit her assertion, she added: 'I
+ shall certainly not see the year 1877.' We could not, however,
+ believe her end so near. For some months she had been obliged
+ to keep her bed, and relinquish that active life she had led so
+ many years.
+
+ "Her strength was gradually failing; the asthma joined to some
+ affection of the heart undermined her constitution; she felt
+ that she was dying, but it was without a fear, we might say
+ without emotion. One day, when speaking to her of her death:
+ 'You are not afraid, then,' said I, 'dear Sister Catherine.'
+ 'Afraid! Sister!' she exclaimed; 'why should I be afraid? I am
+ going to our Lord, the Blessed Virgin, St. Vincent.'
+
+ "And, truly, our dear companion had nothing to fear, for her
+ death was as calm as her life.
+
+ "Several days previous, one of our Sisters was talking
+ familiarly with her, when, without any allusion to the subject
+ from the other, our sick Sister said: 'I shall go to Reuilly.'
+ This was the name given the House of Providence, separated
+ from d'Enghien Hospital by a vast garden, and similar to it
+ in the nature of its works. 'What! to Reuilly?' answered her
+ companion; 'you would not have the heart to do so, you who love
+ so well your Enghien, that you have never left.' 'I tell you, I
+ shall go to Reuilly.' 'But when?' 'Ah! that is it!' said Sister
+ Catherine, in a decided, mysterious tone, that disconcerted
+ her companion. After a few moments, she added: 'There will be
+ no need of a hearse at my funeral.' 'Oh! what do you mean?'
+ replied the Sister. 'It will not be needed,' said the sick one,
+ emphatically. 'But why not?' 'They will put me in the chapel at
+ Reuilly.' These words struck her companion, who repeated the
+ conversation to me. 'Keep that to yourself,' said I.
+
+ "On the 31st of December, she had several spells of weakness,
+ symptoms of her approaching end. We then proposed to her the
+ last consolations of religion; she gratefully consented, and
+ received the Sacraments with indescribable peace and happiness;
+ then, at her request, we recited the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception.
+
+ "Being one day near her bed, speaking to her of Heaven and
+ of the Blessed Virgin, she expressed a desire to have during
+ her agony sixty-three children, each invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin by one of her titles in the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception, and especially these very consoling words: 'Terror
+ of demons, pray for us.' It was observed that there were not
+ sixty-three invocations in the litany. 'You will find them in
+ the office of the Immaculate Conception,' said she. Measures
+ were taken to comply with her desires, the invocations were
+ written upon slips of paper and kept for the final hour,
+ but, just at the time of her agony, we could not collect the
+ children; she then asked that the litany be recited, and had us
+ repeat three times the invocation which makes hell tremble.
+
+ "Our Sisters were especially touched to hear her exclaim, with
+ an accent of deep tenderness: 'My dear Community! my dear
+ Mother House!' So true is it, that what we have loved most in
+ life returns to us with renewed vigor at the hour of death!
+
+ "Some of her former companions and friends of the House came
+ during the day to see her for a last time; one of them,
+ holding an office in the Seminary, approaching her, said
+ sadly: 'Sister Catherine, are you going to leave us without
+ telling me a word of the Blessed Virgin?' Then the dying
+ Sister leaned towards her, and whispered softly in her ear
+ quite a while. 'I ought not to speak,' said she; 'it is M.
+ Chevalier who is commissioned to do that.' ... She continued,
+ without interruption: 'The Blessed Virgin has promised to
+ grant especial graces every time one prays in the chapel, but
+ particularly an increase of purity, that purity of mind, heart,
+ will, which is pure love.'
+
+ "This good daughter, animated with the true primitive spirit
+ of the Community, was, in uttering these last words, the
+ unconscious echo of the venerable Mother Legras, whose writings
+ breathe the same thought.
+
+ "A Sister-Servant, who came to visit her, approaching the sick
+ Sister, reminded her of the necessities of the Community and
+ of the Seminary, and ended by saying: 'Dear Sister Catherine,
+ when you get to Heaven, do not forget all this, attend to all
+ my commissions.' Sister Catherine answered: 'Sister, my will is
+ good, but I have always been so stupid, so dull, I shall not
+ know how to explain myself, for I am ignorant of the language
+ of Heaven.' Upon which the other, delighted with so much
+ simplicity, was inspired to say: 'Oh! my dear Sister Catherine,
+ in Heaven we do not speak as we do on earth; the soul regards
+ God, the good God regards the soul, and all is understood--that
+ is the language of Heaven.' Our dear Sister's countenance
+ became radiant at this, and she answered: 'Oh! Sister, if it is
+ thus, be tranquil, all your commissions will be fulfilled.'
+
+ "M. Chevalier came, also, that day to give her his blessing,
+ and he spoke to her on the same subject. Sister Catherine
+ answered him with faculties undimmed, and said to him, among
+ other things: 'The pilgrimages the Sisters make are not
+ favorable to piety. The Blessed Virgin did not tell me to go
+ so far to pray; it is in the Community chapel she wishes the
+ Sisters to invoke her, that is their true pilgrimage.'
+
+ "The poor, to whom she was so devoted, likewise occupied her
+ thoughts.----
+
+ "At four in the afternoon, another attack of weakness collected
+ us all around our dear, dying one, but the supreme moment had
+ not yet come. We surrounded her bed until evening. At seven,
+ she seemed to sink into a slumber, and without the least agony
+ or the least sign of suffering, she yielded her last sigh.
+ Scarcely could we perceive that she had ceased to live....
+ Never have I seen a death so calm and gentle."
+
+ "The deepest emotion now filled our hearts; we pondered the
+ celestial interview of our blessed companion with that good God
+ who had so often revealed Himself to her during her Seminary
+ life, and that beautiful Virgin, whose charms can never be
+ depicted on earth.
+
+ "It was not sorrow which pervaded our hearts; not a tear was
+ shed in these first moments; we yielded to an indescribable
+ emotion; we felt ourselves near a Saint; the veil of humility
+ under which she had lived so long concealed was now rent, that
+ we might see in her only the soul favored by Heaven.
+
+ "Our Sisters disputed the happiness of passing the night beside
+ her venerated remains, a magnetic attraction drawing them to
+ her.
+
+ "To perpetuate the fact that she had received these favors
+ whilst still a Seminary Sister, we thought of having her
+ photograph taken, also, in the Seminary habit; it succeeded
+ completely in both costumes.
+
+ "We now carried her blessed remains into the chapel. There
+ the Immaculate Virgin watched over her; lilies and roses
+ surrounded her virginal body, and her cherished device--'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee'--surrounding this little sanctuary, seemed the last echo
+ of her life.
+
+ "Then commenced the miracle of glorified humility; this
+ humble Sister, who in life had been scarcely noticed, was
+ suddenly surrounded by persons of every age and condition, who
+ considered it a very great happiness to come, not to pray for
+ her, but to recommend themselves to her blessed intercession.
+
+ "As for us who were keeping watch around our dear relic, we
+ could not bear to think of the moment which would take her
+ from us. This house which had been protected by her presence
+ for forty-six years, would it be deprived of her forever? The
+ thought was heart-breaking; it seemed as if we were about
+ to lose the protection of the Immaculate Virgin, who would
+ henceforth cease to hover over us.
+
+ "On the other hand, to keep our dear Sister with us appeared
+ impossible. Our Superiors being consulted, permitted us to
+ take measures in accordance with our wishes. We had a world of
+ difficulties to surmount.
+
+ "'Pray,' said I to our Sisters; and they passed the night
+ supplicating the Immaculate Mary to let our beloved companion
+ remain with us.
+
+ "All night long, I vainly tried to think of a suitable resting
+ place for her, when suddenly, at the sound of the four o'clock
+ bell, I thought I heard these words: 'The vault is under the
+ chapel of Reuilly.' 'True enough,' said I, joyfully, like a
+ person who suddenly sees the realization of a long deferred
+ hope. I remembered now that, during the construction of the
+ chapel, a vault had been made communicating with the children's
+ refectory. Our worthy Mother Mazin had assigned to it no actual
+ purpose, saying we might have use for it hereafter.
+
+ "There was no time to lose. We were on the eve of her funeral,
+ and the authorization, so difficult to obtain, had not yet been
+ solicited.
+
+ "The vault was hastily prepared, and the petition, sustained by
+ influential persons, succeeded as if by enchantment.
+
+ "January 3d, the feast of St. Genevieve, was the day appointed
+ for the interment of her, whom we regarded as the tutelary
+ angel of our house. But the word 'interment' is not appropriate
+ here--'triumph' is the proper expression--for it was a
+ veritable triumph for our humble Sister.
+
+ "A deputation was sent from all the houses of our Sisters, that
+ had received timely notice, and the little chapel was much too
+ small to accommodate the numbers that came. Mass over, the
+ funeral cortege which was to accompany the body in procession
+ from d'Enghien Hospital to the vault at Reuilly was organized,
+ as follows: The inmates of our industrial school, Children of
+ Mary, came first, bearing their banner; next to these, all our
+ little orphans; then, our young girls of the Society (both
+ externs and those belonging to the house), wearing the livery
+ of the Immaculate Mary; the parishioners, and lastly, our
+ Sisters preceding the clergy.
+
+ "This lengthy procession passed slowly through the long garden
+ walk, and whilst the solemn chants of the Benedictus resounded
+ afar, the modest coffin appeared in sight, covered with lilies
+ and eglantines, emblems of purity and simplicity.
+
+ "At the entrance of the vault, the crowd stood aside, and our
+ Children of Mary greeted the arrival of the body by singing the
+ blessed invocation: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us
+ who have recourse to thee!' It would be impossible to describe
+ the effect of these funeral obsequies, of a nature so entirely
+ new.
+
+ "To preserve our treasure, it was necessary to wall up the
+ subterranean entrance, but we had an opening made communicating
+ with the chapel.
+
+ "The poor, whom Sister Catherine had nursed, lay a magnificent
+ crown on the tomb of St. Vincent's humble daughter, who, in
+ life, sought only the lowliest paths, and who had supplicated
+ the Blessed Virgin to keep her unknown and unsought."----
+
+The life of dear Sister Labouré was the faithful realization of Our
+Lord's words in the Gospel: "I return Thee thanks, Father, that Thou
+hast concealed these things from the wise of this world and hast
+revealed them to little ones." Never were the gifts of God better
+concealed in a soul, under the double mantle of humility and simplicity.
+
+For forty-six years did she lead a life of obscurity and toil, seeking
+no other satisfaction than that of pleasing God; she sanctified herself
+in the lowliest paths by a faithful correspondence to grace, and an
+exact compliance with the practices of a Community life. The favors she
+received from Heaven never filled her heart with pride; witness of the
+wonders daily wrought by the medal, she never uttered a word that might
+lead others to suspect how much more she knew about it than any one
+else.
+
+Might we not say, she had chosen for her motto these words of À Kempis:
+"Love to be unknown and accounted as nothing?" How faithfully these
+traits portray the true daughter of the humble Vincent de Paul!
+
+What, in Heaven, must be the glory of those whose earthly life was
+one of self-abasement? Do we not already perceive a faint radiance of
+this glory? The obsequies of the humble servant of the poor resembled
+a triumph; by an almost unheard of exception, her body remains in
+the midst of her spiritual family; her tomb is visited by persons of
+every condition, who, with confidence, recommend themselves to her
+intercession, and many of whom assure us that their petitions have
+been granted. In fine, this biographical notice discloses what Sister
+Catherine so carefully concealed, and thus accomplishes Our Lord's
+promise: "He who humbleth himself, shall be exalted."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ MARY'S AGENCY IN THE CHURCH.
+
+ THIS AGENCY, EVER MANIFEST, SEEMS TO HAVE DISAPPEARED DURING THE
+ EIGHTEENTH AND IN THE BEGINNING OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY--MARY
+ APPEARS IN 1830--MOTIVES AND IMPORTANCE OF THIS APPARITION--THE
+ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+
+Devotion to the most Blessed Virgin is as ancient as Christianity,
+and we find traces of it from the very origin of the Church, among
+all nations who accepted the Gospel. During the first ages, it was
+concealed in the obscurity of the catacombs, or veiled itself under
+symbolical forms to escape the profanation of infidels; but when the
+era of peace succeeded that of bloody persecutions, it reappeared
+openly and in all the brilliancy of its ravishing beauty. It developed
+a wonderful growth, especially in the fifth century, after the Council
+of Ephesus had proclaimed the divine maternity of Mary, thereby
+sanctioning the exceptional homages rendered her above all the saints.
+
+The image of the Virgin Mother, circulated throughout Christendom,
+becomes the ornament of churches, the protection of the fireside, and
+an object of devotion to the faithful. It is at this epoch, especially,
+we see everywhere gradually disappearing the last vestiges of paganism.
+The Immaculate Virgin, the Mother of tenderness, the Queen of Angels,
+the Patroness of regenerated humanity, supplants those vain idols,
+which for ages had fostered superstition, with its train of vices and
+errors.
+
+Every Catholic admits that the Church's veneration of Mary rests upon
+an inviolable foundation--both faith and reason unite in justifying it.
+Events have proved that God Himself has authorized it, for it has often
+pleased Him to recompense the confidence and fidelity of her servants,
+by sensible marks of His power, by extraordinary graces--in a word,
+by true miracles. By a disposition of His Providence, He has decreed
+Mary's intervention in the economy of the Church and the sanctification
+of souls, as He did in the mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption.
+Her character of Mediatrix between Heaven and earth obliges her to make
+this agency felt, to display the power she has received in favor of
+man. These manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church, these
+marvelous proofs of her solicitude for us, form an interesting portion
+of the history of Catholicity. The liturgy is full of such souvenirs,
+and several feasts have been instituted to commemorate them. Christian
+countries abound in traditions of this nature; they are one of the
+sources whence piety derives its nourishment.
+
+The majority of pilgrim shrines owe their origin to some supernatural
+intervention of the Blessed Virgin. Sometimes she has manifested
+herself under a visible form, most frequently to a poor shepherd
+or peasant; again, she has wrought a miracle, as the recovery of
+a sick person, the conversion of a hardened sinner, or some other
+prodigy betokening the power of a supernatural agency. Sometimes, a
+statue, a picture, apparently not fashioned by the hand of man, is
+accidentally discovered; the neighboring population are touched, their
+faith is reanimated, and soon a shrine, a chapel, or even a splendid
+basilica, is erected to protect this gift of Heaven, this pledge of
+Mary's affection. Innumerable generations repair to the spot, and new
+favors, new miracles, ineffable consolations, ever attest the tutelary
+guardianship of her, whom humble, confiding hearts have never invoked
+in vain. We might cite hundreds of names in support of these assertions.
+
+The history of devotion to Mary in Catholic countries gives rise to
+an observation worthy of remark, that the faith of a country is in
+proportion to its devotion to the Blessed Virgin. We can also add that,
+when God wishes to revive the Faith among any people, He commissions
+Mary to manifest there her goodness and power.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every age has furnished the Church with constantly increasing proofs of
+Mary's mediation; there are epochs in which she seems to be so lavish
+of her presence, that we might say she lives familiarly among mankind,
+and that her delights are to converse with them.
+
+Again, on the contrary, she appears to retire, to hold herself aloof
+from the world, to give no more signs of her intervention. We have a
+striking example of this in a somewhat recent age. More than a century
+do we find deprived of Mary's sensible mediation; history records in
+all that period not one of these apparitions, not a new pilgrim shrine
+founded, not a signal grace obtained through the intercession of the
+Mother of Mercy. If a few events of this kind took place, they were at
+least very rare, and have remained in obscurity. This age, forsaken by
+the Blessed Virgin, was the eighteenth century, to which we must add
+the first thirty years of the nineteenth.
+
+At this epoch, when impious rationalism endeavored to efface all idea
+of the supernatural, when the most firmly established truths were
+attacked, when among Christians the standard of virtue was lowered and
+character was of slight esteem in any class or station of society, we
+might believe that Mary, fatigued with men's ingratitude, had resolved
+to leave them to their own devices, and let them govern the world
+according to their ideas of assumed wisdom. She did, in reality, not
+renounce her mission of Mediatrix in favor of the Church, she still
+watched over her great adopted family, she listened to the prayers
+of her faithful servants, but she remained invisible, she no longer
+displayed any of those marks of tenderness her maternal heart had
+lavished upon them in the ages of faith.
+
+We know the consequences of Mary's abandoning the earth, and how these
+sages who wished to dispense with God governed society. The history of
+their reign is written in letters of fire, of blood and of filth.
+
+This revolutionary and impious naturalism was prolonged into the
+nineteenth century; it still exerts a deplorable influence at the
+present day, but it encounters opposition; the supernatural order is
+firmly asserted, the truths of Faith are warmly defended, the holy
+Church is respected and obeyed, its august Head is held in veneration
+to the very extremities of the earth, God's kingdom is still opposed,
+but it numbers devoted subjects, who, if needful, would shed their
+blood in its defence. Indifference, human respect, jeering scepticism,
+are gradually disappearing, leaving the Church with only sincere
+friends or declared enemies. It is a progress no one can ignore.
+
+Whence comes this change? and what the date of so consoling a
+resurrection? Beyond a doubt, it owes its origin to God's infinite
+bounty--but the instrument, can it be ignored or contemned? Is it not
+the Blessed Virgin Mary? Has not her mediation been visible for forty
+years? Yes; it is Mary who has wrought this astonishing transformation,
+and through the medal styled miraculous has this series of wonders been
+inaugurated.
+
+In 1830, does Mary for the first time, after an interval of a century
+and a half, manifest her desire of a reconciliation with earth.
+
+It is the first sign of pardon she accords man, after her long silence.
+
+It is the announcement of a new era which is about to commence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The apparition of November 27th, in the chapel of the Mother House of
+the Daughters of Charity, Paris, appears, at first, to be of little
+importance, yet it was destined to have an immense bearing upon the
+future and its consequences were to be incalculable. Like a stream
+whose source is concealed at the foot of a mountain, but which receives
+as it advances numberless tributaries, and finally becomes a majestic
+river, fertilizing the provinces and kingdoms through which it flows;
+so the vision of the medal has been the initiatory step in a religious
+movement, which, to-day, extends throughout the world, sitting in
+justice upon old errors, superannuated prejudices; systems inimical to
+truth, and fully revealing the true Church and true sanctity, rendering
+to Mary Immaculate, Mother of God and Mother of men, such tributes of
+veneration, love and devotion, as she has never received since the
+preaching of the Gospel.
+
+The reader is already acquainted with Sister Catherine, the humble
+daughter whom Mary deigned to select for her confidante. The following
+chapter gives a detailed account of the apparitions.
+
+We have said that this event was the dawn of a new era, the signal
+of renewed devotion to Mary throughout the world. It seemed as if
+this tender Mother wished, by lavishing extraordinary graces upon her
+children, to make them forget the severity with which she had punished
+their offences.
+
+A rapid glance at the development of devotion to Mary, during half a
+century, will suffice to show the truth of this affirmation.
+
+The medal, scarcely struck, is circulated by millions; it immediately
+becomes the instrument of so many cures and conversions, that it is
+universally styled the Miraculous Medal, a name which clung to it,
+and which is justified by the constant working of new miracles, as
+the second part of this book will show. But this medal was destined
+not only to work miracles, it had an object still higher, it had a
+dogmatical signification, it was to popularize the belief in the
+Immaculate Conception of Mary.
+
+As far as is possible for us to penetrate the adorable designs of
+Providence, everything inclines us to believe that the Immaculate
+Conception is one of those truths whose proclamation is interwoven
+with the welfare of modern society, and whose influence upon
+Catholicity is incalculable. It is the complement of the Blessed
+Virgin's glory; even with the incomparable prerogative of her divine
+maternity, her grandeur would still lack something, were she not
+proclaimed free from original sin. The germ contained in the Holy
+Scriptures, preserved by tradition, taught by the Fathers and holy
+Doctors, supported by the Roman pontiffs, solemnized from the earliest
+ages in many churches, adopted instinctively by the piety of the
+faithful, and depicted under most graceful forms by brush and chisel of
+Christian artist, this belief received, through the medal, the seal of
+a popular devotion. The prayer revealed by the Blessed Virgin herself:
+"O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+this prayer, repeated incessantly by numberless mouths from infancy to
+old age, by poor and rich, and in every quarter of the globe, entered
+as a formula into the practices of a Christian life, and hastened, we
+might safely say, the day when Pius IX was to declare the Immaculate
+Conception an article of faith.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wonderful circulation of the medal, and the miracles wrought by
+means of it, would soon have made the chapel of the rue du Bac a much
+frequented pilgrim shrine, as many who were indebted to Mary for
+their cure or conversion wished to testify their gratitude by leaving
+there ex-voto offerings. But the Superiors of the Community deemed
+it inadvisable to allow this. However, Divine Providence, wishing to
+maintain this pious impulse, opened in the very centre of Paris a
+sanctuary, to receive what the chapel of the Daughters of Charity had
+refused.
+
+The pastor of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, M. Desgenettes, who had
+taken a lively interest in the apparition of 1830, was inspired to
+consecrate his parish to the holy and immaculate Heart of Mary. An
+Arch confraternity was established for the conversion of sinners; the
+success was as rapid as it was wonderful, and soon the whole world
+resounded with accounts of the miracles accorded the associates'
+prayers. To remind them that Notre-Dame-des-Victoires is allied with
+the vision of the Sister of St. Vincent de Paul, an article of their
+rule enjoins them to wear, with respect and devotion, the indulgenced
+medal of the Immaculate Conception, known as the Miraculous Medal, and
+they are advised to recite occasionally the prayer engraven upon that
+medal: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+thee!"
+
+Some years later, in 1846, the Blessed Virgin manifests herself upon
+the mountain at La Salette to two little shepherd children, charging
+them to warn mankind of the necessity of doing penance in order to
+avert the impending evils.
+
+At Lourdes, in 1858, Mary appears to a poor and ignorant young girl;
+she tells her name, calling herself by that which is most dear to
+her: "I am the Immaculate Conception," and she promises abundant
+benedictions to all who come to pray in that favored place.
+
+In 1871, she appears in the village of Pontmain to some children;
+she comes to revive their drooping courage and restore hope to their
+fainting hearts.
+
+It would take too long to enumerate these manifestations of Mary
+in various parts of Christendom--those images which seem animated;
+those mysterious voices which warn, which encourage the world; those
+supernatural revelations to privileged souls--all, we might say,
+favors of a tender Mother, who pardons her guilty children, and who
+wishes by multiplied tokens of her love to make them oblivious of her
+past severity.
+
+To so many marks of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness, the Catholic
+world has responded by an admirable outburst of filial piety; each
+year sees hundreds of thousands of pilgrims seeking her privileged
+sanctuaries; her Feasts are celebrated with admirable splendor;
+devotion to her is clothed in every form capable of expressing
+admiration, gratitude and tenderness. Who could enumerate the churches
+and monuments everywhere erected in her honor, the associations
+established under her invocation, the books composed in her praises?
+
+But the homage which eclipses all others, is the definition of the
+dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854. This definition, ardently
+desired by the devout faithful, enthusiastically welcomed by the whole
+world, was the grand thought of Pius IX after his elevation to the
+chair of St. Peter, and it will be recorded in history as the crowning
+event of his Pontificate, already illustrious for so many other causes.
+
+Mary, by this, has received from her children all the glory it was
+in their power to procure her; her prerogatives appear in all their
+lustre; she is acknowledged as sovereign mistress of Heaven and earth;
+she occupies in the economy of religion the true place Divine wisdom
+has assigned her. Let us hope she will soon display to the world the
+effects of her powerful protection, that she will crush the infernal
+serpent's head, that she will calm the storms hell has unchained--in
+fine, that she will assure the triumph of the Church and the reign of
+Jesus Christ in justice and truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ APPARITIONS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN
+
+ _TO SISTER CATHERINE_.
+
+ FIRST APPARITION: THE ANGEL CONDUCTS THE SISTER TO THE CHAPEL; MARY
+ CONVERSES WITH HER--SECOND APPARITION: MARY UPON A GLOBE, HER HANDS
+ EMITTING RAYS OF LIGHT, SYMBOLIC OF GRACE; MARY ORDERS A MEDAL TO
+ BE STRUCK--THIRD APPARITION: MARY RENEWS THE COMMAND.
+
+
+When Sister Catherine was favored with these apparitions of the Blessed
+Virgin she related by word of mouth to her Director, what she had seen
+and heard, and he, though apparently attaching little importance to her
+communications, carefully took note of them. The Sister never thought
+of writing them, she judged herself incapable of doing so, and,
+moreover, in her opinion, it would have been contrary to humility.
+
+In 1856, when events had confirmed the truth of her predictions, M.
+Aladel told her to commit to writing all she could recollect of the
+supernatural visitations of 1830. She obeyed, despite her repugnance,
+and sketched an account of her vision of St. Vincent's heart, which we
+have already read, and that of the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+In obedience, she again wrote in 1876, an account of these same
+apparitions.
+
+Finally, another copy, not dated, was found among her papers after
+death.
+
+These three narrations accord perfectly in the main, yet differ
+sufficiently in detail to prove that one was not copied from the other.
+
+To these manuscripts, in which no change has been made, except a
+correction of faults in style and orthography, are we indebted for the
+following account of the apparitions.
+
+It is to be regretted that M. Aladel's notes should have been almost
+entirely destroyed; no doubt they contained very interesting details,
+but what portion of them remains, is of little importance.
+
+Before quoting Sister Catherine's own narration, we must remark, that
+the first vision, having little reference to anything but the Sister
+herself and St. Vincent's two Communities, M. Aladel did not deem it
+advisable to have published; also, that although the account of the
+vision of the medal in the first editions of the notice, seems to
+differ notably from that related by the Sister, we will see later how
+these discrepancies can be explained, and that in the main the two
+versions are identical.
+
+[Illustration: _FIRST APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré, Daughter of Charity. After a picture
+painted from instructions given by Sister Catherine. (See the
+explanation at the list of engravings._)]
+
+Sister Catherine, already favored with celestial visions, ardently
+desired, with all the simplicity of her nature, to see the Blessed
+Virgin. To obtain this grace, she invoked her good Angel, St. Vincent,
+and the Blessed Virgin herself.
+
+On the 18th of July, 1830, eve of the Feast of St. Vincent de Paul,
+the Directress of the Seminary gave an instruction on devotion to
+the Saints and the Blessed Virgin; this but inflamed our Sister's
+pious desire. Fully imbued with the thought, she retired for the
+night, recommending herself to her blessed Father, St. Vincent, and
+confidently believing that her prayers would be answered.
+
+About half-past eleven o'clock, she hears her name, "Sister Labouré,"
+distinctly called three times; suddenly awaking, she opens her curtain
+on the side whence the voice proceeds, and what does she perceive? A
+little child of ravishing beauty, four or five years of age, dressed
+in white and enveloped in the radiant light beaming from his fair hair
+and noble person. "Come," said he, in a melodious voice, "come to the
+chapel, the Blessed Virgin awaits you." But, thought Sister Catherine
+(she slept in a large dormitory), the others will hear me, I shall be
+discovered. "Have no fears," said the child, answering her thought, "it
+is half-past eleven, everybody is asleep, I will accompany you."
+
+At these words, no longer able to resist the invitation of her amiable
+guide, Sister Catherine dresses hastily and follows the child, who
+walks always at her left, illuming the places through which he passes;
+and everywhere along their path, to the Sister's great astonishment,
+does she find the lamps lighted. Her surprise redoubles, on seeing the
+door open at the child's touch, and on finding the altar resplendent
+with lights, "reminding her," she said, "of the midnight Mass."
+
+The child conducts her into the sanctuary; here she kneels, whilst her
+celestial guide remains standing a little behind at her left.
+
+The moments of waiting seem long to Sister Catherine; at last, about
+midnight, the child says to her: "Behold the Blessed Virgin, behold
+her!" At that instant, she distinctly hears on the right hand side of
+the chapel, a slight noise, like the rustling of a silk robe; a most
+beautiful lady enters the sanctuary, and takes her seat in the place
+ordinarily occupied by the Director of the Community, on the left side
+of the sanctuary. The seat, the attitude, the costume (a white robe of
+a golden tinge and a blue veil), strongly resemble the representation
+of St. Anne in the picture adorning the sanctuary. Yet it is not
+the same countenance, and Sister Catherine is struggling interiorly
+against doubt. Can this indeed be the Blessed Virgin? she asks herself.
+Suddenly, the little child, assuming the voice of a man, speaks aloud,
+and in severe words asks her if the Queen of Heaven may not appear to a
+poor mortal under whatever form she pleases.
+
+Her doubts all vanish, and following only the impulses of her heart,
+the Sister throws herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet, familiarly
+placing her hands upon the Blessed Virgin's knees, like a child beside
+its mother.
+
+ "At this moment," said she, "I felt the sweetest emotion of
+ my life, it would be impossible for me to express it. The
+ Blessed Virgin told me how I must act in all my trials; and
+ pointing with her left hand to the foot of the altar, she told
+ me it was there I must come and lay open my heart, adding
+ that it was there I would receive all needful consolation.
+ Then she also said to me: 'My child, I am going to charge you
+ with a mission; you will suffer many trials on account of
+ it, but you will surmount them, knowing that you endure them
+ for the glory of the good God. You will be contradicted, but
+ you will be sustained by grace, do not fear; with simplicity
+ and confidence, tell all that passes within you to him who
+ is charged with the care of your soul. You will see certain
+ things, you will be inspired in your prayers, give an account
+ to him.'
+
+ "I then asked the Blessed Virgin for an explanation of what she
+ had already shown me. She answered: 'My child, the times are
+ very disastrous, great trials are about to come upon France,
+ the throne will be overturned, the entire world will be in
+ confusion by reason of miseries of every kind.' (The Blessed
+ Virgin looked very sad in saying this.) 'But come to the foot
+ of this altar, here graces will be shed upon all--upon all who
+ ask for them with confidence and fervor.
+
+ "'At a certain time the danger will be great indeed, it will
+ seem as if all were lost, but do not fear, I shall be with you;
+ you will acknowledge my visit, the protection of God and that
+ of St. Vincent upon the two Communities. Have confidence, do
+ not be discouraged, you are in my especial keeping.
+
+ "'There will be victims in other Communities.' (Tears were
+ in the Blessed Virgin's eyes as she said this.) 'Among the
+ clergy of Paris there will be victims, Mgr. the Archbishop
+ will die.' (At these words her tears flowed anew.) 'My child,
+ the cross will be despised, it will be trampled under foot,
+ our Lord's side will be opened anew, the streets will flow
+ with blood, the entire world will be in tribulation.'" (Here
+ the Blessed Virgin could no longer speak, grief was depicted
+ in her countenance.) At these words Sister Catherine thought,
+ when will this take place? And an interior light distinctly
+ indicated to her in forty years.
+
+Another version, also written by her own hand, says forty years, then
+ten, after which, peace. In connexion with this M. Aladel said to her:
+
+ "Will you and I see the accomplishment of all these things?"
+ "If we do not, others will," replied the simple daughter.
+
+The Blessed Virgin also entrusted her with several communications for
+her Director concerning the Daughters of Charity, and told her that
+he would one day be clothed with the necessary authority for putting
+them in execution.[7] After this, she said again: "But great troubles
+will come, the danger will be imminent, yet do not fear, St. Vincent
+will watch over you, and the protection of God is always here in a
+particular manner." (The Blessed Virgin still looked very sad.) "I
+will be with you myself, I will always keep my eye upon you, and I
+will enrich you with many graces." The Sister adds: "Graces will be
+bestowed, particularly upon all who ask for them, but they must pray,
+they must pray.----
+
+ [Footnote 7: M. Aladel was made Director of the Community in
+ 1846.]
+
+ "I could not tell," continues the Sister, "how long I remained
+ with the Blessed Virgin; all I can say is that, after talking
+ with me a long time, she disappeared like a shadow that
+ vanishes."
+
+On arising from her knees, Sister Catherine perceived the child just
+where she had left him, to throw herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet.
+He said: "She has gone," and, all resplendent with light as before, he
+stationed himself anew at her left hand, and conducted her back to the
+dormitory by the same paths as they had come.
+
+ "I believe," continues the narration, "that this child was my
+ Guardian Angel, because I had fervently implored him to procure
+ me the favor of seeing the Blessed Virgin.... Returned to my
+ bed, I heard the clock strike two, and I went to sleep no more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What has just been recounted was only a part of Sister Catherine's
+mission, or rather a preparation for a future mission to be given her
+as a pledge of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness for the human race.
+
+In the month of November of this same year, 1830, Sister Catherine
+communicates to M. Aladel a new vision; but it is no longer that of
+an afflicted Mother weeping over the evils menacing her children, or
+the martyrdom of her dearest friends. This vision recalls the rainbow
+appearing in a sky still black with storms, or the star shining through
+the tempest to inspire the mariner with confidence--it is the Virgin
+Queen, bearing the promise of benediction, salvation and peace.
+
+M. Aladel relates this to the Promoter of the diocese, and we find it
+inserted in the verbal process of the investigation, dated February 16,
+1836, as follows:
+
+ "At half-past five in the evening, whilst the Sisters were in
+ the chapel taking their meditation, the Blessed Virgin appeared
+ to a young Sister as if in an oval picture; she was standing on
+ a globe, only one-half of which was visible; she was clothed
+ in a white robe and a mantle of shining blue, having her hands
+ covered, as it were, with diamonds, whence emanated luminous
+ rays falling upon the earth, but more abundantly upon one
+ portion of it.
+
+ "A voice seemed to say: 'These rays are symbolic of the graces
+ Mary obtains for men, and the point upon which they fall most
+ abundantly is France.' Around the picture, written in golden
+ letters, were these words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!' This prayer, traced in
+ a semi-circle, began at the Blessed Virgin's right hand, and,
+ passing over her head, terminated at her left hand. The reverse
+ of the picture bore the letter M surmounted by a cross, having
+ a bar at its base, and beneath the monogram of Mary, were the
+ hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first surrounded with a crown of
+ thorns, the other transpierced with a sword. Then she seemed
+ to hear these words: 'A medal must be struck upon this model;
+ those who wear it indulgenced, and repeat this prayer with
+ devotion, will be, in an especial manner, under the protection
+ of the Mother of God.' At that instant, the vision disappeared."
+
+According to the testimony of Sister Catherine's Director, this
+apparition appeared several times in the course of a few months, always
+in the chapel of the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, either
+during Mass or some of the religious exercises. M. Aladel adds that he
+was not certain as to their number, but he knows they were repeated
+thrice, at least, the Sister having mentioned it three different times.
+
+Here is the account written by the Sister's own hand:
+
+ "The 27th of November, 1830, which was a Saturday and eve of
+ the first Sunday in Advent, whilst making my meditation in
+ profound silence, at half-past five in the evening, I seemed
+ to hear on the right hand side of the sanctuary something
+ like the rustling of a silk dress, and, glancing in that
+ direction, I perceived the Blessed Virgin standing near St.
+ Joseph's picture; her height was medium, and her countenance
+ so beautiful that it would be impossible for me to describe
+ it. She was standing, clothed in a robe the color of auroral
+ light, the style that is usually called _à la vierge_--that is,
+ high neck and plain sleeves. Her head was covered with a white
+ veil, which descended on each side to her feet. Her hair was
+ smooth on the forehead, and above was a coif ornamented with a
+ little lace and fitting close to the head. Her face was only
+ partially covered, and her feet rested upon a globe, or rather
+ a hemisphere (at least, I saw but half a globe). Her hands were
+ raised about as high as her waist, and she held in a graceful
+ attitude another globe (a figure of the universe). Her eyes
+ were lifted up to Heaven, and her countenance was radiant as
+ she offered the globe to Our Lord.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré. First picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+ "Suddenly, her fingers were filled with rings[8] and most
+ beautiful precious stones; the rays gleaming forth and
+ reflected on all sides, enveloped her in such dazzling light
+ that I could see neither her feet nor her robe. The stones were
+ of different sizes, and the rays emanating from them were more
+ or less brilliant in proportion to the size.
+
+ [Footnote 8: The rings were three on each finger; the largest
+ next to the hand, then the medium size, then the smallest; and
+ each ring was covered with precious stones of proportional
+ size; the largest stones emitted the most brilliant rays, the
+ smallest the least brilliant.]
+
+ "I could not express what I felt, nor what I learned, in these
+ few moments.
+
+ "Whilst occupied contemplating this vision, the Blessed Virgin
+ cast her eyes upon me, and a voice said in the depths of my
+ heart: 'The globe that you see represents the entire world, and
+ particularly France, and each person in particular.'
+
+ "I would not know how to express the beauty and brilliancy of
+ these rays. And the Blessed Virgin added: 'Behold the symbol
+ of the graces I shed upon those who ask me for them,' thus
+ making me understand how generous she is to all who implore
+ her intercession.... How many favors she grants to those who
+ ask. At this moment I was not myself, I was in raptures! There
+ now formed around the Blessed Virgin a frame slightly oval,
+ upon which appeared, in golden letters, these words: 'O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Then I heard a voice which said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model, persons who wear it indulgenced, will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it around the neck; graces will
+ be abundantly bestowed upon those who have confidence.'
+
+ "Suddenly," says the Sister, "the picture seemed to turn," and
+ she saw the reverse, such as has already been described in the
+ previous account of the investigation.
+
+Sister Catherine's notes do not mention the twelve stars surrounding
+the monogram of Mary and the two hearts. Yet they are always
+represented on the medal. It is morally certain that she communicated
+this detail, by word of mouth, at the time she related the apparitions.
+
+Other notes in Sister Catherine's own hand-writing complete the
+account. She adds, that some of these precious stones did not emit
+rays, and when she expressed her astonishment at this, she was told
+that they were a figure of the graces we neglect to ask of Mary. On a
+hasty perusal, our Sister's account of the vision appears to differ
+from M. Aladel's. We were struck with this, and had to study these
+interesting and authentic documents attentively, in order to decide
+whether the visions differed essentially or were really the same.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré. Second picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+According to M. Aladel's testimony in the investigation, the
+apparitions relative to the medal were always similar, and Sister
+Catherine, before her death, confirmed this assertion. As we have just
+learned from our Sister's own words, the Blessed Virgin always appeared
+with the terrestrial globe under her feet, and at the same time in her
+virginal hands, pressing it and warming it, as it were, against her
+maternal heart, and offering it to her Divine Son in her quality of
+Advocate and Mother, with an ineffable expression of supplication and
+love.
+
+This is what the Sister saw. Was it all? No, after the first act of
+sublime intercession, after this most efficacious prayer of our divine
+Mediatrix, her hands are suddenly filled with graces, under the figure
+of rings and precious stones, which emit such brilliant rays that
+all else is invisible, Mary is enveloped in them, and her hands are
+bent beneath the weight of these treasures. Her eyes are cast upon
+the humble Sister whose ravished glances can scarcely support this
+celestial effulgence. At the same time, an oval frame is formed around
+the vision, and a voice directs the Sister to have a medal struck
+according to the medal presented. The medal is a faithful reproduction
+of this picture, at the moment the symbolical part disappears in the
+sheaves of light.
+
+Sister Catherine being asked if she still saw the globe in the
+Blessed Virgin's hands, when the luminous sheaves issued from them,
+answered no, there remained nothing but the rays of light; and that
+when the Blessed Virgin spoke of the globe, she meant that under her
+feet, there being no longer any question of the first. Hence, we may
+conclude, that Sister Catherine's description of the apparition and
+M. Aladel's agree perfectly. The small globe which the Blessed Virgin
+holds in her hands, and the large one on which she stands, are both
+inundated with the same dazzling rays, or enriched with the same
+graces. The august Mary seems to indicate by the small globe merely a
+figure of the world, imperfectly represented beneath her feet, thus
+reminding us that she is the all merciful Queen of the human race.
+
+There is yet another variation in the description of the two
+apparitions. M. Aladel, in conformity with the popular belief, that
+white and blue combined constitute the Blessed Virgin's livery,
+as emblems of purity, celestial purity, gives the mantle an azure
+tint. Sister Catherine expresses the same idea several times in her
+notes, saying: "White signifies innocence, and blue is the livery of
+Mary." However, the blue mantle is not mentioned in the notice of
+the apparition, Sister Catherine speaks only of the robe and veil of
+auroral light.
+
+When questioned as to a more definite description of this color, she
+replied that it was a deep white, tinted with the mild, beautiful
+radiance of dawn,[9] thus wishing, no doubt, to give some idea of the
+celestial hue of the robe and veil. It is this hue that tortures the
+artist, for he feels his pencil powerless to depict the beauties of
+another sphere.
+
+ [Footnote 9: We must remember that Sister Catherine's childhood
+ was passed in the country, where she could admire the beauty
+ of that luminous tint which precedes the sun, and colors the
+ horizon at break of day with its increasing radiance.]
+
+We can understand from the above, how M. Aladel could have mistaken
+some details furnished by Sister Catherine, or have confounded the
+apparition of the medal with the visions of July 18th and 19th, in
+which the Blessed Virgin's apparel was white and blue.
+
+However, the accessories of the mantle and its indescribable hue, in no
+wise affect the reality of the apparition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We recollect with what indifference, we might say severity, M. Aladel
+received his penitent's communications, bidding her give no heed
+to them, but dismiss them from her mind, as altogether unworthy of
+attention. But Sister Catherine's obedience, attested by her Director
+himself, could not efface the delightful remembrance of what she had
+seen and heard; to return to Mary's feet was her greatest happiness;
+the thought never left her, nor the firm conviction that she would see
+this dear Mother again. And, indeed, in the course of December, she
+was favored with another vision, similar to that of November 27th, and
+occurring at the same time, during evening meditation. But there was
+a striking difference between this and the previous one, the Blessed
+Virgin, instead of stopping at St. Joseph's picture, passed on, and
+rested above the tabernacle, a little behind it, and precisely in the
+place the statue now occupies. The Blessed Virgin appeared to be about
+forty years of age, according to the Sister's judgment. The apparition
+was, as it were, framed from the hands in the invocation: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" traced
+in golden letters. The reverse presented the monogram of the Blessed
+Virgin, surmounted by a cross, and beneath were the divine hearts of
+Jesus and Mary. Sister Labouré was again directed to have a medal
+struck upon this model. She terminates her account in these words: "To
+tell you what I understood at the moment the Blessed Virgin offered the
+globe to Our Lord, would be impossible, or what my feelings were whilst
+gazing on her! A voice in the depths of my heart said to me: 'These
+rays are symbolic of the graces the Blessed Virgin obtains for those
+who ask for them.'"
+
+These few lines, according to her, should be inscribed at the base of
+the Blessed Virgin's statue. On this occasion, contrary to her usual
+custom, she could not refrain from an exclamation of joy at the thought
+of the homages which would be rendered Mary! "Oh! how delightful to
+hear it said: 'Mary is Queen of the Universe, and particularly of
+France!' The children will proclaim it, 'She is Queen of each soul!'"
+
+When Sister Labouré related the third apparition of the medal, M.
+Aladel asked her if she had seen anything written on the reverse. The
+Sister answered that she had not. "Ah!" said the Father, "ask the
+Blessed Virgin what to put there."
+
+The young Sister obeyed; and after having prayed a long time, one day
+during meditation, she seemed to hear a voice saying: "The M and the
+two hearts express enough."
+
+None of these narrations mention the serpent, yet it always figures in
+representations of the apparition, and certainly in conformity with
+Sister Catherine's earliest revelations of the vision. The following
+shows why we are so positive of this fact.
+
+Towards the close of her life, after a silence of forty-five years, M.
+Aladel being no more, this good daughter was interiorly constrained to
+confide to one of her Superiors the communications she had received
+from the Blessed Virgin, that they might serve to reanimate devotion
+and gratitude to Mary. Having done this, her mind was relieved; she
+felt that now she could die in peace.
+
+The Superior, favored with her confidence, wishing to realize one of
+her venerable companion's most cherished desires, proposes a statue
+of Mary Immaculate, holding the globe. On asking Sister Catherine if
+the serpent must be represented under the Blessed Virgin's feet, she
+answered: "Yes; there was a serpent of a greenish color, with yellow
+spots." She also remarked that the globe in the Virgin's hands was
+surmounted by a little cross, that her countenance was neither very
+youthful nor very joyous, but indicative of gravity mingled with
+sorrow, that the sorrowful expression vanished as her face became
+irradiated with love, especially at the moment of her prayer.
+
+Our attempt at representing the vision was successful, although the
+tint of the robe and veil, the celestial radiance of the face, the
+splendor of the rays, must always remain an impossibility for art;
+as the good Sister, whilst declaring her satisfaction, betrayed by
+her tone of voice and expression the disappointment she felt at the
+impotency of human skill to depict the beauty of the celestial original.
+
+Thirty-five years before, M. Aladel had vainly attempted a
+representation of the same apparition, as we learn from a curious
+fragment, a small design[10] representing the Immaculate Virgin holding
+the globe, etc., as described by Sister Catherine. His note directing
+the details is in exact conformity with the Sister's description,
+except in one particular, the blue mantle. But little satisfied with
+this attempt, which gave but a confused idea of the apparition, and
+his own especial impression of it, he relinquished the undertaking, and
+held to the known model.
+
+ [Footnote 10: The author of this design is M. Letaille, editor
+ of religious imagery.]
+
+We may say, with truth, that nothing can equal the beauty, the grace,
+the expression of tenderness depicted in the attitude of this Virgin,
+whose graciously downcast glances and hands, filled with blessings,
+proclaim her the Mother, inviting her little child to cast itself into
+her arms, or earnestly entreating the prodigal son to confide in her
+merciful mediation.
+
+This image of the Immaculate Mother, universally admired and honored,
+has a mute eloquence which never fails to touch the heart; and, truly,
+may it ever be styled the miraculous Virgin. Were we to cite only those
+which have come to our knowledge, a volume would be insufficient to
+contain an account of all the wonderful conversions, cures, marks of
+protection, wrought since the appearance of this vision to the present
+day.
+
+The production of new models, representing the Immaculate Virgin in a
+different attitude, should never supplant this, which is, as it were,
+the type of all others; nor weaken the devotion heretofore accorded it
+by popular gratitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ PROPAGATION OF THE MEDAL.
+
+ ITS WONDERFUL CIRCULATION--CANONICAL INVESTIGATION ORDERED BY MGR.
+ DE QUÉLEN.
+
+
+We have already seen with what mistrust M. Aladel received Sister
+Catherine's communications, and how he hesitated to assume the mission
+proposed to him. At last, after grave reflection, after consultations
+with enlightened persons, and upon the formal authorization of Mgr.
+de Quélen, Archbishop of Paris, he decided to have the medal of the
+Immaculate Conception struck. This was in 1832.
+
+When about to depict the details as related by the Sister, many
+difficulties presented themselves. In what attitude should the Blessed
+Virgin be represented, for in the apparition she had several? Should
+a globe be in her hands? Again, at one instant she was enveloped in
+waves of light, but this could not be gracefully reproduced in an
+engraving. After mature consideration, it was decided to adopt the
+already existing model of the Immaculate Virgin, which represents her
+with hands extended; to this were added the luminous rays escaping from
+the rings on her fingers, the terrestrial globe on which she stands,
+and the serpent she crushes under her feet. Around the oval were
+inscribed these words: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+have recourse to thee!" The reverse bears the letter M, surmounted by a
+cross, and the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary below the M, the first
+surrounded with a crown of thorns, the second pierced by a sword.
+
+ "As soon as the medal was struck," says M. Aladel, "it was
+ freely circulated, especially among the Daughters of Charity,
+ who, knowing something of its origin, wore it with great
+ confidence. Shortly after, they gave it to several sick
+ persons, six of whom experienced most beneficial results. Three
+ cures and three conversions were wrought, some of them in
+ Paris and some in the diocese of Meaux, all of a very sudden
+ and unexpected nature. And now there was heard everywhere
+ a great demand for the Miraculous Medal, the medal which
+ heals--virtuous mothers of families giving it as a New-Year's
+ present to their children, who received it so gladly and wore
+ it with such respect that no one could doubt how their innocent
+ hearts prized it. All the pious hastened to procure it as soon
+ as it was known to be within reach; but the event it gives us
+ most pleasure to record here, and which edified us most in
+ these early days of the propagation of the medal, is that,
+ in two cities of the province, nearly all the young people
+ united in wearing the medal as the safeguard of their youth.
+ Four hundred silver medals were sent for, to be indulged for
+ this purpose. Very soon entire parishes in various counties
+ solicited their pastors to get them medals, and in Paris an
+ officer of high rank bought sixty for brother officers at their
+ request.
+
+ "Thus, the medals of the Immaculate Conception were circulated
+ in a truly wonderful manner, in all the provinces and among
+ all classes; from every side we heard most consoling things;
+ priests filled with the spirit of God wrote to us that these
+ medals reanimated piety in the cities as well as in the
+ country; grand vicars, enjoying the high esteem due their piety
+ and intellect, prelates, even more distinguished, assured us
+ of their entire confidence in the medals, which they regarded
+ as means sent by Providence to revive the faith so sensibly
+ enfeebled in our age; that in reality they did awaken faith
+ daily in many hearts apparently devoid of it, that they
+ re-established peace and union in families divided by discord,
+ in fine, that not one of all those wearing the medal but had
+ experienced most salutary effects.
+
+ "Mgr. de Quélen himself (whose great charity brought him
+ in contact with all classes) told me several times, that
+ he had given the medal to numbers of sick persons of every
+ condition in life, and never had he failed to recognize the
+ blessed results. Very soon he publishes these in a circular of
+ December 15th, 1836, on the occasion of consecrating the parish
+ church of Our Lady of Loretto. It is a fact we are jealous
+ of confirming, and the knowledge of which we desire should
+ reach even the most remote parts of the Catholic world; in our
+ diocese this devotion has become more deeply rooted with time;
+ the afflicted still affirm, increase and extend its marvelous
+ progress; signal favors, graces of healing, preservation and
+ salvation seem to multiply among us, in proportion as we
+ implore the tender pity of Mary conceived without sin. 'We
+ exhort the faithful,' adds he in the beginning of the same
+ circular, 'to wear the medal struck a few years ago in honor
+ of the Blessed Virgin,' and to repeat frequently the prayer
+ inscribed around the image: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Moreover, in every part of France have we witnessed the
+ increasing eagerness of the faithful of all ages, sexes
+ and conditions, to procure the Miraculous Medal. Careless
+ Christians, hardened sinners, Protestants, the impious and even
+ Jews, asked for it, received it with pleasure and wore it with
+ religious veneration.
+
+ "Not only in France were we forced to admire the propagation
+ of the medal; it spread rapidly and extensively throughout
+ Switzerland, Piedmont, Italy, Spain, Belgium, England, America,
+ in the Levant, and even China. It is also said, that at Naples,
+ as soon as they heard of it, the Metropolitan Chapter sent
+ for some to one of our establishments in that city, that the
+ king had silver medals struck for all the royal family and
+ court, and a million of another medal, which were distributed
+ during the cholera--that the image is there venerated in nearly
+ every house, and the picture in several churches. At Rome, the
+ Superior Generals of religious orders took pains to circulate
+ it, and the Sovereign Pontiff himself, placed it at the foot of
+ his crucifix. We also received a letter informing us that His
+ Holiness gave it to several persons as a particular mark of his
+ pontifical affection.
+
+ "Moreover, to estimate the propagation of this medal, it
+ suffices to consult the registry of M. Vachette, to whom was
+ entrusted the striking of it.[11] This examen shows that, from
+ June, 1832, to the present time, he has sold: 1st, two millions
+ in silver or gold; 2d, eighteen millions of a cheaper metal.
+ According to him, eleven other manufacturers in Paris have
+ sold the same quantity; at Lyons, four others with whom he
+ was acquainted, at least double the number; and in many other
+ cities, whether of France or foreign countries, the manufacture
+ and sales are incalculable."
+
+ [Footnote 11: _Quai des Orfevres_, number 54. They are of
+ different sizes, and the invocation is inscribed in several
+ languages.]
+
+Struck with this marvelous propagation, and the universal anxiety
+to learn the origin of the medal, Sister Catherine's pious Director
+published, in 1834, a short notice containing a brief narration of the
+apparition, and of the graces obtained by means of the medal. This
+book sold rapidly, and new editions had to be printed; when the eighth
+appeared in 1842, the number of copies sold amounted to a hundred and
+thirty thousand, and each successive edition was increased by well
+authenticated accounts of many new miraculous occurrences.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In consequence of all this, the venerable priest found himself engaged
+in a vast and active correspondence, which, to the end of his days,
+filled his heart with ineffable consolation, at the thought of his
+thus assisting in the accomplishment of the Immaculate Mary's promises
+throughout the universe.
+
+Among the communications he received in the course of the year 1836,
+there was one which appeared to him the confirmation of Sister
+Catherine's vision. He published it in the notice of the medal.
+It was the vision of a Swiss religious, already favored with many
+extraordinary graces. We reproduce it here for the edification of the
+reader:
+
+ "The 17th of August, 1835, the first day of her retreat, this
+ religious, in an ecstasy after Holy Communion, sees Our Lord
+ seated upon a throne of glory, and holding a sword in His hand.
+ 'Where goest thou, and what seekest thou?' He asked. 'O Jesus!'
+ she answered, 'I go to Thee, and it is Thyself alone I seek!'
+ 'Where dost thou seek Me, in what and through whom?' 'Lord,
+ in myself I seek Thee, in Thy holy will and through Mary.'
+ Here Our Lord disappeared, and the religious, awaking from her
+ ecstasy, was reflecting upon His words, when there suddenly
+ appeared to her the Blessed Virgin, all lovely and resplendent.
+ She held in her hand a medal, on which was engraven her image
+ and the inscription: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!' And sheaves of light gleamed
+ from her hands. 'These rays,' said Mary to her, 'are symbols
+ of the graces I obtain for men.' She then turned the medal,
+ and the religious saw on the reverse the letter M surmounted
+ by a little cross, beneath which were the Sacred Hearts of
+ Jesus and Mary. 'Wear this medal,' said the Queen of Heaven,
+ 'and thou wilt enjoy my very especial protection; take pains,
+ also, that all who are in any pressing necessity wear it, that
+ efforts are made to procure it for them.... Be in readiness,
+ for I will put it upon thee myself, on the Feast of my beloved
+ servant Bernard; to day, I leave it in thy hands.' The Blessed
+ Virgin afterwards reproached her for misplacing the medal and
+ taking little pains to find it; the religious acknowledged
+ indeed, that she had received it in July, and that having lost
+ it, she really gave herself no anxiety, considering it merely
+ an ordinary medal, knowing neither its origin nor its effects
+ till this vision. This is attested by the Superior of the
+ Community. The Blessed Virgin kept her promise, and on the 20th
+ of the same month, the Feast of St. Bernard, she placed on the
+ neck of the religious, the medal she had already put in her
+ hands, recommending her to wear it respectfully, to repeat the
+ invocation frequently, and to apply herself to the invitation
+ of the Immaculate Mary's virtues.
+
+ "During her retreat in August, 1836, she sees the medal every
+ day, suspended, as it were, in the air. At first, it appeared
+ very high, shining a few moments like the sun, then like gold;
+ again, it seemed not so high and was apparently of silver;
+ finally, very near the earth, and of a baser metal. The
+ religious gazed in admiration, though without comprehending the
+ meaning of this vision, until Vespers, when it was explained
+ to her. A sweet but unfamiliar voice asked her which of these
+ medals she preferred. She answered, the most brilliant, and the
+ same voice congratulating her on the choice she had made, told
+ her, that the brilliant medal shining like the sun, was that of
+ faithful Christians, who, in wearing it, honor Mary perfectly,
+ and contribute to her glory; the gold medal, that of pious
+ persons who have a tender and filial devotion to Mary, but
+ who keeping it within their hearts, advance but slightly this
+ divine Mother's cause; the silver medal, that of all who wear
+ it with respect and devotion, but who sometimes lack constancy
+ and generosity in imitating Mary's virtues--finally, that the
+ brass medal, represented that of all, who contenting themselves
+ with invoking Mary, take no pains to walk in her footsteps, and
+ thus remain sadly attached to earth. The same voice added, that
+ there is, however, a very especial and peculiar union among
+ these various persons, marked, we might say, with the precious
+ seal of Mary Immaculate; they all necessarily aid one another
+ in a very particular manner by prayer, so that with this
+ powerful assistance, the third can elevate the last, the second
+ sustain the third, and the first, thus happily attract all the
+ others.
+
+ "These details have been communicated to us, from the abbey of
+ Our Lady of Hermits at Einsiedlen, so renowned for the great
+ virtues of its fervent religious, and the immense concourse of
+ pilgrims, who repair hither from all parts of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Up to this time, the medal had received only the verbal approbation of
+the Archbishop of Paris; a formal authorization was necessary to assure
+the faithful of its authenticity, and to conform moreover to the laws
+of the Church, which exact a canonical judgment, before permitting
+the introduction of new images in the liturgical worship. A juridical
+examination was consequently requested, in order to confirm the origin
+of the medal.
+
+Mgr. de Quélen willingly complied, and by his order an investigation
+was begun February 16th, 1836, under the direction of M. Quentin, Vicar
+General, Promoter of the diocese; it was prolonged into the month of
+July, and had not less than nineteen sittings.
+
+We still possess the verbal process of this inquiry. Various witnesses
+appeared, the principal of whom was Sister Catherine's Director, M.
+Aladel.
+
+In the course of the process, the Promoter asked, why God had chosen
+the Daughters of Charity for so rare a favor, and not one of those
+convents noted for the observance of an austere rule, such as rigorous
+fasts, mortifications, etc. For it was not in a contemplative order,
+but in the Mother House of this modest institution so useful to
+humanity, in the chapel which for a long time contained the mortal
+remains of St. Vincent, the father of the poor, that the apparition,
+which was the model of the medal, took place.
+
+We believe the reason of this preference is to be found in the two
+usages observed among the Daughters of Charity, from the beginning of
+their Society; the first, an act of consecration to the Blessed Virgin
+on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception; the second, the ending each
+decade of the chaplet by the following profession of faith: "O Most
+Holy Virgin! I believe and confess thy Holy and Immaculate Conception,
+pure and without spot! O Most Pure Virgin! by thy virginal purity, by
+thy Immaculate Conception and thy glorious quality of Mother of God,
+obtain for me of thy dear Son, humility, charity, great purity of
+heart, body and soul, holy perseverance in my dear vocation, the gift
+of prayer, a good life and a happy death."
+
+The proofs admitted in the inquiry to establish the authenticity of the
+vision of the medal, are:
+
+ 1st. The Sister's character--she is a poor young country girl,
+ uneducated and without talent--of solid but simple piety,
+ good judgment, and calm, sedate mind; we perceive at once
+ that everything about her excludes all suspicion of deceit or
+ illusion. The better to preserve her incognito, she will not
+ allow her name to be mentioned, and she even refused to appear
+ before the Promoter of the investigation.
+
+ 2d. The wisdom of the Sister's Director, who took all possible
+ precautions to guard against deception, and who yielded to his
+ penitent's reiterated entreaties, only from fear of displeasing
+ the Blessed Virgin, and by the advice of his Superiors.
+
+ 3d. The apparition in itself, contains nothing, either in its
+ character or object, opposed to the teachings of the Church,
+ but is, on the contrary, conducive to edification. Being
+ several times renewed and always in the same manner, we may
+ conclude, that the Sister's imagination had nothing whatever to
+ do with it.
+
+ 4th. The wonderful circulation of the medal, confirmed by the
+ testimony of the first engraver, M. Vachette, and the extensive
+ sales of copies of the notice, reaching 109,000 in sixteen
+ months, as attested by the publisher, M. Bailly, must be
+ regarded as a confirmation of its supernatural origin.
+
+ 5th. The extraordinary graces obtained through the
+ instrumentality of the medal, cures and conversions, several
+ of which are legally attested by the deposition of reliable
+ witnesses, who appeared before the Promoter and signed the
+ verbal process, give a last proof to the fact it was sought to
+ establish, namely, that the Miraculous Medal must be of divine
+ origin. Such is the formal conclusion, in the report addressed
+ to the Archbishop by the Promoter, at the end of the inquiry.
+
+Unfortunately, the ecclesiastical authority did not pronounce judgment;
+we know not why the inquiry did not receive the sanction to which it
+apparently led. The death of Mgr. de Quélen, at the end of the year
+1839, caused all proceedings to be abandoned. Everything remains still
+in the domain of private devotions, and the model of the Immaculate
+Virgin, with its symbolical attributes, is not yet authorized as an
+object of public veneration in the churches.
+
+This deplorable omission is so much the more difficult to understand,
+as, personally, Mgr. de Quélen took a serious interest in the
+apparition of 1830, the compass of which he comprehended. It was he who
+urged M. Aladel to have the medal struck; he expressed a wish to have
+some of the first; he received them, and experienced their efficacy.
+Before ordering the investigation, he had summoned to him the Mother
+General of the Daughters of Charity, together with the officers forming
+her council, and other Sisters well versed in Community affairs, to
+learn from them what usages of the Community could have drawn down upon
+it such a favor as the Blessed Virgin had just bestowed. Not content
+with possessing the Miraculous Medal, the pious prelate had in his own
+chamber a statue of the Immaculate Conception after the Sister's model.
+It was cast in bronze, under his own eyes, as he wished to assist at
+the operation. When, in 1839, the solemn octave of the Immaculate
+Conception was celebrated in the diocese of Paris, for the first time,
+this statue, on a throne surrounded with flowers, was exposed to the
+veneration of the faithful. The 1st of January of this same year, he
+consecrated his diocese to Mary Immaculate.
+
+In commemoration of this, he had a picture painted, which represents
+him standing at the foot of Mary's statue, his eyes fixed upon her
+with love and confidence. The statue rests upon a globe which bears
+these words: "_Virgo fidelis_." And the invocation, "_Regina, sine labe
+concepta, ora pro nobis_," is inscribed upon the picture.
+
+On the Feast of the Assumption, he presented this picture to his
+chapter, that it might, he said, be a monument of his devotion and
+that of the chapter of Paris to the Immaculate Conception of the Mother
+of God.[12]
+
+ [Footnote 12: "Life of Mgr. de Quélen," by the Baron Henrion.]
+
+A medal, bearing date of January 1, 1839, reproduces this picture upon
+one of its faces. On the other is a vessel, tempest-tossed, and a star
+guiding it to the haven of peace. These words of St. Bernard, "_Respice
+stellam, voca Mariam_,"[13] explain the allegory. The following lines
+complete the explanation:
+
+"_Vana, Hyacinthe, furit; Stella maris auspice, vincis._"[14]
+
+ [Footnote 13: Look at the star, invoke Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 14: In vain, Hyacinthe (de Quélen) is the tempest
+ unchained; under the auspices of the Star of the Sea, thou wilt
+ triumph over its fury.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ DEVELOPMENT OF THE DEVOTION TO THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
+
+ MGR. DE QUÉLEN'S CIRCULAR.
+
+
+The principal end of the Blessed Virgin's apparition to Sister
+Catherine was to develop among the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate
+Conception; and the medal was the instrument used to accomplish this.
+Its influence was so prompt and perceptible that, in the year 1836, the
+Promoter charged with directing the canonical inquiry attributed to
+it, in a great measure, the wonderful development of devotion to the
+Virgin Immaculate. This pious impulse, once firmly rooted, continued to
+increase throughout the world; but, according to the ordinary ways of
+Providence, whilst the effects struck the eyes of all, the cause was
+forgotten, it was forgotten especially that God had chosen a modest
+Daughter of Charity to revive in the Church devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin. The medal was known everywhere, it was worn by everyone, it
+accomplished numberless prodigies, but whence did it come? This no
+one thought of asking. It is miraculous; that epithet includes its
+name, its origin, its value, and the humble Daughter who received it
+from Mary, to bestow upon mankind, silently admires these astonishing
+results, and says, like her blessed Father: "I am nothing in all this
+but a vile instrument, I cannot attribute to myself any of the glory
+without committing an act of injustice."
+
+The august Virgin had said that the graces obtained for mankind through
+her intercession would be particularly abundant in France. Events
+have proved the reality of the promise. It is in France, especially,
+that the medal has been propagated, miracles multiplied, and devotion
+to the Immaculate Conception most rapidly developed; it may be said,
+with truth, that that country has, indeed, merited the title of Mary's
+kingdom. As, among all the French dioceses, Paris was the one favored
+with these apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, so was Paris the one
+to inaugurate the religious movement. Faithful echo of the Church's
+ancient traditions concerning the Immaculate Conception, a prelate,
+whose piety equaled his nobility of character, and whose virtue
+received a new lustre from the fire of persecution, Mgr. de Quélen
+distinguished himself among all the bishops by his zeal in honoring the
+privilege so dear to Mary. A witness of the influence exerted by the
+medal upon the sensibly increasing devotion of the faithful to Mary
+conceived without sin, and struck with the already abundant fruits of
+this devotion in the conversion of sinners, the pious Archbishop was
+filled with joy. Incited by a just hope of seeing the gifts of Heaven
+still more abundantly multiplied, if devotion to Mary were produced
+under new forms, he addressed a petition to the Sovereign Pontiff with
+the view of obtaining from His Holiness: 1st. To celebrate solemnly, on
+the second Sunday of Advent, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, that
+the devotion might be maintained and strengthened among the faithful;
+2d. To add to the preface, _Et te in Immaculata Conceptione_; 3d. A
+plenary indulgence, in perpetuity, for this same day.
+
+Our Holy Father, Pope Gregory XVI, approved the Archbishop's petition,
+and granted it by a rescript of December 7, 1838. The privileges he had
+just obtained, in honor of Mary, conceived without sin, this venerable
+prelate joyfully published the first of the following January in a
+solemn circular, which clearly depicts his eminent piety. We here
+reproduce it for our readers' edification:
+
+ "_Circular of the Archbishop of Paris on the subject of the Feast
+ of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of
+ God._
+
+ "HYACINTHE LOUIS DE QUÉLEN, by the divine mercy and grace
+ of the Holy Apostolic See, Archbishop of Paris, etc.
+
+ "To the clergy and faithful of our diocese, health and benediction
+ in our Lord Jesus Christ.
+
+ "We do not wish, dearly beloved brethren, to await the end of the
+ year which begins to-day, and which we dare regard as one fruitful
+ in all manner of spiritual blessings, ere announcing to you the new
+ favor we have just received from the Holy Apostolic See, so much
+ have we loved to persuade ourselves that the joy of your hearts
+ will equal our own, so confident are we that this favor is for us,
+ the presage of multiplied graces, and that it becomes henceforth
+ for our diocese an abundant source of sanctification and salvation.
+
+ "Let us hasten to proclaim this favor: it treats of devotion to our
+ august Queen, Mother and Mistress, the Most Holy and Immaculate
+ Virgin Mary, honored especially in the mystery of her most pure
+ Conception.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin: Behold what the Catholic Church,
+ what the infallible Church, what the true and only Church of Jesus
+ Christ authorizes us to teach, without, however, declaring it an
+ article of Faith,[15] what she prevents us denying publicly, what
+ she instils into all the faithful, when in her general council,
+ she declares, she proclaims, that in the decree treating of
+ original sin, her intention is not to include therein the Blessed
+ and Immaculate Virgin Mary, Mother of God.[16] Behold! what the
+ Sovereign Pontiffs permit us to say, that always, and with a
+ view of nourishing the piety of Mary's servants, who invoke her
+ by recalling the first of her privileges, that which approaches
+ nearest the sanctity of God, always do they deign to second
+ these prayers, and zealously open the treasure of indulgences of
+ which they are the supreme dispensers, in favor of a devotion so
+ legitimate.
+
+ [Footnote 15: The Immaculate Conception had not then been defined.
+ (Note by translator.)]
+
+ [Footnote 16: Conc. Trid. sess. V. _Decret. de peccato originali_.]
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the Church of Paris
+ glories in professing and maintaining; what her Doctors hold it
+ an honor to teach and defend; what her children are jealous of
+ preserving as one of their dearest possessions after the sacred
+ dogmas of faith; what they do not hesitate to regard as an
+ immediate consequence of their faith, not believing it possible
+ to separate in Mary, the title of Immaculate Virgin from that of
+ Virgin Mother of God, and not considering it possible to refuse the
+ privilege of a Conception without spot, to her who was to receive
+ and who indeed did receive, that of the divine Maternity. Behold!
+ what respect and love for the Word made Flesh, inspire for the
+ chaste bosom the Most High sanctified, because He was to descend
+ there, and there clothe Himself with our nature, there become man
+ by the operation of the Holy Ghost.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what for years, has been
+ repeated thousands and thousands of times, not in this great city
+ or diocese only, but in every part of France, among strangers
+ and in the most distant countries. Behold! the cry of hope which
+ suffering danger, public or private necessities, have wrung from
+ mouths accustomed to bless God, and celebrate the praises of His
+ Holy Mother. Behold! what has been written, engraved, religiously
+ deposed, wherever there were spiritual or temporal favors to be
+ asked, graces of protection, of healing or conversion; at the
+ entrance of cities, at the doors of dwellings, on the breast of the
+ sick, on the couch of the dying. Behold! what in these later times
+ especially, has taken such deep root in all Christian hearts, what
+ has received an extraordinary impulse, what has been propagated in
+ so remarkable a manner, what seems to justify moreover, (the fact
+ can no longer be disguised) the numberless graces obtained through
+ the invocation of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the chaste generation
+ has taken the pious custom of placing on its heart with the sign
+ of the cross as an impenetrable buckler against the inflamed darts
+ of Satan, and under which its innocence and virtue are shielded.
+ Behold! what inspires it, fortifies it, renders it invincible in
+ combats with the demon of darkness; what makes it victorious over
+ all the seductions of the world and the attacks of hell; what
+ attracts, what leads it to follow Mary in the path of angelic
+ perfection, and makes it taste that celestial word which is not
+ given to all to understand; finally, behold! what everywhere and in
+ all conditions, fills with holy emulation, souls truly pious; what
+ encourages them to walk with constancy in the ways of justice; what
+ communicates to them a just horror of sin and the highest esteem
+ for sanctifying grace, of which the Immaculate Virgin is for them
+ the faithful mirror and venerable sanctuary.
+
+ "And behold, also, our very dear brethren, what has urged, and
+ determined us to regard as a consolation, a duty of our episcopate
+ to second your piety in this regard, at the same time, that we
+ satisfy our devotion to this Immaculate Virgin, to whom we are
+ indebted for many signal benefits. We thought it not a rash zeal,
+ to supplicate our Holy Father, the Pope, to deign confide to us the
+ means of increasing devotion to Mary Immaculate in her Conception,
+ to render it easier and thus more popular. The Feast of the Blessed
+ Virgin's Conception, being now in France only one of devotion,
+ we have feared that even if the memory of it were not gradually
+ effaced, it might become insensibly neglected, and the fruits of
+ sanctification and salvation diminished.
+
+ "The Sovereign Pontiff has deigned to accord our humble request.
+ The rescript we have received, our very dear brethren, sufficiently
+ testifies how our petitions have been welcomed, our prayers
+ answered, upon what foundation the regulations we are going to
+ prescribe rest, and the advantages we have had reason to expect
+ from them. We long, yes, we long, from lively gratitude, from
+ tender love to Mary, to give vent to our transports and salute her
+ solemnly by the title of Immaculate in her Conception that day, for
+ distant day it seems to our hearts, when we will be permitted to
+ proclaim it joyfully before the assembled faithful, and during the
+ celebration of the holy mysteries.
+
+ "O Mary! thou whom wisdom hast possessed in the beginning of thy
+ ways, cloud divinely fruitful, always in light and never in shade,
+ new Eve, who didst crush the infernal serpent's head; courageous
+ Judith, glory of Jerusalem, joy of Israel, honor of thy people,
+ amiable Esther, exempt from the common law which presses as a
+ yoke of anathema upon all the children of Adam, full of grace,
+ blessed among all women. O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee! By thy most Holy Virginity and thy
+ Immaculate Conception, O most Holy Virgin! obtain for us purity of
+ heart and body, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
+ the Holy Ghost. Amen!"
+
+But this does not satisfy the prelate's piety; he also entreats the
+Sovereign Pontiff that the belief in the Immaculate Conception be
+expressed in the litanies of the Blessed Virgin. The Holy Father
+grants this petition, and permits the addition to the litany of
+the invocation: "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_." Then
+Monseigneur, in a new circular of June 24th, orders that the Sunday
+following its reception, this invocation should be chanted three
+times at Benediction, and in future chanted or recited every time the
+litany was chanted or recited, adding that no prayer-book without this
+invocation inserted in the litany would have his approbation. The
+prelate also exhorted all the clergy, pastors and others, to instill
+into the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate Conception, recommending
+the use of the formula, "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_."
+
+At last, seeing the near approach of that epoch so dear and solemn, he
+could not refrain, in spite of his extreme weakness and the violent
+sufferings of a mortal malady, from giving vent to his feelings in
+a third circular, which displays at the same time his zeal for the
+Immaculate Virgin's honor and his indefatigable solicitude for the
+welfare of his flock.
+
+The feast and octave of the Immaculate Conception, announced and
+prepared with so much zeal by the pious Bishop, were celebrated with
+extraordinary solemnity in all the churches throughout the diocese
+of Paris, and especially at Notre Dame. It was one of the last
+consolations this great prelate enjoyed upon earth. He died the 31st
+of December, crowning a life rich in virtues and sacrifices, by an act
+of filial homage to Mary Immaculate, and a final testimony of tender
+solicitude for the flock he was about to leave. He loved this flock
+during life, and before dying, he confides it to the inexhaustible
+charity of the Immaculate Heart of the Mother of Jesus, he conceals it
+under the mantle of her purity, that he may feel assured of the victory
+over the enemies of its happiness. He had consecrated his person, his
+diocese and all France to this Virgin, conceived without sin. Was it
+not to her maternal protection the venerable prelate owed that generous
+submission, that admirable tranquility, that tender love and sweet
+serenity of the just, when he was hovering on the brink of eternity? He
+had placed all his confidence in thee, O Mary! at that last moment, he
+invoked thee as the Star of the Sea that was to guide him to Heaven,
+and it was under thy auspices his beautiful soul winged its flight to
+the bosom of its God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In emulation of the example of the illustrious Archbishop of the
+capital, the other Archbishops and Bishops of France petition the
+Holy See for the same privileges, publishing them in their respective
+dioceses by solemn circulars, and proclaiming them a new source
+of benediction for the people. Thus, in the same year, 1839, the
+Archbishops of Toulouse and Bourges, the Bishops of Montauban, Pamiers,
+Carcassonne, Fréjus, Châlons, Saint-Flour and Limoges; in 1840, the
+Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen, the Archbishop of Lyons and Besançon,
+the Bishops of Bayeux, Évreux, Séez, Coutance, Saint-Dié, La Rochelle,
+Tulle, Ajaccio, Nantes and Amiens; in 1841, the Archbishop of Bordeaux,
+the Bishops of Versailles, of Nîmes and Luçon, Mende and Périgueux. We
+are fully persuaded, and even assured, of the fact that a great number
+of the dioceses in France requested and obtained the same privileges;
+but we cite only those of which we ourselves have kept note.
+
+ "What should be our transports of joy, confidence, admiration and
+ gratitude, at this universal tribute of honor and homage to the
+ Virgin conceived without spot! All earth unites with Heaven in
+ a concert of praise and thanksgiving, proclaiming that Mary has
+ been conceived without sin; all hearts vie with one another in
+ celebrating the signal favors, the miraculous cures and conversions
+ God has deigned to accord those who invoke the Blessed Virgin
+ under the title of Immaculate in her Conception." (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Bourges.)
+
+ "This new lustre bestowed upon the devotion to Mary conceived
+ without sin, should console religion and raise our hopes.... Oh!
+ in this desolated region, how should we rejoice to see appear
+ in Heaven, if not an omen of the end of all combats, at least
+ the pledge of new triumphs and new conquests!" (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Digne.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ May this beautiful devotion, be powerful in attracting the
+ benedictions of Heaven upon earth, ever increase. Let us fervently
+ implore the Immaculate Mother of God to enkindle it in all hearts,
+ to bless that France whose protectrice she has so often proved
+ herself, to preserve and augment therein faith and piety, and to
+ make all the children of France but one family, united by the bonds
+ of religion and charity. Let us also implore the same grace for all
+ countries, all peoples. Let each one of us wear the precious sign
+ of her maternal tenderness, this Miraculous Medal, which, recalling
+ to our minds the first and most glorious of her privileges, she
+ gives us as the pledge of all her favors.
+
+ Oh! if we knew the gift of our Mother! oh! if we understood
+ the excess of her bounty! Does she not seem longing to give us
+ knowledge, when she displays to us the abundance of her riches and
+ the prodigies of her liberality, in those rays of grace she showers
+ upon us like a deluge of love and mercy? Does she not likewise
+ unveil to us the mystery of her charity, in the image of her heart
+ united to that of the divine Jesus?... The same fire consumes them,
+ the same zeal devours them, thirst for our salvation. This union
+ of love and sacrifice is very clearly represented by the august
+ Mary's initial joined to the sacred sign of the cross above the
+ two hearts, as an authentic testimony, of the co-operation of the
+ Mother of the Saviour in the salvation of the human race.
+
+ Wear then, little children, this cherished medal, this precious
+ souvenir of the best of mothers; learn and love to say: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+
+ Morning Star, she will delight to guide your first steps and to
+ keep you in the paths of innocence. Wear it, Christian youth,
+ and amidst the numberless dangers lurking in your paths repeat
+ frequently: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Virgin most faithful, she will preserve you
+ from all peril. Wear it, fathers and mothers; say often: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+ And the Mother of Jesus will shed upon you and your families the
+ most abundant benedictions. Wear it, ye old and infirm; say also:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" Help of Christians, she will aid you in sanctifying
+ your sufferings and the closing years of life. Wear it, souls
+ consecrated to God, and never cease repeating: "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" Queen of
+ Virgins, she will implant in the garden of your heart those fruits
+ and flowers which constitute the delight of the Spouse, and which
+ will form your crown at the nuptials of the Lamb. Amidst the trials
+ and tribulations of life, let us invoke Mary, conceived without
+ sin, and our tears will be dried, our sufferings assuaged, our
+ sorrows sweetened, for she dispenses the dew of all graces. In our
+ combats against the demon, the world and the flesh, let us appeal
+ to Mary, conceived without sin; Strength of combatants and Crown
+ of victors, she will shield us against their most violent assaults
+ and assure us of the victory; but oh! when standing on the brink
+ of that moment which summons us before the Sovereign Judge, then
+ especially must we invoke Mary, conceived without sin, and she
+ whom the Church calls Gate of Heaven will herself receive our last
+ sigh and introduce our soul into the abode of glory and perfect
+ happiness.
+
+ And you also, poor sinners, though covered with the wounds of sin,
+ buried in the deepest abysses of passion, the arm of an avenging
+ God lifted to descend upon your guilty head, despair seizing your
+ soul, raise your eyes to the Star of the Sea; you are not bereft
+ of Mary's compassion; take the medal, cry from the depths of your
+ hearts, "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Unfailing Refuge of sinners, her charitable hand
+ will apply to your cruel wounds a healing ointment; she will rescue
+ you from the depths whence you have fallen, she will turn aside
+ the formidable blows of Divine justice, she will pour over your
+ soul the balm of sweet hope, she will guide you anew in the paths
+ of righteousness and conduct you even to the haven of a blessed
+ eternity.
+
+ Would that all might taste this means of salvation! the dismal
+ shades of voluntary death would soon cease to terrify our cities
+ and rural districts. Yes, the short prayer, "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" made with
+ faith, would, even amidst the violent agitation of a homicidal
+ thought, banish the tempter; a simple glance at the medal of the
+ Immaculate Mary would dissipate despair. "No one commits suicide
+ under the eyes of a mother," said very truly, His Eminence, the
+ Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen. And the same might be said of many
+ other crimes of daily occurrence.
+
+ Oh! you whose souls are cruelly afflicted night and day,
+ virtuous wives, who shed burning tears over the irreligion of a
+ tenderly-loved husband; sorrowful mothers, bitterly deploring the
+ wanderings of a child reared in the bosom of an eminently Christian
+ family, but drawn into the vortex of bad example; pious sisters,
+ praying fervently and incessantly for the conversion of a brother,
+ who once, like yourselves, enjoyed the sweet consolations of
+ religion; Christian children, secretly bewailing the indifference
+ of a father who seems to have lost, long since, the precious gift
+ of Faith, console yourselves; a new hope is offered you, and it
+ comes to you through the beneficent hands of Mary; offer, give the
+ image of this tender Mother to the dear objects of your solicitude;
+ the thought of this precious medal or a glance at it, will banish
+ many a temptation, for we may say with truth of the soul as well as
+ of the body, "no one commits suicide under the eyes of a mother."
+ If they refuse your offer do not despair; Mary will find her way to
+ these hardened hearts, and in spite of themselves, she will take
+ them under her protection; imitate the pious ruse of many others,
+ who in a like extremity, have stealthily slipped the precious medal
+ under the pillow of the impenitent sick on the verge of death;
+ imitate those mothers, those wives, those Christian daughters, who
+ carefully concealed in the clothing of that child, that spouse,
+ that father, the medal they had refused to wear, do this, and one
+ day they will appreciate the pledge of your piety and tenderness.
+ No, no, never does any one wear in vain, the medal of her to whom
+ the Church applies these words of Scripture. "He who finds me,
+ will find life, and will obtain salvation from the Lord."[17]
+
+ [Footnote 17: Prov. viii.]
+
+ But it is not enough to wear the medal as a mere pledge of the
+ Immaculate Mary's love; we must regard it also, as an assistant in
+ reaching perfection. This Mother, all amiable, proposes herself to
+ our imitation, she places herself, in a measure, before our eyes,
+ that seeing her so pure and perfect, we may be attracted by her
+ charms. It is the image of her beauty and goodness she brings us
+ from Heaven. It is a mirror in which we learn to know the Sun of
+ Justice, by the perfections with which he has enriched His divine
+ Mother.... It is on one side, the picture of what we should be, and
+ on the other, an eloquent lesson of what we should practice. The
+ shining purity of the Immaculate Mary, reveals to us the beauty of
+ our soul, created in the image of the thrice holy God, and exciting
+ in us, the love of that amiable virtue which makes us resemble the
+ angels, it necessarily inspires us with the most vivid horror of
+ evil, and causes us to shun the slightest imperfections, since they
+ tarnish this divine resemblance.
+
+ And, as though it were not enough to excite our fervor by the
+ sight of her ravishing beauty, this faithful Virgin discovers to
+ us the means of preserving innocence or recovering it, should we
+ have been so unfortunate as to lose it. This is the lesson of the
+ symbolic figures engraven on the reverse of the medal: "Nothing
+ shall be written on the reverse of the medal; ... what is already
+ there says enough to the Christian soul." The Sacred Heart of
+ Jesus and Mary placed beneath the cross tell us that purity is
+ preserved or restored by love and union with our Lord.... Love
+ covers a multitude of sins; love is the bond of perfection, the
+ consummation of all virtues.... Love assures fidelity. It must
+ be stronger than death to make us die to the world, to sin and
+ ourselves, that we may be attached inseparably to Jesus crucified.
+ There is also another lesson to be learned--that taught by Mary's
+ holy name, united to the sign of the cross. It is placed above the
+ two hearts because true love leads to sacrifice; it immolates, it
+ fastens, it nails to the cross of Jesus Christ, and this union of
+ sufferings on earth is the pledge of a glorious and eternal union
+ hereafter.
+
+ Children of Mary, respond to her loving tenderness; be docile to
+ the salutary lessons of our divine Mother, gratefully acknowledge
+ this inappreciable testimony of her ingenious liberality. Go to
+ Mary with the simplicity of a child, who lovingly clings to her
+ bountiful hand until he obtains the object of his desires. Amidst
+ all the storms of life, let your eyes be fixed upon this Star of
+ the Sea. Invoke Mary; ever seek her amiable protection; she will
+ never refuse to hear our petitions. May her remembrance and love
+ reign always in our minds and hearts! May we repeat incessantly
+ this sweet invocation: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!" and when strength and speech have
+ failed us may the Miraculous Medal be pressed to our dying lips,
+ and the last throb of our heart protest that we wish to die
+ murmuring: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ EXTRAORDINARY GRACES
+
+ OBTAINED THROUGH THE INSTRUMENTALITY OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL.
+
+ I.
+
+ _Graces Obtained from 1832 to 1835._
+
+
+"Bless the God of heaven," said the angel to Tobias and his son; "chant
+His praises among all mankind for the blessings with which He has
+loaded you, for it is good to conceal the secret of the king, but it is
+glorious to reveal and publish the works of God. _Elenim sacramentum
+regis abscondere bonum est; opera autem Dei revelare et confiteri
+honorificum est._"[18] Blessed, then, always and everywhere, be the God
+of heaven and earth, for the numberless benefits He has been pleased to
+confer upon us through Mary! Let us adore the mysterious destiny of
+the Mother of the King of Kings, "who, by reason of this title, truly
+merits the name of Queen," says St. Athanasius; and let us rob neither
+God nor Mary of the honor and glory due them. Let us publish the
+Lord's works of power and goodness to man through the mediation of the
+Immaculate Virgin, whom He has established Depositary and Dispensatrix
+of the treasures of His mercy, that mercy which embraces our corporal
+infirmities as well as spiritual needs.
+
+ [Footnote 18: Tob., xii, 7.]
+
+An account of the extraordinary graces obtained by means of the
+Immaculate Conception Medal will be for all Christian souls a source of
+precious benedictions. At the view of these prodigies of mercy, these
+marvelous cures and conversions, the reader will be led to thank God
+and glorify His Holy Mother; those who have already loved Mary will be
+incited to still greater love; careless Christians, those who are tried
+by suffering, those who have the misfortune to be in a state of sin,
+will feel their confidence awakened, and they will tenderly invoke her
+whom the Church so justly styles Health of the weak, Refuge of sinners,
+Comforter of the afflicted.
+
+Experience proves this. Every one knows, moreover, that an example of
+virtue or an event which clearly reveals God's agency, acts much more
+powerfully on the soul than a simple consideration of the subject or a
+series of arguments. "_Verba movent, exempla trahunt_--words can move,
+example attract."
+
+We also hope for something more from the publication of these
+accounts--we hope by them to convince the faithful that Mary's dearest
+title is that of Immaculate, and that she knows not how to refuse the
+petitions of those who, with lively faith, invoke her by this dearest
+title. It is, moreover, the Church of Rome which thus reveals, as it
+were, all the merciful tenderness of Mary's Heart, and presents us the
+devotion to her spotless Conception as the sure means of enriching
+ourselves from the exhaustless treasures of that Heart and according
+to all our necessities. "_Sacra Virgo Maria ... sentiant omnes tuam
+juvamen quicumque celebrant tuam sanctam Conceptionem_;"[19] and
+surely this prayer of the Mother of all churches--prayer which we
+might readily style prophetic--has long since been answered. We have
+recently seen a compilation, made in 1663 by a Jesuit father, with
+the approbation of the Ordinary, containing an account of sixty-two
+conversions or cures effected in different places by the invocation
+of Mary conceived without sin, and apparently nothing less than
+miraculous. It is also a well known fact, mentioned in the life of
+B. Peter Fourrier, founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame, that
+these simple words, "Mary was conceived without sin," worn with faith,
+brought relief to a multitude of sick persons during an epidemic. The
+same means obtained not less visible protection at Nemours, when that
+city was in imminent danger of being sacked, and also at Paris in 1830.
+But we confine ourselves to the graces obtained through the Miraculous
+Medal. Our choice of examples will show that, in bestowing especial
+favors upon France, the Immaculate Mary gives no less striking proofs
+of her protection in other countries where the medal is known and
+piously worn.
+
+ [Footnote 19: Offic. Concept. B.V.M.R. viii.]
+
+Among the traits of protection obtained through the medal in the
+diocese of Paris, nine (three conversions and six cures) underwent a
+detailed examination, and were pronounced veritable by the Promoter in
+the investigation of 1836. We mention them in this edition, adding to
+each one's title the word--Attested.
+
+Quite a number of incidents printed in the edition of 1842 we have
+omitted here, in order to insert (without greatly increasing the size
+of the volume) more recent accounts equally reliable, thus proving that
+the medal is not less miraculous in our day than at the time of the
+apparition.
+
+The extraordinary graces of which it has been the instrument, would
+have formed an uninterrupted series from the year 1832 till the
+present, if unfortunately, neglecting to keep note of them, an interval
+of several years had not crept into the documents in our possession.
+
+For the future, please God, no such omission will occur, and all the
+authenticated accounts which come to our knowledge will be carefully
+registered for the glory of Mary conceived without sin, and the
+edification of her servants.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT ALENÇON--1833.
+
+ The 14th of April, 1833, there was brought to the hospital of
+ Alençon (Orne) a sick soldier, who came from the hospital of Vitré
+ (Ile-et-Vilaine). His impiety there had greatly distressed the
+ hospitable ladies of St. Augustin, in charge of that establishment,
+ a circumstance communicated to us by persons who witnessed the
+ insulting manner in which he rewarded the kind attentions of their
+ unfailing charity. Arrived at the hospital Alençon, we soon saw
+ what he was, irreligious, impious, and brutally rude. The chaplain
+ hastened to visit him, and condole with him on his sufferings; and
+ as the opening of the Jubilee very naturally paved the way for a
+ few words on that extraordinary grace, he gently exhorted the sick
+ man to imitate the example of other soldiers who were preparing to
+ profit by it, but his words were answered by insults. The chaplain
+ did not insist, and contented himself for several days with merely
+ visiting him, and kindly sympathizing with his sufferings; the sick
+ man scarcely replied, and seemed much annoyed, even at the visits.
+
+ The Daughters of Charity in charge of this hospital, met with no
+ better treatment, notwithstanding the kind attentions they lavished
+ on him. His malady increased; seeing that it was becoming very
+ necessary for him to receive the consolations of religion, the
+ chaplain urged him again to make his peace with the good God, but
+ he was answered by blasphemies. "Ah! yes, the good God, little He
+ cares for me." In answer to this the abbé made a few observations
+ full of charity, and the patient continued: "Your good God does
+ not like the French; you say He is good and He loves me; if He
+ loved me, would he afflict me like this, have I deserved it?"
+ These outbursts of impiety only inflamed the charitable zeal of
+ the minister of a God who died for sinners, and inspired him with
+ forcible language, to depict the justice and merciful goodness of
+ the Lord. The sick man soon interrupted him by invectives: "You
+ worry me; let me alone; go away from here; I need neither you nor
+ your sermons," and he turned over to avoid seeing the priest.
+ His treatment to the Sisters was no better; and he continued to
+ utter the most horrible blasphemies against religion, and those
+ who reminded him of it; he carried this to such a degree, that
+ the other soldiers were indignant, especially at his outrageous
+ behaviour, after any one has spoken to him about his soul, or there
+ had been prayers or a little spiritual reading in the room--he
+ appeared dissatisfied, until he had vomited forth his stock of
+ blasphemies and imprecations. Some days passed and nothing was
+ said to him on the subject of religion, but every care for his
+ bodily comfort was redoubled; no one now scarcely dared hope
+ for his return to God, for his malady increased, and likewise
+ his impiety; all contented themselves with praying for him, and
+ recommending him to the prayers of others. The Sister in charge of
+ that ward, having great confidence in the Blessed Virgin's promises
+ to all under the protection of the medal, felt urged interiorly
+ to hang one at the foot of his bed; she yielded to the apparent
+ inspiration, and, unknown to him, the medal was there. He still
+ showed no signs of relenting, and even became indignant when some
+ of the other soldiers prepared themselves, by confession, to gain
+ the Jubilee. The medal had now been six days hanging at the foot of
+ his bed, and many and fervent were the prayers offered up to God
+ for this miserable creature's conversion, although nearly every one
+ despaired of it. One day, when all the convalescents of the ward
+ were assisting at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, the Sister
+ approached his bed, detached the medal and held it up before him.
+ "Look," said she, "at this medal, it is miraculous; I hung it to
+ your bed several days ago, and thereby put you under the Blessed
+ Virgin's especial protection. With her powerful assistance, I
+ confidently hope for your conversion. Look at this good Mother, she
+ is praying for you now." He never raised his eyes, but already was
+ grace working in his heart, for he showed no signs of irritation
+ which had heretofore been the inevitable consequence of mentioning
+ religion. Profiting by this, the Sister spoke to him of God's
+ mercy, and begged him again to cast a glance at the medal she had
+ just hung at the foot of his bed on the inner side. After being
+ repeatedly urged, he opened his eyes and looked towards it. "I do
+ not see your medal," said he to the Sister, "but I see the candle
+ which, doubtless, you have just lit; yes, it is certainly a light."
+ It was five o'clock in the afternoon, June 13th; his bed was so
+ placed that it could not receive any reflection of the sun's rays,
+ and the chaplain, after examining the spot felt assured, that at
+ no time could a reflection strike it in that direction. "You are
+ mistaken," said she, "look at it carefully." He repeated in the
+ most positive manner, "I see it distinctly, it is certainly a
+ light." Astonished beyond expression, but fearing her patient's
+ sight was affected, the Sister showed him other and more distant
+ objects; these he distinguished perfectly, and continued to see
+ this light for a quarter of an hour. During this interval, the
+ Sister spoke to him of God; suddenly, fear and love filled his
+ heart. "I do not wish to die as I am!" he exclaimed, "tell the
+ chaplain to come immediately and hear my confession." Hearing one
+ of the other patients utter an oath, "oh! make that miserable man
+ hush!" said he, to the Sister; "oh! I beg you to make him stop
+ swearing."
+
+ "I was still ignorant," says the chaplain, "of the origin and
+ effects of this medal. It was a very familiar object, and I
+ regarded it as nothing more than an ordinary medal. When told
+ that the sick man wanted me, I went joyfully, and saw for myself
+ what a complete change had taken place in him. Congratulating
+ and encouraging him, without knowing the cause of this change,
+ I hastened to ask him if he wished me to hear his confession.
+ He replied in the affirmative, and made it without delay; I had
+ every opportunity of admiring his good will and the pleasure he
+ manifested at each repetition of my visit. I endeavored to make him
+ explain himself, and asked if he had not acted from mere civility
+ or a desire to rid himself of the importunities by which he had
+ been so long beset. "No," he answered, "I sent for you, because
+ I wished seriously to make my confession and arise from my state
+ of sin." Henceforth he was no longer the same man; he was now as
+ docile, patient, gentle and edifying in all his words and ways,
+ as he had formerly been unmanageable, brutal and scandalous.
+ He eagerly desired the Last Sacraments, which, after proper
+ preparation, he received with lively faith. His happiness seemed
+ beyond expression, and though suffering intensely, no one ever
+ heard the least sign of impatience escape his lips. He continued
+ to give the most unequivocal signs of a true conversion; peace and
+ resignation were depicted in his countenance, and to his last sigh,
+ which he breathed June 27th, 1833, did he persevere most faithfully.
+
+NOTE.--These details are attested by M. Yver Bordeaux, chaplain of the
+Hotel Dieu; by the Sisters of Charity; by a woman patient named Bidon;
+Julien Prével, an infirmarian; by Jean François Royer, of the Seventh
+Cuirassiers; Marie Favry, infirmarian, all eye witnesses, besides
+a large number of other soldiers who left the city whilst we were
+investigating the matter.
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE AURELIE B. (PARIS)--1833. _Attested._
+
+The account of this cure was sent us by the person herself in the month
+of May, 1834.
+
+ The 3d of November, 1833, I was attacked by a typhoid fever, for
+ which I was treated by a skillful physician and the Sisters of
+ Charity, who spared no pains for my recovery. At the end of a month
+ I was able to take a little nourishment, and I had the happiness
+ of assisting at the Holy Mass and receiving Holy Communion on the
+ Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I was still very weak, and
+ utterly incapable of any exertion. In this state of exhaustion, I
+ took a little chocolate. The fever soon returned, and continued
+ with daily increasing violence until Christmas. Then the physician
+ said there was no longer any hope of my recovery. Another physician
+ was called in, who, after an examination, declared me consumptive
+ to the last degree, but said they might try the effect of a few
+ blisters. Those proved of no benefit. The 27th of December, the
+ physicians finding me extremely ill, informed the Sisters that my
+ death was imminent. Moreover, I had been cold for two days. About
+ half-past six that day, I received the last Sacraments, and at nine
+ every one thought I would soon breathe my last. Suddenly, one of
+ the good Sisters around my couch thought of putting the medal on
+ me. I kissed it continually with great confidence, and began to
+ feel better. My condition next morning was a matter of astonishment
+ to the physician, and I continued to improve so rapidly that,
+ at the end of two days, the fever had entirely disappeared. My
+ appetite was ravenous, I soon resumed my occupations, and ever
+ since have been in perfect health. I doubt not, Monsieur, that I
+ owe my recovery to Mary, my good Mother, my love for whom seems to
+ have increased; my greatest happiness being to decorate her altars,
+ and my most earnest desire that of consecrating myself to God in a
+ Community whose works have so touching a connexion with the sublime
+ destiny of the Mother of Jesus; it is under her protection I expect
+ the accomplishment of my designs.
+
+ Yours very respectfully,
+
+ AURELIE B.
+
+NOTE.--The nine Sisters of the establishment have attested the truth
+of these details, and one of the two physicians does not hesitate to
+declare her recovery supernatural.
+
+Moreover, this young person has ever since remained in perfect health.
+Her prayers are granted, the Immaculate Mary has also obtained for her
+the grace of being received into the Community she wished to enter,
+which is the reason we do not give her name.
+
+
+ CURE OF A RELIGIOUS (PARIS)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+This fact is known to many; however, to prevent too great a number
+of visitors, the Superior requests us not to publish the name of the
+Community.
+
+A young religious, twenty-seven and a-half years old and eight years
+professed, in an Order especially consecrated to the Blessed Virgin
+(Paris), had been kept in the infirmary by various maladies, for the
+space of five months. At the very time she appeared convalescent, an
+accident of the gravest nature happened; her left thigh bone became
+disjointed and shrunken, the limb was attacked by paralysis, and the
+sick religious lay upon her bed one month, without experiencing the
+slightest alleviation from human remedies. Two physicians and a surgeon
+being consulted at various times, pronounced the displacing of the bone
+due an irritating humor; but they could not check it, even by means of
+cauterizing and issues, so that after a long and painful treatment,
+she remained a cripple. She now had recourse to the Blessed Virgin as
+a child to its good mother; a religious of the house having brought
+her one of those medals called miraculous, which had been given her,
+she received it gratefully, applied it to the afflicted member and
+commenced, Saturday, March 1st, 1834, a novena to the Blessed Virgin.
+All human remedies seemed unavailing; she lost her appetite and was
+unable to sleep. She was also racked with high fever; however, having
+snatched a little repose during the Wednesday night after beginning
+the novena, she was suddenly awakened by a very painful commotion,
+which re-established the bones in their place; the leg which had been
+shortened about six inches, became lengthened almost even with the
+other, and recovered its usual strength. On visiting her next morning,
+the physicians were greatly astonished, but gave orders that she should
+not yet leave her bed. On Sunday, the last day of the novena, the fact
+of the cure was established beyond a doubt. The religious arose quite
+naturally, and without any assistance, ran to kiss the feet of Mary's
+statue, placed over the infirmary fire-place; then, dressed in her
+habit, and accompanied by the Mother Infirmarian, she descended about a
+dozen steps to the chapel to adore the Blessed Sacrament, after which
+she repaired to the community room, where the Superior with her Mothers
+and Sisters were assembled, to give her the kiss of congratulation.
+This touching scene was terminated by the recitation of the _Te Deum_,
+and _Sub Tuum_. No trace of disease remained, except a slight weakness
+for a few days, and as this was felt only in the sound limb, it was
+evidently the result of her having been six months in bed.
+
+Two of the physicians acknowledged, with all the Community, that it was
+a supernatural favor. One of them has even declared in a certificate
+of May 4th, 1834, that without wishing to characterize a fact as
+extraordinary, he observes that in this circumstance there are: 1st,
+spontaneous disjointing; 2d, spontaneous diminution, three days
+convalescence, and these last two are, to the extent of his knowledge,
+without parallel in the records of surgery.
+
+The religious has never had another attack of this infirmity.
+
+
+ CURE OF A SICK PERSON (CHÂLONS SUR MARNE)--1834.
+
+The Abbé Bégin, an eye-witness of this cure, which took place at the
+hospital St. Maur, where he is chaplain, has prepared a verbal process
+which attests: 1st, that the patient was really afflicted; 2d, that she
+was cured March 14th, 1834; 3d, that she declares no other means were
+employed than the medal and prayer. This verbal process is signed by a
+hundred persons of the above-mentioned hospital.
+
+ "Madame C.H., a widow, aged seventy, a charity patient at the
+ hospital St. Maur, was, in consequence of a fall the 7th of
+ August, 1833, crippled to such a degree that it was with great
+ difficulty she could walk, even with the aid of a crutch, and
+ sometimes the additional assistance of another person's arm; she
+ could scarcely seat herself, and to rise was still more of an
+ effort. To ascend the stairs was almost impossible, she could
+ accomplish it only by grasping as she went along whatever lay
+ within reach. She could not stoop or kneel; the left limb, which
+ was the principal seat of her malady, she dragged helplessly after
+ her, not being able to bend it.
+
+ "Such was her sad condition at the beginning of March, 1834.
+ However, she heard something that enkindled a ray of hope in her
+ heart. Some one had spoken to her the January previous of a medal
+ said to be miraculous; it bore on one side the image of Mary
+ crushing the infernal serpent's head, her hands full of graces
+ figured by rays of light proceeding from them, and the invocation:
+ 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' on the other, the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, with
+ the letter M surmounted by a cross. She was also informed of the
+ wonders it had wrought, and her heart awoke to the consoling hope
+ of realizing some benefit from the medal which had been promised
+ her. How she sighed for the happy moment when it would be in her
+ possession! How long the time of waiting appeared! At last, her
+ desires were gratified; the 6th of March she received, as if
+ it were a present from Heaven, the long wished-for medal, and
+ hastened, by the reception of the Sacrament of Penance, to prepare
+ herself for the desired favor. Next day, the first Wednesday in
+ the month, she commenced by Holy Communion a novena to the Sacred
+ Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Twenty times, day and night, did she
+ press to her lips the precious medal hung around her neck. For
+ several days of the novena, our Lord severely tried her faith
+ anew. Her sufferings increased greatly, likewise her fervor and
+ confidence, and soon the most blessed results were the recompense
+ of this poor woman's prayers.
+
+ "Seven days of the novena had not elapsed ere she was relieved of
+ the sufferings that had so cruelly afflicted her for seven months.
+ I could not depict the astonishment and admiration of every one,
+ who saw on the morning of March 14th this person so helpless
+ the very evening before, walk with all ease imaginable, bend,
+ kneel, go up and down high steps. One spoke of it to another for
+ mutual edification, and, in turn, came to congratulate her on her
+ recovery, and give thanks to God and Mary. The Superior, who had
+ bestowed constant care upon the sick woman during her crippled
+ state, and had thus been a daily witness of her sufferings,
+ returned solemn thanks for this extraordinary grace, the whole
+ Community chanting a _Te Deum_ in their chapel.
+
+ "P.S.--I forgot to say that the widow has the free use of all her
+ limbs, and has never since had a return of her former infirmity."
+
+The following is what Monseigneur thought proper to append to the
+verbal process, an extract from which we have just read: "We certify
+that credence can, and ought to, be placed in the testimony of the Abbé
+Bégin, that of the Sisters and so many other eye-witnesses who have
+spoken conscientiously and from no motive save that of zeal for the
+truth.
+
+ "† M.S.F.V., Bishop of Châlons.
+
+ "_Châlons, May 30, 1834._"
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS OF M. DE CASTILLON, CAPTAIN IN THE 21ST LIGHT GUARDS;
+ AND OF A WOMAN--1834.
+
+ Extract from a letter of Sister C. (Herault) to M.E.:
+
+ "_November 13, 1834._
+
+ "It should be the duty of children to glorify their mother, and
+ a very sweet one it is for me to acquaint you with two incidents
+ manifesting the boundless charity of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "The first relates to a sick soldier in our house. Though we
+ had already witnessed the efficacy of the medal, in effecting
+ the conversion of several soldiers most obstinate in resisting
+ grace, no conversion was so striking as this. M. Frederick de
+ Castillon, aged thirty-five, Captain in the 21st Light Guards,
+ entered the hospital, April 29th, in the last stage of consumption,
+ and attacked by paralysis of the left side. We nursed him a long
+ time, his condition grew alarmingly worse, but how could we
+ mention religion to a young soldier who boasted of having none?
+ I kept myself always informed of his state, and contented myself
+ (apparently) with watching the progress of the disease. Several
+ times I attempted to make him realize his danger, but in vain. One
+ day, when he was much worse, and I had an opportunity of seeing
+ him alone, I ventured to inquire if he were a Catholic. 'Yes,
+ Sister,' he replied, looking steadily at me. I then asked him to
+ accept a medal, to wear it, and frequently invoke the Immaculate
+ Mary, telling him at the same time that, if he did so with faith,
+ this good Mother would obtain for him all the graces he needed, for
+ bearing his sufferings patiently and meritoriously. He received it
+ gratefully, but did not put it on.
+
+ "But our confidence in the Blessed Virgin's influence over him
+ was not diminished, especially when we saw him place the medal
+ on the side of his bed. The Sister in charge of that hall had
+ already slipped one in his pillow-case. Several days passed, his
+ strength was gradually ebbing away, and after many ineffectual
+ efforts to obtain his consent to see a priest, I asked a clergyman
+ to visit him notwithstanding, and I introduced him into the sick
+ man's presence just as some one came to tell me he could not live
+ through that night (October 15th). We found him extremely ill,
+ but still inflexible. After a few moments, I withdrew, and left
+ him alone with the charitable priest, who could get nothing from
+ him but these despairing words: 'Leave me in peace, to-morrow I
+ shall be dead, and all will be over!' Of course, there was nothing
+ else to be done but comply with his request, and you can imagine
+ how painful it was. We redoubled our petitions to the Immaculate
+ Virgin, and this good Mother soon wrought a change in the
+ unfortunate man's heart.
+
+ "Next day, he asked the physician to tell him candidly if his case
+ were hopeless, because he wished to arrange his affairs. That same
+ evening, as soon as the Sister in charge of the hall entered, he
+ said to her very gently and penitently: 'Oh! how sorry I am to have
+ treated the Superior so badly, and the good priest she brought
+ me! Present my apologies to them, I beg you, and ask them to come
+ again.' You know we delayed not a moment in going to see him.
+ Next morning he began his new life, and during the nine days M.
+ Castillon still lived the chaplain visited him several times every
+ day, remaining two hours at a time. One of his brother officers,
+ coming to see him just after his first confession: 'If you had
+ been here a few minutes sooner,' said M. de Castillon, with an
+ utter disregard of human respect, 'you would have found me in good
+ company. I was with the curé, and I could not have been in better.'
+ He had the happiness of receiving the Last Sacraments with the most
+ admirable dispositions. Here are his dying words, which he asked
+ this gentleman to commit to writing: 'I die in the religion of my
+ fathers, I love and revere it, I humbly beg God's pardon for not
+ always having practiced it publicly.' And he expired in the peace
+ of the Lord, October 23d.
+
+ "I now relate the second conversion, that of a woman who, for
+ eighteen years, had been a public scandal, living with a wretch who
+ had abandoned wife and children for her. To such wicked conduct,
+ she added a more than ordinary degree of impiety, boasting that
+ she believed neither in God nor hell, and mocking at everything
+ religion held sacred. Although dangerously ill, she declared that
+ never would she make a confession. Sister N., seeing the rapid
+ progress of the disease and near approach of death, had recourse
+ to the Blessed Virgin; she put a medal around the woman's neck,
+ and began a novena for her conversion, relying upon the assistance
+ of her who, every day, gives us continually increasing proofs
+ that she is our Mother and a most merciful one. Before the novena
+ was finished, this poor creature, yielding to grace, made her
+ confession, and renounced forever the wretch who had been her
+ curse, manifesting as much sorrow for her past life, and proving
+ herself as pious as she had heretofore been shamelessly impious.
+
+ "The above facts, Monsieur, I have thought it my duty to make known
+ to you, for the edification of the faithful and the glory of Mary.
+ May these examples of her power and bounty, lead all sinners to
+ cast themselves into her arms!"
+
+NOTE.--These two events are truly a confirmation of what St. Bernard
+says, "that no one ever invokes Mary in vain;" but what a misfortune
+for those who refuse her succor! A very reliable individual once told
+us, that a sick person to whom a medal had been given, and who began
+to feel the effects of grace, suddenly insisted upon having the medal
+taken off, saying: "It hurts me; I can wear it no longer." To quiet him
+it was taken off, and he soon expired without the slightest sign of
+conversion. The person relating this, was an eye-witness; it happened
+in the month of October, 1834.
+
+
+ CONVERSION AND CURE OF MME. PÉRON AND CURE OF HER
+ DAUGHTER.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--It is Mme. Péron herself who gives us all the details. She lives
+in Paris, rue des Petites-Écuries, No. 24. We quote her own account,
+written February 26th, 1835, from her dictation, and in presence of the
+Sister who visited her in her sickness.
+
+ "I was sick eight years, and afflicted with very considerable
+ hemorrhages. I suffered much and almost continually. I was without
+ strength; I took but little nourishment, and that little increased
+ my malady, which was gradually exhausting me. I do not remember
+ to have had during these eight years, more than eight entire days
+ of relief from pain; the rest of the time I passed on the bed,
+ unable to perform the work necessary to aid my poor husband in
+ supporting the family. I have even been confined to my bed as
+ long as eighteen months without intermission. I consulted several
+ physicians, who prescribed the remedies usual in such cases, but
+ all to no purpose. My husband, not being able to afford such
+ expense, and seeing no hope of my recovery, lost courage and was
+ almost in despair. Some kind persons sought to cheer him: 'You must
+ not be so low-spirited, my poor Bourbonnais, you must bear up under
+ these trials and show your strength of character; your wife is very
+ sick, but she will recover and your friends will not abandon you.'
+ As for myself, seeing that medicines had no effect and cost us a
+ great deal of money, I dispensed with doctors, and was a long time
+ without seeing one, having resigned myself to a slow death.
+
+ "A neighbor who understood my position, came one day to see me,
+ and urged me not to give up thus, but to have the physician again.
+ I opposed it, because we had not the wherewith to remunerate him.
+ She then proposed to call in a Sister of Charity. I observed that
+ not being in want, perhaps the Sisters would refuse to come, as it
+ might thus deprive of their services, others more unfortunate than
+ myself. This good lady insisted, and I yielded.
+
+ "Next morning, I received a visit from Sister Marie (of St. Vincent
+ de Paul's parish), who brought me some assistance, encouraged me to
+ support my sufferings, and did her best to console me. I can truly
+ say that happiness entered my house with this good Sister. She
+ soon sent a physician, who, after examining me and understanding
+ my case, told her, as I have since learned, that it was a hopeless
+ one, I had a very little while to live, and ought to be sent to
+ the hospital to spare my family the sad spectacle of my death.
+ Hearing this, Sister Marie believed it her duty to give my soul
+ especial attention. I was not an enemy to religion, but I was
+ not very practical; I went sometimes to the parish functions,
+ when my sufferings and occupations permitted, but (and I say it
+ to my shame) I had not approached the Sacraments for years. When
+ the Sister, after several other questions, asked me if I went to
+ confession, blushing, I said 'no.' She begged me to do so, and
+ I replied: 'When I am cured, I will.' The good Sister, little
+ satisfied with my evasive answer, urged me again to see a priest.
+ 'Sister,' said I, 'I don't like to be persecuted with things of
+ this sort, when I am cured I will go to confession.' I saw that
+ this answer grieved her, but she never remitted her visits and kind
+ attentions. My malady increased. One Saturday or Sunday night, at
+ the commencement of October, 1834, my whole body was cold, and
+ vainly did my friends endeavor to restore a natural warmth, the
+ chill of death seemed on me. They spoke of reciting the prayers
+ for the dying; I understood a part of what was said, but myself
+ was speechless. Whilst I was so ill, my husband told our eldest
+ daughter to go to bed, and he, thinking me easier because I was
+ feebly breathing, threw himself, without undressing, upon the bed
+ to snatch a little repose; but, getting up a few minutes later, he
+ came to me, put his hand on my face, and was horrified to find it
+ covered with a cold sweat. He thought me dead, and called aloud:
+ 'Euphemie,' (this is our eldest daughter's name), 'Euphemie, alas!
+ thy mother is dead!' Euphemie arose and mingled her lamentations
+ with those of her father. Their cries awakened Madame Pellevé, our
+ neighbor, who came to console them. 'Ah! madame,' said my husband,
+ on seeing her, 'my wife is dead!' Having begged him to be resigned
+ to God's will, this lady approached me, and, placing her hand upon
+ my heart: 'No,' she exclaimed, 'she is not dead, her heart still
+ beats.' They kindled a fire, and succeeded in restoring a little
+ warmth to my body.
+
+ "Madame Pellevé went betimes to inform Sister Marie of all this,
+ and the latter hastened to tell the physician. 'I am not at all
+ surprised,' he answered; 'this lady has two incurable diseases.
+ Besides these hemorrhages, she is in the last stage of consumption,
+ as I have already told you, and if not dead before this, she will
+ not live through the day.' My chest had, indeed, been very weak for
+ some time, and the physicians in consultation had all said I could
+ never be cured.
+
+ "At two o'clock in the afternoon I received a visit from Sister
+ Marie, who found me not quite so ill; I could speak. 'Do you
+ love the Blessed Virgin very much?' said she. 'Yes, Sister,' I
+ had indeed always practiced some devotion in honor of this good
+ Mother. 'If you love her very much, I can give you something to
+ cure you.' 'Oh! yes, I shall soon be well.' I spoke of death, for
+ I felt that it was near. Then she showed me a medal and said:
+ 'Take this medal of the Blessed Virgin, who will cure you, if you
+ have great confidence in her.' The sight of the medal filled me
+ with joy; I took it and kissed it fervently, for I truly longed to
+ be cured. The Sister now recited aloud the little prayer which I
+ could not read, and urged me to repeat it daily; I promised to add
+ five Paters and five Aves. She then put the medal around my neck.
+ At that instant, there passed through me a new, strange feeling,
+ a general revolution in my whole body, a thrill through all my
+ members. It was not a painful sensation, on the contrary, I began
+ to shed tears of joy. I was not cured, but I felt that I was going
+ to be cured, and I experienced a confidence that came not from
+ myself.
+
+ "Sister Marie left me in this state; after her departure, my
+ husband who had remained motionless at the foot of my bed said:
+ 'Put all your confidence in the Blessed Virgin; we are going to
+ make a novena for you.' Towards evening I could raise myself up in
+ bed, which was very astonishing, considering my extreme exhaustion,
+ but a few hours previous. On Tuesday I requested some broth,
+ which was given me at last, and a little while after I took some
+ soup. My strength returned; I felt that I was cured. Finally, on
+ Thursday, I wished to go to church to thank the Blessed Virgin.
+ This suggestion was opposed, but I insisted and at length went.
+ Whilst on the way and alone (for I preferred going by myself), I
+ met Sister Marie, who did not recognize me; I took her hand: 'Oh!'
+ said she, 'it is really yourself!' 'Yes, Sister, it is I indeed; I
+ am going to Mass: I am cured!' 'And what has cured you so quickly?'
+ 'The Blessed Virgin, and I am going to thank her.' The Sister was
+ lost in astonishment. I recounted to her how it had all come about
+ in less than three days, and I kept on to church and heard Mass.
+ Since then, I have had no return of my malady; I enjoy good health;
+ I go about my duties, performing a regular day's work, and to the
+ Miraculous Medal am I indebted for it all."
+
+Not only Madame Péron's body but her soul, did the Blessed Virgin
+restore to health; she soon chose a Director and went to confession,
+and she has continued to do so ever since; her life is really very
+edifying. As she deeply regrets having lived so long estranged from
+God, her greatest happiness now is in frequently approaching the
+Sacraments; two things awaken her tears, the recollection of her past
+life, and gratitude for her twofold recovery.
+
+Nor is this all; the Blessed Virgin seems to have chosen this family
+for the purpose of displaying in it the wonders of her power. Madam
+Péron had a daughter aged sixteen, who, after her mother's recovery,
+gave herself to God in an especial manner, employing in exercises of
+piety, all her leisure moments, and edifying her companions in the
+parish confraternity, whenever she could take part in their devotions
+for she lived in another quarter.
+
+The father also was deeply touched at the favors accorded his wife; he
+wears the medal, and he has experienced its blessed effects.
+
+Madame Péron has still another daughter, a little girl six years and
+a-half old, who had great difficulty in speaking, or rather, who did
+not speak at all, although she was not mute. Her utterance was so
+impeded, that she scarcely ever finished a word, thus disconcerting
+the most patient. It was so much the more deplorable, as she was
+quite a bright child. 'What a pity she does not talk!' said everyone
+who witnessed her infirmity. When Sister Marie saw this little girl,
+'Why do you not send her to school,' said she to the mother, 'instead
+of keeping her home all day?' 'You hear how she talks,' answered
+the mother, who did not like to have her child's infirmity exposed.
+However, she yielded to the Sister's wishes, and little Hortense was
+sent to the Sister's parish school. Her imperfect speech did not
+improve, it would sometimes take her five minutes to pronounce half
+a word. Some days after, Sister Marie, who deeply pitied the child,
+spoke to her mother of a novena for curing this defect. "Cure Hortense,
+Sister! it is impossible, it is a natural defect!" The Sister, with
+increasing anxiety insisted. The novena was commenced on Saturday;
+it consisted in hearing Mass every day, and reciting a few prayers
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. The medal was hung around the little
+girl's neck, and she was to take part in all the exercises of the
+novena. For several days there was no change, but Thursday after the
+Mass of the Blessed Sacrament, Hortense, on leaving church, could
+speak as distinctly and with as much ease as any one. Those who first
+heard her were struck with admiration, the news soon spread, and from
+all sides came persons to see her; they questioned her, and the child
+answered, they scanned her to see if it were really the same, and
+recognizing her, they returned, saying: "This is certainly a great
+miracle, a sudden cure of a natural defect!"
+
+Little Hortense, showing her medal with delight, would say to all who
+knew and congratulated her: "The Blessed Virgin has cured me."
+
+In thanksgiving for so great a benefit, the child was consecrated
+to Mary on the 21st of November, Feast of the Presentation, in the
+same chapel where the apparition of the medal took place, and, in
+commemoration of this great event of her life, she was to wear only
+blue and white until her First Communion. Previous to this ceremony,
+she made her confession, with every evidence of understanding
+thoroughly the importance of the act. When asked if she loves the
+Blessed Virgin, "Oh! yes," she answers, "I love her with more than all
+my heart!" an expression invented, it seems, solely by the fulness of
+her gratitude. She prizes her brass medal so highly, that she would
+not exchange it for one of silver or gold, and she wishes it put in the
+tomb with her when she dies. "We hope, Hortense," said her father not
+long ago, (he always finds a new pleasure in hearing her talk), "we
+hope, when you die, that you will leave us this medal as a souvenir of
+yourself and a relic of the Blessed Virgin." "Certainly, papa, if it
+gives you so much pleasure, but I promised the Blessed Virgin, the day
+of my consecration, that the medal should never leave me, but should
+even descend with me into the tomb when I died."
+
+We publish these details, with the cordial approbation of this family,
+fully imbued with ever increasing gratitude to Mary Immaculate.
+
+These two accounts have been confirmed by nine other persons.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF SEVERAL SOLDIERS (HOTEL DES
+ INVALIDES)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--All these edifying details, which have already produced a most
+beneficial effect upon many young men, were given us and attested by
+Sisters Radier and Pourrat, who, having charge of that ward, were
+witnesses of the facts, and also instruments of divine mercy in
+operating these prodigies.
+
+ "We had in St. Vincent's ward, number 20, royal hotel des
+ Invalides, Paris, a soldier who had been spitting blood about six
+ months, and who, it was thought, would soon die of consumption. He
+ was naturally polite and grateful for the attentions bestowed upon
+ him, but he showed no signs of religion; his morals were bad, and
+ it was a well-known fact that, for twenty years, his life had been
+ one of scandal.
+
+ "It appeared, however, that faith was not entirely extinguished in
+ his heart, for another patient, his neighbor, being on the point
+ of death and refusing to see a priest, this one entreated him to
+ yield, and was instrumental in bringing about his conversion.
+ Alas! his own turn soon came, we saw him growing worse day by day,
+ he was wasting visibly, and had not once mentioned receiving the
+ Sacraments. As he had urged his neighbor to prepare for death, we
+ hoped he would make his own preparation, without being reminded
+ of it, or, at least, that he would willingly comply with the
+ first suggestion. On the contrary, he absolutely resisted all our
+ entreaties, saying: 'I am an honest man, Sister, I have neither
+ killed nor robbed.' 'Even so,' we would answer, 'we all stand in
+ need of God's mercy, we are all sinners.' 'Oh! Sister, just leave
+ me in peace, I beg you.'
+
+ "However, he began to realize that he had been sinking for several
+ days, and he said aloud: 'There is no hope for me!' This thought
+ appeared to distress him. One day (it was Wednesday, the 26th of
+ November), the disease took such a sudden turn for the worse, we
+ feared he would not live through the day, and, being unable to
+ make any religious impression on him, we warned the chaplain of
+ his condition and his resistance to all our entreaties. The latter
+ went to see him. Our patient received him with great respect, but,
+ wishing to get rid of him adroitly, said: 'I am acquainted with the
+ curé.' A little while after, the curé visited him, and conversed
+ with him some time. On leaving his bedside, the venerable, zealous
+ pastor came to us and said: 'Your patient is very low, and I have
+ not succeeded in getting him to do anything for his soul; indeed,
+ I did not urge him too much, for fear he might say _no_, and then
+ would not revoke it, like so many others, after once giving a
+ decided negative.'
+
+ "The same day a lady of his acquaintance also came to see him, and
+ earnestly but vainly urged him to make his peace with God. To get
+ rid of her importunity he said: 'I know the curé; he has already
+ been to see me, and will return this evening.' The curé returned
+ indeed, according to promise; the sick man, on seeing him, jumped
+ out of bed to show that he was not so ill as to make confession a
+ very pressing matter. The curé, a true Samaritan, rendered him all
+ the little services imaginable, helping him back to bed, and even
+ offering to dress his blister; he then spoke to him about his soul,
+ but without avail, for after an hour's conversation he came to us
+ and said: 'I am deeply grieved, for I have done my utmost, but it
+ has had no effect upon him.' We asked the curé if we must call him
+ during the night, in case the sick man grew worse. 'I think,' said
+ he, 'you had better not, unless he asks for me.' A little later one
+ of us reminded him again of the chaplain, who was passing, but he
+ got enraged and began to swear, so that we had to drop the subject,
+ despite our distress at the thought of his appearing so unprepared
+ before his God. Our grief was so much the greater in proportion to
+ his extreme danger, for the death rattle was already in his throat,
+ and it did not seem possible that he could survive the night. It
+ was then my young companion said to me: 'Oh! Sister, perhaps our
+ sins, as our holy St. Vincent says, have been the cause of this
+ man's impenitence.' Expecting nothing more from the patient, Sister
+ Radier now turned all her hopes towards the Blessed Virgin. During
+ night prayers thoughts of the medal came into her mind, and she
+ said to herself: 'If we put the medal on him perhaps the Blessed
+ Virgin will obtain his conversion,' and she determined to make a
+ novena. After prayers she said to her companion: 'Let us go see the
+ sick man and put a medal on him; perhaps the Blessed Virgin will
+ grant our petitions.' She went immediately, and found him up and
+ in a state of great agitation, and about to leave the room; all
+ the other patients saw it clearly, and said that it was with the
+ intention of committing suicide. The Sister cautiously took away
+ his knife and whatever else might be used in this way, slipped
+ unperceived the medal between his two mattresses, and returned to
+ us very sadly, saying: 'Let us fervently invoke the Blessed Virgin,
+ for I very much fear this poor man will kill himself during the
+ night.'
+
+ "Next day, immediately after rising, and even before seeing the
+ Sister who had kept watch, one of us hastened to visit our patient,
+ and not without most dire forebodings, but, to our astonishment,
+ his mind was calm and he seemed better. On inquiring how he felt,
+ 'Very well, Sister,' he answered, 'I passed a good night, I slept
+ well (which I have not done for a long time), and I am better in
+ consequence.' As the Sister retired, he called to her, saying:
+ 'Sister, I wish to make my confession, oh! send the curé to me!'
+ 'You wish to confess?' replied the Sister, 'take care; are you
+ going to do as you did all day yesterday, do you really want him?'
+ 'Yes, Sister, upon my honor.' 'Well, since you wish him, I will go
+ for him, it will certainly be well for you to confess your sins,
+ for it is said that your life has not always been edifying.' Then,
+ without the slightest human respect, he began to mention his sins
+ aloud, and with great sentiments of compunction; we could scarcely
+ induce him to stop. The curé came, and he made his confession,
+ which lasted an hour. Afterwards, one of us having come to see
+ him, he exclaimed joyfully at our reproach: 'Oh! Sister, how happy
+ I am, I have been to confession, I have received absolution, and
+ the curé is to return this evening. Since my First Communion, this
+ is the happiest day of my life!' He appeared deeply affected, and
+ expressed a most ardent desire to receive the good God. 'Do you
+ know what we did?' 'What was it, Sister?' 'We put between your
+ mattresses a Miraculous Medal of the Blessed Virgin.' 'Ah! then,
+ that is why I passed such a comfortable night; moreover, I felt as
+ if there was something about me that wrought a wonderful change,
+ and I do not know why I did not search my bed; I thought of doing
+ so.' The Sister then produced the medal, which he kissed with
+ respect and affection. 'It is this,' he exclaimed, 'that gave me
+ strength to brave human respect. I must place it on my breast; I
+ will give you a ribbon to attach it to my decoration,' (he wore the
+ cross of honor.) The first ribbon offered being a little faded,
+ 'No, Sister,' said he, 'not that, but this; the Blessed Virgin must
+ have a new ribbon.' The Sister, regarding his weak state, placed
+ the medal in such a manner that it was somewhat concealed. 'Oh! do
+ not hide it, Sister,' said he; 'put it beside my cross, I shall not
+ blush to show it.'
+
+ "In the afternoon the curé asked us how our patient was, and he
+ was not less edified than ourselves at the account we gave of his
+ admirable dispositions. Preparations were made to give him the last
+ Sacraments. At the sight of the Holy Viaticum, he was so penetrated
+ with emotion that he begged pardon aloud of God for all the sins
+ of his life in detail, and it was with the utmost difficulty he
+ could be persuaded to lower his voice, his heart being too full
+ to contain itself. He passed the following night and the next day
+ in the same dispositions of faith, regret and piety, until Monday
+ morning, December 1st, when he peacefully rendered his soul to God,
+ and we have every confidence that it was received into the arms of
+ His mercy.
+
+ "We relate what we saw and heard; it took place in our ward, which
+ numbers sixty patients, the majority of whom witnessed a part of
+ these details."
+
+NOTE.--Before burial, the Sister took the medal off his corpse, and the
+patient in the next bed begged to have it, so persuaded was he that it
+had been the instrument of this touching conversion.
+
+This consoling return to God was followed by several others not less
+striking or less sincere, and in that very institution, by the same
+means--the medal. Quite lately two have taken place, but the details
+are so very much like the above that for this reason alone we refrain
+from giving them.
+
+All this has been confirmed by M. Ancelin, curé of the Invalides.
+
+
+ CURE OF M. FERMIN, A PRIEST--1834.
+
+This account was sent us by the Superior General of St. Sulpice, who
+was anxious that we should have it. The venerable priest of this very
+estimable Community, who was favored with this grace, wrote the details
+himself, and they were attested by the Superior and the Director of the
+grand Seminary of Rheims, both of whom were witnesses.
+
+ "To the glory of Mary conceived without sin, I, Jean Baptiste
+ Fermin, unworthy servant of the Blessed Virgin, and subject of M.
+ Olier, have, together with my Superior and confrères, thought it
+ my duty to transmit to our very honored Father, an account of the
+ special favor accorded me.
+
+ "Many persons knew what I suffered for six whole years, how I
+ was worn out with a nervous, worrying cough, whose attacks were
+ so frequent and so prolonged that one can scarcely imagine how I
+ ever survived them. My physician himself told me that, for the
+ first three years, my life was in imminent danger, and if in the
+ last three I was less exposed to death at every step, as it were,
+ the giving way of my stomach, the weakness of my chest, were such
+ that all my days were filled with bitterness, and new crosses
+ were laid upon me. In this condition, what ecclesiastical fasts
+ could I keep? Four or five years ago, the desire of complying,
+ in some degree, with the precepts of the Church led me to fast
+ the Ember week before Christmas, and the prejudice to my health
+ was such that I was not permitted to fast again even for a day.
+ Abstinence from meat became impossible, and for having attempted
+ this slight mortification, how much I suffered in consequence, even
+ in the very month of July, 1834! Whilst my health was so impaired,
+ and I saw only a lingering end to my afflictions, it pleased my
+ Superiors to give me a year's rest. I received with gratitude this
+ additional evidence of their consideration for me, and endeavored
+ to co-operate with them in re-establishing my health, of which they
+ had been so thoughtful; but, in my condition, the recuperative
+ powers of nature were of slight avail. Even amidst perfect
+ quiet and rest for four whole months, I experienced but little
+ alleviation of my sufferings, for though my chest became, at least,
+ apparently stronger, my stomach grew weaker and more disordered,
+ so that I was obliged to diet, which, added to the dieting I had
+ already practiced, reduced me to such a state of exhaustion that I
+ could not foresee the consequences.
+
+ "O, Mary, how deplorable was my condition when you cast upon
+ me a look of mercy! The 15th of November, 1834, I was sent a
+ medal, struck in honor of the Immaculate Conception, and already
+ celebrated as the instrument of many miracles. In receiving it,
+ I was penetrated, for the first time, with a strong feeling
+ of confidence, that this was the Heaven-sent means by which I
+ would reach the end of my afflictions; I had not foreseen this
+ hope, still less had I excited it, for I believe I can say,
+ conscientiously, that I felt naturally disinclined to ask a favor
+ of which I deemed myself unworthy. However, the feeling became so
+ strong that I thought it my duty to consider it prayerfully next
+ morning; and not to oppose so good an impulse, I determined to
+ make a novena, and I commenced it on the 16th. From that moment my
+ confidence was boundless, and like a child who reasons no longer,
+ but sees only what he feels sure of obtaining, it sustained me
+ amidst the new trials to which I was subjected; for on the 19th,
+ and several days after, my sufferings were redoubled, affecting at
+ once both stomach and chest. On the 22d I felt considerably better,
+ on the 23d I believed myself strong enough to abandon a diet on
+ which I had subsisted a long time, and on the 24th I wished to eat
+ just what was served the Community; that very morning I commenced,
+ like the hearty seminarians, to take a little dry bread and wine,
+ and it agreed with me. Thus my desires were accomplished. I had
+ implored the Blessed Virgin to give me health to live according
+ to the rule, and she had done so; but a good Mother like Mary
+ would not leave her work imperfect, and she chose the very day of
+ her Conception to bestow upon me her crowning favors. I was still
+ troubled with a slight indisposition of the stomach accompanying
+ digestion after dinner, but it was not positive suffering, and even
+ this remnant of my old infirmity disappeared entirely. On the eve
+ of that Feast my devotion to Mary, which had lost a little of its
+ first fervor, was, when I least expected it, excited anew, and I
+ felt urged to implore the consummation of a good work so happily
+ begun. I did so that evening, and next morning at prayers, at Mass,
+ at my thanksgiving, and it was in finishing this last exercise
+ before a statue of the Blessed Virgin, after a most fervent prayer,
+ that I realized the recompense of my confidence--I felt assured
+ that my petitions had been granted. Since then I have experienced
+ no indisposition worthy of attention. I was able to fast the Ember
+ week before Christmas and the eve of that great solemnity; I sang
+ the ten o'clock High Mass the fourth Sunday in Advent; I followed
+ all the offices of the choir on those days the Church consecrates
+ to the celebration of our Divine Master's birth, and, instead of
+ regretting these efforts, I find in each one of them a new motive
+ for blessing the Lord and testifying my gratitude to our good
+ Mother.
+
+ J.B. FERMIN."
+
+
+ "Though surpassing our hopes, we have witnessed the speedy and
+ perfect recovery of M.J. Fermin, which appears to be something
+ supernatural, since he employed no other remedies than great
+ devotion to the Blessed Virgin and a novena in her honor.
+
+ "AUBRY, RAIGECOURT GOURNAY."
+
+
+ II.
+
+ _Graces Obtained during the Year 1835, in France, Switzerland,
+ Savoy and Turkey._
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE JOUBERT.
+
+NOTE.--The account of this very striking cure was sent us by M.
+Poinsel, Vicar General of Limoges, whom I took the liberty of asking
+for it.
+
+ "_Bishopric of Limoges._
+
+ "Glory to God! honor to Mary!
+
+ "The 10th of February, 1834, Mlle. Joubert, aged twenty-nine
+ years, a person of solid piety, was suddenly cured of a painful
+ and very serious infirmity. For more than a year, she had carried
+ her left arm in a sling, by reason of an unaccountable disease
+ which extended from the shoulder to the hand, and was of such a
+ nature that the afflicted member seemed dead; when necessary to
+ be handled, it had to be done with extreme precaution, and even
+ then the pain was so excessive that often the patient fell sick
+ in consequence. The disease was successively styled rheumatic
+ gout, inflammatory and gangrenous rheumatism; science employed in
+ combating it, baths, shower baths, poultices, liniments of all
+ sort, vain remedies which only aggravated the evil and varied
+ the suffering. Sometimes amputation was spoken of: 'Would to
+ God, Mademoiselle, you had but one arm!' said the physician,
+ not concealing his anxiety and fears of her death, as spring
+ approached, for the diseased arm was pale, livid, and frightful to
+ behold.
+
+ "The young lady, a true Christian, was resigned to all; by
+ meditations upon the cross, she encouraged herself to suffer,
+ and, perceiving the progress of the disease, she thought only of
+ dying the precious death of the just. A friend, one day, proposed
+ to her that she should wear the medal with confidence, and make a
+ novena to Mary. She acted upon the suggestion; at the end of the
+ novena, on the usual day of her confession (she was accustomed to
+ confess weekly), she approached the sacred tribunal, and lo! at the
+ very instant when recollected, contrite and humbled, she received
+ the moral effect of the priest's benediction and holy words, an
+ extraordinary physical change took place in the arm heretofore
+ judged incurable, it suddenly became unloosed and free, all
+ suffering vanished! 'I scarcely knew where I was,' said she, 'but
+ it seemed to me as if a cord that had been tightly drawn around my
+ arm was unwound, ring after ring, and I was cured! My surprise, my
+ joy, were extreme and beyond all power of expression!'
+
+ "On reaching home, she exclaimed: 'A miracle! light a taper, light
+ two, come, come, see the miracle! I can move my arm, animation is
+ restored to it, I am cured!' Oh! how great the joy of that family!
+ They surrounded the favored one, they looked at, they touched the
+ resuscitated member, they tested its powers in various ways, making
+ her lift divers objects and execute a variety of movements; then,
+ all the members of this truly Christian family, moved even to
+ tears, fell on their knees, and recited that hymn of thanksgiving,
+ the _Te Deum_.
+
+ "Since then, (that is, for more than a year), her arm has been
+ perfectly well. The physician himself was struck with this event,
+ which it would be difficult to attribute to concealed resources,
+ or the sudden agency of nature. What is nature without the
+ intervention and action of God? He is sole Master of nature, life
+ and death are at His will. It is not necessary, then, to reason so
+ much on the subject; a little faith will easily make us recognize
+ here a special grace of God, through the intercession of Mary, our
+ kind, sweet Mother, to whom we must ever repair, invoking her with
+ love and confidence.
+
+ "Such is the simple and conscientious account of the event given
+ me, the undersigned, by the person herself, in answer to my
+ questions, in the presence of an intelligent, reliable individual
+ who saw all, having several times dressed the arm, and who, by
+ reason of her skill and long experience, was well calculated to
+ judge of the danger.
+
+ "In attestation of which, etc.
+
+ "POINSEL, Vicar General.
+
+ "_February 14, 1835._"
+
+These details are confirmed by two letters of Madame and Mademoiselle
+Joubert, by the testimony of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity
+of Limoges, and that of M. Dumonteil, a lawyer and friend of the family.
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS AND CURES WROUGHT IN SWITZERLAND.
+
+Letter from Sister Boubat, Superioress of the Daughters of Charity in
+Chesne:
+
+ "_February 12, 1835._
+
+ "I have not great miracles to recount to-day, but the facts I give
+ are certainly very striking traits of protection. However, I shall
+ tell them just as they are, and let you judge of them for yourself.
+ Those of which I was not an eye-witness have been told me by very
+ reliable parties who were.
+
+ "1st. A woman who had been sick a long time, and given up by the
+ doctors, received, one evening, the Miraculous Medal, and was
+ restored to her usual health that night; feeling perfectly well,
+ she said to her husband next morning that she would get up and
+ prepare breakfast. He treated this as nonsense, and when she really
+ did arise, his astonishment was great, and beyond all bounds when
+ he found that her health was fully restored.
+
+ "2d. In the same village, a young mother had two children, one six
+ the other eight years old. The latter was attacked by a violent
+ malady, described to me as a convulsion, and died in a few days.
+ The younger had a similar attack, and seemed on the verge of death.
+ The poor mother was in the depths of grief, when some one thought
+ of offering her a medal. She received it as a treasure. It was
+ evening; she put it on the dying child, who soon fell asleep, and
+ slept soundly the whole night. In the morning he awoke perfectly
+ cured! This good woman afterwards came to me to get medals for
+ herself and some others. Oh! I wish you could have seen her as she
+ wept for joy whilst expressing to me, with all simplicity, the
+ transports of her soul! Never will I forget it, so deep was the
+ impression it made upon me.
+
+ "3d. A child five years old had been racked for several months by a
+ fever, which resisted all efforts to check it. One day, he was in
+ his grandmother's arms when the paroxysm began. This woman, full of
+ faith, applied the medal; the child soon grew better, and the fever
+ never troubled him again.
+
+ "The attending physician was a relation; on seeing him after this,
+ the child ran towards him, exclaiming with all the animation and
+ artlessness of his age: 'I am cured, but it was not you who cured
+ me, it was the medal.' He repeats these words nearly every time he
+ sees the doctor.
+
+ "4th. A young man, on his death-bed, filled all his friends with
+ serious apprehensions for his salvation. After several vain efforts
+ of the most charitable zeal, the curé induced him to accept a
+ medal, and very soon the dying man expressed a wish to confess. He
+ expired in the most edifying dispositions.
+
+ "5th. Three sinners obstinately refused to assist at the exercises
+ of a mission given in their parish, and even sought to oppose it.
+ One of the missionaries persuaded them to accept a medal, and as
+ soon as they had received it, a great change was visible. They
+ not only made the mission, most devoutly, but became its zealous
+ advocates.
+
+ "I get these details from a very venerable curé, who gave them to
+ me himself.
+
+ "6th. There came to me recently a woman from the neighboring
+ mountainous district, who said without any previous explanation:
+ 'You cured one of my daughters whom all the physicians had given
+ up; I now wish you to give me the same thing.' I tried at once to
+ recollect what medicines I had prescribed, and asked question after
+ question concerning the nature of the malady, so as to know what
+ remedy I had dispensed. After puzzling my brain to discover, she
+ told me it was a piece, thus suddenly reminding me that I had given
+ a medal to a young woman from that place, who came to consult me
+ about her failing health. To verify the fact, I sent word for the
+ young woman to come to see me.
+
+ "I pass over in silence a multitude of other events which, without
+ being termed miracles, are none the less real graces; and in my
+ eyes one most precious and great grace for us is, that the Blessed
+ Virgin deigns to make use of our poor little house to propagate
+ devotion to her. Oh! if you could see these good mountaineers
+ of every age and sex come with the greatest confidence and most
+ touching simplicity, asking for _na médaillot_--a medal. It has
+ affected me deeply, and I cannot sufficiently express my gratitude
+ to our tender and Immaculate Mother.
+
+ "Even Protestants have asked us for these medals, and I am
+ assured it was with perfect sincerity. The pastors in Savoy are
+ also very zealous in propagating this devotion to Mary. Since
+ reading the notice, they have mentioned it from the pulpit to
+ their parishioners, many of whom have, in consequence, procured
+ the medal. Likewise, do we see young men about to enter the army
+ fortify themselves with it, and persons undertaking a voyage
+ wearing it as their safeguard; indeed, every one has recourse to it
+ as the universal remedy for soul and body."
+
+
+CURE OF SISTER HYACINTHE, A RELIGIOUS OF CALVARY.
+
+It is the Mother General of the Community who has given us these
+details. Her letter is dated February 7th, 1835.
+
+ "I am overwhelmed with joy; our poor patient is perfectly cured
+ by virtue of the Miraculous Medal. I could say our patients,
+ for our prayers were offered both for the paralytic and that
+ young person whom I told you had been sick eleven months;
+ she was able to remain out of bed only a few hours each day;
+ whenever she could go to Mass, and that was rarely, she had to
+ be assisted, and the support of an arm was necessary when she
+ approached the Holy Table. Since Thursday she walks alone and
+ eats without experiencing the slightest symptom of her former
+ infirmity, except a little weakness. I hope the Lord will
+ finish His work and restore her to perfect health; but let us
+ speak of our dear Sister.
+
+ "The following is a copy of the account I wrote of this marvel
+ to our holy Bishop day before yesterday, after Mass:
+
+ "'I acquaint Your Grace with an incident of God's great mercy,
+ displayed to our Community in the sudden cure of one of our
+ choir religious, named Hyacinthe, aged forty-seven years.
+ This good Mother, the 14th of last January, had a stroke of
+ paralysis. It did not affect her head, but immediately fixed
+ itself in the left side, which became motionless and devoid
+ of feeling. We hastened to summon the physician, who bled
+ her freely in the arm; next day we tried leeches, medicines,
+ a blister on the neck, and three days after one upon the
+ paralyzed limb, but all of no avail. The poor patient, as well
+ as ourselves, must submit to the decrees of Him who strikes
+ and heals at will. At the end of fifteen days I was inspired
+ with the thought of making a novena in honor of the Immaculate
+ Conception, the medal of which, called the miraculous, we all
+ wear. On the fourth day of the novena, as we were about to
+ recite the prayers around her bed, the good Mother desired Holy
+ Communion. She was taken to the choir by three persons; after
+ receiving, the limb felt a little better, and she could return
+ with the aid of two persons only. Her confidence in the Mother
+ of God increased daily; yesterday she asked permission to come
+ down on the last day of the novena, and this morning, with the
+ assistance of a cane and some one to support her, she came down
+ and had the happiness of receiving Holy Communion. Immediately
+ after, we finished the novena prayers, just at the end of which
+ she was seized with a pain in the paralyzed arm, followed by an
+ icy chill and then a sensation of extreme heat. She came to me
+ with both arms lifted, exclaiming, "I am cured!" And perfectly
+ cured she was, being able to walk and use her limbs as freely
+ as if she had never felt a symptom of paralysis.
+
+ "'To give you an idea of our joy and gratitude, Monseigneur,
+ would be impossible. The patient fainted, and I came very near
+ doing the same; it was with difficulty I could continue our
+ prayers of thanksgiving, so marvelous did it seem that the Lord
+ should have granted this favor to our Community, under the
+ government of one of His most unworthy servants.'
+
+ "I send you this copy, which we had kept, of the letter.
+
+ "In the same letter I asked Monseigneur's permission to have
+ a _Te Deum_ chanted at the end of Benediction. His Grace
+ hastened to send word that he not only permitted but ordered
+ it, which order was joyfully complied with. The Vicar General,
+ our Superior, wrote, asking me to defer our Vespers half an
+ hour, as he wished to assist at the _Te Deum_. Several other
+ ecclesiastics also came, and saw our healed ones blessing God.
+ Since that day our good Mother Hyacinthe follows the rules,
+ complies with all her duties, and has never felt the least
+ return of her malady.
+
+ "This miracle created great excitement in our city; the
+ laborers who were working at the house having learned it on
+ the spot, immediately spread the news; the evening previous,
+ they had seen our poor Sister dragging her limb, a cane in
+ hand, and almost carried by two persons, and next morning they
+ beheld her perfectly cured! These men, who have seldom much
+ religion, sang the praises of God's power, and asked me to
+ give them medals. I gave a medal to each with great pleasure.
+ Clergymen have come to learn the particulars of this event, and
+ I let the miraculously cured herself recount the wonders of the
+ Lord.
+
+ "I must not omit informing you that the physician having vainly
+ exhausted all remedies, had been nine days without seeing the
+ patient; and the very eve of her recovery he told one of our
+ boarders that the disease having settled itself he believed
+ our afflicted one might be able to walk, but she could never
+ use her arm again. On coming next day to visit his other
+ patients, he was surprised beyond expression when she appeared
+ before him perfectly cured. Wishing to get his candid opinion
+ on the subject, I remarked that probably it was not real
+ paralysis, but only a numbness. 'It was a strongly marked case
+ of paralysis,' he answered, 'and there is certainly something
+ supernatural in her recovery.'
+
+ "In thanksgiving we continue the novena prayers, but preface
+ them with the _Laudate_.
+
+ "Make such use of this letter as you may deem advisable. If
+ you insert it in the notice, you are at liberty to name our
+ city and house. Oh! how we long to spread abroad the knowledge
+ and love of God's power, signally displayed in answer to our
+ invocation of the Immaculate Mother of His Divine Son.
+
+ "SISTER ST. MARIE,
+ "_Superioress of Calvary of Orleans_."
+
+
+CURE OF MADAME LEBON (DIJON).
+
+NOTE.--"The venerable lady upon whom this cure was wrought
+belongs to a highly honorable family of Dijon, and her personal
+character is very well calculated to inspire the utmost confidence,"
+says _L'Ami de la Religion_, in its issue of April 17th, 1835.
+Moreover, the letter she wrote, March 12th, to one of her friends, and
+which she was anxious should be transmitted to us, is accompanied by
+the certificates of the pastors of St. Michael of Dijon, of Dampierre
+and Beaumont-sur-Vingeanne, also of five members of the municipal
+council, and several other very reliable persons, some of them members
+of her family; more than this, it is followed by a detailed account
+given by the medical attendant, who had charge of her case for sixteen
+years.
+
+ "_Dijon, March 12, 1835._
+
+ "_Madame and Dear Friend_:
+
+ "You ask me the details of the miraculous manner in which it
+ has pleased God to restore me to health. Well! it might be
+ summed up in these few words: I implored Mary to obtain my
+ recovery, and she did obtain it instantly; having said this,
+ you know all, but you desire me to recall the circumstances of
+ my sickness and my experience subsequent to the cure. I give
+ them as follows:
+
+ "You doubtless remember that, for more than twenty years, I
+ could not walk, in consequence of an abscess on the intestines,
+ which left me in such a state of sensibility that ever after a
+ walk of more than a hundred steps I was exposing myself to the
+ most serious accidents. Neither are you ignorant of the fact
+ that, nearly fifteen months ago, by reason of influenza, a
+ second abscess formed, and so increased the irritability that I
+ hovered between life and death, and even when at my best I was
+ scarcely able to drag myself from one room to another. But you
+ have probably never heard that, since the 1st of last December,
+ my condition was so critical that, with great difficulty, could
+ I remain out of bed three or four hours at a time, which made
+ me, as well as those around me, think my end was near and I
+ would not survive the spring.
+
+ "This was my condition, dear friend, when some one mentioned
+ to me the medal of the Immaculate Virgin, and urged me to get
+ it. I was a long time deciding to do so, for I considered it
+ presumptuous to solicit the cure of an infirmity the physicians
+ had pronounced incurable. At last, having thought, on the one
+ side, that the more desperate the malady, the greater God's
+ glory should He deign to cure it; and, on the other, that He
+ had wrought the most wonderful miracles for those who were
+ least worthy, I decided to mention it to my confessor. I did
+ so, and he encouraged me to make the novena.
+
+ "The 2d of February, Feast of the Purification, the first
+ day of the novena and one ever memorable for me, I was taken
+ to church in a carriage; my daughter, sole confidante of my
+ intentions, assisted me to the Blessed Virgin's altar, where,
+ after hearing Mass as well as my infirmity would permit, I
+ received Holy Communion. Scarcely had I knelt to make an act
+ of adoration, when I was obliged to take my seat. A Sister of
+ Charity, whom I did not know was there, for I had not hoped to
+ receive the medal just yet, put it on my neck. Immediately,
+ I got on my knees to beg the Mother of the afflicted to
+ intercede with her divine Son for the restoration of my health,
+ should He foresee that it would be conducive to God's glory and
+ her honor, to my salvation and the happiness of my husband and
+ children. Scarcely had I pronounced a few words, petitioning
+ our Lord to graciously hear His holy Mother's prayer, ere Mary
+ had interceded and God in His great mercy had hearkened; I was
+ cured, Madame, entirely cured.... I finished all the prayers
+ of thanksgiving after Communion and those of the novena on my
+ knees, and, without experiencing the slightest inconvenience,
+ my malady had disappeared and I have never felt the slightest
+ symptom of it since. I walked, unassisted, to the church door,
+ sent away the carriage and returned home on foot.
+
+ "I have given you a detail of the facts, but to express the
+ feelings that filled my heart on re-entering my house would be
+ impossible; my joy, my astonishment, were boundless; I could
+ hardly realize it myself. Cured in an instant! The thought was
+ overpowering! It seemed as if I must be in a dream, but my
+ husband's astonishment, my mother's, and that of the servants,
+ who, seeing the great change wrought in me, although they were
+ ignorant of the means, could not forbear exclaiming: 'But a
+ miracle must have been worked upon you!' convinced me that I
+ was not asleep.
+
+ "Since that time I walk as well as any one; scarcely was my
+ novena finished ere I could go from one end of the city to the
+ other. It has not been six weeks since my cure, and I have
+ already walked more than three miles at a time, and could have
+ accomplished twice as much. You see, Madame and dear friend,
+ that the miracle is a most striking one.
+
+ "I now beg of you, as well as all other pious souls, to unite
+ heartily with me in thanking God and His august Mother.
+
+ "Your ever devoted
+ "ÉLIS. M. DARBEAUMONT LEBON."
+
+The physician's certificate ends thus: "Whatever may have been the
+cause of a cure, heretofore regarded as impossible by all the doctors
+who attended Mme. Lebon, it should be considered none the less certain
+and positive, for the evidence of the fact is indubitable.
+
+"Wherefore, I sign the present attestation, which I declare sincere and
+true.
+
+ "FOURNIER, Doctor.
+"_Dampierre, March 19, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT AT SMYRNA AND CONSTANTINOPLE.
+
+Extract of a letter from M. Le Leu, Lazarist missionary:
+
+ "_Constantinople, March 16, 1835._
+
+ "It has been a long time since I proposed writing you something
+ about the medal. In my eyes, one of the greatest miracles it
+ has ever worked is the rapidity of its propagation and the
+ confidence it inspires. By our demands upon you for medals, you
+ may judge of their effect in this country. We could dispose
+ of thousands and yet not satisfy the innumerable calls we
+ have for them. At Smyrna, it is the same. We had occasion to
+ send a few into the interior of Asia, and the Blessed Virgin
+ showed herself no less powerful or beneficent there than in
+ Europe. At Angora, an old man was deprived of the use of all
+ his limbs, and had neither walked nor worked for years; he
+ lived in frightful poverty, and sighed for death, for he was
+ especially grieved at being so long a burden upon a family in
+ indigent circumstances. (In this country there are numbers of
+ Armenian families very devoted to the Blessed Virgin, and this
+ was one of them.) He had no sooner heard of the Miraculous
+ Medal, than he solicited the happiness of obtaining and wearing
+ it. In these countries the Faith has retained its primitive
+ simplicity; this recipient of a medal does not content himself
+ with praying before it, or hanging it around his neck, but he
+ kisses it with profound respect and applies it to the affected
+ part; the Blessed Virgin cannot resist such confidence, and the
+ good old man instantly recovers the use of his limbs--he now
+ works and supports himself.
+
+ "Here is another incident: A young woman belonging to a
+ respectable and very pious family had, for a long time, been
+ a prey to a disease, the nature of which neither the French,
+ Greek nor Turkish physicians could understand. Its symptoms
+ were most violent pains in the side, which prevented her
+ walking, eating or sleeping, and which sometimes disappeared,
+ only to return with renewed violence. Having heard of our
+ medal, this lady felt interiorly urged to employ it for her
+ recovery, but believing herself unworthy of obtaining a direct
+ miracle, she besought the Blessed Virgin to enlighten the
+ physician and make known to him the proper remedy. Thereupon,
+ she went to the country. At the end of several days, she was
+ astonished to see her physician, who exclaimed as soon as he
+ saw her: 'Madame, good news! I have found the remedy for your
+ disease. I am sure of it; in a few days you will be perfectly
+ well. I do not know why it is, but your case has constantly
+ occupied my mind since your departure, and by a careful study
+ of it I have at last discovered the cause of the disease and
+ the manner of treating it.' The lady recognized at once that
+ this knowledge came from above, and she had not implored Mary
+ in vain. To-day she is in excellent health. It was from the
+ mouth of her mother I received these details. 'O Monsieur,'
+ exclaimed this good mother, 'how happy I am at my poor
+ daughter's recovery! It is the Blessed Virgin who has restored
+ her to me. If you could only get me a few more of these medals;
+ I am overwhelmed with requests for them.' The physician himself
+ published the details I have just given. So persuaded is he of
+ the efficacy of the medal that he calls it his final remedy,
+ and advises his patients to wear it whenever he is at a loss
+ concerning their malady. And the Blessed Virgin has rewarded
+ his faith; for one of his own daughters, a most pious person,
+ but in miserable health, has just experienced its beneficial
+ effects.
+
+ "I could mention numberless other incidents, as many
+ conversions as cures, but one more will suffice for to-day.
+ Not long ago the mother of a family had every symptom of an
+ attack of apoplexy; she had already lost consciousness, when
+ her son, a very pious young man, who wore one of these medals,
+ took it off his neck and put it around hers. He then ran for a
+ doctor and a priest. On reaching the house they were all three
+ astonished to find that she had quite recovered. That evening
+ the son asked his mother for the medal, and she returned it,
+ but a moment after was stricken with another attack. The
+ protection of the Blessed Virgin seemed to have been withdrawn
+ with this sign of her power. He immediately put the medal on
+ her neck again, this time to remain, and she has been well ever
+ since.
+
+ "Oh! do not delay, I beg you, in sending us the medals we have
+ asked of you."
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF AN OLD MAN AT CASTERA-LES-BAINS.
+
+NOTE.--These details are sent us and attested by M. Bellos,
+clerk of registration at Auch, and by other very reliable persons.
+
+ "In the early part of March, 1835, an old man in the parish of
+ Castera-les-Bains (Gers), fell dangerously ill. The venerable
+ parish priest, M. Barère, hastened to visit him, hoping he
+ might persuade the poor creature to cast himself into those
+ arms that were extended on the cross for all sinners. Our
+ patient, who had not been to confession for long years,
+ received him like an infidel as he was, refused all religious
+ assistance, and ended by saying: 'M. curé, I would rather
+ lose my speech than comply with your wishes!' The charitable
+ pastor retiring, though very reluctantly, now thought of the
+ Miraculous Medal he wore, and, taking it off, gave it to one
+ of the household with instructions to put it in the patient's
+ bed; advising, however, in case the ruse were discovered, no
+ allusion to the subject, so as to spare the unhappy one all
+ occasion of invective against religion. But, oh! marvelous
+ to relate! a little while after, the dying man awakens as if
+ from a profound slumber, and earnestly begs that the curé
+ be sent for to hear his confession. At this news, the good
+ pastor flies to his lost sheep, who receives him with every
+ expression of joy, begs his pardon, and asks to receive the
+ Sacrament of Penance. It would be superfluous for us to dwell
+ at length upon the sentiments and language of the charitable
+ minister of religion. He was so touched by his penitent's
+ dispositions, that he did not hesitate to take him the Holy
+ Viaticum next morning. Many of the faithful accompanied the
+ Blessed Sacrament to the sick man's chamber; confessing again,
+ he abjured his errors before all the assistants, and earnestly
+ entreated them to pardon the scandal his past conduct had
+ given them. Every one was affected to tears, and it was in
+ the midst of this universal emotion that he received the good
+ God, with the deepest sentiments of humility and compunction,
+ and recommending himself to the prayers of all present. In the
+ course of the following night, fearing he might be carried
+ off by a spell of weakness, he requested Extreme Unction, and
+ received it with the same evidences of faith and piety. This
+ conversion was followed by his perfect recovery, and the good
+ old man now blesses Divine Providence, which, through Mary's
+ protection, rescued him from the borders of a frightful abyss
+ into which his infidelity would have plunged him forever.
+
+ "The undersigned, who got these details from the mouth of
+ the curé of Castera, vouches for their authenticity. He has
+ neither added to nor taken from them in the slightest, knowing
+ full well that the Blessed Virgin has no need of falsehoods
+ to prove her power and goodness. It is, then, on his word of
+ conscience he gives this fact, which none of the inhabitants of
+ Castera and the neighboring country would deny, even were he
+ incredulous."
+
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE MORVILLIERS, ACKNOWLEDGED AS MIRACULOUS BY ALL THE
+PARISH.
+
+ "_Hangest_ (_Somme_).
+
+ "I have mentioned to you the cure wrought by the Miraculous
+ Medal upon a person aged fifty years; the fact is
+ incontestable. Rosalie Morvilliers, the recipient of this
+ favor, had never been free from suffering since her seventh
+ year; an affection of the nerves caused almost constant
+ palpitations of the heart and severe headaches, which, however,
+ did not hinder her performing some slight work without
+ aggravating the malady. But about five years ago, she was
+ afflicted by an unmistakable attack of epilepsy, which threw
+ her family into the greatest consternation. Henceforth, she was
+ obliged to keep her bed, and saw no one but her most intimate
+ friends; the very sight of a face that was not familiar was
+ sufficient to throw her into dreadful convulsions for several
+ hours. Independent of any external cause, these paroxysms
+ usually came on three times a day, and so violent were they,
+ that it was with great difficulty she could be kept in her
+ room; she uttered most frightful cries, her features were
+ horribly distorted, her mouth covered with foam, and, indeed,
+ according to the testimony of those who usually witnessed the
+ attacks, it was some time before she regained consciousness.
+
+ "Such was her condition when some one gave her a Miraculous
+ Medal. She received it with the greatest confidence, and
+ immediately applied it to that part of her head where the
+ pain was most acute; the pain disappeared immediately. From
+ that moment she felt urged to make a novena in honor of the
+ Immaculate Conception for the cure of her epilepsy. But
+ diffidence in mentioning the matter to her director made her
+ defer the execution of this pious design six weeks. At length,
+ she yielded to her desires, saying she felt fully persuaded
+ that this novena would ensure her recovery through the Blessed
+ Virgin's intercession, and her confidence was not misplaced.
+ The curé immediately began the novena, engaging in it the
+ sodality of the Holy Family. Whilst at Mass on the morning of
+ the last day, the 17th of Mary's month, the patient was seized
+ with the most violent attack possible, the worst she had ever
+ had, although during the novena, the paroxysms had increased
+ in intensity. Suddenly it ceases. A number of persons begin to
+ pray and recite the chaplet; the patient, regarding them with
+ a smile, gently falls asleep. A few minutes after, she opens
+ her eyes and exclaims: 'I am cured! I am cured! The Blessed
+ Virgin has just cured me of epilepsy! Oh! how good she is, how
+ powerful! It seems to me as if there had just been a general
+ revolution throughout my body. I feel confident, my friends,
+ that this disease has been banished from my system forever.'
+
+ "It was very easy for the assistants to believe that some
+ extraordinary change had really been wrought in her, for her
+ countenance presented not the slightest vestige of the attack.
+ She now desired to communicate, and oh! with what transports of
+ faith, gratitude and love she received the good God!
+
+ "The noise of this cure soon reached the neighboring villages.
+ How beautiful yet, Monsieur, is the simplicity of the faith in
+ these rural districts! Henceforth, every one wished to wear the
+ medal.
+
+ "This event took place on the 17th of May, at nine o'clock
+ in the morning. Since that time the patient has not felt the
+ slightest symptom of epilepsy. She leaves her room, walks about
+ the garden, and receives visitors indiscriminately, without
+ experiencing any ill effects. However, the Blessed Virgin
+ did not cure all her infirmities; she still has the nervous
+ affection that existed before the epileptic attacks, but I
+ should observe that as the novena was made solely for the cure
+ of epilepsy, the Blessed Virgin has obtained all that was asked
+ of her.
+
+ "This, Monsieur, is the exact statement. Some, no doubt, would
+ attribute the cure to natural causes; as for ourselves, we,
+ like the patient, feel convinced that it was owing to Mary's
+ powerful intercession. The curé agrees with us, and so do all
+ who glory in the truths of religion. Honored, then, be the
+ power and goodness of Mary conceived without sin!"
+
+
+CURE OF A DAUGHTER OF CHARITY AND ANOTHER PERSON (DIOCESE OF MOULINS).
+
+The following letter was sent by a gentleman of unquestionable veracity
+to the _Journal du Bourbonnais_, and published in its issue of June 6,
+1835:
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "We are all Mary's children; at the foot of her Divine Son's
+ cross did her maternal heart adopt us as her own. All ages
+ have felt the salutary effects of her powerful protection; our
+ fathers have admired them, we ourselves admire them, and our
+ days are filled with marvels. Even recently has she appeared,
+ shedding torrents of grace upon a privileged kingdom, and this
+ kingdom is France. The vision is verified, for the age which
+ saw it has also witnessed the multiplication of countless
+ miraculous cures and conversions.
+
+ "And shall Bourbonnais, our dear country, be excepted in the
+ distribution of Mary's favors? Oh! no; it also shall have a
+ share in this harvest of glory. The truly astonishing rapidity
+ with which the thousand Miraculous Medals brought to our city
+ have been disposed of is to me a sufficient guaranty of our
+ hopes, and it would keep one's pen in daily use to note the
+ wonderful traits of Mary's protection.
+
+ "1st. Sister Chapin, of St. Joseph's Hospital, was for more
+ than two years racked by pains and a fever that defied all
+ medical skill.
+
+ "This angel of earth lamented her inability to fulfil the
+ duties of her noble vocation; far from abating, her charity,
+ zeal and resignation seemed to increase with her gradually
+ declining health, which now excited our serious fears. Having
+ vainly exhausted all the resources of medicine, she turned her
+ back upon art and nature that she might address herself to
+ faith alone. Full of confidence in the Miraculous Medal, she
+ began a novena to Mary for the recovery of her health. Before
+ the novena was ended, both pains and fever had disappeared, and
+ henceforth, she began a new existence, her strength returned,
+ and she is happy to prove herself by deeds (fulfilling with
+ ease the most painful duties) what her virtues have ever
+ proclaimed her, a true daughter of St. Vincent de Paul.
+
+ "2nd. Yesterday, again, was witnessed in our Bourbonnais,
+ another wonderful trait of Mary's protection. Here are the
+ facts: On Monday, June 1st, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+ in the parish of Montilly, near the borders of Allier and the
+ castle of Beau-Regard, a woman was stricken with a violent
+ rush of blood to the head; the lamentations and piercing cries
+ of the family attracted their neighbors. Two alarming crises
+ succeeded; they were followed by a third, which was thought to
+ be mortal. The patient, after violently struggling against the
+ combined efforts of four men to restrain her, fell motionless
+ and apparently lifeless; her limbs were stiff and chill, her
+ face a livid blue, her features distorted, her eyes fixed, her
+ respiration insensible, death seemed imminent. This frightful
+ attack had lasted about half an hour, when some one present
+ thought of the Miraculous Medal; she approaches the dying woman
+ and lays the medal upon her lips. At that instant the latter
+ arouses from her slumber, she breathes, she clasps her hands
+ as if thanking the person who had restored her to life she
+ recognizes all around her, speaks to them and thanks them for
+ their kind attentions.
+
+ "The next morning, Tuesday, it was not at the gates of death
+ she was to be found, but in the streets of Moulins, where I saw
+ her myself and spoke to her.
+
+ "Pardon me, O divine Mary, if among a thousand striking
+ traits of your power and goodness, I dwell upon some which
+ are comparatively slight, it is only because of their recent
+ occurrence in our very midst. Happy shall I esteem myself to
+ awaken among my brethren a passing tribute to Faith, that
+ living, salutary Faith, whose efficacy I have experienced, and
+ whose truths I long to see planted and nourished in all hearts!
+
+ "Deign to accord, etc."
+
+We have learned that Sister Chapin's recovery is permanent.
+
+
+CURE OF MARIE LACROIX (DIOCESE OF LANGRES).
+
+NOTE.--It is M. Barillot, Vicar General, who sends us this
+account:
+
+ "_Bishopric of Langres, June 20, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "M. Regnault, curé of Ormoy, canton of Chateau-Villain, in our
+ diocese, an excellent pastor and judicious priest, writes me
+ the subjoined letter of the 19th inst.:
+
+ "'A very extraordinary thing has just taken place in my
+ parish. A young woman aged twenty went blind in consequence
+ of a fall; her hip was displaced, and she lost all use of
+ her limbs, except the arms. For three months she was at a
+ hospital of Bar-sur-Aube, under treatment for these severe
+ afflictions, but in vain. At last, judging her case hopeless,
+ the physicians sent her back to her parents at Ormoy. Here,
+ as at Bar-sur-Aube, she endured for three months incredible
+ sufferings, not even being able to turn herself in bed or
+ change her position in the slightest. Her recovery was now
+ despaired of by all, and lately the minister received a
+ petition (with the accompanying certificates of the two
+ physicians who had attended her at Bar-sur-Aube) asking her
+ admission into the hospital of Quinze-Vingts. Meanwhile,
+ this young woman, who had always appeared to me very pious
+ and submissive to God's will, having received a Miraculous
+ Medal, immediately begins a novena. Seven days elapse, and
+ her sufferings, far from diminishing, are intensified; on the
+ eighth she is bathed in a profuse perspiration, after which she
+ suddenly rises, dresses herself, and walks through the streets
+ to church, to the great astonishment of all the people, who,
+ seeing her, cannot restrain their tears.
+
+ "'I questioned her closely, but did not express my opinion
+ on the subject. I went to Bar-sur-Aube to get additional
+ information; the physician declares it astonishing, especially
+ when we consider her former hopeless condition. The hospital
+ Sisters, the curés of Bar-sur-Aube, the patients, all say it is
+ truly a miracle. The people of Ormoy and even of the vicinity,
+ who come to see her, wonder that I do not mention it from the
+ pulpit. I beg of you to let me know how to act in the affair,
+ and also that you will speak to the Bishop about it.'
+
+ "The Bishop has since sent word through me to the curé
+ of Ormoy, to publish this miraculous occurrence to his
+ parishioners; he has also charged me with forwarding you a copy
+ of the good curé's letter, leaving to your discretion the use
+ you may make of it.
+
+ "I am, etc.,
+
+ "BARILLOT, Canon, Vicar General."
+
+Before printing this, we wished to ascertain if the cure were
+permanent, and the Vicar General sent us the following response from
+the curé of Ormoy:
+
+ "The cure is permanent; for several months past the young
+ woman has been with the Ursulines of La Chapelle, who consider
+ her physically able to share in the labors of the house; her
+ condition having been attested by three doctors. Her sudden
+ recovery, as above mentioned, leads us to believe that it was
+ surely supernatural. I was far from meriting this favor which
+ has been granted my poor parish. I hope the Blessed Virgin will
+ finish her work.
+
+ "_November 3, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT IN THE CHABLAIS DISTRICT (SAVOY).
+
+ "_The Borders of Lake Geneva, June 18, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "The country purged of Calvin's heresy by the labors of
+ Geneva's holy bishop, is not a stranger to the blessings
+ figured by the medal's mysterious rays. This wonderful
+ instrument of Mary's liberality has been propagated with
+ astonishing rapidity, though only a few months since we heard
+ of it in our midst. I consider it a pious obligation to offer
+ you a few small stones towards the construction of that temple
+ of glory now in process of erection, to the honor of her,
+ who has lately proved herself more powerful and merciful on
+ earth than ever before. I am a young villager living amidst my
+ family; I do not announce miracles to you, but merely recount
+ facts just as I have seen or heard them. I could have subjoined
+ a list of signatures, but I did not judge it necessary, the
+ docile, religious heart deeming them superfluous, and the
+ skeptic, fraudulent, like the facts. On a perusal of the first
+ few phrases in each incident, persons living in the vicinity
+ will recognize the individuals concerned, and thereby be more
+ deeply impressed.
+
+ "1st. In the month of July, 1824, Mlle. C., aged twenty-nine
+ years, bade, as she thought, a last adieu to her family; she
+ and some other generous companions were going to one of the
+ large cities in southern Italy to consecrate themselves there
+ to the service of the sick and poor. After a few months'
+ novitiate in a religious house devoted to works of this nature,
+ she was attacked by one of those debilitating, wasting maladies
+ that physicians are at a loss to define. Attributing it to the
+ climate, the Superiors, after twenty-two months' ineffectual
+ treatment at the novitiate, sent her to breathe her natal
+ air. But change of air proved vain also, and the doctors at
+ last ceased their visits, judging the re-establishment of
+ her health an impossibility. About six years ago, she had
+ improved sufficiently to walk a few steps beyond her chamber,
+ and even remain in the open air some minutes, but amelioration
+ was illusory, and since 1830 she had not been able to leave
+ her couch of suffering except for a few instants. Many times
+ during these last five years was she apparently on the verge
+ of death, and that for several consecutive days, always,
+ however, retaining her hearing and intellectual faculties,
+ since she could respond by signs to the priest who visited
+ her. It was he who gave me these particulars. Her condition
+ had become such that it was judged advisable to administer the
+ Last Sacraments. This house was now a school of edification,
+ where Christians might study the price of sufferings and the
+ heroism of patience. Finally, about the end of last April,
+ this poor creature, so tortured for the past eleven years,
+ conceived a hope of relief through the Miraculous Medal,
+ but, mistrusting the somewhat extraordinary impressions the
+ thought made upon her imagination, it was only from obedience
+ she could be induced to commence a novena. The sole exercises
+ consisted of repeating, three times a day, the invocation: 'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' On Wednesday, April 24th, the second or third day of
+ the novena, she felt an irresistible desire to arise. It was
+ yet very early in the morning; a little child assisted her
+ to dress. Finding that her limbs support her, she begins to
+ think it must be something miraculous, and, filled with joy,
+ she wishes to announce the news to her mother, who is in an
+ adjoining room. Arrived at the door, she is seized with fright,
+ and precipitately turns back; but, being reassured of her newly
+ restored strength by the facility with which she reaches her
+ own chamber, she overcomes herself, and, retracing her steps,
+ seeks the embraces of her mother, her sister and brother.
+ Her unexpected appearance fills them with great emotion, and
+ abundant tears attest the depths of their joy and gratitude. A
+ clergyman, who often visited this lady, soon heard rumors of
+ her recovery, but gave no credit to them. Meeting her mother
+ on the street not long after, she burst into tears at sight
+ of him, and was unable to express the cause of her emotion.
+ Suspecting it, he went immediately to the house, and saw for
+ himself what a miracle had been wrought. With Mlle. C., he
+ unites in blessing her powerful protectress, the Immaculate
+ Mary.
+
+ "Since that time, April 24, to the present date, June 18th,
+ Mlle. C. rises about seven o'clock, hears Mass on her knees,
+ employs herself in various duties during the day, makes visits
+ and walks of half an hour's or even an hour's duration, and
+ continues well, even her complexion begins to assume a healthy
+ tinge. Her legs are still a little swollen, and she cannot yet
+ take much nourishment.
+
+ "The sudden appearance of this person, whom every one had
+ known to be seriously afflicted for eleven years, created an
+ extraordinary sensation. All eyes were fixed upon her, and many
+ persons even followed her. This took place in the capital of
+ the province.
+
+ "2d. In the month of August, 1833, my sister, at the sight of
+ a child who barely missed falling through an open trap door,
+ was suddenly attacked by frightful nervous convulsions, which
+ henceforth returned daily, and even as often as fifteen times
+ a day. It was only at the end of two months that remedies, and
+ a four weeks' strict hospital treatment, succeeded in checking
+ them. Last year, they manifested themselves again in the month
+ of February, but disappeared, leaving her a prey to great
+ weakness, and a fever that kept her in bed four weeks.
+
+ "In the February of this year, the nervous convulsions
+ returned, and with a frequency and force that were truly
+ alarming. The patient wasted visibly, the paroxysms were
+ renewed seven and ten times a day, and were of a most frightful
+ character; the circulation of her blood seemed checked, her
+ feet and hands were deathly chilled, she jerked her head with
+ violence and precipitation, an agitated cry escaped her breast;
+ the attack lasted from three to six minutes, and left her
+ completely exhausted. The witnesses of this painful spectacle
+ were affected to tears. She was taken to a skillful physician,
+ who after seeing her in one of these convulsions, pronounced
+ the case hopeless, saying, 'it baffled him, he could not
+ understand it.' However, he prescribed remedies. Meanwhile, the
+ first medals arrived in our midst. On Shrove Tuesday, my sister
+ had five attacks, which she assured me were the worst she had
+ ever had. Next day, wearing the medal, she began a novena, and
+ the two convulsions she had that day were the last; never since
+ has she felt the slightest symptom (and that without employing
+ the prescribed remedies), neither has she had a sign of the
+ fever, which last year replaced the less violent convulsions.
+ This cure was wrought in an insensible, but very efficacious
+ manner, the first day of a novena made through the medal. My
+ sister immediately resumed the manifold duties of a laborious
+ household. She attributes, and we also, her recovery to Mary
+ alone. Thousands of times be love and glory to this good Mother!
+
+ "3d. In the Chablais district, on the frontiers of the canton
+ of Geneva, lived a poor widow, the mother of quite a large
+ family. This good woman, about sixty years old, had a natural
+ predisposition to paralysis. At the age of forty-eight, an
+ attack of this disease deprived her of the use of her left
+ arm. At intervals since then, she has had spells of illness
+ so serious and so protracted, that at least a hundred times
+ she seemed on the verge of the tomb. She never consulted a
+ physician, but animated with a lively, persevering faith, she
+ employed only supernatural means. 'God and the Saints are the
+ only good doctors,' she would say, and 'God and the Saints'
+ rewarded her confidence. She has recovered from these hopeless
+ maladies in an extraordinary manner. On the first of last
+ March, her left foot lost the power of supporting her body
+ in walking, doubtless owing to her natural predisposition to
+ paralysis. Persons informed on the subject have given the
+ following description of the convulsive movements of this poor
+ woman's foot: suspended, it preserved its natural position, but
+ on putting it to the ground, it immediately lost its balance;
+ her body was bent, her knee turned out, the sole of her foot
+ exposed, and the left side of her foot was the foundation of
+ support for the left limb in walking. She went thus to church,
+ distant about four minutes' walk; but even in that short space
+ of time, the convulsive movements of the foot were sometimes
+ such that she was not able to keep her balance, but fell to
+ the ground. Every one pitied her, she was always calm and
+ perfectly resigned. Her children had made for her an iron
+ brace which reached to the knee, but after a trial, she was
+ obliged to discard it, the remedy causing more suffering than
+ the disease. During the Lenten season, some charitable persons
+ advised her to seek Mary's assistance through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The good widow did so, and wore her medal with the
+ utmost confidence. On Holy Saturday, she perceived that her
+ foot had become steady; the next day, Easter, without any
+ remedies having been used, it resumed its natural position, and
+ since that time, though a little weaker than the right, not
+ once has it given way or turned. She attributes her recovery to
+ the Blessed Virgin, whom she invoked by wearing the medal, so
+ justly styled miraculous.
+
+ "I could cite many other less striking cases; one time it is a
+ hardy peasant who attributes to Mary's intercession relief from
+ violent pains; another time, a little child, who in a few days,
+ is completely cured of a large tumor under its arm, accompanied
+ by fever; a mother who tells me how her daughter's ill health
+ is sensibly improved by the application of the medal; or a
+ Protestant girl, who, after wearing it, abjures heresy, etc.
+ Nearly all the children of our village wear the Miraculous
+ Medal around their neck, they recite the invocation, they kiss
+ the precious image and give it to their little sisters and
+ brothers in the cradle to kiss.
+
+
+III.
+
+_Graces obtained from 1836 to 1838 in France, Italy, Holland, etc._
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF M. GAETAN (BOULOGNE).
+
+This account was sent me by the curé of Boulogne, February 8, 1836.
+
+ "In my parish, a young man named Gaetan U---, aged twenty-seven
+ years, was leading a life of criminal intimacy with a woman.
+ Several years after abandoning his mother and brother, that he
+ might be under no restraint in his shameless course, he was
+ prostrated by a serious pulmonary attack. M. Jean Pulioli, an
+ excellent physician, undertook the case; but the violence or
+ the disease overcame his skill, and the patient (still in the
+ house of the bad character with whom he lived,) was reduced to
+ such a deplorable state of exhaustion, that he could not move
+ himself. From the beginning of his sickness he had insisted
+ that he would not be worried by a priest. But the disease
+ making very rapid progress, the doctor believed it his duty to
+ warn a priest of his condition. My chaplain went immediately
+ to see him, and earnestly entreated him to put an end to this
+ scandalous state of affairs by marrying the woman, but all in
+ vain. I then paid him a visit, and besides remarking in him
+ neither any intention of marrying her nor of separating from
+ her, I perceived from the excuses he gave, that his soul was
+ enshrouded in impenetrable indifference. Having uselessly
+ exhausted all efforts to effect a change, I concluded it would
+ be better to leave him awhile to quiet and serious reflection,
+ and return later to know his decision. I urged him to seek
+ the mediation of that refuge of sinners, the Blessed Virgin,
+ and slipping the Miraculous Medal under his pillow, I left.
+ There was no necessity for my returning to learn his decision,
+ he sent his mother for me, with whom he had become reconciled
+ in the meantime; after informing me of the very just reasons
+ he had for not marrying the woman, he asked me if I would
+ not request her to leave, a commission I willingly accepted.
+ She consented, and immediately abandoned the house. The sick
+ man's peace and joy at this were indescribable; when I showed
+ him the medal, he kissed it most fervently and impulsively,
+ notwithstanding his state of exhaustion. Then, with every mark
+ of sincere repentance, he confessed, received the Holy Viaticum
+ and Extreme Unction, for we expected each moment he would
+ breathe his last. This occurred January 19, 1836. Interiorly,
+ he enjoyed unspeakable peace, a favor he always attributed to
+ the Blessed Virgin. From this time he began to improve, and
+ in a few days his health was completely re-established. He
+ continues to persevere in his good resolutions, and full of the
+ tenderest affection for his celestial Benefactress, he still
+ reverently wears the medal I gave him, often kissing it with
+ truly filial love.
+
+ "Monsieur, I was a witness of the above-mentioned fact; I send
+ it to you, not only with the permission of the newly converted
+ and cured, but at his request, and I hope that the knowledge
+ will redound to the honor and glory of the Omnipotent God, who,
+ through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin, has wrought
+ this double miracle.
+
+ "I subjoin the certificate of the physician who attests the
+ disease and its cure."
+
+
+CURE OF A JUDGE AT NAPLES.
+
+The judge of the civil tribunal of Naples, M. Joseph Cocchia, seriously
+debilitated by a chronic disease of the bowels, was afflicted with most
+violent pains, accompanied by a spasmodic sensation that, continually
+increasing, banished sleep and appetite, and perceptibly diminished
+his frame. This was followed by a bilious gastric fever, long and
+obstinate, of fifty days duration. When freed from the fever, the sick
+man found himself in a frightful state of emaciation and exhaustion;
+signs of inflammation in the bowels, and such extreme irritation that
+the least jolt induced fever, made skillful physicians fear lest these
+were the symptoms of an incurable malady still more deplorable. Whilst
+in this pitiable condition, there reached the sick man's ears accounts
+of the prodigies Divine mercy had wrought in favor of those who wore
+the medal; he eagerly asked for one, and received it with faith;
+henceforth, he had no longer any need of medical assistance, for he
+recovered the strength and perfect health he now enjoys.
+
+
+CURE OF F.P. DE MAGISTRIS.
+
+M.F. Paul de Magistris, aged seven years, was attacked about the
+middle of November, 1835, by a bilious gastric fever, which, by reason
+of accompanying circumstances, threatened to shorten his life. After
+three weeks' illness, his nervous system was also attacked, and he
+became a prey to a state of profound drowsiness that resulted in the
+loss of reason and speech. His afflicted parents, seeing the obstinacy
+of the disease, notwithstanding all efforts of medical skill to the
+contrary, considered the case hopeless, and their child lost to them.
+On the evening of January 9th, the curé administered Extreme Unction,
+believing, as did all the assistants, that the little sufferer had but
+a few hours to live. A young person, who came to the house, having
+mentioned the Miraculous Medal brought from France by the priests of
+the Congregation of the Mission, it was immediately procured, and,
+with confidence in its healing powers, applied to the child, whilst
+all present knelt around his bed and recited the _Ave Maris Stella_.
+Scarcely had they finished, ere he was considered out of danger. With
+renewed confidence in the medal, it was resolved to begin a novena
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. During its progress, the disease
+diminished perceptibly, and the child has now entirely recovered. Its
+parents, as well as other persons of credit and veracity, among them
+the attendant physician, attest that, having witnessed his deplorable
+condition, they feel convinced his recovery was a miracle, resulting
+from the application of the medal.
+
+_February 22, 1836._
+
+
+CURE OF A DROPSICAL MAN (SWITZERLAND).
+
+ "_Soleure, January 19th, 1836._
+
+ "Baptiste, a wood sawyer, whom you knew during your sojourn
+ in this city, was confined to his bed two whole months by
+ an attack of the severest form of dropsy on the chest. One
+ of our best physicians, who attended him at the beginning
+ of his sickness, having told Baptiste's wife that the case
+ was a hopeless one, the family decided to consult another,
+ M. Gougelmann, at Attyswill, a league from Soleure. After
+ seeing the patient, he also gave the same opinion, and the
+ poor wife's distress was beyond expression. A pious lady,
+ witnessing her grief, gave her a Miraculous Medal. The sick
+ man's arms, legs, and whole body were greatly swollen. His
+ breath was short, and he had scarcely any power of motion; his
+ back, and his elbows upon which he was obliged to lean, were a
+ mass of sores. In this pitiable state, death might be expected
+ any moment. His confessor having come to visit him, brought
+ the Notice of the miracles wrought through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The sick man on receiving it began to read it aloud,
+ greatly to the astonishment of his wife and the priest, who
+ were both witnesses that he had been almost past the power
+ of speech but a few minutes before. And he continued reading
+ thus until he had finished the little book (it was one of the
+ first editions). This was the evening of January 19. His wife,
+ overcome with fatigue, fell asleep for a few moments, his
+ children were in an adjoining room expecting at any instant to
+ hear the sad news of their father's death. He slept a little
+ towards three o'clock in the morning, and on awaking found
+ himself so well that it was impossible to resist the desire of
+ rising from his bed and throwing himself on his knees before a
+ crucifix, in thanksgiving to Our Lord and His divine Mother.
+ His wife awoke, and not seeing him in bed, called to know where
+ he was. 'I am well; the Blessed Virgin has cured me,' was the
+ answer of Baptiste, whom she perceived kneeling before the
+ crucifix. The children, hearing the noise, hastened to their
+ father's presence, believing him about to breathe his last,
+ but judge of their surprise at finding him restored to health,
+ and his sores perfectly healed! Imagine, if you can, the joy
+ of this poor family, and the happy effects the news of this
+ wondrous cure produced upon the many who heard it. Baptiste has
+ had excellent health ever since."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF FRANÇOIS WENMAKERS, OF BOIS-LE-DUC (HOLLAND).
+
+The _Noord Brabander_, a Holland journal, printed at Bois-le-Duc,
+contains in number 68 the following account of an extraordinary cure,
+which is attributed to the Blessed Virgin:
+
+ "_Bois-le Duc, June 6th, 1836._
+
+ "The 25th of last April, François Wenmakers, a young
+ apprentice, aged fourteen years, fell from a height of
+ about sixteen feet. An affection of the brain and an almost
+ complete paralysis of the lungs, larynx and oesophagus were
+ the result; he was not in a condition to take any medicine
+ into his stomach, or even to swallow the least liquid, and he
+ was deprived of consciousness. One of the physicians, feeling
+ worried at his fixed stare, advised the administration of
+ Extreme Unction; and yet another, the eve of his recovery,
+ declared him on the verge of death. The sick man moreover,
+ had become nearly blind the last few days. On the 1st of May,
+ advantage was taken of a lucid interval, to give him the Holy
+ Viaticum; and on the 4th of the same month, he received Extreme
+ Unction from one of the chaplains of St. Jean. His parents, who
+ immediately after his fall, had hung a medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception around his neck, seeing there was now no hope of his
+ recovery, except in the divine goodness and the intercession
+ of the Blessed Virgin, began, on the 16th of May, a novena in
+ honor of the Mother of God. Three days after, about six o'clock
+ in the morning, the patient suddenly asked his mother if the
+ medal around his neck were blessed. She answered yes, regarding
+ the question as the effect of delirium. He immediately
+ kissed it, and sat up for the first time since the fall, for
+ heretofore he had been stretched out helpless on the bed, and,
+ for some days past, had been deprived of the use of his limbs.
+ 'Something tells me,' he exclaimed, 'that I must get up, that
+ I am cured!' The astonishment of those present may easily be
+ imagined. The mother called his sisters, who repaired to the
+ room with an elder girl, and they, seeing that he stoutly
+ persisted in declaring himself cured, persuaded his mother to
+ let him rise. He did indeed get up, and pointing to a picture
+ in the room, representing the medal, he said: 'It is this good
+ Mother who has cured me.' From that moment the boy's health was
+ perfectly re-established, and his intellectual faculties were
+ brighter than ever.
+
+ "Reflections here are superfluous. Glory to God and her who
+ thus rewards the confidence of her servants! The parents and
+ their child will ever remember the blessing they have received,
+ and never cease to publish it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE DUCAS, OF JAUCHELETTE (BELGIUM).
+
+Rosalie Ducas, of Jauchelette, near Jodoigne, aged four years and
+a-half, was, on the 9th of November, 1835, suddenly struck with total
+blindness without the slightest premonitory symptoms; there was no
+disease, no weakness, she was in apparently perfect health. Not only
+was the least light, but the least breath of air so painful, that her
+face had to be kept constantly covered with a cloth four doubled. This
+poor child's sufferings night and day, were heart-rending! At last the
+mother herself was taken sick. Some pious individual procured her a
+blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception. She took it and commenced
+a novena. Another medal was put on the child's neck, the 11th of June,
+1836, about six o'clock in the evening; at midnight, the little one
+ceased its moans, on the fourth or fifth day of the novena, it opened
+its eyes. The mother and father redoubled their prayers to the Blessed
+Virgin, and on the ninth day, towards evening, the child recovered its
+sight entirely, to the great astonishment of the neighbors and all who
+were witnesses of the occurrence.
+
+ "The curé of Jodoigne-la-Souveraine, who had given the medal,
+ has himself seen the child who lives not more than half a
+ league distant; he positively asserts that it has perfectly
+ recovered its sight, and that not the slightest vestige of the
+ attack remains, which fact is well known, and contributes not a
+ little in exciting devotion to the Immaculate Mary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSION OF THE FATHER OF A FAMILY (BELGIUM).
+
+ "There are still in existence here some families who,
+ persistently recognizing in the present clergy only a purely
+ civil power, hold themselves utterly aloof, live in a state of
+ schism, and comply with none of the duties of religion.
+
+ "One of these miserable creatures was afflicted with a virulent
+ cancer on the side of his face, which for a long time had been
+ eating away the flesh. The malady increasing, I believed it my
+ duty to visit him and offer the consolations of my ministry.
+ I saw him several times, he was suffering greatly; the
+ oesophagus was exposed, the right side of his emaciated face
+ presented only a deep sore, the eye, starting from its socket,
+ hung suspended over a terrible disfigured mouth; his tongue
+ caused him acute pain; his condition was pitiable indeed,
+ especially as he seemed determined to die impenitent. He was
+ a rough, blunt man, who wanted to hear nothing about priests
+ or Sacraments. In vain was he reminded of our Lord's bountiful
+ kindness and the rigors of His justice, nothing touched
+ him; to all expostulations his invariable reply was: 'God's
+ mercy is great, I will confess to God, the Blessed Virgin,
+ to St. Barbara and the good Saints.' He was the counterpart
+ of those men to whom Jesus Christ said: '_In peccato vestro
+ moriemini_--you shall die in your sin.'
+
+ "His relations and numerous friends endeavored both by prayers
+ and entreaties to snatch him from perdition, but on the other
+ side visited daily and sustained by his old associates in
+ impiety, he persisted in dying as he had lived, in schism.
+
+ "In the meantime, I was obliged to be absent several days. This
+ period was for him one of Divine mercy. A lady of the parish
+ made a last attempt to recall him to God, by bringing him one
+ of those medals of the Immaculate Conception called miraculous.
+ She sent it to him with the request to wear it and put all his
+ confidence in the Blessed Virgin. The sick man took the medal,
+ kissed it respectfully, and put it under his pillow. In giving
+ it to him, his daughter had taken care to acquaint him with
+ its origin and advantages, at the same time urging him, as
+ usual, to make his confession. 'Leave me in peace,' was the
+ wretched father's reply, and she could say no more. Next day,
+ a neighboring curé was sent for to administer Extreme Unction
+ to another person in the parish. He came, and forgetting, as
+ it were, the one for whom he had been sent, he thought only of
+ the cancerous patient. 'I felt,' he afterwards told me, 'an
+ inexplicable and irresistible desire to visit him, I could not
+ have returned without seeing him.' He asks some one to announce
+ his arrival to the sick man; this person speaks to the latter,
+ and urges him to confess. 'The curé of P. is here,' she adds,
+ 'and would like to see you, if you have no objection.' 'Well,
+ yes, let him come.' The curé went to him immediately; at first
+ there was a slight air of resistance about the patient, but it
+ vanished, the hour of grace had come, he confessed with every
+ indication of true repentance, and received Extreme Unction
+ with an indescribable peace and joy, that never faltered during
+ the four remaining days of his life. The Holy Viaticum could
+ not be administered because he was not able to swallow.
+
+ "At noon, on the 18th of last May, the month consecrated to
+ Mary, he died, aged seventy-eight.
+
+ "Except his former companions in irreligion, this conversion
+ was a subject of rejoicing to the parish, and doubtless it
+ will rejoice all the servants of Mary who hear of it. May this
+ example, among thousands, inspire sinners with great confidence
+ in the Blessed Virgin, propagate devotion to her, and multiply
+ the medal styled miraculous!
+
+ "I have thought it a duty to give these few details, for the
+ purpose of making known the truly visible effects of the
+ protection of the Mother of God, and the ever impenetrable
+ springs of grace in regard to man.
+
+ "I have the honor to be, Monsieur, with great esteem, &c."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ANTOINETTE VAN ERTRYCK (BOIS-LE-DUC).
+
+ "The protection of the Blessed Virgin, which for the last few
+ months has shown itself so powerful in a neighboring kingdom,
+ has also wrought wonders in Bois-le-Duc. Mary has here likewise
+ given equal proofs of her maternal bounty when we have implored
+ her intercession.
+
+ "Mlle. Antoinette Van Ertryck, aged twenty-five years, was for
+ more than twenty months deprived of the use of her limbs; they
+ were stiff and paralyzed, almost without feeling, and stretched
+ motionless on a sort of bench made for the express purpose.
+ Medicine afforded no relief. In this sad condition, wearing
+ a blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception, she thought of
+ making a novena in honor of the Feast, to recover her health.
+ On the last day of the novena, she made a fervent communion.
+ Even after the departure of the priest, who came to administer
+ the Blessed Sacrament, there seemed no change for the better,
+ but she felt a shiver through all her body, like the impression
+ often experienced from sudden cold. Just whilst finishing the
+ last prayers, however, she seemed to hear an interior voice
+ saying to her: 'You are cured.' On attempting to move, she
+ found that her limbs had become flexible, and she was able to
+ walk. The miracle was wrought on Saturday, May 16th. The next
+ day, Sunday, she went to church to return thanks for this
+ blessing to the common Mother of all the faithful. The people
+ of our city, always distinguished for their veneration for the
+ Blessed Virgin, and their confidence in her intercession are
+ not wanting in gratitude, and this new favor will but increase
+ their devotion to Mary Immaculate.
+
+ "The duration of the malady, the inutility of medical skill,
+ and her astonishing sudden cure are attested by the doctor.
+
+ "A. BOLSIUS, M.D."
+
+
+CURE OF A YOUNG GIRL AT CRACOW, POLAND.
+
+Extract from a letter of the Countess Lubinska:
+
+ "_March 12th, 1837._
+
+ "I took into my service, the 20th of last December, a young
+ girl whose excellent qualities elicited my deepest interest.
+
+ "After being with me some months, she began to suffer most
+ acute pains in the head; the remedies we employed affording
+ no relief, the attending physician advised her to keep her
+ bed, and did not conceal from her his opinion that these pains
+ proceeded from the humor flowing constantly from her ears, and
+ which seeming to be upon the brain, threatened her life, or at
+ all events, her reason.
+
+ "What confirmed this opinion was the fact that whenever she
+ walked rapidly or stooped, she was forced by the pain to throw
+ her head back, as she assured me various times during her
+ sickness. The continued suffering induced her, at last, to
+ follow the physician's advice, and consent, if necessary, to
+ the operation of trepanning. I shuddered at the very idea, and
+ made her promise to ascertain if a delay of ten days would be
+ attended with any serious consequences. Upon a negative answer
+ from the physician, I stopped all medicines and determined
+ to try the efficacy of the Miraculous Medal. This was on a
+ Saturday, and the very day observed by her as a strict fast,
+ in thanksgiving to the Blessed Virgin for having miraculously
+ cured her of a mortal typhus, after her mother had dedicated
+ her to Mary. Her confidence in Mary was great; and as I did
+ not give her the medal for some hours after promising it,
+ she told one of her friends, as I have since learned, that
+ her impatience to receive it was almost beyond bounds, and
+ assured her that she would not have hesitated between it and
+ two thousand francs had she been allowed a choice, and we
+ must remember that this girl was very poor. To display more
+ clearly the miraculous nature of the cure, God permitted her
+ sufferings to increase to such a degree that very day, that
+ notwithstanding her patience and resignation, it seemed as
+ if she really could not endure them much longer. Knowing her
+ lively faith and confidence, I deemed it unnecessary to enter
+ into a detailed account of the salutary effects of the medal;
+ I gave it to her; she immediately made with it the sign of
+ the cross upon her poor head, repeated the invocation and
+ fell asleep amidst excessive sufferings. On awaking she was
+ perfectly cured, and has never since experienced the slightest
+ symptom of the disease.
+
+ "Filled with sentiments of the deepest humility and the
+ most lively gratitude, the miraculously cured now wishes to
+ consecrate herself to God in the religious life.
+
+ "Blessed a thousand times be God and the Immaculate Mary, and
+ may we ever appreciate such boundless mercy!"
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. REGNAULT, MAYOR OF POITIERS.--1837
+
+The following account was sent us by the abbé of Chazelle:
+
+ "_Poitiers, June 12th, 1837._
+
+ "M. Regnault, mayor of Poitiers, had exercised his functions
+ since the year 1830. In some difficulties, occurring during his
+ administration, with the bishop and several of the clergy, he
+ had shown himself just and equitable. His charity to the poor
+ was well known. But far different are these moral virtues,
+ which generally receive their recompense here below, from the
+ Christian virtues so seldom rewarded, except in a better world!
+ M. Regnault never appeared at church, except when his presence
+ as mayor was necessary. A prey for some time to a grave malady,
+ he continued to exercise his functions as long as possible,
+ imposing upon himself for that purpose many sacrifices, and
+ displaying an admirable zeal; but, vanquished by the disease,
+ he was at length forced to suspend his duties, and, since the
+ 1st of last January, to resign altogether. The curé of St.
+ Hilaire, having learned the alarming state of his parishioner's
+ health, hastened to visit him, and offer the consolations of
+ his ministry, but in vain. He repeated his visits. He was
+ received into the house, but not taken to see the patient. He
+ now sent word to the latter that he was at his command, and
+ would come immediately when sent for. Meanwhile, the disease
+ made such rapid progress that there was no longer any hope of
+ recovery. Several of his friends, interested in his salvation,
+ were grieved to see him so near death without the slightest
+ preparation for it. One of them brought him a Miraculous Medal,
+ and, not being able to see him herself, she asked a woman
+ about the house to give it to him for her. The woman did so,
+ and, fearing he might reject it with contempt, she begged him
+ to receive it for the donor's sake. He took it, saying: 'It is
+ a medal of the Blessed Virgin; I accept it respectfully, God
+ is not to be trifled with.' And, putting it under his pillow,
+ he sent a kind message of thanks to the lady who had given
+ it. Some moments after, he takes it out, contemplates it, and
+ kisses it respectfully.
+
+ "Having placed his temporal affairs in order, he now expresses
+ a wish to do the same with his conscience, and requests his
+ attendants to send for the parish curé. The latter hastens to
+ the sick man's bedside. 'I have made you come in a hurry,'
+ says the patient, 'I want to have a conversation with you.'
+ After this conversation, he asks the curé to return next day,
+ as he wishes time to prepare himself for the grand action he
+ contemplates. 'The step I am about to take,' he adds, 'I do
+ with full knowledge and entire conviction.' The curé of St.
+ Hilaire, with whom, as mayor, he had just had a law-suit,
+ suggested that he make his confession to some other priest; he
+ answered that he wished no one but his pastor. Next day, the
+ curé returned, and as he addressed his penitent by the title of
+ M. the Mayor: 'Do not call me that,' said M. Regnault; 'you are
+ now my father, I am your son, I beg you to address me thus.'
+ The curé paid him frequent visits, and as the disease continued
+ to progress, he suggested administering the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction. 'I have not been confirmed,' replied the
+ pious patient, 'I ardently desire to receive Confirmation.'
+ The bishop was soon informed, and, readily forgetting all
+ subject of complaint, and thanking God for this unexpected
+ change, the venerable prelate went at once to the sick man.
+ The happy dispositions of the latter touched him deeply, and he
+ administered to him the Sacrament of Confirmation the very day
+ of his receiving Extreme Unction and the Holy Viaticum.
+
+ "It is impossible to give an idea of M. Regnault's faith
+ and truly angelic fervor during this ceremony, or the deep
+ impression made upon him at seeing Monseigneur enter his
+ chamber. It was Saturday, January 21st, the eve of Septuagesima
+ Sunday. Monseigneur addressed him in a few words full of
+ unction and charity, and to inspire him with hope, reminded
+ him of the very touching parable of the next day's Gospel, the
+ laborers in the Father's vineyard, who coming at the last hour
+ received the same recompense as those who had borne the heat
+ and burden of the day. All the assistants were deeply affected
+ at this edifying spectacle, and many were moved to tears.
+ The bishop, on leaving, charged the curé to testify again to
+ M. Regnault how great consolation he had experienced at this
+ happy change, and how much he had been edified at his piety
+ during this touching but long ceremony. 'As first magistrate
+ of the city,' he answered, with a peaceful smile, 'I ought to
+ set good example to those under my administration.' The curé
+ sought by repeated visits to sustain this new-born piety,
+ already tried most severely by the excruciating sufferings of
+ the malady, sufferings which the patient bore with calmness
+ and resignation, offering them to God in expiation of his past
+ offences. To recompense his services to the city during his
+ administration, the government bestowed upon him the cross of
+ honor. The curé could not refrain from congratulating him. 'I
+ do not know,' was the modest answer, 'I do not know what I
+ have done to merit it,' and when reminded of his services to
+ the city, 'Oh! do not speak of them,' said he, 'such things
+ might awaken self-love!' What immense progress virtue makes
+ in the soul in a very little while! It was in these happy
+ dispositions he died, the 2d of the following February, Feast
+ of the Purification. The whole city of Poitiers, we might say,
+ assisted at the funeral. The bishop, the authorities, and
+ a host of other distinguished personages came to pay their
+ tribute of gratitude and admiration to his memory, and the
+ prefect congratulated the curé of St. Hilaire on so wonderful a
+ conversion."
+
+
+MARY'S PROTECTION OF A LITTLE CHILD (PARIS).
+
+Madame Rémond, living number 70, rue Mouffetard, held at her chamber
+window, on the second story, one of her children, aged twenty-two
+months. Fainting suddenly, she fell back into the room, and the
+child was precipitated upon the pavement below. Immediate death
+might naturally have been expected as the inevitable consequence of
+such a fall; but no, wonderful to relate, the child was not injured.
+After reading the Archbishop's circular (upon the occasion of the
+consecration of the church of Notre Dame de Lorette), in which he
+recommends all the faithful to wear the Miraculous Medal, the pious
+parents had hastened to procure one and put it on their child. The
+Immaculate Mary did not fail to reward their piety. On picking the poor
+little creature up, and examining it, not even the slightest bruise was
+discovered. As the mother was a long time recovering from her swoon, it
+caused great anxiety, and several physicians were called in to see her.
+They also saw the child, and declared its escape wonderful indeed. But
+by way of precaution, they applied a few leeches to it, and a poultice
+to one knee which seemed to be the seat of some slight pain. The child
+had been eating an instant before this terrible fall, which, strange
+to say, occasioned no vomiting, and immediately after being picked up
+it took all the little delicacies offered it. Every one declared this
+occurrence a miracle, and the innocent little creature itself seemed
+to proclaim it, by kissing the medal and pressing it to its lips,
+especially when the subject was mentioned, as we ourselves witnessed
+when the father showed him to us the 25th of June, 1837.
+
+ "The mother recovered perfectly, and she never ceases to thank
+ the Immaculate Mary for the double protection she considers due
+ the medal."
+
+
+THE ARCHCONFRATERNITY OF NOTRE DAME DES VICTOIRES.
+
+Scarcely six years since the apparition of 1830, and already the
+designs of Providence were realized; the Miraculous Medal had awakened
+devotion to the Blessed Virgin, belief in the Immaculate Conception had
+penetrated all classes of society, and the innumerable favors accorded
+those who fervently recited the prayers revealed by Mary, had clearly
+proved how she prizes this first of all her privileges. But so far, her
+servants remained isolated, having no bond of union, no central point
+where they could meet; the majority of those who wore the medal as the
+livery of the spotless Virgin, knew neither the place, the mode, nor
+date of its origin.
+
+God was now about to complete the work, by giving to this devotion, an
+organization and fixed exercises which favored its development, and
+increased the efficacy of prayer, by the power of association.
+
+Towards the end of the year 1836, a man was raised up to execute the
+divine plans; this man was M. Dufriche Desgenettes, curé of Notre Dame
+des Victoires, Paris. From 1820 to 1832, in charge of St. Francis
+Xavier's Church, he numbered among the religious establishments of his
+parish, the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, where the Blessed
+Virgin had appeared. He was one of the most earnest in thanking God for
+this grace, and most eager to propagate the medal. It was his desire
+that the privileged chapel should become a pilgrim shrine, but this
+desire not being realized, he was chosen by Providence to supply the
+substitute.
+
+Let us quote his own words, relating how he was led to found the
+Archconfraternity of the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary. "There
+was in Paris, a parish scarcely known even to many of the Parisians.
+It is situated in the centre of the city, between the Palais Royal
+and the Bourse, surrounded by theatres and places of dissipation, a
+quarter swallowed up in the vortex of cupidity and industry, and the
+most abandoned to every species of criminal indulgence. Its church,
+dedicated to Notre Dame des Victoires, remained deserted even on the
+most solemn festivities.... No Sacraments were administered in this
+parish, not even to the dying.... If, by dint of novel persuasion, the
+curé obtained permission to visit a person dangerously ill, it was not
+only on condition of waiting until the patient's faculties were dimmed,
+but also on another almost insuperable condition, that of presenting
+himself in a secular habit. What benefit were such visits? They were
+merely a useless torment to the dying."[20]
+
+ [Footnote 20: Manual of the Archconfraternity, edition of 1853.
+ p. 84.]
+
+Such was the parish confided to M. Desgenettes. With the hope of
+recalling to God, even a few strayed souls, the poor curé, for four
+years, employed every means that the most active zeal could suggest,
+but in vain. Sad and grieved beyond measure, he thought of quitting
+this ungrateful post, when a supernatural communication revived his
+drooping courage.
+
+On the 3d of December, Feast of St. Francis Xavier, thoroughly
+penetrated with the inutility of his ministry in this parish, he
+was saying Mass at the Blessed Virgin's altar, now the altar of the
+Archconfraternity.... After the _Sanctus_, he distinctly heard these
+words pronounced in a very solemn manner: "Consecrate thy parish to the
+most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary." They did not strike his ears,
+but seemed to proceed from an interior voice. He immediately recovered
+peace and liberty of spirit. After finishing his thanksgiving, fearing
+to be the dupe of an illusion, he endeavored to banish the thought of
+what was apparently a supernatural communication, but the same interior
+voice resounded again in the depths of his soul. Returned to his house,
+he begins to compose the statutes of the association, with a view of
+delivering himself from an importunate idea, and scarcely does he take
+his pen in hand, ere he is fully enlightened on the subject, and the
+organization of the work costs him nothing but the manual labor of the
+writing.[21]
+
+ [Footnote 21: Manual of the Archconfraternity, p. 7.]
+
+The statutes prepared, are submitted to Mgr. de Quélen who approves
+them, and the 16th of the same month, an archiepiscopal ordinance
+erects canonically the Association of the Holy and Immaculate Heart
+of Mary for the conversion of sinners. The first meeting took place
+on Sunday, the 11th of December. In announcing it at High Mass, the
+pious pastor expected to see in the evening not more than fifty or
+sixty persons at most. Judge of his astonishment on finding assembled
+at the appointed hour, a congregation of about five hundred, a large
+proportion of whom are men! What had brought them? The majority were
+ignorant of the object of the meeting. An instruction explaining the
+motive and end of the exercises made a deep impression; the Benediction
+was chanted most fervently, and there was a notable increase of fervor
+during the Litany of the Blessed Virgin, especially at the thrice
+repeated invocation: "_Refugium peccatorum, ora pro nobis._" The cause
+was gained, Mary took possession of the parish of Notre Dame des
+Victoires.
+
+The good curé still doubted; to assure himself that the association was
+truly the work of God, he demanded a sign, the conversion of a great
+sinner, an old man on the borders of the tomb, who had several times
+refused to see him. His prayer was granted, the old man received him
+gladly, and became sincerely converted. It was not long before new
+graces showered upon his parish increased M. Desgenette's confidence,
+numberless sinners changed their lives, indifferent Christians became
+practical and fervent, the offices of the Church were attended, the
+Sacraments frequented, the apparently extinguished Faith was relighted,
+and this parish, lately so scandalous, soon became one of the most
+edifying in Paris.
+
+The Confraternity of the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary was
+not to embrace one parish only. God willed that it should extend
+throughout France, and even the entire world. M. Desgenettes, who
+understood this design, addressed himself to the Sovereign Pontiff,
+and obtained, April 24th, 1838, a brief, erecting the association into
+an Archconfraternity, with the power of affiliating to itself other
+associations of the same kind throughout the Church, and granting them
+a participation in the spiritual favors accorded it. From this day, the
+Archconfraternity developed wonderfully, and became an inexhaustible
+source of graces. The church of Notre Dame des Victoires was henceforth
+numbered among the most celebrated sanctuaries in the world. At all
+hours may the faithful be seen around its altars in the attitude of
+prayer and recollection. The re-unions which take place every Sunday
+present a touching spectacle, a dense crowd composed of persons of
+every condition, who, after fervently chanting Mary's praises, listen
+attentively to a long series of petitions received in the course of the
+week from all quarters of the globe.
+
+These present a picture of all the miseries, all the sufferings, all
+the corporal and spiritual necessities possible; to which are added
+numberless acts of thanksgiving for benefits obtained through the
+associates' prayers. These petitions are so multitudinous that they
+cannot be announced except in a general manner and by categories; they
+actually amount, each week, to the number of twenty-five or thirty
+thousand, and, for the entire year, form a total of a million and
+a half. At the time of its founder's death, the Archconfraternity
+numbered fifteen thousand affiliated confraternities in all quarters of
+the globe, and more than twenty million associates. At the beginning of
+this year, 1878, the affiliated confraternities amount to 17,472.
+
+A bulletin, issued monthly, gives an account of the progress of the
+Archconfraternity, the exercises which take place at Notre Dame des
+Victoires, the graces obtained, etc. The first nine numbers were
+published by M. Desgenettes himself, but at irregular intervals; they
+are full of interest and edification.
+
+Amidst the wonderful success of his work, the venerable pastor, far
+from seeking any of the glory, thought only of humbling himself;
+regarding his share in it as naught but that of a simple instrument, he
+confesses even his resistance to the inspirations of grace, his doubts,
+his incredulity;[22] he will not admit that he may be called the
+founder of this work of mercy; it is God who has done all, it is the
+Immaculate Heart of Mary, that has opened to poor sinners a new source
+of graces, as for himself, he was not even the originator of the idea.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Manual of the Archconfraternity, page 86.]
+
+These sentiments reveal the soul of a saint; the true servants of
+God are always humble of heart, and the good they accomplish is in
+proportion to their self-abasement.
+
+In his deep gratitude to God, the pious curé never forgot the bond
+attaching Notre Dame des Victoires to the chapel of the Daughters of
+Charity; he always loved this blessed sanctuary; it was there Mary had
+concealed the source of those vivifying waters which flowed through
+his parish; it was there this Mother of divine grace had promised
+those benedictions which the Archconfraternity reaped so abundantly.
+To preserve the remembrance of this mysterious relation, he desired
+that the medal of the association should be the Miraculous Medal.
+Henceforth, the influence of this medal became confounded with that
+of the Archconfraternity, the extraordinary graces attributed to the
+former were often due the associates' prayers, and reciprocally, for
+example, the conversion of M. Ratisbonne. In this case, as in many
+others, two equally supernatural means united to obtain the same result.
+
+It is related that M. Desgenettes, seeing the Daughters of Charity
+frequently around the altar of the most Holy Heart of Mary at Notre
+Dame des Victoires, would sometimes say to them: "My good Sisters, I
+am much pleased to see you in my dear church, but know that your own
+chapel is the true pilgrim shrine, it is there you have the Blessed
+Virgin, there she manifested herself to you."----
+
+The Miraculous Medal, as revealed to Sister Catherine, bears on the
+reverse the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first crowned with
+thorns, the second pierced by a sword. These are symbols which all
+comprehend. Are they not, at the same time, a prophetic sign?
+
+We are permitted to recognize here a foreshadowing of that devotion
+which would be rendered by the Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des
+Victoires, to the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary.
+
+We may likewise see pre-figured, that later development in our day, of
+devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a devotion born in France, and
+which the entire nation wishes to proclaim amidst pomp and grandeur,
+by the construction of a splendid monument, that from the heights of
+Montmartre, shall overlook all Paris.
+
+Thus by a mysterious gradation, the medal of the Immaculate Conception
+has conducted us to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Heart of the
+Mother has introduced us into the Heart of the Son, the adorable Heart
+of Jesus, that Heart which has so loved men, and which saves nations as
+well as individuals.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, etc._
+
+CURE WROUGHT IN SANTORIN (GREECE)--1838.
+
+
+Letter of M.N., Priest of the Mission, in Santorin:
+
+ "Mme. Marie Delenda, wife of M. Michel Chigi, son of the
+ Vice-Consul from Holland to Santorin, for seven years had
+ suffered most excruciating pains, inducing such a state of
+ nervous sensibility, that she was unable to bear the least
+ excitement. She had had several children, but they all died
+ before birth and receiving baptism. The physicians consulted,
+ declared unanimously, that her disease was incurable, and that
+ none of her children would ever come into the world alive.
+ Greatly distressed at such a sad prospect, she had recourse to
+ the Miraculous Medal, and obtained from it what medical skill
+ was unable to effect; her next child, born not long after, was
+ a fine, live, healthy one. Her husband, as pious as herself,
+ was transported with joy and gratitude. 'Behold!' said he to
+ the attendant physician, and conducting him to an image of the
+ Immaculate Mary, 'Behold our Protectrice, our Liberatrix, the
+ Mother of our child!' The physician knelt, said a prayer and
+ retired. Since then, the mother's health is good; at least she
+ has had no relapse of her former apparently incurable disease,
+ which recovery is sufficient to attest the protection of Mary
+ Immaculate. Full of gratitude, the two spouses have never
+ ceased to urge the erection of the altar and inauguration of
+ the image of Mary Immaculate, in fulfillment of their promise.
+
+ "Several other miraculous cures have also been wrought there
+ through the invocation of Mary Immaculate. I am assured of
+ this; four of them are well attested, and really marvelous.
+ The bishop, the clergy, the people of Santorin, are all ready
+ to affirm my assertions, and not one of them but would be
+ more likely to exaggerate than detract from my account. When
+ Monseigneur went to visit the Chigi family after the birth
+ of their child, he asked to see the image, and looking at
+ it, said: 'This is the second miracle wrought in Santorin by
+ the Immaculate Virgin. The first is known to me through the
+ confessional, and consequently, I cannot divulge it.'
+
+ "It was on the 28th of May, the inauguration of the image of
+ the Immaculate Conception took place. Monseigneur himself
+ officiated in the translation, after the High Mass and
+ procession terminating the Forty Hour's Devotion at the
+ cathedral. The image was placed upon an altar prepared for the
+ purpose, in the court-yard of the donor's house. From the altar
+ to the outer door, a very prettily decorated arched pathway
+ was formed by means of drapery, and upon the threshold, was a
+ triumphal arch. All the pavement, not only in the court but
+ even to our church, was covered with flowers and fragrant
+ grasses. Monseigneur, preceded by the clergy, and followed by
+ all the Catholics and a number of Greek schismatics, repaired
+ to the place where the image was exposed. Having incensed it,
+ he intoned the _Ave, Maris Stella_, and the procession began
+ to move. The clergy with the cross at their head commenced to
+ defile. Then came two young girls bearing each a banner of
+ white silk, whereon was depicted the spotless Virgin, these
+ were suspended diagonally at the entrance of the sanctuary.
+ Next, were two more young girls holding extended, the front of
+ the altar representing the reverse of the medal, and finally,
+ the image borne by the donor and one of his nearest relatives.
+ Monseigneur walked immediately after, and behind him, Mme.
+ Chigi holding her child in her arms and accompanied by her
+ sister. The people were not in the ranks of the procession,
+ but ranged along each side, that they might readily see the
+ image and kiss it as it passed, which they did with so much
+ eagerness and enthusiasm that there was considerable danger
+ of its meeting with an accident. This, however we averted
+ by many precautions, and at length reached the church. At
+ the entrance, another very beautiful triumphal arch had been
+ erected, surmounted by a large representation of the reverse
+ of the medal upon a floating banner, bearing the inscription:
+ '_Ave, Maria Immaculata_.' The church door was decorated with
+ drapery, likewise the interior of the walls, which were also
+ hung with flowers, verdant crowns and garlands. The image was
+ now placed upon a temporary throne, which had been prepared
+ until a more suitable one could be erected. Another High Mass
+ was celebrated, at the end of which the children chanted
+ alternately with the choir the '_Te Mariam laudamus_,' this
+ being the first time it was ever heard in this country. The
+ other individuals I have already mentioned as having been cured
+ through the Immaculate Mary's intercession, made each one a
+ votive offering to her image. One gave a veil, another a pretty
+ golden cross, which decorated the Blessed Virgin's bosom during
+ the ceremony; a third proposed having a silver crown made in
+ fulfillment of her vow, but she was advised to give something
+ else, since several others in unison had already promised a
+ most beautiful golden crown."
+
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ÉLISE BOURGEOIS.
+
+Letter of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity, in Troyes:
+
+ "_Troyes, March 4th, 1842._
+
+ "In 1838, we had in our work-room a young woman, named Élise
+ Bourgeois, aged eighteen years, who, after great suffering, was
+ attacked by an anchylosis in the knee. For seven months and a
+ half she suffered excruciatingly, and her malady had reached
+ the crisis. Her limb had shrunk up about two inches, and she
+ could not walk without the aid of a cane or some one's arm. On
+ the 8th of April, which was Monday in Holy Week, one of our
+ young Sisters told me that the Notice contained an account of a
+ Christian Brother, whose foot on the point of being amputated,
+ was cured by the sole application of the Miraculous Medal,
+ one night when his sufferings were greater than usual. I now
+ reproached myself for having allowed this poor child to be so
+ long afflicted, without our once thinking of having recourse
+ to Mary for her recovery; and ascending to the work-room, I
+ related to the children this account of the Christian Brother,
+ and told the young woman to arouse her faith, to put all her
+ confidence in Mary Immaculate, to apply the medal to her knee,
+ and commence a novena with her companions. All Tuesday night
+ her sufferings were great indeed, she said it seemed as if
+ all her bones were dislocated. Nor was she able to obtain a
+ moment's repose the next day. There now issued from a little
+ hole which had formed in her knee, a quantity of serous
+ matter. The day following, she arose with much difficulty,
+ and was taken to the chapel where she heard Holy Mass. At the
+ elevation, she placed her sound knee upon the bench, saying
+ most fervently to the good God: 'Since Thou art present, deign
+ to cure me, that I may be entirely Thine.' She immediately felt
+ something like the touch of a hand, which replaced the bones in
+ their natural position, and lengthened the shrunken limb; but
+ she did not yet dare rest upon it, for fear of injury. At the
+ end of Mass, she knelt to receive the priest's benediction, and
+ in spite of herself, she rested her weight upon the afflicted
+ knee. She remained in the chapel with her companions to say her
+ prayers and thank the Blessed Virgin for the great favor just
+ obtained. From that time she has never suffered the slightest
+ pain in the limb, and it appears perfectly sound.
+
+ "As soon as the children perceived that she was cured, they
+ declared it a miracle, and all hearts were filled with the
+ deepest emotion and gratitude. Élise now asked permission
+ to go to the cathedral to confession; a request I granted
+ reluctantly, although she assured me she was not suffering in
+ the slightest, yet she had not been out for seven months and
+ a-half, and I could scarcely realize her recovery. Several
+ Masses of thanksgiving were said in our chapel, during the
+ first of which we had the Blessed Sacrament exposed, and the
+ _Te Deum_ chanted. The noise of this miracle soon spread
+ throughout the city, and several persons came to see the healed
+ one. She also requested permission to go to the house of one
+ of her uncles, who had a very impious neighbor, that had been
+ informed of her miraculous recovery, but who had also been told
+ that he need not believe until he had seen Élise for himself.
+ He was perfectly convinced, acknowledged it beyond denial, and
+ said that in thanksgiving, a _Te Deum_ should be chanted in the
+ cathedral.
+
+ "I forgot to say, that our physician had seen this young woman
+ two months before her recovery and pronounced the disease
+ incurable. I had also had her examined by a surgeon, who
+ ordered much blistering, but without expecting a cure."
+
+Accompanying this letter are the signatures of seven Sisters of Charity
+and twenty-three other individuals, witnesses of the miracle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A TRAIT OF PROTECTION. (TEXAS).
+
+The following was sent us by Mgr. Odin, Vicar Apostolic of Texas, in a
+letter dated April 11th, 1841.
+
+ "I had, in the city of Nacogdoches, an opportunity of
+ witnessing how Mary Immaculate loves to grant the prayers of
+ those who put their trust in her. A Maryland lady, on leaving
+ her native State to settle in Texas, had received a Miraculous
+ Medal; her confessor, on giving it to her, exacting the
+ promise, that she would never omit the daily recitation of the
+ little prayer, 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+ have recourse to thee!' and assuring her at the same time that
+ this good Mother would never allow her to die without the last
+ consolations of religion. She faithfully complied with her
+ promise. For four years she was confined to her bed, and often,
+ it was thought, at the point of death, but her confidence in
+ Mary, always inspired her with the hope of receiving the last
+ Sacraments ere leaving this world. As soon as she heard of our
+ arrival, we were summoned to her bedside; she received the Holy
+ Viaticum and Extreme Unction, and expired a few days after,
+ filled with gratitude for her celestial Benefactress.
+
+
+CURES AND INCIDENTS OF PROTECTION. (CHINA).
+
+In a letter of July, 1838, Mgr. Rameaux, Vicar Apostolic of the
+provinces of the Kiang-Si and Tché-Kiang, in sending us the invocation
+of the medal translated into Chinese, says, that the Chinese have
+a great devotion to this little prayer, and always follow the _Ave
+Maria_ by a recitation of it. He also informed us, that Mgr. de
+Bézy, Vicar Apostolic of the Hou-Kouang, and M. Perboyre, Missionary
+Apostolic, would transmit to us several accounts of miraculous marks
+of protection. We received these accounts some months later, and quote
+them as follows:
+
+ "1st. In the province of the Hou-Kouang, a Christian had been
+ racked by a terrible fever for two months, accompanied by
+ constant delirium. Three physicians had attended him, but in
+ vain. Finding himself on the verge of death, he sent for me to
+ administer the Last Sacraments. I gave him the Holy Viaticum,
+ but deferred Extreme Unction, seeing that my duties would
+ retain me in that locality some time longer. I made him a
+ present of the medal, and advised a novena, assuring him, that
+ if it were for the benefit of his soul, he would be restored to
+ health. He began the novena; on the seventh day, the fever left
+ him, and on the eighth he had recovered his usual strength.
+ On the ninth day of the novena he came to see me, and assured
+ me that he was perfectly well. I reminded him of thanking the
+ Blessed Virgin for so great a favor, and he promised to recite
+ with his friends the Rosary in her honor. But our Christian,
+ pre-occupied with various affairs that his sickness had
+ interrupted, forgot the promise. Five days after, he had a
+ relapse. This made him conscious of his fault; he approached
+ the Sacraments again, and began another novena. Though he
+ continued to grow worse from day to day, I still had great
+ hopes that the Immaculate Mary would come to his assistance,
+ and I assured him of his recovery before the end of the novena.
+ My confidence was not deceived; he recovered entirely, to
+ the great astonishment of all the Christians. This time his
+ gratitude was effectual, and the fever did not return.
+
+ "2d. In Tien-Men, a village of the same province, the
+ Christians, numbering about two hundred, are distinguished
+ for their piety and a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin.
+ For eight years, successive inundations had reduced these
+ Christians to extreme poverty; but this year, at the first
+ sign of an overflow, they had recourse to Mary Immaculate by
+ means of the medal, and soon the waters retired without doing
+ the slightest harm to the Christian territory, whilst that of
+ the pagans was devastated. And our Christians now return most
+ grateful thanks to their good Mother for the abundant harvest
+ they have just gathered.
+
+ "3d. The following account was sent us by M. Perboyre, in
+ a letter of August 10th, 1839. The reader will learn, with
+ interest, that this is the same missionary who, arrested a
+ month after for his religion, so generously confessed the Faith
+ one whole year amidst the most frightful tortures, and at last
+ consummated the sacrifice by his glorious martyrdom, September
+ 11th, 1840.
+
+ "Whilst I was giving a mission to the Christians of the Honan
+ province, November, 1837, they brought to me a young woman
+ who had been afflicted with mental aberration for about eight
+ months, telling me she was very anxious to confess, and, though
+ she was incapable of the Sacrament, they begged me not to
+ refuse her a consolation she appeared to desire so earnestly.
+ Her sad condition of mind precluded all idea of her deriving
+ any benefit from the exercise of my ministry, but I heard her
+ out of pure compassion. In taking leave of her, I placed her
+ under the especial protection of the Blessed Virgin--that is,
+ I gave her a medal of the Immaculate Conception. She did not
+ then understand the value of the holy remedy she received;
+ but, from that moment, she began to experience its beneficial
+ effects, her shattered intellect improving so rapidly that,
+ at the end of four or five days, she was entirely changed. To
+ a complete confusion of ideas, to fears that kept her ever in
+ mortal agony, and which, I believe, were the work of the demon,
+ succeeded good sense, peace of mind and happiness. She made her
+ confession again, and received Holy Communion, with the most
+ lively sentiments of joy and fervor. This especial instance
+ of Mary's generosity will doubtless surprise you little, you
+ who know so well that the earth is filled with her mercy; but
+ your hearts will be excited anew to fervent thanksgiving for
+ this particular favor, which is the principal reason of my
+ acquainting you with it."
+
+_1st. Letter from a Missionary of Macao, dated August 25th, 1841:_
+
+ "A widow who had but one son, reared like herself in paganism,
+ saw him suddenly fall under the power of the demon; his
+ paroxysms were so furious that all fled before him, and he ran
+ through the fields uttering the most lamentable cries. Anyone
+ that attempted to stop him was immediately seized and thrown to
+ the ground. His poor mother was in despair, and almost dying
+ of grief, when Divine Providence deigned to cast upon her a
+ look of compassion. One day when he was unusually tormented,
+ the young man fled hither and thither like a vagabond, not
+ knowing where he went; everyone tried to stop him, but he
+ brutally repulsed all who lay hands on him. The most merciful
+ God permitted a Christian to be among the number of those
+ who witnessed this spectacle. Animated with a lively faith,
+ and touched at the unfortunate creature's sufferings, the
+ Christian told all who were pursuing the demoniac to desist,
+ that he unaided could arrest him, that he would quiet him, and
+ restore him docile and gentle to his mother. This language
+ astonished the pagans, but they did as requested, although
+ thinking the Christian ran a great risk. Our good Christian
+ wore the Miraculous Medal of the Immaculate Mary; taking it
+ in his hands he approached the possessed, and showing it to
+ him he commanded the demon to flee and leave the young man in
+ peace. The demon obeyed instantly, and the young man seeing
+ the medal in the Christian's hands, humbly prostrated himself
+ before the miraculous image, without knowing what it was. The
+ pagans, watching from a distance, were greatly astonished.
+ The Christian now commanded the young man to rise and follow
+ him, and still holding in his hand the medal, which was as a
+ magnet attracting the young pagan, he thus conducted him to
+ his mother. 'Mother,' he exclaimed, to her great consolation,
+ as soon as he saw her, 'Do not weep any more, I am freed from
+ the demon; he left me as soon as he perceived this medal.'
+ Imagine the poor mother's joy, on hearing these words! She was
+ perplexed to know whether it was a dream or a reality! The
+ Christian reassured her, and recounted all that had passed,
+ adding, that her son would never be possessed again, if she
+ renounced her idols and became a Christian. She promised
+ sincerely, and they immediately began to divest their altar
+ of its false gods. Then the Christian, feeling assured they
+ would be faithful when instructed in the truths of religion,
+ withdrew, laden with the thanks of both mother and son for the
+ inestimable service he had just rendered them."
+
+_2d. Extract of a Letter from M. Faivre, Priest of the Mission in the
+Province of Nankin, May 6th, 1841:_
+
+ "The two great means God uses for the accomplishment of good
+ in this Mission are our Lord's cross and the Immaculate
+ Mary's protection. As to the most powerful protection of Mary
+ conceived without sin, we have experienced it so often, and in
+ so especial a manner, both as regards ourselves and the welfare
+ of the Mission, that it would be tedious to recount in detail,
+ even if I wished to do so, all the favors we have received at
+ her maternal hands.
+
+ "Seeing the Blessed Virgin's clemency towards us and our
+ Christians, we have done all we could to honor her and advance
+ her honor among the Christians, by seeking to inspire them
+ with the most lively confidence in this good, holy Mother.
+ On the Feast of the Assumption, 1839, we consecrated this
+ Mission to her, and ever since it has been called Mary's
+ Diocese. We have given as a rule to our virgins especial
+ devotion to the Immaculate Conception. We have established Mary
+ Immaculate patroness of the seminary Providence has created
+ in this Mission. (This seminary now numbers six scholars who
+ lead lives of regularity and edification, and make rapid
+ progress in the study of Latin.) One of our virgins, already
+ advanced in age, had been for several years confined to her
+ bed, without the slightest hope of recovery, the thirteen
+ physicians who had been successively consulted having declared
+ her malady incurable. Seeing her end approach, she asked for
+ the missionary, that she might receive the Last Sacraments. He
+ came, and administered the Sacraments of the dying, exhorting
+ her to accept death in a spirit of conformity to the will of
+ God. She replied that she was fully resigned to His holy will,
+ and had no hope of deriving any benefit from human means, but
+ she felt convinced that if she could get a Miraculous Medal,
+ her health would be restored. The missionary, seeing so much
+ faith and confidence, gave her the one he wore, having no other
+ convenient just then, and recommended her to make a novena in
+ honor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin. All
+ the family joined her in making the novena, and from the fifth
+ day she was entirely cured. The attending physician, who was a
+ pagan, coming to see her at the end of the novena, was utterly
+ surprised to find her so well, and he eagerly inquired what
+ extraordinary remedy had been employed to effect such a change.
+ She replied that she had used no remedies, but the Lord of
+ Heaven had restored her health. The physician returned, filled
+ with veneration for the Lord of Heaven, who had displayed such
+ great power; and the virgin, in expression of her gratitude to
+ the Immaculate Mary, her august Benefactress, donated three
+ hundred piastres to repair a chapel dedicated to Mary."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. RATISBONNE, AN ISRAELITE.
+
+ _Rome, 1842._
+
+M. Alphonse Ratisbonne belonged to a Jewish family of Strasburg,
+distinguished in the world as much for its social position as the
+universal esteem in which it was held; he himself was a member of
+a society for the encouragement of labor, contributing thus to the
+benefit of his unfortunate brethren. Towards the end of the year 1841,
+he became affianced to a young Jewess, who united in her person all
+those qualities calculated to assure his happiness. Before entering
+upon this new state of life, he decided to take a pleasure trip to the
+East, visiting on the way some of the most remarkable cities of Italy.
+There was nothing, he thought, interesting to him in the Eternal City,
+so from Naples he would direct his course to Palermo; but Divine mercy
+called him, though he did not recognize the voice; he is constrained,
+as it were, by a secret design of Heaven, to change his determination,
+and visit Rome. It was in this centre of Catholic unity that the God
+of all patience and goodness awaited him, it was here that grace was
+to touch his heart. But what were his dispositions? Thou, O Lord,
+knowest them!... His hatred of Catholicity was very far from suggesting
+a thought of his ever embracing it. He felt for our holy and sublime
+religion that violent animosity which could not contain itself, which
+chafed at anything reminding him of Christianity, and which had even
+grown more rancorous since his brother M. Theodore Ratisbonne's
+abjuration of Judaism and reception of Holy Orders. He could not
+pardon this desertion, and his implacable hatred increased with time.
+But the innocent object of his aversion never ceased to supplicate
+Heaven to shed a ray of divine light upon the deluded brother, who
+loaded him with indignation and contempt. Made sub-Director of the
+Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des Victoires, he often implored the
+associates' prayers for this brother's conversion.
+
+Such were M. Ratisbonne's sentiments when he entered Rome. He had
+scarcely arrived ere he thought of leaving; everything he saw in the
+Holy City urged him to hasten from it, everything excited him to
+declaim against what shocked and vilified his belief.... He was not
+proof, however, against a species of emotion in visiting the church
+of Ara Coeli; but it was an emotion which lost all its influence,
+(if influence it could be said to have exerted upon this heart buried
+in the shades of death,) when he understood that it was the general
+effect produced by the first sight of this remarkable monument. So, far
+from giving way to it, he hastened, on the contrary, to affirm that
+it was not a Catholic emotion, but an impression purely religious. In
+traversing the Ghetto, his hatred against Christianity was still more
+inflamed at witnessing the misery and degradation of the Jews; as if
+the chastisement of that deicidal people had been inflicted by the
+children of the Church, as if this people had not called down upon
+itself the vengeance of innocent blood!
+
+Before leaving Rome, M. Ratisbonne was to visit one of his childhood's
+friends, an old schoolmate with whom he had always kept up an intimacy,
+although their religious belief was so widely at variance. This friend
+was M. Gustave de Bussière, a zealous Protestant, who several times had
+endeavored to profit by their intimacy, by persuading M. Ratisbonne
+to embrace Protestantism, but the latter was immovable, and the two
+friends, after useless discussions, usually ended by a renewal of
+their faith in two words, expressing most emphatically how invincible
+each deemed himself. "Headstrong Jew!" said one; "Enraged Protestant!"
+replied the other. Such was the result of these conversations, which
+never succeeded in shaking the opinion of either, or dissipating any
+of their deplorable errors. This opposition of principles, however,
+did not estrange their friendship. M. Ratisbonne called to see M.
+De Bussière, and was admitted by an Italian servant. He inquired
+for M. Gustave de Bussière, but this gentleman was absent, and by a
+providential mistake the servant introduced him into the salon of M.
+Theodore Bussière, Gustave's brother, whom M. Ratisbonne had seen but
+once. It was too late to withdraw, and though somewhat disconcerted
+at the mistake, he stopped to exchange a few words of courtesy with
+his friend's brother. M. De Bussière had had the happiness of abjuring
+Protestantism, and he was a zealous advocate of the Faith he had
+so lately learned to prize. He knew that M. Ratisbonne was a Jew;
+he received him with affectionate eagerness, and the conversation
+naturally turning upon the various places of interest in Rome visited
+by the young French traveler, it soon drifted into a religious
+discussion. M. Ratisbonne did not disguise his real sentiments, he
+expressed his animosity against Catholicity, his inalterable attachment
+to Judaism and to the baron De Bussière's solid arguments, his only
+replies were the frigid politeness of silence, a smile of pity, or new
+protestations of fidelity to his sect, repeating that a Jew he was born
+and a Jew he would die!
+
+It was then that M. De Bussière, not the least discouraged by M.
+Ratisbonne's emphatic language, and impelled by a secret impulse
+of grace, thought of offering him the Miraculous Medal. Doubtless
+this idea appears rash to many, and many would have banished it as a
+veritable folly, but the simplicity of faith teaches us to discern
+things by a very different light from that in which they are revealed
+to the world. Filled with this holy fearlessness of the Saints, M. De
+Bussière presents the young Jew a medal of the Immaculate Conception.
+"Promise me," said he, "to always wear this little image, I beg you not
+to refuse me." M. Ratisbonne, unable to conceal his astonishment at
+so strange a proposition, rejects it instantly with an expression of
+indignation that would have disconcerted any other than his new friend.
+"But," continues our fervent Catholic undismayed, "I cannot understand
+the cause of such a refusal, for, according to your view of things, the
+wearing of this object must be to you a matter of total indifference,
+whilst it would be a real consolation to me if you would condescend to
+my request." "Ah! I will comply, then, if you attach so much importance
+to it," replied the other with a hearty laugh; "I should not be sorry,
+moreover, to have an opportunity of convincing you that Jews are not
+so headstrong as they are represented. Besides, it will give me an
+interesting chapter to add to my notes and impressions of travel." And
+he continued to jest on the subject in a manner rather painful to the
+Christian hearts around him.
+
+During this debate, the good father of the family had told his two
+little daughters (interesting children, whom an eminently religious
+education had already imbued with sentiments of piety), to put the
+precious medal on a cord. They did so, and gave it to their father,
+who hung it around the young Israelite's neck. Encouraged by this
+first success, he wishes to go still farther. He attempts nothing less
+than binding M. Ratisbonne himself to ask the favor and protection of
+Mary, of Mary whom he despises without knowing, Mary whose image he
+receives most reluctantly! M. De Bussière presents him a paper upon
+which is written St. Bernard's powerful invocation, the _Memorare_....
+This time, the Jew can still less dissimulate his displeasure, it seems
+tried to the utmost; but the baron feels himself actuated by a secret
+impulse, that urges him to persevere in his solicitations, and conquer.
+He repeats his request, and even goes so far when he presents the
+prayer as to beg M. Ratisbonne to take a copy of it for him, as he has
+but one. M. Ratisbonne, convinced that resistance is useless, rather
+than repeat his refusal prefers acceding to the request, and thus
+ridding himself of such vexatious importunity. "Agreed," said he, "that
+you take my copy and I keep yours." And, hastening to this indiscreet
+zealot, he retired, murmuring to himself: "I really wonder what he
+would say if I were to insist upon his reciting the Jewish prayers?
+I must admit that I have, indeed, met a striking original!" It was
+thus he left this house of benediction and salvation, ignorant of the
+treasure he bore with him, the key of Heaven that had been given him;
+the image of the Mother of holy hope he wore upon his heart, and whose
+blessed effects he would so soon experience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. De Bussière, deeply grieved at the young Jew's levity, united with
+his family in conjuring the God of mercy to pardon the words of one who
+knew not what he said; and he recommended his dear children to lift
+up their hands to the Refuge of Sinners, supplicating her to obtain
+the gift of Faith for this poor soul in the shades of darkness and
+error!... O Mary! your tender love graciously welcomed these prayers of
+the innocent, they penetrated your maternal heart, and soon obtained
+the object of their desires. The zeal of this devout servant of the
+Queen of Heaven was not confined within the narrow limits of his own
+family circle.... Going, that evening, according to a pious custom in
+Rome, to keep watch before the Blessed Sacrament with the prince B.
+and some other friends, he also engaged their prayers for the young
+Israelite's conversion.... Let us follow attentively all the details
+preceding the ever memorable day which was to crown M. De Bussière's
+pious efforts. Let us not forget that a generous Christian, elevated by
+a lively faith above the vain prejudices of the world, and docile to
+the secret inspirations of grace, becomes the instrument of Providence
+in procuring God's glory and the salvation of a soul.
+
+Meanwhile, M. Ratisbonne was making arrangements to leave Rome; he
+had already fixed upon the day of his departure, and had come to say
+good-bye to his friend and acquaint him with his intention of starting
+the next evening. "Going!" replied M. De Bussière; "do not think of
+it. I want you to grant me just eight days longer; our conversation of
+yesterday occupies my thoughts more than ever; let me entreat you to
+prolong your stay, and let us go to the diligence office to countermand
+your order." It was in vain. M. Ratisbonne declined, saying he had
+already decided to go, and had no motive for deferring his departure.
+Under the pretext of a very imposing ceremony which was to take place
+at St. Peter's, M. De Bussière forced, rather than persuaded him to
+remain a few days longer.
+
+We shall not here enter into a detailed account of what passed
+between them from the moment M. De Bussière's constancy gained the
+last triumph--that is, from the 16th of January to the 20th--inasmuch
+as there was not the slightest sign of the happy change, either in
+the language or conduct of M. Ratisbonne, towards the new friend
+divine Providence had given him, in spite of himself. He could not,
+however, avoid receiving this new friend's civilities, or refuse to
+be accompanied by him in visiting the various places of note in the
+Eternal City. M. De Bussière, full of hope against all human hope,
+allowed no opportunity to escape of enlightening his young friend; but
+not one consoling response could he obtain, M. Ratisbonne, by jest and
+raillery, always avoiding the arguments he would not take the trouble
+to refute, always ridiculing Catholicity, and thus afflicting the heart
+of the servant of Jesus Christ by responding coldly to the assiduity of
+his zeal, the serious nature of his propositions. "Make your mind easy;
+I will think of all this, but not at Rome. I am to spend two months
+at Malta; it will serve to while away the time." He was astonished at
+the imperturbable tranquillity with which M. De Bussière persevered in
+trying to convince him; he could not understand that union of serenity
+(which religion alone inspires) with that ardent desire (that he
+doubtless attributed to obstinacy) of leading him to a new belief, for
+which, according to his own words, he felt more aversion than ever. To
+him this tranquillity appeared incomprehensible. M. De Bussière did
+not hesitate to express his belief in the triumph of his cause; for
+instance, in passing the _Scala Sancta_ with the young Israelite, as
+he pointed it out he bared his head respectfully and said aloud, as
+if in a voice of prophecy, "Hail, holy staircase! here is a man who
+one day will ascend your steps on his knees." This was on the 19th.
+M. Ratisbonne's only response was a disconcerting peal of laughter,
+and the two friends separated again, without the slightest religious
+impression having been made upon the Israelite, although, unknown to
+human ken, he was on the eve of the brightest day of his life.
+
+During this short interval, M. De Bussière tasted the bitterness of
+losing one of his dearest friends. M. De La Ferronays died suddenly on
+the evening of the 17th, leaving to his family and all who knew him
+the sweet hope that he had bid adieu to this perishable life only to
+enter upon the joys of a blissful immortal one. Doubtless this event
+contributed to the young Israelite's speedy conversion, for whilst on
+earth M. De La Ferronays had prayed for him, and we have every reason
+to believe that he soon became his advocate in heaven. M. De Bussière
+had informed this dear friend of his hopes and the means employed for
+gaining the young Israelite to Jesus Christ, and he had received the
+consoling answer: "Do not be uneasy; if you have succeeded in making
+him say the _Memorare_, he is yours." ... Such was the admirable
+confidence of this fervent Christian in the powerful protection of the
+most compassionate Virgin Mary!
+
+Yet notwithstanding the bitterness of the sacrifice Heaven had just
+demanded of the Baron De Bussière, he found it hard to part from this
+young man whom he longed to conquer to the Faith, and the resignation
+of his grief was a new prayer attracting the Divine mercy. Immediately
+after leaving him on the 19th, he went to prostrate himself beside the
+remains of his virtuous friend, begging that friend's assistance from
+the heights of heaven in obtaining what had been already recommended to
+his prayers on earth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thursday, 20th.--M. Ratisbonne's dispositions are not changed in the
+least; he never raises his thoughts above terrestrial things, the
+religious discussions of the preceding days have not even fixed his
+attention, or apparently not excited in his soul the slightest anxiety.
+As to his false belief, he never dreams of taking one step towards a
+knowledge of the truth; M. De Bussière is not with him to continue the
+conversation on religion, and he dismisses the subject from his mind.
+Leaving the café, he meets one of his fellow-boarders; they discourse
+of balls and other frivolous amusements in such a way as to convince
+one that he was surely not engrossed with anything serious. It was then
+noon, and two hours later the young Jew had seen the light, two hours
+later he eagerly desired the grace of holy baptism, two hours later he
+believed in the Church!... Who is like to Thee, O my God? Who can thus,
+in an instant, triumph over human reason, and force it to render homage
+to Thy sovereign truth?... Ah! it is Thyself, Thyself alone, Lord, it
+is the prerogative of Thy mercy to work such prodigies! Let us return
+to our Israelite.
+
+It is one o'clock; M. De Bussière must repair to the church of
+St. Andrew delle Fratte to make some arrangements for the funeral
+ceremonies of M. De La Ferronays, which take place on the morrow. He
+sets out, and on the way happily meets M. Ratisbonne, who joins him,
+with the intention of taking one of their usual walks, when M. De
+Bussière had fulfilled the imperative duty that required his immediate
+attention.... But the moment of grace has come. They enter the church,
+where various decorations already announce the morrow's ceremonies;
+the Israelite inquires the meaning of them, and M. De Bussière, having
+replied that they were for the funeral obsequies of M. De La Ferronays,
+the intimate friend he had just lost, begs him to wait there an
+instant, whilst he goes into the house to execute a commission with
+one of the monks. M. Ratisbonne then glances coolly around the church,
+seeming to say by his air of indifference, that it is not worth his
+attention. We must remark that he was then at the epistle side of
+the altar. M. De Bussière returns after an absence of about twelve
+minutes, and is surprised at not seeing his young companion. Could he
+have grown weary of waiting in a place that inspired only repugnance
+and disgust?... He knew not, and sought M. Ratisbonne. What was his
+astonishment at finding him on the left hand side of the church,
+kneeling, and apparently wrapt in devotion!... He could scarcely
+believe his eyes, and yet it was no mistake.... It was in the chapel
+of the archangel St. Michael that the prince of darkness had just been
+crushed.... A great victory already rejoiced all Heaven.... The young
+Jew was vanquished.
+
+M. De Bussière approaches, but he is not heard; he touches his
+friend, but he cannot distract him; he touches him again, but still
+no response; he repeats it a third or fourth time, and at last M.
+Ratisbonne turns to answer, and his tearful countenance, his utter
+inability to express what has passed, his hands clasped most fervently,
+partly reveal the heavenly secret. "Oh! how M. De La Ferronays has
+prayed for me!" he exclaims. This is all he says. Never did M. De
+Bussière enjoy a more consoling surprise. The bandage of error blinding
+the young Israelite had fallen, and M. De Bussière's heart was filled
+with the most lively gratitude to God.... He raises his young friend,
+who was completely overcome by this celestial visitation; he takes
+him and almost carries him out of the church.... He is all eagerness
+to know the details.... He asks M. Ratisbonne to reveal the mystery,
+and begs him to say where he wishes to go. "Lead me," replies the new
+Paul, completely vanquished, "lead me where you will.... After what
+I have seen, I obey." ... And not being able to say more, he draws
+forth the unknown treasure he had been wearing upon his heart for four
+days. He takes the dear medal in his hands, he covers it with kisses,
+he waters it abundantly with tears of joy, and amidst his sobs escape
+a few words expressive of his happiness, but which a profound emotion
+almost prevents his articulating. "How good is God! What a plentitude
+of gifts! What joy unknown! Ah! how happy I am, and how much to be
+pitied are they who do not believe!" And continuing to shed torrents
+of tears over the miseries of those whom Faith has never enlightened,
+he already feels the holy desire of seeing the kingdom of Jesus Christ
+extended throughout the world. He can scarcely himself understand such
+a transformation, and amidst the various feelings surging through his
+heart, he interrupts his tears, his exclamations and his silence, to
+ask M. De Bussière if he does not think him crazy.... Then answering
+his own question, "No," he continues: "I am not crazy.... I know well
+what I think and what passes within me.... I know that I am in my right
+mind.... Moreover, everybody knows that I am not crazy!" By degrees,
+these first transports of emotion give place to a more composed frame
+of mind; he can at last express his new desires, his new belief, and
+he asks to be conducted to the feet of a priest, for he craves the
+grace of holy baptism.... Already favored with the most lively Faith,
+he aspires after the happiness of confessing his Divine Master in the
+midst of torments and recalling the sufferings of the martyrs he had
+seen represented upon the walls of St. Étienne le Rond; he wishes to
+shed his blood in attestation of his Faith as a disciple of Jesus
+Christ.... Meanwhile, he has told M. De Bussière nothing of the sudden
+blow that vanquished him, and he refuses to tell except in the presence
+of God's minister; "for what he saw he ought not, he could not reveal
+except on his knees."
+
+Father De Villefort, of the Society of Jesus, is chosen to receive
+the neophyte and hear this consoling secret, which will reveal the
+excess of Divine mercy towards the soul of the young Israelite. M. De
+Bussière himself conducts him to the Reverend Father, who welcomes him
+tenderly.... Then, in the presence of M. De Bussière, M. Ratisbonne
+takes in his hand the medal, the dear pledge of the Immaculate Mary's
+protection, and again covers it with respectful kisses, mingled with a
+shower of tears. He endeavors to overcome his emotion, and exclaims in
+a transport of joy: "I have seen her! I have seen her!" Conquering his
+feelings, he continues his narration, interrupted from time to time by
+the sighs of an overburdened heart.
+
+ "I had been in the church but an instant, when suddenly I was
+ seized with an inexplicable fear. I raised my eyes, the whole
+ edifice had disappeared from my view, one chapel alone had,
+ as it were, concentrated all the light, and in the midst
+ of this effulgence there appeared standing upon the altar the
+ Virgin Mary, grand, brilliant, full of majesty and sweetness,
+ such as she is represented upon the medal--an irresistible
+ force impelled me to her. The Virgin made me a sign with her
+ hand to kneel, and she seemed to say: 'It is well.' She did not
+ speak to me, but I understood all."
+
+[Illustration: _APPARITION OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL_
+
+_To M. Ratisbonne, January 20, 1842, in the Church of St. Andrew,
+delle Fratte, in Rome. "She did not speak one word to me," said M.
+Ratisbonne, "but I understood it all._"]
+
+He ceased, but this short account eloquently revealed the abundant
+favors with which his soul had just been inundated. Reverend Father De
+Villefort and the pious baron listened with a holy joy, mingled with an
+involuntary feeling of religious awe, at thoughts of the infinite power
+which had just triumphed by such a striking manifestation of mercy....
+The mystery was revealed, but M. Ratisbonne, now the disciple of the
+most humble of Masters, a God annihilated, expressed a wish to have the
+wonderful vision kept a profound secret; he even earnestly entreated
+that it should be, but Father De Villefort considered it wiser not
+to yield to the neophyte's modesty, God's glory, the Immaculate
+Mary's honor, demanding that such a miracle should be proclaimed. M.
+Ratisbonne's humility gave way to obedience. In the brief narration
+just quoted, one thing especially had struck the Reverend Father,
+"She did not speak to me, but I understood all!" What, then, had he
+understood, he who, having hitherto lived in the shades of darkness,
+found himself in an instant instructed in heavenly knowledge? What,
+then, had he understood, he who was suddenly recalled from the bosom of
+death which he loved, to a new life which but a short time previous he
+had solemnly declared he would ever ignore, 'a Jew he was born and a
+Jew he would die?' What had he understood, he the young Jew, so lately
+headstrong in his belief, an avowed enemy of Catholicity, but who now
+humbly prostrates himself at the feet of our Lord's minister to retract
+his words and renounce his own will, for he declares that, after what
+he has seen, he obeys?... What has he understood? What has he seen? He
+has seen the Mother of divine grace, the bright aurora of the Sun of
+Justice; he has understood the gift of God, the eternal truth ... the
+unity of the Church, its infallibility, the sanctity of its morals, the
+sublimity of its mysteries, the grandeur and elevation of its hopes....
+He has understood Heaven, and henceforth everything is changed for
+him, everything is renewed within him, he is no longer the same. His
+desires, projects, thoughts, earthly affections, where are they in the
+brilliancy of this celestial radiance? Vain prejudices of error, where
+are they?... The Immaculate Mother of Jesus has rent asunder the band
+that veiled the young Israelite's eyes, and the shades of error are
+dissipated, the blind man sees the light, and his joy is inexpressible,
+for he knew not till then the true gifts, the blessings promised the
+children of the true Church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Ratisbonne had heretofore been completely ignorant of the truths
+of Catholicity, he acknowledges that he had never read even one book
+calculated to enlighten him on the subject, his hatred of Christianity
+kept him aloof from all that might change his views in regard to it.
+He blasphemed without examining the object of his blasphemy, he judged
+without hearing, he despised without investigating.... And behold!
+in spite of himself, in an instant, in defiance of all his past
+protestations, he bends, he falls, he is conquered!
+
+Rejoice, O Mary! for the dew of grace has not descended upon an
+ungrateful soil.... No; not in vain at your mysterious school has he
+learned all this privileged soul of your love, this heart that your
+incomparable beauty, your ineffable bounty have vanquished for Jesus
+Christ!
+
+We see, indeed, that, from the moment his eyes are opened to the
+light, he adores the mysteries he formerly despised, loves what he
+hated, venerates what he ridiculed, and proves himself as humble
+and submissive to the Church as the most fervent Christian. That
+very day, he goes to the basilica of St. Mary Major, in tribute of
+gratitude to her who had just descended from Heaven, to bring him the
+gift of Faith, and its attendant blessings; thence he repairs to St.
+Peter's, to declare in that sanctuary dedicated to the Prince of the
+Apostles, his belief in the truths that Peter taught. M. De Bussière,
+who found a pious delight in offering to God this conquest of grace,
+accompanied him on his holy pilgrimage, and conversed intimately with
+him, they had but one heart and one soul. A new Paul, Ratisbonne, in
+what he experienced, at the moment the Blessed Virgin gently forced
+him to prostrate himself at her feet, to receive the light of Heaven,
+recognized the strength of Him who vanquished His persecutors.... The
+profound emotion, the holy awe that filled the neophyte on entering
+a church, declared more fully the secrets that had been revealed to
+him.... Penetrated with the liveliest faith for the great Sacrament
+of love, he could not approach the altar, he was overwhelmed at the
+thought of the Real Presence of the God who resides in the Most
+Holy Sacrament. He considered himself unworthy to appear in this
+august Presence, as he was yet stained with original sin, and M. De
+Bussière relates, that he took refuge in a chapel, consecrated to the
+Blessed Virgin, exclaiming: "I have no fears here, for I feel myself
+under the protection of a boundless mercy." O Mary! you opened your
+maternal heart, and there he concealed himself, knowing that divine
+justice yields to mercy, when the guilty soul has found and invoked
+with confidence the Refuge of Sinners.... So great was the fervent
+neophyte's happiness when in the temple of the Lord, that he was unable
+to find words expressive of his happiness. "Ah!" said he in a holy
+transport, "how delightful it is to be here! How great reason have
+Catholics to love their churches and to frequent them! How zealous
+they should be in ornamenting them! How sweet to spend a lifetime in
+these holy places! They are truly not of earth but of Heaven!" Ah! are
+we not confounded and abashed by the fervor of him who has just been
+born into the truth! What would he think of the coldness, the levity,
+the ingratitude of the majority of Christians?... Let us acknowledge
+it to our confusion; there is a Host who dwells in our midst, and
+whom we know not; we who eat at His table, who feed upon His own
+flesh, the Bread descended from Heaven, and behold! a young Israelite,
+instructed but a few hours in the wonders of God's love, teaches us how
+we must conduct ourselves in the presence of this Host, and with what
+sentiments our hearts should then be filled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next day, the news of this wonderful conversion had spread through
+Rome; every one was anxious to learn something about it, and collected
+with pious curiosity the various statements in circulation; every one
+wished to see the newly converted and hear his account.... General
+Chlabonski even went to M. De Bussière's house. "So you have seen the
+image of the Blessed Virgin," said he, accosting the neophyte. "The
+image?" answered the latter, "ah! it was no image, but herself I saw;
+yes, M. her real self, just as I see you now!" We must here remark that
+to the Church alone, appertains the power of judging and qualifying
+this vision; but every one was impressed with the fact, that mistake
+or illusion seemed impossible, considering the young Israelite's
+character, education, prejudices and horror for Christianity; moreover,
+in this chapel there was neither statue, picture nor any representation
+whatever of the Blessed Virgin. And we love to quote here the words of
+a wise man, who, referring to the event, says, "that without one grain
+of exaggeration, just as it happened, just as all Rome narrates it, the
+unexpected fact, the public fact of this conversion, considering all
+the circumstances, would of itself be a miracle, if a miracle had not
+caused it."
+
+M. Ratisbonne reluctantly gave the details of what he had seen. When
+questioned closely as to what took place at the moment he found himself
+environed by this celestial effulgence, he answers ingenuously that he
+could not account for the involuntary impulse causing him to leave the
+right hand side of the church for the chapel on the left, especially
+as he was separated from it by the preparations for the morrow's
+ceremonies; that, when the Queen of Heaven appeared before him in all
+the glory and brilliancy of her immaculate purity, he caught a glimpse
+of her incomparable beauty, but immediately realized the impossibility
+of contemplating it, that urged by the desire, three times had he
+endeavored to lift his eyes to the face of this Mother of mercy, whose
+sweet clemency had deigned to manifest herself to him, and three times,
+in spite of himself, had his gaze been stayed at sight of the blessed
+hands, whence escaped a torrent of graces. "I could not," he told us
+himself after his arrival, "I could not express what I saw of mercy and
+liberality in Mary's hands. It was not only an effulgence of light,
+it was not rays I distinguished, words are inadequate to depict the
+ineffable gifts filling our Mother's hands, and descending from them,
+the bounty, mercy, tenderness, the celestial sweetness and riches,
+flowing in torrents and inundating the souls she protects."
+
+In the first moments of his conversion, M. Ratisbonne gave vent to some
+of those thoughts which strongly pre-occupied him, those outpourings
+of a fervent heart which happily, are still preserved. "O my God!"
+he exclaimed in a transport of astonishment and gratitude, "I, who
+only half an hour before was blaspheming! I, who felt such violent
+hatred against the Catholic religion!... Every one of my acquaintances
+knew full well, that to all human appearances, it was impossible for
+me ever to think of changing my religion. My family was Jewish, my
+betrothed, my uncle were Jewish. In embracing Christianity, I know that
+I break away from all earthly hopes and interests.... And yet I do
+it willingly; I renounce the passing happiness of a future which was
+promised me; I do so without hesitation, I act from conviction; ...
+for I am not crazy, and have never been; they well know it.... Who,
+then, could refuse to believe me, and believe in the truth?... The most
+powerful interests enchained me to my religion, and consequently all
+should be convinced that a man who sacrifices everything to a profound
+conviction must sacrifice to a celestial light, which has revealed
+itself by incontrovertible evidence. What I have affirmed is true. I
+know it, I feel it; and what could be my object in thus betraying the
+truth and turning aside from religion by a sacrilegious lie?... I have
+not said too much; my words must carry conviction."
+
+The Baron De Bussière had the consolation of entertaining at his own
+home the new son Heaven had given him; the young Jew remained there
+until the retreat preceding his baptism. It was right and just,
+indeed, that this friend should gather the first bloom of a heart
+refreshed by the dew of grace, that he should be the happy witness of
+the wonders wrought in that soul.... M. Ratisbonne himself had need
+of a confidant, some one that understood him thoroughly, and to whom
+he could communicate the emotions of his heart.... It was in moments
+of sweet intimacy, when alone with his friend, that he could give
+full vent to his feelings, and, in unison with him, admire the loving
+designs of divine Providence, and the means that had dissipated such
+deplorable errors. He bewailed the blindness in which he had lived!...
+"Alas!" said he, "when my excellent brother embraced Catholicity,
+and afterwards entered into the ecclesiastical state, I, of all his
+relatives, was his most unrelenting persecutor.... I could not forgive
+his desertion of our religion--we were at variance, at least; I
+detested him, though he had none but the kindest thoughts for me....
+However, at the time of my betrothal, I said to myself that I must be
+reconciled to my brother, and I wrote him a few cold lines, to which
+he replied by a letter full of charity and tenderness.... One of my
+little nephews died about eighteen months ago. My good brother, having
+learned that he was seriously ill, asked as a personal favor that the
+child be baptized before its death, adding, with great delicacy, that
+to us it would be a matter of indifference, whilst to himself it would
+be a veritable happiness, and he hoped we would not refuse. I was
+infuriated at such a request!
+
+"I hope, oh! yes, I hope that my God will send me severe trials, which
+may redound to His honor and glory, and convince all that I am actuated
+by conscience...." What generosity of heart! What knowledge! His eyes
+are scarcely opened to the truths of Catholicity, ere he embraces
+them in their full extent.... He knows already that the cross is the
+distinctive mark of the children of the Church, of God's elect, and
+this cross which so many Christians drag reluctantly after them, he
+greets, he awaits, he desires.... Moreover, it had been shown to him in
+a very mysterious manner; for he relates that the night preceding his
+conversion there was constantly before his eyes a large cross without
+the Christ, that the sight really fatigued him, although he considered
+it of no importance. "I made," said he, "incredible efforts to banish
+this image, but in vain. It was only later, when having, by chance,
+seen the reverse of the Miraculous Medal, he recognized the exact sign
+which had struck him.
+
+Divine Providence, looking with a loving eye upon this young convert,
+directed his steps, and in these early days of his conversion, led
+him to a venerable Father who was to give him very precious counsel,
+upon the life of abnegation and perpetual sacrifice he had embraced.
+This servant of the Lord, immediately lay before him the importance
+of the step he had taken, the trials awaiting him, the temptation that
+would most assuredly beset his path, and without fearing to shake
+his constancy, he read him a few verses of the second chapter of
+Ecclesiasticus, upon the trials testing the virtue of the true servant
+and friend of God. With pleasure we quote here a part of this good
+priest's instructions:
+
+ "My son, when thou comest to the service of God, stand in
+ justice and in fear, and prepare thy soul for temptation.
+ Humble thy heart and endure; incline thy ear, and receive the
+ words of understanding; and make not haste in the time of
+ clouds. Wait on God with patience; join thyself to God and
+ endure, that thy life may be increased in the latter end. Take
+ all that shall be brought upon thee; and in thy sorrow endure,
+ and in thy humiliation keep patience. For gold and silver
+ are tried in the fire, but acceptable men in the furnace of
+ humiliation. Believe God, and He will recover thee; and direct
+ thy way, and trust in Him. Keep His fear, and grow old therein."
+
+M. Ratisbonne listened in respectful silence to these words of life; he
+cherished the remembrance of them, and the eve of his baptism, he asked
+the Reverend Father to put them in writing that he might meditate upon
+them the rest of his days.... It was accomplished, the joys of earth
+were sacrificed to the glory of bearing the cross of Jesus Christ....
+He was initiated into heavenly secrets by reason of those favors the
+Immaculate Mary had conferred upon him.... He already felt the strength
+that God communicates to the soul, resolved to share the sorrows of its
+divine Master.
+
+Ten days elapsed between the happy moment of the young Israelite's
+sudden comprehension of the truth, and his baptism. The Mother of Mercy
+had brought him from Heaven, the torch of Faith; in enlightening his
+intelligence, she had touched his heart; he sighed after the happy day,
+when the Church would admit him among the number of her children, and
+it was on the 31st of January, this tender Mother opened to him all
+her treasures, clothed him with innocence, called down upon him the
+plenitude of the gifts of the Spirit of love, and invited him to the
+banquet of Angels that she might give him the Bread of life.
+
+The Gésu was the church selected for this solemn ceremony. Long before
+the appointed hour, it was filled with a devout, eager multitude, all
+anxious to get as near as possible to the holy altar. Nothing disturbed
+the beauty or serenity of the occasion, no cloud dimmed the brightness
+of this heavenly festival, which inundated truly Christian hearts with
+the purest joys.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, clothed in the white robe of the catechumen, appeared
+about half-past eight, accompanied by the Reverend Father Villefort,
+(whose consoling duty it had been to prepare the neophyte for this
+beautiful day), and the Baron De Bussière, his god-father. They
+conducted him into the chapel of St. Andrew, where the touching
+ceremony was to take place. An object of the most profound curiosity,
+the fervent neophyte, wrapt in recollection, awaited with angelic
+serenity, the solemn moment.... The pious Romans gave vent to their
+feelings by words and gestures, kissing their chaplets in an effusion
+of grateful love for Mary Immaculate, the cause of our joy.... They
+pointed out one to another the zealous baron, whom divine Providence
+had chosen to give the Miraculous Medal to the young Israelite. "He is
+a Frenchman," they repeated, "He is a Frenchman! Blessed be God!"
+
+His Eminence, the Cardinal Vicar, was to receive M. Ratisbonne's
+profession of Faith. He appeared at nine, clothed in his pontifical
+robes, and commenced the prayers prescribed for the baptism of adults.
+
+The prayers terminated, His Eminence went in procession with the
+clergy to the foot of the church; the young Israelite was conducted
+to his presence. "What do you ask of the Church of God?" "Faith,"
+was the immediate answer. "What name do you wish?" "Mary," said the
+neophyte, in a tone of tender gratitude; Mary, who had opened to him
+the path of salvation; Mary, who was to conduct him into the new life;
+Mary, who will one day introduce him into the City of the Saints,
+whence she descended to lead him to the divine fold.... Then followed
+his profession of Faith, his solemn promises.... He believes all,
+he promises all, he accepts all, he wishes to be a Christian, he is
+already one at heart.... His desires are gratified, the vivifying
+waters are poured upon his head, the grace of holy baptism has invested
+him with all the rights of his eternal heritage, the spirit of darkness
+is confounded. Behold the child of God, the brother of Jesus Christ,
+the new sanctuary of the Spirit of love, the favorite of the Queen of
+Heaven, the friend of Angels and the well-beloved son of Mother Church!
+
+It was on this occasion that the Abbé Dupanloup, who happened to be in
+Rome at the time, celebrated before an immense audience the infinite
+mercies of God and the Immaculate Mary's miraculous protection of a
+child of France. We cannot refrain from inserting here a few fragments
+of the account printed at Rome. It is well calculated to increase
+devotion to Mary:
+
+ "How admirable are the thoughts and ways of divine Providence,
+ and how deplorable the lot of those who neither comprehend nor
+ bless them. For such, the life of man is only a sad mystery,
+ his days a fatal series of events, man himself a noble but
+ miserable creature, cast far from Heaven upon this land of
+ tears, to live here in perpetual darkness, to die in despair,
+ oblivious of a God who heeds neither his virtues nor his
+ sorrows.... But, no; Lord, Thou art not forgetful of us, and
+ life is not thus; despite our infinite misery, thy Providence
+ watches over us, it is far above the heavens, more boundless
+ than the sea--it is an abyss of power, wisdom and love.----
+
+ "Thou hast made us for Thyself, Lord, and our hearts are never
+ at rest until they repose in Thee! We feel an insatiable need,
+ which stirs the depths of our being, which consumes us, and
+ when we yield to it, we inevitably find Thee!
+
+ "I bless Thee especially, I adore Thee, when from the depths of
+ Thy eternity, Thou dost remember compassionately the lowliness
+ of our being, the dust of which we are fashioned; when from the
+ heights of heaven, Thou dost cast a glance of pity and love
+ upon the most humble of Thy children; when, according to the
+ Prophet's expression, 'Thou dost move heaven and earth,' and
+ work innumerable marvels to save those who are dear to Thee, to
+ conquer one soul!
+
+ "O, you, upon whom, at this moment, all eyes are bent with
+ inexpressible emotion, with the tenderest love; for it is God,
+ it is His mercy we love in you, in you whose presence in this
+ holy place inspires these thoughts, tell us yourself what were
+ your thoughts and ways, by what secret mercy the Lord pursued
+ and reclaimed you?
+
+ For who are you? What do you seek in this sanctuary? What are
+ these honors you seem to bear? What is this white robe in which
+ I see you clothed? Tell us whence you came and whither you
+ were going? What obstacle has suddenly changed your course?
+ For walking in the footsteps of Abraham, your ancestor, whose
+ blessed son you are this day, like him, blindly obedient to
+ the voice of God, not knowing whither your journey tends, you
+ suddenly find yourself in the Holy City.... The Lord's work was
+ not yet accomplished; but it is for you to describe to us the
+ rising of the Sun of truth and justice upon your soul, for you
+ to picture its brilliant aurora.... Tell us why you enjoy, like
+ ourselves, perhaps more keenly than ourselves, the good word,
+ the virtues of the future and all our most blessed hopes....
+ Tell us, for we have the right to know, why you enter into
+ possession of our goods as your heritage? Who has introduced
+ you among us, for yesterday we knew you not, or rather we knew
+ you.... Oh! yes, I shall tell all; I know the joy that will
+ fill your heart at my revealing your miseries as well as the
+ celestial mercies.----
+
+ "You did not love the truth, but the truth loved you. To
+ the purest and most ardent efforts of a zeal that sought
+ to enlighten you, did you oppose a disdainful smile, an
+ indifferent silence, a subtle response, a haughty firmness, and
+ sometimes blasphemous pleasantries. O patient God! O God, who
+ lovest us in spite of our miseries! Thy mercy has oftentimes
+ a depth, a sublimity, a tenderness and, allow me to say it, a
+ power and delicacy that are infinite!
+
+ "Suddenly a rumor is circulated throughout the Holy City, a
+ rumor that consoles all Christian hearts, he who blasphemed
+ yesterday, who this morning even ridiculed the friends of
+ God, has become a disciple of Christ; celestial grace has
+ touched his lips, he utters now only words of benediction
+ and sweetness, the most vivid lights of the evangelical law
+ seem to beam from his eyes; we may say that a celestial
+ unction has taught him all things. Whence does he receive this
+ enlightenment of the eyes of the heart, that heart which sees
+ all, which has understood all? O God! Thou art good, infinitely
+ good, and I love to repeat those sweet words, so lately on the
+ blessed lips of him, whose memory is henceforth ineffaceably
+ impressed upon our hearts. We wept over him a few days ago,
+ we still regret him, but we have dried our tears. 'Yes, Thou
+ art good, and the children of men have truly called Thee the
+ good God!' (Last words of M. de La Ferronays.) Thou dost set
+ aside the laws of nature, Thou dost account nothing too much to
+ save Thy children! When Thou dost not come Thyself, Thou dost
+ send Thy angels!... O God! shall I here relate all? I ought
+ to enjoin reserve upon my speech.... But who is she? _Quæ est
+ ista?_ I cannot say the word, and yet I cannot be silent.
+
+ "Hail Mary! You are full of grace; _Ave, gratia plena_, and
+ from the plentitude of your maternal heart, you love to bestow
+ your gifts upon us. The Lord is with you, _Dominus tecum_,
+ and it is through you He is pleased to descend to us! And now
+ to praise you worthily, I must borrow the images of Heaven or
+ speak the inflamed language of the prophets! For, O Mary! your
+ name is sweeter than the purest joys, more delightful than the
+ most exquisite perfumes, more charming than the harmony of
+ angels, _in corde jubilus_; more refreshing to the faithful
+ heart than honeycomb to the wearied traveler, _mel in lingua_;
+ more encouraging and cheering to the guilty but repentant heart
+ than the evening dew to the leaves parched and shriveled by
+ the mid-day sun, _ros in herba_. You are beautiful as the orb
+ of night, _pulchra ut luna_; you, who guide the bewildered
+ traveler; you are brilliant as the aurora, _aurora consurgens_;
+ fair and pure as the morning star, _stella matutina_; and it is
+ you who precede the dawn of the Sun of Justice in our hearts.
+
+ "O Mary! I can never portray all your loveliness and grandeur,
+ and it is my joy to succumb beneath the weight of so much
+ glory! But since I speak in the midst of your children, your
+ children who are my brothers, I shall continue to proclaim
+ your praises from the depths of my heart's affection.... At
+ your name, O Mary, Heaven rejoices, earth quivers with joy,
+ hell fumes with impotent rage.... No, there is no creature so
+ sublime or so humble, that invoking you, will perish. Those
+ august basilicas, erected by the piety of mighty nations,
+ those golden characters, those rich banners worked by royal
+ hands, likewise the modest offerings of the sailor in your
+ lowly chapels, in the crevices of the rock, on the shores of
+ the sea, or even your humble picture which martyr's hands have
+ traced upon the catacombs, all attest your power in appeasing
+ the tempests of divine wrath, and attracting upon us heavenly
+ benedictions.
+
+ "O Mary, I have seen the most savage wilds of nature smile
+ at your name and blossom into beauty; the pious inhabitants
+ of the deserts celebrate your glory, the mountain echoes,
+ the torrent billows, vie with one another in repeating your
+ praises. I have seen great cities bring forth and cherish,
+ under the shadow of your name, the purest and most noble
+ virtues. I have seen youth, with generous impulse, confident
+ ardor, and the inexpressible charm of virtue irradiating its
+ countenance, prefer your name and the happiness of celebrating
+ your festivals to all the enchantments of the world and its
+ most brilliant destinies! I have seen old men, after a godless
+ life of sixty or eighty years, rise upon their couch of pain,
+ to remember at the sound of your name the God who had blessed
+ their early infancy; you were to them as a pledge of security
+ and of peaceful entrance into the Eternal City! O Mary, who are
+ you then? _Quæ est ista?_ You are the Mother of our Saviour,
+ and Jesus, the fruit of your womb, is the God blessed from
+ all eternity. You are our Sister, _soror nostra es_; though a
+ child of Adam like ourselves, you have not participated in our
+ sad heritage, and our woes excite your deepest and most tender
+ compassion.
+
+ "O Mary! you are the masterpiece of the Divine power! You are
+ the most touching invention of God's goodness! I could not say
+ more--you are the sweetest smile of His mercy! O God, give eyes
+ to those who have them not--eyes that they may see Mary and
+ understand the beautiful light of her maternal glance; and to
+ those who have no heart give one, that they may love Mary; for
+ from Mary to the Word Eternal, to the Beauty ever ancient and
+ ever new, to that uncreated Light which strengthens the feeble
+ sight and appeases every desire of our souls, from Mary to
+ Jesus, from the Mother to the Son, there is but a step!----
+
+ "Our dearly beloved brother--and I am happy to be the first
+ to call you thus--behold under what favorable auspices you
+ enter this new Jerusalem, the tabernacle of the Lord, 'the
+ Church of the living God, which is the pillar and ground of
+ truth. But before delivering your heart to these emotions of
+ joy, there is one severe lesson it should learn this day; and
+ since I am destined to be the first to announce to you the
+ words of the Gospel, I shall conceal from you nothing of the
+ austerity it inculcates. 'You have understood all,' you say;
+ but let me ask if you have understood the mystery of the cross.
+ Ah! be careful, for it is the foundation of Christianity. I
+ speak now not only of that blessed cross which you lovingly
+ adore, because it places before your eyes Jesus crucified in
+ expiation of your sins, but borrowing the emphatic language of
+ an ancient apologist of our Faith, I shall say to you: 'This is
+ no question of the cross that is sweet for you to adore, but
+ of the cross to which you must soon submit.' _Ecce cruces jam
+ non adorandæ, sed subeundæ._ Behold what you must understand if
+ you are a Christian and what baptism must disclose to you!...
+ Moreover, in vain would I endeavor to dissimulate the truth, by
+ saying that your future may reveal no crosses; I see them in
+ store for you. No doubt, we must venerate them afar off, but
+ it is infinitely better to bend beneath their weight when laid
+ upon us, and courageously carry them. I shall be mistaken, if
+ the evangelic virtues are not increased and fortified in your
+ soul by patience. And blessed be God for it! You have been
+ introduced into Christianity through Mary and the Cross!...
+ It is an admirable mode of introduction! And again I repeat,
+ blessed be God for it! For I say to you, He has given you
+ ears to hear and a heart to feel this language! Son of the
+ Catholic Church you will share your Mother's destiny! Look
+ at Rome, Rome where you have just been born into the Church;
+ her heritage here below, is always to combat and always to
+ triumph. Moreover, nothing astonishes her; and after eighteen
+ centuries of combats and victories, it is here, in the centre
+ of Catholic unity, at the foot of the Apostolic See, that focus
+ whence daily emanate the most vivid and purest rays of Faith,
+ piercing the shades of paganism, error and Judaism, that the
+ Church has poured over your forehead the beneficent water of
+ celestial regeneration. What do I say? It is Peter himself, the
+ Moses of the new law, worthily represented by the first Vicar
+ of his august Successor, who has struck for you the mysterious
+ rock, the immovable stone. _Petra erat Christus_, whence gush
+ forth those waters springing up unto eternal life.
+
+ "But I have said enough; I retard your happiness. Heaven, at
+ this moment, regards you with love, the earth blesses you
+ and Jesus Christ awaits you; go forward then; angels have
+ commenced the feast, and the friends of God continue it with
+ you here below! And even he who seems dead in our eyes, and
+ whose heart is living in the hand of the Lord! you know him,
+ his supplications and prayers have been poured forth in your
+ behalf; the solemn moment has now arrived! Abraham, Isaac,
+ Israel, the patriarchs and prophets from their heavenly abode
+ encourage you, and Moses blesses you, because the law in your
+ heart has developed into the Gospel; mercy and truth sustain
+ you, justice and peace attend you, repentance and innocence
+ crown you.... And finally, it is Mary who receives and protects
+ you!
+
+ "O Mary! it is a necessity and a duty for us to repeat once
+ more this prayer, this cherished prayer, and I know that not
+ one of all the multitude here assembled, but will fervently
+ repeat it with me: 'Remember, O most pious Virgin Mary, that
+ no one ever had recourse to thy protection, implored thy aid
+ or sought thy mediation, without obtaining relief. Groaning
+ under the weight of our sins, we come, O Virgin of virgins, to
+ cast ourselves in thy arms, and do most humbly supplicate thee.
+ O Mother of the Eternal Word, to remember the just, remember
+ sinners, remember those who know thee, and those who know thee
+ not; remember our woes and thy mercy.' I shall not say remember
+ this young man, for he is thy child, the sweet and glorious
+ conquest of thy love, but I shall say, remember all those dear
+ ones for whom he offers this day, the first prayers of his
+ Catholic heart; restore them to him in time and eternity.----
+
+ "And since I am a stranger here (no, let me recall my words,
+ no one is a stranger in Rome, every Catholic is a Roman), but
+ since we were both born on the soil of France, I think my
+ prayers find an echo in the hearts of all who hear me, when I
+ say: remember France, she is still the home of noble virtues,
+ generous souls, heroic love.... Restore to the Church in France
+ her pristine beauty."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Holy Sacrifice terminated the imposing ceremony. Our new Christian,
+overwhelmed beneath the weight of so many favors, had to be assisted
+to the Holy Table, where he received the Bread of Angels as the seal
+of his celestial alliance. Inundated with happiness, the tears gushed
+from his eyes, and after receiving, it was necessary to assist him
+to his place.... A number of pious Christians participated in the
+divine banquet, to which the Church so tenderly invites all her happy
+children, and the admirable spectacle of a blessed union with their new
+brother, was another edifying episode of this memorable day.
+
+The _Te Deum_ which followed, that most fervent hymn of gratitude,
+arising from every heart and mingling with the sound of all the
+bells, was not less impressive. "I pray God," wrote a witness of this
+ceremony, "never to let the memory of what I experienced during these
+three hours be effaced from my heart; such an impression is, beyond
+doubt, one of the most precious graces a Christian soul can ever
+receive."
+
+Clothed with innocence, enriched with the gifts of Heaven, admitted
+to its joys, buried in the sweet transports of gratitude and love, M.
+Ratisbonne could not relinquish immediately his dear solitude. He had
+made one retreat, as a preparation for the reception of these three
+grand Sacraments, and he was filled with ineffable consolation; feeling
+now the necessity, the imperative duty of returning thanks to his
+Benefactor, he wished to commence a second retreat, so that afar from
+the world, he might be deaf to the confused noises of its frivolous
+joys, and amidst the silence of a sweet peace, celebrate the Lord's
+magnificence, chant hymns of gratitude, taste in secret and at leisure
+the gifts which had been imparted to him, and the new treasures he
+possessed.
+
+Another grand consolation was in store for him. He sighed after the
+happy moment when he could prostrate himself at the feet of the
+Sovereign Pontiff, and there testify his submission to and love for
+that holy Church who had just admitted him into the number of her
+cherished children. An audience was granted him. The two friends, M.
+Ratisbonne and the Baron de Bussière, were conducted into the presence
+of His Holiness by the reverend Father General of the Society of Jesus.
+Having bent the knee three times before the Vicar of Jesus Christ, they
+received in unison, that holy and desirable benediction, which many
+pious Christians esteem themselves happy in obtaining, after long and
+wearisome journeys. They were welcomed with truly paternal tenderness
+by the venerable Pontiff, who conversed some time with them, and loaded
+them with tokens of his favor. M. Ratisbonne knew not how to express
+his admiration for the great simplicity, humility and goodness of this
+worthy Successor of the Prince of the Apostles. "He was so exceedingly
+kind," has M. Ratisbonne told me several times since, "as to take
+us into his chamber, where he showed me near his bed, a magnificent
+picture of my dear medal, a picture for which he has the greatest
+devotion. I had procured quite a number of Miraculous Medals. His
+Holiness cheerfully blessed them for me, and these are the weapons I
+shall use in conquering souls for Jesus Christ and Mary."
+
+The Holy Father crowns all his favors, by presenting M. Ratisbonne
+a crucifix, a precious souvenir which the young Christian will ever
+cherish, clinging to it in his combats and his sorrows, as a weapon
+that must assure him the victory over hell. A new soldier of Jesus
+Christ, he needs no other arms than the cross and Mary Immaculate,
+signal protectors that will guide him in the ways of justice, and one
+day, usher him into the light of eternal felicity.
+
+Shortly after his second retreat, M. Ratisbonne made preparations for
+his return to France, and bade adieu to the Holy City, though not
+without the sweet hope of again offering there his tribute of fervent
+thanksgiving. We have seen and conversed with him many times. The first
+emotions of a boundless and almost unparalled happiness are past,
+but the fruits remain; daily does the precious gift of Faith strike
+deeper root into this soul regenerated by the waters of holy Baptism;
+and the divine life, which was communicated to him on the day of his
+baptism, our new brother nourishes by the frequent reception of the
+Holy Eucharist, and a withdrawal from all worldly society; for whilst
+awaiting the manifestations of the Lord's will in regard to his future,
+he feels the necessity of preserving, in the secrecy of a peaceful and
+recollected life, the treasures he has received.
+
+M. Ratisbonne's conversion, publicly styled a miracle, excited too much
+interest and comment for the Holy See to allow it to pass unnoticed.
+The Sovereign Pontiff ordered a canonical examination according to the
+rules of the Church. The Cardinal Vicar prescribed an investigation.
+Nine witnesses were examined; all the circumstances weighed, and
+after a favorable conclusion, the most eminent Cardinal Patrizzi,
+"pronounced and declared the 3d of June, 1842, that the instantaneous
+and perfect conversion of Alphonse Marie Ratisbonne, from Judaism to
+Catholicity, was a true and incontrovertible miracle, wrought by the
+most blessed and powerful God, through the intercession of the Blessed
+Virgin Mary. For the greater glory of God and the increase of devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin Mary, His Eminence deigns to permit the account
+of this signal miracle, not only to be printed and published but also
+authorized."--A picture commemorative of the apparition of the Blessed
+Virgin to M. Ratisbonne, a representation of the Virgin of the medal,
+was placed in the chapel of St. Andrew's Church, where the miracle had
+taken place.
+
+A few days after his return to France, M. Ratisbonne, in token of
+his gratitude, and with the intention of obtaining his family's
+conversion, felt urged to erect a chapel under the invocation of Mary
+Immaculate, in the Providence orphanage of the Faubourg St. Germain,
+Paris. The laying of the corner stone took place May 1st, 1842, and
+the sanctuary was finished and dedicated May 1st, 1844, with great
+solemnity, in the presence of the founder of the house, M. Desgenettes,
+curé of Notre Dame des Victoires, the Baron de Bussière, M. Étienne,
+Superior General of the Priests of the Mission and daughters of
+Charity, M. Eugène Boré, then a simple layman, but afterwards M.
+Étienne's immediate successor, the abbé de Bonnechose, later an
+Archbishop and Cardinal, and many other distinguished persons.
+
+The pious convert often repaired to this sanctuary to mingle his
+prayers with those of the Daughters of Charity and their dear orphans;
+and many times has he also enjoyed the ineffable consolation of
+celebrating the Holy Sacrifice and thanking his celestial Benefactress,
+before the beautiful picture of the Immaculate Conception placed above
+the high altar, as a souvenir of the miracle of St. Andrew delle
+Fratte, for M. Ratisbonne is now a priest. Not content with leading a
+pious life in the world, he has renounced forever the joys and hopes
+of time to embrace the ecclesiastical state, which consecrated him
+unreservedly to God. For several years past he has been associated with
+his beloved brother Theodore in the order of Our Lady of Sion, the
+object of which congregation is the conversion of Israelites.
+
+
+V.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1843 to 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America._
+
+
+CURE OF A LITTLE GIRL (PARIS)--1843.
+
+This account was sent us in the month of January, 1877, by the very
+person who was cured:
+
+ "About the 15th of December, 1843, a little girl, Zénobie de
+ M., just one year old, was attacked, at the same time, by
+ water on the chest, a disease of the bowels, and cerebral
+ congestion. Dr. Flandrin, a friend of the family was called in
+ immediately, and gave the child every attention, but his skill
+ was powerless, and the family was plunged in the deepest grief.
+ The child's eldest sister alone cherished a faint hope in the
+ depths of her heart; she had intended consecrating herself to
+ God in a religious state, and had always regarded the birth
+ of this little one as a gift of Providence, sent to take her
+ place in the family, and console her afflicted parents. God
+ will not, she thought, take back the child. In her room was a
+ picture representing the apparition of the Miraculous Medal;
+ she knelt before it, begging the child's recovery, and renewing
+ her promises of embracing a religious life should the petition
+ be granted. This generous offering she kept a secret. A little
+ while after, the doctor came and declared the child's case
+ hopeless, and moreover, its recovery not desirable as it would
+ remain imbecile, paralyzed or blind. He proposed, however, a
+ consultation with M. Blache, physician of the Necker hospital,
+ who prescribed energetic treatment, but said, 'this child
+ cannot live.'
+
+ The poor mother, deeming it inadvisable to cause the little
+ creature unnecessary suffering, gently laid it in the cradle,
+ saying with the faith and resignation seen in none but a
+ Christian mother: 'The Lord gave it to me, the Lord wishes
+ to take it away, may His holy will be accomplished!' In the
+ afternoon, one of the aunts came to accompany the elder sister
+ to church, and whilst their prayers ascended to the Most
+ High, more for the mother than the child, this mother obeys
+ spontaneously a supernatural impulse, and taking the Miraculous
+ Medal as a last hope, she applies it to the body of the child,
+ and repeats with confidence the invocation: 'O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!' The
+ plaintive cries ceased, and when M. Flandrin came that evening
+ to see if the little one were still alive, he was greatly
+ surprised to perceive a faint improvement since morning, the
+ whole body covered with a gentle perspiration, and the little
+ paralyzed arm able to move in any direction. 'But what a pity,'
+ said he, 'the child will be blind,' which indeed it seemed to
+ be already, as a light passed several times before its eyes
+ produced no effect whatever.
+
+ "The mother who had not yet mentioned her secret, waited until
+ all had left the room, then taking her dear medal, she lay it
+ upon her infant's eyes and repeated the invocation. After a
+ sound sleep of about twenty-four hours, little Zénobie awoke,
+ recognizing all around her, and smiling upon all, her sight was
+ restored!
+
+ "The child's father, penetrated with faith and piety, said:
+ 'Assuredly, God alone has restored our child to us; henceforth,
+ she shall be called Marie, that she may ever bear in mind
+ to whom she is indebted for life.' An attack of measles now
+ supervened and finished the work, according to the doctor, by
+ absorbing the water on the brain, and throwing out upon the
+ surface of the skin the heretofore internal malady. A small
+ gold cross, having engraven upon it the memorable date of this
+ miraculous cure, was hung around the neck of little Marie, who
+ is now a Daughter of St. Vincent de Paul."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A CAPTAIN IN THE AUSTRIAN ARMY.
+
+Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1860:
+
+ After the war in Italy, a Polish regiment passed through Gratz;
+ the captain, attacked by a violent hemorrhage, was obliged
+ to stop at the general hospital, in charge of the Daughters
+ of Charity. Their constant and unremitting attentions did
+ not retard the progress of the disease, and his life was in
+ imminent danger.
+
+ Full of consideration, gratitude and politeness for those
+ who nursed him, he nevertheless expressed great displeasure
+ whenever they approached him on the subject of religion; he
+ had requested to be spared the visits of the chaplain of the
+ regiment, and as to the hospital chaplain, he dared not present
+ himself. It was necessary to keep the patient very quiet, and
+ avoid all worry, for the least excitement might cause a mortal
+ hemorrhage.
+
+ A Sister, who had been watching by his couch one night, left,
+ in mistake, a little book containing an account of favors
+ obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The sick
+ man took the book and read a few pages; another Sister coming
+ into his room, he showed her a passage, and said, putting his
+ hand to his forehead with a significant gesture: "Here, Sister,
+ just read this nonsense; as for myself, I cannot understand
+ how any one can write such books--if I may dare, let me beg you
+ to take this away."
+
+ Vain was every effort to reach his heart by pleasant
+ distractions, by engaging his attention or his interest; he
+ was insensible to all. A few days after the occurrence just
+ mentioned, a Sister ventured to offer him a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin suspended to a cord, so that he might wear it
+ if he wished. He was too polite to refuse the present, but he
+ let it remain just where the Sister had put it. His servant,
+ though a devout Christian, dared not speak to him of receiving
+ the Sacraments, and, although the patient expected to leave the
+ hospital soon, it was very evident to all else that the fever
+ was daily sapping his strength and rapidly conducting him to
+ the tomb. Much grieved at his condition, and especially his
+ impenitence, the Sisters determined to make one last effort
+ to save this soul. And what was it? They wrote the Blessed
+ Virgin a note, as follows: "Grant that, by some means, most
+ holy Mother, he may accept your medal, prepare him yourself to
+ receive the Sacraments, and assist him at the hour of death.
+ O Mary! conceived without sin, pardon our temerity, we attach
+ this note to your statue, and leave it there till you deign to
+ hear our prayers."
+
+ The chief physician of the hospital said, one day, to the
+ Sister on leaving this patient's room: "The captain will die
+ without the Sacraments, he seems inflexible." "Oh! as to that,"
+ she replied, "the Blessed Virgin will not fail to overcome his
+ obstinacy." Three or four days elapsed; one morning the sick
+ man requested the Sister to put the medal around his neck,
+ which she did most joyfully. In the afternoon, he called her
+ again: "Sister," said he, "I beg you to send for the chaplain
+ of my regiment to hear my confession, so that to-morrow I may
+ receive the Holy Eucharist and Extreme Unction." The worthy
+ priest was happy to answer the summons; he remained a long time
+ with the sick man, and next morning, after celebrating Mass at
+ the altar of the Immaculate Conception, he administered to him
+ the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction. We were all edified at
+ the dying man's piety. He cherished his medal with religious
+ fidelity, often asking for it and kissing it tenderly. A few
+ days after receiving the Last Sacraments, he rendered his
+ soul to God, saved, as we have every reason to hope, by the
+ intercession of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A HARDENED SINNER.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity at Issoudun,
+1862:
+
+ In the month of August, 1862, a young man aged twenty-nine, and
+ who had been married several years, was dying of consumption.
+ Vainly did his friends endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ eternity; every idea of religion seemed extinguished in his
+ heart, and he positively refused to see the priest. A pious
+ acquaintance informed the Sisters of his deplorable state;
+ one of them went immediately to see him. She met with a cool
+ reception, but was not the least disconcerted, and spoke to him
+ very kindly, proposing to send him a physician, and adding,
+ that she would supply all necessary medicines and nourishment.
+ "I need neither doctors nor medicines," was the reply, "I am
+ going to die, and I ask only that you will let me die in
+ peace." His poor wife, who was present, holding their little
+ child in her arms, said to him with tears: "Accept Sister's
+ offer, and perhaps you will recover," but he made no answer;
+ and the Sister now turning to his wife, endeavored to console
+ her, by promising to send the doctor and return soon herself.
+ The doctor came and met with no better reception. In a few days
+ the Sister presented herself again, and was received as before,
+ all her advances eliciting no response save a frigid silence;
+ but naught discouraged, she returned day after day, though her
+ reception was always the same. As the young man grew worse,
+ the Sister's prayers increased, and she felt inspired to offer
+ him a medal of the Immaculate Conception, still hoping that
+ the good God would lead back to the fold, this poor strayed
+ sheep. "I accept a medal!" he exclaimed vehemently, "and what
+ do you wish me to do with it? It would suit my wife or child
+ well enough, but as for myself, I want no medals!" The Sister
+ withdrew from the contest for the time, but not discouraged,
+ she returned to the charge next morning. "Ah," said she
+ pleasantly, "you are going to take the medal to-day?" "You know
+ what I told you yesterday," he answered, "besides, Sister,
+ I am afraid of becoming imbued with your sentiments should
+ I accept it, for I perceive that you are much more unhappy
+ than I care about being." A ray of happiness illumined the
+ Sister's countenance, for she knew that he who fears is already
+ conquered. After plying her with questions about religion, he
+ concluded thus: "After all, death will be a great relief to
+ me; I have twice made an unsuccessful attempt at committing
+ suicide. I suffer so much that I desire nothing but to die as
+ soon possible." Next day, the Sister asked her Superioress to
+ visit him and offer him the medal. She did so, and he not only
+ accepted it, but at last consented to see the priest. When our
+ Sister next saw him he was completely changed, and expressed
+ his joy at the priest's visit, and his desire of seeing him
+ soon again. "Sister," said he, "I am too miserable, I wish to
+ be like you." The priest did not delay his second coming, and
+ the poor, suffering creature, having made his confession, asked
+ for Holy Communion, which he had not received for many years,
+ but this favor was denied him, his throat being so inflamed
+ that he could swallow only a few drops of liquid. His last days
+ were sanctified by the most admirable resignation; no one ever
+ heard him utter a complaint, he asked for one thing only, the
+ visits of the priest and Sister, which alone seemed to afford
+ him any consolation. And on the Feast of All Saints, evincing
+ every mark of a sincere conversion, he breathed his last.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A MALEFACTOR.
+
+A Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland)--1865:
+
+ There was brought to our hospital, a young man of notoriously
+ bad character. He entered our doors blaspheming, and as the
+ physician had told the Sister that he had but a few days to
+ live, she essayed a few words of piety and consolation, to turn
+ his attention to the state of his soul; but he answered her by
+ maledictions. At last, one day she said to him, "My friend,
+ since you will not listen to me, I will ask my Superioress
+ herself to come." "Let her come," was his reply, "if she were
+ to tell me to hang myself, I would obey her, but as for
+ confession, she may talk about that as much as she pleases,
+ I shall never yield." These words were followed by so many
+ blasphemies, that it was with a very heavy heart the poor
+ Sister sought her Superioress. "Have you given him a medal?"
+ said the latter. "A medal!" was the reply, "he would throw it
+ away." "Ah, well, we must put one under his pillow and trust to
+ prayer, for it is useless to talk to him; tell him only that I
+ say he is not worthy of going to confession, and I forbid his
+ doing so."
+
+ As soon as the Sister who was nursing him left the presence
+ of her Superioress, the latter threw herself upon her knees
+ and began to repeat that beautiful prayer, the _Remember_. In
+ a very few minutes the Sister returned, this time shedding
+ tears of joy. "Ah, Sister," said she, "he wishes to confess;
+ as soon as I had put the medal under his pillow and recited
+ the _Remember_ for him, I delivered your message." "Indeed!"
+ said he, rising from his seat, "Well, I would just like to see
+ the person that could prevent it; tell your Superioress that
+ to-morrow morning at eight o'clock, I am going to pay the curé
+ a visit."
+
+ The Sisters felt a little troubled concerning a confession
+ apparently dictated by the spirit of contradiction, but their
+ fears were dissipated when the penitent returned bathed in
+ tears. He had just been to Holy Communion; asking the Sisters'
+ pardon for his past misconduct, he begged them to implore the
+ Blessed Virgin to let him live eight days longer, that he might
+ weep for his sins. This favor was granted him, and daily did he
+ bedew his pillow with tears. At the end of the eight days he
+ died, blessing God, and pressing the medal to his lips.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN ACTRESS.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland), 1865:
+
+ Some years ago, a young Protestant woman, belonging to a troupe
+ of comedians, arrived in Beuthen with her company. The good God
+ permitted that she should find lodgings in a Catholic family,
+ with whom she soon essayed a controversy. "Mademoiselle," said
+ the master of the house, "it would be better for you to go see
+ the Sisters about these things; the Blessed Virgin has wrought
+ wonders in their establishments, I am sure you would return
+ fully enlightened on the subject you have been discussing."
+ The young girl laughed at such a proposition; but a few days
+ after, impelled by curiosity, she repaired to the hospital
+ and asked for the Sister-Servant. "Invite her in," said the
+ latter, who had already heard of the young actress; "no doubt,
+ the Blessed Virgin has something in store for her here." After
+ a few formalities of etiquette, our visitor introduced the
+ subject of religion, and attempted to enter into a controversy
+ with the Sister. "Alas! Mademoiselle," replied the latter, "the
+ poor Daughters of Charity have neither the time nor learning
+ necessary for a discussion of these subtle questions, but they
+ have other arms with which to vanquish you;" and, smiling, she
+ presented her disputant a little medal of the Blessed Virgin.
+ "Promise me to wear this slight souvenir, it will be a constant
+ reminder that we are praying for you." She allowed the Sister
+ to put the medal on her neck, and retired rather pleased with
+ her visit.
+
+ From this day, the Sisters at the hospital began to recommend
+ the young actress to Mary conceived without sin. Not many
+ weeks after, the curé said to the Sister-Servant: "Do you
+ know, Sister, that Mademoiselle M., who spent the most of
+ her time promenading with gentlemen and smoking cigars, now
+ comes to me for religious instruction? In a little while she
+ will make her abjuration." And, indeed, it was not very long
+ before she repaired to the hospital. "Sister," said she to the
+ Sister-Servant, "I am going to confession to-day, and to-morrow
+ I make my First Communion. On my first visit here, I was
+ enraged at you. I could have fought you, and cast to the winds
+ this medal that I now kiss. From the very moment you put it on
+ my neck, an unaccountable change was wrought in me." Next day,
+ the church was filled with Protestants and Jews, all anxious
+ to witness a ceremony which had excited so much comment. After
+ her reception into the Church, the young convert, on the eve of
+ her departure, paid another visit to the Sister Servant, and
+ the latter saw by her very countenance what great changes grace
+ had wrought in this soul. "Well," said the Sister, just to try
+ her, "here is a silver medal to replace yours which has become
+ very black." "Oh, no," was the earnest, prompt reply, as she
+ tenderly pressed her own medal, "I would not exchange this for
+ any other in the world, for it is since I began to wear it my
+ soul has awaked to a new life."
+
+ Some years later, the Sister received a letter dated from
+ Rome, it was from the young convert, who wrote to her as
+ follows: "Sister, Providence has led me to Rome, and it is no
+ longer Mlle. M. you must address, but Sister St.---- of the B.
+ convent. Your desires are accomplished; I now belong entirely
+ to God, as I once did to the world; the Blessed Virgin
+ vanquishes souls with other arms than those of controversy."
+
+We must add, to the praise of the young actress, that her moral
+character was always irreproachable.
+
+The Superioress of the hospital at Beuthen, in narrating these facts,
+adds: "I could mention, for the greater glory of God and honor of the
+Immaculate Mary, numberless incidents of this kind, but lack of time
+and my weak eyes prevent my giving the details. I will say, however,
+and that without the slightest exaggeration, that not a week passes
+but the Blessed Virgin bestows upon our patients at the hospital some
+new proof of her maternal bounty. The medal, so dear to us, is really
+miraculous, and the instrument by which we snatch from destruction
+souls that have cost Our Lord so much. Ah! how numberless, in this
+unhappy land, the snares of the enemy of our salvation to entrap souls;
+but to vanquish him, I everywhere circulate the Miraculous Medal (you
+know what numbers we get), and my confidence in Mary is never deceived."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROMINENT FREE MASON.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States), 1865._
+
+ Among the patients at the great Charity hospital, New Orleans,
+ was a very prominent Free Mason. His hatred of religion was
+ displayed in a thousand ways; not only did he interdict the
+ Sister who nursed him any allusion to his salvation, but
+ he even habitually repaid by harsh and injurious words her
+ kindness and attention to his physical sufferings. If others
+ ventured to mention the subject of religion to him, they were
+ received with jeers and banters. Several times was he at
+ the point of death, and yet, sad to relate, his dispositions
+ remained the same. At last, when the Sister saw that he had but
+ a few hours to live, she stealthily slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his bolster, and said interiorly to the Blessed Virgin:
+ "My dear Mother, you know I have spared no effort to touch this
+ poor man's heart, but in vain; now I abandon him to you, it
+ is you who must save him; I leave him entirely in your hands,
+ and shall try to divest myself of all anxiety concerning him."
+ That evening, in making her rounds, she glances at him and
+ learns from the infirmarian that ever since her (the Sister's)
+ last visit, he had been very calm and apparently absorbed in
+ thought. On inquiring of the patient himself how he felt, she
+ was astonished at his polite answer, but remembering that she
+ had entrusted him entirely to the Blessed Virgin's care, she
+ did not venture a word about his soul, and bidding him good
+ night, she left the room.
+
+ About nine o'clock, he called the infirmarian, and asked for a
+ priest; knowing his former bitterness, the infirmarian thought
+ it a joke and treated it accordingly; the patient repeated his
+ request, but with no better success. Then he began to weep
+ and cry aloud for a priest; all the other patients were mute
+ with astonishment, and the infirmarian unable to resist such
+ entreaties went for the chaplain and the Sister. The dying
+ man requested Baptism, which was administered immediately, as
+ well as Extreme Unction, and before morning he had rendered
+ his account to the Sovereign Judge. His body was interred with
+ Masonic rites, but his soul, thanks to the powerful protection
+ of Mary Immaculate, had been carried by angels to the bosom of
+ its God.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SICK PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ At the same hospital in New Orleans, a Sister for a long time
+ had vainly endeavored to convince a Protestant of the most
+ essential truths of religion, that he might receive Baptism,
+ but he was deaf to all her persuasions. One day she showed him
+ a Miraculous Medal, and related its origin. He appeared to
+ listen somewhat attentively, but when she offered it to him,
+ "Take it away," said he, in a tone of great contempt, "this
+ Virgin is no more than any other woman." "I am going to leave
+ it on your table," was the Sister's reply, "I am sure you will
+ reflect on my words." He said nothing, but to put it out of
+ sight, placed his bible over it. Every day, under the pretext
+ of arranging and dusting his room, the Sister assured herself
+ that the medal was still there. Several days elapsed, during
+ which the patient grew worse; one night, whilst lying awake
+ racked with suffering, he perceived a brilliant light around
+ his bed, though the rest of the room was enveloped in darkness.
+ Greatly astonished, he succeeded, in spite of his weakness, in
+ rising and turning up the gas, to discover if possible, the
+ cause of this mysterious light. Finding none, he returned to
+ bed, and a few minutes after, he perceived that the luminous
+ rays escaped from the medal. He then took it in his hands,
+ and kept it there the remainder of the night. As soon as the
+ Sisters' rising bell rang (which was four o'clock), he called
+ the infirmarian, and begged him to tell the Sister he desired
+ Baptism. The chaplain was immediately informed. "Impossible!"
+ he exclaimed, for having had frequent conversations with the
+ sick man, he was well aware of his sentiments, and could
+ scarcely believe him in earnest. Nevertheless, he obeyed the
+ summons, and finding the patient really disposed to profit by
+ his ministry, he administered the Last Sacraments, and shortly
+ after receiving which the poor man died, blessing God and the
+ Blessed Virgin for the graces bestowed upon him.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT GIRL.
+
+ _New Orleans, (United States)._
+
+ A poor young Protestant girl, brought to our hospital to be
+ treated for a grave malady, had so great a horror of our holy
+ religion, that at the very sight of a Catholic near her,
+ she acted like one possessed. The presence of a Sister was
+ especially irritating, and one day she even went so far as to
+ spit in the Sister's face, but the latter, nothing dismayed,
+ and ever hoping that the God of all mercy would change this
+ wolf into a lamb, continued her kind attentions, the more
+ disrespectful her patient, the more gentle and considerate
+ the Sister. The latter was at last inspired with the thought
+ of slipping a Miraculous Medal between the two mattresses;
+ she acted upon the inspiration, and the following night the
+ Immaculate Mary's image became an instrument of salvation and
+ happiness to a guilty soul. Pitching and tossing upon her bed
+ by reason of a high fever, the patient, in some unaccountable
+ manner, found the medal, and the Sister's astonishment next
+ morning at seeing her clasping it in her hands, and covering
+ it with kisses, was second only to that she experienced on
+ perceiving the wonderful transformation grace had wrought in
+ this poor creature's soul. A supernatural light had revealed
+ to her the sad state of her conscience; her criminal life
+ filled her with horror, and, penetrated with regret for the
+ past, she sighed only for holy Baptism. After the necessary
+ instruction, she was baptized; and, during the remainder of her
+ sickness, which was long and tedious, her patience and fervor
+ never faltered. She persevered in these edifying sentiments,
+ until a happy death placed the seal upon the graces she had
+ received through the intercession of Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant gentleman had spent four years at the hospital,
+ sometimes in one hall, sometimes another. As his malady had
+ not been very serious, no one had considered it necessary to
+ speak to him concerning his soul. However, when his condition
+ became more aggravated, the Sister, after invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin's assistance, told him the physician considered his case
+ dangerous, and she thought he ought to receive Baptism, without
+ which no one could be saved. He listened attentively, then
+ turning to her, said: "Sister, if I were to ask you to become
+ a Protestant, would you comply with my request?" "No," was
+ the decided answer. "Well, then," he continued, "rest assured
+ that it is just as useless for you to attempt persuading me to
+ become a Catholic."
+
+ In spite of this positive refusal, she let no occasion pass
+ without enlightening him, were it ever so little, upon some
+ of the truths of religion. One day, showing him a Miraculous
+ Medal, she told him he would confer a great favor on her by
+ reciting the little invocation: "O Mary! conceived without
+ sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" "What, Sister! a
+ Catholic prayer! that is impossible, I cannot!" She said no
+ more, but slipped the medal under his pillow, and there it
+ remained untouched for several days, during which time she
+ redoubled her attentions to the physical necessities of the
+ poor patient, who gradually grew weaker. At last, one evening
+ she said to him: "Well, Henry, are you not going to do what I
+ asked you?" "Yes, Sister, I most earnestly desire to become a
+ Catholic." The chaplain was called immediately; he had barely
+ time to administer Baptism and Extreme Unction, ere the dying
+ man's regenerated soul was carried by angels to the abode of
+ the blessed.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG METHODIST.
+
+ _St. Louis (United States), 1865._
+
+ A young man, a Methodist, arrived at the hospital in an
+ extremely weak condition. The physician at once pronounced
+ his case hopeless, and said he had but a few days to live.
+ Consequently, the Sister's first care was for his soul.
+ Questioning him, she soon learned that he believed neither in
+ the efficacy nor necessity of Baptism, and all her efforts
+ to induce him to receive this Sacrament were unavailing. He
+ had no desire for any conversation on the subject, and his
+ invariable reply to all her arguments was: "I believe in Jesus,
+ that suffices; I am sure of being saved." The Sister redoubled
+ her prayers, for in them lay her only hope, and time was
+ precious. A good priest visited him every day; once, after a
+ much longer visit than usual, he told the Sister on leaving the
+ room it was impossible to do anything with that man, unless
+ God wrought a miracle in his favor, and they must entreat Him
+ to do so. The poor man persisted, indeed, in refusing all
+ spiritual succor, though receiving gratefully the attentions
+ bestowed upon his body. His strength diminished day by day,
+ and he calmly awaited death; one thought alone disquieted
+ him, that of never seeing his mother and dying afar from her.
+ Perceiving himself on the brink of the grave, he called one of
+ his companions whom he begged to be with him at that fearful
+ moment, and write the particulars of it to his mother. Whilst
+ he made this request, the Sister slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his pillow, confidently believing that Mary would not let
+ this soul entrusted to her perish; yet he was already in his
+ agony. Two Sisters watched beside his bed till midnight, when
+ obliged to retire, they left him in charge of an infirmarian
+ and the young man who had promised to be with him at the hour
+ of death. Apparently he had not more than half an hour to
+ live, so next morning when the infirmarian came to meet the
+ Sister, she was prepared for news of the patient's death, but
+ to her astonishment the infirmarian exclaimed: "Come Sister,
+ come see him, he is restored to life!" He then told her that
+ the patient, to all appearances, had been dead an hour; that
+ the friend and himself had rendered all the last duties to the
+ body, having washed and dressed and prepared it for the grave;
+ then the young man went to bed, and he alone remained with
+ the corpse. After watching near it some time, he approached
+ to bandage the jaws, but what was his fright whilst thus
+ engaged, to see the dead man open his eyes! The Sister heard
+ no more, but eagerly hastened to the spot, and found the man
+ still breathing. With a great effort he said: "Oh! what a
+ blessing that you have come!" In reply, she exhorted him to
+ receive Baptism, and told him that he was indebted to the
+ Blessed Virgin for this prolongation of his life. "I wish to
+ be baptized," said he, and when the Sister replied that the
+ priest would come, "Oh! that will be too late!" was his pitiful
+ answer. The other patients now joined their entreaties to his,
+ and the Sister, after reciting aloud the acts of faith, hope,
+ charity and contrition, which the dying man endeavored to
+ repeat, with hands clasped and eyes raised to Heaven, baptized
+ him. Whilst the regenerating waters flowed upon his soul,
+ transports of love and thanksgiving escaped his lips. Half
+ an hour later, he closed his eyes, never to open them here
+ below. All that the infirmarian related of his first death, was
+ confirmed in the most positive manner, by the Protestant friend
+ who had assisted in preparing him for the grave.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. F----
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant named F---- was brought to our hospital in an
+ advanced stage of consumption. He detested the Catholic
+ religion most heartily, and received the Sisters' services
+ with extreme repugnance. His physical strength diminished
+ perceptibly, but his mind retained its energy and clearness.
+ By degrees, the odor escaping from his decayed lungs, became
+ so intolerable that all abandoned him. M. Burke, a missionary
+ priest and the Sisters, being the only persons who had the
+ courage to go near him, and pay any attention to his comfort.
+ Yet neither priest nor Sister dare mention religion. They
+ contented themselves with putting a Miraculous Medal under
+ his pillow, and invoking her, who so often deigns to display
+ her power in favor of those who deny it. She did not delay in
+ granting their petition. A few days later, as the Protestant
+ minister left the ward, after making his usual distribution of
+ tracts, the sick man said to the Sister, "Sister, it is done;
+ I am converted." "Ah," said the latter interiorly, "our good
+ Mother has accomplished her work." And it was indeed true; for
+ the patient requested a priest, was instructed, and in a few
+ days received the Sacraments of Baptism, the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction, with inexpressible fervor. The very expression
+ of his countenance was changed; the happiness that inundated
+ his heart beaming from every feature. "Ah!" said he, "my
+ sufferings are great, but I feel that I am going to Heaven;
+ the truth has made me free." In these happy dispositions, he
+ expired, promising that in heaven he would pray for all who had
+ been instruments of his conversion.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBAPTIZED PATIENT.
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A patient brought to the hospital in a hopeless condition,
+ openly manifested his hatred of Catholicity. Yet, as he was in
+ imminent danger of death, the Sister, profiting by a moment in
+ which he seemed a little better disposed than usual, ventured
+ to ask him if he would be baptized; he answered roughly, "No,
+ that he scarcely believed in baptism, and not at all in
+ Catholic baptism, that in case of his recovery, perhaps he
+ would receive baptism by immersion, and become a member of some
+ church, but that would never be the Catholic Church." "At any
+ rate," added he, "I am not going to torment myself now about
+ such things." The poor Sister having no other resource than the
+ Blessed Virgin, and seeing that the young man approached his
+ end, stealthily slipped a medal under his pillow. Next morning
+ it was picked up by the infirmarian, who, thinking the Sister
+ had dropped it accidentally, was about to return it, but the
+ patient opposed him; the little image pleased his fancy, and he
+ wanted to keep it himself. To quiet him, the infirmarian was
+ obliged to ask Sister if the patient might have it. The request
+ was granted. Towards evening some one came to the Sister with a
+ message from the patient, he wished to see her. "Sister," said
+ he as soon as she approached, "you have told me I could not be
+ saved without Baptism; let me be baptized, for I wish to be
+ saved." Filled with joy at this news, she began to instruct and
+ prepare him for the ceremony. It took place next morning, and
+ during the course of the day, this soul, now the child of God,
+ went to repose in the bosom of its celestial Father, to bless
+ and thank Him for all eternity for His mercies.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG GIRL.
+
+_Buffalo (United States)._
+
+ A young Protestant girl about twenty years of age came to the
+ hospital, covered from head to foot with a disgusting itch,
+ which the physician pronounced incurable. The Sister who
+ dressed her sores, told her that the Blessed Virgin could
+ obtain her recovery, and would do so, if she wore the medal and
+ relied upon the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The poor girl
+ knowing her case was deemed hopeless by the physician, answered
+ bluntly: "I do not believe in your Blessed Virgin, and I want
+ no medal." "Very well," replied the Sister, "then you may keep
+ your sores." A few days after she asked for a medal herself,
+ put it on her neck, received instruction and was baptized, and
+ in a short time she left the hospital perfectly cured, greatly
+ to the astonishment of the physicians, who had all pronounced
+ her malady incurable.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SINNER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria)._
+
+ An artist whose life had been far from edifying, was an
+ inmate of our hospital. One morning the Sister was greatly
+ surprised at his expressing a desire to confess. Perceiving
+ her astonishment, he said: "This morning, Sister, the chapel
+ door was slightly open, and from my bed I could see the Blessed
+ Virgin's statue." (It was that of the Immaculate Conception.)
+ "It appealed so strongly to my heart, that I have had no
+ peace since. I must put my conscience in order." He did go to
+ confession, not once, but several times, and he often expressed
+ great regret for his past life. "Ah!" he would say, "what a
+ life I have led, and how sad the state of my soul when Mary
+ came to my aid." When asked what he supposed had attracted
+ Mary's compassion, he answered: "I was merely looking at the
+ statue, no thought of religion was in my mind; when suddenly,
+ recollections of my past life filled me with fear, and Mary
+ at the same time inspired me with a horror for sin." In
+ this instance, repentance and reparation were the immediate
+ consequences of the Immaculate Mary's merciful and maternal
+ glance.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A GREEK SCHISMATIC.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria.)_
+
+ A Greek schismatic, attacked by a mortal malady, was brought to
+ the hospital. He declared his intention of remaining attached
+ to the errors in which he had been educated, and the Sisters,
+ seeing his determination, entrusted him to the Blessed Virgin,
+ consecrating him to her by placing under his pillow a medal,
+ which for him proved truly miraculous. One day, a Franciscan
+ Father visited the sick, and the young man asked the Sister
+ to bring the good Father to see him. He conversed a long time
+ with the latter, but manifested no intention of becoming a
+ Catholic. Meanwhile, he grew worse, and, one day, when taken
+ with a hemorrhage, he asked for this Father, "because," said
+ he, "I wish to embrace the Catholic religion." The Sister
+ was surprised, for she had said nothing to persuade him, but
+ the Blessed Virgin had accomplished her work without earthly
+ assistance. He confessed and made his abjuration; he even
+ requested the Reverend Father to announce, in a loud voice, to
+ the other patients that he entered the Church of his own free
+ will. His attacks of vomiting made the priest hesitate to give
+ him the Holy Viaticum, but he insisted so strongly, and had so
+ ardent a desire to receive, that the good God permitted these
+ spells of vomiting to become less frequent, so that he could
+ make his first and last Communion at the same time, which he
+ did with inexpressible fervor and consolation. Interrogated on
+ the subject of his conversion, he answered: "For a long time I
+ felt that everything earthly was of little value, and I sought
+ for the true and lasting." During the delirium of his last
+ moments, he spoke continually of a white robe. The grace of
+ Baptism had clothed his soul in spotless raiment, and to Mary's
+ intercession was he indebted for it.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN APOSTATE.
+
+ _Austria, 1866._
+
+ In one of the prisons confided to the care of the Daughters of
+ Charity, was a young man belonging to a respectable Catholic
+ family, whose shame and disgrace he had become. After a short
+ stay, he fell sick, and his condition necessitated removal
+ to the infirmary; faithful to his principles of impiety, he
+ absolutely refused all spiritual succor, and whenever he saw
+ one of the chaplains pass, he either turned away his head or
+ concealed it under the bedclothes. All the Sisters begged the
+ Superioress to make one last effort for his soul. She paid him
+ a visit, and was received politely, but to rid himself of her
+ importunity, he avowed himself a Protestant, and related how
+ he came to forsake the Faith, after making the acquaintance
+ of several very bad characters, his companions in crime and
+ his counselors in advising him to become a Protestant. The
+ Sister asked him if he felt no remorse for such conduct, but
+ he became enraged and exclaimed aloud: "I am a Protestant, and
+ I wish to live and die a Protestant!" Seeing it impossible
+ to do anything with the miserable creature, she interiorly
+ recommended him to the Refuge of Sinners, and merely asked him
+ to accept the medal she offered, to wear it and sometimes kiss
+ it. He seemed quite pleased to get rid of her so easily, and
+ placing all her confidence in Mary, she withdrew.
+
+ The poor man passed a sleepless night, our Blessed Mother
+ touched his heart, and very early next morning he sent word
+ to the Sister that he wanted a priest to receive his solemn
+ profession of Faith, in reparation of his scandalous apostasy
+ and crimes. But his reputation was such that the prison
+ chaplain doubted his sincerity, and would not go to him except
+ upon repeated solicitations of the Superioress. He was deeply
+ affected at witnessing the change grace had wrought in this
+ soul, and the consequent compunction with which the prodigal
+ confessed his sins. The dying man then made a public abjuration
+ of his errors, and expired a few minutes after, in the grace of
+ God and under the protecting smile of Mary.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT THE HOSPITAL OF CAVA.
+
+ _Cava, (Italy), 1866._
+
+ A young soldier suffering from disease of the chest, was
+ brought to the Military Hospital of Cava. His first question
+ was to ask if the Sisters had charge of that hospital; on
+ receiving an affirmative answer, he said to himself: "They will
+ bother me about going to confession, so I shall call myself a
+ Jew to get rid of them," and Jew he was designated on the card
+ of admission. Perceiving the serious nature of his malady, the
+ Sisters to whose especial care he had been confided, visited
+ him as often as possible. One of them offered him a medal
+ of the Immaculate Conception; regarding it with a smile of
+ pity, he said: "I accept it, because it would not be polite
+ to refuse, but believe me, I consider it a mere plaything and
+ nothing more."
+
+ Every time the chaplain visited the hall, to speak a word of
+ consolation to one and another, the poor Jew covered his head.
+ The Sister sometimes ventured a few words to him about the good
+ God, but he would never reply, and her approach was the signal
+ for his feigning sleep. One evening when he appeared worse than
+ usual, two Sisters went to see him just before they retired
+ for the night. On hearing them approach, he exclaimed: "O
+ Sister, a priest!" The chaplain was immediately summoned to his
+ bedside, the poor dying man repeating all the while: "A priest!
+ a priest!" As soon as the chaplain came, the patient made his
+ profession of Faith in a very audible voice; he then confessed,
+ and just as the priest, in administering Extreme Unction, was
+ anointing the ears, the penitent rendered his soul to God,
+ leaving us the consoling hope that it had found mercy in its
+ Maker's sight.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A WOUNDED SOLDIER.
+
+ _Palermo (Italy), 1866._
+
+ In 1866, at the Military Hospital of Palermo, was a poor man
+ who had just undergone the amputation of his left arm. His
+ impiety was so great, that the Sister felt constrained to
+ remove a large crucifix that had been placed near his bed, for
+ he covered it with invectives. The miserable man's bodily
+ infirmities were as hopeless as his spiritual, yet no one could
+ succeed in inducing him to give any attention to his soul, or
+ even to listen to a word about the good God. What could be done
+ in such an extremity? The poor Sister was in great distress,
+ when one day whilst dressing his wounds she was inspired to
+ slip a medal of the Immaculate Conception between the bandages
+ around the stump of the amputated member. Next morning, on
+ witnessing the great change that had been wrought in her
+ patient's spiritual condition during the night, she was less
+ astonished than happy, for she had confidently relied upon the
+ Blessed Virgin. He asked for a priest, who came immediately;
+ he confessed, publicly repaired the scandals of his past life,
+ and received with piety the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction.
+ His few remaining days were spent in blessing that God who had
+ shown him such boundless mercy. "Oh! how good God is!" did
+ he repeat incessantly to his companions, "I have committed
+ manifold sins and He has pardoned me all!"
+
+
+CURE OF AN AUSTRIAN OFFICER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1867._
+
+ An officer in the garrison at Gratz, suffered from a serious
+ wound in the right arm. He was brought to the general hospital,
+ that he might be more conveniently under the especial treatment
+ of M. Rzehazeh, a very eminent surgeon. The latter exhausted
+ all his skill, but in vain, and after a few weeks he saw the
+ necessity of amputation to save the officer's life. Learning
+ the doctor's decision, the patient was deeply grieved, and
+ his oppressed heart sought refuge in piety. He who had never
+ spoken of God, who had accepted a proffered medal only from
+ courtesy, now appeared to experience a genuine satisfaction
+ when the Sisters told him they would implore the Blessed Virgin
+ in his behalf. During the few days immediately preceding the
+ operation, he felt inspired with a great confidence in his
+ medal, and frequently repeated the invocation engraven upon it:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" The danger was now imminent, and the amputation,
+ which must not be delayed, was to take place on the morrow. One
+ of the Sisters, perceiving that the young officer's confidence
+ expressed itself in continual prayer, suggested that evening
+ that he lay the medal upon his afflicted arm, and let it remain
+ all night, a suggestion which was joyfully received. Next
+ morning she hastened to ascertain her patient's condition, and
+ get the medal. He had spent a quiet night, his sufferings being
+ less severe than usual; and the Sister, whilst attributing his
+ improvement to the anodynes prescribed, understood full well
+ that the precious medal had also been instrumental in procuring
+ relief, and that Mary had looked compassionately upon him;
+ but she did not yet realize the full extent of the blessing.
+ The surgeon came a few hours after, and whilst awaiting his
+ assistants, he carefully examined the wounded arm, he touched
+ it, he probed it, and to his great astonishment, perceived that
+ amputation was not necessary. The other doctors on arriving,
+ confirmed his opinion of this surprising change. The officer
+ was mute with happiness, and not until he found himself alone
+ with the chief surgeon did he impart to the latter, as a
+ secret, his opinion as to the cause of this wonderful change.
+ On leaving him, the surgeon (notwithstanding the injunction
+ of secrecy), could not refrain from saying to the Sister: "I
+ believe the Sisters of Charity have engaged the good God in
+ this case."
+
+ The officer's arm was entirely healed; a few weeks later he
+ left the hospital, taking with him the precious medal as a
+ memento of gratitude and love for Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. N---- AT LIMA.
+
+Letter from a Daughter of Charity in Lima (Peru), 1876:
+
+ M. N---- had been suffering a long time from hypertrophy of
+ the heart, the physicians having vainly exhausted all the
+ resources of their skill, were forced to tell the family that
+ he was beyond the power of human aid, and should look to the
+ state of his soul, sad news for this father of a family, and a
+ man devoid of religion. In vain did his relatives and friends,
+ with all possible delicacy, endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ religion and induce him to receive the Sacraments; he would
+ hear nothing on the subject; a priest, who was an intimate
+ friend of the family, attempted to second their efforts, but he
+ met with no better success; the sick man became exasperated at
+ all allusions to religion, he blasphemed everything relating to
+ it, sparing not even the Blessed Virgin.
+
+ One day, after listening to an account of the conversion of
+ M.----, of Lima, our patient's relatives expressed a desire
+ of having recourse to similar means for their dear one's
+ conversion. "It is very simple," said the person addressed,
+ "you have only to ask Sister N., of St. Anne's Hospital for a
+ medal, she got one for M. Pierre, she will not refuse you."
+ One of his nephews immediately repaired to the hospital and
+ returned with a medal. A niece offered it to him; "Mamma,"
+ said she, "sends you this medal and begs that you will wear
+ it." "Certainly," was the reply, "I will wear it for her sake,
+ but I want everybody to understand that I have no notion of
+ confessing."
+
+ He spent a quiet night, and was quite pleased next morning to
+ find himself somewhat better. "Euloge," said he, to one of his
+ nephews, "what preparation should a person make who intends
+ taking a long journey?" Euloge, who thought he certainly
+ must be in a dream to hear his uncle speak thus, inquired
+ to what journey he alluded. "Ah!" was the answer, "I speak
+ of Eternity." The poor young man, delighted at such a happy
+ change, replied that the best preparation was to put one's
+ conscience in order by making a good confession. "I will do so,
+ send me a priest," said his uncle. As soon as the clergyman
+ arrived and heard his confession, he administered the Holy
+ Viaticum. All the assistants were overcome with emotion when
+ they saw the sick man, almost in his last agony, supported by
+ his children, to receive on bended knee, the God who had just
+ pardoned all the sins of his life. A few moments after, he
+ blessed his children, gave them his parting counsel, and died
+ in sentiments of piety rivaling his past irreligion. His family
+ was deeply grateful to Mary Immaculate for this token of her
+ favor.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBELIEVER.
+
+Letter from a Sister of Charity in Lima, Peru, 1877:
+
+ An old lady whose youth had been pious, having lost her Faith
+ by reading bad books, had not frequented the Sacraments for
+ thirty-five years. The Sister with whom she lived was carried
+ to her grave, after an illness of only five days, and it was
+ natural to suppose that the Christian death of one so dear
+ would have softened her heart; on the contrary, it embittered
+ her the more, and she vented her grief in blasphemies. A
+ Sister of Charity witnessing this scandal, and not being able
+ to soothe the poor creature, was inspired with the thought
+ of giving her a medal of the Blessed Virgin; the old lady
+ accepted, and wore it for several days, during which she
+ appeared greatly pre-occupied, and somewhat less confident in
+ her scepticism; but having yielded to a diabolical suggestion,
+ that urged her to lay the medal aside, doubtless because grace
+ tormented her conscience with keen remorse whilst the medal
+ was on her person, she fell back into an habitual hardness
+ and melancholy that she styled peace. The Sister perceived
+ this, and inquired if she still wore the medal; on receiving
+ a negative answer, our good Sister represented the danger
+ to which her soul was exposed without it, and the old lady
+ promised to put it on again. Many prayers were offered up
+ for her, and at the end of fifteen days, the Sister, who was
+ greatly interested in this poor woman's soul, paid her another
+ visit; perceiving no change in her sentiments, she inquired
+ immediately if the medal had been resumed. The poor woman, who
+ was very uncouth, dared not speak, but made a sign with her
+ head which revealed all. "What have you done with it, and where
+ is it?" asked the Sister. The old lady replied that it was in
+ her wardrobe, and she had made several ineffectual efforts to
+ put it on again. The Sister understands that this miserable
+ soul is under some diabolical influence, holding her aloof from
+ aught calculated to reclaim her to God; she feels that now
+ is the moment for prompt action, and in a tone of severity,
+ says: "Very well, since you will not wear the medal, I abandon
+ you entirely." These words produced the desired effect; the
+ old lady ran to the wardrobe, and taking up the medal, put it
+ around her neck this time to remain. Soon experiencing the
+ sweet and powerful influence of Mary Immaculate, so justly
+ called the Gate of Heaven, in a few days she assisted at the
+ Holy Sacrifice and listened to the instruction, and from that
+ time was entirely changed; she confessed and made her Easter
+ Communion, and the deepest compunction and gratitude are now
+ the abiding sentiments of her heart. She wished to remain
+ at the church door, feeling herself unworthy to penetrate
+ further into the sacred edifice, and it was with the greatest
+ difficulty her friends could prevail upon her to accept a place
+ nearer the altar. She never ceases to thank God and Mary; and
+ she told the Sister that, from the moment the medal was on her
+ neck, she knew neither peace nor rest till she had returned to
+ her duties, so great are the power and love of that Virgin who
+ is the sovereign Terror of demons.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SCANDALOUS SINNER.
+
+ _Moirans, 1877._
+
+The Superioress of the Sisters of Charity at Moirans, relates as
+follows a very consoling conversion, redounding to the glory of Mary
+Immaculate:
+
+ "The most important manufacturer of our village, who employed
+ from four to five hundred men and women, has just died, and
+ contrary to all expectations, his death was penitent and
+ consoling. He had been impious and immoral, and the profligate
+ characters in his workshops were a curse to the surrounding
+ country. His rudeness was such, that everybody trembled before
+ him. His wife and two daughters, pious Christians, silently
+ bewailed his misconduct; and as for myself, I had barely
+ sufficient acquaintance with him to render justifiable my
+ calling upon him in any urgent need.
+
+ "One morning I received a message in great haste; this person
+ was very sick and wished to see me. I went at once, but the
+ disease was of so serious a character and its progress so
+ rapid, that I saw the poor man on the verge of the grave ere
+ I could find a means of turning his thoughts to eternity.
+ I had told his wife and daughters to give him a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, but he refused to accept it, and
+ we were reduced to the necessity of stealthily putting it
+ under his pillow. On the third day, as I was about to leave,
+ after rendering him all the care and attention in my power,
+ he wished, in the effusion of his gratitude, to shake hands
+ with me. I profited by the opportunity to tell him how much
+ pleasure he could give me by consenting to receive the curé,
+ who had just come to see him. He made a sign in the affirmative
+ and with a smile that very rarely parted his lips. We went
+ out of the room, leaving him alone with the priest, whom he
+ had welcomed cordially. In half an hour the latter returned
+ blessing God, for the sick man had made his confession. He
+ now consented to wear the medal, and that evening he received
+ Extreme Unction, but not the Holy Viaticum, as he had spells
+ of suffocation. I asked his wife to let his employees see him,
+ that they might be edified at their patron's conduct. The
+ request was granted, but not many came, as the workshops were
+ closed at this hour; those who did come, prayed a few minutes
+ beside him. Next morning his family was greatly rejoiced at his
+ apparent physical improvement, but their hopes were deceived,
+ and very soon his last agony began. He was recommended to
+ the prayers of the parish; the whole village manifested a
+ touching interest in his condition, and his employees all came
+ to see him. The throng around the dying man was renewed every
+ quarter of an hour, and we recited the _Chaplet_ aloud, a most
+ appropriate devotion for this occasion, the last moments of
+ one whom the Blessed Virgin had snatched from eternal misery.
+ Amidst this concert of praises to Mary, he expired. The
+ Christian Brothers, to whom he had been very hostile, willingly
+ aided us in rendering to him the last duties of religion."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+PROGRESS OF THE DEVOTION TO MARY
+
+
+ CROWNED BY THE DEFINITION OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.--I. OUR
+ LADY OF LA SALETTE.--II. THE CHILDREN OF MARY.--III. THE DEFINITION
+ OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+_I.--Our Lady of La Salette.--1846._
+
+
+In her first manifestation to Sister Catherine, July 19, 1830, the
+Immaculate Virgin announced the disasters which threatened France;
+grief was depicted upon her countenance, tears stifled her voice, she
+earnestly recommended prayer to appease the wrath of God.
+
+Sixteen years later, this Mother of mercy, appearing to two little
+shepherd children upon one of the summits of the Alps, repeated, in a
+most solemn manner, the same warnings and the same counsels. The first
+apparition remains in obscurity, but a knowledge of the second has
+been spread throughout the world, and with most consoling results. The
+miracle of La Salette has greatly increased devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin, and given Christians a clearer idea of the important duties
+of penance and prayer, which, in reality, are the embodiment of all
+practical piety.
+
+We quote the best authenticated account of La Salette, that of the Abbé
+Rousselot, who himself received it from the mouths of the children.
+
+ "Two peasant children, Mélanie Mathieu, aged fourteen years,
+ and Maximin Giraud, aged eleven, both simple and ignorant, as
+ might naturally be expected of their age and condition, were
+ together upon the mountain of La Salette, which overlooks a
+ village where they were at service under different masters.
+ Their acquaintance was very slight, their first meeting having
+ been only the day before the occurrence we are about to relate.
+ When the _Angelus_ announced the hour of noon, they went to
+ soak their hard bread in the water of a spring. After this
+ rural repast, they descended a little farther, and laying down
+ their crooks beside another spring, then dry, they seated
+ themselves a slight distance apart, upon a few stones which had
+ been piled up there, and went to sleep.
+
+ "It was Saturday, September 19th, 1846, and eve of the day on
+ which fell the Feast of Our Lady's Seven Dolors.
+
+ "'After taking the cows to water, and eating our lunch,' says
+ Maximin, 'we went to sleep beside a stream, and very near a
+ spring which was dry. Mélanie awoke first, and aroused me to
+ hunt our cows. We crossed the stream, and going in an opposite
+ direction, saw our cows lying down on the other side, and not
+ very far off.'
+
+ "'I came down first,' says Mélanie; 'when I was within five or
+ six steps of the stream, I perceived a light like that of the
+ sun, but even more brilliant and not the color of sunlight,
+ and I said to Maximin: Come quick to see the bright light down
+ here.' 'Where is it?' inquired Maximin, coming towards me. 'I
+ pointed with my finger in the direction of the spring, and he
+ stood still when he saw it. Then the light seemed to open,
+ and in the midst of it appeared a Lady, she was seated, and
+ her head resting upon her hands.' 'We were both frightened,'
+ continues Maximin, 'and Mélanie, with an exclamation of terror,
+ let fall her crook.' 'Keep your crook,' said I, 'as for me,
+ I am going to keep mine. If it does anything to us, I will
+ give it a blow with my crook.' And the Lady arose. She crossed
+ her arms, and said to us: 'Come to me, my children, do not be
+ afraid. I am here to tell you something very important.' All
+ our fears vanished, we went towards her and crossed the stream,
+ and the Lady advancing a few steps, we met at the place where
+ Mélanie and I had fallen asleep. The Lady was between us, and
+ she wept all the time she was talking. 'I saw her tears flow,'
+ adds Mélanie.
+
+ "'If my people,' said she, 'do not humble themselves, I shall
+ be forced to let them feel the weight of my Son's uplifted arm.
+ I have stayed it heretofore, but it now presses so heavily that
+ I can scarcely support it much longer. And all the while I am
+ suffering thus for you, I must pray without ceasing if I wish
+ to prevent your abandonment by my Son. And, moreover, you do
+ not appreciate it.'
+
+ "'In vain will you pray, in vain will you strive, never can you
+ recompense what I have undergone for you. I have given you six
+ days of the week wherein to work, the seventh I reserved for
+ myself, and even that is denied me! It is this which weighs
+ down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'Even those who drive carts must curse, and mingle my Son's
+ name with their oaths.'
+
+ "'These are the two things that weigh down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'If the harvest fails, it is for no other reason than your
+ sins. I tried last year to make you see this in the failure of
+ the potato crop. You took no account of it. On the contrary,
+ when you found the potatoes rotted, you swore and mingled my
+ Son's name with your maledictions. The potatoes will continue
+ to rot, at Christmas there will be none.'
+
+ "I did not know what this meant," said Mélanie, "for in our
+ part of the country we do not call them potatoes. I asked
+ Maximin what they were, and the Lady said to me:
+
+ "'Ah! my children, you do not understand me, I will use other
+ language.'
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin now repeated the preceding in _patois_, and
+ the remainder of her discourse was also in _patois_. We give
+ the translation as follows:
+
+ "'If you have wheat, it must not be sown, the animals will
+ devour what you sow; and should any remain, it will yield
+ naught but dust when threshed.'
+
+ "'There will be a great famine. Before the famine comes, little
+ children under seven years of age, will be seized with fright
+ and die in the arms of those who are holding them. Some will do
+ penance by reason of the famine. Even the nuts will fail and
+ the grapes rot.'
+
+ "After these words, the beautiful Lady continued to speak aloud
+ to Maximin. Though seeing the motion of her lips, Mélanie hears
+ nothing. Maximin receives a secret in French. Then the Blessed
+ Virgin addresses herself to the little girl, and Maximin ceases
+ to hear her voice. She likewise confides to Mélanie a secret
+ in French, but a more lengthy secret it appears than that
+ entrusted to Maximin. Continuing her discourse in _patois_, and
+ so as to be heard by both, she adds: 'If they turn aside from
+ their evil ways, the very rocks and stones will be changed into
+ heaps of grain, and potatoes will be found scattered over the
+ fields.'
+
+ "The Queen of Heaven then addressed herself more directly to
+ the children.
+
+ "'Do you say your prayers with devotion, my children?'
+
+ "'Oh, no, Madame,' they both answered, 'we say them with very
+ little devotion.'
+
+ "Our divine Mother continued: 'Ah! my children, you must say
+ them fervently evening and morning. When you have not the time,
+ and cannot do better, say an _Our Father_ and a _Hail Mary_;
+ and when you have the time you must say more.
+
+ "'No one goes to Mass, except a few aged women; all the rest in
+ summer spend Sunday working, and in winter, when at a loss for
+ something to do, they go to Mass only to ridicule religion; and
+ during Lent they frequent the shambles as if they were dogs.'
+
+ "After a few more words, reminding Maximin that he had already
+ seen the failure of the grain, the august Queen finished in
+ French as follows: 'Ah! my children, tell this to all my
+ people.' And before leaving them, she repeated the command.
+
+ "The two children add: 'Then she ascended about fifteen steps,
+ to the place where we had gone to look after our cows. Her feet
+ barely touched the surface of the verdure, which did not even
+ bend beneath her, she glided over the surface as if suspended
+ in the air, and impelled by some invisible power. We followed
+ her, Mélanie a little ahead, and I two or three steps from the
+ Lady's side. The beautiful Lady was now gently elevated to
+ about the height of a yard,' said the children. 'She remained
+ thus suspended in the air for a moment. She glances up to
+ Heaven and then at the earth, her head disappears from our
+ view, next her arms, and lastly her feet. She seemed to melt
+ away. There remained a brilliant light that gleamed upon my
+ hands, and the flowers at her feet, but that was all.'
+
+ "At the first words of his son's narration, Maximin's
+ father began to laugh, but very soon recognizing the marks
+ of incontestable sincerity, he hastened to comply with
+ his Christian duties, so long neglected. The neighboring
+ inhabitants followed his example, there were no more
+ blasphemies, no more profanation of Sunday, the whole country
+ was soon transformed, even maternally. Like those of Jonas to
+ Nineveh, the prophetic warnings of the divine Messenger were
+ conditional. They were fulfilled in general, as can still be
+ remembered."[23]
+
+ [Footnote 23: Several details of this account have been derived
+ from "Illustrious Pilgrim Shrines."]
+
+The apparition of La Salette, as is the case with all extraordinary
+events, was variously appreciated even among Catholics, some receiving
+the account with enthusiastic confidence, others strongly contesting
+the reality. But for a long time doubts have ceased, Providence having,
+by numberless miracles, confirmed the faith of those who believed;
+and the mountain sanctified by Mary's presence, has never ceased to
+be visited by pilgrims from the most distant countries. Mgr. De
+Bruillard, Bishop of Grenoble, anxious to prevent illusion on so
+important a question, nominated a commission composed of most competent
+persons, to examine and pass judgment upon this apparition. The result
+being in the affirmative. His Grace, in a circular of September 19th,
+1851, declared as follows:
+
+ "We assert that the apparition of the Blessed Virgin to two
+ little peasants, the 19th of September, 1846, upon one of the
+ peaks of the Alps, situated in the parish of La Salette, of
+ the archpresbytery of Corps, bears every mark of truth, and
+ that the faithful are confirmed in believing it indubitable and
+ certain.
+
+ "Wherefore, to testify our lively gratitude to God and the
+ glorious Virgin Mary, we authorize the devotion to Our Lady of
+ La Salette."
+
+The circular, before publication, was submitted to the Holy See, whose
+approval it received, and Mgr. De Bruillard's two successors have
+always endorsed his appreciation of the apparition.
+
+Consequently, this devotion is invested with every guarantee of
+authenticity that the severest criticism could exact.
+
+A church of the Byzantine style and graceful appearance is erected
+upon the holy mountain, near where the apparition took place. The
+identical spot remains uncovered, and the grass still grows upon the
+soil hallowed by Mary's sacred footsteps; a series of crosses, fourteen
+in number, to which are attached the indulgences of the _via crucis_,
+indicate the path she took. The spring, formerly intermittent, has
+been inexhaustible since the apparition, and its waters have worked
+miracles. Near the church, a convent has been built to accommodate the
+numberless pilgrims, who daily resort hither in the favorable season.
+Numerous chapels, dedicated to Our Lady of La Salette, are scattered
+throughout Christendom, and abundant graces repay the faith of those
+who in these sacred shrines invoke her intercession.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_II.--The Children of Mary.--1847._
+
+Rome, the guardian of our Faith and Catholic traditions, has given
+municipal privileges to the Children of Mary, in consecrating to them
+a chapel in one of her most celebrated churches, St. Agnes Beyond the
+Walls. The Italian sodalities are all inscribed there, and represented
+by a group of the children of Mary surrounding this young Saint, who
+in the third century was martyred for her virginity. They seem to say
+to her, "Agnes, you are our eldest Sister, the well beloved of Jesus
+Christ and His Mother."
+
+This place of honor, this representation proclaims most eloquently,
+that the Children of Mary form in the Church, a family as ancient as
+Catholicity itself.
+
+Nearly nineteen centuries ago, Jesus, our Redeemer, was in the agony
+of death upon the tree of the cross, which his love had chosen as the
+instrument of our redemption; "seeing," says the Evangelist, "that all
+was consummated" for our salvation, He wished to place the seal upon
+His work, by making His last will and testament.
+
+Looking first at Mary, His Mother, and then at John, the beloved
+disciple, he made John a Child of Mary in these memorable words: "_Ecce
+Mater tua, ecce filius tuus_: Behold thy Mother, behold thy son."
+
+Such is the origin of the Children of Mary. We believe with the holy
+Church, that the eternal Word, after becoming incarnate to render men
+redeemed with His blood, the Children of His heavenly Father, gave them
+also, at the hour of His death, His own Mother to be theirs. We know
+likewise, that among the children of every family, there is always one
+most tenderly attached to the mother, for instance, Jacob and Rebecca;
+John and Mary.
+
+Even so, in the bosom of the great family of Catholicity, do we find in
+all ages, souls jealous of rendering to Mary the most intimate filial
+devotion, selecting her in an especial manner, for their model and
+protectress.
+
+Such are the religious orders particularly devoted to her service,
+also, the confraternities established for the same purpose in many
+parishes. The Society of Jesus, which was founded in the sixteenth
+century, laboring zealously to extend the glory of God among the youth
+under its charge, found no means so effectual in forming hearts to
+virtue and piety, as that of placing them under Mary's protection; and
+the celebrated Association of the Prima Primaria, canonically erected
+by Pope Gregory XIII, in 1584, became the parent stem of all the
+congregations, subsequently found in honor of the Mother of God.
+
+It was reserved for our age, to give full development to this fruitful
+devotion, by popularizing and thus making it a powerful means of
+salvation. In placing themselves under the patronage of the Immaculate
+Conception, the Children of Mary cannot fail to obtain from their
+divine Mother the most abundant and precious benedictions.
+
+In 1830, the Immaculate Virgin had uttered a prophecy which resounded
+incessantly in the heart of the missionary, to whom was confided the
+account of the apparitions of the medal. "The Blessed Virgin wishes
+you to found a congregation, of which you will be the Superior, a
+confraternity of Children of Mary; the Blessed Virgin will bestow many
+graces upon it as well as upon yourself, indulgences will be granted
+it. The month of Mary will be celebrated with great solemnity; Mary
+loves these festivals; she will requite their observance with abundant
+graces."
+
+But why this command and this prediction of the Queen of Heaven to her
+servant, in regard to something which was not all new?
+
+Sodalities of the Children of Mary already existed among the numberless
+youths educated by the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. And following
+their example, the Ladies of the Sacred Heart had formed similar
+associations among their scholars, and in 1832, had even established
+them for ladies in the world, under the invocation of the Immaculate
+Conception. It would seem then that a new work was superfluous.
+
+It is true, Associations of the Children of Mary already existed and
+accomplished much good, but they were confined to a few isolated
+places, and recruited from a chosen class, they were not popular;
+and Mary designed as elements of the future work, that multitude of
+young girls in the ordinary walks of life, surrounded by all the
+trials, exposed to all the dangers of the world, who to-day form her
+blessed family, whose innocence she guards, whose modest virtues she
+encourages, and from whom she receives in exchange, a tribute of love,
+praises and a visible service acceptable to her heart. Let us speak
+a word concerning its establishment. When the apostolic heart of M.
+Aladel received Sister Catherine's consoling predictions, he did not
+fully comprehend how he, a simple missionary, should accomplish the
+designs of the Queen of Heaven.
+
+Whilst quietly awaiting the propitious hour and means foreseen by
+Providence, he seized every opportunity of speaking to the children and
+young people of Mary's bounty and the happiness of belonging to her.
+His simplicity and animation, when discoursing upon this his favorite
+theme, attracted all hearts; his listeners hung entranced upon the good
+father's words; and the unction of grace sustaining the ardor he had
+enkindled, the associations were formed by way of trial, in the houses
+of the Daughters of Charity, where M. Aladel had officiated.
+
+Such were those of the Providence Orphanage in Paris, of the House of
+Charity of St. Médard, of the Madeleine; also, those of St. Flour,
+Mainsat, Aurillae, established from 1836 to 1846. The young girls, who
+were externs, very soon rivaled the inmates of the establishments in
+obtaining similar favors; several new associations were begun in the
+year 1846, those of St. Vincent de Paul, St. Roch, St. Paul, St. Louis,
+in Paris, and others in Toulouse, Bruguière, etc., in the province.
+
+Whilst in Rome in 1847, M. Étienne, Superior General of the Priests
+of the Mission and Daughters of Charity, obtained from the Sovereign
+Pontiff a rescript dated June 20th, empowering him and his successors
+to establish among the scholars attending the schools of the Daughters
+of Charity a pious confraternity, under the title of the Immaculate
+Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin, with all the indulgences
+accorded the Congregation of the holy Virgin established at Rome for
+the scholars of the Society of Jesus.
+
+Three years later, the Sovereign Pontiff extended a similar favor to
+the youths educated by the Priests of the Mission; also, to the little
+boys in charge of the Daughters of Charity.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+From this time, 1847, thanks to the benediction of Pius IX, the
+Sodality of the Children of Mary, spread rapidly in all quarters of
+the globe, wherever the Daughters of Charity were established. A
+manual containing the rules of the Association, its privileges and
+obligations, was compiled by M. Aladel, the Director of the work. The
+livery naturally adopted by the Children of Mary was the Miraculous
+Medal, suspended from a blue ribbon.
+
+The new Association from its very origin gave a wonderful impulse to
+youthful piety; humble girls, earning their daily bread, practiced the
+most heroic virtues, under the influence of a desire to become faithful
+Children of Mary; and, sustained by the same spirit, the poorest
+courageously resisted temptation, and complied with those duties so
+little esteemed at the present day--filial devotion and self-denial.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+To these precious fruits are also joined some beautiful flowers of
+devotion; how eagerly the Children of Mary repair to re-unions of the
+Association, especially on all their Mother's feasts, chanting her
+praises and exciting one another to fervent piety.
+
+But the death of these young girls is still more admirable than their
+life; many of them stricken down in the very bloom of youth, fortified
+with their medal and ribbon as with a precious talisman, smile at death
+and defy hell.
+
+Thirty years have passed since the grain of mustard seed was confided
+to the earth, and it has now become an immense tree, whose branches
+overshadow the most distant countries. Europe numbers nearly a thousand
+of these Sodalities, about six hundred being composed of externs, or
+mixed associates. They amount, in other portions of the world to nearly
+two hundred. This displays the visible effects of the benediction of
+St. Peter's Successor; the promises made in 1830 were not realized
+until they had received the approbation of the Vicar of Jesus Christ,
+Pius IX, whose name will always be dear to the Children of Mary.
+
+The Associations vary in number from ten to three hundred sodalists,
+which gives us an average of eighty thousand young girls, courageously
+holding themselves aloof from satan's snares and pomps, and leading a
+life of purity and piety amidst the seductions of a corrupt world.
+
+Surely this must be a miracle of God's right hand and Mary's bounty!
+
+We have thought it would not be uninteresting to the readers, to give
+the statistics for the end of the year 1877, of the Sodalities of the
+Children of Mary, established in the houses of the Daughters of Charity
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF THE _SODALITIES OF CHILDREN OF MARY_.
+
+
+ SODALITIES.
+ _Internal._ _External SUMMARY.
+ and
+ Mixed._
+ France 287 451 } Internal Sodalities 287
+ } External and Mixed 451
+
+ _Europe._
+
+ (Exclusive of France.)
+ Belgium 11 14 }
+ Switzerland 1 7 }
+ Italy 55 64 }
+ Spain 17 25 }
+ Portugal .. 1 } Internal Sodalities 100
+ Great Britain 2 13 } External and Mixed 153
+ Poland 8 9 }
+ Prussia .. 5 }
+ Austria 4 11 }
+ Greece .. 1 }
+ Turkey 2 3 }
+
+ _Asia._
+
+ Turkey 2 7 } Internal Sodalities 2
+ Persia .. 2 } External and Mixed 10
+ China .. 1 }
+
+ _Africa._
+
+ Egypt 3 2 } Internal Sodalities 6
+ Algeria 3 17 } External and Mixed 20
+ Canary Isles .. 1 }
+
+ _America._
+
+ United States 11 44 }
+ Guatemala 4 3 }
+ Brazil 11 9 } Internal Sodalities 54
+ Peru 9 6 } External and Mixed 81
+ La Plata 1 6 }
+ Chili 3 1 }
+ Cuba 5 4 }
+ Mexico 9 7 }
+ Ecuador 1 1 }
+
+ _Oceanica._
+
+ Philippine Isles 1 6 } Internal Sodalities 1
+ } External and Mixed 6
+
+ --- --- ----
+ Total 450 721 Total 1,171
+
+
+_III.--Definition of the Immaculate Conception._
+
+We have observed several times in the course of this work, that the
+principal end of the apparition of 1830, was to popularize belief
+in the Immaculate Conception. The facts we have related, prove most
+conclusively that, thanks to the Miraculous Medal, this object has been
+fully attained.
+
+As a preparation for the accomplishment of this great design,
+Providence placed in St. Peter's chair, a Pontiff animated with the
+most filial tenderness for Mary, and inspired him from the beginning
+of his pontificate, with the desire of glorifying the most holy Mother
+of God, by proclaiming the Immaculate Conception an article of Faith.
+And this hope, this desire, had Pius IX, in the ninth year of his
+reign, the happiness of realizing amidst the universal applause of the
+Catholic world.
+
+We quote below from M. Villefranche's beautiful History of Pius IX, the
+account of this memorable event:
+
+ "By an Encyclical dated from Gaëta, Pius IX had interrogated
+ the Episcopacy of the Universal Church, on the subject of the
+ belief in the Immaculate Conception. The answers received were
+ six hundred and three in number. Five hundred and forty-six
+ Bishops earnestly entreated the doctrinal definition, a few
+ hesitated, though only as to whether it were an opportune
+ moment or not for the decision, for the sentiment of the
+ Catholic world was in unison as regards the belief itself.
+
+ "To assist at this solemnity, Pius IX summoned to his presence,
+ all the Bishops who could repair to Rome. They came five
+ hundred and ninety-two in number, and from all quarters of
+ the globe except Russia, where they were held in check by
+ the suspicious despotism of the Emperor Nicholas. These
+ prelates put the finishing touch to the work of the commission
+ charged with preparing the Bull; but at the very moment of
+ making the final pause in its rendition, it was asked if the
+ Bishops assisted there as judges, to pronounce the definition
+ simultaneously with the Successor of St. Peter, and if their
+ presence must be mentioned as judges, or, if the supreme
+ judgment should not be attributed to the word of the Sovereign
+ Pontiff alone. The debate terminated suddenly, as if by the
+ inspiration of the Holy Spirit. 'It was the last sitting,' says
+ Mgr. Audisio, an eye-witness; 'the hour of noon had just been
+ sounded, every knee was bent to recite the _Angelus_. Then each
+ one resumed his place, and scarcely had a word been spoken,
+ when there arose a universal acclamation to the Holy Father,
+ a cry of eternal adherence to the Primacy of St Peter's See,
+ and the debate was ended:' '_Petre, doce nos; confirma fratres
+ tuos!_ (Peter, teach us; confirm thy brethren!)' And the
+ instruction these pastors asked of the supreme Pastor was the
+ definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+ "The 8th of December, 1854, was the grand day, the triumphal
+ day, which, according to the beautiful words of Mgr.
+ Dupanloup's circular, 'crowns the hopes of past ages, blesses
+ the present age, evokes the gratitude of future generations,
+ and leaves an imperishable memory; the day that witnessed
+ the first definition of Faith, which was not preceded by
+ dissension and followed by heresy.' All Rome rejoiced. Immense
+ multitudes, representing every tongue and nation on the globe,
+ thronged the approaches to the vast Basilica of St. Peter's,
+ far too small to accommodate all who came. Soon, the Bishops
+ were seen forming into the line of march, ranged according to
+ their seniority, and followed by the Cardinals. The Sovereign
+ Pontiff, amidst the most brilliant surroundings, appeared
+ last, whilst the chant of the Litany of the Saints, wafted to
+ Heaven, invited the celestial court to unite with the Church
+ militant in honoring the Queen of Angels and men. Seated upon
+ his throne, Pius IX received the obeisance of the Cardinals and
+ Bishops, after which the Pontifical Mass began.
+
+ "When the Gospel had been chanted in Greek and Latin, Cardinal
+ Macchi, Dean of the Sacred College, accompanied by the Dean of
+ the Archbishops, and the Dean of the Bishops present, with an
+ Archbishop of the Greek rite and one of the Armenian, presented
+ themselves at the foot of the throne, and supplicated the
+ Holy Father, in the name of the universal Church, to raise
+ his Apostolic voice and pronounce the dogmatic decree of the
+ Immaculate Conception. The Pope replied that he willingly
+ granted this prayer, but ere doing so he would invoke once more
+ the assistance of the Holy Spirit And, now, every voice united
+ in the solemn strains of the _Veni Creator_. When the chant had
+ ceased, the Pope arose, and in that grave, sonorous, majestic
+ voice, to whose profound charm millions of the faithful have
+ borne testimony, commenced reading the Bull.
+
+ "He established: first, the theological motives for belief in
+ Mary's privilege; then he adduced the ancient and universal
+ traditions both of the East and West the testimony of religious
+ orders and schools of theology, of the holy Fathers and
+ the Councils, and finally, the pontifical records, ancient
+ as well as modern. His countenance, as he pronounced the
+ words inscribed upon these pious and magnificent documents,
+ betrayed his emotion. Several times he was so overcome that
+ for a few moments it was impossible for him to proceed. 'And
+ consequently,' he adds, 'after having offered unceasingly in
+ humility and fasting, our own prayers and the public prayers
+ of the Church to God the Father through His Son, that He would
+ deign to direct and confirm our thoughts by the inspiration of
+ the Holy Spirit, after having implored the assistance of all
+ the celestial court, ... in honor of the holy and indivisible
+ Trinity, for the glory of the Virgin Mother of God, for the
+ exaltation of the Catholic Faith and the increase of the
+ Christian religion, by the authority of Our Saviour, Jesus
+ Christ, the blessed Apostles, Peter and Paul, and our own.'----
+
+
+ "Here his voice was stifled with emotion, and he paused an
+ instant to wipe away the tears. The assistants, deeply affected
+ as well as himself, but mute with respect and admiration,
+ awaited in profound silence the continuation. In a clear,
+ strong voice, slightly elevated by enthusiasm, he proceeded:
+
+ "'We declare, profess, and define, that the doctrine affirming
+ that the Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved and exempt from
+ all stain of original sin, from the first instant of her
+ conception, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of
+ men, is a doctrine revealed by God, and for this reason, all
+ the faithful must believe it with firm and unwavering faith.
+ Wherefore, if any one should have the presumption, which
+ God forbid, to allow a belief contrary to what we have just
+ defined, let him know that he wrecks his faith and separates
+ himself from the unity of the Church.'
+
+ "The Cardinal Dean, prostrating himself a second time at the
+ feet of the Pontiff, supplicated him to publish the Apostolic
+ letters containing the definition; the Promoter of the Faith,
+ accompanied by the Apostolic Prothonotary also presented
+ themselves, to beg that a verbal process of the decree be
+ prepared. And now the cannon of the castle of St. Angelo and
+ all the bells of the Eternal City, announced the glorification
+ of the Immaculate Virgin!
+
+ "In the evening, Rome, enwreathed in illuminations, and crowned
+ with inscriptions and transparencies, resounded with joyous
+ music, and was imitated at that very time by thousands of
+ cities and villages all over the face of the globe. If we were
+ to compile an account of the pious manifestations relating to
+ this event, it would fill, not volumes, but libraries. The
+ Bishops' responses to the Pope before the definition were
+ printed in nine volumes; the Bull itself, translated under
+ the care of a learned French Sulpitian into every tongue and
+ idiom of the universe, filled about ten volumes; the pastoral
+ instructions, publishing and explaining the Bull, and the
+ articles on the subject in religious journals, would certainly
+ require several hundred, especially if we add thereto the
+ poems, scraps of eloquence, and descriptions of the monuments
+ and fêtes. We should not omit mention here of the spontaneous
+ and incomparable periodical illuminations at Lyons, each time
+ the course of the year brings round the memorable 8th of
+ December."
+
+Pius IX knew that the Catholic movement leading to the definition of
+the Immaculate Conception had originated in France, and he was happy to
+see the French people enthusiastically welcome the Pontifical decree
+of December 8th, and celebrate with unparalleled magnificence Mary's
+glorious privilege. Henceforth, the love he bore that country was
+firmly rooted in his heart, and her misfortunes had but increased his
+tenderness and compassion. It consoles us to insert here the prayer to
+the Blessed Virgin which he composed, and recited daily to obtain for
+her the protection of the Queen of Heaven:
+
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, look down upon France, pray for
+ France, save France! The greater her guilt, the more need of
+ your intercession. Only a word to Jesus reposing in your arms,
+ and France is saved."
+
+ "O Jesus! obedient to Mary, save France!"
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL AND THE WAR.
+
+
+The wars which have taken place since the year 1854, the epoch of the
+definition of the Immaculate Conception, have presented a spectacle to
+which the world was unaccustomed. Not only were _priests_ called upon
+to administer to the spiritual necessities of the soldiers in camps
+and ambulances, but _Sisters_ also were charged with the care of the
+sick and wounded. The priest's cassock and the robe of the religious,
+became almost as familiar to the eye as the military costume itself!
+Sisters of Charity accompanied the armies in the wars of the East, in
+1854; in Italy, in 1859; in the United States, in 1861; in Mexico, in
+1864; in Austria and Prussia, in 1866; in France and Germany, in 1870;
+and we find them ministering to the Russian army and also the Turkish
+ambulance in 1877. For them no enemies existed; the camps of both
+belligerents claimed their attention, they were equally devoted to all
+who needed their ministry of charity.
+
+During the hardships and dangers of war, chaplains and Sisters could
+not fail to invoke the Blessed Virgin, and the Miraculous Medal
+naturally became the sign of the soldier's devotion and the pledge
+of our merciful Mother's protection, against the moral and physical
+dangers war brings in its train. The medal was profusely distributed;
+it was accepted and worn with confidence; even Protestants and
+Schismatics asking eagerly for it; officers as well as private soldiers
+attaching it to their uniforms when they set out for the combat; the
+sick employed it to obtain recovery, or at least, an alleviation of
+their sufferings; the dying kissed it with love; many attributed to it
+their preservation in battle, and a still greater number were indebted
+to it for their eternal salvation.
+
+In proof of the above, we shall present some facts, selected from the
+thousands related in the correspondence of the missionaries and Sisters
+who followed the several armies.
+
+
+WAR IN THE EAST, FROM 1854 to 1856.
+
+ "On the Feast of the Assumption, we shall have at Varna, a
+ beautiful religious ceremony, at which the whole army will
+ assist. I have brought from Constantinople a banner of the
+ Blessed Virgin; this we will set up, and confidently invoking
+ Mary, we know she will obtain the cessation of the cholera, and
+ success of our arms."[24]
+
+ [Footnote 24: Letter of Mr. Boré, Aug. 13, 1854.]
+
+ "The inmates of our hospital of Péra, at Constantinople, number
+ about twelve hundred, including sixty officers. These gentlemen
+ receive the Miraculous Medal with joy and gratitude. Endeavor
+ to find some good souls who will send us a large supply of
+ these pious objects."[25]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Letter of a Sister, September 29.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The three patients whose confessions I heard were poor
+ Irish. They manifested great resignation in their sufferings;
+ all three asked for, and gratefully received a medal of the
+ Immaculate Conception. An English officer (a Catholic), who
+ wore with pious confidence the medal of Mary, told me that
+ several of his colleagues, though Protestants, had accepted the
+ medal and preserved it respectfully, and that the cholera and
+ balls of the Russians had, so far, spared them."[26]
+
+ [Footnote 26: Letter of Mr. Boré, October 25.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Even amidst the turmoil of war, and in spite of the multitude
+ of sick and wounded, the Catholics of Constantinople celebrated
+ solemnly the definition of the dogma of the Immaculate
+ Conception. Mr. Boré wrote as follows, March 22d, 1835: 'The
+ _triduum_ of thanksgiving for the declaration and promulgation
+ of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception was fixed for the
+ Feast of Saint Joseph. We have endeavored to unite, in the
+ expression of our joy, with that of the faithful throughout the
+ Catholic world, and to imitate, to the best of our ability,
+ those magnificent and most consoling manifestations that have
+ taken place in France, who in this has shown a true love for
+ the Mother of God, a love already repaid by a new development
+ of national strength and vigor. The zeal and skill of our dear
+ Sisters in charge of the adjoining establishment have greatly
+ contributed to the splendor of the feast. The good taste
+ and experience of one of them suggested to her the idea of
+ substituting for the large picture over the main altar a figure
+ of the Immaculate Conception; the Blessed Virgin was crowned
+ with golden stars, her dress and drapery were rich and radiant
+ in a glory of gauze, the whole framed in lilies. The head,
+ borrowed from the portrait of a Circassian lady, and the golden
+ crescent under her feet, were happy indications, both in color
+ and emblem, of the events transpiring around us. A Catholic
+ Armenian lady lent a set of diamonds, which flashed back the
+ myriad flames of tapers and candles contained in candelabras,
+ hidden in the abundance of lilies. This illumination,
+ improvised by our pupils in imitation of those they knew would
+ take place throughout France, was indeed an honor to their
+ taste and piety.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "We sometimes meet with sick persons, who, through human
+ respect, ignorance, or indifference, are prevented from
+ receiving the succors of religion. We give them a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, and the Blessed Virgin charges
+ herself with their conversion. Nearly always, without any
+ other inducement, and, as it were, of themselves, they ask for
+ the priest and prepare to receive the Sacraments, manifesting
+ the most lively sorrow for having offended God and abused His
+ benefits. I could cite examples by thousands."
+
+ "Numbers of soldiers wear the Miraculous Medal, the scapular, a
+ reliquary, a cross, or sometimes not one but all of these, and
+ those who do not possess these articles are happy to receive
+ them. In a word, the army is, in a great measure, Catholic, and
+ knows how to pray."
+
+ "A soldier wounded in both legs at the battle of Alma, received
+ for more than two months, the unremitting attention of the
+ physicians and Sisters though without experiencing any relief.
+ Having despaired of saving his life otherwise, the surgeons
+ decided upon amputation. They began by the limb which was most
+ shattered. Next day the patient was in a hopeless condition;
+ there was no question of further amputation. Recourse was
+ then had to supernatural remedies; a novena was made to the
+ Immaculate Mary, and in a few days the patient showed signs of
+ improvement. He is now cured, and his piety and good example
+ are the admiration of his comrades."[27]
+
+ [Footnote 27: Report of Mr. Doumerq, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A patient who was brought in yesterday, refused to go to
+ confession. I placed under his pillow a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, and left him quiet, continuing to give him assiduous
+ care. This morning he called me, and in a resolute tone,
+ inquired if people here died like dogs. 'I am a Christian, and
+ I wish to confess.' 'Yesterday I proposed confession,' said
+ I, 'but you objected, and even sent the priest away.' 'It is
+ true,' he replied; 'but I am sorry for having done so; I wish
+ now to see him as soon as possible.' Since his confession
+ he is completely changed; and calmly awaits the approach of
+ death."[28]
+
+ [Footnote 28: Letter of a Sister, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the Russian prisoners brought to Constantinople after
+ the battle of Tchernaïa, many wore the medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception. By this I understood at once that they were
+ Catholics and Poles."[29]
+
+ [Footnote 29: Letter of Mr. Boré, August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "A young lieutenant in the eighty-fifth regiment, had been
+ wounded in the skull, and when brought to the hospital, his
+ throat was gangrened, and he could scarcely speak. A secret
+ sympathy attracted us towards each other, and he accepted
+ gratefully the services I rendered him. As he was evidently
+ sinking, I spoke to him of the Blessed Virgin, and alluded to
+ the medal he wore around his neck. He smiled, and replied by
+ pressing my hand. When his confession (during which he regained
+ his voice and strength) was finished, he said: 'Monsieur abbé,
+ I have a favor to ask of you.' 'What is it, my friend? tell
+ me; I am anxious to gratify you.' 'Be so kind,' said he, 'as
+ to inform Father Boré that I am here, and am very ill.' These
+ words pierced my heart; however, I was able to answer him:
+ 'Father Boré is he who now speaks to you.' Raising his eyes
+ moistened with tears, and, again pressing my hand, he added:
+ 'I am the brother-in-law of your dear friend, Mr. Taconet, and
+ also brother of the captain of zouaves, whom you assisted a
+ year ago at Varna.' I then recognized in him Mr. _Ferdinand
+ Lefaivre_; he had been recommended to me by a pressing letter
+ from Mr. Taconet, but this letter reached me only after my
+ young friend's death. Mr. Taconet wrote that, on the eleventh
+ of May, the lieutenant with his family had heard Mass at the
+ church of Notre Dame des Victoires, and that he did not doubt
+ but the Blessed Virgin would watch over a life so precious.
+ His hope was not misplaced, for the Blessed Virgin called him
+ to herself, fortified with the Sacraments, on the day of her
+ triumph."[30]
+
+ [Footnote 30: Letter of August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "While we were invoking our Immaculate Mother, on the eve of a
+ combat, in which one of our young soldiers was to take part for
+ the first (and perhaps last) time, he arose and went to Mary's
+ altar; kneeling an instant, he arose again, and hung around
+ the statue's neck a silver heart, in which were inscribed his
+ name and the names of his parents. I feel, as St Vincent has
+ forcibly expressed it, that he did not perform this act of
+ devotion without tearful eyes and a sobbing heart."[31]
+
+ [Footnote 31: Letter of Sister M----, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A serious fire had broken out in the city of Salonica. The
+ flames soon appeared opposite the Sisters' house, the buildings
+ on the other side of the street, a few yards distant, being
+ seized and devoured by the fire, which the wind continued to
+ fan into activity. Already the Sisters' roof and that of the
+ adjoining house were covered with dense smoke. I cast therein
+ several Miraculous Medals. There was no prospect of human
+ succor, as the rumor of there being powder in the vicinity had
+ caused every one to seek safety in flight. I also retired,
+ deeming it useless to expose myself longer; and besides, I was
+ obliged to go to the assistance of a poor man, who, partially
+ intoxicated, persisted in remaining near the fire. I returned
+ shortly after, expecting to see our houses in flames; I doubted
+ not but they would be wholly consumed. As I approached, a
+ young man stopped me on the way, and said: 'Your property
+ is saved, sir; the Sisters' house is not even in danger.'
+ Only on reaching the scene could I be convinced that he had
+ spoken truly. It would be impossible to express my emotion at
+ the sight. I sent to inform our dear Sisters of the fact and
+ they could scarcely credit this marvellous preservation. It
+ suffices to add, that all Salonica is unanimous in pronouncing
+ it a miracle."[32]
+
+ [Footnote 32: Letter of Mr. Turroque, July 16, 1856.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In an ambulance crowded with Russians was a young Pole,
+ severely wounded and suffering intolerable pain; he earnestly
+ invoked the sweet and merciful Virgin Mary. By his side lay
+ a Russian Protestant, wounded also, and attacked by violent
+ dysentery. So offensive was the odor from his disease, that
+ both patients and nurses complained. He appeared utterly
+ indifferent to everything concerning religion. He took no
+ notice of the Sister as she passed and repassed; he never
+ even deigned to look at her. The young Pole, on the contrary,
+ called her frequently, and gratefully received her care and
+ consolations. One evening our young Catholic was suffering more
+ than usual; the pain drew tears from his eyes; his groans and
+ cries were incessant. He called the Sister and begged her to
+ help him, saying his patience was exhausted; he was in despair;
+ his sufferings were excruciating. The Polish Sister, consoling
+ and encouraging him, bade him have confidence, and gave him
+ a medal to apply to the wounded limb. The young man followed
+ her suggestion; and laying his hand on the medal to keep it in
+ place, he soon fell asleep. Our Protestant appeared unconscious
+ of what was going on, yet he had seen and examined all. Some
+ days after, he called our Polish Sister to him, (she was the
+ only one who could understand him) and said: 'Sister, please
+ give me what you gave this young man that did him so much
+ good, for I suffer greatly!' 'My friend, she replied, I desire
+ nothing better than to relieve you also; but you lack what
+ effected his cure, faith and confidence. You Protestants deny
+ the power of the Blessed Virgin; you do not acknowledge her as
+ your Queen, your Advocate, your Mother. So what can I do? It
+ was a medal of Mary that so speedily relieved your neighbor,
+ the young Pole.' 'Give me one also, Sister,' he answered; 'I
+ believe all that you tell me; you do good to every one, why
+ should you deceive me?' 'But,' said the Sister, 'have you
+ confidence in Mary, the Mother of God? Do you believe in her
+ mercy and her power?' 'I believe all that you believe, Sister,
+ since Mary hears the prayers of the unfortunate, and brings
+ relief to the suffering, she cannot deceive us!' The Sister,
+ much consoled at hearing these words, gave him a medal, and
+ our admirable talisman effected in his soul most gratifying
+ results. He asked to receive instruction from a priest, and
+ after some days employed in studying the holy doctrines of
+ the Church, and in assiduous prayer to Mary he abjured his
+ errors. As he had been separated from the other patients, on
+ account of the unpleasant odor we have mentioned, he was at
+ full liberty to act as he wished. After his baptism, and the
+ reception of the holy Eucharist, being unable to restrain
+ his transports, he exclaimed: 'Oh! how happy I am! My heart
+ has never known such joy! I am content to die, and I do not
+ regret having been struck on the battlefield! To my wound do
+ I owe my salvation. Oh! how we poor Protestants are deceived!
+ By what lies are we led astray! How good God is to rescue me
+ from error! May the sweet and holy Virgin be known and loved
+ always and everywhere!' And in these beautiful dispositions, he
+ expired."[33]
+
+ [Footnote 33: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ "A sergeant advanced in years had been suffering for three
+ months from a severe dysentery; one morning the Sister who was
+ visiting the sick found him in tears. 'Ah! my brave soldier,'
+ said she, 'what is the meaning of all this grief?' 'O Sister,'
+ he exclaimed, 'lend me patience, for mine is exhausted. I am
+ in despair; I can endure my sufferings no longer; I feel that
+ I am going to die, and just at the time I was to receive a
+ pension--at the very moment I hoped to return to my country
+ with honor and see my family once more. Must I die afar from
+ home and leave my bones in a strange land?' Groans were
+ mingled with his words, and his gestures had all the violence
+ of despair. The Sister who relates the fact says: 'My heart
+ ached at witnessing the grief of this brave man, with his white
+ hairs and numerous scars. However, as my tears would not have
+ dried his, I tried to rouse his courage by other means, and I
+ promised him a perfect cure if he would unite in prayer with
+ our little family at the hospital. Giving him a Miraculous
+ Medal, I recommended him to God and Mary with my whole heart.
+ We made a novena to the Immaculate Virgin, and ere its
+ termination our sergeant was entirely cured."[34]
+
+ [Footnote 34: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Every evening our soldiers assembled around the Sisters in
+ charge and sang pious canticles; they even composed music and
+ words suited to the occasion. These they intoned, uniting
+ their deep, sonorous voices with the Sisters'. In unison and
+ harmony of mind as of voice, they repeated in chorus the sacred
+ names of Jesus and Mary as a rallying cry of hope, confidence
+ and triumph--a chant of love, a united echo of heaven and
+ country. Then their hearts thrilled with joy inexpressible,
+ and they were filled with pride and happiness at the thought
+ of belonging to that France who imparts to her children the
+ heroism of courage and the virtue of the perfect Christian.
+ During the month of May our military concerts were multiplied;
+ all were rivals in zeal. The altars were adorned with admirable
+ piety and taste, notwithstanding our extreme poverty. Entire
+ trees were felled to assist in concealing the dilapidated state
+ of the barracks, which had been converted into chapels. Had
+ our soldiers been free to do so, they would have despoiled the
+ gardens of the Turks to adorn the sanctuary of the Queen of
+ Heaven.
+
+ "In the ambulances of Péra some of the most zealous soldiers,
+ both officers and privates, wished to present Mary a solemn
+ homage of their devotedness and gratitude. They chose a heart
+ as the symbol of their sentiments. All the balls extracted
+ from their wounds were collected to compose the offering. But
+ a soldier suddenly exclaimed with enthusiasm: 'Comrades, what
+ are we doing? Shall we offer the Blessed Virgin a schismatical
+ heart? All these balls are Russians!' 'True,' replied another,
+ 'these balls are Russian; we must have French balls. Let us ask
+ the Russians for those we sent them.' 'Stay,' said a third,
+ 'you have forgotten that these Russian balls are stained with
+ our blood!' 'Well, then, let us use them,' suggested a fourth,
+ 'the French balls will form the centre.' They went immediately
+ to ask the Russians for the French balls. These were willingly
+ given. The heart was prepared; their names inscribed on it with
+ the designation of the regiment, and the offering was presented
+ to Mary amid the most lively acclamations and transports of joy
+ and gratitude."[35]
+
+ [Footnote 35: Letter of Sister M., July 9, 1857.]
+
+
+ITALIAN WAR, 1859.
+
+Letter of Sister Coste:
+
+ _Gaëta, December 18th, 1860._
+
+ During the siege of Gaëta, the Sisters of Charity willingly
+ remained in the city, to assist the sick and wounded
+ Neapolitans. They felt that there was no greater security
+ against the dangers to which they were exposed, than that of
+ recommending themselves and their abode to the protection
+ of the Blessed Virgin, by means of the Miraculous Medal.
+ Their Superioress, Sister Coste, wrote December 18th, 1860:
+ "Frequently the cannon roars in our ears; bombs whiz around us,
+ but divine Providence is our shield. The first night of our
+ sleeping at the palace, we were saluted by the Piedmontese, who
+ sent us a multitude of bombs; one of them burst just outside
+ our room, and you might have supposed a thunderbolt had fallen.
+ Yet, the precious medal of our Immaculate Mother, which we
+ had placed at all the doors and windows, shielded us from the
+ danger. A large piece of iron detached itself from the bomb
+ above mentioned, and remains in the wall, a visible testimony
+ of Mary's protection. This circumstance reanimated our
+ confidence, and we hesitate not to pass through the streets,
+ notwithstanding the whizzing of projectiles."
+
+
+UNITED STATES.
+
+Extracts of letters written by Sisters of Charity during the War of
+Secession, from 1861 to 1865:
+
+ _"Military Hospital (House of Refuge),_ }
+ _"St. Louis, Missouri._ }
+
+ "Many of our poor soldiers scarcely knew of the existence of
+ God, and had never even heard baptism mentioned. But, when
+ the Sisters explained to them the necessity of this Sacrament,
+ and the goodness of God, who, by means of it, cleanses us from
+ the original stain, and adopts us as His children, they were
+ filled with the deepest emotion, and often shed tears. On one
+ occasion, a patient said: 'Sister, do not leave me; tell me
+ more about that good God whom I ought to love. How is it that
+ I have lived so long and have never heard Him spoken of as you
+ have just done? What must I do to become a child of God? 'You
+ must,' replied the Sister, 'believe and be baptized.' 'Well,
+ baptize me,' was his answer. The Sister persuaded him to await
+ the arrival of Father Burke, who would be there next morning.
+ The patient consented reluctantly. 'Ah!' said he, 'it is very
+ long to wait, and I am so weak; if I die unbaptized, I shall
+ not go to Heaven.' To relieve his anxiety, the Sister promised
+ to watch near him and administer baptism, should she perceive
+ any unfavorable change in his condition. 'Now,' said he, 'I am
+ satisfied; I rely on you to open for me the gates of Heaven;
+ it is through your intervention I must enter.' He spent a
+ quiet night. Next morning, Father Burke admitted him into the
+ Catholic Church, by the Sacrament of Baptism, which he received
+ with admirable piety. A crucifix was presented him; grasping it
+ eagerly, he kissed it, saying as he did so: 'O my God! I did
+ not know Thee or love Thee before coming to this hospital!'
+ Then, turning to the Sister, he said: 'Sister, I have forgotten
+ the prayer you taught me;' and he repeated after her several
+ times, 'My Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit, sweet
+ Jesus, receive my soul.' He died pronouncing these words."
+
+ "The precise number of baptisms cannot be ascertained; there
+ were probably seven hundred during the two or three years of
+ our residence in the hospital. Five hundred Catholics who
+ had led careless or sinful lives returned sincerely to God
+ and resumed the practice of their religious duties. A great
+ number of these had received no other Sacrament than that of
+ Baptism, and they made their first Communion at the hospital.
+ The majority of the newly baptized died; the others on leaving
+ asked for medals and catechisms, saying they desired to
+ instruct themselves and their families."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier named Nichols fell dangerously ill, and in a few
+ days was reduced to the last extremity. Vainly did we strive
+ to touch his heart and awaken him to a sense of religion.
+ His sufferings were terrible; both day and night was he
+ denied repose, and he could scarcely remain a moment in the
+ same position. His condition was most pitiful. Many of his
+ companions, knowing that he had never been baptized, and having
+ perceived the beneficial effects of baptism upon others, begged
+ the Sisters to propose to him the reception of this Sacrament,
+ thinking it might be a comfort to him, and not being aware of
+ the many efforts that had already been made to induce him to
+ believe in its necessity and efficacy. However, we redoubled
+ our efforts, and placed a Miraculous Medal under his pillow.
+ His comrades regarded his sufferings as a visible chastisement
+ of his impiety. We could not induce him to pronounce the name
+ of God, but he implored the physician, in the most heart
+ rending accents, not to let him die. Four days passed without
+ the least change, when one of his companions, who appeared
+ the most deeply interested in his welfare, said to him, with
+ eyes filled with tears, how much he regretted to see him die
+ thus, utterly bereft of a hope for the future. The other
+ soldiers had engaged this man to acquaint the patient with his
+ danger, and persuade him to make his peace with God, for they
+ saw that human respect alone prevented his showing any signs
+ of repentance. This last effort of charity was crowned with
+ success; he called for the Sister, and when she came, said to
+ her: 'Sister, I am ready to do all you wish.' After instructing
+ him in what was necessary for salvation, and feeling convinced
+ of the sincerity of his dispositions, she asked him by whom
+ he wished to be baptized. 'By any one you please,' was his
+ answer. But, to be sure that he did not desire a Protestant
+ minister, she said: 'Shall I send for the priest who attends
+ this ward?' 'Yes,' he replied, 'it is he I wish to baptize
+ me.' The priest was sent for without delay, and we had the
+ inexpressible consolation of seeing this poor sinner admitted
+ into the number of the children of God by the very person who,
+ a few days previous, had been an object of his raillery. He
+ became perfectly calm, and expired shortly after, invoking the
+ holy name of Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the patients was a poor young man named William Hudson,
+ who for a long time refused to receive baptism. The Sisters,
+ however, nowise discouraged, explained to him the Sacrament
+ of Baptism, and instructed him in the mysteries of our holy
+ religion, and the Sister, under whose immediate charge he
+ was, hung a medal around his neck. Finally, he asked to speak
+ to good Father Burke; was baptized, and expired in the most
+ edifying dispositions, pronouncing the holy name of Mary.
+ Several others followed his example, and made their peace with
+ God before death."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mr. Huls, a man of thirty-five, though convinced of the
+ necessity of baptism, postponed the reception of it from day
+ to day. Knowing that he had but little attraction for our holy
+ religion, I forbore to mention the subject too frequently.
+ Nevertheless, seeing that death was rapidly approaching, I
+ placed a medal under his pillow and begged the Blessed Virgin
+ to take charge of his salvation. The next day, just as I was
+ turning away after giving him a drink, he called me and said:
+ 'Sister, what ought I to do to prepare for the next world?' I
+ told him that it was necessary to repent of his sins, because
+ sin is the greatest of evils, and it had caused the sufferings
+ and death of our Lord Jesus Christ; that God's goodness and
+ mercy towards sinners are infinite, and that He is always ready
+ to pardon us, even at the last moment, if we sincerely return
+ to Him. I urged him to cast himself with confidence into the
+ arms of this merciful Father, who earnestly desired to open
+ for him the gates of the Eternal City, and I added that it was
+ absolutely necessary to be baptized. He assured me that he
+ believed all I had said to him; he then repeated with fervor
+ the acts of faith, hope, charity, contrition, and resignation
+ to the will of God. Seeing that he was entering into his agony,
+ I baptized him; the Sacraments appeared to revive his strength.
+ He began to pray, and made such beautiful aspirations of
+ love and gratitude to God, that one might have said his good
+ angel inspired them, particularly the act of contrition. I
+ remained with him to the last, praying for him, when he had not
+ strength to do so himself; if I paused a moment through fear of
+ fatiguing him: 'Go on Sister,' he would say in dying accents,
+ 'I can still pray.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Another soldier, William Barrett, scarcely twenty years of
+ age, was almost in a dying condition when brought to the
+ hospital. After doing all I could for the relief of his poor
+ body, I inquired very cautiously as to the state of his soul.
+ Alas! it was deplorable; not that he had committed great
+ crimes, but that he was entirely ignorant of everything
+ relating to his salvation. He had never said a prayer, and he
+ hardly knew of the existence of a God. My first conversation
+ with him on the subject of religion, was not altogether
+ pleasing to him, for he did not understand it; but when I
+ had briefly explained the principal articles of Faith, he
+ listened very attentively, and begged me to tell him something
+ more. When I told him that our Lord had loved us so much as
+ to become man and die on a cross for our salvation, he could
+ not restrain his tears: 'Oh!' said he, 'why did no one ever
+ tell me that? Oh! if I had only known it sooner! How could I
+ have lived so long without knowing and loving my God!' I now
+ prepared him to receive the Sacrament of Baptism, and tried
+ to make him sensible of God's great mercy, in bringing him to
+ the hospital, that he might die a holy death. He understood
+ this and much more, for grace had spoken to this poor heart,
+ so truly penetrated with sorrow for sin. 'I wish to love God,'
+ said he, 'but I am such a miserable creature! I would like to
+ pray, but I do not know how. Sister, pray for me, please.' I
+ promised to do so, and offering him a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, I told him that by wearing it, he would secure the
+ intercession of the Mother of God, who is ever powerful with
+ her divine Son. He gladly accepted the medal, put it around
+ his neck, and repeated, not only the aspiration, O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee,
+ but other prayers, to obtain the grace of a happy death. He
+ then asked me when I would have him carried to the river, for
+ he was under the impression that he could not be baptized
+ without being immersed. I explained to him the manner in
+ which the Catholic Church administers this Sacrament, and the
+ dispositions necessary for receiving it. Listening eagerly to
+ every word I uttered, 'Pray with me, Sister,' said he, 'come
+ nearer, that I may hear you better, for I do not know how to
+ pray.' He repeated with great fervor all the prayers I recited,
+ and thought only of preparing himself for his baptism which
+ was to take place on the following day. From that time he
+ wished to converse with the Sisters only. If his companions or
+ the attendants came to him, he answered them in a few words,
+ evidently showing that he desired to be alone with his God. One
+ of the officers asked him, if he wished any one to write to his
+ family. 'Do not speak to me of my family now,' said he, 'the
+ Sisters have written to my parents. I wish for nothing but to
+ pray and to be baptized.' And the words ever on his lips, were
+ these: 'O God, have mercy on me, a sinner.' Towards evening he
+ became so weak, that I thought it best to remain with him. At
+ three o'clock in the morning, fearing that he was in his agony,
+ I administered the Sacrament of Regeneration; he lived till
+ seven o'clock. The fervor with which he united in the prayers
+ was truely edifying; even when scarcely able to speak, he tried
+ to express his gratitude to God for His goodness and mercy to
+ him. He was most anxious to quit this world, that he might go
+ to that Father, who had admitted him into the number of His
+ children, and whom he so earnestly desired to see and know."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier, advanced in age, told me one day, that in his
+ country the prejudices of the people were so strong against our
+ Faith, that they would refuse hospitality to a traveler did
+ they know him to be a Catholic; as to himself, he had never
+ met with a Catholic previous to his coming to the hospital;
+ but what he had seen here (nothing comparable to which had he
+ ever witnessed among Protestants), was sufficient to convince
+ him of the truth of Catholicity; that he had belonged to the
+ Presbyterian Church, but he would remain in it no longer, and
+ desired to be instructed in our holy religion. I gave him
+ a catechism and some other books, which he read with great
+ attention. Perceiving that his end approached, he asked for a
+ priest and was baptized. 'If it were the will of God,' said he,
+ speaking of his property, which was considerable, 'I should
+ like to live a little longer and enjoy my fortune; but if the
+ Lord wills otherwise, I am ready to leave all.' He was ever
+ repeating these words: 'Not as I will, O Lord, but as Thou
+ wilt.' From the moment of his baptism, he applied himself
+ most diligently to a profitable disposition of the remainder
+ of life, that he might prepare for his journey to eternity.
+ At times, when he felt a little stronger, he studied the
+ catechism; and when he could no longer hold a book, he prayed
+ and meditated in silence. One day as I was giving him a drink,
+ he showed me his medal. 'Ah!' said he, tears of gratitude
+ streaming down his cheeks, 'behold! my Mother. I kiss her
+ every hour!' He prayed constantly, even when he could neither
+ eat, drink, nor sleep. Once when he was extremely weak, the
+ attendants having changed his position, he fainted, and rallied
+ only with great difficulty. On perceiving that I was trying to
+ restore him: 'Ah! Sister,' said he, 'why did you not let me
+ go?' He also remarked to the attendants, that he feared the
+ Sister would prolong his life for a month, but his fears were
+ not realized; in a few days he slept the sleep of the just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "One of the soldiers, who had been a long time in the hospital,
+ having fallen very ill, I tried to persuade him to make his
+ peace with God, before going to meet that God as his Judge. My
+ efforts met with little success; he did not admit the necessity
+ of baptism, and he was not in the least concerned about his
+ salvation. But he accepted a medal, and without being aware of
+ it, he swallowed some drops of holy water. Then I recommended
+ him very earnestly to the Blessed Virgin, and in a few days
+ after he asked to be instructed, and was baptized. We could not
+ give him greater pleasure than to pray beside him. He received
+ Extreme Unction with deep and sincere devotion, and expired in
+ the most happy dispositions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In the hospital was a soldier named Sanders, who, though not
+ very ill, was unable to join his regiment. He had no idea of
+ religion. I remarked that he observed us very closely, as if
+ examining our conduct; nothing escaped him. Before leaving, he
+ came to bid me good-by and thank me for the care I had bestowed
+ upon him. I was somewhat surprised, as I had had no occasion of
+ serving him; but, seeing he was so well disposed, I profited by
+ the opportunity to offer him a medal and a book explaining the
+ Catholic Faith. He accepted them with gratitude, and returned
+ to his regiment. A year later, he came again to the hospital,
+ hastening to inform me of his conversion, and seeking a priest,
+ by whom he was gladly instructed and received into the fold
+ of the Holy Church. 'I owe my conversion,' said he, 'to the
+ intercession of the Immaculate Mary and your prayers, and it
+ has been my happy lot to bring other souls to God.' This was,
+ indeed, the case; employed in a military hospital, where he was
+ the only Catholic, by his zeal and solicitude he instructed
+ many poor sick, called a priest, had them baptized, and enjoyed
+ the consolation of procuring eternal happiness for a large
+ number of his fellow-soldiers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In 1862, a Sister of the hospital at New Orleans gave a medal
+ to one of the attendants on the point of setting out for the
+ army, and she advised him to keep it always about him. Some
+ time after, he returned, having received a slight wound on
+ the head. On seeing the Sister, he exclaimed: 'Sister, here
+ is the medal you gave me; it has saved my life! Just in the
+ midst of battle, the string by which the medal hung around my
+ neck broke, and whilst the cannons were roaring around us, I
+ attached it to a button of my uniform; all my companions fell,
+ and I escaped with this slight contusion.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Military Hospital of Philadelphia._
+
+ "A soldier was brought to the hospital grievously wounded. A
+ few questions which the Sister put to him on the subject of
+ religion revealed the fact, that not only was he not baptized,
+ but also most ignorant of the truths essential to salvation.
+ The Sister then began to instruct him, and with all requisite
+ prudence, gave him to understand that the physicians despaired
+ of his recovery. From this moment he listened with the deepest
+ interest to explanations of the catechism; and, one day, when
+ Sister had spoken to him of the necessity of that Sacrament
+ which renders us children of God and heirs of heaven, he joined
+ his hands and said in the most beseeching tone: 'Oh! do not let
+ me die without baptism!' The Sister then asked him from what
+ minister he desired to receive this Sacrament and he replied:
+ 'From yours; from him who says Mass in the Sister's Chapel.'
+ Before the close of the day, Father MacGrane had satisfied
+ the sick man's pious desire, and the new Christian, filled
+ with joy, incessantly repeated acts of love and gratitude. The
+ physician, making his evening visit, found him so ill, that
+ he directed the attendant to watch him all night, saying he
+ might die at any moment. Before retiring, the Sister gave him a
+ medal of the Blessed Virgin, and briefly narrating to him how
+ this tender Mother had often wrought miraculous cures by means
+ of her blessed image; she encouraged the dying man to address
+ himself to Mary with entire confidence.
+
+ "Next morning she was surprised to find him better; but he
+ was much troubled about 'his piece,' which he could not find;
+ he feared it had been taken away. The Sister soon found and
+ restored it to him; receiving it most joyfully, he asked for a
+ string and placed the medal over his wound. When the physician
+ came, which was soon after, he was no less surprised than the
+ Sister at perceiving the change in his patient's condition.
+ The patient, (Duken by name), continued to improve, and in a
+ few weeks he could walk with the aid of crutches. His first
+ visit was to the chapel; from that day, whenever we had Mass,
+ he rose at five o'clock in order to assist at it; and so eager
+ was he for Father MacGrane's instructions, that the intervening
+ time from one Sunday to another seemed to him very long. He
+ attributed his cure to the Blessed Virgin, and it was indeed
+ most remarkable; for he was out of the physician's hands long
+ before many other soldiers of the same ward whose wounds were
+ less dangerous, and who had received the same attentions, were
+ able to leave their beds. He asked for a furlough that he might
+ visit his wife, whom he was very anxious to see a member of the
+ true Church, but 'knowing her prejudice against Catholics, he
+ dared hope for such a happiness.' It was, nevertheless, granted
+ him; she consented to be baptized with her children, and Duken
+ returned to the hospital, blessing God and the holy Virgin for
+ the wonderful graces bestowed on his family.
+
+ "Our Sisters of the South, like those of the North, were
+ in great demand wherever sufferings and miseries claimed
+ relief, and they responded to the call with a holy courage and
+ eagerness.
+
+ "In these divers localities was the Miraculous Medal the
+ instrument God frequently employed in delivering souls from
+ the yoke of Satan. How often have we seen Mary's image
+ kissed respectfully by lips which had formerly uttered only
+ blasphemies against the Mother of God! Every one asked for
+ a medal; some, no doubt, urged by curiosity or the desire
+ of possessing a souvenir of the Sisters, as they themselves
+ acknowledged; but, even so, they could not carry upon
+ their person this sweet image, without growing better and
+ experiencing the effects of Mary's protection. In nearly every
+ case, what rendered the triumph of grace still more remarkable
+ was the fact of its acting upon men who were not only ignorant,
+ but fanatical, hating the name of Catholic, and excited to
+ fury at the sight of a priest. A Sister relates that she
+ ventured, one day, to ask a soldier, who was in the threshold
+ of eternity, if he had been baptized. 'No,' was the reply, in
+ a voice of thunder; 'no, and I have no wish to be plunged in
+ water just now. Let me alone!'
+
+ "'Recommending him to Mary,' says the Sister, 'I left him.
+ Towards evening, I heard a noise in the ward in the direction
+ of his bed, and the attendant came in haste to say that the
+ patient had sent for me.' 'Ah!' said the latter, in a tone
+ very different from that of his morning's speech; 'I am dying,
+ baptize me, I beg of you.' 'Giving him briefly the necessary
+ instruction, I administered the holy rite, and a few hours
+ later he peacefully expired.'
+
+ "Rarely did these poor soldiers complain of their fate; though
+ but little accustomed to the rigors of military life, they bore
+ them with admirable patience. However, there was one exception
+ to the general rule, that of an old soldier, who murmured
+ continually and accused God of afflicting him unjustly.
+ Arguments were worse than useless, they served but to aggravate
+ the evil. Failing in this means to bring him to a better state
+ of mind, I offered him a medal of the Blessed Virgin. By
+ degrees, his complaints ceased, his countenance became composed
+ and serene, and I had the consolation of seeing him expire in
+ the most edifying dispositions."
+
+
+THE WAR BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND AUSTRIA, 1866.
+
+Letter of Mr. Stroever, Priest of the Mission, July 1st, 1867:
+
+ "The wounded arrive in great numbers, and all our houses are
+ filled. Every one wishes to have a medal; I inquired of one,
+ who had begged for a medal at any price, if he were a Catholic.
+ 'No,' was the answer; 'I am a Protestant but I would like to
+ have it as a souvenir of yourself;' and he received it most
+ gratefully.
+
+ "We observe a certain degree of piety among the soldiers,
+ and the sick are most eager to receive the Sacraments. The
+ Protestants show a remarkable inclination to Catholicity. Not
+ only the private soldiers, but even persons of distinction,
+ wishing to have medals, scapulars or a crucifix. They take no
+ measures to conceal these objects of devotion, and no one seems
+ surprised at seeing them on their persons."
+
+
+REMINISCENCES OF THE COMMUNE, PARIS, 1871.
+
+Notes of a Sister of the Hospital d'Enghien:
+
+ "During the siege, we had placed Miraculous Medals over all the
+ doors and windows of the house. As one of our Sisters expressed
+ the intention of concealing them, Sister Catherine exclaimed:
+ 'No, no; they must be seen; put them in the middle of the
+ principal entrance.'
+
+ "During the few days immediately preceding our departure from
+ the house, the federal national guards said to one another:
+ 'Let us go and ask the venerable Sister Catherine for medals;
+ she has given some to our comrades who have shown them to us,
+ we would like to have them too.' 'But you, poor creatures,'
+ replied a Sister, 'you have no faith, no religion, what good
+ will the medal do you.' 'Very true, Sister,' said they, 'we
+ have not much faith, but we believe in the medal; it has
+ protected others, it will also protect us, and when we go to
+ battle, it will help us to die as brave soldiers.' Good Sister
+ Catherine gave medals to all who presented themselves, and
+ many, who belonged to the enemy, sent their comrades to procure
+ them.
+
+ "After the army had entered Paris, thirty of the wounded
+ insurgents, before being brought to trial, were sent to the
+ Hospital d'Enghien to be nursed by the Sisters. The house
+ was already transformed into an ambulance, and we were
+ obliged to take one of the dormitories of the orphans for the
+ newly-arrived patients. The appearance of these men were so
+ frightful, that Sister Eugenie who had been appointed to attend
+ them, had not the courage for the first two days to make any
+ suggestions to them concerning religion; but finally, feeling
+ that she must comply with her duty, and urged by the advice of
+ a companion, she went to Sister Catherine and asked for medals
+ for the insurgents. Sister gave them cheerfully, and encouraged
+ her to use this powerful means of inspiring these unfortunate
+ men with Christian sentiments. Animated by this thought, Sister
+ Eugenie repaired to the ward, and much affected, proposed
+ to say evening prayers. 'Yes, Sister,' answered some among
+ them. Trembling, she began; but at the _Creed_, overcome by
+ excitement and terror, she wept like a child, and was obliged
+ to pause. When she recovered her voice, it was not to continue
+ the prayers, but to tell the prisoners how much she felt at the
+ thought that on the morrow, they would be judged and perhaps
+ condemned; then making them a brief exhortation, inspired by
+ the circumstances, she offered to give each one a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin, begging them to retain it about their person,
+ happen what might. The proposition was accepted immediately,
+ but Sister Eugenie was too frightened to give the medal into
+ their hands; in the middle of the night, when all seemed to be
+ asleep, she quietly placed a medal under each one's pillow.
+ How great was her joy next morning, to see all these poor
+ insurgents with the medal around their neck.
+
+ "The Superioress came into the hall where the men were
+ collected and asked if they wished a priest to come and hear
+ their confessions. All consented with unequivocal signs of
+ gratitude. A good priest, one of the hostages of the Commune,
+ came and heard their confession. On leaving them he seemed
+ much consoled, and said he had every reason to hope for their
+ salvation. The unfortunate men left the house at seven o'clock,
+ and were conducted to Versailles; they were calm and resigned,
+ and when about to leave, showed the Sisters the medal they
+ wore. Doubtless, God accepted the sacrifice of their life in
+ atonement for their faults."
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Recent Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin
+
+_IN FRANCE, ITALY AND GERMANY_.
+
+THE CONFIDENCE WITH WHICH THESE APPARITIONS SHOULD INSPIRE US.
+
+
+The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, has, in our
+age, brought to its climax, devotion to the Blessed Virgin. Divine
+Providence employed twenty-four years in preparing the world for this
+great event; we have seen in the preceding chapters, how much the
+apparition of 1830, contributed thereto, and how powerful the influence
+of the Miraculous Medal in propagating this devotion. Since this time a
+second period of twenty-four years has elapsed, during which devotion
+to the Immaculate Mary has shone as a radiant star in the firmament
+of the Church, spreading everywhere the light of truth and the warmth
+of true piety; and, by a gentle yet efficacious impulse, producing
+unanimity of mind and heart in the great Catholic family.
+
+Since the definition, as well as before it, France continues to be the
+privileged country of Mary; nowhere else are miracles so numerous, or
+graces so abundant. Whence arises this glorious prerogative? So far as
+we are permitted to penetrate the secrets of God, it appears to us, to
+our understanding: France who has wrought so much evil by disseminating
+philosophical and revolutionary doctrines, is to repair the past by
+propagating truth, and Mary desires to prepare her for this mission.
+Everyone knows, moreover, that the French character possesses a force
+of expansion and a power of energy that render the French eminently
+qualified to maintain the interests of truth and justice. Then, again,
+is not France the eldest daughter of the Church, since she was baptized
+in the person of Clovis, the first of the Most Christian Kings; and in
+virtue of this title, is it not her duty to devote herself under the
+patronage of her Mother in heaven to the defence of her Mother on earth?
+
+Be the motives of Mary's predilection for the French nation what they
+may, the fact is incontrovertible. Nevertheless, the Blessed Virgin has
+not forgotten other Catholic countries; they also have had their share
+in the singular favors she has so generously dispensed in our days.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF LOURDES.--1858.
+
+Four years after the definition of the Immaculate Conception, Mary
+vouchsafed to manifest herself anew to the world, and this time, as if
+in token of her gratitude, she took the glorious name the Church had
+just decreed her: "_I am the Immaculate Conception_." It was in France
+that the vision of the medal took place, preparatory to the act of
+December 8th, 1854; it was also in France, at Lourdes, in the diocese
+of Tarbes, at the base of the Pyrenees, that Mary came in person, to
+testify and proclaim that privilege which she prized above all others.
+In 1830, she choose a young, unlettered Sister for her confidant; in
+1846, she addressed herself to two poor peasant children; in 1858, she
+also selects one in the humblest ranks of life as the depository of her
+merciful designs.
+
+Bernadette Soubirous, born at Lourdes in 1844, of poor parents, was
+a young girl of weak and delicate health; she could neither read nor
+write; she knew no prayers but her _Chaplet_, and she could speak only
+the _patois_ of the country. "On February 11th, 1858," says she, "my
+parents were in great perplexity for want of wood to cook the dinner. I
+put on my hood, and offered to go with my younger sister Marie and our
+friend, the little Jeanne Abadie, to pick up some dead branches." The
+three children repaired to the bank of the Gave, opposite the grotto
+of Masabielle; in which were collected the sand and branches of trees
+drifted there by the current. But to reach the grotto, it was necessary
+to wade through the shallow bed of the river. Marie and Jeanne took off
+their shoes without hesitation; Bernadette delayed and feared to cross,
+as she was suffering from a cold. Whilst thus deliberating, she was
+astonished by a rushing of wind, instantly repeated, though the trees
+near the river were motionless. One vine only was slightly agitated,
+an eglantine, which grew in the upper part of this natural grotto.
+This niche and the wild rose within reflected a most extraordinary
+brilliancy; a Lady of admirable beauty appeared in the niche, her feet
+resting on the eglantine, her arms gracefully bent, and her hands
+joined; with a sweet smile, she saluted the child. Bernadette's first
+emotion was one of fear; she instinctively grasped her chaplet, as if
+seeking defence in it, and she tried to raise her hand to make the sign
+of the cross, but her arm fell powerless and her terror increased. The
+Lady also had a _Chaplet_ suspended from her left wrist; taking it in
+her right hand, she made a very distinct sign of the cross, and passed
+between her fingers the beads (white as drops of milk); but her lips
+did not move. She smiled upon the shepherdess, who, reassured from
+this moment, recovered the use of her arm, made the sign of the cross
+and recited the _Chaplet_. The little Bernadette remained on her knees
+nearly an hour, in ecstacy. At length, the Lady made her a sign to
+approach, but Bernadette did not move. Then the Lady, extending her
+hand, smiled, and, bowing as if bidding farewell, disappeared. Returned
+to herself, Bernadette thought of rejoining her companions, who, having
+seen nothing, were at a loss to understand her conduct. She entered
+the water, which she found, to her surprise, of a gentle warmth. On
+reaching home, she imparted the secret to her sister, and then to her
+mother, who did not credit it.
+
+However, the child being tormented by an earnest desire to behold the
+apparition again, her parents granted permission for her return to the
+grotto with several companions; the same manifestation took place and
+the same ecstacy. On Thursday, February 18th, she again repaired to the
+grotto; the apparition was visible for the third time, and the Lady
+requested Bernadette to come there daily for a fortnight. Bernadette
+promised. "And I," replied the Lady, "promise to render you happy not
+in this world, but the next."
+
+On the succeeding days, the young girl went to the grotto, accompanied
+by her parents and an ever increasing crowd. None of them saw or
+heard anything. The transfiguration of the countenance of Bernadette
+announced the presence of a supernatural being, who urged the child to
+pray for sinners.
+
+On the sixth day of the fortnight, the august Lady revealed to
+Bernadette three secrets, forbidding her to communicate them to any
+one. She taught her a prayer, and charged her with a message. "You will
+go," said she, "and tell the priest that a chapel must be built here,
+and that the people must come here in procession."
+
+Bernadette communicated this order to the curé, but he hesitated to
+believe the child, and told her to ask the Lady for a sign which might
+confirm her words, for example, to make the wild rose which winter has
+divested of its leaves, break forth into blossom, then the month of
+February.
+
+The Blessed Virgin did not judge proper to grant the miracle, but she
+tried Bernadette's obedience, by commanding her to kiss the ground
+on several occasions, and to climb the rock on her knees, praying
+meantime for sinners. One day she enjoined upon her to go and drink at
+the fountain of the grotto, to wash therein, and to eat of a certain
+herb which grew in that place. Bernadette saw no fountain, and no one
+had ever heard of one in the grotto, yet on a sign from the Lady, the
+docile child dug the earth with her fingers, and discovered a muddy
+water which, notwithstanding her repugnance, she used as commanded.
+
+At the end of several days, the little thread of muddy water had become
+a limpid and abundant spring, and what was still more marvelous, it
+wrought innumerable prodigies. On February 26th, by the use of this
+water, a man who had gone blind twenty years previous, by the explosion
+of a mine, recovered his sight, and on the last day of the fortnight, a
+child dying, or as was supposed, dead, regained life and health in the
+waters of this fountain.
+
+We will not dwell here upon the persecutions directed against
+Bernadette by the magistrates, or upon the vexations besetting the
+pilgrims who flocked hither from all parts of the world. Every one has
+read these details in the work of M. Lasserre, who so ably depicts the
+dignity and firmness displayed in the affair by the parish priest, M.
+Peyramale.
+
+The apparition of March 25th, has a special significance. Bernadette,
+on several occasions, inquired the Lady's name. At this question, the
+vision, on the day mentioned, unclasped her hands, the chaplet of
+golden chain and alabaster grains sliding on to her arm. She opened her
+arms and directed them towards the earth, as if to indicate that her
+virginal hands were filled with benedictions for the human race; then
+raising them towards the celestial country, whence descended on this
+day the divine messenger of the Annunciation, she clasped them with
+fervor, and looking towards heaven with an indescribable expression
+of gratitude, she pronounced these words: "_I am the Immaculate
+Conception_." Having said this, she disappeared, and the child found
+herself and the multitude in presence of a bare rock.
+
+The Immaculate Virgin appeared to Bernadette twice again; on Easter
+Monday, April 5th, and July 16th, the Feast of our Lady of Mount
+Carmel.
+
+The following 28th of July, the Bishop of Tarbes named a commission of
+inquiry, composed of ecclesiastics, physicians and learned men. July
+18th, 1862, he published a decree concerning the events that had taken
+place at Lourdes; it was couched in the following words:
+
+ "We judge that the Immaculate Mother of God did really appear
+ to Bernadette Soubirous, Feb. 11th, 1858, and on succeeding
+ days to the number of eighteen times in the grotto of
+ Masabielle, near the city of Lourdes; that this apparition
+ bears all the characteristics of truth, and that the faithful
+ may rely upon its reality."
+
+Mary had petitioned that a chapel be built upon the spot. The first
+stone was laid in the month of October, 1862, the piety of pilgrims
+furnishing the necessary funds for the erection of the edifice, and on
+the 21st of May, 1868, the Holy Mass was celebrated there for the first
+time, in the crypt which was to bear the new sanctuary. The connection
+existing between the apparitions of 1858 and 1830 is indicated by two
+painted windows in the sanctuary, one of which represents Bernadette's
+vision, the other that of Sister Catherine.
+
+The pilgrimage to Lourdes has assumed vast proportions; thanks to the
+railroads, the pilgrims each year number hundreds of thousands, coming
+from every quarter of the globe, and countless miracles recompense the
+faith of those who seek in this sanctuary the merciful power of the
+Immaculate Mary.
+
+The grotto of Lourdes, reproduced in a thousand places, has become one
+of the most popular objects of devotion.
+
+As to Bernadette, the interest and veneration attached to her have not
+in the least affected her candor and simplicity. She has retired to the
+convent of Sisters Hospitallers of Nevers, and nothing distinguishes
+her from the most humble of her companions.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF PONTMAIN (DIOCESE OF LAVAL).--1871.
+
+ "France, having been invaded by the Prussians, was conquered;
+ Paris was besieged and suffered the horrors of famine,
+ aggravated by the rigors of an extremely cold winter. It
+ was at this period the Blessed Virgin vouchsafed to appear,
+ bringing words of hope and consolation to the people of her
+ predilection. The place favored with this apparition was the
+ little town of Pontmain, situated about four leagues from
+ Fougères, on the confines of the dioceses of Laval and Rennes.
+ It was Monday, January 17th, 1871, about six o'clock in the
+ evening; Eugène Barbedette, a child aged twelve years, looking
+ from the door of the barn where he was occupied with his father
+ and younger brother, Joseph, aged ten years, perceived in the
+ air, a little above and behind the house of the family of
+ Guidecoq, which was opposite him, a tall and beautiful Lady,
+ who smiled upon him. He called his brother, his father, and
+ a woman of the village who was talking to him at the moment.
+ But his brother was the only one except himself who saw the
+ vision, and both gave exactly the same description of this
+ wonderful being. The Lady was clothed in a wide-sleeved blue
+ robe, embroidered with golden stars. Her dress descended to
+ the shoes, which were also blue, fastened with a clasp of
+ gold-colored ribbon. She wore a black veil, covering a portion
+ of her forehead and falling behind her shoulders to the girdle.
+ Upon her head was a golden circle like a diadem, and with no
+ ornament but a red line passing through the middle. Her face
+ was delicate, very white, and of incomparable beauty.
+
+ "In a little while, quite a crowd had collected around the
+ barn-door; Madame Barbedette, the Sisters in charge of the
+ parish school, the venerable curé, and more than sixty other
+ persons, but of all these, only two shared the happiness of the
+ Barbedette children. These two were also children, boarders
+ at the convent. Frances Richer, aged eleven years, and Jane
+ Mary Lebossé, aged nine and a half. The other spectators were
+ witnesses only of the joy and happiness of the four privileged
+ ones, but all were convinced that it was truly the Blessed
+ Virgin who had appeared.
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin's attitude was at first, that seen in the
+ Miraculous Medal. After the parish priest arrived, a circle of
+ blue was formed around the apparition, and a small red cross
+ like that worn by pilgrims, appeared on the Blessed Virgin's
+ heart. All began to pray. Suddenly the vision was enlarged,
+ and outside the blue circle, appeared a long white strip or
+ band, on which the children saw letters successively traced
+ and forming those words: '_But pray, my children. God will, in
+ a short time hear you. My Son allows himself to be touched by
+ your supplications._' Then, raising her hands, as if in unison
+ with the singing of the canticle, '_Mother of hope_,' there
+ appeared in them a red crucifix at the top of which was the
+ inscription: _Jesus Christ_.
+
+ "This prodigy was visible for three hours. After juridical
+ information, Mgr. Wicart, Bishop of Laval, confirmed by a
+ solemn judgment, the reality of the apparition.
+
+ "On the 17th of January, 1872, the first anniversary of the
+ event, a beautiful statue representing the apparition, was
+ solemnly set up, in presence of more than eight thousand
+ pilgrims, and a magnificent church is now in course of erection
+ on the spot.
+
+ "The Holy See has authorized the clergy of the diocese of Laval
+ to recite the _Office_ and celebrate the Mass of the Immaculate
+ Conception, every year, on the 17th of January; and by Papal
+ brief, an archconfraternity, under the title of _Our Lady of
+ Hope_, has been instituted in the parish of Pontmain."[36]
+
+ [Footnote 36: Extract of a relation approved by the Bishop of
+ Laval.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We could enumerate many other apparitions of the Blessed Virgin in
+France, but, not having been approved, by ecclesiastical authority, we
+dare not give them as authentic. We shall mention only the apparitions
+with which Miss Estelle Faguette was favored with at Pellevoisin, in
+the diocese of Bourges. The instantaneous cure of this lady, afflicted
+by a malady judged incurable, may be regarded as evidence of the truth
+of the account. Moreover, the Archbishop of Bourges appears to have
+considered it reliable, as he has authorized the erection of a chapel
+in memory of the event. On the 14th of February, 1876, the Blessed
+Virgin appeared to Miss Faguette, and the vision was repeated fifteen
+times in the space of ten months. Mary's attitude was similar to that
+represented on the Miraculous Medal, except that the rays proceeding
+from her hands were replaced by drops of dew, symbols of grace. A
+scapular of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was on her breast.
+
+Mary expressed her love for France, but complained of her admonitions
+being disregarded. She recommended fervent prayer, by the fulfillment
+of which duty we may confidently rely upon God's mercy.
+
+ "What have I not done for France?" said she. "How many
+ warnings have I not given! Yet, this unhappy land refuses to
+ listen. I can no longer restrain my Son's wrath. France will
+ suffer. Have courage and confidence. I come especially for the
+ conversion of sinners. You must pray; I set you the example.
+ My Son's heart has so great love for my heart that He cannot
+ refuse my petitions. You must all pray, and have confidence!"
+ Showing the scapular, she said: "I love this devotion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Who has not heard of the wonderful manifestations of the Blessed Virgin
+in Italy of late years? How many thousands of persons, moved by piety
+or curiosity, have visited the Madonnas of Rimini, of San Ginesio,
+of Vicovaro, of Prosessi, etc., and have witnessed the movement of
+the eyes, the change of color, and other miraculous signs certainly
+attributable to none but a supernatural power. It does not appear,
+however, that Mary has, in this country, presented herself in person,
+though here she receives the most sincere and abundant tributes of
+affection. Doubtless, she considers any stimulus to the faith of its
+people unnecessary. And besides, may we not say that she has fixed her
+abode in Italy, since her own house, the house of Nazareth, wherein the
+mystery of the Incarnation was accomplished, and where dwelt the Holy
+Family, has been transported thither by the hands of angels?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whilst the Prussian government is persecuting the Church, the Blessed
+Virgin vouchsafed to appear in the two most Catholic provinces of her
+kingdom, and in two opposite frontiers, near the banks of the Rhine
+and in the Grand Duchy of Posen. Does she not seem to say to the good
+people of these localities, that they must have confidence and that
+God will conquer their enemies? We must remark that on both of these
+occasions, Mary announces herself as the _Virgin conceived without
+sin_.
+
+We give an abridged account of these two apparitions, which we have
+every reason to consider supernatural. The second vision had been
+formally approved by the Bishop of Ermeland.
+
+On the 3rd of July, 1876, at Marpingen, an inconsiderable village of
+the district of Trèves (Rhenish Prussia), the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to three little girls, in a pine forest about the hour of the evening.
+The three children were each about eight years of age, and belonged
+to families of poor, honest farmers residing in the village. They
+perceived a bright light, and in the midst of it a beautiful Lady
+seated, holding a child in her right arm. The Lady and child were clad
+in white, the Lady crowned with red roses, and in her clasped hands, a
+little cross.
+
+The vision was renewed several times. To the childrens' questions as
+to her name, she answered; "_I am she who was conceived without sin_;"
+and when asked what she desired, the reply was: "That you pray with
+fervor, and that you commit no sin." Several sick persons were cured by
+touching the place which the children pointed out as that occupied by
+the Blessed Virgin. These facts are incontestable; but they have not
+yet been examined by ecclesiastical authority.[37]
+
+ [Footnote 37: Extract from _Catholic Annals_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the village of Grietzwald, in Varmia, one of the ancient provinces
+of Poland annexed to Prussia, four young girls, poor and of great
+innocence, were favored on various occasions for two months, beginning
+June 27th, 1877, with apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, who appeared
+sometimes alone, sometimes carrying the Child Jesus, holding in his
+hands a globe surmounted by a cross. Both Mother and Child were clothed
+in white.
+
+To the children's question: "Who are you?" the apparition answered, on
+one occasion: "I am the Blessed Virgin Mary, _conceived without sin_;"
+and another time, "_I am the Immaculate Conception_."
+
+In the first apparition, our Lady's countenance was sad, and she even
+shed tears; afterwards, it betokened joy. She asked that a chapel be
+erected and a statue of the Immaculate Conception placed therein. At
+each apparition she blessed the crowd, which was always numerous; she
+blessed also a spring, which has since then furnished an abundant
+supply of water, effecting miraculous cures. She recommended the
+recitation of the _Rosary_, and exhorted all to fervent prayer, and
+confidence in the midst of the trials which were to come.[38]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Letters from Poland.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+These recent apparitions of the Blessed Virgin have founded new
+pilgrimages, the faithful flocking to the favored spots in honor of the
+Mother of God, and ask for the graces which she bestows with a truly
+royal liberality. At the same time her ancient sanctuaries, far from
+being neglected, have only become more endeared to piety, many having
+been reconstructed with magnificence, or at least most handsomely
+embellished; it suffices to mention Fourvières, Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde,
+Rocamadour, Boulogne-sur-mer, Liesse and Buglose.
+
+The coronation of the most celebrated statues of the Blessed Virgin,
+in the name and by the munificence of Pius IX, was the occasion of
+imposing solemnities, and also a means of infusing into the devotion of
+the people greater vigor and fervor.
+
+The exercises of the Month of Mary have extended to the most humble
+villages, and there is scarcely a parish without its confraternity in
+honor of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Science, eloquence, poetry, music, sculpture, painting and architecture
+have rivalled one another in celebrating the glory of the Virgin Mother.
+
+What may we deduce from this wonderful increase of devotion to the
+Immaculate Mary?
+
+The impression naturally produced is that of confidence. A society
+which pays such homage to Mary, cannot perish. If, as St Bernard says,
+it is unheard of that any one has been forsaken who had recourse to
+her intercession, how were it possible that the fervent prayers of an
+entire people should fail to touch her heart? No, the future is not
+without hope; the mediation of Mary will save us.
+
+The venerable Grignion of Montfort, in his _Treatise_ on true devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin has written these lines: "It is by the Blessed
+Virgin Mary, Jesus Christ came into the world; it is also by her,
+that he is to reign in the world. If then, as is certain, the reign
+of Jesus Christ will come, so likewise is it certain that this reign
+will be a necessary consequence of the knowledge and reign of the
+Blessed Virgin. Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, produced that
+most stupendous of all creations, a Man-God, and she will produce by
+the power of this same Holy Spirit, the greatest prodigies in these
+latter times. It is through Mary the salvation of the world began, it
+is through Mary the salvation of the world is to be consummated. Mary
+will display still greater mercy, power and grace in these days. Mercy,
+to bring back poor sinners; power, against the enemies of God; grace,
+to sustain and animate the valiant soldiers and faithful servants of
+Jesus Christ, combating for His interests. Ah! when will arrive the
+day that establishes Mary mistress and sovereign of hearts, to subject
+them to the empire of Jesus?... Then will great and wonderful things be
+accomplished.... When will this joyful epoch come, this _Age of Mary_,
+in which souls absorbed in the abyss of the interior of Mary, will
+become living copies of the sublime, original, loving and glorifying
+Jesus Christ?"
+
+Father de Montfort adds, in addressing our Saviour: _Ut adveniat regnum
+tuum, adveniat regnum Mariæ!_ May the reign of Mary come that they
+reign, O Jesus, may come!
+
+Is not this the _Age of Mary_? Was there ever in the Church, a period
+in which Mary was, if we may thus express it, so lavish of favors as
+in these, our days? Was there ever a period in which she has appeared
+so frequently and familiarly, in which she has given to the world,
+admonitions so grave and maternal; in which she has worked so many
+miracles; and poured out graces so abundantly? The reader of this
+volume will answer unhesitatingly, that no period of history offers
+anything comparable to what we have witnessed in our own days.
+
+It is true, that the day of triumph announced by the venerated
+Montfort, appears far distant; one might say that the kingdom of God on
+earth is more compromised than ever. The wicked make unexampled efforts
+to demolish the social edifice; they are numerous, powerful, and
+possessed of incalculable resources. But for the Church, when all seems
+lost, then is her triumph at hand. God sometimes permits the malice of
+men to exceed all bounds, that His power may be the more manifest when
+the moment of their defeat arrives.
+
+All the united efforts of the Church's enemies in the course of ages,
+all their errors, hatred and violence directed against her, the Spouse
+of Christ, are now concentrated in what is termed the Revolution--that
+is, anti-Christianity reduced to a system and propagated throughout the
+world, it is Satan usurping the place of Jesus Christ.
+
+But He who has conquered the world, and put to flight the prince of the
+world, will not permit Himself to be dethroned. He will reign, and even
+now, before our eyes, is His kingdom being prepared, by the mediation
+of the Immaculate Mary, of whom the promise was made that _she should
+crush the serpent's head, and to whom alone belongs the privilege of
+destroying all heresies arising upon earth_.
+
+
+ _THE END._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: The book included a decorative image at the
+beginning of each chapter.
+
+The labels for these have been removed in the text version of
+this book
+
+The oe ligature has been expanded. There were many printer's errors in
+this publication, which have been corrected.
+
+ Page 25 Extraordinay is now extraordinary.
+ Page 112 physican is now physician.
+ Page 158 Physycian is now for physician.
+ Page 258 Prepartion is now preparation.
+ Page 266 Tranformed is now transformed.
+
+Inconsistent use of accents has resulted in 2 words being
+amended. Chalons is now Châlons, and Eugene is now Eugène.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
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diff --git a/old/44231-0.zip b/old/44231-0.zip
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Miraculous Medal
+ Its Origin, History, Circulation, Results
+
+Author: Jean Marie Aladel
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2013 [EBook #44231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Karina Aleksandrova, Sue Fleming, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: _SISTER CATHERINE LABOURÉ,
+
+The Daughter of Charity, favored with the Vision of the Miraculous
+Medal in 1830. Died December 31, 1876._]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ MIRACULOUS MEDAL
+
+ ITS
+
+ _Origin, History, Circulation, Results_.
+
+ BY M. ALADEL, C.M.
+
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,
+
+ BY P.S.,
+
+ Graduate of St. Joseph's, Emmitsburg, Md.
+
+ ILLUSTRATED.
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ H.L. KILNER & CO.,
+ PUBLISHERS.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1880, BY JOHN B. PIET.
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION.
+
+ TO
+
+ THE MOST COMPASSIONATE VIRGIN MARY,
+
+ MOTHER OF GOD, CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN.
+
+_Oh Mary, conceived without sin, Virgin incomparable, august Mother of
+Jesus, thou who hast adopted us for thy children, and who hast given us
+so many proofs of thy maternal tenderness, deign to accept this little
+book, feeble token of our gratitude and love!_
+
+_Oh! may it be instrumental in attracting and attaching inviolably to
+thee, the hearts of all who read it!_
+
+_O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!_
+
+
+
+
+ _AUTHOR'S DECLARATION._
+
+
+In conformity with the decree of Pope Urban VIII, we declare that
+the terms miracle, revelation, apparition and other expressions of a
+similar nature here employed, have, in our intention, no other than a
+purely historical value, and that we submit unreservedly the entire
+contents of this book to the judgment of the Apostolic See.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLISHER.
+
+
+Since the hour when the Beloved Disciple took the Blessed Virgin to
+his own, the followers of her Divine Son have always cherished a
+reverential affection for her above all other creatures. They have
+regarded her as the ideal of all that is true and pure and sweet and
+noble in the Christian life, and they have honored her as the most
+favored of mortals, the greatest of saints, the masterpiece of the
+Almighty. The peculiar veneration paid to her by the Apostles, was
+caught up by the first Christians, who regarded her with awe because
+of her great dignity; and when she died, her memory was held in
+benediction. But death could not sever her from those who, in the
+person of St. John, had been given to her for her children. She still
+lived for the Church. From the time when the faithful took refuge
+in the Catacombs to the fifth century, when the Council of Ephesus
+solemnly sanctioned the homage paid to her as the Mother of God, her
+intercession was often invoked; and from that day, devotion towards her
+has increased until our own age, when the nations of the earth unite to
+proclaim her Blessed.
+
+Often has Mary given signal proofs of the pleasure she takes in the
+devotion of her clients and of the power she possesses to grant their
+petitions. Graces asked through her mediation have been suddenly
+obtained; wonders in the way of cures and conversions have been wrought
+at her shrines; disasters have been averted; plagues have been made
+to cease; and, to crown all her favors, apparitions have occurred, in
+which she has shown herself, radiant with the lustre of Heaven, to
+her loyal servants; and, in some instances, she has left something
+like the scapular, the Miraculous Medal and the fount in the grotto of
+Lourdes, as memorials of her visit.
+
+These manifestations of her maternal solicitude have of late been more
+frequent, more renowned, and more efficacious than ever. As the end
+draws near and the dangers increase, her anxiety for the sanctification
+of her own bursts its bonds and urges her to find new ways to the
+hearts of men. Among the most recent of these demonstrations, the
+Miraculous Medal is one of the most remarkable. How it originated,
+how rapidly and widely it has circulated, and how gloriously it has
+fulfilled its mission, are told in this book. A more interesting and
+edifying history could not easily have been written. To all children of
+Mary, in America as elsewhere, it will be welcome, and for them this
+edition has been prepared by
+
+
+ THE PUBLISHER.
+
+ May 4, 1880.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE FRENCH EDITION
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The eighth and last edition of THE HISTORY OF THE MIRACULOUS
+MEDAL, extending up to the year 1842, has for a long time been
+out of print. More than once efforts have been made to have a new
+edition published, but until now they have failed. The recent death
+of the Sister who was favored with the Blessed Virgin's confidence,
+has again excited a general desire for the work; for many persons are
+eager to learn the origin of the medal, and others hope to get the full
+particulars of it. For these reasons, the present edition has been
+undertaken.
+
+Believing that it would gratify our readers, we have placed at the
+beginning of the book a biographical sketch of the privileged Sister,
+Catherine Labouré, and to it we have added some notes concerning M.
+Aladel, her Director, who was the author of the previous editions.
+
+These editions of the History presented but a very condensed account
+of the apparition of the Blessed Virgin in 1830; for serious reasons
+induced M. Aladel to suppress many things. He feared especially to
+attract attention to the humble daughter who had transmitted Heaven's
+orders, and who, it was best, should remain unknown to the end of her
+life.
+
+Now, these fears are no longer an obstacle, and we are permitted to
+publish, for the edification of the faithful, all that the Sister
+revealed, at least, all that we still possess of these communications.
+At the time of the last edition, M. Aladel could understand but
+imperfectly the import of the vision of the medal, but certain events
+of subsequent occurrence, have placed this important revelation in a
+clearer light, and fully established its connection with the past and
+the future. We have endeavored to show the designs of Providence, by
+proving that the apparition of 1830 was not an isolated fact; that
+it marked the end of a disastrous period for the Church and society;
+that it was the beginning of a new era, an era of mercy and hope; that
+it was a preparation for the definition of the Immaculate Conception
+as a dogma of faith; in fine, that it was the first of a series of
+supernatural manifestations, which have greatly increased devotion to
+the Blessed Virgin, insomuch, that our age may justly be styled the age
+of Mary.
+
+We have judged it advisable to omit quite a number of miraculous
+occurrences related in the preceding editions, and substitute for them
+others not less authentic, but more recent, thus demonstrating that
+the medal is as efficacious in our days, as it was at the time of its
+origin.
+
+We ask those who may hereafter obtain similar favors, to send an
+account of them, together with satisfactory vouchers of their
+authenticity, to the Superior-General of the Daughters of Charity, rue
+du Bac, 140, or to the Director of the Daughters of Charity, rue de
+Sevres, 95, Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ DEDICATION, iii
+
+ THE AUTHOR'S DECLARATION, v
+
+ PREFACE, vii
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ Sister Catherine, Daughter of Charity--Her Birth--Early
+ Life--Vocation--Entrance into the Community--Apparition of
+ the Blessed Virgin--The Medal--Sister Catherine is sent to
+ d'Enghien Hospital--Her humble, hidden Life--Her Death.
+ 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ Mary's Agency in the Church--This Agency always manifest, seems
+ to have disappeared during the Eighteenth and at the beginning
+ of the Nineteenth Century--Mary reappears in 1830--Motives and
+ Importance of this Apparition--The Immaculate Conception.
+ 42
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine--First
+ Apparition: An Angel Conducts the Sister to the Chapel--Mary
+ Converses with Her--Second Apparition: Mary standing upon
+ a Globe, her hands emitting Rays of Light, symbolic of
+ Grace--Mary orders a Medal to be Struck--Third Apparition: Mary
+ Repeats the Order.
+ 51
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ The Medal Appears--The Welcome it Receives--Canonical
+ Investigation ordered by Mgr. de Quélen--Wonderful Circulation
+ of the Medal.
+ 67
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ Development of the Devotion to the Immaculate Conception--Mgr.
+ de Quélen's Circular.
+ 79
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ Extraordinary Graces obtained by means of the Miraculous
+ Medal--Graces obtained from 1832 to 1835--During the year 1835,
+ in France, Switzerland, Savoy, Turkey--From 1836 to 1838, in
+ France, Italy, Holland, &c.--Notre Dame des Victoires--From
+ 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, &c.--From 1843 to
+ 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America.
+ 94
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Progress of the Devotion to Mary crowned by the Definition of
+ the Immaculate Conception--Our Lady of La Salette--The Children
+ of Mary--The Definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+ 261
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Miraculous Medal and the War--The War in the East--The
+ Italian War--The United States--War between Prussia and
+ Austria--Souvenirs of the Commune.
+ 289
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Recent Manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church--Our
+ Lady of Lourdes--Our Lady of Pontmain, &c.--Conclusion.
+
+
+
+
+Table of Engravings of the Miraculous Medal
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ Portrait of Sister Catherine Labouré, the Daughter of Charity
+ favored with the Vision of the Miraculous Medal in 1830.
+ _Frontispiece_
+
+ First Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Labouré, Daughter of Charity, during the night of July 18th,
+ 1830. After a picture painted according to Sister Catherine's
+ directions. Summoned by her Guardian Angel, under the form of a
+ child, emitting rays of light, Sister Catherine arises, follows
+ him to the Chapel, which she finds brilliantly illuminated; she
+ afterwards sees the Blessed Virgin seated in the sanctuary. The
+ picture represents Sister Catherine at the Blessed Virgin's
+ feet, her hands on the Blessed Virgin's knees: "My child,"
+ says the Blessed Virgin, "the times are very disastrous, great
+ troubles are about to descend upon France; the throne will
+ be upset, the entire world will be in confusion by reason of
+ miseries of every description."
+ 53
+
+ Second Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Labouré, November 17th, 1830, first picture. About half-past
+ five in the evening, whilst Sister Catharine is taking her
+ meditation, the Blessed Virgin again appears. She stands upon a
+ hemisphere, and holds in her hand a globe which she offers to
+ our Lord. Suddenly her fingers are filled with most dazzling
+ rings and precious stones. "This globe," says the Blessed
+ Virgin, "represents the whole world and particularly France."
+ She adds that the rays escaping from her hands "are symbols of
+ the graces she bestows upon those who ask for them."
+ 59
+
+ Same Apparition, second picture. "Then," relates Sister
+ Catherine, "there formed around the Blessed Virgin a somewhat
+ oval picture, upon which appeared in golden letters these
+ words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!' and a voice said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model; those who wear it indulgenced will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it on the neck; abundant graces
+ will be bestowed upon those who have confidence.'" At that
+ instant, the picture being turned, Sister Catherine sees on the
+ reverse, the letter M, surmounted by a cross, and beneath this
+ the sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
+ 60
+
+ Medal struck by order of Mgr. de Quélen. 78
+
+ Apparition of the Miraculous Medal to M. Ratisbonne. 205
+
+ Representation of the Miraculous Medal, modelled in accordance
+ with the description given by Sister Catherine Labouré.
+ 272, 273
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SISTER CATHERINE,
+
+ _DAUGHTER OF CHARITY_.
+
+ HER BIRTH--EARLY LIFE--VOCATION--ENTRANCE INTO THE
+ COMMUNITY--APPARITION OF THE VIRGIN--THE MEDAL--SISTER CATHERINE
+ IS PLACED AT THE HOSPITAL D'ENGHIEN--HER HUMBLE, HIDDEN LIFE--HER
+ DEATH.
+
+
+It is an extensively credited assumption, that those who are favored
+with supernatural communications should have something extraordinary
+in their person and mode of life. One easily invests them with an
+ideal of perfection, which, in some measure, sets them apart from
+the majority of mankind. But if, at any time, an occasion occurs of
+proving that such an assumption is erroneous, if we discover in these
+divine confidants weaknesses or only infirmities, we are astonished
+and tempted to be scandalized. Among the Christians who knew St. Paul
+only by reputation, some were disappointed on a closer acquaintance;
+they said his appearance was too unprepossessing and his language too
+unrefined for an apostle. Were not the Jews scandalized that Our Lord
+ate and drank like others, that His parents were poor, that He came
+from Nazareth, and that He conversed with sinners? So true is it, that
+we are always disposed to judge by appearances.
+
+Not so with God. He sees the depths of our hearts, and often what
+appears contemptible in the eyes of the world, is great in His.
+Simplicity and purity He prizes especially. Exterior qualities, gifts
+of intellect, birth and education, are of little value to Him, and when
+He has an important mission to confide, it is ordinarily to persons not
+possessing these qualifications. Thus, does He display His wisdom and
+power, in using what is weak, to accomplish great results. Sometimes,
+He chooses for His instruments subjects that are even imperfect,
+permitting them to commit faults in order to keep them in all humility,
+and convince them that the favors they receive are not accorded their
+own merits, but are the gift of God's pure bounty.
+
+These observations naturally prelude Sister Catherine's biography; they
+explain in advance the difficulties which might arise in the mind of
+the reader at the contrast between a life so simple and ordinary and
+the graces showered upon her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine (Zoé Labouré) was born May 2, 1806, in a little
+village of the Côte-d'Or Mountains, called Fain-les-Moutiers, of the
+parish of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. This last place, particularly dear
+to St. Vincent, was not far from the cradle of St. Bernard, that
+great servant of Mary, nor from the spot where St. Chantal passed a
+part of her life, as if in the soil as well as the blood there was a
+predisposition to certain qualities or hereditary virtues.
+
+Her parents, sincere Christians, were held in esteem. They cultivated
+their farm, and enjoyed that competency which arises from rural labor
+joined to simplicity of life. God had blessed their union with a
+numerous family, seven sons and three daughters.
+
+At an early age, the sons left the paternal roof; little Zoé, with
+her sisters, remained under the mother's eye, but this mother, God
+took from Zoé, ere she had completed her eighth year. Already capable
+of feeling the extent of this sacrifice, it seemed to her as if the
+Blessed Virgin wished to be her only Mother.
+
+An aunt, living at Rémy, took Zoé and the youngest sister to live with
+her; but the father, a pious man, who in his youth had even thought of
+embracing the ecclesiastical state, preferred having the children under
+his own eye, and at the end of two years they were brought home.
+
+Another motive, also, impelled him to act thus. The eldest sister
+thought seriously of leaving her family to enter the Community of
+Daughters of Charity, and the poor father could not bear the idea of
+confiding his house to mercenary hands. And thus, at an age when other
+children think only of their sports, Zoé was inured to hard work.
+
+At the age of twelve, with a pure and fervent heart, she made her First
+Communion in the church of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Henceforth, her only
+desire was to be solely His who had just given Himself to her for the
+first time.
+
+Very soon after, the eldest sister left home to postulate at Langres;
+and Zoé, now little mistress of the house, did the cooking, with the
+assistance of a woman for the roughest work. She carried the field
+hands their meals, and never shrank from any duty however laborious or
+severe.
+
+Moutiers-Saint-Jean possesses an establishment of the Sisters of St.
+Vincent de Paul. Zoé went to see them as often as her household duties
+permitted, and the good Sister-Servant, who loved her much, encouraged
+the child in her laborious life; yet the latter never spoke to the
+Sister of her growing vocation, but awaited, with a secret impatience,
+until her sister (two years her junior) would be able to take charge
+of the house. It was she to whom Zoé confided her dearest desires, and
+then commenced for the two that tender intimacy of life, one of pure
+labor and duty, and whose only relaxations were attending the services
+of the parish church.
+
+The two young girls, thinking themselves able to dispense with the
+servant, dismissed her, and now shared between them all the work. Zoé,
+who was very sedate and trustworthy, watched over everything with
+the utmost vigilance, and took care of her sister with a mother's
+tenderness.
+
+One of her favorite occupations was the charge of the pigeon house,
+which always contained from seven to eight hundred pigeons. So
+faithfully did she perform this duty, that they all knew her, and as
+soon as she appeared they came flying around her in the shape of a
+crown. It was, says her sister, a most charming spectacle--innocence
+attracting the birds, which are its symbol.
+
+In youth, we see her, already modest in deportment, serious in
+character, pious and recollected in the parochial church which she
+regularly attended, kneeling upon the cold stones even in winter. And
+this was not the only mortification she practiced; to bodily fatigue,
+she added from her tenderest youth that of fasting every Wednesday
+and Saturday. It was for a long time without her father's knowledge;
+at length, discovering his daughter's pious ruse, he endeavored to
+dissuade her; but all his reproaches were not able to overcome her love
+of penance, she believed it her duty to prefer the interior voice of
+God to that of her father.
+
+In all this we clearly discern the character of the future Sister,
+with its virtues and defects. On one side, we see true simplicity,
+unselfishness, constant application to the most laborious duties under
+the safeguard of innocence and fervor; on the other, a disposition
+accustomed to govern, and which could not yield without an internal
+struggle.
+
+During this life of rural toil, she never lost sight of her vocation.
+Several times was her hand asked in marriage, but she invariably
+answered that, long affianced to Jesus her good Saviour, she wished no
+other spouse than Him. But had she yet made choice of the Community she
+would enter? It is doubtful, especially when we consider the following
+event of her life, which deeply impressed her, and always remained
+graven in the memory of her dear sister who related it.
+
+Being still in her father's house at Fain-les-Moutiers, she had
+a dream, which we may consider as an inspiration from God and a
+preparation for her vocation.
+
+It seemed to her that she was in the Purgatorian chapel of the
+village church. An aged priest of venerable appearance and remarkable
+countenance appeared in the chapel, and began to vest himself for
+Mass; she assisted at it, deeply impressed with the presence of this
+unknown priest. At the end of Mass, he made her a sign to approach, but
+affrighted, she drew back, yet ever keeping her eyes fixed upon him.
+
+Leaving the church, she went to visit a sick person in the village.
+Here, she again finds herself with the aged priest, who addresses her
+in these words: "My daughter, it is well to nurse the sick; you fly
+from me now, but one day you will be happy to come to me. God has His
+designs upon you, do not forget it." Amazed and filled with fear, the
+young girl still flies his presence. On leaving the house, it seemed to
+her that her feet scarcely touched the ground, and just at the moment
+of entering her home she awoke, and recognized that what had passed was
+only a dream.
+
+She was now eighteen years old, knowing scarcely how to read, much less
+write; as she was doubtless aware that this would be an obstacle to her
+admission into a Community, she obtained her father's permission to
+visit her sister-in-law, who kept a boarding school at Châtillon, and
+there receive a little instruction. Her father, fearing to lose her,
+reluctantly consented to her departure.
+
+Incessantly occupied with thoughts of the vision we have already
+related, she spoke of it to the Curé of Châtillon, who said to her: "I
+believe, my child, that this old man is St. Vincent, who calls you to
+be a Daughter of Charity." Her sister-in-law having taken her to see
+the Sisters at Châtillon, she was astonished on entering their parlor
+to behold a picture, the perfect portrait of the priest who had said
+to her in her dream: "My daughter, you fly from me now, but one day
+you will be happy to come to me. God has His designs upon you, do not
+forget it." She immediately inquired the name of the original, and when
+told that it was St. Vincent, the mystery vanished; she understood that
+it was he who was to be her Father.
+
+This circumstance was not of a nature to quench the ardor of her
+desires. She remained but a short time with her sister-in-law. The
+humble country girl was ill at ease amidst the young ladies of the
+school, and she learned nothing.
+
+It was at this time she became acquainted with Sister Victoire Séjole,
+who was afterwards placed over the house at Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Though
+young, already thoroughly devoted to God and His poor, Sister Victoire
+divined the candor of this soul and its sufferings; she immediately
+begged her Sister-Servant to admit Zoé as a postulant without delay,
+offering herself to bestow particular pains upon her, instructing her
+in whatever was indispensable for her as a Daughter of Charity.
+
+But Zoé could not yet profit by the interest good Sister Victoire had
+taken in her; this happiness was to be dearly bought.
+
+When she acquainted her father with her intentions, the poor father's
+heart rebelled; he had already given his eldest daughter to St.
+Vincent's family, and now, to sacrifice her who for years had so
+wisely directed his household, seemed indeed beyond his strength. He
+considered a means of dissuading her from her plans, and thought he
+had found it by sending her to Paris, to one of his sons who kept a
+restaurant, telling him to seek by various distractions to extinguish
+in the sister's heart all idea of her vocation. Time of trial and
+suffering for the young aspirant, who, far from losing the desire of
+consecrating herself to God, only sighed more ardently after the happy
+day when she could quit the world.
+
+She now thought of writing to her sister-in-law at Châtillon, and
+interesting her in the matter. The latter, touched with this mark of
+confidence, had Zoé come to her, and finally obtained the father's
+consent. Zoé became a postulant in the house of the Sisters at
+Châtillon, in the beginning of the year 1830.
+
+Zoé Labouré was very happy to find, at last, the end of those severe
+trials which had lasted almost two years. The 21st of April, 1830, she
+reached that much desired haven, the Seminary.[1]
+
+ [Footnote 1: St. Vincent desired that the sojourn which the
+ young Sisters make at the Mother House, to be there imbued
+ with, and instructed in, the spirit and duties of their
+ vocation, should be called the Seminary term; he feared lest
+ the word "novitiate," applicable to religious Orders, might
+ cause the Daughters of Charity to be regarded as such.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Behold her, then, in possession of all that had been the cherished
+object of her desires and affections from earliest childhood! Her soul
+could now dilate itself in prayer, and in the joyful consciousness of
+being entirely devoted to the service of its God.
+
+During the whole of her Seminary term, she had the happiness of
+having for Director of her conscience M. Jean Marie Aladel, of
+venerated memory, a priest of eminent piety, excellent judgment and
+great experience, austere as a hermit, indefatigable in work, a true
+son of St. Vincent de Paul. He was a prudent guide for her in the
+extraordinary ways whither God had called her. He knew how to hold
+her in check against the illusions of imagination, and especially the
+seductions of pride at the same time, that he encouraged her to walk
+in the paths of perfection by the practice of the most solid virtues.
+M. Aladel did not lose sight of her, even after she was sent to the
+Hospital d'Enghien. He thereby gained much for his own sanctification
+and the mission confided to him.
+
+Informed by her of God's designs, he devoted himself unreservedly to
+the propagation of devotion to Mary Immaculate, and during the last
+years of his life, to extend among the young girls educated by the
+Sisters of St. Vincent, the association of Children of Mary. He died in
+1865, eleven years before his spiritual daughter.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: The Life of M. Aladel has been published; 1 volume
+ in 12mo. It can be procured in Paris, rue du Bac, 140.]
+
+Three days before the magnificent ceremony of the translation of St.
+Vincent de Paul's relics to the chapel of St. Lazare, a feast which
+was the signal of renewed life for the Congregation of the Mission,
+Sister Labouré was favored with a prophetic vision. The same God who
+had called Vincent from the charge of his father's flocks to make him a
+vessel of election, was now going to confide to a poor country girl the
+secrets of His mercy. Let us give the account of this first impression
+in her own simple language.
+
+ "It was Wednesday before the translation of St. Vincent de
+ Paul's relics. Happy and delighted at the idea of taking part
+ in this grand celebration, it seemed to me that I no longer
+ cared for anything on earth.
+
+ "I begged St. Vincent to give me whatever graces I needed, also
+ to bestow the same upon his two families and all France. It
+ appeared to me that France was in sore need of them. In fine,
+ I prayed St. Vincent to teach me what I ought to ask, and also
+ that I might ask it with a lively faith."
+
+She returned from St. Lazare's filled with the thought of her blessed
+Father, and believed that she found him again at the Community.
+"I had," said she, "the consolation of seeing his heart above the
+little shrine where his relics are exposed. It appeared to me three
+successive days in a different manner: First, of a pale, clear color,
+and this denoted peace, serenity, innocence and union.
+
+"Afterwards, I saw it the color of fire, symbolic of the charity that
+should be enkindled in hearts. It seemed to me that charity was to be
+reanimated and extended even to the extremities of the world.
+
+"Lastly, it appeared a very dark red, a livid hue, which plunged my
+heart in sadness. It filled me with fears I could scarcely overcome. I
+know not why, nor how, but this sadness seemed to be connected with a
+change of government."
+
+It was strange, indeed, that Sister Labouré, at that time, should have
+these political forebodings.
+
+An interior voice said to her: "The heart of St. Vincent is profoundly
+afflicted at the great misfortunes which will overwhelm France."
+The last day of the octave, she saw the same heart vermilion color,
+and the interior voice whispered: "The heart of St. Vincent is a
+little consoled, because he has obtained from God (through Mary's
+intercession) protection for his two families in the midst of these
+disasters; they shall not perish, and God will use them to revive the
+Faith."
+
+To ease her mind, she related this vision to her confessor, who told
+her to think no more about it; Sister Labouré never dreamed of aught
+but obeying, and in no way did she ever reveal it to her companions.
+
+We find this singular favor mentioned in a letter written by Sister
+Catherine, in the year 1856, at the command of M. Aladel. The year
+she entered the Seminary, this worthy missionary was almost the only
+chaplain of the Community. The Congregation of the Mission, scarcely
+restored at this epoch, counted at its Mother House but nine priests
+in all, and at least half that number were in the Seminary. M. Étienne,
+of venerated memory, was Procurator General, and M. Salhorgne, Superior
+of St. Vincent's two families. If the laborers were few, the deficiency
+was supplied by the devotedness of these few, who multiplied themselves
+for the service of the Community. The Divine bounty has prepared for
+their charity a beautiful recompense.
+
+According to the notes which Sister Catherine wrote later in obedience
+to M. Aladel, the humble daughter during all her Seminary term enjoyed
+the undisguised sight of Him whose presence is concealed from our
+senses in the Sacrament of His love. "Except," said she, "when I
+doubted, then I saw nothing, because I wished to fathom the mystery,
+fearing to be deceived."
+
+Our Lord deigned to show Himself to His humble servant, conformably to
+the mysteries of the day, and, in connexion with this, she mentions one
+circumstance relative to the change of government, which could not have
+been foreseen by human means.
+
+"On the Feast of the Holy Trinity," says she, "Our Lord during Holy
+Mass appeared to me in the Most Blessed Sacrament as a king with the
+cross upon His breast. Just at the Gospel, it seemed to me that the
+cross and all His regal ornaments fell at His feet, and He remained
+thus despoiled. It was then the gloomiest and saddest thoughts
+oppressed me, for I understood from this that the king would be
+stripped of his royal garb, and great disasters would ensue."
+
+When the humble daughter had these forebodings concerning the king, he
+was then apparently at the pinnacle of fortune. The siege of Algiers
+was in progress, and everything predicted the happy success of his
+arms. During the early part of July, this almost impregnable fortress
+of the pirates fell into the power of France; the whole kingdom
+rejoiced at the memorable victory, and the churches resounded with
+hymns of thanksgiving.
+
+Alas! this triumph was to be quickly followed by a bloody revolution,
+which would overthrow the throne and menace the altars. That very
+month, the clergy and religious communities of Paris were seized with
+terror. M. Aladel was greatly alarmed for the Daughters of Charity and
+the Missionaries, but Sister Labouré never ceased to reassure him,
+saying that the two communities had nothing to fear, they would not
+perish.
+
+One day she told him that a bishop had sought refuge at St. Lazare's,
+that he could be received without hesitation, and might remain there
+in safety. M. Aladel paid little attention to these predictions,
+but returning sadly to his house, he was accosted on entering by M.
+Salhorgne, who told him that Mgr. Frayssinous, Bishop of Hermopolis,
+and Minister of Religious Worship under Charles X, had just come,
+begging an asylum from the persecution that pursued him.
+
+These revelations bore an impress of truth which it was difficult to
+ignore; so in feigning to mistrust them, M. Aladel listened with the
+deepest interest. He began to persuade himself that the spirit of God
+inspired this young Sister; and after seeing the accomplishment of
+several things she had foretold, he now felt disposed to give credence
+to other and more marvellous communications she had confided to him.
+
+According to her testimony, the Most Holy Virgin had appeared to her,
+these apparitions were repeated various times, she had been charged to
+acquaint her Director with what she had seen and heard, an important
+mission had been confided to her, that of having struck and circulated
+a medal in honor of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+The third chapter of this volume gives a detailed account of these
+visions, just as they have been transmitted to us from the hand of the
+Sister herself.
+
+Notwithstanding the sensible assurances of the Sister's veracity, M.
+Aladel listened to these communications with mistrust, as he tells us
+himself, in the canonical investigation prescribed in 1836 by Mgr.
+de Quélen; he professed to consider them of little value, as if they
+had been the pious vagaries of a young girl's imagination. He told
+her to regard them in the same light, and he even went so far as to
+humble her, and reproach her with a want of submission. The poor
+Sister, unable to convince him, dared speak no more of the apparitions
+of the Blessed Virgin; she never mentioned the subject to him except
+when she felt herself tormented and constrained to do so by an almost
+irresistible desire.
+
+"Such was the reason," says M. Aladel, "that she spoke to him
+concerning the matter but three times, although the visions were much
+oftener repeated." After thus relieving her heart, she became perfectly
+calm. The investigation also shows us that Sister Catherine sought no
+other confidant of her secrets than her confessor; she never mentioned
+them to her Superior or any one else. It was to M. Aladel Mary had
+directed her, to him only did she speak, and she even exacted of him
+the promise that her name would never be mentioned.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: Verbal process of the investigation made by order
+ of Mgr. de Quélen in 1836, upon the origin of the medal, MS. p.
+ 10.]
+
+After this pledge, M. Aladel related the vision to M. Étienne and
+others, but without designating the Sister's identity, directly or
+indirectly. We shall see later how Providence always guarded her secret.
+
+These celestial communications, we may easily imagine, produced in the
+soul of Sister Labouré profound impressions, which usually remained
+even after she had finished her devotions, and which rendered her in
+some degree oblivious of what was passing around her. It is related
+that after one of these apparitions she rises like the others at the
+given signal, leaves the chapel, and takes her place in the refectory,
+but remains so absorbed that she never thinks of touching the meal
+apportioned her.
+
+Sister Caillaud, third Directress, going her rounds, says bluntly to
+her: "Ah! Sister Labouré, are you still in an ecstasy?" This recalls
+her to herself, and the good Directress, who knows not how truly she
+has spoken, suspects nothing.
+
+Meanwhile, Sister Catherine approached the end of her Seminary term,
+and in spite of her affirmations at once so artless and so exact, her
+Director always refused to credit them. She had the affliction of
+leaving the Mother House without being able to obtain anything, even a
+hope.
+
+It was because the affair was graver than she thought; the supernatural
+origin of the favor he was directed to communicate to the public could
+be contested, and the prudent Director saw that in such a matter he
+could neither exact too many proofs, nor take too many precautions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Labouré was clothed with the holy habit in the month of January,
+1831, and sent under the name of Sister Catherine to the Hospital
+d'Enghien in the faubourg St. Antoine. Here she could continue her
+communications with M. Aladel. This good father did not lose sight of
+her; though apparently giving no credit to his penitent revelations,
+he was studying her carefully to convince himself whether or not these
+visions were the product of a weak, enthusiastic mind and excited
+imagination. But the more he studied her, the more confident he felt
+that there was nothing of this in Sister Labouré. The judgment formed
+of her by the Directresses of the Seminary was, that she had a somewhat
+reserved but calm, positive character, which M. Aladel qualified as
+cold and even apathetic.
+
+This last epithet, however, was not applicable to Sister Catherine,
+in whom her companions, on the contrary, recognized a very impulsive
+temperament. But his opinion proves, at least, that there was no
+excessive imagination. Moreover, she proved herself solidly grounded
+in virtue, whilst no one ever perceived anything extraordinary in her
+demeanor, and especially in her devotions.
+
+Before going to her new destination, Sister Labouré passed some days in
+one of the large establishments of Paris. Wishing to examine the young
+Sister more leisurely, M. Aladel made a pretext of visiting the Sisters
+at this house. The account of these visions had already been circulated
+throughout the Community, and it was known that M. Aladel had received
+the Sisters' confidence; hence, as soon as he appeared, the Sisters
+surrounded him, and each one eagerly plied him with questions. He had
+his eye upon Sister Catherine, who, without being disconcerted, quietly
+mingled her inquiries with the others. The worthy missionary was
+reassured, understanding that the Sister kept her secret.
+
+The last time the Blessed Virgin appeared to Sister Labouré in
+the sanctuary of the Mother House, she said to her: "My daughter,
+henceforth you will see me no more, but you will hear my voice during
+your meditations." And, indeed, during the whole course of her life,
+she had frequent communications of this kind. They were no longer
+sensible apparitions, but mental visions, that she well knew how to
+distinguish from the illusions of imagination or the impressions of a
+pious fervor.
+
+Her mission had not been accomplished in regard to the medal. Some
+months elapsed, and the Immaculate Virgin complained to Sister
+Catherine that her orders had not been executed.
+
+"But, my good Mother," replied Sister Catherine, "you see that he will
+not believe me." "Be calm," was the answer; "a day will come when he
+will do what I desire; he is my servant, and he would fear to displease
+me."
+
+These words were soon verified.
+
+When the pious missionary received this communication, he began to
+reflect seriously. "If Mary is displeased," said he, "it is not with
+the young Sister, whose position prevents her doing anything; it must
+be with me." This thought troubled him.[4] A long time previous, he
+had related these visions to M. Étienne, then Procurator General. One
+day, at the beginning of the year 1832, when they had gone together on
+a visit to Mgr. de Quélen, M. Aladel profited by the opportunity to
+speak to the latter of these apparitions, and especially of his own
+embarrassment, since the Blessed Virgin had complained to the Sister of
+the delay in fulfilling her commands.
+
+ [Footnote 4: Verbal process of the investigation, p. 5.]
+
+Mgr. de Quélen replied that, seeing nothing in it at all contrary to
+faith, he had no objection to the medal being struck at once. He even
+asked them to send him some of the first.
+
+The ravages of the cholera, which had broken out meanwhile, retarded
+the execution of this design until June; the 30th of that month, two
+thousand medals were struck, and M. Aladel hastened to send some of
+them to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Mgr. de Quélen wished to make an immediate trial of its efficacy; he
+was very much troubled concerning the spiritual condition of the former
+Archbishop of Mechlin, Mgr. de Pradt, now on the verge of death; he
+desired his conversion so much the more earnestly, as the death of this
+prelate might be the occasion of scandal and grave disorders, such as
+have accompanied the interment of the constitutional bishop Gregory.
+Providing himself with a medal, he went to visit the sick man. At
+first he was refused admittance, but very soon the dying man repents
+of it, and sends him an apology, with a request to call again. In this
+interview, he testifies to His Grace a sincere repentance for his past
+life, retracts all his errors, and after receiving the Last Sacraments,
+he dies that very night in the arms of the Archbishop, who, filled with
+a holy joy, eagerly imparts this consoling news to M. Aladel.
+
+The worthy missionary sent a medal to Sister Catherine, who received
+it with great devotion and respect,[5] and said: "Now it must be
+disseminated." This was easy to do among the Daughters of Charity, who
+had all heard whispers of these apparitions; the eagerness to receive
+the medals was general, they were distributed freely, and cures and
+conversions multiplied themselves accordingly in all ranks of society,
+so that very soon the medal received the appellation of miraculous.
+
+ [Footnote 5: Verbal process of the investigation.]
+
+A witness of these wonders, the heart of Father Aladel dilated with
+joy, and he believed it his duty to publish a notice of the origin of
+the medal, and thus satisfy all the inquiries addressed him on the
+subject. For the glory of God and Mary, he added an account of all the
+consoling facts that had come to his knowledge.
+
+What said Sister Catherine in hearing of these wonderful occurrences?
+Less than any one; she was astonished; doubtless her joy was great, but
+it was confined within the silence of her heart. Occasionally she sent
+some new message to M. Aladel, begging him to have an altar erected
+commemorative of the apparition, and telling him that many graces and
+indulgences would be attached thereto, and fall most abundantly upon
+himself and the Community.
+
+She urged him also to solicit particular spiritual favors, assuring him
+that he might ask freely, for all his requests would be granted.
+
+But this worthy priest, whose position in the Community, as we have
+already said, was that of simple chaplain, prudently kept silence,
+holding himself in reserve until the favorable moment should arrive
+for him to act. Some years after, M. Étienne, his intimate friend, was
+elected Superior General, and he was made assistant of the Congregation
+and Director of the Daughters of Charity; in concert, they formed the
+design of erecting to the Immaculate Mary an altar more in accordance
+with her maternal bounty and the gratitude of her children. Providence
+itself seemed to co-operate with the execution of their plan, the
+Community receiving from the government just then a present of two
+magnificent blocks of white marble, in recognition of the Sisters'
+services to the cholera patients and their orphans. One was destined
+for an altar, the other for a statue of the Immaculate Mary.
+
+Meanwhile, the number of inmates at the Mother House, the Seminary
+especially, increased daily. The new life infused into the Community
+had awakened many vocations, and the centre of reunion had become
+inadequate in size to its purposes, the chapel particularly was much
+too small. In enlarging it, the architect had a difficult problem to
+resolve: he must respect the sanctuary honored by Mary's visit, and
+yet extend the enclosure. He did so by adding side aisles, on a lower
+foundation, surmounted with galleries. If the edifice, always too low
+and small, gained nothing in the way of art, it has, at least, the
+advantage of preserving intact the exact spot where the Most Holy
+Virgin appeared.
+
+The former altar was taken into the side chapel dedicated to St.
+Vincent, and the holy founder was there represented holding that heart,
+burning with love of God and the poor, as it had appeared to Sister
+Catherine in the vision. A plaster statue of the Immaculate Conception
+occupied temporarily the place over the main altar, destined for the
+marble statue, which for various causes was not solemnly inaugurated
+till 1856.
+
+It was a day of great rejoicing for the Mother House; the statue was
+not a cold, mute representation; ... it was an eloquent image of Mary;
+here had this merciful Mother spoken and promised her graces; daily
+experience had confirmed these promises, and the statue still awakens
+in the hearts of those who come to pray at her feet, the deepest and
+tender emotions. Yes, Mary is indeed here. She speaks to the hearts of
+her children. She makes them feel that she loves and protects them!
+
+Sister Catherine said also to M. Aladel, in the early period of her
+vocation: "The Blessed Virgin wishes you to found a Congregation, of
+which you will be the Superior. It is a Sodality of Children of Mary;
+the Blessed Virgin will shower many graces upon it, and indulgences
+will be granted it."
+
+The reader will see, in the course of the volume, how this work was
+realized, and how admirably Providence has extended the association.
+
+She also told him that the month of May would be celebrated with much
+magnificence, and become universal in the Church; that the month of St.
+Joseph would likewise be kept with solemnity; that devotion to this
+great Saint would greatly increase, as well as devotion to the Sacred
+Heart of Jesus.
+
+So many miracles wrought everywhere and every day, so many signal
+testimonies of Mary's protection, made it an obligation on the
+Community, and especially the Seminary where they had originated, to
+perpetuate so precious a souvenir.
+
+Two pictures were therefore ordered, one representing the vision of
+the medal, the other that of St. Vincent's heart. The artist, wishing
+to depict the Blessed Virgin as accurately as possible, consulted M.
+Aladel as to the color of the veil.----
+
+The missionary's embarrassment was great; he had forgotten this item,
+but attaching more importance to the details than Sister Catherine
+thought, he wrote to her, and under the pretext of warning her against
+the illusions of the demon, he asked her to describe again the Blessed
+Virgin's appearance in the vision of the medal. Sister Catherine
+made this answer: "Just now, my Father, it would be impossible for me
+to recall all that I saw, one detail alone remains, it is, that the
+Blessed Virgin's veil was the color of morning light."
+
+This was just what M. Aladel wished to know, and precisely the only
+thing Sister Catherine could recollect.
+
+These little incidents, regulated by Providence, were not lost; they
+increased the confidence of the wise Director. When the pictures were
+placed in the Seminary, M. Aladel discreetly took measures to have
+Sister Catherine come to see them, just at the very time he would
+be there as if by chance. Another Sister, accidentally meeting them
+there, has a suspicion of the truth, and turning suddenly to the worthy
+Father, she says: "This is certainly the Sister who had the vision!"
+He is greatly embarrassed, and sees no way of extricating himself from
+the difficulty, except by calling upon Sister Catherine to answer. She
+laughed, saying: "You have guessed well," but with such simplicity that
+the other Sister said to the Father: "Oh! I see plainly that it is not
+she; you would not have asked her to tell me."
+
+During the course of her long life, Sister Catherine was subjected to
+trials of this sort.
+
+The details Mgr. de Quélen had received from M. Aladel concerning
+the vision of the medal interested him deeply, and he was anxious to
+become acquainted with the favored Sister. M. Aladel replied that
+the Sister insisted upon remaining unknown. "As for that," said His
+Grace, "she can put on a veil and speak to me without being seen." M.
+Aladel excused himself anew, saying it was for him a secret of the
+confessional.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, miraculously converted in 1842 by the apparition of the
+Miraculous Medal, also ardently desired to speak with the Sister first
+favored by this celestial vision, and he often but vainly entreated her
+Director's permission.
+
+Those around her frequently asked embarrassing questions, or
+expressed their suspicions. When too closely pressed, she found means
+of making the curious feel their indiscretion, so that it was not
+repeated. Moreover, her great simplicity ordinarily disconcerted her
+interrogators.
+
+On several occasions, the Blessed Virgin seemed to aid her; thus, in
+the investigation of 1836, and in the deposition made to the Promoter,
+M. Aladel declared that he had vainly endeavored to persuade Sister
+Catherine to be present, he could not overcome her repugnance; and
+moreover, they would interrogate her to no purpose, she had forgotten
+everything concerning the event.
+
+The same thing happened one day, it is said, in the presence of M.
+Étienne, then Superior General; he could not succeed in making her
+speak, she remembered nothing. It is this which gave rise to the rumor
+in the Community, that the vision was completely effaced from the
+memory of the Sister who had been favored with it.
+
+Thanks to this opinion, Sister Catherine was enabled to remain long
+years truly concealed in her modest duties; employed first in the
+kitchen, then in the clothes-room; afterwards, for nearly forty years,
+she had charge of the old men's ward of the Hospital d'Enghien,
+combining with this duty the care of the poultry yard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She loved these humble duties. Everything was kept in perfect order,
+and for her there was no greater happiness than that of being among
+her poor. At the end of her life, she spoke of it as her chief
+consolation. "I have always," said she, "loved to stay at home;
+whenever there was question of a walk, I yielded my turn to others that
+I might serve my poor."
+
+And this was true. One walk only was she unwilling to forego, that
+which led to the Community, and she knew no other road but that to the
+Mother House. When she could make this visit she never yielded her turn.
+
+Her attraction for silence and the hidden life always kept her in the
+rear, as the place most suitable for her, and most favorable to the
+spirit of recollection. She ceded to none the lowest and most repulsive
+duties of her ward, duties which she termed the pearls of a Daughter
+of Charity; she moved calmly and quietly, avoiding precipitation, and
+when advanced in years, the young Sisters, her assistants, often heard
+from her lips these words: "Ah! my dear, do not be so agitated, be more
+gentle."
+
+She regarded as one of the most cherished souvenirs of her Community
+life, that of her first Sister-Servant, "a dear soul," said she, "who
+every year sent the first fruits of her garden to the indigent families
+of the faubourg, or to her old men. The Sisters were not allowed to
+touch them until this had been done."
+
+This aged Superior was Sister Savard, who never supposed that Sister
+Catherine was favored with especial graces, and particularly with the
+vision of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Our humble daughter Catherine respected and loved all the Sisters under
+whom she served, and never did she utter a word against them; she saw
+only their virtues and good qualities.
+
+"Child of duty and labor, but especially of humility," says her last
+Superior, "Sister Catherine was not truly appreciated except by
+those who studied her sufficiently to perceive the great simplicity,
+uprightness, and purity pervading her soul, her mind, her heart, her
+whole person.
+
+"Never arrogating to herself the slightest merit on account of the
+singular favors with which the Immaculate Virgin had loaded her, she
+said, one day towards the close of her life, when Providence permitted
+a slight allusion to this subject: 'I, favored Sister! I have been
+only an instrument; it was not for myself the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to me. I knew nothing, not even how to write; it was in the Community
+I learned all I know; and because of my ignorance the Blessed Virgin
+chose me, that no one might doubt."
+
+Is not the conclusion inspired by the spirit of St. Vincent, "I have
+been chosen, because being nothing, no one could doubt that such great
+things are the work of God."
+
+Sister Catherine cared little for the esteem or contempt of others.
+Despite her rigid silence, there always hovered over her the suspicion
+that it was she who had seen the Blessed Virgin; no one dared tell her
+so; but in consequence of the suspicion, she was more closely observed,
+and more severely judged than any one else, and if by chance her
+companions discovered in her some slight weakness of nature, or even
+the absence of some heroic virtue, the thought was immediately rejected
+that the Blessed Virgin had chosen so ordinary a person.
+
+The testimony of one of her first companions confirms the impression
+on this point, an impression repeated a hundred fold. This companion
+writes to Sister Dufès: "Having passed six years with Sister
+Catherine, and worked constantly with her one year, it would seem
+that I could cite a great number of details full of interest and
+edification; but I am forced to confess that her life was so simple,
+so uniform, that I find nothing in it to remark. Notwithstanding the
+whispered assurances that she was the Sister so favored by the Blessed
+Virgin, I scarcely credited it, so much was her life like that of
+others. Sometimes, I sought to enlighten myself indirectly on the
+subject by questioning her as to the impression such extraordinary
+occurrences had produced in the Seminary, hoping that her answers would
+betray her, and thereby satisfy my curiosity, but she replied with so
+much simplicity that my hopes were always deceived."
+
+It is true, Sister Catherine had nothing remarkable about her, and yet
+nothing common or trivial.
+
+Her height was above the medium; her regular features bore the seal
+of modesty; and her clear blue eye was indicative of candor. She was
+industrious, simple, and not the least mystical in her spiritual
+exercises; she affected neither great virtues nor particular devotions,
+well pleased to cherish them in the depths of her heart, and practice
+them according to the rule with fidelity and exactness.
+
+After her death, some notes were found written by her own hand during
+one of the annual retreats. Everything in them is simple, solid,
+practical, and there is not one word of allusion to the extraordinary
+graces she had received; even when addressing the Blessed Virgin,
+nothing recalls the familiarity with which Mary had treated her. Here
+are some extracts, in which no changes have been made except those of
+fault-spelling.
+
+ "I will take Mary for my model at the commencement of all my
+ actions; in everything, I will consider if Mary were engaged
+ thus, how and wherefore she would do this, with what intention.
+ Oh! how beautiful and consoling is the name of Mary ... Mary!
+
+ "Resolution to offer myself to God without reserve, to bear
+ every little contradiction in a spirit of humility and
+ penance, to beg in all my prayers that the will of God may be
+ accomplished in me. O my God! do with me as Thou wilt! O Mary!
+ grant me your love, without which I perish; bestow upon me all
+ the graces I need! O Immaculate Heart of Mary! obtain for me
+ the faith and love which attached you to the foot of the cross
+ of Jesus Christ!
+
+ "O sweet objects of my affections, Jesus and Mary, let me
+ suffer for you, let me die for you, let me be all for you and
+ no longer anything for myself!
+
+ "Not to complain of the little contradictions I meet with among
+ the poor, and to pray for those who cause me suffering. O Mary,
+ obtain for me this grace, through your virginal purity!
+
+ "To employ my time well, and not to spend one moment
+ unprofitably. O Mary, happy those who serve you and put their
+ confidence in you!
+
+ "O Mary, Mary, Mary, pray, pray, pray for us, poor sinners, now
+ and at the hour of our death! Mary, O Mary!
+
+ "In my temptations and times of spiritual dryness, I will
+ always have recourse to Mary, who is purity itself. O Mary,
+ conceived without sin!----
+
+ "O Mary, make me love you, and it will not be difficult to
+ imitate you!
+
+ "Humility, simplicity and charity are the foundation of our
+ holy vocation. O Mary, make me understand these holy virtues!
+ St. Vincent, pray, pray for us!
+
+ "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray, pray for us! Deign, O
+ Queen of Angels and of men, to cast a favorable eye upon the
+ whole world ... especially upon France ... and each person
+ in particular! O Mary, inspire us what to ask of you for our
+ happiness!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine lived forty-six years in a large establishment, under
+the direction of five successive Superiors; she was brought in contact
+with many companions of different dispositions and different degrees of
+virtue, consequently the esteem in which she was held varied. If they
+sometimes gave her to understand that her mind was failing, such things
+troubled her little, and she always quietly went her way, receiving
+kindness with grateful simplicity, and ungracious words without
+flinching.
+
+Faithful to the rule with such uniform exactness, that merit seems
+to disappear before habit, she never uttered a word against charity.
+Even when age had given her some privileges over her young companions,
+rarely did she allow herself to blame or advise them; not, at least,
+unless they consulted her, then she advised submission. "Everything
+is in that," said she, "without obedience, Community life is not
+possible." To the very end of her days, her obedience to her Superior
+was as perfect as when she left the Seminary.
+
+We must not, however, suppose that Sister Catherine was of a yielding,
+gentle temperament, to which obedience was natural; no, on the
+contrary, she had a strong will and quick temper. Thoroughly versed in
+household labors, she performed her part with great care and assiduity,
+and directed most scrupulously all that was entrusted to her charge.
+Her impulsive temper sometimes displayed itself in little sallies of
+impatience, the firm tone of her words revealing at times what virtue
+ordinarily caused her to repress. When the first heat was over, she
+immediately repented of it and humbled herself.
+
+It was often observed that this first movement of surprise, just ready
+to escape, was held captive, not by human respect, but by a superior
+will; thus proving that her implicit obedience was due her fidelity to
+grace.
+
+Understanding her nature, we can now form an idea of what Sister
+Catherine suffered from the opposition she experienced in realizing her
+mission; even though these contradictions, especially after the medal
+had been struck, were more apparent than real on the part of her wise
+Director, they were none the less painful to her. Might we not say that
+these trials constituted an interior martyrdom sustained by God and
+known to him alone?
+
+Sister Catherine, despite her strong constitution, was not exempt from
+physical suffering, and her companions were sometimes astonished at the
+simplicity with which she asked for little comforts that a mortified
+soul would have denied itself. These slight defects formed a veil that
+obscured the sight of many, and partially concealed the beauties of her
+soul.
+
+Apparently, the very depths of this simple nature might be read at a
+glance, and yet she faithfully guarded the secrets of God. In her were
+seen, by a singular contrast, prudence and discretion allied to perfect
+simplicity. Thus, whilst some found her a little too thoughtful of her
+health, others observed that on all great feasts of the Blessed Virgin,
+particularly that of the Immaculate Conception, she was either sick
+or suffering acute pain, which trials the humble Sister received as a
+favor from her celestial Mother.
+
+The Superior of the Hospital d'Enghien relates that, one year, when
+Sister Catherine had gone with several of her companions to spend the
+beautiful Feast of December 8th at the Community, on getting into the
+omnibus that evening she fell and broke her wrist. She said not a word,
+and no one perceived the accident. Some minutes after, seeing that
+she held her arm in her handkerchief, Sister Dufès inquired what had
+happened. "Ah! Sister," she quietly replied, "I am holding my bouquet;
+every year the Blessed Virgin sends me one of this sort."
+
+Detachment from the esteem and affection of creatures was still another
+trait characteristic of our dear Sister. God sufficed her; that God
+who had manifested Himself to her in so wonderful a manner, that
+Immaculate Virgin whose charms had ravished her heart, were her sole
+joy and delight. The Blessed Virgin, pointing to the sacred tabernacle
+where her divine Son reposes, had said to her: "In all your trials, my
+daughter, it is there you must seek consolation." Faithful to these
+words of her good Mother, Sister Catherine in moments of trial sought
+the chapel, whence she soon returned to her occupations with renewed
+serenity of soul and countenance ever cheerful. Jesus and Mary alone
+received the confidence of her sufferings and her fervor, so that her
+virtues in a measure were concealed from creatures.
+
+One of the Sisters of the house says that, having often observed her
+closely to discover, if possible, some trace of her communications with
+God, she could find nothing especial except that during prayer she
+did not cast down her eyes, but always kept them fixed upon the image
+of Mary. She remarks, also, that Sister Catherine never wept except
+from great anguish of heart, but many times she saw her shed tears in
+abundance on listening to some traits of protection or some conversion
+obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession, or, as in 1871, at
+the evils afflicting the Church and France.
+
+Solidly pious in the midst of companions apparently more so, we see
+nothing indeed in our humble Sister to distinguish her from others.
+Only one especial circumstance has been remarked, the importance
+she attached to the recitation of the chaplet. Let us hear what her
+Sister-Servant says on this point--
+
+"We were always struck," writes Sister Dufès, "when saying the chaplet
+in common, with the grave and pious manner in which our dear companion
+pronounced the words of the Angelical Salutation. And what convinced
+us of the depth of her respect and devotion was the fact that she,
+always so humble, so reserved, could not refrain from censuring the
+indifference, the want of attention, which too often accompanies the
+recitation of a prayer, so beautiful and efficacious."
+
+Her love for the two families of St. Vincent, far from diminishing with
+age, only incited her to employ continually in their behalf the sole
+influence at her disposal, prayer; regularly every week, she offered a
+Communion to attract the benediction of Heaven upon the Congregation of
+the Mission; her prayers for her Community were incessant.
+
+Sister Catherine always retained the same duty at the Hospital
+d'Enghien; with truly admirable solicitude, she nursed the old men
+entrusted to her, at the same time not neglecting the pigeon house,
+which recalled the purest and sweetest joys of her childhood. The young
+girl of former days, whom we have seen with her dear pigeons hovering
+round her, was now a poor Sister, quite aged, but none the less
+attentive to her little charge.
+
+Sister Catherine was, then, the soul of the little family in charge of
+the hospital. During these later years, the number of our Sisters had
+increased considerably, and consequently the administration of the two
+houses, d'Enghien and Reuilly, being very difficult for one person, an
+assistant was sent me for the hospital. If Sister Catherine had not
+for years been moulded to obedience and abnegation, it would have been
+hard to her quick, impulsive nature, to recognize the authority of a
+companion so much younger than herself; but far different were the
+thoughts of this humble Sister, who always endeavored to abase herself.
+
+ "She was the first to tender her perfect submission. 'Sister,'
+ said she, 'be at ease, it suffices that our Superiors have
+ spoken; we will receive Sister Angélique as one sent from God,
+ and obey her as we do you.' Her conduct justified her words.
+
+ "Although Sister Catherine guarded rigorously the supernatural
+ communications she had received, she occasionally expressed her
+ views to me on actual occurrences, speaking then as if inspired
+ by God.
+
+ "Thus, at the time of the Commune, she told me that I would
+ leave the house accompanied by a certain Sister, that I would
+ return the 31st of May, and she assured me I need have no
+ fears, as the Blessed Virgin would take my place and guard the
+ house. At the time, I paid very little attention to the good
+ Sister's words.
+
+ "I left, indeed, and realized, contrary to my plans, and
+ without a thought on the subject, all that Sister Catherine
+ had predicted. On my return from the Community, May 31st, I
+ expressed my anxiety concerning the house, which had been in
+ the hands of the Communists, and, it was said, plundered.
+ Sister Catherine endeavored to reassure me, repeating that the
+ Blessed Virgin had taken care of everything, she was confident
+ of it, for the Blessed Virgin had promised her.
+
+ "We found on our arrival that this Mother of mercy had, indeed,
+ guarded and saved all, notwithstanding the long occupation of
+ our dear house by a mob of furies, whose Satanic pleasure was
+ to destroy.
+
+ "One circumstance in particular struck me most forcibly; these
+ wretches had made useless efforts to overthrow the statue of
+ Mary Immaculate placed in the garden--it had withstood all
+ their sacrilegious attempts.
+
+ "Sister Catherine hastened to place upon the head of our august
+ Queen the crown she had taken with her in our exile, telling
+ the Blessed Virgin she restored it in token of gratitude.
+
+ "Many times did Sister Catherine thus reveal her thoughts to
+ me with the simplicity of a child. When her predictions were
+ not realized, she would quietly say: 'Ah! well, Sister, I was
+ mistaken. I believed what I told you. I am very glad the truth
+ is known.'[6]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Persons favored with supernatural communications
+ are not thereby preserved from error. They may be deceived in
+ misunderstanding what they see or hear, they may be duped by
+ the illusions of the demon, they may involuntarily mingle their
+ own ideas with those which come from God, and they may fail in
+ transmitting with accuracy what has been revealed to them. We
+ must also remark that prophecies are frequently conditional,
+ and their accomplishment depends upon the manner in which the
+ conditions are fulfilled; so that, when the Church approves
+ these private revelations, she does nothing more than declare
+ that, after grave examination, they may be published for the
+ edification of the faithful, and that the proofs given are
+ sufficient to ensure belief.
+
+ To the Sacred Writers alone belongs the privilege of
+ infallibility in receiving and transmitting divine
+ inspirations.]
+
+ "Meanwhile, time fled, and our good Sister often spoke of her
+ approaching end. Our venerated Superiors began to feel anxious
+ about losing her, and the Superior General one day sent for
+ her to come to the Community that he might receive from her own
+ lips certain communications which he considered very important.
+
+ "Sister Catherine, to whom this was wholly unexpected, was
+ almost speechless with amazement. On her return, she expressed
+ to me her emotion, and, for the first time, opened her heart
+ to me concerning that which she had formerly so much feared to
+ reveal.
+
+ "This repugnance had vanished; seeing herself on the borders
+ of the tomb, she felt constrained to make known the details
+ which she thought buried with the venerated Father Aladel,
+ and she expressed great grief that devotion to the Immaculate
+ Conception was less lively and general than it had been.
+
+ "These communications, moreover, were for myself alone; I
+ did not impart them to the other Sisters. It is true, the
+ greater number were informed of this pious secret, but they
+ never learned it from Sister Catherine herself. All they could
+ observe in connexion with it was her ardent love for Mary
+ Immaculate and her zeal for the propagation of the Miraculous
+ Medal, also that, when she heard one of our Sisters express
+ a desire to make the pilgrimage to Lourdes or some other
+ privileged sanctuary of Mary, she could not refrain from
+ saying, somewhat impetuously: 'But why do you wish to go so
+ far? Have you not the Community? Did not the Blessed Virgin
+ appear there as well as at Lourdes?' And a most extraordinary
+ fact is, that, without having read any of the publications
+ concerning this miraculous grotto, Sister Catherine was more
+ familiar with what had taken place there than many who had made
+ the pilgrimage. Leaving these incidents aside, never did she
+ utter a word calculated to give the impression that she had
+ any part in the singular favors the Blessed Virgin had lavished
+ upon our humble chapel at the Mother House.
+
+ "Since opening her heart to me, this good companion had become
+ very affectionate; it was a rest for her, a consolation to
+ find some one who understood her. Our worthy Father Chevalier,
+ Assistant of the Congregation of the Mission, occasionally
+ visited her to receive her communications concerning the
+ apparition. One day, he spoke to her of the new edition he was
+ preparing of the notice of the medal. 'When M. Aladel's edition
+ of 1842 appeared,' replied Sister Catherine, 'I said to him,
+ truly, that he would never publish another, and that I would
+ never see another edition, because it would not be finished
+ during my lifetime.' 'I shall catch you there,' replied M.
+ Chevalier, who expected it to appear very soon. But unforeseen
+ difficulties having retarded the publication, he subsequently
+ recognized that the good Sister had spoken rightly.
+
+ "From the beginning of the year 1876, Sister Catherine alluded
+ very frequently to her death; on all our feast days, she never
+ failed to say: 'It is the last time I shall see this feast.'
+ And when we appeared not to credit her assertion, she added: 'I
+ shall certainly not see the year 1877.' We could not, however,
+ believe her end so near. For some months she had been obliged
+ to keep her bed, and relinquish that active life she had led so
+ many years.
+
+ "Her strength was gradually failing; the asthma joined to some
+ affection of the heart undermined her constitution; she felt
+ that she was dying, but it was without a fear, we might say
+ without emotion. One day, when speaking to her of her death:
+ 'You are not afraid, then,' said I, 'dear Sister Catherine.'
+ 'Afraid! Sister!' she exclaimed; 'why should I be afraid? I am
+ going to our Lord, the Blessed Virgin, St. Vincent.'
+
+ "And, truly, our dear companion had nothing to fear, for her
+ death was as calm as her life.
+
+ "Several days previous, one of our Sisters was talking
+ familiarly with her, when, without any allusion to the subject
+ from the other, our sick Sister said: 'I shall go to Reuilly.'
+ This was the name given the House of Providence, separated
+ from d'Enghien Hospital by a vast garden, and similar to it
+ in the nature of its works. 'What! to Reuilly?' answered her
+ companion; 'you would not have the heart to do so, you who love
+ so well your Enghien, that you have never left.' 'I tell you, I
+ shall go to Reuilly.' 'But when?' 'Ah! that is it!' said Sister
+ Catherine, in a decided, mysterious tone, that disconcerted
+ her companion. After a few moments, she added: 'There will be
+ no need of a hearse at my funeral.' 'Oh! what do you mean?'
+ replied the Sister. 'It will not be needed,' said the sick one,
+ emphatically. 'But why not?' 'They will put me in the chapel at
+ Reuilly.' These words struck her companion, who repeated the
+ conversation to me. 'Keep that to yourself,' said I.
+
+ "On the 31st of December, she had several spells of weakness,
+ symptoms of her approaching end. We then proposed to her the
+ last consolations of religion; she gratefully consented, and
+ received the Sacraments with indescribable peace and happiness;
+ then, at her request, we recited the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception.
+
+ "Being one day near her bed, speaking to her of Heaven and
+ of the Blessed Virgin, she expressed a desire to have during
+ her agony sixty-three children, each invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin by one of her titles in the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception, and especially these very consoling words: 'Terror
+ of demons, pray for us.' It was observed that there were not
+ sixty-three invocations in the litany. 'You will find them in
+ the office of the Immaculate Conception,' said she. Measures
+ were taken to comply with her desires, the invocations were
+ written upon slips of paper and kept for the final hour,
+ but, just at the time of her agony, we could not collect the
+ children; she then asked that the litany be recited, and had us
+ repeat three times the invocation which makes hell tremble.
+
+ "Our Sisters were especially touched to hear her exclaim, with
+ an accent of deep tenderness: 'My dear Community! my dear
+ Mother House!' So true is it, that what we have loved most in
+ life returns to us with renewed vigor at the hour of death!
+
+ "Some of her former companions and friends of the House came
+ during the day to see her for a last time; one of them,
+ holding an office in the Seminary, approaching her, said
+ sadly: 'Sister Catherine, are you going to leave us without
+ telling me a word of the Blessed Virgin?' Then the dying
+ Sister leaned towards her, and whispered softly in her ear
+ quite a while. 'I ought not to speak,' said she; 'it is M.
+ Chevalier who is commissioned to do that.' ... She continued,
+ without interruption: 'The Blessed Virgin has promised to
+ grant especial graces every time one prays in the chapel, but
+ particularly an increase of purity, that purity of mind, heart,
+ will, which is pure love.'
+
+ "This good daughter, animated with the true primitive spirit
+ of the Community, was, in uttering these last words, the
+ unconscious echo of the venerable Mother Legras, whose writings
+ breathe the same thought.
+
+ "A Sister-Servant, who came to visit her, approaching the sick
+ Sister, reminded her of the necessities of the Community and
+ of the Seminary, and ended by saying: 'Dear Sister Catherine,
+ when you get to Heaven, do not forget all this, attend to all
+ my commissions.' Sister Catherine answered: 'Sister, my will is
+ good, but I have always been so stupid, so dull, I shall not
+ know how to explain myself, for I am ignorant of the language
+ of Heaven.' Upon which the other, delighted with so much
+ simplicity, was inspired to say: 'Oh! my dear Sister Catherine,
+ in Heaven we do not speak as we do on earth; the soul regards
+ God, the good God regards the soul, and all is understood--that
+ is the language of Heaven.' Our dear Sister's countenance
+ became radiant at this, and she answered: 'Oh! Sister, if it is
+ thus, be tranquil, all your commissions will be fulfilled.'
+
+ "M. Chevalier came, also, that day to give her his blessing,
+ and he spoke to her on the same subject. Sister Catherine
+ answered him with faculties undimmed, and said to him, among
+ other things: 'The pilgrimages the Sisters make are not
+ favorable to piety. The Blessed Virgin did not tell me to go
+ so far to pray; it is in the Community chapel she wishes the
+ Sisters to invoke her, that is their true pilgrimage.'
+
+ "The poor, to whom she was so devoted, likewise occupied her
+ thoughts.----
+
+ "At four in the afternoon, another attack of weakness collected
+ us all around our dear, dying one, but the supreme moment had
+ not yet come. We surrounded her bed until evening. At seven,
+ she seemed to sink into a slumber, and without the least agony
+ or the least sign of suffering, she yielded her last sigh.
+ Scarcely could we perceive that she had ceased to live....
+ Never have I seen a death so calm and gentle."
+
+ "The deepest emotion now filled our hearts; we pondered the
+ celestial interview of our blessed companion with that good God
+ who had so often revealed Himself to her during her Seminary
+ life, and that beautiful Virgin, whose charms can never be
+ depicted on earth.
+
+ "It was not sorrow which pervaded our hearts; not a tear was
+ shed in these first moments; we yielded to an indescribable
+ emotion; we felt ourselves near a Saint; the veil of humility
+ under which she had lived so long concealed was now rent, that
+ we might see in her only the soul favored by Heaven.
+
+ "Our Sisters disputed the happiness of passing the night beside
+ her venerated remains, a magnetic attraction drawing them to
+ her.
+
+ "To perpetuate the fact that she had received these favors
+ whilst still a Seminary Sister, we thought of having her
+ photograph taken, also, in the Seminary habit; it succeeded
+ completely in both costumes.
+
+ "We now carried her blessed remains into the chapel. There
+ the Immaculate Virgin watched over her; lilies and roses
+ surrounded her virginal body, and her cherished device--'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee'--surrounding this little sanctuary, seemed the last echo
+ of her life.
+
+ "Then commenced the miracle of glorified humility; this
+ humble Sister, who in life had been scarcely noticed, was
+ suddenly surrounded by persons of every age and condition, who
+ considered it a very great happiness to come, not to pray for
+ her, but to recommend themselves to her blessed intercession.
+
+ "As for us who were keeping watch around our dear relic, we
+ could not bear to think of the moment which would take her
+ from us. This house which had been protected by her presence
+ for forty-six years, would it be deprived of her forever? The
+ thought was heart-breaking; it seemed as if we were about
+ to lose the protection of the Immaculate Virgin, who would
+ henceforth cease to hover over us.
+
+ "On the other hand, to keep our dear Sister with us appeared
+ impossible. Our Superiors being consulted, permitted us to
+ take measures in accordance with our wishes. We had a world of
+ difficulties to surmount.
+
+ "'Pray,' said I to our Sisters; and they passed the night
+ supplicating the Immaculate Mary to let our beloved companion
+ remain with us.
+
+ "All night long, I vainly tried to think of a suitable resting
+ place for her, when suddenly, at the sound of the four o'clock
+ bell, I thought I heard these words: 'The vault is under the
+ chapel of Reuilly.' 'True enough,' said I, joyfully, like a
+ person who suddenly sees the realization of a long deferred
+ hope. I remembered now that, during the construction of the
+ chapel, a vault had been made communicating with the children's
+ refectory. Our worthy Mother Mazin had assigned to it no actual
+ purpose, saying we might have use for it hereafter.
+
+ "There was no time to lose. We were on the eve of her funeral,
+ and the authorization, so difficult to obtain, had not yet been
+ solicited.
+
+ "The vault was hastily prepared, and the petition, sustained by
+ influential persons, succeeded as if by enchantment.
+
+ "January 3d, the feast of St. Genevieve, was the day appointed
+ for the interment of her, whom we regarded as the tutelary
+ angel of our house. But the word 'interment' is not appropriate
+ here--'triumph' is the proper expression--for it was a
+ veritable triumph for our humble Sister.
+
+ "A deputation was sent from all the houses of our Sisters, that
+ had received timely notice, and the little chapel was much too
+ small to accommodate the numbers that came. Mass over, the
+ funeral cortege which was to accompany the body in procession
+ from d'Enghien Hospital to the vault at Reuilly was organized,
+ as follows: The inmates of our industrial school, Children of
+ Mary, came first, bearing their banner; next to these, all our
+ little orphans; then, our young girls of the Society (both
+ externs and those belonging to the house), wearing the livery
+ of the Immaculate Mary; the parishioners, and lastly, our
+ Sisters preceding the clergy.
+
+ "This lengthy procession passed slowly through the long garden
+ walk, and whilst the solemn chants of the Benedictus resounded
+ afar, the modest coffin appeared in sight, covered with lilies
+ and eglantines, emblems of purity and simplicity.
+
+ "At the entrance of the vault, the crowd stood aside, and our
+ Children of Mary greeted the arrival of the body by singing the
+ blessed invocation: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us
+ who have recourse to thee!' It would be impossible to describe
+ the effect of these funeral obsequies, of a nature so entirely
+ new.
+
+ "To preserve our treasure, it was necessary to wall up the
+ subterranean entrance, but we had an opening made communicating
+ with the chapel.
+
+ "The poor, whom Sister Catherine had nursed, lay a magnificent
+ crown on the tomb of St. Vincent's humble daughter, who, in
+ life, sought only the lowliest paths, and who had supplicated
+ the Blessed Virgin to keep her unknown and unsought."----
+
+The life of dear Sister Labouré was the faithful realization of Our
+Lord's words in the Gospel: "I return Thee thanks, Father, that Thou
+hast concealed these things from the wise of this world and hast
+revealed them to little ones." Never were the gifts of God better
+concealed in a soul, under the double mantle of humility and simplicity.
+
+For forty-six years did she lead a life of obscurity and toil, seeking
+no other satisfaction than that of pleasing God; she sanctified herself
+in the lowliest paths by a faithful correspondence to grace, and an
+exact compliance with the practices of a Community life. The favors she
+received from Heaven never filled her heart with pride; witness of the
+wonders daily wrought by the medal, she never uttered a word that might
+lead others to suspect how much more she knew about it than any one
+else.
+
+Might we not say, she had chosen for her motto these words of À Kempis:
+"Love to be unknown and accounted as nothing?" How faithfully these
+traits portray the true daughter of the humble Vincent de Paul!
+
+What, in Heaven, must be the glory of those whose earthly life was
+one of self-abasement? Do we not already perceive a faint radiance of
+this glory? The obsequies of the humble servant of the poor resembled
+a triumph; by an almost unheard of exception, her body remains in
+the midst of her spiritual family; her tomb is visited by persons of
+every condition, who, with confidence, recommend themselves to her
+intercession, and many of whom assure us that their petitions have
+been granted. In fine, this biographical notice discloses what Sister
+Catherine so carefully concealed, and thus accomplishes Our Lord's
+promise: "He who humbleth himself, shall be exalted."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ MARY'S AGENCY IN THE CHURCH.
+
+ THIS AGENCY, EVER MANIFEST, SEEMS TO HAVE DISAPPEARED DURING THE
+ EIGHTEENTH AND IN THE BEGINNING OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY--MARY
+ APPEARS IN 1830--MOTIVES AND IMPORTANCE OF THIS APPARITION--THE
+ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+
+Devotion to the most Blessed Virgin is as ancient as Christianity,
+and we find traces of it from the very origin of the Church, among
+all nations who accepted the Gospel. During the first ages, it was
+concealed in the obscurity of the catacombs, or veiled itself under
+symbolical forms to escape the profanation of infidels; but when the
+era of peace succeeded that of bloody persecutions, it reappeared
+openly and in all the brilliancy of its ravishing beauty. It developed
+a wonderful growth, especially in the fifth century, after the Council
+of Ephesus had proclaimed the divine maternity of Mary, thereby
+sanctioning the exceptional homages rendered her above all the saints.
+
+The image of the Virgin Mother, circulated throughout Christendom,
+becomes the ornament of churches, the protection of the fireside, and
+an object of devotion to the faithful. It is at this epoch, especially,
+we see everywhere gradually disappearing the last vestiges of paganism.
+The Immaculate Virgin, the Mother of tenderness, the Queen of Angels,
+the Patroness of regenerated humanity, supplants those vain idols,
+which for ages had fostered superstition, with its train of vices and
+errors.
+
+Every Catholic admits that the Church's veneration of Mary rests upon
+an inviolable foundation--both faith and reason unite in justifying it.
+Events have proved that God Himself has authorized it, for it has often
+pleased Him to recompense the confidence and fidelity of her servants,
+by sensible marks of His power, by extraordinary graces--in a word,
+by true miracles. By a disposition of His Providence, He has decreed
+Mary's intervention in the economy of the Church and the sanctification
+of souls, as He did in the mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption.
+Her character of Mediatrix between Heaven and earth obliges her to make
+this agency felt, to display the power she has received in favor of
+man. These manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church, these
+marvelous proofs of her solicitude for us, form an interesting portion
+of the history of Catholicity. The liturgy is full of such souvenirs,
+and several feasts have been instituted to commemorate them. Christian
+countries abound in traditions of this nature; they are one of the
+sources whence piety derives its nourishment.
+
+The majority of pilgrim shrines owe their origin to some supernatural
+intervention of the Blessed Virgin. Sometimes she has manifested
+herself under a visible form, most frequently to a poor shepherd
+or peasant; again, she has wrought a miracle, as the recovery of
+a sick person, the conversion of a hardened sinner, or some other
+prodigy betokening the power of a supernatural agency. Sometimes, a
+statue, a picture, apparently not fashioned by the hand of man, is
+accidentally discovered; the neighboring population are touched, their
+faith is reanimated, and soon a shrine, a chapel, or even a splendid
+basilica, is erected to protect this gift of Heaven, this pledge of
+Mary's affection. Innumerable generations repair to the spot, and new
+favors, new miracles, ineffable consolations, ever attest the tutelary
+guardianship of her, whom humble, confiding hearts have never invoked
+in vain. We might cite hundreds of names in support of these assertions.
+
+The history of devotion to Mary in Catholic countries gives rise to
+an observation worthy of remark, that the faith of a country is in
+proportion to its devotion to the Blessed Virgin. We can also add that,
+when God wishes to revive the Faith among any people, He commissions
+Mary to manifest there her goodness and power.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every age has furnished the Church with constantly increasing proofs of
+Mary's mediation; there are epochs in which she seems to be so lavish
+of her presence, that we might say she lives familiarly among mankind,
+and that her delights are to converse with them.
+
+Again, on the contrary, she appears to retire, to hold herself aloof
+from the world, to give no more signs of her intervention. We have a
+striking example of this in a somewhat recent age. More than a century
+do we find deprived of Mary's sensible mediation; history records in
+all that period not one of these apparitions, not a new pilgrim shrine
+founded, not a signal grace obtained through the intercession of the
+Mother of Mercy. If a few events of this kind took place, they were at
+least very rare, and have remained in obscurity. This age, forsaken by
+the Blessed Virgin, was the eighteenth century, to which we must add
+the first thirty years of the nineteenth.
+
+At this epoch, when impious rationalism endeavored to efface all idea
+of the supernatural, when the most firmly established truths were
+attacked, when among Christians the standard of virtue was lowered and
+character was of slight esteem in any class or station of society, we
+might believe that Mary, fatigued with men's ingratitude, had resolved
+to leave them to their own devices, and let them govern the world
+according to their ideas of assumed wisdom. She did, in reality, not
+renounce her mission of Mediatrix in favor of the Church, she still
+watched over her great adopted family, she listened to the prayers
+of her faithful servants, but she remained invisible, she no longer
+displayed any of those marks of tenderness her maternal heart had
+lavished upon them in the ages of faith.
+
+We know the consequences of Mary's abandoning the earth, and how these
+sages who wished to dispense with God governed society. The history of
+their reign is written in letters of fire, of blood and of filth.
+
+This revolutionary and impious naturalism was prolonged into the
+nineteenth century; it still exerts a deplorable influence at the
+present day, but it encounters opposition; the supernatural order is
+firmly asserted, the truths of Faith are warmly defended, the holy
+Church is respected and obeyed, its august Head is held in veneration
+to the very extremities of the earth, God's kingdom is still opposed,
+but it numbers devoted subjects, who, if needful, would shed their
+blood in its defence. Indifference, human respect, jeering scepticism,
+are gradually disappearing, leaving the Church with only sincere
+friends or declared enemies. It is a progress no one can ignore.
+
+Whence comes this change? and what the date of so consoling a
+resurrection? Beyond a doubt, it owes its origin to God's infinite
+bounty--but the instrument, can it be ignored or contemned? Is it not
+the Blessed Virgin Mary? Has not her mediation been visible for forty
+years? Yes; it is Mary who has wrought this astonishing transformation,
+and through the medal styled miraculous has this series of wonders been
+inaugurated.
+
+In 1830, does Mary for the first time, after an interval of a century
+and a half, manifest her desire of a reconciliation with earth.
+
+It is the first sign of pardon she accords man, after her long silence.
+
+It is the announcement of a new era which is about to commence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The apparition of November 27th, in the chapel of the Mother House of
+the Daughters of Charity, Paris, appears, at first, to be of little
+importance, yet it was destined to have an immense bearing upon the
+future and its consequences were to be incalculable. Like a stream
+whose source is concealed at the foot of a mountain, but which receives
+as it advances numberless tributaries, and finally becomes a majestic
+river, fertilizing the provinces and kingdoms through which it flows;
+so the vision of the medal has been the initiatory step in a religious
+movement, which, to-day, extends throughout the world, sitting in
+justice upon old errors, superannuated prejudices; systems inimical to
+truth, and fully revealing the true Church and true sanctity, rendering
+to Mary Immaculate, Mother of God and Mother of men, such tributes of
+veneration, love and devotion, as she has never received since the
+preaching of the Gospel.
+
+The reader is already acquainted with Sister Catherine, the humble
+daughter whom Mary deigned to select for her confidante. The following
+chapter gives a detailed account of the apparitions.
+
+We have said that this event was the dawn of a new era, the signal
+of renewed devotion to Mary throughout the world. It seemed as if
+this tender Mother wished, by lavishing extraordinary graces upon her
+children, to make them forget the severity with which she had punished
+their offences.
+
+A rapid glance at the development of devotion to Mary, during half a
+century, will suffice to show the truth of this affirmation.
+
+The medal, scarcely struck, is circulated by millions; it immediately
+becomes the instrument of so many cures and conversions, that it is
+universally styled the Miraculous Medal, a name which clung to it,
+and which is justified by the constant working of new miracles, as
+the second part of this book will show. But this medal was destined
+not only to work miracles, it had an object still higher, it had a
+dogmatical signification, it was to popularize the belief in the
+Immaculate Conception of Mary.
+
+As far as is possible for us to penetrate the adorable designs of
+Providence, everything inclines us to believe that the Immaculate
+Conception is one of those truths whose proclamation is interwoven
+with the welfare of modern society, and whose influence upon
+Catholicity is incalculable. It is the complement of the Blessed
+Virgin's glory; even with the incomparable prerogative of her divine
+maternity, her grandeur would still lack something, were she not
+proclaimed free from original sin. The germ contained in the Holy
+Scriptures, preserved by tradition, taught by the Fathers and holy
+Doctors, supported by the Roman pontiffs, solemnized from the earliest
+ages in many churches, adopted instinctively by the piety of the
+faithful, and depicted under most graceful forms by brush and chisel of
+Christian artist, this belief received, through the medal, the seal of
+a popular devotion. The prayer revealed by the Blessed Virgin herself:
+"O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+this prayer, repeated incessantly by numberless mouths from infancy to
+old age, by poor and rich, and in every quarter of the globe, entered
+as a formula into the practices of a Christian life, and hastened, we
+might safely say, the day when Pius IX was to declare the Immaculate
+Conception an article of faith.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wonderful circulation of the medal, and the miracles wrought by
+means of it, would soon have made the chapel of the rue du Bac a much
+frequented pilgrim shrine, as many who were indebted to Mary for
+their cure or conversion wished to testify their gratitude by leaving
+there ex-voto offerings. But the Superiors of the Community deemed
+it inadvisable to allow this. However, Divine Providence, wishing to
+maintain this pious impulse, opened in the very centre of Paris a
+sanctuary, to receive what the chapel of the Daughters of Charity had
+refused.
+
+The pastor of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, M. Desgenettes, who had
+taken a lively interest in the apparition of 1830, was inspired to
+consecrate his parish to the holy and immaculate Heart of Mary. An
+Arch confraternity was established for the conversion of sinners; the
+success was as rapid as it was wonderful, and soon the whole world
+resounded with accounts of the miracles accorded the associates'
+prayers. To remind them that Notre-Dame-des-Victoires is allied with
+the vision of the Sister of St. Vincent de Paul, an article of their
+rule enjoins them to wear, with respect and devotion, the indulgenced
+medal of the Immaculate Conception, known as the Miraculous Medal, and
+they are advised to recite occasionally the prayer engraven upon that
+medal: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+thee!"
+
+Some years later, in 1846, the Blessed Virgin manifests herself upon
+the mountain at La Salette to two little shepherd children, charging
+them to warn mankind of the necessity of doing penance in order to
+avert the impending evils.
+
+At Lourdes, in 1858, Mary appears to a poor and ignorant young girl;
+she tells her name, calling herself by that which is most dear to
+her: "I am the Immaculate Conception," and she promises abundant
+benedictions to all who come to pray in that favored place.
+
+In 1871, she appears in the village of Pontmain to some children;
+she comes to revive their drooping courage and restore hope to their
+fainting hearts.
+
+It would take too long to enumerate these manifestations of Mary
+in various parts of Christendom--those images which seem animated;
+those mysterious voices which warn, which encourage the world; those
+supernatural revelations to privileged souls--all, we might say,
+favors of a tender Mother, who pardons her guilty children, and who
+wishes by multiplied tokens of her love to make them oblivious of her
+past severity.
+
+To so many marks of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness, the Catholic
+world has responded by an admirable outburst of filial piety; each
+year sees hundreds of thousands of pilgrims seeking her privileged
+sanctuaries; her Feasts are celebrated with admirable splendor;
+devotion to her is clothed in every form capable of expressing
+admiration, gratitude and tenderness. Who could enumerate the churches
+and monuments everywhere erected in her honor, the associations
+established under her invocation, the books composed in her praises?
+
+But the homage which eclipses all others, is the definition of the
+dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854. This definition, ardently
+desired by the devout faithful, enthusiastically welcomed by the whole
+world, was the grand thought of Pius IX after his elevation to the
+chair of St. Peter, and it will be recorded in history as the crowning
+event of his Pontificate, already illustrious for so many other causes.
+
+Mary, by this, has received from her children all the glory it was
+in their power to procure her; her prerogatives appear in all their
+lustre; she is acknowledged as sovereign mistress of Heaven and earth;
+she occupies in the economy of religion the true place Divine wisdom
+has assigned her. Let us hope she will soon display to the world the
+effects of her powerful protection, that she will crush the infernal
+serpent's head, that she will calm the storms hell has unchained--in
+fine, that she will assure the triumph of the Church and the reign of
+Jesus Christ in justice and truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ APPARITIONS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN
+
+ _TO SISTER CATHERINE_.
+
+ FIRST APPARITION: THE ANGEL CONDUCTS THE SISTER TO THE CHAPEL; MARY
+ CONVERSES WITH HER--SECOND APPARITION: MARY UPON A GLOBE, HER HANDS
+ EMITTING RAYS OF LIGHT, SYMBOLIC OF GRACE; MARY ORDERS A MEDAL TO
+ BE STRUCK--THIRD APPARITION: MARY RENEWS THE COMMAND.
+
+
+When Sister Catherine was favored with these apparitions of the Blessed
+Virgin she related by word of mouth to her Director, what she had seen
+and heard, and he, though apparently attaching little importance to her
+communications, carefully took note of them. The Sister never thought
+of writing them, she judged herself incapable of doing so, and,
+moreover, in her opinion, it would have been contrary to humility.
+
+In 1856, when events had confirmed the truth of her predictions, M.
+Aladel told her to commit to writing all she could recollect of the
+supernatural visitations of 1830. She obeyed, despite her repugnance,
+and sketched an account of her vision of St. Vincent's heart, which we
+have already read, and that of the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+In obedience, she again wrote in 1876, an account of these same
+apparitions.
+
+Finally, another copy, not dated, was found among her papers after
+death.
+
+These three narrations accord perfectly in the main, yet differ
+sufficiently in detail to prove that one was not copied from the other.
+
+To these manuscripts, in which no change has been made, except a
+correction of faults in style and orthography, are we indebted for the
+following account of the apparitions.
+
+It is to be regretted that M. Aladel's notes should have been almost
+entirely destroyed; no doubt they contained very interesting details,
+but what portion of them remains, is of little importance.
+
+Before quoting Sister Catherine's own narration, we must remark, that
+the first vision, having little reference to anything but the Sister
+herself and St. Vincent's two Communities, M. Aladel did not deem it
+advisable to have published; also, that although the account of the
+vision of the medal in the first editions of the notice, seems to
+differ notably from that related by the Sister, we will see later how
+these discrepancies can be explained, and that in the main the two
+versions are identical.
+
+[Illustration: _FIRST APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré, Daughter of Charity. After a picture
+painted from instructions given by Sister Catherine. (See the
+explanation at the list of engravings._)]
+
+Sister Catherine, already favored with celestial visions, ardently
+desired, with all the simplicity of her nature, to see the Blessed
+Virgin. To obtain this grace, she invoked her good Angel, St. Vincent,
+and the Blessed Virgin herself.
+
+On the 18th of July, 1830, eve of the Feast of St. Vincent de Paul,
+the Directress of the Seminary gave an instruction on devotion to
+the Saints and the Blessed Virgin; this but inflamed our Sister's
+pious desire. Fully imbued with the thought, she retired for the
+night, recommending herself to her blessed Father, St. Vincent, and
+confidently believing that her prayers would be answered.
+
+About half-past eleven o'clock, she hears her name, "Sister Labouré,"
+distinctly called three times; suddenly awaking, she opens her curtain
+on the side whence the voice proceeds, and what does she perceive? A
+little child of ravishing beauty, four or five years of age, dressed
+in white and enveloped in the radiant light beaming from his fair hair
+and noble person. "Come," said he, in a melodious voice, "come to the
+chapel, the Blessed Virgin awaits you." But, thought Sister Catherine
+(she slept in a large dormitory), the others will hear me, I shall be
+discovered. "Have no fears," said the child, answering her thought, "it
+is half-past eleven, everybody is asleep, I will accompany you."
+
+At these words, no longer able to resist the invitation of her amiable
+guide, Sister Catherine dresses hastily and follows the child, who
+walks always at her left, illuming the places through which he passes;
+and everywhere along their path, to the Sister's great astonishment,
+does she find the lamps lighted. Her surprise redoubles, on seeing the
+door open at the child's touch, and on finding the altar resplendent
+with lights, "reminding her," she said, "of the midnight Mass."
+
+The child conducts her into the sanctuary; here she kneels, whilst her
+celestial guide remains standing a little behind at her left.
+
+The moments of waiting seem long to Sister Catherine; at last, about
+midnight, the child says to her: "Behold the Blessed Virgin, behold
+her!" At that instant, she distinctly hears on the right hand side of
+the chapel, a slight noise, like the rustling of a silk robe; a most
+beautiful lady enters the sanctuary, and takes her seat in the place
+ordinarily occupied by the Director of the Community, on the left side
+of the sanctuary. The seat, the attitude, the costume (a white robe of
+a golden tinge and a blue veil), strongly resemble the representation
+of St. Anne in the picture adorning the sanctuary. Yet it is not
+the same countenance, and Sister Catherine is struggling interiorly
+against doubt. Can this indeed be the Blessed Virgin? she asks herself.
+Suddenly, the little child, assuming the voice of a man, speaks aloud,
+and in severe words asks her if the Queen of Heaven may not appear to a
+poor mortal under whatever form she pleases.
+
+Her doubts all vanish, and following only the impulses of her heart,
+the Sister throws herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet, familiarly
+placing her hands upon the Blessed Virgin's knees, like a child beside
+its mother.
+
+ "At this moment," said she, "I felt the sweetest emotion of
+ my life, it would be impossible for me to express it. The
+ Blessed Virgin told me how I must act in all my trials; and
+ pointing with her left hand to the foot of the altar, she told
+ me it was there I must come and lay open my heart, adding
+ that it was there I would receive all needful consolation.
+ Then she also said to me: 'My child, I am going to charge you
+ with a mission; you will suffer many trials on account of
+ it, but you will surmount them, knowing that you endure them
+ for the glory of the good God. You will be contradicted, but
+ you will be sustained by grace, do not fear; with simplicity
+ and confidence, tell all that passes within you to him who
+ is charged with the care of your soul. You will see certain
+ things, you will be inspired in your prayers, give an account
+ to him.'
+
+ "I then asked the Blessed Virgin for an explanation of what she
+ had already shown me. She answered: 'My child, the times are
+ very disastrous, great trials are about to come upon France,
+ the throne will be overturned, the entire world will be in
+ confusion by reason of miseries of every kind.' (The Blessed
+ Virgin looked very sad in saying this.) 'But come to the foot
+ of this altar, here graces will be shed upon all--upon all who
+ ask for them with confidence and fervor.
+
+ "'At a certain time the danger will be great indeed, it will
+ seem as if all were lost, but do not fear, I shall be with you;
+ you will acknowledge my visit, the protection of God and that
+ of St. Vincent upon the two Communities. Have confidence, do
+ not be discouraged, you are in my especial keeping.
+
+ "'There will be victims in other Communities.' (Tears were
+ in the Blessed Virgin's eyes as she said this.) 'Among the
+ clergy of Paris there will be victims, Mgr. the Archbishop
+ will die.' (At these words her tears flowed anew.) 'My child,
+ the cross will be despised, it will be trampled under foot,
+ our Lord's side will be opened anew, the streets will flow
+ with blood, the entire world will be in tribulation.'" (Here
+ the Blessed Virgin could no longer speak, grief was depicted
+ in her countenance.) At these words Sister Catherine thought,
+ when will this take place? And an interior light distinctly
+ indicated to her in forty years.
+
+Another version, also written by her own hand, says forty years, then
+ten, after which, peace. In connexion with this M. Aladel said to her:
+
+ "Will you and I see the accomplishment of all these things?"
+ "If we do not, others will," replied the simple daughter.
+
+The Blessed Virgin also entrusted her with several communications for
+her Director concerning the Daughters of Charity, and told her that
+he would one day be clothed with the necessary authority for putting
+them in execution.[7] After this, she said again: "But great troubles
+will come, the danger will be imminent, yet do not fear, St. Vincent
+will watch over you, and the protection of God is always here in a
+particular manner." (The Blessed Virgin still looked very sad.) "I
+will be with you myself, I will always keep my eye upon you, and I
+will enrich you with many graces." The Sister adds: "Graces will be
+bestowed, particularly upon all who ask for them, but they must pray,
+they must pray.----
+
+ [Footnote 7: M. Aladel was made Director of the Community in
+ 1846.]
+
+ "I could not tell," continues the Sister, "how long I remained
+ with the Blessed Virgin; all I can say is that, after talking
+ with me a long time, she disappeared like a shadow that
+ vanishes."
+
+On arising from her knees, Sister Catherine perceived the child just
+where she had left him, to throw herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet.
+He said: "She has gone," and, all resplendent with light as before, he
+stationed himself anew at her left hand, and conducted her back to the
+dormitory by the same paths as they had come.
+
+ "I believe," continues the narration, "that this child was my
+ Guardian Angel, because I had fervently implored him to procure
+ me the favor of seeing the Blessed Virgin.... Returned to my
+ bed, I heard the clock strike two, and I went to sleep no more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What has just been recounted was only a part of Sister Catherine's
+mission, or rather a preparation for a future mission to be given her
+as a pledge of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness for the human race.
+
+In the month of November of this same year, 1830, Sister Catherine
+communicates to M. Aladel a new vision; but it is no longer that of
+an afflicted Mother weeping over the evils menacing her children, or
+the martyrdom of her dearest friends. This vision recalls the rainbow
+appearing in a sky still black with storms, or the star shining through
+the tempest to inspire the mariner with confidence--it is the Virgin
+Queen, bearing the promise of benediction, salvation and peace.
+
+M. Aladel relates this to the Promoter of the diocese, and we find it
+inserted in the verbal process of the investigation, dated February 16,
+1836, as follows:
+
+ "At half-past five in the evening, whilst the Sisters were in
+ the chapel taking their meditation, the Blessed Virgin appeared
+ to a young Sister as if in an oval picture; she was standing on
+ a globe, only one-half of which was visible; she was clothed
+ in a white robe and a mantle of shining blue, having her hands
+ covered, as it were, with diamonds, whence emanated luminous
+ rays falling upon the earth, but more abundantly upon one
+ portion of it.
+
+ "A voice seemed to say: 'These rays are symbolic of the graces
+ Mary obtains for men, and the point upon which they fall most
+ abundantly is France.' Around the picture, written in golden
+ letters, were these words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!' This prayer, traced in
+ a semi-circle, began at the Blessed Virgin's right hand, and,
+ passing over her head, terminated at her left hand. The reverse
+ of the picture bore the letter M surmounted by a cross, having
+ a bar at its base, and beneath the monogram of Mary, were the
+ hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first surrounded with a crown of
+ thorns, the other transpierced with a sword. Then she seemed
+ to hear these words: 'A medal must be struck upon this model;
+ those who wear it indulgenced, and repeat this prayer with
+ devotion, will be, in an especial manner, under the protection
+ of the Mother of God.' At that instant, the vision disappeared."
+
+According to the testimony of Sister Catherine's Director, this
+apparition appeared several times in the course of a few months, always
+in the chapel of the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, either
+during Mass or some of the religious exercises. M. Aladel adds that he
+was not certain as to their number, but he knows they were repeated
+thrice, at least, the Sister having mentioned it three different times.
+
+Here is the account written by the Sister's own hand:
+
+ "The 27th of November, 1830, which was a Saturday and eve of
+ the first Sunday in Advent, whilst making my meditation in
+ profound silence, at half-past five in the evening, I seemed
+ to hear on the right hand side of the sanctuary something
+ like the rustling of a silk dress, and, glancing in that
+ direction, I perceived the Blessed Virgin standing near St.
+ Joseph's picture; her height was medium, and her countenance
+ so beautiful that it would be impossible for me to describe
+ it. She was standing, clothed in a robe the color of auroral
+ light, the style that is usually called _à la vierge_--that is,
+ high neck and plain sleeves. Her head was covered with a white
+ veil, which descended on each side to her feet. Her hair was
+ smooth on the forehead, and above was a coif ornamented with a
+ little lace and fitting close to the head. Her face was only
+ partially covered, and her feet rested upon a globe, or rather
+ a hemisphere (at least, I saw but half a globe). Her hands were
+ raised about as high as her waist, and she held in a graceful
+ attitude another globe (a figure of the universe). Her eyes
+ were lifted up to Heaven, and her countenance was radiant as
+ she offered the globe to Our Lord.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré. First picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+ "Suddenly, her fingers were filled with rings[8] and most
+ beautiful precious stones; the rays gleaming forth and
+ reflected on all sides, enveloped her in such dazzling light
+ that I could see neither her feet nor her robe. The stones were
+ of different sizes, and the rays emanating from them were more
+ or less brilliant in proportion to the size.
+
+ [Footnote 8: The rings were three on each finger; the largest
+ next to the hand, then the medium size, then the smallest; and
+ each ring was covered with precious stones of proportional
+ size; the largest stones emitted the most brilliant rays, the
+ smallest the least brilliant.]
+
+ "I could not express what I felt, nor what I learned, in these
+ few moments.
+
+ "Whilst occupied contemplating this vision, the Blessed Virgin
+ cast her eyes upon me, and a voice said in the depths of my
+ heart: 'The globe that you see represents the entire world, and
+ particularly France, and each person in particular.'
+
+ "I would not know how to express the beauty and brilliancy of
+ these rays. And the Blessed Virgin added: 'Behold the symbol
+ of the graces I shed upon those who ask me for them,' thus
+ making me understand how generous she is to all who implore
+ her intercession.... How many favors she grants to those who
+ ask. At this moment I was not myself, I was in raptures! There
+ now formed around the Blessed Virgin a frame slightly oval,
+ upon which appeared, in golden letters, these words: 'O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Then I heard a voice which said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model, persons who wear it indulgenced, will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it around the neck; graces will
+ be abundantly bestowed upon those who have confidence.'
+
+ "Suddenly," says the Sister, "the picture seemed to turn," and
+ she saw the reverse, such as has already been described in the
+ previous account of the investigation.
+
+Sister Catherine's notes do not mention the twelve stars surrounding
+the monogram of Mary and the two hearts. Yet they are always
+represented on the medal. It is morally certain that she communicated
+this detail, by word of mouth, at the time she related the apparitions.
+
+Other notes in Sister Catherine's own hand-writing complete the
+account. She adds, that some of these precious stones did not emit
+rays, and when she expressed her astonishment at this, she was told
+that they were a figure of the graces we neglect to ask of Mary. On a
+hasty perusal, our Sister's account of the vision appears to differ
+from M. Aladel's. We were struck with this, and had to study these
+interesting and authentic documents attentively, in order to decide
+whether the visions differed essentially or were really the same.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Labouré. Second picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+According to M. Aladel's testimony in the investigation, the
+apparitions relative to the medal were always similar, and Sister
+Catherine, before her death, confirmed this assertion. As we have just
+learned from our Sister's own words, the Blessed Virgin always appeared
+with the terrestrial globe under her feet, and at the same time in her
+virginal hands, pressing it and warming it, as it were, against her
+maternal heart, and offering it to her Divine Son in her quality of
+Advocate and Mother, with an ineffable expression of supplication and
+love.
+
+This is what the Sister saw. Was it all? No, after the first act of
+sublime intercession, after this most efficacious prayer of our divine
+Mediatrix, her hands are suddenly filled with graces, under the figure
+of rings and precious stones, which emit such brilliant rays that
+all else is invisible, Mary is enveloped in them, and her hands are
+bent beneath the weight of these treasures. Her eyes are cast upon
+the humble Sister whose ravished glances can scarcely support this
+celestial effulgence. At the same time, an oval frame is formed around
+the vision, and a voice directs the Sister to have a medal struck
+according to the medal presented. The medal is a faithful reproduction
+of this picture, at the moment the symbolical part disappears in the
+sheaves of light.
+
+Sister Catherine being asked if she still saw the globe in the
+Blessed Virgin's hands, when the luminous sheaves issued from them,
+answered no, there remained nothing but the rays of light; and that
+when the Blessed Virgin spoke of the globe, she meant that under her
+feet, there being no longer any question of the first. Hence, we may
+conclude, that Sister Catherine's description of the apparition and
+M. Aladel's agree perfectly. The small globe which the Blessed Virgin
+holds in her hands, and the large one on which she stands, are both
+inundated with the same dazzling rays, or enriched with the same
+graces. The august Mary seems to indicate by the small globe merely a
+figure of the world, imperfectly represented beneath her feet, thus
+reminding us that she is the all merciful Queen of the human race.
+
+There is yet another variation in the description of the two
+apparitions. M. Aladel, in conformity with the popular belief, that
+white and blue combined constitute the Blessed Virgin's livery,
+as emblems of purity, celestial purity, gives the mantle an azure
+tint. Sister Catherine expresses the same idea several times in her
+notes, saying: "White signifies innocence, and blue is the livery of
+Mary." However, the blue mantle is not mentioned in the notice of
+the apparition, Sister Catherine speaks only of the robe and veil of
+auroral light.
+
+When questioned as to a more definite description of this color, she
+replied that it was a deep white, tinted with the mild, beautiful
+radiance of dawn,[9] thus wishing, no doubt, to give some idea of the
+celestial hue of the robe and veil. It is this hue that tortures the
+artist, for he feels his pencil powerless to depict the beauties of
+another sphere.
+
+ [Footnote 9: We must remember that Sister Catherine's childhood
+ was passed in the country, where she could admire the beauty
+ of that luminous tint which precedes the sun, and colors the
+ horizon at break of day with its increasing radiance.]
+
+We can understand from the above, how M. Aladel could have mistaken
+some details furnished by Sister Catherine, or have confounded the
+apparition of the medal with the visions of July 18th and 19th, in
+which the Blessed Virgin's apparel was white and blue.
+
+However, the accessories of the mantle and its indescribable hue, in no
+wise affect the reality of the apparition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We recollect with what indifference, we might say severity, M. Aladel
+received his penitent's communications, bidding her give no heed
+to them, but dismiss them from her mind, as altogether unworthy of
+attention. But Sister Catherine's obedience, attested by her Director
+himself, could not efface the delightful remembrance of what she had
+seen and heard; to return to Mary's feet was her greatest happiness;
+the thought never left her, nor the firm conviction that she would see
+this dear Mother again. And, indeed, in the course of December, she
+was favored with another vision, similar to that of November 27th, and
+occurring at the same time, during evening meditation. But there was
+a striking difference between this and the previous one, the Blessed
+Virgin, instead of stopping at St. Joseph's picture, passed on, and
+rested above the tabernacle, a little behind it, and precisely in the
+place the statue now occupies. The Blessed Virgin appeared to be about
+forty years of age, according to the Sister's judgment. The apparition
+was, as it were, framed from the hands in the invocation: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" traced
+in golden letters. The reverse presented the monogram of the Blessed
+Virgin, surmounted by a cross, and beneath were the divine hearts of
+Jesus and Mary. Sister Labouré was again directed to have a medal
+struck upon this model. She terminates her account in these words: "To
+tell you what I understood at the moment the Blessed Virgin offered the
+globe to Our Lord, would be impossible, or what my feelings were whilst
+gazing on her! A voice in the depths of my heart said to me: 'These
+rays are symbolic of the graces the Blessed Virgin obtains for those
+who ask for them.'"
+
+These few lines, according to her, should be inscribed at the base of
+the Blessed Virgin's statue. On this occasion, contrary to her usual
+custom, she could not refrain from an exclamation of joy at the thought
+of the homages which would be rendered Mary! "Oh! how delightful to
+hear it said: 'Mary is Queen of the Universe, and particularly of
+France!' The children will proclaim it, 'She is Queen of each soul!'"
+
+When Sister Labouré related the third apparition of the medal, M.
+Aladel asked her if she had seen anything written on the reverse. The
+Sister answered that she had not. "Ah!" said the Father, "ask the
+Blessed Virgin what to put there."
+
+The young Sister obeyed; and after having prayed a long time, one day
+during meditation, she seemed to hear a voice saying: "The M and the
+two hearts express enough."
+
+None of these narrations mention the serpent, yet it always figures in
+representations of the apparition, and certainly in conformity with
+Sister Catherine's earliest revelations of the vision. The following
+shows why we are so positive of this fact.
+
+Towards the close of her life, after a silence of forty-five years, M.
+Aladel being no more, this good daughter was interiorly constrained to
+confide to one of her Superiors the communications she had received
+from the Blessed Virgin, that they might serve to reanimate devotion
+and gratitude to Mary. Having done this, her mind was relieved; she
+felt that now she could die in peace.
+
+The Superior, favored with her confidence, wishing to realize one of
+her venerable companion's most cherished desires, proposes a statue
+of Mary Immaculate, holding the globe. On asking Sister Catherine if
+the serpent must be represented under the Blessed Virgin's feet, she
+answered: "Yes; there was a serpent of a greenish color, with yellow
+spots." She also remarked that the globe in the Virgin's hands was
+surmounted by a little cross, that her countenance was neither very
+youthful nor very joyous, but indicative of gravity mingled with
+sorrow, that the sorrowful expression vanished as her face became
+irradiated with love, especially at the moment of her prayer.
+
+Our attempt at representing the vision was successful, although the
+tint of the robe and veil, the celestial radiance of the face, the
+splendor of the rays, must always remain an impossibility for art;
+as the good Sister, whilst declaring her satisfaction, betrayed by
+her tone of voice and expression the disappointment she felt at the
+impotency of human skill to depict the beauty of the celestial original.
+
+Thirty-five years before, M. Aladel had vainly attempted a
+representation of the same apparition, as we learn from a curious
+fragment, a small design[10] representing the Immaculate Virgin holding
+the globe, etc., as described by Sister Catherine. His note directing
+the details is in exact conformity with the Sister's description,
+except in one particular, the blue mantle. But little satisfied with
+this attempt, which gave but a confused idea of the apparition, and
+his own especial impression of it, he relinquished the undertaking, and
+held to the known model.
+
+ [Footnote 10: The author of this design is M. Letaille, editor
+ of religious imagery.]
+
+We may say, with truth, that nothing can equal the beauty, the grace,
+the expression of tenderness depicted in the attitude of this Virgin,
+whose graciously downcast glances and hands, filled with blessings,
+proclaim her the Mother, inviting her little child to cast itself into
+her arms, or earnestly entreating the prodigal son to confide in her
+merciful mediation.
+
+This image of the Immaculate Mother, universally admired and honored,
+has a mute eloquence which never fails to touch the heart; and, truly,
+may it ever be styled the miraculous Virgin. Were we to cite only those
+which have come to our knowledge, a volume would be insufficient to
+contain an account of all the wonderful conversions, cures, marks of
+protection, wrought since the appearance of this vision to the present
+day.
+
+The production of new models, representing the Immaculate Virgin in a
+different attitude, should never supplant this, which is, as it were,
+the type of all others; nor weaken the devotion heretofore accorded it
+by popular gratitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ PROPAGATION OF THE MEDAL.
+
+ ITS WONDERFUL CIRCULATION--CANONICAL INVESTIGATION ORDERED BY MGR.
+ DE QUÉLEN.
+
+
+We have already seen with what mistrust M. Aladel received Sister
+Catherine's communications, and how he hesitated to assume the mission
+proposed to him. At last, after grave reflection, after consultations
+with enlightened persons, and upon the formal authorization of Mgr.
+de Quélen, Archbishop of Paris, he decided to have the medal of the
+Immaculate Conception struck. This was in 1832.
+
+When about to depict the details as related by the Sister, many
+difficulties presented themselves. In what attitude should the Blessed
+Virgin be represented, for in the apparition she had several? Should
+a globe be in her hands? Again, at one instant she was enveloped in
+waves of light, but this could not be gracefully reproduced in an
+engraving. After mature consideration, it was decided to adopt the
+already existing model of the Immaculate Virgin, which represents her
+with hands extended; to this were added the luminous rays escaping from
+the rings on her fingers, the terrestrial globe on which she stands,
+and the serpent she crushes under her feet. Around the oval were
+inscribed these words: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+have recourse to thee!" The reverse bears the letter M, surmounted by a
+cross, and the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary below the M, the first
+surrounded with a crown of thorns, the second pierced by a sword.
+
+ "As soon as the medal was struck," says M. Aladel, "it was
+ freely circulated, especially among the Daughters of Charity,
+ who, knowing something of its origin, wore it with great
+ confidence. Shortly after, they gave it to several sick
+ persons, six of whom experienced most beneficial results. Three
+ cures and three conversions were wrought, some of them in
+ Paris and some in the diocese of Meaux, all of a very sudden
+ and unexpected nature. And now there was heard everywhere
+ a great demand for the Miraculous Medal, the medal which
+ heals--virtuous mothers of families giving it as a New-Year's
+ present to their children, who received it so gladly and wore
+ it with such respect that no one could doubt how their innocent
+ hearts prized it. All the pious hastened to procure it as soon
+ as it was known to be within reach; but the event it gives us
+ most pleasure to record here, and which edified us most in
+ these early days of the propagation of the medal, is that,
+ in two cities of the province, nearly all the young people
+ united in wearing the medal as the safeguard of their youth.
+ Four hundred silver medals were sent for, to be indulged for
+ this purpose. Very soon entire parishes in various counties
+ solicited their pastors to get them medals, and in Paris an
+ officer of high rank bought sixty for brother officers at their
+ request.
+
+ "Thus, the medals of the Immaculate Conception were circulated
+ in a truly wonderful manner, in all the provinces and among
+ all classes; from every side we heard most consoling things;
+ priests filled with the spirit of God wrote to us that these
+ medals reanimated piety in the cities as well as in the
+ country; grand vicars, enjoying the high esteem due their piety
+ and intellect, prelates, even more distinguished, assured us
+ of their entire confidence in the medals, which they regarded
+ as means sent by Providence to revive the faith so sensibly
+ enfeebled in our age; that in reality they did awaken faith
+ daily in many hearts apparently devoid of it, that they
+ re-established peace and union in families divided by discord,
+ in fine, that not one of all those wearing the medal but had
+ experienced most salutary effects.
+
+ "Mgr. de Quélen himself (whose great charity brought him
+ in contact with all classes) told me several times, that
+ he had given the medal to numbers of sick persons of every
+ condition in life, and never had he failed to recognize the
+ blessed results. Very soon he publishes these in a circular of
+ December 15th, 1836, on the occasion of consecrating the parish
+ church of Our Lady of Loretto. It is a fact we are jealous
+ of confirming, and the knowledge of which we desire should
+ reach even the most remote parts of the Catholic world; in our
+ diocese this devotion has become more deeply rooted with time;
+ the afflicted still affirm, increase and extend its marvelous
+ progress; signal favors, graces of healing, preservation and
+ salvation seem to multiply among us, in proportion as we
+ implore the tender pity of Mary conceived without sin. 'We
+ exhort the faithful,' adds he in the beginning of the same
+ circular, 'to wear the medal struck a few years ago in honor
+ of the Blessed Virgin,' and to repeat frequently the prayer
+ inscribed around the image: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Moreover, in every part of France have we witnessed the
+ increasing eagerness of the faithful of all ages, sexes
+ and conditions, to procure the Miraculous Medal. Careless
+ Christians, hardened sinners, Protestants, the impious and even
+ Jews, asked for it, received it with pleasure and wore it with
+ religious veneration.
+
+ "Not only in France were we forced to admire the propagation
+ of the medal; it spread rapidly and extensively throughout
+ Switzerland, Piedmont, Italy, Spain, Belgium, England, America,
+ in the Levant, and even China. It is also said, that at Naples,
+ as soon as they heard of it, the Metropolitan Chapter sent
+ for some to one of our establishments in that city, that the
+ king had silver medals struck for all the royal family and
+ court, and a million of another medal, which were distributed
+ during the cholera--that the image is there venerated in nearly
+ every house, and the picture in several churches. At Rome, the
+ Superior Generals of religious orders took pains to circulate
+ it, and the Sovereign Pontiff himself, placed it at the foot of
+ his crucifix. We also received a letter informing us that His
+ Holiness gave it to several persons as a particular mark of his
+ pontifical affection.
+
+ "Moreover, to estimate the propagation of this medal, it
+ suffices to consult the registry of M. Vachette, to whom was
+ entrusted the striking of it.[11] This examen shows that, from
+ June, 1832, to the present time, he has sold: 1st, two millions
+ in silver or gold; 2d, eighteen millions of a cheaper metal.
+ According to him, eleven other manufacturers in Paris have
+ sold the same quantity; at Lyons, four others with whom he
+ was acquainted, at least double the number; and in many other
+ cities, whether of France or foreign countries, the manufacture
+ and sales are incalculable."
+
+ [Footnote 11: _Quai des Orfevres_, number 54. They are of
+ different sizes, and the invocation is inscribed in several
+ languages.]
+
+Struck with this marvelous propagation, and the universal anxiety
+to learn the origin of the medal, Sister Catherine's pious Director
+published, in 1834, a short notice containing a brief narration of the
+apparition, and of the graces obtained by means of the medal. This
+book sold rapidly, and new editions had to be printed; when the eighth
+appeared in 1842, the number of copies sold amounted to a hundred and
+thirty thousand, and each successive edition was increased by well
+authenticated accounts of many new miraculous occurrences.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In consequence of all this, the venerable priest found himself engaged
+in a vast and active correspondence, which, to the end of his days,
+filled his heart with ineffable consolation, at the thought of his
+thus assisting in the accomplishment of the Immaculate Mary's promises
+throughout the universe.
+
+Among the communications he received in the course of the year 1836,
+there was one which appeared to him the confirmation of Sister
+Catherine's vision. He published it in the notice of the medal.
+It was the vision of a Swiss religious, already favored with many
+extraordinary graces. We reproduce it here for the edification of the
+reader:
+
+ "The 17th of August, 1835, the first day of her retreat, this
+ religious, in an ecstasy after Holy Communion, sees Our Lord
+ seated upon a throne of glory, and holding a sword in His hand.
+ 'Where goest thou, and what seekest thou?' He asked. 'O Jesus!'
+ she answered, 'I go to Thee, and it is Thyself alone I seek!'
+ 'Where dost thou seek Me, in what and through whom?' 'Lord,
+ in myself I seek Thee, in Thy holy will and through Mary.'
+ Here Our Lord disappeared, and the religious, awaking from her
+ ecstasy, was reflecting upon His words, when there suddenly
+ appeared to her the Blessed Virgin, all lovely and resplendent.
+ She held in her hand a medal, on which was engraven her image
+ and the inscription: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!' And sheaves of light gleamed
+ from her hands. 'These rays,' said Mary to her, 'are symbols
+ of the graces I obtain for men.' She then turned the medal,
+ and the religious saw on the reverse the letter M surmounted
+ by a little cross, beneath which were the Sacred Hearts of
+ Jesus and Mary. 'Wear this medal,' said the Queen of Heaven,
+ 'and thou wilt enjoy my very especial protection; take pains,
+ also, that all who are in any pressing necessity wear it, that
+ efforts are made to procure it for them.... Be in readiness,
+ for I will put it upon thee myself, on the Feast of my beloved
+ servant Bernard; to day, I leave it in thy hands.' The Blessed
+ Virgin afterwards reproached her for misplacing the medal and
+ taking little pains to find it; the religious acknowledged
+ indeed, that she had received it in July, and that having lost
+ it, she really gave herself no anxiety, considering it merely
+ an ordinary medal, knowing neither its origin nor its effects
+ till this vision. This is attested by the Superior of the
+ Community. The Blessed Virgin kept her promise, and on the 20th
+ of the same month, the Feast of St. Bernard, she placed on the
+ neck of the religious, the medal she had already put in her
+ hands, recommending her to wear it respectfully, to repeat the
+ invocation frequently, and to apply herself to the invitation
+ of the Immaculate Mary's virtues.
+
+ "During her retreat in August, 1836, she sees the medal every
+ day, suspended, as it were, in the air. At first, it appeared
+ very high, shining a few moments like the sun, then like gold;
+ again, it seemed not so high and was apparently of silver;
+ finally, very near the earth, and of a baser metal. The
+ religious gazed in admiration, though without comprehending the
+ meaning of this vision, until Vespers, when it was explained
+ to her. A sweet but unfamiliar voice asked her which of these
+ medals she preferred. She answered, the most brilliant, and the
+ same voice congratulating her on the choice she had made, told
+ her, that the brilliant medal shining like the sun, was that of
+ faithful Christians, who, in wearing it, honor Mary perfectly,
+ and contribute to her glory; the gold medal, that of pious
+ persons who have a tender and filial devotion to Mary, but
+ who keeping it within their hearts, advance but slightly this
+ divine Mother's cause; the silver medal, that of all who wear
+ it with respect and devotion, but who sometimes lack constancy
+ and generosity in imitating Mary's virtues--finally, that the
+ brass medal, represented that of all, who contenting themselves
+ with invoking Mary, take no pains to walk in her footsteps, and
+ thus remain sadly attached to earth. The same voice added, that
+ there is, however, a very especial and peculiar union among
+ these various persons, marked, we might say, with the precious
+ seal of Mary Immaculate; they all necessarily aid one another
+ in a very particular manner by prayer, so that with this
+ powerful assistance, the third can elevate the last, the second
+ sustain the third, and the first, thus happily attract all the
+ others.
+
+ "These details have been communicated to us, from the abbey of
+ Our Lady of Hermits at Einsiedlen, so renowned for the great
+ virtues of its fervent religious, and the immense concourse of
+ pilgrims, who repair hither from all parts of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Up to this time, the medal had received only the verbal approbation of
+the Archbishop of Paris; a formal authorization was necessary to assure
+the faithful of its authenticity, and to conform moreover to the laws
+of the Church, which exact a canonical judgment, before permitting
+the introduction of new images in the liturgical worship. A juridical
+examination was consequently requested, in order to confirm the origin
+of the medal.
+
+Mgr. de Quélen willingly complied, and by his order an investigation
+was begun February 16th, 1836, under the direction of M. Quentin, Vicar
+General, Promoter of the diocese; it was prolonged into the month of
+July, and had not less than nineteen sittings.
+
+We still possess the verbal process of this inquiry. Various witnesses
+appeared, the principal of whom was Sister Catherine's Director, M.
+Aladel.
+
+In the course of the process, the Promoter asked, why God had chosen
+the Daughters of Charity for so rare a favor, and not one of those
+convents noted for the observance of an austere rule, such as rigorous
+fasts, mortifications, etc. For it was not in a contemplative order,
+but in the Mother House of this modest institution so useful to
+humanity, in the chapel which for a long time contained the mortal
+remains of St. Vincent, the father of the poor, that the apparition,
+which was the model of the medal, took place.
+
+We believe the reason of this preference is to be found in the two
+usages observed among the Daughters of Charity, from the beginning of
+their Society; the first, an act of consecration to the Blessed Virgin
+on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception; the second, the ending each
+decade of the chaplet by the following profession of faith: "O Most
+Holy Virgin! I believe and confess thy Holy and Immaculate Conception,
+pure and without spot! O Most Pure Virgin! by thy virginal purity, by
+thy Immaculate Conception and thy glorious quality of Mother of God,
+obtain for me of thy dear Son, humility, charity, great purity of
+heart, body and soul, holy perseverance in my dear vocation, the gift
+of prayer, a good life and a happy death."
+
+The proofs admitted in the inquiry to establish the authenticity of the
+vision of the medal, are:
+
+ 1st. The Sister's character--she is a poor young country girl,
+ uneducated and without talent--of solid but simple piety,
+ good judgment, and calm, sedate mind; we perceive at once
+ that everything about her excludes all suspicion of deceit or
+ illusion. The better to preserve her incognito, she will not
+ allow her name to be mentioned, and she even refused to appear
+ before the Promoter of the investigation.
+
+ 2d. The wisdom of the Sister's Director, who took all possible
+ precautions to guard against deception, and who yielded to his
+ penitent's reiterated entreaties, only from fear of displeasing
+ the Blessed Virgin, and by the advice of his Superiors.
+
+ 3d. The apparition in itself, contains nothing, either in its
+ character or object, opposed to the teachings of the Church,
+ but is, on the contrary, conducive to edification. Being
+ several times renewed and always in the same manner, we may
+ conclude, that the Sister's imagination had nothing whatever to
+ do with it.
+
+ 4th. The wonderful circulation of the medal, confirmed by the
+ testimony of the first engraver, M. Vachette, and the extensive
+ sales of copies of the notice, reaching 109,000 in sixteen
+ months, as attested by the publisher, M. Bailly, must be
+ regarded as a confirmation of its supernatural origin.
+
+ 5th. The extraordinary graces obtained through the
+ instrumentality of the medal, cures and conversions, several
+ of which are legally attested by the deposition of reliable
+ witnesses, who appeared before the Promoter and signed the
+ verbal process, give a last proof to the fact it was sought to
+ establish, namely, that the Miraculous Medal must be of divine
+ origin. Such is the formal conclusion, in the report addressed
+ to the Archbishop by the Promoter, at the end of the inquiry.
+
+Unfortunately, the ecclesiastical authority did not pronounce judgment;
+we know not why the inquiry did not receive the sanction to which it
+apparently led. The death of Mgr. de Quélen, at the end of the year
+1839, caused all proceedings to be abandoned. Everything remains still
+in the domain of private devotions, and the model of the Immaculate
+Virgin, with its symbolical attributes, is not yet authorized as an
+object of public veneration in the churches.
+
+This deplorable omission is so much the more difficult to understand,
+as, personally, Mgr. de Quélen took a serious interest in the
+apparition of 1830, the compass of which he comprehended. It was he who
+urged M. Aladel to have the medal struck; he expressed a wish to have
+some of the first; he received them, and experienced their efficacy.
+Before ordering the investigation, he had summoned to him the Mother
+General of the Daughters of Charity, together with the officers forming
+her council, and other Sisters well versed in Community affairs, to
+learn from them what usages of the Community could have drawn down upon
+it such a favor as the Blessed Virgin had just bestowed. Not content
+with possessing the Miraculous Medal, the pious prelate had in his own
+chamber a statue of the Immaculate Conception after the Sister's model.
+It was cast in bronze, under his own eyes, as he wished to assist at
+the operation. When, in 1839, the solemn octave of the Immaculate
+Conception was celebrated in the diocese of Paris, for the first time,
+this statue, on a throne surrounded with flowers, was exposed to the
+veneration of the faithful. The 1st of January of this same year, he
+consecrated his diocese to Mary Immaculate.
+
+In commemoration of this, he had a picture painted, which represents
+him standing at the foot of Mary's statue, his eyes fixed upon her
+with love and confidence. The statue rests upon a globe which bears
+these words: "_Virgo fidelis_." And the invocation, "_Regina, sine labe
+concepta, ora pro nobis_," is inscribed upon the picture.
+
+On the Feast of the Assumption, he presented this picture to his
+chapter, that it might, he said, be a monument of his devotion and
+that of the chapter of Paris to the Immaculate Conception of the Mother
+of God.[12]
+
+ [Footnote 12: "Life of Mgr. de Quélen," by the Baron Henrion.]
+
+A medal, bearing date of January 1, 1839, reproduces this picture upon
+one of its faces. On the other is a vessel, tempest-tossed, and a star
+guiding it to the haven of peace. These words of St. Bernard, "_Respice
+stellam, voca Mariam_,"[13] explain the allegory. The following lines
+complete the explanation:
+
+"_Vana, Hyacinthe, furit; Stella maris auspice, vincis._"[14]
+
+ [Footnote 13: Look at the star, invoke Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 14: In vain, Hyacinthe (de Quélen) is the tempest
+ unchained; under the auspices of the Star of the Sea, thou wilt
+ triumph over its fury.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ DEVELOPMENT OF THE DEVOTION TO THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
+
+ MGR. DE QUÉLEN'S CIRCULAR.
+
+
+The principal end of the Blessed Virgin's apparition to Sister
+Catherine was to develop among the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate
+Conception; and the medal was the instrument used to accomplish this.
+Its influence was so prompt and perceptible that, in the year 1836, the
+Promoter charged with directing the canonical inquiry attributed to
+it, in a great measure, the wonderful development of devotion to the
+Virgin Immaculate. This pious impulse, once firmly rooted, continued to
+increase throughout the world; but, according to the ordinary ways of
+Providence, whilst the effects struck the eyes of all, the cause was
+forgotten, it was forgotten especially that God had chosen a modest
+Daughter of Charity to revive in the Church devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin. The medal was known everywhere, it was worn by everyone, it
+accomplished numberless prodigies, but whence did it come? This no
+one thought of asking. It is miraculous; that epithet includes its
+name, its origin, its value, and the humble Daughter who received it
+from Mary, to bestow upon mankind, silently admires these astonishing
+results, and says, like her blessed Father: "I am nothing in all this
+but a vile instrument, I cannot attribute to myself any of the glory
+without committing an act of injustice."
+
+The august Virgin had said that the graces obtained for mankind through
+her intercession would be particularly abundant in France. Events
+have proved the reality of the promise. It is in France, especially,
+that the medal has been propagated, miracles multiplied, and devotion
+to the Immaculate Conception most rapidly developed; it may be said,
+with truth, that that country has, indeed, merited the title of Mary's
+kingdom. As, among all the French dioceses, Paris was the one favored
+with these apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, so was Paris the one
+to inaugurate the religious movement. Faithful echo of the Church's
+ancient traditions concerning the Immaculate Conception, a prelate,
+whose piety equaled his nobility of character, and whose virtue
+received a new lustre from the fire of persecution, Mgr. de Quélen
+distinguished himself among all the bishops by his zeal in honoring the
+privilege so dear to Mary. A witness of the influence exerted by the
+medal upon the sensibly increasing devotion of the faithful to Mary
+conceived without sin, and struck with the already abundant fruits of
+this devotion in the conversion of sinners, the pious Archbishop was
+filled with joy. Incited by a just hope of seeing the gifts of Heaven
+still more abundantly multiplied, if devotion to Mary were produced
+under new forms, he addressed a petition to the Sovereign Pontiff with
+the view of obtaining from His Holiness: 1st. To celebrate solemnly, on
+the second Sunday of Advent, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, that
+the devotion might be maintained and strengthened among the faithful;
+2d. To add to the preface, _Et te in Immaculata Conceptione_; 3d. A
+plenary indulgence, in perpetuity, for this same day.
+
+Our Holy Father, Pope Gregory XVI, approved the Archbishop's petition,
+and granted it by a rescript of December 7, 1838. The privileges he had
+just obtained, in honor of Mary, conceived without sin, this venerable
+prelate joyfully published the first of the following January in a
+solemn circular, which clearly depicts his eminent piety. We here
+reproduce it for our readers' edification:
+
+ "_Circular of the Archbishop of Paris on the subject of the Feast
+ of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of
+ God._
+
+ "HYACINTHE LOUIS DE QUÉLEN, by the divine mercy and grace
+ of the Holy Apostolic See, Archbishop of Paris, etc.
+
+ "To the clergy and faithful of our diocese, health and benediction
+ in our Lord Jesus Christ.
+
+ "We do not wish, dearly beloved brethren, to await the end of the
+ year which begins to-day, and which we dare regard as one fruitful
+ in all manner of spiritual blessings, ere announcing to you the new
+ favor we have just received from the Holy Apostolic See, so much
+ have we loved to persuade ourselves that the joy of your hearts
+ will equal our own, so confident are we that this favor is for us,
+ the presage of multiplied graces, and that it becomes henceforth
+ for our diocese an abundant source of sanctification and salvation.
+
+ "Let us hasten to proclaim this favor: it treats of devotion to our
+ august Queen, Mother and Mistress, the Most Holy and Immaculate
+ Virgin Mary, honored especially in the mystery of her most pure
+ Conception.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin: Behold what the Catholic Church,
+ what the infallible Church, what the true and only Church of Jesus
+ Christ authorizes us to teach, without, however, declaring it an
+ article of Faith,[15] what she prevents us denying publicly, what
+ she instils into all the faithful, when in her general council,
+ she declares, she proclaims, that in the decree treating of
+ original sin, her intention is not to include therein the Blessed
+ and Immaculate Virgin Mary, Mother of God.[16] Behold! what the
+ Sovereign Pontiffs permit us to say, that always, and with a
+ view of nourishing the piety of Mary's servants, who invoke her
+ by recalling the first of her privileges, that which approaches
+ nearest the sanctity of God, always do they deign to second
+ these prayers, and zealously open the treasure of indulgences of
+ which they are the supreme dispensers, in favor of a devotion so
+ legitimate.
+
+ [Footnote 15: The Immaculate Conception had not then been defined.
+ (Note by translator.)]
+
+ [Footnote 16: Conc. Trid. sess. V. _Decret. de peccato originali_.]
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the Church of Paris
+ glories in professing and maintaining; what her Doctors hold it
+ an honor to teach and defend; what her children are jealous of
+ preserving as one of their dearest possessions after the sacred
+ dogmas of faith; what they do not hesitate to regard as an
+ immediate consequence of their faith, not believing it possible
+ to separate in Mary, the title of Immaculate Virgin from that of
+ Virgin Mother of God, and not considering it possible to refuse the
+ privilege of a Conception without spot, to her who was to receive
+ and who indeed did receive, that of the divine Maternity. Behold!
+ what respect and love for the Word made Flesh, inspire for the
+ chaste bosom the Most High sanctified, because He was to descend
+ there, and there clothe Himself with our nature, there become man
+ by the operation of the Holy Ghost.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what for years, has been
+ repeated thousands and thousands of times, not in this great city
+ or diocese only, but in every part of France, among strangers
+ and in the most distant countries. Behold! the cry of hope which
+ suffering danger, public or private necessities, have wrung from
+ mouths accustomed to bless God, and celebrate the praises of His
+ Holy Mother. Behold! what has been written, engraved, religiously
+ deposed, wherever there were spiritual or temporal favors to be
+ asked, graces of protection, of healing or conversion; at the
+ entrance of cities, at the doors of dwellings, on the breast of the
+ sick, on the couch of the dying. Behold! what in these later times
+ especially, has taken such deep root in all Christian hearts, what
+ has received an extraordinary impulse, what has been propagated in
+ so remarkable a manner, what seems to justify moreover, (the fact
+ can no longer be disguised) the numberless graces obtained through
+ the invocation of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the chaste generation
+ has taken the pious custom of placing on its heart with the sign
+ of the cross as an impenetrable buckler against the inflamed darts
+ of Satan, and under which its innocence and virtue are shielded.
+ Behold! what inspires it, fortifies it, renders it invincible in
+ combats with the demon of darkness; what makes it victorious over
+ all the seductions of the world and the attacks of hell; what
+ attracts, what leads it to follow Mary in the path of angelic
+ perfection, and makes it taste that celestial word which is not
+ given to all to understand; finally, behold! what everywhere and in
+ all conditions, fills with holy emulation, souls truly pious; what
+ encourages them to walk with constancy in the ways of justice; what
+ communicates to them a just horror of sin and the highest esteem
+ for sanctifying grace, of which the Immaculate Virgin is for them
+ the faithful mirror and venerable sanctuary.
+
+ "And behold, also, our very dear brethren, what has urged, and
+ determined us to regard as a consolation, a duty of our episcopate
+ to second your piety in this regard, at the same time, that we
+ satisfy our devotion to this Immaculate Virgin, to whom we are
+ indebted for many signal benefits. We thought it not a rash zeal,
+ to supplicate our Holy Father, the Pope, to deign confide to us the
+ means of increasing devotion to Mary Immaculate in her Conception,
+ to render it easier and thus more popular. The Feast of the Blessed
+ Virgin's Conception, being now in France only one of devotion,
+ we have feared that even if the memory of it were not gradually
+ effaced, it might become insensibly neglected, and the fruits of
+ sanctification and salvation diminished.
+
+ "The Sovereign Pontiff has deigned to accord our humble request.
+ The rescript we have received, our very dear brethren, sufficiently
+ testifies how our petitions have been welcomed, our prayers
+ answered, upon what foundation the regulations we are going to
+ prescribe rest, and the advantages we have had reason to expect
+ from them. We long, yes, we long, from lively gratitude, from
+ tender love to Mary, to give vent to our transports and salute her
+ solemnly by the title of Immaculate in her Conception that day, for
+ distant day it seems to our hearts, when we will be permitted to
+ proclaim it joyfully before the assembled faithful, and during the
+ celebration of the holy mysteries.
+
+ "O Mary! thou whom wisdom hast possessed in the beginning of thy
+ ways, cloud divinely fruitful, always in light and never in shade,
+ new Eve, who didst crush the infernal serpent's head; courageous
+ Judith, glory of Jerusalem, joy of Israel, honor of thy people,
+ amiable Esther, exempt from the common law which presses as a
+ yoke of anathema upon all the children of Adam, full of grace,
+ blessed among all women. O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee! By thy most Holy Virginity and thy
+ Immaculate Conception, O most Holy Virgin! obtain for us purity of
+ heart and body, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
+ the Holy Ghost. Amen!"
+
+But this does not satisfy the prelate's piety; he also entreats the
+Sovereign Pontiff that the belief in the Immaculate Conception be
+expressed in the litanies of the Blessed Virgin. The Holy Father
+grants this petition, and permits the addition to the litany of
+the invocation: "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_." Then
+Monseigneur, in a new circular of June 24th, orders that the Sunday
+following its reception, this invocation should be chanted three
+times at Benediction, and in future chanted or recited every time the
+litany was chanted or recited, adding that no prayer-book without this
+invocation inserted in the litany would have his approbation. The
+prelate also exhorted all the clergy, pastors and others, to instill
+into the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate Conception, recommending
+the use of the formula, "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_."
+
+At last, seeing the near approach of that epoch so dear and solemn, he
+could not refrain, in spite of his extreme weakness and the violent
+sufferings of a mortal malady, from giving vent to his feelings in
+a third circular, which displays at the same time his zeal for the
+Immaculate Virgin's honor and his indefatigable solicitude for the
+welfare of his flock.
+
+The feast and octave of the Immaculate Conception, announced and
+prepared with so much zeal by the pious Bishop, were celebrated with
+extraordinary solemnity in all the churches throughout the diocese
+of Paris, and especially at Notre Dame. It was one of the last
+consolations this great prelate enjoyed upon earth. He died the 31st
+of December, crowning a life rich in virtues and sacrifices, by an act
+of filial homage to Mary Immaculate, and a final testimony of tender
+solicitude for the flock he was about to leave. He loved this flock
+during life, and before dying, he confides it to the inexhaustible
+charity of the Immaculate Heart of the Mother of Jesus, he conceals it
+under the mantle of her purity, that he may feel assured of the victory
+over the enemies of its happiness. He had consecrated his person, his
+diocese and all France to this Virgin, conceived without sin. Was it
+not to her maternal protection the venerable prelate owed that generous
+submission, that admirable tranquility, that tender love and sweet
+serenity of the just, when he was hovering on the brink of eternity? He
+had placed all his confidence in thee, O Mary! at that last moment, he
+invoked thee as the Star of the Sea that was to guide him to Heaven,
+and it was under thy auspices his beautiful soul winged its flight to
+the bosom of its God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In emulation of the example of the illustrious Archbishop of the
+capital, the other Archbishops and Bishops of France petition the
+Holy See for the same privileges, publishing them in their respective
+dioceses by solemn circulars, and proclaiming them a new source
+of benediction for the people. Thus, in the same year, 1839, the
+Archbishops of Toulouse and Bourges, the Bishops of Montauban, Pamiers,
+Carcassonne, Fréjus, Châlons, Saint-Flour and Limoges; in 1840, the
+Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen, the Archbishop of Lyons and Besançon,
+the Bishops of Bayeux, Évreux, Séez, Coutance, Saint-Dié, La Rochelle,
+Tulle, Ajaccio, Nantes and Amiens; in 1841, the Archbishop of Bordeaux,
+the Bishops of Versailles, of Nîmes and Luçon, Mende and Périgueux. We
+are fully persuaded, and even assured, of the fact that a great number
+of the dioceses in France requested and obtained the same privileges;
+but we cite only those of which we ourselves have kept note.
+
+ "What should be our transports of joy, confidence, admiration and
+ gratitude, at this universal tribute of honor and homage to the
+ Virgin conceived without spot! All earth unites with Heaven in
+ a concert of praise and thanksgiving, proclaiming that Mary has
+ been conceived without sin; all hearts vie with one another in
+ celebrating the signal favors, the miraculous cures and conversions
+ God has deigned to accord those who invoke the Blessed Virgin
+ under the title of Immaculate in her Conception." (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Bourges.)
+
+ "This new lustre bestowed upon the devotion to Mary conceived
+ without sin, should console religion and raise our hopes.... Oh!
+ in this desolated region, how should we rejoice to see appear
+ in Heaven, if not an omen of the end of all combats, at least
+ the pledge of new triumphs and new conquests!" (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Digne.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ May this beautiful devotion, be powerful in attracting the
+ benedictions of Heaven upon earth, ever increase. Let us fervently
+ implore the Immaculate Mother of God to enkindle it in all hearts,
+ to bless that France whose protectrice she has so often proved
+ herself, to preserve and augment therein faith and piety, and to
+ make all the children of France but one family, united by the bonds
+ of religion and charity. Let us also implore the same grace for all
+ countries, all peoples. Let each one of us wear the precious sign
+ of her maternal tenderness, this Miraculous Medal, which, recalling
+ to our minds the first and most glorious of her privileges, she
+ gives us as the pledge of all her favors.
+
+ Oh! if we knew the gift of our Mother! oh! if we understood
+ the excess of her bounty! Does she not seem longing to give us
+ knowledge, when she displays to us the abundance of her riches and
+ the prodigies of her liberality, in those rays of grace she showers
+ upon us like a deluge of love and mercy? Does she not likewise
+ unveil to us the mystery of her charity, in the image of her heart
+ united to that of the divine Jesus?... The same fire consumes them,
+ the same zeal devours them, thirst for our salvation. This union
+ of love and sacrifice is very clearly represented by the august
+ Mary's initial joined to the sacred sign of the cross above the
+ two hearts, as an authentic testimony, of the co-operation of the
+ Mother of the Saviour in the salvation of the human race.
+
+ Wear then, little children, this cherished medal, this precious
+ souvenir of the best of mothers; learn and love to say: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+
+ Morning Star, she will delight to guide your first steps and to
+ keep you in the paths of innocence. Wear it, Christian youth,
+ and amidst the numberless dangers lurking in your paths repeat
+ frequently: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Virgin most faithful, she will preserve you
+ from all peril. Wear it, fathers and mothers; say often: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+ And the Mother of Jesus will shed upon you and your families the
+ most abundant benedictions. Wear it, ye old and infirm; say also:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" Help of Christians, she will aid you in sanctifying
+ your sufferings and the closing years of life. Wear it, souls
+ consecrated to God, and never cease repeating: "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" Queen of
+ Virgins, she will implant in the garden of your heart those fruits
+ and flowers which constitute the delight of the Spouse, and which
+ will form your crown at the nuptials of the Lamb. Amidst the trials
+ and tribulations of life, let us invoke Mary, conceived without
+ sin, and our tears will be dried, our sufferings assuaged, our
+ sorrows sweetened, for she dispenses the dew of all graces. In our
+ combats against the demon, the world and the flesh, let us appeal
+ to Mary, conceived without sin; Strength of combatants and Crown
+ of victors, she will shield us against their most violent assaults
+ and assure us of the victory; but oh! when standing on the brink
+ of that moment which summons us before the Sovereign Judge, then
+ especially must we invoke Mary, conceived without sin, and she
+ whom the Church calls Gate of Heaven will herself receive our last
+ sigh and introduce our soul into the abode of glory and perfect
+ happiness.
+
+ And you also, poor sinners, though covered with the wounds of sin,
+ buried in the deepest abysses of passion, the arm of an avenging
+ God lifted to descend upon your guilty head, despair seizing your
+ soul, raise your eyes to the Star of the Sea; you are not bereft
+ of Mary's compassion; take the medal, cry from the depths of your
+ hearts, "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Unfailing Refuge of sinners, her charitable hand
+ will apply to your cruel wounds a healing ointment; she will rescue
+ you from the depths whence you have fallen, she will turn aside
+ the formidable blows of Divine justice, she will pour over your
+ soul the balm of sweet hope, she will guide you anew in the paths
+ of righteousness and conduct you even to the haven of a blessed
+ eternity.
+
+ Would that all might taste this means of salvation! the dismal
+ shades of voluntary death would soon cease to terrify our cities
+ and rural districts. Yes, the short prayer, "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" made with
+ faith, would, even amidst the violent agitation of a homicidal
+ thought, banish the tempter; a simple glance at the medal of the
+ Immaculate Mary would dissipate despair. "No one commits suicide
+ under the eyes of a mother," said very truly, His Eminence, the
+ Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen. And the same might be said of many
+ other crimes of daily occurrence.
+
+ Oh! you whose souls are cruelly afflicted night and day,
+ virtuous wives, who shed burning tears over the irreligion of a
+ tenderly-loved husband; sorrowful mothers, bitterly deploring the
+ wanderings of a child reared in the bosom of an eminently Christian
+ family, but drawn into the vortex of bad example; pious sisters,
+ praying fervently and incessantly for the conversion of a brother,
+ who once, like yourselves, enjoyed the sweet consolations of
+ religion; Christian children, secretly bewailing the indifference
+ of a father who seems to have lost, long since, the precious gift
+ of Faith, console yourselves; a new hope is offered you, and it
+ comes to you through the beneficent hands of Mary; offer, give the
+ image of this tender Mother to the dear objects of your solicitude;
+ the thought of this precious medal or a glance at it, will banish
+ many a temptation, for we may say with truth of the soul as well as
+ of the body, "no one commits suicide under the eyes of a mother."
+ If they refuse your offer do not despair; Mary will find her way to
+ these hardened hearts, and in spite of themselves, she will take
+ them under her protection; imitate the pious ruse of many others,
+ who in a like extremity, have stealthily slipped the precious medal
+ under the pillow of the impenitent sick on the verge of death;
+ imitate those mothers, those wives, those Christian daughters, who
+ carefully concealed in the clothing of that child, that spouse,
+ that father, the medal they had refused to wear, do this, and one
+ day they will appreciate the pledge of your piety and tenderness.
+ No, no, never does any one wear in vain, the medal of her to whom
+ the Church applies these words of Scripture. "He who finds me,
+ will find life, and will obtain salvation from the Lord."[17]
+
+ [Footnote 17: Prov. viii.]
+
+ But it is not enough to wear the medal as a mere pledge of the
+ Immaculate Mary's love; we must regard it also, as an assistant in
+ reaching perfection. This Mother, all amiable, proposes herself to
+ our imitation, she places herself, in a measure, before our eyes,
+ that seeing her so pure and perfect, we may be attracted by her
+ charms. It is the image of her beauty and goodness she brings us
+ from Heaven. It is a mirror in which we learn to know the Sun of
+ Justice, by the perfections with which he has enriched His divine
+ Mother.... It is on one side, the picture of what we should be, and
+ on the other, an eloquent lesson of what we should practice. The
+ shining purity of the Immaculate Mary, reveals to us the beauty of
+ our soul, created in the image of the thrice holy God, and exciting
+ in us, the love of that amiable virtue which makes us resemble the
+ angels, it necessarily inspires us with the most vivid horror of
+ evil, and causes us to shun the slightest imperfections, since they
+ tarnish this divine resemblance.
+
+ And, as though it were not enough to excite our fervor by the
+ sight of her ravishing beauty, this faithful Virgin discovers to
+ us the means of preserving innocence or recovering it, should we
+ have been so unfortunate as to lose it. This is the lesson of the
+ symbolic figures engraven on the reverse of the medal: "Nothing
+ shall be written on the reverse of the medal; ... what is already
+ there says enough to the Christian soul." The Sacred Heart of
+ Jesus and Mary placed beneath the cross tell us that purity is
+ preserved or restored by love and union with our Lord.... Love
+ covers a multitude of sins; love is the bond of perfection, the
+ consummation of all virtues.... Love assures fidelity. It must
+ be stronger than death to make us die to the world, to sin and
+ ourselves, that we may be attached inseparably to Jesus crucified.
+ There is also another lesson to be learned--that taught by Mary's
+ holy name, united to the sign of the cross. It is placed above the
+ two hearts because true love leads to sacrifice; it immolates, it
+ fastens, it nails to the cross of Jesus Christ, and this union of
+ sufferings on earth is the pledge of a glorious and eternal union
+ hereafter.
+
+ Children of Mary, respond to her loving tenderness; be docile to
+ the salutary lessons of our divine Mother, gratefully acknowledge
+ this inappreciable testimony of her ingenious liberality. Go to
+ Mary with the simplicity of a child, who lovingly clings to her
+ bountiful hand until he obtains the object of his desires. Amidst
+ all the storms of life, let your eyes be fixed upon this Star of
+ the Sea. Invoke Mary; ever seek her amiable protection; she will
+ never refuse to hear our petitions. May her remembrance and love
+ reign always in our minds and hearts! May we repeat incessantly
+ this sweet invocation: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!" and when strength and speech have
+ failed us may the Miraculous Medal be pressed to our dying lips,
+ and the last throb of our heart protest that we wish to die
+ murmuring: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ EXTRAORDINARY GRACES
+
+ OBTAINED THROUGH THE INSTRUMENTALITY OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL.
+
+ I.
+
+ _Graces Obtained from 1832 to 1835._
+
+
+"Bless the God of heaven," said the angel to Tobias and his son; "chant
+His praises among all mankind for the blessings with which He has
+loaded you, for it is good to conceal the secret of the king, but it is
+glorious to reveal and publish the works of God. _Elenim sacramentum
+regis abscondere bonum est; opera autem Dei revelare et confiteri
+honorificum est._"[18] Blessed, then, always and everywhere, be the God
+of heaven and earth, for the numberless benefits He has been pleased to
+confer upon us through Mary! Let us adore the mysterious destiny of
+the Mother of the King of Kings, "who, by reason of this title, truly
+merits the name of Queen," says St. Athanasius; and let us rob neither
+God nor Mary of the honor and glory due them. Let us publish the
+Lord's works of power and goodness to man through the mediation of the
+Immaculate Virgin, whom He has established Depositary and Dispensatrix
+of the treasures of His mercy, that mercy which embraces our corporal
+infirmities as well as spiritual needs.
+
+ [Footnote 18: Tob., xii, 7.]
+
+An account of the extraordinary graces obtained by means of the
+Immaculate Conception Medal will be for all Christian souls a source of
+precious benedictions. At the view of these prodigies of mercy, these
+marvelous cures and conversions, the reader will be led to thank God
+and glorify His Holy Mother; those who have already loved Mary will be
+incited to still greater love; careless Christians, those who are tried
+by suffering, those who have the misfortune to be in a state of sin,
+will feel their confidence awakened, and they will tenderly invoke her
+whom the Church so justly styles Health of the weak, Refuge of sinners,
+Comforter of the afflicted.
+
+Experience proves this. Every one knows, moreover, that an example of
+virtue or an event which clearly reveals God's agency, acts much more
+powerfully on the soul than a simple consideration of the subject or a
+series of arguments. "_Verba movent, exempla trahunt_--words can move,
+example attract."
+
+We also hope for something more from the publication of these
+accounts--we hope by them to convince the faithful that Mary's dearest
+title is that of Immaculate, and that she knows not how to refuse the
+petitions of those who, with lively faith, invoke her by this dearest
+title. It is, moreover, the Church of Rome which thus reveals, as it
+were, all the merciful tenderness of Mary's Heart, and presents us the
+devotion to her spotless Conception as the sure means of enriching
+ourselves from the exhaustless treasures of that Heart and according
+to all our necessities. "_Sacra Virgo Maria ... sentiant omnes tuam
+juvamen quicumque celebrant tuam sanctam Conceptionem_;"[19] and
+surely this prayer of the Mother of all churches--prayer which we
+might readily style prophetic--has long since been answered. We have
+recently seen a compilation, made in 1663 by a Jesuit father, with
+the approbation of the Ordinary, containing an account of sixty-two
+conversions or cures effected in different places by the invocation
+of Mary conceived without sin, and apparently nothing less than
+miraculous. It is also a well known fact, mentioned in the life of
+B. Peter Fourrier, founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame, that
+these simple words, "Mary was conceived without sin," worn with faith,
+brought relief to a multitude of sick persons during an epidemic. The
+same means obtained not less visible protection at Nemours, when that
+city was in imminent danger of being sacked, and also at Paris in 1830.
+But we confine ourselves to the graces obtained through the Miraculous
+Medal. Our choice of examples will show that, in bestowing especial
+favors upon France, the Immaculate Mary gives no less striking proofs
+of her protection in other countries where the medal is known and
+piously worn.
+
+ [Footnote 19: Offic. Concept. B.V.M.R. viii.]
+
+Among the traits of protection obtained through the medal in the
+diocese of Paris, nine (three conversions and six cures) underwent a
+detailed examination, and were pronounced veritable by the Promoter in
+the investigation of 1836. We mention them in this edition, adding to
+each one's title the word--Attested.
+
+Quite a number of incidents printed in the edition of 1842 we have
+omitted here, in order to insert (without greatly increasing the size
+of the volume) more recent accounts equally reliable, thus proving that
+the medal is not less miraculous in our day than at the time of the
+apparition.
+
+The extraordinary graces of which it has been the instrument, would
+have formed an uninterrupted series from the year 1832 till the
+present, if unfortunately, neglecting to keep note of them, an interval
+of several years had not crept into the documents in our possession.
+
+For the future, please God, no such omission will occur, and all the
+authenticated accounts which come to our knowledge will be carefully
+registered for the glory of Mary conceived without sin, and the
+edification of her servants.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT ALENÇON--1833.
+
+ The 14th of April, 1833, there was brought to the hospital of
+ Alençon (Orne) a sick soldier, who came from the hospital of Vitré
+ (Ile-et-Vilaine). His impiety there had greatly distressed the
+ hospitable ladies of St. Augustin, in charge of that establishment,
+ a circumstance communicated to us by persons who witnessed the
+ insulting manner in which he rewarded the kind attentions of their
+ unfailing charity. Arrived at the hospital Alençon, we soon saw
+ what he was, irreligious, impious, and brutally rude. The chaplain
+ hastened to visit him, and condole with him on his sufferings; and
+ as the opening of the Jubilee very naturally paved the way for a
+ few words on that extraordinary grace, he gently exhorted the sick
+ man to imitate the example of other soldiers who were preparing to
+ profit by it, but his words were answered by insults. The chaplain
+ did not insist, and contented himself for several days with merely
+ visiting him, and kindly sympathizing with his sufferings; the sick
+ man scarcely replied, and seemed much annoyed, even at the visits.
+
+ The Daughters of Charity in charge of this hospital, met with no
+ better treatment, notwithstanding the kind attentions they lavished
+ on him. His malady increased; seeing that it was becoming very
+ necessary for him to receive the consolations of religion, the
+ chaplain urged him again to make his peace with the good God, but
+ he was answered by blasphemies. "Ah! yes, the good God, little He
+ cares for me." In answer to this the abbé made a few observations
+ full of charity, and the patient continued: "Your good God does
+ not like the French; you say He is good and He loves me; if He
+ loved me, would he afflict me like this, have I deserved it?"
+ These outbursts of impiety only inflamed the charitable zeal of
+ the minister of a God who died for sinners, and inspired him with
+ forcible language, to depict the justice and merciful goodness of
+ the Lord. The sick man soon interrupted him by invectives: "You
+ worry me; let me alone; go away from here; I need neither you nor
+ your sermons," and he turned over to avoid seeing the priest.
+ His treatment to the Sisters was no better; and he continued to
+ utter the most horrible blasphemies against religion, and those
+ who reminded him of it; he carried this to such a degree, that
+ the other soldiers were indignant, especially at his outrageous
+ behaviour, after any one has spoken to him about his soul, or there
+ had been prayers or a little spiritual reading in the room--he
+ appeared dissatisfied, until he had vomited forth his stock of
+ blasphemies and imprecations. Some days passed and nothing was
+ said to him on the subject of religion, but every care for his
+ bodily comfort was redoubled; no one now scarcely dared hope
+ for his return to God, for his malady increased, and likewise
+ his impiety; all contented themselves with praying for him, and
+ recommending him to the prayers of others. The Sister in charge of
+ that ward, having great confidence in the Blessed Virgin's promises
+ to all under the protection of the medal, felt urged interiorly
+ to hang one at the foot of his bed; she yielded to the apparent
+ inspiration, and, unknown to him, the medal was there. He still
+ showed no signs of relenting, and even became indignant when some
+ of the other soldiers prepared themselves, by confession, to gain
+ the Jubilee. The medal had now been six days hanging at the foot of
+ his bed, and many and fervent were the prayers offered up to God
+ for this miserable creature's conversion, although nearly every one
+ despaired of it. One day, when all the convalescents of the ward
+ were assisting at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, the Sister
+ approached his bed, detached the medal and held it up before him.
+ "Look," said she, "at this medal, it is miraculous; I hung it to
+ your bed several days ago, and thereby put you under the Blessed
+ Virgin's especial protection. With her powerful assistance, I
+ confidently hope for your conversion. Look at this good Mother, she
+ is praying for you now." He never raised his eyes, but already was
+ grace working in his heart, for he showed no signs of irritation
+ which had heretofore been the inevitable consequence of mentioning
+ religion. Profiting by this, the Sister spoke to him of God's
+ mercy, and begged him again to cast a glance at the medal she had
+ just hung at the foot of his bed on the inner side. After being
+ repeatedly urged, he opened his eyes and looked towards it. "I do
+ not see your medal," said he to the Sister, "but I see the candle
+ which, doubtless, you have just lit; yes, it is certainly a light."
+ It was five o'clock in the afternoon, June 13th; his bed was so
+ placed that it could not receive any reflection of the sun's rays,
+ and the chaplain, after examining the spot felt assured, that at
+ no time could a reflection strike it in that direction. "You are
+ mistaken," said she, "look at it carefully." He repeated in the
+ most positive manner, "I see it distinctly, it is certainly a
+ light." Astonished beyond expression, but fearing her patient's
+ sight was affected, the Sister showed him other and more distant
+ objects; these he distinguished perfectly, and continued to see
+ this light for a quarter of an hour. During this interval, the
+ Sister spoke to him of God; suddenly, fear and love filled his
+ heart. "I do not wish to die as I am!" he exclaimed, "tell the
+ chaplain to come immediately and hear my confession." Hearing one
+ of the other patients utter an oath, "oh! make that miserable man
+ hush!" said he, to the Sister; "oh! I beg you to make him stop
+ swearing."
+
+ "I was still ignorant," says the chaplain, "of the origin and
+ effects of this medal. It was a very familiar object, and I
+ regarded it as nothing more than an ordinary medal. When told
+ that the sick man wanted me, I went joyfully, and saw for myself
+ what a complete change had taken place in him. Congratulating
+ and encouraging him, without knowing the cause of this change,
+ I hastened to ask him if he wished me to hear his confession.
+ He replied in the affirmative, and made it without delay; I had
+ every opportunity of admiring his good will and the pleasure he
+ manifested at each repetition of my visit. I endeavored to make him
+ explain himself, and asked if he had not acted from mere civility
+ or a desire to rid himself of the importunities by which he had
+ been so long beset. "No," he answered, "I sent for you, because
+ I wished seriously to make my confession and arise from my state
+ of sin." Henceforth he was no longer the same man; he was now as
+ docile, patient, gentle and edifying in all his words and ways,
+ as he had formerly been unmanageable, brutal and scandalous.
+ He eagerly desired the Last Sacraments, which, after proper
+ preparation, he received with lively faith. His happiness seemed
+ beyond expression, and though suffering intensely, no one ever
+ heard the least sign of impatience escape his lips. He continued
+ to give the most unequivocal signs of a true conversion; peace and
+ resignation were depicted in his countenance, and to his last sigh,
+ which he breathed June 27th, 1833, did he persevere most faithfully.
+
+NOTE.--These details are attested by M. Yver Bordeaux, chaplain of the
+Hotel Dieu; by the Sisters of Charity; by a woman patient named Bidon;
+Julien Prével, an infirmarian; by Jean François Royer, of the Seventh
+Cuirassiers; Marie Favry, infirmarian, all eye witnesses, besides
+a large number of other soldiers who left the city whilst we were
+investigating the matter.
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE AURELIE B. (PARIS)--1833. _Attested._
+
+The account of this cure was sent us by the person herself in the month
+of May, 1834.
+
+ The 3d of November, 1833, I was attacked by a typhoid fever, for
+ which I was treated by a skillful physician and the Sisters of
+ Charity, who spared no pains for my recovery. At the end of a month
+ I was able to take a little nourishment, and I had the happiness
+ of assisting at the Holy Mass and receiving Holy Communion on the
+ Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I was still very weak, and
+ utterly incapable of any exertion. In this state of exhaustion, I
+ took a little chocolate. The fever soon returned, and continued
+ with daily increasing violence until Christmas. Then the physician
+ said there was no longer any hope of my recovery. Another physician
+ was called in, who, after an examination, declared me consumptive
+ to the last degree, but said they might try the effect of a few
+ blisters. Those proved of no benefit. The 27th of December, the
+ physicians finding me extremely ill, informed the Sisters that my
+ death was imminent. Moreover, I had been cold for two days. About
+ half-past six that day, I received the last Sacraments, and at nine
+ every one thought I would soon breathe my last. Suddenly, one of
+ the good Sisters around my couch thought of putting the medal on
+ me. I kissed it continually with great confidence, and began to
+ feel better. My condition next morning was a matter of astonishment
+ to the physician, and I continued to improve so rapidly that,
+ at the end of two days, the fever had entirely disappeared. My
+ appetite was ravenous, I soon resumed my occupations, and ever
+ since have been in perfect health. I doubt not, Monsieur, that I
+ owe my recovery to Mary, my good Mother, my love for whom seems to
+ have increased; my greatest happiness being to decorate her altars,
+ and my most earnest desire that of consecrating myself to God in a
+ Community whose works have so touching a connexion with the sublime
+ destiny of the Mother of Jesus; it is under her protection I expect
+ the accomplishment of my designs.
+
+ Yours very respectfully,
+
+ AURELIE B.
+
+NOTE.--The nine Sisters of the establishment have attested the truth
+of these details, and one of the two physicians does not hesitate to
+declare her recovery supernatural.
+
+Moreover, this young person has ever since remained in perfect health.
+Her prayers are granted, the Immaculate Mary has also obtained for her
+the grace of being received into the Community she wished to enter,
+which is the reason we do not give her name.
+
+
+ CURE OF A RELIGIOUS (PARIS)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+This fact is known to many; however, to prevent too great a number
+of visitors, the Superior requests us not to publish the name of the
+Community.
+
+A young religious, twenty-seven and a-half years old and eight years
+professed, in an Order especially consecrated to the Blessed Virgin
+(Paris), had been kept in the infirmary by various maladies, for the
+space of five months. At the very time she appeared convalescent, an
+accident of the gravest nature happened; her left thigh bone became
+disjointed and shrunken, the limb was attacked by paralysis, and the
+sick religious lay upon her bed one month, without experiencing the
+slightest alleviation from human remedies. Two physicians and a surgeon
+being consulted at various times, pronounced the displacing of the bone
+due an irritating humor; but they could not check it, even by means of
+cauterizing and issues, so that after a long and painful treatment,
+she remained a cripple. She now had recourse to the Blessed Virgin as
+a child to its good mother; a religious of the house having brought
+her one of those medals called miraculous, which had been given her,
+she received it gratefully, applied it to the afflicted member and
+commenced, Saturday, March 1st, 1834, a novena to the Blessed Virgin.
+All human remedies seemed unavailing; she lost her appetite and was
+unable to sleep. She was also racked with high fever; however, having
+snatched a little repose during the Wednesday night after beginning
+the novena, she was suddenly awakened by a very painful commotion,
+which re-established the bones in their place; the leg which had been
+shortened about six inches, became lengthened almost even with the
+other, and recovered its usual strength. On visiting her next morning,
+the physicians were greatly astonished, but gave orders that she should
+not yet leave her bed. On Sunday, the last day of the novena, the fact
+of the cure was established beyond a doubt. The religious arose quite
+naturally, and without any assistance, ran to kiss the feet of Mary's
+statue, placed over the infirmary fire-place; then, dressed in her
+habit, and accompanied by the Mother Infirmarian, she descended about a
+dozen steps to the chapel to adore the Blessed Sacrament, after which
+she repaired to the community room, where the Superior with her Mothers
+and Sisters were assembled, to give her the kiss of congratulation.
+This touching scene was terminated by the recitation of the _Te Deum_,
+and _Sub Tuum_. No trace of disease remained, except a slight weakness
+for a few days, and as this was felt only in the sound limb, it was
+evidently the result of her having been six months in bed.
+
+Two of the physicians acknowledged, with all the Community, that it was
+a supernatural favor. One of them has even declared in a certificate
+of May 4th, 1834, that without wishing to characterize a fact as
+extraordinary, he observes that in this circumstance there are: 1st,
+spontaneous disjointing; 2d, spontaneous diminution, three days
+convalescence, and these last two are, to the extent of his knowledge,
+without parallel in the records of surgery.
+
+The religious has never had another attack of this infirmity.
+
+
+ CURE OF A SICK PERSON (CHÂLONS SUR MARNE)--1834.
+
+The Abbé Bégin, an eye-witness of this cure, which took place at the
+hospital St. Maur, where he is chaplain, has prepared a verbal process
+which attests: 1st, that the patient was really afflicted; 2d, that she
+was cured March 14th, 1834; 3d, that she declares no other means were
+employed than the medal and prayer. This verbal process is signed by a
+hundred persons of the above-mentioned hospital.
+
+ "Madame C.H., a widow, aged seventy, a charity patient at the
+ hospital St. Maur, was, in consequence of a fall the 7th of
+ August, 1833, crippled to such a degree that it was with great
+ difficulty she could walk, even with the aid of a crutch, and
+ sometimes the additional assistance of another person's arm; she
+ could scarcely seat herself, and to rise was still more of an
+ effort. To ascend the stairs was almost impossible, she could
+ accomplish it only by grasping as she went along whatever lay
+ within reach. She could not stoop or kneel; the left limb, which
+ was the principal seat of her malady, she dragged helplessly after
+ her, not being able to bend it.
+
+ "Such was her sad condition at the beginning of March, 1834.
+ However, she heard something that enkindled a ray of hope in her
+ heart. Some one had spoken to her the January previous of a medal
+ said to be miraculous; it bore on one side the image of Mary
+ crushing the infernal serpent's head, her hands full of graces
+ figured by rays of light proceeding from them, and the invocation:
+ 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' on the other, the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, with
+ the letter M surmounted by a cross. She was also informed of the
+ wonders it had wrought, and her heart awoke to the consoling hope
+ of realizing some benefit from the medal which had been promised
+ her. How she sighed for the happy moment when it would be in her
+ possession! How long the time of waiting appeared! At last, her
+ desires were gratified; the 6th of March she received, as if
+ it were a present from Heaven, the long wished-for medal, and
+ hastened, by the reception of the Sacrament of Penance, to prepare
+ herself for the desired favor. Next day, the first Wednesday in
+ the month, she commenced by Holy Communion a novena to the Sacred
+ Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Twenty times, day and night, did she
+ press to her lips the precious medal hung around her neck. For
+ several days of the novena, our Lord severely tried her faith
+ anew. Her sufferings increased greatly, likewise her fervor and
+ confidence, and soon the most blessed results were the recompense
+ of this poor woman's prayers.
+
+ "Seven days of the novena had not elapsed ere she was relieved of
+ the sufferings that had so cruelly afflicted her for seven months.
+ I could not depict the astonishment and admiration of every one,
+ who saw on the morning of March 14th this person so helpless
+ the very evening before, walk with all ease imaginable, bend,
+ kneel, go up and down high steps. One spoke of it to another for
+ mutual edification, and, in turn, came to congratulate her on her
+ recovery, and give thanks to God and Mary. The Superior, who had
+ bestowed constant care upon the sick woman during her crippled
+ state, and had thus been a daily witness of her sufferings,
+ returned solemn thanks for this extraordinary grace, the whole
+ Community chanting a _Te Deum_ in their chapel.
+
+ "P.S.--I forgot to say that the widow has the free use of all her
+ limbs, and has never since had a return of her former infirmity."
+
+The following is what Monseigneur thought proper to append to the
+verbal process, an extract from which we have just read: "We certify
+that credence can, and ought to, be placed in the testimony of the Abbé
+Bégin, that of the Sisters and so many other eye-witnesses who have
+spoken conscientiously and from no motive save that of zeal for the
+truth.
+
+ "[Dagger] M.S.F.V., Bishop of Châlons.
+
+ "_Chàlons, May 30, 1834._"
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS OF M. DE CASTILLON, CAPTAIN IN THE 21ST LIGHT GUARDS;
+ AND OF A WOMAN--1834.
+
+ Extract from a letter of Sister C. (Herault) to M.E.:
+
+ "_November 13, 1834._
+
+ "It should be the duty of children to glorify their mother, and
+ a very sweet one it is for me to acquaint you with two incidents
+ manifesting the boundless charity of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "The first relates to a sick soldier in our house. Though we
+ had already witnessed the efficacy of the medal, in effecting
+ the conversion of several soldiers most obstinate in resisting
+ grace, no conversion was so striking as this. M. Frederick de
+ Castillon, aged thirty-five, Captain in the 21st Light Guards,
+ entered the hospital, April 29th, in the last stage of consumption,
+ and attacked by paralysis of the left side. We nursed him a long
+ time, his condition grew alarmingly worse, but how could we
+ mention religion to a young soldier who boasted of having none?
+ I kept myself always informed of his state, and contented myself
+ (apparently) with watching the progress of the disease. Several
+ times I attempted to make him realize his danger, but in vain. One
+ day, when he was much worse, and I had an opportunity of seeing
+ him alone, I ventured to inquire if he were a Catholic. 'Yes,
+ Sister,' he replied, looking steadily at me. I then asked him to
+ accept a medal, to wear it, and frequently invoke the Immaculate
+ Mary, telling him at the same time that, if he did so with faith,
+ this good Mother would obtain for him all the graces he needed, for
+ bearing his sufferings patiently and meritoriously. He received it
+ gratefully, but did not put it on.
+
+ "But our confidence in the Blessed Virgin's influence over him
+ was not diminished, especially when we saw him place the medal
+ on the side of his bed. The Sister in charge of that hall had
+ already slipped one in his pillow-case. Several days passed, his
+ strength was gradually ebbing away, and after many ineffectual
+ efforts to obtain his consent to see a priest, I asked a clergyman
+ to visit him notwithstanding, and I introduced him into the sick
+ man's presence just as some one came to tell me he could not live
+ through that night (October 15th). We found him extremely ill,
+ but still inflexible. After a few moments, I withdrew, and left
+ him alone with the charitable priest, who could get nothing from
+ him but these despairing words: 'Leave me in peace, to-morrow I
+ shall be dead, and all will be over!' Of course, there was nothing
+ else to be done but comply with his request, and you can imagine
+ how painful it was. We redoubled our petitions to the Immaculate
+ Virgin, and this good Mother soon wrought a change in the
+ unfortunate man's heart.
+
+ "Next day, he asked the physician to tell him candidly if his case
+ were hopeless, because he wished to arrange his affairs. That same
+ evening, as soon as the Sister in charge of the hall entered, he
+ said to her very gently and penitently: 'Oh! how sorry I am to have
+ treated the Superior so badly, and the good priest she brought
+ me! Present my apologies to them, I beg you, and ask them to come
+ again.' You know we delayed not a moment in going to see him.
+ Next morning he began his new life, and during the nine days M.
+ Castillon still lived the chaplain visited him several times every
+ day, remaining two hours at a time. One of his brother officers,
+ coming to see him just after his first confession: 'If you had
+ been here a few minutes sooner,' said M. de Castillon, with an
+ utter disregard of human respect, 'you would have found me in good
+ company. I was with the curé, and I could not have been in better.'
+ He had the happiness of receiving the Last Sacraments with the most
+ admirable dispositions. Here are his dying words, which he asked
+ this gentleman to commit to writing: 'I die in the religion of my
+ fathers, I love and revere it, I humbly beg God's pardon for not
+ always having practiced it publicly.' And he expired in the peace
+ of the Lord, October 23d.
+
+ "I now relate the second conversion, that of a woman who, for
+ eighteen years, had been a public scandal, living with a wretch who
+ had abandoned wife and children for her. To such wicked conduct,
+ she added a more than ordinary degree of impiety, boasting that
+ she believed neither in God nor hell, and mocking at everything
+ religion held sacred. Although dangerously ill, she declared that
+ never would she make a confession. Sister N., seeing the rapid
+ progress of the disease and near approach of death, had recourse
+ to the Blessed Virgin; she put a medal around the woman's neck,
+ and began a novena for her conversion, relying upon the assistance
+ of her who, every day, gives us continually increasing proofs
+ that she is our Mother and a most merciful one. Before the novena
+ was finished, this poor creature, yielding to grace, made her
+ confession, and renounced forever the wretch who had been her
+ curse, manifesting as much sorrow for her past life, and proving
+ herself as pious as she had heretofore been shamelessly impious.
+
+ "The above facts, Monsieur, I have thought it my duty to make known
+ to you, for the edification of the faithful and the glory of Mary.
+ May these examples of her power and bounty, lead all sinners to
+ cast themselves into her arms!"
+
+NOTE.--These two events are truly a confirmation of what St. Bernard
+says, "that no one ever invokes Mary in vain;" but what a misfortune
+for those who refuse her succor! A very reliable individual once told
+us, that a sick person to whom a medal had been given, and who began
+to feel the effects of grace, suddenly insisted upon having the medal
+taken off, saying: "It hurts me; I can wear it no longer." To quiet him
+it was taken off, and he soon expired without the slightest sign of
+conversion. The person relating this, was an eye-witness; it happened
+in the month of October, 1834.
+
+
+ CONVERSION AND CURE OF MME. PÉRON AND CURE OF HER
+ DAUGHTER.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--It is Mme. Péron herself who gives us all the details. She lives
+in Paris, rue des Petites-Écuries, No. 24. We quote her own account,
+written February 26th, 1835, from her dictation, and in presence of the
+Sister who visited her in her sickness.
+
+ "I was sick eight years, and afflicted with very considerable
+ hemorrhages. I suffered much and almost continually. I was without
+ strength; I took but little nourishment, and that little increased
+ my malady, which was gradually exhausting me. I do not remember
+ to have had during these eight years, more than eight entire days
+ of relief from pain; the rest of the time I passed on the bed,
+ unable to perform the work necessary to aid my poor husband in
+ supporting the family. I have even been confined to my bed as
+ long as eighteen months without intermission. I consulted several
+ physicians, who prescribed the remedies usual in such cases, but
+ all to no purpose. My husband, not being able to afford such
+ expense, and seeing no hope of my recovery, lost courage and was
+ almost in despair. Some kind persons sought to cheer him: 'You must
+ not be so low-spirited, my poor Bourbonnais, you must bear up under
+ these trials and show your strength of character; your wife is very
+ sick, but she will recover and your friends will not abandon you.'
+ As for myself, seeing that medicines had no effect and cost us a
+ great deal of money, I dispensed with doctors, and was a long time
+ without seeing one, having resigned myself to a slow death.
+
+ "A neighbor who understood my position, came one day to see me,
+ and urged me not to give up thus, but to have the physician again.
+ I opposed it, because we had not the wherewith to remunerate him.
+ She then proposed to call in a Sister of Charity. I observed that
+ not being in want, perhaps the Sisters would refuse to come, as it
+ might thus deprive of their services, others more unfortunate than
+ myself. This good lady insisted, and I yielded.
+
+ "Next morning, I received a visit from Sister Marie (of St. Vincent
+ de Paul's parish), who brought me some assistance, encouraged me to
+ support my sufferings, and did her best to console me. I can truly
+ say that happiness entered my house with this good Sister. She
+ soon sent a physician, who, after examining me and understanding
+ my case, told her, as I have since learned, that it was a hopeless
+ one, I had a very little while to live, and ought to be sent to
+ the hospital to spare my family the sad spectacle of my death.
+ Hearing this, Sister Marie believed it her duty to give my soul
+ especial attention. I was not an enemy to religion, but I was
+ not very practical; I went sometimes to the parish functions,
+ when my sufferings and occupations permitted, but (and I say it
+ to my shame) I had not approached the Sacraments for years. When
+ the Sister, after several other questions, asked me if I went to
+ confession, blushing, I said 'no.' She begged me to do so, and
+ I replied: 'When I am cured, I will.' The good Sister, little
+ satisfied with my evasive answer, urged me again to see a priest.
+ 'Sister,' said I, 'I don't like to be persecuted with things of
+ this sort, when I am cured I will go to confession.' I saw that
+ this answer grieved her, but she never remitted her visits and kind
+ attentions. My malady increased. One Saturday or Sunday night, at
+ the commencement of October, 1834, my whole body was cold, and
+ vainly did my friends endeavor to restore a natural warmth, the
+ chill of death seemed on me. They spoke of reciting the prayers
+ for the dying; I understood a part of what was said, but myself
+ was speechless. Whilst I was so ill, my husband told our eldest
+ daughter to go to bed, and he, thinking me easier because I was
+ feebly breathing, threw himself, without undressing, upon the bed
+ to snatch a little repose; but, getting up a few minutes later, he
+ came to me, put his hand on my face, and was horrified to find it
+ covered with a cold sweat. He thought me dead, and called aloud:
+ 'Euphemie,' (this is our eldest daughter's name), 'Euphemie, alas!
+ thy mother is dead!' Euphemie arose and mingled her lamentations
+ with those of her father. Their cries awakened Madame Pellevé, our
+ neighbor, who came to console them. 'Ah! madame,' said my husband,
+ on seeing her, 'my wife is dead!' Having begged him to be resigned
+ to God's will, this lady approached me, and, placing her hand upon
+ my heart: 'No,' she exclaimed, 'she is not dead, her heart still
+ beats.' They kindled a fire, and succeeded in restoring a little
+ warmth to my body.
+
+ "Madame Pellevé went betimes to inform Sister Marie of all this,
+ and the latter hastened to tell the physician. 'I am not at all
+ surprised,' he answered; 'this lady has two incurable diseases.
+ Besides these hemorrhages, she is in the last stage of consumption,
+ as I have already told you, and if not dead before this, she will
+ not live through the day.' My chest had, indeed, been very weak for
+ some time, and the physicians in consultation had all said I could
+ never be cured.
+
+ "At two o'clock in the afternoon I received a visit from Sister
+ Marie, who found me not quite so ill; I could speak. 'Do you
+ love the Blessed Virgin very much?' said she. 'Yes, Sister,' I
+ had indeed always practiced some devotion in honor of this good
+ Mother. 'If you love her very much, I can give you something to
+ cure you.' 'Oh! yes, I shall soon be well.' I spoke of death, for
+ I felt that it was near. Then she showed me a medal and said:
+ 'Take this medal of the Blessed Virgin, who will cure you, if you
+ have great confidence in her.' The sight of the medal filled me
+ with joy; I took it and kissed it fervently, for I truly longed to
+ be cured. The Sister now recited aloud the little prayer which I
+ could not read, and urged me to repeat it daily; I promised to add
+ five Paters and five Aves. She then put the medal around my neck.
+ At that instant, there passed through me a new, strange feeling,
+ a general revolution in my whole body, a thrill through all my
+ members. It was not a painful sensation, on the contrary, I began
+ to shed tears of joy. I was not cured, but I felt that I was going
+ to be cured, and I experienced a confidence that came not from
+ myself.
+
+ "Sister Marie left me in this state; after her departure, my
+ husband who had remained motionless at the foot of my bed said:
+ 'Put all your confidence in the Blessed Virgin; we are going to
+ make a novena for you.' Towards evening I could raise myself up in
+ bed, which was very astonishing, considering my extreme exhaustion,
+ but a few hours previous. On Tuesday I requested some broth,
+ which was given me at last, and a little while after I took some
+ soup. My strength returned; I felt that I was cured. Finally, on
+ Thursday, I wished to go to church to thank the Blessed Virgin.
+ This suggestion was opposed, but I insisted and at length went.
+ Whilst on the way and alone (for I preferred going by myself), I
+ met Sister Marie, who did not recognize me; I took her hand: 'Oh!'
+ said she, 'it is really yourself!' 'Yes, Sister, it is I indeed; I
+ am going to Mass: I am cured!' 'And what has cured you so quickly?'
+ 'The Blessed Virgin, and I am going to thank her.' The Sister was
+ lost in astonishment. I recounted to her how it had all come about
+ in less than three days, and I kept on to church and heard Mass.
+ Since then, I have had no return of my malady; I enjoy good health;
+ I go about my duties, performing a regular day's work, and to the
+ Miraculous Medal am I indebted for it all."
+
+Not only Madame Péron's body but her soul, did the Blessed Virgin
+restore to health; she soon chose a Director and went to confession,
+and she has continued to do so ever since; her life is really very
+edifying. As she deeply regrets having lived so long estranged from
+God, her greatest happiness now is in frequently approaching the
+Sacraments; two things awaken her tears, the recollection of her past
+life, and gratitude for her twofold recovery.
+
+Nor is this all; the Blessed Virgin seems to have chosen this family
+for the purpose of displaying in it the wonders of her power. Madam
+Péron had a daughter aged sixteen, who, after her mother's recovery,
+gave herself to God in an especial manner, employing in exercises of
+piety, all her leisure moments, and edifying her companions in the
+parish confraternity, whenever she could take part in their devotions
+for she lived in another quarter.
+
+The father also was deeply touched at the favors accorded his wife; he
+wears the medal, and he has experienced its blessed effects.
+
+Madame Péron has still another daughter, a little girl six years and
+a-half old, who had great difficulty in speaking, or rather, who did
+not speak at all, although she was not mute. Her utterance was so
+impeded, that she scarcely ever finished a word, thus disconcerting
+the most patient. It was so much the more deplorable, as she was
+quite a bright child. 'What a pity she does not talk!' said everyone
+who witnessed her infirmity. When Sister Marie saw this little girl,
+'Why do you not send her to school,' said she to the mother, 'instead
+of keeping her home all day?' 'You hear how she talks,' answered
+the mother, who did not like to have her child's infirmity exposed.
+However, she yielded to the Sister's wishes, and little Hortense was
+sent to the Sister's parish school. Her imperfect speech did not
+improve, it would sometimes take her five minutes to pronounce half
+a word. Some days after, Sister Marie, who deeply pitied the child,
+spoke to her mother of a novena for curing this defect. "Cure Hortense,
+Sister! it is impossible, it is a natural defect!" The Sister, with
+increasing anxiety insisted. The novena was commenced on Saturday;
+it consisted in hearing Mass every day, and reciting a few prayers
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. The medal was hung around the little
+girl's neck, and she was to take part in all the exercises of the
+novena. For several days there was no change, but Thursday after the
+Mass of the Blessed Sacrament, Hortense, on leaving church, could
+speak as distinctly and with as much ease as any one. Those who first
+heard her were struck with admiration, the news soon spread, and from
+all sides came persons to see her; they questioned her, and the child
+answered, they scanned her to see if it were really the same, and
+recognizing her, they returned, saying: "This is certainly a great
+miracle, a sudden cure of a natural defect!"
+
+Little Hortense, showing her medal with delight, would say to all who
+knew and congratulated her: "The Blessed Virgin has cured me."
+
+In thanksgiving for so great a benefit, the child was consecrated
+to Mary on the 21st of November, Feast of the Presentation, in the
+same chapel where the apparition of the medal took place, and, in
+commemoration of this great event of her life, she was to wear only
+blue and white until her First Communion. Previous to this ceremony,
+she made her confession, with every evidence of understanding
+thoroughly the importance of the act. When asked if she loves the
+Blessed Virgin, "Oh! yes," she answers, "I love her with more than all
+my heart!" an expression invented, it seems, solely by the fulness of
+her gratitude. She prizes her brass medal so highly, that she would
+not exchange it for one of silver or gold, and she wishes it put in the
+tomb with her when she dies. "We hope, Hortense," said her father not
+long ago, (he always finds a new pleasure in hearing her talk), "we
+hope, when you die, that you will leave us this medal as a souvenir of
+yourself and a relic of the Blessed Virgin." "Certainly, papa, if it
+gives you so much pleasure, but I promised the Blessed Virgin, the day
+of my consecration, that the medal should never leave me, but should
+even descend with me into the tomb when I died."
+
+We publish these details, with the cordial approbation of this family,
+fully imbued with ever increasing gratitude to Mary Immaculate.
+
+These two accounts have been confirmed by nine other persons.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF SEVERAL SOLDIERS (HOTEL DES
+ INVALIDES)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--All these edifying details, which have already produced a most
+beneficial effect upon many young men, were given us and attested by
+Sisters Radier and Pourrat, who, having charge of that ward, were
+witnesses of the facts, and also instruments of divine mercy in
+operating these prodigies.
+
+ "We had in St. Vincent's ward, number 20, royal hotel des
+ Invalides, Paris, a soldier who had been spitting blood about six
+ months, and who, it was thought, would soon die of consumption. He
+ was naturally polite and grateful for the attentions bestowed upon
+ him, but he showed no signs of religion; his morals were bad, and
+ it was a well-known fact that, for twenty years, his life had been
+ one of scandal.
+
+ "It appeared, however, that faith was not entirely extinguished in
+ his heart, for another patient, his neighbor, being on the point
+ of death and refusing to see a priest, this one entreated him to
+ yield, and was instrumental in bringing about his conversion.
+ Alas! his own turn soon came, we saw him growing worse day by day,
+ he was wasting visibly, and had not once mentioned receiving the
+ Sacraments. As he had urged his neighbor to prepare for death, we
+ hoped he would make his own preparation, without being reminded
+ of it, or, at least, that he would willingly comply with the
+ first suggestion. On the contrary, he absolutely resisted all our
+ entreaties, saying: 'I am an honest man, Sister, I have neither
+ killed nor robbed.' 'Even so,' we would answer, 'we all stand in
+ need of God's mercy, we are all sinners.' 'Oh! Sister, just leave
+ me in peace, I beg you.'
+
+ "However, he began to realize that he had been sinking for several
+ days, and he said aloud: 'There is no hope for me!' This thought
+ appeared to distress him. One day (it was Wednesday, the 26th of
+ November), the disease took such a sudden turn for the worse, we
+ feared he would not live through the day, and, being unable to
+ make any religious impression on him, we warned the chaplain of
+ his condition and his resistance to all our entreaties. The latter
+ went to see him. Our patient received him with great respect, but,
+ wishing to get rid of him adroitly, said: 'I am acquainted with the
+ curé.' A little while after, the curé visited him, and conversed
+ with him some time. On leaving his bedside, the venerable, zealous
+ pastor came to us and said: 'Your patient is very low, and I have
+ not succeeded in getting him to do anything for his soul; indeed,
+ I did not urge him too much, for fear he might say _no_, and then
+ would not revoke it, like so many others, after once giving a
+ decided negative.'
+
+ "The same day a lady of his acquaintance also came to see him, and
+ earnestly but vainly urged him to make his peace with God. To get
+ rid of her importunity he said: 'I know the curé; he has already
+ been to see me, and will return this evening.' The curé returned
+ indeed, according to promise; the sick man, on seeing him, jumped
+ out of bed to show that he was not so ill as to make confession a
+ very pressing matter. The curé, a true Samaritan, rendered him all
+ the little services imaginable, helping him back to bed, and even
+ offering to dress his blister; he then spoke to him about his soul,
+ but without avail, for after an hour's conversation he came to us
+ and said: 'I am deeply grieved, for I have done my utmost, but it
+ has had no effect upon him.' We asked the curé if we must call him
+ during the night, in case the sick man grew worse. 'I think,' said
+ he, 'you had better not, unless he asks for me.' A little later one
+ of us reminded him again of the chaplain, who was passing, but he
+ got enraged and began to swear, so that we had to drop the subject,
+ despite our distress at the thought of his appearing so unprepared
+ before his God. Our grief was so much the greater in proportion to
+ his extreme danger, for the death rattle was already in his throat,
+ and it did not seem possible that he could survive the night. It
+ was then my young companion said to me: 'Oh! Sister, perhaps our
+ sins, as our holy St. Vincent says, have been the cause of this
+ man's impenitence.' Expecting nothing more from the patient, Sister
+ Radier now turned all her hopes towards the Blessed Virgin. During
+ night prayers thoughts of the medal came into her mind, and she
+ said to herself: 'If we put the medal on him perhaps the Blessed
+ Virgin will obtain his conversion,' and she determined to make a
+ novena. After prayers she said to her companion: 'Let us go see the
+ sick man and put a medal on him; perhaps the Blessed Virgin will
+ grant our petitions.' She went immediately, and found him up and
+ in a state of great agitation, and about to leave the room; all
+ the other patients saw it clearly, and said that it was with the
+ intention of committing suicide. The Sister cautiously took away
+ his knife and whatever else might be used in this way, slipped
+ unperceived the medal between his two mattresses, and returned to
+ us very sadly, saying: 'Let us fervently invoke the Blessed Virgin,
+ for I very much fear this poor man will kill himself during the
+ night.'
+
+ "Next day, immediately after rising, and even before seeing the
+ Sister who had kept watch, one of us hastened to visit our patient,
+ and not without most dire forebodings, but, to our astonishment,
+ his mind was calm and he seemed better. On inquiring how he felt,
+ 'Very well, Sister,' he answered, 'I passed a good night, I slept
+ well (which I have not done for a long time), and I am better in
+ consequence.' As the Sister retired, he called to her, saying:
+ 'Sister, I wish to make my confession, oh! send the curé to me!'
+ 'You wish to confess?' replied the Sister, 'take care; are you
+ going to do as you did all day yesterday, do you really want him?'
+ 'Yes, Sister, upon my honor.' 'Well, since you wish him, I will go
+ for him, it will certainly be well for you to confess your sins,
+ for it is said that your life has not always been edifying.' Then,
+ without the slightest human respect, he began to mention his sins
+ aloud, and with great sentiments of compunction; we could scarcely
+ induce him to stop. The curé came, and he made his confession,
+ which lasted an hour. Afterwards, one of us having come to see
+ him, he exclaimed joyfully at our reproach: 'Oh! Sister, how happy
+ I am, I have been to confession, I have received absolution, and
+ the curé is to return this evening. Since my First Communion, this
+ is the happiest day of my life!' He appeared deeply affected, and
+ expressed a most ardent desire to receive the good God. 'Do you
+ know what we did?' 'What was it, Sister?' 'We put between your
+ mattresses a Miraculous Medal of the Blessed Virgin.' 'Ah! then,
+ that is why I passed such a comfortable night; moreover, I felt as
+ if there was something about me that wrought a wonderful change,
+ and I do not know why I did not search my bed; I thought of doing
+ so.' The Sister then produced the medal, which he kissed with
+ respect and affection. 'It is this,' he exclaimed, 'that gave me
+ strength to brave human respect. I must place it on my breast; I
+ will give you a ribbon to attach it to my decoration,' (he wore the
+ cross of honor.) The first ribbon offered being a little faded,
+ 'No, Sister,' said he, 'not that, but this; the Blessed Virgin must
+ have a new ribbon.' The Sister, regarding his weak state, placed
+ the medal in such a manner that it was somewhat concealed. 'Oh! do
+ not hide it, Sister,' said he; 'put it beside my cross, I shall not
+ blush to show it.'
+
+ "In the afternoon the curé asked us how our patient was, and he
+ was not less edified than ourselves at the account we gave of his
+ admirable dispositions. Preparations were made to give him the last
+ Sacraments. At the sight of the Holy Viaticum, he was so penetrated
+ with emotion that he begged pardon aloud of God for all the sins
+ of his life in detail, and it was with the utmost difficulty he
+ could be persuaded to lower his voice, his heart being too full
+ to contain itself. He passed the following night and the next day
+ in the same dispositions of faith, regret and piety, until Monday
+ morning, December 1st, when he peacefully rendered his soul to God,
+ and we have every confidence that it was received into the arms of
+ His mercy.
+
+ "We relate what we saw and heard; it took place in our ward, which
+ numbers sixty patients, the majority of whom witnessed a part of
+ these details."
+
+NOTE.--Before burial, the Sister took the medal off his corpse, and the
+patient in the next bed begged to have it, so persuaded was he that it
+had been the instrument of this touching conversion.
+
+This consoling return to God was followed by several others not less
+striking or less sincere, and in that very institution, by the same
+means--the medal. Quite lately two have taken place, but the details
+are so very much like the above that for this reason alone we refrain
+from giving them.
+
+All this has been confirmed by M. Ancelin, curé of the Invalides.
+
+
+ CURE OF M. FERMIN, A PRIEST--1834.
+
+This account was sent us by the Superior General of St. Sulpice, who
+was anxious that we should have it. The venerable priest of this very
+estimable Community, who was favored with this grace, wrote the details
+himself, and they were attested by the Superior and the Director of the
+grand Seminary of Rheims, both of whom were witnesses.
+
+ "To the glory of Mary conceived without sin, I, Jean Baptiste
+ Fermin, unworthy servant of the Blessed Virgin, and subject of M.
+ Olier, have, together with my Superior and confrères, thought it
+ my duty to transmit to our very honored Father, an account of the
+ special favor accorded me.
+
+ "Many persons knew what I suffered for six whole years, how I
+ was worn out with a nervous, worrying cough, whose attacks were
+ so frequent and so prolonged that one can scarcely imagine how I
+ ever survived them. My physician himself told me that, for the
+ first three years, my life was in imminent danger, and if in the
+ last three I was less exposed to death at every step, as it were,
+ the giving way of my stomach, the weakness of my chest, were such
+ that all my days were filled with bitterness, and new crosses
+ were laid upon me. In this condition, what ecclesiastical fasts
+ could I keep? Four or five years ago, the desire of complying,
+ in some degree, with the precepts of the Church led me to fast
+ the Ember week before Christmas, and the prejudice to my health
+ was such that I was not permitted to fast again even for a day.
+ Abstinence from meat became impossible, and for having attempted
+ this slight mortification, how much I suffered in consequence, even
+ in the very month of July, 1834! Whilst my health was so impaired,
+ and I saw only a lingering end to my afflictions, it pleased my
+ Superiors to give me a year's rest. I received with gratitude this
+ additional evidence of their consideration for me, and endeavored
+ to co-operate with them in re-establishing my health, of which they
+ had been so thoughtful; but, in my condition, the recuperative
+ powers of nature were of slight avail. Even amidst perfect
+ quiet and rest for four whole months, I experienced but little
+ alleviation of my sufferings, for though my chest became, at least,
+ apparently stronger, my stomach grew weaker and more disordered,
+ so that I was obliged to diet, which, added to the dieting I had
+ already practiced, reduced me to such a state of exhaustion that I
+ could not foresee the consequences.
+
+ "O, Mary, how deplorable was my condition when you cast upon
+ me a look of mercy! The 15th of November, 1834, I was sent a
+ medal, struck in honor of the Immaculate Conception, and already
+ celebrated as the instrument of many miracles. In receiving it,
+ I was penetrated, for the first time, with a strong feeling
+ of confidence, that this was the Heaven-sent means by which I
+ would reach the end of my afflictions; I had not foreseen this
+ hope, still less had I excited it, for I believe I can say,
+ conscientiously, that I felt naturally disinclined to ask a favor
+ of which I deemed myself unworthy. However, the feeling became so
+ strong that I thought it my duty to consider it prayerfully next
+ morning; and not to oppose so good an impulse, I determined to
+ make a novena, and I commenced it on the 16th. From that moment my
+ confidence was boundless, and like a child who reasons no longer,
+ but sees only what he feels sure of obtaining, it sustained me
+ amidst the new trials to which I was subjected; for on the 19th,
+ and several days after, my sufferings were redoubled, affecting at
+ once both stomach and chest. On the 22d I felt considerably better,
+ on the 23d I believed myself strong enough to abandon a diet on
+ which I had subsisted a long time, and on the 24th I wished to eat
+ just what was served the Community; that very morning I commenced,
+ like the hearty seminarians, to take a little dry bread and wine,
+ and it agreed with me. Thus my desires were accomplished. I had
+ implored the Blessed Virgin to give me health to live according
+ to the rule, and she had done so; but a good Mother like Mary
+ would not leave her work imperfect, and she chose the very day of
+ her Conception to bestow upon me her crowning favors. I was still
+ troubled with a slight indisposition of the stomach accompanying
+ digestion after dinner, but it was not positive suffering, and even
+ this remnant of my old infirmity disappeared entirely. On the eve
+ of that Feast my devotion to Mary, which had lost a little of its
+ first fervor, was, when I least expected it, excited anew, and I
+ felt urged to implore the consummation of a good work so happily
+ begun. I did so that evening, and next morning at prayers, at Mass,
+ at my thanksgiving, and it was in finishing this last exercise
+ before a statue of the Blessed Virgin, after a most fervent prayer,
+ that I realized the recompense of my confidence--I felt assured
+ that my petitions had been granted. Since then I have experienced
+ no indisposition worthy of attention. I was able to fast the Ember
+ week before Christmas and the eve of that great solemnity; I sang
+ the ten o'clock High Mass the fourth Sunday in Advent; I followed
+ all the offices of the choir on those days the Church consecrates
+ to the celebration of our Divine Master's birth, and, instead of
+ regretting these efforts, I find in each one of them a new motive
+ for blessing the Lord and testifying my gratitude to our good
+ Mother.
+
+ J.B. FERMIN."
+
+
+ "Though surpassing our hopes, we have witnessed the speedy and
+ perfect recovery of M.J. Fermin, which appears to be something
+ supernatural, since he employed no other remedies than great
+ devotion to the Blessed Virgin and a novena in her honor.
+
+ "AUBRY, RAIGECOURT GOURNAY."
+
+
+ II.
+
+ _Graces Obtained during the Year 1835, in France, Switzerland,
+ Savoy and Turkey._
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE JOUBERT.
+
+NOTE.--The account of this very striking cure was sent us by M.
+Poinsel, Vicar General of Limoges, whom I took the liberty of asking
+for it.
+
+ "_Bishopric of Limoges._
+
+ "Glory to God! honor to Mary!
+
+ "The 10th of February, 1834, Mlle. Joubert, aged twenty-nine
+ years, a person of solid piety, was suddenly cured of a painful
+ and very serious infirmity. For more than a year, she had carried
+ her left arm in a sling, by reason of an unaccountable disease
+ which extended from the shoulder to the hand, and was of such a
+ nature that the afflicted member seemed dead; when necessary to
+ be handled, it had to be done with extreme precaution, and even
+ then the pain was so excessive that often the patient fell sick
+ in consequence. The disease was successively styled rheumatic
+ gout, inflammatory and gangrenous rheumatism; science employed in
+ combating it, baths, shower baths, poultices, liniments of all
+ sort, vain remedies which only aggravated the evil and varied
+ the suffering. Sometimes amputation was spoken of: 'Would to
+ God, Mademoiselle, you had but one arm!' said the physician,
+ not concealing his anxiety and fears of her death, as spring
+ approached, for the diseased arm was pale, livid, and frightful to
+ behold.
+
+ "The young lady, a true Christian, was resigned to all; by
+ meditations upon the cross, she encouraged herself to suffer,
+ and, perceiving the progress of the disease, she thought only of
+ dying the precious death of the just. A friend, one day, proposed
+ to her that she should wear the medal with confidence, and make a
+ novena to Mary. She acted upon the suggestion; at the end of the
+ novena, on the usual day of her confession (she was accustomed to
+ confess weekly), she approached the sacred tribunal, and lo! at the
+ very instant when recollected, contrite and humbled, she received
+ the moral effect of the priest's benediction and holy words, an
+ extraordinary physical change took place in the arm heretofore
+ judged incurable, it suddenly became unloosed and free, all
+ suffering vanished! 'I scarcely knew where I was,' said she, 'but
+ it seemed to me as if a cord that had been tightly drawn around my
+ arm was unwound, ring after ring, and I was cured! My surprise, my
+ joy, were extreme and beyond all power of expression!'
+
+ "On reaching home, she exclaimed: 'A miracle! light a taper, light
+ two, come, come, see the miracle! I can move my arm, animation is
+ restored to it, I am cured!' Oh! how great the joy of that family!
+ They surrounded the favored one, they looked at, they touched the
+ resuscitated member, they tested its powers in various ways, making
+ her lift divers objects and execute a variety of movements; then,
+ all the members of this truly Christian family, moved even to
+ tears, fell on their knees, and recited that hymn of thanksgiving,
+ the _Te Deum_.
+
+ "Since then, (that is, for more than a year), her arm has been
+ perfectly well. The physician himself was struck with this event,
+ which it would be difficult to attribute to concealed resources,
+ or the sudden agency of nature. What is nature without the
+ intervention and action of God? He is sole Master of nature, life
+ and death are at His will. It is not necessary, then, to reason so
+ much on the subject; a little faith will easily make us recognize
+ here a special grace of God, through the intercession of Mary, our
+ kind, sweet Mother, to whom we must ever repair, invoking her with
+ love and confidence.
+
+ "Such is the simple and conscientious account of the event given
+ me, the undersigned, by the person herself, in answer to my
+ questions, in the presence of an intelligent, reliable individual
+ who saw all, having several times dressed the arm, and who, by
+ reason of her skill and long experience, was well calculated to
+ judge of the danger.
+
+ "In attestation of which, etc.
+
+ "POINSEL, Vicar General.
+
+ "_February 14, 1835._"
+
+These details are confirmed by two letters of Madame and Mademoiselle
+Joubert, by the testimony of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity
+of Limoges, and that of M. Dumonteil, a lawyer and friend of the family.
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS AND CURES WROUGHT IN SWITZERLAND.
+
+Letter from Sister Boubat, Superioress of the Daughters of Charity in
+Chesne:
+
+ "_February 12, 1835._
+
+ "I have not great miracles to recount to-day, but the facts I give
+ are certainly very striking traits of protection. However, I shall
+ tell them just as they are, and let you judge of them for yourself.
+ Those of which I was not an eye-witness have been told me by very
+ reliable parties who were.
+
+ "1st. A woman who had been sick a long time, and given up by the
+ doctors, received, one evening, the Miraculous Medal, and was
+ restored to her usual health that night; feeling perfectly well,
+ she said to her husband next morning that she would get up and
+ prepare breakfast. He treated this as nonsense, and when she really
+ did arise, his astonishment was great, and beyond all bounds when
+ he found that her health was fully restored.
+
+ "2d. In the same village, a young mother had two children, one six
+ the other eight years old. The latter was attacked by a violent
+ malady, described to me as a convulsion, and died in a few days.
+ The younger had a similar attack, and seemed on the verge of death.
+ The poor mother was in the depths of grief, when some one thought
+ of offering her a medal. She received it as a treasure. It was
+ evening; she put it on the dying child, who soon fell asleep, and
+ slept soundly the whole night. In the morning he awoke perfectly
+ cured! This good woman afterwards came to me to get medals for
+ herself and some others. Oh! I wish you could have seen her as she
+ wept for joy whilst expressing to me, with all simplicity, the
+ transports of her soul! Never will I forget it, so deep was the
+ impression it made upon me.
+
+ "3d. A child five years old had been racked for several months by a
+ fever, which resisted all efforts to check it. One day, he was in
+ his grandmother's arms when the paroxysm began. This woman, full of
+ faith, applied the medal; the child soon grew better, and the fever
+ never troubled him again.
+
+ "The attending physician was a relation; on seeing him after this,
+ the child ran towards him, exclaiming with all the animation and
+ artlessness of his age: 'I am cured, but it was not you who cured
+ me, it was the medal.' He repeats these words nearly every time he
+ sees the doctor.
+
+ "4th. A young man, on his death-bed, filled all his friends with
+ serious apprehensions for his salvation. After several vain efforts
+ of the most charitable zeal, the curé induced him to accept a
+ medal, and very soon the dying man expressed a wish to confess. He
+ expired in the most edifying dispositions.
+
+ "5th. Three sinners obstinately refused to assist at the exercises
+ of a mission given in their parish, and even sought to oppose it.
+ One of the missionaries persuaded them to accept a medal, and as
+ soon as they had received it, a great change was visible. They
+ not only made the mission, most devoutly, but became its zealous
+ advocates.
+
+ "I get these details from a very venerable curé, who gave them to
+ me himself.
+
+ "6th. There came to me recently a woman from the neighboring
+ mountainous district, who said without any previous explanation:
+ 'You cured one of my daughters whom all the physicians had given
+ up; I now wish you to give me the same thing.' I tried at once to
+ recollect what medicines I had prescribed, and asked question after
+ question concerning the nature of the malady, so as to know what
+ remedy I had dispensed. After puzzling my brain to discover, she
+ told me it was a piece, thus suddenly reminding me that I had given
+ a medal to a young woman from that place, who came to consult me
+ about her failing health. To verify the fact, I sent word for the
+ young woman to come to see me.
+
+ "I pass over in silence a multitude of other events which, without
+ being termed miracles, are none the less real graces; and in my
+ eyes one most precious and great grace for us is, that the Blessed
+ Virgin deigns to make use of our poor little house to propagate
+ devotion to her. Oh! if you could see these good mountaineers
+ of every age and sex come with the greatest confidence and most
+ touching simplicity, asking for _na médaillot_--a medal. It has
+ affected me deeply, and I cannot sufficiently express my gratitude
+ to our tender and Immaculate Mother.
+
+ "Even Protestants have asked us for these medals, and I am
+ assured it was with perfect sincerity. The pastors in Savoy are
+ also very zealous in propagating this devotion to Mary. Since
+ reading the notice, they have mentioned it from the pulpit to
+ their parishioners, many of whom have, in consequence, procured
+ the medal. Likewise, do we see young men about to enter the army
+ fortify themselves with it, and persons undertaking a voyage
+ wearing it as their safeguard; indeed, every one has recourse to it
+ as the universal remedy for soul and body."
+
+
+CURE OF SISTER HYACINTHE, A RELIGIOUS OF CALVARY.
+
+It is the Mother General of the Community who has given us these
+details. Her letter is dated February 7th, 1835.
+
+ "I am overwhelmed with joy; our poor patient is perfectly cured
+ by virtue of the Miraculous Medal. I could say our patients,
+ for our prayers were offered both for the paralytic and that
+ young person whom I told you had been sick eleven months;
+ she was able to remain out of bed only a few hours each day;
+ whenever she could go to Mass, and that was rarely, she had to
+ be assisted, and the support of an arm was necessary when she
+ approached the Holy Table. Since Thursday she walks alone and
+ eats without experiencing the slightest symptom of her former
+ infirmity, except a little weakness. I hope the Lord will
+ finish His work and restore her to perfect health; but let us
+ speak of our dear Sister.
+
+ "The following is a copy of the account I wrote of this marvel
+ to our holy Bishop day before yesterday, after Mass:
+
+ "'I acquaint Your Grace with an incident of God's great mercy,
+ displayed to our Community in the sudden cure of one of our
+ choir religious, named Hyacinthe, aged forty-seven years.
+ This good Mother, the 14th of last January, had a stroke of
+ paralysis. It did not affect her head, but immediately fixed
+ itself in the left side, which became motionless and devoid
+ of feeling. We hastened to summon the physician, who bled
+ her freely in the arm; next day we tried leeches, medicines,
+ a blister on the neck, and three days after one upon the
+ paralyzed limb, but all of no avail. The poor patient, as well
+ as ourselves, must submit to the decrees of Him who strikes
+ and heals at will. At the end of fifteen days I was inspired
+ with the thought of making a novena in honor of the Immaculate
+ Conception, the medal of which, called the miraculous, we all
+ wear. On the fourth day of the novena, as we were about to
+ recite the prayers around her bed, the good Mother desired Holy
+ Communion. She was taken to the choir by three persons; after
+ receiving, the limb felt a little better, and she could return
+ with the aid of two persons only. Her confidence in the Mother
+ of God increased daily; yesterday she asked permission to come
+ down on the last day of the novena, and this morning, with the
+ assistance of a cane and some one to support her, she came down
+ and had the happiness of receiving Holy Communion. Immediately
+ after, we finished the novena prayers, just at the end of which
+ she was seized with a pain in the paralyzed arm, followed by an
+ icy chill and then a sensation of extreme heat. She came to me
+ with both arms lifted, exclaiming, "I am cured!" And perfectly
+ cured she was, being able to walk and use her limbs as freely
+ as if she had never felt a symptom of paralysis.
+
+ "'To give you an idea of our joy and gratitude, Monseigneur,
+ would be impossible. The patient fainted, and I came very near
+ doing the same; it was with difficulty I could continue our
+ prayers of thanksgiving, so marvelous did it seem that the Lord
+ should have granted this favor to our Community, under the
+ government of one of His most unworthy servants.'
+
+ "I send you this copy, which we had kept, of the letter.
+
+ "In the same letter I asked Monseigneur's permission to have
+ a _Te Deum_ chanted at the end of Benediction. His Grace
+ hastened to send word that he not only permitted but ordered
+ it, which order was joyfully complied with. The Vicar General,
+ our Superior, wrote, asking me to defer our Vespers half an
+ hour, as he wished to assist at the _Te Deum_. Several other
+ ecclesiastics also came, and saw our healed ones blessing God.
+ Since that day our good Mother Hyacinthe follows the rules,
+ complies with all her duties, and has never felt the least
+ return of her malady.
+
+ "This miracle created great excitement in our city; the
+ laborers who were working at the house having learned it on
+ the spot, immediately spread the news; the evening previous,
+ they had seen our poor Sister dragging her limb, a cane in
+ hand, and almost carried by two persons, and next morning they
+ beheld her perfectly cured! These men, who have seldom much
+ religion, sang the praises of God's power, and asked me to
+ give them medals. I gave a medal to each with great pleasure.
+ Clergymen have come to learn the particulars of this event, and
+ I let the miraculously cured herself recount the wonders of the
+ Lord.
+
+ "I must not omit informing you that the physician having vainly
+ exhausted all remedies, had been nine days without seeing the
+ patient; and the very eve of her recovery he told one of our
+ boarders that the disease having settled itself he believed
+ our afflicted one might be able to walk, but she could never
+ use her arm again. On coming next day to visit his other
+ patients, he was surprised beyond expression when she appeared
+ before him perfectly cured. Wishing to get his candid opinion
+ on the subject, I remarked that probably it was not real
+ paralysis, but only a numbness. 'It was a strongly marked case
+ of paralysis,' he answered, 'and there is certainly something
+ supernatural in her recovery.'
+
+ "In thanksgiving we continue the novena prayers, but preface
+ them with the _Laudate_.
+
+ "Make such use of this letter as you may deem advisable. If
+ you insert it in the notice, you are at liberty to name our
+ city and house. Oh! how we long to spread abroad the knowledge
+ and love of God's power, signally displayed in answer to our
+ invocation of the Immaculate Mother of His Divine Son.
+
+ "SISTER ST. MARIE,
+ "_Superioress of Calvary of Orleans_."
+
+
+CURE OF MADAME LEBON (DIJON).
+
+NOTE.--"The venerable lady upon whom this cure was wrought
+belongs to a highly honorable family of Dijon, and her personal
+character is very well calculated to inspire the utmost confidence,"
+says _L'Ami de la Religion_, in its issue of April 17th, 1835.
+Moreover, the letter she wrote, March 12th, to one of her friends, and
+which she was anxious should be transmitted to us, is accompanied by
+the certificates of the pastors of St. Michael of Dijon, of Dampierre
+and Beaumont-sur-Vingeanne, also of five members of the municipal
+council, and several other very reliable persons, some of them members
+of her family; more than this, it is followed by a detailed account
+given by the medical attendant, who had charge of her case for sixteen
+years.
+
+ "_Dijon, March 12, 1835._
+
+ "_Madame and Dear Friend_:
+
+ "You ask me the details of the miraculous manner in which it
+ has pleased God to restore me to health. Well! it might be
+ summed up in these few words: I implored Mary to obtain my
+ recovery, and she did obtain it instantly; having said this,
+ you know all, but you desire me to recall the circumstances of
+ my sickness and my experience subsequent to the cure. I give
+ them as follows:
+
+ "You doubtless remember that, for more than twenty years, I
+ could not walk, in consequence of an abscess on the intestines,
+ which left me in such a state of sensibility that ever after a
+ walk of more than a hundred steps I was exposing myself to the
+ most serious accidents. Neither are you ignorant of the fact
+ that, nearly fifteen months ago, by reason of influenza, a
+ second abscess formed, and so increased the irritability that I
+ hovered between life and death, and even when at my best I was
+ scarcely able to drag myself from one room to another. But you
+ have probably never heard that, since the 1st of last December,
+ my condition was so critical that, with great difficulty, could
+ I remain out of bed three or four hours at a time, which made
+ me, as well as those around me, think my end was near and I
+ would not survive the spring.
+
+ "This was my condition, dear friend, when some one mentioned
+ to me the medal of the Immaculate Virgin, and urged me to get
+ it. I was a long time deciding to do so, for I considered it
+ presumptuous to solicit the cure of an infirmity the physicians
+ had pronounced incurable. At last, having thought, on the one
+ side, that the more desperate the malady, the greater God's
+ glory should He deign to cure it; and, on the other, that He
+ had wrought the most wonderful miracles for those who were
+ least worthy, I decided to mention it to my confessor. I did
+ so, and he encouraged me to make the novena.
+
+ "The 2d of February, Feast of the Purification, the first
+ day of the novena and one ever memorable for me, I was taken
+ to church in a carriage; my daughter, sole confidante of my
+ intentions, assisted me to the Blessed Virgin's altar, where,
+ after hearing Mass as well as my infirmity would permit, I
+ received Holy Communion. Scarcely had I knelt to make an act
+ of adoration, when I was obliged to take my seat. A Sister of
+ Charity, whom I did not know was there, for I had not hoped to
+ receive the medal just yet, put it on my neck. Immediately,
+ I got on my knees to beg the Mother of the afflicted to
+ intercede with her divine Son for the restoration of my health,
+ should He foresee that it would be conducive to God's glory and
+ her honor, to my salvation and the happiness of my husband and
+ children. Scarcely had I pronounced a few words, petitioning
+ our Lord to graciously hear His holy Mother's prayer, ere Mary
+ had interceded and God in His great mercy had hearkened; I was
+ cured, Madame, entirely cured.... I finished all the prayers
+ of thanksgiving after Communion and those of the novena on my
+ knees, and, without experiencing the slightest inconvenience,
+ my malady had disappeared and I have never felt the slightest
+ symptom of it since. I walked, unassisted, to the church door,
+ sent away the carriage and returned home on foot.
+
+ "I have given you a detail of the facts, but to express the
+ feelings that filled my heart on re-entering my house would be
+ impossible; my joy, my astonishment, were boundless; I could
+ hardly realize it myself. Cured in an instant! The thought was
+ overpowering! It seemed as if I must be in a dream, but my
+ husband's astonishment, my mother's, and that of the servants,
+ who, seeing the great change wrought in me, although they were
+ ignorant of the means, could not forbear exclaiming: 'But a
+ miracle must have been worked upon you!' convinced me that I
+ was not asleep.
+
+ "Since that time I walk as well as any one; scarcely was my
+ novena finished ere I could go from one end of the city to the
+ other. It has not been six weeks since my cure, and I have
+ already walked more than three miles at a time, and could have
+ accomplished twice as much. You see, Madame and dear friend,
+ that the miracle is a most striking one.
+
+ "I now beg of you, as well as all other pious souls, to unite
+ heartily with me in thanking God and His august Mother.
+
+ "Your ever devoted
+ "ÉLIS. M. DARBEAUMONT LEBON."
+
+The physician's certificate ends thus: "Whatever may have been the
+cause of a cure, heretofore regarded as impossible by all the doctors
+who attended Mme. Lebon, it should be considered none the less certain
+and positive, for the evidence of the fact is indubitable.
+
+"Wherefore, I sign the present attestation, which I declare sincere and
+true.
+
+ "FOURNIER, Doctor.
+"_Dampierre, March 19, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT AT SMYRNA AND CONSTANTINOPLE.
+
+Extract of a letter from M. Le Leu, Lazarist missionary:
+
+ "_Constantinople, March 16, 1835._
+
+ "It has been a long time since I proposed writing you something
+ about the medal. In my eyes, one of the greatest miracles it
+ has ever worked is the rapidity of its propagation and the
+ confidence it inspires. By our demands upon you for medals, you
+ may judge of their effect in this country. We could dispose
+ of thousands and yet not satisfy the innumerable calls we
+ have for them. At Smyrna, it is the same. We had occasion to
+ send a few into the interior of Asia, and the Blessed Virgin
+ showed herself no less powerful or beneficent there than in
+ Europe. At Angora, an old man was deprived of the use of all
+ his limbs, and had neither walked nor worked for years; he
+ lived in frightful poverty, and sighed for death, for he was
+ especially grieved at being so long a burden upon a family in
+ indigent circumstances. (In this country there are numbers of
+ Armenian families very devoted to the Blessed Virgin, and this
+ was one of them.) He had no sooner heard of the Miraculous
+ Medal, than he solicited the happiness of obtaining and wearing
+ it. In these countries the Faith has retained its primitive
+ simplicity; this recipient of a medal does not content himself
+ with praying before it, or hanging it around his neck, but he
+ kisses it with profound respect and applies it to the affected
+ part; the Blessed Virgin cannot resist such confidence, and the
+ good old man instantly recovers the use of his limbs--he now
+ works and supports himself.
+
+ "Here is another incident: A young woman belonging to a
+ respectable and very pious family had, for a long time, been
+ a prey to a disease, the nature of which neither the French,
+ Greek nor Turkish physicians could understand. Its symptoms
+ were most violent pains in the side, which prevented her
+ walking, eating or sleeping, and which sometimes disappeared,
+ only to return with renewed violence. Having heard of our
+ medal, this lady felt interiorly urged to employ it for her
+ recovery, but believing herself unworthy of obtaining a direct
+ miracle, she besought the Blessed Virgin to enlighten the
+ physician and make known to him the proper remedy. Thereupon,
+ she went to the country. At the end of several days, she was
+ astonished to see her physician, who exclaimed as soon as he
+ saw her: 'Madame, good news! I have found the remedy for your
+ disease. I am sure of it; in a few days you will be perfectly
+ well. I do not know why it is, but your case has constantly
+ occupied my mind since your departure, and by a careful study
+ of it I have at last discovered the cause of the disease and
+ the manner of treating it.' The lady recognized at once that
+ this knowledge came from above, and she had not implored Mary
+ in vain. To-day she is in excellent health. It was from the
+ mouth of her mother I received these details. 'O Monsieur,'
+ exclaimed this good mother, 'how happy I am at my poor
+ daughter's recovery! It is the Blessed Virgin who has restored
+ her to me. If you could only get me a few more of these medals;
+ I am overwhelmed with requests for them.' The physician himself
+ published the details I have just given. So persuaded is he of
+ the efficacy of the medal that he calls it his final remedy,
+ and advises his patients to wear it whenever he is at a loss
+ concerning their malady. And the Blessed Virgin has rewarded
+ his faith; for one of his own daughters, a most pious person,
+ but in miserable health, has just experienced its beneficial
+ effects.
+
+ "I could mention numberless other incidents, as many
+ conversions as cures, but one more will suffice for to-day.
+ Not long ago the mother of a family had every symptom of an
+ attack of apoplexy; she had already lost consciousness, when
+ her son, a very pious young man, who wore one of these medals,
+ took it off his neck and put it around hers. He then ran for a
+ doctor and a priest. On reaching the house they were all three
+ astonished to find that she had quite recovered. That evening
+ the son asked his mother for the medal, and she returned it,
+ but a moment after was stricken with another attack. The
+ protection of the Blessed Virgin seemed to have been withdrawn
+ with this sign of her power. He immediately put the medal on
+ her neck again, this time to remain, and she has been well ever
+ since.
+
+ "Oh! do not delay, I beg you, in sending us the medals we have
+ asked of you."
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF AN OLD MAN AT CASTERA-LES-BAINS.
+
+NOTE.--These details are sent us and attested by M. Bellos,
+clerk of registration at Auch, and by other very reliable persons.
+
+ "In the early part of March, 1835, an old man in the parish of
+ Castera-les-Bains (Gers), fell dangerously ill. The venerable
+ parish priest, M. Barère, hastened to visit him, hoping he
+ might persuade the poor creature to cast himself into those
+ arms that were extended on the cross for all sinners. Our
+ patient, who had not been to confession for long years,
+ received him like an infidel as he was, refused all religious
+ assistance, and ended by saying: 'M. curé, I would rather
+ lose my speech than comply with your wishes!' The charitable
+ pastor retiring, though very reluctantly, now thought of the
+ Miraculous Medal he wore, and, taking it off, gave it to one
+ of the household with instructions to put it in the patient's
+ bed; advising, however, in case the ruse were discovered, no
+ allusion to the subject, so as to spare the unhappy one all
+ occasion of invective against religion. But, oh! marvelous
+ to relate! a little while after, the dying man awakens as if
+ from a profound slumber, and earnestly begs that the curé
+ be sent for to hear his confession. At this news, the good
+ pastor flies to his lost sheep, who receives him with every
+ expression of joy, begs his pardon, and asks to receive the
+ Sacrament of Penance. It would be superfluous for us to dwell
+ at length upon the sentiments and language of the charitable
+ minister of religion. He was so touched by his penitent's
+ dispositions, that he did not hesitate to take him the Holy
+ Viaticum next morning. Many of the faithful accompanied the
+ Blessed Sacrament to the sick man's chamber; confessing again,
+ he abjured his errors before all the assistants, and earnestly
+ entreated them to pardon the scandal his past conduct had
+ given them. Every one was affected to tears, and it was in
+ the midst of this universal emotion that he received the good
+ God, with the deepest sentiments of humility and compunction,
+ and recommending himself to the prayers of all present. In the
+ course of the following night, fearing he might be carried
+ off by a spell of weakness, he requested Extreme Unction, and
+ received it with the same evidences of faith and piety. This
+ conversion was followed by his perfect recovery, and the good
+ old man now blesses Divine Providence, which, through Mary's
+ protection, rescued him from the borders of a frightful abyss
+ into which his infidelity would have plunged him forever.
+
+ "The undersigned, who got these details from the mouth of
+ the curé of Castera, vouches for their authenticity. He has
+ neither added to nor taken from them in the slightest, knowing
+ full well that the Blessed Virgin has no need of falsehoods
+ to prove her power and goodness. It is, then, on his word of
+ conscience he gives this fact, which none of the inhabitants of
+ Castera and the neighboring country would deny, even were he
+ incredulous."
+
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE MORVILLIERS, ACKNOWLEDGED AS MIRACULOUS BY ALL THE
+PARISH.
+
+ "_Hangest_ (_Somme_).
+
+ "I have mentioned to you the cure wrought by the Miraculous
+ Medal upon a person aged fifty years; the fact is
+ incontestable. Rosalie Morvilliers, the recipient of this
+ favor, had never been free from suffering since her seventh
+ year; an affection of the nerves caused almost constant
+ palpitations of the heart and severe headaches, which, however,
+ did not hinder her performing some slight work without
+ aggravating the malady. But about five years ago, she was
+ afflicted by an unmistakable attack of epilepsy, which threw
+ her family into the greatest consternation. Henceforth, she was
+ obliged to keep her bed, and saw no one but her most intimate
+ friends; the very sight of a face that was not familiar was
+ sufficient to throw her into dreadful convulsions for several
+ hours. Independent of any external cause, these paroxysms
+ usually came on three times a day, and so violent were they,
+ that it was with great difficulty she could be kept in her
+ room; she uttered most frightful cries, her features were
+ horribly distorted, her mouth covered with foam, and, indeed,
+ according to the testimony of those who usually witnessed the
+ attacks, it was some time before she regained consciousness.
+
+ "Such was her condition when some one gave her a Miraculous
+ Medal. She received it with the greatest confidence, and
+ immediately applied it to that part of her head where the
+ pain was most acute; the pain disappeared immediately. From
+ that moment she felt urged to make a novena in honor of the
+ Immaculate Conception for the cure of her epilepsy. But
+ diffidence in mentioning the matter to her director made her
+ defer the execution of this pious design six weeks. At length,
+ she yielded to her desires, saying she felt fully persuaded
+ that this novena would ensure her recovery through the Blessed
+ Virgin's intercession, and her confidence was not misplaced.
+ The curé immediately began the novena, engaging in it the
+ sodality of the Holy Family. Whilst at Mass on the morning of
+ the last day, the 17th of Mary's month, the patient was seized
+ with the most violent attack possible, the worst she had ever
+ had, although during the novena, the paroxysms had increased
+ in intensity. Suddenly it ceases. A number of persons begin to
+ pray and recite the chaplet; the patient, regarding them with
+ a smile, gently falls asleep. A few minutes after, she opens
+ her eyes and exclaims: 'I am cured! I am cured! The Blessed
+ Virgin has just cured me of epilepsy! Oh! how good she is, how
+ powerful! It seems to me as if there had just been a general
+ revolution throughout my body. I feel confident, my friends,
+ that this disease has been banished from my system forever.'
+
+ "It was very easy for the assistants to believe that some
+ extraordinary change had really been wrought in her, for her
+ countenance presented not the slightest vestige of the attack.
+ She now desired to communicate, and oh! with what transports of
+ faith, gratitude and love she received the good God!
+
+ "The noise of this cure soon reached the neighboring villages.
+ How beautiful yet, Monsieur, is the simplicity of the faith in
+ these rural districts! Henceforth, every one wished to wear the
+ medal.
+
+ "This event took place on the 17th of May, at nine o'clock
+ in the morning. Since that time the patient has not felt the
+ slightest symptom of epilepsy. She leaves her room, walks about
+ the garden, and receives visitors indiscriminately, without
+ experiencing any ill effects. However, the Blessed Virgin
+ did not cure all her infirmities; she still has the nervous
+ affection that existed before the epileptic attacks, but I
+ should observe that as the novena was made solely for the cure
+ of epilepsy, the Blessed Virgin has obtained all that was asked
+ of her.
+
+ "This, Monsieur, is the exact statement. Some, no doubt, would
+ attribute the cure to natural causes; as for ourselves, we,
+ like the patient, feel convinced that it was owing to Mary's
+ powerful intercession. The curé agrees with us, and so do all
+ who glory in the truths of religion. Honored, then, be the
+ power and goodness of Mary conceived without sin!"
+
+
+CURE OF A DAUGHTER OF CHARITY AND ANOTHER PERSON (DIOCESE OF MOULINS).
+
+The following letter was sent by a gentleman of unquestionable veracity
+to the _Journal du Bourbonnais_, and published in its issue of June 6,
+1835:
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "We are all Mary's children; at the foot of her Divine Son's
+ cross did her maternal heart adopt us as her own. All ages
+ have felt the salutary effects of her powerful protection; our
+ fathers have admired them, we ourselves admire them, and our
+ days are filled with marvels. Even recently has she appeared,
+ shedding torrents of grace upon a privileged kingdom, and this
+ kingdom is France. The vision is verified, for the age which
+ saw it has also witnessed the multiplication of countless
+ miraculous cures and conversions.
+
+ "And shall Bourbonnais, our dear country, be excepted in the
+ distribution of Mary's favors? Oh! no; it also shall have a
+ share in this harvest of glory. The truly astonishing rapidity
+ with which the thousand Miraculous Medals brought to our city
+ have been disposed of is to me a sufficient guaranty of our
+ hopes, and it would keep one's pen in daily use to note the
+ wonderful traits of Mary's protection.
+
+ "1st. Sister Chapin, of St. Joseph's Hospital, was for more
+ than two years racked by pains and a fever that defied all
+ medical skill.
+
+ "This angel of earth lamented her inability to fulfil the
+ duties of her noble vocation; far from abating, her charity,
+ zeal and resignation seemed to increase with her gradually
+ declining health, which now excited our serious fears. Having
+ vainly exhausted all the resources of medicine, she turned her
+ back upon art and nature that she might address herself to
+ faith alone. Full of confidence in the Miraculous Medal, she
+ began a novena to Mary for the recovery of her health. Before
+ the novena was ended, both pains and fever had disappeared, and
+ henceforth, she began a new existence, her strength returned,
+ and she is happy to prove herself by deeds (fulfilling with
+ ease the most painful duties) what her virtues have ever
+ proclaimed her, a true daughter of St. Vincent de Paul.
+
+ "2nd. Yesterday, again, was witnessed in our Bourbonnais,
+ another wonderful trait of Mary's protection. Here are the
+ facts: On Monday, June 1st, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+ in the parish of Montilly, near the borders of Allier and the
+ castle of Beau-Regard, a woman was stricken with a violent
+ rush of blood to the head; the lamentations and piercing cries
+ of the family attracted their neighbors. Two alarming crises
+ succeeded; they were followed by a third, which was thought to
+ be mortal. The patient, after violently struggling against the
+ combined efforts of four men to restrain her, fell motionless
+ and apparently lifeless; her limbs were stiff and chill, her
+ face a livid blue, her features distorted, her eyes fixed, her
+ respiration insensible, death seemed imminent. This frightful
+ attack had lasted about half an hour, when some one present
+ thought of the Miraculous Medal; she approaches the dying woman
+ and lays the medal upon her lips. At that instant the latter
+ arouses from her slumber, she breathes, she clasps her hands
+ as if thanking the person who had restored her to life she
+ recognizes all around her, speaks to them and thanks them for
+ their kind attentions.
+
+ "The next morning, Tuesday, it was not at the gates of death
+ she was to be found, but in the streets of Moulins, where I saw
+ her myself and spoke to her.
+
+ "Pardon me, O divine Mary, if among a thousand striking
+ traits of your power and goodness, I dwell upon some which
+ are comparatively slight, it is only because of their recent
+ occurrence in our very midst. Happy shall I esteem myself to
+ awaken among my brethren a passing tribute to Faith, that
+ living, salutary Faith, whose efficacy I have experienced, and
+ whose truths I long to see planted and nourished in all hearts!
+
+ "Deign to accord, etc."
+
+We have learned that Sister Chapin's recovery is permanent.
+
+
+CURE OF MARIE LACROIX (DIOCESE OF LANGRES).
+
+NOTE.--It is M. Barillot, Vicar General, who sends us this
+account:
+
+ "_Bishopric of Langres, June 20, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "M. Regnault, curé of Ormoy, canton of Chateau-Villain, in our
+ diocese, an excellent pastor and judicious priest, writes me
+ the subjoined letter of the 19th inst.:
+
+ "'A very extraordinary thing has just taken place in my
+ parish. A young woman aged twenty went blind in consequence
+ of a fall; her hip was displaced, and she lost all use of
+ her limbs, except the arms. For three months she was at a
+ hospital of Bar-sur-Aube, under treatment for these severe
+ afflictions, but in vain. At last, judging her case hopeless,
+ the physicians sent her back to her parents at Ormoy. Here,
+ as at Bar-sur-Aube, she endured for three months incredible
+ sufferings, not even being able to turn herself in bed or
+ change her position in the slightest. Her recovery was now
+ despaired of by all, and lately the minister received a
+ petition (with the accompanying certificates of the two
+ physicians who had attended her at Bar-sur-Aube) asking her
+ admission into the hospital of Quinze-Vingts. Meanwhile,
+ this young woman, who had always appeared to me very pious
+ and submissive to God's will, having received a Miraculous
+ Medal, immediately begins a novena. Seven days elapse, and
+ her sufferings, far from diminishing, are intensified; on the
+ eighth she is bathed in a profuse perspiration, after which she
+ suddenly rises, dresses herself, and walks through the streets
+ to church, to the great astonishment of all the people, who,
+ seeing her, cannot restrain their tears.
+
+ "'I questioned her closely, but did not express my opinion
+ on the subject. I went to Bar-sur-Aube to get additional
+ information; the physician declares it astonishing, especially
+ when we consider her former hopeless condition. The hospital
+ Sisters, the curés of Bar-sur-Aube, the patients, all say it is
+ truly a miracle. The people of Ormoy and even of the vicinity,
+ who come to see her, wonder that I do not mention it from the
+ pulpit. I beg of you to let me know how to act in the affair,
+ and also that you will speak to the Bishop about it.'
+
+ "The Bishop has since sent word through me to the curé
+ of Ormoy, to publish this miraculous occurrence to his
+ parishioners; he has also charged me with forwarding you a copy
+ of the good curé's letter, leaving to your discretion the use
+ you may make of it.
+
+ "I am, etc.,
+
+ "BARILLOT, Canon, Vicar General."
+
+Before printing this, we wished to ascertain if the cure were
+permanent, and the Vicar General sent us the following response from
+the curé of Ormoy:
+
+ "The cure is permanent; for several months past the young
+ woman has been with the Ursulines of La Chapelle, who consider
+ her physically able to share in the labors of the house; her
+ condition having been attested by three doctors. Her sudden
+ recovery, as above mentioned, leads us to believe that it was
+ surely supernatural. I was far from meriting this favor which
+ has been granted my poor parish. I hope the Blessed Virgin will
+ finish her work.
+
+ "_November 3, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT IN THE CHABLAIS DISTRICT (SAVOY).
+
+ "_The Borders of Lake Geneva, June 18, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "The country purged of Calvin's heresy by the labors of
+ Geneva's holy bishop, is not a stranger to the blessings
+ figured by the medal's mysterious rays. This wonderful
+ instrument of Mary's liberality has been propagated with
+ astonishing rapidity, though only a few months since we heard
+ of it in our midst. I consider it a pious obligation to offer
+ you a few small stones towards the construction of that temple
+ of glory now in process of erection, to the honor of her,
+ who has lately proved herself more powerful and merciful on
+ earth than ever before. I am a young villager living amidst my
+ family; I do not announce miracles to you, but merely recount
+ facts just as I have seen or heard them. I could have subjoined
+ a list of signatures, but I did not judge it necessary, the
+ docile, religious heart deeming them superfluous, and the
+ skeptic, fraudulent, like the facts. On a perusal of the first
+ few phrases in each incident, persons living in the vicinity
+ will recognize the individuals concerned, and thereby be more
+ deeply impressed.
+
+ "1st. In the month of July, 1824, Mlle. C., aged twenty-nine
+ years, bade, as she thought, a last adieu to her family; she
+ and some other generous companions were going to one of the
+ large cities in southern Italy to consecrate themselves there
+ to the service of the sick and poor. After a few months'
+ novitiate in a religious house devoted to works of this nature,
+ she was attacked by one of those debilitating, wasting maladies
+ that physicians are at a loss to define. Attributing it to the
+ climate, the Superiors, after twenty-two months' ineffectual
+ treatment at the novitiate, sent her to breathe her natal
+ air. But change of air proved vain also, and the doctors at
+ last ceased their visits, judging the re-establishment of
+ her health an impossibility. About six years ago, she had
+ improved sufficiently to walk a few steps beyond her chamber,
+ and even remain in the open air some minutes, but amelioration
+ was illusory, and since 1830 she had not been able to leave
+ her couch of suffering except for a few instants. Many times
+ during these last five years was she apparently on the verge
+ of death, and that for several consecutive days, always,
+ however, retaining her hearing and intellectual faculties,
+ since she could respond by signs to the priest who visited
+ her. It was he who gave me these particulars. Her condition
+ had become such that it was judged advisable to administer the
+ Last Sacraments. This house was now a school of edification,
+ where Christians might study the price of sufferings and the
+ heroism of patience. Finally, about the end of last April,
+ this poor creature, so tortured for the past eleven years,
+ conceived a hope of relief through the Miraculous Medal,
+ but, mistrusting the somewhat extraordinary impressions the
+ thought made upon her imagination, it was only from obedience
+ she could be induced to commence a novena. The sole exercises
+ consisted of repeating, three times a day, the invocation: 'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' On Wednesday, April 24th, the second or third day of
+ the novena, she felt an irresistible desire to arise. It was
+ yet very early in the morning; a little child assisted her
+ to dress. Finding that her limbs support her, she begins to
+ think it must be something miraculous, and, filled with joy,
+ she wishes to announce the news to her mother, who is in an
+ adjoining room. Arrived at the door, she is seized with fright,
+ and precipitately turns back; but, being reassured of her newly
+ restored strength by the facility with which she reaches her
+ own chamber, she overcomes herself, and, retracing her steps,
+ seeks the embraces of her mother, her sister and brother.
+ Her unexpected appearance fills them with great emotion, and
+ abundant tears attest the depths of their joy and gratitude. A
+ clergyman, who often visited this lady, soon heard rumors of
+ her recovery, but gave no credit to them. Meeting her mother
+ on the street not long after, she burst into tears at sight
+ of him, and was unable to express the cause of her emotion.
+ Suspecting it, he went immediately to the house, and saw for
+ himself what a miracle had been wrought. With Mlle. C., he
+ unites in blessing her powerful protectress, the Immaculate
+ Mary.
+
+ "Since that time, April 24, to the present date, June 18th,
+ Mlle. C. rises about seven o'clock, hears Mass on her knees,
+ employs herself in various duties during the day, makes visits
+ and walks of half an hour's or even an hour's duration, and
+ continues well, even her complexion begins to assume a healthy
+ tinge. Her legs are still a little swollen, and she cannot yet
+ take much nourishment.
+
+ "The sudden appearance of this person, whom every one had
+ known to be seriously afflicted for eleven years, created an
+ extraordinary sensation. All eyes were fixed upon her, and many
+ persons even followed her. This took place in the capital of
+ the province.
+
+ "2d. In the month of August, 1833, my sister, at the sight of
+ a child who barely missed falling through an open trap door,
+ was suddenly attacked by frightful nervous convulsions, which
+ henceforth returned daily, and even as often as fifteen times
+ a day. It was only at the end of two months that remedies, and
+ a four weeks' strict hospital treatment, succeeded in checking
+ them. Last year, they manifested themselves again in the month
+ of February, but disappeared, leaving her a prey to great
+ weakness, and a fever that kept her in bed four weeks.
+
+ "In the February of this year, the nervous convulsions
+ returned, and with a frequency and force that were truly
+ alarming. The patient wasted visibly, the paroxysms were
+ renewed seven and ten times a day, and were of a most frightful
+ character; the circulation of her blood seemed checked, her
+ feet and hands were deathly chilled, she jerked her head with
+ violence and precipitation, an agitated cry escaped her breast;
+ the attack lasted from three to six minutes, and left her
+ completely exhausted. The witnesses of this painful spectacle
+ were affected to tears. She was taken to a skillful physician,
+ who after seeing her in one of these convulsions, pronounced
+ the case hopeless, saying, 'it baffled him, he could not
+ understand it.' However, he prescribed remedies. Meanwhile, the
+ first medals arrived in our midst. On Shrove Tuesday, my sister
+ had five attacks, which she assured me were the worst she had
+ ever had. Next day, wearing the medal, she began a novena, and
+ the two convulsions she had that day were the last; never since
+ has she felt the slightest symptom (and that without employing
+ the prescribed remedies), neither has she had a sign of the
+ fever, which last year replaced the less violent convulsions.
+ This cure was wrought in an insensible, but very efficacious
+ manner, the first day of a novena made through the medal. My
+ sister immediately resumed the manifold duties of a laborious
+ household. She attributes, and we also, her recovery to Mary
+ alone. Thousands of times be love and glory to this good Mother!
+
+ "3d. In the Chablais district, on the frontiers of the canton
+ of Geneva, lived a poor widow, the mother of quite a large
+ family. This good woman, about sixty years old, had a natural
+ predisposition to paralysis. At the age of forty-eight, an
+ attack of this disease deprived her of the use of her left
+ arm. At intervals since then, she has had spells of illness
+ so serious and so protracted, that at least a hundred times
+ she seemed on the verge of the tomb. She never consulted a
+ physician, but animated with a lively, persevering faith, she
+ employed only supernatural means. 'God and the Saints are the
+ only good doctors,' she would say, and 'God and the Saints'
+ rewarded her confidence. She has recovered from these hopeless
+ maladies in an extraordinary manner. On the first of last
+ March, her left foot lost the power of supporting her body
+ in walking, doubtless owing to her natural predisposition to
+ paralysis. Persons informed on the subject have given the
+ following description of the convulsive movements of this poor
+ woman's foot: suspended, it preserved its natural position, but
+ on putting it to the ground, it immediately lost its balance;
+ her body was bent, her knee turned out, the sole of her foot
+ exposed, and the left side of her foot was the foundation of
+ support for the left limb in walking. She went thus to church,
+ distant about four minutes' walk; but even in that short space
+ of time, the convulsive movements of the foot were sometimes
+ such that she was not able to keep her balance, but fell to
+ the ground. Every one pitied her, she was always calm and
+ perfectly resigned. Her children had made for her an iron
+ brace which reached to the knee, but after a trial, she was
+ obliged to discard it, the remedy causing more suffering than
+ the disease. During the Lenten season, some charitable persons
+ advised her to seek Mary's assistance through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The good widow did so, and wore her medal with the
+ utmost confidence. On Holy Saturday, she perceived that her
+ foot had become steady; the next day, Easter, without any
+ remedies having been used, it resumed its natural position, and
+ since that time, though a little weaker than the right, not
+ once has it given way or turned. She attributes her recovery to
+ the Blessed Virgin, whom she invoked by wearing the medal, so
+ justly styled miraculous.
+
+ "I could cite many other less striking cases; one time it is a
+ hardy peasant who attributes to Mary's intercession relief from
+ violent pains; another time, a little child, who in a few days,
+ is completely cured of a large tumor under its arm, accompanied
+ by fever; a mother who tells me how her daughter's ill health
+ is sensibly improved by the application of the medal; or a
+ Protestant girl, who, after wearing it, abjures heresy, etc.
+ Nearly all the children of our village wear the Miraculous
+ Medal around their neck, they recite the invocation, they kiss
+ the precious image and give it to their little sisters and
+ brothers in the cradle to kiss.
+
+
+III.
+
+_Graces obtained from 1836 to 1838 in France, Italy, Holland, etc._
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF M. GAETAN (BOULOGNE).
+
+This account was sent me by the curé of Boulogne, February 8, 1836.
+
+ "In my parish, a young man named Gaetan U---, aged twenty-seven
+ years, was leading a life of criminal intimacy with a woman.
+ Several years after abandoning his mother and brother, that he
+ might be under no restraint in his shameless course, he was
+ prostrated by a serious pulmonary attack. M. Jean Pulioli, an
+ excellent physician, undertook the case; but the violence or
+ the disease overcame his skill, and the patient (still in the
+ house of the bad character with whom he lived,) was reduced to
+ such a deplorable state of exhaustion, that he could not move
+ himself. From the beginning of his sickness he had insisted
+ that he would not be worried by a priest. But the disease
+ making very rapid progress, the doctor believed it his duty to
+ warn a priest of his condition. My chaplain went immediately
+ to see him, and earnestly entreated him to put an end to this
+ scandalous state of affairs by marrying the woman, but all in
+ vain. I then paid him a visit, and besides remarking in him
+ neither any intention of marrying her nor of separating from
+ her, I perceived from the excuses he gave, that his soul was
+ enshrouded in impenetrable indifference. Having uselessly
+ exhausted all efforts to effect a change, I concluded it would
+ be better to leave him awhile to quiet and serious reflection,
+ and return later to know his decision. I urged him to seek
+ the mediation of that refuge of sinners, the Blessed Virgin,
+ and slipping the Miraculous Medal under his pillow, I left.
+ There was no necessity for my returning to learn his decision,
+ he sent his mother for me, with whom he had become reconciled
+ in the meantime; after informing me of the very just reasons
+ he had for not marrying the woman, he asked me if I would
+ not request her to leave, a commission I willingly accepted.
+ She consented, and immediately abandoned the house. The sick
+ man's peace and joy at this were indescribable; when I showed
+ him the medal, he kissed it most fervently and impulsively,
+ notwithstanding his state of exhaustion. Then, with every mark
+ of sincere repentance, he confessed, received the Holy Viaticum
+ and Extreme Unction, for we expected each moment he would
+ breathe his last. This occurred January 19, 1836. Interiorly,
+ he enjoyed unspeakable peace, a favor he always attributed to
+ the Blessed Virgin. From this time he began to improve, and
+ in a few days his health was completely re-established. He
+ continues to persevere in his good resolutions, and full of the
+ tenderest affection for his celestial Benefactress, he still
+ reverently wears the medal I gave him, often kissing it with
+ truly filial love.
+
+ "Monsieur, I was a witness of the above-mentioned fact; I send
+ it to you, not only with the permission of the newly converted
+ and cured, but at his request, and I hope that the knowledge
+ will redound to the honor and glory of the Omnipotent God, who,
+ through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin, has wrought
+ this double miracle.
+
+ "I subjoin the certificate of the physician who attests the
+ disease and its cure."
+
+
+CURE OF A JUDGE AT NAPLES.
+
+The judge of the civil tribunal of Naples, M. Joseph Cocchia, seriously
+debilitated by a chronic disease of the bowels, was afflicted with most
+violent pains, accompanied by a spasmodic sensation that, continually
+increasing, banished sleep and appetite, and perceptibly diminished
+his frame. This was followed by a bilious gastric fever, long and
+obstinate, of fifty days duration. When freed from the fever, the sick
+man found himself in a frightful state of emaciation and exhaustion;
+signs of inflammation in the bowels, and such extreme irritation that
+the least jolt induced fever, made skillful physicians fear lest these
+were the symptoms of an incurable malady still more deplorable. Whilst
+in this pitiable condition, there reached the sick man's ears accounts
+of the prodigies Divine mercy had wrought in favor of those who wore
+the medal; he eagerly asked for one, and received it with faith;
+henceforth, he had no longer any need of medical assistance, for he
+recovered the strength and perfect health he now enjoys.
+
+
+CURE OF F.P. DE MAGISTRIS.
+
+M.F. Paul de Magistris, aged seven years, was attacked about the
+middle of November, 1835, by a bilious gastric fever, which, by reason
+of accompanying circumstances, threatened to shorten his life. After
+three weeks' illness, his nervous system was also attacked, and he
+became a prey to a state of profound drowsiness that resulted in the
+loss of reason and speech. His afflicted parents, seeing the obstinacy
+of the disease, notwithstanding all efforts of medical skill to the
+contrary, considered the case hopeless, and their child lost to them.
+On the evening of January 9th, the curé administered Extreme Unction,
+believing, as did all the assistants, that the little sufferer had but
+a few hours to live. A young person, who came to the house, having
+mentioned the Miraculous Medal brought from France by the priests of
+the Congregation of the Mission, it was immediately procured, and,
+with confidence in its healing powers, applied to the child, whilst
+all present knelt around his bed and recited the _Ave Maris Stella_.
+Scarcely had they finished, ere he was considered out of danger. With
+renewed confidence in the medal, it was resolved to begin a novena
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. During its progress, the disease
+diminished perceptibly, and the child has now entirely recovered. Its
+parents, as well as other persons of credit and veracity, among them
+the attendant physician, attest that, having witnessed his deplorable
+condition, they feel convinced his recovery was a miracle, resulting
+from the application of the medal.
+
+_February 22, 1836._
+
+
+CURE OF A DROPSICAL MAN (SWITZERLAND).
+
+ "_Soleure, January 19th, 1836._
+
+ "Baptiste, a wood sawyer, whom you knew during your sojourn
+ in this city, was confined to his bed two whole months by
+ an attack of the severest form of dropsy on the chest. One
+ of our best physicians, who attended him at the beginning
+ of his sickness, having told Baptiste's wife that the case
+ was a hopeless one, the family decided to consult another,
+ M. Gougelmann, at Attyswill, a league from Soleure. After
+ seeing the patient, he also gave the same opinion, and the
+ poor wife's distress was beyond expression. A pious lady,
+ witnessing her grief, gave her a Miraculous Medal. The sick
+ man's arms, legs, and whole body were greatly swollen. His
+ breath was short, and he had scarcely any power of motion; his
+ back, and his elbows upon which he was obliged to lean, were a
+ mass of sores. In this pitiable state, death might be expected
+ any moment. His confessor having come to visit him, brought
+ the Notice of the miracles wrought through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The sick man on receiving it began to read it aloud,
+ greatly to the astonishment of his wife and the priest, who
+ were both witnesses that he had been almost past the power
+ of speech but a few minutes before. And he continued reading
+ thus until he had finished the little book (it was one of the
+ first editions). This was the evening of January 19. His wife,
+ overcome with fatigue, fell asleep for a few moments, his
+ children were in an adjoining room expecting at any instant to
+ hear the sad news of their father's death. He slept a little
+ towards three o'clock in the morning, and on awaking found
+ himself so well that it was impossible to resist the desire of
+ rising from his bed and throwing himself on his knees before a
+ crucifix, in thanksgiving to Our Lord and His divine Mother.
+ His wife awoke, and not seeing him in bed, called to know where
+ he was. 'I am well; the Blessed Virgin has cured me,' was the
+ answer of Baptiste, whom she perceived kneeling before the
+ crucifix. The children, hearing the noise, hastened to their
+ father's presence, believing him about to breathe his last,
+ but judge of their surprise at finding him restored to health,
+ and his sores perfectly healed! Imagine, if you can, the joy
+ of this poor family, and the happy effects the news of this
+ wondrous cure produced upon the many who heard it. Baptiste has
+ had excellent health ever since."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF FRANÇOIS WENMAKERS, OF BOIS-LE-DUC (HOLLAND).
+
+The _Noord Brabander_, a Holland journal, printed at Bois-le-Duc,
+contains in number 68 the following account of an extraordinary cure,
+which is attributed to the Blessed Virgin:
+
+ "_Bois-le Duc, June 6th, 1836._
+
+ "The 25th of last April, François Wenmakers, a young
+ apprentice, aged fourteen years, fell from a height of
+ about sixteen feet. An affection of the brain and an almost
+ complete paralysis of the lungs, larynx and oesophagus were
+ the result; he was not in a condition to take any medicine
+ into his stomach, or even to swallow the least liquid, and he
+ was deprived of consciousness. One of the physicians, feeling
+ worried at his fixed stare, advised the administration of
+ Extreme Unction; and yet another, the eve of his recovery,
+ declared him on the verge of death. The sick man moreover,
+ had become nearly blind the last few days. On the 1st of May,
+ advantage was taken of a lucid interval, to give him the Holy
+ Viaticum; and on the 4th of the same month, he received Extreme
+ Unction from one of the chaplains of St. Jean. His parents, who
+ immediately after his fall, had hung a medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception around his neck, seeing there was now no hope of his
+ recovery, except in the divine goodness and the intercession
+ of the Blessed Virgin, began, on the 16th of May, a novena in
+ honor of the Mother of God. Three days after, about six o'clock
+ in the morning, the patient suddenly asked his mother if the
+ medal around his neck were blessed. She answered yes, regarding
+ the question as the effect of delirium. He immediately
+ kissed it, and sat up for the first time since the fall, for
+ heretofore he had been stretched out helpless on the bed, and,
+ for some days past, had been deprived of the use of his limbs.
+ 'Something tells me,' he exclaimed, 'that I must get up, that
+ I am cured!' The astonishment of those present may easily be
+ imagined. The mother called his sisters, who repaired to the
+ room with an elder girl, and they, seeing that he stoutly
+ persisted in declaring himself cured, persuaded his mother to
+ let him rise. He did indeed get up, and pointing to a picture
+ in the room, representing the medal, he said: 'It is this good
+ Mother who has cured me.' From that moment the boy's health was
+ perfectly re-established, and his intellectual faculties were
+ brighter than ever.
+
+ "Reflections here are superfluous. Glory to God and her who
+ thus rewards the confidence of her servants! The parents and
+ their child will ever remember the blessing they have received,
+ and never cease to publish it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE DUCAS, OF JAUCHELETTE (BELGIUM).
+
+Rosalie Ducas, of Jauchelette, near Jodoigne, aged four years and
+a-half, was, on the 9th of November, 1835, suddenly struck with total
+blindness without the slightest premonitory symptoms; there was no
+disease, no weakness, she was in apparently perfect health. Not only
+was the least light, but the least breath of air so painful, that her
+face had to be kept constantly covered with a cloth four doubled. This
+poor child's sufferings night and day, were heart-rending! At last the
+mother herself was taken sick. Some pious individual procured her a
+blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception. She took it and commenced
+a novena. Another medal was put on the child's neck, the 11th of June,
+1836, about six o'clock in the evening; at midnight, the little one
+ceased its moans, on the fourth or fifth day of the novena, it opened
+its eyes. The mother and father redoubled their prayers to the Blessed
+Virgin, and on the ninth day, towards evening, the child recovered its
+sight entirely, to the great astonishment of the neighbors and all who
+were witnesses of the occurrence.
+
+ "The curé of Jodoigne-la-Souveraine, who had given the medal,
+ has himself seen the child who lives not more than half a
+ league distant; he positively asserts that it has perfectly
+ recovered its sight, and that not the slightest vestige of the
+ attack remains, which fact is well known, and contributes not a
+ little in exciting devotion to the Immaculate Mary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSION OF THE FATHER OF A FAMILY (BELGIUM).
+
+ "There are still in existence here some families who,
+ persistently recognizing in the present clergy only a purely
+ civil power, hold themselves utterly aloof, live in a state of
+ schism, and comply with none of the duties of religion.
+
+ "One of these miserable creatures was afflicted with a virulent
+ cancer on the side of his face, which for a long time had been
+ eating away the flesh. The malady increasing, I believed it my
+ duty to visit him and offer the consolations of my ministry.
+ I saw him several times, he was suffering greatly; the
+ oesophagus was exposed, the right side of his emaciated face
+ presented only a deep sore, the eye, starting from its socket,
+ hung suspended over a terrible disfigured mouth; his tongue
+ caused him acute pain; his condition was pitiable indeed,
+ especially as he seemed determined to die impenitent. He was
+ a rough, blunt man, who wanted to hear nothing about priests
+ or Sacraments. In vain was he reminded of our Lord's bountiful
+ kindness and the rigors of His justice, nothing touched
+ him; to all expostulations his invariable reply was: 'God's
+ mercy is great, I will confess to God, the Blessed Virgin,
+ to St. Barbara and the good Saints.' He was the counterpart
+ of those men to whom Jesus Christ said: '_In peccato vestro
+ moriemini_--you shall die in your sin.'
+
+ "His relations and numerous friends endeavored both by prayers
+ and entreaties to snatch him from perdition, but on the other
+ side visited daily and sustained by his old associates in
+ impiety, he persisted in dying as he had lived, in schism.
+
+ "In the meantime, I was obliged to be absent several days. This
+ period was for him one of Divine mercy. A lady of the parish
+ made a last attempt to recall him to God, by bringing him one
+ of those medals of the Immaculate Conception called miraculous.
+ She sent it to him with the request to wear it and put all his
+ confidence in the Blessed Virgin. The sick man took the medal,
+ kissed it respectfully, and put it under his pillow. In giving
+ it to him, his daughter had taken care to acquaint him with
+ its origin and advantages, at the same time urging him, as
+ usual, to make his confession. 'Leave me in peace,' was the
+ wretched father's reply, and she could say no more. Next day,
+ a neighboring curé was sent for to administer Extreme Unction
+ to another person in the parish. He came, and forgetting, as
+ it were, the one for whom he had been sent, he thought only of
+ the cancerous patient. 'I felt,' he afterwards told me, 'an
+ inexplicable and irresistible desire to visit him, I could not
+ have returned without seeing him.' He asks some one to announce
+ his arrival to the sick man; this person speaks to the latter,
+ and urges him to confess. 'The curé of P. is here,' she adds,
+ 'and would like to see you, if you have no objection.' 'Well,
+ yes, let him come.' The curé went to him immediately; at first
+ there was a slight air of resistance about the patient, but it
+ vanished, the hour of grace had come, he confessed with every
+ indication of true repentance, and received Extreme Unction
+ with an indescribable peace and joy, that never faltered during
+ the four remaining days of his life. The Holy Viaticum could
+ not be administered because he was not able to swallow.
+
+ "At noon, on the 18th of last May, the month consecrated to
+ Mary, he died, aged seventy-eight.
+
+ "Except his former companions in irreligion, this conversion
+ was a subject of rejoicing to the parish, and doubtless it
+ will rejoice all the servants of Mary who hear of it. May this
+ example, among thousands, inspire sinners with great confidence
+ in the Blessed Virgin, propagate devotion to her, and multiply
+ the medal styled miraculous!
+
+ "I have thought it a duty to give these few details, for the
+ purpose of making known the truly visible effects of the
+ protection of the Mother of God, and the ever impenetrable
+ springs of grace in regard to man.
+
+ "I have the honor to be, Monsieur, with great esteem, &c."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ANTOINETTE VAN ERTRYCK (BOIS-LE-DUC).
+
+ "The protection of the Blessed Virgin, which for the last few
+ months has shown itself so powerful in a neighboring kingdom,
+ has also wrought wonders in Bois-le-Duc. Mary has here likewise
+ given equal proofs of her maternal bounty when we have implored
+ her intercession.
+
+ "Mlle. Antoinette Van Ertryck, aged twenty-five years, was for
+ more than twenty months deprived of the use of her limbs; they
+ were stiff and paralyzed, almost without feeling, and stretched
+ motionless on a sort of bench made for the express purpose.
+ Medicine afforded no relief. In this sad condition, wearing
+ a blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception, she thought of
+ making a novena in honor of the Feast, to recover her health.
+ On the last day of the novena, she made a fervent communion.
+ Even after the departure of the priest, who came to administer
+ the Blessed Sacrament, there seemed no change for the better,
+ but she felt a shiver through all her body, like the impression
+ often experienced from sudden cold. Just whilst finishing the
+ last prayers, however, she seemed to hear an interior voice
+ saying to her: 'You are cured.' On attempting to move, she
+ found that her limbs had become flexible, and she was able to
+ walk. The miracle was wrought on Saturday, May 16th. The next
+ day, Sunday, she went to church to return thanks for this
+ blessing to the common Mother of all the faithful. The people
+ of our city, always distinguished for their veneration for the
+ Blessed Virgin, and their confidence in her intercession are
+ not wanting in gratitude, and this new favor will but increase
+ their devotion to Mary Immaculate.
+
+ "The duration of the malady, the inutility of medical skill,
+ and her astonishing sudden cure are attested by the doctor.
+
+ "A. BOLSIUS, M.D."
+
+
+CURE OF A YOUNG GIRL AT CRACOW, POLAND.
+
+Extract from a letter of the Countess Lubinska:
+
+ "_March 12th, 1837._
+
+ "I took into my service, the 20th of last December, a young
+ girl whose excellent qualities elicited my deepest interest.
+
+ "After being with me some months, she began to suffer most
+ acute pains in the head; the remedies we employed affording
+ no relief, the attending physician advised her to keep her
+ bed, and did not conceal from her his opinion that these pains
+ proceeded from the humor flowing constantly from her ears, and
+ which seeming to be upon the brain, threatened her life, or at
+ all events, her reason.
+
+ "What confirmed this opinion was the fact that whenever she
+ walked rapidly or stooped, she was forced by the pain to throw
+ her head back, as she assured me various times during her
+ sickness. The continued suffering induced her, at last, to
+ follow the physician's advice, and consent, if necessary, to
+ the operation of trepanning. I shuddered at the very idea, and
+ made her promise to ascertain if a delay of ten days would be
+ attended with any serious consequences. Upon a negative answer
+ from the physician, I stopped all medicines and determined
+ to try the efficacy of the Miraculous Medal. This was on a
+ Saturday, and the very day observed by her as a strict fast,
+ in thanksgiving to the Blessed Virgin for having miraculously
+ cured her of a mortal typhus, after her mother had dedicated
+ her to Mary. Her confidence in Mary was great; and as I did
+ not give her the medal for some hours after promising it,
+ she told one of her friends, as I have since learned, that
+ her impatience to receive it was almost beyond bounds, and
+ assured her that she would not have hesitated between it and
+ two thousand francs had she been allowed a choice, and we
+ must remember that this girl was very poor. To display more
+ clearly the miraculous nature of the cure, God permitted her
+ sufferings to increase to such a degree that very day, that
+ notwithstanding her patience and resignation, it seemed as
+ if she really could not endure them much longer. Knowing her
+ lively faith and confidence, I deemed it unnecessary to enter
+ into a detailed account of the salutary effects of the medal;
+ I gave it to her; she immediately made with it the sign of
+ the cross upon her poor head, repeated the invocation and
+ fell asleep amidst excessive sufferings. On awaking she was
+ perfectly cured, and has never since experienced the slightest
+ symptom of the disease.
+
+ "Filled with sentiments of the deepest humility and the
+ most lively gratitude, the miraculously cured now wishes to
+ consecrate herself to God in the religious life.
+
+ "Blessed a thousand times be God and the Immaculate Mary, and
+ may we ever appreciate such boundless mercy!"
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. REGNAULT, MAYOR OF POITIERS.--1837
+
+The following account was sent us by the abbé of Chazelle:
+
+ "_Poitiers, June 12th, 1837._
+
+ "M. Regnault, mayor of Poitiers, had exercised his functions
+ since the year 1830. In some difficulties, occurring during his
+ administration, with the bishop and several of the clergy, he
+ had shown himself just and equitable. His charity to the poor
+ was well known. But far different are these moral virtues,
+ which generally receive their recompense here below, from the
+ Christian virtues so seldom rewarded, except in a better world!
+ M. Regnault never appeared at church, except when his presence
+ as mayor was necessary. A prey for some time to a grave malady,
+ he continued to exercise his functions as long as possible,
+ imposing upon himself for that purpose many sacrifices, and
+ displaying an admirable zeal; but, vanquished by the disease,
+ he was at length forced to suspend his duties, and, since the
+ 1st of last January, to resign altogether. The curé of St.
+ Hilaire, having learned the alarming state of his parishioner's
+ health, hastened to visit him, and offer the consolations of
+ his ministry, but in vain. He repeated his visits. He was
+ received into the house, but not taken to see the patient. He
+ now sent word to the latter that he was at his command, and
+ would come immediately when sent for. Meanwhile, the disease
+ made such rapid progress that there was no longer any hope of
+ recovery. Several of his friends, interested in his salvation,
+ were grieved to see him so near death without the slightest
+ preparation for it. One of them brought him a Miraculous Medal,
+ and, not being able to see him herself, she asked a woman
+ about the house to give it to him for her. The woman did so,
+ and, fearing he might reject it with contempt, she begged him
+ to receive it for the donor's sake. He took it, saying: 'It is
+ a medal of the Blessed Virgin; I accept it respectfully, God
+ is not to be trifled with.' And, putting it under his pillow,
+ he sent a kind message of thanks to the lady who had given
+ it. Some moments after, he takes it out, contemplates it, and
+ kisses it respectfully.
+
+ "Having placed his temporal affairs in order, he now expresses
+ a wish to do the same with his conscience, and requests his
+ attendants to send for the parish curé. The latter hastens to
+ the sick man's bedside. 'I have made you come in a hurry,'
+ says the patient, 'I want to have a conversation with you.'
+ After this conversation, he asks the curé to return next day,
+ as he wishes time to prepare himself for the grand action he
+ contemplates. 'The step I am about to take,' he adds, 'I do
+ with full knowledge and entire conviction.' The curé of St.
+ Hilaire, with whom, as mayor, he had just had a law-suit,
+ suggested that he make his confession to some other priest; he
+ answered that he wished no one but his pastor. Next day, the
+ curé returned, and as he addressed his penitent by the title of
+ M. the Mayor: 'Do not call me that,' said M. Regnault; 'you are
+ now my father, I am your son, I beg you to address me thus.'
+ The curé paid him frequent visits, and as the disease continued
+ to progress, he suggested administering the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction. 'I have not been confirmed,' replied the
+ pious patient, 'I ardently desire to receive Confirmation.'
+ The bishop was soon informed, and, readily forgetting all
+ subject of complaint, and thanking God for this unexpected
+ change, the venerable prelate went at once to the sick man.
+ The happy dispositions of the latter touched him deeply, and he
+ administered to him the Sacrament of Confirmation the very day
+ of his receiving Extreme Unction and the Holy Viaticum.
+
+ "It is impossible to give an idea of M. Regnault's faith
+ and truly angelic fervor during this ceremony, or the deep
+ impression made upon him at seeing Monseigneur enter his
+ chamber. It was Saturday, January 21st, the eve of Septuagesima
+ Sunday. Monseigneur addressed him in a few words full of
+ unction and charity, and to inspire him with hope, reminded
+ him of the very touching parable of the next day's Gospel, the
+ laborers in the Father's vineyard, who coming at the last hour
+ received the same recompense as those who had borne the heat
+ and burden of the day. All the assistants were deeply affected
+ at this edifying spectacle, and many were moved to tears.
+ The bishop, on leaving, charged the curé to testify again to
+ M. Regnault how great consolation he had experienced at this
+ happy change, and how much he had been edified at his piety
+ during this touching but long ceremony. 'As first magistrate
+ of the city,' he answered, with a peaceful smile, 'I ought to
+ set good example to those under my administration.' The curé
+ sought by repeated visits to sustain this new-born piety,
+ already tried most severely by the excruciating sufferings of
+ the malady, sufferings which the patient bore with calmness
+ and resignation, offering them to God in expiation of his past
+ offences. To recompense his services to the city during his
+ administration, the government bestowed upon him the cross of
+ honor. The curé could not refrain from congratulating him. 'I
+ do not know,' was the modest answer, 'I do not know what I
+ have done to merit it,' and when reminded of his services to
+ the city, 'Oh! do not speak of them,' said he, 'such things
+ might awaken self-love!' What immense progress virtue makes
+ in the soul in a very little while! It was in these happy
+ dispositions he died, the 2d of the following February, Feast
+ of the Purification. The whole city of Poitiers, we might say,
+ assisted at the funeral. The bishop, the authorities, and
+ a host of other distinguished personages came to pay their
+ tribute of gratitude and admiration to his memory, and the
+ prefect congratulated the curé of St. Hilaire on so wonderful a
+ conversion."
+
+
+MARY'S PROTECTION OF A LITTLE CHILD (PARIS).
+
+Madame Rémond, living number 70, rue Mouffetard, held at her chamber
+window, on the second story, one of her children, aged twenty-two
+months. Fainting suddenly, she fell back into the room, and the
+child was precipitated upon the pavement below. Immediate death
+might naturally have been expected as the inevitable consequence of
+such a fall; but no, wonderful to relate, the child was not injured.
+After reading the Archbishop's circular (upon the occasion of the
+consecration of the church of Notre Dame de Lorette), in which he
+recommends all the faithful to wear the Miraculous Medal, the pious
+parents had hastened to procure one and put it on their child. The
+Immaculate Mary did not fail to reward their piety. On picking the poor
+little creature up, and examining it, not even the slightest bruise was
+discovered. As the mother was a long time recovering from her swoon, it
+caused great anxiety, and several physicians were called in to see her.
+They also saw the child, and declared its escape wonderful indeed. But
+by way of precaution, they applied a few leeches to it, and a poultice
+to one knee which seemed to be the seat of some slight pain. The child
+had been eating an instant before this terrible fall, which, strange
+to say, occasioned no vomiting, and immediately after being picked up
+it took all the little delicacies offered it. Every one declared this
+occurrence a miracle, and the innocent little creature itself seemed
+to proclaim it, by kissing the medal and pressing it to its lips,
+especially when the subject was mentioned, as we ourselves witnessed
+when the father showed him to us the 25th of June, 1837.
+
+ "The mother recovered perfectly, and she never ceases to thank
+ the Immaculate Mary for the double protection she considers due
+ the medal."
+
+
+THE ARCHCONFRATERNITY OF NOTRE DAME DES VICTOIRES.
+
+Scarcely six years since the apparition of 1830, and already the
+designs of Providence were realized; the Miraculous Medal had awakened
+devotion to the Blessed Virgin, belief in the Immaculate Conception had
+penetrated all classes of society, and the innumerable favors accorded
+those who fervently recited the prayers revealed by Mary, had clearly
+proved how she prizes this first of all her privileges. But so far, her
+servants remained isolated, having no bond of union, no central point
+where they could meet; the majority of those who wore the medal as the
+livery of the spotless Virgin, knew neither the place, the mode, nor
+date of its origin.
+
+God was now about to complete the work, by giving to this devotion, an
+organization and fixed exercises which favored its development, and
+increased the efficacy of prayer, by the power of association.
+
+Towards the end of the year 1836, a man was raised up to execute the
+divine plans; this man was M. Dufriche Desgenettes, curé of Notre Dame
+des Victoires, Paris. From 1820 to 1832, in charge of St. Francis
+Xavier's Church, he numbered among the religious establishments of his
+parish, the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, where the Blessed
+Virgin had appeared. He was one of the most earnest in thanking God for
+this grace, and most eager to propagate the medal. It was his desire
+that the privileged chapel should become a pilgrim shrine, but this
+desire not being realized, he was chosen by Providence to supply the
+substitute.
+
+Let us quote his own words, relating how he was led to found the
+Archconfraternity of the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary. "There
+was in Paris, a parish scarcely known even to many of the Parisians.
+It is situated in the centre of the city, between the Palais Royal
+and the Bourse, surrounded by theatres and places of dissipation, a
+quarter swallowed up in the vortex of cupidity and industry, and the
+most abandoned to every species of criminal indulgence. Its church,
+dedicated to Notre Dame des Victoires, remained deserted even on the
+most solemn festivities.... No Sacraments were administered in this
+parish, not even to the dying.... If, by dint of novel persuasion, the
+curé obtained permission to visit a person dangerously ill, it was not
+only on condition of waiting until the patient's faculties were dimmed,
+but also on another almost insuperable condition, that of presenting
+himself in a secular habit. What benefit were such visits? They were
+merely a useless torment to the dying."[20]
+
+ [Footnote 20: Manual of the Archconfraternity, edition of 1853.
+ p. 84.]
+
+Such was the parish confided to M. Desgenettes. With the hope of
+recalling to God, even a few strayed souls, the poor curé, for four
+years, employed every means that the most active zeal could suggest,
+but in vain. Sad and grieved beyond measure, he thought of quitting
+this ungrateful post, when a supernatural communication revived his
+drooping courage.
+
+On the 3d of December, Feast of St. Francis Xavier, thoroughly
+penetrated with the inutility of his ministry in this parish, he
+was saying Mass at the Blessed Virgin's altar, now the altar of the
+Archconfraternity.... After the _Sanctus_, he distinctly heard these
+words pronounced in a very solemn manner: "Consecrate thy parish to the
+most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary." They did not strike his ears,
+but seemed to proceed from an interior voice. He immediately recovered
+peace and liberty of spirit. After finishing his thanksgiving, fearing
+to be the dupe of an illusion, he endeavored to banish the thought of
+what was apparently a supernatural communication, but the same interior
+voice resounded again in the depths of his soul. Returned to his house,
+he begins to compose the statutes of the association, with a view of
+delivering himself from an importunate idea, and scarcely does he take
+his pen in hand, ere he is fully enlightened on the subject, and the
+organization of the work costs him nothing but the manual labor of the
+writing.[21]
+
+ [Footnote 21: Manual of the Archconfraternity, p. 7.]
+
+The statutes prepared, are submitted to Mgr. de Quélen who approves
+them, and the 16th of the same month, an archiepiscopal ordinance
+erects canonically the Association of the Holy and Immaculate Heart
+of Mary for the conversion of sinners. The first meeting took place
+on Sunday, the 11th of December. In announcing it at High Mass, the
+pious pastor expected to see in the evening not more than fifty or
+sixty persons at most. Judge of his astonishment on finding assembled
+at the appointed hour, a congregation of about five hundred, a large
+proportion of whom are men! What had brought them? The majority were
+ignorant of the object of the meeting. An instruction explaining the
+motive and end of the exercises made a deep impression; the Benediction
+was chanted most fervently, and there was a notable increase of fervor
+during the Litany of the Blessed Virgin, especially at the thrice
+repeated invocation: "_Refugium peccatorum, ora pro nobis._" The cause
+was gained, Mary took possession of the parish of Notre Dame des
+Victoires.
+
+The good curé still doubted; to assure himself that the association was
+truly the work of God, he demanded a sign, the conversion of a great
+sinner, an old man on the borders of the tomb, who had several times
+refused to see him. His prayer was granted, the old man received him
+gladly, and became sincerely converted. It was not long before new
+graces showered upon his parish increased M. Desgenette's confidence,
+numberless sinners changed their lives, indifferent Christians became
+practical and fervent, the offices of the Church were attended, the
+Sacraments frequented, the apparently extinguished Faith was relighted,
+and this parish, lately so scandalous, soon became one of the most
+edifying in Paris.
+
+The Confraternity of the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary was
+not to embrace one parish only. God willed that it should extend
+throughout France, and even the entire world. M. Desgenettes, who
+understood this design, addressed himself to the Sovereign Pontiff,
+and obtained, April 24th, 1838, a brief, erecting the association into
+an Archconfraternity, with the power of affiliating to itself other
+associations of the same kind throughout the Church, and granting them
+a participation in the spiritual favors accorded it. From this day, the
+Archconfraternity developed wonderfully, and became an inexhaustible
+source of graces. The church of Notre Dame des Victoires was henceforth
+numbered among the most celebrated sanctuaries in the world. At all
+hours may the faithful be seen around its altars in the attitude of
+prayer and recollection. The re-unions which take place every Sunday
+present a touching spectacle, a dense crowd composed of persons of
+every condition, who, after fervently chanting Mary's praises, listen
+attentively to a long series of petitions received in the course of the
+week from all quarters of the globe.
+
+These present a picture of all the miseries, all the sufferings, all
+the corporal and spiritual necessities possible; to which are added
+numberless acts of thanksgiving for benefits obtained through the
+associates' prayers. These petitions are so multitudinous that they
+cannot be announced except in a general manner and by categories; they
+actually amount, each week, to the number of twenty-five or thirty
+thousand, and, for the entire year, form a total of a million and
+a half. At the time of its founder's death, the Archconfraternity
+numbered fifteen thousand affiliated confraternities in all quarters of
+the globe, and more than twenty million associates. At the beginning of
+this year, 1878, the affiliated confraternities amount to 17,472.
+
+A bulletin, issued monthly, gives an account of the progress of the
+Archconfraternity, the exercises which take place at Notre Dame des
+Victoires, the graces obtained, etc. The first nine numbers were
+published by M. Desgenettes himself, but at irregular intervals; they
+are full of interest and edification.
+
+Amidst the wonderful success of his work, the venerable pastor, far
+from seeking any of the glory, thought only of humbling himself;
+regarding his share in it as naught but that of a simple instrument, he
+confesses even his resistance to the inspirations of grace, his doubts,
+his incredulity;[22] he will not admit that he may be called the
+founder of this work of mercy; it is God who has done all, it is the
+Immaculate Heart of Mary, that has opened to poor sinners a new source
+of graces, as for himself, he was not even the originator of the idea.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Manual of the Archconfraternity, page 86.]
+
+These sentiments reveal the soul of a saint; the true servants of
+God are always humble of heart, and the good they accomplish is in
+proportion to their self-abasement.
+
+In his deep gratitude to God, the pious curé never forgot the bond
+attaching Notre Dame des Victoires to the chapel of the Daughters of
+Charity; he always loved this blessed sanctuary; it was there Mary had
+concealed the source of those vivifying waters which flowed through
+his parish; it was there this Mother of divine grace had promised
+those benedictions which the Archconfraternity reaped so abundantly.
+To preserve the remembrance of this mysterious relation, he desired
+that the medal of the association should be the Miraculous Medal.
+Henceforth, the influence of this medal became confounded with that
+of the Archconfraternity, the extraordinary graces attributed to the
+former were often due the associates' prayers, and reciprocally, for
+example, the conversion of M. Ratisbonne. In this case, as in many
+others, two equally supernatural means united to obtain the same result.
+
+It is related that M. Desgenettes, seeing the Daughters of Charity
+frequently around the altar of the most Holy Heart of Mary at Notre
+Dame des Victoires, would sometimes say to them: "My good Sisters, I
+am much pleased to see you in my dear church, but know that your own
+chapel is the true pilgrim shrine, it is there you have the Blessed
+Virgin, there she manifested herself to you."----
+
+The Miraculous Medal, as revealed to Sister Catherine, bears on the
+reverse the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first crowned with
+thorns, the second pierced by a sword. These are symbols which all
+comprehend. Are they not, at the same time, a prophetic sign?
+
+We are permitted to recognize here a foreshadowing of that devotion
+which would be rendered by the Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des
+Victoires, to the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary.
+
+We may likewise see pre-figured, that later development in our day, of
+devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a devotion born in France, and
+which the entire nation wishes to proclaim amidst pomp and grandeur,
+by the construction of a splendid monument, that from the heights of
+Montmartre, shall overlook all Paris.
+
+Thus by a mysterious gradation, the medal of the Immaculate Conception
+has conducted us to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Heart of the
+Mother has introduced us into the Heart of the Son, the adorable Heart
+of Jesus, that Heart which has so loved men, and which saves nations as
+well as individuals.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, etc._
+
+CURE WROUGHT IN SANTORIN (GREECE)--1838.
+
+
+Letter of M.N., Priest of the Mission, in Santorin:
+
+ "Mme. Marie Delenda, wife of M. Michel Chigi, son of the
+ Vice-Consul from Holland to Santorin, for seven years had
+ suffered most excruciating pains, inducing such a state of
+ nervous sensibility, that she was unable to bear the least
+ excitement. She had had several children, but they all died
+ before birth and receiving baptism. The physicians consulted,
+ declared unanimously, that her disease was incurable, and that
+ none of her children would ever come into the world alive.
+ Greatly distressed at such a sad prospect, she had recourse to
+ the Miraculous Medal, and obtained from it what medical skill
+ was unable to effect; her next child, born not long after, was
+ a fine, live, healthy one. Her husband, as pious as herself,
+ was transported with joy and gratitude. 'Behold!' said he to
+ the attendant physician, and conducting him to an image of the
+ Immaculate Mary, 'Behold our Protectrice, our Liberatrix, the
+ Mother of our child!' The physician knelt, said a prayer and
+ retired. Since then, the mother's health is good; at least she
+ has had no relapse of her former apparently incurable disease,
+ which recovery is sufficient to attest the protection of Mary
+ Immaculate. Full of gratitude, the two spouses have never
+ ceased to urge the erection of the altar and inauguration of
+ the image of Mary Immaculate, in fulfillment of their promise.
+
+ "Several other miraculous cures have also been wrought there
+ through the invocation of Mary Immaculate. I am assured of
+ this; four of them are well attested, and really marvelous.
+ The bishop, the clergy, the people of Santorin, are all ready
+ to affirm my assertions, and not one of them but would be
+ more likely to exaggerate than detract from my account. When
+ Monseigneur went to visit the Chigi family after the birth
+ of their child, he asked to see the image, and looking at
+ it, said: 'This is the second miracle wrought in Santorin by
+ the Immaculate Virgin. The first is known to me through the
+ confessional, and consequently, I cannot divulge it.'
+
+ "It was on the 28th of May, the inauguration of the image of
+ the Immaculate Conception took place. Monseigneur himself
+ officiated in the translation, after the High Mass and
+ procession terminating the Forty Hour's Devotion at the
+ cathedral. The image was placed upon an altar prepared for the
+ purpose, in the court-yard of the donor's house. From the altar
+ to the outer door, a very prettily decorated arched pathway
+ was formed by means of drapery, and upon the threshold, was a
+ triumphal arch. All the pavement, not only in the court but
+ even to our church, was covered with flowers and fragrant
+ grasses. Monseigneur, preceded by the clergy, and followed by
+ all the Catholics and a number of Greek schismatics, repaired
+ to the place where the image was exposed. Having incensed it,
+ he intoned the _Ave, Maris Stella_, and the procession began
+ to move. The clergy with the cross at their head commenced to
+ defile. Then came two young girls bearing each a banner of
+ white silk, whereon was depicted the spotless Virgin, these
+ were suspended diagonally at the entrance of the sanctuary.
+ Next, were two more young girls holding extended, the front of
+ the altar representing the reverse of the medal, and finally,
+ the image borne by the donor and one of his nearest relatives.
+ Monseigneur walked immediately after, and behind him, Mme.
+ Chigi holding her child in her arms and accompanied by her
+ sister. The people were not in the ranks of the procession,
+ but ranged along each side, that they might readily see the
+ image and kiss it as it passed, which they did with so much
+ eagerness and enthusiasm that there was considerable danger
+ of its meeting with an accident. This, however we averted
+ by many precautions, and at length reached the church. At
+ the entrance, another very beautiful triumphal arch had been
+ erected, surmounted by a large representation of the reverse
+ of the medal upon a floating banner, bearing the inscription:
+ '_Ave, Maria Immaculata_.' The church door was decorated with
+ drapery, likewise the interior of the walls, which were also
+ hung with flowers, verdant crowns and garlands. The image was
+ now placed upon a temporary throne, which had been prepared
+ until a more suitable one could be erected. Another High Mass
+ was celebrated, at the end of which the children chanted
+ alternately with the choir the '_Te Mariam laudamus_,' this
+ being the first time it was ever heard in this country. The
+ other individuals I have already mentioned as having been cured
+ through the Immaculate Mary's intercession, made each one a
+ votive offering to her image. One gave a veil, another a pretty
+ golden cross, which decorated the Blessed Virgin's bosom during
+ the ceremony; a third proposed having a silver crown made in
+ fulfillment of her vow, but she was advised to give something
+ else, since several others in unison had already promised a
+ most beautiful golden crown."
+
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ÉLISE BOURGEOIS.
+
+Letter of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity, in Troyes:
+
+ "_Troyes, March 4th, 1842._
+
+ "In 1838, we had in our work-room a young woman, named Élise
+ Bourgeois, aged eighteen years, who, after great suffering, was
+ attacked by an anchylosis in the knee. For seven months and a
+ half she suffered excruciatingly, and her malady had reached
+ the crisis. Her limb had shrunk up about two inches, and she
+ could not walk without the aid of a cane or some one's arm. On
+ the 8th of April, which was Monday in Holy Week, one of our
+ young Sisters told me that the Notice contained an account of a
+ Christian Brother, whose foot on the point of being amputated,
+ was cured by the sole application of the Miraculous Medal,
+ one night when his sufferings were greater than usual. I now
+ reproached myself for having allowed this poor child to be so
+ long afflicted, without our once thinking of having recourse
+ to Mary for her recovery; and ascending to the work-room, I
+ related to the children this account of the Christian Brother,
+ and told the young woman to arouse her faith, to put all her
+ confidence in Mary Immaculate, to apply the medal to her knee,
+ and commence a novena with her companions. All Tuesday night
+ her sufferings were great indeed, she said it seemed as if
+ all her bones were dislocated. Nor was she able to obtain a
+ moment's repose the next day. There now issued from a little
+ hole which had formed in her knee, a quantity of serous
+ matter. The day following, she arose with much difficulty,
+ and was taken to the chapel where she heard Holy Mass. At the
+ elevation, she placed her sound knee upon the bench, saying
+ most fervently to the good God: 'Since Thou art present, deign
+ to cure me, that I may be entirely Thine.' She immediately felt
+ something like the touch of a hand, which replaced the bones in
+ their natural position, and lengthened the shrunken limb; but
+ she did not yet dare rest upon it, for fear of injury. At the
+ end of Mass, she knelt to receive the priest's benediction, and
+ in spite of herself, she rested her weight upon the afflicted
+ knee. She remained in the chapel with her companions to say her
+ prayers and thank the Blessed Virgin for the great favor just
+ obtained. From that time she has never suffered the slightest
+ pain in the limb, and it appears perfectly sound.
+
+ "As soon as the children perceived that she was cured, they
+ declared it a miracle, and all hearts were filled with the
+ deepest emotion and gratitude. Élise now asked permission
+ to go to the cathedral to confession; a request I granted
+ reluctantly, although she assured me she was not suffering in
+ the slightest, yet she had not been out for seven months and
+ a-half, and I could scarcely realize her recovery. Several
+ Masses of thanksgiving were said in our chapel, during the
+ first of which we had the Blessed Sacrament exposed, and the
+ _Te Deum_ chanted. The noise of this miracle soon spread
+ throughout the city, and several persons came to see the healed
+ one. She also requested permission to go to the house of one
+ of her uncles, who had a very impious neighbor, that had been
+ informed of her miraculous recovery, but who had also been told
+ that he need not believe until he had seen Élise for himself.
+ He was perfectly convinced, acknowledged it beyond denial, and
+ said that in thanksgiving, a _Te Deum_ should be chanted in the
+ cathedral.
+
+ "I forgot to say, that our physician had seen this young woman
+ two months before her recovery and pronounced the disease
+ incurable. I had also had her examined by a surgeon, who
+ ordered much blistering, but without expecting a cure."
+
+Accompanying this letter are the signatures of seven Sisters of Charity
+and twenty-three other individuals, witnesses of the miracle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A TRAIT OF PROTECTION. (TEXAS).
+
+The following was sent us by Mgr. Odin, Vicar Apostolic of Texas, in a
+letter dated April 11th, 1841.
+
+ "I had, in the city of Nacogdoches, an opportunity of
+ witnessing how Mary Immaculate loves to grant the prayers of
+ those who put their trust in her. A Maryland lady, on leaving
+ her native State to settle in Texas, had received a Miraculous
+ Medal; her confessor, on giving it to her, exacting the
+ promise, that she would never omit the daily recitation of the
+ little prayer, 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+ have recourse to thee!' and assuring her at the same time that
+ this good Mother would never allow her to die without the last
+ consolations of religion. She faithfully complied with her
+ promise. For four years she was confined to her bed, and often,
+ it was thought, at the point of death, but her confidence in
+ Mary, always inspired her with the hope of receiving the last
+ Sacraments ere leaving this world. As soon as she heard of our
+ arrival, we were summoned to her bedside; she received the Holy
+ Viaticum and Extreme Unction, and expired a few days after,
+ filled with gratitude for her celestial Benefactress.
+
+
+CURES AND INCIDENTS OF PROTECTION. (CHINA).
+
+In a letter of July, 1838, Mgr. Rameaux, Vicar Apostolic of the
+provinces of the Kiang-Si and Tché-Kiang, in sending us the invocation
+of the medal translated into Chinese, says, that the Chinese have
+a great devotion to this little prayer, and always follow the _Ave
+Maria_ by a recitation of it. He also informed us, that Mgr. de
+Bézy, Vicar Apostolic of the Hou-Kouang, and M. Perboyre, Missionary
+Apostolic, would transmit to us several accounts of miraculous marks
+of protection. We received these accounts some months later, and quote
+them as follows:
+
+ "1st. In the province of the Hou-Kouang, a Christian had been
+ racked by a terrible fever for two months, accompanied by
+ constant delirium. Three physicians had attended him, but in
+ vain. Finding himself on the verge of death, he sent for me to
+ administer the Last Sacraments. I gave him the Holy Viaticum,
+ but deferred Extreme Unction, seeing that my duties would
+ retain me in that locality some time longer. I made him a
+ present of the medal, and advised a novena, assuring him, that
+ if it were for the benefit of his soul, he would be restored to
+ health. He began the novena; on the seventh day, the fever left
+ him, and on the eighth he had recovered his usual strength.
+ On the ninth day of the novena he came to see me, and assured
+ me that he was perfectly well. I reminded him of thanking the
+ Blessed Virgin for so great a favor, and he promised to recite
+ with his friends the Rosary in her honor. But our Christian,
+ pre-occupied with various affairs that his sickness had
+ interrupted, forgot the promise. Five days after, he had a
+ relapse. This made him conscious of his fault; he approached
+ the Sacraments again, and began another novena. Though he
+ continued to grow worse from day to day, I still had great
+ hopes that the Immaculate Mary would come to his assistance,
+ and I assured him of his recovery before the end of the novena.
+ My confidence was not deceived; he recovered entirely, to
+ the great astonishment of all the Christians. This time his
+ gratitude was effectual, and the fever did not return.
+
+ "2d. In Tien-Men, a village of the same province, the
+ Christians, numbering about two hundred, are distinguished
+ for their piety and a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin.
+ For eight years, successive inundations had reduced these
+ Christians to extreme poverty; but this year, at the first
+ sign of an overflow, they had recourse to Mary Immaculate by
+ means of the medal, and soon the waters retired without doing
+ the slightest harm to the Christian territory, whilst that of
+ the pagans was devastated. And our Christians now return most
+ grateful thanks to their good Mother for the abundant harvest
+ they have just gathered.
+
+ "3d. The following account was sent us by M. Perboyre, in
+ a letter of August 10th, 1839. The reader will learn, with
+ interest, that this is the same missionary who, arrested a
+ month after for his religion, so generously confessed the Faith
+ one whole year amidst the most frightful tortures, and at last
+ consummated the sacrifice by his glorious martyrdom, September
+ 11th, 1840.
+
+ "Whilst I was giving a mission to the Christians of the Honan
+ province, November, 1837, they brought to me a young woman
+ who had been afflicted with mental aberration for about eight
+ months, telling me she was very anxious to confess, and, though
+ she was incapable of the Sacrament, they begged me not to
+ refuse her a consolation she appeared to desire so earnestly.
+ Her sad condition of mind precluded all idea of her deriving
+ any benefit from the exercise of my ministry, but I heard her
+ out of pure compassion. In taking leave of her, I placed her
+ under the especial protection of the Blessed Virgin--that is,
+ I gave her a medal of the Immaculate Conception. She did not
+ then understand the value of the holy remedy she received;
+ but, from that moment, she began to experience its beneficial
+ effects, her shattered intellect improving so rapidly that,
+ at the end of four or five days, she was entirely changed. To
+ a complete confusion of ideas, to fears that kept her ever in
+ mortal agony, and which, I believe, were the work of the demon,
+ succeeded good sense, peace of mind and happiness. She made her
+ confession again, and received Holy Communion, with the most
+ lively sentiments of joy and fervor. This especial instance
+ of Mary's generosity will doubtless surprise you little, you
+ who know so well that the earth is filled with her mercy; but
+ your hearts will be excited anew to fervent thanksgiving for
+ this particular favor, which is the principal reason of my
+ acquainting you with it."
+
+_1st. Letter from a Missionary of Macao, dated August 25th, 1841:_
+
+ "A widow who had but one son, reared like herself in paganism,
+ saw him suddenly fall under the power of the demon; his
+ paroxysms were so furious that all fled before him, and he ran
+ through the fields uttering the most lamentable cries. Anyone
+ that attempted to stop him was immediately seized and thrown to
+ the ground. His poor mother was in despair, and almost dying
+ of grief, when Divine Providence deigned to cast upon her a
+ look of compassion. One day when he was unusually tormented,
+ the young man fled hither and thither like a vagabond, not
+ knowing where he went; everyone tried to stop him, but he
+ brutally repulsed all who lay hands on him. The most merciful
+ God permitted a Christian to be among the number of those
+ who witnessed this spectacle. Animated with a lively faith,
+ and touched at the unfortunate creature's sufferings, the
+ Christian told all who were pursuing the demoniac to desist,
+ that he unaided could arrest him, that he would quiet him, and
+ restore him docile and gentle to his mother. This language
+ astonished the pagans, but they did as requested, although
+ thinking the Christian ran a great risk. Our good Christian
+ wore the Miraculous Medal of the Immaculate Mary; taking it
+ in his hands he approached the possessed, and showing it to
+ him he commanded the demon to flee and leave the young man in
+ peace. The demon obeyed instantly, and the young man seeing
+ the medal in the Christian's hands, humbly prostrated himself
+ before the miraculous image, without knowing what it was. The
+ pagans, watching from a distance, were greatly astonished.
+ The Christian now commanded the young man to rise and follow
+ him, and still holding in his hand the medal, which was as a
+ magnet attracting the young pagan, he thus conducted him to
+ his mother. 'Mother,' he exclaimed, to her great consolation,
+ as soon as he saw her, 'Do not weep any more, I am freed from
+ the demon; he left me as soon as he perceived this medal.'
+ Imagine the poor mother's joy, on hearing these words! She was
+ perplexed to know whether it was a dream or a reality! The
+ Christian reassured her, and recounted all that had passed,
+ adding, that her son would never be possessed again, if she
+ renounced her idols and became a Christian. She promised
+ sincerely, and they immediately began to divest their altar
+ of its false gods. Then the Christian, feeling assured they
+ would be faithful when instructed in the truths of religion,
+ withdrew, laden with the thanks of both mother and son for the
+ inestimable service he had just rendered them."
+
+_2d. Extract of a Letter from M. Faivre, Priest of the Mission in the
+Province of Nankin, May 6th, 1841:_
+
+ "The two great means God uses for the accomplishment of good
+ in this Mission are our Lord's cross and the Immaculate
+ Mary's protection. As to the most powerful protection of Mary
+ conceived without sin, we have experienced it so often, and in
+ so especial a manner, both as regards ourselves and the welfare
+ of the Mission, that it would be tedious to recount in detail,
+ even if I wished to do so, all the favors we have received at
+ her maternal hands.
+
+ "Seeing the Blessed Virgin's clemency towards us and our
+ Christians, we have done all we could to honor her and advance
+ her honor among the Christians, by seeking to inspire them
+ with the most lively confidence in this good, holy Mother.
+ On the Feast of the Assumption, 1839, we consecrated this
+ Mission to her, and ever since it has been called Mary's
+ Diocese. We have given as a rule to our virgins especial
+ devotion to the Immaculate Conception. We have established Mary
+ Immaculate patroness of the seminary Providence has created
+ in this Mission. (This seminary now numbers six scholars who
+ lead lives of regularity and edification, and make rapid
+ progress in the study of Latin.) One of our virgins, already
+ advanced in age, had been for several years confined to her
+ bed, without the slightest hope of recovery, the thirteen
+ physicians who had been successively consulted having declared
+ her malady incurable. Seeing her end approach, she asked for
+ the missionary, that she might receive the Last Sacraments. He
+ came, and administered the Sacraments of the dying, exhorting
+ her to accept death in a spirit of conformity to the will of
+ God. She replied that she was fully resigned to His holy will,
+ and had no hope of deriving any benefit from human means, but
+ she felt convinced that if she could get a Miraculous Medal,
+ her health would be restored. The missionary, seeing so much
+ faith and confidence, gave her the one he wore, having no other
+ convenient just then, and recommended her to make a novena in
+ honor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin. All
+ the family joined her in making the novena, and from the fifth
+ day she was entirely cured. The attending physician, who was a
+ pagan, coming to see her at the end of the novena, was utterly
+ surprised to find her so well, and he eagerly inquired what
+ extraordinary remedy had been employed to effect such a change.
+ She replied that she had used no remedies, but the Lord of
+ Heaven had restored her health. The physician returned, filled
+ with veneration for the Lord of Heaven, who had displayed such
+ great power; and the virgin, in expression of her gratitude to
+ the Immaculate Mary, her august Benefactress, donated three
+ hundred piastres to repair a chapel dedicated to Mary."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. RATISBONNE, AN ISRAELITE.
+
+ _Rome, 1842._
+
+M. Alphonse Ratisbonne belonged to a Jewish family of Strasburg,
+distinguished in the world as much for its social position as the
+universal esteem in which it was held; he himself was a member of
+a society for the encouragement of labor, contributing thus to the
+benefit of his unfortunate brethren. Towards the end of the year 1841,
+he became affianced to a young Jewess, who united in her person all
+those qualities calculated to assure his happiness. Before entering
+upon this new state of life, he decided to take a pleasure trip to the
+East, visiting on the way some of the most remarkable cities of Italy.
+There was nothing, he thought, interesting to him in the Eternal City,
+so from Naples he would direct his course to Palermo; but Divine mercy
+called him, though he did not recognize the voice; he is constrained,
+as it were, by a secret design of Heaven, to change his determination,
+and visit Rome. It was in this centre of Catholic unity that the God
+of all patience and goodness awaited him, it was here that grace was
+to touch his heart. But what were his dispositions? Thou, O Lord,
+knowest them!... His hatred of Catholicity was very far from suggesting
+a thought of his ever embracing it. He felt for our holy and sublime
+religion that violent animosity which could not contain itself, which
+chafed at anything reminding him of Christianity, and which had even
+grown more rancorous since his brother M. Theodore Ratisbonne's
+abjuration of Judaism and reception of Holy Orders. He could not
+pardon this desertion, and his implacable hatred increased with time.
+But the innocent object of his aversion never ceased to supplicate
+Heaven to shed a ray of divine light upon the deluded brother, who
+loaded him with indignation and contempt. Made sub-Director of the
+Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des Victoires, he often implored the
+associates' prayers for this brother's conversion.
+
+Such were M. Ratisbonne's sentiments when he entered Rome. He had
+scarcely arrived ere he thought of leaving; everything he saw in the
+Holy City urged him to hasten from it, everything excited him to
+declaim against what shocked and vilified his belief.... He was not
+proof, however, against a species of emotion in visiting the church
+of Ara Coeli; but it was an emotion which lost all its influence,
+(if influence it could be said to have exerted upon this heart buried
+in the shades of death,) when he understood that it was the general
+effect produced by the first sight of this remarkable monument. So, far
+from giving way to it, he hastened, on the contrary, to affirm that
+it was not a Catholic emotion, but an impression purely religious. In
+traversing the Ghetto, his hatred against Christianity was still more
+inflamed at witnessing the misery and degradation of the Jews; as if
+the chastisement of that deicidal people had been inflicted by the
+children of the Church, as if this people had not called down upon
+itself the vengeance of innocent blood!
+
+Before leaving Rome, M. Ratisbonne was to visit one of his childhood's
+friends, an old schoolmate with whom he had always kept up an intimacy,
+although their religious belief was so widely at variance. This friend
+was M. Gustave de Bussière, a zealous Protestant, who several times had
+endeavored to profit by their intimacy, by persuading M. Ratisbonne
+to embrace Protestantism, but the latter was immovable, and the two
+friends, after useless discussions, usually ended by a renewal of
+their faith in two words, expressing most emphatically how invincible
+each deemed himself. "Headstrong Jew!" said one; "Enraged Protestant!"
+replied the other. Such was the result of these conversations, which
+never succeeded in shaking the opinion of either, or dissipating any
+of their deplorable errors. This opposition of principles, however,
+did not estrange their friendship. M. Ratisbonne called to see M.
+De Bussière, and was admitted by an Italian servant. He inquired
+for M. Gustave de Bussière, but this gentleman was absent, and by a
+providential mistake the servant introduced him into the salon of M.
+Theodore Bussière, Gustave's brother, whom M. Ratisbonne had seen but
+once. It was too late to withdraw, and though somewhat disconcerted
+at the mistake, he stopped to exchange a few words of courtesy with
+his friend's brother. M. De Bussière had had the happiness of abjuring
+Protestantism, and he was a zealous advocate of the Faith he had
+so lately learned to prize. He knew that M. Ratisbonne was a Jew;
+he received him with affectionate eagerness, and the conversation
+naturally turning upon the various places of interest in Rome visited
+by the young French traveler, it soon drifted into a religious
+discussion. M. Ratisbonne did not disguise his real sentiments, he
+expressed his animosity against Catholicity, his inalterable attachment
+to Judaism and to the baron De Bussière's solid arguments, his only
+replies were the frigid politeness of silence, a smile of pity, or new
+protestations of fidelity to his sect, repeating that a Jew he was born
+and a Jew he would die!
+
+It was then that M. De Bussière, not the least discouraged by M.
+Ratisbonne's emphatic language, and impelled by a secret impulse
+of grace, thought of offering him the Miraculous Medal. Doubtless
+this idea appears rash to many, and many would have banished it as a
+veritable folly, but the simplicity of faith teaches us to discern
+things by a very different light from that in which they are revealed
+to the world. Filled with this holy fearlessness of the Saints, M. De
+Bussière presents the young Jew a medal of the Immaculate Conception.
+"Promise me," said he, "to always wear this little image, I beg you not
+to refuse me." M. Ratisbonne, unable to conceal his astonishment at
+so strange a proposition, rejects it instantly with an expression of
+indignation that would have disconcerted any other than his new friend.
+"But," continues our fervent Catholic undismayed, "I cannot understand
+the cause of such a refusal, for, according to your view of things, the
+wearing of this object must be to you a matter of total indifference,
+whilst it would be a real consolation to me if you would condescend to
+my request." "Ah! I will comply, then, if you attach so much importance
+to it," replied the other with a hearty laugh; "I should not be sorry,
+moreover, to have an opportunity of convincing you that Jews are not
+so headstrong as they are represented. Besides, it will give me an
+interesting chapter to add to my notes and impressions of travel." And
+he continued to jest on the subject in a manner rather painful to the
+Christian hearts around him.
+
+During this debate, the good father of the family had told his two
+little daughters (interesting children, whom an eminently religious
+education had already imbued with sentiments of piety), to put the
+precious medal on a cord. They did so, and gave it to their father,
+who hung it around the young Israelite's neck. Encouraged by this
+first success, he wishes to go still farther. He attempts nothing less
+than binding M. Ratisbonne himself to ask the favor and protection of
+Mary, of Mary whom he despises without knowing, Mary whose image he
+receives most reluctantly! M. De Bussière presents him a paper upon
+which is written St. Bernard's powerful invocation, the _Memorare_....
+This time, the Jew can still less dissimulate his displeasure, it seems
+tried to the utmost; but the baron feels himself actuated by a secret
+impulse, that urges him to persevere in his solicitations, and conquer.
+He repeats his request, and even goes so far when he presents the
+prayer as to beg M. Ratisbonne to take a copy of it for him, as he has
+but one. M. Ratisbonne, convinced that resistance is useless, rather
+than repeat his refusal prefers acceding to the request, and thus
+ridding himself of such vexatious importunity. "Agreed," said he, "that
+you take my copy and I keep yours." And, hastening to this indiscreet
+zealot, he retired, murmuring to himself: "I really wonder what he
+would say if I were to insist upon his reciting the Jewish prayers?
+I must admit that I have, indeed, met a striking original!" It was
+thus he left this house of benediction and salvation, ignorant of the
+treasure he bore with him, the key of Heaven that had been given him;
+the image of the Mother of holy hope he wore upon his heart, and whose
+blessed effects he would so soon experience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. De Bussière, deeply grieved at the young Jew's levity, united with
+his family in conjuring the God of mercy to pardon the words of one who
+knew not what he said; and he recommended his dear children to lift
+up their hands to the Refuge of Sinners, supplicating her to obtain
+the gift of Faith for this poor soul in the shades of darkness and
+error!... O Mary! your tender love graciously welcomed these prayers of
+the innocent, they penetrated your maternal heart, and soon obtained
+the object of their desires. The zeal of this devout servant of the
+Queen of Heaven was not confined within the narrow limits of his own
+family circle.... Going, that evening, according to a pious custom in
+Rome, to keep watch before the Blessed Sacrament with the prince B.
+and some other friends, he also engaged their prayers for the young
+Israelite's conversion.... Let us follow attentively all the details
+preceding the ever memorable day which was to crown M. De Bussière's
+pious efforts. Let us not forget that a generous Christian, elevated by
+a lively faith above the vain prejudices of the world, and docile to
+the secret inspirations of grace, becomes the instrument of Providence
+in procuring God's glory and the salvation of a soul.
+
+Meanwhile, M. Ratisbonne was making arrangements to leave Rome; he
+had already fixed upon the day of his departure, and had come to say
+good-bye to his friend and acquaint him with his intention of starting
+the next evening. "Going!" replied M. De Bussière; "do not think of
+it. I want you to grant me just eight days longer; our conversation of
+yesterday occupies my thoughts more than ever; let me entreat you to
+prolong your stay, and let us go to the diligence office to countermand
+your order." It was in vain. M. Ratisbonne declined, saying he had
+already decided to go, and had no motive for deferring his departure.
+Under the pretext of a very imposing ceremony which was to take place
+at St. Peter's, M. De Bussière forced, rather than persuaded him to
+remain a few days longer.
+
+We shall not here enter into a detailed account of what passed
+between them from the moment M. De Bussière's constancy gained the
+last triumph--that is, from the 16th of January to the 20th--inasmuch
+as there was not the slightest sign of the happy change, either in
+the language or conduct of M. Ratisbonne, towards the new friend
+divine Providence had given him, in spite of himself. He could not,
+however, avoid receiving this new friend's civilities, or refuse to
+be accompanied by him in visiting the various places of note in the
+Eternal City. M. De Bussière, full of hope against all human hope,
+allowed no opportunity to escape of enlightening his young friend; but
+not one consoling response could he obtain, M. Ratisbonne, by jest and
+raillery, always avoiding the arguments he would not take the trouble
+to refute, always ridiculing Catholicity, and thus afflicting the heart
+of the servant of Jesus Christ by responding coldly to the assiduity of
+his zeal, the serious nature of his propositions. "Make your mind easy;
+I will think of all this, but not at Rome. I am to spend two months
+at Malta; it will serve to while away the time." He was astonished at
+the imperturbable tranquillity with which M. De Bussière persevered in
+trying to convince him; he could not understand that union of serenity
+(which religion alone inspires) with that ardent desire (that he
+doubtless attributed to obstinacy) of leading him to a new belief, for
+which, according to his own words, he felt more aversion than ever. To
+him this tranquillity appeared incomprehensible. M. De Bussière did
+not hesitate to express his belief in the triumph of his cause; for
+instance, in passing the _Scala Sancta_ with the young Israelite, as
+he pointed it out he bared his head respectfully and said aloud, as
+if in a voice of prophecy, "Hail, holy staircase! here is a man who
+one day will ascend your steps on his knees." This was on the 19th.
+M. Ratisbonne's only response was a disconcerting peal of laughter,
+and the two friends separated again, without the slightest religious
+impression having been made upon the Israelite, although, unknown to
+human ken, he was on the eve of the brightest day of his life.
+
+During this short interval, M. De Bussière tasted the bitterness of
+losing one of his dearest friends. M. De La Ferronays died suddenly on
+the evening of the 17th, leaving to his family and all who knew him
+the sweet hope that he had bid adieu to this perishable life only to
+enter upon the joys of a blissful immortal one. Doubtless this event
+contributed to the young Israelite's speedy conversion, for whilst on
+earth M. De La Ferronays had prayed for him, and we have every reason
+to believe that he soon became his advocate in heaven. M. De Bussière
+had informed this dear friend of his hopes and the means employed for
+gaining the young Israelite to Jesus Christ, and he had received the
+consoling answer: "Do not be uneasy; if you have succeeded in making
+him say the _Memorare_, he is yours." ... Such was the admirable
+confidence of this fervent Christian in the powerful protection of the
+most compassionate Virgin Mary!
+
+Yet notwithstanding the bitterness of the sacrifice Heaven had just
+demanded of the Baron De Bussière, he found it hard to part from this
+young man whom he longed to conquer to the Faith, and the resignation
+of his grief was a new prayer attracting the Divine mercy. Immediately
+after leaving him on the 19th, he went to prostrate himself beside the
+remains of his virtuous friend, begging that friend's assistance from
+the heights of heaven in obtaining what had been already recommended to
+his prayers on earth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thursday, 20th.--M. Ratisbonne's dispositions are not changed in the
+least; he never raises his thoughts above terrestrial things, the
+religious discussions of the preceding days have not even fixed his
+attention, or apparently not excited in his soul the slightest anxiety.
+As to his false belief, he never dreams of taking one step towards a
+knowledge of the truth; M. De Bussière is not with him to continue the
+conversation on religion, and he dismisses the subject from his mind.
+Leaving the café, he meets one of his fellow-boarders; they discourse
+of balls and other frivolous amusements in such a way as to convince
+one that he was surely not engrossed with anything serious. It was then
+noon, and two hours later the young Jew had seen the light, two hours
+later he eagerly desired the grace of holy baptism, two hours later he
+believed in the Church!... Who is like to Thee, O my God? Who can thus,
+in an instant, triumph over human reason, and force it to render homage
+to Thy sovereign truth?... Ah! it is Thyself, Thyself alone, Lord, it
+is the prerogative of Thy mercy to work such prodigies! Let us return
+to our Israelite.
+
+It is one o'clock; M. De Bussière must repair to the church of
+St. Andrew delle Fratte to make some arrangements for the funeral
+ceremonies of M. De La Ferronays, which take place on the morrow. He
+sets out, and on the way happily meets M. Ratisbonne, who joins him,
+with the intention of taking one of their usual walks, when M. De
+Bussière had fulfilled the imperative duty that required his immediate
+attention.... But the moment of grace has come. They enter the church,
+where various decorations already announce the morrow's ceremonies;
+the Israelite inquires the meaning of them, and M. De Bussière, having
+replied that they were for the funeral obsequies of M. De La Ferronays,
+the intimate friend he had just lost, begs him to wait there an
+instant, whilst he goes into the house to execute a commission with
+one of the monks. M. Ratisbonne then glances coolly around the church,
+seeming to say by his air of indifference, that it is not worth his
+attention. We must remark that he was then at the epistle side of
+the altar. M. De Bussière returns after an absence of about twelve
+minutes, and is surprised at not seeing his young companion. Could he
+have grown weary of waiting in a place that inspired only repugnance
+and disgust?... He knew not, and sought M. Ratisbonne. What was his
+astonishment at finding him on the left hand side of the church,
+kneeling, and apparently wrapt in devotion!... He could scarcely
+believe his eyes, and yet it was no mistake.... It was in the chapel
+of the archangel St. Michael that the prince of darkness had just been
+crushed.... A great victory already rejoiced all Heaven.... The young
+Jew was vanquished.
+
+M. De Bussière approaches, but he is not heard; he touches his
+friend, but he cannot distract him; he touches him again, but still
+no response; he repeats it a third or fourth time, and at last M.
+Ratisbonne turns to answer, and his tearful countenance, his utter
+inability to express what has passed, his hands clasped most fervently,
+partly reveal the heavenly secret. "Oh! how M. De La Ferronays has
+prayed for me!" he exclaims. This is all he says. Never did M. De
+Bussière enjoy a more consoling surprise. The bandage of error blinding
+the young Israelite had fallen, and M. De Bussière's heart was filled
+with the most lively gratitude to God.... He raises his young friend,
+who was completely overcome by this celestial visitation; he takes
+him and almost carries him out of the church.... He is all eagerness
+to know the details.... He asks M. Ratisbonne to reveal the mystery,
+and begs him to say where he wishes to go. "Lead me," replies the new
+Paul, completely vanquished, "lead me where you will.... After what
+I have seen, I obey." ... And not being able to say more, he draws
+forth the unknown treasure he had been wearing upon his heart for four
+days. He takes the dear medal in his hands, he covers it with kisses,
+he waters it abundantly with tears of joy, and amidst his sobs escape
+a few words expressive of his happiness, but which a profound emotion
+almost prevents his articulating. "How good is God! What a plentitude
+of gifts! What joy unknown! Ah! how happy I am, and how much to be
+pitied are they who do not believe!" And continuing to shed torrents
+of tears over the miseries of those whom Faith has never enlightened,
+he already feels the holy desire of seeing the kingdom of Jesus Christ
+extended throughout the world. He can scarcely himself understand such
+a transformation, and amidst the various feelings surging through his
+heart, he interrupts his tears, his exclamations and his silence, to
+ask M. De Bussière if he does not think him crazy.... Then answering
+his own question, "No," he continues: "I am not crazy.... I know well
+what I think and what passes within me.... I know that I am in my right
+mind.... Moreover, everybody knows that I am not crazy!" By degrees,
+these first transports of emotion give place to a more composed frame
+of mind; he can at last express his new desires, his new belief, and
+he asks to be conducted to the feet of a priest, for he craves the
+grace of holy baptism.... Already favored with the most lively Faith,
+he aspires after the happiness of confessing his Divine Master in the
+midst of torments and recalling the sufferings of the martyrs he had
+seen represented upon the walls of St. Étienne le Rond; he wishes to
+shed his blood in attestation of his Faith as a disciple of Jesus
+Christ.... Meanwhile, he has told M. De Bussière nothing of the sudden
+blow that vanquished him, and he refuses to tell except in the presence
+of God's minister; "for what he saw he ought not, he could not reveal
+except on his knees."
+
+Father De Villefort, of the Society of Jesus, is chosen to receive
+the neophyte and hear this consoling secret, which will reveal the
+excess of Divine mercy towards the soul of the young Israelite. M. De
+Bussière himself conducts him to the Reverend Father, who welcomes him
+tenderly.... Then, in the presence of M. De Bussière, M. Ratisbonne
+takes in his hand the medal, the dear pledge of the Immaculate Mary's
+protection, and again covers it with respectful kisses, mingled with a
+shower of tears. He endeavors to overcome his emotion, and exclaims in
+a transport of joy: "I have seen her! I have seen her!" Conquering his
+feelings, he continues his narration, interrupted from time to time by
+the sighs of an overburdened heart.
+
+ "I had been in the church but an instant, when suddenly I was
+ seized with an inexplicable fear. I raised my eyes, the whole
+ edifice had disappeared from my view, one chapel alone had,
+ as it were, concentrated all the light, and in the midst
+ of this effulgence there appeared standing upon the altar the
+ Virgin Mary, grand, brilliant, full of majesty and sweetness,
+ such as she is represented upon the medal--an irresistible
+ force impelled me to her. The Virgin made me a sign with her
+ hand to kneel, and she seemed to say: 'It is well.' She did not
+ speak to me, but I understood all."
+
+[Illustration: _APPARITION OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL_
+
+_To M. Ratisbonne, January 20, 1842, in the Church of St. Andrew,
+delle Fratte, in Rome. "She did not speak one word to me," said M.
+Ratisbonne, "but I understood it all._"]
+
+He ceased, but this short account eloquently revealed the abundant
+favors with which his soul had just been inundated. Reverend Father De
+Villefort and the pious baron listened with a holy joy, mingled with an
+involuntary feeling of religious awe, at thoughts of the infinite power
+which had just triumphed by such a striking manifestation of mercy....
+The mystery was revealed, but M. Ratisbonne, now the disciple of the
+most humble of Masters, a God annihilated, expressed a wish to have the
+wonderful vision kept a profound secret; he even earnestly entreated
+that it should be, but Father De Villefort considered it wiser not
+to yield to the neophyte's modesty, God's glory, the Immaculate
+Mary's honor, demanding that such a miracle should be proclaimed. M.
+Ratisbonne's humility gave way to obedience. In the brief narration
+just quoted, one thing especially had struck the Reverend Father,
+"She did not speak to me, but I understood all!" What, then, had he
+understood, he who, having hitherto lived in the shades of darkness,
+found himself in an instant instructed in heavenly knowledge? What,
+then, had he understood, he who was suddenly recalled from the bosom of
+death which he loved, to a new life which but a short time previous he
+had solemnly declared he would ever ignore, 'a Jew he was born and a
+Jew he would die?' What had he understood, he the young Jew, so lately
+headstrong in his belief, an avowed enemy of Catholicity, but who now
+humbly prostrates himself at the feet of our Lord's minister to retract
+his words and renounce his own will, for he declares that, after what
+he has seen, he obeys?... What has he understood? What has he seen? He
+has seen the Mother of divine grace, the bright aurora of the Sun of
+Justice; he has understood the gift of God, the eternal truth ... the
+unity of the Church, its infallibility, the sanctity of its morals, the
+sublimity of its mysteries, the grandeur and elevation of its hopes....
+He has understood Heaven, and henceforth everything is changed for
+him, everything is renewed within him, he is no longer the same. His
+desires, projects, thoughts, earthly affections, where are they in the
+brilliancy of this celestial radiance? Vain prejudices of error, where
+are they?... The Immaculate Mother of Jesus has rent asunder the band
+that veiled the young Israelite's eyes, and the shades of error are
+dissipated, the blind man sees the light, and his joy is inexpressible,
+for he knew not till then the true gifts, the blessings promised the
+children of the true Church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Ratisbonne had heretofore been completely ignorant of the truths
+of Catholicity, he acknowledges that he had never read even one book
+calculated to enlighten him on the subject, his hatred of Christianity
+kept him aloof from all that might change his views in regard to it.
+He blasphemed without examining the object of his blasphemy, he judged
+without hearing, he despised without investigating.... And behold!
+in spite of himself, in an instant, in defiance of all his past
+protestations, he bends, he falls, he is conquered!
+
+Rejoice, O Mary! for the dew of grace has not descended upon an
+ungrateful soil.... No; not in vain at your mysterious school has he
+learned all this privileged soul of your love, this heart that your
+incomparable beauty, your ineffable bounty have vanquished for Jesus
+Christ!
+
+We see, indeed, that, from the moment his eyes are opened to the
+light, he adores the mysteries he formerly despised, loves what he
+hated, venerates what he ridiculed, and proves himself as humble
+and submissive to the Church as the most fervent Christian. That
+very day, he goes to the basilica of St. Mary Major, in tribute of
+gratitude to her who had just descended from Heaven, to bring him the
+gift of Faith, and its attendant blessings; thence he repairs to St.
+Peter's, to declare in that sanctuary dedicated to the Prince of the
+Apostles, his belief in the truths that Peter taught. M. De Bussière,
+who found a pious delight in offering to God this conquest of grace,
+accompanied him on his holy pilgrimage, and conversed intimately with
+him, they had but one heart and one soul. A new Paul, Ratisbonne, in
+what he experienced, at the moment the Blessed Virgin gently forced
+him to prostrate himself at her feet, to receive the light of Heaven,
+recognized the strength of Him who vanquished His persecutors.... The
+profound emotion, the holy awe that filled the neophyte on entering
+a church, declared more fully the secrets that had been revealed to
+him.... Penetrated with the liveliest faith for the great Sacrament
+of love, he could not approach the altar, he was overwhelmed at the
+thought of the Real Presence of the God who resides in the Most
+Holy Sacrament. He considered himself unworthy to appear in this
+august Presence, as he was yet stained with original sin, and M. De
+Bussière relates, that he took refuge in a chapel, consecrated to the
+Blessed Virgin, exclaiming: "I have no fears here, for I feel myself
+under the protection of a boundless mercy." O Mary! you opened your
+maternal heart, and there he concealed himself, knowing that divine
+justice yields to mercy, when the guilty soul has found and invoked
+with confidence the Refuge of Sinners.... So great was the fervent
+neophyte's happiness when in the temple of the Lord, that he was unable
+to find words expressive of his happiness. "Ah!" said he in a holy
+transport, "how delightful it is to be here! How great reason have
+Catholics to love their churches and to frequent them! How zealous
+they should be in ornamenting them! How sweet to spend a lifetime in
+these holy places! They are truly not of earth but of Heaven!" Ah! are
+we not confounded and abashed by the fervor of him who has just been
+born into the truth! What would he think of the coldness, the levity,
+the ingratitude of the majority of Christians?... Let us acknowledge
+it to our confusion; there is a Host who dwells in our midst, and
+whom we know not; we who eat at His table, who feed upon His own
+flesh, the Bread descended from Heaven, and behold! a young Israelite,
+instructed but a few hours in the wonders of God's love, teaches us how
+we must conduct ourselves in the presence of this Host, and with what
+sentiments our hearts should then be filled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next day, the news of this wonderful conversion had spread through
+Rome; every one was anxious to learn something about it, and collected
+with pious curiosity the various statements in circulation; every one
+wished to see the newly converted and hear his account.... General
+Chlabonski even went to M. De Bussière's house. "So you have seen the
+image of the Blessed Virgin," said he, accosting the neophyte. "The
+image?" answered the latter, "ah! it was no image, but herself I saw;
+yes, M. her real self, just as I see you now!" We must here remark that
+to the Church alone, appertains the power of judging and qualifying
+this vision; but every one was impressed with the fact, that mistake
+or illusion seemed impossible, considering the young Israelite's
+character, education, prejudices and horror for Christianity; moreover,
+in this chapel there was neither statue, picture nor any representation
+whatever of the Blessed Virgin. And we love to quote here the words of
+a wise man, who, referring to the event, says, "that without one grain
+of exaggeration, just as it happened, just as all Rome narrates it, the
+unexpected fact, the public fact of this conversion, considering all
+the circumstances, would of itself be a miracle, if a miracle had not
+caused it."
+
+M. Ratisbonne reluctantly gave the details of what he had seen. When
+questioned closely as to what took place at the moment he found himself
+environed by this celestial effulgence, he answers ingenuously that he
+could not account for the involuntary impulse causing him to leave the
+right hand side of the church for the chapel on the left, especially
+as he was separated from it by the preparations for the morrow's
+ceremonies; that, when the Queen of Heaven appeared before him in all
+the glory and brilliancy of her immaculate purity, he caught a glimpse
+of her incomparable beauty, but immediately realized the impossibility
+of contemplating it, that urged by the desire, three times had he
+endeavored to lift his eyes to the face of this Mother of mercy, whose
+sweet clemency had deigned to manifest herself to him, and three times,
+in spite of himself, had his gaze been stayed at sight of the blessed
+hands, whence escaped a torrent of graces. "I could not," he told us
+himself after his arrival, "I could not express what I saw of mercy and
+liberality in Mary's hands. It was not only an effulgence of light,
+it was not rays I distinguished, words are inadequate to depict the
+ineffable gifts filling our Mother's hands, and descending from them,
+the bounty, mercy, tenderness, the celestial sweetness and riches,
+flowing in torrents and inundating the souls she protects."
+
+In the first moments of his conversion, M. Ratisbonne gave vent to some
+of those thoughts which strongly pre-occupied him, those outpourings
+of a fervent heart which happily, are still preserved. "O my God!"
+he exclaimed in a transport of astonishment and gratitude, "I, who
+only half an hour before was blaspheming! I, who felt such violent
+hatred against the Catholic religion!... Every one of my acquaintances
+knew full well, that to all human appearances, it was impossible for
+me ever to think of changing my religion. My family was Jewish, my
+betrothed, my uncle were Jewish. In embracing Christianity, I know that
+I break away from all earthly hopes and interests.... And yet I do
+it willingly; I renounce the passing happiness of a future which was
+promised me; I do so without hesitation, I act from conviction; ...
+for I am not crazy, and have never been; they well know it.... Who,
+then, could refuse to believe me, and believe in the truth?... The most
+powerful interests enchained me to my religion, and consequently all
+should be convinced that a man who sacrifices everything to a profound
+conviction must sacrifice to a celestial light, which has revealed
+itself by incontrovertible evidence. What I have affirmed is true. I
+know it, I feel it; and what could be my object in thus betraying the
+truth and turning aside from religion by a sacrilegious lie?... I have
+not said too much; my words must carry conviction."
+
+The Baron De Bussière had the consolation of entertaining at his own
+home the new son Heaven had given him; the young Jew remained there
+until the retreat preceding his baptism. It was right and just,
+indeed, that this friend should gather the first bloom of a heart
+refreshed by the dew of grace, that he should be the happy witness of
+the wonders wrought in that soul.... M. Ratisbonne himself had need
+of a confidant, some one that understood him thoroughly, and to whom
+he could communicate the emotions of his heart.... It was in moments
+of sweet intimacy, when alone with his friend, that he could give
+full vent to his feelings, and, in unison with him, admire the loving
+designs of divine Providence, and the means that had dissipated such
+deplorable errors. He bewailed the blindness in which he had lived!...
+"Alas!" said he, "when my excellent brother embraced Catholicity,
+and afterwards entered into the ecclesiastical state, I, of all his
+relatives, was his most unrelenting persecutor.... I could not forgive
+his desertion of our religion--we were at variance, at least; I
+detested him, though he had none but the kindest thoughts for me....
+However, at the time of my betrothal, I said to myself that I must be
+reconciled to my brother, and I wrote him a few cold lines, to which
+he replied by a letter full of charity and tenderness.... One of my
+little nephews died about eighteen months ago. My good brother, having
+learned that he was seriously ill, asked as a personal favor that the
+child be baptized before its death, adding, with great delicacy, that
+to us it would be a matter of indifference, whilst to himself it would
+be a veritable happiness, and he hoped we would not refuse. I was
+infuriated at such a request!
+
+"I hope, oh! yes, I hope that my God will send me severe trials, which
+may redound to His honor and glory, and convince all that I am actuated
+by conscience...." What generosity of heart! What knowledge! His eyes
+are scarcely opened to the truths of Catholicity, ere he embraces
+them in their full extent.... He knows already that the cross is the
+distinctive mark of the children of the Church, of God's elect, and
+this cross which so many Christians drag reluctantly after them, he
+greets, he awaits, he desires.... Moreover, it had been shown to him in
+a very mysterious manner; for he relates that the night preceding his
+conversion there was constantly before his eyes a large cross without
+the Christ, that the sight really fatigued him, although he considered
+it of no importance. "I made," said he, "incredible efforts to banish
+this image, but in vain. It was only later, when having, by chance,
+seen the reverse of the Miraculous Medal, he recognized the exact sign
+which had struck him.
+
+Divine Providence, looking with a loving eye upon this young convert,
+directed his steps, and in these early days of his conversion, led
+him to a venerable Father who was to give him very precious counsel,
+upon the life of abnegation and perpetual sacrifice he had embraced.
+This servant of the Lord, immediately lay before him the importance
+of the step he had taken, the trials awaiting him, the temptation that
+would most assuredly beset his path, and without fearing to shake
+his constancy, he read him a few verses of the second chapter of
+Ecclesiasticus, upon the trials testing the virtue of the true servant
+and friend of God. With pleasure we quote here a part of this good
+priest's instructions:
+
+ "My son, when thou comest to the service of God, stand in
+ justice and in fear, and prepare thy soul for temptation.
+ Humble thy heart and endure; incline thy ear, and receive the
+ words of understanding; and make not haste in the time of
+ clouds. Wait on God with patience; join thyself to God and
+ endure, that thy life may be increased in the latter end. Take
+ all that shall be brought upon thee; and in thy sorrow endure,
+ and in thy humiliation keep patience. For gold and silver
+ are tried in the fire, but acceptable men in the furnace of
+ humiliation. Believe God, and He will recover thee; and direct
+ thy way, and trust in Him. Keep His fear, and grow old therein."
+
+M. Ratisbonne listened in respectful silence to these words of life; he
+cherished the remembrance of them, and the eve of his baptism, he asked
+the Reverend Father to put them in writing that he might meditate upon
+them the rest of his days.... It was accomplished, the joys of earth
+were sacrificed to the glory of bearing the cross of Jesus Christ....
+He was initiated into heavenly secrets by reason of those favors the
+Immaculate Mary had conferred upon him.... He already felt the strength
+that God communicates to the soul, resolved to share the sorrows of its
+divine Master.
+
+Ten days elapsed between the happy moment of the young Israelite's
+sudden comprehension of the truth, and his baptism. The Mother of Mercy
+had brought him from Heaven, the torch of Faith; in enlightening his
+intelligence, she had touched his heart; he sighed after the happy day,
+when the Church would admit him among the number of her children, and
+it was on the 31st of January, this tender Mother opened to him all
+her treasures, clothed him with innocence, called down upon him the
+plenitude of the gifts of the Spirit of love, and invited him to the
+banquet of Angels that she might give him the Bread of life.
+
+The Gésu was the church selected for this solemn ceremony. Long before
+the appointed hour, it was filled with a devout, eager multitude, all
+anxious to get as near as possible to the holy altar. Nothing disturbed
+the beauty or serenity of the occasion, no cloud dimmed the brightness
+of this heavenly festival, which inundated truly Christian hearts with
+the purest joys.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, clothed in the white robe of the catechumen, appeared
+about half-past eight, accompanied by the Reverend Father Villefort,
+(whose consoling duty it had been to prepare the neophyte for this
+beautiful day), and the Baron De Bussière, his god-father. They
+conducted him into the chapel of St. Andrew, where the touching
+ceremony was to take place. An object of the most profound curiosity,
+the fervent neophyte, wrapt in recollection, awaited with angelic
+serenity, the solemn moment.... The pious Romans gave vent to their
+feelings by words and gestures, kissing their chaplets in an effusion
+of grateful love for Mary Immaculate, the cause of our joy.... They
+pointed out one to another the zealous baron, whom divine Providence
+had chosen to give the Miraculous Medal to the young Israelite. "He is
+a Frenchman," they repeated, "He is a Frenchman! Blessed be God!"
+
+His Eminence, the Cardinal Vicar, was to receive M. Ratisbonne's
+profession of Faith. He appeared at nine, clothed in his pontifical
+robes, and commenced the prayers prescribed for the baptism of adults.
+
+The prayers terminated, His Eminence went in procession with the
+clergy to the foot of the church; the young Israelite was conducted
+to his presence. "What do you ask of the Church of God?" "Faith,"
+was the immediate answer. "What name do you wish?" "Mary," said the
+neophyte, in a tone of tender gratitude; Mary, who had opened to him
+the path of salvation; Mary, who was to conduct him into the new life;
+Mary, who will one day introduce him into the City of the Saints,
+whence she descended to lead him to the divine fold.... Then followed
+his profession of Faith, his solemn promises.... He believes all,
+he promises all, he accepts all, he wishes to be a Christian, he is
+already one at heart.... His desires are gratified, the vivifying
+waters are poured upon his head, the grace of holy baptism has invested
+him with all the rights of his eternal heritage, the spirit of darkness
+is confounded. Behold the child of God, the brother of Jesus Christ,
+the new sanctuary of the Spirit of love, the favorite of the Queen of
+Heaven, the friend of Angels and the well-beloved son of Mother Church!
+
+It was on this occasion that the Abbé Dupanloup, who happened to be in
+Rome at the time, celebrated before an immense audience the infinite
+mercies of God and the Immaculate Mary's miraculous protection of a
+child of France. We cannot refrain from inserting here a few fragments
+of the account printed at Rome. It is well calculated to increase
+devotion to Mary:
+
+ "How admirable are the thoughts and ways of divine Providence,
+ and how deplorable the lot of those who neither comprehend nor
+ bless them. For such, the life of man is only a sad mystery,
+ his days a fatal series of events, man himself a noble but
+ miserable creature, cast far from Heaven upon this land of
+ tears, to live here in perpetual darkness, to die in despair,
+ oblivious of a God who heeds neither his virtues nor his
+ sorrows.... But, no; Lord, Thou art not forgetful of us, and
+ life is not thus; despite our infinite misery, thy Providence
+ watches over us, it is far above the heavens, more boundless
+ than the sea--it is an abyss of power, wisdom and love.----
+
+ "Thou hast made us for Thyself, Lord, and our hearts are never
+ at rest until they repose in Thee! We feel an insatiable need,
+ which stirs the depths of our being, which consumes us, and
+ when we yield to it, we inevitably find Thee!
+
+ "I bless Thee especially, I adore Thee, when from the depths of
+ Thy eternity, Thou dost remember compassionately the lowliness
+ of our being, the dust of which we are fashioned; when from the
+ heights of heaven, Thou dost cast a glance of pity and love
+ upon the most humble of Thy children; when, according to the
+ Prophet's expression, 'Thou dost move heaven and earth,' and
+ work innumerable marvels to save those who are dear to Thee, to
+ conquer one soul!
+
+ "O, you, upon whom, at this moment, all eyes are bent with
+ inexpressible emotion, with the tenderest love; for it is God,
+ it is His mercy we love in you, in you whose presence in this
+ holy place inspires these thoughts, tell us yourself what were
+ your thoughts and ways, by what secret mercy the Lord pursued
+ and reclaimed you?
+
+ For who are you? What do you seek in this sanctuary? What are
+ these honors you seem to bear? What is this white robe in which
+ I see you clothed? Tell us whence you came and whither you
+ were going? What obstacle has suddenly changed your course?
+ For walking in the footsteps of Abraham, your ancestor, whose
+ blessed son you are this day, like him, blindly obedient to
+ the voice of God, not knowing whither your journey tends, you
+ suddenly find yourself in the Holy City.... The Lord's work was
+ not yet accomplished; but it is for you to describe to us the
+ rising of the Sun of truth and justice upon your soul, for you
+ to picture its brilliant aurora.... Tell us why you enjoy, like
+ ourselves, perhaps more keenly than ourselves, the good word,
+ the virtues of the future and all our most blessed hopes....
+ Tell us, for we have the right to know, why you enter into
+ possession of our goods as your heritage? Who has introduced
+ you among us, for yesterday we knew you not, or rather we knew
+ you.... Oh! yes, I shall tell all; I know the joy that will
+ fill your heart at my revealing your miseries as well as the
+ celestial mercies.----
+
+ "You did not love the truth, but the truth loved you. To
+ the purest and most ardent efforts of a zeal that sought
+ to enlighten you, did you oppose a disdainful smile, an
+ indifferent silence, a subtle response, a haughty firmness, and
+ sometimes blasphemous pleasantries. O patient God! O God, who
+ lovest us in spite of our miseries! Thy mercy has oftentimes
+ a depth, a sublimity, a tenderness and, allow me to say it, a
+ power and delicacy that are infinite!
+
+ "Suddenly a rumor is circulated throughout the Holy City, a
+ rumor that consoles all Christian hearts, he who blasphemed
+ yesterday, who this morning even ridiculed the friends of
+ God, has become a disciple of Christ; celestial grace has
+ touched his lips, he utters now only words of benediction
+ and sweetness, the most vivid lights of the evangelical law
+ seem to beam from his eyes; we may say that a celestial
+ unction has taught him all things. Whence does he receive this
+ enlightenment of the eyes of the heart, that heart which sees
+ all, which has understood all? O God! Thou art good, infinitely
+ good, and I love to repeat those sweet words, so lately on the
+ blessed lips of him, whose memory is henceforth ineffaceably
+ impressed upon our hearts. We wept over him a few days ago,
+ we still regret him, but we have dried our tears. 'Yes, Thou
+ art good, and the children of men have truly called Thee the
+ good God!' (Last words of M. de La Ferronays.) Thou dost set
+ aside the laws of nature, Thou dost account nothing too much to
+ save Thy children! When Thou dost not come Thyself, Thou dost
+ send Thy angels!... O God! shall I here relate all? I ought
+ to enjoin reserve upon my speech.... But who is she? _Quæ est
+ ista?_ I cannot say the word, and yet I cannot be silent.
+
+ "Hail Mary! You are full of grace; _Ave, gratia plena_, and
+ from the plentitude of your maternal heart, you love to bestow
+ your gifts upon us. The Lord is with you, _Dominus tecum_,
+ and it is through you He is pleased to descend to us! And now
+ to praise you worthily, I must borrow the images of Heaven or
+ speak the inflamed language of the prophets! For, O Mary! your
+ name is sweeter than the purest joys, more delightful than the
+ most exquisite perfumes, more charming than the harmony of
+ angels, _in corde jubilus_; more refreshing to the faithful
+ heart than honeycomb to the wearied traveler, _mel in lingua_;
+ more encouraging and cheering to the guilty but repentant heart
+ than the evening dew to the leaves parched and shriveled by
+ the mid-day sun, _ros in herba_. You are beautiful as the orb
+ of night, _pulchra ut luna_; you, who guide the bewildered
+ traveler; you are brilliant as the aurora, _aurora consurgens_;
+ fair and pure as the morning star, _stella matutina_; and it is
+ you who precede the dawn of the Sun of Justice in our hearts.
+
+ "O Mary! I can never portray all your loveliness and grandeur,
+ and it is my joy to succumb beneath the weight of so much
+ glory! But since I speak in the midst of your children, your
+ children who are my brothers, I shall continue to proclaim
+ your praises from the depths of my heart's affection.... At
+ your name, O Mary, Heaven rejoices, earth quivers with joy,
+ hell fumes with impotent rage.... No, there is no creature so
+ sublime or so humble, that invoking you, will perish. Those
+ august basilicas, erected by the piety of mighty nations,
+ those golden characters, those rich banners worked by royal
+ hands, likewise the modest offerings of the sailor in your
+ lowly chapels, in the crevices of the rock, on the shores of
+ the sea, or even your humble picture which martyr's hands have
+ traced upon the catacombs, all attest your power in appeasing
+ the tempests of divine wrath, and attracting upon us heavenly
+ benedictions.
+
+ "O Mary, I have seen the most savage wilds of nature smile
+ at your name and blossom into beauty; the pious inhabitants
+ of the deserts celebrate your glory, the mountain echoes,
+ the torrent billows, vie with one another in repeating your
+ praises. I have seen great cities bring forth and cherish,
+ under the shadow of your name, the purest and most noble
+ virtues. I have seen youth, with generous impulse, confident
+ ardor, and the inexpressible charm of virtue irradiating its
+ countenance, prefer your name and the happiness of celebrating
+ your festivals to all the enchantments of the world and its
+ most brilliant destinies! I have seen old men, after a godless
+ life of sixty or eighty years, rise upon their couch of pain,
+ to remember at the sound of your name the God who had blessed
+ their early infancy; you were to them as a pledge of security
+ and of peaceful entrance into the Eternal City! O Mary, who are
+ you then? _Quæ est ista?_ You are the Mother of our Saviour,
+ and Jesus, the fruit of your womb, is the God blessed from
+ all eternity. You are our Sister, _soror nostra es_; though a
+ child of Adam like ourselves, you have not participated in our
+ sad heritage, and our woes excite your deepest and most tender
+ compassion.
+
+ "O Mary! you are the masterpiece of the Divine power! You are
+ the most touching invention of God's goodness! I could not say
+ more--you are the sweetest smile of His mercy! O God, give eyes
+ to those who have them not--eyes that they may see Mary and
+ understand the beautiful light of her maternal glance; and to
+ those who have no heart give one, that they may love Mary; for
+ from Mary to the Word Eternal, to the Beauty ever ancient and
+ ever new, to that uncreated Light which strengthens the feeble
+ sight and appeases every desire of our souls, from Mary to
+ Jesus, from the Mother to the Son, there is but a step!----
+
+ "Our dearly beloved brother--and I am happy to be the first
+ to call you thus--behold under what favorable auspices you
+ enter this new Jerusalem, the tabernacle of the Lord, 'the
+ Church of the living God, which is the pillar and ground of
+ truth. But before delivering your heart to these emotions of
+ joy, there is one severe lesson it should learn this day; and
+ since I am destined to be the first to announce to you the
+ words of the Gospel, I shall conceal from you nothing of the
+ austerity it inculcates. 'You have understood all,' you say;
+ but let me ask if you have understood the mystery of the cross.
+ Ah! be careful, for it is the foundation of Christianity. I
+ speak now not only of that blessed cross which you lovingly
+ adore, because it places before your eyes Jesus crucified in
+ expiation of your sins, but borrowing the emphatic language of
+ an ancient apologist of our Faith, I shall say to you: 'This is
+ no question of the cross that is sweet for you to adore, but
+ of the cross to which you must soon submit.' _Ecce cruces jam
+ non adorandæ, sed subeundæ._ Behold what you must understand if
+ you are a Christian and what baptism must disclose to you!...
+ Moreover, in vain would I endeavor to dissimulate the truth, by
+ saying that your future may reveal no crosses; I see them in
+ store for you. No doubt, we must venerate them afar off, but
+ it is infinitely better to bend beneath their weight when laid
+ upon us, and courageously carry them. I shall be mistaken, if
+ the evangelic virtues are not increased and fortified in your
+ soul by patience. And blessed be God for it! You have been
+ introduced into Christianity through Mary and the Cross!...
+ It is an admirable mode of introduction! And again I repeat,
+ blessed be God for it! For I say to you, He has given you
+ ears to hear and a heart to feel this language! Son of the
+ Catholic Church you will share your Mother's destiny! Look
+ at Rome, Rome where you have just been born into the Church;
+ her heritage here below, is always to combat and always to
+ triumph. Moreover, nothing astonishes her; and after eighteen
+ centuries of combats and victories, it is here, in the centre
+ of Catholic unity, at the foot of the Apostolic See, that focus
+ whence daily emanate the most vivid and purest rays of Faith,
+ piercing the shades of paganism, error and Judaism, that the
+ Church has poured over your forehead the beneficent water of
+ celestial regeneration. What do I say? It is Peter himself, the
+ Moses of the new law, worthily represented by the first Vicar
+ of his august Successor, who has struck for you the mysterious
+ rock, the immovable stone. _Petra erat Christus_, whence gush
+ forth those waters springing up unto eternal life.
+
+ "But I have said enough; I retard your happiness. Heaven, at
+ this moment, regards you with love, the earth blesses you
+ and Jesus Christ awaits you; go forward then; angels have
+ commenced the feast, and the friends of God continue it with
+ you here below! And even he who seems dead in our eyes, and
+ whose heart is living in the hand of the Lord! you know him,
+ his supplications and prayers have been poured forth in your
+ behalf; the solemn moment has now arrived! Abraham, Isaac,
+ Israel, the patriarchs and prophets from their heavenly abode
+ encourage you, and Moses blesses you, because the law in your
+ heart has developed into the Gospel; mercy and truth sustain
+ you, justice and peace attend you, repentance and innocence
+ crown you.... And finally, it is Mary who receives and protects
+ you!
+
+ "O Mary! it is a necessity and a duty for us to repeat once
+ more this prayer, this cherished prayer, and I know that not
+ one of all the multitude here assembled, but will fervently
+ repeat it with me: 'Remember, O most pious Virgin Mary, that
+ no one ever had recourse to thy protection, implored thy aid
+ or sought thy mediation, without obtaining relief. Groaning
+ under the weight of our sins, we come, O Virgin of virgins, to
+ cast ourselves in thy arms, and do most humbly supplicate thee.
+ O Mother of the Eternal Word, to remember the just, remember
+ sinners, remember those who know thee, and those who know thee
+ not; remember our woes and thy mercy.' I shall not say remember
+ this young man, for he is thy child, the sweet and glorious
+ conquest of thy love, but I shall say, remember all those dear
+ ones for whom he offers this day, the first prayers of his
+ Catholic heart; restore them to him in time and eternity.----
+
+ "And since I am a stranger here (no, let me recall my words,
+ no one is a stranger in Rome, every Catholic is a Roman), but
+ since we were both born on the soil of France, I think my
+ prayers find an echo in the hearts of all who hear me, when I
+ say: remember France, she is still the home of noble virtues,
+ generous souls, heroic love.... Restore to the Church in France
+ her pristine beauty."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Holy Sacrifice terminated the imposing ceremony. Our new Christian,
+overwhelmed beneath the weight of so many favors, had to be assisted
+to the Holy Table, where he received the Bread of Angels as the seal
+of his celestial alliance. Inundated with happiness, the tears gushed
+from his eyes, and after receiving, it was necessary to assist him
+to his place.... A number of pious Christians participated in the
+divine banquet, to which the Church so tenderly invites all her happy
+children, and the admirable spectacle of a blessed union with their new
+brother, was another edifying episode of this memorable day.
+
+The _Te Deum_ which followed, that most fervent hymn of gratitude,
+arising from every heart and mingling with the sound of all the
+bells, was not less impressive. "I pray God," wrote a witness of this
+ceremony, "never to let the memory of what I experienced during these
+three hours be effaced from my heart; such an impression is, beyond
+doubt, one of the most precious graces a Christian soul can ever
+receive."
+
+Clothed with innocence, enriched with the gifts of Heaven, admitted
+to its joys, buried in the sweet transports of gratitude and love, M.
+Ratisbonne could not relinquish immediately his dear solitude. He had
+made one retreat, as a preparation for the reception of these three
+grand Sacraments, and he was filled with ineffable consolation; feeling
+now the necessity, the imperative duty of returning thanks to his
+Benefactor, he wished to commence a second retreat, so that afar from
+the world, he might be deaf to the confused noises of its frivolous
+joys, and amidst the silence of a sweet peace, celebrate the Lord's
+magnificence, chant hymns of gratitude, taste in secret and at leisure
+the gifts which had been imparted to him, and the new treasures he
+possessed.
+
+Another grand consolation was in store for him. He sighed after the
+happy moment when he could prostrate himself at the feet of the
+Sovereign Pontiff, and there testify his submission to and love for
+that holy Church who had just admitted him into the number of her
+cherished children. An audience was granted him. The two friends, M.
+Ratisbonne and the Baron de Bussière, were conducted into the presence
+of His Holiness by the reverend Father General of the Society of Jesus.
+Having bent the knee three times before the Vicar of Jesus Christ, they
+received in unison, that holy and desirable benediction, which many
+pious Christians esteem themselves happy in obtaining, after long and
+wearisome journeys. They were welcomed with truly paternal tenderness
+by the venerable Pontiff, who conversed some time with them, and loaded
+them with tokens of his favor. M. Ratisbonne knew not how to express
+his admiration for the great simplicity, humility and goodness of this
+worthy Successor of the Prince of the Apostles. "He was so exceedingly
+kind," has M. Ratisbonne told me several times since, "as to take
+us into his chamber, where he showed me near his bed, a magnificent
+picture of my dear medal, a picture for which he has the greatest
+devotion. I had procured quite a number of Miraculous Medals. His
+Holiness cheerfully blessed them for me, and these are the weapons I
+shall use in conquering souls for Jesus Christ and Mary."
+
+The Holy Father crowns all his favors, by presenting M. Ratisbonne
+a crucifix, a precious souvenir which the young Christian will ever
+cherish, clinging to it in his combats and his sorrows, as a weapon
+that must assure him the victory over hell. A new soldier of Jesus
+Christ, he needs no other arms than the cross and Mary Immaculate,
+signal protectors that will guide him in the ways of justice, and one
+day, usher him into the light of eternal felicity.
+
+Shortly after his second retreat, M. Ratisbonne made preparations for
+his return to France, and bade adieu to the Holy City, though not
+without the sweet hope of again offering there his tribute of fervent
+thanksgiving. We have seen and conversed with him many times. The first
+emotions of a boundless and almost unparalled happiness are past,
+but the fruits remain; daily does the precious gift of Faith strike
+deeper root into this soul regenerated by the waters of holy Baptism;
+and the divine life, which was communicated to him on the day of his
+baptism, our new brother nourishes by the frequent reception of the
+Holy Eucharist, and a withdrawal from all worldly society; for whilst
+awaiting the manifestations of the Lord's will in regard to his future,
+he feels the necessity of preserving, in the secrecy of a peaceful and
+recollected life, the treasures he has received.
+
+M. Ratisbonne's conversion, publicly styled a miracle, excited too much
+interest and comment for the Holy See to allow it to pass unnoticed.
+The Sovereign Pontiff ordered a canonical examination according to the
+rules of the Church. The Cardinal Vicar prescribed an investigation.
+Nine witnesses were examined; all the circumstances weighed, and
+after a favorable conclusion, the most eminent Cardinal Patrizzi,
+"pronounced and declared the 3d of June, 1842, that the instantaneous
+and perfect conversion of Alphonse Marie Ratisbonne, from Judaism to
+Catholicity, was a true and incontrovertible miracle, wrought by the
+most blessed and powerful God, through the intercession of the Blessed
+Virgin Mary. For the greater glory of God and the increase of devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin Mary, His Eminence deigns to permit the account
+of this signal miracle, not only to be printed and published but also
+authorized."--A picture commemorative of the apparition of the Blessed
+Virgin to M. Ratisbonne, a representation of the Virgin of the medal,
+was placed in the chapel of St. Andrew's Church, where the miracle had
+taken place.
+
+A few days after his return to France, M. Ratisbonne, in token of
+his gratitude, and with the intention of obtaining his family's
+conversion, felt urged to erect a chapel under the invocation of Mary
+Immaculate, in the Providence orphanage of the Faubourg St. Germain,
+Paris. The laying of the corner stone took place May 1st, 1842, and
+the sanctuary was finished and dedicated May 1st, 1844, with great
+solemnity, in the presence of the founder of the house, M. Desgenettes,
+curé of Notre Dame des Victoires, the Baron de Bussière, M. Étienne,
+Superior General of the Priests of the Mission and daughters of
+Charity, M. Eugène Boré, then a simple layman, but afterwards M.
+Étienne's immediate successor, the abbé de Bonnechose, later an
+Archbishop and Cardinal, and many other distinguished persons.
+
+The pious convert often repaired to this sanctuary to mingle his
+prayers with those of the Daughters of Charity and their dear orphans;
+and many times has he also enjoyed the ineffable consolation of
+celebrating the Holy Sacrifice and thanking his celestial Benefactress,
+before the beautiful picture of the Immaculate Conception placed above
+the high altar, as a souvenir of the miracle of St. Andrew delle
+Fratte, for M. Ratisbonne is now a priest. Not content with leading a
+pious life in the world, he has renounced forever the joys and hopes
+of time to embrace the ecclesiastical state, which consecrated him
+unreservedly to God. For several years past he has been associated with
+his beloved brother Theodore in the order of Our Lady of Sion, the
+object of which congregation is the conversion of Israelites.
+
+
+V.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1843 to 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America._
+
+
+CURE OF A LITTLE GIRL (PARIS)--1843.
+
+This account was sent us in the month of January, 1877, by the very
+person who was cured:
+
+ "About the 15th of December, 1843, a little girl, Zénobie de
+ M., just one year old, was attacked, at the same time, by
+ water on the chest, a disease of the bowels, and cerebral
+ congestion. Dr. Flandrin, a friend of the family was called in
+ immediately, and gave the child every attention, but his skill
+ was powerless, and the family was plunged in the deepest grief.
+ The child's eldest sister alone cherished a faint hope in the
+ depths of her heart; she had intended consecrating herself to
+ God in a religious state, and had always regarded the birth
+ of this little one as a gift of Providence, sent to take her
+ place in the family, and console her afflicted parents. God
+ will not, she thought, take back the child. In her room was a
+ picture representing the apparition of the Miraculous Medal;
+ she knelt before it, begging the child's recovery, and renewing
+ her promises of embracing a religious life should the petition
+ be granted. This generous offering she kept a secret. A little
+ while after, the doctor came and declared the child's case
+ hopeless, and moreover, its recovery not desirable as it would
+ remain imbecile, paralyzed or blind. He proposed, however, a
+ consultation with M. Blache, physician of the Necker hospital,
+ who prescribed energetic treatment, but said, 'this child
+ cannot live.'
+
+ The poor mother, deeming it inadvisable to cause the little
+ creature unnecessary suffering, gently laid it in the cradle,
+ saying with the faith and resignation seen in none but a
+ Christian mother: 'The Lord gave it to me, the Lord wishes
+ to take it away, may His holy will be accomplished!' In the
+ afternoon, one of the aunts came to accompany the elder sister
+ to church, and whilst their prayers ascended to the Most
+ High, more for the mother than the child, this mother obeys
+ spontaneously a supernatural impulse, and taking the Miraculous
+ Medal as a last hope, she applies it to the body of the child,
+ and repeats with confidence the invocation: 'O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!' The
+ plaintive cries ceased, and when M. Flandrin came that evening
+ to see if the little one were still alive, he was greatly
+ surprised to perceive a faint improvement since morning, the
+ whole body covered with a gentle perspiration, and the little
+ paralyzed arm able to move in any direction. 'But what a pity,'
+ said he, 'the child will be blind,' which indeed it seemed to
+ be already, as a light passed several times before its eyes
+ produced no effect whatever.
+
+ "The mother who had not yet mentioned her secret, waited until
+ all had left the room, then taking her dear medal, she lay it
+ upon her infant's eyes and repeated the invocation. After a
+ sound sleep of about twenty-four hours, little Zénobie awoke,
+ recognizing all around her, and smiling upon all, her sight was
+ restored!
+
+ "The child's father, penetrated with faith and piety, said:
+ 'Assuredly, God alone has restored our child to us; henceforth,
+ she shall be called Marie, that she may ever bear in mind
+ to whom she is indebted for life.' An attack of measles now
+ supervened and finished the work, according to the doctor, by
+ absorbing the water on the brain, and throwing out upon the
+ surface of the skin the heretofore internal malady. A small
+ gold cross, having engraven upon it the memorable date of this
+ miraculous cure, was hung around the neck of little Marie, who
+ is now a Daughter of St. Vincent de Paul."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A CAPTAIN IN THE AUSTRIAN ARMY.
+
+Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1860:
+
+ After the war in Italy, a Polish regiment passed through Gratz;
+ the captain, attacked by a violent hemorrhage, was obliged
+ to stop at the general hospital, in charge of the Daughters
+ of Charity. Their constant and unremitting attentions did
+ not retard the progress of the disease, and his life was in
+ imminent danger.
+
+ Full of consideration, gratitude and politeness for those
+ who nursed him, he nevertheless expressed great displeasure
+ whenever they approached him on the subject of religion; he
+ had requested to be spared the visits of the chaplain of the
+ regiment, and as to the hospital chaplain, he dared not present
+ himself. It was necessary to keep the patient very quiet, and
+ avoid all worry, for the least excitement might cause a mortal
+ hemorrhage.
+
+ A Sister, who had been watching by his couch one night, left,
+ in mistake, a little book containing an account of favors
+ obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The sick
+ man took the book and read a few pages; another Sister coming
+ into his room, he showed her a passage, and said, putting his
+ hand to his forehead with a significant gesture: "Here, Sister,
+ just read this nonsense; as for myself, I cannot understand
+ how any one can write such books--if I may dare, let me beg you
+ to take this away."
+
+ Vain was every effort to reach his heart by pleasant
+ distractions, by engaging his attention or his interest; he
+ was insensible to all. A few days after the occurrence just
+ mentioned, a Sister ventured to offer him a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin suspended to a cord, so that he might wear it
+ if he wished. He was too polite to refuse the present, but he
+ let it remain just where the Sister had put it. His servant,
+ though a devout Christian, dared not speak to him of receiving
+ the Sacraments, and, although the patient expected to leave the
+ hospital soon, it was very evident to all else that the fever
+ was daily sapping his strength and rapidly conducting him to
+ the tomb. Much grieved at his condition, and especially his
+ impenitence, the Sisters determined to make one last effort
+ to save this soul. And what was it? They wrote the Blessed
+ Virgin a note, as follows: "Grant that, by some means, most
+ holy Mother, he may accept your medal, prepare him yourself to
+ receive the Sacraments, and assist him at the hour of death.
+ O Mary! conceived without sin, pardon our temerity, we attach
+ this note to your statue, and leave it there till you deign to
+ hear our prayers."
+
+ The chief physician of the hospital said, one day, to the
+ Sister on leaving this patient's room: "The captain will die
+ without the Sacraments, he seems inflexible." "Oh! as to that,"
+ she replied, "the Blessed Virgin will not fail to overcome his
+ obstinacy." Three or four days elapsed; one morning the sick
+ man requested the Sister to put the medal around his neck,
+ which she did most joyfully. In the afternoon, he called her
+ again: "Sister," said he, "I beg you to send for the chaplain
+ of my regiment to hear my confession, so that to-morrow I may
+ receive the Holy Eucharist and Extreme Unction." The worthy
+ priest was happy to answer the summons; he remained a long time
+ with the sick man, and next morning, after celebrating Mass at
+ the altar of the Immaculate Conception, he administered to him
+ the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction. We were all edified at
+ the dying man's piety. He cherished his medal with religious
+ fidelity, often asking for it and kissing it tenderly. A few
+ days after receiving the Last Sacraments, he rendered his
+ soul to God, saved, as we have every reason to hope, by the
+ intercession of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A HARDENED SINNER.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity at Issoudun,
+1862:
+
+ In the month of August, 1862, a young man aged twenty-nine, and
+ who had been married several years, was dying of consumption.
+ Vainly did his friends endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ eternity; every idea of religion seemed extinguished in his
+ heart, and he positively refused to see the priest. A pious
+ acquaintance informed the Sisters of his deplorable state;
+ one of them went immediately to see him. She met with a cool
+ reception, but was not the least disconcerted, and spoke to him
+ very kindly, proposing to send him a physician, and adding,
+ that she would supply all necessary medicines and nourishment.
+ "I need neither doctors nor medicines," was the reply, "I am
+ going to die, and I ask only that you will let me die in
+ peace." His poor wife, who was present, holding their little
+ child in her arms, said to him with tears: "Accept Sister's
+ offer, and perhaps you will recover," but he made no answer;
+ and the Sister now turning to his wife, endeavored to console
+ her, by promising to send the doctor and return soon herself.
+ The doctor came and met with no better reception. In a few days
+ the Sister presented herself again, and was received as before,
+ all her advances eliciting no response save a frigid silence;
+ but naught discouraged, she returned day after day, though her
+ reception was always the same. As the young man grew worse,
+ the Sister's prayers increased, and she felt inspired to offer
+ him a medal of the Immaculate Conception, still hoping that
+ the good God would lead back to the fold, this poor strayed
+ sheep. "I accept a medal!" he exclaimed vehemently, "and what
+ do you wish me to do with it? It would suit my wife or child
+ well enough, but as for myself, I want no medals!" The Sister
+ withdrew from the contest for the time, but not discouraged,
+ she returned to the charge next morning. "Ah," said she
+ pleasantly, "you are going to take the medal to-day?" "You know
+ what I told you yesterday," he answered, "besides, Sister,
+ I am afraid of becoming imbued with your sentiments should
+ I accept it, for I perceive that you are much more unhappy
+ than I care about being." A ray of happiness illumined the
+ Sister's countenance, for she knew that he who fears is already
+ conquered. After plying her with questions about religion, he
+ concluded thus: "After all, death will be a great relief to
+ me; I have twice made an unsuccessful attempt at committing
+ suicide. I suffer so much that I desire nothing but to die as
+ soon possible." Next day, the Sister asked her Superioress to
+ visit him and offer him the medal. She did so, and he not only
+ accepted it, but at last consented to see the priest. When our
+ Sister next saw him he was completely changed, and expressed
+ his joy at the priest's visit, and his desire of seeing him
+ soon again. "Sister," said he, "I am too miserable, I wish to
+ be like you." The priest did not delay his second coming, and
+ the poor, suffering creature, having made his confession, asked
+ for Holy Communion, which he had not received for many years,
+ but this favor was denied him, his throat being so inflamed
+ that he could swallow only a few drops of liquid. His last days
+ were sanctified by the most admirable resignation; no one ever
+ heard him utter a complaint, he asked for one thing only, the
+ visits of the priest and Sister, which alone seemed to afford
+ him any consolation. And on the Feast of All Saints, evincing
+ every mark of a sincere conversion, he breathed his last.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A MALEFACTOR.
+
+A Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland)--1865:
+
+ There was brought to our hospital, a young man of notoriously
+ bad character. He entered our doors blaspheming, and as the
+ physician had told the Sister that he had but a few days to
+ live, she essayed a few words of piety and consolation, to turn
+ his attention to the state of his soul; but he answered her by
+ maledictions. At last, one day she said to him, "My friend,
+ since you will not listen to me, I will ask my Superioress
+ herself to come." "Let her come," was his reply, "if she were
+ to tell me to hang myself, I would obey her, but as for
+ confession, she may talk about that as much as she pleases,
+ I shall never yield." These words were followed by so many
+ blasphemies, that it was with a very heavy heart the poor
+ Sister sought her Superioress. "Have you given him a medal?"
+ said the latter. "A medal!" was the reply, "he would throw it
+ away." "Ah, well, we must put one under his pillow and trust to
+ prayer, for it is useless to talk to him; tell him only that I
+ say he is not worthy of going to confession, and I forbid his
+ doing so."
+
+ As soon as the Sister who was nursing him left the presence
+ of her Superioress, the latter threw herself upon her knees
+ and began to repeat that beautiful prayer, the _Remember_. In
+ a very few minutes the Sister returned, this time shedding
+ tears of joy. "Ah, Sister," said she, "he wishes to confess;
+ as soon as I had put the medal under his pillow and recited
+ the _Remember_ for him, I delivered your message." "Indeed!"
+ said he, rising from his seat, "Well, I would just like to see
+ the person that could prevent it; tell your Superioress that
+ to-morrow morning at eight o'clock, I am going to pay the curé
+ a visit."
+
+ The Sisters felt a little troubled concerning a confession
+ apparently dictated by the spirit of contradiction, but their
+ fears were dissipated when the penitent returned bathed in
+ tears. He had just been to Holy Communion; asking the Sisters'
+ pardon for his past misconduct, he begged them to implore the
+ Blessed Virgin to let him live eight days longer, that he might
+ weep for his sins. This favor was granted him, and daily did he
+ bedew his pillow with tears. At the end of the eight days he
+ died, blessing God, and pressing the medal to his lips.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN ACTRESS.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland), 1865:
+
+ Some years ago, a young Protestant woman, belonging to a troupe
+ of comedians, arrived in Beuthen with her company. The good God
+ permitted that she should find lodgings in a Catholic family,
+ with whom she soon essayed a controversy. "Mademoiselle," said
+ the master of the house, "it would be better for you to go see
+ the Sisters about these things; the Blessed Virgin has wrought
+ wonders in their establishments, I am sure you would return
+ fully enlightened on the subject you have been discussing."
+ The young girl laughed at such a proposition; but a few days
+ after, impelled by curiosity, she repaired to the hospital
+ and asked for the Sister-Servant. "Invite her in," said the
+ latter, who had already heard of the young actress; "no doubt,
+ the Blessed Virgin has something in store for her here." After
+ a few formalities of etiquette, our visitor introduced the
+ subject of religion, and attempted to enter into a controversy
+ with the Sister. "Alas! Mademoiselle," replied the latter, "the
+ poor Daughters of Charity have neither the time nor learning
+ necessary for a discussion of these subtle questions, but they
+ have other arms with which to vanquish you;" and, smiling, she
+ presented her disputant a little medal of the Blessed Virgin.
+ "Promise me to wear this slight souvenir, it will be a constant
+ reminder that we are praying for you." She allowed the Sister
+ to put the medal on her neck, and retired rather pleased with
+ her visit.
+
+ From this day, the Sisters at the hospital began to recommend
+ the young actress to Mary conceived without sin. Not many
+ weeks after, the curé said to the Sister-Servant: "Do you
+ know, Sister, that Mademoiselle M., who spent the most of
+ her time promenading with gentlemen and smoking cigars, now
+ comes to me for religious instruction? In a little while she
+ will make her abjuration." And, indeed, it was not very long
+ before she repaired to the hospital. "Sister," said she to the
+ Sister-Servant, "I am going to confession to-day, and to-morrow
+ I make my First Communion. On my first visit here, I was
+ enraged at you. I could have fought you, and cast to the winds
+ this medal that I now kiss. From the very moment you put it on
+ my neck, an unaccountable change was wrought in me." Next day,
+ the church was filled with Protestants and Jews, all anxious
+ to witness a ceremony which had excited so much comment. After
+ her reception into the Church, the young convert, on the eve of
+ her departure, paid another visit to the Sister Servant, and
+ the latter saw by her very countenance what great changes grace
+ had wrought in this soul. "Well," said the Sister, just to try
+ her, "here is a silver medal to replace yours which has become
+ very black." "Oh, no," was the earnest, prompt reply, as she
+ tenderly pressed her own medal, "I would not exchange this for
+ any other in the world, for it is since I began to wear it my
+ soul has awaked to a new life."
+
+ Some years later, the Sister received a letter dated from
+ Rome, it was from the young convert, who wrote to her as
+ follows: "Sister, Providence has led me to Rome, and it is no
+ longer Mlle. M. you must address, but Sister St.---- of the B.
+ convent. Your desires are accomplished; I now belong entirely
+ to God, as I once did to the world; the Blessed Virgin
+ vanquishes souls with other arms than those of controversy."
+
+We must add, to the praise of the young actress, that her moral
+character was always irreproachable.
+
+The Superioress of the hospital at Beuthen, in narrating these facts,
+adds: "I could mention, for the greater glory of God and honor of the
+Immaculate Mary, numberless incidents of this kind, but lack of time
+and my weak eyes prevent my giving the details. I will say, however,
+and that without the slightest exaggeration, that not a week passes
+but the Blessed Virgin bestows upon our patients at the hospital some
+new proof of her maternal bounty. The medal, so dear to us, is really
+miraculous, and the instrument by which we snatch from destruction
+souls that have cost Our Lord so much. Ah! how numberless, in this
+unhappy land, the snares of the enemy of our salvation to entrap souls;
+but to vanquish him, I everywhere circulate the Miraculous Medal (you
+know what numbers we get), and my confidence in Mary is never deceived."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROMINENT FREE MASON.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States), 1865._
+
+ Among the patients at the great Charity hospital, New Orleans,
+ was a very prominent Free Mason. His hatred of religion was
+ displayed in a thousand ways; not only did he interdict the
+ Sister who nursed him any allusion to his salvation, but
+ he even habitually repaid by harsh and injurious words her
+ kindness and attention to his physical sufferings. If others
+ ventured to mention the subject of religion to him, they were
+ received with jeers and banters. Several times was he at
+ the point of death, and yet, sad to relate, his dispositions
+ remained the same. At last, when the Sister saw that he had but
+ a few hours to live, she stealthily slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his bolster, and said interiorly to the Blessed Virgin:
+ "My dear Mother, you know I have spared no effort to touch this
+ poor man's heart, but in vain; now I abandon him to you, it
+ is you who must save him; I leave him entirely in your hands,
+ and shall try to divest myself of all anxiety concerning him."
+ That evening, in making her rounds, she glances at him and
+ learns from the infirmarian that ever since her (the Sister's)
+ last visit, he had been very calm and apparently absorbed in
+ thought. On inquiring of the patient himself how he felt, she
+ was astonished at his polite answer, but remembering that she
+ had entrusted him entirely to the Blessed Virgin's care, she
+ did not venture a word about his soul, and bidding him good
+ night, she left the room.
+
+ About nine o'clock, he called the infirmarian, and asked for a
+ priest; knowing his former bitterness, the infirmarian thought
+ it a joke and treated it accordingly; the patient repeated his
+ request, but with no better success. Then he began to weep
+ and cry aloud for a priest; all the other patients were mute
+ with astonishment, and the infirmarian unable to resist such
+ entreaties went for the chaplain and the Sister. The dying
+ man requested Baptism, which was administered immediately, as
+ well as Extreme Unction, and before morning he had rendered
+ his account to the Sovereign Judge. His body was interred with
+ Masonic rites, but his soul, thanks to the powerful protection
+ of Mary Immaculate, had been carried by angels to the bosom of
+ its God.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SICK PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ At the same hospital in New Orleans, a Sister for a long time
+ had vainly endeavored to convince a Protestant of the most
+ essential truths of religion, that he might receive Baptism,
+ but he was deaf to all her persuasions. One day she showed him
+ a Miraculous Medal, and related its origin. He appeared to
+ listen somewhat attentively, but when she offered it to him,
+ "Take it away," said he, in a tone of great contempt, "this
+ Virgin is no more than any other woman." "I am going to leave
+ it on your table," was the Sister's reply, "I am sure you will
+ reflect on my words." He said nothing, but to put it out of
+ sight, placed his bible over it. Every day, under the pretext
+ of arranging and dusting his room, the Sister assured herself
+ that the medal was still there. Several days elapsed, during
+ which the patient grew worse; one night, whilst lying awake
+ racked with suffering, he perceived a brilliant light around
+ his bed, though the rest of the room was enveloped in darkness.
+ Greatly astonished, he succeeded, in spite of his weakness, in
+ rising and turning up the gas, to discover if possible, the
+ cause of this mysterious light. Finding none, he returned to
+ bed, and a few minutes after, he perceived that the luminous
+ rays escaped from the medal. He then took it in his hands,
+ and kept it there the remainder of the night. As soon as the
+ Sisters' rising bell rang (which was four o'clock), he called
+ the infirmarian, and begged him to tell the Sister he desired
+ Baptism. The chaplain was immediately informed. "Impossible!"
+ he exclaimed, for having had frequent conversations with the
+ sick man, he was well aware of his sentiments, and could
+ scarcely believe him in earnest. Nevertheless, he obeyed the
+ summons, and finding the patient really disposed to profit by
+ his ministry, he administered the Last Sacraments, and shortly
+ after receiving which the poor man died, blessing God and the
+ Blessed Virgin for the graces bestowed upon him.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT GIRL.
+
+ _New Orleans, (United States)._
+
+ A poor young Protestant girl, brought to our hospital to be
+ treated for a grave malady, had so great a horror of our holy
+ religion, that at the very sight of a Catholic near her,
+ she acted like one possessed. The presence of a Sister was
+ especially irritating, and one day she even went so far as to
+ spit in the Sister's face, but the latter, nothing dismayed,
+ and ever hoping that the God of all mercy would change this
+ wolf into a lamb, continued her kind attentions, the more
+ disrespectful her patient, the more gentle and considerate
+ the Sister. The latter was at last inspired with the thought
+ of slipping a Miraculous Medal between the two mattresses;
+ she acted upon the inspiration, and the following night the
+ Immaculate Mary's image became an instrument of salvation and
+ happiness to a guilty soul. Pitching and tossing upon her bed
+ by reason of a high fever, the patient, in some unaccountable
+ manner, found the medal, and the Sister's astonishment next
+ morning at seeing her clasping it in her hands, and covering
+ it with kisses, was second only to that she experienced on
+ perceiving the wonderful transformation grace had wrought in
+ this poor creature's soul. A supernatural light had revealed
+ to her the sad state of her conscience; her criminal life
+ filled her with horror, and, penetrated with regret for the
+ past, she sighed only for holy Baptism. After the necessary
+ instruction, she was baptized; and, during the remainder of her
+ sickness, which was long and tedious, her patience and fervor
+ never faltered. She persevered in these edifying sentiments,
+ until a happy death placed the seal upon the graces she had
+ received through the intercession of Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant gentleman had spent four years at the hospital,
+ sometimes in one hall, sometimes another. As his malady had
+ not been very serious, no one had considered it necessary to
+ speak to him concerning his soul. However, when his condition
+ became more aggravated, the Sister, after invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin's assistance, told him the physician considered his case
+ dangerous, and she thought he ought to receive Baptism, without
+ which no one could be saved. He listened attentively, then
+ turning to her, said: "Sister, if I were to ask you to become
+ a Protestant, would you comply with my request?" "No," was
+ the decided answer. "Well, then," he continued, "rest assured
+ that it is just as useless for you to attempt persuading me to
+ become a Catholic."
+
+ In spite of this positive refusal, she let no occasion pass
+ without enlightening him, were it ever so little, upon some
+ of the truths of religion. One day, showing him a Miraculous
+ Medal, she told him he would confer a great favor on her by
+ reciting the little invocation: "O Mary! conceived without
+ sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" "What, Sister! a
+ Catholic prayer! that is impossible, I cannot!" She said no
+ more, but slipped the medal under his pillow, and there it
+ remained untouched for several days, during which time she
+ redoubled her attentions to the physical necessities of the
+ poor patient, who gradually grew weaker. At last, one evening
+ she said to him: "Well, Henry, are you not going to do what I
+ asked you?" "Yes, Sister, I most earnestly desire to become a
+ Catholic." The chaplain was called immediately; he had barely
+ time to administer Baptism and Extreme Unction, ere the dying
+ man's regenerated soul was carried by angels to the abode of
+ the blessed.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG METHODIST.
+
+ _St. Louis (United States), 1865._
+
+ A young man, a Methodist, arrived at the hospital in an
+ extremely weak condition. The physician at once pronounced
+ his case hopeless, and said he had but a few days to live.
+ Consequently, the Sister's first care was for his soul.
+ Questioning him, she soon learned that he believed neither in
+ the efficacy nor necessity of Baptism, and all her efforts
+ to induce him to receive this Sacrament were unavailing. He
+ had no desire for any conversation on the subject, and his
+ invariable reply to all her arguments was: "I believe in Jesus,
+ that suffices; I am sure of being saved." The Sister redoubled
+ her prayers, for in them lay her only hope, and time was
+ precious. A good priest visited him every day; once, after a
+ much longer visit than usual, he told the Sister on leaving the
+ room it was impossible to do anything with that man, unless
+ God wrought a miracle in his favor, and they must entreat Him
+ to do so. The poor man persisted, indeed, in refusing all
+ spiritual succor, though receiving gratefully the attentions
+ bestowed upon his body. His strength diminished day by day,
+ and he calmly awaited death; one thought alone disquieted
+ him, that of never seeing his mother and dying afar from her.
+ Perceiving himself on the brink of the grave, he called one of
+ his companions whom he begged to be with him at that fearful
+ moment, and write the particulars of it to his mother. Whilst
+ he made this request, the Sister slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his pillow, confidently believing that Mary would not let
+ this soul entrusted to her perish; yet he was already in his
+ agony. Two Sisters watched beside his bed till midnight, when
+ obliged to retire, they left him in charge of an infirmarian
+ and the young man who had promised to be with him at the hour
+ of death. Apparently he had not more than half an hour to
+ live, so next morning when the infirmarian came to meet the
+ Sister, she was prepared for news of the patient's death, but
+ to her astonishment the infirmarian exclaimed: "Come Sister,
+ come see him, he is restored to life!" He then told her that
+ the patient, to all appearances, had been dead an hour; that
+ the friend and himself had rendered all the last duties to the
+ body, having washed and dressed and prepared it for the grave;
+ then the young man went to bed, and he alone remained with
+ the corpse. After watching near it some time, he approached
+ to bandage the jaws, but what was his fright whilst thus
+ engaged, to see the dead man open his eyes! The Sister heard
+ no more, but eagerly hastened to the spot, and found the man
+ still breathing. With a great effort he said: "Oh! what a
+ blessing that you have come!" In reply, she exhorted him to
+ receive Baptism, and told him that he was indebted to the
+ Blessed Virgin for this prolongation of his life. "I wish to
+ be baptized," said he, and when the Sister replied that the
+ priest would come, "Oh! that will be too late!" was his pitiful
+ answer. The other patients now joined their entreaties to his,
+ and the Sister, after reciting aloud the acts of faith, hope,
+ charity and contrition, which the dying man endeavored to
+ repeat, with hands clasped and eyes raised to Heaven, baptized
+ him. Whilst the regenerating waters flowed upon his soul,
+ transports of love and thanksgiving escaped his lips. Half
+ an hour later, he closed his eyes, never to open them here
+ below. All that the infirmarian related of his first death, was
+ confirmed in the most positive manner, by the Protestant friend
+ who had assisted in preparing him for the grave.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. F----
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant named F---- was brought to our hospital in an
+ advanced stage of consumption. He detested the Catholic
+ religion most heartily, and received the Sisters' services
+ with extreme repugnance. His physical strength diminished
+ perceptibly, but his mind retained its energy and clearness.
+ By degrees, the odor escaping from his decayed lungs, became
+ so intolerable that all abandoned him. M. Burke, a missionary
+ priest and the Sisters, being the only persons who had the
+ courage to go near him, and pay any attention to his comfort.
+ Yet neither priest nor Sister dare mention religion. They
+ contented themselves with putting a Miraculous Medal under
+ his pillow, and invoking her, who so often deigns to display
+ her power in favor of those who deny it. She did not delay in
+ granting their petition. A few days later, as the Protestant
+ minister left the ward, after making his usual distribution of
+ tracts, the sick man said to the Sister, "Sister, it is done;
+ I am converted." "Ah," said the latter interiorly, "our good
+ Mother has accomplished her work." And it was indeed true; for
+ the patient requested a priest, was instructed, and in a few
+ days received the Sacraments of Baptism, the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction, with inexpressible fervor. The very expression
+ of his countenance was changed; the happiness that inundated
+ his heart beaming from every feature. "Ah!" said he, "my
+ sufferings are great, but I feel that I am going to Heaven;
+ the truth has made me free." In these happy dispositions, he
+ expired, promising that in heaven he would pray for all who had
+ been instruments of his conversion.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBAPTIZED PATIENT.
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A patient brought to the hospital in a hopeless condition,
+ openly manifested his hatred of Catholicity. Yet, as he was in
+ imminent danger of death, the Sister, profiting by a moment in
+ which he seemed a little better disposed than usual, ventured
+ to ask him if he would be baptized; he answered roughly, "No,
+ that he scarcely believed in baptism, and not at all in
+ Catholic baptism, that in case of his recovery, perhaps he
+ would receive baptism by immersion, and become a member of some
+ church, but that would never be the Catholic Church." "At any
+ rate," added he, "I am not going to torment myself now about
+ such things." The poor Sister having no other resource than the
+ Blessed Virgin, and seeing that the young man approached his
+ end, stealthily slipped a medal under his pillow. Next morning
+ it was picked up by the infirmarian, who, thinking the Sister
+ had dropped it accidentally, was about to return it, but the
+ patient opposed him; the little image pleased his fancy, and he
+ wanted to keep it himself. To quiet him, the infirmarian was
+ obliged to ask Sister if the patient might have it. The request
+ was granted. Towards evening some one came to the Sister with a
+ message from the patient, he wished to see her. "Sister," said
+ he as soon as she approached, "you have told me I could not be
+ saved without Baptism; let me be baptized, for I wish to be
+ saved." Filled with joy at this news, she began to instruct and
+ prepare him for the ceremony. It took place next morning, and
+ during the course of the day, this soul, now the child of God,
+ went to repose in the bosom of its celestial Father, to bless
+ and thank Him for all eternity for His mercies.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG GIRL.
+
+_Buffalo (United States)._
+
+ A young Protestant girl about twenty years of age came to the
+ hospital, covered from head to foot with a disgusting itch,
+ which the physician pronounced incurable. The Sister who
+ dressed her sores, told her that the Blessed Virgin could
+ obtain her recovery, and would do so, if she wore the medal and
+ relied upon the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The poor girl
+ knowing her case was deemed hopeless by the physician, answered
+ bluntly: "I do not believe in your Blessed Virgin, and I want
+ no medal." "Very well," replied the Sister, "then you may keep
+ your sores." A few days after she asked for a medal herself,
+ put it on her neck, received instruction and was baptized, and
+ in a short time she left the hospital perfectly cured, greatly
+ to the astonishment of the physicians, who had all pronounced
+ her malady incurable.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SINNER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria)._
+
+ An artist whose life had been far from edifying, was an
+ inmate of our hospital. One morning the Sister was greatly
+ surprised at his expressing a desire to confess. Perceiving
+ her astonishment, he said: "This morning, Sister, the chapel
+ door was slightly open, and from my bed I could see the Blessed
+ Virgin's statue." (It was that of the Immaculate Conception.)
+ "It appealed so strongly to my heart, that I have had no
+ peace since. I must put my conscience in order." He did go to
+ confession, not once, but several times, and he often expressed
+ great regret for his past life. "Ah!" he would say, "what a
+ life I have led, and how sad the state of my soul when Mary
+ came to my aid." When asked what he supposed had attracted
+ Mary's compassion, he answered: "I was merely looking at the
+ statue, no thought of religion was in my mind; when suddenly,
+ recollections of my past life filled me with fear, and Mary
+ at the same time inspired me with a horror for sin." In
+ this instance, repentance and reparation were the immediate
+ consequences of the Immaculate Mary's merciful and maternal
+ glance.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A GREEK SCHISMATIC.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria.)_
+
+ A Greek schismatic, attacked by a mortal malady, was brought to
+ the hospital. He declared his intention of remaining attached
+ to the errors in which he had been educated, and the Sisters,
+ seeing his determination, entrusted him to the Blessed Virgin,
+ consecrating him to her by placing under his pillow a medal,
+ which for him proved truly miraculous. One day, a Franciscan
+ Father visited the sick, and the young man asked the Sister
+ to bring the good Father to see him. He conversed a long time
+ with the latter, but manifested no intention of becoming a
+ Catholic. Meanwhile, he grew worse, and, one day, when taken
+ with a hemorrhage, he asked for this Father, "because," said
+ he, "I wish to embrace the Catholic religion." The Sister
+ was surprised, for she had said nothing to persuade him, but
+ the Blessed Virgin had accomplished her work without earthly
+ assistance. He confessed and made his abjuration; he even
+ requested the Reverend Father to announce, in a loud voice, to
+ the other patients that he entered the Church of his own free
+ will. His attacks of vomiting made the priest hesitate to give
+ him the Holy Viaticum, but he insisted so strongly, and had so
+ ardent a desire to receive, that the good God permitted these
+ spells of vomiting to become less frequent, so that he could
+ make his first and last Communion at the same time, which he
+ did with inexpressible fervor and consolation. Interrogated on
+ the subject of his conversion, he answered: "For a long time I
+ felt that everything earthly was of little value, and I sought
+ for the true and lasting." During the delirium of his last
+ moments, he spoke continually of a white robe. The grace of
+ Baptism had clothed his soul in spotless raiment, and to Mary's
+ intercession was he indebted for it.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN APOSTATE.
+
+ _Austria, 1866._
+
+ In one of the prisons confided to the care of the Daughters of
+ Charity, was a young man belonging to a respectable Catholic
+ family, whose shame and disgrace he had become. After a short
+ stay, he fell sick, and his condition necessitated removal
+ to the infirmary; faithful to his principles of impiety, he
+ absolutely refused all spiritual succor, and whenever he saw
+ one of the chaplains pass, he either turned away his head or
+ concealed it under the bedclothes. All the Sisters begged the
+ Superioress to make one last effort for his soul. She paid him
+ a visit, and was received politely, but to rid himself of her
+ importunity, he avowed himself a Protestant, and related how
+ he came to forsake the Faith, after making the acquaintance
+ of several very bad characters, his companions in crime and
+ his counselors in advising him to become a Protestant. The
+ Sister asked him if he felt no remorse for such conduct, but
+ he became enraged and exclaimed aloud: "I am a Protestant, and
+ I wish to live and die a Protestant!" Seeing it impossible
+ to do anything with the miserable creature, she interiorly
+ recommended him to the Refuge of Sinners, and merely asked him
+ to accept the medal she offered, to wear it and sometimes kiss
+ it. He seemed quite pleased to get rid of her so easily, and
+ placing all her confidence in Mary, she withdrew.
+
+ The poor man passed a sleepless night, our Blessed Mother
+ touched his heart, and very early next morning he sent word
+ to the Sister that he wanted a priest to receive his solemn
+ profession of Faith, in reparation of his scandalous apostasy
+ and crimes. But his reputation was such that the prison
+ chaplain doubted his sincerity, and would not go to him except
+ upon repeated solicitations of the Superioress. He was deeply
+ affected at witnessing the change grace had wrought in this
+ soul, and the consequent compunction with which the prodigal
+ confessed his sins. The dying man then made a public abjuration
+ of his errors, and expired a few minutes after, in the grace of
+ God and under the protecting smile of Mary.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT THE HOSPITAL OF CAVA.
+
+ _Cava, (Italy), 1866._
+
+ A young soldier suffering from disease of the chest, was
+ brought to the Military Hospital of Cava. His first question
+ was to ask if the Sisters had charge of that hospital; on
+ receiving an affirmative answer, he said to himself: "They will
+ bother me about going to confession, so I shall call myself a
+ Jew to get rid of them," and Jew he was designated on the card
+ of admission. Perceiving the serious nature of his malady, the
+ Sisters to whose especial care he had been confided, visited
+ him as often as possible. One of them offered him a medal
+ of the Immaculate Conception; regarding it with a smile of
+ pity, he said: "I accept it, because it would not be polite
+ to refuse, but believe me, I consider it a mere plaything and
+ nothing more."
+
+ Every time the chaplain visited the hall, to speak a word of
+ consolation to one and another, the poor Jew covered his head.
+ The Sister sometimes ventured a few words to him about the good
+ God, but he would never reply, and her approach was the signal
+ for his feigning sleep. One evening when he appeared worse than
+ usual, two Sisters went to see him just before they retired
+ for the night. On hearing them approach, he exclaimed: "O
+ Sister, a priest!" The chaplain was immediately summoned to his
+ bedside, the poor dying man repeating all the while: "A priest!
+ a priest!" As soon as the chaplain came, the patient made his
+ profession of Faith in a very audible voice; he then confessed,
+ and just as the priest, in administering Extreme Unction, was
+ anointing the ears, the penitent rendered his soul to God,
+ leaving us the consoling hope that it had found mercy in its
+ Maker's sight.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A WOUNDED SOLDIER.
+
+ _Palermo (Italy), 1866._
+
+ In 1866, at the Military Hospital of Palermo, was a poor man
+ who had just undergone the amputation of his left arm. His
+ impiety was so great, that the Sister felt constrained to
+ remove a large crucifix that had been placed near his bed, for
+ he covered it with invectives. The miserable man's bodily
+ infirmities were as hopeless as his spiritual, yet no one could
+ succeed in inducing him to give any attention to his soul, or
+ even to listen to a word about the good God. What could be done
+ in such an extremity? The poor Sister was in great distress,
+ when one day whilst dressing his wounds she was inspired to
+ slip a medal of the Immaculate Conception between the bandages
+ around the stump of the amputated member. Next morning, on
+ witnessing the great change that had been wrought in her
+ patient's spiritual condition during the night, she was less
+ astonished than happy, for she had confidently relied upon the
+ Blessed Virgin. He asked for a priest, who came immediately;
+ he confessed, publicly repaired the scandals of his past life,
+ and received with piety the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction.
+ His few remaining days were spent in blessing that God who had
+ shown him such boundless mercy. "Oh! how good God is!" did
+ he repeat incessantly to his companions, "I have committed
+ manifold sins and He has pardoned me all!"
+
+
+CURE OF AN AUSTRIAN OFFICER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1867._
+
+ An officer in the garrison at Gratz, suffered from a serious
+ wound in the right arm. He was brought to the general hospital,
+ that he might be more conveniently under the especial treatment
+ of M. Rzehazeh, a very eminent surgeon. The latter exhausted
+ all his skill, but in vain, and after a few weeks he saw the
+ necessity of amputation to save the officer's life. Learning
+ the doctor's decision, the patient was deeply grieved, and
+ his oppressed heart sought refuge in piety. He who had never
+ spoken of God, who had accepted a proffered medal only from
+ courtesy, now appeared to experience a genuine satisfaction
+ when the Sisters told him they would implore the Blessed Virgin
+ in his behalf. During the few days immediately preceding the
+ operation, he felt inspired with a great confidence in his
+ medal, and frequently repeated the invocation engraven upon it:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" The danger was now imminent, and the amputation,
+ which must not be delayed, was to take place on the morrow. One
+ of the Sisters, perceiving that the young officer's confidence
+ expressed itself in continual prayer, suggested that evening
+ that he lay the medal upon his afflicted arm, and let it remain
+ all night, a suggestion which was joyfully received. Next
+ morning she hastened to ascertain her patient's condition, and
+ get the medal. He had spent a quiet night, his sufferings being
+ less severe than usual; and the Sister, whilst attributing his
+ improvement to the anodynes prescribed, understood full well
+ that the precious medal had also been instrumental in procuring
+ relief, and that Mary had looked compassionately upon him;
+ but she did not yet realize the full extent of the blessing.
+ The surgeon came a few hours after, and whilst awaiting his
+ assistants, he carefully examined the wounded arm, he touched
+ it, he probed it, and to his great astonishment, perceived that
+ amputation was not necessary. The other doctors on arriving,
+ confirmed his opinion of this surprising change. The officer
+ was mute with happiness, and not until he found himself alone
+ with the chief surgeon did he impart to the latter, as a
+ secret, his opinion as to the cause of this wonderful change.
+ On leaving him, the surgeon (notwithstanding the injunction
+ of secrecy), could not refrain from saying to the Sister: "I
+ believe the Sisters of Charity have engaged the good God in
+ this case."
+
+ The officer's arm was entirely healed; a few weeks later he
+ left the hospital, taking with him the precious medal as a
+ memento of gratitude and love for Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. N---- AT LIMA.
+
+Letter from a Daughter of Charity in Lima (Peru), 1876:
+
+ M. N---- had been suffering a long time from hypertrophy of
+ the heart, the physicians having vainly exhausted all the
+ resources of their skill, were forced to tell the family that
+ he was beyond the power of human aid, and should look to the
+ state of his soul, sad news for this father of a family, and a
+ man devoid of religion. In vain did his relatives and friends,
+ with all possible delicacy, endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ religion and induce him to receive the Sacraments; he would
+ hear nothing on the subject; a priest, who was an intimate
+ friend of the family, attempted to second their efforts, but he
+ met with no better success; the sick man became exasperated at
+ all allusions to religion, he blasphemed everything relating to
+ it, sparing not even the Blessed Virgin.
+
+ One day, after listening to an account of the conversion of
+ M.----, of Lima, our patient's relatives expressed a desire
+ of having recourse to similar means for their dear one's
+ conversion. "It is very simple," said the person addressed,
+ "you have only to ask Sister N., of St. Anne's Hospital for a
+ medal, she got one for M. Pierre, she will not refuse you."
+ One of his nephews immediately repaired to the hospital and
+ returned with a medal. A niece offered it to him; "Mamma,"
+ said she, "sends you this medal and begs that you will wear
+ it." "Certainly," was the reply, "I will wear it for her sake,
+ but I want everybody to understand that I have no notion of
+ confessing."
+
+ He spent a quiet night, and was quite pleased next morning to
+ find himself somewhat better. "Euloge," said he, to one of his
+ nephews, "what preparation should a person make who intends
+ taking a long journey?" Euloge, who thought he certainly
+ must be in a dream to hear his uncle speak thus, inquired
+ to what journey he alluded. "Ah!" was the answer, "I speak
+ of Eternity." The poor young man, delighted at such a happy
+ change, replied that the best preparation was to put one's
+ conscience in order by making a good confession. "I will do so,
+ send me a priest," said his uncle. As soon as the clergyman
+ arrived and heard his confession, he administered the Holy
+ Viaticum. All the assistants were overcome with emotion when
+ they saw the sick man, almost in his last agony, supported by
+ his children, to receive on bended knee, the God who had just
+ pardoned all the sins of his life. A few moments after, he
+ blessed his children, gave them his parting counsel, and died
+ in sentiments of piety rivaling his past irreligion. His family
+ was deeply grateful to Mary Immaculate for this token of her
+ favor.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBELIEVER.
+
+Letter from a Sister of Charity in Lima, Peru, 1877:
+
+ An old lady whose youth had been pious, having lost her Faith
+ by reading bad books, had not frequented the Sacraments for
+ thirty-five years. The Sister with whom she lived was carried
+ to her grave, after an illness of only five days, and it was
+ natural to suppose that the Christian death of one so dear
+ would have softened her heart; on the contrary, it embittered
+ her the more, and she vented her grief in blasphemies. A
+ Sister of Charity witnessing this scandal, and not being able
+ to soothe the poor creature, was inspired with the thought
+ of giving her a medal of the Blessed Virgin; the old lady
+ accepted, and wore it for several days, during which she
+ appeared greatly pre-occupied, and somewhat less confident in
+ her scepticism; but having yielded to a diabolical suggestion,
+ that urged her to lay the medal aside, doubtless because grace
+ tormented her conscience with keen remorse whilst the medal
+ was on her person, she fell back into an habitual hardness
+ and melancholy that she styled peace. The Sister perceived
+ this, and inquired if she still wore the medal; on receiving
+ a negative answer, our good Sister represented the danger
+ to which her soul was exposed without it, and the old lady
+ promised to put it on again. Many prayers were offered up
+ for her, and at the end of fifteen days, the Sister, who was
+ greatly interested in this poor woman's soul, paid her another
+ visit; perceiving no change in her sentiments, she inquired
+ immediately if the medal had been resumed. The poor woman, who
+ was very uncouth, dared not speak, but made a sign with her
+ head which revealed all. "What have you done with it, and where
+ is it?" asked the Sister. The old lady replied that it was in
+ her wardrobe, and she had made several ineffectual efforts to
+ put it on again. The Sister understands that this miserable
+ soul is under some diabolical influence, holding her aloof from
+ aught calculated to reclaim her to God; she feels that now
+ is the moment for prompt action, and in a tone of severity,
+ says: "Very well, since you will not wear the medal, I abandon
+ you entirely." These words produced the desired effect; the
+ old lady ran to the wardrobe, and taking up the medal, put it
+ around her neck this time to remain. Soon experiencing the
+ sweet and powerful influence of Mary Immaculate, so justly
+ called the Gate of Heaven, in a few days she assisted at the
+ Holy Sacrifice and listened to the instruction, and from that
+ time was entirely changed; she confessed and made her Easter
+ Communion, and the deepest compunction and gratitude are now
+ the abiding sentiments of her heart. She wished to remain
+ at the church door, feeling herself unworthy to penetrate
+ further into the sacred edifice, and it was with the greatest
+ difficulty her friends could prevail upon her to accept a place
+ nearer the altar. She never ceases to thank God and Mary; and
+ she told the Sister that, from the moment the medal was on her
+ neck, she knew neither peace nor rest till she had returned to
+ her duties, so great are the power and love of that Virgin who
+ is the sovereign Terror of demons.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SCANDALOUS SINNER.
+
+ _Moirans, 1877._
+
+The Superioress of the Sisters of Charity at Moirans, relates as
+follows a very consoling conversion, redounding to the glory of Mary
+Immaculate:
+
+ "The most important manufacturer of our village, who employed
+ from four to five hundred men and women, has just died, and
+ contrary to all expectations, his death was penitent and
+ consoling. He had been impious and immoral, and the profligate
+ characters in his workshops were a curse to the surrounding
+ country. His rudeness was such, that everybody trembled before
+ him. His wife and two daughters, pious Christians, silently
+ bewailed his misconduct; and as for myself, I had barely
+ sufficient acquaintance with him to render justifiable my
+ calling upon him in any urgent need.
+
+ "One morning I received a message in great haste; this person
+ was very sick and wished to see me. I went at once, but the
+ disease was of so serious a character and its progress so
+ rapid, that I saw the poor man on the verge of the grave ere
+ I could find a means of turning his thoughts to eternity.
+ I had told his wife and daughters to give him a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, but he refused to accept it, and
+ we were reduced to the necessity of stealthily putting it
+ under his pillow. On the third day, as I was about to leave,
+ after rendering him all the care and attention in my power,
+ he wished, in the effusion of his gratitude, to shake hands
+ with me. I profited by the opportunity to tell him how much
+ pleasure he could give me by consenting to receive the curé,
+ who had just come to see him. He made a sign in the affirmative
+ and with a smile that very rarely parted his lips. We went
+ out of the room, leaving him alone with the priest, whom he
+ had welcomed cordially. In half an hour the latter returned
+ blessing God, for the sick man had made his confession. He
+ now consented to wear the medal, and that evening he received
+ Extreme Unction, but not the Holy Viaticum, as he had spells
+ of suffocation. I asked his wife to let his employees see him,
+ that they might be edified at their patron's conduct. The
+ request was granted, but not many came, as the workshops were
+ closed at this hour; those who did come, prayed a few minutes
+ beside him. Next morning his family was greatly rejoiced at his
+ apparent physical improvement, but their hopes were deceived,
+ and very soon his last agony began. He was recommended to
+ the prayers of the parish; the whole village manifested a
+ touching interest in his condition, and his employees all came
+ to see him. The throng around the dying man was renewed every
+ quarter of an hour, and we recited the _Chaplet_ aloud, a most
+ appropriate devotion for this occasion, the last moments of
+ one whom the Blessed Virgin had snatched from eternal misery.
+ Amidst this concert of praises to Mary, he expired. The
+ Christian Brothers, to whom he had been very hostile, willingly
+ aided us in rendering to him the last duties of religion."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+PROGRESS OF THE DEVOTION TO MARY
+
+
+ CROWNED BY THE DEFINITION OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.--I. OUR
+ LADY OF LA SALETTE.--II. THE CHILDREN OF MARY.--III. THE DEFINITION
+ OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+_I.--Our Lady of La Salette.--1846._
+
+
+In her first manifestation to Sister Catherine, July 19, 1830, the
+Immaculate Virgin announced the disasters which threatened France;
+grief was depicted upon her countenance, tears stifled her voice, she
+earnestly recommended prayer to appease the wrath of God.
+
+Sixteen years later, this Mother of mercy, appearing to two little
+shepherd children upon one of the summits of the Alps, repeated, in a
+most solemn manner, the same warnings and the same counsels. The first
+apparition remains in obscurity, but a knowledge of the second has
+been spread throughout the world, and with most consoling results. The
+miracle of La Salette has greatly increased devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin, and given Christians a clearer idea of the important duties
+of penance and prayer, which, in reality, are the embodiment of all
+practical piety.
+
+We quote the best authenticated account of La Salette, that of the Abbé
+Rousselot, who himself received it from the mouths of the children.
+
+ "Two peasant children, Mélanie Mathieu, aged fourteen years,
+ and Maximin Giraud, aged eleven, both simple and ignorant, as
+ might naturally be expected of their age and condition, were
+ together upon the mountain of La Salette, which overlooks a
+ village where they were at service under different masters.
+ Their acquaintance was very slight, their first meeting having
+ been only the day before the occurrence we are about to relate.
+ When the _Angelus_ announced the hour of noon, they went to
+ soak their hard bread in the water of a spring. After this
+ rural repast, they descended a little farther, and laying down
+ their crooks beside another spring, then dry, they seated
+ themselves a slight distance apart, upon a few stones which had
+ been piled up there, and went to sleep.
+
+ "It was Saturday, September 19th, 1846, and eve of the day on
+ which fell the Feast of Our Lady's Seven Dolors.
+
+ "'After taking the cows to water, and eating our lunch,' says
+ Maximin, 'we went to sleep beside a stream, and very near a
+ spring which was dry. Mélanie awoke first, and aroused me to
+ hunt our cows. We crossed the stream, and going in an opposite
+ direction, saw our cows lying down on the other side, and not
+ very far off.'
+
+ "'I came down first,' says Mélanie; 'when I was within five or
+ six steps of the stream, I perceived a light like that of the
+ sun, but even more brilliant and not the color of sunlight,
+ and I said to Maximin: Come quick to see the bright light down
+ here.' 'Where is it?' inquired Maximin, coming towards me. 'I
+ pointed with my finger in the direction of the spring, and he
+ stood still when he saw it. Then the light seemed to open,
+ and in the midst of it appeared a Lady, she was seated, and
+ her head resting upon her hands.' 'We were both frightened,'
+ continues Maximin, 'and Mélanie, with an exclamation of terror,
+ let fall her crook.' 'Keep your crook,' said I, 'as for me,
+ I am going to keep mine. If it does anything to us, I will
+ give it a blow with my crook.' And the Lady arose. She crossed
+ her arms, and said to us: 'Come to me, my children, do not be
+ afraid. I am here to tell you something very important.' All
+ our fears vanished, we went towards her and crossed the stream,
+ and the Lady advancing a few steps, we met at the place where
+ Mélanie and I had fallen asleep. The Lady was between us, and
+ she wept all the time she was talking. 'I saw her tears flow,'
+ adds Mélanie.
+
+ "'If my people,' said she, 'do not humble themselves, I shall
+ be forced to let them feel the weight of my Son's uplifted arm.
+ I have stayed it heretofore, but it now presses so heavily that
+ I can scarcely support it much longer. And all the while I am
+ suffering thus for you, I must pray without ceasing if I wish
+ to prevent your abandonment by my Son. And, moreover, you do
+ not appreciate it.'
+
+ "'In vain will you pray, in vain will you strive, never can you
+ recompense what I have undergone for you. I have given you six
+ days of the week wherein to work, the seventh I reserved for
+ myself, and even that is denied me! It is this which weighs
+ down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'Even those who drive carts must curse, and mingle my Son's
+ name with their oaths.'
+
+ "'These are the two things that weigh down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'If the harvest fails, it is for no other reason than your
+ sins. I tried last year to make you see this in the failure of
+ the potato crop. You took no account of it. On the contrary,
+ when you found the potatoes rotted, you swore and mingled my
+ Son's name with your maledictions. The potatoes will continue
+ to rot, at Christmas there will be none.'
+
+ "I did not know what this meant," said Mélanie, "for in our
+ part of the country we do not call them potatoes. I asked
+ Maximin what they were, and the Lady said to me:
+
+ "'Ah! my children, you do not understand me, I will use other
+ language.'
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin now repeated the preceding in _patois_, and
+ the remainder of her discourse was also in _patois_. We give
+ the translation as follows:
+
+ "'If you have wheat, it must not be sown, the animals will
+ devour what you sow; and should any remain, it will yield
+ naught but dust when threshed.'
+
+ "'There will be a great famine. Before the famine comes, little
+ children under seven years of age, will be seized with fright
+ and die in the arms of those who are holding them. Some will do
+ penance by reason of the famine. Even the nuts will fail and
+ the grapes rot.'
+
+ "After these words, the beautiful Lady continued to speak aloud
+ to Maximin. Though seeing the motion of her lips, Mélanie hears
+ nothing. Maximin receives a secret in French. Then the Blessed
+ Virgin addresses herself to the little girl, and Maximin ceases
+ to hear her voice. She likewise confides to Mélanie a secret
+ in French, but a more lengthy secret it appears than that
+ entrusted to Maximin. Continuing her discourse in _patois_, and
+ so as to be heard by both, she adds: 'If they turn aside from
+ their evil ways, the very rocks and stones will be changed into
+ heaps of grain, and potatoes will be found scattered over the
+ fields.'
+
+ "The Queen of Heaven then addressed herself more directly to
+ the children.
+
+ "'Do you say your prayers with devotion, my children?'
+
+ "'Oh, no, Madame,' they both answered, 'we say them with very
+ little devotion.'
+
+ "Our divine Mother continued: 'Ah! my children, you must say
+ them fervently evening and morning. When you have not the time,
+ and cannot do better, say an _Our Father_ and a _Hail Mary_;
+ and when you have the time you must say more.
+
+ "'No one goes to Mass, except a few aged women; all the rest in
+ summer spend Sunday working, and in winter, when at a loss for
+ something to do, they go to Mass only to ridicule religion; and
+ during Lent they frequent the shambles as if they were dogs.'
+
+ "After a few more words, reminding Maximin that he had already
+ seen the failure of the grain, the august Queen finished in
+ French as follows: 'Ah! my children, tell this to all my
+ people.' And before leaving them, she repeated the command.
+
+ "The two children add: 'Then she ascended about fifteen steps,
+ to the place where we had gone to look after our cows. Her feet
+ barely touched the surface of the verdure, which did not even
+ bend beneath her, she glided over the surface as if suspended
+ in the air, and impelled by some invisible power. We followed
+ her, Mélanie a little ahead, and I two or three steps from the
+ Lady's side. The beautiful Lady was now gently elevated to
+ about the height of a yard,' said the children. 'She remained
+ thus suspended in the air for a moment. She glances up to
+ Heaven and then at the earth, her head disappears from our
+ view, next her arms, and lastly her feet. She seemed to melt
+ away. There remained a brilliant light that gleamed upon my
+ hands, and the flowers at her feet, but that was all.'
+
+ "At the first words of his son's narration, Maximin's
+ father began to laugh, but very soon recognizing the marks
+ of incontestable sincerity, he hastened to comply with
+ his Christian duties, so long neglected. The neighboring
+ inhabitants followed his example, there were no more
+ blasphemies, no more profanation of Sunday, the whole country
+ was soon transformed, even maternally. Like those of Jonas to
+ Nineveh, the prophetic warnings of the divine Messenger were
+ conditional. They were fulfilled in general, as can still be
+ remembered."[23]
+
+ [Footnote 23: Several details of this account have been derived
+ from "Illustrious Pilgrim Shrines."]
+
+The apparition of La Salette, as is the case with all extraordinary
+events, was variously appreciated even among Catholics, some receiving
+the account with enthusiastic confidence, others strongly contesting
+the reality. But for a long time doubts have ceased, Providence having,
+by numberless miracles, confirmed the faith of those who believed;
+and the mountain sanctified by Mary's presence, has never ceased to
+be visited by pilgrims from the most distant countries. Mgr. De
+Bruillard, Bishop of Grenoble, anxious to prevent illusion on so
+important a question, nominated a commission composed of most competent
+persons, to examine and pass judgment upon this apparition. The result
+being in the affirmative. His Grace, in a circular of September 19th,
+1851, declared as follows:
+
+ "We assert that the apparition of the Blessed Virgin to two
+ little peasants, the 19th of September, 1846, upon one of the
+ peaks of the Alps, situated in the parish of La Salette, of
+ the archpresbytery of Corps, bears every mark of truth, and
+ that the faithful are confirmed in believing it indubitable and
+ certain.
+
+ "Wherefore, to testify our lively gratitude to God and the
+ glorious Virgin Mary, we authorize the devotion to Our Lady of
+ La Salette."
+
+The circular, before publication, was submitted to the Holy See, whose
+approval it received, and Mgr. De Bruillard's two successors have
+always endorsed his appreciation of the apparition.
+
+Consequently, this devotion is invested with every guarantee of
+authenticity that the severest criticism could exact.
+
+A church of the Byzantine style and graceful appearance is erected
+upon the holy mountain, near where the apparition took place. The
+identical spot remains uncovered, and the grass still grows upon the
+soil hallowed by Mary's sacred footsteps; a series of crosses, fourteen
+in number, to which are attached the indulgences of the _via crucis_,
+indicate the path she took. The spring, formerly intermittent, has
+been inexhaustible since the apparition, and its waters have worked
+miracles. Near the church, a convent has been built to accommodate the
+numberless pilgrims, who daily resort hither in the favorable season.
+Numerous chapels, dedicated to Our Lady of La Salette, are scattered
+throughout Christendom, and abundant graces repay the faith of those
+who in these sacred shrines invoke her intercession.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_II.--The Children of Mary.--1847._
+
+Rome, the guardian of our Faith and Catholic traditions, has given
+municipal privileges to the Children of Mary, in consecrating to them
+a chapel in one of her most celebrated churches, St. Agnes Beyond the
+Walls. The Italian sodalities are all inscribed there, and represented
+by a group of the children of Mary surrounding this young Saint, who
+in the third century was martyred for her virginity. They seem to say
+to her, "Agnes, you are our eldest Sister, the well beloved of Jesus
+Christ and His Mother."
+
+This place of honor, this representation proclaims most eloquently,
+that the Children of Mary form in the Church, a family as ancient as
+Catholicity itself.
+
+Nearly nineteen centuries ago, Jesus, our Redeemer, was in the agony
+of death upon the tree of the cross, which his love had chosen as the
+instrument of our redemption; "seeing," says the Evangelist, "that all
+was consummated" for our salvation, He wished to place the seal upon
+His work, by making His last will and testament.
+
+Looking first at Mary, His Mother, and then at John, the beloved
+disciple, he made John a Child of Mary in these memorable words: "_Ecce
+Mater tua, ecce filius tuus_: Behold thy Mother, behold thy son."
+
+Such is the origin of the Children of Mary. We believe with the holy
+Church, that the eternal Word, after becoming incarnate to render men
+redeemed with His blood, the Children of His heavenly Father, gave them
+also, at the hour of His death, His own Mother to be theirs. We know
+likewise, that among the children of every family, there is always one
+most tenderly attached to the mother, for instance, Jacob and Rebecca;
+John and Mary.
+
+Even so, in the bosom of the great family of Catholicity, do we find in
+all ages, souls jealous of rendering to Mary the most intimate filial
+devotion, selecting her in an especial manner, for their model and
+protectress.
+
+Such are the religious orders particularly devoted to her service,
+also, the confraternities established for the same purpose in many
+parishes. The Society of Jesus, which was founded in the sixteenth
+century, laboring zealously to extend the glory of God among the youth
+under its charge, found no means so effectual in forming hearts to
+virtue and piety, as that of placing them under Mary's protection; and
+the celebrated Association of the Prima Primaria, canonically erected
+by Pope Gregory XIII, in 1584, became the parent stem of all the
+congregations, subsequently found in honor of the Mother of God.
+
+It was reserved for our age, to give full development to this fruitful
+devotion, by popularizing and thus making it a powerful means of
+salvation. In placing themselves under the patronage of the Immaculate
+Conception, the Children of Mary cannot fail to obtain from their
+divine Mother the most abundant and precious benedictions.
+
+In 1830, the Immaculate Virgin had uttered a prophecy which resounded
+incessantly in the heart of the missionary, to whom was confided the
+account of the apparitions of the medal. "The Blessed Virgin wishes
+you to found a congregation, of which you will be the Superior, a
+confraternity of Children of Mary; the Blessed Virgin will bestow many
+graces upon it as well as upon yourself, indulgences will be granted
+it. The month of Mary will be celebrated with great solemnity; Mary
+loves these festivals; she will requite their observance with abundant
+graces."
+
+But why this command and this prediction of the Queen of Heaven to her
+servant, in regard to something which was not all new?
+
+Sodalities of the Children of Mary already existed among the numberless
+youths educated by the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. And following
+their example, the Ladies of the Sacred Heart had formed similar
+associations among their scholars, and in 1832, had even established
+them for ladies in the world, under the invocation of the Immaculate
+Conception. It would seem then that a new work was superfluous.
+
+It is true, Associations of the Children of Mary already existed and
+accomplished much good, but they were confined to a few isolated
+places, and recruited from a chosen class, they were not popular;
+and Mary designed as elements of the future work, that multitude of
+young girls in the ordinary walks of life, surrounded by all the
+trials, exposed to all the dangers of the world, who to-day form her
+blessed family, whose innocence she guards, whose modest virtues she
+encourages, and from whom she receives in exchange, a tribute of love,
+praises and a visible service acceptable to her heart. Let us speak
+a word concerning its establishment. When the apostolic heart of M.
+Aladel received Sister Catherine's consoling predictions, he did not
+fully comprehend how he, a simple missionary, should accomplish the
+designs of the Queen of Heaven.
+
+Whilst quietly awaiting the propitious hour and means foreseen by
+Providence, he seized every opportunity of speaking to the children and
+young people of Mary's bounty and the happiness of belonging to her.
+His simplicity and animation, when discoursing upon this his favorite
+theme, attracted all hearts; his listeners hung entranced upon the good
+father's words; and the unction of grace sustaining the ardor he had
+enkindled, the associations were formed by way of trial, in the houses
+of the Daughters of Charity, where M. Aladel had officiated.
+
+Such were those of the Providence Orphanage in Paris, of the House of
+Charity of St. Médard, of the Madeleine; also, those of St. Flour,
+Mainsat, Aurillae, established from 1836 to 1846. The young girls, who
+were externs, very soon rivaled the inmates of the establishments in
+obtaining similar favors; several new associations were begun in the
+year 1846, those of St. Vincent de Paul, St. Roch, St. Paul, St. Louis,
+in Paris, and others in Toulouse, Bruguière, etc., in the province.
+
+Whilst in Rome in 1847, M. Étienne, Superior General of the Priests
+of the Mission and Daughters of Charity, obtained from the Sovereign
+Pontiff a rescript dated June 20th, empowering him and his successors
+to establish among the scholars attending the schools of the Daughters
+of Charity a pious confraternity, under the title of the Immaculate
+Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin, with all the indulgences
+accorded the Congregation of the holy Virgin established at Rome for
+the scholars of the Society of Jesus.
+
+Three years later, the Sovereign Pontiff extended a similar favor to
+the youths educated by the Priests of the Mission; also, to the little
+boys in charge of the Daughters of Charity.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+From this time, 1847, thanks to the benediction of Pius IX, the
+Sodality of the Children of Mary, spread rapidly in all quarters of
+the globe, wherever the Daughters of Charity were established. A
+manual containing the rules of the Association, its privileges and
+obligations, was compiled by M. Aladel, the Director of the work. The
+livery naturally adopted by the Children of Mary was the Miraculous
+Medal, suspended from a blue ribbon.
+
+The new Association from its very origin gave a wonderful impulse to
+youthful piety; humble girls, earning their daily bread, practiced the
+most heroic virtues, under the influence of a desire to become faithful
+Children of Mary; and, sustained by the same spirit, the poorest
+courageously resisted temptation, and complied with those duties so
+little esteemed at the present day--filial devotion and self-denial.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+To these precious fruits are also joined some beautiful flowers of
+devotion; how eagerly the Children of Mary repair to re-unions of the
+Association, especially on all their Mother's feasts, chanting her
+praises and exciting one another to fervent piety.
+
+But the death of these young girls is still more admirable than their
+life; many of them stricken down in the very bloom of youth, fortified
+with their medal and ribbon as with a precious talisman, smile at death
+and defy hell.
+
+Thirty years have passed since the grain of mustard seed was confided
+to the earth, and it has now become an immense tree, whose branches
+overshadow the most distant countries. Europe numbers nearly a thousand
+of these Sodalities, about six hundred being composed of externs, or
+mixed associates. They amount, in other portions of the world to nearly
+two hundred. This displays the visible effects of the benediction of
+St. Peter's Successor; the promises made in 1830 were not realized
+until they had received the approbation of the Vicar of Jesus Christ,
+Pius IX, whose name will always be dear to the Children of Mary.
+
+The Associations vary in number from ten to three hundred sodalists,
+which gives us an average of eighty thousand young girls, courageously
+holding themselves aloof from satan's snares and pomps, and leading a
+life of purity and piety amidst the seductions of a corrupt world.
+
+Surely this must be a miracle of God's right hand and Mary's bounty!
+
+We have thought it would not be uninteresting to the readers, to give
+the statistics for the end of the year 1877, of the Sodalities of the
+Children of Mary, established in the houses of the Daughters of Charity
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF THE _SODALITIES OF CHILDREN OF MARY_.
+
+
+ SODALITIES.
+ _Internal._ _External SUMMARY.
+ and
+ Mixed._
+ France 287 451 } Internal Sodalities 287
+ } External and Mixed 451
+
+ _Europe._
+
+ (Exclusive of France.)
+ Belgium 11 14 }
+ Switzerland 1 7 }
+ Italy 55 64 }
+ Spain 17 25 }
+ Portugal .. 1 } Internal Sodalities 100
+ Great Britain 2 13 } External and Mixed 153
+ Poland 8 9 }
+ Prussia .. 5 }
+ Austria 4 11 }
+ Greece .. 1 }
+ Turkey 2 3 }
+
+ _Asia._
+
+ Turkey 2 7 } Internal Sodalities 2
+ Persia .. 2 } External and Mixed 10
+ China .. 1 }
+
+ _Africa._
+
+ Egypt 3 2 } Internal Sodalities 6
+ Algeria 3 17 } External and Mixed 20
+ Canary Isles .. 1 }
+
+ _America._
+
+ United States 11 44 }
+ Guatemala 4 3 }
+ Brazil 11 9 } Internal Sodalities 54
+ Peru 9 6 } External and Mixed 81
+ La Plata 1 6 }
+ Chili 3 1 }
+ Cuba 5 4 }
+ Mexico 9 7 }
+ Ecuador 1 1 }
+
+ _Oceanica._
+
+ Philippine Isles 1 6 } Internal Sodalities 1
+ } External and Mixed 6
+
+ --- --- ----
+ Total 450 721 Total 1,171
+
+
+_III.--Definition of the Immaculate Conception._
+
+We have observed several times in the course of this work, that the
+principal end of the apparition of 1830, was to popularize belief
+in the Immaculate Conception. The facts we have related, prove most
+conclusively that, thanks to the Miraculous Medal, this object has been
+fully attained.
+
+As a preparation for the accomplishment of this great design,
+Providence placed in St. Peter's chair, a Pontiff animated with the
+most filial tenderness for Mary, and inspired him from the beginning
+of his pontificate, with the desire of glorifying the most holy Mother
+of God, by proclaiming the Immaculate Conception an article of Faith.
+And this hope, this desire, had Pius IX, in the ninth year of his
+reign, the happiness of realizing amidst the universal applause of the
+Catholic world.
+
+We quote below from M. Villefranche's beautiful History of Pius IX, the
+account of this memorable event:
+
+ "By an Encyclical dated from Gaëta, Pius IX had interrogated
+ the Episcopacy of the Universal Church, on the subject of the
+ belief in the Immaculate Conception. The answers received were
+ six hundred and three in number. Five hundred and forty-six
+ Bishops earnestly entreated the doctrinal definition, a few
+ hesitated, though only as to whether it were an opportune
+ moment or not for the decision, for the sentiment of the
+ Catholic world was in unison as regards the belief itself.
+
+ "To assist at this solemnity, Pius IX summoned to his presence,
+ all the Bishops who could repair to Rome. They came five
+ hundred and ninety-two in number, and from all quarters of
+ the globe except Russia, where they were held in check by
+ the suspicious despotism of the Emperor Nicholas. These
+ prelates put the finishing touch to the work of the commission
+ charged with preparing the Bull; but at the very moment of
+ making the final pause in its rendition, it was asked if the
+ Bishops assisted there as judges, to pronounce the definition
+ simultaneously with the Successor of St. Peter, and if their
+ presence must be mentioned as judges, or, if the supreme
+ judgment should not be attributed to the word of the Sovereign
+ Pontiff alone. The debate terminated suddenly, as if by the
+ inspiration of the Holy Spirit. 'It was the last sitting,' says
+ Mgr. Audisio, an eye-witness; 'the hour of noon had just been
+ sounded, every knee was bent to recite the _Angelus_. Then each
+ one resumed his place, and scarcely had a word been spoken,
+ when there arose a universal acclamation to the Holy Father,
+ a cry of eternal adherence to the Primacy of St Peter's See,
+ and the debate was ended:' '_Petre, doce nos; confirma fratres
+ tuos!_ (Peter, teach us; confirm thy brethren!)' And the
+ instruction these pastors asked of the supreme Pastor was the
+ definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+ "The 8th of December, 1854, was the grand day, the triumphal
+ day, which, according to the beautiful words of Mgr.
+ Dupanloup's circular, 'crowns the hopes of past ages, blesses
+ the present age, evokes the gratitude of future generations,
+ and leaves an imperishable memory; the day that witnessed
+ the first definition of Faith, which was not preceded by
+ dissension and followed by heresy.' All Rome rejoiced. Immense
+ multitudes, representing every tongue and nation on the globe,
+ thronged the approaches to the vast Basilica of St. Peter's,
+ far too small to accommodate all who came. Soon, the Bishops
+ were seen forming into the line of march, ranged according to
+ their seniority, and followed by the Cardinals. The Sovereign
+ Pontiff, amidst the most brilliant surroundings, appeared
+ last, whilst the chant of the Litany of the Saints, wafted to
+ Heaven, invited the celestial court to unite with the Church
+ militant in honoring the Queen of Angels and men. Seated upon
+ his throne, Pius IX received the obeisance of the Cardinals and
+ Bishops, after which the Pontifical Mass began.
+
+ "When the Gospel had been chanted in Greek and Latin, Cardinal
+ Macchi, Dean of the Sacred College, accompanied by the Dean of
+ the Archbishops, and the Dean of the Bishops present, with an
+ Archbishop of the Greek rite and one of the Armenian, presented
+ themselves at the foot of the throne, and supplicated the
+ Holy Father, in the name of the universal Church, to raise
+ his Apostolic voice and pronounce the dogmatic decree of the
+ Immaculate Conception. The Pope replied that he willingly
+ granted this prayer, but ere doing so he would invoke once more
+ the assistance of the Holy Spirit And, now, every voice united
+ in the solemn strains of the _Veni Creator_. When the chant had
+ ceased, the Pope arose, and in that grave, sonorous, majestic
+ voice, to whose profound charm millions of the faithful have
+ borne testimony, commenced reading the Bull.
+
+ "He established: first, the theological motives for belief in
+ Mary's privilege; then he adduced the ancient and universal
+ traditions both of the East and West the testimony of religious
+ orders and schools of theology, of the holy Fathers and
+ the Councils, and finally, the pontifical records, ancient
+ as well as modern. His countenance, as he pronounced the
+ words inscribed upon these pious and magnificent documents,
+ betrayed his emotion. Several times he was so overcome that
+ for a few moments it was impossible for him to proceed. 'And
+ consequently,' he adds, 'after having offered unceasingly in
+ humility and fasting, our own prayers and the public prayers
+ of the Church to God the Father through His Son, that He would
+ deign to direct and confirm our thoughts by the inspiration of
+ the Holy Spirit, after having implored the assistance of all
+ the celestial court, ... in honor of the holy and indivisible
+ Trinity, for the glory of the Virgin Mother of God, for the
+ exaltation of the Catholic Faith and the increase of the
+ Christian religion, by the authority of Our Saviour, Jesus
+ Christ, the blessed Apostles, Peter and Paul, and our own.'----
+
+
+ "Here his voice was stifled with emotion, and he paused an
+ instant to wipe away the tears. The assistants, deeply affected
+ as well as himself, but mute with respect and admiration,
+ awaited in profound silence the continuation. In a clear,
+ strong voice, slightly elevated by enthusiasm, he proceeded:
+
+ "'We declare, profess, and define, that the doctrine affirming
+ that the Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved and exempt from
+ all stain of original sin, from the first instant of her
+ conception, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of
+ men, is a doctrine revealed by God, and for this reason, all
+ the faithful must believe it with firm and unwavering faith.
+ Wherefore, if any one should have the presumption, which
+ God forbid, to allow a belief contrary to what we have just
+ defined, let him know that he wrecks his faith and separates
+ himself from the unity of the Church.'
+
+ "The Cardinal Dean, prostrating himself a second time at the
+ feet of the Pontiff, supplicated him to publish the Apostolic
+ letters containing the definition; the Promoter of the Faith,
+ accompanied by the Apostolic Prothonotary also presented
+ themselves, to beg that a verbal process of the decree be
+ prepared. And now the cannon of the castle of St. Angelo and
+ all the bells of the Eternal City, announced the glorification
+ of the Immaculate Virgin!
+
+ "In the evening, Rome, enwreathed in illuminations, and crowned
+ with inscriptions and transparencies, resounded with joyous
+ music, and was imitated at that very time by thousands of
+ cities and villages all over the face of the globe. If we were
+ to compile an account of the pious manifestations relating to
+ this event, it would fill, not volumes, but libraries. The
+ Bishops' responses to the Pope before the definition were
+ printed in nine volumes; the Bull itself, translated under
+ the care of a learned French Sulpitian into every tongue and
+ idiom of the universe, filled about ten volumes; the pastoral
+ instructions, publishing and explaining the Bull, and the
+ articles on the subject in religious journals, would certainly
+ require several hundred, especially if we add thereto the
+ poems, scraps of eloquence, and descriptions of the monuments
+ and fêtes. We should not omit mention here of the spontaneous
+ and incomparable periodical illuminations at Lyons, each time
+ the course of the year brings round the memorable 8th of
+ December."
+
+Pius IX knew that the Catholic movement leading to the definition of
+the Immaculate Conception had originated in France, and he was happy to
+see the French people enthusiastically welcome the Pontifical decree
+of December 8th, and celebrate with unparalleled magnificence Mary's
+glorious privilege. Henceforth, the love he bore that country was
+firmly rooted in his heart, and her misfortunes had but increased his
+tenderness and compassion. It consoles us to insert here the prayer to
+the Blessed Virgin which he composed, and recited daily to obtain for
+her the protection of the Queen of Heaven:
+
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, look down upon France, pray for
+ France, save France! The greater her guilt, the more need of
+ your intercession. Only a word to Jesus reposing in your arms,
+ and France is saved."
+
+ "O Jesus! obedient to Mary, save France!"
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL AND THE WAR.
+
+
+The wars which have taken place since the year 1854, the epoch of the
+definition of the Immaculate Conception, have presented a spectacle to
+which the world was unaccustomed. Not only were _priests_ called upon
+to administer to the spiritual necessities of the soldiers in camps
+and ambulances, but _Sisters_ also were charged with the care of the
+sick and wounded. The priest's cassock and the robe of the religious,
+became almost as familiar to the eye as the military costume itself!
+Sisters of Charity accompanied the armies in the wars of the East, in
+1854; in Italy, in 1859; in the United States, in 1861; in Mexico, in
+1864; in Austria and Prussia, in 1866; in France and Germany, in 1870;
+and we find them ministering to the Russian army and also the Turkish
+ambulance in 1877. For them no enemies existed; the camps of both
+belligerents claimed their attention, they were equally devoted to all
+who needed their ministry of charity.
+
+During the hardships and dangers of war, chaplains and Sisters could
+not fail to invoke the Blessed Virgin, and the Miraculous Medal
+naturally became the sign of the soldier's devotion and the pledge
+of our merciful Mother's protection, against the moral and physical
+dangers war brings in its train. The medal was profusely distributed;
+it was accepted and worn with confidence; even Protestants and
+Schismatics asking eagerly for it; officers as well as private soldiers
+attaching it to their uniforms when they set out for the combat; the
+sick employed it to obtain recovery, or at least, an alleviation of
+their sufferings; the dying kissed it with love; many attributed to it
+their preservation in battle, and a still greater number were indebted
+to it for their eternal salvation.
+
+In proof of the above, we shall present some facts, selected from the
+thousands related in the correspondence of the missionaries and Sisters
+who followed the several armies.
+
+
+WAR IN THE EAST, FROM 1854 to 1856.
+
+ "On the Feast of the Assumption, we shall have at Varna, a
+ beautiful religious ceremony, at which the whole army will
+ assist. I have brought from Constantinople a banner of the
+ Blessed Virgin; this we will set up, and confidently invoking
+ Mary, we know she will obtain the cessation of the cholera, and
+ success of our arms."[24]
+
+ [Footnote 24: Letter of Mr. Boré, Aug. 13, 1854.]
+
+ "The inmates of our hospital of Péra, at Constantinople, number
+ about twelve hundred, including sixty officers. These gentlemen
+ receive the Miraculous Medal with joy and gratitude. Endeavor
+ to find some good souls who will send us a large supply of
+ these pious objects."[25]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Letter of a Sister, September 29.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The three patients whose confessions I heard were poor
+ Irish. They manifested great resignation in their sufferings;
+ all three asked for, and gratefully received a medal of the
+ Immaculate Conception. An English officer (a Catholic), who
+ wore with pious confidence the medal of Mary, told me that
+ several of his colleagues, though Protestants, had accepted the
+ medal and preserved it respectfully, and that the cholera and
+ balls of the Russians had, so far, spared them."[26]
+
+ [Footnote 26: Letter of Mr. Boré, October 25.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Even amidst the turmoil of war, and in spite of the multitude
+ of sick and wounded, the Catholics of Constantinople celebrated
+ solemnly the definition of the dogma of the Immaculate
+ Conception. Mr. Boré wrote as follows, March 22d, 1835: 'The
+ _triduum_ of thanksgiving for the declaration and promulgation
+ of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception was fixed for the
+ Feast of Saint Joseph. We have endeavored to unite, in the
+ expression of our joy, with that of the faithful throughout the
+ Catholic world, and to imitate, to the best of our ability,
+ those magnificent and most consoling manifestations that have
+ taken place in France, who in this has shown a true love for
+ the Mother of God, a love already repaid by a new development
+ of national strength and vigor. The zeal and skill of our dear
+ Sisters in charge of the adjoining establishment have greatly
+ contributed to the splendor of the feast. The good taste
+ and experience of one of them suggested to her the idea of
+ substituting for the large picture over the main altar a figure
+ of the Immaculate Conception; the Blessed Virgin was crowned
+ with golden stars, her dress and drapery were rich and radiant
+ in a glory of gauze, the whole framed in lilies. The head,
+ borrowed from the portrait of a Circassian lady, and the golden
+ crescent under her feet, were happy indications, both in color
+ and emblem, of the events transpiring around us. A Catholic
+ Armenian lady lent a set of diamonds, which flashed back the
+ myriad flames of tapers and candles contained in candelabras,
+ hidden in the abundance of lilies. This illumination,
+ improvised by our pupils in imitation of those they knew would
+ take place throughout France, was indeed an honor to their
+ taste and piety.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "We sometimes meet with sick persons, who, through human
+ respect, ignorance, or indifference, are prevented from
+ receiving the succors of religion. We give them a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, and the Blessed Virgin charges
+ herself with their conversion. Nearly always, without any
+ other inducement, and, as it were, of themselves, they ask for
+ the priest and prepare to receive the Sacraments, manifesting
+ the most lively sorrow for having offended God and abused His
+ benefits. I could cite examples by thousands."
+
+ "Numbers of soldiers wear the Miraculous Medal, the scapular, a
+ reliquary, a cross, or sometimes not one but all of these, and
+ those who do not possess these articles are happy to receive
+ them. In a word, the army is, in a great measure, Catholic, and
+ knows how to pray."
+
+ "A soldier wounded in both legs at the battle of Alma, received
+ for more than two months, the unremitting attention of the
+ physicians and Sisters though without experiencing any relief.
+ Having despaired of saving his life otherwise, the surgeons
+ decided upon amputation. They began by the limb which was most
+ shattered. Next day the patient was in a hopeless condition;
+ there was no question of further amputation. Recourse was
+ then had to supernatural remedies; a novena was made to the
+ Immaculate Mary, and in a few days the patient showed signs of
+ improvement. He is now cured, and his piety and good example
+ are the admiration of his comrades."[27]
+
+ [Footnote 27: Report of Mr. Doumerq, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A patient who was brought in yesterday, refused to go to
+ confession. I placed under his pillow a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, and left him quiet, continuing to give him assiduous
+ care. This morning he called me, and in a resolute tone,
+ inquired if people here died like dogs. 'I am a Christian, and
+ I wish to confess.' 'Yesterday I proposed confession,' said
+ I, 'but you objected, and even sent the priest away.' 'It is
+ true,' he replied; 'but I am sorry for having done so; I wish
+ now to see him as soon as possible.' Since his confession
+ he is completely changed; and calmly awaits the approach of
+ death."[28]
+
+ [Footnote 28: Letter of a Sister, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the Russian prisoners brought to Constantinople after
+ the battle of Tchernaïa, many wore the medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception. By this I understood at once that they were
+ Catholics and Poles."[29]
+
+ [Footnote 29: Letter of Mr. Boré, August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "A young lieutenant in the eighty-fifth regiment, had been
+ wounded in the skull, and when brought to the hospital, his
+ throat was gangrened, and he could scarcely speak. A secret
+ sympathy attracted us towards each other, and he accepted
+ gratefully the services I rendered him. As he was evidently
+ sinking, I spoke to him of the Blessed Virgin, and alluded to
+ the medal he wore around his neck. He smiled, and replied by
+ pressing my hand. When his confession (during which he regained
+ his voice and strength) was finished, he said: 'Monsieur abbé,
+ I have a favor to ask of you.' 'What is it, my friend? tell
+ me; I am anxious to gratify you.' 'Be so kind,' said he, 'as
+ to inform Father Boré that I am here, and am very ill.' These
+ words pierced my heart; however, I was able to answer him:
+ 'Father Boré is he who now speaks to you.' Raising his eyes
+ moistened with tears, and, again pressing my hand, he added:
+ 'I am the brother-in-law of your dear friend, Mr. Taconet, and
+ also brother of the captain of zouaves, whom you assisted a
+ year ago at Varna.' I then recognized in him Mr. _Ferdinand
+ Lefaivre_; he had been recommended to me by a pressing letter
+ from Mr. Taconet, but this letter reached me only after my
+ young friend's death. Mr. Taconet wrote that, on the eleventh
+ of May, the lieutenant with his family had heard Mass at the
+ church of Notre Dame des Victoires, and that he did not doubt
+ but the Blessed Virgin would watch over a life so precious.
+ His hope was not misplaced, for the Blessed Virgin called him
+ to herself, fortified with the Sacraments, on the day of her
+ triumph."[30]
+
+ [Footnote 30: Letter of August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "While we were invoking our Immaculate Mother, on the eve of a
+ combat, in which one of our young soldiers was to take part for
+ the first (and perhaps last) time, he arose and went to Mary's
+ altar; kneeling an instant, he arose again, and hung around
+ the statue's neck a silver heart, in which were inscribed his
+ name and the names of his parents. I feel, as St Vincent has
+ forcibly expressed it, that he did not perform this act of
+ devotion without tearful eyes and a sobbing heart."[31]
+
+ [Footnote 31: Letter of Sister M----, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A serious fire had broken out in the city of Salonica. The
+ flames soon appeared opposite the Sisters' house, the buildings
+ on the other side of the street, a few yards distant, being
+ seized and devoured by the fire, which the wind continued to
+ fan into activity. Already the Sisters' roof and that of the
+ adjoining house were covered with dense smoke. I cast therein
+ several Miraculous Medals. There was no prospect of human
+ succor, as the rumor of there being powder in the vicinity had
+ caused every one to seek safety in flight. I also retired,
+ deeming it useless to expose myself longer; and besides, I was
+ obliged to go to the assistance of a poor man, who, partially
+ intoxicated, persisted in remaining near the fire. I returned
+ shortly after, expecting to see our houses in flames; I doubted
+ not but they would be wholly consumed. As I approached, a
+ young man stopped me on the way, and said: 'Your property
+ is saved, sir; the Sisters' house is not even in danger.'
+ Only on reaching the scene could I be convinced that he had
+ spoken truly. It would be impossible to express my emotion at
+ the sight. I sent to inform our dear Sisters of the fact and
+ they could scarcely credit this marvellous preservation. It
+ suffices to add, that all Salonica is unanimous in pronouncing
+ it a miracle."[32]
+
+ [Footnote 32: Letter of Mr. Turroque, July 16, 1856.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In an ambulance crowded with Russians was a young Pole,
+ severely wounded and suffering intolerable pain; he earnestly
+ invoked the sweet and merciful Virgin Mary. By his side lay
+ a Russian Protestant, wounded also, and attacked by violent
+ dysentery. So offensive was the odor from his disease, that
+ both patients and nurses complained. He appeared utterly
+ indifferent to everything concerning religion. He took no
+ notice of the Sister as she passed and repassed; he never
+ even deigned to look at her. The young Pole, on the contrary,
+ called her frequently, and gratefully received her care and
+ consolations. One evening our young Catholic was suffering more
+ than usual; the pain drew tears from his eyes; his groans and
+ cries were incessant. He called the Sister and begged her to
+ help him, saying his patience was exhausted; he was in despair;
+ his sufferings were excruciating. The Polish Sister, consoling
+ and encouraging him, bade him have confidence, and gave him
+ a medal to apply to the wounded limb. The young man followed
+ her suggestion; and laying his hand on the medal to keep it in
+ place, he soon fell asleep. Our Protestant appeared unconscious
+ of what was going on, yet he had seen and examined all. Some
+ days after, he called our Polish Sister to him, (she was the
+ only one who could understand him) and said: 'Sister, please
+ give me what you gave this young man that did him so much
+ good, for I suffer greatly!' 'My friend, she replied, I desire
+ nothing better than to relieve you also; but you lack what
+ effected his cure, faith and confidence. You Protestants deny
+ the power of the Blessed Virgin; you do not acknowledge her as
+ your Queen, your Advocate, your Mother. So what can I do? It
+ was a medal of Mary that so speedily relieved your neighbor,
+ the young Pole.' 'Give me one also, Sister,' he answered; 'I
+ believe all that you tell me; you do good to every one, why
+ should you deceive me?' 'But,' said the Sister, 'have you
+ confidence in Mary, the Mother of God? Do you believe in her
+ mercy and her power?' 'I believe all that you believe, Sister,
+ since Mary hears the prayers of the unfortunate, and brings
+ relief to the suffering, she cannot deceive us!' The Sister,
+ much consoled at hearing these words, gave him a medal, and
+ our admirable talisman effected in his soul most gratifying
+ results. He asked to receive instruction from a priest, and
+ after some days employed in studying the holy doctrines of
+ the Church, and in assiduous prayer to Mary he abjured his
+ errors. As he had been separated from the other patients, on
+ account of the unpleasant odor we have mentioned, he was at
+ full liberty to act as he wished. After his baptism, and the
+ reception of the holy Eucharist, being unable to restrain
+ his transports, he exclaimed: 'Oh! how happy I am! My heart
+ has never known such joy! I am content to die, and I do not
+ regret having been struck on the battlefield! To my wound do
+ I owe my salvation. Oh! how we poor Protestants are deceived!
+ By what lies are we led astray! How good God is to rescue me
+ from error! May the sweet and holy Virgin be known and loved
+ always and everywhere!' And in these beautiful dispositions, he
+ expired."[33]
+
+ [Footnote 33: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ "A sergeant advanced in years had been suffering for three
+ months from a severe dysentery; one morning the Sister who was
+ visiting the sick found him in tears. 'Ah! my brave soldier,'
+ said she, 'what is the meaning of all this grief?' 'O Sister,'
+ he exclaimed, 'lend me patience, for mine is exhausted. I am
+ in despair; I can endure my sufferings no longer; I feel that
+ I am going to die, and just at the time I was to receive a
+ pension--at the very moment I hoped to return to my country
+ with honor and see my family once more. Must I die afar from
+ home and leave my bones in a strange land?' Groans were
+ mingled with his words, and his gestures had all the violence
+ of despair. The Sister who relates the fact says: 'My heart
+ ached at witnessing the grief of this brave man, with his white
+ hairs and numerous scars. However, as my tears would not have
+ dried his, I tried to rouse his courage by other means, and I
+ promised him a perfect cure if he would unite in prayer with
+ our little family at the hospital. Giving him a Miraculous
+ Medal, I recommended him to God and Mary with my whole heart.
+ We made a novena to the Immaculate Virgin, and ere its
+ termination our sergeant was entirely cured."[34]
+
+ [Footnote 34: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Every evening our soldiers assembled around the Sisters in
+ charge and sang pious canticles; they even composed music and
+ words suited to the occasion. These they intoned, uniting
+ their deep, sonorous voices with the Sisters'. In unison and
+ harmony of mind as of voice, they repeated in chorus the sacred
+ names of Jesus and Mary as a rallying cry of hope, confidence
+ and triumph--a chant of love, a united echo of heaven and
+ country. Then their hearts thrilled with joy inexpressible,
+ and they were filled with pride and happiness at the thought
+ of belonging to that France who imparts to her children the
+ heroism of courage and the virtue of the perfect Christian.
+ During the month of May our military concerts were multiplied;
+ all were rivals in zeal. The altars were adorned with admirable
+ piety and taste, notwithstanding our extreme poverty. Entire
+ trees were felled to assist in concealing the dilapidated state
+ of the barracks, which had been converted into chapels. Had
+ our soldiers been free to do so, they would have despoiled the
+ gardens of the Turks to adorn the sanctuary of the Queen of
+ Heaven.
+
+ "In the ambulances of Péra some of the most zealous soldiers,
+ both officers and privates, wished to present Mary a solemn
+ homage of their devotedness and gratitude. They chose a heart
+ as the symbol of their sentiments. All the balls extracted
+ from their wounds were collected to compose the offering. But
+ a soldier suddenly exclaimed with enthusiasm: 'Comrades, what
+ are we doing? Shall we offer the Blessed Virgin a schismatical
+ heart? All these balls are Russians!' 'True,' replied another,
+ 'these balls are Russian; we must have French balls. Let us ask
+ the Russians for those we sent them.' 'Stay,' said a third,
+ 'you have forgotten that these Russian balls are stained with
+ our blood!' 'Well, then, let us use them,' suggested a fourth,
+ 'the French balls will form the centre.' They went immediately
+ to ask the Russians for the French balls. These were willingly
+ given. The heart was prepared; their names inscribed on it with
+ the designation of the regiment, and the offering was presented
+ to Mary amid the most lively acclamations and transports of joy
+ and gratitude."[35]
+
+ [Footnote 35: Letter of Sister M., July 9, 1857.]
+
+
+ITALIAN WAR, 1859.
+
+Letter of Sister Coste:
+
+ _Gaëta, December 18th, 1860._
+
+ During the siege of Gaëta, the Sisters of Charity willingly
+ remained in the city, to assist the sick and wounded
+ Neapolitans. They felt that there was no greater security
+ against the dangers to which they were exposed, than that of
+ recommending themselves and their abode to the protection
+ of the Blessed Virgin, by means of the Miraculous Medal.
+ Their Superioress, Sister Coste, wrote December 18th, 1860:
+ "Frequently the cannon roars in our ears; bombs whiz around us,
+ but divine Providence is our shield. The first night of our
+ sleeping at the palace, we were saluted by the Piedmontese, who
+ sent us a multitude of bombs; one of them burst just outside
+ our room, and you might have supposed a thunderbolt had fallen.
+ Yet, the precious medal of our Immaculate Mother, which we
+ had placed at all the doors and windows, shielded us from the
+ danger. A large piece of iron detached itself from the bomb
+ above mentioned, and remains in the wall, a visible testimony
+ of Mary's protection. This circumstance reanimated our
+ confidence, and we hesitate not to pass through the streets,
+ notwithstanding the whizzing of projectiles."
+
+
+UNITED STATES.
+
+Extracts of letters written by Sisters of Charity during the War of
+Secession, from 1861 to 1865:
+
+ _"Military Hospital (House of Refuge),_ }
+ _"St. Louis, Missouri._ }
+
+ "Many of our poor soldiers scarcely knew of the existence of
+ God, and had never even heard baptism mentioned. But, when
+ the Sisters explained to them the necessity of this Sacrament,
+ and the goodness of God, who, by means of it, cleanses us from
+ the original stain, and adopts us as His children, they were
+ filled with the deepest emotion, and often shed tears. On one
+ occasion, a patient said: 'Sister, do not leave me; tell me
+ more about that good God whom I ought to love. How is it that
+ I have lived so long and have never heard Him spoken of as you
+ have just done? What must I do to become a child of God? 'You
+ must,' replied the Sister, 'believe and be baptized.' 'Well,
+ baptize me,' was his answer. The Sister persuaded him to await
+ the arrival of Father Burke, who would be there next morning.
+ The patient consented reluctantly. 'Ah!' said he, 'it is very
+ long to wait, and I am so weak; if I die unbaptized, I shall
+ not go to Heaven.' To relieve his anxiety, the Sister promised
+ to watch near him and administer baptism, should she perceive
+ any unfavorable change in his condition. 'Now,' said he, 'I am
+ satisfied; I rely on you to open for me the gates of Heaven;
+ it is through your intervention I must enter.' He spent a
+ quiet night. Next morning, Father Burke admitted him into the
+ Catholic Church, by the Sacrament of Baptism, which he received
+ with admirable piety. A crucifix was presented him; grasping it
+ eagerly, he kissed it, saying as he did so: 'O my God! I did
+ not know Thee or love Thee before coming to this hospital!'
+ Then, turning to the Sister, he said: 'Sister, I have forgotten
+ the prayer you taught me;' and he repeated after her several
+ times, 'My Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit, sweet
+ Jesus, receive my soul.' He died pronouncing these words."
+
+ "The precise number of baptisms cannot be ascertained; there
+ were probably seven hundred during the two or three years of
+ our residence in the hospital. Five hundred Catholics who
+ had led careless or sinful lives returned sincerely to God
+ and resumed the practice of their religious duties. A great
+ number of these had received no other Sacrament than that of
+ Baptism, and they made their first Communion at the hospital.
+ The majority of the newly baptized died; the others on leaving
+ asked for medals and catechisms, saying they desired to
+ instruct themselves and their families."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier named Nichols fell dangerously ill, and in a few
+ days was reduced to the last extremity. Vainly did we strive
+ to touch his heart and awaken him to a sense of religion.
+ His sufferings were terrible; both day and night was he
+ denied repose, and he could scarcely remain a moment in the
+ same position. His condition was most pitiful. Many of his
+ companions, knowing that he had never been baptized, and having
+ perceived the beneficial effects of baptism upon others, begged
+ the Sisters to propose to him the reception of this Sacrament,
+ thinking it might be a comfort to him, and not being aware of
+ the many efforts that had already been made to induce him to
+ believe in its necessity and efficacy. However, we redoubled
+ our efforts, and placed a Miraculous Medal under his pillow.
+ His comrades regarded his sufferings as a visible chastisement
+ of his impiety. We could not induce him to pronounce the name
+ of God, but he implored the physician, in the most heart
+ rending accents, not to let him die. Four days passed without
+ the least change, when one of his companions, who appeared
+ the most deeply interested in his welfare, said to him, with
+ eyes filled with tears, how much he regretted to see him die
+ thus, utterly bereft of a hope for the future. The other
+ soldiers had engaged this man to acquaint the patient with his
+ danger, and persuade him to make his peace with God, for they
+ saw that human respect alone prevented his showing any signs
+ of repentance. This last effort of charity was crowned with
+ success; he called for the Sister, and when she came, said to
+ her: 'Sister, I am ready to do all you wish.' After instructing
+ him in what was necessary for salvation, and feeling convinced
+ of the sincerity of his dispositions, she asked him by whom
+ he wished to be baptized. 'By any one you please,' was his
+ answer. But, to be sure that he did not desire a Protestant
+ minister, she said: 'Shall I send for the priest who attends
+ this ward?' 'Yes,' he replied, 'it is he I wish to baptize
+ me.' The priest was sent for without delay, and we had the
+ inexpressible consolation of seeing this poor sinner admitted
+ into the number of the children of God by the very person who,
+ a few days previous, had been an object of his raillery. He
+ became perfectly calm, and expired shortly after, invoking the
+ holy name of Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the patients was a poor young man named William Hudson,
+ who for a long time refused to receive baptism. The Sisters,
+ however, nowise discouraged, explained to him the Sacrament
+ of Baptism, and instructed him in the mysteries of our holy
+ religion, and the Sister, under whose immediate charge he
+ was, hung a medal around his neck. Finally, he asked to speak
+ to good Father Burke; was baptized, and expired in the most
+ edifying dispositions, pronouncing the holy name of Mary.
+ Several others followed his example, and made their peace with
+ God before death."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mr. Huls, a man of thirty-five, though convinced of the
+ necessity of baptism, postponed the reception of it from day
+ to day. Knowing that he had but little attraction for our holy
+ religion, I forbore to mention the subject too frequently.
+ Nevertheless, seeing that death was rapidly approaching, I
+ placed a medal under his pillow and begged the Blessed Virgin
+ to take charge of his salvation. The next day, just as I was
+ turning away after giving him a drink, he called me and said:
+ 'Sister, what ought I to do to prepare for the next world?' I
+ told him that it was necessary to repent of his sins, because
+ sin is the greatest of evils, and it had caused the sufferings
+ and death of our Lord Jesus Christ; that God's goodness and
+ mercy towards sinners are infinite, and that He is always ready
+ to pardon us, even at the last moment, if we sincerely return
+ to Him. I urged him to cast himself with confidence into the
+ arms of this merciful Father, who earnestly desired to open
+ for him the gates of the Eternal City, and I added that it was
+ absolutely necessary to be baptized. He assured me that he
+ believed all I had said to him; he then repeated with fervor
+ the acts of faith, hope, charity, contrition, and resignation
+ to the will of God. Seeing that he was entering into his agony,
+ I baptized him; the Sacraments appeared to revive his strength.
+ He began to pray, and made such beautiful aspirations of
+ love and gratitude to God, that one might have said his good
+ angel inspired them, particularly the act of contrition. I
+ remained with him to the last, praying for him, when he had not
+ strength to do so himself; if I paused a moment through fear of
+ fatiguing him: 'Go on Sister,' he would say in dying accents,
+ 'I can still pray.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Another soldier, William Barrett, scarcely twenty years of
+ age, was almost in a dying condition when brought to the
+ hospital. After doing all I could for the relief of his poor
+ body, I inquired very cautiously as to the state of his soul.
+ Alas! it was deplorable; not that he had committed great
+ crimes, but that he was entirely ignorant of everything
+ relating to his salvation. He had never said a prayer, and he
+ hardly knew of the existence of a God. My first conversation
+ with him on the subject of religion, was not altogether
+ pleasing to him, for he did not understand it; but when I
+ had briefly explained the principal articles of Faith, he
+ listened very attentively, and begged me to tell him something
+ more. When I told him that our Lord had loved us so much as
+ to become man and die on a cross for our salvation, he could
+ not restrain his tears: 'Oh!' said he, 'why did no one ever
+ tell me that? Oh! if I had only known it sooner! How could I
+ have lived so long without knowing and loving my God!' I now
+ prepared him to receive the Sacrament of Baptism, and tried
+ to make him sensible of God's great mercy, in bringing him to
+ the hospital, that he might die a holy death. He understood
+ this and much more, for grace had spoken to this poor heart,
+ so truly penetrated with sorrow for sin. 'I wish to love God,'
+ said he, 'but I am such a miserable creature! I would like to
+ pray, but I do not know how. Sister, pray for me, please.' I
+ promised to do so, and offering him a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, I told him that by wearing it, he would secure the
+ intercession of the Mother of God, who is ever powerful with
+ her divine Son. He gladly accepted the medal, put it around
+ his neck, and repeated, not only the aspiration, O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee,
+ but other prayers, to obtain the grace of a happy death. He
+ then asked me when I would have him carried to the river, for
+ he was under the impression that he could not be baptized
+ without being immersed. I explained to him the manner in
+ which the Catholic Church administers this Sacrament, and the
+ dispositions necessary for receiving it. Listening eagerly to
+ every word I uttered, 'Pray with me, Sister,' said he, 'come
+ nearer, that I may hear you better, for I do not know how to
+ pray.' He repeated with great fervor all the prayers I recited,
+ and thought only of preparing himself for his baptism which
+ was to take place on the following day. From that time he
+ wished to converse with the Sisters only. If his companions or
+ the attendants came to him, he answered them in a few words,
+ evidently showing that he desired to be alone with his God. One
+ of the officers asked him, if he wished any one to write to his
+ family. 'Do not speak to me of my family now,' said he, 'the
+ Sisters have written to my parents. I wish for nothing but to
+ pray and to be baptized.' And the words ever on his lips, were
+ these: 'O God, have mercy on me, a sinner.' Towards evening he
+ became so weak, that I thought it best to remain with him. At
+ three o'clock in the morning, fearing that he was in his agony,
+ I administered the Sacrament of Regeneration; he lived till
+ seven o'clock. The fervor with which he united in the prayers
+ was truely edifying; even when scarcely able to speak, he tried
+ to express his gratitude to God for His goodness and mercy to
+ him. He was most anxious to quit this world, that he might go
+ to that Father, who had admitted him into the number of His
+ children, and whom he so earnestly desired to see and know."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier, advanced in age, told me one day, that in his
+ country the prejudices of the people were so strong against our
+ Faith, that they would refuse hospitality to a traveler did
+ they know him to be a Catholic; as to himself, he had never
+ met with a Catholic previous to his coming to the hospital;
+ but what he had seen here (nothing comparable to which had he
+ ever witnessed among Protestants), was sufficient to convince
+ him of the truth of Catholicity; that he had belonged to the
+ Presbyterian Church, but he would remain in it no longer, and
+ desired to be instructed in our holy religion. I gave him
+ a catechism and some other books, which he read with great
+ attention. Perceiving that his end approached, he asked for a
+ priest and was baptized. 'If it were the will of God,' said he,
+ speaking of his property, which was considerable, 'I should
+ like to live a little longer and enjoy my fortune; but if the
+ Lord wills otherwise, I am ready to leave all.' He was ever
+ repeating these words: 'Not as I will, O Lord, but as Thou
+ wilt.' From the moment of his baptism, he applied himself
+ most diligently to a profitable disposition of the remainder
+ of life, that he might prepare for his journey to eternity.
+ At times, when he felt a little stronger, he studied the
+ catechism; and when he could no longer hold a book, he prayed
+ and meditated in silence. One day as I was giving him a drink,
+ he showed me his medal. 'Ah!' said he, tears of gratitude
+ streaming down his cheeks, 'behold! my Mother. I kiss her
+ every hour!' He prayed constantly, even when he could neither
+ eat, drink, nor sleep. Once when he was extremely weak, the
+ attendants having changed his position, he fainted, and rallied
+ only with great difficulty. On perceiving that I was trying to
+ restore him: 'Ah! Sister,' said he, 'why did you not let me
+ go?' He also remarked to the attendants, that he feared the
+ Sister would prolong his life for a month, but his fears were
+ not realized; in a few days he slept the sleep of the just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "One of the soldiers, who had been a long time in the hospital,
+ having fallen very ill, I tried to persuade him to make his
+ peace with God, before going to meet that God as his Judge. My
+ efforts met with little success; he did not admit the necessity
+ of baptism, and he was not in the least concerned about his
+ salvation. But he accepted a medal, and without being aware of
+ it, he swallowed some drops of holy water. Then I recommended
+ him very earnestly to the Blessed Virgin, and in a few days
+ after he asked to be instructed, and was baptized. We could not
+ give him greater pleasure than to pray beside him. He received
+ Extreme Unction with deep and sincere devotion, and expired in
+ the most happy dispositions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In the hospital was a soldier named Sanders, who, though not
+ very ill, was unable to join his regiment. He had no idea of
+ religion. I remarked that he observed us very closely, as if
+ examining our conduct; nothing escaped him. Before leaving, he
+ came to bid me good-by and thank me for the care I had bestowed
+ upon him. I was somewhat surprised, as I had had no occasion of
+ serving him; but, seeing he was so well disposed, I profited by
+ the opportunity to offer him a medal and a book explaining the
+ Catholic Faith. He accepted them with gratitude, and returned
+ to his regiment. A year later, he came again to the hospital,
+ hastening to inform me of his conversion, and seeking a priest,
+ by whom he was gladly instructed and received into the fold
+ of the Holy Church. 'I owe my conversion,' said he, 'to the
+ intercession of the Immaculate Mary and your prayers, and it
+ has been my happy lot to bring other souls to God.' This was,
+ indeed, the case; employed in a military hospital, where he was
+ the only Catholic, by his zeal and solicitude he instructed
+ many poor sick, called a priest, had them baptized, and enjoyed
+ the consolation of procuring eternal happiness for a large
+ number of his fellow-soldiers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In 1862, a Sister of the hospital at New Orleans gave a medal
+ to one of the attendants on the point of setting out for the
+ army, and she advised him to keep it always about him. Some
+ time after, he returned, having received a slight wound on
+ the head. On seeing the Sister, he exclaimed: 'Sister, here
+ is the medal you gave me; it has saved my life! Just in the
+ midst of battle, the string by which the medal hung around my
+ neck broke, and whilst the cannons were roaring around us, I
+ attached it to a button of my uniform; all my companions fell,
+ and I escaped with this slight contusion.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Military Hospital of Philadelphia._
+
+ "A soldier was brought to the hospital grievously wounded. A
+ few questions which the Sister put to him on the subject of
+ religion revealed the fact, that not only was he not baptized,
+ but also most ignorant of the truths essential to salvation.
+ The Sister then began to instruct him, and with all requisite
+ prudence, gave him to understand that the physicians despaired
+ of his recovery. From this moment he listened with the deepest
+ interest to explanations of the catechism; and, one day, when
+ Sister had spoken to him of the necessity of that Sacrament
+ which renders us children of God and heirs of heaven, he joined
+ his hands and said in the most beseeching tone: 'Oh! do not let
+ me die without baptism!' The Sister then asked him from what
+ minister he desired to receive this Sacrament and he replied:
+ 'From yours; from him who says Mass in the Sister's Chapel.'
+ Before the close of the day, Father MacGrane had satisfied
+ the sick man's pious desire, and the new Christian, filled
+ with joy, incessantly repeated acts of love and gratitude. The
+ physician, making his evening visit, found him so ill, that
+ he directed the attendant to watch him all night, saying he
+ might die at any moment. Before retiring, the Sister gave him a
+ medal of the Blessed Virgin, and briefly narrating to him how
+ this tender Mother had often wrought miraculous cures by means
+ of her blessed image; she encouraged the dying man to address
+ himself to Mary with entire confidence.
+
+ "Next morning she was surprised to find him better; but he
+ was much troubled about 'his piece,' which he could not find;
+ he feared it had been taken away. The Sister soon found and
+ restored it to him; receiving it most joyfully, he asked for a
+ string and placed the medal over his wound. When the physician
+ came, which was soon after, he was no less surprised than the
+ Sister at perceiving the change in his patient's condition.
+ The patient, (Duken by name), continued to improve, and in a
+ few weeks he could walk with the aid of crutches. His first
+ visit was to the chapel; from that day, whenever we had Mass,
+ he rose at five o'clock in order to assist at it; and so eager
+ was he for Father MacGrane's instructions, that the intervening
+ time from one Sunday to another seemed to him very long. He
+ attributed his cure to the Blessed Virgin, and it was indeed
+ most remarkable; for he was out of the physician's hands long
+ before many other soldiers of the same ward whose wounds were
+ less dangerous, and who had received the same attentions, were
+ able to leave their beds. He asked for a furlough that he might
+ visit his wife, whom he was very anxious to see a member of the
+ true Church, but 'knowing her prejudice against Catholics, he
+ dared hope for such a happiness.' It was, nevertheless, granted
+ him; she consented to be baptized with her children, and Duken
+ returned to the hospital, blessing God and the holy Virgin for
+ the wonderful graces bestowed on his family.
+
+ "Our Sisters of the South, like those of the North, were
+ in great demand wherever sufferings and miseries claimed
+ relief, and they responded to the call with a holy courage and
+ eagerness.
+
+ "In these divers localities was the Miraculous Medal the
+ instrument God frequently employed in delivering souls from
+ the yoke of Satan. How often have we seen Mary's image
+ kissed respectfully by lips which had formerly uttered only
+ blasphemies against the Mother of God! Every one asked for
+ a medal; some, no doubt, urged by curiosity or the desire
+ of possessing a souvenir of the Sisters, as they themselves
+ acknowledged; but, even so, they could not carry upon
+ their person this sweet image, without growing better and
+ experiencing the effects of Mary's protection. In nearly every
+ case, what rendered the triumph of grace still more remarkable
+ was the fact of its acting upon men who were not only ignorant,
+ but fanatical, hating the name of Catholic, and excited to
+ fury at the sight of a priest. A Sister relates that she
+ ventured, one day, to ask a soldier, who was in the threshold
+ of eternity, if he had been baptized. 'No,' was the reply, in
+ a voice of thunder; 'no, and I have no wish to be plunged in
+ water just now. Let me alone!'
+
+ "'Recommending him to Mary,' says the Sister, 'I left him.
+ Towards evening, I heard a noise in the ward in the direction
+ of his bed, and the attendant came in haste to say that the
+ patient had sent for me.' 'Ah!' said the latter, in a tone
+ very different from that of his morning's speech; 'I am dying,
+ baptize me, I beg of you.' 'Giving him briefly the necessary
+ instruction, I administered the holy rite, and a few hours
+ later he peacefully expired.'
+
+ "Rarely did these poor soldiers complain of their fate; though
+ but little accustomed to the rigors of military life, they bore
+ them with admirable patience. However, there was one exception
+ to the general rule, that of an old soldier, who murmured
+ continually and accused God of afflicting him unjustly.
+ Arguments were worse than useless, they served but to aggravate
+ the evil. Failing in this means to bring him to a better state
+ of mind, I offered him a medal of the Blessed Virgin. By
+ degrees, his complaints ceased, his countenance became composed
+ and serene, and I had the consolation of seeing him expire in
+ the most edifying dispositions."
+
+
+THE WAR BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND AUSTRIA, 1866.
+
+Letter of Mr. Stroever, Priest of the Mission, July 1st, 1867:
+
+ "The wounded arrive in great numbers, and all our houses are
+ filled. Every one wishes to have a medal; I inquired of one,
+ who had begged for a medal at any price, if he were a Catholic.
+ 'No,' was the answer; 'I am a Protestant but I would like to
+ have it as a souvenir of yourself;' and he received it most
+ gratefully.
+
+ "We observe a certain degree of piety among the soldiers,
+ and the sick are most eager to receive the Sacraments. The
+ Protestants show a remarkable inclination to Catholicity. Not
+ only the private soldiers, but even persons of distinction,
+ wishing to have medals, scapulars or a crucifix. They take no
+ measures to conceal these objects of devotion, and no one seems
+ surprised at seeing them on their persons."
+
+
+REMINISCENCES OF THE COMMUNE, PARIS, 1871.
+
+Notes of a Sister of the Hospital d'Enghien:
+
+ "During the siege, we had placed Miraculous Medals over all the
+ doors and windows of the house. As one of our Sisters expressed
+ the intention of concealing them, Sister Catherine exclaimed:
+ 'No, no; they must be seen; put them in the middle of the
+ principal entrance.'
+
+ "During the few days immediately preceding our departure from
+ the house, the federal national guards said to one another:
+ 'Let us go and ask the venerable Sister Catherine for medals;
+ she has given some to our comrades who have shown them to us,
+ we would like to have them too.' 'But you, poor creatures,'
+ replied a Sister, 'you have no faith, no religion, what good
+ will the medal do you.' 'Very true, Sister,' said they, 'we
+ have not much faith, but we believe in the medal; it has
+ protected others, it will also protect us, and when we go to
+ battle, it will help us to die as brave soldiers.' Good Sister
+ Catherine gave medals to all who presented themselves, and
+ many, who belonged to the enemy, sent their comrades to procure
+ them.
+
+ "After the army had entered Paris, thirty of the wounded
+ insurgents, before being brought to trial, were sent to the
+ Hospital d'Enghien to be nursed by the Sisters. The house
+ was already transformed into an ambulance, and we were
+ obliged to take one of the dormitories of the orphans for the
+ newly-arrived patients. The appearance of these men were so
+ frightful, that Sister Eugenie who had been appointed to attend
+ them, had not the courage for the first two days to make any
+ suggestions to them concerning religion; but finally, feeling
+ that she must comply with her duty, and urged by the advice of
+ a companion, she went to Sister Catherine and asked for medals
+ for the insurgents. Sister gave them cheerfully, and encouraged
+ her to use this powerful means of inspiring these unfortunate
+ men with Christian sentiments. Animated by this thought, Sister
+ Eugenie repaired to the ward, and much affected, proposed
+ to say evening prayers. 'Yes, Sister,' answered some among
+ them. Trembling, she began; but at the _Creed_, overcome by
+ excitement and terror, she wept like a child, and was obliged
+ to pause. When she recovered her voice, it was not to continue
+ the prayers, but to tell the prisoners how much she felt at the
+ thought that on the morrow, they would be judged and perhaps
+ condemned; then making them a brief exhortation, inspired by
+ the circumstances, she offered to give each one a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin, begging them to retain it about their person,
+ happen what might. The proposition was accepted immediately,
+ but Sister Eugenie was too frightened to give the medal into
+ their hands; in the middle of the night, when all seemed to be
+ asleep, she quietly placed a medal under each one's pillow.
+ How great was her joy next morning, to see all these poor
+ insurgents with the medal around their neck.
+
+ "The Superioress came into the hall where the men were
+ collected and asked if they wished a priest to come and hear
+ their confessions. All consented with unequivocal signs of
+ gratitude. A good priest, one of the hostages of the Commune,
+ came and heard their confession. On leaving them he seemed
+ much consoled, and said he had every reason to hope for their
+ salvation. The unfortunate men left the house at seven o'clock,
+ and were conducted to Versailles; they were calm and resigned,
+ and when about to leave, showed the Sisters the medal they
+ wore. Doubtless, God accepted the sacrifice of their life in
+ atonement for their faults."
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Recent Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin
+
+_IN FRANCE, ITALY AND GERMANY_.
+
+THE CONFIDENCE WITH WHICH THESE APPARITIONS SHOULD INSPIRE US.
+
+
+The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, has, in our
+age, brought to its climax, devotion to the Blessed Virgin. Divine
+Providence employed twenty-four years in preparing the world for this
+great event; we have seen in the preceding chapters, how much the
+apparition of 1830, contributed thereto, and how powerful the influence
+of the Miraculous Medal in propagating this devotion. Since this time a
+second period of twenty-four years has elapsed, during which devotion
+to the Immaculate Mary has shone as a radiant star in the firmament
+of the Church, spreading everywhere the light of truth and the warmth
+of true piety; and, by a gentle yet efficacious impulse, producing
+unanimity of mind and heart in the great Catholic family.
+
+Since the definition, as well as before it, France continues to be the
+privileged country of Mary; nowhere else are miracles so numerous, or
+graces so abundant. Whence arises this glorious prerogative? So far as
+we are permitted to penetrate the secrets of God, it appears to us, to
+our understanding: France who has wrought so much evil by disseminating
+philosophical and revolutionary doctrines, is to repair the past by
+propagating truth, and Mary desires to prepare her for this mission.
+Everyone knows, moreover, that the French character possesses a force
+of expansion and a power of energy that render the French eminently
+qualified to maintain the interests of truth and justice. Then, again,
+is not France the eldest daughter of the Church, since she was baptized
+in the person of Clovis, the first of the Most Christian Kings; and in
+virtue of this title, is it not her duty to devote herself under the
+patronage of her Mother in heaven to the defence of her Mother on earth?
+
+Be the motives of Mary's predilection for the French nation what they
+may, the fact is incontrovertible. Nevertheless, the Blessed Virgin has
+not forgotten other Catholic countries; they also have had their share
+in the singular favors she has so generously dispensed in our days.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF LOURDES.--1858.
+
+Four years after the definition of the Immaculate Conception, Mary
+vouchsafed to manifest herself anew to the world, and this time, as if
+in token of her gratitude, she took the glorious name the Church had
+just decreed her: "_I am the Immaculate Conception_." It was in France
+that the vision of the medal took place, preparatory to the act of
+December 8th, 1854; it was also in France, at Lourdes, in the diocese
+of Tarbes, at the base of the Pyrenees, that Mary came in person, to
+testify and proclaim that privilege which she prized above all others.
+In 1830, she choose a young, unlettered Sister for her confidant; in
+1846, she addressed herself to two poor peasant children; in 1858, she
+also selects one in the humblest ranks of life as the depository of her
+merciful designs.
+
+Bernadette Soubirous, born at Lourdes in 1844, of poor parents, was
+a young girl of weak and delicate health; she could neither read nor
+write; she knew no prayers but her _Chaplet_, and she could speak only
+the _patois_ of the country. "On February 11th, 1858," says she, "my
+parents were in great perplexity for want of wood to cook the dinner. I
+put on my hood, and offered to go with my younger sister Marie and our
+friend, the little Jeanne Abadie, to pick up some dead branches." The
+three children repaired to the bank of the Gave, opposite the grotto
+of Masabielle; in which were collected the sand and branches of trees
+drifted there by the current. But to reach the grotto, it was necessary
+to wade through the shallow bed of the river. Marie and Jeanne took off
+their shoes without hesitation; Bernadette delayed and feared to cross,
+as she was suffering from a cold. Whilst thus deliberating, she was
+astonished by a rushing of wind, instantly repeated, though the trees
+near the river were motionless. One vine only was slightly agitated,
+an eglantine, which grew in the upper part of this natural grotto.
+This niche and the wild rose within reflected a most extraordinary
+brilliancy; a Lady of admirable beauty appeared in the niche, her feet
+resting on the eglantine, her arms gracefully bent, and her hands
+joined; with a sweet smile, she saluted the child. Bernadette's first
+emotion was one of fear; she instinctively grasped her chaplet, as if
+seeking defence in it, and she tried to raise her hand to make the sign
+of the cross, but her arm fell powerless and her terror increased. The
+Lady also had a _Chaplet_ suspended from her left wrist; taking it in
+her right hand, she made a very distinct sign of the cross, and passed
+between her fingers the beads (white as drops of milk); but her lips
+did not move. She smiled upon the shepherdess, who, reassured from
+this moment, recovered the use of her arm, made the sign of the cross
+and recited the _Chaplet_. The little Bernadette remained on her knees
+nearly an hour, in ecstacy. At length, the Lady made her a sign to
+approach, but Bernadette did not move. Then the Lady, extending her
+hand, smiled, and, bowing as if bidding farewell, disappeared. Returned
+to herself, Bernadette thought of rejoining her companions, who, having
+seen nothing, were at a loss to understand her conduct. She entered
+the water, which she found, to her surprise, of a gentle warmth. On
+reaching home, she imparted the secret to her sister, and then to her
+mother, who did not credit it.
+
+However, the child being tormented by an earnest desire to behold the
+apparition again, her parents granted permission for her return to the
+grotto with several companions; the same manifestation took place and
+the same ecstacy. On Thursday, February 18th, she again repaired to the
+grotto; the apparition was visible for the third time, and the Lady
+requested Bernadette to come there daily for a fortnight. Bernadette
+promised. "And I," replied the Lady, "promise to render you happy not
+in this world, but the next."
+
+On the succeeding days, the young girl went to the grotto, accompanied
+by her parents and an ever increasing crowd. None of them saw or
+heard anything. The transfiguration of the countenance of Bernadette
+announced the presence of a supernatural being, who urged the child to
+pray for sinners.
+
+On the sixth day of the fortnight, the august Lady revealed to
+Bernadette three secrets, forbidding her to communicate them to any
+one. She taught her a prayer, and charged her with a message. "You will
+go," said she, "and tell the priest that a chapel must be built here,
+and that the people must come here in procession."
+
+Bernadette communicated this order to the curé, but he hesitated to
+believe the child, and told her to ask the Lady for a sign which might
+confirm her words, for example, to make the wild rose which winter has
+divested of its leaves, break forth into blossom, then the month of
+February.
+
+The Blessed Virgin did not judge proper to grant the miracle, but she
+tried Bernadette's obedience, by commanding her to kiss the ground
+on several occasions, and to climb the rock on her knees, praying
+meantime for sinners. One day she enjoined upon her to go and drink at
+the fountain of the grotto, to wash therein, and to eat of a certain
+herb which grew in that place. Bernadette saw no fountain, and no one
+had ever heard of one in the grotto, yet on a sign from the Lady, the
+docile child dug the earth with her fingers, and discovered a muddy
+water which, notwithstanding her repugnance, she used as commanded.
+
+At the end of several days, the little thread of muddy water had become
+a limpid and abundant spring, and what was still more marvelous, it
+wrought innumerable prodigies. On February 26th, by the use of this
+water, a man who had gone blind twenty years previous, by the explosion
+of a mine, recovered his sight, and on the last day of the fortnight, a
+child dying, or as was supposed, dead, regained life and health in the
+waters of this fountain.
+
+We will not dwell here upon the persecutions directed against
+Bernadette by the magistrates, or upon the vexations besetting the
+pilgrims who flocked hither from all parts of the world. Every one has
+read these details in the work of M. Lasserre, who so ably depicts the
+dignity and firmness displayed in the affair by the parish priest, M.
+Peyramale.
+
+The apparition of March 25th, has a special significance. Bernadette,
+on several occasions, inquired the Lady's name. At this question, the
+vision, on the day mentioned, unclasped her hands, the chaplet of
+golden chain and alabaster grains sliding on to her arm. She opened her
+arms and directed them towards the earth, as if to indicate that her
+virginal hands were filled with benedictions for the human race; then
+raising them towards the celestial country, whence descended on this
+day the divine messenger of the Annunciation, she clasped them with
+fervor, and looking towards heaven with an indescribable expression
+of gratitude, she pronounced these words: "_I am the Immaculate
+Conception_." Having said this, she disappeared, and the child found
+herself and the multitude in presence of a bare rock.
+
+The Immaculate Virgin appeared to Bernadette twice again; on Easter
+Monday, April 5th, and July 16th, the Feast of our Lady of Mount
+Carmel.
+
+The following 28th of July, the Bishop of Tarbes named a commission of
+inquiry, composed of ecclesiastics, physicians and learned men. July
+18th, 1862, he published a decree concerning the events that had taken
+place at Lourdes; it was couched in the following words:
+
+ "We judge that the Immaculate Mother of God did really appear
+ to Bernadette Soubirous, Feb. 11th, 1858, and on succeeding
+ days to the number of eighteen times in the grotto of
+ Masabielle, near the city of Lourdes; that this apparition
+ bears all the characteristics of truth, and that the faithful
+ may rely upon its reality."
+
+Mary had petitioned that a chapel be built upon the spot. The first
+stone was laid in the month of October, 1862, the piety of pilgrims
+furnishing the necessary funds for the erection of the edifice, and on
+the 21st of May, 1868, the Holy Mass was celebrated there for the first
+time, in the crypt which was to bear the new sanctuary. The connection
+existing between the apparitions of 1858 and 1830 is indicated by two
+painted windows in the sanctuary, one of which represents Bernadette's
+vision, the other that of Sister Catherine.
+
+The pilgrimage to Lourdes has assumed vast proportions; thanks to the
+railroads, the pilgrims each year number hundreds of thousands, coming
+from every quarter of the globe, and countless miracles recompense the
+faith of those who seek in this sanctuary the merciful power of the
+Immaculate Mary.
+
+The grotto of Lourdes, reproduced in a thousand places, has become one
+of the most popular objects of devotion.
+
+As to Bernadette, the interest and veneration attached to her have not
+in the least affected her candor and simplicity. She has retired to the
+convent of Sisters Hospitallers of Nevers, and nothing distinguishes
+her from the most humble of her companions.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF PONTMAIN (DIOCESE OF LAVAL).--1871.
+
+ "France, having been invaded by the Prussians, was conquered;
+ Paris was besieged and suffered the horrors of famine,
+ aggravated by the rigors of an extremely cold winter. It
+ was at this period the Blessed Virgin vouchsafed to appear,
+ bringing words of hope and consolation to the people of her
+ predilection. The place favored with this apparition was the
+ little town of Pontmain, situated about four leagues from
+ Fougères, on the confines of the dioceses of Laval and Rennes.
+ It was Monday, January 17th, 1871, about six o'clock in the
+ evening; Eugène Barbedette, a child aged twelve years, looking
+ from the door of the barn where he was occupied with his father
+ and younger brother, Joseph, aged ten years, perceived in the
+ air, a little above and behind the house of the family of
+ Guidecoq, which was opposite him, a tall and beautiful Lady,
+ who smiled upon him. He called his brother, his father, and
+ a woman of the village who was talking to him at the moment.
+ But his brother was the only one except himself who saw the
+ vision, and both gave exactly the same description of this
+ wonderful being. The Lady was clothed in a wide-sleeved blue
+ robe, embroidered with golden stars. Her dress descended to
+ the shoes, which were also blue, fastened with a clasp of
+ gold-colored ribbon. She wore a black veil, covering a portion
+ of her forehead and falling behind her shoulders to the girdle.
+ Upon her head was a golden circle like a diadem, and with no
+ ornament but a red line passing through the middle. Her face
+ was delicate, very white, and of incomparable beauty.
+
+ "In a little while, quite a crowd had collected around the
+ barn-door; Madame Barbedette, the Sisters in charge of the
+ parish school, the venerable curé, and more than sixty other
+ persons, but of all these, only two shared the happiness of the
+ Barbedette children. These two were also children, boarders
+ at the convent. Frances Richer, aged eleven years, and Jane
+ Mary Lebossé, aged nine and a half. The other spectators were
+ witnesses only of the joy and happiness of the four privileged
+ ones, but all were convinced that it was truly the Blessed
+ Virgin who had appeared.
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin's attitude was at first, that seen in the
+ Miraculous Medal. After the parish priest arrived, a circle of
+ blue was formed around the apparition, and a small red cross
+ like that worn by pilgrims, appeared on the Blessed Virgin's
+ heart. All began to pray. Suddenly the vision was enlarged,
+ and outside the blue circle, appeared a long white strip or
+ band, on which the children saw letters successively traced
+ and forming those words: '_But pray, my children. God will, in
+ a short time hear you. My Son allows himself to be touched by
+ your supplications._' Then, raising her hands, as if in unison
+ with the singing of the canticle, '_Mother of hope_,' there
+ appeared in them a red crucifix at the top of which was the
+ inscription: _Jesus Christ_.
+
+ "This prodigy was visible for three hours. After juridical
+ information, Mgr. Wicart, Bishop of Laval, confirmed by a
+ solemn judgment, the reality of the apparition.
+
+ "On the 17th of January, 1872, the first anniversary of the
+ event, a beautiful statue representing the apparition, was
+ solemnly set up, in presence of more than eight thousand
+ pilgrims, and a magnificent church is now in course of erection
+ on the spot.
+
+ "The Holy See has authorized the clergy of the diocese of Laval
+ to recite the _Office_ and celebrate the Mass of the Immaculate
+ Conception, every year, on the 17th of January; and by Papal
+ brief, an archconfraternity, under the title of _Our Lady of
+ Hope_, has been instituted in the parish of Pontmain."[36]
+
+ [Footnote 36: Extract of a relation approved by the Bishop of
+ Laval.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We could enumerate many other apparitions of the Blessed Virgin in
+France, but, not having been approved, by ecclesiastical authority, we
+dare not give them as authentic. We shall mention only the apparitions
+with which Miss Estelle Faguette was favored with at Pellevoisin, in
+the diocese of Bourges. The instantaneous cure of this lady, afflicted
+by a malady judged incurable, may be regarded as evidence of the truth
+of the account. Moreover, the Archbishop of Bourges appears to have
+considered it reliable, as he has authorized the erection of a chapel
+in memory of the event. On the 14th of February, 1876, the Blessed
+Virgin appeared to Miss Faguette, and the vision was repeated fifteen
+times in the space of ten months. Mary's attitude was similar to that
+represented on the Miraculous Medal, except that the rays proceeding
+from her hands were replaced by drops of dew, symbols of grace. A
+scapular of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was on her breast.
+
+Mary expressed her love for France, but complained of her admonitions
+being disregarded. She recommended fervent prayer, by the fulfillment
+of which duty we may confidently rely upon God's mercy.
+
+ "What have I not done for France?" said she. "How many
+ warnings have I not given! Yet, this unhappy land refuses to
+ listen. I can no longer restrain my Son's wrath. France will
+ suffer. Have courage and confidence. I come especially for the
+ conversion of sinners. You must pray; I set you the example.
+ My Son's heart has so great love for my heart that He cannot
+ refuse my petitions. You must all pray, and have confidence!"
+ Showing the scapular, she said: "I love this devotion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Who has not heard of the wonderful manifestations of the Blessed Virgin
+in Italy of late years? How many thousands of persons, moved by piety
+or curiosity, have visited the Madonnas of Rimini, of San Ginesio,
+of Vicovaro, of Prosessi, etc., and have witnessed the movement of
+the eyes, the change of color, and other miraculous signs certainly
+attributable to none but a supernatural power. It does not appear,
+however, that Mary has, in this country, presented herself in person,
+though here she receives the most sincere and abundant tributes of
+affection. Doubtless, she considers any stimulus to the faith of its
+people unnecessary. And besides, may we not say that she has fixed her
+abode in Italy, since her own house, the house of Nazareth, wherein the
+mystery of the Incarnation was accomplished, and where dwelt the Holy
+Family, has been transported thither by the hands of angels?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whilst the Prussian government is persecuting the Church, the Blessed
+Virgin vouchsafed to appear in the two most Catholic provinces of her
+kingdom, and in two opposite frontiers, near the banks of the Rhine
+and in the Grand Duchy of Posen. Does she not seem to say to the good
+people of these localities, that they must have confidence and that
+God will conquer their enemies? We must remark that on both of these
+occasions, Mary announces herself as the _Virgin conceived without
+sin_.
+
+We give an abridged account of these two apparitions, which we have
+every reason to consider supernatural. The second vision had been
+formally approved by the Bishop of Ermeland.
+
+On the 3rd of July, 1876, at Marpingen, an inconsiderable village of
+the district of Trèves (Rhenish Prussia), the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to three little girls, in a pine forest about the hour of the evening.
+The three children were each about eight years of age, and belonged
+to families of poor, honest farmers residing in the village. They
+perceived a bright light, and in the midst of it a beautiful Lady
+seated, holding a child in her right arm. The Lady and child were clad
+in white, the Lady crowned with red roses, and in her clasped hands, a
+little cross.
+
+The vision was renewed several times. To the childrens' questions as
+to her name, she answered; "_I am she who was conceived without sin_;"
+and when asked what she desired, the reply was: "That you pray with
+fervor, and that you commit no sin." Several sick persons were cured by
+touching the place which the children pointed out as that occupied by
+the Blessed Virgin. These facts are incontestable; but they have not
+yet been examined by ecclesiastical authority.[37]
+
+ [Footnote 37: Extract from _Catholic Annals_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the village of Grietzwald, in Varmia, one of the ancient provinces
+of Poland annexed to Prussia, four young girls, poor and of great
+innocence, were favored on various occasions for two months, beginning
+June 27th, 1877, with apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, who appeared
+sometimes alone, sometimes carrying the Child Jesus, holding in his
+hands a globe surmounted by a cross. Both Mother and Child were clothed
+in white.
+
+To the children's question: "Who are you?" the apparition answered, on
+one occasion: "I am the Blessed Virgin Mary, _conceived without sin_;"
+and another time, "_I am the Immaculate Conception_."
+
+In the first apparition, our Lady's countenance was sad, and she even
+shed tears; afterwards, it betokened joy. She asked that a chapel be
+erected and a statue of the Immaculate Conception placed therein. At
+each apparition she blessed the crowd, which was always numerous; she
+blessed also a spring, which has since then furnished an abundant
+supply of water, effecting miraculous cures. She recommended the
+recitation of the _Rosary_, and exhorted all to fervent prayer, and
+confidence in the midst of the trials which were to come.[38]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Letters from Poland.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+These recent apparitions of the Blessed Virgin have founded new
+pilgrimages, the faithful flocking to the favored spots in honor of the
+Mother of God, and ask for the graces which she bestows with a truly
+royal liberality. At the same time her ancient sanctuaries, far from
+being neglected, have only become more endeared to piety, many having
+been reconstructed with magnificence, or at least most handsomely
+embellished; it suffices to mention Fourvières, Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde,
+Rocamadour, Boulogne-sur-mer, Liesse and Buglose.
+
+The coronation of the most celebrated statues of the Blessed Virgin,
+in the name and by the munificence of Pius IX, was the occasion of
+imposing solemnities, and also a means of infusing into the devotion of
+the people greater vigor and fervor.
+
+The exercises of the Month of Mary have extended to the most humble
+villages, and there is scarcely a parish without its confraternity in
+honor of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Science, eloquence, poetry, music, sculpture, painting and architecture
+have rivalled one another in celebrating the glory of the Virgin Mother.
+
+What may we deduce from this wonderful increase of devotion to the
+Immaculate Mary?
+
+The impression naturally produced is that of confidence. A society
+which pays such homage to Mary, cannot perish. If, as St Bernard says,
+it is unheard of that any one has been forsaken who had recourse to
+her intercession, how were it possible that the fervent prayers of an
+entire people should fail to touch her heart? No, the future is not
+without hope; the mediation of Mary will save us.
+
+The venerable Grignion of Montfort, in his _Treatise_ on true devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin has written these lines: "It is by the Blessed
+Virgin Mary, Jesus Christ came into the world; it is also by her,
+that he is to reign in the world. If then, as is certain, the reign
+of Jesus Christ will come, so likewise is it certain that this reign
+will be a necessary consequence of the knowledge and reign of the
+Blessed Virgin. Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, produced that
+most stupendous of all creations, a Man-God, and she will produce by
+the power of this same Holy Spirit, the greatest prodigies in these
+latter times. It is through Mary the salvation of the world began, it
+is through Mary the salvation of the world is to be consummated. Mary
+will display still greater mercy, power and grace in these days. Mercy,
+to bring back poor sinners; power, against the enemies of God; grace,
+to sustain and animate the valiant soldiers and faithful servants of
+Jesus Christ, combating for His interests. Ah! when will arrive the
+day that establishes Mary mistress and sovereign of hearts, to subject
+them to the empire of Jesus?... Then will great and wonderful things be
+accomplished.... When will this joyful epoch come, this _Age of Mary_,
+in which souls absorbed in the abyss of the interior of Mary, will
+become living copies of the sublime, original, loving and glorifying
+Jesus Christ?"
+
+Father de Montfort adds, in addressing our Saviour: _Ut adveniat regnum
+tuum, adveniat regnum Mariæ!_ May the reign of Mary come that they
+reign, O Jesus, may come!
+
+Is not this the _Age of Mary_? Was there ever in the Church, a period
+in which Mary was, if we may thus express it, so lavish of favors as
+in these, our days? Was there ever a period in which she has appeared
+so frequently and familiarly, in which she has given to the world,
+admonitions so grave and maternal; in which she has worked so many
+miracles; and poured out graces so abundantly? The reader of this
+volume will answer unhesitatingly, that no period of history offers
+anything comparable to what we have witnessed in our own days.
+
+It is true, that the day of triumph announced by the venerated
+Montfort, appears far distant; one might say that the kingdom of God on
+earth is more compromised than ever. The wicked make unexampled efforts
+to demolish the social edifice; they are numerous, powerful, and
+possessed of incalculable resources. But for the Church, when all seems
+lost, then is her triumph at hand. God sometimes permits the malice of
+men to exceed all bounds, that His power may be the more manifest when
+the moment of their defeat arrives.
+
+All the united efforts of the Church's enemies in the course of ages,
+all their errors, hatred and violence directed against her, the Spouse
+of Christ, are now concentrated in what is termed the Revolution--that
+is, anti-Christianity reduced to a system and propagated throughout the
+world, it is Satan usurping the place of Jesus Christ.
+
+But He who has conquered the world, and put to flight the prince of the
+world, will not permit Himself to be dethroned. He will reign, and even
+now, before our eyes, is His kingdom being prepared, by the mediation
+of the Immaculate Mary, of whom the promise was made that _she should
+crush the serpent's head, and to whom alone belongs the privilege of
+destroying all heresies arising upon earth_.
+
+
+ _THE END._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: The book included a decorative image at the
+beginning of each chapter.
+
+The labels for these have been removed in the text version of
+this book
+
+The oe ligature has been expanded. There were many printer's errors in
+this publication, which have been corrected.
+
+ Page 25 Extraordinay is now extraordinary.
+ Page 112 physican is now physician.
+ Page 158 Physycian is now for physician.
+ Page 258 Prepartion is now preparation.
+ Page 266 Tranformed is now transformed.
+
+Inconsistent use of accents has resulted in 2 words being
+amended. Chalons is now Châlons, and Eugene is now Eugène.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Miraculous Medal
+ Its Origin, History, Circulation, Results
+
+Author: Jean Marie Aladel
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2013 [EBook #44231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Karina Aleksandrova, Sue Fleming, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo1" id="illo1"></a>
+<img src="images/i001.jpg" width="271" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>SISTER CATHERINE LABOUR&Eacute;,</i><br />
+
+<i>The Daughter of Charity, favored with the Vision of the Miraculous
+Medal in 1830.<br />
+
+Died December 31, 1876.</i></div></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p class="no-indent center"><small><b>THE</b></small><br /></p>
+
+<h1>MIRACULOUS MEDAL<br /></h1>
+
+<p class="no-indent center">&mdash;<small><b>ITS</b></small>&mdash;<br /></p>
+
+<p class="label1"><i>Origin, History, Circulation, Results</i>.<br /></p>
+
+<p class="label1 space-below space-above"><b>BY M. ALADEL, C.M.</b><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/line.png" width="157" height="20" alt="" /></div>
+
+<p class="no-indent small center space-above"><b>TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,</b><br /></p>
+
+<p class="no-indent small center"><b>BY P.S.,</b><br /></p>
+
+<p class="small space-below center"><b>Graduate of St. Joseph's, Emmitsburg, Md.</b><br /></p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+<p class="label1">ILLUSTRATED.<br /></p>
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="small space-above center">PHILADELPHIA:<br /></p>
+<p class="label1">H.L. KILNER &amp; CO.,<br /></p>
+<p class="small center">PUBLISHERS.<br /></p>
+
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1880, BY JOHN B. PIET.</p>
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="DEDICATION" id="DEDICATION">DEDICATION.</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="center">TO</p>
+
+<p class="title"><span class="smcap">The Most Compassionate Virgin Mary,</span></p>
+
+<p class="smcap center"><b>mother of god, conceived without sin.</b></p>
+
+
+<p><i>Oh Mary, conceived without sin, Virgin incomparable, august Mother of
+Jesus, thou who hast adopted us for thy children, and who hast given us
+so many proofs of thy maternal tenderness, deign to accept this little
+book, feeble token of our gratitude and love!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Oh! may it be instrumental in attracting and attaching inviolably to
+thee, the hearts of all who read it!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!</i></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="AUTHORS_DECLARATION" id="AUTHORS_DECLARATION"><i>AUTHOR'S DECLARATION.</i></a></h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p>In conformity with the decree of Pope Urban VIII, we declare that
+the terms miracle, revelation, apparition and other expressions of a
+similar nature here employed, have, in our intention, no other than a
+purely historical value, and that we submit unreservedly the entire
+contents of this book to the judgment of the Apostolic See.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE_OF_THE_AMERICAN_PUBLISHER" id="PREFACE_OF_THE_AMERICAN_PUBLISHER"><i>PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLISHER.</i></a></h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/line.png" width="157" height="20" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<p>Since the hour when the Beloved Disciple took the Blessed Virgin to
+his own, the followers of her Divine Son have always cherished a
+reverential affection for her above all other creatures. They have
+regarded her as the ideal of all that is true and pure and sweet and
+noble in the Christian life, and they have honored her as the most
+favored of mortals, the greatest of saints, the masterpiece of the
+Almighty. The peculiar veneration paid to her by the Apostles, was
+caught up by the first Christians, who regarded her with awe because
+of her great dignity; and when she died, her memory was held in
+benediction. But death could not sever her from those who, in the
+person of St. John, had been given to her for her children. She still
+lived for the Church. From the time when the faithful took refuge
+in the Catacombs to the fifth century, when the Council of Ephesus
+solemnly sanctioned the homage paid to her as the Mother of God, her
+intercession was often invoked; and from that day, devotion towards her
+has increased until our own age, when the nations of the earth unite to
+proclaim her Blessed.</p>
+
+<p>Often has Mary given signal proofs of the pleasure she takes in the
+devotion of her clients and of the power she possesses to grant their
+petitions. Graces asked through her mediation have been suddenly
+obtained; wonders in the way of cures and conversions have been wrought
+at her shrines; disasters have been averted; plagues have been made
+to cease; and, to crown all her favors, apparitions have occurred, in
+which she has shown herself, radiant with the lustre of Heaven, to
+her loyal servants; and, in some instances, she has left something
+like the scapular, the Miraculous Medal and the fount in the grotto of
+Lourdes, as memorials of her visit.</p>
+
+<p>These manifestations of her maternal solicitude have of late been more
+frequent, more renowned, and more efficacious than ever. As the end
+draws near and the dangers increase, her anxiety for the sanctification
+of her own bursts its bonds and urges her to find new ways to the
+hearts of men. Among the most recent of these demonstrations, the
+Miraculous Medal is one of the most remarkable. How it originated,
+how rapidly and widely it has circulated, and how gloriously it has
+fulfilled its mission, are told in this book. A more interesting and
+edifying history could not easily have been written. To all children of
+Mary, in America as elsewhere, it will be welcome, and for them this
+edition has been prepared by</p>
+
+<p class="right">THE PUBLISHER.<br /></p>
+
+<p class="indent">May 4, 1880.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE_TO_THE_FRENCH_EDITION" id="PREFACE_TO_THE_FRENCH_EDITION"><i>PREFACE TO THE FRENCH EDITION</i></a></h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/line.png" width="157" height="20" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<p>The eighth and last edition of THE HISTORY OF THE MIRACULOUS
+MEDAL, extending up to the year 1842, has for a long time been
+out of print. More than once efforts have been made to have a new
+edition published, but until now they have failed. The recent death
+of the Sister who was favored with the Blessed Virgin's confidence,
+has again excited a general desire for the work; for many persons are
+eager to learn the origin of the medal, and others hope to get the full
+particulars of it. For these reasons, the present edition has been
+undertaken.</p>
+
+<p>Believing that it would gratify our readers, we have placed at the
+beginning of the book a biographical sketch of the privileged Sister,
+Catherine Labour&eacute;, and to it we have added some notes concerning M.
+Aladel, her Director, who was the author of the previous editions.</p>
+
+<p>These editions of the History presented but a very condensed account
+of the apparition of the Blessed Virgin in 1830; for serious reasons
+induced M. Aladel to suppress many things. He feared especially to
+attract attention to the humble daughter who had transmitted Heaven's
+orders, and who, it was best, should remain unknown to the end of her
+life.</p>
+
+<p>Now, these fears are no longer an obstacle, and we are permitted to
+publish, for the edification of the faithful, all that the Sister
+revealed, at least, all that we still possess of these communications.
+At the time of the last edition, M. Aladel could understand but
+imperfectly the import of the vision of the medal, but certain events
+of subsequent occurrence, have placed this important revelation in a
+clearer light, and fully established its connection with the past and
+the future. We have endeavored to show the designs of Providence, by
+proving that the apparition of 1830 was not an isolated fact; that
+it marked the end of a disastrous period for the Church and society;
+that it was the beginning of a new era, an era of mercy and hope; that
+it was a preparation for the definition of the Immaculate Conception
+as a dogma of faith; in fine, that it was the first of a series of
+supernatural manifestations, which have greatly increased devotion to
+the Blessed Virgin, insomuch, that our age may justly be styled the age
+of Mary.</p>
+
+<p>We have judged it advisable to omit quite a number of miraculous
+occurrences related in the preceding editions, and substitute for them
+others not less authentic, but more recent, thus demonstrating that
+the medal is as efficacious in our days, as it was at the time of its
+origin.</p>
+
+<p>We ask those who may hereafter obtain similar favors, to send an
+account of them, together with satisfactory vouchers of their
+authenticity, to the Superior-General of the Daughters of Charity, rue
+du Bac, 140, or to the Director of the Daughters of Charity, rue de
+Sevres, 95, Paris.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</a></h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="max-width:32em" summary="Table of ContentsA">
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#DEDICATION"><span class="smcap"><span class="hangindent">Dedication</span></span></a></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#DEDICATION">iii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#AUTHORS_DECLARATION"><span class="smcap"><span class="hangindent">The Author's Declaration</span></span></a></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#AUTHORS_DECLARATION">v</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><a href="#PREFACE_OF_THE_AMERICAN_PUBLISHER"><span class="smcap"><span class="hangindent">Preface</span></span></a></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#PREFACE_OF_THE_AMERICAN_PUBLISHER">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#Sister_Catherine">CHAPTER I.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#Sister_Catherine">Sister Catherine, Daughter of Charity&mdash;Her Birth&mdash;Early
+ Life&mdash;Vocation&mdash;Entrance into the Community&mdash;Apparition
+ of the Blessed Virgin&mdash;The Medal&mdash;Sister Catherine is sent to
+ d'Enghien Hospital&mdash;Her humble, hidden Life&mdash;Her Death.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Sister_Catherine">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">Mary's Agency in the Church&mdash;This Agency always manifest, seems to
+ have disappeared during the Eighteenth and at the beginning of the
+ Nineteenth Century&mdash;Mary reappears in 1830&mdash;Motives and
+ Importance of this Apparition&mdash;The Immaculate Conception.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">42</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine&mdash;First
+ Apparition: An Angel Conducts the Sister to the Chapel&mdash;Mary
+ Converses with Her&mdash;Second Apparition: Mary standing upon a Globe,
+ her hands emitting Rays of Light, symbolic of Grace&mdash;Mary orders a
+ Medal to be Struck&mdash;Third Apparition: Mary Repeats the Order.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">The Medal Appears&mdash;The Welcome it Receives&mdash;Canonical
+ Investigation ordered by Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len&mdash;Wonderful Circulation of
+ the Medal.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></td>
+ <td align="right"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Development of the Devotion to the Immaculate Conception&mdash;Mgr. de
+ Qu&eacute;len's Circular.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">79</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Extraordinary Graces obtained by means of the Miraculous
+ Medal&mdash;Graces obtained from 1832 to 1835&mdash;During the year
+ 1835, in France, Switzerland, Savoy, Turkey&mdash;From 1836 to 1838, in
+ France, Italy, Holland, &amp;c.&mdash;Notre Dame des
+ Victoires&mdash;From 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China,
+ &amp;c.&mdash;From 1843 to 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">94</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">Progress of the Devotion to Mary crowned by the Definition of the
+ Immaculate Conception&mdash;Our Lady of La Salette&mdash;The Children of
+ Mary&mdash;The Definition of the Immaculate Conception.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">261</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">The Miraculous Medal and the War&mdash;The War in the East&mdash;The
+ Italian War&mdash;The United States&mdash;War between Prussia and
+ Austria&mdash;Souvenirs of the Commune.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">289</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Recent Manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church&mdash;Our Lady
+ of Lourdes&mdash;Our Lady of Pontmain, &amp;c.&mdash;Conclusion.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="Table_of_Engravings_of_the_Miraculous_Medal" id="Table_of_Engravings_of_the_Miraculous_Medal"></a>Table of Engravings of the Miraculous Medal</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="max-width:32em" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr>
+ <td align='left'>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo1">Portrait of Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;, the Daughter of Charity favored
+ with the Vision of the Miraculous Medal in 1830.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><i><a href="#illo1">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo69">First Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;,
+ Daughter of Charity, during the night of July 18th, 1830. After a
+ picture painted according to Sister Catherine's directions. Summoned by
+ her Guardian Angel, under the form of a child, emitting rays of light,
+ Sister Catherine arises, follows him to the Chapel, which she finds
+ brilliantly illuminated; she afterwards sees the Blessed Virgin seated
+ in the sanctuary. The picture represents Sister Catherine at the Blessed
+ Virgin's feet, her hands on the Blessed Virgin's knees: "My child," says
+ the Blessed Virgin, "the times are very disastrous, great troubles are
+ about to descend upon France; the throne will be upset, the entire world
+ will be in confusion by reason of miseries of every description."</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo69">53</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo77">Second Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;,
+ November 17th, 1830, first picture. About half-past five in the evening,
+ whilst Sister Catharine is taking her meditation, the Blessed Virgin
+ again appears. She stands upon a hemisphere, and holds in her hand a
+ globe which she offers to our Lord. Suddenly her fingers are filled with
+ most dazzling rings and precious stones. "This globe," says the Blessed
+ Virgin, "represents the whole world and particularly France." She adds
+ that the rays escaping from her hands "are symbols of the graces she
+ bestows upon those who ask for them."</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo77">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</a></span></td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo80">Same Apparition, second picture. "Then," relates Sister Catherine,
+ "there formed around the Blessed Virgin a somewhat oval picture, upon
+ which appeared in golden letters these words: 'O Mary! conceived without
+ sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!' and a voice said: 'Have a
+ medal struck upon this model; those who wear it indulgenced will receive
+ great graces, especially if they wear it on the neck; abundant graces
+ will be bestowed upon those who have confidence.'" At that instant, the
+ picture being turned, Sister Catherine sees on the reverse, the letter
+ M, surmounted by a cross, and beneath this the sacred Hearts of Jesus
+ and Mary.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo80">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo99">Medal struck by order of Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo99">78</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo227">Apparition of the Miraculous Medal to M. Ratisbonne.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo227">205</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left"><span class="hangindent"><a href="#illo295">Representation of the Miraculous Medal, modelled in accordance with the
+ description given by Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;.</a></span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#illo295">272</a>, <a href="#illo296">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<p class="title"><span class="smcap"><a id="Sister_Catherine"></a>Sister Catherine</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="label1"><i>DAUGHTER OF CHARITY</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">HER BIRTH&mdash;EARLY LIFE&mdash;VOCATION&mdash;ENTRANCE INTO THE
+COMMUNITY&mdash;APPARITION OF THE VIRGIN&mdash;THE MEDAL&mdash;SISTER CATHERINE
+IS PLACED AT THE HOSPITAL D'ENGHIEN&mdash;HER HUMBLE, HIDDEN LIFE&mdash;HER
+DEATH.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>It is an extensively credited assumption, that those who are favored
+with supernatural communications should have something extraordinary
+in their person and mode of life. One easily invests them with an
+ideal of perfection, which, in some measure, sets them apart from
+the majority of mankind. But if, at any time, an occasion occurs of
+proving that such an assumption is erroneous, if we discover in these
+divine confidants weaknesses or only infirmities, we are astonished
+and tempted to be scandalized. Among the Christians who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>knew St. Paul
+only by reputation, some were disappointed on a closer acquaintance;
+they said his appearance was too unprepossessing and his language too
+unrefined for an apostle. Were not the Jews scandalized that Our Lord
+ate and drank like others, that His parents were poor, that He came
+from Nazareth, and that He conversed with sinners? So true is it, that
+we are always disposed to judge by appearances.</p>
+
+<p>Not so with God. He sees the depths of our hearts, and often what
+appears contemptible in the eyes of the world, is great in His.
+Simplicity and purity He prizes especially. Exterior qualities, gifts
+of intellect, birth and education, are of little value to Him, and when
+He has an important mission to confide, it is ordinarily to persons not
+possessing these qualifications. Thus, does He display His wisdom and
+power, in using what is weak, to accomplish great results. Sometimes,
+He chooses for His instruments subjects that are even imperfect,
+permitting them to commit faults in order to keep them in all humility,
+and convince them that the favors they receive are not accorded their
+own merits, but are the gift of God's pure bounty.</p>
+
+<p>These observations naturally prelude Sister Catherine's biography; they
+explain in advance the difficulties which might arise in the mind of
+the reader at the contrast between a life so simple and ordinary and
+the graces showered upon her.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Sister Catherine (Zo&eacute; Labour&eacute;) was born May 2, 1806, in a little
+village of the C&ocirc;te-d'Or Mountains, called Fain-les-Moutiers, of the
+parish of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. This last place, particularly dear
+to St. Vincent, was not far from the cradle of St. Bernard, that
+great servant of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>Mary, nor from the spot where St. Chantal passed a
+part of her life, as if in the soil as well as the blood there was a
+predisposition to certain qualities or hereditary virtues.</p>
+
+<p>Her parents, sincere Christians, were held in esteem. They cultivated
+their farm, and enjoyed that competency which arises from rural labor
+joined to simplicity of life. God had blessed their union with a
+numerous family, seven sons and three daughters.</p>
+
+<p>At an early age, the sons left the paternal roof; little Zo&eacute;, with
+her sisters, remained under the mother's eye, but this mother, God
+took from Zo&eacute;, ere she had completed her eighth year. Already capable
+of feeling the extent of this sacrifice, it seemed to her as if the
+Blessed Virgin wished to be her only Mother.</p>
+
+<p>An aunt, living at R&eacute;my, took Zo&eacute; and the youngest sister to live with
+her; but the father, a pious man, who in his youth had even thought of
+embracing the ecclesiastical state, preferred having the children under
+his own eye, and at the end of two years they were brought home.</p>
+
+<p>Another motive, also, impelled him to act thus. The eldest sister
+thought seriously of leaving her family to enter the Community of
+Daughters of Charity, and the poor father could not bear the idea of
+confiding his house to mercenary hands. And thus, at an age when other
+children think only of their sports, Zo&eacute; was inured to hard work.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twelve, with a pure and fervent heart, she made her First
+Communion in the church of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Henceforth, her only
+desire was to be solely His who had just given Himself to her for the
+first time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
+<p>Very soon after, the eldest sister left home to postulate at Langres;
+and Zo&eacute;, now little mistress of the house, did the cooking, with the
+assistance of a woman for the roughest work. She carried the field
+hands their meals, and never shrank from any duty however laborious or
+severe.</p>
+
+<p>Moutiers-Saint-Jean possesses an establishment of the Sisters of St.
+Vincent de Paul. Zo&eacute; went to see them as often as her household duties
+permitted, and the good Sister-Servant, who loved her much, encouraged
+the child in her laborious life; yet the latter never spoke to the
+Sister of her growing vocation, but awaited, with a secret impatience,
+until her sister (two years her junior) would be able to take charge
+of the house. It was she to whom Zo&eacute; confided her dearest desires, and
+then commenced for the two that tender intimacy of life, one of pure
+labor and duty, and whose only relaxations were attending the services
+of the parish church.</p>
+
+<p>The two young girls, thinking themselves able to dispense with the
+servant, dismissed her, and now shared between them all the work. Zo&eacute;,
+who was very sedate and trustworthy, watched over everything with
+the utmost vigilance, and took care of her sister with a mother's
+tenderness.</p>
+
+<p>One of her favorite occupations was the charge of the pigeon house,
+which always contained from seven to eight hundred pigeons. So
+faithfully did she perform this duty, that they all knew her, and as
+soon as she appeared they came flying around her in the shape of a
+crown. It was, says her sister, a most charming spectacle&mdash;innocence
+attracting the birds, which are its symbol.</p>
+
+<p>In youth, we see her, already modest in deportment, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>serious in
+character, pious and recollected in the parochial church which she
+regularly attended, kneeling upon the cold stones even in winter. And
+this was not the only mortification she practiced; to bodily fatigue,
+she added from her tenderest youth that of fasting every Wednesday
+and Saturday. It was for a long time without her father's knowledge;
+at length, discovering his daughter's pious ruse, he endeavored to
+dissuade her; but all his reproaches were not able to overcome her love
+of penance, she believed it her duty to prefer the interior voice of
+God to that of her father.</p>
+
+<p>In all this we clearly discern the character of the future Sister,
+with its virtues and defects. On one side, we see true simplicity,
+unselfishness, constant application to the most laborious duties under
+the safeguard of innocence and fervor; on the other, a disposition
+accustomed to govern, and which could not yield without an internal
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>During this life of rural toil, she never lost sight of her vocation.
+Several times was her hand asked in marriage, but she invariably
+answered that, long affianced to Jesus her good Saviour, she wished no
+other spouse than Him. But had she yet made choice of the Community she
+would enter? It is doubtful, especially when we consider the following
+event of her life, which deeply impressed her, and always remained
+graven in the memory of her dear sister who related it.</p>
+
+<p>Being still in her father's house at Fain-les-Moutiers, she had
+a dream, which we may consider as an inspiration from God and a
+preparation for her vocation.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to her that she was in the Purgatorian chapel of the
+village church. An aged priest of venerable appearance and remarkable
+countenance appeared <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>in the chapel, and began to vest himself for
+Mass; she assisted at it, deeply impressed with the presence of this
+unknown priest. At the end of Mass, he made her a sign to approach, but
+affrighted, she drew back, yet ever keeping her eyes fixed upon him.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the church, she went to visit a sick person in the village.
+Here, she again finds herself with the aged priest, who addresses her
+in these words: "My daughter, it is well to nurse the sick; you fly
+from me now, but one day you will be happy to come to me. God has His
+designs upon you, do not forget it." Amazed and filled with fear, the
+young girl still flies his presence. On leaving the house, it seemed to
+her that her feet scarcely touched the ground, and just at the moment
+of entering her home she awoke, and recognized that what had passed was
+only a dream.</p>
+
+<p>She was now eighteen years old, knowing scarcely how to read, much less
+write; as she was doubtless aware that this would be an obstacle to her
+admission into a Community, she obtained her father's permission to
+visit her sister-in-law, who kept a boarding school at Ch&acirc;tillon, and
+there receive a little instruction. Her father, fearing to lose her,
+reluctantly consented to her departure.</p>
+
+<p>Incessantly occupied with thoughts of the vision we have already
+related, she spoke of it to the Cur&eacute; of Ch&acirc;tillon, who said to her: "I
+believe, my child, that this old man is St. Vincent, who calls you to
+be a Daughter of Charity." Her sister-in-law having taken her to see
+the Sisters at Ch&acirc;tillon, she was astonished on entering their parlor
+to behold a picture, the perfect portrait of the priest who had said
+to her in her dream: "My daughter, you fly from me now, but one day
+you will be happy to come to me. God has His designs upon you, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>do not
+forget it." She immediately inquired the name of the original, and when
+told that it was St. Vincent, the mystery vanished; she understood that
+it was he who was to be her Father.</p>
+
+<p>This circumstance was not of a nature to quench the ardor of her
+desires. She remained but a short time with her sister-in-law. The
+humble country girl was ill at ease amidst the young ladies of the
+school, and she learned nothing.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this time she became acquainted with Sister Victoire S&eacute;jole,
+who was afterwards placed over the house at Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Though
+young, already thoroughly devoted to God and His poor, Sister Victoire
+divined the candor of this soul and its sufferings; she immediately
+begged her Sister-Servant to admit Zo&eacute; as a postulant without delay,
+offering herself to bestow particular pains upon her, instructing her
+in whatever was indispensable for her as a Daughter of Charity.</p>
+
+<p>But Zo&eacute; could not yet profit by the interest good Sister Victoire had
+taken in her; this happiness was to be dearly bought.</p>
+
+<p>When she acquainted her father with her intentions, the poor father's
+heart rebelled; he had already given his eldest daughter to St.
+Vincent's family, and now, to sacrifice her who for years had so
+wisely directed his household, seemed indeed beyond his strength. He
+considered a means of dissuading her from her plans, and thought he
+had found it by sending her to Paris, to one of his sons who kept a
+restaurant, telling him to seek by various distractions to extinguish
+in the sister's heart all idea of her vocation. Time of trial and
+suffering for the young aspirant, who, far from losing the desire of
+consecrating herself to God, only sighed more ardently after the happy
+day when she could quit the world.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
+<p>She now thought of writing to her sister-in-law at Ch&acirc;tillon, and
+interesting her in the matter. The latter, touched with this mark of
+confidence, had Zo&eacute; come to her, and finally obtained the father's
+consent. Zo&eacute; became a postulant in the house of the Sisters at
+Ch&acirc;tillon, in the beginning of the year 1830.</p>
+
+<p>Zo&eacute; Labour&eacute; was very happy to find, at last, the end of those severe
+trials which had lasted almost two years. The 21st of April, 1830, she
+reached that much desired haven, the Seminary.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Behold her, then, in possession of all that had been the cherished
+object of her desires and affections from earliest childhood! Her soul
+could now dilate itself in prayer, and in the joyful consciousness of
+being entirely devoted to the service of its God.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of her Seminary term, she had the happiness of
+having for Director of her conscience M. Jean Marie Aladel, of
+venerated memory, a priest of eminent piety, excellent judgment and
+great experience, austere as a hermit, indefatigable in work, a true
+son of St. Vincent de Paul. He was a prudent guide for her in the
+extraordinary ways whither God had called her. He knew how to hold
+her in check against the illusions of imagination, and especially the
+seductions of pride at the same time, that he encouraged her to walk
+in the paths of perfection by the practice of the most solid virtues.
+M. Aladel did not lose sight of her, even after she was sent to the
+Hospital d'Enghien. He thereby gained much for his own sanctification
+and the mission confided to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
+<p>Informed by her of God's designs, he devoted himself unreservedly to
+the propagation of devotion to Mary Immaculate, and during the last
+years of his life, to extend among the young girls educated by the
+Sisters of St. Vincent, the association of Children of Mary. He died in
+1865, eleven years before his spiritual daughter.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
+
+<p>Three days before the magnificent ceremony of the translation of St.
+Vincent de Paul's relics to the chapel of St. Lazare, a feast which
+was the signal of renewed life for the Congregation of the Mission,
+Sister Labour&eacute; was favored with a prophetic vision. The same God who
+had called Vincent from the charge of his father's flocks to make him a
+vessel of election, was now going to confide to a poor country girl the
+secrets of His mercy. Let us give the account of this first impression
+in her own simple language.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"It was Wednesday before the translation of St. Vincent de Paul's
+relics. Happy and delighted at the idea of taking part in this grand
+celebration, it seemed to me that I no longer cared for anything on
+earth.</p>
+
+<p>"I begged St. Vincent to give me whatever graces I needed, also to
+bestow the same upon his two families and all France. It appeared to
+me that France was in sore need of them. In fine, I prayed St. Vincent
+to teach me what I ought to ask, and also that I might ask it with a
+lively faith."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>She returned from St. Lazare's filled with the thought of her blessed
+Father, and believed that she found him again at the Community.
+"I had," said she, "the consolation of seeing his heart above the
+little shrine where his relics are exposed. It appeared to me three
+succes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>sive days in a different manner: First, of a pale, clear color,
+and this denoted peace, serenity, innocence and union.</p>
+
+<p>"Afterwards, I saw it the color of fire, symbolic of the charity that
+should be enkindled in hearts. It seemed to me that charity was to be
+reanimated and extended even to the extremities of the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Lastly, it appeared a very dark red, a livid hue, which plunged my
+heart in sadness. It filled me with fears I could scarcely overcome. I
+know not why, nor how, but this sadness seemed to be connected with a
+change of government."</p>
+
+<p>It was strange, indeed, that Sister Labour&eacute;, at that time, should have
+these political forebodings.</p>
+
+<p>An interior voice said to her: "The heart of St. Vincent is profoundly
+afflicted at the great misfortunes which will overwhelm France."
+The last day of the octave, she saw the same heart vermilion color,
+and the interior voice whispered: "The heart of St. Vincent is a
+little consoled, because he has obtained from God (through Mary's
+intercession) protection for his two families in the midst of these
+disasters; they shall not perish, and God will use them to revive the
+Faith."</p>
+
+<p>To ease her mind, she related this vision to her confessor, who told
+her to think no more about it; Sister Labour&eacute; never dreamed of aught
+but obeying, and in no way did she ever reveal it to her companions.</p>
+
+<p>We find this singular favor mentioned in a letter written by Sister
+Catherine, in the year 1856, at the command of M. Aladel. The year
+she entered the Seminary, this worthy missionary was almost the only
+chaplain of the Community. The Congregation of the Mission, scarcely
+restored at this epoch, counted at its <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>Mother House but nine priests
+in all, and at least half that number were in the Seminary. M. &Eacute;tienne,
+of venerated memory, was Procurator General, and M. Salhorgne, Superior
+of St. Vincent's two families. If the laborers were few, the deficiency
+was supplied by the devotedness of these few, who multiplied themselves
+for the service of the Community. The Divine bounty has prepared for
+their charity a beautiful recompense.</p>
+
+<p>According to the notes which Sister Catherine wrote later in obedience
+to M. Aladel, the humble daughter during all her Seminary term enjoyed
+the undisguised sight of Him whose presence is concealed from our
+senses in the Sacrament of His love. "Except," said she, "when I
+doubted, then I saw nothing, because I wished to fathom the mystery,
+fearing to be deceived."</p>
+
+<p>Our Lord deigned to show Himself to His humble servant, conformably to
+the mysteries of the day, and, in connexion with this, she mentions one
+circumstance relative to the change of government, which could not have
+been foreseen by human means.</p>
+
+<p>"On the Feast of the Holy Trinity," says she, "Our Lord during Holy
+Mass appeared to me in the Most Blessed Sacrament as a king with the
+cross upon His breast. Just at the Gospel, it seemed to me that the
+cross and all His regal ornaments fell at His feet, and He remained
+thus despoiled. It was then the gloomiest and saddest thoughts
+oppressed me, for I understood from this that the king would be
+stripped of his royal garb, and great disasters would ensue."</p>
+
+<p>When the humble daughter had these forebodings concerning the king, he
+was then apparently at the pinnacle of fortune. The siege of Algiers
+was in progress, and everything predicted the happy success of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>arms. During the early part of July, this almost impregnable fortress
+of the pirates fell into the power of France; the whole kingdom
+rejoiced at the memorable victory, and the churches resounded with
+hymns of thanksgiving.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! this triumph was to be quickly followed by a bloody revolution,
+which would overthrow the throne and menace the altars. That very
+month, the clergy and religious communities of Paris were seized with
+terror. M. Aladel was greatly alarmed for the Daughters of Charity and
+the Missionaries, but Sister Labour&eacute; never ceased to reassure him,
+saying that the two communities had nothing to fear, they would not
+perish.</p>
+
+<p>One day she told him that a bishop had sought refuge at St. Lazare's,
+that he could be received without hesitation, and might remain there
+in safety. M. Aladel paid little attention to these predictions,
+but returning sadly to his house, he was accosted on entering by M.
+Salhorgne, who told him that Mgr. Frayssinous, Bishop of Hermopolis,
+and Minister of Religious Worship under Charles X, had just come,
+begging an asylum from the persecution that pursued him.</p>
+
+<p>These revelations bore an impress of truth which it was difficult to
+ignore; so in feigning to mistrust them, M. Aladel listened with the
+deepest interest. He began to persuade himself that the spirit of God
+inspired this young Sister; and after seeing the accomplishment of
+several things she had foretold, he now felt disposed to give credence
+to other and more marvellous communications she had confided to him.</p>
+
+<p>According to her testimony, the Most Holy Virgin had appeared to her,
+these apparitions were repeated various times, she had been charged to
+acquaint her Director with what she had seen and heard, an impor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>tant
+mission had been confided to her, that of having struck and circulated
+a medal in honor of the Immaculate Conception.</p>
+
+<p>The third chapter of this volume gives a detailed account of these
+visions, just as they have been transmitted to us from the hand of the
+Sister herself.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the sensible assurances of the Sister's veracity, M.
+Aladel listened to these communications with mistrust, as he tells us
+himself, in the canonical investigation prescribed in 1836 by Mgr.
+de Qu&eacute;len; he professed to consider them of little value, as if they
+had been the pious vagaries of a young girl's imagination. He told
+her to regard them in the same light, and he even went so far as to
+humble her, and reproach her with a want of submission. The poor
+Sister, unable to convince him, dared speak no more of the apparitions
+of the Blessed Virgin; she never mentioned the subject to him except
+when she felt herself tormented and constrained to do so by an almost
+irresistible desire.</p>
+
+<p>"Such was the reason," says M. Aladel, "that she spoke to him
+concerning the matter but three times, although the visions were much
+oftener repeated." After thus relieving her heart, she became perfectly
+calm. The investigation also shows us that Sister Catherine sought no
+other confidant of her secrets than her confessor; she never mentioned
+them to her Superior or any one else. It was to M. Aladel Mary had
+directed her, to him only did she speak, and she even exacted of him
+the promise that her name would never be mentioned.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
+
+<p>After this pledge, M. Aladel related the vision to M. &Eacute;tienne and
+others, but without designating the Sister's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>identity, directly or
+indirectly. We shall see later how Providence always guarded her secret.</p>
+
+<p>These celestial communications, we may easily imagine, produced in the
+soul of Sister Labour&eacute; profound impressions, which usually remained
+even after she had finished her devotions, and which rendered her in
+some degree oblivious of what was passing around her. It is related
+that after one of these apparitions she rises like the others at the
+given signal, leaves the chapel, and takes her place in the refectory,
+but remains so absorbed that she never thinks of touching the meal
+apportioned her.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Caillaud, third Directress, going her rounds, says bluntly to
+her: "Ah! Sister Labour&eacute;, are you still in an ecstasy?" This recalls
+her to herself, and the good Directress, who knows not how truly she
+has spoken, suspects nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Sister Catherine approached the end of her Seminary term,
+and in spite of her affirmations at once so artless and so exact, her
+Director always refused to credit them. She had the affliction of
+leaving the Mother House without being able to obtain anything, even a
+hope.</p>
+
+<p>It was because the affair was graver than she thought; the supernatural
+origin of the favor he was directed to communicate to the public could
+be contested, and the prudent Director saw that in such a matter he
+could neither exact too many proofs, nor take too many precautions.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Sister Labour&eacute; was clothed with the holy habit in the month of January,
+1831, and sent under the name of Sister Catherine to the Hospital
+d'Enghien in the faubourg St. Antoine. Here she could continue her
+com<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>munications with M. Aladel. This good father did not lose sight of
+her; though apparently giving no credit to his penitent revelations,
+he was studying her carefully to convince himself whether or not these
+visions were the product of a weak, enthusiastic mind and excited
+imagination. But the more he studied her, the more confident he felt
+that there was nothing of this in Sister Labour&eacute;. The judgment formed
+of her by the Directresses of the Seminary was, that she had a somewhat
+reserved but calm, positive character, which M. Aladel qualified as
+cold and even apathetic.</p>
+
+<p>This last epithet, however, was not applicable to Sister Catherine,
+in whom her companions, on the contrary, recognized a very impulsive
+temperament. But his opinion proves, at least, that there was no
+excessive imagination. Moreover, she proved herself solidly grounded
+in virtue, whilst no one ever perceived anything extraordinary in her
+demeanor, and especially in her devotions.</p>
+
+<p>Before going to her new destination, Sister Labour&eacute; passed some days in
+one of the large establishments of Paris. Wishing to examine the young
+Sister more leisurely, M. Aladel made a pretext of visiting the Sisters
+at this house. The account of these visions had already been circulated
+throughout the Community, and it was known that M. Aladel had received
+the Sisters' confidence; hence, as soon as he appeared, the Sisters
+surrounded him, and each one eagerly plied him with questions. He had
+his eye upon Sister Catherine, who, without being disconcerted, quietly
+mingled her inquiries with the others. The worthy missionary was
+reassured, understanding that the Sister kept her secret.</p>
+
+<p>The last time the Blessed Virgin appeared to Sister <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>Labour&eacute; in
+the sanctuary of the Mother House, she said to her: "My daughter,
+henceforth you will see me no more, but you will hear my voice during
+your meditations." And, indeed, during the whole course of her life,
+she had frequent communications of this kind. They were no longer
+sensible apparitions, but mental visions, that she well knew how to
+distinguish from the illusions of imagination or the impressions of a
+pious fervor.</p>
+
+<p>Her mission had not been accomplished in regard to the medal. Some
+months elapsed, and the Immaculate Virgin complained to Sister
+Catherine that her orders had not been executed.</p>
+
+<p>"But, my good Mother," replied Sister Catherine, "you see that he will
+not believe me." "Be calm," was the answer; "a day will come when he
+will do what I desire; he is my servant, and he would fear to displease
+me."</p>
+
+<p>These words were soon verified.</p>
+
+<p>When the pious missionary received this communication, he began to
+reflect seriously. "If Mary is displeased," said he, "it is not with
+the young Sister, whose position prevents her doing anything; it must
+be with me." This thought troubled him.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> A long time previous, he
+had related these visions to M. &Eacute;tienne, then Procurator General. One
+day, at the beginning of the year 1832, when they had gone together on
+a visit to Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len, M. Aladel profited by the opportunity to
+speak to the latter of these apparitions, and especially of his own
+embarrassment, since the Blessed Virgin had complained to the Sister of
+the delay in fulfilling her commands.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
+<p>Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len replied that, seeing nothing in it at all contrary to
+faith, he had no objection to the medal being struck at once. He even
+asked them to send him some of the first.</p>
+
+<p>The ravages of the cholera, which had broken out meanwhile, retarded
+the execution of this design until June; the 30th of that month, two
+thousand medals were struck, and M. Aladel hastened to send some of
+them to the Archbishop of Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len wished to make an immediate trial of its efficacy; he
+was very much troubled concerning the spiritual condition of the former
+Archbishop of Mechlin, Mgr. de Pradt, now on the verge of death; he
+desired his conversion so much the more earnestly, as the death of this
+prelate might be the occasion of scandal and grave disorders, such as
+have accompanied the interment of the constitutional bishop Gregory.
+Providing himself with a medal, he went to visit the sick man. At
+first he was refused admittance, but very soon the dying man repents
+of it, and sends him an apology, with a request to call again. In this
+interview, he testifies to His Grace a sincere repentance for his past
+life, retracts all his errors, and after receiving the Last Sacraments,
+he dies that very night in the arms of the Archbishop, who, filled with
+a holy joy, eagerly imparts this consoling news to M. Aladel.</p>
+
+<p>The worthy missionary sent a medal to Sister Catherine, who received
+it with great devotion and respect,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> and said: "Now it must be
+disseminated." This was easy to do among the Daughters of Charity, who
+had all heard whispers of these apparitions; the eagerness to receive
+the medals was general, they were distributed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>freely, and cures and
+conversions multiplied themselves accordingly in all ranks of society,
+so that very soon the medal received the appellation of miraculous.</p>
+
+<p>A witness of these wonders, the heart of Father Aladel dilated with
+joy, and he believed it his duty to publish a notice of the origin of
+the medal, and thus satisfy all the inquiries addressed him on the
+subject. For the glory of God and Mary, he added an account of all the
+consoling facts that had come to his knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>What said Sister Catherine in hearing of these wonderful occurrences?
+Less than any one; she was astonished; doubtless her joy was great, but
+it was confined within the silence of her heart. Occasionally she sent
+some new message to M. Aladel, begging him to have an altar erected
+commemorative of the apparition, and telling him that many graces and
+indulgences would be attached thereto, and fall most abundantly upon
+himself and the Community.</p>
+
+<p>She urged him also to solicit particular spiritual favors, assuring him
+that he might ask freely, for all his requests would be granted.</p>
+
+<p>But this worthy priest, whose position in the Community, as we have
+already said, was that of simple chaplain, prudently kept silence,
+holding himself in reserve until the favorable moment should arrive
+for him to act. Some years after, M. &Eacute;tienne, his intimate friend, was
+elected Superior General, and he was made assistant of the Congregation
+and Director of the Daughters of Charity; in concert, they formed the
+design of erecting to the Immaculate Mary an altar more in accordance
+with her maternal bounty and the gratitude of her children. Providence
+itself seemed to co-operate with the execution of their plan, the
+Community receiving from <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>the government just then a present of two
+magnificent blocks of white marble, in recognition of the Sisters'
+services to the cholera patients and their orphans. One was destined
+for an altar, the other for a statue of the Immaculate Mary.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the number of inmates at the Mother House, the Seminary
+especially, increased daily. The new life infused into the Community
+had awakened many vocations, and the centre of reunion had become
+inadequate in size to its purposes, the chapel particularly was much
+too small. In enlarging it, the architect had a difficult problem to
+resolve: he must respect the sanctuary honored by Mary's visit, and
+yet extend the enclosure. He did so by adding side aisles, on a lower
+foundation, surmounted with galleries. If the edifice, always too low
+and small, gained nothing in the way of art, it has, at least, the
+advantage of preserving intact the exact spot where the Most Holy
+Virgin appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The former altar was taken into the side chapel dedicated to St.
+Vincent, and the holy founder was there represented holding that heart,
+burning with love of God and the poor, as it had appeared to Sister
+Catherine in the vision. A plaster statue of the Immaculate Conception
+occupied temporarily the place over the main altar, destined for the
+marble statue, which for various causes was not solemnly inaugurated
+till 1856.</p>
+
+<p>It was a day of great rejoicing for the Mother House; the statue was
+not a cold, mute representation; ... it was an eloquent image of Mary;
+here had this merciful Mother spoken and promised her graces; daily
+experience had confirmed these promises, and the statue still awakens
+in the hearts of those who come to pray at her feet, the deepest and
+tender emotions. Yes, Mary is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>indeed here. She speaks to the hearts of
+her children. She makes them feel that she loves and protects them!</p>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine said also to M. Aladel, in the early period of her
+vocation: "The Blessed Virgin wishes you to found a Congregation, of
+which you will be the Superior. It is a Sodality of Children of Mary;
+the Blessed Virgin will shower many graces upon it, and indulgences
+will be granted it."</p>
+
+<p>The reader will see, in the course of the volume, how this work was
+realized, and how admirably Providence has extended the association.</p>
+
+<p>She also told him that the month of May would be celebrated with much
+magnificence, and become universal in the Church; that the month of St.
+Joseph would likewise be kept with solemnity; that devotion to this
+great Saint would greatly increase, as well as devotion to the Sacred
+Heart of Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>So many miracles wrought everywhere and every day, so many signal
+testimonies of Mary's protection, made it an obligation on the
+Community, and especially the Seminary where they had originated, to
+perpetuate so precious a souvenir.</p>
+
+<p>Two pictures were therefore ordered, one representing the vision of
+the medal, the other that of St. Vincent's heart. The artist, wishing
+to depict the Blessed Virgin as accurately as possible, consulted M.
+Aladel as to the color of the veil.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>The missionary's embarrassment was great; he had forgotten this item,
+but attaching more importance to the details than Sister Catherine
+thought, he wrote to her, and under the pretext of warning her against
+the illusions of the demon, he asked her to describe again the Blessed
+Virgin's appearance in the vision of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>medal. Sister Catherine
+made this answer: "Just now, my Father, it would be impossible for me
+to recall all that I saw, one detail alone remains, it is, that the
+Blessed Virgin's veil was the color of morning light."</p>
+
+<p>This was just what M. Aladel wished to know, and precisely the only
+thing Sister Catherine could recollect.</p>
+
+<p>These little incidents, regulated by Providence, were not lost; they
+increased the confidence of the wise Director. When the pictures were
+placed in the Seminary, M. Aladel discreetly took measures to have
+Sister Catherine come to see them, just at the very time he would
+be there as if by chance. Another Sister, accidentally meeting them
+there, has a suspicion of the truth, and turning suddenly to the worthy
+Father, she says: "This is certainly the Sister who had the vision!"
+He is greatly embarrassed, and sees no way of extricating himself from
+the difficulty, except by calling upon Sister Catherine to answer. She
+laughed, saying: "You have guessed well," but with such simplicity that
+the other Sister said to the Father: "Oh! I see plainly that it is not
+she; you would not have asked her to tell me."</p>
+
+<p>During the course of her long life, Sister Catherine was subjected to
+trials of this sort.</p>
+
+<p>The details Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len had received from M. Aladel concerning
+the vision of the medal interested him deeply, and he was anxious to
+become acquainted with the favored Sister. M. Aladel replied that
+the Sister insisted upon remaining unknown. "As for that," said His
+Grace, "she can put on a veil and speak to me without being seen." M.
+Aladel excused himself anew, saying it was for him a secret of the
+confessional.</p>
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne, miraculously converted in 1842 by the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>apparition of the
+Miraculous Medal, also ardently desired to speak with the Sister first
+favored by this celestial vision, and he often but vainly entreated her
+Director's permission.</p>
+
+<p>Those around her frequently asked embarrassing questions, or
+expressed their suspicions. When too closely pressed, she found means
+of making the curious feel their indiscretion, so that it was not
+repeated. Moreover, her great simplicity ordinarily disconcerted her
+interrogators.</p>
+
+<p>On several occasions, the Blessed Virgin seemed to aid her; thus, in
+the investigation of 1836, and in the deposition made to the Promoter,
+M. Aladel declared that he had vainly endeavored to persuade Sister
+Catherine to be present, he could not overcome her repugnance; and
+moreover, they would interrogate her to no purpose, she had forgotten
+everything concerning the event.</p>
+
+<p>The same thing happened one day, it is said, in the presence of M.
+&Eacute;tienne, then Superior General; he could not succeed in making her
+speak, she remembered nothing. It is this which gave rise to the rumor
+in the Community, that the vision was completely effaced from the
+memory of the Sister who had been favored with it.</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to this opinion, Sister Catherine was enabled to remain long
+years truly concealed in her modest duties; employed first in the
+kitchen, then in the clothes-room; afterwards, for nearly forty years,
+she had charge of the old men's ward of the Hospital d'Enghien,
+combining with this duty the care of the poultry yard.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>She loved these humble duties. Everything was kept in perfect order,
+and for her there was no greater happiness than that of being among
+her poor. At the end of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>her life, she spoke of it as her chief
+consolation. "I have always," said she, "loved to stay at home;
+whenever there was question of a walk, I yielded my turn to others that
+I might serve my poor."</p>
+
+<p>And this was true. One walk only was she unwilling to forego, that
+which led to the Community, and she knew no other road but that to the
+Mother House. When she could make this visit she never yielded her turn.</p>
+
+<p>Her attraction for silence and the hidden life always kept her in the
+rear, as the place most suitable for her, and most favorable to the
+spirit of recollection. She ceded to none the lowest and most repulsive
+duties of her ward, duties which she termed the pearls of a Daughter
+of Charity; she moved calmly and quietly, avoiding precipitation, and
+when advanced in years, the young Sisters, her assistants, often heard
+from her lips these words: "Ah! my dear, do not be so agitated, be more
+gentle."</p>
+
+<p>She regarded as one of the most cherished souvenirs of her Community
+life, that of her first Sister-Servant, "a dear soul," said she, "who
+every year sent the first fruits of her garden to the indigent families
+of the faubourg, or to her old men. The Sisters were not allowed to
+touch them until this had been done."</p>
+
+<p>This aged Superior was Sister Savard, who never supposed that Sister
+Catherine was favored with especial graces, and particularly with the
+vision of the Blessed Virgin.</p>
+
+<p>Our humble daughter Catherine respected and loved all the Sisters under
+whom she served, and never did she utter a word against them; she saw
+only their virtues and good qualities.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Child of duty and labor, but especially of humility," says her last
+Superior, "Sister Catherine was not truly appreciated except by
+those who studied her sufficiently to perceive the great simplicity,
+uprightness, and purity pervading her soul, her mind, her heart, her
+whole person.</p>
+
+<p>"Never arrogating to herself the slightest merit on account of the
+singular favors with which the Immaculate Virgin had loaded her, she
+said, one day towards the close of her life, when Providence permitted
+a slight allusion to this subject: 'I, favored Sister! I have been
+only an instrument; it was not for myself the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to me. I knew nothing, not even how to write; it was in the Community
+I learned all I know; and because of my ignorance the Blessed Virgin
+chose me, that no one might doubt."</p>
+
+<p>Is not the conclusion inspired by the spirit of St. Vincent, "I have
+been chosen, because being nothing, no one could doubt that such great
+things are the work of God."</p>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine cared little for the esteem or contempt of others.
+Despite her rigid silence, there always hovered over her the suspicion
+that it was she who had seen the Blessed Virgin; no one dared tell her
+so; but in consequence of the suspicion, she was more closely observed,
+and more severely judged than any one else, and if by chance her
+companions discovered in her some slight weakness of nature, or even
+the absence of some heroic virtue, the thought was immediately rejected
+that the Blessed Virgin had chosen so ordinary a person.</p>
+
+<p>The testimony of one of her first companions confirms the impression
+on this point, an impression repeated a hundred fold. This companion
+writes to Sister Duf&egrave;s: <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>"Having passed six years with Sister
+Catherine, and worked constantly with her one year, it would seem
+that I could cite a great number of details full of interest and
+edification; but I am forced to confess that her life was so simple,
+so uniform, that I find nothing in it to remark. Notwithstanding the
+whispered assurances that she was the Sister so favored by the Blessed
+Virgin, I scarcely credited it, so much was her life like that of
+others. Sometimes, I sought to enlighten myself indirectly on the
+subject by questioning her as to the impression such extraordinary
+occurrences had produced in the Seminary, hoping that her answers would
+betray her, and thereby satisfy my curiosity, but she replied with so
+much simplicity that my hopes were always deceived."</p>
+
+<p>It is true, Sister Catherine had nothing remarkable about her, and yet
+nothing common or trivial.</p>
+
+<p>Her height was above the medium; her regular features bore the seal
+of modesty; and her clear blue eye was indicative of candor. She was
+industrious, simple, and not the least mystical in her spiritual
+exercises; she affected neither great virtues nor particular devotions,
+well pleased to cherish them in the depths of her heart, and practice
+them according to the rule with fidelity and exactness.</p>
+
+<p>After her death, some notes were found written by her own hand during
+one of the annual retreats. Everything in them is simple, solid,
+practical, and there is not one word of allusion to the extraordinary
+graces she had received; even when addressing the Blessed Virgin,
+nothing recalls the familiarity with which Mary had treated her. Here
+are some extracts, in which no changes have been made except those of
+fault-spelling.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I will take Mary for my model at the commencement <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>of all my actions;
+in everything, I will consider if Mary were engaged thus, how and
+wherefore she would do this, with what intention. Oh! how beautiful and
+consoling is the name of Mary ... Mary!</p>
+
+<p>"Resolution to offer myself to God without reserve, to bear every
+little contradiction in a spirit of humility and penance, to beg in all
+my prayers that the will of God may be accomplished in me. O my God!
+do with me as Thou wilt! O Mary! grant me your love, without which I
+perish; bestow upon me all the graces I need! O Immaculate Heart of
+Mary! obtain for me the faith and love which attached you to the foot
+of the cross of Jesus Christ!</p>
+
+<p>"O sweet objects of my affections, Jesus and Mary, let me suffer for
+you, let me die for you, let me be all for you and no longer anything
+for myself!</p>
+
+<p>"Not to complain of the little contradictions I meet with among the
+poor, and to pray for those who cause me suffering. O Mary, obtain for
+me this grace, through your virginal purity!</p>
+
+<p>"To employ my time well, and not to spend one moment unprofitably. O
+Mary, happy those who serve you and put their confidence in you!</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary, Mary, Mary, pray, pray, pray for us, poor sinners, now and at
+the hour of our death! Mary, O Mary!</p>
+
+<p>"In my temptations and times of spiritual dryness, I will always have
+recourse to Mary, who is purity itself. O Mary, conceived without sin!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary, make me love you, and it will not be difficult to imitate you!</p>
+
+<p>"Humility, simplicity and charity are the foundation of our holy
+vocation. O Mary, make me understand these holy virtues! St. Vincent,
+pray, pray for us!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+<p>"O Mary, conceived without sin, pray, pray for us! Deign, O Queen of
+Angels and of men, to cast a favorable eye upon the whole world ...
+especially upon France ... and each person in particular! O Mary,
+inspire us what to ask of you for our happiness!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Sister Catherine lived forty-six years in a large establishment, under
+the direction of five successive Superiors; she was brought in contact
+with many companions of different dispositions and different degrees of
+virtue, consequently the esteem in which she was held varied. If they
+sometimes gave her to understand that her mind was failing, such things
+troubled her little, and she always quietly went her way, receiving
+kindness with grateful simplicity, and ungracious words without
+flinching.</p>
+
+<p>Faithful to the rule with such uniform exactness, that merit seems
+to disappear before habit, she never uttered a word against charity.
+Even when age had given her some privileges over her young companions,
+rarely did she allow herself to blame or advise them; not, at least,
+unless they consulted her, then she advised submission. "Everything
+is in that," said she, "without obedience, Community life is not
+possible." To the very end of her days, her obedience to her Superior
+was as perfect as when she left the Seminary.</p>
+
+<p>We must not, however, suppose that Sister Catherine was of a yielding,
+gentle temperament, to which obedience was natural; no, on the
+contrary, she had a strong will and quick temper. Thoroughly versed in
+household labors, she performed her part with great care and assiduity,
+and directed most scrupulously all that was entrusted to her charge.
+Her impulsive temper some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>times displayed itself in little sallies of
+impatience, the firm tone of her words revealing at times what virtue
+ordinarily caused her to repress. When the first heat was over, she
+immediately repented of it and humbled herself.</p>
+
+<p>It was often observed that this first movement of surprise, just ready
+to escape, was held captive, not by human respect, but by a superior
+will; thus proving that her implicit obedience was due her fidelity to
+grace.</p>
+
+<p>Understanding her nature, we can now form an idea of what Sister
+Catherine suffered from the opposition she experienced in realizing her
+mission; even though these contradictions, especially after the medal
+had been struck, were more apparent than real on the part of her wise
+Director, they were none the less painful to her. Might we not say that
+these trials constituted an interior martyrdom sustained by God and
+known to him alone?</p>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine, despite her strong constitution, was not exempt from
+physical suffering, and her companions were sometimes astonished at the
+simplicity with which she asked for little comforts that a mortified
+soul would have denied itself. These slight defects formed a veil that
+obscured the sight of many, and partially concealed the beauties of her
+soul.</p>
+
+<p>Apparently, the very depths of this simple nature might be read at a
+glance, and yet she faithfully guarded the secrets of God. In her were
+seen, by a singular contrast, prudence and discretion allied to perfect
+simplicity. Thus, whilst some found her a little too thoughtful of her
+health, others observed that on all great feasts of the Blessed Virgin,
+particularly that of the Immaculate Conception, she was either sick
+or suffering acute pain, which trials the humble Sister received as a
+favor from her celestial Mother.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
+<p>The Superior of the Hospital d'Enghien relates that, one year, when
+Sister Catherine had gone with several of her companions to spend the
+beautiful Feast of December 8th at the Community, on getting into the
+omnibus that evening she fell and broke her wrist. She said not a word,
+and no one perceived the accident. Some minutes after, seeing that
+she held her arm in her handkerchief, Sister Duf&egrave;s inquired what had
+happened. "Ah! Sister," she quietly replied, "I am holding my bouquet;
+every year the Blessed Virgin sends me one of this sort."</p>
+
+<p>Detachment from the esteem and affection of creatures was still another
+trait characteristic of our dear Sister. God sufficed her; that God
+who had manifested Himself to her in so wonderful a manner, that
+Immaculate Virgin whose charms had ravished her heart, were her sole
+joy and delight. The Blessed Virgin, pointing to the sacred tabernacle
+where her divine Son reposes, had said to her: "In all your trials, my
+daughter, it is there you must seek consolation." Faithful to these
+words of her good Mother, Sister Catherine in moments of trial sought
+the chapel, whence she soon returned to her occupations with renewed
+serenity of soul and countenance ever cheerful. Jesus and Mary alone
+received the confidence of her sufferings and her fervor, so that her
+virtues in a measure were concealed from creatures.</p>
+
+<p>One of the Sisters of the house says that, having often observed her
+closely to discover, if possible, some trace of her communications with
+God, she could find nothing especial except that during prayer she
+did not cast down her eyes, but always kept them fixed upon the image
+of Mary. She remarks, also, that Sister Catherine never wept except
+from great anguish of heart, but many <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>times she saw her shed tears in
+abundance on listening to some traits of protection or some conversion
+obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession, or, as in 1871, at
+the evils afflicting the Church and France.</p>
+
+<p>Solidly pious in the midst of companions apparently more so, we see
+nothing indeed in our humble Sister to distinguish her from others.
+Only one especial circumstance has been remarked, the importance
+she attached to the recitation of the chaplet. Let us hear what her
+Sister-Servant says on this point&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"We were always struck," writes Sister Duf&egrave;s, "when saying the chaplet
+in common, with the grave and pious manner in which our dear companion
+pronounced the words of the Angelical Salutation. And what convinced
+us of the depth of her respect and devotion was the fact that she,
+always so humble, so reserved, could not refrain from censuring the
+indifference, the want of attention, which too often accompanies the
+recitation of a prayer, so beautiful and efficacious."</p>
+
+<p>Her love for the two families of St. Vincent, far from diminishing with
+age, only incited her to employ continually in their behalf the sole
+influence at her disposal, prayer; regularly every week, she offered a
+Communion to attract the benediction of Heaven upon the Congregation of
+the Mission; her prayers for her Community were incessant.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine always retained the same duty at the Hospital
+d'Enghien; with truly admirable solicitude, she nursed the old men
+entrusted to her, at the same time not neglecting the pigeon house,
+which recalled the purest and sweetest joys of her childhood. The young
+girl of former days, whom we have seen with her dear pigeons hovering
+round her, was now a poor Sister, quite aged, but none the less
+attentive to her little charge.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+<p>Sister Catherine was, then, the soul of the little family in charge of
+the hospital. During these later years, the number of our Sisters had
+increased considerably, and consequently the administration of the two
+houses, d'Enghien and Reuilly, being very difficult for one person, an
+assistant was sent me for the hospital. If Sister Catherine had not
+for years been moulded to obedience and abnegation, it would have been
+hard to her quick, impulsive nature, to recognize the authority of a
+companion so much younger than herself; but far different were the
+thoughts of this humble Sister, who always endeavored to abase herself.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"She was the first to tender her perfect submission. 'Sister,' said
+she, 'be at ease, it suffices that our Superiors have spoken; we will
+receive Sister Ang&eacute;lique as one sent from God, and obey her as we do
+you.' Her conduct justified her words.</p>
+
+<p>"Although Sister Catherine guarded rigorously the supernatural
+communications she had received, she occasionally expressed her views
+to me on actual occurrences, speaking then as if inspired by God.</p>
+
+<p>"Thus, at the time of the Commune, she told me that I would leave the
+house accompanied by a certain Sister, that I would return the 31st of
+May, and she assured me I need have no fears, as the Blessed Virgin
+would take my place and guard the house. At the time, I paid very
+little attention to the good Sister's words.</p>
+
+<p>"I left, indeed, and realized, contrary to my plans, and without a
+thought on the subject, all that Sister Catherine had predicted. On my
+return from the Community, May 31st, I expressed my anxiety concerning
+the house, which had been in the hands of the Communists, and, it was
+said, plundered. Sister Catherine <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>endeavored to reassure me, repeating
+that the Blessed Virgin had taken care of everything, she was confident
+of it, for the Blessed Virgin had promised her.</p>
+
+<p>"We found on our arrival that this Mother of mercy had, indeed, guarded
+and saved all, notwithstanding the long occupation of our dear house by
+a mob of furies, whose Satanic pleasure was to destroy.</p>
+
+<p>"One circumstance in particular struck me most forcibly; these wretches
+had made useless efforts to overthrow the statue of Mary Immaculate
+placed in the garden&mdash;it had withstood all their sacrilegious attempts.</p>
+
+<p>"Sister Catherine hastened to place upon the head of our august Queen
+the crown she had taken with her in our exile, telling the Blessed
+Virgin she restored it in token of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>"Many times did Sister Catherine thus reveal her thoughts to me with
+the simplicity of a child. When her predictions were not realized, she
+would quietly say: 'Ah! well, Sister, I was mistaken. I believed what I
+told you. I am very glad the truth is known.'<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>"Meanwhile, time fled, and our good Sister often spoke of her
+approaching end. Our venerated Superiors began to feel anxious about
+losing her, and the Superior Gen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>eral one day sent for her to come
+to the Community that he might receive from her own lips certain
+communications which he considered very important.</p>
+
+<p>"Sister Catherine, to whom this was wholly unexpected, was almost
+speechless with amazement. On her return, she expressed to me her
+emotion, and, for the first time, opened her heart to me concerning
+that which she had formerly so much feared to reveal.</p>
+
+<p>"This repugnance had vanished; seeing herself on the borders of the
+tomb, she felt constrained to make known the details which she thought
+buried with the venerated Father Aladel, and she expressed great grief
+that devotion to the Immaculate Conception was less lively and general
+than it had been.</p>
+
+<p>"These communications, moreover, were for myself alone; I did not
+impart them to the other Sisters. It is true, the greater number were
+informed of this pious secret, but they never learned it from Sister
+Catherine herself. All they could observe in connexion with it was
+her ardent love for Mary Immaculate and her zeal for the propagation
+of the Miraculous Medal, also that, when she heard one of our Sisters
+express a desire to make the pilgrimage to Lourdes or some other
+privileged sanctuary of Mary, she could not refrain from saying,
+somewhat impetuously: 'But why do you wish to go so far? Have you not
+the Community? Did not the Blessed Virgin appear there as well as at
+Lourdes?' And a most extraordinary fact is, that, without having read
+any of the publications concerning this miraculous grotto, Sister
+Catherine was more familiar with what had taken place there than many
+who had made the pilgrimage. Leaving these incidents aside, never did
+she utter a word calculated to give the impression that she <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>had any
+part in the singular favors the Blessed Virgin had lavished upon our
+humble chapel at the Mother House.</p>
+
+<p>"Since opening her heart to me, this good companion had become very
+affectionate; it was a rest for her, a consolation to find some one
+who understood her. Our worthy Father Chevalier, Assistant of the
+Congregation of the Mission, occasionally visited her to receive her
+communications concerning the apparition. One day, he spoke to her of
+the new edition he was preparing of the notice of the medal. 'When M.
+Aladel's edition of 1842 appeared,' replied Sister Catherine, 'I said
+to him, truly, that he would never publish another, and that I would
+never see another edition, because it would not be finished during
+my lifetime.' 'I shall catch you there,' replied M. Chevalier, who
+expected it to appear very soon. But unforeseen difficulties having
+retarded the publication, he subsequently recognized that the good
+Sister had spoken rightly.</p>
+
+<p>"From the beginning of the year 1876, Sister Catherine alluded very
+frequently to her death; on all our feast days, she never failed to
+say: 'It is the last time I shall see this feast.' And when we appeared
+not to credit her assertion, she added: 'I shall certainly not see the
+year 1877.' We could not, however, believe her end so near. For some
+months she had been obliged to keep her bed, and relinquish that active
+life she had led so many years.</p>
+
+<p>"Her strength was gradually failing; the asthma joined to some
+affection of the heart undermined her constitution; she felt that she
+was dying, but it was without a fear, we might say without emotion. One
+day, when speaking to her of her death: 'You are not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>afraid, then,'
+said I, 'dear Sister Catherine.' 'Afraid! Sister!' she exclaimed; 'why
+should I be afraid? I am going to our Lord, the Blessed Virgin, St.
+Vincent.'</p>
+
+<p>"And, truly, our dear companion had nothing to fear, for her death was
+as calm as her life.</p>
+
+<p>"Several days previous, one of our Sisters was talking familiarly with
+her, when, without any allusion to the subject from the other, our sick
+Sister said: 'I shall go to Reuilly.' This was the name given the House
+of Providence, separated from d'Enghien Hospital by a vast garden, and
+similar to it in the nature of its works. 'What! to Reuilly?' answered
+her companion; 'you would not have the heart to do so, you who love so
+well your Enghien, that you have never left.' 'I tell you, I shall go
+to Reuilly.' 'But when?' 'Ah! that is it!' said Sister Catherine, in a
+decided, mysterious tone, that disconcerted her companion. After a few
+moments, she added: 'There will be no need of a hearse at my funeral.'
+'Oh! what do you mean?' replied the Sister. 'It will not be needed,'
+said the sick one, emphatically. 'But why not?' 'They will put me in
+the chapel at Reuilly.' These words struck her companion, who repeated
+the conversation to me. 'Keep that to yourself,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"On the 31st of December, she had several spells of weakness, symptoms
+of her approaching end. We then proposed to her the last consolations
+of religion; she gratefully consented, and received the Sacraments with
+indescribable peace and happiness; then, at her request, we recited the
+litany of the Immaculate Conception.</p>
+
+<p>"Being one day near her bed, speaking to her of Heaven and of the
+Blessed Virgin, she expressed a desire to have during her agony
+sixty-three children, each <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>invoking the Blessed Virgin by one of her
+titles in the litany of the Immaculate Conception, and especially
+these very consoling words: 'Terror of demons, pray for us.' It was
+observed that there were not sixty-three invocations in the litany.
+'You will find them in the office of the Immaculate Conception,' said
+she. Measures were taken to comply with her desires, the invocations
+were written upon slips of paper and kept for the final hour, but, just
+at the time of her agony, we could not collect the children; she then
+asked that the litany be recited, and had us repeat three times the
+invocation which makes hell tremble.</p>
+
+<p>"Our Sisters were especially touched to hear her exclaim, with an
+accent of deep tenderness: 'My dear Community! my dear Mother House!'
+So true is it, that what we have loved most in life returns to us with
+renewed vigor at the hour of death!</p>
+
+<p>"Some of her former companions and friends of the House came during the
+day to see her for a last time; one of them, holding an office in the
+Seminary, approaching her, said sadly: 'Sister Catherine, are you going
+to leave us without telling me a word of the Blessed Virgin?' Then the
+dying Sister leaned towards her, and whispered softly in her ear quite
+a while. 'I ought not to speak,' said she; 'it is M. Chevalier who is
+commissioned to do that.' ... She continued, without interruption:
+'The Blessed Virgin has promised to grant especial graces every time
+one prays in the chapel, but particularly an increase of purity, that
+purity of mind, heart, will, which is pure love.'</p>
+
+<p>"This good daughter, animated with the true primitive spirit of the
+Community, was, in uttering these last words, the unconscious echo of
+the venerable Mother Legras, whose writings breathe the same thought.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
+<p>"A Sister-Servant, who came to visit her, approaching the sick Sister,
+reminded her of the necessities of the Community and of the Seminary,
+and ended by saying: 'Dear Sister Catherine, when you get to Heaven, do
+not forget all this, attend to all my commissions.' Sister Catherine
+answered: 'Sister, my will is good, but I have always been so stupid,
+so dull, I shall not know how to explain myself, for I am ignorant of
+the language of Heaven.' Upon which the other, delighted with so much
+simplicity, was inspired to say: 'Oh! my dear Sister Catherine, in
+Heaven we do not speak as we do on earth; the soul regards God, the
+good God regards the soul, and all is understood&mdash;that is the language
+of Heaven.' Our dear Sister's countenance became radiant at this,
+and she answered: 'Oh! Sister, if it is thus, be tranquil, all your
+commissions will be fulfilled.'</p>
+
+<p>"M. Chevalier came, also, that day to give her his blessing, and
+he spoke to her on the same subject. Sister Catherine answered him
+with faculties undimmed, and said to him, among other things: 'The
+pilgrimages the Sisters make are not favorable to piety. The Blessed
+Virgin did not tell me to go so far to pray; it is in the Community
+chapel she wishes the Sisters to invoke her, that is their true
+pilgrimage.'</p>
+
+<p>"The poor, to whom she was so devoted, likewise occupied her thoughts.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"At four in the afternoon, another attack of weakness collected us all
+around our dear, dying one, but the supreme moment had not yet come.
+We surrounded her bed until evening. At seven, she seemed to sink into
+a slumber, and without the least agony or the least sign of suffering,
+she yielded her last sigh. Scarcely could we perceive that she had
+ceased to live.... Never have I seen a death so calm and gentle."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
+<p>"The deepest emotion now filled our hearts; we pondered the celestial
+interview of our blessed companion with that good God who had so often
+revealed Himself to her during her Seminary life, and that beautiful
+Virgin, whose charms can never be depicted on earth.</p>
+
+<p>"It was not sorrow which pervaded our hearts; not a tear was shed in
+these first moments; we yielded to an indescribable emotion; we felt
+ourselves near a Saint; the veil of humility under which she had lived
+so long concealed was now rent, that we might see in her only the soul
+favored by Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>"Our Sisters disputed the happiness of passing the night beside her
+venerated remains, a magnetic attraction drawing them to her.</p>
+
+<p>"To perpetuate the fact that she had received these favors whilst still
+a Seminary Sister, we thought of having her photograph taken, also, in
+the Seminary habit; it succeeded completely in both costumes.</p>
+
+<p>"We now carried her blessed remains into the chapel. There the
+Immaculate Virgin watched over her; lilies and roses surrounded her
+virginal body, and her cherished device&mdash;'O Mary! conceived without
+sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee'&mdash;surrounding this little
+sanctuary, seemed the last echo of her life.</p>
+
+<p>"Then commenced the miracle of glorified humility; this humble Sister,
+who in life had been scarcely noticed, was suddenly surrounded by
+persons of every age and condition, who considered it a very great
+happiness to come, not to pray for her, but to recommend themselves to
+her blessed intercession.</p>
+
+<p>"As for us who were keeping watch around our dear relic, we could not
+bear to think of the moment which would take her from us. This house
+which had been <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>protected by her presence for forty-six years, would it
+be deprived of her forever? The thought was heart-breaking; it seemed
+as if we were about to lose the protection of the Immaculate Virgin,
+who would henceforth cease to hover over us.</p>
+
+<p>"On the other hand, to keep our dear Sister with us appeared
+impossible. Our Superiors being consulted, permitted us to take
+measures in accordance with our wishes. We had a world of difficulties
+to surmount.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pray,' said I to our Sisters; and they passed the night supplicating
+the Immaculate Mary to let our beloved companion remain with us.</p>
+
+<p>"All night long, I vainly tried to think of a suitable resting place
+for her, when suddenly, at the sound of the four o'clock bell, I
+thought I heard these words: 'The vault is under the chapel of
+Reuilly.' 'True enough,' said I, joyfully, like a person who suddenly
+sees the realization of a long deferred hope. I remembered now
+that, during the construction of the chapel, a vault had been made
+communicating with the children's refectory. Our worthy Mother Mazin
+had assigned to it no actual purpose, saying we might have use for it
+hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>"There was no time to lose. We were on the eve of her funeral, and the
+authorization, so difficult to obtain, had not yet been solicited.</p>
+
+<p>"The vault was hastily prepared, and the petition, sustained by
+influential persons, succeeded as if by enchantment.</p>
+
+<p>"January 3d, the feast of St. Genevieve, was the day appointed for
+the interment of her, whom we regarded as the tutelary angel of our
+house. But the word 'interment' is not appropriate here&mdash;'triumph' is
+the proper expression&mdash;for it was a veritable triumph for our humble
+Sister.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+<p>"A deputation was sent from all the houses of our Sisters, that had
+received timely notice, and the little chapel was much too small to
+accommodate the numbers that came. Mass over, the funeral cortege
+which was to accompany the body in procession from d'Enghien Hospital
+to the vault at Reuilly was organized, as follows: The inmates of our
+industrial school, Children of Mary, came first, bearing their banner;
+next to these, all our little orphans; then, our young girls of the
+Society (both externs and those belonging to the house), wearing the
+livery of the Immaculate Mary; the parishioners, and lastly, our
+Sisters preceding the clergy.</p>
+
+<p>"This lengthy procession passed slowly through the long garden walk,
+and whilst the solemn chants of the Benedictus resounded afar, the
+modest coffin appeared in sight, covered with lilies and eglantines,
+emblems of purity and simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>"At the entrance of the vault, the crowd stood aside, and our Children
+of Mary greeted the arrival of the body by singing the blessed
+invocation: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+recourse to thee!' It would be impossible to describe the effect of
+these funeral obsequies, of a nature so entirely new.</p>
+
+<p>"To preserve our treasure, it was necessary to wall up the subterranean
+entrance, but we had an opening made communicating with the chapel.</p>
+
+<p>"The poor, whom Sister Catherine had nursed, lay a magnificent crown on
+the tomb of St. Vincent's humble daughter, who, in life, sought only
+the lowliest paths, and who had supplicated the Blessed Virgin to keep
+her unknown and unsought.&mdash;&mdash;"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The life of dear Sister Labour&eacute; was the faithful realization of Our
+Lord's words in the Gospel: "I return <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>Thee thanks, Father, that Thou
+hast concealed these things from the wise of this world and hast
+revealed them to little ones." Never were the gifts of God better
+concealed in a soul, under the double mantle of humility and simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>For forty-six years did she lead a life of obscurity and toil, seeking
+no other satisfaction than that of pleasing God; she sanctified herself
+in the lowliest paths by a faithful correspondence to grace, and an
+exact compliance with the practices of a Community life. The favors she
+received from Heaven never filled her heart with pride; witness of the
+wonders daily wrought by the medal, she never uttered a word that might
+lead others to suspect how much more she knew about it than any one
+else.</p>
+
+<p>Might we not say, she had chosen for her motto these words of &Agrave; Kempis:
+"Love to be unknown and accounted as nothing?" How faithfully these
+traits portray the true daughter of the humble Vincent de Paul!</p>
+
+<p>What, in Heaven, must be the glory of those whose earthly life was
+one of self-abasement? Do we not already perceive a faint radiance of
+this glory? The obsequies of the humble servant of the poor resembled
+a triumph; by an almost unheard of exception, her body remains in
+the midst of her spiritual family; her tomb is visited by persons of
+every condition, who, with confidence, recommend themselves to her
+intercession, and many of whom assure us that their petitions have
+been granted. In fine, this biographical notice discloses what Sister
+Catherine so carefully concealed, and thus accomplishes Our Lord's
+promise: "He who humbleth himself, shall be exalted."</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="title"><span class="smcap">Mary's Agency in the Church.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">THIS AGENCY, EVER MANIFEST, SEEMS TO HAVE DISAPPEARED DURING THE
+EIGHTEENTH AND IN THE BEGINNING OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY&mdash;MARY
+APPEARS IN 1830&mdash;MOTIVES AND IMPORTANCE OF THIS APPARITION&mdash;THE
+IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>Devotion to the most Blessed Virgin is as ancient as Christianity,
+and we find traces of it from the very origin of the Church, among
+all nations who accepted the Gospel. During the first ages, it was
+concealed in the obscurity of the catacombs, or veiled itself under
+symbolical forms to escape the profanation of infidels; but when the
+era of peace succeeded that of bloody persecutions, it reappeared
+openly and in all the brilliancy of its ravishing beauty. It developed
+a wonderful growth, especially in the fifth century, after the Council
+of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>Ephesus had proclaimed the divine maternity of Mary, thereby
+sanctioning the exceptional homages rendered her above all the saints.</p>
+
+<p>The image of the Virgin Mother, circulated throughout Christendom,
+becomes the ornament of churches, the protection of the fireside, and
+an object of devotion to the faithful. It is at this epoch, especially,
+we see everywhere gradually disappearing the last vestiges of paganism.
+The Immaculate Virgin, the Mother of tenderness, the Queen of Angels,
+the Patroness of regenerated humanity, supplants those vain idols,
+which for ages had fostered superstition, with its train of vices and
+errors.</p>
+
+<p>Every Catholic admits that the Church's veneration of Mary rests upon
+an inviolable foundation&mdash;both faith and reason unite in justifying it.
+Events have proved that God Himself has authorized it, for it has often
+pleased Him to recompense the confidence and fidelity of her servants,
+by sensible marks of His power, by extraordinary graces&mdash;in a word,
+by true miracles. By a disposition of His Providence, He has decreed
+Mary's intervention in the economy of the Church and the sanctification
+of souls, as He did in the mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption.
+Her character of Mediatrix between Heaven and earth obliges her to make
+this agency felt, to display the power she has received in favor of
+man. These manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church, these
+marvelous proofs of her solicitude for us, form an interesting portion
+of the history of Catholicity. The liturgy is full of such souvenirs,
+and several feasts have been instituted to commemorate them. Christian
+countries abound in traditions of this nature; they are one of the
+sources whence piety derives its nourishment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span></p>
+<p>The majority of pilgrim shrines owe their origin to some supernatural
+intervention of the Blessed Virgin. Sometimes she has manifested
+herself under a visible form, most frequently to a poor shepherd
+or peasant; again, she has wrought a miracle, as the recovery of
+a sick person, the conversion of a hardened sinner, or some other
+prodigy betokening the power of a supernatural agency. Sometimes, a
+statue, a picture, apparently not fashioned by the hand of man, is
+accidentally discovered; the neighboring population are touched, their
+faith is reanimated, and soon a shrine, a chapel, or even a splendid
+basilica, is erected to protect this gift of Heaven, this pledge of
+Mary's affection. Innumerable generations repair to the spot, and new
+favors, new miracles, ineffable consolations, ever attest the tutelary
+guardianship of her, whom humble, confiding hearts have never invoked
+in vain. We might cite hundreds of names in support of these assertions.</p>
+
+<p>The history of devotion to Mary in Catholic countries gives rise to
+an observation worthy of remark, that the faith of a country is in
+proportion to its devotion to the Blessed Virgin. We can also add that,
+when God wishes to revive the Faith among any people, He commissions
+Mary to manifest there her goodness and power.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Every age has furnished the Church with constantly increasing proofs of
+Mary's mediation; there are epochs in which she seems to be so lavish
+of her presence, that we might say she lives familiarly among mankind,
+and that her delights are to converse with them.</p>
+
+<p>Again, on the contrary, she appears to retire, to hold herself aloof
+from the world, to give no more signs of her intervention. We have a
+striking example of this in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>a somewhat recent age. More than a century
+do we find deprived of Mary's sensible mediation; history records in
+all that period not one of these apparitions, not a new pilgrim shrine
+founded, not a signal grace obtained through the intercession of the
+Mother of Mercy. If a few events of this kind took place, they were at
+least very rare, and have remained in obscurity. This age, forsaken by
+the Blessed Virgin, was the eighteenth century, to which we must add
+the first thirty years of the nineteenth.</p>
+
+<p>At this epoch, when impious rationalism endeavored to efface all idea
+of the supernatural, when the most firmly established truths were
+attacked, when among Christians the standard of virtue was lowered and
+character was of slight esteem in any class or station of society, we
+might believe that Mary, fatigued with men's ingratitude, had resolved
+to leave them to their own devices, and let them govern the world
+according to their ideas of assumed wisdom. She did, in reality, not
+renounce her mission of Mediatrix in favor of the Church, she still
+watched over her great adopted family, she listened to the prayers
+of her faithful servants, but she remained invisible, she no longer
+displayed any of those marks of tenderness her maternal heart had
+lavished upon them in the ages of faith.</p>
+
+<p>We know the consequences of Mary's abandoning the earth, and how these
+sages who wished to dispense with God governed society. The history of
+their reign is written in letters of fire, of blood and of filth.</p>
+
+<p>This revolutionary and impious naturalism was prolonged into the
+nineteenth century; it still exerts a deplorable influence at the
+present day, but it encounters opposition; the supernatural order is
+firmly asserted, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>truths of Faith are warmly defended, the holy
+Church is respected and obeyed, its august Head is held in veneration
+to the very extremities of the earth, God's kingdom is still opposed,
+but it numbers devoted subjects, who, if needful, would shed their
+blood in its defence. Indifference, human respect, jeering scepticism,
+are gradually disappearing, leaving the Church with only sincere
+friends or declared enemies. It is a progress no one can ignore.</p>
+
+<p>Whence comes this change? and what the date of so consoling a
+resurrection? Beyond a doubt, it owes its origin to God's infinite
+bounty&mdash;but the instrument, can it be ignored or contemned? Is it not
+the Blessed Virgin Mary? Has not her mediation been visible for forty
+years? Yes; it is Mary who has wrought this astonishing transformation,
+and through the medal styled miraculous has this series of wonders been
+inaugurated.</p>
+
+<p>In 1830, does Mary for the first time, after an interval of a century
+and a half, manifest her desire of a reconciliation with earth.</p>
+
+<p>It is the first sign of pardon she accords man, after her long silence.</p>
+
+<p>It is the announcement of a new era which is about to commence.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>The apparition of November 27th, in the chapel of the Mother House of
+the Daughters of Charity, Paris, appears, at first, to be of little
+importance, yet it was destined to have an immense bearing upon the
+future and its consequences were to be incalculable. Like a stream
+whose source is concealed at the foot of a mountain, but which receives
+as it advances numberless tributaries, and finally becomes a majestic
+river, fertilizing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>the provinces and kingdoms through which it flows;
+so the vision of the medal has been the initiatory step in a religious
+movement, which, to-day, extends throughout the world, sitting in
+justice upon old errors, superannuated prejudices; systems inimical to
+truth, and fully revealing the true Church and true sanctity, rendering
+to Mary Immaculate, Mother of God and Mother of men, such tributes of
+veneration, love and devotion, as she has never received since the
+preaching of the Gospel.</p>
+
+<p>The reader is already acquainted with Sister Catherine, the humble
+daughter whom Mary deigned to select for her confidante. The following
+chapter gives a detailed account of the apparitions.</p>
+
+<p>We have said that this event was the dawn of a new era, the signal
+of renewed devotion to Mary throughout the world. It seemed as if
+this tender Mother wished, by lavishing extraordinary graces upon her
+children, to make them forget the severity with which she had punished
+their offences.</p>
+
+<p>A rapid glance at the development of devotion to Mary, during half a
+century, will suffice to show the truth of this affirmation.</p>
+
+<p>The medal, scarcely struck, is circulated by millions; it immediately
+becomes the instrument of so many cures and conversions, that it is
+universally styled the Miraculous Medal, a name which clung to it,
+and which is justified by the constant working of new miracles, as
+the second part of this book will show. But this medal was destined
+not only to work miracles, it had an object still higher, it had a
+dogmatical signification, it was to popularize the belief in the
+Immaculate Conception of Mary.</p>
+
+<p>As far as is possible for us to penetrate the adorable designs of
+Providence, everything inclines us to believe that the Immaculate
+Conception is one of those truths <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>whose proclamation is interwoven
+with the welfare of modern society, and whose influence upon
+Catholicity is incalculable. It is the complement of the Blessed
+Virgin's glory; even with the incomparable prerogative of her divine
+maternity, her grandeur would still lack something, were she not
+proclaimed free from original sin. The germ contained in the Holy
+Scriptures, preserved by tradition, taught by the Fathers and holy
+Doctors, supported by the Roman pontiffs, solemnized from the earliest
+ages in many churches, adopted instinctively by the piety of the
+faithful, and depicted under most graceful forms by brush and chisel of
+Christian artist, this belief received, through the medal, the seal of
+a popular devotion. The prayer revealed by the Blessed Virgin herself:
+"O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+this prayer, repeated incessantly by numberless mouths from infancy to
+old age, by poor and rich, and in every quarter of the globe, entered
+as a formula into the practices of a Christian life, and hastened, we
+might safely say, the day when Pius IX was to declare the Immaculate
+Conception an article of faith.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>The wonderful circulation of the medal, and the miracles wrought by
+means of it, would soon have made the chapel of the rue du Bac a much
+frequented pilgrim shrine, as many who were indebted to Mary for
+their cure or conversion wished to testify their gratitude by leaving
+there ex-voto offerings. But the Superiors of the Community deemed
+it inadvisable to allow this. However, Divine Providence, wishing to
+maintain this pious impulse, opened in the very centre of Paris a
+sanctuary, to receive what the chapel of the Daughters of Charity had
+refused.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
+<p>The pastor of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, M. Desgenettes, who had
+taken a lively interest in the apparition of 1830, was inspired to
+consecrate his parish to the holy and immaculate Heart of Mary. An
+Arch confraternity was established for the conversion of sinners; the
+success was as rapid as it was wonderful, and soon the whole world
+resounded with accounts of the miracles accorded the associates'
+prayers. To remind them that Notre-Dame-des-Victoires is allied with
+the vision of the Sister of St. Vincent de Paul, an article of their
+rule enjoins them to wear, with respect and devotion, the indulgenced
+medal of the Immaculate Conception, known as the Miraculous Medal, and
+they are advised to recite occasionally the prayer engraven upon that
+medal: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+thee!"</p>
+
+<p>Some years later, in 1846, the Blessed Virgin manifests herself upon
+the mountain at La Salette to two little shepherd children, charging
+them to warn mankind of the necessity of doing penance in order to
+avert the impending evils.</p>
+
+<p>At Lourdes, in 1858, Mary appears to a poor and ignorant young girl;
+she tells her name, calling herself by that which is most dear to
+her: "I am the Immaculate Conception," and she promises abundant
+benedictions to all who come to pray in that favored place.</p>
+
+<p>In 1871, she appears in the village of Pontmain to some children;
+she comes to revive their drooping courage and restore hope to their
+fainting hearts.</p>
+
+<p>It would take too long to enumerate these manifestations of Mary
+in various parts of Christendom&mdash;those images which seem animated;
+those mysterious voices which warn, which encourage the world; those
+super<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>natural revelations to privileged souls&mdash;all, we might say,
+favors of a tender Mother, who pardons her guilty children, and who
+wishes by multiplied tokens of her love to make them oblivious of her
+past severity.</p>
+
+<p>To so many marks of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness, the Catholic
+world has responded by an admirable outburst of filial piety; each
+year sees hundreds of thousands of pilgrims seeking her privileged
+sanctuaries; her Feasts are celebrated with admirable splendor;
+devotion to her is clothed in every form capable of expressing
+admiration, gratitude and tenderness. Who could enumerate the churches
+and monuments everywhere erected in her honor, the associations
+established under her invocation, the books composed in her praises?</p>
+
+<p>But the homage which eclipses all others, is the definition of the
+dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854. This definition, ardently
+desired by the devout faithful, enthusiastically welcomed by the whole
+world, was the grand thought of Pius IX after his elevation to the
+chair of St. Peter, and it will be recorded in history as the crowning
+event of his Pontificate, already illustrious for so many other causes.</p>
+
+<p>Mary, by this, has received from her children all the glory it was
+in their power to procure her; her prerogatives appear in all their
+lustre; she is acknowledged as sovereign mistress of Heaven and earth;
+she occupies in the economy of religion the true place Divine wisdom
+has assigned her. Let us hope she will soon display to the world the
+effects of her powerful protection, that she will crush the infernal
+serpent's head, that she will calm the storms hell has unchained&mdash;in
+fine, that she will assure the triumph of the Church and the reign of
+Jesus Christ in justice and truth.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="title">APPARITIONS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN</p>
+
+<p class="label1"><i>TO SISTER CATHERINE</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">FIRST APPARITION: THE ANGEL CONDUCTS THE SISTER TO THE CHAPEL; MARY
+CONVERSES WITH HER&mdash;SECOND APPARITION: MARY UPON A GLOBE, HER HANDS
+EMITTING RAYS OF LIGHT, SYMBOLIC OF GRACE; MARY ORDERS A MEDAL TO
+BE STRUCK&mdash;THIRD APPARITION: MARY RENEWS THE COMMAND.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>When Sister Catherine was favored with these apparitions of the Blessed
+Virgin she related by word of mouth to her Director, what she had seen
+and heard, and he, though apparently attaching little importance to her
+communications, carefully took note of them. The Sister never thought
+of writing them, she judged <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>herself incapable of doing so, and,
+moreover, in her opinion, it would have been contrary to humility.</p>
+
+<p>In 1856, when events had confirmed the truth of her predictions, M.
+Aladel told her to commit to writing all she could recollect of the
+supernatural visitations of 1830. She obeyed, despite her repugnance,
+and sketched an account of her vision of St. Vincent's heart, which we
+have already read, and that of the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin.</p>
+
+<p>In obedience, she again wrote in 1876, an account of these same
+apparitions.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, another copy, not dated, was found among her papers after
+death.</p>
+
+<p>These three narrations accord perfectly in the main, yet differ
+sufficiently in detail to prove that one was not copied from the other.</p>
+
+<p>To these manuscripts, in which no change has been made, except a
+correction of faults in style and orthography, are we indebted for the
+following account of the apparitions.</p>
+
+<p>It is to be regretted that M. Aladel's notes should have been almost
+entirely destroyed; no doubt they contained very interesting details,
+but what portion of them remains, is of little importance.</p>
+
+<p>Before quoting Sister Catherine's own narration, we must remark, that
+the first vision, having little reference to anything but the Sister
+herself and St. Vincent's two Communities, M. Aladel did not deem it
+advisable to have published; also, that although the account of the
+vision of the medal in the first editions of the notice, seems to
+differ notably from that related by the Sister, we will see later how
+these discrepancies can be explained, and that in the main the two
+versions are identical.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo69" id="illo69"></a>
+<img src="images/i069.jpg" width="265" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>FIRST APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN</i><br />
+
+<i>To Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;, Daughter of Charity. After a picture
+painted from instructions given by Sister Catherine.<br />
+
+(See the explanation at the list of engravings.</i>)</div></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
+<p>Sister Catherine, already favored with celestial visions, ardently
+desired, with all the simplicity of her nature, to see the Blessed
+Virgin. To obtain this grace, she invoked her good Angel, St. Vincent,
+and the Blessed Virgin herself.</p>
+
+<p>On the 18th of July, 1830, eve of the Feast of St. Vincent de Paul,
+the Directress of the Seminary gave an instruction on devotion to
+the Saints and the Blessed Virgin; this but inflamed our Sister's
+pious desire. Fully imbued with the thought, she retired for the
+night, recommending herself to her blessed Father, St. Vincent, and
+confidently believing that her prayers would be answered.</p>
+
+<p>About half-past eleven o'clock, she hears her name, "Sister Labour&eacute;,"
+distinctly called three times; suddenly awaking, she opens her curtain
+on the side whence the voice proceeds, and what does she perceive? A
+little child of ravishing beauty, four or five years of age, dressed
+in white and enveloped in the radiant light beaming from his fair hair
+and noble person. "Come," said he, in a melodious voice, "come to the
+chapel, the Blessed Virgin awaits you." But, thought Sister Catherine
+(she slept in a large dormitory), the others will hear me, I shall be
+discovered. "Have no fears," said the child, answering her thought, "it
+is half-past eleven, everybody is asleep, I will accompany you."</p>
+
+<p>At these words, no longer able to resist the invitation of her amiable
+guide, Sister Catherine dresses hastily and follows the child, who
+walks always at her left, illuming the places through which he passes;
+and everywhere along their path, to the Sister's great astonishment,
+does she find the lamps lighted. Her surprise redoubles, on seeing the
+door open at the child's touch, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>and on finding the altar resplendent
+with lights, "reminding her," she said, "of the midnight Mass."</p>
+
+<p>The child conducts her into the sanctuary; here she kneels, whilst her
+celestial guide remains standing a little behind at her left.</p>
+
+<p>The moments of waiting seem long to Sister Catherine; at last, about
+midnight, the child says to her: "Behold the Blessed Virgin, behold
+her!" At that instant, she distinctly hears on the right hand side of
+the chapel, a slight noise, like the rustling of a silk robe; a most
+beautiful lady enters the sanctuary, and takes her seat in the place
+ordinarily occupied by the Director of the Community, on the left side
+of the sanctuary. The seat, the attitude, the costume (a white robe of
+a golden tinge and a blue veil), strongly resemble the representation
+of St. Anne in the picture adorning the sanctuary. Yet it is not
+the same countenance, and Sister Catherine is struggling interiorly
+against doubt. Can this indeed be the Blessed Virgin? she asks herself.
+Suddenly, the little child, assuming the voice of a man, speaks aloud,
+and in severe words asks her if the Queen of Heaven may not appear to a
+poor mortal under whatever form she pleases.</p>
+
+<p>Her doubts all vanish, and following only the impulses of her heart,
+the Sister throws herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet, familiarly
+placing her hands upon the Blessed Virgin's knees, like a child beside
+its mother.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"At this moment," said she, "I felt the sweetest emotion of my life,
+it would be impossible for me to express it. The Blessed Virgin told
+me how I must act in all my trials; and pointing with her left hand to
+the foot of the altar, she told me it was there I must come and lay
+open my heart, adding that it was there I would <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>receive all needful
+consolation. Then she also said to me: 'My child, I am going to charge
+you with a mission; you will suffer many trials on account of it, but
+you will surmount them, knowing that you endure them for the glory
+of the good God. You will be contradicted, but you will be sustained
+by grace, do not fear; with simplicity and confidence, tell all that
+passes within you to him who is charged with the care of your soul. You
+will see certain things, you will be inspired in your prayers, give an
+account to him.'</p>
+
+<p>"I then asked the Blessed Virgin for an explanation of what she
+had already shown me. She answered: 'My child, the times are very
+disastrous, great trials are about to come upon France, the throne
+will be overturned, the entire world will be in confusion by reason of
+miseries of every kind.' (The Blessed Virgin looked very sad in saying
+this.) 'But come to the foot of this altar, here graces will be shed
+upon all&mdash;upon all who ask for them with confidence and fervor.</p>
+
+<p>"'At a certain time the danger will be great indeed, it will seem
+as if all were lost, but do not fear, I shall be with you; you will
+acknowledge my visit, the protection of God and that of St. Vincent
+upon the two Communities. Have confidence, do not be discouraged, you
+are in my especial keeping.</p>
+
+<p>"'There will be victims in other Communities.' (Tears were in the
+Blessed Virgin's eyes as she said this.) 'Among the clergy of Paris
+there will be victims, Mgr. the Archbishop will die.' (At these
+words her tears flowed anew.) 'My child, the cross will be despised,
+it will be trampled under foot, our Lord's side will be opened
+anew, the streets will flow with blood, the entire world will be in
+tribulation.'" (Here the Blessed Vir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>gin could no longer speak, grief
+was depicted in her countenance.) At these words Sister Catherine
+thought, when will this take place? And an interior light distinctly
+indicated to her in forty years.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Another version, also written by her own hand, says forty years, then
+ten, after which, peace. In connexion with this M. Aladel said to her:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Will you and I see the accomplishment of all these things?" "If we do
+not, others will," replied the simple daughter.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Blessed Virgin also entrusted her with several communications for
+her Director concerning the Daughters of Charity, and told her that
+he would one day be clothed with the necessary authority for putting
+them in execution.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> After this, she said again: "But great troubles
+will come, the danger will be imminent, yet do not fear, St. Vincent
+will watch over you, and the protection of God is always here in a
+particular manner." (The Blessed Virgin still looked very sad.) "I
+will be with you myself, I will always keep my eye upon you, and I
+will enrich you with many graces." The Sister adds: "Graces will be
+bestowed, particularly upon all who ask for them, but they must pray,
+they must pray.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I could not tell," continues the Sister, "how long I remained with the
+Blessed Virgin; all I can say is that, after talking with me a long
+time, she disappeared like a shadow that vanishes."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>On arising from her knees, Sister Catherine perceived the child just
+where she had left him, to throw herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet.
+He said: "She has gone," and, all resplendent with light as before, he
+stationed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>himself anew at her left hand, and conducted her back to the
+dormitory by the same paths as they had come.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I believe," continues the narration, "that this child was my Guardian
+Angel, because I had fervently implored him to procure me the favor of
+seeing the Blessed Virgin.... Returned to my bed, I heard the clock
+strike two, and I went to sleep no more."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>What has just been recounted was only a part of Sister Catherine's
+mission, or rather a preparation for a future mission to be given her
+as a pledge of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness for the human race.</p>
+
+<p>In the month of November of this same year, 1830, Sister Catherine
+communicates to M. Aladel a new vision; but it is no longer that of
+an afflicted Mother weeping over the evils menacing her children, or
+the martyrdom of her dearest friends. This vision recalls the rainbow
+appearing in a sky still black with storms, or the star shining through
+the tempest to inspire the mariner with confidence&mdash;it is the Virgin
+Queen, bearing the promise of benediction, salvation and peace.</p>
+
+<p>M. Aladel relates this to the Promoter of the diocese, and we find it
+inserted in the verbal process of the investigation, dated February 16,
+1836, as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"At half-past five in the evening, whilst the Sisters were in the
+chapel taking their meditation, the Blessed Virgin appeared to a young
+Sister as if in an oval picture; she was standing on a globe, only
+one-half of which was visible; she was clothed in a white robe and a
+mantle of shining blue, having her hands covered, as it were, with
+diamonds, whence emanated luminous rays falling upon the earth, but
+more abundantly upon one portion of it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
+<p>"A voice seemed to say: 'These rays are symbolic of the graces Mary
+obtains for men, and the point upon which they fall most abundantly
+is France.' Around the picture, written in golden letters, were these
+words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+to thee!' This prayer, traced in a semi-circle, began at the Blessed
+Virgin's right hand, and, passing over her head, terminated at her
+left hand. The reverse of the picture bore the letter M surmounted by
+a cross, having a bar at its base, and beneath the monogram of Mary,
+were the hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first surrounded with a crown of
+thorns, the other transpierced with a sword. Then she seemed to hear
+these words: 'A medal must be struck upon this model; those who wear
+it indulgenced, and repeat this prayer with devotion, will be, in an
+especial manner, under the protection of the Mother of God.' At that
+instant, the vision disappeared."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>According to the testimony of Sister Catherine's Director, this
+apparition appeared several times in the course of a few months, always
+in the chapel of the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, either
+during Mass or some of the religious exercises. M. Aladel adds that he
+was not certain as to their number, but he knows they were repeated
+thrice, at least, the Sister having mentioned it three different times.</p>
+
+<p>Here is the account written by the Sister's own hand:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The 27th of November, 1830, which was a Saturday and eve of the first
+Sunday in Advent, whilst making my meditation in profound silence, at
+half-past five in the evening, I seemed to hear on the right hand side
+of the sanctuary something like the rustling of a silk dress, and,
+glancing in that direction, I perceived the Blessed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>Virgin standing
+near St. Joseph's picture; her height was medium, and her countenance
+so beautiful that it would be impossible for me to describe it. She was
+standing, clothed in a robe the color of auroral light, the style that
+is usually called <i>&agrave; la vierge</i>&mdash;that is, high neck and plain sleeves.
+Her head was covered with a white veil, which descended on each side
+to her feet. Her hair was smooth on the forehead, and above was a coif
+ornamented with a little lace and fitting close to the head. Her face
+was only partially covered, and her feet rested upon a globe, or rather
+a hemisphere (at least, I saw but half a globe). Her hands were raised
+about as high as her waist, and she held in a graceful attitude another
+globe (a figure of the universe). Her eyes were lifted up to Heaven,
+and her countenance was radiant as she offered the globe to Our Lord.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo77" id="illo77"></a>
+<img src="images/i077.jpg" width="260" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN</i><br />
+
+<i>To Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;. First picture.</i><br />
+
+(<i>See the explanation at the list of engravings.</i>)</div></div>
+
+
+<blockquote><p>"Suddenly, her fingers were filled with rings<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> and most beautiful
+precious stones; the rays gleaming forth and reflected on all sides,
+enveloped her in such dazzling light that I could see neither her
+feet nor her robe. The stones were of different sizes, and the rays
+emanating from them were more or less brilliant in proportion to the
+size.</p>
+
+<p>"I could not express what I felt, nor what I learned, in these few
+moments.</p>
+
+<p>"Whilst occupied contemplating this vision, the Blessed Virgin cast her
+eyes upon me, and a voice said in the depths of my heart: 'The globe
+that you see represents the entire world, and particularly France, and
+each person in particular.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+<p>"I would not know how to express the beauty and brilliancy of these
+rays. And the Blessed Virgin added: 'Behold the symbol of the graces
+I shed upon those who ask me for them,' thus making me understand how
+generous she is to all who implore her intercession.... How many favors
+she grants to those who ask. At this moment I was not myself, I was in
+raptures! There now formed around the Blessed Virgin a frame slightly
+oval, upon which appeared, in golden letters, these words: 'O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!'</p>
+
+<p>"Then I heard a voice which said: 'Have a medal struck upon this model,
+persons who wear it indulgenced, will receive great graces, especially
+if they wear it around the neck; graces will be abundantly bestowed
+upon those who have confidence.'</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly," says the Sister, "the picture seemed to turn," and she saw
+the reverse, such as has already been described in the previous account
+of the investigation.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine's notes do not mention the twelve stars surrounding
+the monogram of Mary and the two hearts. Yet they are always
+represented on the medal. It is morally certain that she communicated
+this detail, by word of mouth, at the time she related the apparitions.</p>
+
+<p>Other notes in Sister Catherine's own hand-writing complete the
+account. She adds, that some of these precious stones did not emit
+rays, and when she expressed her astonishment at this, she was told
+that they were a figure of the graces we neglect to ask of Mary. On a
+hasty perusal, our Sister's account of the vision appears to differ
+from M. Aladel's. We were struck <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>with this, and had to study these
+interesting and authentic documents attentively, in order to decide
+whether the visions differed essentially or were really the same.</p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo80" id="illo80"></a>
+<img src="images/i080.jpg" width="265" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN</i><br />
+
+<i>To Sister Catherine Labour&eacute;. Second picture.</i><br />
+
+(<i>See the explanation at the list of engravings.</i>)</div></div>
+
+
+<p>According to M. Aladel's testimony in the investigation, the
+apparitions relative to the medal were always similar, and Sister
+Catherine, before her death, confirmed this assertion. As we have just
+learned from our Sister's own words, the Blessed Virgin always appeared
+with the terrestrial globe under her feet, and at the same time in her
+virginal hands, pressing it and warming it, as it were, against her
+maternal heart, and offering it to her Divine Son in her quality of
+Advocate and Mother, with an ineffable expression of supplication and
+love.</p>
+
+<p>This is what the Sister saw. Was it all? No, after the first act of
+sublime intercession, after this most efficacious prayer of our divine
+Mediatrix, her hands are suddenly filled with graces, under the figure
+of rings and precious stones, which emit such brilliant rays that
+all else is invisible, Mary is enveloped in them, and her hands are
+bent beneath the weight of these treasures. Her eyes are cast upon
+the humble Sister whose ravished glances can scarcely support this
+celestial effulgence. At the same time, an oval frame is formed around
+the vision, and a voice directs the Sister to have a medal struck
+according to the medal presented. The medal is a faithful reproduction
+of this picture, at the moment the symbolical part disappears in the
+sheaves of light.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Catherine being asked if she still saw the globe in the
+Blessed Virgin's hands, when the luminous sheaves issued from them,
+answered no, there remained nothing but the rays of light; and that
+when the Blessed Virgin spoke of the globe, she meant that under <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>her
+feet, there being no longer any question of the first. Hence, we may
+conclude, that Sister Catherine's description of the apparition and
+M. Aladel's agree perfectly. The small globe which the Blessed Virgin
+holds in her hands, and the large one on which she stands, are both
+inundated with the same dazzling rays, or enriched with the same
+graces. The august Mary seems to indicate by the small globe merely a
+figure of the world, imperfectly represented beneath her feet, thus
+reminding us that she is the all merciful Queen of the human race.</p>
+
+<p>There is yet another variation in the description of the two
+apparitions. M. Aladel, in conformity with the popular belief, that
+white and blue combined constitute the Blessed Virgin's livery,
+as emblems of purity, celestial purity, gives the mantle an azure
+tint. Sister Catherine expresses the same idea several times in her
+notes, saying: "White signifies innocence, and blue is the livery of
+Mary." However, the blue mantle is not mentioned in the notice of
+the apparition, Sister Catherine speaks only of the robe and veil of
+auroral light.</p>
+
+<p>When questioned as to a more definite description of this color, she
+replied that it was a deep white, tinted with the mild, beautiful
+radiance of dawn,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> thus wishing, no doubt, to give some idea of the
+celestial hue of the robe and veil. It is this hue that tortures the
+artist, for he feels his pencil powerless to depict the beauties of
+another sphere.</p>
+
+<p>We can understand from the above, how M. Aladel could have mistaken
+some details furnished by Sister <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>Catherine, or have confounded the
+apparition of the medal with the visions of July 18th and 19th, in
+which the Blessed Virgin's apparel was white and blue.</p>
+
+<p>However, the accessories of the mantle and its indescribable hue, in no
+wise affect the reality of the apparition.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>We recollect with what indifference, we might say severity, M. Aladel
+received his penitent's communications, bidding her give no heed
+to them, but dismiss them from her mind, as altogether unworthy of
+attention. But Sister Catherine's obedience, attested by her Director
+himself, could not efface the delightful remembrance of what she had
+seen and heard; to return to Mary's feet was her greatest happiness;
+the thought never left her, nor the firm conviction that she would see
+this dear Mother again. And, indeed, in the course of December, she
+was favored with another vision, similar to that of November 27th, and
+occurring at the same time, during evening meditation. But there was
+a striking difference between this and the previous one, the Blessed
+Virgin, instead of stopping at St. Joseph's picture, passed on, and
+rested above the tabernacle, a little behind it, and precisely in the
+place the statue now occupies. The Blessed Virgin appeared to be about
+forty years of age, according to the Sister's judgment. The apparition
+was, as it were, framed from the hands in the invocation: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" traced
+in golden letters. The reverse presented the monogram of the Blessed
+Virgin, surmounted by a cross, and beneath were the divine hearts of
+Jesus and Mary. Sister Labour&eacute; was again directed to have a medal
+struck upon <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>this model. She terminates her account in these words: "To
+tell you what I understood at the moment the Blessed Virgin offered the
+globe to Our Lord, would be impossible, or what my feelings were whilst
+gazing on her! A voice in the depths of my heart said to me: 'These
+rays are symbolic of the graces the Blessed Virgin obtains for those
+who ask for them.'"</p>
+
+<p>These few lines, according to her, should be inscribed at the base of
+the Blessed Virgin's statue. On this occasion, contrary to her usual
+custom, she could not refrain from an exclamation of joy at the thought
+of the homages which would be rendered Mary! "Oh! how delightful to
+hear it said: 'Mary is Queen of the Universe, and particularly of
+France!' The children will proclaim it, 'She is Queen of each soul!'"</p>
+
+<p>When Sister Labour&eacute; related the third apparition of the medal, M.
+Aladel asked her if she had seen anything written on the reverse. The
+Sister answered that she had not. "Ah!" said the Father, "ask the
+Blessed Virgin what to put there."</p>
+
+<p>The young Sister obeyed; and after having prayed a long time, one day
+during meditation, she seemed to hear a voice saying: "The M and the
+two hearts express enough."</p>
+
+<p>None of these narrations mention the serpent, yet it always figures in
+representations of the apparition, and certainly in conformity with
+Sister Catherine's earliest revelations of the vision. The following
+shows why we are so positive of this fact.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the close of her life, after a silence of forty-five years, M.
+Aladel being no more, this good daughter was interiorly constrained to
+confide to one of her Superiors the communications she had received
+from the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>Blessed Virgin, that they might serve to reanimate devotion
+and gratitude to Mary. Having done this, her mind was relieved; she
+felt that now she could die in peace.</p>
+
+<p>The Superior, favored with her confidence, wishing to realize one of
+her venerable companion's most cherished desires, proposes a statue
+of Mary Immaculate, holding the globe. On asking Sister Catherine if
+the serpent must be represented under the Blessed Virgin's feet, she
+answered: "Yes; there was a serpent of a greenish color, with yellow
+spots." She also remarked that the globe in the Virgin's hands was
+surmounted by a little cross, that her countenance was neither very
+youthful nor very joyous, but indicative of gravity mingled with
+sorrow, that the sorrowful expression vanished as her face became
+irradiated with love, especially at the moment of her prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Our attempt at representing the vision was successful, although the
+tint of the robe and veil, the celestial radiance of the face, the
+splendor of the rays, must always remain an impossibility for art;
+as the good Sister, whilst declaring her satisfaction, betrayed by
+her tone of voice and expression the disappointment she felt at the
+impotency of human skill to depict the beauty of the celestial original.</p>
+
+<p>Thirty-five years before, M. Aladel had vainly attempted a
+representation of the same apparition, as we learn from a curious
+fragment, a small design<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> representing the Immaculate Virgin holding
+the globe, etc., as described by Sister Catherine. His note directing
+the details is in exact conformity with the Sister's description,
+except in one particular, the blue mantle. But little satisfied with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>this attempt, which gave but a confused idea of the apparition, and
+his own especial impression of it, he relinquished the undertaking, and
+held to the known model.</p>
+
+<p>We may say, with truth, that nothing can equal the beauty, the grace,
+the expression of tenderness depicted in the attitude of this Virgin,
+whose graciously downcast glances and hands, filled with blessings,
+proclaim her the Mother, inviting her little child to cast itself into
+her arms, or earnestly entreating the prodigal son to confide in her
+merciful mediation.</p>
+
+<p>This image of the Immaculate Mother, universally admired and honored,
+has a mute eloquence which never fails to touch the heart; and, truly,
+may it ever be styled the miraculous Virgin. Were we to cite only those
+which have come to our knowledge, a volume would be insufficient to
+contain an account of all the wonderful conversions, cures, marks of
+protection, wrought since the appearance of this vision to the present
+day.</p>
+
+<p>The production of new models, representing the Immaculate Virgin in a
+different attitude, should never supplant this, which is, as it were,
+the type of all others; nor weaken the devotion heretofore accorded it
+by popular gratitude.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="title"><span class="smcap">Propagation of the Medal</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">ITS WONDERFUL CIRCULATION&mdash;CANONICAL INVESTIGATION ORDERED BY MGR.
+DE QU&Eacute;LEN.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>We have already seen with what mistrust M. Aladel received Sister
+Catherine's communications, and how he hesitated to assume the mission
+proposed to him. At last, after grave reflection, after consultations
+with enlightened persons, and upon the formal authorization of Mgr.
+de Qu&eacute;len, Archbishop of Paris, he decided to have the medal of the
+Immaculate Conception struck. This was in 1832.</p>
+
+<p>When about to depict the details as related by the Sister, many
+difficulties presented themselves. In what attitude should the Blessed
+Virgin be represented, for in the apparition she had several? Should
+a globe be in her hands? Again, at one instant she was enveloped <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>in
+waves of light, but this could not be gracefully reproduced in an
+engraving. After mature consideration, it was decided to adopt the
+already existing model of the Immaculate Virgin, which represents her
+with hands extended; to this were added the luminous rays escaping from
+the rings on her fingers, the terrestrial globe on which she stands,
+and the serpent she crushes under her feet. Around the oval were
+inscribed these words: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+have recourse to thee!" The reverse bears the letter M, surmounted by a
+cross, and the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary below the M, the first
+surrounded with a crown of thorns, the second pierced by a sword.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"As soon as the medal was struck," says M. Aladel, "it was freely
+circulated, especially among the Daughters of Charity, who, knowing
+something of its origin, wore it with great confidence. Shortly after,
+they gave it to several sick persons, six of whom experienced most
+beneficial results. Three cures and three conversions were wrought,
+some of them in Paris and some in the diocese of Meaux, all of a very
+sudden and unexpected nature. And now there was heard everywhere a
+great demand for the Miraculous Medal, the medal which heals&mdash;virtuous
+mothers of families giving it as a New-Year's present to their
+children, who received it so gladly and wore it with such respect that
+no one could doubt how their innocent hearts prized it. All the pious
+hastened to procure it as soon as it was known to be within reach; but
+the event it gives us most pleasure to record here, and which edified
+us most in these early days of the propagation of the medal, is that,
+in two cities of the province, nearly all the young people united
+in wearing the medal as the safeguard of their youth. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>Four hundred
+silver medals were sent for, to be indulged for this purpose. Very soon
+entire parishes in various counties solicited their pastors to get them
+medals, and in Paris an officer of high rank bought sixty for brother
+officers at their request.</p>
+
+<p>"Thus, the medals of the Immaculate Conception were circulated in a
+truly wonderful manner, in all the provinces and among all classes;
+from every side we heard most consoling things; priests filled with
+the spirit of God wrote to us that these medals reanimated piety
+in the cities as well as in the country; grand vicars, enjoying
+the high esteem due their piety and intellect, prelates, even more
+distinguished, assured us of their entire confidence in the medals,
+which they regarded as means sent by Providence to revive the faith so
+sensibly enfeebled in our age; that in reality they did awaken faith
+daily in many hearts apparently devoid of it, that they re-established
+peace and union in families divided by discord, in fine, that not
+one of all those wearing the medal but had experienced most salutary
+effects.</p>
+
+<p>"Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len himself (whose great charity brought him in contact
+with all classes) told me several times, that he had given the medal to
+numbers of sick persons of every condition in life, and never had he
+failed to recognize the blessed results. Very soon he publishes these
+in a circular of December 15th, 1836, on the occasion of consecrating
+the parish church of Our Lady of Loretto. It is a fact we are jealous
+of confirming, and the knowledge of which we desire should reach even
+the most remote parts of the Catholic world; in our diocese this
+devotion has become more deeply rooted with time; the afflicted still
+affirm, increase and extend its marvelous progress; signal favors,
+graces of healing, preservation <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>and salvation seem to multiply among
+us, in proportion as we implore the tender pity of Mary conceived
+without sin. 'We exhort the faithful,' adds he in the beginning of
+the same circular, 'to wear the medal struck a few years ago in honor
+of the Blessed Virgin,' and to repeat frequently the prayer inscribed
+around the image: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+recourse to thee!'</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, in every part of France have we witnessed the increasing
+eagerness of the faithful of all ages, sexes and conditions, to
+procure the Miraculous Medal. Careless Christians, hardened sinners,
+Protestants, the impious and even Jews, asked for it, received it with
+pleasure and wore it with religious veneration.</p>
+
+<p>"Not only in France were we forced to admire the propagation of the
+medal; it spread rapidly and extensively throughout Switzerland,
+Piedmont, Italy, Spain, Belgium, England, America, in the Levant, and
+even China. It is also said, that at Naples, as soon as they heard of
+it, the Metropolitan Chapter sent for some to one of our establishments
+in that city, that the king had silver medals struck for all the
+royal family and court, and a million of another medal, which were
+distributed during the cholera&mdash;that the image is there venerated in
+nearly every house, and the picture in several churches. At Rome, the
+Superior Generals of religious orders took pains to circulate it, and
+the Sovereign Pontiff himself, placed it at the foot of his crucifix.
+We also received a letter informing us that His Holiness gave it to
+several persons as a particular mark of his pontifical affection.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, to estimate the propagation of this medal, it suffices
+to consult the registry of M. Vachette, to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>whom was entrusted the
+striking of it.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> This examen shows that, from June, 1832, to the
+present time, he has sold: 1st, two millions in silver or gold; 2d,
+eighteen millions of a cheaper metal. According to him, eleven other
+manufacturers in Paris have sold the same quantity; at Lyons, four
+others with whom he was acquainted, at least double the number; and
+in many other cities, whether of France or foreign countries, the
+manufacture and sales are incalculable."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Struck with this marvelous propagation, and the universal anxiety
+to learn the origin of the medal, Sister Catherine's pious Director
+published, in 1834, a short notice containing a brief narration of the
+apparition, and of the graces obtained by means of the medal. This
+book sold rapidly, and new editions had to be printed; when the eighth
+appeared in 1842, the number of copies sold amounted to a hundred and
+thirty thousand, and each successive edition was increased by well
+authenticated accounts of many new miraculous occurrences.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>In consequence of all this, the venerable priest found himself engaged
+in a vast and active correspondence, which, to the end of his days,
+filled his heart with ineffable consolation, at the thought of his
+thus assisting in the accomplishment of the Immaculate Mary's promises
+throughout the universe.</p>
+
+<p>Among the communications he received in the course of the year 1836,
+there was one which appeared to him the confirmation of Sister
+Catherine's vision. He published it in the notice of the medal.
+It was the vision of a Swiss religious, already favored with many
+extraor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>dinary graces. We reproduce it here for the edification of the
+reader:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The 17th of August, 1835, the first day of her retreat, this
+religious, in an ecstasy after Holy Communion, sees Our Lord seated
+upon a throne of glory, and holding a sword in His hand. 'Where goest
+thou, and what seekest thou?' He asked. 'O Jesus!' she answered, 'I
+go to Thee, and it is Thyself alone I seek!' 'Where dost thou seek
+Me, in what and through whom?' 'Lord, in myself I seek Thee, in Thy
+holy will and through Mary.' Here Our Lord disappeared, and the
+religious, awaking from her ecstasy, was reflecting upon His words,
+when there suddenly appeared to her the Blessed Virgin, all lovely and
+resplendent. She held in her hand a medal, on which was engraven her
+image and the inscription: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+us who have recourse to thee!' And sheaves of light gleamed from her
+hands. 'These rays,' said Mary to her, 'are symbols of the graces I
+obtain for men.' She then turned the medal, and the religious saw on
+the reverse the letter M surmounted by a little cross, beneath which
+were the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. 'Wear this medal,' said the
+Queen of Heaven, 'and thou wilt enjoy my very especial protection; take
+pains, also, that all who are in any pressing necessity wear it, that
+efforts are made to procure it for them.... Be in readiness, for I will
+put it upon thee myself, on the Feast of my beloved servant Bernard; to
+day, I leave it in thy hands.' The Blessed Virgin afterwards reproached
+her for misplacing the medal and taking little pains to find it; the
+religious acknowledged indeed, that she had received it in July, and
+that having lost it, she really gave herself no anxiety, considering it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>merely an ordinary medal, knowing neither its origin nor its effects
+till this vision. This is attested by the Superior of the Community.
+The Blessed Virgin kept her promise, and on the 20th of the same month,
+the Feast of St. Bernard, she placed on the neck of the religious, the
+medal she had already put in her hands, recommending her to wear it
+respectfully, to repeat the invocation frequently, and to apply herself
+to the invitation of the Immaculate Mary's virtues.</p>
+
+<p>"During her retreat in August, 1836, she sees the medal every day,
+suspended, as it were, in the air. At first, it appeared very high,
+shining a few moments like the sun, then like gold; again, it seemed
+not so high and was apparently of silver; finally, very near the earth,
+and of a baser metal. The religious gazed in admiration, though without
+comprehending the meaning of this vision, until Vespers, when it was
+explained to her. A sweet but unfamiliar voice asked her which of these
+medals she preferred. She answered, the most brilliant, and the same
+voice congratulating her on the choice she had made, told her, that the
+brilliant medal shining like the sun, was that of faithful Christians,
+who, in wearing it, honor Mary perfectly, and contribute to her glory;
+the gold medal, that of pious persons who have a tender and filial
+devotion to Mary, but who keeping it within their hearts, advance but
+slightly this divine Mother's cause; the silver medal, that of all who
+wear it with respect and devotion, but who sometimes lack constancy
+and generosity in imitating Mary's virtues&mdash;finally, that the brass
+medal, represented that of all, who contenting themselves with invoking
+Mary, take no pains to walk in her footsteps, and thus remain sadly
+attached to earth. The same voice added, that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>there is, however, a
+very especial and peculiar union among these various persons, marked,
+we might say, with the precious seal of Mary Immaculate; they all
+necessarily aid one another in a very particular manner by prayer, so
+that with this powerful assistance, the third can elevate the last, the
+second sustain the third, and the first, thus happily attract all the
+others.</p>
+
+<p>"These details have been communicated to us, from the abbey of Our Lady
+of Hermits at Einsiedlen, so renowned for the great virtues of its
+fervent religious, and the immense concourse of pilgrims, who repair
+hither from all parts of the world."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Up to this time, the medal had received only the verbal approbation of
+the Archbishop of Paris; a formal authorization was necessary to assure
+the faithful of its authenticity, and to conform moreover to the laws
+of the Church, which exact a canonical judgment, before permitting
+the introduction of new images in the liturgical worship. A juridical
+examination was consequently requested, in order to confirm the origin
+of the medal.</p>
+
+<p>Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len willingly complied, and by his order an investigation
+was begun February 16th, 1836, under the direction of M. Quentin, Vicar
+General, Promoter of the diocese; it was prolonged into the month of
+July, and had not less than nineteen sittings.</p>
+
+<p>We still possess the verbal process of this inquiry. Various witnesses
+appeared, the principal of whom was Sister Catherine's Director, M.
+Aladel.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the process, the Promoter asked, why God had chosen
+the Daughters of Charity for so rare a favor, and not one of those
+convents noted for the obser<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>vance of an austere rule, such as rigorous
+fasts, mortifications, etc. For it was not in a contemplative order,
+but in the Mother House of this modest institution so useful to
+humanity, in the chapel which for a long time contained the mortal
+remains of St. Vincent, the father of the poor, that the apparition,
+which was the model of the medal, took place.</p>
+
+<p>We believe the reason of this preference is to be found in the two
+usages observed among the Daughters of Charity, from the beginning of
+their Society; the first, an act of consecration to the Blessed Virgin
+on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception; the second, the ending each
+decade of the chaplet by the following profession of faith: "O Most
+Holy Virgin! I believe and confess thy Holy and Immaculate Conception,
+pure and without spot! O Most Pure Virgin! by thy virginal purity, by
+thy Immaculate Conception and thy glorious quality of Mother of God,
+obtain for me of thy dear Son, humility, charity, great purity of
+heart, body and soul, holy perseverance in my dear vocation, the gift
+of prayer, a good life and a happy death."</p>
+
+<p>The proofs admitted in the inquiry to establish the authenticity of the
+vision of the medal, are:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>1st. The Sister's character&mdash;she is a poor young country girl,
+uneducated and without talent&mdash;of solid but simple piety, good
+judgment, and calm, sedate mind; we perceive at once that everything
+about her excludes all suspicion of deceit or illusion. The better to
+preserve her incognito, she will not allow her name to be mentioned,
+and she even refused to appear before the Promoter of the investigation.</p>
+
+<p>2d. The wisdom of the Sister's Director, who took all possible
+precautions to guard against deception, and who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>yielded to his
+penitent's reiterated entreaties, only from fear of displeasing the
+Blessed Virgin, and by the advice of his Superiors.</p>
+
+<p>3d. The apparition in itself, contains nothing, either in its character
+or object, opposed to the teachings of the Church, but is, on the
+contrary, conducive to edification. Being several times renewed
+and always in the same manner, we may conclude, that the Sister's
+imagination had nothing whatever to do with it.</p>
+
+<p>4th. The wonderful circulation of the medal, confirmed by the testimony
+of the first engraver, M. Vachette, and the extensive sales of copies
+of the notice, reaching 109,000 in sixteen months, as attested by
+the publisher, M. Bailly, must be regarded as a confirmation of its
+supernatural origin.</p>
+
+<p>5th. The extraordinary graces obtained through the instrumentality
+of the medal, cures and conversions, several of which are legally
+attested by the deposition of reliable witnesses, who appeared before
+the Promoter and signed the verbal process, give a last proof to the
+fact it was sought to establish, namely, that the Miraculous Medal
+must be of divine origin. Such is the formal conclusion, in the report
+addressed to the Archbishop by the Promoter, at the end of the inquiry.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, the ecclesiastical authority did not pronounce judgment;
+we know not why the inquiry did not receive the sanction to which it
+apparently led. The death of Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len, at the end of the year
+1839, caused all proceedings to be abandoned. Everything remains still
+in the domain of private devotions, and the model of the Immaculate
+Virgin, with its symbolical attributes, is not yet authorized as an
+object of public veneration in the churches.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
+<p>This deplorable omission is so much the more difficult to understand,
+as, personally, Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len took a serious interest in the
+apparition of 1830, the compass of which he comprehended. It was he who
+urged M. Aladel to have the medal struck; he expressed a wish to have
+some of the first; he received them, and experienced their efficacy.
+Before ordering the investigation, he had summoned to him the Mother
+General of the Daughters of Charity, together with the officers forming
+her council, and other Sisters well versed in Community affairs, to
+learn from them what usages of the Community could have drawn down upon
+it such a favor as the Blessed Virgin had just bestowed. Not content
+with possessing the Miraculous Medal, the pious prelate had in his own
+chamber a statue of the Immaculate Conception after the Sister's model.
+It was cast in bronze, under his own eyes, as he wished to assist at
+the operation. When, in 1839, the solemn octave of the Immaculate
+Conception was celebrated in the diocese of Paris, for the first time,
+this statue, on a throne surrounded with flowers, was exposed to the
+veneration of the faithful. The 1st of January of this same year, he
+consecrated his diocese to Mary Immaculate.</p>
+
+<p>In commemoration of this, he had a picture painted, which represents
+him standing at the foot of Mary's statue, his eyes fixed upon her
+with love and confidence. The statue rests upon a globe which bears
+these words: "<i>Virgo fidelis</i>." And the invocation, "<i>Regina, sine labe
+concepta, ora pro nobis</i>," is inscribed upon the picture.</p>
+
+<p>On the Feast of the Assumption, he presented this picture to his
+chapter, that it might, he said, be a monument <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>of his devotion and
+that of the chapter of Paris to the Immaculate Conception of the Mother
+of God.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>A medal, bearing date of January 1, 1839, reproduces this picture upon
+one of its faces. On the other is a vessel, tempest-tossed, and a star
+guiding it to the haven of peace. These words of St. Bernard, "<i>Respice
+stellam, voca Mariam</i>,"<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> explain the allegory. The following lines
+complete the explanation:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Vana, Hyacinthe, furit; Stella maris auspice, vincis.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo99" id="illo99"></a>
+<img src="images/i099.jpg" width="400" height="266" alt="" /></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="label1">DEVELOPMENT OF THE</p>
+
+<p class="title">DEVOTION TO THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION</p>
+
+<p class="smaller smcap center">MGR. DE QU&Eacute;LEN'S CIRCULAR.</p>
+
+
+<p>The principal end of the Blessed Virgin's apparition to Sister
+Catherine was to develop among the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate
+Conception; and the medal was the instrument used to accomplish this.
+Its influence was so prompt and perceptible that, in the year 1836, the
+Promoter charged with directing the canonical inquiry attributed to
+it, in a great measure, the wonderful development of devotion to the
+Virgin Immaculate. This pious impulse, once firmly rooted, continued to
+increase throughout the world; but, according to the ordinary ways of
+Providence, whilst the effects struck the eyes of all, the cause was
+forgotten, it was forgotten especially that God had chosen a modest
+Daughter of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>Charity to revive in the Church devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin. The medal was known everywhere, it was worn by everyone, it
+accomplished numberless prodigies, but whence did it come? This no
+one thought of asking. It is miraculous; that epithet includes its
+name, its origin, its value, and the humble Daughter who received it
+from Mary, to bestow upon mankind, silently admires these astonishing
+results, and says, like her blessed Father: "I am nothing in all this
+but a vile instrument, I cannot attribute to myself any of the glory
+without committing an act of injustice."</p>
+
+<p>The august Virgin had said that the graces obtained for mankind through
+her intercession would be particularly abundant in France. Events
+have proved the reality of the promise. It is in France, especially,
+that the medal has been propagated, miracles multiplied, and devotion
+to the Immaculate Conception most rapidly developed; it may be said,
+with truth, that that country has, indeed, merited the title of Mary's
+kingdom. As, among all the French dioceses, Paris was the one favored
+with these apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, so was Paris the one
+to inaugurate the religious movement. Faithful echo of the Church's
+ancient traditions concerning the Immaculate Conception, a prelate,
+whose piety equaled his nobility of character, and whose virtue
+received a new lustre from the fire of persecution, Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len
+distinguished himself among all the bishops by his zeal in honoring the
+privilege so dear to Mary. A witness of the influence exerted by the
+medal upon the sensibly increasing devotion of the faithful to Mary
+conceived without sin, and struck with the already abundant fruits of
+this devotion in the conversion of sinners, the pious Archbishop was
+filled with joy. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>Incited by a just hope of seeing the gifts of Heaven
+still more abundantly multiplied, if devotion to Mary were produced
+under new forms, he addressed a petition to the Sovereign Pontiff with
+the view of obtaining from His Holiness: 1st. To celebrate solemnly, on
+the second Sunday of Advent, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, that
+the devotion might be maintained and strengthened among the faithful;
+2d. To add to the preface, <i>Et te in Immaculata Conceptione</i>; 3d. A
+plenary indulgence, in perpetuity, for this same day.</p>
+
+<p>Our Holy Father, Pope Gregory XVI, approved the Archbishop's petition,
+and granted it by a rescript of December 7, 1838. The privileges he had
+just obtained, in honor of Mary, conceived without sin, this venerable
+prelate joyfully published the first of the following January in a
+solemn circular, which clearly depicts his eminent piety. We here
+reproduce it for our readers' edification:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>"<i>Circular of the Archbishop of Paris on the subject of the Feast
+of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of
+God.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Hyacinthe Louis De Qu&eacute;len</span>, by the divine mercy and grace
+of the Holy Apostolic See, Archbishop of Paris, etc.</p>
+
+<p>"To the clergy and faithful of our diocese, health and benediction
+in our Lord Jesus Christ.</p>
+
+<p>"We do not wish, dearly beloved brethren, to await the end of the
+year which begins to-day, and which we dare regard as one fruitful
+in all manner of spiritual blessings, ere announcing to you the new
+favor we have just received from the Holy Apostolic See, so much
+have we loved to persuade ourselves that the joy of your hearts
+will equal our own, so confident are we that this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>favor is for us,
+the presage of multiplied graces, and that it becomes henceforth
+for our diocese an abundant source of sanctification and salvation.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us hasten to proclaim this favor: it treats of devotion to our
+august Queen, Mother and Mistress, the Most Holy and Immaculate
+Virgin Mary, honored especially in the mystery of her most pure
+Conception.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary was conceived without sin: Behold what the Catholic Church,
+what the infallible Church, what the true and only Church of Jesus
+Christ authorizes us to teach, without, however, declaring it an
+article of Faith,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> what she prevents us denying publicly, what
+she instils into all the faithful, when in her general council,
+she declares, she proclaims, that in the decree treating of
+original sin, her intention is not to include therein the Blessed
+and Immaculate Virgin Mary, Mother of God.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> Behold! what the
+Sovereign Pontiffs permit us to say, that always, and with a
+view of nourishing the piety of Mary's servants, who invoke her
+by recalling the first of her privileges, that which approaches
+nearest the sanctity of God, always do they deign to second
+these prayers, and zealously open the treasure of indulgences of
+which they are the supreme dispensers, in favor of a devotion so
+legitimate.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the Church of Paris
+glories in professing and maintaining; what her Doctors hold it
+an honor to teach and defend; what her children are jealous of
+preserving as one of their dearest possessions after the sacred
+dogmas of faith; what they do not hesitate to regard as an
+immediate con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>sequence of their faith, not believing it possible
+to separate in Mary, the title of Immaculate Virgin from that of
+Virgin Mother of God, and not considering it possible to refuse the
+privilege of a Conception without spot, to her who was to receive
+and who indeed did receive, that of the divine Maternity. Behold!
+what respect and love for the Word made Flesh, inspire for the
+chaste bosom the Most High sanctified, because He was to descend
+there, and there clothe Himself with our nature, there become man
+by the operation of the Holy Ghost.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what for years, has been
+repeated thousands and thousands of times, not in this great city
+or diocese only, but in every part of France, among strangers
+and in the most distant countries. Behold! the cry of hope which
+suffering danger, public or private necessities, have wrung from
+mouths accustomed to bless God, and celebrate the praises of His
+Holy Mother. Behold! what has been written, engraved, religiously
+deposed, wherever there were spiritual or temporal favors to be
+asked, graces of protection, of healing or conversion; at the
+entrance of cities, at the doors of dwellings, on the breast of the
+sick, on the couch of the dying. Behold! what in these later times
+especially, has taken such deep root in all Christian hearts, what
+has received an extraordinary impulse, what has been propagated in
+so remarkable a manner, what seems to justify moreover, (the fact
+can no longer be disguised) the numberless graces obtained through
+the invocation of Mary conceived without sin.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the chaste generation
+has taken the pious custom of placing on its heart with the sign
+of the cross as an impenetrable buckler against the inflamed darts
+of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>Satan, and under which its innocence and virtue are shielded.
+Behold! what inspires it, fortifies it, renders it invincible in
+combats with the demon of darkness; what makes it victorious over
+all the seductions of the world and the attacks of hell; what
+attracts, what leads it to follow Mary in the path of angelic
+perfection, and makes it taste that celestial word which is not
+given to all to understand; finally, behold! what everywhere and in
+all conditions, fills with holy emulation, souls truly pious; what
+encourages them to walk with constancy in the ways of justice; what
+communicates to them a just horror of sin and the highest esteem
+for sanctifying grace, of which the Immaculate Virgin is for them
+the faithful mirror and venerable sanctuary.</p>
+
+<p>"And behold, also, our very dear brethren, what has urged, and
+determined us to regard as a consolation, a duty of our episcopate
+to second your piety in this regard, at the same time, that we
+satisfy our devotion to this Immaculate Virgin, to whom we are
+indebted for many signal benefits. We thought it not a rash zeal,
+to supplicate our Holy Father, the Pope, to deign confide to us the
+means of increasing devotion to Mary Immaculate in her Conception,
+to render it easier and thus more popular. The Feast of the Blessed
+Virgin's Conception, being now in France only one of devotion,
+we have feared that even if the memory of it were not gradually
+effaced, it might become insensibly neglected, and the fruits of
+sanctification and salvation diminished.</p>
+
+<p>"The Sovereign Pontiff has deigned to accord our humble request.
+The rescript we have received, our very dear brethren, sufficiently
+testifies how our petitions have been welcomed, our prayers
+answered, upon what foundation the regulations we are going to
+prescribe rest, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>and the advantages we have had reason to expect
+from them. We long, yes, we long, from lively gratitude, from
+tender love to Mary, to give vent to our transports and salute her
+solemnly by the title of Immaculate in her Conception that day, for
+distant day it seems to our hearts, when we will be permitted to
+proclaim it joyfully before the assembled faithful, and during the
+celebration of the holy mysteries.</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary! thou whom wisdom hast possessed in the beginning of thy
+ways, cloud divinely fruitful, always in light and never in shade,
+new Eve, who didst crush the infernal serpent's head; courageous
+Judith, glory of Jerusalem, joy of Israel, honor of thy people,
+amiable Esther, exempt from the common law which presses as a
+yoke of anathema upon all the children of Adam, full of grace,
+blessed among all women. O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+us who have recourse to thee! By thy most Holy Virginity and thy
+Immaculate Conception, O most Holy Virgin! obtain for us purity of
+heart and body, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
+the Holy Ghost. Amen!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But this does not satisfy the prelate's piety; he also entreats the
+Sovereign Pontiff that the belief in the Immaculate Conception be
+expressed in the litanies of the Blessed Virgin. The Holy Father
+grants this petition, and permits the addition to the litany of
+the invocation: "<i>Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis</i>."
+Then Monseigneur, in a new circular of June 24th, orders that the
+Sunday following its reception, this invocation should be chanted
+three times at Benediction, and in future chanted or recited every
+time the litany was chanted or recited, adding that no prayer-book
+without this invocation inserted in the litany <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>would have his
+approbation. The prelate also exhorted all the clergy, pastors and
+others, to instill into the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate
+Conception, recommending the use of the formula, "<i>Regina sine labe
+concepta, ora pro nobis</i>."</p>
+
+<p>At last, seeing the near approach of that epoch so dear and solemn,
+he could not refrain, in spite of his extreme weakness and the
+violent sufferings of a mortal malady, from giving vent to his
+feelings in a third circular, which displays at the same time
+his zeal for the Immaculate Virgin's honor and his indefatigable
+solicitude for the welfare of his flock.</p>
+
+<p>The feast and octave of the Immaculate Conception, announced and
+prepared with so much zeal by the pious Bishop, were celebrated
+with extraordinary solemnity in all the churches throughout the
+diocese of Paris, and especially at Notre Dame. It was one of
+the last consolations this great prelate enjoyed upon earth. He
+died the 31st of December, crowning a life rich in virtues and
+sacrifices, by an act of filial homage to Mary Immaculate, and a
+final testimony of tender solicitude for the flock he was about
+to leave. He loved this flock during life, and before dying, he
+confides it to the inexhaustible charity of the Immaculate Heart
+of the Mother of Jesus, he conceals it under the mantle of her
+purity, that he may feel assured of the victory over the enemies
+of its happiness. He had consecrated his person, his diocese and
+all France to this Virgin, conceived without sin. Was it not to
+her maternal protection the venerable prelate owed that generous
+submission, that admirable tranquility, that tender love and
+sweet serenity of the just, when he was hovering on the brink of
+eternity? He had placed all his confidence in thee, O Mary! at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>that last moment, he invoked thee as the Star of the Sea that was
+to guide him to Heaven, and it was under thy auspices his beautiful
+soul winged its flight to the bosom of its God.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>In emulation of the example of the illustrious Archbishop of the
+capital, the other Archbishops and Bishops of France petition
+the Holy See for the same privileges, publishing them in their
+respective dioceses by solemn circulars, and proclaiming them a new
+source of benediction for the people. Thus, in the same year, 1839,
+the Archbishops of Toulouse and Bourges, the Bishops of Montauban,
+Pamiers, Carcassonne, Fr&eacute;jus, Ch&acirc;lons, Saint-Flour and Limoges; in
+1840, the Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen, the Archbishop of Lyons
+and Besan&ccedil;on, the Bishops of Bayeux, &Eacute;vreux, S&eacute;ez, Coutance,
+Saint-Di&eacute;, La Rochelle, Tulle, Ajaccio, Nantes and Amiens; in 1841,
+the Archbishop of Bordeaux, the Bishops of Versailles, of N&icirc;mes
+and Lu&ccedil;on, Mende and P&eacute;rigueux. We are fully persuaded, and even
+assured, of the fact that a great number of the dioceses in France
+requested and obtained the same privileges; but we cite only those
+of which we ourselves have kept note.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"What should be our transports of joy, confidence, admiration and
+gratitude, at this universal tribute of honor and homage to the
+Virgin conceived without spot! All earth unites with Heaven in
+a concert of praise and thanksgiving, proclaiming that Mary has
+been conceived without sin; all hearts vie with one another in
+celebrating the signal favors, the miraculous cures and conversions
+God has deigned to accord those who invoke the Blessed Virgin
+under the title of Immaculate in her Conception." (Circular of the
+Archbishop of Bourges.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"This new lustre bestowed upon the devotion to Mary conceived
+without sin, should console religion and raise our hopes.... Oh!
+in this desolated region, how should we rejoice to see appear
+in Heaven, if not an omen of the end of all combats, at least
+the pledge of new triumphs and new conquests!" (Circular of the
+Archbishop of Digne.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>May this beautiful devotion, be powerful in attracting the
+benedictions of Heaven upon earth, ever increase. Let us fervently
+implore the Immaculate Mother of God to enkindle it in all hearts,
+to bless that France whose protectrice she has so often proved
+herself, to preserve and augment therein faith and piety, and to
+make all the children of France but one family, united by the bonds
+of religion and charity. Let us also implore the same grace for all
+countries, all peoples. Let each one of us wear the precious sign
+of her maternal tenderness, this Miraculous Medal, which, recalling
+to our minds the first and most glorious of her privileges, she
+gives us as the pledge of all her favors.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! if we knew the gift of our Mother! oh! if we understood
+the excess of her bounty! Does she not seem longing to give us
+knowledge, when she displays to us the abundance of her riches and
+the prodigies of her liberality, in those rays of grace she showers
+upon us like a deluge of love and mercy? Does she not likewise
+unveil to us the mystery of her charity, in the image of her heart
+united to that of the divine Jesus?... The same fire consumes them,
+the same zeal devours them, thirst for our salvation. This union
+of love and sacrifice is very clearly represented by the august
+Mary's initial joined to the sacred sign of the cross above the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>two hearts, as an authentic testimony, of the co-operation of the
+Mother of the Saviour in the salvation of the human race.</p>
+
+<p>Wear then, little children, this cherished medal, this precious
+souvenir of the best of mothers; learn and love to say: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p>Morning Star, she will delight to guide your first steps and to
+keep you in the paths of innocence. Wear it, Christian youth,
+and amidst the numberless dangers lurking in your paths repeat
+frequently: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+recourse to thee!" Virgin most faithful, she will preserve you
+from all peril. Wear it, fathers and mothers; say often: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+And the Mother of Jesus will shed upon you and your families the
+most abundant benedictions. Wear it, ye old and infirm; say also:
+"O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+to thee!" Help of Christians, she will aid you in sanctifying
+your sufferings and the closing years of life. Wear it, souls
+consecrated to God, and never cease repeating: "O Mary! conceived
+without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" Queen of
+Virgins, she will implant in the garden of your heart those fruits
+and flowers which constitute the delight of the Spouse, and which
+will form your crown at the nuptials of the Lamb. Amidst the trials
+and tribulations of life, let us invoke Mary, conceived without
+sin, and our tears will be dried, our sufferings assuaged, our
+sorrows sweetened, for she dispenses the dew of all graces. In our
+combats against the demon, the world and the flesh, let us appeal
+to Mary, conceived without sin; Strength of combatants <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>and Crown
+of victors, she will shield us against their most violent assaults
+and assure us of the victory; but oh! when standing on the brink
+of that moment which summons us before the Sovereign Judge, then
+especially must we invoke Mary, conceived without sin, and she
+whom the Church calls Gate of Heaven will herself receive our last
+sigh and introduce our soul into the abode of glory and perfect
+happiness.</p>
+
+<p>And you also, poor sinners, though covered with the wounds of sin,
+buried in the deepest abysses of passion, the arm of an avenging
+God lifted to descend upon your guilty head, despair seizing your
+soul, raise your eyes to the Star of the Sea; you are not bereft
+of Mary's compassion; take the medal, cry from the depths of your
+hearts, "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+recourse to thee!" Unfailing Refuge of sinners, her charitable hand
+will apply to your cruel wounds a healing ointment; she will rescue
+you from the depths whence you have fallen, she will turn aside
+the formidable blows of Divine justice, she will pour over your
+soul the balm of sweet hope, she will guide you anew in the paths
+of righteousness and conduct you even to the haven of a blessed
+eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Would that all might taste this means of salvation! the dismal
+shades of voluntary death would soon cease to terrify our cities
+and rural districts. Yes, the short prayer, "O Mary! conceived
+without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" made with
+faith, would, even amidst the violent agitation of a homicidal
+thought, banish the tempter; a simple glance at the medal of the
+Immaculate Mary would dissipate despair. "No one commits suicide
+under the eyes of a mother," said very truly, His Eminence, the
+Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>And the same might be said of many
+other crimes of daily occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! you whose souls are cruelly afflicted night and day,
+virtuous wives, who shed burning tears over the irreligion of a
+tenderly-loved husband; sorrowful mothers, bitterly deploring the
+wanderings of a child reared in the bosom of an eminently Christian
+family, but drawn into the vortex of bad example; pious sisters,
+praying fervently and incessantly for the conversion of a brother,
+who once, like yourselves, enjoyed the sweet consolations of
+religion; Christian children, secretly bewailing the indifference
+of a father who seems to have lost, long since, the precious gift
+of Faith, console yourselves; a new hope is offered you, and it
+comes to you through the beneficent hands of Mary; offer, give the
+image of this tender Mother to the dear objects of your solicitude;
+the thought of this precious medal or a glance at it, will banish
+many a temptation, for we may say with truth of the soul as well as
+of the body, "no one commits suicide under the eyes of a mother."
+If they refuse your offer do not despair; Mary will find her way to
+these hardened hearts, and in spite of themselves, she will take
+them under her protection; imitate the pious ruse of many others,
+who in a like extremity, have stealthily slipped the precious medal
+under the pillow of the impenitent sick on the verge of death;
+imitate those mothers, those wives, those Christian daughters, who
+carefully concealed in the clothing of that child, that spouse,
+that father, the medal they had refused to wear, do this, and one
+day they will appreciate the pledge of your piety and tenderness.
+No, no, never does any one wear in vain, the medal of her to whom
+the Church <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>applies these words of Scripture. "He who finds me,
+will find life, and will obtain salvation from the Lord."<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<p>But it is not enough to wear the medal as a mere pledge of the
+Immaculate Mary's love; we must regard it also, as an assistant in
+reaching perfection. This Mother, all amiable, proposes herself to
+our imitation, she places herself, in a measure, before our eyes,
+that seeing her so pure and perfect, we may be attracted by her
+charms. It is the image of her beauty and goodness she brings us
+from Heaven. It is a mirror in which we learn to know the Sun of
+Justice, by the perfections with which he has enriched His divine
+Mother.... It is on one side, the picture of what we should be, and
+on the other, an eloquent lesson of what we should practice. The
+shining purity of the Immaculate Mary, reveals to us the beauty of
+our soul, created in the image of the thrice holy God, and exciting
+in us, the love of that amiable virtue which makes us resemble the
+angels, it necessarily inspires us with the most vivid horror of
+evil, and causes us to shun the slightest imperfections, since they
+tarnish this divine resemblance.</p>
+
+<p>And, as though it were not enough to excite our fervor by the
+sight of her ravishing beauty, this faithful Virgin discovers to
+us the means of preserving innocence or recovering it, should we
+have been so unfortunate as to lose it. This is the lesson of the
+symbolic figures engraven on the reverse of the medal: "Nothing
+shall be written on the reverse of the medal; ... what is already
+there says enough to the Christian soul." The Sacred Heart of
+Jesus and Mary placed beneath the cross tell us that purity is
+preserved or restored by love and union with our Lord.... Love
+covers a multi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>tude of sins; love is the bond of perfection, the
+consummation of all virtues.... Love assures fidelity. It must
+be stronger than death to make us die to the world, to sin and
+ourselves, that we may be attached inseparably to Jesus crucified.
+There is also another lesson to be learned&mdash;that taught by Mary's
+holy name, united to the sign of the cross. It is placed above the
+two hearts because true love leads to sacrifice; it immolates, it
+fastens, it nails to the cross of Jesus Christ, and this union of
+sufferings on earth is the pledge of a glorious and eternal union
+hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>Children of Mary, respond to her loving tenderness; be docile to
+the salutary lessons of our divine Mother, gratefully acknowledge
+this inappreciable testimony of her ingenious liberality. Go to
+Mary with the simplicity of a child, who lovingly clings to her
+bountiful hand until he obtains the object of his desires. Amidst
+all the storms of life, let your eyes be fixed upon this Star of
+the Sea. Invoke Mary; ever seek her amiable protection; she will
+never refuse to hear our petitions. May her remembrance and love
+reign always in our minds and hearts! May we repeat incessantly
+this sweet invocation: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+us who have recourse to thee!" and when strength and speech have
+failed us may the Miraculous Medal be pressed to our dying lips,
+and the last throb of our heart protest that we wish to die
+murmuring: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+recourse to thee!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="title"><span class="smcap">Extraordinary Graces</span></p>
+
+<p class="smaller center smcap">OBTAINED THROUGH THE INSTRUMENTALITY OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL.</p>
+
+
+<p class="label1">I.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><b><i>Graces Obtained from 1832 to 1835.</i></b></p>
+
+
+<p>"Bless the God of heaven," said the angel to Tobias and his son;
+"chant His praises among all mankind for the blessings with which
+He has loaded you, for it is good to conceal the secret of the
+king, but it is glorious to reveal and publish the works of God.
+<i>Elenim sacramentum regis abscondere bonum est; opera autem Dei
+revelare et confiteri honorificum est.</i>"<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Blessed, then, always
+and everywhere, be the God of heaven and earth, for the numberless
+benefits He has been pleased to confer upon us through Mary! Let
+us adore the mysterious <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>destiny of the Mother of the King of
+Kings, "who, by reason of this title, truly merits the name of
+Queen," says St. Athanasius; and let us rob neither God nor Mary of
+the honor and glory due them. Let us publish the Lord's works of
+power and goodness to man through the mediation of the Immaculate
+Virgin, whom He has established Depositary and Dispensatrix of the
+treasures of His mercy, that mercy which embraces our corporal
+infirmities as well as spiritual needs.</p>
+
+<p>An account of the extraordinary graces obtained by means of the
+Immaculate Conception Medal will be for all Christian souls a
+source of precious benedictions. At the view of these prodigies
+of mercy, these marvelous cures and conversions, the reader will
+be led to thank God and glorify His Holy Mother; those who have
+already loved Mary will be incited to still greater love; careless
+Christians, those who are tried by suffering, those who have the
+misfortune to be in a state of sin, will feel their confidence
+awakened, and they will tenderly invoke her whom the Church so
+justly styles Health of the weak, Refuge of sinners, Comforter of
+the afflicted.</p>
+
+<p>Experience proves this. Every one knows, moreover, that an example
+of virtue or an event which clearly reveals God's agency, acts
+much more powerfully on the soul than a simple consideration of
+the subject or a series of arguments. "<i>Verba movent, exempla
+trahunt</i>&mdash;words can move, example attract."</p>
+
+<p>We also hope for something more from the publication of these
+accounts&mdash;we hope by them to convince the faithful that Mary's
+dearest title is that of Immaculate, and that she knows not how to
+refuse the petitions of those who, with lively faith, invoke her by
+this dearest <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>title. It is, moreover, the Church of Rome which thus
+reveals, as it were, all the merciful tenderness of Mary's Heart,
+and presents us the devotion to her spotless Conception as the sure
+means of enriching ourselves from the exhaustless treasures of that
+Heart and according to all our necessities. "<i>Sacra Virgo Maria
+... sentiant omnes tuam juvamen quicumque celebrant tuam sanctam
+Conceptionem</i>;"<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> and surely this prayer of the Mother of all
+churches&mdash;prayer which we might readily style prophetic&mdash;has long
+since been answered. We have recently seen a compilation, made in
+1663 by a Jesuit father, with the approbation of the Ordinary,
+containing an account of sixty-two conversions or cures effected
+in different places by the invocation of Mary conceived without
+sin, and apparently nothing less than miraculous. It is also a well
+known fact, mentioned in the life of B. Peter Fourrier, founder
+of the Congregation of Notre Dame, that these simple words, "Mary
+was conceived without sin," worn with faith, brought relief to
+a multitude of sick persons during an epidemic. The same means
+obtained not less visible protection at Nemours, when that city was
+in imminent danger of being sacked, and also at Paris in 1830. But
+we confine ourselves to the graces obtained through the Miraculous
+Medal. Our choice of examples will show that, in bestowing especial
+favors upon France, the Immaculate Mary gives no less striking
+proofs of her protection in other countries where the medal is
+known and piously worn.</p>
+
+<p>Among the traits of protection obtained through the medal in the
+diocese of Paris, nine (three conversions <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>and six cures) underwent
+a detailed examination, and were pronounced veritable by the
+Promoter in the investigation of 1836. We mention them in this
+edition, adding to each one's title the word&mdash;Attested.</p>
+
+<p>Quite a number of incidents printed in the edition of 1842 we have
+omitted here, in order to insert (without greatly increasing the
+size of the volume) more recent accounts equally reliable, thus
+proving that the medal is not less miraculous in our day than at
+the time of the apparition.</p>
+
+<p>The extraordinary graces of which it has been the instrument, would
+have formed an uninterrupted series from the year 1832 till the
+present, if unfortunately, neglecting to keep note of them, an
+interval of several years had not crept into the documents in our
+possession.</p>
+
+<p>For the future, please God, no such omission will occur, and all
+the authenticated accounts which come to our knowledge will be
+carefully registered for the glory of Mary conceived without sin,
+and the edification of her servants.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT ALEN&Ccedil;ON&mdash;1833.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The 14th of April, 1833, there was brought to the hospital of
+Alen&ccedil;on (Orne) a sick soldier, who came from the hospital of Vitr&eacute;
+(Ile-et-Vilaine). His impiety there had greatly distressed the
+hospitable ladies of St. Augustin, in charge of that establishment,
+a circumstance communicated to us by persons who witnessed the
+insulting manner in which he rewarded the kind attentions of their
+unfailing charity. Arrived at the hospital Alen&ccedil;on, we soon saw
+what he was, irreligious, impious, and brutally rude. The chaplain
+hastened to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>visit him, and condole with him on his sufferings; and
+as the opening of the Jubilee very naturally paved the way for a
+few words on that extraordinary grace, he gently exhorted the sick
+man to imitate the example of other soldiers who were preparing to
+profit by it, but his words were answered by insults. The chaplain
+did not insist, and contented himself for several days with merely
+visiting him, and kindly sympathizing with his sufferings; the sick
+man scarcely replied, and seemed much annoyed, even at the visits.</p>
+
+<p>The Daughters of Charity in charge of this hospital, met with no
+better treatment, notwithstanding the kind attentions they lavished
+on him. His malady increased; seeing that it was becoming very
+necessary for him to receive the consolations of religion, the
+chaplain urged him again to make his peace with the good God, but
+he was answered by blasphemies. "Ah! yes, the good God, little He
+cares for me." In answer to this the abb&eacute; made a few observations
+full of charity, and the patient continued: "Your good God does
+not like the French; you say He is good and He loves me; if He
+loved me, would he afflict me like this, have I deserved it?"
+These outbursts of impiety only inflamed the charitable zeal of
+the minister of a God who died for sinners, and inspired him with
+forcible language, to depict the justice and merciful goodness of
+the Lord. The sick man soon interrupted him by invectives: "You
+worry me; let me alone; go away from here; I need neither you nor
+your sermons," and he turned over to avoid seeing the priest.
+His treatment to the Sisters was no better; and he continued to
+utter the most horrible blasphemies against religion, and those
+who reminded him of it; he carried this to such a degree, that
+the other soldiers were indig<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>nant, especially at his outrageous
+behaviour, after any one has spoken to him about his soul, or there
+had been prayers or a little spiritual reading in the room&mdash;he
+appeared dissatisfied, until he had vomited forth his stock of
+blasphemies and imprecations. Some days passed and nothing was
+said to him on the subject of religion, but every care for his
+bodily comfort was redoubled; no one now scarcely dared hope
+for his return to God, for his malady increased, and likewise
+his impiety; all contented themselves with praying for him, and
+recommending him to the prayers of others. The Sister in charge of
+that ward, having great confidence in the Blessed Virgin's promises
+to all under the protection of the medal, felt urged interiorly
+to hang one at the foot of his bed; she yielded to the apparent
+inspiration, and, unknown to him, the medal was there. He still
+showed no signs of relenting, and even became indignant when some
+of the other soldiers prepared themselves, by confession, to gain
+the Jubilee. The medal had now been six days hanging at the foot of
+his bed, and many and fervent were the prayers offered up to God
+for this miserable creature's conversion, although nearly every one
+despaired of it. One day, when all the convalescents of the ward
+were assisting at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, the Sister
+approached his bed, detached the medal and held it up before him.
+"Look," said she, "at this medal, it is miraculous; I hung it to
+your bed several days ago, and thereby put you under the Blessed
+Virgin's especial protection. With her powerful assistance, I
+confidently hope for your conversion. Look at this good Mother, she
+is praying for you now." He never raised his eyes, but already was
+grace working in his heart, for he showed no signs of irritation
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>which had heretofore been the inevitable consequence of mentioning
+religion. Profiting by this, the Sister spoke to him of God's
+mercy, and begged him again to cast a glance at the medal she had
+just hung at the foot of his bed on the inner side. After being
+repeatedly urged, he opened his eyes and looked towards it. "I do
+not see your medal," said he to the Sister, "but I see the candle
+which, doubtless, you have just lit; yes, it is certainly a light."
+It was five o'clock in the afternoon, June 13th; his bed was so
+placed that it could not receive any reflection of the sun's rays,
+and the chaplain, after examining the spot felt assured, that at
+no time could a reflection strike it in that direction. "You are
+mistaken," said she, "look at it carefully." He repeated in the
+most positive manner, "I see it distinctly, it is certainly a
+light." Astonished beyond expression, but fearing her patient's
+sight was affected, the Sister showed him other and more distant
+objects; these he distinguished perfectly, and continued to see
+this light for a quarter of an hour. During this interval, the
+Sister spoke to him of God; suddenly, fear and love filled his
+heart. "I do not wish to die as I am!" he exclaimed, "tell the
+chaplain to come immediately and hear my confession." Hearing one
+of the other patients utter an oath, "oh! make that miserable man
+hush!" said he, to the Sister; "oh! I beg you to make him stop
+swearing."</p>
+
+<p>"I was still ignorant," says the chaplain, "of the origin and
+effects of this medal. It was a very familiar object, and I
+regarded it as nothing more than an ordinary medal. When told
+that the sick man wanted me, I went joyfully, and saw for myself
+what a complete change had taken place in him. Congratulating
+and encouraging him, without knowing the cause of this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>change,
+I hastened to ask him if he wished me to hear his confession.
+He replied in the affirmative, and made it without delay; I had
+every opportunity of admiring his good will and the pleasure he
+manifested at each repetition of my visit. I endeavored to make him
+explain himself, and asked if he had not acted from mere civility
+or a desire to rid himself of the importunities by which he had
+been so long beset. "No," he answered, "I sent for you, because
+I wished seriously to make my confession and arise from my state
+of sin." Henceforth he was no longer the same man; he was now as
+docile, patient, gentle and edifying in all his words and ways,
+as he had formerly been unmanageable, brutal and scandalous.
+He eagerly desired the Last Sacraments, which, after proper
+preparation, he received with lively faith. His happiness seemed
+beyond expression, and though suffering intensely, no one ever
+heard the least sign of impatience escape his lips. He continued
+to give the most unequivocal signs of a true conversion; peace and
+resignation were depicted in his countenance, and to his last sigh,
+which he breathed June 27th, 1833, did he persevere most faithfully.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">NOTE</span>.&mdash;These details are attested by M. Yver Bordeaux,
+chaplain of the Hotel Dieu; by the Sisters of Charity; by a
+woman patient named Bidon; Julien Pr&eacute;vel, an infirmarian; by
+Jean Fran&ccedil;ois Royer, of the Seventh Cuirassiers; Marie Favry,
+infirmarian, all eye witnesses, besides a large number of other
+soldiers who left the city whilst we were investigating the matter.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MADEMOISELLE AURELIE B. (PARIS)&mdash;1833.</span></p>
+<p class="center"><i>Attested.</i></p>
+
+<p>The account of this cure was sent us by the person herself in the
+month of May, 1834.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>The 3d of November, 1833, I was attacked by a typhoid fever, for
+which I was treated by a skillful physician and the Sisters of
+Charity, who spared no pains for my recovery. At the end of a month
+I was able to take a little nourishment, and I had the happiness
+of assisting at the Holy Mass and receiving Holy Communion on the
+Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I was still very weak, and
+utterly incapable of any exertion. In this state of exhaustion, I
+took a little chocolate. The fever soon returned, and continued
+with daily increasing violence until Christmas. Then the physician
+said there was no longer any hope of my recovery. Another physician
+was called in, who, after an examination, declared me consumptive
+to the last degree, but said they might try the effect of a few
+blisters. Those proved of no benefit. The 27th of December, the
+physicians finding me extremely ill, informed the Sisters that my
+death was imminent. Moreover, I had been cold for two days. About
+half-past six that day, I received the last Sacraments, and at nine
+every one thought I would soon breathe my last. Suddenly, one of
+the good Sisters around my couch thought of putting the medal on
+me. I kissed it continually with great confidence, and began to
+feel better. My condition next morning was a matter of astonishment
+to the physician, and I continued to improve so rapidly that,
+at the end of two days, the fever had entirely disappeared. My
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>appetite was ravenous, I soon resumed my occupations, and ever
+since have been in perfect health. I doubt not, Monsieur, that I
+owe my recovery to Mary, my good Mother, my love for whom seems to
+have increased; my greatest happiness being to decorate her altars,
+and my most earnest desire that of consecrating myself to God in a
+Community whose works have so touching a connexion with the sublime
+destiny of the Mother of Jesus; it is under her protection I expect
+the accomplishment of my designs.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Yours very respectfully,</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Aurelie B</span>.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;The nine Sisters of the establishment have attested
+the truth of these details, and one of the two physicians does not
+hesitate to declare her recovery supernatural.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, this young person has ever since remained in perfect
+health. Her prayers are granted, the Immaculate Mary has also
+obtained for her the grace of being received into the Community she
+wished to enter, which is the reason we do not give her name.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A RELIGIOUS (PARIS)&mdash;1834.</span>&mdash;<i>Attested.</i></p>
+
+<p>This fact is known to many; however, to prevent too great a number
+of visitors, the Superior requests us not to publish the name of
+the Community.</p>
+
+<p>A young religious, twenty-seven and a-half years old and eight
+years professed, in an Order especially consecrated to the Blessed
+Virgin (Paris), had been kept in the infirmary by various maladies,
+for the space of five months. At the very time she appeared
+convalescent, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>an accident of the gravest nature happened; her left
+thigh bone became disjointed and shrunken, the limb was attacked
+by paralysis, and the sick religious lay upon her bed one month,
+without experiencing the slightest alleviation from human remedies.
+Two physicians and a surgeon being consulted at various times,
+pronounced the displacing of the bone due an irritating humor; but
+they could not check it, even by means of cauterizing and issues,
+so that after a long and painful treatment, she remained a cripple.
+She now had recourse to the Blessed Virgin as a child to its good
+mother; a religious of the house having brought her one of those
+medals called miraculous, which had been given her, she received
+it gratefully, applied it to the afflicted member and commenced,
+Saturday, March 1st, 1834, a novena to the Blessed Virgin. All
+human remedies seemed unavailing; she lost her appetite and was
+unable to sleep. She was also racked with high fever; however,
+having snatched a little repose during the Wednesday night after
+beginning the novena, she was suddenly awakened by a very painful
+commotion, which re-established the bones in their place; the leg
+which had been shortened about six inches, became lengthened almost
+even with the other, and recovered its usual strength. On visiting
+her next morning, the physicians were greatly astonished, but gave
+orders that she should not yet leave her bed. On Sunday, the last
+day of the novena, the fact of the cure was established beyond
+a doubt. The religious arose quite naturally, and without any
+assistance, ran to kiss the feet of Mary's statue, placed over the
+infirmary fire-place; then, dressed in her habit, and accompanied
+by the Mother Infirmarian, she descended about a dozen steps to the
+chapel to adore the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>Blessed Sacrament, after which she repaired to
+the community room, where the Superior with her Mothers and Sisters
+were assembled, to give her the kiss of congratulation. This
+touching scene was terminated by the recitation of the <i>Te Deum</i>,
+and <i>Sub Tuum</i>. No trace of disease remained, except a slight
+weakness for a few days, and as this was felt only in the sound
+limb, it was evidently the result of her having been six months in
+bed.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the physicians acknowledged, with all the Community, that
+it was a supernatural favor. One of them has even declared in a
+certificate of May 4th, 1834, that without wishing to characterize
+a fact as extraordinary, he observes that in this circumstance
+there are: 1st, spontaneous disjointing; 2d, spontaneous
+diminution, three days convalescence, and these last two are, to
+the extent of his knowledge, without parallel in the records of
+surgery.</p>
+
+<p>The religious has never had another attack of this infirmity.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A SICK PERSON (CH&Acirc;LONS SUR MARNE)&mdash;1834.</span></p>
+
+<p>The Abb&eacute; B&eacute;gin, an eye-witness of this cure, which took place at
+the hospital St. Maur, where he is chaplain, has prepared a verbal
+process which attests: 1st, that the patient was really afflicted;
+2d, that she was cured March 14th, 1834; 3d, that she declares no
+other means were employed than the medal and prayer. This verbal
+process is signed by a hundred persons of the above-mentioned
+hospital.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Madame C.H., a widow, aged seventy, a charity patient at the
+hospital St. Maur, was, in consequence of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>a fall the 7th of
+August, 1833, crippled to such a degree that it was with great
+difficulty she could walk, even with the aid of a crutch, and
+sometimes the additional assistance of another person's arm; she
+could scarcely seat herself, and to rise was still more of an
+effort. To ascend the stairs was almost impossible, she could
+accomplish it only by grasping as she went along whatever lay
+within reach. She could not stoop or kneel; the left limb, which
+was the principal seat of her malady, she dragged helplessly after
+her, not being able to bend it.</p>
+
+<p>"Such was her sad condition at the beginning of March, 1834.
+However, she heard something that enkindled a ray of hope in her
+heart. Some one had spoken to her the January previous of a medal
+said to be miraculous; it bore on one side the image of Mary
+crushing the infernal serpent's head, her hands full of graces
+figured by rays of light proceeding from them, and the invocation:
+'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+thee!' on the other, the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, with
+the letter M surmounted by a cross. She was also informed of the
+wonders it had wrought, and her heart awoke to the consoling hope
+of realizing some benefit from the medal which had been promised
+her. How she sighed for the happy moment when it would be in her
+possession! How long the time of waiting appeared! At last, her
+desires were gratified; the 6th of March she received, as if
+it were a present from Heaven, the long wished-for medal, and
+hastened, by the reception of the Sacrament of Penance, to prepare
+herself for the desired favor. Next day, the first Wednesday in
+the month, she commenced by Holy Communion a novena to the Sacred
+Hearts of Jesus and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>Mary. Twenty times, day and night, did she
+press to her lips the precious medal hung around her neck. For
+several days of the novena, our Lord severely tried her faith
+anew. Her sufferings increased greatly, likewise her fervor and
+confidence, and soon the most blessed results were the recompense
+of this poor woman's prayers.</p>
+
+<p>"Seven days of the novena had not elapsed ere she was relieved of
+the sufferings that had so cruelly afflicted her for seven months.
+I could not depict the astonishment and admiration of every one,
+who saw on the morning of March 14th this person so helpless
+the very evening before, walk with all ease imaginable, bend,
+kneel, go up and down high steps. One spoke of it to another for
+mutual edification, and, in turn, came to congratulate her on her
+recovery, and give thanks to God and Mary. The Superior, who had
+bestowed constant care upon the sick woman during her crippled
+state, and had thus been a daily witness of her sufferings,
+returned solemn thanks for this extraordinary grace, the whole
+Community chanting a <i>Te Deum</i> in their chapel.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S.&mdash;I forgot to say that the widow has the free use of all her
+limbs, and has never since had a return of her former infirmity."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The following is what Monseigneur thought proper to append to
+the verbal process, an extract from which we have just read:
+"We certify that credence can, and ought to, be placed in the
+testimony of the Abb&eacute; B&eacute;gin, that of the Sisters and so many other
+eye-witnesses who have spoken conscientiously and from no motive
+save that of zeal for the truth.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"&#8224; M.S.F.V., Bishop of Ch&acirc;lons.</p>
+
+<p class="indent">"<i>Ch&acirc;lons, May 30, 1834.</i>"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSIONS OF M. DE CASTILLON, CAPTAIN IN THE 21ST LIGHT GUARDS;
+AND OF A WOMAN&mdash;1834</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Extract from a letter of Sister C. (Herault) to M.E.:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>November 13, 1834.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It should be the duty of children to glorify their mother, and
+a very sweet one it is for me to acquaint you with two incidents
+manifesting the boundless charity of Mary conceived without sin.</p>
+
+<p>"The first relates to a sick soldier in our house. Though we
+had already witnessed the efficacy of the medal, in effecting
+the conversion of several soldiers most obstinate in resisting
+grace, no conversion was so striking as this. M. Frederick de
+Castillon, aged thirty-five, Captain in the 21st Light Guards,
+entered the hospital, April 29th, in the last stage of consumption,
+and attacked by paralysis of the left side. We nursed him a long
+time, his condition grew alarmingly worse, but how could we
+mention religion to a young soldier who boasted of having none?
+I kept myself always informed of his state, and contented myself
+(apparently) with watching the progress of the disease. Several
+times I attempted to make him realize his danger, but in vain. One
+day, when he was much worse, and I had an opportunity of seeing
+him alone, I ventured to inquire if he were a Catholic. 'Yes,
+Sister,' he replied, looking steadily at me. I then asked him to
+accept a medal, to wear it, and frequently invoke the Immaculate
+Mary, telling him at the same time that, if he did so with faith,
+this good Mother would obtain for him all the graces he needed, for
+bearing his sufferings patiently and meritoriously. He received it
+gratefully, but did not put it on.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
+<p>"But our confidence in the Blessed Virgin's influence over him
+was not diminished, especially when we saw him place the medal
+on the side of his bed. The Sister in charge of that hall had
+already slipped one in his pillow-case. Several days passed, his
+strength was gradually ebbing away, and after many ineffectual
+efforts to obtain his consent to see a priest, I asked a clergyman
+to visit him notwithstanding, and I introduced him into the sick
+man's presence just as some one came to tell me he could not live
+through that night (October 15th). We found him extremely ill,
+but still inflexible. After a few moments, I withdrew, and left
+him alone with the charitable priest, who could get nothing from
+him but these despairing words: 'Leave me in peace, to-morrow I
+shall be dead, and all will be over!' Of course, there was nothing
+else to be done but comply with his request, and you can imagine
+how painful it was. We redoubled our petitions to the Immaculate
+Virgin, and this good Mother soon wrought a change in the
+unfortunate man's heart.</p>
+
+<p>"Next day, he asked the physician to tell him candidly if his case
+were hopeless, because he wished to arrange his affairs. That same
+evening, as soon as the Sister in charge of the hall entered, he
+said to her very gently and penitently: 'Oh! how sorry I am to have
+treated the Superior so badly, and the good priest she brought
+me! Present my apologies to them, I beg you, and ask them to come
+again.' You know we delayed not a moment in going to see him.
+Next morning he began his new life, and during the nine days M.
+Castillon still lived the chaplain visited him several times every
+day, remaining two hours at a time. One of his brother officers,
+coming to see him just after his first confession: <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>'If you had
+been here a few minutes sooner,' said M. de Castillon, with an
+utter disregard of human respect, 'you would have found me in good
+company. I was with the cur&eacute;, and I could not have been in better.'
+He had the happiness of receiving the Last Sacraments with the most
+admirable dispositions. Here are his dying words, which he asked
+this gentleman to commit to writing: 'I die in the religion of my
+fathers, I love and revere it, I humbly beg God's pardon for not
+always having practiced it publicly.' And he expired in the peace
+of the Lord, October 23d.</p>
+
+<p>"I now relate the second conversion, that of a woman who, for
+eighteen years, had been a public scandal, living with a wretch who
+had abandoned wife and children for her. To such wicked conduct,
+she added a more than ordinary degree of impiety, boasting that
+she believed neither in God nor hell, and mocking at everything
+religion held sacred. Although dangerously ill, she declared that
+never would she make a confession. Sister N., seeing the rapid
+progress of the disease and near approach of death, had recourse
+to the Blessed Virgin; she put a medal around the woman's neck,
+and began a novena for her conversion, relying upon the assistance
+of her who, every day, gives us continually increasing proofs
+that she is our Mother and a most merciful one. Before the novena
+was finished, this poor creature, yielding to grace, made her
+confession, and renounced forever the wretch who had been her
+curse, manifesting as much sorrow for her past life, and proving
+herself as pious as she had heretofore been shamelessly impious.</p>
+
+<p>"The above facts, Monsieur, I have thought it my duty to make known
+to you, for the edification of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>faithful and the glory of Mary.
+May these examples of her power and bounty, lead all sinners to
+cast themselves into her arms!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">NOTE</span>.&mdash;These two events are truly a confirmation of what
+St. Bernard says, "that no one ever invokes Mary in vain;" but
+what a misfortune for those who refuse her succor! A very reliable
+individual once told us, that a sick person to whom a medal had
+been given, and who began to feel the effects of grace, suddenly
+insisted upon having the medal taken off, saying: "It hurts me;
+I can wear it no longer." To quiet him it was taken off, and he
+soon expired without the slightest sign of conversion. The person
+relating this, was an eye-witness; it happened in the month of
+October, 1834.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION AND CURE OF MME. P&Eacute;RON AND CURE OF HER
+DAUGHTER.</span>&mdash;<i>Attested.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;It is Mme. P&eacute;ron herself who gives us all the
+details. She lives in Paris, rue des Petites-&Eacute;curies, No. 24.
+We quote her own account, written February 26th, 1835, from her
+dictation, and in presence of the Sister who visited her in her
+sickness.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I was sick eight years, and afflicted with very considerable
+hemorrhages. I suffered much and almost continually. I was without
+strength; I took but little nourishment, and that little increased
+my malady, which was gradually exhausting me. I do not remember
+to have had during these eight years, more than eight entire days
+of relief from pain; the rest of the time I passed on the bed,
+unable to perform the work necessary to aid my poor husband in
+supporting the family. I have even <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>been confined to my bed as
+long as eighteen months without intermission. I consulted several
+physicians, who prescribed the remedies usual in such cases, but
+all to no purpose. My husband, not being able to afford such
+expense, and seeing no hope of my recovery, lost courage and was
+almost in despair. Some kind persons sought to cheer him: 'You must
+not be so low-spirited, my poor Bourbonnais, you must bear up under
+these trials and show your strength of character; your wife is very
+sick, but she will recover and your friends will not abandon you.'
+As for myself, seeing that medicines had no effect and cost us a
+great deal of money, I dispensed with doctors, and was a long time
+without seeing one, having resigned myself to a slow death.</p>
+
+<p>"A neighbor who understood my position, came one day to see me,
+and urged me not to give up thus, but to have the physician again.
+I opposed it, because we had not the wherewith to remunerate him.
+She then proposed to call in a Sister of Charity. I observed that
+not being in want, perhaps the Sisters would refuse to come, as it
+might thus deprive of their services, others more unfortunate than
+myself. This good lady insisted, and I yielded.</p>
+
+<p>"Next morning, I received a visit from Sister Marie (of St. Vincent
+de Paul's parish), who brought me some assistance, encouraged me to
+support my sufferings, and did her best to console me. I can truly
+say that happiness entered my house with this good Sister. She
+soon sent a physician, who, after examining me and understanding
+my case, told her, as I have since learned, that it was a hopeless
+one, I had a very little while to live, and ought to be sent to
+the hospital to spare my family the sad spectacle of my death.
+Hearing this, Sister <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>Marie believed it her duty to give my soul
+especial attention. I was not an enemy to religion, but I was
+not very practical; I went sometimes to the parish functions,
+when my sufferings and occupations permitted, but (and I say it
+to my shame) I had not approached the Sacraments for years. When
+the Sister, after several other questions, asked me if I went to
+confession, blushing, I said 'no.' She begged me to do so, and
+I replied: 'When I am cured, I will.' The good Sister, little
+satisfied with my evasive answer, urged me again to see a priest.
+'Sister,' said I, 'I don't like to be persecuted with things of
+this sort, when I am cured I will go to confession.' I saw that
+this answer grieved her, but she never remitted her visits and kind
+attentions. My malady increased. One Saturday or Sunday night, at
+the commencement of October, 1834, my whole body was cold, and
+vainly did my friends endeavor to restore a natural warmth, the
+chill of death seemed on me. They spoke of reciting the prayers
+for the dying; I understood a part of what was said, but myself
+was speechless. Whilst I was so ill, my husband told our eldest
+daughter to go to bed, and he, thinking me easier because I was
+feebly breathing, threw himself, without undressing, upon the bed
+to snatch a little repose; but, getting up a few minutes later, he
+came to me, put his hand on my face, and was horrified to find it
+covered with a cold sweat. He thought me dead, and called aloud:
+'Euphemie,' (this is our eldest daughter's name), 'Euphemie, alas!
+thy mother is dead!' Euphemie arose and mingled her lamentations
+with those of her father. Their cries awakened Madame Pellev&eacute;, our
+neighbor, who came to console them. 'Ah! madame,' said my husband,
+on seeing her, 'my wife is dead!' Having <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>begged him to be resigned
+to God's will, this lady approached me, and, placing her hand upon
+my heart: 'No,' she exclaimed, 'she is not dead, her heart still
+beats.' They kindled a fire, and succeeded in restoring a little
+warmth to my body.</p>
+
+<p>"Madame Pellev&eacute; went betimes to inform Sister Marie of all this,
+and the latter hastened to tell the physician. 'I am not at all
+surprised,' he answered; 'this lady has two incurable diseases.
+Besides these hemorrhages, she is in the last stage of consumption,
+as I have already told you, and if not dead before this, she will
+not live through the day.' My chest had, indeed, been very weak for
+some time, and the physicians in consultation had all said I could
+never be cured.</p>
+
+<p>"At two o'clock in the afternoon I received a visit from Sister
+Marie, who found me not quite so ill; I could speak. 'Do you
+love the Blessed Virgin very much?' said she. 'Yes, Sister,' I
+had indeed always practiced some devotion in honor of this good
+Mother. 'If you love her very much, I can give you something to
+cure you.' 'Oh! yes, I shall soon be well.' I spoke of death, for
+I felt that it was near. Then she showed me a medal and said:
+'Take this medal of the Blessed Virgin, who will cure you, if you
+have great confidence in her.' The sight of the medal filled me
+with joy; I took it and kissed it fervently, for I truly longed to
+be cured. The Sister now recited aloud the little prayer which I
+could not read, and urged me to repeat it daily; I promised to add
+five Paters and five Aves. She then put the medal around my neck.
+At that instant, there passed through me a new, strange feeling,
+a general revolution in my whole body, a thrill through all my
+members. It was not a painful sensation, on the contrary, I began
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>to shed tears of joy. I was not cured, but I felt that I was going
+to be cured, and I experienced a confidence that came not from
+myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Sister Marie left me in this state; after her departure, my
+husband who had remained motionless at the foot of my bed said:
+'Put all your confidence in the Blessed Virgin; we are going to
+make a novena for you.' Towards evening I could raise myself up in
+bed, which was very astonishing, considering my extreme exhaustion,
+but a few hours previous. On Tuesday I requested some broth,
+which was given me at last, and a little while after I took some
+soup. My strength returned; I felt that I was cured. Finally, on
+Thursday, I wished to go to church to thank the Blessed Virgin.
+This suggestion was opposed, but I insisted and at length went.
+Whilst on the way and alone (for I preferred going by myself), I
+met Sister Marie, who did not recognize me; I took her hand: 'Oh!'
+said she, 'it is really yourself!' 'Yes, Sister, it is I indeed; I
+am going to Mass: I am cured!' 'And what has cured you so quickly?'
+'The Blessed Virgin, and I am going to thank her.' The Sister was
+lost in astonishment. I recounted to her how it had all come about
+in less than three days, and I kept on to church and heard Mass.
+Since then, I have had no return of my malady; I enjoy good health;
+I go about my duties, performing a regular day's work, and to the
+Miraculous Medal am I indebted for it all."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Not only Madame P&eacute;ron's body but her soul, did the Blessed
+Virgin restore to health; she soon chose a Director and went to
+confession, and she has continued to do so ever since; her life is
+really very edifying. As she deeply regrets having lived so long
+estranged from God, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>her greatest happiness now is in frequently
+approaching the Sacraments; two things awaken her tears, the
+recollection of her past life, and gratitude for her twofold
+recovery.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all; the Blessed Virgin seems to have chosen this
+family for the purpose of displaying in it the wonders of her
+power. Madam P&eacute;ron had a daughter aged sixteen, who, after her
+mother's recovery, gave herself to God in an especial manner,
+employing in exercises of piety, all her leisure moments, and
+edifying her companions in the parish confraternity, whenever she
+could take part in their devotions for she lived in another quarter.</p>
+
+<p>The father also was deeply touched at the favors accorded his wife;
+he wears the medal, and he has experienced its blessed effects.</p>
+
+<p>Madame P&eacute;ron has still another daughter, a little girl six years
+and a-half old, who had great difficulty in speaking, or rather,
+who did not speak at all, although she was not mute. Her utterance
+was so impeded, that she scarcely ever finished a word, thus
+disconcerting the most patient. It was so much the more deplorable,
+as she was quite a bright child. 'What a pity she does not talk!'
+said everyone who witnessed her infirmity. When Sister Marie saw
+this little girl, 'Why do you not send her to school,' said she
+to the mother, 'instead of keeping her home all day?' 'You hear
+how she talks,' answered the mother, who did not like to have her
+child's infirmity exposed. However, she yielded to the Sister's
+wishes, and little Hortense was sent to the Sister's parish
+school. Her imperfect speech did not improve, it would sometimes
+take her five minutes to pronounce half a word. Some days after,
+Sister Marie, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>who deeply pitied the child, spoke to her mother
+of a novena for curing this defect. "Cure Hortense, Sister! it is
+impossible, it is a natural defect!" The Sister, with increasing
+anxiety insisted. The novena was commenced on Saturday; it
+consisted in hearing Mass every day, and reciting a few prayers in
+honor of the Blessed Virgin. The medal was hung around the little
+girl's neck, and she was to take part in all the exercises of the
+novena. For several days there was no change, but Thursday after
+the Mass of the Blessed Sacrament, Hortense, on leaving church,
+could speak as distinctly and with as much ease as any one. Those
+who first heard her were struck with admiration, the news soon
+spread, and from all sides came persons to see her; they questioned
+her, and the child answered, they scanned her to see if it were
+really the same, and recognizing her, they returned, saying: "This
+is certainly a great miracle, a sudden cure of a natural defect!"</p>
+
+<p>Little Hortense, showing her medal with delight, would say to all
+who knew and congratulated her: "The Blessed Virgin has cured me."</p>
+
+<p>In thanksgiving for so great a benefit, the child was consecrated
+to Mary on the 21st of November, Feast of the Presentation, in
+the same chapel where the apparition of the medal took place,
+and, in commemoration of this great event of her life, she was to
+wear only blue and white until her First Communion. Previous to
+this ceremony, she made her confession, with every evidence of
+understanding thoroughly the importance of the act. When asked if
+she loves the Blessed Virgin, "Oh! yes," she answers, "I love her
+with more than all my heart!" an expression invented, it seems,
+solely by the fulness of her gratitude. She prizes her brass medal
+so highly, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>that she would not exchange it for one of silver or
+gold, and she wishes it put in the tomb with her when she dies.
+"We hope, Hortense," said her father not long ago, (he always
+finds a new pleasure in hearing her talk), "we hope, when you die,
+that you will leave us this medal as a souvenir of yourself and a
+relic of the Blessed Virgin." "Certainly, papa, if it gives you so
+much pleasure, but I promised the Blessed Virgin, the day of my
+consecration, that the medal should never leave me, but should even
+descend with me into the tomb when I died."</p>
+
+<p>We publish these details, with the cordial approbation of this
+family, fully imbued with ever increasing gratitude to Mary
+Immaculate.</p>
+
+<p>These two accounts have been confirmed by nine other persons.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF SEVERAL SOLDIERS (HOTEL DES
+INVALIDES)</span>&mdash;1834.&mdash;<i>Attested.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;All these edifying details, which have already
+produced a most beneficial effect upon many young men, were given
+us and attested by Sisters Radier and Pourrat, who, having charge
+of that ward, were witnesses of the facts, and also instruments of
+divine mercy in operating these prodigies.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"We had in St. Vincent's ward, number 20, royal hotel des
+Invalides, Paris, a soldier who had been spitting blood about six
+months, and who, it was thought, would soon die of consumption. He
+was naturally polite and grateful for the attentions bestowed upon
+him, but he showed no signs of religion; his morals were bad, and
+it was a well-known fact that, for twenty years, his life had been
+one of scandal.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+<p>"It appeared, however, that faith was not entirely extinguished in
+his heart, for another patient, his neighbor, being on the point
+of death and refusing to see a priest, this one entreated him to
+yield, and was instrumental in bringing about his conversion.
+Alas! his own turn soon came, we saw him growing worse day by day,
+he was wasting visibly, and had not once mentioned receiving the
+Sacraments. As he had urged his neighbor to prepare for death, we
+hoped he would make his own preparation, without being reminded
+of it, or, at least, that he would willingly comply with the
+first suggestion. On the contrary, he absolutely resisted all our
+entreaties, saying: 'I am an honest man, Sister, I have neither
+killed nor robbed.' 'Even so,' we would answer, 'we all stand in
+need of God's mercy, we are all sinners.' 'Oh! Sister, just leave
+me in peace, I beg you.'</p>
+
+<p>"However, he began to realize that he had been sinking for several
+days, and he said aloud: 'There is no hope for me!' This thought
+appeared to distress him. One day (it was Wednesday, the 26th of
+November), the disease took such a sudden turn for the worse, we
+feared he would not live through the day, and, being unable to
+make any religious impression on him, we warned the chaplain of
+his condition and his resistance to all our entreaties. The latter
+went to see him. Our patient received him with great respect, but,
+wishing to get rid of him adroitly, said: 'I am acquainted with the
+cur&eacute;.' A little while after, the cur&eacute; visited him, and conversed
+with him some time. On leaving his bedside, the venerable, zealous
+pastor came to us and said: 'Your patient is very low, and I have
+not succeeded in getting him to do anything for his soul; indeed,
+I did not urge him too much, for fear he might say <i>no</i>, and then
+would <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>not revoke it, like so many others, after once giving a
+decided negative.'</p>
+
+<p>"The same day a lady of his acquaintance also came to see him, and
+earnestly but vainly urged him to make his peace with God. To get
+rid of her importunity he said: 'I know the cur&eacute;; he has already
+been to see me, and will return this evening.' The cur&eacute; returned
+indeed, according to promise; the sick man, on seeing him, jumped
+out of bed to show that he was not so ill as to make confession a
+very pressing matter. The cur&eacute;, a true Samaritan, rendered him all
+the little services imaginable, helping him back to bed, and even
+offering to dress his blister; he then spoke to him about his soul,
+but without avail, for after an hour's conversation he came to us
+and said: 'I am deeply grieved, for I have done my utmost, but it
+has had no effect upon him.' We asked the cur&eacute; if we must call him
+during the night, in case the sick man grew worse. 'I think,' said
+he, 'you had better not, unless he asks for me.' A little later one
+of us reminded him again of the chaplain, who was passing, but he
+got enraged and began to swear, so that we had to drop the subject,
+despite our distress at the thought of his appearing so unprepared
+before his God. Our grief was so much the greater in proportion to
+his extreme danger, for the death rattle was already in his throat,
+and it did not seem possible that he could survive the night. It
+was then my young companion said to me: 'Oh! Sister, perhaps our
+sins, as our holy St. Vincent says, have been the cause of this
+man's impenitence.' Expecting nothing more from the patient, Sister
+Radier now turned all her hopes towards the Blessed Virgin. During
+night prayers thoughts of the medal came into her mind, and she
+said to herself: 'If <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>we put the medal on him perhaps the Blessed
+Virgin will obtain his conversion,' and she determined to make a
+novena. After prayers she said to her companion: 'Let us go see the
+sick man and put a medal on him; perhaps the Blessed Virgin will
+grant our petitions.' She went immediately, and found him up and
+in a state of great agitation, and about to leave the room; all
+the other patients saw it clearly, and said that it was with the
+intention of committing suicide. The Sister cautiously took away
+his knife and whatever else might be used in this way, slipped
+unperceived the medal between his two mattresses, and returned to
+us very sadly, saying: 'Let us fervently invoke the Blessed Virgin,
+for I very much fear this poor man will kill himself during the
+night.'</p>
+
+<p>"Next day, immediately after rising, and even before seeing the
+Sister who had kept watch, one of us hastened to visit our patient,
+and not without most dire forebodings, but, to our astonishment,
+his mind was calm and he seemed better. On inquiring how he felt,
+'Very well, Sister,' he answered, 'I passed a good night, I slept
+well (which I have not done for a long time), and I am better in
+consequence.' As the Sister retired, he called to her, saying:
+'Sister, I wish to make my confession, oh! send the cur&eacute; to me!'
+'You wish to confess?' replied the Sister, 'take care; are you
+going to do as you did all day yesterday, do you really want him?'
+'Yes, Sister, upon my honor.' 'Well, since you wish him, I will go
+for him, it will certainly be well for you to confess your sins,
+for it is said that your life has not always been edifying.' Then,
+without the slightest human respect, he began to mention his sins
+aloud, and with great sentiments of compunction; we could scarcely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>induce him to stop. The cur&eacute; came, and he made his confession,
+which lasted an hour. Afterwards, one of us having come to see
+him, he exclaimed joyfully at our reproach: 'Oh! Sister, how happy
+I am, I have been to confession, I have received absolution, and
+the cur&eacute; is to return this evening. Since my First Communion, this
+is the happiest day of my life!' He appeared deeply affected, and
+expressed a most ardent desire to receive the good God. 'Do you
+know what we did?' 'What was it, Sister?' 'We put between your
+mattresses a Miraculous Medal of the Blessed Virgin.' 'Ah! then,
+that is why I passed such a comfortable night; moreover, I felt as
+if there was something about me that wrought a wonderful change,
+and I do not know why I did not search my bed; I thought of doing
+so.' The Sister then produced the medal, which he kissed with
+respect and affection. 'It is this,' he exclaimed, 'that gave me
+strength to brave human respect. I must place it on my breast; I
+will give you a ribbon to attach it to my decoration,' (he wore the
+cross of honor.) The first ribbon offered being a little faded,
+'No, Sister,' said he, 'not that, but this; the Blessed Virgin must
+have a new ribbon.' The Sister, regarding his weak state, placed
+the medal in such a manner that it was somewhat concealed. 'Oh! do
+not hide it, Sister,' said he; 'put it beside my cross, I shall not
+blush to show it.'</p>
+
+<p>"In the afternoon the cur&eacute; asked us how our patient was, and he
+was not less edified than ourselves at the account we gave of his
+admirable dispositions. Preparations were made to give him the last
+Sacraments. At the sight of the Holy Viaticum, he was so penetrated
+with emotion that he begged pardon aloud of God for <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>all the sins
+of his life in detail, and it was with the utmost difficulty he
+could be persuaded to lower his voice, his heart being too full
+to contain itself. He passed the following night and the next day
+in the same dispositions of faith, regret and piety, until Monday
+morning, December 1st, when he peacefully rendered his soul to God,
+and we have every confidence that it was received into the arms of
+His mercy.</p>
+
+<p>"We relate what we saw and heard; it took place in our ward, which
+numbers sixty patients, the majority of whom witnessed a part of
+these details."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;Before burial, the Sister took the medal off his
+corpse, and the patient in the next bed begged to have it, so
+persuaded was he that it had been the instrument of this touching
+conversion.</p>
+
+<p>This consoling return to God was followed by several others not
+less striking or less sincere, and in that very institution, by the
+same means&mdash;the medal. Quite lately two have taken place, but the
+details are so very much like the above that for this reason alone
+we refrain from giving them.</p>
+
+<p>All this has been confirmed by M. Ancelin, cur&eacute; of the Invalides.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF M. FERMIN, A PRIEST&mdash;1834</span>.</p>
+
+<p>This account was sent us by the Superior General of St. Sulpice,
+who was anxious that we should have it. The venerable priest of
+this very estimable Community, who was favored with this grace,
+wrote the details himself, and they were attested by the Superior
+and the Director of the grand Seminary of Rheims, both of whom were
+witnesses.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"To the glory of Mary conceived without sin, I, Jean Baptiste
+Fermin, unworthy servant of the Blessed Virgin, and subject of M.
+Olier, have, together with my Superior and confr&egrave;res, thought it
+my duty to transmit to our very honored Father, an account of the
+special favor accorded me.</p>
+
+<p>"Many persons knew what I suffered for six whole years, how I
+was worn out with a nervous, worrying cough, whose attacks were
+so frequent and so prolonged that one can scarcely imagine how I
+ever survived them. My physician himself told me that, for the
+first three years, my life was in imminent danger, and if in the
+last three I was less exposed to death at every step, as it were,
+the giving way of my stomach, the weakness of my chest, were such
+that all my days were filled with bitterness, and new crosses
+were laid upon me. In this condition, what ecclesiastical fasts
+could I keep? Four or five years ago, the desire of complying,
+in some degree, with the precepts of the Church led me to fast
+the Ember week before Christmas, and the prejudice to my health
+was such that I was not permitted to fast again even for a day.
+Abstinence from meat became impossible, and for having attempted
+this slight mortification, how much I suffered in consequence, even
+in the very month of July, 1834! Whilst my health was so impaired,
+and I saw only a lingering end to my afflictions, it pleased my
+Superiors to give me a year's rest. I received with gratitude this
+additional evidence of their consideration for me, and endeavored
+to co-operate with them in re-establishing my health, of which they
+had been so thoughtful; but, in my condition, the recuperative
+powers of nature were of slight avail. Even amidst perfect
+quiet and rest for four whole months, I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>experienced but little
+alleviation of my sufferings, for though my chest became, at least,
+apparently stronger, my stomach grew weaker and more disordered,
+so that I was obliged to diet, which, added to the dieting I had
+already practiced, reduced me to such a state of exhaustion that I
+could not foresee the consequences.</p>
+
+<p>"O, Mary, how deplorable was my condition when you cast upon
+me a look of mercy! The 15th of November, 1834, I was sent a
+medal, struck in honor of the Immaculate Conception, and already
+celebrated as the instrument of many miracles. In receiving it,
+I was penetrated, for the first time, with a strong feeling
+of confidence, that this was the Heaven-sent means by which I
+would reach the end of my afflictions; I had not foreseen this
+hope, still less had I excited it, for I believe I can say,
+conscientiously, that I felt naturally disinclined to ask a favor
+of which I deemed myself unworthy. However, the feeling became so
+strong that I thought it my duty to consider it prayerfully next
+morning; and not to oppose so good an impulse, I determined to
+make a novena, and I commenced it on the 16th. From that moment my
+confidence was boundless, and like a child who reasons no longer,
+but sees only what he feels sure of obtaining, it sustained me
+amidst the new trials to which I was subjected; for on the 19th,
+and several days after, my sufferings were redoubled, affecting at
+once both stomach and chest. On the 22d I felt considerably better,
+on the 23d I believed myself strong enough to abandon a diet on
+which I had subsisted a long time, and on the 24th I wished to eat
+just what was served the Community; that very morning I commenced,
+like the hearty seminarians, to take a little dry bread and wine,
+and it agreed <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>with me. Thus my desires were accomplished. I had
+implored the Blessed Virgin to give me health to live according
+to the rule, and she had done so; but a good Mother like Mary
+would not leave her work imperfect, and she chose the very day of
+her Conception to bestow upon me her crowning favors. I was still
+troubled with a slight indisposition of the stomach accompanying
+digestion after dinner, but it was not positive suffering, and even
+this remnant of my old infirmity disappeared entirely. On the eve
+of that Feast my devotion to Mary, which had lost a little of its
+first fervor, was, when I least expected it, excited anew, and I
+felt urged to implore the consummation of a good work so happily
+begun. I did so that evening, and next morning at prayers, at Mass,
+at my thanksgiving, and it was in finishing this last exercise
+before a statue of the Blessed Virgin, after a most fervent prayer,
+that I realized the recompense of my confidence&mdash;I felt assured
+that my petitions had been granted. Since then I have experienced
+no indisposition worthy of attention. I was able to fast the Ember
+week before Christmas and the eve of that great solemnity; I sang
+the ten o'clock High Mass the fourth Sunday in Advent; I followed
+all the offices of the choir on those days the Church consecrates
+to the celebration of our Divine Master's birth, and, instead of
+regretting these efforts, I find in each one of them a new motive
+for blessing the Lord and testifying my gratitude to our good
+Mother.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J.B. FERMIN</span>."<br /></p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Though surpassing our hopes, we have witnessed the speedy and
+perfect recovery of M.J. Fermin, which appears to be something
+supernatural, since he employed no other remedies than great
+devotion to the Blessed Virgin and a novena in her honor.</p>
+
+<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">AUBRY, RAIGECOURT GOURNAY</span>."<br /></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+<p class="label1 center">II.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Graces Obtained during the Year 1835, in France, Switzerland,
+Savoy and Turkey.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MADEMOISELLE JOUBERT.</span></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;The account of this very striking cure was sent us
+by M. Poinsel, Vicar General of Limoges, whom I took the liberty of
+asking for it.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p class="right">"<i>Bishopric of Limoges.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>"Glory to God! honor to Mary!</p>
+
+<p>"The 10th of February, 1834, Mlle. Joubert, aged twenty-nine
+years, a person of solid piety, was suddenly cured of a painful
+and very serious infirmity. For more than a year, she had carried
+her left arm in a sling, by reason of an unaccountable disease
+which extended from the shoulder to the hand, and was of such a
+nature that the afflicted member seemed dead; when necessary to
+be handled, it had to be done with extreme precaution, and even
+then the pain was so excessive that often the patient fell sick
+in consequence. The disease was successively styled rheumatic
+gout, inflammatory and gangrenous rheumatism; science employed in
+combating it, baths, shower baths, poultices, liniments of all
+sort, vain remedies which only aggravated the evil and varied
+the suffering. Sometimes amputation was spoken of: 'Would to
+God, Mademoiselle, you had but one arm!' said the physician,
+not concealing his anxiety and fears of her death, as spring
+approached, for the diseased arm was pale, livid, and frightful to
+behold.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+<p>"The young lady, a true Christian, was resigned to all; by
+meditations upon the cross, she encouraged herself to suffer,
+and, perceiving the progress of the disease, she thought only of
+dying the precious death of the just. A friend, one day, proposed
+to her that she should wear the medal with confidence, and make a
+novena to Mary. She acted upon the suggestion; at the end of the
+novena, on the usual day of her confession (she was accustomed to
+confess weekly), she approached the sacred tribunal, and lo! at the
+very instant when recollected, contrite and humbled, she received
+the moral effect of the priest's benediction and holy words, an
+extraordinary physical change took place in the arm heretofore
+judged incurable, it suddenly became unloosed and free, all
+suffering vanished! 'I scarcely knew where I was,' said she, 'but
+it seemed to me as if a cord that had been tightly drawn around my
+arm was unwound, ring after ring, and I was cured! My surprise, my
+joy, were extreme and beyond all power of expression!'</p>
+
+<p>"On reaching home, she exclaimed: 'A miracle! light a taper, light
+two, come, come, see the miracle! I can move my arm, animation is
+restored to it, I am cured!' Oh! how great the joy of that family!
+They surrounded the favored one, they looked at, they touched the
+resuscitated member, they tested its powers in various ways, making
+her lift divers objects and execute a variety of movements; then,
+all the members of this truly Christian family, moved even to
+tears, fell on their knees, and recited that hymn of thanksgiving,
+the <i>Te Deum</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Since then, (that is, for more than a year), her arm has been
+perfectly well. The physician himself was struck with this event,
+which it would be difficult to attribute to concealed resources,
+or the sudden agency of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>nature. What is nature without the
+intervention and action of God? He is sole Master of nature, life
+and death are at His will. It is not necessary, then, to reason so
+much on the subject; a little faith will easily make us recognize
+here a special grace of God, through the intercession of Mary, our
+kind, sweet Mother, to whom we must ever repair, invoking her with
+love and confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"Such is the simple and conscientious account of the event given
+me, the undersigned, by the person herself, in answer to my
+questions, in the presence of an intelligent, reliable individual
+who saw all, having several times dressed the arm, and who, by
+reason of her skill and long experience, was well calculated to
+judge of the danger.</p>
+
+<p>"In attestation of which, etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right">"POINSEL, Vicar General.<br /></p>
+
+<p>"<i>February 14, 1835.</i>"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These details are confirmed by two letters of Madame and Mademoiselle
+Joubert, by the testimony of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity
+of Limoges, and that of M. Dumonteil, a lawyer and friend of the family.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSIONS AND CURES WROUGHT IN SWITZERLAND.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter from Sister Boubat, Superioress of the Daughters of Charity in
+Chesne:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>February 12, 1835.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>"I have not great miracles to recount to-day, but the facts I give
+are certainly very striking traits of protection. However, I shall
+tell them just as they are, and let you judge of them for yourself.
+Those of which I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>was not an eye-witness have been told me by very
+reliable parties who were.</p>
+
+<p>"1st. A woman who had been sick a long time, and given up by the
+doctors, received, one evening, the Miraculous Medal, and was
+restored to her usual health that night; feeling perfectly well,
+she said to her husband next morning that she would get up and
+prepare breakfast. He treated this as nonsense, and when she really
+did arise, his astonishment was great, and beyond all bounds when
+he found that her health was fully restored.</p>
+
+<p>"2d. In the same village, a young mother had two children, one six
+the other eight years old. The latter was attacked by a violent
+malady, described to me as a convulsion, and died in a few days.
+The younger had a similar attack, and seemed on the verge of death.
+The poor mother was in the depths of grief, when some one thought
+of offering her a medal. She received it as a treasure. It was
+evening; she put it on the dying child, who soon fell asleep, and
+slept soundly the whole night. In the morning he awoke perfectly
+cured! This good woman afterwards came to me to get medals for
+herself and some others. Oh! I wish you could have seen her as she
+wept for joy whilst expressing to me, with all simplicity, the
+transports of her soul! Never will I forget it, so deep was the
+impression it made upon me.</p>
+
+<p>"3d. A child five years old had been racked for several months by a
+fever, which resisted all efforts to check it. One day, he was in
+his grandmother's arms when the paroxysm began. This woman, full of
+faith, applied the medal; the child soon grew better, and the fever
+never troubled him again.</p>
+
+<p>"The attending physician was a relation; on seeing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>him after this,
+the child ran towards him, exclaiming with all the animation and
+artlessness of his age: 'I am cured, but it was not you who cured
+me, it was the medal.' He repeats these words nearly every time he
+sees the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"4th. A young man, on his death-bed, filled all his friends with
+serious apprehensions for his salvation. After several vain efforts
+of the most charitable zeal, the cur&eacute; induced him to accept a
+medal, and very soon the dying man expressed a wish to confess. He
+expired in the most edifying dispositions.</p>
+
+<p>"5th. Three sinners obstinately refused to assist at the exercises
+of a mission given in their parish, and even sought to oppose it.
+One of the missionaries persuaded them to accept a medal, and as
+soon as they had received it, a great change was visible. They
+not only made the mission, most devoutly, but became its zealous
+advocates.</p>
+
+<p>"I get these details from a very venerable cur&eacute;, who gave them to
+me himself.</p>
+
+<p>"6th. There came to me recently a woman from the neighboring
+mountainous district, who said without any previous explanation:
+'You cured one of my daughters whom all the physicians had given
+up; I now wish you to give me the same thing.' I tried at once to
+recollect what medicines I had prescribed, and asked question after
+question concerning the nature of the malady, so as to know what
+remedy I had dispensed. After puzzling my brain to discover, she
+told me it was a piece, thus suddenly reminding me that I had given
+a medal to a young woman from that place, who came to consult me
+about her failing health. To verify the fact, I sent word for the
+young woman to come to see me.</p>
+
+<p>"I pass over in silence a multitude of other events <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>which, without
+being termed miracles, are none the less real graces; and in my
+eyes one most precious and great grace for us is, that the Blessed
+Virgin deigns to make use of our poor little house to propagate
+devotion to her. Oh! if you could see these good mountaineers
+of every age and sex come with the greatest confidence and most
+touching simplicity, asking for <i>na m&eacute;daillot</i>&mdash;a medal. It has
+affected me deeply, and I cannot sufficiently express my gratitude
+to our tender and Immaculate Mother.</p>
+
+<p>"Even Protestants have asked us for these medals, and I am
+assured it was with perfect sincerity. The pastors in Savoy are
+also very zealous in propagating this devotion to Mary. Since
+reading the notice, they have mentioned it from the pulpit to
+their parishioners, many of whom have, in consequence, procured
+the medal. Likewise, do we see young men about to enter the army
+fortify themselves with it, and persons undertaking a voyage
+wearing it as their safeguard; indeed, every one has recourse to it
+as the universal remedy for soul and body."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF SISTER HYACINTHE, A RELIGIOUS OF CALVARY.</span></p>
+
+<p>It is the Mother General of the Community who has given us these
+details. Her letter is dated February 7th, 1835.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I am overwhelmed with joy; our poor patient is perfectly cured by
+virtue of the Miraculous Medal. I could say our patients, for our
+prayers were offered both for the paralytic and that young person whom
+I told you had been sick eleven months; she was able to remain out of
+bed only a few hours each day; whenever she <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>could go to Mass, and
+that was rarely, she had to be assisted, and the support of an arm was
+necessary when she approached the Holy Table. Since Thursday she walks
+alone and eats without experiencing the slightest symptom of her former
+infirmity, except a little weakness. I hope the Lord will finish His
+work and restore her to perfect health; but let us speak of our dear
+Sister.</p>
+
+<p>"The following is a copy of the account I wrote of this marvel to our
+holy Bishop day before yesterday, after Mass:</p>
+
+<p>"'I acquaint Your Grace with an incident of God's great mercy,
+displayed to our Community in the sudden cure of one of our choir
+religious, named Hyacinthe, aged forty-seven years. This good Mother,
+the 14th of last January, had a stroke of paralysis. It did not affect
+her head, but immediately fixed itself in the left side, which became
+motionless and devoid of feeling. We hastened to summon the physician,
+who bled her freely in the arm; next day we tried leeches, medicines,
+a blister on the neck, and three days after one upon the paralyzed
+limb, but all of no avail. The poor patient, as well as ourselves, must
+submit to the decrees of Him who strikes and heals at will. At the end
+of fifteen days I was inspired with the thought of making a novena in
+honor of the Immaculate Conception, the medal of which, called the
+miraculous, we all wear. On the fourth day of the novena, as we were
+about to recite the prayers around her bed, the good Mother desired
+Holy Communion. She was taken to the choir by three persons; after
+receiving, the limb felt a little better, and she could return with the
+aid of two persons only. Her confidence in the Mother of God increased
+daily; yester<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>day she asked permission to come down on the last day of
+the novena, and this morning, with the assistance of a cane and some
+one to support her, she came down and had the happiness of receiving
+Holy Communion. Immediately after, we finished the novena prayers, just
+at the end of which she was seized with a pain in the paralyzed arm,
+followed by an icy chill and then a sensation of extreme heat. She came
+to me with both arms lifted, exclaiming, "I am cured!" And perfectly
+cured she was, being able to walk and use her limbs as freely as if she
+had never felt a symptom of paralysis.</p>
+
+<p>"'To give you an idea of our joy and gratitude, Monseigneur, would be
+impossible. The patient fainted, and I came very near doing the same;
+it was with difficulty I could continue our prayers of thanksgiving,
+so marvelous did it seem that the Lord should have granted this favor
+to our Community, under the government of one of His most unworthy
+servants.'</p>
+
+<p>"I send you this copy, which we had kept, of the letter.</p>
+
+<p>"In the same letter I asked Monseigneur's permission to have a <i>Te
+Deum</i> chanted at the end of Benediction. His Grace hastened to send
+word that he not only permitted but ordered it, which order was
+joyfully complied with. The Vicar General, our Superior, wrote, asking
+me to defer our Vespers half an hour, as he wished to assist at the
+<i>Te Deum</i>. Several other ecclesiastics also came, and saw our healed
+ones blessing God. Since that day our good Mother Hyacinthe follows
+the rules, complies with all her duties, and has never felt the least
+return of her malady.</p>
+
+<p>"This miracle created great excitement in our city; the laborers who
+were working at the house having <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>learned it on the spot, immediately
+spread the news; the evening previous, they had seen our poor Sister
+dragging her limb, a cane in hand, and almost carried by two persons,
+and next morning they beheld her perfectly cured! These men, who have
+seldom much religion, sang the praises of God's power, and asked me to
+give them medals. I gave a medal to each with great pleasure. Clergymen
+have come to learn the particulars of this event, and I let the
+miraculously cured herself recount the wonders of the Lord.</p>
+
+<p>"I must not omit informing you that the physician having vainly
+exhausted all remedies, had been nine days without seeing the patient;
+and the very eve of her recovery he told one of our boarders that the
+disease having settled itself he believed our afflicted one might be
+able to walk, but she could never use her arm again. On coming next
+day to visit his other patients, he was surprised beyond expression
+when she appeared before him perfectly cured. Wishing to get his
+candid opinion on the subject, I remarked that probably it was not
+real paralysis, but only a numbness. 'It was a strongly marked case of
+paralysis,' he answered, 'and there is certainly something supernatural
+in her recovery.'</p>
+
+<p>"In thanksgiving we continue the novena prayers, but preface them with
+the <i>Laudate</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Make such use of this letter as you may deem advisable. If you insert
+it in the notice, you are at liberty to name our city and house. Oh!
+how we long to spread abroad the knowledge and love of God's power,
+signally displayed in answer to our invocation of the Immaculate Mother
+of His Divine Son.</p>
+
+<p class="right">"SISTER ST. MARIE,<br /></p>
+<p class="right">"<i>Superioress of Calvary of Orleans</i>."<br /></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MADAME LEBON (DIJON).</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;"The venerable lady upon whom this cure was wrought
+belongs to a highly honorable family of Dijon, and her personal
+character is very well calculated to inspire the utmost confidence,"
+says <i>L'Ami de la Religion</i>, in its issue of April 17th, 1835.
+Moreover, the letter she wrote, March 12th, to one of her friends, and
+which she was anxious should be transmitted to us, is accompanied by
+the certificates of the pastors of St. Michael of Dijon, of Dampierre
+and Beaumont-sur-Vingeanne, also of five members of the municipal
+council, and several other very reliable persons, some of them members
+of her family; more than this, it is followed by a detailed account
+given by the medical attendant, who had charge of her case for sixteen
+years.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Dijon, March 12, 1835.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>"<i>Madame and Dear Friend</i>:</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me the details of the miraculous manner in which it has
+pleased God to restore me to health. Well! it might be summed up in
+these few words: I implored Mary to obtain my recovery, and she did
+obtain it instantly; having said this, you know all, but you desire me
+to recall the circumstances of my sickness and my experience subsequent
+to the cure. I give them as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"You doubtless remember that, for more than twenty years, I could not
+walk, in consequence of an abscess on the intestines, which left me
+in such a state of sensibility that ever after a walk of more than a
+hundred steps I was exposing myself to the most serious accidents.
+Neither are you ignorant of the fact that, nearly fifteen <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>months ago,
+by reason of influenza, a second abscess formed, and so increased the
+irritability that I hovered between life and death, and even when at my
+best I was scarcely able to drag myself from one room to another. But
+you have probably never heard that, since the 1st of last December, my
+condition was so critical that, with great difficulty, could I remain
+out of bed three or four hours at a time, which made me, as well as
+those around me, think my end was near and I would not survive the
+spring.</p>
+
+<p>"This was my condition, dear friend, when some one mentioned to me the
+medal of the Immaculate Virgin, and urged me to get it. I was a long
+time deciding to do so, for I considered it presumptuous to solicit the
+cure of an infirmity the physicians had pronounced incurable. At last,
+having thought, on the one side, that the more desperate the malady,
+the greater God's glory should He deign to cure it; and, on the other,
+that He had wrought the most wonderful miracles for those who were
+least worthy, I decided to mention it to my confessor. I did so, and he
+encouraged me to make the novena.</p>
+
+<p>"The 2d of February, Feast of the Purification, the first day of the
+novena and one ever memorable for me, I was taken to church in a
+carriage; my daughter, sole confidante of my intentions, assisted me
+to the Blessed Virgin's altar, where, after hearing Mass as well as
+my infirmity would permit, I received Holy Communion. Scarcely had I
+knelt to make an act of adoration, when I was obliged to take my seat.
+A Sister of Charity, whom I did not know was there, for I had not hoped
+to receive the medal just yet, put it on my neck. Immediately, I got
+on my knees to beg the Mother of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>afflicted to intercede with her
+divine Son for the restoration of my health, should He foresee that it
+would be conducive to God's glory and her honor, to my salvation and
+the happiness of my husband and children. Scarcely had I pronounced a
+few words, petitioning our Lord to graciously hear His holy Mother's
+prayer, ere Mary had interceded and God in His great mercy had
+hearkened; I was cured, Madame, entirely cured.... I finished all the
+prayers of thanksgiving after Communion and those of the novena on my
+knees, and, without experiencing the slightest inconvenience, my malady
+had disappeared and I have never felt the slightest symptom of it
+since. I walked, unassisted, to the church door, sent away the carriage
+and returned home on foot.</p>
+
+<p>"I have given you a detail of the facts, but to express the feelings
+that filled my heart on re-entering my house would be impossible; my
+joy, my astonishment, were boundless; I could hardly realize it myself.
+Cured in an instant! The thought was overpowering! It seemed as if I
+must be in a dream, but my husband's astonishment, my mother's, and
+that of the servants, who, seeing the great change wrought in me,
+although they were ignorant of the means, could not forbear exclaiming:
+'But a miracle must have been worked upon you!' convinced me that I was
+not asleep.</p>
+
+<p>"Since that time I walk as well as any one; scarcely was my novena
+finished ere I could go from one end of the city to the other. It has
+not been six weeks since my cure, and I have already walked more than
+three miles at a time, and could have accomplished twice as much. You
+see, Madame and dear friend, that the miracle is a most striking one.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
+<p>"I now beg of you, as well as all other pious souls, to unite heartily
+with me in thanking God and His august Mother.</p>
+
+<p class="indent">"Your ever devoted<br /></p>
+<p class="right">"&Eacute;LIS. M. DARBEAUMONT LEBON."<br /></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The physician's certificate ends thus: "Whatever may have been the
+cause of a cure, heretofore regarded as impossible by all the doctors
+who attended Mme. Lebon, it should be considered none the less certain
+and positive, for the evidence of the fact is indubitable.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Wherefore, I sign the present attestation, which I declare sincere and
+true.</p>
+
+<p class="right">"FOURNIER, Doctor.<br />
+"<i>Dampierre, March 19, 1835.</i>"<br /></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURES WROUGHT AT SMYRNA AND CONSTANTINOPLE.</span></p>
+
+<p>Extract of a letter from M. Le Leu, Lazarist missionary:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Constantinople, March 16, 1835.</i></p>
+
+<p>"It has been a long time since I proposed writing you something about
+the medal. In my eyes, one of the greatest miracles it has ever worked
+is the rapidity of its propagation and the confidence it inspires.
+By our demands upon you for medals, you may judge of their effect in
+this country. We could dispose of thousands and yet not satisfy the
+innumerable calls we have for them. At Smyrna, it is the same. We had
+occasion to send a few into the interior of Asia, and the Blessed
+Virgin showed herself no less powerful or beneficent there than in
+Europe. At Angora, an old man was deprived of the use of all his limbs,
+and had neither walked nor worked for years; he lived in frightful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>poverty, and sighed for death, for he was especially grieved at being
+so long a burden upon a family in indigent circumstances. (In this
+country there are numbers of Armenian families very devoted to the
+Blessed Virgin, and this was one of them.) He had no sooner heard of
+the Miraculous Medal, than he solicited the happiness of obtaining and
+wearing it. In these countries the Faith has retained its primitive
+simplicity; this recipient of a medal does not content himself with
+praying before it, or hanging it around his neck, but he kisses it
+with profound respect and applies it to the affected part; the Blessed
+Virgin cannot resist such confidence, and the good old man instantly
+recovers the use of his limbs&mdash;he now works and supports himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is another incident: A young woman belonging to a respectable
+and very pious family had, for a long time, been a prey to a disease,
+the nature of which neither the French, Greek nor Turkish physicians
+could understand. Its symptoms were most violent pains in the side,
+which prevented her walking, eating or sleeping, and which sometimes
+disappeared, only to return with renewed violence. Having heard of our
+medal, this lady felt interiorly urged to employ it for her recovery,
+but believing herself unworthy of obtaining a direct miracle, she
+besought the Blessed Virgin to enlighten the physician and make known
+to him the proper remedy. Thereupon, she went to the country. At the
+end of several days, she was astonished to see her physician, who
+exclaimed as soon as he saw her: 'Madame, good news! I have found the
+remedy for your disease. I am sure of it; in a few days you will be
+perfectly well. I do not know why it is, but your case has constantly
+occupied my mind since your departure, and by a careful study of it I
+have at last discovered the cause of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>disease and the manner of
+treating it.' The lady recognized at once that this knowledge came
+from above, and she had not implored Mary in vain. To-day she is in
+excellent health. It was from the mouth of her mother I received these
+details. 'O Monsieur,' exclaimed this good mother, 'how happy I am at
+my poor daughter's recovery! It is the Blessed Virgin who has restored
+her to me. If you could only get me a few more of these medals; I am
+overwhelmed with requests for them.' The physician himself published
+the details I have just given. So persuaded is he of the efficacy of
+the medal that he calls it his final remedy, and advises his patients
+to wear it whenever he is at a loss concerning their malady. And the
+Blessed Virgin has rewarded his faith; for one of his own daughters, a
+most pious person, but in miserable health, has just experienced its
+beneficial effects.</p>
+
+<p>"I could mention numberless other incidents, as many conversions as
+cures, but one more will suffice for to-day. Not long ago the mother of
+a family had every symptom of an attack of apoplexy; she had already
+lost consciousness, when her son, a very pious young man, who wore one
+of these medals, took it off his neck and put it around hers. He then
+ran for a doctor and a priest. On reaching the house they were all
+three astonished to find that she had quite recovered. That evening the
+son asked his mother for the medal, and she returned it, but a moment
+after was stricken with another attack. The protection of the Blessed
+Virgin seemed to have been withdrawn with this sign of her power. He
+immediately put the medal on her neck again, this time to remain, and
+she has been well ever since.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! do not delay, I beg you, in sending us the medals we have asked of
+you."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION AND CURE OF AN OLD MAN AT CASTERA-LES-BAINS.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;These details are sent us and attested by M. Bellos,
+clerk of registration at Auch, and by other very reliable persons.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"In the early part of March, 1835, an old man in the parish of
+Castera-les-Bains (Gers), fell dangerously ill. The venerable parish
+priest, M. Bar&egrave;re, hastened to visit him, hoping he might persuade the
+poor creature to cast himself into those arms that were extended on
+the cross for all sinners. Our patient, who had not been to confession
+for long years, received him like an infidel as he was, refused all
+religious assistance, and ended by saying: 'M. cur&eacute;, I would rather
+lose my speech than comply with your wishes!' The charitable pastor
+retiring, though very reluctantly, now thought of the Miraculous Medal
+he wore, and, taking it off, gave it to one of the household with
+instructions to put it in the patient's bed; advising, however, in case
+the ruse were discovered, no allusion to the subject, so as to spare
+the unhappy one all occasion of invective against religion. But, oh!
+marvelous to relate! a little while after, the dying man awakens as if
+from a profound slumber, and earnestly begs that the cur&eacute; be sent for
+to hear his confession. At this news, the good pastor flies to his lost
+sheep, who receives him with every expression of joy, begs his pardon,
+and asks to receive the Sacrament of Penance. It would be superfluous
+for us to dwell at length upon the sentiments and language of the
+charitable minister of religion. He was so touched by his penitent's
+dispositions, that he did not hesitate to take <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>him the Holy Viaticum
+next morning. Many of the faithful accompanied the Blessed Sacrament to
+the sick man's chamber; confessing again, he abjured his errors before
+all the assistants, and earnestly entreated them to pardon the scandal
+his past conduct had given them. Every one was affected to tears, and
+it was in the midst of this universal emotion that he received the
+good God, with the deepest sentiments of humility and compunction,
+and recommending himself to the prayers of all present. In the course
+of the following night, fearing he might be carried off by a spell
+of weakness, he requested Extreme Unction, and received it with the
+same evidences of faith and piety. This conversion was followed by his
+perfect recovery, and the good old man now blesses Divine Providence,
+which, through Mary's protection, rescued him from the borders of
+a frightful abyss into which his infidelity would have plunged him
+forever.</p>
+
+<p>"The undersigned, who got these details from the mouth of the cur&eacute; of
+Castera, vouches for their authenticity. He has neither added to nor
+taken from them in the slightest, knowing full well that the Blessed
+Virgin has no need of falsehoods to prove her power and goodness. It
+is, then, on his word of conscience he gives this fact, which none of
+the inhabitants of Castera and the neighboring country would deny, even
+were he incredulous."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF ROSALIE MORVILLIERS, ACKNOWLEDGED AS MIRACULOUS BY ALL THE
+PARISH.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Hangest</i>&nbsp;(<i>Somme</i>).<br /></p>
+
+<p>"I have mentioned to you the cure wrought by the Miraculous Medal
+upon a person aged fifty years; the fact is incontestable. Rosalie
+Morvilliers, the recipient of this favor, had never been free from
+suffering since her seventh year; an affection of the nerves caused
+almost constant palpitations of the heart and severe headaches, which,
+however, did not hinder her performing some slight work without
+aggravating the malady. But about five years ago, she was afflicted
+by an unmistakable attack of epilepsy, which threw her family into
+the greatest consternation. Henceforth, she was obliged to keep her
+bed, and saw no one but her most intimate friends; the very sight of a
+face that was not familiar was sufficient to throw her into dreadful
+convulsions for several hours. Independent of any external cause, these
+paroxysms usually came on three times a day, and so violent were they,
+that it was with great difficulty she could be kept in her room; she
+uttered most frightful cries, her features were horribly distorted, her
+mouth covered with foam, and, indeed, according to the testimony of
+those who usually witnessed the attacks, it was some time before she
+regained consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>"Such was her condition when some one gave her a Miraculous Medal.
+She received it with the greatest confidence, and immediately applied
+it to that part of her head where the pain was most acute; the pain
+disappeared immediately. From that moment she felt urged to make a
+novena in honor of the Immaculate <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>Conception for the cure of her
+epilepsy. But diffidence in mentioning the matter to her director
+made her defer the execution of this pious design six weeks. At
+length, she yielded to her desires, saying she felt fully persuaded
+that this novena would ensure her recovery through the Blessed
+Virgin's intercession, and her confidence was not misplaced. The cur&eacute;
+immediately began the novena, engaging in it the sodality of the Holy
+Family. Whilst at Mass on the morning of the last day, the 17th of
+Mary's month, the patient was seized with the most violent attack
+possible, the worst she had ever had, although during the novena, the
+paroxysms had increased in intensity. Suddenly it ceases. A number of
+persons begin to pray and recite the chaplet; the patient, regarding
+them with a smile, gently falls asleep. A few minutes after, she opens
+her eyes and exclaims: 'I am cured! I am cured! The Blessed Virgin has
+just cured me of epilepsy! Oh! how good she is, how powerful! It seems
+to me as if there had just been a general revolution throughout my
+body. I feel confident, my friends, that this disease has been banished
+from my system forever.'</p>
+
+<p>"It was very easy for the assistants to believe that some extraordinary
+change had really been wrought in her, for her countenance presented
+not the slightest vestige of the attack. She now desired to
+communicate, and oh! with what transports of faith, gratitude and love
+she received the good God!</p>
+
+<p>"The noise of this cure soon reached the neighboring villages. How
+beautiful yet, Monsieur, is the simplicity of the faith in these rural
+districts! Henceforth, every one wished to wear the medal.</p>
+
+<p>"This event took place on the 17th of May, at nine <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>o'clock in the
+morning. Since that time the patient has not felt the slightest symptom
+of epilepsy. She leaves her room, walks about the garden, and receives
+visitors indiscriminately, without experiencing any ill effects.
+However, the Blessed Virgin did not cure all her infirmities; she still
+has the nervous affection that existed before the epileptic attacks,
+but I should observe that as the novena was made solely for the cure of
+epilepsy, the Blessed Virgin has obtained all that was asked of her.</p>
+
+<p>"This, Monsieur, is the exact statement. Some, no doubt, would
+attribute the cure to natural causes; as for ourselves, we, like
+the patient, feel convinced that it was owing to Mary's powerful
+intercession. The cur&eacute; agrees with us, and so do all who glory in the
+truths of religion. Honored, then, be the power and goodness of Mary
+conceived without sin!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A DAUGHTER OF CHARITY AND ANOTHER PERSON (DIOCESE OF MOULINS).</span></p>
+
+<p>The following letter was sent by a gentleman of unquestionable veracity
+to the <i>Journal du Bourbonnais</i>, and published in its issue of June 6,
+1835:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"<i>Monsieur</i>:<br /></p>
+
+<p>"We are all Mary's children; at the foot of her Divine Son's cross did
+her maternal heart adopt us as her own. All ages have felt the salutary
+effects of her powerful protection; our fathers have admired them,
+we ourselves admire them, and our days are filled with marvels. Even
+recently has she appeared, shedding torrents of grace upon a privileged
+kingdom, and this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>kingdom is France. The vision is verified, for the
+age which saw it has also witnessed the multiplication of countless
+miraculous cures and conversions.</p>
+
+<p>"And shall Bourbonnais, our dear country, be excepted in the
+distribution of Mary's favors? Oh! no; it also shall have a share in
+this harvest of glory. The truly astonishing rapidity with which the
+thousand Miraculous Medals brought to our city have been disposed of is
+to me a sufficient guaranty of our hopes, and it would keep one's pen
+in daily use to note the wonderful traits of Mary's protection.</p>
+
+<p>"1st. Sister Chapin, of St. Joseph's Hospital, was for more than two
+years racked by pains and a fever that defied all medical skill.</p>
+
+<p>"This angel of earth lamented her inability to fulfil the duties of her
+noble vocation; far from abating, her charity, zeal and resignation
+seemed to increase with her gradually declining health, which now
+excited our serious fears. Having vainly exhausted all the resources
+of medicine, she turned her back upon art and nature that she might
+address herself to faith alone. Full of confidence in the Miraculous
+Medal, she began a novena to Mary for the recovery of her health.
+Before the novena was ended, both pains and fever had disappeared,
+and henceforth, she began a new existence, her strength returned, and
+she is happy to prove herself by deeds (fulfilling with ease the most
+painful duties) what her virtues have ever proclaimed her, a true
+daughter of St. Vincent de Paul.</p>
+
+<p>"2nd. Yesterday, again, was witnessed in our Bourbonnais, another
+wonderful trait of Mary's protection. Here are the facts: On Monday,
+June 1st, at eight o'clock in the evening, in the parish of Montilly,
+near <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>the borders of Allier and the castle of Beau-Regard, a woman was
+stricken with a violent rush of blood to the head; the lamentations and
+piercing cries of the family attracted their neighbors. Two alarming
+crises succeeded; they were followed by a third, which was thought to
+be mortal. The patient, after violently struggling against the combined
+efforts of four men to restrain her, fell motionless and apparently
+lifeless; her limbs were stiff and chill, her face a livid blue, her
+features distorted, her eyes fixed, her respiration insensible, death
+seemed imminent. This frightful attack had lasted about half an hour,
+when some one present thought of the Miraculous Medal; she approaches
+the dying woman and lays the medal upon her lips. At that instant the
+latter arouses from her slumber, she breathes, she clasps her hands as
+if thanking the person who had restored her to life she recognizes all
+around her, speaks to them and thanks them for their kind attentions.</p>
+
+<p>"The next morning, Tuesday, it was not at the gates of death she was
+to be found, but in the streets of Moulins, where I saw her myself and
+spoke to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me, O divine Mary, if among a thousand striking traits of your
+power and goodness, I dwell upon some which are comparatively slight,
+it is only because of their recent occurrence in our very midst. Happy
+shall I esteem myself to awaken among my brethren a passing tribute to
+Faith, that living, salutary Faith, whose efficacy I have experienced,
+and whose truths I long to see planted and nourished in all hearts!</p>
+
+<p>"Deign to accord, etc."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>We have learned that Sister Chapin's recovery is permanent.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MARIE LACROIX (DIOCESE OF LANGRES).</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>.&mdash;It is M. Barillot, Vicar General, who sends us this
+account:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Bishopric of Langres, June 20, 1835.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>Monsieur</i>:<br /></p>
+
+<p>"M. Regnault, cur&eacute; of Ormoy, canton of Chateau-Villain, in our diocese,
+an excellent pastor and judicious priest, writes me the subjoined
+letter of the 19th inst.:</p>
+
+<p>"'A very extraordinary thing has just taken place in my parish. A
+young woman aged twenty went blind in consequence of a fall; her hip
+was displaced, and she lost all use of her limbs, except the arms. For
+three months she was at a hospital of Bar-sur-Aube, under treatment
+for these severe afflictions, but in vain. At last, judging her case
+hopeless, the physicians sent her back to her parents at Ormoy. Here,
+as at Bar-sur-Aube, she endured for three months incredible sufferings,
+not even being able to turn herself in bed or change her position in
+the slightest. Her recovery was now despaired of by all, and lately
+the minister received a petition (with the accompanying certificates
+of the two physicians who had attended her at Bar-sur-Aube) asking her
+admission into the hospital of Quinze-Vingts. Meanwhile, this young
+woman, who had always appeared to me very pious and submissive to
+God's will, having received a Miraculous Medal, immediately begins a
+novena. Seven days elapse, and her sufferings, far from diminishing,
+are intensified; on the eighth she is bathed in a profuse perspiration,
+after which she suddenly rises, dresses herself, and walks through the
+streets to church, to the great astonishment of all the people, who,
+seeing her, cannot restrain their tears.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+<p>"'I questioned her closely, but did not express my opinion on the
+subject. I went to Bar-sur-Aube to get additional information; the
+physician declares it astonishing, especially when we consider
+her former hopeless condition. The hospital Sisters, the cur&eacute;s of
+Bar-sur-Aube, the patients, all say it is truly a miracle. The people
+of Ormoy and even of the vicinity, who come to see her, wonder that I
+do not mention it from the pulpit. I beg of you to let me know how to
+act in the affair, and also that you will speak to the Bishop about it.'</p>
+
+<p>"The Bishop has since sent word through me to the cur&eacute; of Ormoy, to
+publish this miraculous occurrence to his parishioners; he has also
+charged me with forwarding you a copy of the good cur&eacute;'s letter,
+leaving to your discretion the use you may make of it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"I am, etc.,</p>
+
+<p class="right">"<span class="smcap">BARILLOT</span>, Canon, Vicar General."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Before printing this, we wished to ascertain if the cure were
+permanent, and the Vicar General sent us the following response from
+the cur&eacute; of Ormoy:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The cure is permanent; for several months past the young woman has
+been with the Ursulines of La Chapelle, who consider her physically
+able to share in the labors of the house; her condition having been
+attested by three doctors. Her sudden recovery, as above mentioned,
+leads us to believe that it was surely supernatural. I was far from
+meriting this favor which has been granted my poor parish. I hope the
+Blessed Virgin will finish her work.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>November 3, 1835.</i>"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURES WROUGHT IN THE CHABLAIS DISTRICT (SAVOY).</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>The Borders of Lake Geneva, June 18, 1835.</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>Monsieur</i>:</p>
+
+<p>"The country purged of Calvin's heresy by the labors of Geneva's holy
+bishop, is not a stranger to the blessings figured by the medal's
+mysterious rays. This wonderful instrument of Mary's liberality has
+been propagated with astonishing rapidity, though only a few months
+since we heard of it in our midst. I consider it a pious obligation to
+offer you a few small stones towards the construction of that temple of
+glory now in process of erection, to the honor of her, who has lately
+proved herself more powerful and merciful on earth than ever before. I
+am a young villager living amidst my family; I do not announce miracles
+to you, but merely recount facts just as I have seen or heard them.
+I could have subjoined a list of signatures, but I did not judge it
+necessary, the docile, religious heart deeming them superfluous, and
+the skeptic, fraudulent, like the facts. On a perusal of the first few
+phrases in each incident, persons living in the vicinity will recognize
+the individuals concerned, and thereby be more deeply impressed.</p>
+
+<p>"1st. In the month of July, 1824, Mlle. C., aged twenty-nine years,
+bade, as she thought, a last adieu to her family; she and some other
+generous companions were going to one of the large cities in southern
+Italy to consecrate themselves there to the service of the sick and
+poor. After a few months' novitiate in a religious house devoted to
+works of this nature, she was attacked by one of those debilitating,
+wasting maladies that phy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>sicians are at a loss to define. Attributing
+it to the climate, the Superiors, after twenty-two months' ineffectual
+treatment at the novitiate, sent her to breathe her natal air. But
+change of air proved vain also, and the doctors at last ceased their
+visits, judging the re-establishment of her health an impossibility.
+About six years ago, she had improved sufficiently to walk a few steps
+beyond her chamber, and even remain in the open air some minutes, but
+amelioration was illusory, and since 1830 she had not been able to
+leave her couch of suffering except for a few instants. Many times
+during these last five years was she apparently on the verge of death,
+and that for several consecutive days, always, however, retaining
+her hearing and intellectual faculties, since she could respond by
+signs to the priest who visited her. It was he who gave me these
+particulars. Her condition had become such that it was judged advisable
+to administer the Last Sacraments. This house was now a school of
+edification, where Christians might study the price of sufferings and
+the heroism of patience. Finally, about the end of last April, this
+poor creature, so tortured for the past eleven years, conceived a hope
+of relief through the Miraculous Medal, but, mistrusting the somewhat
+extraordinary impressions the thought made upon her imagination, it was
+only from obedience she could be induced to commence a novena. The sole
+exercises consisted of repeating, three times a day, the invocation: 'O
+Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!' On
+Wednesday, April 24th, the second or third day of the novena, she felt
+an irresistible desire to arise. It was yet very early in the morning;
+a little child assisted her to dress. Finding that her limbs support
+her, she begins to think it must <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>be something miraculous, and, filled
+with joy, she wishes to announce the news to her mother, who is in an
+adjoining room. Arrived at the door, she is seized with fright, and
+precipitately turns back; but, being reassured of her newly restored
+strength by the facility with which she reaches her own chamber, she
+overcomes herself, and, retracing her steps, seeks the embraces of her
+mother, her sister and brother. Her unexpected appearance fills them
+with great emotion, and abundant tears attest the depths of their joy
+and gratitude. A clergyman, who often visited this lady, soon heard
+rumors of her recovery, but gave no credit to them. Meeting her mother
+on the street not long after, she burst into tears at sight of him, and
+was unable to express the cause of her emotion. Suspecting it, he went
+immediately to the house, and saw for himself what a miracle had been
+wrought. With Mlle. C., he unites in blessing her powerful protectress,
+the Immaculate Mary.</p>
+
+<p>"Since that time, April 24, to the present date, June 18th, Mlle. C.
+rises about seven o'clock, hears Mass on her knees, employs herself in
+various duties during the day, makes visits and walks of half an hour's
+or even an hour's duration, and continues well, even her complexion
+begins to assume a healthy tinge. Her legs are still a little swollen,
+and she cannot yet take much nourishment.</p>
+
+<p>"The sudden appearance of this person, whom every one had known to
+be seriously afflicted for eleven years, created an extraordinary
+sensation. All eyes were fixed upon her, and many persons even followed
+her. This took place in the capital of the province.</p>
+
+<p>"2d. In the month of August, 1833, my sister, at the sight of a child
+who barely missed falling through an open trap door, was suddenly
+attacked by frightful ner<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>vous convulsions, which henceforth returned
+daily, and even as often as fifteen times a day. It was only at the
+end of two months that remedies, and a four weeks' strict hospital
+treatment, succeeded in checking them. Last year, they manifested
+themselves again in the month of February, but disappeared, leaving her
+a prey to great weakness, and a fever that kept her in bed four weeks.</p>
+
+<p>"In the February of this year, the nervous convulsions returned, and
+with a frequency and force that were truly alarming. The patient wasted
+visibly, the paroxysms were renewed seven and ten times a day, and were
+of a most frightful character; the circulation of her blood seemed
+checked, her feet and hands were deathly chilled, she jerked her head
+with violence and precipitation, an agitated cry escaped her breast;
+the attack lasted from three to six minutes, and left her completely
+exhausted. The witnesses of this painful spectacle were affected to
+tears. She was taken to a skillful physician, who after seeing her
+in one of these convulsions, pronounced the case hopeless, saying,
+'it baffled him, he could not understand it.' However, he prescribed
+remedies. Meanwhile, the first medals arrived in our midst. On Shrove
+Tuesday, my sister had five attacks, which she assured me were the
+worst she had ever had. Next day, wearing the medal, she began a
+novena, and the two convulsions she had that day were the last; never
+since has she felt the slightest symptom (and that without employing
+the prescribed remedies), neither has she had a sign of the fever,
+which last year replaced the less violent convulsions. This cure was
+wrought in an insensible, but very efficacious manner, the first day
+of a novena made through the medal. My sister immediately resumed the
+manifold duties of a laborious household. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>She attributes, and we also,
+her recovery to Mary alone. Thousands of times be love and glory to
+this good Mother!</p>
+
+<p>"3d. In the Chablais district, on the frontiers of the canton of
+Geneva, lived a poor widow, the mother of quite a large family. This
+good woman, about sixty years old, had a natural predisposition to
+paralysis. At the age of forty-eight, an attack of this disease
+deprived her of the use of her left arm. At intervals since then,
+she has had spells of illness so serious and so protracted, that at
+least a hundred times she seemed on the verge of the tomb. She never
+consulted a physician, but animated with a lively, persevering faith,
+she employed only supernatural means. 'God and the Saints are the
+only good doctors,' she would say, and 'God and the Saints' rewarded
+her confidence. She has recovered from these hopeless maladies in an
+extraordinary manner. On the first of last March, her left foot lost
+the power of supporting her body in walking, doubtless owing to her
+natural predisposition to paralysis. Persons informed on the subject
+have given the following description of the convulsive movements of
+this poor woman's foot: suspended, it preserved its natural position,
+but on putting it to the ground, it immediately lost its balance; her
+body was bent, her knee turned out, the sole of her foot exposed, and
+the left side of her foot was the foundation of support for the left
+limb in walking. She went thus to church, distant about four minutes'
+walk; but even in that short space of time, the convulsive movements of
+the foot were sometimes such that she was not able to keep her balance,
+but fell to the ground. Every one pitied her, she was always calm and
+perfectly resigned. Her children had made for her an iron brace <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>which
+reached to the knee, but after a trial, she was obliged to discard it,
+the remedy causing more suffering than the disease. During the Lenten
+season, some charitable persons advised her to seek Mary's assistance
+through the Miraculous Medal. The good widow did so, and wore her medal
+with the utmost confidence. On Holy Saturday, she perceived that her
+foot had become steady; the next day, Easter, without any remedies
+having been used, it resumed its natural position, and since that time,
+though a little weaker than the right, not once has it given way or
+turned. She attributes her recovery to the Blessed Virgin, whom she
+invoked by wearing the medal, so justly styled miraculous.</p>
+
+<p>"I could cite many other less striking cases; one time it is a hardy
+peasant who attributes to Mary's intercession relief from violent
+pains; another time, a little child, who in a few days, is completely
+cured of a large tumor under its arm, accompanied by fever; a mother
+who tells me how her daughter's ill health is sensibly improved by the
+application of the medal; or a Protestant girl, who, after wearing
+it, abjures heresy, etc. Nearly all the children of our village wear
+the Miraculous Medal around their neck, they recite the invocation,
+they kiss the precious image and give it to their little sisters and
+brothers in the cradle to kiss.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center label1">III.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Graces obtained from 1836 to 1838 in France, Italy, Holland, etc.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION AND CURE OF M. GAETAN (BOULOGNE).</span></p>
+
+<p>This account was sent me by the cur&eacute; of Boulogne, February 8, 1836.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"In my parish, a young man named Gaetan U&mdash;-, aged twenty-seven years,
+was leading a life of criminal intimacy with a woman. Several years
+after abandoning his mother and brother, that he might be under no
+restraint in his shameless course, he was prostrated by a serious
+pulmonary attack. M. Jean Pulioli, an excellent physician, undertook
+the case; but the violence or the disease overcame his skill, and the
+patient (still in the house of the bad character with whom he lived,)
+was reduced to such a deplorable state of exhaustion, that he could
+not move himself. From the beginning of his sickness he had insisted
+that he would not be worried by a priest. But the disease making very
+rapid progress, the doctor believed it his duty to warn a priest of
+his condition. My chaplain went immediately to see him, and earnestly
+entreated him to put an end to this scandalous state of affairs by
+marrying the woman, but all in vain. I then paid him a visit, and
+besides remarking in him neither any intention of marrying her nor of
+separating from her, I perceived from the excuses he gave, that his
+soul was enshrouded in impenetrable indifference. Having uselessly
+exhausted all efforts to effect a change, I concluded it would be
+better to leave him awhile to quiet and serious reflection, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>return
+later to know his decision. I urged him to seek the mediation of that
+refuge of sinners, the Blessed Virgin, and slipping the Miraculous
+Medal under his pillow, I left. There was no necessity for my returning
+to learn his decision, he sent his mother for me, with whom he had
+become reconciled in the meantime; after informing me of the very just
+reasons he had for not marrying the woman, he asked me if I would not
+request her to leave, a commission I willingly accepted. She consented,
+and immediately abandoned the house. The sick man's peace and joy at
+this were indescribable; when I showed him the medal, he kissed it most
+fervently and impulsively, notwithstanding his state of exhaustion.
+Then, with every mark of sincere repentance, he confessed, received
+the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction, for we expected each moment he
+would breathe his last. This occurred January 19, 1836. Interiorly, he
+enjoyed unspeakable peace, a favor he always attributed to the Blessed
+Virgin. From this time he began to improve, and in a few days his
+health was completely re-established. He continues to persevere in his
+good resolutions, and full of the tenderest affection for his celestial
+Benefactress, he still reverently wears the medal I gave him, often
+kissing it with truly filial love.</p>
+
+<p>"Monsieur, I was a witness of the above-mentioned fact; I send it to
+you, not only with the permission of the newly converted and cured, but
+at his request, and I hope that the knowledge will redound to the honor
+and glory of the Omnipotent God, who, through the intercession of the
+Blessed Virgin, has wrought this double miracle.</p>
+
+<p>"I subjoin the certificate of the physician who attests the disease and
+its cure."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A JUDGE AT NAPLES.</span></p>
+
+<p>The judge of the civil tribunal of Naples, M. Joseph Cocchia, seriously
+debilitated by a chronic disease of the bowels, was afflicted with most
+violent pains, accompanied by a spasmodic sensation that, continually
+increasing, banished sleep and appetite, and perceptibly diminished
+his frame. This was followed by a bilious gastric fever, long and
+obstinate, of fifty days duration. When freed from the fever, the sick
+man found himself in a frightful state of emaciation and exhaustion;
+signs of inflammation in the bowels, and such extreme irritation that
+the least jolt induced fever, made skillful physicians fear lest these
+were the symptoms of an incurable malady still more deplorable. Whilst
+in this pitiable condition, there reached the sick man's ears accounts
+of the prodigies Divine mercy had wrought in favor of those who wore
+the medal; he eagerly asked for one, and received it with faith;
+henceforth, he had no longer any need of medical assistance, for he
+recovered the strength and perfect health he now enjoys.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF F.P. DE MAGISTRIS.</span></p>
+
+<p>M.F. Paul de Magistris, aged seven years, was attacked about the
+middle of November, 1835, by a bilious gastric fever, which, by reason
+of accompanying circumstances, threatened to shorten his life. After
+three weeks' illness, his nervous system was also attacked, and he
+became a prey to a state of profound drowsiness that resulted in the
+loss of reason and speech. His afflicted parents, seeing the obstinacy
+of the disease, notwithstanding all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>efforts of medical skill to the
+contrary, considered the case hopeless, and their child lost to them.
+On the evening of January 9th, the cur&eacute; administered Extreme Unction,
+believing, as did all the assistants, that the little sufferer had but
+a few hours to live. A young person, who came to the house, having
+mentioned the Miraculous Medal brought from France by the priests of
+the Congregation of the Mission, it was immediately procured, and,
+with confidence in its healing powers, applied to the child, whilst
+all present knelt around his bed and recited the <i>Ave Maris Stella</i>.
+Scarcely had they finished, ere he was considered out of danger. With
+renewed confidence in the medal, it was resolved to begin a novena
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. During its progress, the disease
+diminished perceptibly, and the child has now entirely recovered. Its
+parents, as well as other persons of credit and veracity, among them
+the attendant physician, attest that, having witnessed his deplorable
+condition, they feel convinced his recovery was a miracle, resulting
+from the application of the medal.</p>
+
+<p><i>February 22, 1836.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A DROPSICAL MAN (SWITZERLAND).</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Soleure, January 19th, 1836.</i></p>
+<p>"Baptiste, a wood sawyer, whom you knew during your sojourn in this
+city, was confined to his bed two whole months by an attack of the
+severest form of dropsy on the chest. One of our best physicians, who
+attended him at the beginning of his sickness, having told Baptiste's
+wife that the case was a hopeless one, the family <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>decided to consult
+another, M. Gougelmann, at Attyswill, a league from Soleure. After
+seeing the patient, he also gave the same opinion, and the poor wife's
+distress was beyond expression. A pious lady, witnessing her grief,
+gave her a Miraculous Medal. The sick man's arms, legs, and whole body
+were greatly swollen. His breath was short, and he had scarcely any
+power of motion; his back, and his elbows upon which he was obliged
+to lean, were a mass of sores. In this pitiable state, death might be
+expected any moment. His confessor having come to visit him, brought
+the Notice of the miracles wrought through the Miraculous Medal.
+The sick man on receiving it began to read it aloud, greatly to the
+astonishment of his wife and the priest, who were both witnesses that
+he had been almost past the power of speech but a few minutes before.
+And he continued reading thus until he had finished the little book (it
+was one of the first editions). This was the evening of January 19.
+His wife, overcome with fatigue, fell asleep for a few moments, his
+children were in an adjoining room expecting at any instant to hear
+the sad news of their father's death. He slept a little towards three
+o'clock in the morning, and on awaking found himself so well that it
+was impossible to resist the desire of rising from his bed and throwing
+himself on his knees before a crucifix, in thanksgiving to Our Lord and
+His divine Mother. His wife awoke, and not seeing him in bed, called
+to know where he was. 'I am well; the Blessed Virgin has cured me,'
+was the answer of Baptiste, whom she perceived kneeling before the
+crucifix. The children, hearing the noise, hastened to their father's
+presence, believing him about to breathe his last, but judge of their
+surprise at finding him restored to health, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>and his sores perfectly
+healed! Imagine, if you can, the joy of this poor family, and the happy
+effects the news of this wondrous cure produced upon the many who heard
+it. Baptiste has had excellent health ever since."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF FRAN&Ccedil;OIS WENMAKERS, OF BOIS-LE-DUC (HOLLAND).</span></p>
+
+<p>The <i>Noord Brabander</i>, a Holland journal, printed at Bois-le-Duc,
+contains in number 68 the following account of an extraordinary cure,
+which is attributed to the Blessed Virgin:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Bois-le Duc, June 6th, 1836.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The 25th of last April, Fran&ccedil;ois Wenmakers, a young apprentice, aged
+fourteen years, fell from a height of about sixteen feet. An affection
+of the brain and an almost complete paralysis of the lungs, larynx
+and oesophagus were the result; he was not in a condition to take
+any medicine into his stomach, or even to swallow the least liquid,
+and he was deprived of consciousness. One of the physicians, feeling
+worried at his fixed stare, advised the administration of Extreme
+Unction; and yet another, the eve of his recovery, declared him on
+the verge of death. The sick man moreover, had become nearly blind
+the last few days. On the 1st of May, advantage was taken of a lucid
+interval, to give him the Holy Viaticum; and on the 4th of the same
+month, he received Extreme Unction from one of the chaplains of St.
+Jean. His parents, who immediately after his fall, had hung a medal of
+the Immaculate Conception around his neck, seeing there was now no hope
+of his recovery, except in the divine goodness and the intercession of
+the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>Blessed Virgin, began, on the 16th of May, a novena in honor of
+the Mother of God. Three days after, about six o'clock in the morning,
+the patient suddenly asked his mother if the medal around his neck
+were blessed. She answered yes, regarding the question as the effect
+of delirium. He immediately kissed it, and sat up for the first time
+since the fall, for heretofore he had been stretched out helpless on
+the bed, and, for some days past, had been deprived of the use of his
+limbs. 'Something tells me,' he exclaimed, 'that I must get up, that I
+am cured!' The astonishment of those present may easily be imagined.
+The mother called his sisters, who repaired to the room with an elder
+girl, and they, seeing that he stoutly persisted in declaring himself
+cured, persuaded his mother to let him rise. He did indeed get up, and
+pointing to a picture in the room, representing the medal, he said:
+'It is this good Mother who has cured me.' From that moment the boy's
+health was perfectly re-established, and his intellectual faculties
+were brighter than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Reflections here are superfluous. Glory to God and her who thus
+rewards the confidence of her servants! The parents and their child
+will ever remember the blessing they have received, and never cease to
+publish it!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF ROSALIE DUCAS, OF JAUCHELETTE (BELGIUM).</span></p>
+
+<p>Rosalie Ducas, of Jauchelette, near Jodoigne, aged four years and
+a-half, was, on the 9th of November, 1835, suddenly struck with total
+blindness without the slightest premonitory symptoms; there was no
+disease, no weakness, she was in apparently perfect health. Not <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>only
+was the least light, but the least breath of air so painful, that her
+face had to be kept constantly covered with a cloth four doubled. This
+poor child's sufferings night and day, were heart-rending! At last the
+mother herself was taken sick. Some pious individual procured her a
+blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception. She took it and commenced
+a novena. Another medal was put on the child's neck, the 11th of June,
+1836, about six o'clock in the evening; at midnight, the little one
+ceased its moans, on the fourth or fifth day of the novena, it opened
+its eyes. The mother and father redoubled their prayers to the Blessed
+Virgin, and on the ninth day, towards evening, the child recovered its
+sight entirely, to the great astonishment of the neighbors and all who
+were witnesses of the occurrence.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The cur&eacute; of Jodoigne-la-Souveraine, who had given the medal, has
+himself seen the child who lives not more than half a league distant;
+he positively asserts that it has perfectly recovered its sight, and
+that not the slightest vestige of the attack remains, which fact is
+well known, and contributes not a little in exciting devotion to the
+Immaculate Mary."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF THE FATHER OF A FAMILY (BELGIUM).</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"There are still in existence here some families who, persistently
+recognizing in the present clergy only a purely civil power, hold
+themselves utterly aloof, live in a state of schism, and comply with
+none of the duties of religion.</p>
+
+<p>"One of these miserable creatures was afflicted with a virulent cancer
+on the side of his face, which for a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>long time had been eating away
+the flesh. The malady increasing, I believed it my duty to visit him
+and offer the consolations of my ministry. I saw him several times, he
+was suffering greatly; the oesophagus was exposed, the right side
+of his emaciated face presented only a deep sore, the eye, starting
+from its socket, hung suspended over a terrible disfigured mouth;
+his tongue caused him acute pain; his condition was pitiable indeed,
+especially as he seemed determined to die impenitent. He was a rough,
+blunt man, who wanted to hear nothing about priests or Sacraments.
+In vain was he reminded of our Lord's bountiful kindness and the
+rigors of His justice, nothing touched him; to all expostulations his
+invariable reply was: 'God's mercy is great, I will confess to God,
+the Blessed Virgin, to St. Barbara and the good Saints.' He was the
+counterpart of those men to whom Jesus Christ said: '<i>In peccato vestro
+moriemini</i>&mdash;you shall die in your sin.'</p>
+
+<p>"His relations and numerous friends endeavored both by prayers and
+entreaties to snatch him from perdition, but on the other side visited
+daily and sustained by his old associates in impiety, he persisted in
+dying as he had lived, in schism.</p>
+
+<p>"In the meantime, I was obliged to be absent several days. This period
+was for him one of Divine mercy. A lady of the parish made a last
+attempt to recall him to God, by bringing him one of those medals
+of the Immaculate Conception called miraculous. She sent it to him
+with the request to wear it and put all his confidence in the Blessed
+Virgin. The sick man took the medal, kissed it respectfully, and put
+it under his pillow. In giving it to him, his daughter had taken care
+to acquaint him with its origin and advantages, at the same <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>time
+urging him, as usual, to make his confession. 'Leave me in peace,' was
+the wretched father's reply, and she could say no more. Next day, a
+neighboring cur&eacute; was sent for to administer Extreme Unction to another
+person in the parish. He came, and forgetting, as it were, the one for
+whom he had been sent, he thought only of the cancerous patient. 'I
+felt,' he afterwards told me, 'an inexplicable and irresistible desire
+to visit him, I could not have returned without seeing him.' He asks
+some one to announce his arrival to the sick man; this person speaks
+to the latter, and urges him to confess. 'The cur&eacute; of P. is here,' she
+adds, 'and would like to see you, if you have no objection.' 'Well,
+yes, let him come.' The cur&eacute; went to him immediately; at first there
+was a slight air of resistance about the patient, but it vanished, the
+hour of grace had come, he confessed with every indication of true
+repentance, and received Extreme Unction with an indescribable peace
+and joy, that never faltered during the four remaining days of his
+life. The Holy Viaticum could not be administered because he was not
+able to swallow.</p>
+
+<p>"At noon, on the 18th of last May, the month consecrated to Mary, he
+died, aged seventy-eight.</p>
+
+<p>"Except his former companions in irreligion, this conversion was a
+subject of rejoicing to the parish, and doubtless it will rejoice all
+the servants of Mary who hear of it. May this example, among thousands,
+inspire sinners with great confidence in the Blessed Virgin, propagate
+devotion to her, and multiply the medal styled miraculous!</p>
+
+<p>"I have thought it a duty to give these few details, for the purpose of
+making known the truly visible effects <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>of the protection of the Mother
+of God, and the ever impenetrable springs of grace in regard to man.</p>
+
+<p>"I have the honor to be, Monsieur, with great esteem, &amp;c."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MLLE. ANTOINETTE VAN ERTRYCK<br /></span>
+<span class="smcap">(BOIS-LE-DUC).</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The protection of the Blessed Virgin, which for the last few months
+has shown itself so powerful in a neighboring kingdom, has also wrought
+wonders in Bois-le-Duc. Mary has here likewise given equal proofs of
+her maternal bounty when we have implored her intercession.</p>
+
+<p>"Mlle. Antoinette Van Ertryck, aged twenty-five years, was for more
+than twenty months deprived of the use of her limbs; they were stiff
+and paralyzed, almost without feeling, and stretched motionless on
+a sort of bench made for the express purpose. Medicine afforded
+no relief. In this sad condition, wearing a blessed medal of the
+Immaculate Conception, she thought of making a novena in honor of the
+Feast, to recover her health. On the last day of the novena, she made
+a fervent communion. Even after the departure of the priest, who came
+to administer the Blessed Sacrament, there seemed no change for the
+better, but she felt a shiver through all her body, like the impression
+often experienced from sudden cold. Just whilst finishing the last
+prayers, however, she seemed to hear an interior voice saying to her:
+'You are cured.' On attempting to move, she found that her limbs had
+become flexible, and she was able to walk. The miracle was wrought on
+Saturday, May 16th. The next day, Sunday, she went to church <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>to return
+thanks for this blessing to the common Mother of all the faithful.
+The people of our city, always distinguished for their veneration
+for the Blessed Virgin, and their confidence in her intercession are
+not wanting in gratitude, and this new favor will but increase their
+devotion to Mary Immaculate.</p>
+
+<p>"The duration of the malady, the inutility of medical skill, and her
+astonishing sudden cure are attested by the doctor.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">"A. BOLSIUS, M.D."</span></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A YOUNG GIRL AT CRACOW, POLAND.</span></p>
+
+<p>Extract from a letter of the Countess Lubinska:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>March 12th, 1837.</i></p>
+
+<p>"I took into my service, the 20th of last December, a young girl whose
+excellent qualities elicited my deepest interest.</p>
+
+<p>"After being with me some months, she began to suffer most acute
+pains in the head; the remedies we employed affording no relief, the
+attending physician advised her to keep her bed, and did not conceal
+from her his opinion that these pains proceeded from the humor flowing
+constantly from her ears, and which seeming to be upon the brain,
+threatened her life, or at all events, her reason.</p>
+
+<p>"What confirmed this opinion was the fact that whenever she walked
+rapidly or stooped, she was forced by the pain to throw her head back,
+as she assured me various times during her sickness. The continued
+suffering induced her, at last, to follow the physician's advice, and
+consent, if necessary, to the operation of trepanning. I shuddered at
+the very idea, and made her <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>promise to ascertain if a delay of ten
+days would be attended with any serious consequences. Upon a negative
+answer from the physician, I stopped all medicines and determined to
+try the efficacy of the Miraculous Medal. This was on a Saturday, and
+the very day observed by her as a strict fast, in thanksgiving to the
+Blessed Virgin for having miraculously cured her of a mortal typhus,
+after her mother had dedicated her to Mary. Her confidence in Mary
+was great; and as I did not give her the medal for some hours after
+promising it, she told one of her friends, as I have since learned,
+that her impatience to receive it was almost beyond bounds, and assured
+her that she would not have hesitated between it and two thousand
+francs had she been allowed a choice, and we must remember that this
+girl was very poor. To display more clearly the miraculous nature of
+the cure, God permitted her sufferings to increase to such a degree
+that very day, that notwithstanding her patience and resignation, it
+seemed as if she really could not endure them much longer. Knowing her
+lively faith and confidence, I deemed it unnecessary to enter into
+a detailed account of the salutary effects of the medal; I gave it
+to her; she immediately made with it the sign of the cross upon her
+poor head, repeated the invocation and fell asleep amidst excessive
+sufferings. On awaking she was perfectly cured, and has never since
+experienced the slightest symptom of the disease.</p>
+
+<p>"Filled with sentiments of the deepest humility and the most lively
+gratitude, the miraculously cured now wishes to consecrate herself to
+God in the religious life.</p>
+
+<p>"Blessed a thousand times be God and the Immaculate Mary, and may we
+ever appreciate such boundless mercy!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF M. REGNAULT, MAYOR OF POITIERS.&mdash;1837</span></p>
+
+<p>The following account was sent us by the abb&eacute; of Chazelle:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Poitiers, June 12th, 1837.</i></p>
+
+<p>"M. Regnault, mayor of Poitiers, had exercised his functions since the
+year 1830. In some difficulties, occurring during his administration,
+with the bishop and several of the clergy, he had shown himself
+just and equitable. His charity to the poor was well known. But far
+different are these moral virtues, which generally receive their
+recompense here below, from the Christian virtues so seldom rewarded,
+except in a better world! M. Regnault never appeared at church, except
+when his presence as mayor was necessary. A prey for some time to
+a grave malady, he continued to exercise his functions as long as
+possible, imposing upon himself for that purpose many sacrifices, and
+displaying an admirable zeal; but, vanquished by the disease, he was
+at length forced to suspend his duties, and, since the 1st of last
+January, to resign altogether. The cur&eacute; of St. Hilaire, having learned
+the alarming state of his parishioner's health, hastened to visit him,
+and offer the consolations of his ministry, but in vain. He repeated
+his visits. He was received into the house, but not taken to see the
+patient. He now sent word to the latter that he was at his command,
+and would come immediately when sent for. Meanwhile, the disease made
+such rapid progress that there was no longer any hope of recovery.
+Several of his friends, interested in his salvation, were grieved to
+see him so near death without the slightest preparation for it. One of
+them brought him a Miraculous Medal, and, not being able to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>see him
+herself, she asked a woman about the house to give it to him for her.
+The woman did so, and, fearing he might reject it with contempt, she
+begged him to receive it for the donor's sake. He took it, saying: 'It
+is a medal of the Blessed Virgin; I accept it respectfully, God is not
+to be trifled with.' And, putting it under his pillow, he sent a kind
+message of thanks to the lady who had given it. Some moments after, he
+takes it out, contemplates it, and kisses it respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Having placed his temporal affairs in order, he now expresses a wish
+to do the same with his conscience, and requests his attendants to send
+for the parish cur&eacute;. The latter hastens to the sick man's bedside. 'I
+have made you come in a hurry,' says the patient, 'I want to have a
+conversation with you.' After this conversation, he asks the cur&eacute; to
+return next day, as he wishes time to prepare himself for the grand
+action he contemplates. 'The step I am about to take,' he adds, 'I do
+with full knowledge and entire conviction.' The cur&eacute; of St. Hilaire,
+with whom, as mayor, he had just had a law-suit, suggested that he make
+his confession to some other priest; he answered that he wished no
+one but his pastor. Next day, the cur&eacute; returned, and as he addressed
+his penitent by the title of M. the Mayor: 'Do not call me that,'
+said M. Regnault; 'you are now my father, I am your son, I beg you to
+address me thus.' The cur&eacute; paid him frequent visits, and as the disease
+continued to progress, he suggested administering the Holy Viaticum
+and Extreme Unction. 'I have not been confirmed,' replied the pious
+patient, 'I ardently desire to receive Confirmation.' The bishop was
+soon informed, and, readily forgetting all subject of complaint, and
+thanking God for this unexpected change, the venerable prelate went at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>once to the sick man. The happy dispositions of the latter touched him
+deeply, and he administered to him the Sacrament of Confirmation the
+very day of his receiving Extreme Unction and the Holy Viaticum.</p>
+
+<p>"It is impossible to give an idea of M. Regnault's faith and truly
+angelic fervor during this ceremony, or the deep impression made upon
+him at seeing Monseigneur enter his chamber. It was Saturday, January
+21st, the eve of Septuagesima Sunday. Monseigneur addressed him in a
+few words full of unction and charity, and to inspire him with hope,
+reminded him of the very touching parable of the next day's Gospel,
+the laborers in the Father's vineyard, who coming at the last hour
+received the same recompense as those who had borne the heat and burden
+of the day. All the assistants were deeply affected at this edifying
+spectacle, and many were moved to tears. The bishop, on leaving,
+charged the cur&eacute; to testify again to M. Regnault how great consolation
+he had experienced at this happy change, and how much he had been
+edified at his piety during this touching but long ceremony. 'As first
+magistrate of the city,' he answered, with a peaceful smile, 'I ought
+to set good example to those under my administration.' The cur&eacute; sought
+by repeated visits to sustain this new-born piety, already tried most
+severely by the excruciating sufferings of the malady, sufferings which
+the patient bore with calmness and resignation, offering them to God in
+expiation of his past offences. To recompense his services to the city
+during his administration, the government bestowed upon him the cross
+of honor. The cur&eacute; could not refrain from congratulating him. 'I do not
+know,' was the modest answer, 'I do not know what I have done to merit
+it,' and when reminded of his services to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>the city, 'Oh! do not speak
+of them,' said he, 'such things might awaken self-love!' What immense
+progress virtue makes in the soul in a very little while! It was in
+these happy dispositions he died, the 2d of the following February,
+Feast of the Purification. The whole city of Poitiers, we might say,
+assisted at the funeral. The bishop, the authorities, and a host of
+other distinguished personages came to pay their tribute of gratitude
+and admiration to his memory, and the prefect congratulated the cur&eacute; of
+St. Hilaire on so wonderful a conversion."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">MARY'S PROTECTION OF A LITTLE CHILD (PARIS).</span></p>
+
+<p>Madame R&eacute;mond, living number 70, rue Mouffetard, held at her chamber
+window, on the second story, one of her children, aged twenty-two
+months. Fainting suddenly, she fell back into the room, and the
+child was precipitated upon the pavement below. Immediate death
+might naturally have been expected as the inevitable consequence of
+such a fall; but no, wonderful to relate, the child was not injured.
+After reading the Archbishop's circular (upon the occasion of the
+consecration of the church of Notre Dame de Lorette), in which he
+recommends all the faithful to wear the Miraculous Medal, the pious
+parents had hastened to procure one and put it on their child. The
+Immaculate Mary did not fail to reward their piety. On picking the poor
+little creature up, and examining it, not even the slightest bruise was
+discovered. As the mother was a long time recovering from her swoon, it
+caused great anxiety, and several physicians were called in to see her.
+They also saw the child, and declared its escape wonderful <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>indeed. But
+by way of precaution, they applied a few leeches to it, and a poultice
+to one knee which seemed to be the seat of some slight pain. The child
+had been eating an instant before this terrible fall, which, strange
+to say, occasioned no vomiting, and immediately after being picked up
+it took all the little delicacies offered it. Every one declared this
+occurrence a miracle, and the innocent little creature itself seemed
+to proclaim it, by kissing the medal and pressing it to its lips,
+especially when the subject was mentioned, as we ourselves witnessed
+when the father showed him to us the 25th of June, 1837.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The mother recovered perfectly, and she never ceases to thank the
+Immaculate Mary for the double protection she considers due the medal."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center">THE ARCHCONFRATERNITY OF</p>
+
+<p class="label1"><i>NOTRE DAME DES VICTOIRES</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely six years since the apparition of 1830, and already the
+designs of Providence were realized; the Miraculous Medal had awakened
+devotion to the Blessed Virgin, belief in the Immaculate Conception had
+penetrated all classes of society, and the innumerable favors accorded
+those who fervently recited the prayers revealed by Mary, had clearly
+proved how she prizes this first of all her privileges. But so far, her
+servants remained isolated, having no bond of union, no central point
+where they could meet; the majority of those who wore the medal as the
+livery of the spotless Virgin, knew neither the place, the mode, nor
+date of its origin.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
+<p>God was now about to complete the work, by giving to this devotion, an
+organization and fixed exercises which favored its development, and
+increased the efficacy of prayer, by the power of association.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the year 1836, a man was raised up to execute the
+divine plans; this man was M. Dufriche Desgenettes, cur&eacute; of Notre Dame
+des Victoires, Paris. From 1820 to 1832, in charge of St. Francis
+Xavier's Church, he numbered among the religious establishments of his
+parish, the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, where the Blessed
+Virgin had appeared. He was one of the most earnest in thanking God for
+this grace, and most eager to propagate the medal. It was his desire
+that the privileged chapel should become a pilgrim shrine, but this
+desire not being realized, he was chosen by Providence to supply the
+substitute.</p>
+
+<p>Let us quote his own words, relating how he was led to found the
+Archconfraternity of the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary. "There
+was in Paris, a parish scarcely known even to many of the Parisians.
+It is situated in the centre of the city, between the Palais Royal
+and the Bourse, surrounded by theatres and places of dissipation, a
+quarter swallowed up in the vortex of cupidity and industry, and the
+most abandoned to every species of criminal indulgence. Its church,
+dedicated to Notre Dame des Victoires, remained deserted even on the
+most solemn festivities.... No Sacraments were administered in this
+parish, not even to the dying.... If, by dint of novel persuasion, the
+cur&eacute; obtained permission to visit a person dangerously ill, it was not
+only on condition of waiting until the patient's faculties were dimmed,
+but also on another almost insuperable condition, that of presenting
+himself in a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>secular habit. What benefit were such visits? They were
+merely a useless torment to the dying."<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>Such was the parish confided to M. Desgenettes. With the hope of
+recalling to God, even a few strayed souls, the poor cur&eacute;, for four
+years, employed every means that the most active zeal could suggest,
+but in vain. Sad and grieved beyond measure, he thought of quitting
+this ungrateful post, when a supernatural communication revived his
+drooping courage.</p>
+
+<p>On the 3d of December, Feast of St. Francis Xavier, thoroughly
+penetrated with the inutility of his ministry in this parish, he
+was saying Mass at the Blessed Virgin's altar, now the altar of the
+Archconfraternity.... After the <i>Sanctus</i>, he distinctly heard these
+words pronounced in a very solemn manner: "Consecrate thy parish to the
+most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary." They did not strike his ears,
+but seemed to proceed from an interior voice. He immediately recovered
+peace and liberty of spirit. After finishing his thanksgiving, fearing
+to be the dupe of an illusion, he endeavored to banish the thought of
+what was apparently a supernatural communication, but the same interior
+voice resounded again in the depths of his soul. Returned to his house,
+he begins to compose the statutes of the association, with a view of
+delivering himself from an importunate idea, and scarcely does he take
+his pen in hand, ere he is fully enlightened on the subject, and the
+organization of the work costs him nothing but the manual labor of the
+writing.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p>The statutes prepared, are submitted to Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len who approves
+them, and the 16th of the same <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>month, an archiepiscopal ordinance
+erects canonically the Association of the Holy and Immaculate Heart
+of Mary for the conversion of sinners. The first meeting took place
+on Sunday, the 11th of December. In announcing it at High Mass, the
+pious pastor expected to see in the evening not more than fifty or
+sixty persons at most. Judge of his astonishment on finding assembled
+at the appointed hour, a congregation of about five hundred, a large
+proportion of whom are men! What had brought them? The majority were
+ignorant of the object of the meeting. An instruction explaining the
+motive and end of the exercises made a deep impression; the Benediction
+was chanted most fervently, and there was a notable increase of fervor
+during the Litany of the Blessed Virgin, especially at the thrice
+repeated invocation: "<i>Refugium peccatorum, ora pro nobis.</i>" The cause
+was gained, Mary took possession of the parish of Notre Dame des
+Victoires.</p>
+
+<p>The good cur&eacute; still doubted; to assure himself that the association was
+truly the work of God, he demanded a sign, the conversion of a great
+sinner, an old man on the borders of the tomb, who had several times
+refused to see him. His prayer was granted, the old man received him
+gladly, and became sincerely converted. It was not long before new
+graces showered upon his parish increased M. Desgenette's confidence,
+numberless sinners changed their lives, indifferent Christians became
+practical and fervent, the offices of the Church were attended, the
+Sacraments frequented, the apparently extinguished Faith was relighted,
+and this parish, lately so scandalous, soon became one of the most
+edifying in Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The Confraternity of the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary was
+not to embrace one parish only. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>God willed that it should extend
+throughout France, and even the entire world. M. Desgenettes, who
+understood this design, addressed himself to the Sovereign Pontiff,
+and obtained, April 24th, 1838, a brief, erecting the association into
+an Archconfraternity, with the power of affiliating to itself other
+associations of the same kind throughout the Church, and granting them
+a participation in the spiritual favors accorded it. From this day, the
+Archconfraternity developed wonderfully, and became an inexhaustible
+source of graces. The church of Notre Dame des Victoires was henceforth
+numbered among the most celebrated sanctuaries in the world. At all
+hours may the faithful be seen around its altars in the attitude of
+prayer and recollection. The re-unions which take place every Sunday
+present a touching spectacle, a dense crowd composed of persons of
+every condition, who, after fervently chanting Mary's praises, listen
+attentively to a long series of petitions received in the course of the
+week from all quarters of the globe.</p>
+
+<p>These present a picture of all the miseries, all the sufferings, all
+the corporal and spiritual necessities possible; to which are added
+numberless acts of thanksgiving for benefits obtained through the
+associates' prayers. These petitions are so multitudinous that they
+cannot be announced except in a general manner and by categories; they
+actually amount, each week, to the number of twenty-five or thirty
+thousand, and, for the entire year, form a total of a million and
+a half. At the time of its founder's death, the Archconfraternity
+numbered fifteen thousand affiliated confraternities in all quarters of
+the globe, and more than twenty million associates. At the beginning of
+this year, 1878, the affiliated confraternities amount to 17,472.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
+<p>A bulletin, issued monthly, gives an account of the progress of the
+Archconfraternity, the exercises which take place at Notre Dame des
+Victoires, the graces obtained, etc. The first nine numbers were
+published by M. Desgenettes himself, but at irregular intervals; they
+are full of interest and edification.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst the wonderful success of his work, the venerable pastor, far
+from seeking any of the glory, thought only of humbling himself;
+regarding his share in it as naught but that of a simple instrument, he
+confesses even his resistance to the inspirations of grace, his doubts,
+his incredulity;<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> he will not admit that he may be called the
+founder of this work of mercy; it is God who has done all, it is the
+Immaculate Heart of Mary, that has opened to poor sinners a new source
+of graces, as for himself, he was not even the originator of the idea.</p>
+
+<p>These sentiments reveal the soul of a saint; the true servants of
+God are always humble of heart, and the good they accomplish is in
+proportion to their self-abasement.</p>
+
+<p>In his deep gratitude to God, the pious cur&eacute; never forgot the bond
+attaching Notre Dame des Victoires to the chapel of the Daughters of
+Charity; he always loved this blessed sanctuary; it was there Mary had
+concealed the source of those vivifying waters which flowed through
+his parish; it was there this Mother of divine grace had promised
+those benedictions which the Archconfraternity reaped so abundantly.
+To preserve the remembrance of this mysterious relation, he desired
+that the medal of the association should be the Miraculous Medal.
+Henceforth, the influence of this medal became confounded with that
+of the Archconfraternity, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>the extraordinary graces attributed to the
+former were often due the associates' prayers, and reciprocally, for
+example, the conversion of M. Ratisbonne. In this case, as in many
+others, two equally supernatural means united to obtain the same result.</p>
+
+<p>It is related that M. Desgenettes, seeing the Daughters of Charity
+frequently around the altar of the most Holy Heart of Mary at Notre
+Dame des Victoires, would sometimes say to them: "My good Sisters, I
+am much pleased to see you in my dear church, but know that your own
+chapel is the true pilgrim shrine, it is there you have the Blessed
+Virgin, there she manifested herself to you.&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The Miraculous Medal, as revealed to Sister Catherine, bears on the
+reverse the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first crowned with
+thorns, the second pierced by a sword. These are symbols which all
+comprehend. Are they not, at the same time, a prophetic sign?</p>
+
+<p>We are permitted to recognize here a foreshadowing of that devotion
+which would be rendered by the Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des
+Victoires, to the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary.</p>
+
+<p>We may likewise see pre-figured, that later development in our day, of
+devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a devotion born in France, and
+which the entire nation wishes to proclaim amidst pomp and grandeur,
+by the construction of a splendid monument, that from the heights of
+Montmartre, shall overlook all Paris.</p>
+
+<p>Thus by a mysterious gradation, the medal of the Immaculate Conception
+has conducted us to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Heart of the
+Mother has introduced us into the Heart of the Son, the adorable Heart
+of Jesus, that Heart which has so loved men, and which saves nations as
+well as individuals.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
+<p class="title">IV.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Graces Obtained from 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, etc.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">CURE WROUGHT IN SANTORIN (GREECE)</span>&mdash;1838.</p>
+
+
+<p>Letter of M.N., Priest of the Mission, in Santorin:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Mme. Marie Delenda, wife of M. Michel Chigi, son of the Vice-Consul
+from Holland to Santorin, for seven years had suffered most
+excruciating pains, inducing such a state of nervous sensibility,
+that she was unable to bear the least excitement. She had had several
+children, but they all died before birth and receiving baptism. The
+physicians consulted, declared unanimously, that her disease was
+incurable, and that none of her children would ever come into the world
+alive. Greatly distressed at such a sad prospect, she had recourse
+to the Miraculous Medal, and obtained from it what medical skill was
+unable to effect; her next child, born not long after, was a fine,
+live, healthy one. Her husband, as pious as herself, was transported
+with joy and gratitude. 'Behold!' said he to the attendant physician,
+and conducting him to an image of the Immaculate Mary, 'Behold our
+Protectrice, our Liberatrix, the Mother of our child!' The physician
+knelt, said a prayer and retired. Since then, the mother's health
+is good; at least she has had no relapse of her former apparently
+incurable disease, which recovery is sufficient to attest the
+protection of Mary Immaculate. Full of gratitude, the two spouses have
+never ceased to urge the erection of the altar and inauguration of the
+image of Mary Immaculate, in fulfillment of their promise.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Several other miraculous cures have also been wrought there through
+the invocation of Mary Immaculate. I am assured of this; four of them
+are well attested, and really marvelous. The bishop, the clergy, the
+people of Santorin, are all ready to affirm my assertions, and not
+one of them but would be more likely to exaggerate than detract from
+my account. When Monseigneur went to visit the Chigi family after the
+birth of their child, he asked to see the image, and looking at it,
+said: 'This is the second miracle wrought in Santorin by the Immaculate
+Virgin. The first is known to me through the confessional, and
+consequently, I cannot divulge it.'</p>
+
+<p>"It was on the 28th of May, the inauguration of the image of the
+Immaculate Conception took place. Monseigneur himself officiated in the
+translation, after the High Mass and procession terminating the Forty
+Hour's Devotion at the cathedral. The image was placed upon an altar
+prepared for the purpose, in the court-yard of the donor's house. From
+the altar to the outer door, a very prettily decorated arched pathway
+was formed by means of drapery, and upon the threshold, was a triumphal
+arch. All the pavement, not only in the court but even to our church,
+was covered with flowers and fragrant grasses. Monseigneur, preceded
+by the clergy, and followed by all the Catholics and a number of Greek
+schismatics, repaired to the place where the image was exposed. Having
+incensed it, he intoned the <i>Ave, Maris Stella</i>, and the procession
+began to move. The clergy with the cross at their head commenced to
+defile. Then came two young girls bearing each a banner of white
+silk, whereon was depicted the spotless Virgin, these were suspended
+diagonally at the entrance <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>of the sanctuary. Next, were two more
+young girls holding extended, the front of the altar representing the
+reverse of the medal, and finally, the image borne by the donor and one
+of his nearest relatives. Monseigneur walked immediately after, and
+behind him, Mme. Chigi holding her child in her arms and accompanied
+by her sister. The people were not in the ranks of the procession, but
+ranged along each side, that they might readily see the image and kiss
+it as it passed, which they did with so much eagerness and enthusiasm
+that there was considerable danger of its meeting with an accident.
+This, however we averted by many precautions, and at length reached
+the church. At the entrance, another very beautiful triumphal arch had
+been erected, surmounted by a large representation of the reverse of
+the medal upon a floating banner, bearing the inscription: '<i>Ave, Maria
+Immaculata</i>.' The church door was decorated with drapery, likewise
+the interior of the walls, which were also hung with flowers, verdant
+crowns and garlands. The image was now placed upon a temporary throne,
+which had been prepared until a more suitable one could be erected.
+Another High Mass was celebrated, at the end of which the children
+chanted alternately with the choir the '<i>Te Mariam laudamus</i>,' this
+being the first time it was ever heard in this country. The other
+individuals I have already mentioned as having been cured through the
+Immaculate Mary's intercession, made each one a votive offering to her
+image. One gave a veil, another a pretty golden cross, which decorated
+the Blessed Virgin's bosom during the ceremony; a third proposed having
+a silver crown made in fulfillment of her vow, but she was advised
+to give something else, since several others in unison had already
+promised a most beautiful golden crown."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF MLLE. &Eacute;LISE BOURGEOIS.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity, in Troyes:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Troyes, March 4th, 1842.</i></p>
+
+<p>"In 1838, we had in our work-room a young woman, named &Eacute;lise Bourgeois,
+aged eighteen years, who, after great suffering, was attacked by an
+anchylosis in the knee. For seven months and a half she suffered
+excruciatingly, and her malady had reached the crisis. Her limb had
+shrunk up about two inches, and she could not walk without the aid of
+a cane or some one's arm. On the 8th of April, which was Monday in
+Holy Week, one of our young Sisters told me that the Notice contained
+an account of a Christian Brother, whose foot on the point of being
+amputated, was cured by the sole application of the Miraculous Medal,
+one night when his sufferings were greater than usual. I now reproached
+myself for having allowed this poor child to be so long afflicted,
+without our once thinking of having recourse to Mary for her recovery;
+and ascending to the work-room, I related to the children this account
+of the Christian Brother, and told the young woman to arouse her faith,
+to put all her confidence in Mary Immaculate, to apply the medal to her
+knee, and commence a novena with her companions. All Tuesday night her
+sufferings were great indeed, she said it seemed as if all her bones
+were dislocated. Nor was she able to obtain a moment's repose the next
+day. There now issued from a little hole which had formed in her knee,
+a quantity of serous matter. The day following, she arose with much
+difficulty, and was taken to the chapel where she heard Holy Mass. At
+the elevation, she placed her sound knee upon the bench, saying <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>most
+fervently to the good God: 'Since Thou art present, deign to cure me,
+that I may be entirely Thine.' She immediately felt something like the
+touch of a hand, which replaced the bones in their natural position,
+and lengthened the shrunken limb; but she did not yet dare rest upon
+it, for fear of injury. At the end of Mass, she knelt to receive the
+priest's benediction, and in spite of herself, she rested her weight
+upon the afflicted knee. She remained in the chapel with her companions
+to say her prayers and thank the Blessed Virgin for the great favor
+just obtained. From that time she has never suffered the slightest pain
+in the limb, and it appears perfectly sound.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as the children perceived that she was cured, they declared
+it a miracle, and all hearts were filled with the deepest emotion
+and gratitude. &Eacute;lise now asked permission to go to the cathedral to
+confession; a request I granted reluctantly, although she assured me
+she was not suffering in the slightest, yet she had not been out for
+seven months and a-half, and I could scarcely realize her recovery.
+Several Masses of thanksgiving were said in our chapel, during the
+first of which we had the Blessed Sacrament exposed, and the <i>Te Deum</i>
+chanted. The noise of this miracle soon spread throughout the city,
+and several persons came to see the healed one. She also requested
+permission to go to the house of one of her uncles, who had a very
+impious neighbor, that had been informed of her miraculous recovery,
+but who had also been told that he need not believe until he had seen
+&Eacute;lise for himself. He was perfectly convinced, acknowledged it beyond
+denial, and said that in thanksgiving, a <i>Te Deum</i> should be chanted in
+the cathedral.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
+<p>"I forgot to say, that our physician had seen this young woman two
+months before her recovery and pronounced the disease incurable. I had
+also had her examined by a surgeon, who ordered much blistering, but
+without expecting a cure."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Accompanying this letter are the signatures of seven Sisters of Charity
+and twenty-three other individuals, witnesses of the miracle.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">A TRAIT OF PROTECTION. (TEXAS)</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The following was sent us by Mgr. Odin, Vicar Apostolic of Texas, in a
+letter dated April 11th, 1841.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I had, in the city of Nacogdoches, an opportunity of witnessing how
+Mary Immaculate loves to grant the prayers of those who put their
+trust in her. A Maryland lady, on leaving her native State to settle
+in Texas, had received a Miraculous Medal; her confessor, on giving
+it to her, exacting the promise, that she would never omit the daily
+recitation of the little prayer, 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray
+for us who have recourse to thee!' and assuring her at the same time
+that this good Mother would never allow her to die without the last
+consolations of religion. She faithfully complied with her promise.
+For four years she was confined to her bed, and often, it was thought,
+at the point of death, but her confidence in Mary, always inspired her
+with the hope of receiving the last Sacraments ere leaving this world.
+As soon as she heard of our arrival, we were summoned to her bedside;
+she received the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction, and expired a few
+days after, filled with gratitude for her celestial Benefactress.</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURES AND INCIDENTS OF PROTECTION. (CHINA).</span></p>
+
+<p>In a letter of July, 1838, Mgr. Rameaux, Vicar Apostolic of the
+provinces of the Kiang-Si and Tch&eacute;-Kiang, in sending us the invocation
+of the medal translated into Chinese, says, that the Chinese have
+a great devotion to this little prayer, and always follow the <i>Ave
+Maria</i> by a recitation of it. He also informed us, that Mgr. de
+B&eacute;zy, Vicar Apostolic of the Hou-Kouang, and M. Perboyre, Missionary
+Apostolic, would transmit to us several accounts of miraculous marks
+of protection. We received these accounts some months later, and quote
+them as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"1st. In the province of the Hou-Kouang, a Christian had been racked
+by a terrible fever for two months, accompanied by constant delirium.
+Three physicians had attended him, but in vain. Finding himself on the
+verge of death, he sent for me to administer the Last Sacraments. I
+gave him the Holy Viaticum, but deferred Extreme Unction, seeing that
+my duties would retain me in that locality some time longer. I made him
+a present of the medal, and advised a novena, assuring him, that if it
+were for the benefit of his soul, he would be restored to health. He
+began the novena; on the seventh day, the fever left him, and on the
+eighth he had recovered his usual strength. On the ninth day of the
+novena he came to see me, and assured me that he was perfectly well. I
+reminded him of thanking the Blessed Virgin for so great a favor, and
+he promised to recite with his friends the Rosary in her honor. But
+our Christian, pre-occupied with various affairs that his sickness had
+interrupted, forgot the promise. Five days after, he had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>a relapse.
+This made him conscious of his fault; he approached the Sacraments
+again, and began another novena. Though he continued to grow worse from
+day to day, I still had great hopes that the Immaculate Mary would come
+to his assistance, and I assured him of his recovery before the end of
+the novena. My confidence was not deceived; he recovered entirely, to
+the great astonishment of all the Christians. This time his gratitude
+was effectual, and the fever did not return.</p>
+
+<p>"2d. In Tien-Men, a village of the same province, the Christians,
+numbering about two hundred, are distinguished for their piety and
+a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin. For eight years, successive
+inundations had reduced these Christians to extreme poverty; but this
+year, at the first sign of an overflow, they had recourse to Mary
+Immaculate by means of the medal, and soon the waters retired without
+doing the slightest harm to the Christian territory, whilst that of
+the pagans was devastated. And our Christians now return most grateful
+thanks to their good Mother for the abundant harvest they have just
+gathered.</p>
+
+<p>"3d. The following account was sent us by M. Perboyre, in a letter of
+August 10th, 1839. The reader will learn, with interest, that this is
+the same missionary who, arrested a month after for his religion, so
+generously confessed the Faith one whole year amidst the most frightful
+tortures, and at last consummated the sacrifice by his glorious
+martyrdom, September 11th, 1840.</p>
+
+<p>"Whilst I was giving a mission to the Christians of the Honan province,
+November, 1837, they brought to me a young woman who had been afflicted
+with mental aberration for about eight months, telling me she was very
+anxious to confess, and, though she was incapable <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>of the Sacrament,
+they begged me not to refuse her a consolation she appeared to desire
+so earnestly. Her sad condition of mind precluded all idea of her
+deriving any benefit from the exercise of my ministry, but I heard her
+out of pure compassion. In taking leave of her, I placed her under
+the especial protection of the Blessed Virgin&mdash;that is, I gave her a
+medal of the Immaculate Conception. She did not then understand the
+value of the holy remedy she received; but, from that moment, she
+began to experience its beneficial effects, her shattered intellect
+improving so rapidly that, at the end of four or five days, she was
+entirely changed. To a complete confusion of ideas, to fears that
+kept her ever in mortal agony, and which, I believe, were the work
+of the demon, succeeded good sense, peace of mind and happiness. She
+made her confession again, and received Holy Communion, with the most
+lively sentiments of joy and fervor. This especial instance of Mary's
+generosity will doubtless surprise you little, you who know so well
+that the earth is filled with her mercy; but your hearts will be
+excited anew to fervent thanksgiving for this particular favor, which
+is the principal reason of my acquainting you with it."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><i>1st. Letter from a Missionary of Macao, dated August 25th, 1841:</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"A widow who had but one son, reared like herself in paganism, saw
+him suddenly fall under the power of the demon; his paroxysms were
+so furious that all fled before him, and he ran through the fields
+uttering the most lamentable cries. Anyone that attempted to stop him
+was immediately seized and thrown to the ground. His poor mother was
+in despair, and almost dying of grief, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>when Divine Providence deigned
+to cast upon her a look of compassion. One day when he was unusually
+tormented, the young man fled hither and thither like a vagabond, not
+knowing where he went; everyone tried to stop him, but he brutally
+repulsed all who lay hands on him. The most merciful God permitted a
+Christian to be among the number of those who witnessed this spectacle.
+Animated with a lively faith, and touched at the unfortunate creature's
+sufferings, the Christian told all who were pursuing the demoniac to
+desist, that he unaided could arrest him, that he would quiet him, and
+restore him docile and gentle to his mother. This language astonished
+the pagans, but they did as requested, although thinking the Christian
+ran a great risk. Our good Christian wore the Miraculous Medal of the
+Immaculate Mary; taking it in his hands he approached the possessed,
+and showing it to him he commanded the demon to flee and leave the
+young man in peace. The demon obeyed instantly, and the young man
+seeing the medal in the Christian's hands, humbly prostrated himself
+before the miraculous image, without knowing what it was. The pagans,
+watching from a distance, were greatly astonished. The Christian now
+commanded the young man to rise and follow him, and still holding in
+his hand the medal, which was as a magnet attracting the young pagan,
+he thus conducted him to his mother. 'Mother,' he exclaimed, to her
+great consolation, as soon as he saw her, 'Do not weep any more, I
+am freed from the demon; he left me as soon as he perceived this
+medal.' Imagine the poor mother's joy, on hearing these words! She was
+perplexed to know whether it was a dream or a reality! The Christian
+reassured her, and recounted all that had passed, adding, that her
+son <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>would never be possessed again, if she renounced her idols and
+became a Christian. She promised sincerely, and they immediately began
+to divest their altar of its false gods. Then the Christian, feeling
+assured they would be faithful when instructed in the truths of
+religion, withdrew, laden with the thanks of both mother and son for
+the inestimable service he had just rendered them."</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p><i>2d. Extract of a Letter from M. Faivre, Priest of the Mission in the
+Province of Nankin, May 6th, 1841:</i></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The two great means God uses for the accomplishment of good in this
+Mission are our Lord's cross and the Immaculate Mary's protection. As
+to the most powerful protection of Mary conceived without sin, we have
+experienced it so often, and in so especial a manner, both as regards
+ourselves and the welfare of the Mission, that it would be tedious to
+recount in detail, even if I wished to do so, all the favors we have
+received at her maternal hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Seeing the Blessed Virgin's clemency towards us and our Christians,
+we have done all we could to honor her and advance her honor among
+the Christians, by seeking to inspire them with the most lively
+confidence in this good, holy Mother. On the Feast of the Assumption,
+1839, we consecrated this Mission to her, and ever since it has
+been called Mary's Diocese. We have given as a rule to our virgins
+especial devotion to the Immaculate Conception. We have established
+Mary Immaculate patroness of the seminary Providence has created in
+this Mission. (This seminary now numbers six scholars who lead lives
+of regularity and edification, and make rapid progress in the study
+of Latin.) One of our virgins, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>already advanced in age, had been
+for several years confined to her bed, without the slightest hope of
+recovery, the thirteen physicians who had been successively consulted
+having declared her malady incurable. Seeing her end approach, she
+asked for the missionary, that she might receive the Last Sacraments.
+He came, and administered the Sacraments of the dying, exhorting her
+to accept death in a spirit of conformity to the will of God. She
+replied that she was fully resigned to His holy will, and had no hope
+of deriving any benefit from human means, but she felt convinced that
+if she could get a Miraculous Medal, her health would be restored. The
+missionary, seeing so much faith and confidence, gave her the one he
+wore, having no other convenient just then, and recommended her to make
+a novena in honor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin.
+All the family joined her in making the novena, and from the fifth
+day she was entirely cured. The attending physician, who was a pagan,
+coming to see her at the end of the novena, was utterly surprised to
+find her so well, and he eagerly inquired what extraordinary remedy
+had been employed to effect such a change. She replied that she had
+used no remedies, but the Lord of Heaven had restored her health. The
+physician returned, filled with veneration for the Lord of Heaven, who
+had displayed such great power; and the virgin, in expression of her
+gratitude to the Immaculate Mary, her august Benefactress, donated
+three hundred piastres to repair a chapel dedicated to Mary."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF M. RATISBONNE, AN ISRAELITE.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Rome, 1842.</i></p>
+
+<p>M. Alphonse Ratisbonne belonged to a Jewish family of Strasburg,
+distinguished in the world as much for its social position as the
+universal esteem in which it was held; he himself was a member of
+a society for the encouragement of labor, contributing thus to the
+benefit of his unfortunate brethren. Towards the end of the year 1841,
+he became affianced to a young Jewess, who united in her person all
+those qualities calculated to assure his happiness. Before entering
+upon this new state of life, he decided to take a pleasure trip to the
+East, visiting on the way some of the most remarkable cities of Italy.
+There was nothing, he thought, interesting to him in the Eternal City,
+so from Naples he would direct his course to Palermo; but Divine mercy
+called him, though he did not recognize the voice; he is constrained,
+as it were, by a secret design of Heaven, to change his determination,
+and visit Rome. It was in this centre of Catholic unity that the God
+of all patience and goodness awaited him, it was here that grace was
+to touch his heart. But what were his dispositions? Thou, O Lord,
+knowest them!... His hatred of Catholicity was very far from suggesting
+a thought of his ever embracing it. He felt for our holy and sublime
+religion that violent animosity which could not contain itself, which
+chafed at anything reminding him of Christianity, and which had even
+grown more rancorous since his brother M. Theodore Ratisbonne's
+abjuration of Judaism and reception of Holy Orders. He could not
+pardon this desertion, and his implacable hatred increased with time.
+But the innocent object of his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>aversion never ceased to supplicate
+Heaven to shed a ray of divine light upon the deluded brother, who
+loaded him with indignation and contempt. Made sub-Director of the
+Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des Victoires, he often implored the
+associates' prayers for this brother's conversion.</p>
+
+<p>Such were M. Ratisbonne's sentiments when he entered Rome. He had
+scarcely arrived ere he thought of leaving; everything he saw in the
+Holy City urged him to hasten from it, everything excited him to
+declaim against what shocked and vilified his belief.... He was not
+proof, however, against a species of emotion in visiting the church
+of Ara Coeli; but it was an emotion which lost all its influence,
+(if influence it could be said to have exerted upon this heart buried
+in the shades of death,) when he understood that it was the general
+effect produced by the first sight of this remarkable monument. So, far
+from giving way to it, he hastened, on the contrary, to affirm that
+it was not a Catholic emotion, but an impression purely religious. In
+traversing the Ghetto, his hatred against Christianity was still more
+inflamed at witnessing the misery and degradation of the Jews; as if
+the chastisement of that deicidal people had been inflicted by the
+children of the Church, as if this people had not called down upon
+itself the vengeance of innocent blood!</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving Rome, M. Ratisbonne was to visit one of his childhood's
+friends, an old schoolmate with whom he had always kept up an intimacy,
+although their religious belief was so widely at variance. This friend
+was M. Gustave de Bussi&egrave;re, a zealous Protestant, who several times had
+endeavored to profit by their intimacy, by persuading M. Ratisbonne
+to embrace Protestantism, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>but the latter was immovable, and the two
+friends, after useless discussions, usually ended by a renewal of
+their faith in two words, expressing most emphatically how invincible
+each deemed himself. "Headstrong Jew!" said one; "Enraged Protestant!"
+replied the other. Such was the result of these conversations, which
+never succeeded in shaking the opinion of either, or dissipating any
+of their deplorable errors. This opposition of principles, however,
+did not estrange their friendship. M. Ratisbonne called to see M.
+De Bussi&egrave;re, and was admitted by an Italian servant. He inquired
+for M. Gustave de Bussi&egrave;re, but this gentleman was absent, and by a
+providential mistake the servant introduced him into the salon of M.
+Theodore Bussi&egrave;re, Gustave's brother, whom M. Ratisbonne had seen but
+once. It was too late to withdraw, and though somewhat disconcerted
+at the mistake, he stopped to exchange a few words of courtesy with
+his friend's brother. M. De Bussi&egrave;re had had the happiness of abjuring
+Protestantism, and he was a zealous advocate of the Faith he had
+so lately learned to prize. He knew that M. Ratisbonne was a Jew;
+he received him with affectionate eagerness, and the conversation
+naturally turning upon the various places of interest in Rome visited
+by the young French traveler, it soon drifted into a religious
+discussion. M. Ratisbonne did not disguise his real sentiments, he
+expressed his animosity against Catholicity, his inalterable attachment
+to Judaism and to the baron De Bussi&egrave;re's solid arguments, his only
+replies were the frigid politeness of silence, a smile of pity, or new
+protestations of fidelity to his sect, repeating that a Jew he was born
+and a Jew he would die!</p>
+
+<p>It was then that M. De Bussi&egrave;re, not the least discour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>aged by M.
+Ratisbonne's emphatic language, and impelled by a secret impulse
+of grace, thought of offering him the Miraculous Medal. Doubtless
+this idea appears rash to many, and many would have banished it as a
+veritable folly, but the simplicity of faith teaches us to discern
+things by a very different light from that in which they are revealed
+to the world. Filled with this holy fearlessness of the Saints, M. De
+Bussi&egrave;re presents the young Jew a medal of the Immaculate Conception.
+"Promise me," said he, "to always wear this little image, I beg you not
+to refuse me." M. Ratisbonne, unable to conceal his astonishment at
+so strange a proposition, rejects it instantly with an expression of
+indignation that would have disconcerted any other than his new friend.
+"But," continues our fervent Catholic undismayed, "I cannot understand
+the cause of such a refusal, for, according to your view of things, the
+wearing of this object must be to you a matter of total indifference,
+whilst it would be a real consolation to me if you would condescend to
+my request." "Ah! I will comply, then, if you attach so much importance
+to it," replied the other with a hearty laugh; "I should not be sorry,
+moreover, to have an opportunity of convincing you that Jews are not
+so headstrong as they are represented. Besides, it will give me an
+interesting chapter to add to my notes and impressions of travel." And
+he continued to jest on the subject in a manner rather painful to the
+Christian hearts around him.</p>
+
+<p>During this debate, the good father of the family had told his two
+little daughters (interesting children, whom an eminently religious
+education had already imbued with sentiments of piety), to put the
+precious medal on a cord. They did so, and gave it to their father,
+who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>hung it around the young Israelite's neck. Encouraged by this
+first success, he wishes to go still farther. He attempts nothing less
+than binding M. Ratisbonne himself to ask the favor and protection of
+Mary, of Mary whom he despises without knowing, Mary whose image he
+receives most reluctantly! M. De Bussi&egrave;re presents him a paper upon
+which is written St. Bernard's powerful invocation, the <i>Memorare</i>....
+This time, the Jew can still less dissimulate his displeasure, it seems
+tried to the utmost; but the baron feels himself actuated by a secret
+impulse, that urges him to persevere in his solicitations, and conquer.
+He repeats his request, and even goes so far when he presents the
+prayer as to beg M. Ratisbonne to take a copy of it for him, as he has
+but one. M. Ratisbonne, convinced that resistance is useless, rather
+than repeat his refusal prefers acceding to the request, and thus
+ridding himself of such vexatious importunity. "Agreed," said he, "that
+you take my copy and I keep yours." And, hastening to this indiscreet
+zealot, he retired, murmuring to himself: "I really wonder what he
+would say if I were to insist upon his reciting the Jewish prayers?
+I must admit that I have, indeed, met a striking original!" It was
+thus he left this house of benediction and salvation, ignorant of the
+treasure he bore with him, the key of Heaven that had been given him;
+the image of the Mother of holy hope he wore upon his heart, and whose
+blessed effects he would so soon experience.</p>
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>M. De Bussi&egrave;re, deeply grieved at the young Jew's levity, united with
+his family in conjuring the God of mercy to pardon the words of one who
+knew not what he said; and he recommended his dear children to lift
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>up their hands to the Refuge of Sinners, supplicating her to obtain
+the gift of Faith for this poor soul in the shades of darkness and
+error!... O Mary! your tender love graciously welcomed these prayers of
+the innocent, they penetrated your maternal heart, and soon obtained
+the object of their desires. The zeal of this devout servant of the
+Queen of Heaven was not confined within the narrow limits of his own
+family circle.... Going, that evening, according to a pious custom in
+Rome, to keep watch before the Blessed Sacrament with the prince B.
+and some other friends, he also engaged their prayers for the young
+Israelite's conversion.... Let us follow attentively all the details
+preceding the ever memorable day which was to crown M. De Bussi&egrave;re's
+pious efforts. Let us not forget that a generous Christian, elevated by
+a lively faith above the vain prejudices of the world, and docile to
+the secret inspirations of grace, becomes the instrument of Providence
+in procuring God's glory and the salvation of a soul.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, M. Ratisbonne was making arrangements to leave Rome; he
+had already fixed upon the day of his departure, and had come to say
+good-bye to his friend and acquaint him with his intention of starting
+the next evening. "Going!" replied M. De Bussi&egrave;re; "do not think of
+it. I want you to grant me just eight days longer; our conversation of
+yesterday occupies my thoughts more than ever; let me entreat you to
+prolong your stay, and let us go to the diligence office to countermand
+your order." It was in vain. M. Ratisbonne declined, saying he had
+already decided to go, and had no motive for deferring his departure.
+Under the pretext of a very imposing ceremony which was to take place
+at St. Peter's, M. De Bussi&egrave;re forced, rather than persuaded him to
+remain a few days longer.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
+<p>We shall not here enter into a detailed account of what passed
+between them from the moment M. De Bussi&egrave;re's constancy gained the
+last triumph&mdash;that is, from the 16th of January to the 20th&mdash;inasmuch
+as there was not the slightest sign of the happy change, either in
+the language or conduct of M. Ratisbonne, towards the new friend
+divine Providence had given him, in spite of himself. He could not,
+however, avoid receiving this new friend's civilities, or refuse to
+be accompanied by him in visiting the various places of note in the
+Eternal City. M. De Bussi&egrave;re, full of hope against all human hope,
+allowed no opportunity to escape of enlightening his young friend; but
+not one consoling response could he obtain, M. Ratisbonne, by jest and
+raillery, always avoiding the arguments he would not take the trouble
+to refute, always ridiculing Catholicity, and thus afflicting the heart
+of the servant of Jesus Christ by responding coldly to the assiduity of
+his zeal, the serious nature of his propositions. "Make your mind easy;
+I will think of all this, but not at Rome. I am to spend two months
+at Malta; it will serve to while away the time." He was astonished at
+the imperturbable tranquillity with which M. De Bussi&egrave;re persevered in
+trying to convince him; he could not understand that union of serenity
+(which religion alone inspires) with that ardent desire (that he
+doubtless attributed to obstinacy) of leading him to a new belief, for
+which, according to his own words, he felt more aversion than ever. To
+him this tranquillity appeared incomprehensible. M. De Bussi&egrave;re did
+not hesitate to express his belief in the triumph of his cause; for
+instance, in passing the <i>Scala Sancta</i> with the young Israelite, as
+he pointed it out he bared his head respect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>fully and said aloud, as
+if in a voice of prophecy, "Hail, holy staircase! here is a man who
+one day will ascend your steps on his knees." This was on the 19th.
+M. Ratisbonne's only response was a disconcerting peal of laughter,
+and the two friends separated again, without the slightest religious
+impression having been made upon the Israelite, although, unknown to
+human ken, he was on the eve of the brightest day of his life.</p>
+
+<p>During this short interval, M. De Bussi&egrave;re tasted the bitterness of
+losing one of his dearest friends. M. De La Ferronays died suddenly on
+the evening of the 17th, leaving to his family and all who knew him
+the sweet hope that he had bid adieu to this perishable life only to
+enter upon the joys of a blissful immortal one. Doubtless this event
+contributed to the young Israelite's speedy conversion, for whilst on
+earth M. De La Ferronays had prayed for him, and we have every reason
+to believe that he soon became his advocate in heaven. M. De Bussi&egrave;re
+had informed this dear friend of his hopes and the means employed for
+gaining the young Israelite to Jesus Christ, and he had received the
+consoling answer: "Do not be uneasy; if you have succeeded in making
+him say the <i>Memorare</i>, he is yours." ... Such was the admirable
+confidence of this fervent Christian in the powerful protection of the
+most compassionate Virgin Mary!</p>
+
+<p>Yet notwithstanding the bitterness of the sacrifice Heaven had just
+demanded of the Baron De Bussi&egrave;re, he found it hard to part from this
+young man whom he longed to conquer to the Faith, and the resignation
+of his grief was a new prayer attracting the Divine mercy. Immediately
+after leaving him on the 19th, he went to prostrate himself beside the
+remains of his virtuous <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>friend, begging that friend's assistance from
+the heights of heaven in obtaining what had been already recommended to
+his prayers on earth.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Thursday, 20th.&mdash;M. Ratisbonne's dispositions are not changed in the
+least; he never raises his thoughts above terrestrial things, the
+religious discussions of the preceding days have not even fixed his
+attention, or apparently not excited in his soul the slightest anxiety.
+As to his false belief, he never dreams of taking one step towards a
+knowledge of the truth; M. De Bussi&egrave;re is not with him to continue the
+conversation on religion, and he dismisses the subject from his mind.
+Leaving the caf&eacute;, he meets one of his fellow-boarders; they discourse
+of balls and other frivolous amusements in such a way as to convince
+one that he was surely not engrossed with anything serious. It was then
+noon, and two hours later the young Jew had seen the light, two hours
+later he eagerly desired the grace of holy baptism, two hours later he
+believed in the Church!... Who is like to Thee, O my God? Who can thus,
+in an instant, triumph over human reason, and force it to render homage
+to Thy sovereign truth?... Ah! it is Thyself, Thyself alone, Lord, it
+is the prerogative of Thy mercy to work such prodigies! Let us return
+to our Israelite.</p>
+
+<p>It is one o'clock; M. De Bussi&egrave;re must repair to the church of
+St. Andrew delle Fratte to make some arrangements for the funeral
+ceremonies of M. De La Ferronays, which take place on the morrow. He
+sets out, and on the way happily meets M. Ratisbonne, who joins him,
+with the intention of taking one of their usual walks, when M. De
+Bussi&egrave;re had fulfilled the imperative duty <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>that required his immediate
+attention.... But the moment of grace has come. They enter the church,
+where various decorations already announce the morrow's ceremonies;
+the Israelite inquires the meaning of them, and M. De Bussi&egrave;re, having
+replied that they were for the funeral obsequies of M. De La Ferronays,
+the intimate friend he had just lost, begs him to wait there an
+instant, whilst he goes into the house to execute a commission with
+one of the monks. M. Ratisbonne then glances coolly around the church,
+seeming to say by his air of indifference, that it is not worth his
+attention. We must remark that he was then at the epistle side of
+the altar. M. De Bussi&egrave;re returns after an absence of about twelve
+minutes, and is surprised at not seeing his young companion. Could he
+have grown weary of waiting in a place that inspired only repugnance
+and disgust?... He knew not, and sought M. Ratisbonne. What was his
+astonishment at finding him on the left hand side of the church,
+kneeling, and apparently wrapt in devotion!... He could scarcely
+believe his eyes, and yet it was no mistake.... It was in the chapel
+of the archangel St. Michael that the prince of darkness had just been
+crushed.... A great victory already rejoiced all Heaven.... The young
+Jew was vanquished.</p>
+
+<p>M. De Bussi&egrave;re approaches, but he is not heard; he touches his
+friend, but he cannot distract him; he touches him again, but still
+no response; he repeats it a third or fourth time, and at last M.
+Ratisbonne turns to answer, and his tearful countenance, his utter
+inability to express what has passed, his hands clasped most fervently,
+partly reveal the heavenly secret. "Oh! how M. De La Ferronays has
+prayed for me!" he exclaims. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>This is all he says. Never did M. De
+Bussi&egrave;re enjoy a more consoling surprise. The bandage of error blinding
+the young Israelite had fallen, and M. De Bussi&egrave;re's heart was filled
+with the most lively gratitude to God.... He raises his young friend,
+who was completely overcome by this celestial visitation; he takes
+him and almost carries him out of the church.... He is all eagerness
+to know the details.... He asks M. Ratisbonne to reveal the mystery,
+and begs him to say where he wishes to go. "Lead me," replies the new
+Paul, completely vanquished, "lead me where you will.... After what
+I have seen, I obey." ... And not being able to say more, he draws
+forth the unknown treasure he had been wearing upon his heart for four
+days. He takes the dear medal in his hands, he covers it with kisses,
+he waters it abundantly with tears of joy, and amidst his sobs escape
+a few words expressive of his happiness, but which a profound emotion
+almost prevents his articulating. "How good is God! What a plentitude
+of gifts! What joy unknown! Ah! how happy I am, and how much to be
+pitied are they who do not believe!" And continuing to shed torrents
+of tears over the miseries of those whom Faith has never enlightened,
+he already feels the holy desire of seeing the kingdom of Jesus Christ
+extended throughout the world. He can scarcely himself understand such
+a transformation, and amidst the various feelings surging through his
+heart, he interrupts his tears, his exclamations and his silence, to
+ask M. De Bussi&egrave;re if he does not think him crazy.... Then answering
+his own question, "No," he continues: "I am not crazy.... I know well
+what I think and what passes within me.... I know that I am in my right
+mind.... Moreover, everybody knows that I <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>am not crazy!" By degrees,
+these first transports of emotion give place to a more composed frame
+of mind; he can at last express his new desires, his new belief, and
+he asks to be conducted to the feet of a priest, for he craves the
+grace of holy baptism.... Already favored with the most lively Faith,
+he aspires after the happiness of confessing his Divine Master in the
+midst of torments and recalling the sufferings of the martyrs he had
+seen represented upon the walls of St. &Eacute;tienne le Rond; he wishes to
+shed his blood in attestation of his Faith as a disciple of Jesus
+Christ.... Meanwhile, he has told M. De Bussi&egrave;re nothing of the sudden
+blow that vanquished him, and he refuses to tell except in the presence
+of God's minister; "for what he saw he ought not, he could not reveal
+except on his knees."</p>
+
+<p>Father De Villefort, of the Society of Jesus, is chosen to receive
+the neophyte and hear this consoling secret, which will reveal the
+excess of Divine mercy towards the soul of the young Israelite. M. De
+Bussi&egrave;re himself conducts him to the Reverend Father, who welcomes him
+tenderly.... Then, in the presence of M. De Bussi&egrave;re, M. Ratisbonne
+takes in his hand the medal, the dear pledge of the Immaculate Mary's
+protection, and again covers it with respectful kisses, mingled with a
+shower of tears. He endeavors to overcome his emotion, and exclaims in
+a transport of joy: "I have seen her! I have seen her!" Conquering his
+feelings, he continues his narration, interrupted from time to time by
+the sighs of an overburdened heart.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"I had been in the church but an instant, when suddenly I was seized
+with an inexplicable fear. I raised my eyes, the whole edifice
+had disappeared from my view, one chapel alone had, as it were,
+concentrated all the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>light, and in the midst of this effulgence
+there appeared standing upon the altar the Virgin Mary, grand,
+brilliant, full of majesty and sweetness, such as she is represented
+upon the medal&mdash;an irresistible force impelled me to her. The Virgin
+made me a sign with her hand to kneel, and she seemed to say: 'It is
+well.' She did not speak to me, but I understood all."</p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo227" id="illo227"></a>
+<img src="images/i227.jpg" width="259" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>APPARITION OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL</i><br />
+
+<p><i>To M. Ratisbonne, January 20, 1842, in the Church of St. Andrew,
+delle Fratte, in Rome. "She did not speak one word to me," said M.
+Ratisbonne, "but I understood it all.</i>"</p></div></div>
+
+<p>He ceased, but this short account eloquently revealed the abundant
+favors with which his soul had just been inundated. Reverend Father De
+Villefort and the pious baron listened with a holy joy, mingled with an
+involuntary feeling of religious awe, at thoughts of the infinite power
+which had just triumphed by such a striking manifestation of mercy....
+The mystery was revealed, but M. Ratisbonne, now the disciple of the
+most humble of Masters, a God annihilated, expressed a wish to have the
+wonderful vision kept a profound secret; he even earnestly entreated
+that it should be, but Father De Villefort considered it wiser not
+to yield to the neophyte's modesty, God's glory, the Immaculate
+Mary's honor, demanding that such a miracle should be proclaimed. M.
+Ratisbonne's humility gave way to obedience. In the brief narration
+just quoted, one thing especially had struck the Reverend Father,
+"She did not speak to me, but I understood all!" What, then, had he
+understood, he who, having hitherto lived in the shades of darkness,
+found himself in an instant instructed in heavenly knowledge? What,
+then, had he understood, he who was suddenly recalled from the bosom of
+death which he loved, to a new life which but a short time previous he
+had solemnly declared he would ever ignore, 'a Jew he was born and a
+Jew he would die?' What had he understood, he the young Jew, so lately
+head<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>strong in his belief, an avowed enemy of Catholicity, but who now
+humbly prostrates himself at the feet of our Lord's minister to retract
+his words and renounce his own will, for he declares that, after what
+he has seen, he obeys?... What has he understood? What has he seen? He
+has seen the Mother of divine grace, the bright aurora of the Sun of
+Justice; he has understood the gift of God, the eternal truth ... the
+unity of the Church, its infallibility, the sanctity of its morals, the
+sublimity of its mysteries, the grandeur and elevation of its hopes....
+He has understood Heaven, and henceforth everything is changed for
+him, everything is renewed within him, he is no longer the same. His
+desires, projects, thoughts, earthly affections, where are they in the
+brilliancy of this celestial radiance? Vain prejudices of error, where
+are they?... The Immaculate Mother of Jesus has rent asunder the band
+that veiled the young Israelite's eyes, and the shades of error are
+dissipated, the blind man sees the light, and his joy is inexpressible,
+for he knew not till then the true gifts, the blessings promised the
+children of the true Church.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne had heretofore been completely ignorant of the truths
+of Catholicity, he acknowledges that he had never read even one book
+calculated to enlighten him on the subject, his hatred of Christianity
+kept him aloof from all that might change his views in regard to it.
+He blasphemed without examining the object of his blasphemy, he judged
+without hearing, he despised without investigating.... And behold!
+in spite of himself, in an instant, in defiance of all his past
+protestations, he bends, he falls, he is conquered!</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span></p>
+<p>Rejoice, O Mary! for the dew of grace has not descended upon an
+ungrateful soil.... No; not in vain at your mysterious school has he
+learned all this privileged soul of your love, this heart that your
+incomparable beauty, your ineffable bounty have vanquished for Jesus
+Christ!</p>
+
+<p>We see, indeed, that, from the moment his eyes are opened to the
+light, he adores the mysteries he formerly despised, loves what he
+hated, venerates what he ridiculed, and proves himself as humble
+and submissive to the Church as the most fervent Christian. That
+very day, he goes to the basilica of St. Mary Major, in tribute of
+gratitude to her who had just descended from Heaven, to bring him the
+gift of Faith, and its attendant blessings; thence he repairs to St.
+Peter's, to declare in that sanctuary dedicated to the Prince of the
+Apostles, his belief in the truths that Peter taught. M. De Bussi&egrave;re,
+who found a pious delight in offering to God this conquest of grace,
+accompanied him on his holy pilgrimage, and conversed intimately with
+him, they had but one heart and one soul. A new Paul, Ratisbonne, in
+what he experienced, at the moment the Blessed Virgin gently forced
+him to prostrate himself at her feet, to receive the light of Heaven,
+recognized the strength of Him who vanquished His persecutors.... The
+profound emotion, the holy awe that filled the neophyte on entering
+a church, declared more fully the secrets that had been revealed to
+him.... Penetrated with the liveliest faith for the great Sacrament
+of love, he could not approach the altar, he was overwhelmed at the
+thought of the Real Presence of the God who resides in the Most
+Holy Sacrament. He considered himself unworthy to appear in this
+august Presence, as he was yet stained with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>original sin, and M. De
+Bussi&egrave;re relates, that he took refuge in a chapel, consecrated to the
+Blessed Virgin, exclaiming: "I have no fears here, for I feel myself
+under the protection of a boundless mercy." O Mary! you opened your
+maternal heart, and there he concealed himself, knowing that divine
+justice yields to mercy, when the guilty soul has found and invoked
+with confidence the Refuge of Sinners.... So great was the fervent
+neophyte's happiness when in the temple of the Lord, that he was unable
+to find words expressive of his happiness. "Ah!" said he in a holy
+transport, "how delightful it is to be here! How great reason have
+Catholics to love their churches and to frequent them! How zealous
+they should be in ornamenting them! How sweet to spend a lifetime in
+these holy places! They are truly not of earth but of Heaven!" Ah! are
+we not confounded and abashed by the fervor of him who has just been
+born into the truth! What would he think of the coldness, the levity,
+the ingratitude of the majority of Christians?... Let us acknowledge
+it to our confusion; there is a Host who dwells in our midst, and
+whom we know not; we who eat at His table, who feed upon His own
+flesh, the Bread descended from Heaven, and behold! a young Israelite,
+instructed but a few hours in the wonders of God's love, teaches us how
+we must conduct ourselves in the presence of this Host, and with what
+sentiments our hearts should then be filled.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Next day, the news of this wonderful conversion had spread through
+Rome; every one was anxious to learn something about it, and collected
+with pious curiosity the various statements in circulation; every one
+wished <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>to see the newly converted and hear his account.... General
+Chlabonski even went to M. De Bussi&egrave;re's house. "So you have seen the
+image of the Blessed Virgin," said he, accosting the neophyte. "The
+image?" answered the latter, "ah! it was no image, but herself I saw;
+yes, M. her real self, just as I see you now!" We must here remark that
+to the Church alone, appertains the power of judging and qualifying
+this vision; but every one was impressed with the fact, that mistake
+or illusion seemed impossible, considering the young Israelite's
+character, education, prejudices and horror for Christianity; moreover,
+in this chapel there was neither statue, picture nor any representation
+whatever of the Blessed Virgin. And we love to quote here the words of
+a wise man, who, referring to the event, says, "that without one grain
+of exaggeration, just as it happened, just as all Rome narrates it, the
+unexpected fact, the public fact of this conversion, considering all
+the circumstances, would of itself be a miracle, if a miracle had not
+caused it."</p>
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne reluctantly gave the details of what he had seen. When
+questioned closely as to what took place at the moment he found himself
+environed by this celestial effulgence, he answers ingenuously that he
+could not account for the involuntary impulse causing him to leave the
+right hand side of the church for the chapel on the left, especially
+as he was separated from it by the preparations for the morrow's
+ceremonies; that, when the Queen of Heaven appeared before him in all
+the glory and brilliancy of her immaculate purity, he caught a glimpse
+of her incomparable beauty, but immediately realized the impossibility
+of contemplating it, that urged by the desire, three times had he
+endeavored <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>to lift his eyes to the face of this Mother of mercy, whose
+sweet clemency had deigned to manifest herself to him, and three times,
+in spite of himself, had his gaze been stayed at sight of the blessed
+hands, whence escaped a torrent of graces. "I could not," he told us
+himself after his arrival, "I could not express what I saw of mercy and
+liberality in Mary's hands. It was not only an effulgence of light,
+it was not rays I distinguished, words are inadequate to depict the
+ineffable gifts filling our Mother's hands, and descending from them,
+the bounty, mercy, tenderness, the celestial sweetness and riches,
+flowing in torrents and inundating the souls she protects."</p>
+
+<p>In the first moments of his conversion, M. Ratisbonne gave vent to some
+of those thoughts which strongly pre-occupied him, those outpourings
+of a fervent heart which happily, are still preserved. "O my God!"
+he exclaimed in a transport of astonishment and gratitude, "I, who
+only half an hour before was blaspheming! I, who felt such violent
+hatred against the Catholic religion!... Every one of my acquaintances
+knew full well, that to all human appearances, it was impossible for
+me ever to think of changing my religion. My family was Jewish, my
+betrothed, my uncle were Jewish. In embracing Christianity, I know that
+I break away from all earthly hopes and interests.... And yet I do
+it willingly; I renounce the passing happiness of a future which was
+promised me; I do so without hesitation, I act from conviction; ...
+for I am not crazy, and have never been; they well know it.... Who,
+then, could refuse to believe me, and believe in the truth?... The most
+powerful interests enchained me to my religion, and consequently all
+should be con<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>vinced that a man who sacrifices everything to a profound
+conviction must sacrifice to a celestial light, which has revealed
+itself by incontrovertible evidence. What I have affirmed is true. I
+know it, I feel it; and what could be my object in thus betraying the
+truth and turning aside from religion by a sacrilegious lie?... I have
+not said too much; my words must carry conviction."</p>
+
+<p>The Baron De Bussi&egrave;re had the consolation of entertaining at his own
+home the new son Heaven had given him; the young Jew remained there
+until the retreat preceding his baptism. It was right and just,
+indeed, that this friend should gather the first bloom of a heart
+refreshed by the dew of grace, that he should be the happy witness of
+the wonders wrought in that soul.... M. Ratisbonne himself had need
+of a confidant, some one that understood him thoroughly, and to whom
+he could communicate the emotions of his heart.... It was in moments
+of sweet intimacy, when alone with his friend, that he could give
+full vent to his feelings, and, in unison with him, admire the loving
+designs of divine Providence, and the means that had dissipated such
+deplorable errors. He bewailed the blindness in which he had lived!...
+"Alas!" said he, "when my excellent brother embraced Catholicity,
+and afterwards entered into the ecclesiastical state, I, of all his
+relatives, was his most unrelenting persecutor.... I could not forgive
+his desertion of our religion&mdash;we were at variance, at least; I
+detested him, though he had none but the kindest thoughts for me....
+However, at the time of my betrothal, I said to myself that I must be
+reconciled to my brother, and I wrote him a few cold lines, to which
+he replied by a letter full of charity and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>tenderness.... One of my
+little nephews died about eighteen months ago. My good brother, having
+learned that he was seriously ill, asked as a personal favor that the
+child be baptized before its death, adding, with great delicacy, that
+to us it would be a matter of indifference, whilst to himself it would
+be a veritable happiness, and he hoped we would not refuse. I was
+infuriated at such a request!</p>
+
+<p>"I hope, oh! yes, I hope that my God will send me severe trials, which
+may redound to His honor and glory, and convince all that I am actuated
+by conscience...." What generosity of heart! What knowledge! His eyes
+are scarcely opened to the truths of Catholicity, ere he embraces
+them in their full extent.... He knows already that the cross is the
+distinctive mark of the children of the Church, of God's elect, and
+this cross which so many Christians drag reluctantly after them, he
+greets, he awaits, he desires.... Moreover, it had been shown to him in
+a very mysterious manner; for he relates that the night preceding his
+conversion there was constantly before his eyes a large cross without
+the Christ, that the sight really fatigued him, although he considered
+it of no importance. "I made," said he, "incredible efforts to banish
+this image, but in vain. It was only later, when having, by chance,
+seen the reverse of the Miraculous Medal, he recognized the exact sign
+which had struck him.</p>
+
+<p>Divine Providence, looking with a loving eye upon this young convert,
+directed his steps, and in these early days of his conversion, led
+him to a venerable Father who was to give him very precious counsel,
+upon the life of abnegation and perpetual sacrifice he had embraced.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>This servant of the Lord, immediately lay before him the importance
+of the step he had taken, the trials awaiting him, the temptation that
+would most assuredly beset his path, and without fearing to shake
+his constancy, he read him a few verses of the second chapter of
+Ecclesiasticus, upon the trials testing the virtue of the true servant
+and friend of God. With pleasure we quote here a part of this good
+priest's instructions:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"My son, when thou comest to the service of God, stand in justice
+and in fear, and prepare thy soul for temptation. Humble thy heart
+and endure; incline thy ear, and receive the words of understanding;
+and make not haste in the time of clouds. Wait on God with patience;
+join thyself to God and endure, that thy life may be increased in the
+latter end. Take all that shall be brought upon thee; and in thy sorrow
+endure, and in thy humiliation keep patience. For gold and silver are
+tried in the fire, but acceptable men in the furnace of humiliation.
+Believe God, and He will recover thee; and direct thy way, and trust in
+Him. Keep His fear, and grow old therein."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne listened in respectful silence to these words of life; he
+cherished the remembrance of them, and the eve of his baptism, he asked
+the Reverend Father to put them in writing that he might meditate upon
+them the rest of his days.... It was accomplished, the joys of earth
+were sacrificed to the glory of bearing the cross of Jesus Christ....
+He was initiated into heavenly secrets by reason of those favors the
+Immaculate Mary had conferred upon him.... He already felt the strength
+that God communicates to the soul, resolved to share the sorrows of its
+divine Master.</p>
+
+<p>Ten days elapsed between the happy moment of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>young Israelite's
+sudden comprehension of the truth, and his baptism. The Mother of Mercy
+had brought him from Heaven, the torch of Faith; in enlightening his
+intelligence, she had touched his heart; he sighed after the happy day,
+when the Church would admit him among the number of her children, and
+it was on the 31st of January, this tender Mother opened to him all
+her treasures, clothed him with innocence, called down upon him the
+plenitude of the gifts of the Spirit of love, and invited him to the
+banquet of Angels that she might give him the Bread of life.</p>
+
+<p>The G&eacute;su was the church selected for this solemn ceremony. Long before
+the appointed hour, it was filled with a devout, eager multitude, all
+anxious to get as near as possible to the holy altar. Nothing disturbed
+the beauty or serenity of the occasion, no cloud dimmed the brightness
+of this heavenly festival, which inundated truly Christian hearts with
+the purest joys.</p>
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne, clothed in the white robe of the catechumen, appeared
+about half-past eight, accompanied by the Reverend Father Villefort,
+(whose consoling duty it had been to prepare the neophyte for this
+beautiful day), and the Baron De Bussi&egrave;re, his god-father. They
+conducted him into the chapel of St. Andrew, where the touching
+ceremony was to take place. An object of the most profound curiosity,
+the fervent neophyte, wrapt in recollection, awaited with angelic
+serenity, the solemn moment.... The pious Romans gave vent to their
+feelings by words and gestures, kissing their chaplets in an effusion
+of grateful love for Mary Immaculate, the cause of our joy.... They
+pointed out one to another the zealous baron, whom divine Providence
+had chosen to give the Miraculous Medal to the young <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>Israelite. "He is
+a Frenchman," they repeated, "He is a Frenchman! Blessed be God!"</p>
+
+<p>His Eminence, the Cardinal Vicar, was to receive M. Ratisbonne's
+profession of Faith. He appeared at nine, clothed in his pontifical
+robes, and commenced the prayers prescribed for the baptism of adults.</p>
+
+<p>The prayers terminated, His Eminence went in procession with the
+clergy to the foot of the church; the young Israelite was conducted
+to his presence. "What do you ask of the Church of God?" "Faith,"
+was the immediate answer. "What name do you wish?" "Mary," said the
+neophyte, in a tone of tender gratitude; Mary, who had opened to him
+the path of salvation; Mary, who was to conduct him into the new life;
+Mary, who will one day introduce him into the City of the Saints,
+whence she descended to lead him to the divine fold.... Then followed
+his profession of Faith, his solemn promises.... He believes all,
+he promises all, he accepts all, he wishes to be a Christian, he is
+already one at heart.... His desires are gratified, the vivifying
+waters are poured upon his head, the grace of holy baptism has invested
+him with all the rights of his eternal heritage, the spirit of darkness
+is confounded. Behold the child of God, the brother of Jesus Christ,
+the new sanctuary of the Spirit of love, the favorite of the Queen of
+Heaven, the friend of Angels and the well-beloved son of Mother Church!</p>
+
+<p>It was on this occasion that the Abb&eacute; Dupanloup, who happened to be in
+Rome at the time, celebrated before an immense audience the infinite
+mercies of God and the Immaculate Mary's miraculous protection of a
+child of France. We cannot refrain from inserting here a few fragments
+of the account printed at Rome. It is well calculated to increase
+devotion to Mary:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"How admirable are the thoughts and ways of divine Providence, and how
+deplorable the lot of those who neither comprehend nor bless them. For
+such, the life of man is only a sad mystery, his days a fatal series
+of events, man himself a noble but miserable creature, cast far from
+Heaven upon this land of tears, to live here in perpetual darkness, to
+die in despair, oblivious of a God who heeds neither his virtues nor
+his sorrows.... But, no; Lord, Thou art not forgetful of us, and life
+is not thus; despite our infinite misery, thy Providence watches over
+us, it is far above the heavens, more boundless than the sea&mdash;it is an
+abyss of power, wisdom and love.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thou hast made us for Thyself, Lord, and our hearts are never at rest
+until they repose in Thee! We feel an insatiable need, which stirs the
+depths of our being, which consumes us, and when we yield to it, we
+inevitably find Thee!</p>
+
+<p>"I bless Thee especially, I adore Thee, when from the depths of Thy
+eternity, Thou dost remember compassionately the lowliness of our
+being, the dust of which we are fashioned; when from the heights of
+heaven, Thou dost cast a glance of pity and love upon the most humble
+of Thy children; when, according to the Prophet's expression, 'Thou
+dost move heaven and earth,' and work innumerable marvels to save those
+who are dear to Thee, to conquer one soul!</p>
+
+<p>"O, you, upon whom, at this moment, all eyes are bent with
+inexpressible emotion, with the tenderest love; for it is God, it is
+His mercy we love in you, in you whose presence in this holy place
+inspires these thoughts, tell us yourself what were your thoughts and
+ways, by what secret mercy the Lord pursued and reclaimed you?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
+<p>For who are you? What do you seek in this sanctuary? What are these
+honors you seem to bear? What is this white robe in which I see you
+clothed? Tell us whence you came and whither you were going? What
+obstacle has suddenly changed your course? For walking in the footsteps
+of Abraham, your ancestor, whose blessed son you are this day, like
+him, blindly obedient to the voice of God, not knowing whither your
+journey tends, you suddenly find yourself in the Holy City.... The
+Lord's work was not yet accomplished; but it is for you to describe
+to us the rising of the Sun of truth and justice upon your soul, for
+you to picture its brilliant aurora.... Tell us why you enjoy, like
+ourselves, perhaps more keenly than ourselves, the good word, the
+virtues of the future and all our most blessed hopes.... Tell us, for
+we have the right to know, why you enter into possession of our goods
+as your heritage? Who has introduced you among us, for yesterday we
+knew you not, or rather we knew you.... Oh! yes, I shall tell all; I
+know the joy that will fill your heart at my revealing your miseries as
+well as the celestial mercies.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You did not love the truth, but the truth loved you. To the purest and
+most ardent efforts of a zeal that sought to enlighten you, did you
+oppose a disdainful smile, an indifferent silence, a subtle response,
+a haughty firmness, and sometimes blasphemous pleasantries. O patient
+God! O God, who lovest us in spite of our miseries! Thy mercy has
+oftentimes a depth, a sublimity, a tenderness and, allow me to say it,
+a power and delicacy that are infinite!</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly a rumor is circulated throughout the Holy City, a rumor that
+consoles all Christian hearts, he who <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>blasphemed yesterday, who this
+morning even ridiculed the friends of God, has become a disciple of
+Christ; celestial grace has touched his lips, he utters now only words
+of benediction and sweetness, the most vivid lights of the evangelical
+law seem to beam from his eyes; we may say that a celestial unction has
+taught him all things. Whence does he receive this enlightenment of the
+eyes of the heart, that heart which sees all, which has understood all?
+O God! Thou art good, infinitely good, and I love to repeat those sweet
+words, so lately on the blessed lips of him, whose memory is henceforth
+ineffaceably impressed upon our hearts. We wept over him a few days
+ago, we still regret him, but we have dried our tears. 'Yes, Thou art
+good, and the children of men have truly called Thee the good God!'
+(Last words of M. de La Ferronays.) Thou dost set aside the laws of
+nature, Thou dost account nothing too much to save Thy children! When
+Thou dost not come Thyself, Thou dost send Thy angels!... O God! shall
+I here relate all? I ought to enjoin reserve upon my speech.... But
+who is she? <i>Quæ est ista?</i> I cannot say the word, and yet I cannot be
+silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Hail Mary! You are full of grace; <i>Ave, gratia plena</i>, and from the
+plentitude of your maternal heart, you love to bestow your gifts upon
+us. The Lord is with you, <i>Dominus tecum</i>, and it is through you He is
+pleased to descend to us! And now to praise you worthily, I must borrow
+the images of Heaven or speak the inflamed language of the prophets!
+For, O Mary! your name is sweeter than the purest joys, more delightful
+than the most exquisite perfumes, more charming than the harmony of
+angels, <i>in corde jubilus</i>; more refreshing to the faithful heart than
+honeycomb to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>wearied traveler, <i>mel in lingua</i>; more encouraging
+and cheering to the guilty but repentant heart than the evening dew to
+the leaves parched and shriveled by the mid-day sun, <i>ros in herba</i>.
+You are beautiful as the orb of night, <i>pulchra ut luna</i>; you, who
+guide the bewildered traveler; you are brilliant as the aurora, <i>aurora
+consurgens</i>; fair and pure as the morning star, <i>stella matutina</i>; and
+it is you who precede the dawn of the Sun of Justice in our hearts.</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary! I can never portray all your loveliness and grandeur, and
+it is my joy to succumb beneath the weight of so much glory! But
+since I speak in the midst of your children, your children who are my
+brothers, I shall continue to proclaim your praises from the depths of
+my heart's affection.... At your name, O Mary, Heaven rejoices, earth
+quivers with joy, hell fumes with impotent rage.... No, there is no
+creature so sublime or so humble, that invoking you, will perish. Those
+august basilicas, erected by the piety of mighty nations, those golden
+characters, those rich banners worked by royal hands, likewise the
+modest offerings of the sailor in your lowly chapels, in the crevices
+of the rock, on the shores of the sea, or even your humble picture
+which martyr's hands have traced upon the catacombs, all attest your
+power in appeasing the tempests of divine wrath, and attracting upon us
+heavenly benedictions.</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary, I have seen the most savage wilds of nature smile at your name
+and blossom into beauty; the pious inhabitants of the deserts celebrate
+your glory, the mountain echoes, the torrent billows, vie with one
+another in repeating your praises. I have seen great cities bring forth
+and cherish, under the shadow of your <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>name, the purest and most noble
+virtues. I have seen youth, with generous impulse, confident ardor, and
+the inexpressible charm of virtue irradiating its countenance, prefer
+your name and the happiness of celebrating your festivals to all the
+enchantments of the world and its most brilliant destinies! I have seen
+old men, after a godless life of sixty or eighty years, rise upon their
+couch of pain, to remember at the sound of your name the God who had
+blessed their early infancy; you were to them as a pledge of security
+and of peaceful entrance into the Eternal City! O Mary, who are you
+then? <i>Quæ est ista?</i> You are the Mother of our Saviour, and Jesus, the
+fruit of your womb, is the God blessed from all eternity. You are our
+Sister, <i>soror nostra es</i>; though a child of Adam like ourselves, you
+have not participated in our sad heritage, and our woes excite your
+deepest and most tender compassion.</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary! you are the masterpiece of the Divine power! You are the most
+touching invention of God's goodness! I could not say more&mdash;you are the
+sweetest smile of His mercy! O God, give eyes to those who have them
+not&mdash;eyes that they may see Mary and understand the beautiful light
+of her maternal glance; and to those who have no heart give one, that
+they may love Mary; for from Mary to the Word Eternal, to the Beauty
+ever ancient and ever new, to that uncreated Light which strengthens
+the feeble sight and appeases every desire of our souls, from Mary to
+Jesus, from the Mother to the Son, there is but a step!&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Our dearly beloved brother&mdash;and I am happy to be the first to call
+you thus&mdash;behold under what favorable auspices you enter this new
+Jerusalem, the tabernacle of the Lord, 'the Church of the living God,
+which is the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>pillar and ground of truth. But before delivering your
+heart to these emotions of joy, there is one severe lesson it should
+learn this day; and since I am destined to be the first to announce to
+you the words of the Gospel, I shall conceal from you nothing of the
+austerity it inculcates. 'You have understood all,' you say; but let me
+ask if you have understood the mystery of the cross. Ah! be careful,
+for it is the foundation of Christianity. I speak now not only of that
+blessed cross which you lovingly adore, because it places before your
+eyes Jesus crucified in expiation of your sins, but borrowing the
+emphatic language of an ancient apologist of our Faith, I shall say to
+you: 'This is no question of the cross that is sweet for you to adore,
+but of the cross to which you must soon submit.' <i>Ecce cruces jam non
+adorandæ, sed subeundæ.</i> Behold what you must understand if you are a
+Christian and what baptism must disclose to you!... Moreover, in vain
+would I endeavor to dissimulate the truth, by saying that your future
+may reveal no crosses; I see them in store for you. No doubt, we must
+venerate them afar off, but it is infinitely better to bend beneath
+their weight when laid upon us, and courageously carry them. I shall
+be mistaken, if the evangelic virtues are not increased and fortified
+in your soul by patience. And blessed be God for it! You have been
+introduced into Christianity through Mary and the Cross!... It is an
+admirable mode of introduction! And again I repeat, blessed be God for
+it! For I say to you, He has given you ears to hear and a heart to feel
+this language! Son of the Catholic Church you will share your Mother's
+destiny! Look at Rome, Rome where you have just been born into the
+Church; her heritage here below, is always to combat <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>and always to
+triumph. Moreover, nothing astonishes her; and after eighteen centuries
+of combats and victories, it is here, in the centre of Catholic unity,
+at the foot of the Apostolic See, that focus whence daily emanate the
+most vivid and purest rays of Faith, piercing the shades of paganism,
+error and Judaism, that the Church has poured over your forehead the
+beneficent water of celestial regeneration. What do I say? It is Peter
+himself, the Moses of the new law, worthily represented by the first
+Vicar of his august Successor, who has struck for you the mysterious
+rock, the immovable stone. <i>Petra erat Christus</i>, whence gush forth
+those waters springing up unto eternal life.</p>
+
+<p>"But I have said enough; I retard your happiness. Heaven, at this
+moment, regards you with love, the earth blesses you and Jesus Christ
+awaits you; go forward then; angels have commenced the feast, and the
+friends of God continue it with you here below! And even he who seems
+dead in our eyes, and whose heart is living in the hand of the Lord!
+you know him, his supplications and prayers have been poured forth in
+your behalf; the solemn moment has now arrived! Abraham, Isaac, Israel,
+the patriarchs and prophets from their heavenly abode encourage you,
+and Moses blesses you, because the law in your heart has developed into
+the Gospel; mercy and truth sustain you, justice and peace attend you,
+repentance and innocence crown you.... And finally, it is Mary who
+receives and protects you!</p>
+
+<p>"O Mary! it is a necessity and a duty for us to repeat once more
+this prayer, this cherished prayer, and I know that not one of all
+the multitude here assembled, but will fervently repeat it with me:
+'Remember, O most <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>pious Virgin Mary, that no one ever had recourse
+to thy protection, implored thy aid or sought thy mediation, without
+obtaining relief. Groaning under the weight of our sins, we come, O
+Virgin of virgins, to cast ourselves in thy arms, and do most humbly
+supplicate thee. O Mother of the Eternal Word, to remember the just,
+remember sinners, remember those who know thee, and those who know thee
+not; remember our woes and thy mercy.' I shall not say remember this
+young man, for he is thy child, the sweet and glorious conquest of thy
+love, but I shall say, remember all those dear ones for whom he offers
+this day, the first prayers of his Catholic heart; restore them to him
+in time and eternity.&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"And since I am a stranger here (no, let me recall my words, no one
+is a stranger in Rome, every Catholic is a Roman), but since we were
+both born on the soil of France, I think my prayers find an echo in the
+hearts of all who hear me, when I say: remember France, she is still
+the home of noble virtues, generous souls, heroic love.... Restore to
+the Church in France her pristine beauty."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>The Holy Sacrifice terminated the imposing ceremony. Our new Christian,
+overwhelmed beneath the weight of so many favors, had to be assisted
+to the Holy Table, where he received the Bread of Angels as the seal
+of his celestial alliance. Inundated with happiness, the tears gushed
+from his eyes, and after receiving, it was necessary to assist him
+to his place.... A number of pious Christians participated in the
+divine banquet, to which the Church so tenderly invites all her happy
+children, and the admirable spectacle of a blessed union with their new
+brother, was another edifying episode of this memorable day.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
+<p>The <i>Te Deum</i> which followed, that most fervent hymn of gratitude,
+arising from every heart and mingling with the sound of all the
+bells, was not less impressive. "I pray God," wrote a witness of this
+ceremony, "never to let the memory of what I experienced during these
+three hours be effaced from my heart; such an impression is, beyond
+doubt, one of the most precious graces a Christian soul can ever
+receive."</p>
+
+<p>Clothed with innocence, enriched with the gifts of Heaven, admitted
+to its joys, buried in the sweet transports of gratitude and love, M.
+Ratisbonne could not relinquish immediately his dear solitude. He had
+made one retreat, as a preparation for the reception of these three
+grand Sacraments, and he was filled with ineffable consolation; feeling
+now the necessity, the imperative duty of returning thanks to his
+Benefactor, he wished to commence a second retreat, so that afar from
+the world, he might be deaf to the confused noises of its frivolous
+joys, and amidst the silence of a sweet peace, celebrate the Lord's
+magnificence, chant hymns of gratitude, taste in secret and at leisure
+the gifts which had been imparted to him, and the new treasures he
+possessed.</p>
+
+<p>Another grand consolation was in store for him. He sighed after the
+happy moment when he could prostrate himself at the feet of the
+Sovereign Pontiff, and there testify his submission to and love for
+that holy Church who had just admitted him into the number of her
+cherished children. An audience was granted him. The two friends, M.
+Ratisbonne and the Baron de Bussi&egrave;re, were conducted into the presence
+of His Holiness by the reverend Father General of the Society of Jesus.
+Having bent the knee three times before the Vicar of Jesus Christ, they
+received in unison, that holy and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>desirable benediction, which many
+pious Christians esteem themselves happy in obtaining, after long and
+wearisome journeys. They were welcomed with truly paternal tenderness
+by the venerable Pontiff, who conversed some time with them, and loaded
+them with tokens of his favor. M. Ratisbonne knew not how to express
+his admiration for the great simplicity, humility and goodness of this
+worthy Successor of the Prince of the Apostles. "He was so exceedingly
+kind," has M. Ratisbonne told me several times since, "as to take
+us into his chamber, where he showed me near his bed, a magnificent
+picture of my dear medal, a picture for which he has the greatest
+devotion. I had procured quite a number of Miraculous Medals. His
+Holiness cheerfully blessed them for me, and these are the weapons I
+shall use in conquering souls for Jesus Christ and Mary."</p>
+
+<p>The Holy Father crowns all his favors, by presenting M. Ratisbonne
+a crucifix, a precious souvenir which the young Christian will ever
+cherish, clinging to it in his combats and his sorrows, as a weapon
+that must assure him the victory over hell. A new soldier of Jesus
+Christ, he needs no other arms than the cross and Mary Immaculate,
+signal protectors that will guide him in the ways of justice, and one
+day, usher him into the light of eternal felicity.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after his second retreat, M. Ratisbonne made preparations for
+his return to France, and bade adieu to the Holy City, though not
+without the sweet hope of again offering there his tribute of fervent
+thanksgiving. We have seen and conversed with him many times. The first
+emotions of a boundless and almost unparalled happiness are past,
+but the fruits remain; daily does the precious gift of Faith strike
+deeper root into this soul <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>regenerated by the waters of holy Baptism;
+and the divine life, which was communicated to him on the day of his
+baptism, our new brother nourishes by the frequent reception of the
+Holy Eucharist, and a withdrawal from all worldly society; for whilst
+awaiting the manifestations of the Lord's will in regard to his future,
+he feels the necessity of preserving, in the secrecy of a peaceful and
+recollected life, the treasures he has received.</p>
+
+<p>M. Ratisbonne's conversion, publicly styled a miracle, excited too much
+interest and comment for the Holy See to allow it to pass unnoticed.
+The Sovereign Pontiff ordered a canonical examination according to the
+rules of the Church. The Cardinal Vicar prescribed an investigation.
+Nine witnesses were examined; all the circumstances weighed, and
+after a favorable conclusion, the most eminent Cardinal Patrizzi,
+"pronounced and declared the 3d of June, 1842, that the instantaneous
+and perfect conversion of Alphonse Marie Ratisbonne, from Judaism to
+Catholicity, was a true and incontrovertible miracle, wrought by the
+most blessed and powerful God, through the intercession of the Blessed
+Virgin Mary. For the greater glory of God and the increase of devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin Mary, His Eminence deigns to permit the account
+of this signal miracle, not only to be printed and published but also
+authorized."&mdash;A picture commemorative of the apparition of the Blessed
+Virgin to M. Ratisbonne, a representation of the Virgin of the medal,
+was placed in the chapel of St. Andrew's Church, where the miracle had
+taken place.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after his return to France, M. Ratisbonne, in token of
+his gratitude, and with the intention of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>obtaining his family's
+conversion, felt urged to erect a chapel under the invocation of Mary
+Immaculate, in the Providence orphanage of the Faubourg St. Germain,
+Paris. The laying of the corner stone took place May 1st, 1842, and
+the sanctuary was finished and dedicated May 1st, 1844, with great
+solemnity, in the presence of the founder of the house, M. Desgenettes,
+cur&eacute; of Notre Dame des Victoires, the Baron de Bussi&egrave;re, M. &Eacute;tienne,
+Superior General of the Priests of the Mission and daughters of
+Charity, M. Eug&egrave;ne Bor&eacute;, then a simple layman, but afterwards M.
+&Eacute;tienne's immediate successor, the abb&eacute; de Bonnechose, later an
+Archbishop and Cardinal, and many other distinguished persons.</p>
+
+<p>The pious convert often repaired to this sanctuary to mingle his
+prayers with those of the Daughters of Charity and their dear orphans;
+and many times has he also enjoyed the ineffable consolation of
+celebrating the Holy Sacrifice and thanking his celestial Benefactress,
+before the beautiful picture of the Immaculate Conception placed above
+the high altar, as a souvenir of the miracle of St. Andrew delle
+Fratte, for M. Ratisbonne is now a priest. Not content with leading a
+pious life in the world, he has renounced forever the joys and hopes
+of time to embrace the ecclesiastical state, which consecrated him
+unreservedly to God. For several years past he has been associated with
+his beloved brother Theodore in the order of Our Lady of Sion, the
+object of which congregation is the conversion of Israelites.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
+<p class="label1 center">V.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>Graces Obtained from 1843 to 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF A LITTLE GIRL (PARIS)&mdash;1843.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>This account was sent us in the month of January, 1877, by the very
+person who was cured:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"About the 15th of December, 1843, a little girl, Z&eacute;nobie de M., just
+one year old, was attacked, at the same time, by water on the chest, a
+disease of the bowels, and cerebral congestion. Dr. Flandrin, a friend
+of the family was called in immediately, and gave the child every
+attention, but his skill was powerless, and the family was plunged in
+the deepest grief. The child's eldest sister alone cherished a faint
+hope in the depths of her heart; she had intended consecrating herself
+to God in a religious state, and had always regarded the birth of this
+little one as a gift of Providence, sent to take her place in the
+family, and console her afflicted parents. God will not, she thought,
+take back the child. In her room was a picture representing the
+apparition of the Miraculous Medal; she knelt before it, begging the
+child's recovery, and renewing her promises of embracing a religious
+life should the petition be granted. This generous offering she kept
+a secret. A little while after, the doctor came and declared the
+child's case hopeless, and moreover, its recovery not desirable as
+it would remain imbecile, paralyzed or blind. He proposed, however,
+a consultation with M. Blache, physician of the Necker hospital, who
+prescribed energetic treatment, but said, 'this child cannot live.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
+<p>The poor mother, deeming it inadvisable to cause the little creature
+unnecessary suffering, gently laid it in the cradle, saying with the
+faith and resignation seen in none but a Christian mother: 'The Lord
+gave it to me, the Lord wishes to take it away, may His holy will be
+accomplished!' In the afternoon, one of the aunts came to accompany
+the elder sister to church, and whilst their prayers ascended to the
+Most High, more for the mother than the child, this mother obeys
+spontaneously a supernatural impulse, and taking the Miraculous Medal
+as a last hope, she applies it to the body of the child, and repeats
+with confidence the invocation: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray
+for us who have recourse to thee!' The plaintive cries ceased, and
+when M. Flandrin came that evening to see if the little one were still
+alive, he was greatly surprised to perceive a faint improvement since
+morning, the whole body covered with a gentle perspiration, and the
+little paralyzed arm able to move in any direction. 'But what a pity,'
+said he, 'the child will be blind,' which indeed it seemed to be
+already, as a light passed several times before its eyes produced no
+effect whatever.</p>
+
+<p>"The mother who had not yet mentioned her secret, waited until all
+had left the room, then taking her dear medal, she lay it upon her
+infant's eyes and repeated the invocation. After a sound sleep of about
+twenty-four hours, little Z&eacute;nobie awoke, recognizing all around her,
+and smiling upon all, her sight was restored!</p>
+
+<p>"The child's father, penetrated with faith and piety, said: 'Assuredly,
+God alone has restored our child to us; henceforth, she shall be
+called Marie, that she may ever bear in mind to whom she is indebted
+for life.' An attack of measles now supervened and finished the work,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>according to the doctor, by absorbing the water on the brain, and
+throwing out upon the surface of the skin the heretofore internal
+malady. A small gold cross, having engraven upon it the memorable date
+of this miraculous cure, was hung around the neck of little Marie, who
+is now a Daughter of St. Vincent de Paul."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A CAPTAIN IN THE AUSTRIAN ARMY.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1860:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>After the war in Italy, a Polish regiment passed through Gratz; the
+captain, attacked by a violent hemorrhage, was obliged to stop at the
+general hospital, in charge of the Daughters of Charity. Their constant
+and unremitting attentions did not retard the progress of the disease,
+and his life was in imminent danger.</p>
+
+<p>Full of consideration, gratitude and politeness for those who nursed
+him, he nevertheless expressed great displeasure whenever they
+approached him on the subject of religion; he had requested to be
+spared the visits of the chaplain of the regiment, and as to the
+hospital chaplain, he dared not present himself. It was necessary
+to keep the patient very quiet, and avoid all worry, for the least
+excitement might cause a mortal hemorrhage.</p>
+
+<p>A Sister, who had been watching by his couch one night, left, in
+mistake, a little book containing an account of favors obtained through
+the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The sick man took the book and read
+a few pages; another Sister coming into his room, he showed her a
+passage, and said, putting his hand to his forehead with a significant
+gesture: "Here, Sister, just read this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>nonsense; as for myself, I
+cannot understand how any one can write such books&mdash;if I may dare, let
+me beg you to take this away."</p>
+
+<p>Vain was every effort to reach his heart by pleasant distractions,
+by engaging his attention or his interest; he was insensible to all.
+A few days after the occurrence just mentioned, a Sister ventured to
+offer him a medal of the Blessed Virgin suspended to a cord, so that he
+might wear it if he wished. He was too polite to refuse the present,
+but he let it remain just where the Sister had put it. His servant,
+though a devout Christian, dared not speak to him of receiving the
+Sacraments, and, although the patient expected to leave the hospital
+soon, it was very evident to all else that the fever was daily sapping
+his strength and rapidly conducting him to the tomb. Much grieved at
+his condition, and especially his impenitence, the Sisters determined
+to make one last effort to save this soul. And what was it? They wrote
+the Blessed Virgin a note, as follows: "Grant that, by some means, most
+holy Mother, he may accept your medal, prepare him yourself to receive
+the Sacraments, and assist him at the hour of death. O Mary! conceived
+without sin, pardon our temerity, we attach this note to your statue,
+and leave it there till you deign to hear our prayers."</p>
+
+<p>The chief physician of the hospital said, one day, to the Sister
+on leaving this patient's room: "The captain will die without the
+Sacraments, he seems inflexible." "Oh! as to that," she replied, "the
+Blessed Virgin will not fail to overcome his obstinacy." Three or four
+days elapsed; one morning the sick man requested the Sister to put the
+medal around his neck, which she did most joyfully. In the afternoon,
+he called her again: <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>"Sister," said he, "I beg you to send for the
+chaplain of my regiment to hear my confession, so that to-morrow I may
+receive the Holy Eucharist and Extreme Unction." The worthy priest
+was happy to answer the summons; he remained a long time with the
+sick man, and next morning, after celebrating Mass at the altar of
+the Immaculate Conception, he administered to him the Holy Viaticum
+and Extreme Unction. We were all edified at the dying man's piety. He
+cherished his medal with religious fidelity, often asking for it and
+kissing it tenderly. A few days after receiving the Last Sacraments, he
+rendered his soul to God, saved, as we have every reason to hope, by
+the intercession of Mary conceived without sin.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A HARDENED SINNER.</span></p>
+
+<p>A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity at Issoudun,
+1862:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>In the month of August, 1862, a young man aged twenty-nine, and who
+had been married several years, was dying of consumption. Vainly did
+his friends endeavor to turn his thoughts to eternity; every idea of
+religion seemed extinguished in his heart, and he positively refused
+to see the priest. A pious acquaintance informed the Sisters of his
+deplorable state; one of them went immediately to see him. She met
+with a cool reception, but was not the least disconcerted, and spoke
+to him very kindly, proposing to send him a physician, and adding,
+that she would supply all necessary medicines and nourishment. "I need
+neither doctors nor medicines," was the reply, "I am going to die, and
+I ask <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>only that you will let me die in peace." His poor wife, who
+was present, holding their little child in her arms, said to him with
+tears: "Accept Sister's offer, and perhaps you will recover," but he
+made no answer; and the Sister now turning to his wife, endeavored to
+console her, by promising to send the doctor and return soon herself.
+The doctor came and met with no better reception. In a few days the
+Sister presented herself again, and was received as before, all her
+advances eliciting no response save a frigid silence; but naught
+discouraged, she returned day after day, though her reception was
+always the same. As the young man grew worse, the Sister's prayers
+increased, and she felt inspired to offer him a medal of the Immaculate
+Conception, still hoping that the good God would lead back to the fold,
+this poor strayed sheep. "I accept a medal!" he exclaimed vehemently,
+"and what do you wish me to do with it? It would suit my wife or child
+well enough, but as for myself, I want no medals!" The Sister withdrew
+from the contest for the time, but not discouraged, she returned to the
+charge next morning. "Ah," said she pleasantly, "you are going to take
+the medal to-day?" "You know what I told you yesterday," he answered,
+"besides, Sister, I am afraid of becoming imbued with your sentiments
+should I accept it, for I perceive that you are much more unhappy
+than I care about being." A ray of happiness illumined the Sister's
+countenance, for she knew that he who fears is already conquered.
+After plying her with questions about religion, he concluded thus:
+"After all, death will be a great relief to me; I have twice made an
+unsuccessful attempt at committing suicide. I suffer so much that I
+desire nothing but to die as soon possible." Next day, the Sister asked
+her Superioress to visit him <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>and offer him the medal. She did so,
+and he not only accepted it, but at last consented to see the priest.
+When our Sister next saw him he was completely changed, and expressed
+his joy at the priest's visit, and his desire of seeing him soon
+again. "Sister," said he, "I am too miserable, I wish to be like you."
+The priest did not delay his second coming, and the poor, suffering
+creature, having made his confession, asked for Holy Communion,
+which he had not received for many years, but this favor was denied
+him, his throat being so inflamed that he could swallow only a few
+drops of liquid. His last days were sanctified by the most admirable
+resignation; no one ever heard him utter a complaint, he asked for one
+thing only, the visits of the priest and Sister, which alone seemed to
+afford him any consolation. And on the Feast of All Saints, evincing
+every mark of a sincere conversion, he breathed his last.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A MALEFACTOR.</span></p>
+
+<p>A Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland)&mdash;1865:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>There was brought to our hospital, a young man of notoriously bad
+character. He entered our doors blaspheming, and as the physician had
+told the Sister that he had but a few days to live, she essayed a few
+words of piety and consolation, to turn his attention to the state
+of his soul; but he answered her by maledictions. At last, one day
+she said to him, "My friend, since you will not listen to me, I will
+ask my Superioress herself to come." "Let her come," was his reply,
+"if she were to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>tell me to hang myself, I would obey her, but as for
+confession, she may talk about that as much as she pleases, I shall
+never yield." These words were followed by so many blasphemies, that
+it was with a very heavy heart the poor Sister sought her Superioress.
+"Have you given him a medal?" said the latter. "A medal!" was the
+reply, "he would throw it away." "Ah, well, we must put one under his
+pillow and trust to prayer, for it is useless to talk to him; tell him
+only that I say he is not worthy of going to confession, and I forbid
+his doing so."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the Sister who was nursing him left the presence of her
+Superioress, the latter threw herself upon her knees and began to
+repeat that beautiful prayer, the <i>Remember</i>. In a very few minutes the
+Sister returned, this time shedding tears of joy. "Ah, Sister," said
+she, "he wishes to confess; as soon as I had put the medal under his
+pillow and recited the <i>Remember</i> for him, I delivered your message."
+"Indeed!" said he, rising from his seat, "Well, I would just like
+to see the person that could prevent it; tell your Superioress that
+to-morrow morning at eight o'clock, I am going to pay the cur&eacute; a visit."</p>
+
+<p>The Sisters felt a little troubled concerning a confession apparently
+dictated by the spirit of contradiction, but their fears were
+dissipated when the penitent returned bathed in tears. He had just been
+to Holy Communion; asking the Sisters' pardon for his past misconduct,
+he begged them to implore the Blessed Virgin to let him live eight days
+longer, that he might weep for his sins. This favor was granted him,
+and daily did he bedew his pillow with tears. At the end of the eight
+days he died, blessing God, and pressing the medal to his lips.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF AN ACTRESS.</span></p>
+
+<p>A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland), 1865:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Some years ago, a young Protestant woman, belonging to a troupe of
+comedians, arrived in Beuthen with her company. The good God permitted
+that she should find lodgings in a Catholic family, with whom she soon
+essayed a controversy. "Mademoiselle," said the master of the house,
+"it would be better for you to go see the Sisters about these things;
+the Blessed Virgin has wrought wonders in their establishments, I am
+sure you would return fully enlightened on the subject you have been
+discussing." The young girl laughed at such a proposition; but a few
+days after, impelled by curiosity, she repaired to the hospital and
+asked for the Sister-Servant. "Invite her in," said the latter, who had
+already heard of the young actress; "no doubt, the Blessed Virgin has
+something in store for her here." After a few formalities of etiquette,
+our visitor introduced the subject of religion, and attempted to enter
+into a controversy with the Sister. "Alas! Mademoiselle," replied
+the latter, "the poor Daughters of Charity have neither the time nor
+learning necessary for a discussion of these subtle questions, but
+they have other arms with which to vanquish you;" and, smiling, she
+presented her disputant a little medal of the Blessed Virgin. "Promise
+me to wear this slight souvenir, it will be a constant reminder that we
+are praying for you." She allowed the Sister to put the medal on her
+neck, and retired rather pleased with her visit.</p>
+
+<p>From this day, the Sisters at the hospital began to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>recommend
+the young actress to Mary conceived without sin. Not many weeks
+after, the cur&eacute; said to the Sister-Servant: "Do you know, Sister,
+that Mademoiselle M., who spent the most of her time promenading
+with gentlemen and smoking cigars, now comes to me for religious
+instruction? In a little while she will make her abjuration." And,
+indeed, it was not very long before she repaired to the hospital.
+"Sister," said she to the Sister-Servant, "I am going to confession
+to-day, and to-morrow I make my First Communion. On my first visit
+here, I was enraged at you. I could have fought you, and cast to the
+winds this medal that I now kiss. From the very moment you put it on my
+neck, an unaccountable change was wrought in me." Next day, the church
+was filled with Protestants and Jews, all anxious to witness a ceremony
+which had excited so much comment. After her reception into the Church,
+the young convert, on the eve of her departure, paid another visit to
+the Sister Servant, and the latter saw by her very countenance what
+great changes grace had wrought in this soul. "Well," said the Sister,
+just to try her, "here is a silver medal to replace yours which has
+become very black." "Oh, no," was the earnest, prompt reply, as she
+tenderly pressed her own medal, "I would not exchange this for any
+other in the world, for it is since I began to wear it my soul has
+awaked to a new life."</p>
+
+<p>Some years later, the Sister received a letter dated from Rome, it
+was from the young convert, who wrote to her as follows: "Sister,
+Providence has led me to Rome, and it is no longer Mlle. M. you must
+address, but Sister St.&mdash;&mdash; of the B. convent. Your desires are
+accomplished; I now belong entirely to God, as I once did to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>the
+world; the Blessed Virgin vanquishes souls with other arms than those
+of controversy."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>We must add, to the praise of the young actress, that her moral
+character was always irreproachable.</p>
+
+<p>The Superioress of the hospital at Beuthen, in narrating these facts,
+adds: "I could mention, for the greater glory of God and honor of the
+Immaculate Mary, numberless incidents of this kind, but lack of time
+and my weak eyes prevent my giving the details. I will say, however,
+and that without the slightest exaggeration, that not a week passes
+but the Blessed Virgin bestows upon our patients at the hospital some
+new proof of her maternal bounty. The medal, so dear to us, is really
+miraculous, and the instrument by which we snatch from destruction
+souls that have cost Our Lord so much. Ah! how numberless, in this
+unhappy land, the snares of the enemy of our salvation to entrap souls;
+but to vanquish him, I everywhere circulate the Miraculous Medal (you
+know what numbers we get), and my confidence in Mary is never deceived."</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A PROMINENT FREE MASON.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>New Orleans (United States), 1865.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>Among the patients at the great Charity hospital, New Orleans, was a
+very prominent Free Mason. His hatred of religion was displayed in a
+thousand ways; not only did he interdict the Sister who nursed him any
+allusion to his salvation, but he even habitually repaid by harsh and
+injurious words her kindness and attention to his physical sufferings.
+If others ventured to mention the subject of religion to him, they
+were received <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>with jeers and banters. Several times was he at the
+point of death, and yet, sad to relate, his dispositions remained the
+same. At last, when the Sister saw that he had but a few hours to live,
+she stealthily slipped a Miraculous Medal under his bolster, and said
+interiorly to the Blessed Virgin: "My dear Mother, you know I have
+spared no effort to touch this poor man's heart, but in vain; now I
+abandon him to you, it is you who must save him; I leave him entirely
+in your hands, and shall try to divest myself of all anxiety concerning
+him." That evening, in making her rounds, she glances at him and learns
+from the infirmarian that ever since her (the Sister's) last visit, he
+had been very calm and apparently absorbed in thought. On inquiring
+of the patient himself how he felt, she was astonished at his polite
+answer, but remembering that she had entrusted him entirely to the
+Blessed Virgin's care, she did not venture a word about his soul, and
+bidding him good night, she left the room.</p>
+
+<p>About nine o'clock, he called the infirmarian, and asked for a priest;
+knowing his former bitterness, the infirmarian thought it a joke and
+treated it accordingly; the patient repeated his request, but with no
+better success. Then he began to weep and cry aloud for a priest; all
+the other patients were mute with astonishment, and the infirmarian
+unable to resist such entreaties went for the chaplain and the Sister.
+The dying man requested Baptism, which was administered immediately, as
+well as Extreme Unction, and before morning he had rendered his account
+to the Sovereign Judge. His body was interred with Masonic rites, but
+his soul, thanks to the powerful protection of Mary Immaculate, had
+been carried by angels to the bosom of its God.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A SICK PROTESTANT.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>New Orleans (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>At the same hospital in New Orleans, a Sister for a long time had
+vainly endeavored to convince a Protestant of the most essential
+truths of religion, that he might receive Baptism, but he was deaf
+to all her persuasions. One day she showed him a Miraculous Medal,
+and related its origin. He appeared to listen somewhat attentively,
+but when she offered it to him, "Take it away," said he, in a tone of
+great contempt, "this Virgin is no more than any other woman." "I am
+going to leave it on your table," was the Sister's reply, "I am sure
+you will reflect on my words." He said nothing, but to put it out
+of sight, placed his bible over it. Every day, under the pretext of
+arranging and dusting his room, the Sister assured herself that the
+medal was still there. Several days elapsed, during which the patient
+grew worse; one night, whilst lying awake racked with suffering, he
+perceived a brilliant light around his bed, though the rest of the
+room was enveloped in darkness. Greatly astonished, he succeeded, in
+spite of his weakness, in rising and turning up the gas, to discover
+if possible, the cause of this mysterious light. Finding none, he
+returned to bed, and a few minutes after, he perceived that the
+luminous rays escaped from the medal. He then took it in his hands,
+and kept it there the remainder of the night. As soon as the Sisters'
+rising bell rang (which was four o'clock), he called the infirmarian,
+and begged him to tell the Sister he desired Baptism. The chaplain
+was immediately informed. "Impossible!" he exclaimed, for having had
+frequent conversations with the sick <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>man, he was well aware of his
+sentiments, and could scarcely believe him in earnest. Nevertheless, he
+obeyed the summons, and finding the patient really disposed to profit
+by his ministry, he administered the Last Sacraments, and shortly after
+receiving which the poor man died, blessing God and the Blessed Virgin
+for the graces bestowed upon him.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT GIRL.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>New Orleans, (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A poor young Protestant girl, brought to our hospital to be treated for
+a grave malady, had so great a horror of our holy religion, that at the
+very sight of a Catholic near her, she acted like one possessed. The
+presence of a Sister was especially irritating, and one day she even
+went so far as to spit in the Sister's face, but the latter, nothing
+dismayed, and ever hoping that the God of all mercy would change this
+wolf into a lamb, continued her kind attentions, the more disrespectful
+her patient, the more gentle and considerate the Sister. The latter
+was at last inspired with the thought of slipping a Miraculous Medal
+between the two mattresses; she acted upon the inspiration, and the
+following night the Immaculate Mary's image became an instrument of
+salvation and happiness to a guilty soul. Pitching and tossing upon
+her bed by reason of a high fever, the patient, in some unaccountable
+manner, found the medal, and the Sister's astonishment next morning
+at seeing her clasping it in her hands, and covering it with kisses,
+was second only to that she experienced on perceiving the wonderful
+transformation grace had wrought in this poor creature's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>soul. A
+supernatural light had revealed to her the sad state of her conscience;
+her criminal life filled her with horror, and, penetrated with regret
+for the past, she sighed only for holy Baptism. After the necessary
+instruction, she was baptized; and, during the remainder of her
+sickness, which was long and tedious, her patience and fervor never
+faltered. She persevered in these edifying sentiments, until a happy
+death placed the seal upon the graces she had received through the
+intercession of Mary Immaculate.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>New Orleans (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A Protestant gentleman had spent four years at the hospital, sometimes
+in one hall, sometimes another. As his malady had not been very
+serious, no one had considered it necessary to speak to him concerning
+his soul. However, when his condition became more aggravated, the
+Sister, after invoking the Blessed Virgin's assistance, told him the
+physician considered his case dangerous, and she thought he ought to
+receive Baptism, without which no one could be saved. He listened
+attentively, then turning to her, said: "Sister, if I were to ask you
+to become a Protestant, would you comply with my request?" "No," was
+the decided answer. "Well, then," he continued, "rest assured that
+it is just as useless for you to attempt persuading me to become a
+Catholic."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of this positive refusal, she let no occasion pass without
+enlightening him, were it ever so little, upon some of the truths of
+religion. One day, showing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>him a Miraculous Medal, she told him he
+would confer a great favor on her by reciting the little invocation: "O
+Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+"What, Sister! a Catholic prayer! that is impossible, I cannot!" She
+said no more, but slipped the medal under his pillow, and there it
+remained untouched for several days, during which time she redoubled
+her attentions to the physical necessities of the poor patient, who
+gradually grew weaker. At last, one evening she said to him: "Well,
+Henry, are you not going to do what I asked you?" "Yes, Sister, I
+most earnestly desire to become a Catholic." The chaplain was called
+immediately; he had barely time to administer Baptism and Extreme
+Unction, ere the dying man's regenerated soul was carried by angels to
+the abode of the blessed.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A YOUNG METHODIST.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>St. Louis (United States), 1865.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A young man, a Methodist, arrived at the hospital in an extremely weak
+condition. The physician at once pronounced his case hopeless, and said
+he had but a few days to live. Consequently, the Sister's first care
+was for his soul. Questioning him, she soon learned that he believed
+neither in the efficacy nor necessity of Baptism, and all her efforts
+to induce him to receive this Sacrament were unavailing. He had no
+desire for any conversation on the subject, and his invariable reply to
+all her arguments was: "I believe in Jesus, that suffices; I am sure
+of being saved." The Sister redoubled her prayers, for in them lay her
+only hope, and time was <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>precious. A good priest visited him every
+day; once, after a much longer visit than usual, he told the Sister on
+leaving the room it was impossible to do anything with that man, unless
+God wrought a miracle in his favor, and they must entreat Him to do
+so. The poor man persisted, indeed, in refusing all spiritual succor,
+though receiving gratefully the attentions bestowed upon his body.
+His strength diminished day by day, and he calmly awaited death; one
+thought alone disquieted him, that of never seeing his mother and dying
+afar from her. Perceiving himself on the brink of the grave, he called
+one of his companions whom he begged to be with him at that fearful
+moment, and write the particulars of it to his mother. Whilst he made
+this request, the Sister slipped a Miraculous Medal under his pillow,
+confidently believing that Mary would not let this soul entrusted to
+her perish; yet he was already in his agony. Two Sisters watched beside
+his bed till midnight, when obliged to retire, they left him in charge
+of an infirmarian and the young man who had promised to be with him
+at the hour of death. Apparently he had not more than half an hour to
+live, so next morning when the infirmarian came to meet the Sister, she
+was prepared for news of the patient's death, but to her astonishment
+the infirmarian exclaimed: "Come Sister, come see him, he is restored
+to life!" He then told her that the patient, to all appearances, had
+been dead an hour; that the friend and himself had rendered all the
+last duties to the body, having washed and dressed and prepared it
+for the grave; then the young man went to bed, and he alone remained
+with the corpse. After watching near it some time, he approached to
+bandage the jaws, but what was his fright <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>whilst thus engaged, to
+see the dead man open his eyes! The Sister heard no more, but eagerly
+hastened to the spot, and found the man still breathing. With a great
+effort he said: "Oh! what a blessing that you have come!" In reply,
+she exhorted him to receive Baptism, and told him that he was indebted
+to the Blessed Virgin for this prolongation of his life. "I wish to be
+baptized," said he, and when the Sister replied that the priest would
+come, "Oh! that will be too late!" was his pitiful answer. The other
+patients now joined their entreaties to his, and the Sister, after
+reciting aloud the acts of faith, hope, charity and contrition, which
+the dying man endeavored to repeat, with hands clasped and eyes raised
+to Heaven, baptized him. Whilst the regenerating waters flowed upon his
+soul, transports of love and thanksgiving escaped his lips. Half an
+hour later, he closed his eyes, never to open them here below. All that
+the infirmarian related of his first death, was confirmed in the most
+positive manner, by the Protestant friend who had assisted in preparing
+him for the grave.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF M. F</span>&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>St. Louis, (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A Protestant named F&mdash;&mdash; was brought to our hospital in an advanced
+stage of consumption. He detested the Catholic religion most heartily,
+and received the Sisters' services with extreme repugnance. His
+physical strength diminished perceptibly, but his mind retained its
+energy and clearness. By degrees, the odor escaping from his decayed
+lungs, became so intolerable that all abandoned him. M. Burke, a
+missionary priest and the Sisters, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>being the only persons who had
+the courage to go near him, and pay any attention to his comfort.
+Yet neither priest nor Sister dare mention religion. They contented
+themselves with putting a Miraculous Medal under his pillow, and
+invoking her, who so often deigns to display her power in favor of
+those who deny it. She did not delay in granting their petition. A few
+days later, as the Protestant minister left the ward, after making his
+usual distribution of tracts, the sick man said to the Sister, "Sister,
+it is done; I am converted." "Ah," said the latter interiorly, "our
+good Mother has accomplished her work." And it was indeed true; for the
+patient requested a priest, was instructed, and in a few days received
+the Sacraments of Baptism, the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction,
+with inexpressible fervor. The very expression of his countenance was
+changed; the happiness that inundated his heart beaming from every
+feature. "Ah!" said he, "my sufferings are great, but I feel that
+I am going to Heaven; the truth has made me free." In these happy
+dispositions, he expired, promising that in heaven he would pray for
+all who had been instruments of his conversion.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF AN UNBAPTIZED PATIENT.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>St. Louis, (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A patient brought to the hospital in a hopeless condition, openly
+manifested his hatred of Catholicity. Yet, as he was in imminent
+danger of death, the Sister, profiting by a moment in which he seemed
+a little better disposed than usual, ventured to ask him if he would
+be baptized; he answered roughly, "No, that he scarcely <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>believed
+in baptism, and not at all in Catholic baptism, that in case of his
+recovery, perhaps he would receive baptism by immersion, and become a
+member of some church, but that would never be the Catholic Church."
+"At any rate," added he, "I am not going to torment myself now about
+such things." The poor Sister having no other resource than the Blessed
+Virgin, and seeing that the young man approached his end, stealthily
+slipped a medal under his pillow. Next morning it was picked up by the
+infirmarian, who, thinking the Sister had dropped it accidentally,
+was about to return it, but the patient opposed him; the little image
+pleased his fancy, and he wanted to keep it himself. To quiet him, the
+infirmarian was obliged to ask Sister if the patient might have it.
+The request was granted. Towards evening some one came to the Sister
+with a message from the patient, he wished to see her. "Sister," said
+he as soon as she approached, "you have told me I could not be saved
+without Baptism; let me be baptized, for I wish to be saved." Filled
+with joy at this news, she began to instruct and prepare him for the
+ceremony. It took place next morning, and during the course of the
+day, this soul, now the child of God, went to repose in the bosom of
+its celestial Father, to bless and thank Him for all eternity for His
+mercies.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A YOUNG GIRL.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Buffalo (United States).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A young Protestant girl about twenty years of age came to the hospital,
+covered from head to foot with a disgusting itch, which the physician
+pronounced incurable. The Sister who dressed her sores, told her that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>the Blessed Virgin could obtain her recovery, and would do so, if
+she wore the medal and relied upon the Blessed Virgin's intercession.
+The poor girl knowing her case was deemed hopeless by the physician,
+answered bluntly: "I do not believe in your Blessed Virgin, and I want
+no medal." "Very well," replied the Sister, "then you may keep your
+sores." A few days after she asked for a medal herself, put it on her
+neck, received instruction and was baptized, and in a short time she
+left the hospital perfectly cured, greatly to the astonishment of the
+physicians, who had all pronounced her malady incurable.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A SINNER.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Hospital of Gratz (Austria).</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>An artist whose life had been far from edifying, was an inmate of
+our hospital. One morning the Sister was greatly surprised at his
+expressing a desire to confess. Perceiving her astonishment, he said:
+"This morning, Sister, the chapel door was slightly open, and from
+my bed I could see the Blessed Virgin's statue." (It was that of the
+Immaculate Conception.) "It appealed so strongly to my heart, that I
+have had no peace since. I must put my conscience in order." He did
+go to confession, not once, but several times, and he often expressed
+great regret for his past life. "Ah!" he would say, "what a life I have
+led, and how sad the state of my soul when Mary came to my aid." When
+asked what he supposed had attracted Mary's compassion, he answered:
+"I was merely looking at the statue, no thought of religion was in my
+mind; when suddenly, recollections of my past life filled me with fear,
+and Mary <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>at the same time inspired me with a horror for sin." In this
+instance, repentance and reparation were the immediate consequences of
+the Immaculate Mary's merciful and maternal glance.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A GREEK SCHISMATIC.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Hospital of Gratz (Austria.)</i><br /></p>
+<blockquote>
+<p>A Greek schismatic, attacked by a mortal malady, was brought to the
+hospital. He declared his intention of remaining attached to the
+errors in which he had been educated, and the Sisters, seeing his
+determination, entrusted him to the Blessed Virgin, consecrating him
+to her by placing under his pillow a medal, which for him proved truly
+miraculous. One day, a Franciscan Father visited the sick, and the
+young man asked the Sister to bring the good Father to see him. He
+conversed a long time with the latter, but manifested no intention
+of becoming a Catholic. Meanwhile, he grew worse, and, one day, when
+taken with a hemorrhage, he asked for this Father, "because," said he,
+"I wish to embrace the Catholic religion." The Sister was surprised,
+for she had said nothing to persuade him, but the Blessed Virgin had
+accomplished her work without earthly assistance. He confessed and made
+his abjuration; he even requested the Reverend Father to announce, in
+a loud voice, to the other patients that he entered the Church of his
+own free will. His attacks of vomiting made the priest hesitate to
+give him the Holy Viaticum, but he insisted so strongly, and had so
+ardent a desire to receive, that the good God permitted these spells of
+vomiting to become less frequent, so that he could make <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>his first and
+last Communion at the same time, which he did with inexpressible fervor
+and consolation. Interrogated on the subject of his conversion, he
+answered: "For a long time I felt that everything earthly was of little
+value, and I sought for the true and lasting." During the delirium
+of his last moments, he spoke continually of a white robe. The grace
+of Baptism had clothed his soul in spotless raiment, and to Mary's
+intercession was he indebted for it.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF AN APOSTATE.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Austria, 1866.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>In one of the prisons confided to the care of the Daughters of Charity,
+was a young man belonging to a respectable Catholic family, whose shame
+and disgrace he had become. After a short stay, he fell sick, and
+his condition necessitated removal to the infirmary; faithful to his
+principles of impiety, he absolutely refused all spiritual succor, and
+whenever he saw one of the chaplains pass, he either turned away his
+head or concealed it under the bedclothes. All the Sisters begged the
+Superioress to make one last effort for his soul. She paid him a visit,
+and was received politely, but to rid himself of her importunity, he
+avowed himself a Protestant, and related how he came to forsake the
+Faith, after making the acquaintance of several very bad characters,
+his companions in crime and his counselors in advising him to become
+a Protestant. The Sister asked him if he felt no remorse for such
+conduct, but he became enraged and exclaimed aloud: "I am a Protestant,
+and I wish to live and die a Protestant!" <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>Seeing it impossible to do
+anything with the miserable creature, she interiorly recommended him
+to the Refuge of Sinners, and merely asked him to accept the medal she
+offered, to wear it and sometimes kiss it. He seemed quite pleased to
+get rid of her so easily, and placing all her confidence in Mary, she
+withdrew.</p>
+
+<p>The poor man passed a sleepless night, our Blessed Mother touched
+his heart, and very early next morning he sent word to the Sister
+that he wanted a priest to receive his solemn profession of Faith, in
+reparation of his scandalous apostasy and crimes. But his reputation
+was such that the prison chaplain doubted his sincerity, and would not
+go to him except upon repeated solicitations of the Superioress. He
+was deeply affected at witnessing the change grace had wrought in this
+soul, and the consequent compunction with which the prodigal confessed
+his sins. The dying man then made a public abjuration of his errors,
+and expired a few minutes after, in the grace of God and under the
+protecting smile of Mary.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT THE HOSPITAL OF CAVA.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Cava, (Italy), 1866.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>A young soldier suffering from disease of the chest, was brought to the
+Military Hospital of Cava. His first question was to ask if the Sisters
+had charge of that hospital; on receiving an affirmative answer, he
+said to himself: "They will bother me about going to confession, so I
+shall call myself a Jew to get rid of them," and Jew he was designated
+on the card of admission. Perceiving the serious nature of his malady,
+the Sisters <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>to whose especial care he had been confided, visited him
+as often as possible. One of them offered him a medal of the Immaculate
+Conception; regarding it with a smile of pity, he said: "I accept it,
+because it would not be polite to refuse, but believe me, I consider it
+a mere plaything and nothing more."</p>
+
+<p>Every time the chaplain visited the hall, to speak a word of
+consolation to one and another, the poor Jew covered his head. The
+Sister sometimes ventured a few words to him about the good God, but
+he would never reply, and her approach was the signal for his feigning
+sleep. One evening when he appeared worse than usual, two Sisters
+went to see him just before they retired for the night. On hearing
+them approach, he exclaimed: "O Sister, a priest!" The chaplain was
+immediately summoned to his bedside, the poor dying man repeating all
+the while: "A priest! a priest!" As soon as the chaplain came, the
+patient made his profession of Faith in a very audible voice; he then
+confessed, and just as the priest, in administering Extreme Unction,
+was anointing the ears, the penitent rendered his soul to God, leaving
+us the consoling hope that it had found mercy in its Maker's sight.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A WOUNDED SOLDIER.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Palermo (Italy), 1866.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>In 1866, at the Military Hospital of Palermo, was a poor man who had
+just undergone the amputation of his left arm. His impiety was so
+great, that the Sister felt constrained to remove a large crucifix that
+had been placed near his bed, for he covered it with invectives. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>The
+miserable man's bodily infirmities were as hopeless as his spiritual,
+yet no one could succeed in inducing him to give any attention to his
+soul, or even to listen to a word about the good God. What could be
+done in such an extremity? The poor Sister was in great distress, when
+one day whilst dressing his wounds she was inspired to slip a medal of
+the Immaculate Conception between the bandages around the stump of the
+amputated member. Next morning, on witnessing the great change that had
+been wrought in her patient's spiritual condition during the night,
+she was less astonished than happy, for she had confidently relied
+upon the Blessed Virgin. He asked for a priest, who came immediately;
+he confessed, publicly repaired the scandals of his past life, and
+received with piety the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction. His few
+remaining days were spent in blessing that God who had shown him such
+boundless mercy. "Oh! how good God is!" did he repeat incessantly to
+his companions, "I have committed manifold sins and He has pardoned me
+all!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CURE OF AN AUSTRIAN OFFICER.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1867.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>An officer in the garrison at Gratz, suffered from a serious wound in
+the right arm. He was brought to the general hospital, that he might
+be more conveniently under the especial treatment of M. Rzehazeh, a
+very eminent surgeon. The latter exhausted all his skill, but in vain,
+and after a few weeks he saw the necessity of amputation to save the
+officer's life. Learning the doctor's decision, the patient was deeply
+grieved, and his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>oppressed heart sought refuge in piety. He who had
+never spoken of God, who had accepted a proffered medal only from
+courtesy, now appeared to experience a genuine satisfaction when the
+Sisters told him they would implore the Blessed Virgin in his behalf.
+During the few days immediately preceding the operation, he felt
+inspired with a great confidence in his medal, and frequently repeated
+the invocation engraven upon it: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray
+for us who have recourse to thee!" The danger was now imminent, and the
+amputation, which must not be delayed, was to take place on the morrow.
+One of the Sisters, perceiving that the young officer's confidence
+expressed itself in continual prayer, suggested that evening that he
+lay the medal upon his afflicted arm, and let it remain all night, a
+suggestion which was joyfully received. Next morning she hastened to
+ascertain her patient's condition, and get the medal. He had spent
+a quiet night, his sufferings being less severe than usual; and the
+Sister, whilst attributing his improvement to the anodynes prescribed,
+understood full well that the precious medal had also been instrumental
+in procuring relief, and that Mary had looked compassionately upon
+him; but she did not yet realize the full extent of the blessing. The
+surgeon came a few hours after, and whilst awaiting his assistants, he
+carefully examined the wounded arm, he touched it, he probed it, and to
+his great astonishment, perceived that amputation was not necessary.
+The other doctors on arriving, confirmed his opinion of this surprising
+change. The officer was mute with happiness, and not until he found
+himself alone with the chief surgeon did he impart to the latter, as
+a secret, his opinion as to the cause of this wonderful change. On
+leaving him, the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>surgeon (notwithstanding the injunction of secrecy),
+could not refrain from saying to the Sister: "I believe the Sisters of
+Charity have engaged the good God in this case."</p>
+
+<p>The officer's arm was entirely healed; a few weeks later he left the
+hospital, taking with him the precious medal as a memento of gratitude
+and love for Mary Immaculate.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF M. N&mdash;&mdash; AT LIMA.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter from a Daughter of Charity in Lima (Peru), 1876:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>M. N&mdash;&mdash; had been suffering a long time from hypertrophy of the heart,
+the physicians having vainly exhausted all the resources of their
+skill, were forced to tell the family that he was beyond the power
+of human aid, and should look to the state of his soul, sad news for
+this father of a family, and a man devoid of religion. In vain did his
+relatives and friends, with all possible delicacy, endeavor to turn
+his thoughts to religion and induce him to receive the Sacraments; he
+would hear nothing on the subject; a priest, who was an intimate friend
+of the family, attempted to second their efforts, but he met with no
+better success; the sick man became exasperated at all allusions to
+religion, he blasphemed everything relating to it, sparing not even the
+Blessed Virgin.</p>
+
+<p>One day, after listening to an account of the conversion of M.&mdash;&mdash;, of
+Lima, our patient's relatives expressed a desire of having recourse to
+similar means for their dear one's conversion. "It is very simple,"
+said the person addressed, "you have only to ask Sister N., of St.
+Anne's Hospital for a medal, she got one for M. Pierre, she <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>will not
+refuse you." One of his nephews immediately repaired to the hospital
+and returned with a medal. A niece offered it to him; "Mamma,"
+said she, "sends you this medal and begs that you will wear it."
+"Certainly," was the reply, "I will wear it for her sake, but I want
+everybody to understand that I have no notion of confessing."</p>
+
+<p>He spent a quiet night, and was quite pleased next morning to find
+himself somewhat better. "Euloge," said he, to one of his nephews,
+"what preparation should a person make who intends taking a long
+journey?" Euloge, who thought he certainly must be in a dream to hear
+his uncle speak thus, inquired to what journey he alluded. "Ah!" was
+the answer, "I speak of Eternity." The poor young man, delighted at
+such a happy change, replied that the best preparation was to put one's
+conscience in order by making a good confession. "I will do so, send me
+a priest," said his uncle. As soon as the clergyman arrived and heard
+his confession, he administered the Holy Viaticum. All the assistants
+were overcome with emotion when they saw the sick man, almost in his
+last agony, supported by his children, to receive on bended knee, the
+God who had just pardoned all the sins of his life. A few moments
+after, he blessed his children, gave them his parting counsel, and died
+in sentiments of piety rivaling his past irreligion. His family was
+deeply grateful to Mary Immaculate for this token of her favor.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF AN UNBELIEVER.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter from a Sister of Charity in Lima, Peru, 1877:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>An old lady whose youth had been pious, having lost her Faith by
+reading bad books, had not frequented the Sacraments for thirty-five
+years. The Sister with whom she lived was carried to her grave, after
+an illness of only five days, and it was natural to suppose that the
+Christian death of one so dear would have softened her heart; on the
+contrary, it embittered her the more, and she vented her grief in
+blasphemies. A Sister of Charity witnessing this scandal, and not
+being able to soothe the poor creature, was inspired with the thought
+of giving her a medal of the Blessed Virgin; the old lady accepted,
+and wore it for several days, during which she appeared greatly
+pre-occupied, and somewhat less confident in her scepticism; but
+having yielded to a diabolical suggestion, that urged her to lay the
+medal aside, doubtless because grace tormented her conscience with
+keen remorse whilst the medal was on her person, she fell back into
+an habitual hardness and melancholy that she styled peace. The Sister
+perceived this, and inquired if she still wore the medal; on receiving
+a negative answer, our good Sister represented the danger to which her
+soul was exposed without it, and the old lady promised to put it on
+again. Many prayers were offered up for her, and at the end of fifteen
+days, the Sister, who was greatly interested in this poor woman's soul,
+paid her another visit; perceiving no change in her sentiments, she
+inquired immediately if the medal had been resumed. The poor woman,
+who was very uncouth, dared not speak, but made a sign with her head
+which revealed all. "What have you done with it, and where is it?"
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>asked the Sister. The old lady replied that it was in her wardrobe,
+and she had made several ineffectual efforts to put it on again. The
+Sister understands that this miserable soul is under some diabolical
+influence, holding her aloof from aught calculated to reclaim her to
+God; she feels that now is the moment for prompt action, and in a tone
+of severity, says: "Very well, since you will not wear the medal, I
+abandon you entirely." These words produced the desired effect; the
+old lady ran to the wardrobe, and taking up the medal, put it around
+her neck this time to remain. Soon experiencing the sweet and powerful
+influence of Mary Immaculate, so justly called the Gate of Heaven,
+in a few days she assisted at the Holy Sacrifice and listened to the
+instruction, and from that time was entirely changed; she confessed and
+made her Easter Communion, and the deepest compunction and gratitude
+are now the abiding sentiments of her heart. She wished to remain at
+the church door, feeling herself unworthy to penetrate further into the
+sacred edifice, and it was with the greatest difficulty her friends
+could prevail upon her to accept a place nearer the altar. She never
+ceases to thank God and Mary; and she told the Sister that, from the
+moment the medal was on her neck, she knew neither peace nor rest till
+she had returned to her duties, so great are the power and love of that
+Virgin who is the sovereign Terror of demons.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CONVERSION OF A SCANDALOUS SINNER.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Moirans, 1877.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>The Superioress of the Sisters of Charity at Moirans, relates as
+follows a very consoling conversion, redounding to the glory of Mary
+Immaculate:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The most important manufacturer of our village, who employed from
+four to five hundred men and women, has just died, and contrary to all
+expectations, his death was penitent and consoling. He had been impious
+and immoral, and the profligate characters in his workshops were a
+curse to the surrounding country. His rudeness was such, that everybody
+trembled before him. His wife and two daughters, pious Christians,
+silently bewailed his misconduct; and as for myself, I had barely
+sufficient acquaintance with him to render justifiable my calling upon
+him in any urgent need.</p>
+
+<p>"One morning I received a message in great haste; this person was very
+sick and wished to see me. I went at once, but the disease was of so
+serious a character and its progress so rapid, that I saw the poor
+man on the verge of the grave ere I could find a means of turning his
+thoughts to eternity. I had told his wife and daughters to give him a
+medal of the Immaculate Conception, but he refused to accept it, and
+we were reduced to the necessity of stealthily putting it under his
+pillow. On the third day, as I was about to leave, after rendering him
+all the care and attention in my power, he wished, in the effusion of
+his gratitude, to shake hands with me. I profited by the opportunity
+to tell him how much pleasure he could give me by consenting to
+receive the cur&eacute;, who had just come to see him. He made a sign in
+the affirmative and with a smile that very rarely <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>parted his lips.
+We went out of the room, leaving him alone with the priest, whom he
+had welcomed cordially. In half an hour the latter returned blessing
+God, for the sick man had made his confession. He now consented to
+wear the medal, and that evening he received Extreme Unction, but not
+the Holy Viaticum, as he had spells of suffocation. I asked his wife
+to let his employees see him, that they might be edified at their
+patron's conduct. The request was granted, but not many came, as the
+workshops were closed at this hour; those who did come, prayed a few
+minutes beside him. Next morning his family was greatly rejoiced at
+his apparent physical improvement, but their hopes were deceived, and
+very soon his last agony began. He was recommended to the prayers of
+the parish; the whole village manifested a touching interest in his
+condition, and his employees all came to see him. The throng around
+the dying man was renewed every quarter of an hour, and we recited
+the <i>Chaplet</i> aloud, a most appropriate devotion for this occasion,
+the last moments of one whom the Blessed Virgin had snatched from
+eternal misery. Amidst this concert of praises to Mary, he expired. The
+Christian Brothers, to whom he had been very hostile, willingly aided
+us in rendering to him the last duties of religion."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h2>
+
+<p class="title">PROGRESS OF THE DEVOTION TO MARY</p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">CROWNED BY THE DEFINITION OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.&mdash;I. OUR
+LADY OF LA SALETTE.&mdash;II. THE CHILDREN OF MARY.&mdash;III. THE DEFINITION
+OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.</span></p>
+
+<p class="label1"><i>I.&mdash;Our Lady of La Salette.&mdash;1846.</i></p>
+
+
+<p>In her first manifestation to Sister Catherine, July 19, 1830, the
+Immaculate Virgin announced the disasters which threatened France;
+grief was depicted upon her countenance, tears stifled her voice, she
+earnestly recommended prayer to appease the wrath of God.</p>
+
+<p>Sixteen years later, this Mother of mercy, appearing to two little
+shepherd children upon one of the summits of the Alps, repeated, in a
+most solemn manner, the same warnings and the same counsels. The first
+apparition remains in obscurity, but a knowledge of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>second has
+been spread throughout the world, and with most consoling results. The
+miracle of La Salette has greatly increased devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin, and given Christians a clearer idea of the important duties
+of penance and prayer, which, in reality, are the embodiment of all
+practical piety.</p>
+
+<p>We quote the best authenticated account of La Salette, that of the Abb&eacute;
+Rousselot, who himself received it from the mouths of the children.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Two peasant children, M&eacute;lanie Mathieu, aged fourteen years, and
+Maximin Giraud, aged eleven, both simple and ignorant, as might
+naturally be expected of their age and condition, were together upon
+the mountain of La Salette, which overlooks a village where they were
+at service under different masters. Their acquaintance was very slight,
+their first meeting having been only the day before the occurrence we
+are about to relate. When the <i>Angelus</i> announced the hour of noon,
+they went to soak their hard bread in the water of a spring. After this
+rural repast, they descended a little farther, and laying down their
+crooks beside another spring, then dry, they seated themselves a slight
+distance apart, upon a few stones which had been piled up there, and
+went to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"It was Saturday, September 19th, 1846, and eve of the day on which
+fell the Feast of Our Lady's Seven Dolors.</p>
+
+<p>"'After taking the cows to water, and eating our lunch,' says Maximin,
+'we went to sleep beside a stream, and very near a spring which was
+dry. M&eacute;lanie awoke first, and aroused me to hunt our cows. We crossed
+the stream, and going in an opposite direction, saw our cows lying down
+on the other side, and not very far off.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
+<p>"'I came down first,' says M&eacute;lanie; 'when I was within five or six
+steps of the stream, I perceived a light like that of the sun, but even
+more brilliant and not the color of sunlight, and I said to Maximin:
+Come quick to see the bright light down here.' 'Where is it?' inquired
+Maximin, coming towards me. 'I pointed with my finger in the direction
+of the spring, and he stood still when he saw it. Then the light seemed
+to open, and in the midst of it appeared a Lady, she was seated, and
+her head resting upon her hands.' 'We were both frightened,' continues
+Maximin, 'and M&eacute;lanie, with an exclamation of terror, let fall her
+crook.' 'Keep your crook,' said I, 'as for me, I am going to keep mine.
+If it does anything to us, I will give it a blow with my crook.' And
+the Lady arose. She crossed her arms, and said to us: 'Come to me,
+my children, do not be afraid. I am here to tell you something very
+important.' All our fears vanished, we went towards her and crossed the
+stream, and the Lady advancing a few steps, we met at the place where
+M&eacute;lanie and I had fallen asleep. The Lady was between us, and she wept
+all the time she was talking. 'I saw her tears flow,' adds M&eacute;lanie.</p>
+
+<p>"'If my people,' said she, 'do not humble themselves, I shall be forced
+to let them feel the weight of my Son's uplifted arm. I have stayed it
+heretofore, but it now presses so heavily that I can scarcely support
+it much longer. And all the while I am suffering thus for you, I must
+pray without ceasing if I wish to prevent your abandonment by my Son.
+And, moreover, you do not appreciate it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'In vain will you pray, in vain will you strive, never can you
+recompense what I have undergone for you. I have given you six days of
+the week wherein to work, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>the seventh I reserved for myself, and even
+that is denied me! It is this which weighs down my Son's arm.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Even those who drive carts must curse, and mingle my Son's name with
+their oaths.'</p>
+
+<p>"'These are the two things that weigh down my Son's arm.'</p>
+
+<p>"'If the harvest fails, it is for no other reason than your sins. I
+tried last year to make you see this in the failure of the potato crop.
+You took no account of it. On the contrary, when you found the potatoes
+rotted, you swore and mingled my Son's name with your maledictions. The
+potatoes will continue to rot, at Christmas there will be none.'</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know what this meant," said M&eacute;lanie, "for in our part of the
+country we do not call them potatoes. I asked Maximin what they were,
+and the Lady said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah! my children, you do not understand me, I will use other language.'</p>
+
+<p>"The Blessed Virgin now repeated the preceding in <i>patois</i>, and
+the remainder of her discourse was also in <i>patois</i>. We give the
+translation as follows:</p>
+
+<p>"'If you have wheat, it must not be sown, the animals will devour what
+you sow; and should any remain, it will yield naught but dust when
+threshed.'</p>
+
+<p>"'There will be a great famine. Before the famine comes, little
+children under seven years of age, will be seized with fright and die
+in the arms of those who are holding them. Some will do penance by
+reason of the famine. Even the nuts will fail and the grapes rot.'</p>
+
+<p>"After these words, the beautiful Lady continued to speak aloud to
+Maximin. Though seeing the motion of her lips, M&eacute;lanie hears nothing.
+Maximin receives a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>secret in French. Then the Blessed Virgin addresses
+herself to the little girl, and Maximin ceases to hear her voice. She
+likewise confides to M&eacute;lanie a secret in French, but a more lengthy
+secret it appears than that entrusted to Maximin. Continuing her
+discourse in <i>patois</i>, and so as to be heard by both, she adds: 'If
+they turn aside from their evil ways, the very rocks and stones will be
+changed into heaps of grain, and potatoes will be found scattered over
+the fields.'</p>
+
+<p>"The Queen of Heaven then addressed herself more directly to the
+children.</p>
+
+<p>"'Do you say your prayers with devotion, my children?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, no, Madame,' they both answered, 'we say them with very little
+devotion.'</p>
+
+<p>"Our divine Mother continued: 'Ah! my children, you must say them
+fervently evening and morning. When you have not the time, and cannot
+do better, say an <i>Our Father</i> and a <i>Hail Mary</i>; and when you have the
+time you must say more.</p>
+
+<p>"'No one goes to Mass, except a few aged women; all the rest in summer
+spend Sunday working, and in winter, when at a loss for something to
+do, they go to Mass only to ridicule religion; and during Lent they
+frequent the shambles as if they were dogs.'</p>
+
+<p>"After a few more words, reminding Maximin that he had already seen the
+failure of the grain, the august Queen finished in French as follows:
+'Ah! my children, tell this to all my people.' And before leaving them,
+she repeated the command.</p>
+
+<p>"The two children add: 'Then she ascended about fifteen steps, to the
+place where we had gone to look after our cows. Her feet barely touched
+the surface of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>verdure, which did not even bend beneath her, she
+glided over the surface as if suspended in the air, and impelled by
+some invisible power. We followed her, M&eacute;lanie a little ahead, and I
+two or three steps from the Lady's side. The beautiful Lady was now
+gently elevated to about the height of a yard,' said the children. 'She
+remained thus suspended in the air for a moment. She glances up to
+Heaven and then at the earth, her head disappears from our view, next
+her arms, and lastly her feet. She seemed to melt away. There remained
+a brilliant light that gleamed upon my hands, and the flowers at her
+feet, but that was all.'</p>
+
+<p>"At the first words of his son's narration, Maximin's father began to
+laugh, but very soon recognizing the marks of incontestable sincerity,
+he hastened to comply with his Christian duties, so long neglected.
+The neighboring inhabitants followed his example, there were no more
+blasphemies, no more profanation of Sunday, the whole country was soon
+transformed, even maternally. Like those of Jonas to Nineveh, the
+prophetic warnings of the divine Messenger were conditional. They were
+fulfilled in general, as can still be remembered."<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The apparition of La Salette, as is the case with all extraordinary
+events, was variously appreciated even among Catholics, some receiving
+the account with enthusiastic confidence, others strongly contesting
+the reality. But for a long time doubts have ceased, Providence having,
+by numberless miracles, confirmed the faith of those who believed;
+and the mountain sanctified by Mary's presence, has never ceased to
+be visited by <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>pilgrims from the most distant countries. Mgr. De
+Bruillard, Bishop of Grenoble, anxious to prevent illusion on so
+important a question, nominated a commission composed of most competent
+persons, to examine and pass judgment upon this apparition. The result
+being in the affirmative. His Grace, in a circular of September 19th,
+1851, declared as follows:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"We assert that the apparition of the Blessed Virgin to two little
+peasants, the 19th of September, 1846, upon one of the peaks of the
+Alps, situated in the parish of La Salette, of the archpresbytery of
+Corps, bears every mark of truth, and that the faithful are confirmed
+in believing it indubitable and certain.</p>
+
+<p>"Wherefore, to testify our lively gratitude to God and the glorious
+Virgin Mary, we authorize the devotion to Our Lady of La Salette."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The circular, before publication, was submitted to the Holy See, whose
+approval it received, and Mgr. De Bruillard's two successors have
+always endorsed his appreciation of the apparition.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, this devotion is invested with every guarantee of
+authenticity that the severest criticism could exact.</p>
+
+<p>A church of the Byzantine style and graceful appearance is erected
+upon the holy mountain, near where the apparition took place. The
+identical spot remains uncovered, and the grass still grows upon the
+soil hallowed by Mary's sacred footsteps; a series of crosses, fourteen
+in number, to which are attached the indulgences of the <i>via crucis</i>,
+indicate the path she took. The spring, formerly intermittent, has
+been inexhaustible since the apparition, and its waters have worked
+miracles. Near the church, a convent has been built to accommodate <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>the
+numberless pilgrims, who daily resort hither in the favorable season.
+Numerous chapels, dedicated to Our Lady of La Salette, are scattered
+throughout Christendom, and abundant graces repay the faith of those
+who in these sacred shrines invoke her intercession.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="label1"><i>II.&mdash;The Children of Mary.&mdash;1847.</i></p>
+
+<p>Rome, the guardian of our Faith and Catholic traditions, has given
+municipal privileges to the Children of Mary, in consecrating to them
+a chapel in one of her most celebrated churches, St. Agnes Beyond the
+Walls. The Italian sodalities are all inscribed there, and represented
+by a group of the children of Mary surrounding this young Saint, who
+in the third century was martyred for her virginity. They seem to say
+to her, "Agnes, you are our eldest Sister, the well beloved of Jesus
+Christ and His Mother."</p>
+
+<p>This place of honor, this representation proclaims most eloquently,
+that the Children of Mary form in the Church, a family as ancient as
+Catholicity itself.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly nineteen centuries ago, Jesus, our Redeemer, was in the agony
+of death upon the tree of the cross, which his love had chosen as the
+instrument of our redemption; "seeing," says the Evangelist, "that all
+was consummated" for our salvation, He wished to place the seal upon
+His work, by making His last will and testament.</p>
+
+<p>Looking first at Mary, His Mother, and then at John, the beloved
+disciple, he made John a Child of Mary in these memorable words: "<i>Ecce
+Mater tua, ecce filius tuus</i>&gt;: Behold thy Mother, behold thy son."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
+<p>Such is the origin of the Children of Mary. We believe with the holy
+Church, that the eternal Word, after becoming incarnate to render men
+redeemed with His blood, the Children of His heavenly Father, gave them
+also, at the hour of His death, His own Mother to be theirs. We know
+likewise, that among the children of every family, there is always one
+most tenderly attached to the mother, for instance, Jacob and Rebecca;
+John and Mary.</p>
+
+<p>Even so, in the bosom of the great family of Catholicity, do we find in
+all ages, souls jealous of rendering to Mary the most intimate filial
+devotion, selecting her in an especial manner, for their model and
+protectress.</p>
+
+<p>Such are the religious orders particularly devoted to her service,
+also, the confraternities established for the same purpose in many
+parishes. The Society of Jesus, which was founded in the sixteenth
+century, laboring zealously to extend the glory of God among the youth
+under its charge, found no means so effectual in forming hearts to
+virtue and piety, as that of placing them under Mary's protection; and
+the celebrated Association of the Prima Primaria, canonically erected
+by Pope Gregory XIII, in 1584, became the parent stem of all the
+congregations, subsequently found in honor of the Mother of God.</p>
+
+<p>It was reserved for our age, to give full development to this fruitful
+devotion, by popularizing and thus making it a powerful means of
+salvation. In placing themselves under the patronage of the Immaculate
+Conception, the Children of Mary cannot fail to obtain from their
+divine Mother the most abundant and precious benedictions.</p>
+
+<p>In 1830, the Immaculate Virgin had uttered a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>prophecy which resounded
+incessantly in the heart of the missionary, to whom was confided the
+account of the apparitions of the medal. "The Blessed Virgin wishes
+you to found a congregation, of which you will be the Superior, a
+confraternity of Children of Mary; the Blessed Virgin will bestow many
+graces upon it as well as upon yourself, indulgences will be granted
+it. The month of Mary will be celebrated with great solemnity; Mary
+loves these festivals; she will requite their observance with abundant
+graces."</p>
+
+<p>But why this command and this prediction of the Queen of Heaven to her
+servant, in regard to something which was not all new?</p>
+
+<p>Sodalities of the Children of Mary already existed among the numberless
+youths educated by the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. And following
+their example, the Ladies of the Sacred Heart had formed similar
+associations among their scholars, and in 1832, had even established
+them for ladies in the world, under the invocation of the Immaculate
+Conception. It would seem then that a new work was superfluous.</p>
+
+<p>It is true, Associations of the Children of Mary already existed and
+accomplished much good, but they were confined to a few isolated
+places, and recruited from a chosen class, they were not popular;
+and Mary designed as elements of the future work, that multitude of
+young girls in the ordinary walks of life, surrounded by all the
+trials, exposed to all the dangers of the world, who to-day form her
+blessed family, whose innocence she guards, whose modest virtues she
+encourages, and from whom she receives in exchange, a tribute of love,
+praises and a visible service acceptable to her heart. Let us speak
+a word concerning its establishment. When the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>apostolic heart of M.
+Aladel received Sister Catherine's consoling predictions, he did not
+fully comprehend how he, a simple missionary, should accomplish the
+designs of the Queen of Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst quietly awaiting the propitious hour and means foreseen by
+Providence, he seized every opportunity of speaking to the children and
+young people of Mary's bounty and the happiness of belonging to her.
+His simplicity and animation, when discoursing upon this his favorite
+theme, attracted all hearts; his listeners hung entranced upon the good
+father's words; and the unction of grace sustaining the ardor he had
+enkindled, the associations were formed by way of trial, in the houses
+of the Daughters of Charity, where M. Aladel had officiated.</p>
+
+<p>Such were those of the Providence Orphanage in Paris, of the House of
+Charity of St. M&eacute;dard, of the Madeleine; also, those of St. Flour,
+Mainsat, Aurillae, established from 1836 to 1846. The young girls, who
+were externs, very soon rivaled the inmates of the establishments in
+obtaining similar favors; several new associations were begun in the
+year 1846, those of St. Vincent de Paul, St. Roch, St. Paul, St. Louis,
+in Paris, and others in Toulouse, Brugui&egrave;re, etc., in the province.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst in Rome in 1847, M. &Eacute;tienne, Superior General of the Priests
+of the Mission and Daughters of Charity, obtained from the Sovereign
+Pontiff a rescript dated June 20th, empowering him and his successors
+to establish among the scholars attending the schools of the Daughters
+of Charity a pious confraternity, under the title of the Immaculate
+Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin, with all the indulgences
+accorded the Congre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>gation of the holy Virgin established at Rome for
+the scholars of the Society of Jesus.</p>
+
+<p>Three years later, the Sovereign Pontiff extended a similar favor to
+the youths educated by the Priests of the Mission; also, to the little
+boys in charge of the Daughters of Charity.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo295" id="illo295"></a>
+<img src="images/i295.jpg" width="285" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>The Miraculous Medal<br />
+adopted as the Livery of the Children of Mary.</i></div></div>
+
+<p>From this time, 1847, thanks to the benediction of Pius IX, the
+Sodality of the Children of Mary, spread rapidly in all quarters of
+the globe, wherever the Daughters of Charity were established. A
+manual containing the rules of the Association, its privileges and
+obligations, was compiled by M. Aladel, the Director of the work. The
+livery naturally adopted by the Children of Mary was the Miraculous
+Medal, suspended from a blue ribbon.</p>
+
+<p>The new Association from its very origin gave a won<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>derful impulse to
+youthful piety; humble girls, earning their daily bread, practiced the
+most heroic virtues, under the influence of a desire to become faithful
+Children of Mary; and, sustained by the same spirit, the poorest
+courageously resisted temptation, and complied with those duties so
+little esteemed at the present day&mdash;filial devotion and self-denial.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo296" id="illo296"></a>
+<img src="images/i296.jpg" width="283" height="400" alt="" />
+<div class="caption"><i>The Miraculous Medal<br />
+adopted as the Livery of the Children of Mary.</i></div></div>
+
+<p>To these precious fruits are also joined some beautiful flowers of
+devotion; how eagerly the Children of Mary repair to re-unions of the
+Association, especially on all their Mother's feasts, chanting her
+praises and exciting one another to fervent piety.</p>
+
+<p>But the death of these young girls is still more admirable than their
+life; many of them stricken down in the very bloom of youth, fortified
+with their medal and ribbon as with a precious talisman, smile at death
+and defy hell.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
+<p>Thirty years have passed since the grain of mustard seed was confided
+to the earth, and it has now become an immense tree, whose branches
+overshadow the most distant countries. Europe numbers nearly a thousand
+of these Sodalities, about six hundred being composed of externs, or
+mixed associates. They amount, in other portions of the world to nearly
+two hundred. This displays the visible effects of the benediction of
+St. Peter's Successor; the promises made in 1830 were not realized
+until they had received the approbation of the Vicar of Jesus Christ,
+Pius IX, whose name will always be dear to the Children of Mary.</p>
+
+<p>The Associations vary in number from ten to three hundred sodalists,
+which gives us an average of eighty thousand young girls, courageously
+holding themselves aloof from satan's snares and pomps, and leading a
+life of purity and piety amidst the seductions of a corrupt world.</p>
+
+<p>Surely this must be a miracle of God's right hand and Mary's bounty!</p>
+
+<p>We have thought it would not be uninteresting to the readers, to give
+the statistics for the end of the year 1877, of the Sodalities of the
+Children of Mary, established in the houses of the Daughters of Charity
+throughout the world.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
+<p class="label1"><a name="LIST_OF_THE" id="LIST_OF_THE">LIST OF THE</a><br />
+
+<i>SODALITIES OF CHILDREN OF MARY</i>.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="max-width:52em" id="tos" summary="Sodalities">
+<tr>
+ <th align="left">&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align="center" colspan="2"><span class="u"><b>SODALITIES</b></span></th>
+ <th align="left">&nbsp;</th>
+ <th align="right">&nbsp;</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <th>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th><i>Internal.</i></th>
+ <th align="right"><i>External and Mixed.</i></th>
+ <th>&nbsp;</th>
+ <th>SUMMARY</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">France</td>
+ <td align="right">287</td>
+ <td align="right">451</td>
+ <td rowspan="2" valign="top"><span class="bracket3">}</span></td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td align="right">287</td>
+ </tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td align="right">451</td>
+ </tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><b><i>Europe</i></b></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left"><small>(Exclusive of France)</small></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Belgium</td>
+ <td class="right">11</td>
+ <td class="right">14</td>
+ <td rowspan="11" valign="top"><span class="bracket11">}</span></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Switzerland</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td class="right">7</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Italy</td>
+ <td class="right">55</td>
+ <td class="right">64</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Spain</td>
+ <td class="right">17</td>
+ <td class="right">25</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Portugal</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td class="right">100</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Great Britain</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+ <td class="right">13</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td class="right">153</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Poland</td>
+ <td class="right">8</td>
+ <td class="right">9</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Prussia</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">5</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Austria</td>
+ <td class="right">4</td>
+ <td class="right">11</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Greece</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Turkey</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+ <td class="right">3</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><b><i>Asia</i></b></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Turkey</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+ <td class="right">7</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" valign="top"><span class="bracket4">}</span></td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Persia</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td class="right">10</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">China</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><b><i>Africa</i></b></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Egypt</td>
+ <td class="right">3</td>
+ <td class="right">2</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" valign="top"><span class="bracket4">}</span></td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td class="right">6</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Algeria</td>
+ <td class="right">3</td>
+ <td class="right">17</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td class="right">20</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Canary Isles</td>
+ <td class="right">..</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><b><i>America.</i></b></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">United States</td>
+ <td class="right">11</td>
+ <td class="right">44</td>
+ <td rowspan="9" valign="top"><span class="bracket11">}</span></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Guatemala</td>
+ <td class="right">4</td>
+ <td class="right">3</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Brazil</td>
+ <td class="right">11</td>
+ <td class="right">9</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Peru</td>
+ <td class="right">9</td>
+ <td class="right">6</td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td class="right">54</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">La Plata</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td class="right">6</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td class="right">81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Chile</td>
+ <td class="right">3</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Cuba</td>
+ <td class="right">5</td>
+ <td class="right">4</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Mexico</td>
+ <td class="right">9</td>
+ <td class="right">7</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Ecuador</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center"><b><i>Oceanica.</i></b></td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="left">Philippine Isles</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+ <td class="right">6</td>
+ <td rowspan="3" valign="top"><span class="bracket3">}</span></td>
+ <td align="left">Internal Sodalities</td>
+ <td class="right">1</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="left">External and Mixed</td>
+ <td class="right">6</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right">----</td>
+ <td class="right">----</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="right">------</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td align="center">Total</td>
+ <td class="right">450</td>
+ <td class="right">721</td>
+ <td align="right">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td align="center">Total</td>
+ <td class="right">1,171</td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span></p>
+<p class="label1"><i>III.&mdash;Definition of the Immaculate Conception.</i></p>
+
+<p>We have observed several times in the course of this work, that the
+principal end of the apparition of 1830, was to popularize belief
+in the Immaculate Conception. The facts we have related, prove most
+conclusively that, thanks to the Miraculous Medal, this object has been
+fully attained.</p>
+
+<p>As a preparation for the accomplishment of this great design,
+Providence placed in St. Peter's chair, a Pontiff animated with the
+most filial tenderness for Mary, and inspired him from the beginning
+of his pontificate, with the desire of glorifying the most holy Mother
+of God, by proclaiming the Immaculate Conception an article of Faith.
+And this hope, this desire, had Pius IX, in the ninth year of his
+reign, the happiness of realizing amidst the universal applause of the
+Catholic world.</p>
+
+<p>We quote below from M. Villefranche's beautiful History of Pius IX, the
+account of this memorable event:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"By an Encyclical dated from Ga&euml;ta, Pius IX had interrogated the
+Episcopacy of the Universal Church, on the subject of the belief in the
+Immaculate Conception. The answers received were six hundred and three
+in number. Five hundred and forty-six Bishops earnestly entreated the
+doctrinal definition, a few hesitated, though only as to whether it
+were an opportune moment or not for the decision, for the sentiment of
+the Catholic world was in unison as regards the belief itself.</p>
+
+<p>"To assist at this solemnity, Pius IX summoned to his presence, all
+the Bishops who could repair to Rome. They came five hundred and
+ninety-two in number, and from all quarters of the globe except
+Russia, where they <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>were held in check by the suspicious despotism of
+the Emperor Nicholas. These prelates put the finishing touch to the
+work of the commission charged with preparing the Bull; but at the
+very moment of making the final pause in its rendition, it was asked
+if the Bishops assisted there as judges, to pronounce the definition
+simultaneously with the Successor of St. Peter, and if their presence
+must be mentioned as judges, or, if the supreme judgment should not
+be attributed to the word of the Sovereign Pontiff alone. The debate
+terminated suddenly, as if by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
+'It was the last sitting,' says Mgr. Audisio, an eye-witness; 'the
+hour of noon had just been sounded, every knee was bent to recite
+the <i>Angelus</i>. Then each one resumed his place, and scarcely had a
+word been spoken, when there arose a universal acclamation to the
+Holy Father, a cry of eternal adherence to the Primacy of St Peter's
+See, and the debate was ended:' '<i>Petre, doce nos; confirma fratres
+tuos!</i> (Peter, teach us; confirm thy brethren!)' And the instruction
+these pastors asked of the supreme Pastor was the definition of the
+Immaculate Conception.</p>
+
+<p>"The 8th of December, 1854, was the grand day, the triumphal day,
+which, according to the beautiful words of Mgr. Dupanloup's circular,
+'crowns the hopes of past ages, blesses the present age, evokes the
+gratitude of future generations, and leaves an imperishable memory;
+the day that witnessed the first definition of Faith, which was not
+preceded by dissension and followed by heresy.' All Rome rejoiced.
+Immense multitudes, representing every tongue and nation on the globe,
+thronged the approaches to the vast Basilica of St. Peter's, far
+too small to accommodate all who came. Soon, the Bishops <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>were seen
+forming into the line of march, ranged according to their seniority,
+and followed by the Cardinals. The Sovereign Pontiff, amidst the most
+brilliant surroundings, appeared last, whilst the chant of the Litany
+of the Saints, wafted to Heaven, invited the celestial court to unite
+with the Church militant in honoring the Queen of Angels and men.
+Seated upon his throne, Pius IX received the obeisance of the Cardinals
+and Bishops, after which the Pontifical Mass began.</p>
+
+<p>"When the Gospel had been chanted in Greek and Latin, Cardinal Macchi,
+Dean of the Sacred College, accompanied by the Dean of the Archbishops,
+and the Dean of the Bishops present, with an Archbishop of the Greek
+rite and one of the Armenian, presented themselves at the foot of the
+throne, and supplicated the Holy Father, in the name of the universal
+Church, to raise his Apostolic voice and pronounce the dogmatic decree
+of the Immaculate Conception. The Pope replied that he willingly
+granted this prayer, but ere doing so he would invoke once more the
+assistance of the Holy Spirit And, now, every voice united in the
+solemn strains of the <i>Veni Creator</i>. When the chant had ceased, the
+Pope arose, and in that grave, sonorous, majestic voice, to whose
+profound charm millions of the faithful have borne testimony, commenced
+reading the Bull.</p>
+
+<p>"He established: first, the theological motives for belief in Mary's
+privilege; then he adduced the ancient and universal traditions both
+of the East and West the testimony of religious orders and schools
+of theology, of the holy Fathers and the Councils, and finally, the
+pontifical records, ancient as well as modern. His countenance, as
+he pronounced the words inscribed upon these pious and magnificent
+documents, betrayed his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>emotion. Several times he was so overcome
+that for a few moments it was impossible for him to proceed. 'And
+consequently,' he adds, 'after having offered unceasingly in humility
+and fasting, our own prayers and the public prayers of the Church to
+God the Father through His Son, that He would deign to direct and
+confirm our thoughts by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, after
+having implored the assistance of all the celestial court, ... in honor
+of the holy and indivisible Trinity, for the glory of the Virgin Mother
+of God, for the exaltation of the Catholic Faith and the increase of
+the Christian religion, by the authority of Our Saviour, Jesus Christ,
+the blessed Apostles, Peter and Paul, and our own.&mdash;&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"Here his voice was stifled with emotion, and he paused an instant
+to wipe away the tears. The assistants, deeply affected as well as
+himself, but mute with respect and admiration, awaited in profound
+silence the continuation. In a clear, strong voice, slightly elevated
+by enthusiasm, he proceeded:</p>
+
+<p>"'We declare, profess, and define, that the doctrine affirming that the
+Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved and exempt from all stain of original
+sin, from the first instant of her conception, in view of the merits of
+Jesus Christ, Saviour of men, is a doctrine revealed by God, and for
+this reason, all the faithful must believe it with firm and unwavering
+faith. Wherefore, if any one should have the presumption, which God
+forbid, to allow a belief contrary to what we have just defined, let
+him know that he wrecks his faith and separates himself from the unity
+of the Church.'</p>
+
+<p>"The Cardinal Dean, prostrating himself a second time at the feet
+of the Pontiff, supplicated him to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>publish the Apostolic letters
+containing the definition; the Promoter of the Faith, accompanied by
+the Apostolic Prothonotary also presented themselves, to beg that a
+verbal process of the decree be prepared. And now the cannon of the
+castle of St. Angelo and all the bells of the Eternal City, announced
+the glorification of the Immaculate Virgin!</p>
+
+<p>"In the evening, Rome, enwreathed in illuminations, and crowned with
+inscriptions and transparencies, resounded with joyous music, and was
+imitated at that very time by thousands of cities and villages all over
+the face of the globe. If we were to compile an account of the pious
+manifestations relating to this event, it would fill, not volumes, but
+libraries. The Bishops' responses to the Pope before the definition
+were printed in nine volumes; the Bull itself, translated under the
+care of a learned French Sulpitian into every tongue and idiom of
+the universe, filled about ten volumes; the pastoral instructions,
+publishing and explaining the Bull, and the articles on the subject in
+religious journals, would certainly require several hundred, especially
+if we add thereto the poems, scraps of eloquence, and descriptions
+of the monuments and f&ecirc;tes. We should not omit mention here of the
+spontaneous and incomparable periodical illuminations at Lyons, each
+time the course of the year brings round the memorable 8th of December."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Pius IX knew that the Catholic movement leading to the definition of
+the Immaculate Conception had originated in France, and he was happy to
+see the French people enthusiastically welcome the Pontifical decree
+of December 8th, and celebrate with unparalleled magnificence Mary's
+glorious privilege. Henceforth, the love <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>he bore that country was
+firmly rooted in his heart, and her misfortunes had but increased his
+tenderness and compassion. It consoles us to insert here the prayer to
+the Blessed Virgin which he composed, and recited daily to obtain for
+her the protection of the Queen of Heaven:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"O Mary! conceived without sin, look down upon France, pray for France,
+save France! The greater her guilt, the more need of your intercession.
+Only a word to Jesus reposing in your arms, and France is saved."</p>
+
+<p>"O Jesus! obedient to Mary, save France!"</p></blockquote>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><a name="illo304" id="illo304"></a>
+<img src="images/i304.jpg" width="111" height="109" alt="" /></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+<p class="title">THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL<br /></p>
+<p class="center"><b>AND THE WAR.</b></p>
+
+
+<p>The wars which have taken place since the year 1854, the epoch of the
+definition of the Immaculate Conception, have presented a spectacle to
+which the world was unaccustomed. Not only were <i>priests</i> called upon
+to administer to the spiritual necessities of the soldiers in camps
+and ambulances, but <i>Sisters</i> also were charged with the care of the
+sick and wounded. The priest's cassock and the robe of the religious,
+became almost as familiar to the eye as the military costume itself!
+Sisters of Charity accompanied the armies in the wars of the East, in
+1854; in Italy, in 1859; in the United States, in 1861; in Mexico, in
+1864; in Austria and Prussia, in 1866; in France and Germany, in 1870;
+and we find them ministering to the Russian army and also the Turkish
+ambulance in 1877. For them no enemies <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>existed; the camps of both
+belligerents claimed their attention, they were equally devoted to all
+who needed their ministry of charity.</p>
+
+<p>During the hardships and dangers of war, chaplains and Sisters could
+not fail to invoke the Blessed Virgin, and the Miraculous Medal
+naturally became the sign of the soldier's devotion and the pledge
+of our merciful Mother's protection, against the moral and physical
+dangers war brings in its train. The medal was profusely distributed;
+it was accepted and worn with confidence; even Protestants and
+Schismatics asking eagerly for it; officers as well as private soldiers
+attaching it to their uniforms when they set out for the combat; the
+sick employed it to obtain recovery, or at least, an alleviation of
+their sufferings; the dying kissed it with love; many attributed to it
+their preservation in battle, and a still greater number were indebted
+to it for their eternal salvation.</p>
+
+<p>In proof of the above, we shall present some facts, selected from the
+thousands related in the correspondence of the missionaries and Sisters
+who followed the several armies.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">WAR IN THE EAST, FROM</span> 1854 to 1856.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"On the Feast of the Assumption, we shall have at Varna, a beautiful
+religious ceremony, at which the whole army will assist. I have brought
+from Constantinople a banner of the Blessed Virgin; this we will
+set up, and confidently invoking Mary, we know she will obtain the
+cessation of the cholera, and success of our arms."<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"The inmates of our hospital of P&eacute;ra, at Constantinople, number about
+twelve hundred, including sixty officers. These gentlemen receive the
+Miraculous Medal with joy and gratitude. Endeavor to find some good
+souls who will send us a large supply of these pious objects."<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"The three patients whose confessions I heard were poor Irish. They
+manifested great resignation in their sufferings; all three asked
+for, and gratefully received a medal of the Immaculate Conception. An
+English officer (a Catholic), who wore with pious confidence the medal
+of Mary, told me that several of his colleagues, though Protestants,
+had accepted the medal and preserved it respectfully, and that the
+cholera and balls of the Russians had, so far, spared them."<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Even amidst the turmoil of war, and in spite of the multitude of sick
+and wounded, the Catholics of Constantinople celebrated solemnly the
+definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. Mr. Bor&eacute; wrote
+as follows, March 22d, 1835: 'The <i>triduum</i> of thanksgiving for the
+declaration and promulgation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception
+was fixed for the Feast of Saint Joseph. We have endeavored to unite,
+in the expression of our joy, with that of the faithful throughout
+the Catholic world, and to imitate, to the best of our ability, those
+magnificent and most consoling manifestations that have taken place in
+France, who in this has shown a true love for the Mother of God, a love
+already repaid by a new development of national strength and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>vigor.
+The zeal and skill of our dear Sisters in charge of the adjoining
+establishment have greatly contributed to the splendor of the feast.
+The good taste and experience of one of them suggested to her the idea
+of substituting for the large picture over the main altar a figure of
+the Immaculate Conception; the Blessed Virgin was crowned with golden
+stars, her dress and drapery were rich and radiant in a glory of gauze,
+the whole framed in lilies. The head, borrowed from the portrait of a
+Circassian lady, and the golden crescent under her feet, were happy
+indications, both in color and emblem, of the events transpiring around
+us. A Catholic Armenian lady lent a set of diamonds, which flashed
+back the myriad flames of tapers and candles contained in candelabras,
+hidden in the abundance of lilies. This illumination, improvised by
+our pupils in imitation of those they knew would take place throughout
+France, was indeed an honor to their taste and piety.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"We sometimes meet with sick persons, who, through human respect,
+ignorance, or indifference, are prevented from receiving the succors of
+religion. We give them a medal of the Immaculate Conception, and the
+Blessed Virgin charges herself with their conversion. Nearly always,
+without any other inducement, and, as it were, of themselves, they ask
+for the priest and prepare to receive the Sacraments, manifesting the
+most lively sorrow for having offended God and abused His benefits. I
+could cite examples by thousands."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Numbers of soldiers wear the Miraculous Medal, the scapular, a
+reliquary, a cross, or sometimes not one but all of these, and those
+who do not possess these articles are happy to receive them. In a word,
+the army is, in a great measure, Catholic, and knows how to pray."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"A soldier wounded in both legs at the battle of Alma, received for
+more than two months, the unremitting attention of the physicians and
+Sisters though without experiencing any relief. Having despaired of
+saving his life otherwise, the surgeons decided upon amputation. They
+began by the limb which was most shattered. Next day the patient was
+in a hopeless condition; there was no question of further amputation.
+Recourse was then had to supernatural remedies; a novena was made to
+the Immaculate Mary, and in a few days the patient showed signs of
+improvement. He is now cured, and his piety and good example are the
+admiration of his comrades."<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"A patient who was brought in yesterday, refused to go to confession.
+I placed under his pillow a medal of the Blessed Virgin, and left him
+quiet, continuing to give him assiduous care. This morning he called
+me, and in a resolute tone, inquired if people here died like dogs.
+'I am a Christian, and I wish to confess.' 'Yesterday I proposed
+confession,' said I, 'but you objected, and even sent the priest
+away.' 'It is true,' he replied; 'but I am sorry for having done so; I
+wish now to see him as soon as possible.' Since his confession he is
+completely changed; and calmly awaits the approach of death."<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Among the Russian prisoners brought to Constantinople after the battle
+of Tcherna&iuml;a, many wore the medal of the Immaculate Conception. By this
+I understood at once that they were Catholics and Poles."<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"A young lieutenant in the eighty-fifth regiment, had been wounded in
+the skull, and when brought to the hospital, his throat was gangrened,
+and he could scarcely speak. A secret sympathy attracted us towards
+each other, and he accepted gratefully the services I rendered him. As
+he was evidently sinking, I spoke to him of the Blessed Virgin, and
+alluded to the medal he wore around his neck. He smiled, and replied
+by pressing my hand. When his confession (during which he regained his
+voice and strength) was finished, he said: 'Monsieur abb&eacute;, I have a
+favor to ask of you.' 'What is it, my friend? tell me; I am anxious to
+gratify you.' 'Be so kind,' said he, 'as to inform Father Bor&eacute; that
+I am here, and am very ill.' These words pierced my heart; however,
+I was able to answer him: 'Father Bor&eacute; is he who now speaks to you.'
+Raising his eyes moistened with tears, and, again pressing my hand, he
+added: 'I am the brother-in-law of your dear friend, Mr. Taconet, and
+also brother of the captain of zouaves, whom you assisted a year ago
+at Varna.' I then recognized in him Mr. <i>Ferdinand Lefaivre</i>; he had
+been recommended to me by a pressing letter from Mr. Taconet, but this
+letter reached me only after my young friend's death. Mr. Taconet wrote
+that, on the eleventh of May, the lieutenant with his family had heard
+Mass at the church of Notre Dame des Victoires, and that he did not
+doubt but the Blessed Virgin would watch over a life so precious. His
+hope was not misplaced, for the Blessed Virgin called him to herself,
+fortified with the Sacraments, on the day of her triumph."<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"While we were invoking our Immaculate Mother, on the eve of a combat,
+in which one of our young soldiers was to take part for the first (and
+perhaps last) time, he arose and went to Mary's altar; kneeling an
+instant, he arose again, and hung around the statue's neck a silver
+heart, in which were inscribed his name and the names of his parents. I
+feel, as St Vincent has forcibly expressed it, that he did not perform
+this act of devotion without tearful eyes and a sobbing heart."<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"A serious fire had broken out in the city of Salonica. The flames
+soon appeared opposite the Sisters' house, the buildings on the other
+side of the street, a few yards distant, being seized and devoured by
+the fire, which the wind continued to fan into activity. Already the
+Sisters' roof and that of the adjoining house were covered with dense
+smoke. I cast therein several Miraculous Medals. There was no prospect
+of human succor, as the rumor of there being powder in the vicinity
+had caused every one to seek safety in flight. I also retired, deeming
+it useless to expose myself longer; and besides, I was obliged to go
+to the assistance of a poor man, who, partially intoxicated, persisted
+in remaining near the fire. I returned shortly after, expecting to see
+our houses in flames; I doubted not but they would be wholly consumed.
+As I approached, a young man stopped me on the way, and said: 'Your
+property is saved, sir; the Sisters' house is not even in danger.' Only
+on reaching the scene could I be convinced that he had spoken truly.
+It would be impossible to express my emotion at the sight. I sent
+to inform our dear Sisters of the fact and they could scarcely
+credit this marvellous preservation. It suffices to add, that <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+all Salonica is unanimous in pronouncing it a miracle."<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"In an ambulance crowded with Russians was a young Pole, severely
+wounded and suffering intolerable pain; he earnestly invoked the
+sweet and merciful Virgin Mary. By his side lay a Russian Protestant,
+wounded also, and attacked by violent dysentery. So offensive was the
+odor from his disease, that both patients and nurses complained. He
+appeared utterly indifferent to everything concerning religion. He
+took no notice of the Sister as she passed and repassed; he never even
+deigned to look at her. The young Pole, on the contrary, called her
+frequently, and gratefully received her care and consolations. One
+evening our young Catholic was suffering more than usual; the pain drew
+tears from his eyes; his groans and cries were incessant. He called the
+Sister and begged her to help him, saying his patience was exhausted;
+he was in despair; his sufferings were excruciating. The Polish Sister,
+consoling and encouraging him, bade him have confidence, and gave
+him a medal to apply to the wounded limb. The young man followed her
+suggestion; and laying his hand on the medal to keep it in place, he
+soon fell asleep. Our Protestant appeared unconscious of what was going
+on, yet he had seen and examined all. Some days after, he called our
+Polish Sister to him, (she was the only one who could understand him)
+and said: 'Sister, please give me what you gave this young man that
+did him so much good, for I suffer greatly!' 'My friend, she replied,
+I desire nothing better than to relieve you also; but you lack what
+effected his cure, faith and confi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>dence. You Protestants deny the
+power of the Blessed Virgin; you do not acknowledge her as your Queen,
+your Advocate, your Mother. So what can I do? It was a medal of Mary
+that so speedily relieved your neighbor, the young Pole.' 'Give me one
+also, Sister,' he answered; 'I believe all that you tell me; you do
+good to every one, why should you deceive me?' 'But,' said the Sister,
+'have you confidence in Mary, the Mother of God? Do you believe in her
+mercy and her power?' 'I believe all that you believe, Sister, since
+Mary hears the prayers of the unfortunate, and brings relief to the
+suffering, she cannot deceive us!' The Sister, much consoled at hearing
+these words, gave him a medal, and our admirable talisman effected in
+his soul most gratifying results. He asked to receive instruction from
+a priest, and after some days employed in studying the holy doctrines
+of the Church, and in assiduous prayer to Mary he abjured his errors.
+As he had been separated from the other patients, on account of the
+unpleasant odor we have mentioned, he was at full liberty to act as he
+wished. After his baptism, and the reception of the holy Eucharist,
+being unable to restrain his transports, he exclaimed: 'Oh! how happy
+I am! My heart has never known such joy! I am content to die, and I do
+not regret having been struck on the battlefield! To my wound do I owe
+my salvation. Oh! how we poor Protestants are deceived! By what lies
+are we led astray! How good God is to rescue me from error! May the
+sweet and holy Virgin be known and loved always and everywhere!' And in
+these beautiful dispositions, he expired."<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
+<blockquote><p>"A sergeant advanced in years had been suffering for three months
+from a severe dysentery; one morning the Sister who was visiting the
+sick found him in tears. 'Ah! my brave soldier,' said she, 'what is
+the meaning of all this grief?' 'O Sister,' he exclaimed, 'lend me
+patience, for mine is exhausted. I am in despair; I can endure my
+sufferings no longer; I feel that I am going to die, and just at the
+time I was to receive a pension&mdash;at the very moment I hoped to return
+to my country with honor and see my family once more. Must I die afar
+from home and leave my bones in a strange land?' Groans were mingled
+with his words, and his gestures had all the violence of despair. The
+Sister who relates the fact says: 'My heart ached at witnessing the
+grief of this brave man, with his white hairs and numerous scars.
+However, as my tears would not have dried his, I tried to rouse his
+courage by other means, and I promised him a perfect cure if he
+would unite in prayer with our little family at the hospital. Giving
+him a Miraculous Medal, I recommended him to God and Mary with my
+whole heart. We made a novena to the Immaculate Virgin, and ere its
+termination our sergeant was entirely cured."<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Every evening our soldiers assembled around the Sisters in charge and
+sang pious canticles; they even composed music and words suited to the
+occasion. These they intoned, uniting their deep, sonorous voices with
+the Sisters'. In unison and harmony of mind as of voice, they repeated
+in chorus the sacred names of Jesus and Mary as a rallying cry of
+hope, confidence and triumph&mdash;a chant of love, a united echo of heaven
+and country. Then their hearts thrilled with joy inex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>pressible, and
+they were filled with pride and happiness at the thought of belonging
+to that France who imparts to her children the heroism of courage
+and the virtue of the perfect Christian. During the month of May
+our military concerts were multiplied; all were rivals in zeal. The
+altars were adorned with admirable piety and taste, notwithstanding
+our extreme poverty. Entire trees were felled to assist in concealing
+the dilapidated state of the barracks, which had been converted into
+chapels. Had our soldiers been free to do so, they would have despoiled
+the gardens of the Turks to adorn the sanctuary of the Queen of Heaven.</p>
+
+<p>"In the ambulances of P&eacute;ra some of the most zealous soldiers, both
+officers and privates, wished to present Mary a solemn homage of their
+devotedness and gratitude. They chose a heart as the symbol of their
+sentiments. All the balls extracted from their wounds were collected to
+compose the offering. But a soldier suddenly exclaimed with enthusiasm:
+'Comrades, what are we doing? Shall we offer the Blessed Virgin a
+schismatical heart? All these balls are Russians!' 'True,' replied
+another, 'these balls are Russian; we must have French balls. Let us
+ask the Russians for those we sent them.' 'Stay,' said a third, 'you
+have forgotten that these Russian balls are stained with our blood!'
+'Well, then, let us use them,' suggested a fourth, 'the French balls
+will form the centre.' They went immediately to ask the Russians for
+the French balls. These were willingly given. The heart was prepared;
+their names inscribed on it with the designation of the regiment, and
+the offering was presented to Mary amid the most lively acclamations
+and transports of joy and gratitude."<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">ITALIAN WAR, 1859.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter of Sister Coste:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>Ga&euml;ta, December 18th, 1860.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>During the siege of Ga&euml;ta, the Sisters of Charity willingly remained
+in the city, to assist the sick and wounded Neapolitans. They felt
+that there was no greater security against the dangers to which they
+were exposed, than that of recommending themselves and their abode
+to the protection of the Blessed Virgin, by means of the Miraculous
+Medal. Their Superioress, Sister Coste, wrote December 18th, 1860:
+"Frequently the cannon roars in our ears; bombs whiz around us, but
+divine Providence is our shield. The first night of our sleeping at the
+palace, we were saluted by the Piedmontese, who sent us a multitude
+of bombs; one of them burst just outside our room, and you might have
+supposed a thunderbolt had fallen. Yet, the precious medal of our
+Immaculate Mother, which we had placed at all the doors and windows,
+shielded us from the danger. A large piece of iron detached itself from
+the bomb above mentioned, and remains in the wall, a visible testimony
+of Mary's protection. This circumstance reanimated our confidence,
+and we hesitate not to pass through the streets, notwithstanding the
+whizzing of projectiles."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">UNITED STATES.</span></p>
+
+<p>Extracts of letters written by Sisters of Charity during the War of
+Secession, from 1861 to 1865:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right"><i>"Military Hospital (House of Refuge),</i> }<br /></p>
+<p class="right"><i>"St. Louis, Missouri.</i> }</p>
+
+
+<p>"Many of our poor soldiers scarcely knew of the existence of God,
+and had never even heard baptism <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>mentioned. But, when the Sisters
+explained to them the necessity of this Sacrament, and the goodness
+of God, who, by means of it, cleanses us from the original stain, and
+adopts us as His children, they were filled with the deepest emotion,
+and often shed tears. On one occasion, a patient said: 'Sister, do not
+leave me; tell me more about that good God whom I ought to love. How
+is it that I have lived so long and have never heard Him spoken of
+as you have just done? What must I do to become a child of God? 'You
+must,' replied the Sister, 'believe and be baptized.' 'Well, baptize
+me,' was his answer. The Sister persuaded him to await the arrival of
+Father Burke, who would be there next morning. The patient consented
+reluctantly. 'Ah!' said he, 'it is very long to wait, and I am so weak;
+if I die unbaptized, I shall not go to Heaven.' To relieve his anxiety,
+the Sister promised to watch near him and administer baptism, should
+she perceive any unfavorable change in his condition. 'Now,' said he,
+'I am satisfied; I rely on you to open for me the gates of Heaven; it
+is through your intervention I must enter.' He spent a quiet night.
+Next morning, Father Burke admitted him into the Catholic Church, by
+the Sacrament of Baptism, which he received with admirable piety. A
+crucifix was presented him; grasping it eagerly, he kissed it, saying
+as he did so: 'O my God! I did not know Thee or love Thee before coming
+to this hospital!' Then, turning to the Sister, he said: 'Sister, I
+have forgotten the prayer you taught me;' and he repeated after her
+several times, 'My Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit, sweet
+Jesus, receive my soul.' He died pronouncing these words."</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
+<p>"The precise number of baptisms cannot be ascertained; there were
+probably seven hundred during the two or three years of our residence
+in the hospital. Five hundred Catholics who had led careless or
+sinful lives returned sincerely to God and resumed the practice of
+their religious duties. A great number of these had received no other
+Sacrament than that of Baptism, and they made their first Communion
+at the hospital. The majority of the newly baptized died; the others
+on leaving asked for medals and catechisms, saying they desired to
+instruct themselves and their families."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"A soldier named Nichols fell dangerously ill, and in a few days was
+reduced to the last extremity. Vainly did we strive to touch his heart
+and awaken him to a sense of religion. His sufferings were terrible;
+both day and night was he denied repose, and he could scarcely remain
+a moment in the same position. His condition was most pitiful. Many of
+his companions, knowing that he had never been baptized, and having
+perceived the beneficial effects of baptism upon others, begged the
+Sisters to propose to him the reception of this Sacrament, thinking it
+might be a comfort to him, and not being aware of the many efforts that
+had already been made to induce him to believe in its necessity and
+efficacy. However, we redoubled our efforts, and placed a Miraculous
+Medal under his pillow. His comrades regarded his sufferings as a
+visible chastisement of his impiety. We could not induce him to
+pronounce the name of God, but he implored the physician, in the most
+heart rending accents, not to let him die. Four days passed without the
+least change, when one of his companions, who appeared the most deeply
+interested in his <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>welfare, said to him, with eyes filled with tears,
+how much he regretted to see him die thus, utterly bereft of a hope for
+the future. The other soldiers had engaged this man to acquaint the
+patient with his danger, and persuade him to make his peace with God,
+for they saw that human respect alone prevented his showing any signs
+of repentance. This last effort of charity was crowned with success;
+he called for the Sister, and when she came, said to her: 'Sister,
+I am ready to do all you wish.' After instructing him in what was
+necessary for salvation, and feeling convinced of the sincerity of his
+dispositions, she asked him by whom he wished to be baptized. 'By any
+one you please,' was his answer. But, to be sure that he did not desire
+a Protestant minister, she said: 'Shall I send for the priest who
+attends this ward?' 'Yes,' he replied, 'it is he I wish to baptize me.'
+The priest was sent for without delay, and we had the inexpressible
+consolation of seeing this poor sinner admitted into the number of
+the children of God by the very person who, a few days previous, had
+been an object of his raillery. He became perfectly calm, and expired
+shortly after, invoking the holy name of Jesus."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Among the patients was a poor young man named William Hudson, who for
+a long time refused to receive baptism. The Sisters, however, nowise
+discouraged, explained to him the Sacrament of Baptism, and instructed
+him in the mysteries of our holy religion, and the Sister, under whose
+immediate charge he was, hung a medal around his neck. Finally, he
+asked to speak to good Father Burke; was baptized, and expired in the
+most edifying dispositions, pronouncing the holy <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>name of Mary. Several
+others followed his example, and made their peace with God before
+death."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Mr. Huls, a man of thirty-five, though convinced of the necessity
+of baptism, postponed the reception of it from day to day. Knowing
+that he had but little attraction for our holy religion, I forbore to
+mention the subject too frequently. Nevertheless, seeing that death
+was rapidly approaching, I placed a medal under his pillow and begged
+the Blessed Virgin to take charge of his salvation. The next day, just
+as I was turning away after giving him a drink, he called me and said:
+'Sister, what ought I to do to prepare for the next world?' I told
+him that it was necessary to repent of his sins, because sin is the
+greatest of evils, and it had caused the sufferings and death of our
+Lord Jesus Christ; that God's goodness and mercy towards sinners are
+infinite, and that He is always ready to pardon us, even at the last
+moment, if we sincerely return to Him. I urged him to cast himself
+with confidence into the arms of this merciful Father, who earnestly
+desired to open for him the gates of the Eternal City, and I added
+that it was absolutely necessary to be baptized. He assured me that
+he believed all I had said to him; he then repeated with fervor the
+acts of faith, hope, charity, contrition, and resignation to the will
+of God. Seeing that he was entering into his agony, I baptized him;
+the Sacraments appeared to revive his strength. He began to pray, and
+made such beautiful aspirations of love and gratitude to God, that one
+might have said his good angel inspired them, particularly the act of
+contrition. I remained with him to the last, praying for him, when he
+had not strength to do so himself; if I paused a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>moment through fear
+of fatiguing him: 'Go on Sister,' he would say in dying accents, 'I can
+still pray.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"Another soldier, William Barrett, scarcely twenty years of age,
+was almost in a dying condition when brought to the hospital. After
+doing all I could for the relief of his poor body, I inquired very
+cautiously as to the state of his soul. Alas! it was deplorable; not
+that he had committed great crimes, but that he was entirely ignorant
+of everything relating to his salvation. He had never said a prayer,
+and he hardly knew of the existence of a God. My first conversation
+with him on the subject of religion, was not altogether pleasing to
+him, for he did not understand it; but when I had briefly explained the
+principal articles of Faith, he listened very attentively, and begged
+me to tell him something more. When I told him that our Lord had loved
+us so much as to become man and die on a cross for our salvation, he
+could not restrain his tears: 'Oh!' said he, 'why did no one ever tell
+me that? Oh! if I had only known it sooner! How could I have lived so
+long without knowing and loving my God!' I now prepared him to receive
+the Sacrament of Baptism, and tried to make him sensible of God's
+great mercy, in bringing him to the hospital, that he might die a holy
+death. He understood this and much more, for grace had spoken to this
+poor heart, so truly penetrated with sorrow for sin. 'I wish to love
+God,' said he, 'but I am such a miserable creature! I would like to
+pray, but I do not know how. Sister, pray for me, please.' I promised
+to do so, and offering him a medal of the Blessed Virgin, I told him
+that by wearing it, he would secure the intercession of the Mother of
+God, who is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>ever powerful with her divine Son. He gladly accepted the
+medal, put it around his neck, and repeated, not only the aspiration,
+O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee,
+but other prayers, to obtain the grace of a happy death. He then asked
+me when I would have him carried to the river, for he was under the
+impression that he could not be baptized without being immersed. I
+explained to him the manner in which the Catholic Church administers
+this Sacrament, and the dispositions necessary for receiving it.
+Listening eagerly to every word I uttered, 'Pray with me, Sister,' said
+he, 'come nearer, that I may hear you better, for I do not know how to
+pray.' He repeated with great fervor all the prayers I recited, and
+thought only of preparing himself for his baptism which was to take
+place on the following day. From that time he wished to converse with
+the Sisters only. If his companions or the attendants came to him, he
+answered them in a few words, evidently showing that he desired to be
+alone with his God. One of the officers asked him, if he wished any one
+to write to his family. 'Do not speak to me of my family now,' said
+he, 'the Sisters have written to my parents. I wish for nothing but to
+pray and to be baptized.' And the words ever on his lips, were these:
+'O God, have mercy on me, a sinner.' Towards evening he became so weak,
+that I thought it best to remain with him. At three o'clock in the
+morning, fearing that he was in his agony, I administered the Sacrament
+of Regeneration; he lived till seven o'clock. The fervor with which he
+united in the prayers was truely edifying; even when scarcely able to
+speak, he tried to express his gratitude to God for His goodness and
+mercy to him. He was most anxious to quit this world, that he might <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>go
+to that Father, who had admitted him into the number of His children,
+and whom he so earnestly desired to see and know."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"A soldier, advanced in age, told me one day, that in his country
+the prejudices of the people were so strong against our Faith, that
+they would refuse hospitality to a traveler did they know him to be
+a Catholic; as to himself, he had never met with a Catholic previous
+to his coming to the hospital; but what he had seen here (nothing
+comparable to which had he ever witnessed among Protestants), was
+sufficient to convince him of the truth of Catholicity; that he had
+belonged to the Presbyterian Church, but he would remain in it no
+longer, and desired to be instructed in our holy religion. I gave him
+a catechism and some other books, which he read with great attention.
+Perceiving that his end approached, he asked for a priest and was
+baptized. 'If it were the will of God,' said he, speaking of his
+property, which was considerable, 'I should like to live a little
+longer and enjoy my fortune; but if the Lord wills otherwise, I am
+ready to leave all.' He was ever repeating these words: 'Not as I will,
+O Lord, but as Thou wilt.' From the moment of his baptism, he applied
+himself most diligently to a profitable disposition of the remainder
+of life, that he might prepare for his journey to eternity. At times,
+when he felt a little stronger, he studied the catechism; and when he
+could no longer hold a book, he prayed and meditated in silence. One
+day as I was giving him a drink, he showed me his medal. 'Ah!' said
+he, tears of gratitude streaming down his cheeks, 'behold! my Mother.
+I kiss her every hour!' He prayed constantly, even when he could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>neither eat, drink, nor sleep. Once when he was extremely weak, the
+attendants having changed his position, he fainted, and rallied only
+with great difficulty. On perceiving that I was trying to restore him:
+'Ah! Sister,' said he, 'why did you not let me go?' He also remarked to
+the attendants, that he feared the Sister would prolong his life for
+a month, but his fears were not realized; in a few days he slept the
+sleep of the just.</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"One of the soldiers, who had been a long time in the hospital, having
+fallen very ill, I tried to persuade him to make his peace with God,
+before going to meet that God as his Judge. My efforts met with little
+success; he did not admit the necessity of baptism, and he was not in
+the least concerned about his salvation. But he accepted a medal, and
+without being aware of it, he swallowed some drops of holy water. Then
+I recommended him very earnestly to the Blessed Virgin, and in a few
+days after he asked to be instructed, and was baptized. We could not
+give him greater pleasure than to pray beside him. He received Extreme
+Unction with deep and sincere devotion, and expired in the most happy
+dispositions."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"In the hospital was a soldier named Sanders, who, though not very ill,
+was unable to join his regiment. He had no idea of religion. I remarked
+that he observed us very closely, as if examining our conduct; nothing
+escaped him. Before leaving, he came to bid me good-by and thank me for
+the care I had bestowed upon him. I was somewhat surprised, as I had
+had no occasion of serving him; but, seeing he was so well disposed, I
+profited by the opportunity to offer him a medal and a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>book explaining
+the Catholic Faith. He accepted them with gratitude, and returned to
+his regiment. A year later, he came again to the hospital, hastening
+to inform me of his conversion, and seeking a priest, by whom he was
+gladly instructed and received into the fold of the Holy Church. 'I
+owe my conversion,' said he, 'to the intercession of the Immaculate
+Mary and your prayers, and it has been my happy lot to bring other
+souls to God.' This was, indeed, the case; employed in a military
+hospital, where he was the only Catholic, by his zeal and solicitude
+he instructed many poor sick, called a priest, had them baptized, and
+enjoyed the consolation of procuring eternal happiness for a large
+number of his fellow-soldiers."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p>"In 1862, a Sister of the hospital at New Orleans gave a medal to one
+of the attendants on the point of setting out for the army, and she
+advised him to keep it always about him. Some time after, he returned,
+having received a slight wound on the head. On seeing the Sister, he
+exclaimed: 'Sister, here is the medal you gave me; it has saved my
+life! Just in the midst of battle, the string by which the medal hung
+around my neck broke, and whilst the cannons were roaring around us, I
+attached it to a button of my uniform; all my companions fell, and I
+escaped with this slight contusion.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">"<i>Military Hospital of Philadelphia.</i><br /></p>
+
+<p>"A soldier was brought to the hospital grievously wounded. A few
+questions which the Sister put to him on the subject of religion
+revealed the fact, that not only was he not baptized, but also most
+ignorant of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>truths essential to salvation. The Sister then
+began to instruct him, and with all requisite prudence, gave him to
+understand that the physicians despaired of his recovery. From this
+moment he listened with the deepest interest to explanations of the
+catechism; and, one day, when Sister had spoken to him of the necessity
+of that Sacrament which renders us children of God and heirs of heaven,
+he joined his hands and said in the most beseeching tone: 'Oh! do
+not let me die without baptism!' The Sister then asked him from what
+minister he desired to receive this Sacrament and he replied: 'From
+yours; from him who says Mass in the Sister's Chapel.' Before the close
+of the day, Father MacGrane had satisfied the sick man's pious desire,
+and the new Christian, filled with joy, incessantly repeated acts of
+love and gratitude. The physician, making his evening visit, found
+him so ill, that he directed the attendant to watch him all night,
+saying he might die at any moment. Before retiring, the Sister gave
+him a medal of the Blessed Virgin, and briefly narrating to him how
+this tender Mother had often wrought miraculous cures by means of her
+blessed image; she encouraged the dying man to address himself to Mary
+with entire confidence.</p>
+
+<p>"Next morning she was surprised to find him better; but he was much
+troubled about 'his piece,' which he could not find; he feared it
+had been taken away. The Sister soon found and restored it to him;
+receiving it most joyfully, he asked for a string and placed the
+medal over his wound. When the physician came, which was soon after,
+he was no less surprised than the Sister at perceiving the change in
+his patient's condition. The patient, (Duken by name), continued to
+improve, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>and in a few weeks he could walk with the aid of crutches.
+His first visit was to the chapel; from that day, whenever we had Mass,
+he rose at five o'clock in order to assist at it; and so eager was he
+for Father MacGrane's instructions, that the intervening time from one
+Sunday to another seemed to him very long. He attributed his cure to
+the Blessed Virgin, and it was indeed most remarkable; for he was out
+of the physician's hands long before many other soldiers of the same
+ward whose wounds were less dangerous, and who had received the same
+attentions, were able to leave their beds. He asked for a furlough
+that he might visit his wife, whom he was very anxious to see a member
+of the true Church, but 'knowing her prejudice against Catholics, he
+dared hope for such a happiness.' It was, nevertheless, granted him;
+she consented to be baptized with her children, and Duken returned to
+the hospital, blessing God and the holy Virgin for the wonderful graces
+bestowed on his family.</p>
+
+<p>"Our Sisters of the South, like those of the North, were in great
+demand wherever sufferings and miseries claimed relief, and they
+responded to the call with a holy courage and eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"In these divers localities was the Miraculous Medal the instrument God
+frequently employed in delivering souls from the yoke of Satan. How
+often have we seen Mary's image kissed respectfully by lips which had
+formerly uttered only blasphemies against the Mother of God! Every one
+asked for a medal; some, no doubt, urged by curiosity or the desire of
+possessing a souvenir of the Sisters, as they themselves acknowledged;
+but, even so, they could not carry upon their person this sweet
+image, without growing better and experiencing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>the effects of Mary's
+protection. In nearly every case, what rendered the triumph of grace
+still more remarkable was the fact of its acting upon men who were not
+only ignorant, but fanatical, hating the name of Catholic, and excited
+to fury at the sight of a priest. A Sister relates that she ventured,
+one day, to ask a soldier, who was in the threshold of eternity, if he
+had been baptized. 'No,' was the reply, in a voice of thunder; 'no, and
+I have no wish to be plunged in water just now. Let me alone!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Recommending him to Mary,' says the Sister, 'I left him. Towards
+evening, I heard a noise in the ward in the direction of his bed,
+and the attendant came in haste to say that the patient had sent for
+me.' 'Ah!' said the latter, in a tone very different from that of his
+morning's speech; 'I am dying, baptize me, I beg of you.' 'Giving him
+briefly the necessary instruction, I administered the holy rite, and a
+few hours later he peacefully expired.'</p>
+
+<p>"Rarely did these poor soldiers complain of their fate; though but
+little accustomed to the rigors of military life, they bore them with
+admirable patience. However, there was one exception to the general
+rule, that of an old soldier, who murmured continually and accused God
+of afflicting him unjustly. Arguments were worse than useless, they
+served but to aggravate the evil. Failing in this means to bring him to
+a better state of mind, I offered him a medal of the Blessed Virgin.
+By degrees, his complaints ceased, his countenance became composed and
+serene, and I had the consolation of seeing him expire in the most
+edifying dispositions."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">THE WAR BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND AUSTRIA, 1866.</span></p>
+
+<p>Letter of Mr. Stroever, Priest of the Mission, July 1st, 1867:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"The wounded arrive in great numbers, and all our houses are filled.
+Every one wishes to have a medal; I inquired of one, who had begged for
+a medal at any price, if he were a Catholic. 'No,' was the answer; 'I
+am a Protestant but I would like to have it as a souvenir of yourself;'
+and he received it most gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"We observe a certain degree of piety among the soldiers, and the
+sick are most eager to receive the Sacraments. The Protestants show a
+remarkable inclination to Catholicity. Not only the private soldiers,
+but even persons of distinction, wishing to have medals, scapulars or a
+crucifix. They take no measures to conceal these objects of devotion,
+and no one seems surprised at seeing them on their persons."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">REMINISCENCES OF THE COMMUNE, PARIS, 1871.</span></p>
+
+<p>Notes of a Sister of the Hospital d'Enghien:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"During the siege, we had placed Miraculous Medals over all the doors
+and windows of the house. As one of our Sisters expressed the intention
+of concealing them, Sister Catherine exclaimed: 'No, no; they must be
+seen; put them in the middle of the principal entrance.'</p>
+
+<p>"During the few days immediately preceding our departure from the
+house, the federal national guards said to one another: 'Let us go and
+ask the venerable Sister Catherine for medals; she has given some to
+our comrades who have shown them to us, we would like to <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>have them
+too.' 'But you, poor creatures,' replied a Sister, 'you have no faith,
+no religion, what good will the medal do you.' 'Very true, Sister,'
+said they, 'we have not much faith, but we believe in the medal; it has
+protected others, it will also protect us, and when we go to battle,
+it will help us to die as brave soldiers.' Good Sister Catherine gave
+medals to all who presented themselves, and many, who belonged to the
+enemy, sent their comrades to procure them.</p>
+
+<p>"After the army had entered Paris, thirty of the wounded insurgents,
+before being brought to trial, were sent to the Hospital d'Enghien
+to be nursed by the Sisters. The house was already transformed into
+an ambulance, and we were obliged to take one of the dormitories of
+the orphans for the newly-arrived patients. The appearance of these
+men were so frightful, that Sister Eugenie who had been appointed to
+attend them, had not the courage for the first two days to make any
+suggestions to them concerning religion; but finally, feeling that she
+must comply with her duty, and urged by the advice of a companion,
+she went to Sister Catherine and asked for medals for the insurgents.
+Sister gave them cheerfully, and encouraged her to use this powerful
+means of inspiring these unfortunate men with Christian sentiments.
+Animated by this thought, Sister Eugenie repaired to the ward, and much
+affected, proposed to say evening prayers. 'Yes, Sister,' answered
+some among them. Trembling, she began; but at the <i>Creed</i>, overcome by
+excitement and terror, she wept like a child, and was obliged to pause.
+When she recovered her voice, it was not to continue the prayers, but
+to tell the prisoners how much she felt at the thought that on the
+morrow, they would be judged <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>and perhaps condemned; then making them
+a brief exhortation, inspired by the circumstances, she offered to
+give each one a medal of the Blessed Virgin, begging them to retain it
+about their person, happen what might. The proposition was accepted
+immediately, but Sister Eugenie was too frightened to give the medal
+into their hands; in the middle of the night, when all seemed to be
+asleep, she quietly placed a medal under each one's pillow. How great
+was her joy next morning, to see all these poor insurgents with the
+medal around their neck.</p>
+
+<p>"The Superioress came into the hall where the men were collected and
+asked if they wished a priest to come and hear their confessions. All
+consented with unequivocal signs of gratitude. A good priest, one
+of the hostages of the Commune, came and heard their confession. On
+leaving them he seemed much consoled, and said he had every reason to
+hope for their salvation. The unfortunate men left the house at seven
+o'clock, and were conducted to Versailles; they were calm and resigned,
+and when about to leave, showed the Sisters the medal they wore.
+Doubtless, God accepted the sacrifice of their life in atonement for
+their faults."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill-chap.jpg" width="315" height="150" alt="" /></div>
+
+
+<h2><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+<p class="title">Recent Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>IN FRANCE, ITALY AND GERMANY</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">THE CONFIDENCE WITH WHICH THESE APPARITIONS SHOULD INSPIRE US.</span></p>
+
+
+<p>The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, has, in our
+age, brought to its climax, devotion to the Blessed Virgin. Divine
+Providence employed twenty-four years in preparing the world for this
+great event; we have seen in the preceding chapters, how much the
+apparition of 1830, contributed thereto, and how powerful the influence
+of the Miraculous Medal in propagating this devotion. Since this time a
+second period of twenty-four years has elapsed, during which devotion
+to the Immaculate Mary has shone as a radiant star in the firmament
+of the Church, spreading everywhere the light of truth and the warmth
+of true piety; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>and, by a gentle yet efficacious impulse, producing
+unanimity of mind and heart in the great Catholic family.</p>
+
+<p>Since the definition, as well as before it, France continues to be the
+privileged country of Mary; nowhere else are miracles so numerous, or
+graces so abundant. Whence arises this glorious prerogative? So far as
+we are permitted to penetrate the secrets of God, it appears to us, to
+our understanding: France who has wrought so much evil by disseminating
+philosophical and revolutionary doctrines, is to repair the past by
+propagating truth, and Mary desires to prepare her for this mission.
+Everyone knows, moreover, that the French character possesses a force
+of expansion and a power of energy that render the French eminently
+qualified to maintain the interests of truth and justice. Then, again,
+is not France the eldest daughter of the Church, since she was baptized
+in the person of Clovis, the first of the Most Christian Kings; and in
+virtue of this title, is it not her duty to devote herself under the
+patronage of her Mother in heaven to the defence of her Mother on earth?</p>
+
+<p>Be the motives of Mary's predilection for the French nation what they
+may, the fact is incontrovertible. Nevertheless, the Blessed Virgin has
+not forgotten other Catholic countries; they also have had their share
+in the singular favors she has so generously dispensed in our days.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">OUR LADY OF LOURDES.&mdash;1858.</span></p>
+
+<p>Four years after the definition of the Immaculate Conception, Mary
+vouchsafed to manifest herself anew to the world, and this time, as if
+in token of her gratitude, she took the glorious name the Church had
+just <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>decreed her: "<i>I am the Immaculate Conception</i>." It was in France
+that the vision of the medal took place, preparatory to the act of
+December 8th, 1854; it was also in France, at Lourdes, in the diocese
+of Tarbes, at the base of the Pyrenees, that Mary came in person, to
+testify and proclaim that privilege which she prized above all others.
+In 1830, she choose a young, unlettered Sister for her confidant; in
+1846, she addressed herself to two poor peasant children; in 1858, she
+also selects one in the humblest ranks of life as the depository of her
+merciful designs.</p>
+
+<p>Bernadette Soubirous, born at Lourdes in 1844, of poor parents, was
+a young girl of weak and delicate health; she could neither read nor
+write; she knew no prayers but her <i>Chaplet</i>, and she could speak only
+the <i>patois</i> of the country. "On February 11th, 1858," says she, "my
+parents were in great perplexity for want of wood to cook the dinner. I
+put on my hood, and offered to go with my younger sister Marie and our
+friend, the little Jeanne Abadie, to pick up some dead branches." The
+three children repaired to the bank of the Gave, opposite the grotto
+of Masabielle; in which were collected the sand and branches of trees
+drifted there by the current. But to reach the grotto, it was necessary
+to wade through the shallow bed of the river. Marie and Jeanne took off
+their shoes without hesitation; Bernadette delayed and feared to cross,
+as she was suffering from a cold. Whilst thus deliberating, she was
+astonished by a rushing of wind, instantly repeated, though the trees
+near the river were motionless. One vine only was slightly agitated,
+an eglantine, which grew in the upper part of this natural grotto.
+This niche and the wild rose within reflected a most <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>extraordinary
+brilliancy; a Lady of admirable beauty appeared in the niche, her feet
+resting on the eglantine, her arms gracefully bent, and her hands
+joined; with a sweet smile, she saluted the child. Bernadette's first
+emotion was one of fear; she instinctively grasped her chaplet, as if
+seeking defence in it, and she tried to raise her hand to make the sign
+of the cross, but her arm fell powerless and her terror increased. The
+Lady also had a <i>Chaplet</i> suspended from her left wrist; taking it in
+her right hand, she made a very distinct sign of the cross, and passed
+between her fingers the beads (white as drops of milk); but her lips
+did not move. She smiled upon the shepherdess, who, reassured from
+this moment, recovered the use of her arm, made the sign of the cross
+and recited the <i>Chaplet</i>. The little Bernadette remained on her knees
+nearly an hour, in ecstacy. At length, the Lady made her a sign to
+approach, but Bernadette did not move. Then the Lady, extending her
+hand, smiled, and, bowing as if bidding farewell, disappeared. Returned
+to herself, Bernadette thought of rejoining her companions, who, having
+seen nothing, were at a loss to understand her conduct. She entered
+the water, which she found, to her surprise, of a gentle warmth. On
+reaching home, she imparted the secret to her sister, and then to her
+mother, who did not credit it.</p>
+
+<p>However, the child being tormented by an earnest desire to behold the
+apparition again, her parents granted permission for her return to the
+grotto with several companions; the same manifestation took place and
+the same ecstacy. On Thursday, February 18th, she again repaired to the
+grotto; the apparition was visible for the third time, and the Lady
+requested Bernadette to come there daily for a fortnight. Bernadette
+promised. "And <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>I," replied the Lady, "promise to render you happy not
+in this world, but the next."</p>
+
+<p>On the succeeding days, the young girl went to the grotto, accompanied
+by her parents and an ever increasing crowd. None of them saw or
+heard anything. The transfiguration of the countenance of Bernadette
+announced the presence of a supernatural being, who urged the child to
+pray for sinners.</p>
+
+<p>On the sixth day of the fortnight, the august Lady revealed to
+Bernadette three secrets, forbidding her to communicate them to any
+one. She taught her a prayer, and charged her with a message. "You will
+go," said she, "and tell the priest that a chapel must be built here,
+and that the people must come here in procession."</p>
+
+<p>Bernadette communicated this order to the cur&eacute;, but he hesitated to
+believe the child, and told her to ask the Lady for a sign which might
+confirm her words, for example, to make the wild rose which winter has
+divested of its leaves, break forth into blossom, then the month of
+February.</p>
+
+<p>The Blessed Virgin did not judge proper to grant the miracle, but she
+tried Bernadette's obedience, by commanding her to kiss the ground
+on several occasions, and to climb the rock on her knees, praying
+meantime for sinners. One day she enjoined upon her to go and drink at
+the fountain of the grotto, to wash therein, and to eat of a certain
+herb which grew in that place. Bernadette saw no fountain, and no one
+had ever heard of one in the grotto, yet on a sign from the Lady, the
+docile child dug the earth with her fingers, and discovered a muddy
+water which, notwithstanding her repugnance, she used as commanded.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
+<p>At the end of several days, the little thread of muddy water had become
+a limpid and abundant spring, and what was still more marvelous, it
+wrought innumerable prodigies. On February 26th, by the use of this
+water, a man who had gone blind twenty years previous, by the explosion
+of a mine, recovered his sight, and on the last day of the fortnight, a
+child dying, or as was supposed, dead, regained life and health in the
+waters of this fountain.</p>
+
+<p>We will not dwell here upon the persecutions directed against
+Bernadette by the magistrates, or upon the vexations besetting the
+pilgrims who flocked hither from all parts of the world. Every one has
+read these details in the work of M. Lasserre, who so ably depicts the
+dignity and firmness displayed in the affair by the parish priest, M.
+Peyramale.</p>
+
+<p>The apparition of March 25th, has a special significance. Bernadette,
+on several occasions, inquired the Lady's name. At this question, the
+vision, on the day mentioned, unclasped her hands, the chaplet of
+golden chain and alabaster grains sliding on to her arm. She opened her
+arms and directed them towards the earth, as if to indicate that her
+virginal hands were filled with benedictions for the human race; then
+raising them towards the celestial country, whence descended on this
+day the divine messenger of the Annunciation, she clasped them with
+fervor, and looking towards heaven with an indescribable expression
+of gratitude, she pronounced these words: "<i>I am the Immaculate
+Conception</i>." Having said this, she disappeared, and the child found
+herself and the multitude in presence of a bare rock.</p>
+
+<p>The Immaculate Virgin appeared to Bernadette twice again; on Easter
+Monday, April 5th, and July 16th, the Feast of our Lady of Mount
+Carmel.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span></p>
+<p>The following 28th of July, the Bishop of Tarbes named a commission of
+inquiry, composed of ecclesiastics, physicians and learned men. July
+18th, 1862, he published a decree concerning the events that had taken
+place at Lourdes; it was couched in the following words:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"We judge that the Immaculate Mother of God did really appear to
+Bernadette Soubirous, Feb. 11th, 1858, and on succeeding days to the
+number of eighteen times in the grotto of Masabielle, near the city of
+Lourdes; that this apparition bears all the characteristics of truth,
+and that the faithful may rely upon its reality."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mary had petitioned that a chapel be built upon the spot. The first
+stone was laid in the month of October, 1862, the piety of pilgrims
+furnishing the necessary funds for the erection of the edifice, and on
+the 21st of May, 1868, the Holy Mass was celebrated there for the first
+time, in the crypt which was to bear the new sanctuary. The connection
+existing between the apparitions of 1858 and 1830 is indicated by two
+painted windows in the sanctuary, one of which represents Bernadette's
+vision, the other that of Sister Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>The pilgrimage to Lourdes has assumed vast proportions; thanks to the
+railroads, the pilgrims each year number hundreds of thousands, coming
+from every quarter of the globe, and countless miracles recompense the
+faith of those who seek in this sanctuary the merciful power of the
+Immaculate Mary.</p>
+
+<p>The grotto of Lourdes, reproduced in a thousand places, has become one
+of the most popular objects of devotion.</p>
+
+<p>As to Bernadette, the interest and veneration attached to her have not
+in the least affected her candor and simplicity. She has retired to the
+convent of Sisters Hospitallers of Nevers, and nothing distinguishes
+her from the most humble of her companions.</p>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center smaller"><span class="smcap">OUR LADY OF PONTMAIN (DIOCESE OF LAVAL).&mdash;1871.</span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"France, having been invaded by the Prussians, was conquered; Paris
+was besieged and suffered the horrors of famine, aggravated by the
+rigors of an extremely cold winter. It was at this period the Blessed
+Virgin vouchsafed to appear, bringing words of hope and consolation to
+the people of her predilection. The place favored with this apparition
+was the little town of Pontmain, situated about four leagues from
+Foug&egrave;res, on the confines of the dioceses of Laval and Rennes. It was
+Monday, January 17th, 1871, about six o'clock in the evening; Eug&egrave;ne
+Barbedette, a child aged twelve years, looking from the door of the
+barn where he was occupied with his father and younger brother, Joseph,
+aged ten years, perceived in the air, a little above and behind the
+house of the family of Guidecoq, which was opposite him, a tall and
+beautiful Lady, who smiled upon him. He called his brother, his father,
+and a woman of the village who was talking to him at the moment. But
+his brother was the only one except himself who saw the vision, and
+both gave exactly the same description of this wonderful being. The
+Lady was clothed in a wide-sleeved blue robe, embroidered with golden
+stars. Her dress descended to the shoes, which were also blue, fastened
+with a clasp of gold-colored ribbon. She wore a black veil, covering a
+portion of her forehead and falling behind her shoulders to the girdle.
+Upon her head was a golden circle like a diadem, and with no ornament
+but a red line passing through the middle. Her face was delicate, very
+white, and of incomparable beauty.</p>
+
+<p>"In a little while, quite a crowd had collected around <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span>the barn-door;
+Madame Barbedette, the Sisters in charge of the parish school, the
+venerable cur&eacute;, and more than sixty other persons, but of all these,
+only two shared the happiness of the Barbedette children. These two
+were also children, boarders at the convent. Frances Richer, aged
+eleven years, and Jane Mary Leboss&eacute;, aged nine and a half. The other
+spectators were witnesses only of the joy and happiness of the four
+privileged ones, but all were convinced that it was truly the Blessed
+Virgin who had appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"The Blessed Virgin's attitude was at first, that seen in the
+Miraculous Medal. After the parish priest arrived, a circle of blue
+was formed around the apparition, and a small red cross like that worn
+by pilgrims, appeared on the Blessed Virgin's heart. All began to
+pray. Suddenly the vision was enlarged, and outside the blue circle,
+appeared a long white strip or band, on which the children saw letters
+successively traced and forming those words: '<i>But pray, my children.
+God will, in a short time hear you. My Son allows himself to be touched
+by your supplications.</i>' Then, raising her hands, as if in unison with
+the singing of the canticle, '<i>Mother of hope</i>,' there appeared in them
+a red crucifix at the top of which was the inscription: <i>Jesus Christ</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"This prodigy was visible for three hours. After juridical information,
+Mgr. Wicart, Bishop of Laval, confirmed by a solemn judgment, the
+reality of the apparition.</p>
+
+<p>"On the 17th of January, 1872, the first anniversary of the event, a
+beautiful statue representing the apparition, was solemnly set up, in
+presence of more than eight thousand pilgrims, and a magnificent church
+is now in course of erection on the spot.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
+<p>"The Holy See has authorized the clergy of the diocese of Laval
+to recite the <i>Office</i> and celebrate the Mass of the Immaculate
+Conception, every year, on the 17th of January; and by Papal brief,
+an archconfraternity, under the title of <i>Our Lady of Hope</i>, has been
+instituted in the parish of Pontmain."<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>We could enumerate many other apparitions of the Blessed Virgin in
+France, but, not having been approved, by ecclesiastical authority, we
+dare not give them as authentic. We shall mention only the apparitions
+with which Miss Estelle Faguette was favored with at Pellevoisin, in
+the diocese of Bourges. The instantaneous cure of this lady, afflicted
+by a malady judged incurable, may be regarded as evidence of the truth
+of the account. Moreover, the Archbishop of Bourges appears to have
+considered it reliable, as he has authorized the erection of a chapel
+in memory of the event. On the 14th of February, 1876, the Blessed
+Virgin appeared to Miss Faguette, and the vision was repeated fifteen
+times in the space of ten months. Mary's attitude was similar to that
+represented on the Miraculous Medal, except that the rays proceeding
+from her hands were replaced by drops of dew, symbols of grace. A
+scapular of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was on her breast.</p>
+
+<p>Mary expressed her love for France, but complained of her admonitions
+being disregarded. She recommended fervent prayer, by the fulfillment
+of which duty we may confidently rely upon God's mercy.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"What have I not done for France?" said she. "How many warnings have
+I not given! Yet, this unhappy land refuses to listen. I can no
+longer restrain my Son's <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>wrath. France will suffer. Have courage and
+confidence. I come especially for the conversion of sinners. You must
+pray; I set you the example. My Son's heart has so great love for my
+heart that He cannot refuse my petitions. You must all pray, and have
+confidence!" Showing the scapular, she said: "I love this devotion."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Who has not heard of the wonderful manifestations of the Blessed Virgin
+in Italy of late years? How many thousands of persons, moved by piety
+or curiosity, have visited the Madonnas of Rimini, of San Ginesio,
+of Vicovaro, of Prosessi, etc., and have witnessed the movement of
+the eyes, the change of color, and other miraculous signs certainly
+attributable to none but a supernatural power. It does not appear,
+however, that Mary has, in this country, presented herself in person,
+though here she receives the most sincere and abundant tributes of
+affection. Doubtless, she considers any stimulus to the faith of its
+people unnecessary. And besides, may we not say that she has fixed her
+abode in Italy, since her own house, the house of Nazareth, wherein the
+mystery of the Incarnation was accomplished, and where dwelt the Holy
+Family, has been transported thither by the hands of angels?</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>Whilst the Prussian government is persecuting the Church, the Blessed
+Virgin vouchsafed to appear in the two most Catholic provinces of her
+kingdom, and in two opposite frontiers, near the banks of the Rhine
+and in the Grand Duchy of Posen. Does she not seem to say to the good
+people of these localities, that they must have confidence and that
+God will conquer their enemies? We must remark that on both of these
+occasions, Mary announces herself as the <i>Virgin conceived without
+sin</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
+<p>We give an abridged account of these two apparitions, which we have
+every reason to consider supernatural. The second vision had been
+formally approved by the Bishop of Ermeland.</p>
+
+<p>On the 3rd of July, 1876, at Marpingen, an inconsiderable village of
+the district of Tr&egrave;ves (Rhenish Prussia), the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to three little girls, in a pine forest about the hour of the evening.
+The three children were each about eight years of age, and belonged
+to families of poor, honest farmers residing in the village. They
+perceived a bright light, and in the midst of it a beautiful Lady
+seated, holding a child in her right arm. The Lady and child were clad
+in white, the Lady crowned with red roses, and in her clasped hands, a
+little cross.</p>
+
+<p>The vision was renewed several times. To the childrens' questions as
+to her name, she answered; "<i>I am she who was conceived without sin</i>;"
+and when asked what she desired, the reply was: "That you pray with
+fervor, and that you commit no sin." Several sick persons were cured by
+touching the place which the children pointed out as that occupied by
+the Blessed Virgin. These facts are incontestable; but they have not
+yet been examined by ecclesiastical authority.<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>In the village of Grietzwald, in Varmia, one of the ancient provinces
+of Poland annexed to Prussia, four young girls, poor and of great
+innocence, were favored on various occasions for two months, beginning
+June 27th, 1877, with apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, who appeared
+sometimes alone, sometimes carrying the Child <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>Jesus, holding in his
+hands a globe surmounted by a cross. Both Mother and Child were clothed
+in white.</p>
+
+<p>To the children's question: "Who are you?" the apparition answered, on
+one occasion: "I am the Blessed Virgin Mary, <i>conceived without sin</i>;"
+and another time, "<i>I am the Immaculate Conception</i>."</p>
+
+<p>In the first apparition, our Lady's countenance was sad, and she even
+shed tears; afterwards, it betokened joy. She asked that a chapel be
+erected and a statue of the Immaculate Conception placed therein. At
+each apparition she blessed the crowd, which was always numerous; she
+blessed also a spring, which has since then furnished an abundant
+supply of water, effecting miraculous cures. She recommended the
+recitation of the <i>Rosary</i>, and exhorted all to fervent prayer, and
+confidence in the midst of the trials which were to come.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p>These recent apparitions of the Blessed Virgin have founded new
+pilgrimages, the faithful flocking to the favored spots in honor of the
+Mother of God, and ask for the graces which she bestows with a truly
+royal liberality. At the same time her ancient sanctuaries, far from
+being neglected, have only become more endeared to piety, many having
+been reconstructed with magnificence, or at least most handsomely
+embellished; it suffices to mention Fourvi&egrave;res, Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde,
+Rocamadour, Boulogne-sur-mer, Liesse and Buglose.</p>
+
+<p>The coronation of the most celebrated statues of the Blessed Virgin,
+in the name and by the munificence of Pius IX, was the occasion of
+imposing solemnities, and also a means of infusing into the devotion of
+the people greater vigor and fervor.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
+<p>The exercises of the Month of Mary have extended to the most humble
+villages, and there is scarcely a parish without its confraternity in
+honor of the Blessed Virgin.</p>
+
+<p>Science, eloquence, poetry, music, sculpture, painting and architecture
+have rivalled one another in celebrating the glory of the Virgin Mother.</p>
+
+<p>What may we deduce from this wonderful increase of devotion to the
+Immaculate Mary?</p>
+
+<p>The impression naturally produced is that of confidence. A society
+which pays such homage to Mary, cannot perish. If, as St Bernard says,
+it is unheard of that any one has been forsaken who had recourse to
+her intercession, how were it possible that the fervent prayers of an
+entire people should fail to touch her heart? No, the future is not
+without hope; the mediation of Mary will save us.</p>
+
+<p>The venerable Grignion of Montfort, in his <i>Treatise</i> on true devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin has written these lines: "It is by the Blessed
+Virgin Mary, Jesus Christ came into the world; it is also by her,
+that he is to reign in the world. If then, as is certain, the reign
+of Jesus Christ will come, so likewise is it certain that this reign
+will be a necessary consequence of the knowledge and reign of the
+Blessed Virgin. Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, produced that
+most stupendous of all creations, a Man-God, and she will produce by
+the power of this same Holy Spirit, the greatest prodigies in these
+latter times. It is through Mary the salvation of the world began, it
+is through Mary the salvation of the world is to be consummated. Mary
+will display still greater mercy, power and grace in these days. Mercy,
+to bring back poor sinners; power, against the enemies of God; grace,
+to sustain <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>and animate the valiant soldiers and faithful servants of
+Jesus Christ, combating for His interests. Ah! when will arrive the
+day that establishes Mary mistress and sovereign of hearts, to subject
+them to the empire of Jesus?... Then will great and wonderful things be
+accomplished.... When will this joyful epoch come, this <i>Age of Mary</i>,
+in which souls absorbed in the abyss of the interior of Mary, will
+become living copies of the sublime, original, loving and glorifying
+Jesus Christ?"</p>
+
+<p>Father de Montfort adds, in addressing our Saviour: <i>Ut adveniat regnum
+tuum, adveniat regnum Mariæ!</i> May the reign of Mary come that they
+reign, O Jesus, may come!</p>
+
+<p>Is not this the <i>Age of Mary</i>? Was there ever in the Church, a period
+in which Mary was, if we may thus express it, so lavish of favors as
+in these, our days? Was there ever a period in which she has appeared
+so frequently and familiarly, in which she has given to the world,
+admonitions so grave and maternal; in which she has worked so many
+miracles; and poured out graces so abundantly? The reader of this
+volume will answer unhesitatingly, that no period of history offers
+anything comparable to what we have witnessed in our own days.</p>
+
+<p>It is true, that the day of triumph announced by the venerated
+Montfort, appears far distant; one might say that the kingdom of God on
+earth is more compromised than ever. The wicked make unexampled efforts
+to demolish the social edifice; they are numerous, powerful, and
+possessed of incalculable resources. But for the Church, when all seems
+lost, then is her triumph at hand. God sometimes permits the malice of
+men to exceed all <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>bounds, that His power may be the more manifest when
+the moment of their defeat arrives.</p>
+
+<p>All the united efforts of the Church's enemies in the course of ages,
+all their errors, hatred and violence directed against her, the Spouse
+of Christ, are now concentrated in what is termed the Revolution&mdash;that
+is, anti-Christianity reduced to a system and propagated throughout the
+world, it is Satan usurping the place of Jesus Christ.</p>
+
+<p>But He who has conquered the world, and put to flight the prince of the
+world, will not permit Himself to be dethroned. He will reign, and even
+now, before our eyes, is His kingdom being prepared, by the mediation
+of the Immaculate Mary, of whom the promise was made that <i>she should
+crush the serpent's head, and to whom alone belongs the privilege of
+destroying all heresies arising upon earth</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><i>THE END.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="label1">FOOTNOTES</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> St. Vincent desired that the sojourn which the young
+Sisters make at the Mother House, to be there imbued with, and
+instructed in, the spirit and duties of their vocation, should be
+called the Seminary term; he feared lest the word "novitiate,"
+applicable to religious Orders, might cause the Daughters of Charity to
+be regarded as such.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The Life of M. Aladel has been published; 1 volume in
+12mo. It can be procured in Paris, rue du Bac, 140.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Verbal process of the investigation made by order of Mgr.
+de Qu&eacute;len in 1836, upon the origin of the medal, MS. p. 10.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Verbal process of the investigation, p. 5.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Verbal process of the investigation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Persons favored with supernatural communications are not
+thereby preserved from error. They may be deceived in misunderstanding
+what they see or hear, they may be duped by the illusions of the demon,
+they may involuntarily mingle their own ideas with those which come
+from God, and they may fail in transmitting with accuracy what has been
+revealed to them. We must also remark that prophecies are frequently
+conditional, and their accomplishment depends upon the manner in which
+the conditions are fulfilled; so that, when the Church approves these
+private revelations, she does nothing more than declare that, after
+grave examination, they may be published for the edification of the
+faithful, and that the proofs given are sufficient to ensure belief.</p>
+
+<p>To the Sacred Writers alone belongs the privilege of infallibility in
+receiving and transmitting divine inspirations.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> M. Aladel was made Director of the Community in 1846.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The rings were three on each finger; the largest next to
+the hand, then the medium size, then the smallest; and each ring was
+covered with precious stones of proportional size; the largest stones
+emitted the most brilliant rays, the smallest the least brilliant.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> We must remember that Sister Catherine's childhood was
+passed in the country, where she could admire the beauty of that
+luminous tint which precedes the sun, and colors the horizon at break
+of day with its increasing radiance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The author of this design is M. Letaille, editor of
+religious imagery.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>Quai des Orfevres</i>, number 54. They are of different
+sizes, and the invocation is inscribed in several languages.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> "Life of Mgr. de Qu&eacute;len," by the Baron Henrion.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Look at the star, invoke Mary.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> In vain, Hyacinthe (de Qu&eacute;len) is the tempest unchained;
+under the auspices of the Star of the Sea, thou wilt triumph over its
+fury.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The Immaculate Conception had not then been defined.
+(Note by translator.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Conc. Trid. sess. V. <i>Decret. de peccato originali</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Prov. viii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Tob., xii, 7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Offic. Concept. B.V.M.R. viii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Manual of the Archconfraternity, edition of 1853. p. 84.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Manual of the Archconfraternity, p. 7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Manual of the Archconfraternity, page 86.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Several details of this account have been derived from
+"Illustrious Pilgrim Shrines."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Letter of Mr. Bor&eacute;, Aug. 13, 1854.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Letter of a Sister, September 29.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Letter of Mr. Bor&eacute;, October 25.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Report of Mr. Doumerq, 1855.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Letter of a Sister, 1855.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Letter of Mr. Bor&eacute;, August 25, 1855.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Letter of August 25, 1855.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Letter of Sister M&mdash;&mdash;, 1855.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Letter of Mr. Turroque, July 16, 1856.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Letter of Sister M&mdash;&mdash;, July 9, 1857.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Letter of Sister M&mdash;&mdash;, July 9, 1857.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Letter of Sister M., July 9, 1857.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Extract of a relation approved by the Bishop of Laval.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Extract from <i>Catholic Annals</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Letters from Poland.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="transnote">
+Transcriber's Note: The book included a decorative image at the
+beginning of each chapter.
+
+The labels for these have been removed in the text version of
+this book.<br />
+
+There were many printer's errors in this publication, which
+have been corrected.<br />
+
+The words physican and physycian are now physician, prepartion
+is preparation, they is thy, tranformed is transformed,
+Gautemala is Guatemala, Chili is Chile, extraordinay is
+extraordinary, deligently is diligently, d'Enghein is
+d'Enghien; and forfaken is forsaken.<br />
+
+Inconsistent use of accents has resulted in 2 words being
+amended. Chalons is now Ch&acirc;lons, and Eugene is now Eug&egrave;ne.<br />
+
+The coverpage is placed in the public domain.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Miraculous Medal
+ Its Origin, History, Circulation, Results
+
+Author: Jean Marie Aladel
+
+Release Date: November 19, 2013 [EBook #44231]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Karina Aleksandrova, Sue Fleming, and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+(This file was produced from images generously made
+available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: _SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE,
+
+The Daughter of Charity, favored with the Vision of the Miraculous
+Medal in 1830. Died December 31, 1876._]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ MIRACULOUS MEDAL
+
+ ITS
+
+ _Origin, History, Circulation, Results_.
+
+ BY M. ALADEL, C.M.
+
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH,
+
+ BY P.S.,
+
+ Graduate of St. Joseph's, Emmitsburg, Md.
+
+ ILLUSTRATED.
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ H.L. KILNER & CO.,
+ PUBLISHERS.
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1880, BY JOHN B. PIET.
+
+
+
+
+ DEDICATION.
+
+ TO
+
+ THE MOST COMPASSIONATE VIRGIN MARY,
+
+ MOTHER OF GOD, CONCEIVED WITHOUT SIN.
+
+_Oh Mary, conceived without sin, Virgin incomparable, august Mother of
+Jesus, thou who hast adopted us for thy children, and who hast given us
+so many proofs of thy maternal tenderness, deign to accept this little
+book, feeble token of our gratitude and love!_
+
+_Oh! may it be instrumental in attracting and attaching inviolably to
+thee, the hearts of all who read it!_
+
+_O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!_
+
+
+
+
+ _AUTHOR'S DECLARATION._
+
+
+In conformity with the decree of Pope Urban VIII, we declare that
+the terms miracle, revelation, apparition and other expressions of a
+similar nature here employed, have, in our intention, no other than a
+purely historical value, and that we submit unreservedly the entire
+contents of this book to the judgment of the Apostolic See.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLISHER.
+
+
+Since the hour when the Beloved Disciple took the Blessed Virgin to
+his own, the followers of her Divine Son have always cherished a
+reverential affection for her above all other creatures. They have
+regarded her as the ideal of all that is true and pure and sweet and
+noble in the Christian life, and they have honored her as the most
+favored of mortals, the greatest of saints, the masterpiece of the
+Almighty. The peculiar veneration paid to her by the Apostles, was
+caught up by the first Christians, who regarded her with awe because
+of her great dignity; and when she died, her memory was held in
+benediction. But death could not sever her from those who, in the
+person of St. John, had been given to her for her children. She still
+lived for the Church. From the time when the faithful took refuge
+in the Catacombs to the fifth century, when the Council of Ephesus
+solemnly sanctioned the homage paid to her as the Mother of God, her
+intercession was often invoked; and from that day, devotion towards her
+has increased until our own age, when the nations of the earth unite to
+proclaim her Blessed.
+
+Often has Mary given signal proofs of the pleasure she takes in the
+devotion of her clients and of the power she possesses to grant their
+petitions. Graces asked through her mediation have been suddenly
+obtained; wonders in the way of cures and conversions have been wrought
+at her shrines; disasters have been averted; plagues have been made
+to cease; and, to crown all her favors, apparitions have occurred, in
+which she has shown herself, radiant with the lustre of Heaven, to
+her loyal servants; and, in some instances, she has left something
+like the scapular, the Miraculous Medal and the fount in the grotto of
+Lourdes, as memorials of her visit.
+
+These manifestations of her maternal solicitude have of late been more
+frequent, more renowned, and more efficacious than ever. As the end
+draws near and the dangers increase, her anxiety for the sanctification
+of her own bursts its bonds and urges her to find new ways to the
+hearts of men. Among the most recent of these demonstrations, the
+Miraculous Medal is one of the most remarkable. How it originated,
+how rapidly and widely it has circulated, and how gloriously it has
+fulfilled its mission, are told in this book. A more interesting and
+edifying history could not easily have been written. To all children of
+Mary, in America as elsewhere, it will be welcome, and for them this
+edition has been prepared by
+
+
+ THE PUBLISHER.
+
+ May 4, 1880.
+
+
+
+
+ PREFACE TO THE FRENCH EDITION
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The eighth and last edition of THE HISTORY OF THE MIRACULOUS
+MEDAL, extending up to the year 1842, has for a long time been
+out of print. More than once efforts have been made to have a new
+edition published, but until now they have failed. The recent death
+of the Sister who was favored with the Blessed Virgin's confidence,
+has again excited a general desire for the work; for many persons are
+eager to learn the origin of the medal, and others hope to get the full
+particulars of it. For these reasons, the present edition has been
+undertaken.
+
+Believing that it would gratify our readers, we have placed at the
+beginning of the book a biographical sketch of the privileged Sister,
+Catherine Laboure, and to it we have added some notes concerning M.
+Aladel, her Director, who was the author of the previous editions.
+
+These editions of the History presented but a very condensed account
+of the apparition of the Blessed Virgin in 1830; for serious reasons
+induced M. Aladel to suppress many things. He feared especially to
+attract attention to the humble daughter who had transmitted Heaven's
+orders, and who, it was best, should remain unknown to the end of her
+life.
+
+Now, these fears are no longer an obstacle, and we are permitted to
+publish, for the edification of the faithful, all that the Sister
+revealed, at least, all that we still possess of these communications.
+At the time of the last edition, M. Aladel could understand but
+imperfectly the import of the vision of the medal, but certain events
+of subsequent occurrence, have placed this important revelation in a
+clearer light, and fully established its connection with the past and
+the future. We have endeavored to show the designs of Providence, by
+proving that the apparition of 1830 was not an isolated fact; that
+it marked the end of a disastrous period for the Church and society;
+that it was the beginning of a new era, an era of mercy and hope; that
+it was a preparation for the definition of the Immaculate Conception
+as a dogma of faith; in fine, that it was the first of a series of
+supernatural manifestations, which have greatly increased devotion to
+the Blessed Virgin, insomuch, that our age may justly be styled the age
+of Mary.
+
+We have judged it advisable to omit quite a number of miraculous
+occurrences related in the preceding editions, and substitute for them
+others not less authentic, but more recent, thus demonstrating that
+the medal is as efficacious in our days, as it was at the time of its
+origin.
+
+We ask those who may hereafter obtain similar favors, to send an
+account of them, together with satisfactory vouchers of their
+authenticity, to the Superior-General of the Daughters of Charity, rue
+du Bac, 140, or to the Director of the Daughters of Charity, rue de
+Sevres, 95, Paris.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ DEDICATION, iii
+
+ THE AUTHOR'S DECLARATION, v
+
+ PREFACE, vii
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ Sister Catherine, Daughter of Charity--Her Birth--Early
+ Life--Vocation--Entrance into the Community--Apparition of
+ the Blessed Virgin--The Medal--Sister Catherine is sent to
+ d'Enghien Hospital--Her humble, hidden Life--Her Death.
+ 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ Mary's Agency in the Church--This Agency always manifest, seems
+ to have disappeared during the Eighteenth and at the beginning
+ of the Nineteenth Century--Mary reappears in 1830--Motives and
+ Importance of this Apparition--The Immaculate Conception.
+ 42
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine--First
+ Apparition: An Angel Conducts the Sister to the Chapel--Mary
+ Converses with Her--Second Apparition: Mary standing upon
+ a Globe, her hands emitting Rays of Light, symbolic of
+ Grace--Mary orders a Medal to be Struck--Third Apparition: Mary
+ Repeats the Order.
+ 51
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ The Medal Appears--The Welcome it Receives--Canonical
+ Investigation ordered by Mgr. de Quelen--Wonderful Circulation
+ of the Medal.
+ 67
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ Development of the Devotion to the Immaculate Conception--Mgr.
+ de Quelen's Circular.
+ 79
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ Extraordinary Graces obtained by means of the Miraculous
+ Medal--Graces obtained from 1832 to 1835--During the year 1835,
+ in France, Switzerland, Savoy, Turkey--From 1836 to 1838, in
+ France, Italy, Holland, &c.--Notre Dame des Victoires--From
+ 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, &c.--From 1843 to
+ 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America.
+ 94
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Progress of the Devotion to Mary crowned by the Definition of
+ the Immaculate Conception--Our Lady of La Salette--The Children
+ of Mary--The Definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+ 261
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The Miraculous Medal and the War--The War in the East--The
+ Italian War--The United States--War between Prussia and
+ Austria--Souvenirs of the Commune.
+ 289
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ Recent Manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church--Our
+ Lady of Lourdes--Our Lady of Pontmain, &c.--Conclusion.
+
+
+
+
+Table of Engravings of the Miraculous Medal
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ Portrait of Sister Catherine Laboure, the Daughter of Charity
+ favored with the Vision of the Miraculous Medal in 1830.
+ _Frontispiece_
+
+ First Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Laboure, Daughter of Charity, during the night of July 18th,
+ 1830. After a picture painted according to Sister Catherine's
+ directions. Summoned by her Guardian Angel, under the form of a
+ child, emitting rays of light, Sister Catherine arises, follows
+ him to the Chapel, which she finds brilliantly illuminated; she
+ afterwards sees the Blessed Virgin seated in the sanctuary. The
+ picture represents Sister Catherine at the Blessed Virgin's
+ feet, her hands on the Blessed Virgin's knees: "My child,"
+ says the Blessed Virgin, "the times are very disastrous, great
+ troubles are about to descend upon France; the throne will
+ be upset, the entire world will be in confusion by reason of
+ miseries of every description."
+ 53
+
+ Second Apparition of the Blessed Virgin to Sister Catherine
+ Laboure, November 17th, 1830, first picture. About half-past
+ five in the evening, whilst Sister Catharine is taking her
+ meditation, the Blessed Virgin again appears. She stands upon a
+ hemisphere, and holds in her hand a globe which she offers to
+ our Lord. Suddenly her fingers are filled with most dazzling
+ rings and precious stones. "This globe," says the Blessed
+ Virgin, "represents the whole world and particularly France."
+ She adds that the rays escaping from her hands "are symbols of
+ the graces she bestows upon those who ask for them."
+ 59
+
+ Same Apparition, second picture. "Then," relates Sister
+ Catherine, "there formed around the Blessed Virgin a somewhat
+ oval picture, upon which appeared in golden letters these
+ words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!' and a voice said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model; those who wear it indulgenced will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it on the neck; abundant graces
+ will be bestowed upon those who have confidence.'" At that
+ instant, the picture being turned, Sister Catherine sees on the
+ reverse, the letter M, surmounted by a cross, and beneath this
+ the sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
+ 60
+
+ Medal struck by order of Mgr. de Quelen. 78
+
+ Apparition of the Miraculous Medal to M. Ratisbonne. 205
+
+ Representation of the Miraculous Medal, modelled in accordance
+ with the description given by Sister Catherine Laboure.
+ 272, 273
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+SISTER CATHERINE,
+
+ _DAUGHTER OF CHARITY_.
+
+ HER BIRTH--EARLY LIFE--VOCATION--ENTRANCE INTO THE
+ COMMUNITY--APPARITION OF THE VIRGIN--THE MEDAL--SISTER CATHERINE
+ IS PLACED AT THE HOSPITAL D'ENGHIEN--HER HUMBLE, HIDDEN LIFE--HER
+ DEATH.
+
+
+It is an extensively credited assumption, that those who are favored
+with supernatural communications should have something extraordinary
+in their person and mode of life. One easily invests them with an
+ideal of perfection, which, in some measure, sets them apart from
+the majority of mankind. But if, at any time, an occasion occurs of
+proving that such an assumption is erroneous, if we discover in these
+divine confidants weaknesses or only infirmities, we are astonished
+and tempted to be scandalized. Among the Christians who knew St. Paul
+only by reputation, some were disappointed on a closer acquaintance;
+they said his appearance was too unprepossessing and his language too
+unrefined for an apostle. Were not the Jews scandalized that Our Lord
+ate and drank like others, that His parents were poor, that He came
+from Nazareth, and that He conversed with sinners? So true is it, that
+we are always disposed to judge by appearances.
+
+Not so with God. He sees the depths of our hearts, and often what
+appears contemptible in the eyes of the world, is great in His.
+Simplicity and purity He prizes especially. Exterior qualities, gifts
+of intellect, birth and education, are of little value to Him, and when
+He has an important mission to confide, it is ordinarily to persons not
+possessing these qualifications. Thus, does He display His wisdom and
+power, in using what is weak, to accomplish great results. Sometimes,
+He chooses for His instruments subjects that are even imperfect,
+permitting them to commit faults in order to keep them in all humility,
+and convince them that the favors they receive are not accorded their
+own merits, but are the gift of God's pure bounty.
+
+These observations naturally prelude Sister Catherine's biography; they
+explain in advance the difficulties which might arise in the mind of
+the reader at the contrast between a life so simple and ordinary and
+the graces showered upon her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine (Zoe Laboure) was born May 2, 1806, in a little
+village of the Cote-d'Or Mountains, called Fain-les-Moutiers, of the
+parish of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. This last place, particularly dear
+to St. Vincent, was not far from the cradle of St. Bernard, that
+great servant of Mary, nor from the spot where St. Chantal passed a
+part of her life, as if in the soil as well as the blood there was a
+predisposition to certain qualities or hereditary virtues.
+
+Her parents, sincere Christians, were held in esteem. They cultivated
+their farm, and enjoyed that competency which arises from rural labor
+joined to simplicity of life. God had blessed their union with a
+numerous family, seven sons and three daughters.
+
+At an early age, the sons left the paternal roof; little Zoe, with
+her sisters, remained under the mother's eye, but this mother, God
+took from Zoe, ere she had completed her eighth year. Already capable
+of feeling the extent of this sacrifice, it seemed to her as if the
+Blessed Virgin wished to be her only Mother.
+
+An aunt, living at Remy, took Zoe and the youngest sister to live with
+her; but the father, a pious man, who in his youth had even thought of
+embracing the ecclesiastical state, preferred having the children under
+his own eye, and at the end of two years they were brought home.
+
+Another motive, also, impelled him to act thus. The eldest sister
+thought seriously of leaving her family to enter the Community of
+Daughters of Charity, and the poor father could not bear the idea of
+confiding his house to mercenary hands. And thus, at an age when other
+children think only of their sports, Zoe was inured to hard work.
+
+At the age of twelve, with a pure and fervent heart, she made her First
+Communion in the church of Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Henceforth, her only
+desire was to be solely His who had just given Himself to her for the
+first time.
+
+Very soon after, the eldest sister left home to postulate at Langres;
+and Zoe, now little mistress of the house, did the cooking, with the
+assistance of a woman for the roughest work. She carried the field
+hands their meals, and never shrank from any duty however laborious or
+severe.
+
+Moutiers-Saint-Jean possesses an establishment of the Sisters of St.
+Vincent de Paul. Zoe went to see them as often as her household duties
+permitted, and the good Sister-Servant, who loved her much, encouraged
+the child in her laborious life; yet the latter never spoke to the
+Sister of her growing vocation, but awaited, with a secret impatience,
+until her sister (two years her junior) would be able to take charge
+of the house. It was she to whom Zoe confided her dearest desires, and
+then commenced for the two that tender intimacy of life, one of pure
+labor and duty, and whose only relaxations were attending the services
+of the parish church.
+
+The two young girls, thinking themselves able to dispense with the
+servant, dismissed her, and now shared between them all the work. Zoe,
+who was very sedate and trustworthy, watched over everything with
+the utmost vigilance, and took care of her sister with a mother's
+tenderness.
+
+One of her favorite occupations was the charge of the pigeon house,
+which always contained from seven to eight hundred pigeons. So
+faithfully did she perform this duty, that they all knew her, and as
+soon as she appeared they came flying around her in the shape of a
+crown. It was, says her sister, a most charming spectacle--innocence
+attracting the birds, which are its symbol.
+
+In youth, we see her, already modest in deportment, serious in
+character, pious and recollected in the parochial church which she
+regularly attended, kneeling upon the cold stones even in winter. And
+this was not the only mortification she practiced; to bodily fatigue,
+she added from her tenderest youth that of fasting every Wednesday
+and Saturday. It was for a long time without her father's knowledge;
+at length, discovering his daughter's pious ruse, he endeavored to
+dissuade her; but all his reproaches were not able to overcome her love
+of penance, she believed it her duty to prefer the interior voice of
+God to that of her father.
+
+In all this we clearly discern the character of the future Sister,
+with its virtues and defects. On one side, we see true simplicity,
+unselfishness, constant application to the most laborious duties under
+the safeguard of innocence and fervor; on the other, a disposition
+accustomed to govern, and which could not yield without an internal
+struggle.
+
+During this life of rural toil, she never lost sight of her vocation.
+Several times was her hand asked in marriage, but she invariably
+answered that, long affianced to Jesus her good Saviour, she wished no
+other spouse than Him. But had she yet made choice of the Community she
+would enter? It is doubtful, especially when we consider the following
+event of her life, which deeply impressed her, and always remained
+graven in the memory of her dear sister who related it.
+
+Being still in her father's house at Fain-les-Moutiers, she had
+a dream, which we may consider as an inspiration from God and a
+preparation for her vocation.
+
+It seemed to her that she was in the Purgatorian chapel of the
+village church. An aged priest of venerable appearance and remarkable
+countenance appeared in the chapel, and began to vest himself for
+Mass; she assisted at it, deeply impressed with the presence of this
+unknown priest. At the end of Mass, he made her a sign to approach, but
+affrighted, she drew back, yet ever keeping her eyes fixed upon him.
+
+Leaving the church, she went to visit a sick person in the village.
+Here, she again finds herself with the aged priest, who addresses her
+in these words: "My daughter, it is well to nurse the sick; you fly
+from me now, but one day you will be happy to come to me. God has His
+designs upon you, do not forget it." Amazed and filled with fear, the
+young girl still flies his presence. On leaving the house, it seemed to
+her that her feet scarcely touched the ground, and just at the moment
+of entering her home she awoke, and recognized that what had passed was
+only a dream.
+
+She was now eighteen years old, knowing scarcely how to read, much less
+write; as she was doubtless aware that this would be an obstacle to her
+admission into a Community, she obtained her father's permission to
+visit her sister-in-law, who kept a boarding school at Chatillon, and
+there receive a little instruction. Her father, fearing to lose her,
+reluctantly consented to her departure.
+
+Incessantly occupied with thoughts of the vision we have already
+related, she spoke of it to the Cure of Chatillon, who said to her: "I
+believe, my child, that this old man is St. Vincent, who calls you to
+be a Daughter of Charity." Her sister-in-law having taken her to see
+the Sisters at Chatillon, she was astonished on entering their parlor
+to behold a picture, the perfect portrait of the priest who had said
+to her in her dream: "My daughter, you fly from me now, but one day
+you will be happy to come to me. God has His designs upon you, do not
+forget it." She immediately inquired the name of the original, and when
+told that it was St. Vincent, the mystery vanished; she understood that
+it was he who was to be her Father.
+
+This circumstance was not of a nature to quench the ardor of her
+desires. She remained but a short time with her sister-in-law. The
+humble country girl was ill at ease amidst the young ladies of the
+school, and she learned nothing.
+
+It was at this time she became acquainted with Sister Victoire Sejole,
+who was afterwards placed over the house at Moutiers-Saint-Jean. Though
+young, already thoroughly devoted to God and His poor, Sister Victoire
+divined the candor of this soul and its sufferings; she immediately
+begged her Sister-Servant to admit Zoe as a postulant without delay,
+offering herself to bestow particular pains upon her, instructing her
+in whatever was indispensable for her as a Daughter of Charity.
+
+But Zoe could not yet profit by the interest good Sister Victoire had
+taken in her; this happiness was to be dearly bought.
+
+When she acquainted her father with her intentions, the poor father's
+heart rebelled; he had already given his eldest daughter to St.
+Vincent's family, and now, to sacrifice her who for years had so
+wisely directed his household, seemed indeed beyond his strength. He
+considered a means of dissuading her from her plans, and thought he
+had found it by sending her to Paris, to one of his sons who kept a
+restaurant, telling him to seek by various distractions to extinguish
+in the sister's heart all idea of her vocation. Time of trial and
+suffering for the young aspirant, who, far from losing the desire of
+consecrating herself to God, only sighed more ardently after the happy
+day when she could quit the world.
+
+She now thought of writing to her sister-in-law at Chatillon, and
+interesting her in the matter. The latter, touched with this mark of
+confidence, had Zoe come to her, and finally obtained the father's
+consent. Zoe became a postulant in the house of the Sisters at
+Chatillon, in the beginning of the year 1830.
+
+Zoe Laboure was very happy to find, at last, the end of those severe
+trials which had lasted almost two years. The 21st of April, 1830, she
+reached that much desired haven, the Seminary.[1]
+
+ [Footnote 1: St. Vincent desired that the sojourn which the
+ young Sisters make at the Mother House, to be there imbued
+ with, and instructed in, the spirit and duties of their
+ vocation, should be called the Seminary term; he feared lest
+ the word "novitiate," applicable to religious Orders, might
+ cause the Daughters of Charity to be regarded as such.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Behold her, then, in possession of all that had been the cherished
+object of her desires and affections from earliest childhood! Her soul
+could now dilate itself in prayer, and in the joyful consciousness of
+being entirely devoted to the service of its God.
+
+During the whole of her Seminary term, she had the happiness of
+having for Director of her conscience M. Jean Marie Aladel, of
+venerated memory, a priest of eminent piety, excellent judgment and
+great experience, austere as a hermit, indefatigable in work, a true
+son of St. Vincent de Paul. He was a prudent guide for her in the
+extraordinary ways whither God had called her. He knew how to hold
+her in check against the illusions of imagination, and especially the
+seductions of pride at the same time, that he encouraged her to walk
+in the paths of perfection by the practice of the most solid virtues.
+M. Aladel did not lose sight of her, even after she was sent to the
+Hospital d'Enghien. He thereby gained much for his own sanctification
+and the mission confided to him.
+
+Informed by her of God's designs, he devoted himself unreservedly to
+the propagation of devotion to Mary Immaculate, and during the last
+years of his life, to extend among the young girls educated by the
+Sisters of St. Vincent, the association of Children of Mary. He died in
+1865, eleven years before his spiritual daughter.[2]
+
+ [Footnote 2: The Life of M. Aladel has been published; 1 volume
+ in 12mo. It can be procured in Paris, rue du Bac, 140.]
+
+Three days before the magnificent ceremony of the translation of St.
+Vincent de Paul's relics to the chapel of St. Lazare, a feast which
+was the signal of renewed life for the Congregation of the Mission,
+Sister Laboure was favored with a prophetic vision. The same God who
+had called Vincent from the charge of his father's flocks to make him a
+vessel of election, was now going to confide to a poor country girl the
+secrets of His mercy. Let us give the account of this first impression
+in her own simple language.
+
+ "It was Wednesday before the translation of St. Vincent de
+ Paul's relics. Happy and delighted at the idea of taking part
+ in this grand celebration, it seemed to me that I no longer
+ cared for anything on earth.
+
+ "I begged St. Vincent to give me whatever graces I needed, also
+ to bestow the same upon his two families and all France. It
+ appeared to me that France was in sore need of them. In fine,
+ I prayed St. Vincent to teach me what I ought to ask, and also
+ that I might ask it with a lively faith."
+
+She returned from St. Lazare's filled with the thought of her blessed
+Father, and believed that she found him again at the Community.
+"I had," said she, "the consolation of seeing his heart above the
+little shrine where his relics are exposed. It appeared to me three
+successive days in a different manner: First, of a pale, clear color,
+and this denoted peace, serenity, innocence and union.
+
+"Afterwards, I saw it the color of fire, symbolic of the charity that
+should be enkindled in hearts. It seemed to me that charity was to be
+reanimated and extended even to the extremities of the world.
+
+"Lastly, it appeared a very dark red, a livid hue, which plunged my
+heart in sadness. It filled me with fears I could scarcely overcome. I
+know not why, nor how, but this sadness seemed to be connected with a
+change of government."
+
+It was strange, indeed, that Sister Laboure, at that time, should have
+these political forebodings.
+
+An interior voice said to her: "The heart of St. Vincent is profoundly
+afflicted at the great misfortunes which will overwhelm France."
+The last day of the octave, she saw the same heart vermilion color,
+and the interior voice whispered: "The heart of St. Vincent is a
+little consoled, because he has obtained from God (through Mary's
+intercession) protection for his two families in the midst of these
+disasters; they shall not perish, and God will use them to revive the
+Faith."
+
+To ease her mind, she related this vision to her confessor, who told
+her to think no more about it; Sister Laboure never dreamed of aught
+but obeying, and in no way did she ever reveal it to her companions.
+
+We find this singular favor mentioned in a letter written by Sister
+Catherine, in the year 1856, at the command of M. Aladel. The year
+she entered the Seminary, this worthy missionary was almost the only
+chaplain of the Community. The Congregation of the Mission, scarcely
+restored at this epoch, counted at its Mother House but nine priests
+in all, and at least half that number were in the Seminary. M. Etienne,
+of venerated memory, was Procurator General, and M. Salhorgne, Superior
+of St. Vincent's two families. If the laborers were few, the deficiency
+was supplied by the devotedness of these few, who multiplied themselves
+for the service of the Community. The Divine bounty has prepared for
+their charity a beautiful recompense.
+
+According to the notes which Sister Catherine wrote later in obedience
+to M. Aladel, the humble daughter during all her Seminary term enjoyed
+the undisguised sight of Him whose presence is concealed from our
+senses in the Sacrament of His love. "Except," said she, "when I
+doubted, then I saw nothing, because I wished to fathom the mystery,
+fearing to be deceived."
+
+Our Lord deigned to show Himself to His humble servant, conformably to
+the mysteries of the day, and, in connexion with this, she mentions one
+circumstance relative to the change of government, which could not have
+been foreseen by human means.
+
+"On the Feast of the Holy Trinity," says she, "Our Lord during Holy
+Mass appeared to me in the Most Blessed Sacrament as a king with the
+cross upon His breast. Just at the Gospel, it seemed to me that the
+cross and all His regal ornaments fell at His feet, and He remained
+thus despoiled. It was then the gloomiest and saddest thoughts
+oppressed me, for I understood from this that the king would be
+stripped of his royal garb, and great disasters would ensue."
+
+When the humble daughter had these forebodings concerning the king, he
+was then apparently at the pinnacle of fortune. The siege of Algiers
+was in progress, and everything predicted the happy success of his
+arms. During the early part of July, this almost impregnable fortress
+of the pirates fell into the power of France; the whole kingdom
+rejoiced at the memorable victory, and the churches resounded with
+hymns of thanksgiving.
+
+Alas! this triumph was to be quickly followed by a bloody revolution,
+which would overthrow the throne and menace the altars. That very
+month, the clergy and religious communities of Paris were seized with
+terror. M. Aladel was greatly alarmed for the Daughters of Charity and
+the Missionaries, but Sister Laboure never ceased to reassure him,
+saying that the two communities had nothing to fear, they would not
+perish.
+
+One day she told him that a bishop had sought refuge at St. Lazare's,
+that he could be received without hesitation, and might remain there
+in safety. M. Aladel paid little attention to these predictions,
+but returning sadly to his house, he was accosted on entering by M.
+Salhorgne, who told him that Mgr. Frayssinous, Bishop of Hermopolis,
+and Minister of Religious Worship under Charles X, had just come,
+begging an asylum from the persecution that pursued him.
+
+These revelations bore an impress of truth which it was difficult to
+ignore; so in feigning to mistrust them, M. Aladel listened with the
+deepest interest. He began to persuade himself that the spirit of God
+inspired this young Sister; and after seeing the accomplishment of
+several things she had foretold, he now felt disposed to give credence
+to other and more marvellous communications she had confided to him.
+
+According to her testimony, the Most Holy Virgin had appeared to her,
+these apparitions were repeated various times, she had been charged to
+acquaint her Director with what she had seen and heard, an important
+mission had been confided to her, that of having struck and circulated
+a medal in honor of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+The third chapter of this volume gives a detailed account of these
+visions, just as they have been transmitted to us from the hand of the
+Sister herself.
+
+Notwithstanding the sensible assurances of the Sister's veracity, M.
+Aladel listened to these communications with mistrust, as he tells us
+himself, in the canonical investigation prescribed in 1836 by Mgr.
+de Quelen; he professed to consider them of little value, as if they
+had been the pious vagaries of a young girl's imagination. He told
+her to regard them in the same light, and he even went so far as to
+humble her, and reproach her with a want of submission. The poor
+Sister, unable to convince him, dared speak no more of the apparitions
+of the Blessed Virgin; she never mentioned the subject to him except
+when she felt herself tormented and constrained to do so by an almost
+irresistible desire.
+
+"Such was the reason," says M. Aladel, "that she spoke to him
+concerning the matter but three times, although the visions were much
+oftener repeated." After thus relieving her heart, she became perfectly
+calm. The investigation also shows us that Sister Catherine sought no
+other confidant of her secrets than her confessor; she never mentioned
+them to her Superior or any one else. It was to M. Aladel Mary had
+directed her, to him only did she speak, and she even exacted of him
+the promise that her name would never be mentioned.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: Verbal process of the investigation made by order
+ of Mgr. de Quelen in 1836, upon the origin of the medal, MS. p.
+ 10.]
+
+After this pledge, M. Aladel related the vision to M. Etienne and
+others, but without designating the Sister's identity, directly or
+indirectly. We shall see later how Providence always guarded her secret.
+
+These celestial communications, we may easily imagine, produced in the
+soul of Sister Laboure profound impressions, which usually remained
+even after she had finished her devotions, and which rendered her in
+some degree oblivious of what was passing around her. It is related
+that after one of these apparitions she rises like the others at the
+given signal, leaves the chapel, and takes her place in the refectory,
+but remains so absorbed that she never thinks of touching the meal
+apportioned her.
+
+Sister Caillaud, third Directress, going her rounds, says bluntly to
+her: "Ah! Sister Laboure, are you still in an ecstasy?" This recalls
+her to herself, and the good Directress, who knows not how truly she
+has spoken, suspects nothing.
+
+Meanwhile, Sister Catherine approached the end of her Seminary term,
+and in spite of her affirmations at once so artless and so exact, her
+Director always refused to credit them. She had the affliction of
+leaving the Mother House without being able to obtain anything, even a
+hope.
+
+It was because the affair was graver than she thought; the supernatural
+origin of the favor he was directed to communicate to the public could
+be contested, and the prudent Director saw that in such a matter he
+could neither exact too many proofs, nor take too many precautions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Laboure was clothed with the holy habit in the month of January,
+1831, and sent under the name of Sister Catherine to the Hospital
+d'Enghien in the faubourg St. Antoine. Here she could continue her
+communications with M. Aladel. This good father did not lose sight of
+her; though apparently giving no credit to his penitent revelations,
+he was studying her carefully to convince himself whether or not these
+visions were the product of a weak, enthusiastic mind and excited
+imagination. But the more he studied her, the more confident he felt
+that there was nothing of this in Sister Laboure. The judgment formed
+of her by the Directresses of the Seminary was, that she had a somewhat
+reserved but calm, positive character, which M. Aladel qualified as
+cold and even apathetic.
+
+This last epithet, however, was not applicable to Sister Catherine,
+in whom her companions, on the contrary, recognized a very impulsive
+temperament. But his opinion proves, at least, that there was no
+excessive imagination. Moreover, she proved herself solidly grounded
+in virtue, whilst no one ever perceived anything extraordinary in her
+demeanor, and especially in her devotions.
+
+Before going to her new destination, Sister Laboure passed some days in
+one of the large establishments of Paris. Wishing to examine the young
+Sister more leisurely, M. Aladel made a pretext of visiting the Sisters
+at this house. The account of these visions had already been circulated
+throughout the Community, and it was known that M. Aladel had received
+the Sisters' confidence; hence, as soon as he appeared, the Sisters
+surrounded him, and each one eagerly plied him with questions. He had
+his eye upon Sister Catherine, who, without being disconcerted, quietly
+mingled her inquiries with the others. The worthy missionary was
+reassured, understanding that the Sister kept her secret.
+
+The last time the Blessed Virgin appeared to Sister Laboure in
+the sanctuary of the Mother House, she said to her: "My daughter,
+henceforth you will see me no more, but you will hear my voice during
+your meditations." And, indeed, during the whole course of her life,
+she had frequent communications of this kind. They were no longer
+sensible apparitions, but mental visions, that she well knew how to
+distinguish from the illusions of imagination or the impressions of a
+pious fervor.
+
+Her mission had not been accomplished in regard to the medal. Some
+months elapsed, and the Immaculate Virgin complained to Sister
+Catherine that her orders had not been executed.
+
+"But, my good Mother," replied Sister Catherine, "you see that he will
+not believe me." "Be calm," was the answer; "a day will come when he
+will do what I desire; he is my servant, and he would fear to displease
+me."
+
+These words were soon verified.
+
+When the pious missionary received this communication, he began to
+reflect seriously. "If Mary is displeased," said he, "it is not with
+the young Sister, whose position prevents her doing anything; it must
+be with me." This thought troubled him.[4] A long time previous, he
+had related these visions to M. Etienne, then Procurator General. One
+day, at the beginning of the year 1832, when they had gone together on
+a visit to Mgr. de Quelen, M. Aladel profited by the opportunity to
+speak to the latter of these apparitions, and especially of his own
+embarrassment, since the Blessed Virgin had complained to the Sister of
+the delay in fulfilling her commands.
+
+ [Footnote 4: Verbal process of the investigation, p. 5.]
+
+Mgr. de Quelen replied that, seeing nothing in it at all contrary to
+faith, he had no objection to the medal being struck at once. He even
+asked them to send him some of the first.
+
+The ravages of the cholera, which had broken out meanwhile, retarded
+the execution of this design until June; the 30th of that month, two
+thousand medals were struck, and M. Aladel hastened to send some of
+them to the Archbishop of Paris.
+
+Mgr. de Quelen wished to make an immediate trial of its efficacy; he
+was very much troubled concerning the spiritual condition of the former
+Archbishop of Mechlin, Mgr. de Pradt, now on the verge of death; he
+desired his conversion so much the more earnestly, as the death of this
+prelate might be the occasion of scandal and grave disorders, such as
+have accompanied the interment of the constitutional bishop Gregory.
+Providing himself with a medal, he went to visit the sick man. At
+first he was refused admittance, but very soon the dying man repents
+of it, and sends him an apology, with a request to call again. In this
+interview, he testifies to His Grace a sincere repentance for his past
+life, retracts all his errors, and after receiving the Last Sacraments,
+he dies that very night in the arms of the Archbishop, who, filled with
+a holy joy, eagerly imparts this consoling news to M. Aladel.
+
+The worthy missionary sent a medal to Sister Catherine, who received
+it with great devotion and respect,[5] and said: "Now it must be
+disseminated." This was easy to do among the Daughters of Charity, who
+had all heard whispers of these apparitions; the eagerness to receive
+the medals was general, they were distributed freely, and cures and
+conversions multiplied themselves accordingly in all ranks of society,
+so that very soon the medal received the appellation of miraculous.
+
+ [Footnote 5: Verbal process of the investigation.]
+
+A witness of these wonders, the heart of Father Aladel dilated with
+joy, and he believed it his duty to publish a notice of the origin of
+the medal, and thus satisfy all the inquiries addressed him on the
+subject. For the glory of God and Mary, he added an account of all the
+consoling facts that had come to his knowledge.
+
+What said Sister Catherine in hearing of these wonderful occurrences?
+Less than any one; she was astonished; doubtless her joy was great, but
+it was confined within the silence of her heart. Occasionally she sent
+some new message to M. Aladel, begging him to have an altar erected
+commemorative of the apparition, and telling him that many graces and
+indulgences would be attached thereto, and fall most abundantly upon
+himself and the Community.
+
+She urged him also to solicit particular spiritual favors, assuring him
+that he might ask freely, for all his requests would be granted.
+
+But this worthy priest, whose position in the Community, as we have
+already said, was that of simple chaplain, prudently kept silence,
+holding himself in reserve until the favorable moment should arrive
+for him to act. Some years after, M. Etienne, his intimate friend, was
+elected Superior General, and he was made assistant of the Congregation
+and Director of the Daughters of Charity; in concert, they formed the
+design of erecting to the Immaculate Mary an altar more in accordance
+with her maternal bounty and the gratitude of her children. Providence
+itself seemed to co-operate with the execution of their plan, the
+Community receiving from the government just then a present of two
+magnificent blocks of white marble, in recognition of the Sisters'
+services to the cholera patients and their orphans. One was destined
+for an altar, the other for a statue of the Immaculate Mary.
+
+Meanwhile, the number of inmates at the Mother House, the Seminary
+especially, increased daily. The new life infused into the Community
+had awakened many vocations, and the centre of reunion had become
+inadequate in size to its purposes, the chapel particularly was much
+too small. In enlarging it, the architect had a difficult problem to
+resolve: he must respect the sanctuary honored by Mary's visit, and
+yet extend the enclosure. He did so by adding side aisles, on a lower
+foundation, surmounted with galleries. If the edifice, always too low
+and small, gained nothing in the way of art, it has, at least, the
+advantage of preserving intact the exact spot where the Most Holy
+Virgin appeared.
+
+The former altar was taken into the side chapel dedicated to St.
+Vincent, and the holy founder was there represented holding that heart,
+burning with love of God and the poor, as it had appeared to Sister
+Catherine in the vision. A plaster statue of the Immaculate Conception
+occupied temporarily the place over the main altar, destined for the
+marble statue, which for various causes was not solemnly inaugurated
+till 1856.
+
+It was a day of great rejoicing for the Mother House; the statue was
+not a cold, mute representation; ... it was an eloquent image of Mary;
+here had this merciful Mother spoken and promised her graces; daily
+experience had confirmed these promises, and the statue still awakens
+in the hearts of those who come to pray at her feet, the deepest and
+tender emotions. Yes, Mary is indeed here. She speaks to the hearts of
+her children. She makes them feel that she loves and protects them!
+
+Sister Catherine said also to M. Aladel, in the early period of her
+vocation: "The Blessed Virgin wishes you to found a Congregation, of
+which you will be the Superior. It is a Sodality of Children of Mary;
+the Blessed Virgin will shower many graces upon it, and indulgences
+will be granted it."
+
+The reader will see, in the course of the volume, how this work was
+realized, and how admirably Providence has extended the association.
+
+She also told him that the month of May would be celebrated with much
+magnificence, and become universal in the Church; that the month of St.
+Joseph would likewise be kept with solemnity; that devotion to this
+great Saint would greatly increase, as well as devotion to the Sacred
+Heart of Jesus.
+
+So many miracles wrought everywhere and every day, so many signal
+testimonies of Mary's protection, made it an obligation on the
+Community, and especially the Seminary where they had originated, to
+perpetuate so precious a souvenir.
+
+Two pictures were therefore ordered, one representing the vision of
+the medal, the other that of St. Vincent's heart. The artist, wishing
+to depict the Blessed Virgin as accurately as possible, consulted M.
+Aladel as to the color of the veil.----
+
+The missionary's embarrassment was great; he had forgotten this item,
+but attaching more importance to the details than Sister Catherine
+thought, he wrote to her, and under the pretext of warning her against
+the illusions of the demon, he asked her to describe again the Blessed
+Virgin's appearance in the vision of the medal. Sister Catherine
+made this answer: "Just now, my Father, it would be impossible for me
+to recall all that I saw, one detail alone remains, it is, that the
+Blessed Virgin's veil was the color of morning light."
+
+This was just what M. Aladel wished to know, and precisely the only
+thing Sister Catherine could recollect.
+
+These little incidents, regulated by Providence, were not lost; they
+increased the confidence of the wise Director. When the pictures were
+placed in the Seminary, M. Aladel discreetly took measures to have
+Sister Catherine come to see them, just at the very time he would
+be there as if by chance. Another Sister, accidentally meeting them
+there, has a suspicion of the truth, and turning suddenly to the worthy
+Father, she says: "This is certainly the Sister who had the vision!"
+He is greatly embarrassed, and sees no way of extricating himself from
+the difficulty, except by calling upon Sister Catherine to answer. She
+laughed, saying: "You have guessed well," but with such simplicity that
+the other Sister said to the Father: "Oh! I see plainly that it is not
+she; you would not have asked her to tell me."
+
+During the course of her long life, Sister Catherine was subjected to
+trials of this sort.
+
+The details Mgr. de Quelen had received from M. Aladel concerning
+the vision of the medal interested him deeply, and he was anxious to
+become acquainted with the favored Sister. M. Aladel replied that
+the Sister insisted upon remaining unknown. "As for that," said His
+Grace, "she can put on a veil and speak to me without being seen." M.
+Aladel excused himself anew, saying it was for him a secret of the
+confessional.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, miraculously converted in 1842 by the apparition of the
+Miraculous Medal, also ardently desired to speak with the Sister first
+favored by this celestial vision, and he often but vainly entreated her
+Director's permission.
+
+Those around her frequently asked embarrassing questions, or
+expressed their suspicions. When too closely pressed, she found means
+of making the curious feel their indiscretion, so that it was not
+repeated. Moreover, her great simplicity ordinarily disconcerted her
+interrogators.
+
+On several occasions, the Blessed Virgin seemed to aid her; thus, in
+the investigation of 1836, and in the deposition made to the Promoter,
+M. Aladel declared that he had vainly endeavored to persuade Sister
+Catherine to be present, he could not overcome her repugnance; and
+moreover, they would interrogate her to no purpose, she had forgotten
+everything concerning the event.
+
+The same thing happened one day, it is said, in the presence of M.
+Etienne, then Superior General; he could not succeed in making her
+speak, she remembered nothing. It is this which gave rise to the rumor
+in the Community, that the vision was completely effaced from the
+memory of the Sister who had been favored with it.
+
+Thanks to this opinion, Sister Catherine was enabled to remain long
+years truly concealed in her modest duties; employed first in the
+kitchen, then in the clothes-room; afterwards, for nearly forty years,
+she had charge of the old men's ward of the Hospital d'Enghien,
+combining with this duty the care of the poultry yard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She loved these humble duties. Everything was kept in perfect order,
+and for her there was no greater happiness than that of being among
+her poor. At the end of her life, she spoke of it as her chief
+consolation. "I have always," said she, "loved to stay at home;
+whenever there was question of a walk, I yielded my turn to others that
+I might serve my poor."
+
+And this was true. One walk only was she unwilling to forego, that
+which led to the Community, and she knew no other road but that to the
+Mother House. When she could make this visit she never yielded her turn.
+
+Her attraction for silence and the hidden life always kept her in the
+rear, as the place most suitable for her, and most favorable to the
+spirit of recollection. She ceded to none the lowest and most repulsive
+duties of her ward, duties which she termed the pearls of a Daughter
+of Charity; she moved calmly and quietly, avoiding precipitation, and
+when advanced in years, the young Sisters, her assistants, often heard
+from her lips these words: "Ah! my dear, do not be so agitated, be more
+gentle."
+
+She regarded as one of the most cherished souvenirs of her Community
+life, that of her first Sister-Servant, "a dear soul," said she, "who
+every year sent the first fruits of her garden to the indigent families
+of the faubourg, or to her old men. The Sisters were not allowed to
+touch them until this had been done."
+
+This aged Superior was Sister Savard, who never supposed that Sister
+Catherine was favored with especial graces, and particularly with the
+vision of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Our humble daughter Catherine respected and loved all the Sisters under
+whom she served, and never did she utter a word against them; she saw
+only their virtues and good qualities.
+
+"Child of duty and labor, but especially of humility," says her last
+Superior, "Sister Catherine was not truly appreciated except by
+those who studied her sufficiently to perceive the great simplicity,
+uprightness, and purity pervading her soul, her mind, her heart, her
+whole person.
+
+"Never arrogating to herself the slightest merit on account of the
+singular favors with which the Immaculate Virgin had loaded her, she
+said, one day towards the close of her life, when Providence permitted
+a slight allusion to this subject: 'I, favored Sister! I have been
+only an instrument; it was not for myself the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to me. I knew nothing, not even how to write; it was in the Community
+I learned all I know; and because of my ignorance the Blessed Virgin
+chose me, that no one might doubt."
+
+Is not the conclusion inspired by the spirit of St. Vincent, "I have
+been chosen, because being nothing, no one could doubt that such great
+things are the work of God."
+
+Sister Catherine cared little for the esteem or contempt of others.
+Despite her rigid silence, there always hovered over her the suspicion
+that it was she who had seen the Blessed Virgin; no one dared tell her
+so; but in consequence of the suspicion, she was more closely observed,
+and more severely judged than any one else, and if by chance her
+companions discovered in her some slight weakness of nature, or even
+the absence of some heroic virtue, the thought was immediately rejected
+that the Blessed Virgin had chosen so ordinary a person.
+
+The testimony of one of her first companions confirms the impression
+on this point, an impression repeated a hundred fold. This companion
+writes to Sister Dufes: "Having passed six years with Sister
+Catherine, and worked constantly with her one year, it would seem
+that I could cite a great number of details full of interest and
+edification; but I am forced to confess that her life was so simple,
+so uniform, that I find nothing in it to remark. Notwithstanding the
+whispered assurances that she was the Sister so favored by the Blessed
+Virgin, I scarcely credited it, so much was her life like that of
+others. Sometimes, I sought to enlighten myself indirectly on the
+subject by questioning her as to the impression such extraordinary
+occurrences had produced in the Seminary, hoping that her answers would
+betray her, and thereby satisfy my curiosity, but she replied with so
+much simplicity that my hopes were always deceived."
+
+It is true, Sister Catherine had nothing remarkable about her, and yet
+nothing common or trivial.
+
+Her height was above the medium; her regular features bore the seal
+of modesty; and her clear blue eye was indicative of candor. She was
+industrious, simple, and not the least mystical in her spiritual
+exercises; she affected neither great virtues nor particular devotions,
+well pleased to cherish them in the depths of her heart, and practice
+them according to the rule with fidelity and exactness.
+
+After her death, some notes were found written by her own hand during
+one of the annual retreats. Everything in them is simple, solid,
+practical, and there is not one word of allusion to the extraordinary
+graces she had received; even when addressing the Blessed Virgin,
+nothing recalls the familiarity with which Mary had treated her. Here
+are some extracts, in which no changes have been made except those of
+fault-spelling.
+
+ "I will take Mary for my model at the commencement of all my
+ actions; in everything, I will consider if Mary were engaged
+ thus, how and wherefore she would do this, with what intention.
+ Oh! how beautiful and consoling is the name of Mary ... Mary!
+
+ "Resolution to offer myself to God without reserve, to bear
+ every little contradiction in a spirit of humility and
+ penance, to beg in all my prayers that the will of God may be
+ accomplished in me. O my God! do with me as Thou wilt! O Mary!
+ grant me your love, without which I perish; bestow upon me all
+ the graces I need! O Immaculate Heart of Mary! obtain for me
+ the faith and love which attached you to the foot of the cross
+ of Jesus Christ!
+
+ "O sweet objects of my affections, Jesus and Mary, let me
+ suffer for you, let me die for you, let me be all for you and
+ no longer anything for myself!
+
+ "Not to complain of the little contradictions I meet with among
+ the poor, and to pray for those who cause me suffering. O Mary,
+ obtain for me this grace, through your virginal purity!
+
+ "To employ my time well, and not to spend one moment
+ unprofitably. O Mary, happy those who serve you and put their
+ confidence in you!
+
+ "O Mary, Mary, Mary, pray, pray, pray for us, poor sinners, now
+ and at the hour of our death! Mary, O Mary!
+
+ "In my temptations and times of spiritual dryness, I will
+ always have recourse to Mary, who is purity itself. O Mary,
+ conceived without sin!----
+
+ "O Mary, make me love you, and it will not be difficult to
+ imitate you!
+
+ "Humility, simplicity and charity are the foundation of our
+ holy vocation. O Mary, make me understand these holy virtues!
+ St. Vincent, pray, pray for us!
+
+ "O Mary, conceived without sin, pray, pray for us! Deign, O
+ Queen of Angels and of men, to cast a favorable eye upon the
+ whole world ... especially upon France ... and each person
+ in particular! O Mary, inspire us what to ask of you for our
+ happiness!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sister Catherine lived forty-six years in a large establishment, under
+the direction of five successive Superiors; she was brought in contact
+with many companions of different dispositions and different degrees of
+virtue, consequently the esteem in which she was held varied. If they
+sometimes gave her to understand that her mind was failing, such things
+troubled her little, and she always quietly went her way, receiving
+kindness with grateful simplicity, and ungracious words without
+flinching.
+
+Faithful to the rule with such uniform exactness, that merit seems
+to disappear before habit, she never uttered a word against charity.
+Even when age had given her some privileges over her young companions,
+rarely did she allow herself to blame or advise them; not, at least,
+unless they consulted her, then she advised submission. "Everything
+is in that," said she, "without obedience, Community life is not
+possible." To the very end of her days, her obedience to her Superior
+was as perfect as when she left the Seminary.
+
+We must not, however, suppose that Sister Catherine was of a yielding,
+gentle temperament, to which obedience was natural; no, on the
+contrary, she had a strong will and quick temper. Thoroughly versed in
+household labors, she performed her part with great care and assiduity,
+and directed most scrupulously all that was entrusted to her charge.
+Her impulsive temper sometimes displayed itself in little sallies of
+impatience, the firm tone of her words revealing at times what virtue
+ordinarily caused her to repress. When the first heat was over, she
+immediately repented of it and humbled herself.
+
+It was often observed that this first movement of surprise, just ready
+to escape, was held captive, not by human respect, but by a superior
+will; thus proving that her implicit obedience was due her fidelity to
+grace.
+
+Understanding her nature, we can now form an idea of what Sister
+Catherine suffered from the opposition she experienced in realizing her
+mission; even though these contradictions, especially after the medal
+had been struck, were more apparent than real on the part of her wise
+Director, they were none the less painful to her. Might we not say that
+these trials constituted an interior martyrdom sustained by God and
+known to him alone?
+
+Sister Catherine, despite her strong constitution, was not exempt from
+physical suffering, and her companions were sometimes astonished at the
+simplicity with which she asked for little comforts that a mortified
+soul would have denied itself. These slight defects formed a veil that
+obscured the sight of many, and partially concealed the beauties of her
+soul.
+
+Apparently, the very depths of this simple nature might be read at a
+glance, and yet she faithfully guarded the secrets of God. In her were
+seen, by a singular contrast, prudence and discretion allied to perfect
+simplicity. Thus, whilst some found her a little too thoughtful of her
+health, others observed that on all great feasts of the Blessed Virgin,
+particularly that of the Immaculate Conception, she was either sick
+or suffering acute pain, which trials the humble Sister received as a
+favor from her celestial Mother.
+
+The Superior of the Hospital d'Enghien relates that, one year, when
+Sister Catherine had gone with several of her companions to spend the
+beautiful Feast of December 8th at the Community, on getting into the
+omnibus that evening she fell and broke her wrist. She said not a word,
+and no one perceived the accident. Some minutes after, seeing that
+she held her arm in her handkerchief, Sister Dufes inquired what had
+happened. "Ah! Sister," she quietly replied, "I am holding my bouquet;
+every year the Blessed Virgin sends me one of this sort."
+
+Detachment from the esteem and affection of creatures was still another
+trait characteristic of our dear Sister. God sufficed her; that God
+who had manifested Himself to her in so wonderful a manner, that
+Immaculate Virgin whose charms had ravished her heart, were her sole
+joy and delight. The Blessed Virgin, pointing to the sacred tabernacle
+where her divine Son reposes, had said to her: "In all your trials, my
+daughter, it is there you must seek consolation." Faithful to these
+words of her good Mother, Sister Catherine in moments of trial sought
+the chapel, whence she soon returned to her occupations with renewed
+serenity of soul and countenance ever cheerful. Jesus and Mary alone
+received the confidence of her sufferings and her fervor, so that her
+virtues in a measure were concealed from creatures.
+
+One of the Sisters of the house says that, having often observed her
+closely to discover, if possible, some trace of her communications with
+God, she could find nothing especial except that during prayer she
+did not cast down her eyes, but always kept them fixed upon the image
+of Mary. She remarks, also, that Sister Catherine never wept except
+from great anguish of heart, but many times she saw her shed tears in
+abundance on listening to some traits of protection or some conversion
+obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession, or, as in 1871, at
+the evils afflicting the Church and France.
+
+Solidly pious in the midst of companions apparently more so, we see
+nothing indeed in our humble Sister to distinguish her from others.
+Only one especial circumstance has been remarked, the importance
+she attached to the recitation of the chaplet. Let us hear what her
+Sister-Servant says on this point--
+
+"We were always struck," writes Sister Dufes, "when saying the chaplet
+in common, with the grave and pious manner in which our dear companion
+pronounced the words of the Angelical Salutation. And what convinced
+us of the depth of her respect and devotion was the fact that she,
+always so humble, so reserved, could not refrain from censuring the
+indifference, the want of attention, which too often accompanies the
+recitation of a prayer, so beautiful and efficacious."
+
+Her love for the two families of St. Vincent, far from diminishing with
+age, only incited her to employ continually in their behalf the sole
+influence at her disposal, prayer; regularly every week, she offered a
+Communion to attract the benediction of Heaven upon the Congregation of
+the Mission; her prayers for her Community were incessant.
+
+Sister Catherine always retained the same duty at the Hospital
+d'Enghien; with truly admirable solicitude, she nursed the old men
+entrusted to her, at the same time not neglecting the pigeon house,
+which recalled the purest and sweetest joys of her childhood. The young
+girl of former days, whom we have seen with her dear pigeons hovering
+round her, was now a poor Sister, quite aged, but none the less
+attentive to her little charge.
+
+Sister Catherine was, then, the soul of the little family in charge of
+the hospital. During these later years, the number of our Sisters had
+increased considerably, and consequently the administration of the two
+houses, d'Enghien and Reuilly, being very difficult for one person, an
+assistant was sent me for the hospital. If Sister Catherine had not
+for years been moulded to obedience and abnegation, it would have been
+hard to her quick, impulsive nature, to recognize the authority of a
+companion so much younger than herself; but far different were the
+thoughts of this humble Sister, who always endeavored to abase herself.
+
+ "She was the first to tender her perfect submission. 'Sister,'
+ said she, 'be at ease, it suffices that our Superiors have
+ spoken; we will receive Sister Angelique as one sent from God,
+ and obey her as we do you.' Her conduct justified her words.
+
+ "Although Sister Catherine guarded rigorously the supernatural
+ communications she had received, she occasionally expressed her
+ views to me on actual occurrences, speaking then as if inspired
+ by God.
+
+ "Thus, at the time of the Commune, she told me that I would
+ leave the house accompanied by a certain Sister, that I would
+ return the 31st of May, and she assured me I need have no
+ fears, as the Blessed Virgin would take my place and guard the
+ house. At the time, I paid very little attention to the good
+ Sister's words.
+
+ "I left, indeed, and realized, contrary to my plans, and
+ without a thought on the subject, all that Sister Catherine
+ had predicted. On my return from the Community, May 31st, I
+ expressed my anxiety concerning the house, which had been in
+ the hands of the Communists, and, it was said, plundered.
+ Sister Catherine endeavored to reassure me, repeating that the
+ Blessed Virgin had taken care of everything, she was confident
+ of it, for the Blessed Virgin had promised her.
+
+ "We found on our arrival that this Mother of mercy had, indeed,
+ guarded and saved all, notwithstanding the long occupation of
+ our dear house by a mob of furies, whose Satanic pleasure was
+ to destroy.
+
+ "One circumstance in particular struck me most forcibly; these
+ wretches had made useless efforts to overthrow the statue of
+ Mary Immaculate placed in the garden--it had withstood all
+ their sacrilegious attempts.
+
+ "Sister Catherine hastened to place upon the head of our august
+ Queen the crown she had taken with her in our exile, telling
+ the Blessed Virgin she restored it in token of gratitude.
+
+ "Many times did Sister Catherine thus reveal her thoughts to
+ me with the simplicity of a child. When her predictions were
+ not realized, she would quietly say: 'Ah! well, Sister, I was
+ mistaken. I believed what I told you. I am very glad the truth
+ is known.'[6]
+
+ [Footnote 6: Persons favored with supernatural communications
+ are not thereby preserved from error. They may be deceived in
+ misunderstanding what they see or hear, they may be duped by
+ the illusions of the demon, they may involuntarily mingle their
+ own ideas with those which come from God, and they may fail in
+ transmitting with accuracy what has been revealed to them. We
+ must also remark that prophecies are frequently conditional,
+ and their accomplishment depends upon the manner in which the
+ conditions are fulfilled; so that, when the Church approves
+ these private revelations, she does nothing more than declare
+ that, after grave examination, they may be published for the
+ edification of the faithful, and that the proofs given are
+ sufficient to ensure belief.
+
+ To the Sacred Writers alone belongs the privilege of
+ infallibility in receiving and transmitting divine
+ inspirations.]
+
+ "Meanwhile, time fled, and our good Sister often spoke of her
+ approaching end. Our venerated Superiors began to feel anxious
+ about losing her, and the Superior General one day sent for
+ her to come to the Community that he might receive from her own
+ lips certain communications which he considered very important.
+
+ "Sister Catherine, to whom this was wholly unexpected, was
+ almost speechless with amazement. On her return, she expressed
+ to me her emotion, and, for the first time, opened her heart
+ to me concerning that which she had formerly so much feared to
+ reveal.
+
+ "This repugnance had vanished; seeing herself on the borders
+ of the tomb, she felt constrained to make known the details
+ which she thought buried with the venerated Father Aladel,
+ and she expressed great grief that devotion to the Immaculate
+ Conception was less lively and general than it had been.
+
+ "These communications, moreover, were for myself alone; I
+ did not impart them to the other Sisters. It is true, the
+ greater number were informed of this pious secret, but they
+ never learned it from Sister Catherine herself. All they could
+ observe in connexion with it was her ardent love for Mary
+ Immaculate and her zeal for the propagation of the Miraculous
+ Medal, also that, when she heard one of our Sisters express
+ a desire to make the pilgrimage to Lourdes or some other
+ privileged sanctuary of Mary, she could not refrain from
+ saying, somewhat impetuously: 'But why do you wish to go so
+ far? Have you not the Community? Did not the Blessed Virgin
+ appear there as well as at Lourdes?' And a most extraordinary
+ fact is, that, without having read any of the publications
+ concerning this miraculous grotto, Sister Catherine was more
+ familiar with what had taken place there than many who had made
+ the pilgrimage. Leaving these incidents aside, never did she
+ utter a word calculated to give the impression that she had
+ any part in the singular favors the Blessed Virgin had lavished
+ upon our humble chapel at the Mother House.
+
+ "Since opening her heart to me, this good companion had become
+ very affectionate; it was a rest for her, a consolation to
+ find some one who understood her. Our worthy Father Chevalier,
+ Assistant of the Congregation of the Mission, occasionally
+ visited her to receive her communications concerning the
+ apparition. One day, he spoke to her of the new edition he was
+ preparing of the notice of the medal. 'When M. Aladel's edition
+ of 1842 appeared,' replied Sister Catherine, 'I said to him,
+ truly, that he would never publish another, and that I would
+ never see another edition, because it would not be finished
+ during my lifetime.' 'I shall catch you there,' replied M.
+ Chevalier, who expected it to appear very soon. But unforeseen
+ difficulties having retarded the publication, he subsequently
+ recognized that the good Sister had spoken rightly.
+
+ "From the beginning of the year 1876, Sister Catherine alluded
+ very frequently to her death; on all our feast days, she never
+ failed to say: 'It is the last time I shall see this feast.'
+ And when we appeared not to credit her assertion, she added: 'I
+ shall certainly not see the year 1877.' We could not, however,
+ believe her end so near. For some months she had been obliged
+ to keep her bed, and relinquish that active life she had led so
+ many years.
+
+ "Her strength was gradually failing; the asthma joined to some
+ affection of the heart undermined her constitution; she felt
+ that she was dying, but it was without a fear, we might say
+ without emotion. One day, when speaking to her of her death:
+ 'You are not afraid, then,' said I, 'dear Sister Catherine.'
+ 'Afraid! Sister!' she exclaimed; 'why should I be afraid? I am
+ going to our Lord, the Blessed Virgin, St. Vincent.'
+
+ "And, truly, our dear companion had nothing to fear, for her
+ death was as calm as her life.
+
+ "Several days previous, one of our Sisters was talking
+ familiarly with her, when, without any allusion to the subject
+ from the other, our sick Sister said: 'I shall go to Reuilly.'
+ This was the name given the House of Providence, separated
+ from d'Enghien Hospital by a vast garden, and similar to it
+ in the nature of its works. 'What! to Reuilly?' answered her
+ companion; 'you would not have the heart to do so, you who love
+ so well your Enghien, that you have never left.' 'I tell you, I
+ shall go to Reuilly.' 'But when?' 'Ah! that is it!' said Sister
+ Catherine, in a decided, mysterious tone, that disconcerted
+ her companion. After a few moments, she added: 'There will be
+ no need of a hearse at my funeral.' 'Oh! what do you mean?'
+ replied the Sister. 'It will not be needed,' said the sick one,
+ emphatically. 'But why not?' 'They will put me in the chapel at
+ Reuilly.' These words struck her companion, who repeated the
+ conversation to me. 'Keep that to yourself,' said I.
+
+ "On the 31st of December, she had several spells of weakness,
+ symptoms of her approaching end. We then proposed to her the
+ last consolations of religion; she gratefully consented, and
+ received the Sacraments with indescribable peace and happiness;
+ then, at her request, we recited the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception.
+
+ "Being one day near her bed, speaking to her of Heaven and
+ of the Blessed Virgin, she expressed a desire to have during
+ her agony sixty-three children, each invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin by one of her titles in the litany of the Immaculate
+ Conception, and especially these very consoling words: 'Terror
+ of demons, pray for us.' It was observed that there were not
+ sixty-three invocations in the litany. 'You will find them in
+ the office of the Immaculate Conception,' said she. Measures
+ were taken to comply with her desires, the invocations were
+ written upon slips of paper and kept for the final hour,
+ but, just at the time of her agony, we could not collect the
+ children; she then asked that the litany be recited, and had us
+ repeat three times the invocation which makes hell tremble.
+
+ "Our Sisters were especially touched to hear her exclaim, with
+ an accent of deep tenderness: 'My dear Community! my dear
+ Mother House!' So true is it, that what we have loved most in
+ life returns to us with renewed vigor at the hour of death!
+
+ "Some of her former companions and friends of the House came
+ during the day to see her for a last time; one of them,
+ holding an office in the Seminary, approaching her, said
+ sadly: 'Sister Catherine, are you going to leave us without
+ telling me a word of the Blessed Virgin?' Then the dying
+ Sister leaned towards her, and whispered softly in her ear
+ quite a while. 'I ought not to speak,' said she; 'it is M.
+ Chevalier who is commissioned to do that.' ... She continued,
+ without interruption: 'The Blessed Virgin has promised to
+ grant especial graces every time one prays in the chapel, but
+ particularly an increase of purity, that purity of mind, heart,
+ will, which is pure love.'
+
+ "This good daughter, animated with the true primitive spirit
+ of the Community, was, in uttering these last words, the
+ unconscious echo of the venerable Mother Legras, whose writings
+ breathe the same thought.
+
+ "A Sister-Servant, who came to visit her, approaching the sick
+ Sister, reminded her of the necessities of the Community and
+ of the Seminary, and ended by saying: 'Dear Sister Catherine,
+ when you get to Heaven, do not forget all this, attend to all
+ my commissions.' Sister Catherine answered: 'Sister, my will is
+ good, but I have always been so stupid, so dull, I shall not
+ know how to explain myself, for I am ignorant of the language
+ of Heaven.' Upon which the other, delighted with so much
+ simplicity, was inspired to say: 'Oh! my dear Sister Catherine,
+ in Heaven we do not speak as we do on earth; the soul regards
+ God, the good God regards the soul, and all is understood--that
+ is the language of Heaven.' Our dear Sister's countenance
+ became radiant at this, and she answered: 'Oh! Sister, if it is
+ thus, be tranquil, all your commissions will be fulfilled.'
+
+ "M. Chevalier came, also, that day to give her his blessing,
+ and he spoke to her on the same subject. Sister Catherine
+ answered him with faculties undimmed, and said to him, among
+ other things: 'The pilgrimages the Sisters make are not
+ favorable to piety. The Blessed Virgin did not tell me to go
+ so far to pray; it is in the Community chapel she wishes the
+ Sisters to invoke her, that is their true pilgrimage.'
+
+ "The poor, to whom she was so devoted, likewise occupied her
+ thoughts.----
+
+ "At four in the afternoon, another attack of weakness collected
+ us all around our dear, dying one, but the supreme moment had
+ not yet come. We surrounded her bed until evening. At seven,
+ she seemed to sink into a slumber, and without the least agony
+ or the least sign of suffering, she yielded her last sigh.
+ Scarcely could we perceive that she had ceased to live....
+ Never have I seen a death so calm and gentle."
+
+ "The deepest emotion now filled our hearts; we pondered the
+ celestial interview of our blessed companion with that good God
+ who had so often revealed Himself to her during her Seminary
+ life, and that beautiful Virgin, whose charms can never be
+ depicted on earth.
+
+ "It was not sorrow which pervaded our hearts; not a tear was
+ shed in these first moments; we yielded to an indescribable
+ emotion; we felt ourselves near a Saint; the veil of humility
+ under which she had lived so long concealed was now rent, that
+ we might see in her only the soul favored by Heaven.
+
+ "Our Sisters disputed the happiness of passing the night beside
+ her venerated remains, a magnetic attraction drawing them to
+ her.
+
+ "To perpetuate the fact that she had received these favors
+ whilst still a Seminary Sister, we thought of having her
+ photograph taken, also, in the Seminary habit; it succeeded
+ completely in both costumes.
+
+ "We now carried her blessed remains into the chapel. There
+ the Immaculate Virgin watched over her; lilies and roses
+ surrounded her virginal body, and her cherished device--'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee'--surrounding this little sanctuary, seemed the last echo
+ of her life.
+
+ "Then commenced the miracle of glorified humility; this
+ humble Sister, who in life had been scarcely noticed, was
+ suddenly surrounded by persons of every age and condition, who
+ considered it a very great happiness to come, not to pray for
+ her, but to recommend themselves to her blessed intercession.
+
+ "As for us who were keeping watch around our dear relic, we
+ could not bear to think of the moment which would take her
+ from us. This house which had been protected by her presence
+ for forty-six years, would it be deprived of her forever? The
+ thought was heart-breaking; it seemed as if we were about
+ to lose the protection of the Immaculate Virgin, who would
+ henceforth cease to hover over us.
+
+ "On the other hand, to keep our dear Sister with us appeared
+ impossible. Our Superiors being consulted, permitted us to
+ take measures in accordance with our wishes. We had a world of
+ difficulties to surmount.
+
+ "'Pray,' said I to our Sisters; and they passed the night
+ supplicating the Immaculate Mary to let our beloved companion
+ remain with us.
+
+ "All night long, I vainly tried to think of a suitable resting
+ place for her, when suddenly, at the sound of the four o'clock
+ bell, I thought I heard these words: 'The vault is under the
+ chapel of Reuilly.' 'True enough,' said I, joyfully, like a
+ person who suddenly sees the realization of a long deferred
+ hope. I remembered now that, during the construction of the
+ chapel, a vault had been made communicating with the children's
+ refectory. Our worthy Mother Mazin had assigned to it no actual
+ purpose, saying we might have use for it hereafter.
+
+ "There was no time to lose. We were on the eve of her funeral,
+ and the authorization, so difficult to obtain, had not yet been
+ solicited.
+
+ "The vault was hastily prepared, and the petition, sustained by
+ influential persons, succeeded as if by enchantment.
+
+ "January 3d, the feast of St. Genevieve, was the day appointed
+ for the interment of her, whom we regarded as the tutelary
+ angel of our house. But the word 'interment' is not appropriate
+ here--'triumph' is the proper expression--for it was a
+ veritable triumph for our humble Sister.
+
+ "A deputation was sent from all the houses of our Sisters, that
+ had received timely notice, and the little chapel was much too
+ small to accommodate the numbers that came. Mass over, the
+ funeral cortege which was to accompany the body in procession
+ from d'Enghien Hospital to the vault at Reuilly was organized,
+ as follows: The inmates of our industrial school, Children of
+ Mary, came first, bearing their banner; next to these, all our
+ little orphans; then, our young girls of the Society (both
+ externs and those belonging to the house), wearing the livery
+ of the Immaculate Mary; the parishioners, and lastly, our
+ Sisters preceding the clergy.
+
+ "This lengthy procession passed slowly through the long garden
+ walk, and whilst the solemn chants of the Benedictus resounded
+ afar, the modest coffin appeared in sight, covered with lilies
+ and eglantines, emblems of purity and simplicity.
+
+ "At the entrance of the vault, the crowd stood aside, and our
+ Children of Mary greeted the arrival of the body by singing the
+ blessed invocation: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us
+ who have recourse to thee!' It would be impossible to describe
+ the effect of these funeral obsequies, of a nature so entirely
+ new.
+
+ "To preserve our treasure, it was necessary to wall up the
+ subterranean entrance, but we had an opening made communicating
+ with the chapel.
+
+ "The poor, whom Sister Catherine had nursed, lay a magnificent
+ crown on the tomb of St. Vincent's humble daughter, who, in
+ life, sought only the lowliest paths, and who had supplicated
+ the Blessed Virgin to keep her unknown and unsought."----
+
+The life of dear Sister Laboure was the faithful realization of Our
+Lord's words in the Gospel: "I return Thee thanks, Father, that Thou
+hast concealed these things from the wise of this world and hast
+revealed them to little ones." Never were the gifts of God better
+concealed in a soul, under the double mantle of humility and simplicity.
+
+For forty-six years did she lead a life of obscurity and toil, seeking
+no other satisfaction than that of pleasing God; she sanctified herself
+in the lowliest paths by a faithful correspondence to grace, and an
+exact compliance with the practices of a Community life. The favors she
+received from Heaven never filled her heart with pride; witness of the
+wonders daily wrought by the medal, she never uttered a word that might
+lead others to suspect how much more she knew about it than any one
+else.
+
+Might we not say, she had chosen for her motto these words of A Kempis:
+"Love to be unknown and accounted as nothing?" How faithfully these
+traits portray the true daughter of the humble Vincent de Paul!
+
+What, in Heaven, must be the glory of those whose earthly life was
+one of self-abasement? Do we not already perceive a faint radiance of
+this glory? The obsequies of the humble servant of the poor resembled
+a triumph; by an almost unheard of exception, her body remains in
+the midst of her spiritual family; her tomb is visited by persons of
+every condition, who, with confidence, recommend themselves to her
+intercession, and many of whom assure us that their petitions have
+been granted. In fine, this biographical notice discloses what Sister
+Catherine so carefully concealed, and thus accomplishes Our Lord's
+promise: "He who humbleth himself, shall be exalted."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ MARY'S AGENCY IN THE CHURCH.
+
+ THIS AGENCY, EVER MANIFEST, SEEMS TO HAVE DISAPPEARED DURING THE
+ EIGHTEENTH AND IN THE BEGINNING OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY--MARY
+ APPEARS IN 1830--MOTIVES AND IMPORTANCE OF THIS APPARITION--THE
+ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+
+Devotion to the most Blessed Virgin is as ancient as Christianity,
+and we find traces of it from the very origin of the Church, among
+all nations who accepted the Gospel. During the first ages, it was
+concealed in the obscurity of the catacombs, or veiled itself under
+symbolical forms to escape the profanation of infidels; but when the
+era of peace succeeded that of bloody persecutions, it reappeared
+openly and in all the brilliancy of its ravishing beauty. It developed
+a wonderful growth, especially in the fifth century, after the Council
+of Ephesus had proclaimed the divine maternity of Mary, thereby
+sanctioning the exceptional homages rendered her above all the saints.
+
+The image of the Virgin Mother, circulated throughout Christendom,
+becomes the ornament of churches, the protection of the fireside, and
+an object of devotion to the faithful. It is at this epoch, especially,
+we see everywhere gradually disappearing the last vestiges of paganism.
+The Immaculate Virgin, the Mother of tenderness, the Queen of Angels,
+the Patroness of regenerated humanity, supplants those vain idols,
+which for ages had fostered superstition, with its train of vices and
+errors.
+
+Every Catholic admits that the Church's veneration of Mary rests upon
+an inviolable foundation--both faith and reason unite in justifying it.
+Events have proved that God Himself has authorized it, for it has often
+pleased Him to recompense the confidence and fidelity of her servants,
+by sensible marks of His power, by extraordinary graces--in a word,
+by true miracles. By a disposition of His Providence, He has decreed
+Mary's intervention in the economy of the Church and the sanctification
+of souls, as He did in the mysteries of the Incarnation and Redemption.
+Her character of Mediatrix between Heaven and earth obliges her to make
+this agency felt, to display the power she has received in favor of
+man. These manifestations of the Blessed Virgin in the Church, these
+marvelous proofs of her solicitude for us, form an interesting portion
+of the history of Catholicity. The liturgy is full of such souvenirs,
+and several feasts have been instituted to commemorate them. Christian
+countries abound in traditions of this nature; they are one of the
+sources whence piety derives its nourishment.
+
+The majority of pilgrim shrines owe their origin to some supernatural
+intervention of the Blessed Virgin. Sometimes she has manifested
+herself under a visible form, most frequently to a poor shepherd
+or peasant; again, she has wrought a miracle, as the recovery of
+a sick person, the conversion of a hardened sinner, or some other
+prodigy betokening the power of a supernatural agency. Sometimes, a
+statue, a picture, apparently not fashioned by the hand of man, is
+accidentally discovered; the neighboring population are touched, their
+faith is reanimated, and soon a shrine, a chapel, or even a splendid
+basilica, is erected to protect this gift of Heaven, this pledge of
+Mary's affection. Innumerable generations repair to the spot, and new
+favors, new miracles, ineffable consolations, ever attest the tutelary
+guardianship of her, whom humble, confiding hearts have never invoked
+in vain. We might cite hundreds of names in support of these assertions.
+
+The history of devotion to Mary in Catholic countries gives rise to
+an observation worthy of remark, that the faith of a country is in
+proportion to its devotion to the Blessed Virgin. We can also add that,
+when God wishes to revive the Faith among any people, He commissions
+Mary to manifest there her goodness and power.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every age has furnished the Church with constantly increasing proofs of
+Mary's mediation; there are epochs in which she seems to be so lavish
+of her presence, that we might say she lives familiarly among mankind,
+and that her delights are to converse with them.
+
+Again, on the contrary, she appears to retire, to hold herself aloof
+from the world, to give no more signs of her intervention. We have a
+striking example of this in a somewhat recent age. More than a century
+do we find deprived of Mary's sensible mediation; history records in
+all that period not one of these apparitions, not a new pilgrim shrine
+founded, not a signal grace obtained through the intercession of the
+Mother of Mercy. If a few events of this kind took place, they were at
+least very rare, and have remained in obscurity. This age, forsaken by
+the Blessed Virgin, was the eighteenth century, to which we must add
+the first thirty years of the nineteenth.
+
+At this epoch, when impious rationalism endeavored to efface all idea
+of the supernatural, when the most firmly established truths were
+attacked, when among Christians the standard of virtue was lowered and
+character was of slight esteem in any class or station of society, we
+might believe that Mary, fatigued with men's ingratitude, had resolved
+to leave them to their own devices, and let them govern the world
+according to their ideas of assumed wisdom. She did, in reality, not
+renounce her mission of Mediatrix in favor of the Church, she still
+watched over her great adopted family, she listened to the prayers
+of her faithful servants, but she remained invisible, she no longer
+displayed any of those marks of tenderness her maternal heart had
+lavished upon them in the ages of faith.
+
+We know the consequences of Mary's abandoning the earth, and how these
+sages who wished to dispense with God governed society. The history of
+their reign is written in letters of fire, of blood and of filth.
+
+This revolutionary and impious naturalism was prolonged into the
+nineteenth century; it still exerts a deplorable influence at the
+present day, but it encounters opposition; the supernatural order is
+firmly asserted, the truths of Faith are warmly defended, the holy
+Church is respected and obeyed, its august Head is held in veneration
+to the very extremities of the earth, God's kingdom is still opposed,
+but it numbers devoted subjects, who, if needful, would shed their
+blood in its defence. Indifference, human respect, jeering scepticism,
+are gradually disappearing, leaving the Church with only sincere
+friends or declared enemies. It is a progress no one can ignore.
+
+Whence comes this change? and what the date of so consoling a
+resurrection? Beyond a doubt, it owes its origin to God's infinite
+bounty--but the instrument, can it be ignored or contemned? Is it not
+the Blessed Virgin Mary? Has not her mediation been visible for forty
+years? Yes; it is Mary who has wrought this astonishing transformation,
+and through the medal styled miraculous has this series of wonders been
+inaugurated.
+
+In 1830, does Mary for the first time, after an interval of a century
+and a half, manifest her desire of a reconciliation with earth.
+
+It is the first sign of pardon she accords man, after her long silence.
+
+It is the announcement of a new era which is about to commence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The apparition of November 27th, in the chapel of the Mother House of
+the Daughters of Charity, Paris, appears, at first, to be of little
+importance, yet it was destined to have an immense bearing upon the
+future and its consequences were to be incalculable. Like a stream
+whose source is concealed at the foot of a mountain, but which receives
+as it advances numberless tributaries, and finally becomes a majestic
+river, fertilizing the provinces and kingdoms through which it flows;
+so the vision of the medal has been the initiatory step in a religious
+movement, which, to-day, extends throughout the world, sitting in
+justice upon old errors, superannuated prejudices; systems inimical to
+truth, and fully revealing the true Church and true sanctity, rendering
+to Mary Immaculate, Mother of God and Mother of men, such tributes of
+veneration, love and devotion, as she has never received since the
+preaching of the Gospel.
+
+The reader is already acquainted with Sister Catherine, the humble
+daughter whom Mary deigned to select for her confidante. The following
+chapter gives a detailed account of the apparitions.
+
+We have said that this event was the dawn of a new era, the signal
+of renewed devotion to Mary throughout the world. It seemed as if
+this tender Mother wished, by lavishing extraordinary graces upon her
+children, to make them forget the severity with which she had punished
+their offences.
+
+A rapid glance at the development of devotion to Mary, during half a
+century, will suffice to show the truth of this affirmation.
+
+The medal, scarcely struck, is circulated by millions; it immediately
+becomes the instrument of so many cures and conversions, that it is
+universally styled the Miraculous Medal, a name which clung to it,
+and which is justified by the constant working of new miracles, as
+the second part of this book will show. But this medal was destined
+not only to work miracles, it had an object still higher, it had a
+dogmatical signification, it was to popularize the belief in the
+Immaculate Conception of Mary.
+
+As far as is possible for us to penetrate the adorable designs of
+Providence, everything inclines us to believe that the Immaculate
+Conception is one of those truths whose proclamation is interwoven
+with the welfare of modern society, and whose influence upon
+Catholicity is incalculable. It is the complement of the Blessed
+Virgin's glory; even with the incomparable prerogative of her divine
+maternity, her grandeur would still lack something, were she not
+proclaimed free from original sin. The germ contained in the Holy
+Scriptures, preserved by tradition, taught by the Fathers and holy
+Doctors, supported by the Roman pontiffs, solemnized from the earliest
+ages in many churches, adopted instinctively by the piety of the
+faithful, and depicted under most graceful forms by brush and chisel of
+Christian artist, this belief received, through the medal, the seal of
+a popular devotion. The prayer revealed by the Blessed Virgin herself:
+"O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+this prayer, repeated incessantly by numberless mouths from infancy to
+old age, by poor and rich, and in every quarter of the globe, entered
+as a formula into the practices of a Christian life, and hastened, we
+might safely say, the day when Pius IX was to declare the Immaculate
+Conception an article of faith.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The wonderful circulation of the medal, and the miracles wrought by
+means of it, would soon have made the chapel of the rue du Bac a much
+frequented pilgrim shrine, as many who were indebted to Mary for
+their cure or conversion wished to testify their gratitude by leaving
+there ex-voto offerings. But the Superiors of the Community deemed
+it inadvisable to allow this. However, Divine Providence, wishing to
+maintain this pious impulse, opened in the very centre of Paris a
+sanctuary, to receive what the chapel of the Daughters of Charity had
+refused.
+
+The pastor of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, M. Desgenettes, who had
+taken a lively interest in the apparition of 1830, was inspired to
+consecrate his parish to the holy and immaculate Heart of Mary. An
+Arch confraternity was established for the conversion of sinners; the
+success was as rapid as it was wonderful, and soon the whole world
+resounded with accounts of the miracles accorded the associates'
+prayers. To remind them that Notre-Dame-des-Victoires is allied with
+the vision of the Sister of St. Vincent de Paul, an article of their
+rule enjoins them to wear, with respect and devotion, the indulgenced
+medal of the Immaculate Conception, known as the Miraculous Medal, and
+they are advised to recite occasionally the prayer engraven upon that
+medal: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+thee!"
+
+Some years later, in 1846, the Blessed Virgin manifests herself upon
+the mountain at La Salette to two little shepherd children, charging
+them to warn mankind of the necessity of doing penance in order to
+avert the impending evils.
+
+At Lourdes, in 1858, Mary appears to a poor and ignorant young girl;
+she tells her name, calling herself by that which is most dear to
+her: "I am the Immaculate Conception," and she promises abundant
+benedictions to all who come to pray in that favored place.
+
+In 1871, she appears in the village of Pontmain to some children;
+she comes to revive their drooping courage and restore hope to their
+fainting hearts.
+
+It would take too long to enumerate these manifestations of Mary
+in various parts of Christendom--those images which seem animated;
+those mysterious voices which warn, which encourage the world; those
+supernatural revelations to privileged souls--all, we might say,
+favors of a tender Mother, who pardons her guilty children, and who
+wishes by multiplied tokens of her love to make them oblivious of her
+past severity.
+
+To so many marks of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness, the Catholic
+world has responded by an admirable outburst of filial piety; each
+year sees hundreds of thousands of pilgrims seeking her privileged
+sanctuaries; her Feasts are celebrated with admirable splendor;
+devotion to her is clothed in every form capable of expressing
+admiration, gratitude and tenderness. Who could enumerate the churches
+and monuments everywhere erected in her honor, the associations
+established under her invocation, the books composed in her praises?
+
+But the homage which eclipses all others, is the definition of the
+dogma of the Immaculate Conception in 1854. This definition, ardently
+desired by the devout faithful, enthusiastically welcomed by the whole
+world, was the grand thought of Pius IX after his elevation to the
+chair of St. Peter, and it will be recorded in history as the crowning
+event of his Pontificate, already illustrious for so many other causes.
+
+Mary, by this, has received from her children all the glory it was
+in their power to procure her; her prerogatives appear in all their
+lustre; she is acknowledged as sovereign mistress of Heaven and earth;
+she occupies in the economy of religion the true place Divine wisdom
+has assigned her. Let us hope she will soon display to the world the
+effects of her powerful protection, that she will crush the infernal
+serpent's head, that she will calm the storms hell has unchained--in
+fine, that she will assure the triumph of the Church and the reign of
+Jesus Christ in justice and truth.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ APPARITIONS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN
+
+ _TO SISTER CATHERINE_.
+
+ FIRST APPARITION: THE ANGEL CONDUCTS THE SISTER TO THE CHAPEL; MARY
+ CONVERSES WITH HER--SECOND APPARITION: MARY UPON A GLOBE, HER HANDS
+ EMITTING RAYS OF LIGHT, SYMBOLIC OF GRACE; MARY ORDERS A MEDAL TO
+ BE STRUCK--THIRD APPARITION: MARY RENEWS THE COMMAND.
+
+
+When Sister Catherine was favored with these apparitions of the Blessed
+Virgin she related by word of mouth to her Director, what she had seen
+and heard, and he, though apparently attaching little importance to her
+communications, carefully took note of them. The Sister never thought
+of writing them, she judged herself incapable of doing so, and,
+moreover, in her opinion, it would have been contrary to humility.
+
+In 1856, when events had confirmed the truth of her predictions, M.
+Aladel told her to commit to writing all she could recollect of the
+supernatural visitations of 1830. She obeyed, despite her repugnance,
+and sketched an account of her vision of St. Vincent's heart, which we
+have already read, and that of the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+In obedience, she again wrote in 1876, an account of these same
+apparitions.
+
+Finally, another copy, not dated, was found among her papers after
+death.
+
+These three narrations accord perfectly in the main, yet differ
+sufficiently in detail to prove that one was not copied from the other.
+
+To these manuscripts, in which no change has been made, except a
+correction of faults in style and orthography, are we indebted for the
+following account of the apparitions.
+
+It is to be regretted that M. Aladel's notes should have been almost
+entirely destroyed; no doubt they contained very interesting details,
+but what portion of them remains, is of little importance.
+
+Before quoting Sister Catherine's own narration, we must remark, that
+the first vision, having little reference to anything but the Sister
+herself and St. Vincent's two Communities, M. Aladel did not deem it
+advisable to have published; also, that although the account of the
+vision of the medal in the first editions of the notice, seems to
+differ notably from that related by the Sister, we will see later how
+these discrepancies can be explained, and that in the main the two
+versions are identical.
+
+[Illustration: _FIRST APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Laboure, Daughter of Charity. After a picture
+painted from instructions given by Sister Catherine. (See the
+explanation at the list of engravings._)]
+
+Sister Catherine, already favored with celestial visions, ardently
+desired, with all the simplicity of her nature, to see the Blessed
+Virgin. To obtain this grace, she invoked her good Angel, St. Vincent,
+and the Blessed Virgin herself.
+
+On the 18th of July, 1830, eve of the Feast of St. Vincent de Paul,
+the Directress of the Seminary gave an instruction on devotion to
+the Saints and the Blessed Virgin; this but inflamed our Sister's
+pious desire. Fully imbued with the thought, she retired for the
+night, recommending herself to her blessed Father, St. Vincent, and
+confidently believing that her prayers would be answered.
+
+About half-past eleven o'clock, she hears her name, "Sister Laboure,"
+distinctly called three times; suddenly awaking, she opens her curtain
+on the side whence the voice proceeds, and what does she perceive? A
+little child of ravishing beauty, four or five years of age, dressed
+in white and enveloped in the radiant light beaming from his fair hair
+and noble person. "Come," said he, in a melodious voice, "come to the
+chapel, the Blessed Virgin awaits you." But, thought Sister Catherine
+(she slept in a large dormitory), the others will hear me, I shall be
+discovered. "Have no fears," said the child, answering her thought, "it
+is half-past eleven, everybody is asleep, I will accompany you."
+
+At these words, no longer able to resist the invitation of her amiable
+guide, Sister Catherine dresses hastily and follows the child, who
+walks always at her left, illuming the places through which he passes;
+and everywhere along their path, to the Sister's great astonishment,
+does she find the lamps lighted. Her surprise redoubles, on seeing the
+door open at the child's touch, and on finding the altar resplendent
+with lights, "reminding her," she said, "of the midnight Mass."
+
+The child conducts her into the sanctuary; here she kneels, whilst her
+celestial guide remains standing a little behind at her left.
+
+The moments of waiting seem long to Sister Catherine; at last, about
+midnight, the child says to her: "Behold the Blessed Virgin, behold
+her!" At that instant, she distinctly hears on the right hand side of
+the chapel, a slight noise, like the rustling of a silk robe; a most
+beautiful lady enters the sanctuary, and takes her seat in the place
+ordinarily occupied by the Director of the Community, on the left side
+of the sanctuary. The seat, the attitude, the costume (a white robe of
+a golden tinge and a blue veil), strongly resemble the representation
+of St. Anne in the picture adorning the sanctuary. Yet it is not
+the same countenance, and Sister Catherine is struggling interiorly
+against doubt. Can this indeed be the Blessed Virgin? she asks herself.
+Suddenly, the little child, assuming the voice of a man, speaks aloud,
+and in severe words asks her if the Queen of Heaven may not appear to a
+poor mortal under whatever form she pleases.
+
+Her doubts all vanish, and following only the impulses of her heart,
+the Sister throws herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet, familiarly
+placing her hands upon the Blessed Virgin's knees, like a child beside
+its mother.
+
+ "At this moment," said she, "I felt the sweetest emotion of
+ my life, it would be impossible for me to express it. The
+ Blessed Virgin told me how I must act in all my trials; and
+ pointing with her left hand to the foot of the altar, she told
+ me it was there I must come and lay open my heart, adding
+ that it was there I would receive all needful consolation.
+ Then she also said to me: 'My child, I am going to charge you
+ with a mission; you will suffer many trials on account of
+ it, but you will surmount them, knowing that you endure them
+ for the glory of the good God. You will be contradicted, but
+ you will be sustained by grace, do not fear; with simplicity
+ and confidence, tell all that passes within you to him who
+ is charged with the care of your soul. You will see certain
+ things, you will be inspired in your prayers, give an account
+ to him.'
+
+ "I then asked the Blessed Virgin for an explanation of what she
+ had already shown me. She answered: 'My child, the times are
+ very disastrous, great trials are about to come upon France,
+ the throne will be overturned, the entire world will be in
+ confusion by reason of miseries of every kind.' (The Blessed
+ Virgin looked very sad in saying this.) 'But come to the foot
+ of this altar, here graces will be shed upon all--upon all who
+ ask for them with confidence and fervor.
+
+ "'At a certain time the danger will be great indeed, it will
+ seem as if all were lost, but do not fear, I shall be with you;
+ you will acknowledge my visit, the protection of God and that
+ of St. Vincent upon the two Communities. Have confidence, do
+ not be discouraged, you are in my especial keeping.
+
+ "'There will be victims in other Communities.' (Tears were
+ in the Blessed Virgin's eyes as she said this.) 'Among the
+ clergy of Paris there will be victims, Mgr. the Archbishop
+ will die.' (At these words her tears flowed anew.) 'My child,
+ the cross will be despised, it will be trampled under foot,
+ our Lord's side will be opened anew, the streets will flow
+ with blood, the entire world will be in tribulation.'" (Here
+ the Blessed Virgin could no longer speak, grief was depicted
+ in her countenance.) At these words Sister Catherine thought,
+ when will this take place? And an interior light distinctly
+ indicated to her in forty years.
+
+Another version, also written by her own hand, says forty years, then
+ten, after which, peace. In connexion with this M. Aladel said to her:
+
+ "Will you and I see the accomplishment of all these things?"
+ "If we do not, others will," replied the simple daughter.
+
+The Blessed Virgin also entrusted her with several communications for
+her Director concerning the Daughters of Charity, and told her that
+he would one day be clothed with the necessary authority for putting
+them in execution.[7] After this, she said again: "But great troubles
+will come, the danger will be imminent, yet do not fear, St. Vincent
+will watch over you, and the protection of God is always here in a
+particular manner." (The Blessed Virgin still looked very sad.) "I
+will be with you myself, I will always keep my eye upon you, and I
+will enrich you with many graces." The Sister adds: "Graces will be
+bestowed, particularly upon all who ask for them, but they must pray,
+they must pray.----
+
+ [Footnote 7: M. Aladel was made Director of the Community in
+ 1846.]
+
+ "I could not tell," continues the Sister, "how long I remained
+ with the Blessed Virgin; all I can say is that, after talking
+ with me a long time, she disappeared like a shadow that
+ vanishes."
+
+On arising from her knees, Sister Catherine perceived the child just
+where she had left him, to throw herself at the Blessed Virgin's feet.
+He said: "She has gone," and, all resplendent with light as before, he
+stationed himself anew at her left hand, and conducted her back to the
+dormitory by the same paths as they had come.
+
+ "I believe," continues the narration, "that this child was my
+ Guardian Angel, because I had fervently implored him to procure
+ me the favor of seeing the Blessed Virgin.... Returned to my
+ bed, I heard the clock strike two, and I went to sleep no more."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+What has just been recounted was only a part of Sister Catherine's
+mission, or rather a preparation for a future mission to be given her
+as a pledge of the Immaculate Mary's tenderness for the human race.
+
+In the month of November of this same year, 1830, Sister Catherine
+communicates to M. Aladel a new vision; but it is no longer that of
+an afflicted Mother weeping over the evils menacing her children, or
+the martyrdom of her dearest friends. This vision recalls the rainbow
+appearing in a sky still black with storms, or the star shining through
+the tempest to inspire the mariner with confidence--it is the Virgin
+Queen, bearing the promise of benediction, salvation and peace.
+
+M. Aladel relates this to the Promoter of the diocese, and we find it
+inserted in the verbal process of the investigation, dated February 16,
+1836, as follows:
+
+ "At half-past five in the evening, whilst the Sisters were in
+ the chapel taking their meditation, the Blessed Virgin appeared
+ to a young Sister as if in an oval picture; she was standing on
+ a globe, only one-half of which was visible; she was clothed
+ in a white robe and a mantle of shining blue, having her hands
+ covered, as it were, with diamonds, whence emanated luminous
+ rays falling upon the earth, but more abundantly upon one
+ portion of it.
+
+ "A voice seemed to say: 'These rays are symbolic of the graces
+ Mary obtains for men, and the point upon which they fall most
+ abundantly is France.' Around the picture, written in golden
+ letters, were these words: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!' This prayer, traced in
+ a semi-circle, began at the Blessed Virgin's right hand, and,
+ passing over her head, terminated at her left hand. The reverse
+ of the picture bore the letter M surmounted by a cross, having
+ a bar at its base, and beneath the monogram of Mary, were the
+ hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first surrounded with a crown of
+ thorns, the other transpierced with a sword. Then she seemed
+ to hear these words: 'A medal must be struck upon this model;
+ those who wear it indulgenced, and repeat this prayer with
+ devotion, will be, in an especial manner, under the protection
+ of the Mother of God.' At that instant, the vision disappeared."
+
+According to the testimony of Sister Catherine's Director, this
+apparition appeared several times in the course of a few months, always
+in the chapel of the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, either
+during Mass or some of the religious exercises. M. Aladel adds that he
+was not certain as to their number, but he knows they were repeated
+thrice, at least, the Sister having mentioned it three different times.
+
+Here is the account written by the Sister's own hand:
+
+ "The 27th of November, 1830, which was a Saturday and eve of
+ the first Sunday in Advent, whilst making my meditation in
+ profound silence, at half-past five in the evening, I seemed
+ to hear on the right hand side of the sanctuary something
+ like the rustling of a silk dress, and, glancing in that
+ direction, I perceived the Blessed Virgin standing near St.
+ Joseph's picture; her height was medium, and her countenance
+ so beautiful that it would be impossible for me to describe
+ it. She was standing, clothed in a robe the color of auroral
+ light, the style that is usually called _a la vierge_--that is,
+ high neck and plain sleeves. Her head was covered with a white
+ veil, which descended on each side to her feet. Her hair was
+ smooth on the forehead, and above was a coif ornamented with a
+ little lace and fitting close to the head. Her face was only
+ partially covered, and her feet rested upon a globe, or rather
+ a hemisphere (at least, I saw but half a globe). Her hands were
+ raised about as high as her waist, and she held in a graceful
+ attitude another globe (a figure of the universe). Her eyes
+ were lifted up to Heaven, and her countenance was radiant as
+ she offered the globe to Our Lord.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Laboure. First picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+ "Suddenly, her fingers were filled with rings[8] and most
+ beautiful precious stones; the rays gleaming forth and
+ reflected on all sides, enveloped her in such dazzling light
+ that I could see neither her feet nor her robe. The stones were
+ of different sizes, and the rays emanating from them were more
+ or less brilliant in proportion to the size.
+
+ [Footnote 8: The rings were three on each finger; the largest
+ next to the hand, then the medium size, then the smallest; and
+ each ring was covered with precious stones of proportional
+ size; the largest stones emitted the most brilliant rays, the
+ smallest the least brilliant.]
+
+ "I could not express what I felt, nor what I learned, in these
+ few moments.
+
+ "Whilst occupied contemplating this vision, the Blessed Virgin
+ cast her eyes upon me, and a voice said in the depths of my
+ heart: 'The globe that you see represents the entire world, and
+ particularly France, and each person in particular.'
+
+ "I would not know how to express the beauty and brilliancy of
+ these rays. And the Blessed Virgin added: 'Behold the symbol
+ of the graces I shed upon those who ask me for them,' thus
+ making me understand how generous she is to all who implore
+ her intercession.... How many favors she grants to those who
+ ask. At this moment I was not myself, I was in raptures! There
+ now formed around the Blessed Virgin a frame slightly oval,
+ upon which appeared, in golden letters, these words: 'O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Then I heard a voice which said: 'Have a medal struck upon
+ this model, persons who wear it indulgenced, will receive great
+ graces, especially if they wear it around the neck; graces will
+ be abundantly bestowed upon those who have confidence.'
+
+ "Suddenly," says the Sister, "the picture seemed to turn," and
+ she saw the reverse, such as has already been described in the
+ previous account of the investigation.
+
+Sister Catherine's notes do not mention the twelve stars surrounding
+the monogram of Mary and the two hearts. Yet they are always
+represented on the medal. It is morally certain that she communicated
+this detail, by word of mouth, at the time she related the apparitions.
+
+Other notes in Sister Catherine's own hand-writing complete the
+account. She adds, that some of these precious stones did not emit
+rays, and when she expressed her astonishment at this, she was told
+that they were a figure of the graces we neglect to ask of Mary. On a
+hasty perusal, our Sister's account of the vision appears to differ
+from M. Aladel's. We were struck with this, and had to study these
+interesting and authentic documents attentively, in order to decide
+whether the visions differed essentially or were really the same.
+
+[Illustration: _SECOND APPARITION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN_
+
+_To Sister Catherine Laboure. Second picture._ (_See the explanation at
+the list of engravings._)]
+
+According to M. Aladel's testimony in the investigation, the
+apparitions relative to the medal were always similar, and Sister
+Catherine, before her death, confirmed this assertion. As we have just
+learned from our Sister's own words, the Blessed Virgin always appeared
+with the terrestrial globe under her feet, and at the same time in her
+virginal hands, pressing it and warming it, as it were, against her
+maternal heart, and offering it to her Divine Son in her quality of
+Advocate and Mother, with an ineffable expression of supplication and
+love.
+
+This is what the Sister saw. Was it all? No, after the first act of
+sublime intercession, after this most efficacious prayer of our divine
+Mediatrix, her hands are suddenly filled with graces, under the figure
+of rings and precious stones, which emit such brilliant rays that
+all else is invisible, Mary is enveloped in them, and her hands are
+bent beneath the weight of these treasures. Her eyes are cast upon
+the humble Sister whose ravished glances can scarcely support this
+celestial effulgence. At the same time, an oval frame is formed around
+the vision, and a voice directs the Sister to have a medal struck
+according to the medal presented. The medal is a faithful reproduction
+of this picture, at the moment the symbolical part disappears in the
+sheaves of light.
+
+Sister Catherine being asked if she still saw the globe in the
+Blessed Virgin's hands, when the luminous sheaves issued from them,
+answered no, there remained nothing but the rays of light; and that
+when the Blessed Virgin spoke of the globe, she meant that under her
+feet, there being no longer any question of the first. Hence, we may
+conclude, that Sister Catherine's description of the apparition and
+M. Aladel's agree perfectly. The small globe which the Blessed Virgin
+holds in her hands, and the large one on which she stands, are both
+inundated with the same dazzling rays, or enriched with the same
+graces. The august Mary seems to indicate by the small globe merely a
+figure of the world, imperfectly represented beneath her feet, thus
+reminding us that she is the all merciful Queen of the human race.
+
+There is yet another variation in the description of the two
+apparitions. M. Aladel, in conformity with the popular belief, that
+white and blue combined constitute the Blessed Virgin's livery,
+as emblems of purity, celestial purity, gives the mantle an azure
+tint. Sister Catherine expresses the same idea several times in her
+notes, saying: "White signifies innocence, and blue is the livery of
+Mary." However, the blue mantle is not mentioned in the notice of
+the apparition, Sister Catherine speaks only of the robe and veil of
+auroral light.
+
+When questioned as to a more definite description of this color, she
+replied that it was a deep white, tinted with the mild, beautiful
+radiance of dawn,[9] thus wishing, no doubt, to give some idea of the
+celestial hue of the robe and veil. It is this hue that tortures the
+artist, for he feels his pencil powerless to depict the beauties of
+another sphere.
+
+ [Footnote 9: We must remember that Sister Catherine's childhood
+ was passed in the country, where she could admire the beauty
+ of that luminous tint which precedes the sun, and colors the
+ horizon at break of day with its increasing radiance.]
+
+We can understand from the above, how M. Aladel could have mistaken
+some details furnished by Sister Catherine, or have confounded the
+apparition of the medal with the visions of July 18th and 19th, in
+which the Blessed Virgin's apparel was white and blue.
+
+However, the accessories of the mantle and its indescribable hue, in no
+wise affect the reality of the apparition.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We recollect with what indifference, we might say severity, M. Aladel
+received his penitent's communications, bidding her give no heed
+to them, but dismiss them from her mind, as altogether unworthy of
+attention. But Sister Catherine's obedience, attested by her Director
+himself, could not efface the delightful remembrance of what she had
+seen and heard; to return to Mary's feet was her greatest happiness;
+the thought never left her, nor the firm conviction that she would see
+this dear Mother again. And, indeed, in the course of December, she
+was favored with another vision, similar to that of November 27th, and
+occurring at the same time, during evening meditation. But there was
+a striking difference between this and the previous one, the Blessed
+Virgin, instead of stopping at St. Joseph's picture, passed on, and
+rested above the tabernacle, a little behind it, and precisely in the
+place the statue now occupies. The Blessed Virgin appeared to be about
+forty years of age, according to the Sister's judgment. The apparition
+was, as it were, framed from the hands in the invocation: "O Mary!
+conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" traced
+in golden letters. The reverse presented the monogram of the Blessed
+Virgin, surmounted by a cross, and beneath were the divine hearts of
+Jesus and Mary. Sister Laboure was again directed to have a medal
+struck upon this model. She terminates her account in these words: "To
+tell you what I understood at the moment the Blessed Virgin offered the
+globe to Our Lord, would be impossible, or what my feelings were whilst
+gazing on her! A voice in the depths of my heart said to me: 'These
+rays are symbolic of the graces the Blessed Virgin obtains for those
+who ask for them.'"
+
+These few lines, according to her, should be inscribed at the base of
+the Blessed Virgin's statue. On this occasion, contrary to her usual
+custom, she could not refrain from an exclamation of joy at the thought
+of the homages which would be rendered Mary! "Oh! how delightful to
+hear it said: 'Mary is Queen of the Universe, and particularly of
+France!' The children will proclaim it, 'She is Queen of each soul!'"
+
+When Sister Laboure related the third apparition of the medal, M.
+Aladel asked her if she had seen anything written on the reverse. The
+Sister answered that she had not. "Ah!" said the Father, "ask the
+Blessed Virgin what to put there."
+
+The young Sister obeyed; and after having prayed a long time, one day
+during meditation, she seemed to hear a voice saying: "The M and the
+two hearts express enough."
+
+None of these narrations mention the serpent, yet it always figures in
+representations of the apparition, and certainly in conformity with
+Sister Catherine's earliest revelations of the vision. The following
+shows why we are so positive of this fact.
+
+Towards the close of her life, after a silence of forty-five years, M.
+Aladel being no more, this good daughter was interiorly constrained to
+confide to one of her Superiors the communications she had received
+from the Blessed Virgin, that they might serve to reanimate devotion
+and gratitude to Mary. Having done this, her mind was relieved; she
+felt that now she could die in peace.
+
+The Superior, favored with her confidence, wishing to realize one of
+her venerable companion's most cherished desires, proposes a statue
+of Mary Immaculate, holding the globe. On asking Sister Catherine if
+the serpent must be represented under the Blessed Virgin's feet, she
+answered: "Yes; there was a serpent of a greenish color, with yellow
+spots." She also remarked that the globe in the Virgin's hands was
+surmounted by a little cross, that her countenance was neither very
+youthful nor very joyous, but indicative of gravity mingled with
+sorrow, that the sorrowful expression vanished as her face became
+irradiated with love, especially at the moment of her prayer.
+
+Our attempt at representing the vision was successful, although the
+tint of the robe and veil, the celestial radiance of the face, the
+splendor of the rays, must always remain an impossibility for art;
+as the good Sister, whilst declaring her satisfaction, betrayed by
+her tone of voice and expression the disappointment she felt at the
+impotency of human skill to depict the beauty of the celestial original.
+
+Thirty-five years before, M. Aladel had vainly attempted a
+representation of the same apparition, as we learn from a curious
+fragment, a small design[10] representing the Immaculate Virgin holding
+the globe, etc., as described by Sister Catherine. His note directing
+the details is in exact conformity with the Sister's description,
+except in one particular, the blue mantle. But little satisfied with
+this attempt, which gave but a confused idea of the apparition, and
+his own especial impression of it, he relinquished the undertaking, and
+held to the known model.
+
+ [Footnote 10: The author of this design is M. Letaille, editor
+ of religious imagery.]
+
+We may say, with truth, that nothing can equal the beauty, the grace,
+the expression of tenderness depicted in the attitude of this Virgin,
+whose graciously downcast glances and hands, filled with blessings,
+proclaim her the Mother, inviting her little child to cast itself into
+her arms, or earnestly entreating the prodigal son to confide in her
+merciful mediation.
+
+This image of the Immaculate Mother, universally admired and honored,
+has a mute eloquence which never fails to touch the heart; and, truly,
+may it ever be styled the miraculous Virgin. Were we to cite only those
+which have come to our knowledge, a volume would be insufficient to
+contain an account of all the wonderful conversions, cures, marks of
+protection, wrought since the appearance of this vision to the present
+day.
+
+The production of new models, representing the Immaculate Virgin in a
+different attitude, should never supplant this, which is, as it were,
+the type of all others; nor weaken the devotion heretofore accorded it
+by popular gratitude.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ PROPAGATION OF THE MEDAL.
+
+ ITS WONDERFUL CIRCULATION--CANONICAL INVESTIGATION ORDERED BY MGR.
+ DE QUELEN.
+
+
+We have already seen with what mistrust M. Aladel received Sister
+Catherine's communications, and how he hesitated to assume the mission
+proposed to him. At last, after grave reflection, after consultations
+with enlightened persons, and upon the formal authorization of Mgr.
+de Quelen, Archbishop of Paris, he decided to have the medal of the
+Immaculate Conception struck. This was in 1832.
+
+When about to depict the details as related by the Sister, many
+difficulties presented themselves. In what attitude should the Blessed
+Virgin be represented, for in the apparition she had several? Should
+a globe be in her hands? Again, at one instant she was enveloped in
+waves of light, but this could not be gracefully reproduced in an
+engraving. After mature consideration, it was decided to adopt the
+already existing model of the Immaculate Virgin, which represents her
+with hands extended; to this were added the luminous rays escaping from
+the rings on her fingers, the terrestrial globe on which she stands,
+and the serpent she crushes under her feet. Around the oval were
+inscribed these words: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+have recourse to thee!" The reverse bears the letter M, surmounted by a
+cross, and the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary below the M, the first
+surrounded with a crown of thorns, the second pierced by a sword.
+
+ "As soon as the medal was struck," says M. Aladel, "it was
+ freely circulated, especially among the Daughters of Charity,
+ who, knowing something of its origin, wore it with great
+ confidence. Shortly after, they gave it to several sick
+ persons, six of whom experienced most beneficial results. Three
+ cures and three conversions were wrought, some of them in
+ Paris and some in the diocese of Meaux, all of a very sudden
+ and unexpected nature. And now there was heard everywhere
+ a great demand for the Miraculous Medal, the medal which
+ heals--virtuous mothers of families giving it as a New-Year's
+ present to their children, who received it so gladly and wore
+ it with such respect that no one could doubt how their innocent
+ hearts prized it. All the pious hastened to procure it as soon
+ as it was known to be within reach; but the event it gives us
+ most pleasure to record here, and which edified us most in
+ these early days of the propagation of the medal, is that,
+ in two cities of the province, nearly all the young people
+ united in wearing the medal as the safeguard of their youth.
+ Four hundred silver medals were sent for, to be indulged for
+ this purpose. Very soon entire parishes in various counties
+ solicited their pastors to get them medals, and in Paris an
+ officer of high rank bought sixty for brother officers at their
+ request.
+
+ "Thus, the medals of the Immaculate Conception were circulated
+ in a truly wonderful manner, in all the provinces and among
+ all classes; from every side we heard most consoling things;
+ priests filled with the spirit of God wrote to us that these
+ medals reanimated piety in the cities as well as in the
+ country; grand vicars, enjoying the high esteem due their piety
+ and intellect, prelates, even more distinguished, assured us
+ of their entire confidence in the medals, which they regarded
+ as means sent by Providence to revive the faith so sensibly
+ enfeebled in our age; that in reality they did awaken faith
+ daily in many hearts apparently devoid of it, that they
+ re-established peace and union in families divided by discord,
+ in fine, that not one of all those wearing the medal but had
+ experienced most salutary effects.
+
+ "Mgr. de Quelen himself (whose great charity brought him
+ in contact with all classes) told me several times, that
+ he had given the medal to numbers of sick persons of every
+ condition in life, and never had he failed to recognize the
+ blessed results. Very soon he publishes these in a circular of
+ December 15th, 1836, on the occasion of consecrating the parish
+ church of Our Lady of Loretto. It is a fact we are jealous
+ of confirming, and the knowledge of which we desire should
+ reach even the most remote parts of the Catholic world; in our
+ diocese this devotion has become more deeply rooted with time;
+ the afflicted still affirm, increase and extend its marvelous
+ progress; signal favors, graces of healing, preservation and
+ salvation seem to multiply among us, in proportion as we
+ implore the tender pity of Mary conceived without sin. 'We
+ exhort the faithful,' adds he in the beginning of the same
+ circular, 'to wear the medal struck a few years ago in honor
+ of the Blessed Virgin,' and to repeat frequently the prayer
+ inscribed around the image: 'O Mary! conceived without sin,
+ pray for us who have recourse to thee!'
+
+ "Moreover, in every part of France have we witnessed the
+ increasing eagerness of the faithful of all ages, sexes
+ and conditions, to procure the Miraculous Medal. Careless
+ Christians, hardened sinners, Protestants, the impious and even
+ Jews, asked for it, received it with pleasure and wore it with
+ religious veneration.
+
+ "Not only in France were we forced to admire the propagation
+ of the medal; it spread rapidly and extensively throughout
+ Switzerland, Piedmont, Italy, Spain, Belgium, England, America,
+ in the Levant, and even China. It is also said, that at Naples,
+ as soon as they heard of it, the Metropolitan Chapter sent
+ for some to one of our establishments in that city, that the
+ king had silver medals struck for all the royal family and
+ court, and a million of another medal, which were distributed
+ during the cholera--that the image is there venerated in nearly
+ every house, and the picture in several churches. At Rome, the
+ Superior Generals of religious orders took pains to circulate
+ it, and the Sovereign Pontiff himself, placed it at the foot of
+ his crucifix. We also received a letter informing us that His
+ Holiness gave it to several persons as a particular mark of his
+ pontifical affection.
+
+ "Moreover, to estimate the propagation of this medal, it
+ suffices to consult the registry of M. Vachette, to whom was
+ entrusted the striking of it.[11] This examen shows that, from
+ June, 1832, to the present time, he has sold: 1st, two millions
+ in silver or gold; 2d, eighteen millions of a cheaper metal.
+ According to him, eleven other manufacturers in Paris have
+ sold the same quantity; at Lyons, four others with whom he
+ was acquainted, at least double the number; and in many other
+ cities, whether of France or foreign countries, the manufacture
+ and sales are incalculable."
+
+ [Footnote 11: _Quai des Orfevres_, number 54. They are of
+ different sizes, and the invocation is inscribed in several
+ languages.]
+
+Struck with this marvelous propagation, and the universal anxiety
+to learn the origin of the medal, Sister Catherine's pious Director
+published, in 1834, a short notice containing a brief narration of the
+apparition, and of the graces obtained by means of the medal. This
+book sold rapidly, and new editions had to be printed; when the eighth
+appeared in 1842, the number of copies sold amounted to a hundred and
+thirty thousand, and each successive edition was increased by well
+authenticated accounts of many new miraculous occurrences.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In consequence of all this, the venerable priest found himself engaged
+in a vast and active correspondence, which, to the end of his days,
+filled his heart with ineffable consolation, at the thought of his
+thus assisting in the accomplishment of the Immaculate Mary's promises
+throughout the universe.
+
+Among the communications he received in the course of the year 1836,
+there was one which appeared to him the confirmation of Sister
+Catherine's vision. He published it in the notice of the medal.
+It was the vision of a Swiss religious, already favored with many
+extraordinary graces. We reproduce it here for the edification of the
+reader:
+
+ "The 17th of August, 1835, the first day of her retreat, this
+ religious, in an ecstasy after Holy Communion, sees Our Lord
+ seated upon a throne of glory, and holding a sword in His hand.
+ 'Where goest thou, and what seekest thou?' He asked. 'O Jesus!'
+ she answered, 'I go to Thee, and it is Thyself alone I seek!'
+ 'Where dost thou seek Me, in what and through whom?' 'Lord,
+ in myself I seek Thee, in Thy holy will and through Mary.'
+ Here Our Lord disappeared, and the religious, awaking from her
+ ecstasy, was reflecting upon His words, when there suddenly
+ appeared to her the Blessed Virgin, all lovely and resplendent.
+ She held in her hand a medal, on which was engraven her image
+ and the inscription: 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!' And sheaves of light gleamed
+ from her hands. 'These rays,' said Mary to her, 'are symbols
+ of the graces I obtain for men.' She then turned the medal,
+ and the religious saw on the reverse the letter M surmounted
+ by a little cross, beneath which were the Sacred Hearts of
+ Jesus and Mary. 'Wear this medal,' said the Queen of Heaven,
+ 'and thou wilt enjoy my very especial protection; take pains,
+ also, that all who are in any pressing necessity wear it, that
+ efforts are made to procure it for them.... Be in readiness,
+ for I will put it upon thee myself, on the Feast of my beloved
+ servant Bernard; to day, I leave it in thy hands.' The Blessed
+ Virgin afterwards reproached her for misplacing the medal and
+ taking little pains to find it; the religious acknowledged
+ indeed, that she had received it in July, and that having lost
+ it, she really gave herself no anxiety, considering it merely
+ an ordinary medal, knowing neither its origin nor its effects
+ till this vision. This is attested by the Superior of the
+ Community. The Blessed Virgin kept her promise, and on the 20th
+ of the same month, the Feast of St. Bernard, she placed on the
+ neck of the religious, the medal she had already put in her
+ hands, recommending her to wear it respectfully, to repeat the
+ invocation frequently, and to apply herself to the invitation
+ of the Immaculate Mary's virtues.
+
+ "During her retreat in August, 1836, she sees the medal every
+ day, suspended, as it were, in the air. At first, it appeared
+ very high, shining a few moments like the sun, then like gold;
+ again, it seemed not so high and was apparently of silver;
+ finally, very near the earth, and of a baser metal. The
+ religious gazed in admiration, though without comprehending the
+ meaning of this vision, until Vespers, when it was explained
+ to her. A sweet but unfamiliar voice asked her which of these
+ medals she preferred. She answered, the most brilliant, and the
+ same voice congratulating her on the choice she had made, told
+ her, that the brilliant medal shining like the sun, was that of
+ faithful Christians, who, in wearing it, honor Mary perfectly,
+ and contribute to her glory; the gold medal, that of pious
+ persons who have a tender and filial devotion to Mary, but
+ who keeping it within their hearts, advance but slightly this
+ divine Mother's cause; the silver medal, that of all who wear
+ it with respect and devotion, but who sometimes lack constancy
+ and generosity in imitating Mary's virtues--finally, that the
+ brass medal, represented that of all, who contenting themselves
+ with invoking Mary, take no pains to walk in her footsteps, and
+ thus remain sadly attached to earth. The same voice added, that
+ there is, however, a very especial and peculiar union among
+ these various persons, marked, we might say, with the precious
+ seal of Mary Immaculate; they all necessarily aid one another
+ in a very particular manner by prayer, so that with this
+ powerful assistance, the third can elevate the last, the second
+ sustain the third, and the first, thus happily attract all the
+ others.
+
+ "These details have been communicated to us, from the abbey of
+ Our Lady of Hermits at Einsiedlen, so renowned for the great
+ virtues of its fervent religious, and the immense concourse of
+ pilgrims, who repair hither from all parts of the world."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Up to this time, the medal had received only the verbal approbation of
+the Archbishop of Paris; a formal authorization was necessary to assure
+the faithful of its authenticity, and to conform moreover to the laws
+of the Church, which exact a canonical judgment, before permitting
+the introduction of new images in the liturgical worship. A juridical
+examination was consequently requested, in order to confirm the origin
+of the medal.
+
+Mgr. de Quelen willingly complied, and by his order an investigation
+was begun February 16th, 1836, under the direction of M. Quentin, Vicar
+General, Promoter of the diocese; it was prolonged into the month of
+July, and had not less than nineteen sittings.
+
+We still possess the verbal process of this inquiry. Various witnesses
+appeared, the principal of whom was Sister Catherine's Director, M.
+Aladel.
+
+In the course of the process, the Promoter asked, why God had chosen
+the Daughters of Charity for so rare a favor, and not one of those
+convents noted for the observance of an austere rule, such as rigorous
+fasts, mortifications, etc. For it was not in a contemplative order,
+but in the Mother House of this modest institution so useful to
+humanity, in the chapel which for a long time contained the mortal
+remains of St. Vincent, the father of the poor, that the apparition,
+which was the model of the medal, took place.
+
+We believe the reason of this preference is to be found in the two
+usages observed among the Daughters of Charity, from the beginning of
+their Society; the first, an act of consecration to the Blessed Virgin
+on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception; the second, the ending each
+decade of the chaplet by the following profession of faith: "O Most
+Holy Virgin! I believe and confess thy Holy and Immaculate Conception,
+pure and without spot! O Most Pure Virgin! by thy virginal purity, by
+thy Immaculate Conception and thy glorious quality of Mother of God,
+obtain for me of thy dear Son, humility, charity, great purity of
+heart, body and soul, holy perseverance in my dear vocation, the gift
+of prayer, a good life and a happy death."
+
+The proofs admitted in the inquiry to establish the authenticity of the
+vision of the medal, are:
+
+ 1st. The Sister's character--she is a poor young country girl,
+ uneducated and without talent--of solid but simple piety,
+ good judgment, and calm, sedate mind; we perceive at once
+ that everything about her excludes all suspicion of deceit or
+ illusion. The better to preserve her incognito, she will not
+ allow her name to be mentioned, and she even refused to appear
+ before the Promoter of the investigation.
+
+ 2d. The wisdom of the Sister's Director, who took all possible
+ precautions to guard against deception, and who yielded to his
+ penitent's reiterated entreaties, only from fear of displeasing
+ the Blessed Virgin, and by the advice of his Superiors.
+
+ 3d. The apparition in itself, contains nothing, either in its
+ character or object, opposed to the teachings of the Church,
+ but is, on the contrary, conducive to edification. Being
+ several times renewed and always in the same manner, we may
+ conclude, that the Sister's imagination had nothing whatever to
+ do with it.
+
+ 4th. The wonderful circulation of the medal, confirmed by the
+ testimony of the first engraver, M. Vachette, and the extensive
+ sales of copies of the notice, reaching 109,000 in sixteen
+ months, as attested by the publisher, M. Bailly, must be
+ regarded as a confirmation of its supernatural origin.
+
+ 5th. The extraordinary graces obtained through the
+ instrumentality of the medal, cures and conversions, several
+ of which are legally attested by the deposition of reliable
+ witnesses, who appeared before the Promoter and signed the
+ verbal process, give a last proof to the fact it was sought to
+ establish, namely, that the Miraculous Medal must be of divine
+ origin. Such is the formal conclusion, in the report addressed
+ to the Archbishop by the Promoter, at the end of the inquiry.
+
+Unfortunately, the ecclesiastical authority did not pronounce judgment;
+we know not why the inquiry did not receive the sanction to which it
+apparently led. The death of Mgr. de Quelen, at the end of the year
+1839, caused all proceedings to be abandoned. Everything remains still
+in the domain of private devotions, and the model of the Immaculate
+Virgin, with its symbolical attributes, is not yet authorized as an
+object of public veneration in the churches.
+
+This deplorable omission is so much the more difficult to understand,
+as, personally, Mgr. de Quelen took a serious interest in the
+apparition of 1830, the compass of which he comprehended. It was he who
+urged M. Aladel to have the medal struck; he expressed a wish to have
+some of the first; he received them, and experienced their efficacy.
+Before ordering the investigation, he had summoned to him the Mother
+General of the Daughters of Charity, together with the officers forming
+her council, and other Sisters well versed in Community affairs, to
+learn from them what usages of the Community could have drawn down upon
+it such a favor as the Blessed Virgin had just bestowed. Not content
+with possessing the Miraculous Medal, the pious prelate had in his own
+chamber a statue of the Immaculate Conception after the Sister's model.
+It was cast in bronze, under his own eyes, as he wished to assist at
+the operation. When, in 1839, the solemn octave of the Immaculate
+Conception was celebrated in the diocese of Paris, for the first time,
+this statue, on a throne surrounded with flowers, was exposed to the
+veneration of the faithful. The 1st of January of this same year, he
+consecrated his diocese to Mary Immaculate.
+
+In commemoration of this, he had a picture painted, which represents
+him standing at the foot of Mary's statue, his eyes fixed upon her
+with love and confidence. The statue rests upon a globe which bears
+these words: "_Virgo fidelis_." And the invocation, "_Regina, sine labe
+concepta, ora pro nobis_," is inscribed upon the picture.
+
+On the Feast of the Assumption, he presented this picture to his
+chapter, that it might, he said, be a monument of his devotion and
+that of the chapter of Paris to the Immaculate Conception of the Mother
+of God.[12]
+
+ [Footnote 12: "Life of Mgr. de Quelen," by the Baron Henrion.]
+
+A medal, bearing date of January 1, 1839, reproduces this picture upon
+one of its faces. On the other is a vessel, tempest-tossed, and a star
+guiding it to the haven of peace. These words of St. Bernard, "_Respice
+stellam, voca Mariam_,"[13] explain the allegory. The following lines
+complete the explanation:
+
+"_Vana, Hyacinthe, furit; Stella maris auspice, vincis._"[14]
+
+ [Footnote 13: Look at the star, invoke Mary.]
+
+ [Footnote 14: In vain, Hyacinthe (de Quelen) is the tempest
+ unchained; under the auspices of the Star of the Sea, thou wilt
+ triumph over its fury.]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ DEVELOPMENT OF THE DEVOTION TO THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
+
+ MGR. DE QUELEN'S CIRCULAR.
+
+
+The principal end of the Blessed Virgin's apparition to Sister
+Catherine was to develop among the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate
+Conception; and the medal was the instrument used to accomplish this.
+Its influence was so prompt and perceptible that, in the year 1836, the
+Promoter charged with directing the canonical inquiry attributed to
+it, in a great measure, the wonderful development of devotion to the
+Virgin Immaculate. This pious impulse, once firmly rooted, continued to
+increase throughout the world; but, according to the ordinary ways of
+Providence, whilst the effects struck the eyes of all, the cause was
+forgotten, it was forgotten especially that God had chosen a modest
+Daughter of Charity to revive in the Church devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin. The medal was known everywhere, it was worn by everyone, it
+accomplished numberless prodigies, but whence did it come? This no
+one thought of asking. It is miraculous; that epithet includes its
+name, its origin, its value, and the humble Daughter who received it
+from Mary, to bestow upon mankind, silently admires these astonishing
+results, and says, like her blessed Father: "I am nothing in all this
+but a vile instrument, I cannot attribute to myself any of the glory
+without committing an act of injustice."
+
+The august Virgin had said that the graces obtained for mankind through
+her intercession would be particularly abundant in France. Events
+have proved the reality of the promise. It is in France, especially,
+that the medal has been propagated, miracles multiplied, and devotion
+to the Immaculate Conception most rapidly developed; it may be said,
+with truth, that that country has, indeed, merited the title of Mary's
+kingdom. As, among all the French dioceses, Paris was the one favored
+with these apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, so was Paris the one
+to inaugurate the religious movement. Faithful echo of the Church's
+ancient traditions concerning the Immaculate Conception, a prelate,
+whose piety equaled his nobility of character, and whose virtue
+received a new lustre from the fire of persecution, Mgr. de Quelen
+distinguished himself among all the bishops by his zeal in honoring the
+privilege so dear to Mary. A witness of the influence exerted by the
+medal upon the sensibly increasing devotion of the faithful to Mary
+conceived without sin, and struck with the already abundant fruits of
+this devotion in the conversion of sinners, the pious Archbishop was
+filled with joy. Incited by a just hope of seeing the gifts of Heaven
+still more abundantly multiplied, if devotion to Mary were produced
+under new forms, he addressed a petition to the Sovereign Pontiff with
+the view of obtaining from His Holiness: 1st. To celebrate solemnly, on
+the second Sunday of Advent, the Immaculate Conception of Mary, that
+the devotion might be maintained and strengthened among the faithful;
+2d. To add to the preface, _Et te in Immaculata Conceptione_; 3d. A
+plenary indulgence, in perpetuity, for this same day.
+
+Our Holy Father, Pope Gregory XVI, approved the Archbishop's petition,
+and granted it by a rescript of December 7, 1838. The privileges he had
+just obtained, in honor of Mary, conceived without sin, this venerable
+prelate joyfully published the first of the following January in a
+solemn circular, which clearly depicts his eminent piety. We here
+reproduce it for our readers' edification:
+
+ "_Circular of the Archbishop of Paris on the subject of the Feast
+ of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of
+ God._
+
+ "HYACINTHE LOUIS DE QUELEN, by the divine mercy and grace
+ of the Holy Apostolic See, Archbishop of Paris, etc.
+
+ "To the clergy and faithful of our diocese, health and benediction
+ in our Lord Jesus Christ.
+
+ "We do not wish, dearly beloved brethren, to await the end of the
+ year which begins to-day, and which we dare regard as one fruitful
+ in all manner of spiritual blessings, ere announcing to you the new
+ favor we have just received from the Holy Apostolic See, so much
+ have we loved to persuade ourselves that the joy of your hearts
+ will equal our own, so confident are we that this favor is for us,
+ the presage of multiplied graces, and that it becomes henceforth
+ for our diocese an abundant source of sanctification and salvation.
+
+ "Let us hasten to proclaim this favor: it treats of devotion to our
+ august Queen, Mother and Mistress, the Most Holy and Immaculate
+ Virgin Mary, honored especially in the mystery of her most pure
+ Conception.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin: Behold what the Catholic Church,
+ what the infallible Church, what the true and only Church of Jesus
+ Christ authorizes us to teach, without, however, declaring it an
+ article of Faith,[15] what she prevents us denying publicly, what
+ she instils into all the faithful, when in her general council,
+ she declares, she proclaims, that in the decree treating of
+ original sin, her intention is not to include therein the Blessed
+ and Immaculate Virgin Mary, Mother of God.[16] Behold! what the
+ Sovereign Pontiffs permit us to say, that always, and with a
+ view of nourishing the piety of Mary's servants, who invoke her
+ by recalling the first of her privileges, that which approaches
+ nearest the sanctity of God, always do they deign to second
+ these prayers, and zealously open the treasure of indulgences of
+ which they are the supreme dispensers, in favor of a devotion so
+ legitimate.
+
+ [Footnote 15: The Immaculate Conception had not then been defined.
+ (Note by translator.)]
+
+ [Footnote 16: Conc. Trid. sess. V. _Decret. de peccato originali_.]
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the Church of Paris
+ glories in professing and maintaining; what her Doctors hold it
+ an honor to teach and defend; what her children are jealous of
+ preserving as one of their dearest possessions after the sacred
+ dogmas of faith; what they do not hesitate to regard as an
+ immediate consequence of their faith, not believing it possible
+ to separate in Mary, the title of Immaculate Virgin from that of
+ Virgin Mother of God, and not considering it possible to refuse the
+ privilege of a Conception without spot, to her who was to receive
+ and who indeed did receive, that of the divine Maternity. Behold!
+ what respect and love for the Word made Flesh, inspire for the
+ chaste bosom the Most High sanctified, because He was to descend
+ there, and there clothe Himself with our nature, there become man
+ by the operation of the Holy Ghost.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what for years, has been
+ repeated thousands and thousands of times, not in this great city
+ or diocese only, but in every part of France, among strangers
+ and in the most distant countries. Behold! the cry of hope which
+ suffering danger, public or private necessities, have wrung from
+ mouths accustomed to bless God, and celebrate the praises of His
+ Holy Mother. Behold! what has been written, engraved, religiously
+ deposed, wherever there were spiritual or temporal favors to be
+ asked, graces of protection, of healing or conversion; at the
+ entrance of cities, at the doors of dwellings, on the breast of the
+ sick, on the couch of the dying. Behold! what in these later times
+ especially, has taken such deep root in all Christian hearts, what
+ has received an extraordinary impulse, what has been propagated in
+ so remarkable a manner, what seems to justify moreover, (the fact
+ can no longer be disguised) the numberless graces obtained through
+ the invocation of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "Mary was conceived without sin. Behold! what the chaste generation
+ has taken the pious custom of placing on its heart with the sign
+ of the cross as an impenetrable buckler against the inflamed darts
+ of Satan, and under which its innocence and virtue are shielded.
+ Behold! what inspires it, fortifies it, renders it invincible in
+ combats with the demon of darkness; what makes it victorious over
+ all the seductions of the world and the attacks of hell; what
+ attracts, what leads it to follow Mary in the path of angelic
+ perfection, and makes it taste that celestial word which is not
+ given to all to understand; finally, behold! what everywhere and in
+ all conditions, fills with holy emulation, souls truly pious; what
+ encourages them to walk with constancy in the ways of justice; what
+ communicates to them a just horror of sin and the highest esteem
+ for sanctifying grace, of which the Immaculate Virgin is for them
+ the faithful mirror and venerable sanctuary.
+
+ "And behold, also, our very dear brethren, what has urged, and
+ determined us to regard as a consolation, a duty of our episcopate
+ to second your piety in this regard, at the same time, that we
+ satisfy our devotion to this Immaculate Virgin, to whom we are
+ indebted for many signal benefits. We thought it not a rash zeal,
+ to supplicate our Holy Father, the Pope, to deign confide to us the
+ means of increasing devotion to Mary Immaculate in her Conception,
+ to render it easier and thus more popular. The Feast of the Blessed
+ Virgin's Conception, being now in France only one of devotion,
+ we have feared that even if the memory of it were not gradually
+ effaced, it might become insensibly neglected, and the fruits of
+ sanctification and salvation diminished.
+
+ "The Sovereign Pontiff has deigned to accord our humble request.
+ The rescript we have received, our very dear brethren, sufficiently
+ testifies how our petitions have been welcomed, our prayers
+ answered, upon what foundation the regulations we are going to
+ prescribe rest, and the advantages we have had reason to expect
+ from them. We long, yes, we long, from lively gratitude, from
+ tender love to Mary, to give vent to our transports and salute her
+ solemnly by the title of Immaculate in her Conception that day, for
+ distant day it seems to our hearts, when we will be permitted to
+ proclaim it joyfully before the assembled faithful, and during the
+ celebration of the holy mysteries.
+
+ "O Mary! thou whom wisdom hast possessed in the beginning of thy
+ ways, cloud divinely fruitful, always in light and never in shade,
+ new Eve, who didst crush the infernal serpent's head; courageous
+ Judith, glory of Jerusalem, joy of Israel, honor of thy people,
+ amiable Esther, exempt from the common law which presses as a
+ yoke of anathema upon all the children of Adam, full of grace,
+ blessed among all women. O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee! By thy most Holy Virginity and thy
+ Immaculate Conception, O most Holy Virgin! obtain for us purity of
+ heart and body, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
+ the Holy Ghost. Amen!"
+
+But this does not satisfy the prelate's piety; he also entreats the
+Sovereign Pontiff that the belief in the Immaculate Conception be
+expressed in the litanies of the Blessed Virgin. The Holy Father
+grants this petition, and permits the addition to the litany of
+the invocation: "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_." Then
+Monseigneur, in a new circular of June 24th, orders that the Sunday
+following its reception, this invocation should be chanted three
+times at Benediction, and in future chanted or recited every time the
+litany was chanted or recited, adding that no prayer-book without this
+invocation inserted in the litany would have his approbation. The
+prelate also exhorted all the clergy, pastors and others, to instill
+into the faithful, devotion to the Immaculate Conception, recommending
+the use of the formula, "_Regina sine labe concepta, ora pro nobis_."
+
+At last, seeing the near approach of that epoch so dear and solemn, he
+could not refrain, in spite of his extreme weakness and the violent
+sufferings of a mortal malady, from giving vent to his feelings in
+a third circular, which displays at the same time his zeal for the
+Immaculate Virgin's honor and his indefatigable solicitude for the
+welfare of his flock.
+
+The feast and octave of the Immaculate Conception, announced and
+prepared with so much zeal by the pious Bishop, were celebrated with
+extraordinary solemnity in all the churches throughout the diocese
+of Paris, and especially at Notre Dame. It was one of the last
+consolations this great prelate enjoyed upon earth. He died the 31st
+of December, crowning a life rich in virtues and sacrifices, by an act
+of filial homage to Mary Immaculate, and a final testimony of tender
+solicitude for the flock he was about to leave. He loved this flock
+during life, and before dying, he confides it to the inexhaustible
+charity of the Immaculate Heart of the Mother of Jesus, he conceals it
+under the mantle of her purity, that he may feel assured of the victory
+over the enemies of its happiness. He had consecrated his person, his
+diocese and all France to this Virgin, conceived without sin. Was it
+not to her maternal protection the venerable prelate owed that generous
+submission, that admirable tranquility, that tender love and sweet
+serenity of the just, when he was hovering on the brink of eternity? He
+had placed all his confidence in thee, O Mary! at that last moment, he
+invoked thee as the Star of the Sea that was to guide him to Heaven,
+and it was under thy auspices his beautiful soul winged its flight to
+the bosom of its God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In emulation of the example of the illustrious Archbishop of the
+capital, the other Archbishops and Bishops of France petition the
+Holy See for the same privileges, publishing them in their respective
+dioceses by solemn circulars, and proclaiming them a new source
+of benediction for the people. Thus, in the same year, 1839, the
+Archbishops of Toulouse and Bourges, the Bishops of Montauban, Pamiers,
+Carcassonne, Frejus, Chalons, Saint-Flour and Limoges; in 1840, the
+Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen, the Archbishop of Lyons and Besancon,
+the Bishops of Bayeux, Evreux, Seez, Coutance, Saint-Die, La Rochelle,
+Tulle, Ajaccio, Nantes and Amiens; in 1841, the Archbishop of Bordeaux,
+the Bishops of Versailles, of Nimes and Lucon, Mende and Perigueux. We
+are fully persuaded, and even assured, of the fact that a great number
+of the dioceses in France requested and obtained the same privileges;
+but we cite only those of which we ourselves have kept note.
+
+ "What should be our transports of joy, confidence, admiration and
+ gratitude, at this universal tribute of honor and homage to the
+ Virgin conceived without spot! All earth unites with Heaven in
+ a concert of praise and thanksgiving, proclaiming that Mary has
+ been conceived without sin; all hearts vie with one another in
+ celebrating the signal favors, the miraculous cures and conversions
+ God has deigned to accord those who invoke the Blessed Virgin
+ under the title of Immaculate in her Conception." (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Bourges.)
+
+ "This new lustre bestowed upon the devotion to Mary conceived
+ without sin, should console religion and raise our hopes.... Oh!
+ in this desolated region, how should we rejoice to see appear
+ in Heaven, if not an omen of the end of all combats, at least
+ the pledge of new triumphs and new conquests!" (Circular of the
+ Archbishop of Digne.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ May this beautiful devotion, be powerful in attracting the
+ benedictions of Heaven upon earth, ever increase. Let us fervently
+ implore the Immaculate Mother of God to enkindle it in all hearts,
+ to bless that France whose protectrice she has so often proved
+ herself, to preserve and augment therein faith and piety, and to
+ make all the children of France but one family, united by the bonds
+ of religion and charity. Let us also implore the same grace for all
+ countries, all peoples. Let each one of us wear the precious sign
+ of her maternal tenderness, this Miraculous Medal, which, recalling
+ to our minds the first and most glorious of her privileges, she
+ gives us as the pledge of all her favors.
+
+ Oh! if we knew the gift of our Mother! oh! if we understood
+ the excess of her bounty! Does she not seem longing to give us
+ knowledge, when she displays to us the abundance of her riches and
+ the prodigies of her liberality, in those rays of grace she showers
+ upon us like a deluge of love and mercy? Does she not likewise
+ unveil to us the mystery of her charity, in the image of her heart
+ united to that of the divine Jesus?... The same fire consumes them,
+ the same zeal devours them, thirst for our salvation. This union
+ of love and sacrifice is very clearly represented by the august
+ Mary's initial joined to the sacred sign of the cross above the
+ two hearts, as an authentic testimony, of the co-operation of the
+ Mother of the Saviour in the salvation of the human race.
+
+ Wear then, little children, this cherished medal, this precious
+ souvenir of the best of mothers; learn and love to say: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+
+ Morning Star, she will delight to guide your first steps and to
+ keep you in the paths of innocence. Wear it, Christian youth,
+ and amidst the numberless dangers lurking in your paths repeat
+ frequently: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Virgin most faithful, she will preserve you
+ from all peril. Wear it, fathers and mothers; say often: "O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!"
+ And the Mother of Jesus will shed upon you and your families the
+ most abundant benedictions. Wear it, ye old and infirm; say also:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" Help of Christians, she will aid you in sanctifying
+ your sufferings and the closing years of life. Wear it, souls
+ consecrated to God, and never cease repeating: "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" Queen of
+ Virgins, she will implant in the garden of your heart those fruits
+ and flowers which constitute the delight of the Spouse, and which
+ will form your crown at the nuptials of the Lamb. Amidst the trials
+ and tribulations of life, let us invoke Mary, conceived without
+ sin, and our tears will be dried, our sufferings assuaged, our
+ sorrows sweetened, for she dispenses the dew of all graces. In our
+ combats against the demon, the world and the flesh, let us appeal
+ to Mary, conceived without sin; Strength of combatants and Crown
+ of victors, she will shield us against their most violent assaults
+ and assure us of the victory; but oh! when standing on the brink
+ of that moment which summons us before the Sovereign Judge, then
+ especially must we invoke Mary, conceived without sin, and she
+ whom the Church calls Gate of Heaven will herself receive our last
+ sigh and introduce our soul into the abode of glory and perfect
+ happiness.
+
+ And you also, poor sinners, though covered with the wounds of sin,
+ buried in the deepest abysses of passion, the arm of an avenging
+ God lifted to descend upon your guilty head, despair seizing your
+ soul, raise your eyes to the Star of the Sea; you are not bereft
+ of Mary's compassion; take the medal, cry from the depths of your
+ hearts, "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!" Unfailing Refuge of sinners, her charitable hand
+ will apply to your cruel wounds a healing ointment; she will rescue
+ you from the depths whence you have fallen, she will turn aside
+ the formidable blows of Divine justice, she will pour over your
+ soul the balm of sweet hope, she will guide you anew in the paths
+ of righteousness and conduct you even to the haven of a blessed
+ eternity.
+
+ Would that all might taste this means of salvation! the dismal
+ shades of voluntary death would soon cease to terrify our cities
+ and rural districts. Yes, the short prayer, "O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" made with
+ faith, would, even amidst the violent agitation of a homicidal
+ thought, banish the tempter; a simple glance at the medal of the
+ Immaculate Mary would dissipate despair. "No one commits suicide
+ under the eyes of a mother," said very truly, His Eminence, the
+ Cardinal Archbishop of Rouen. And the same might be said of many
+ other crimes of daily occurrence.
+
+ Oh! you whose souls are cruelly afflicted night and day,
+ virtuous wives, who shed burning tears over the irreligion of a
+ tenderly-loved husband; sorrowful mothers, bitterly deploring the
+ wanderings of a child reared in the bosom of an eminently Christian
+ family, but drawn into the vortex of bad example; pious sisters,
+ praying fervently and incessantly for the conversion of a brother,
+ who once, like yourselves, enjoyed the sweet consolations of
+ religion; Christian children, secretly bewailing the indifference
+ of a father who seems to have lost, long since, the precious gift
+ of Faith, console yourselves; a new hope is offered you, and it
+ comes to you through the beneficent hands of Mary; offer, give the
+ image of this tender Mother to the dear objects of your solicitude;
+ the thought of this precious medal or a glance at it, will banish
+ many a temptation, for we may say with truth of the soul as well as
+ of the body, "no one commits suicide under the eyes of a mother."
+ If they refuse your offer do not despair; Mary will find her way to
+ these hardened hearts, and in spite of themselves, she will take
+ them under her protection; imitate the pious ruse of many others,
+ who in a like extremity, have stealthily slipped the precious medal
+ under the pillow of the impenitent sick on the verge of death;
+ imitate those mothers, those wives, those Christian daughters, who
+ carefully concealed in the clothing of that child, that spouse,
+ that father, the medal they had refused to wear, do this, and one
+ day they will appreciate the pledge of your piety and tenderness.
+ No, no, never does any one wear in vain, the medal of her to whom
+ the Church applies these words of Scripture. "He who finds me,
+ will find life, and will obtain salvation from the Lord."[17]
+
+ [Footnote 17: Prov. viii.]
+
+ But it is not enough to wear the medal as a mere pledge of the
+ Immaculate Mary's love; we must regard it also, as an assistant in
+ reaching perfection. This Mother, all amiable, proposes herself to
+ our imitation, she places herself, in a measure, before our eyes,
+ that seeing her so pure and perfect, we may be attracted by her
+ charms. It is the image of her beauty and goodness she brings us
+ from Heaven. It is a mirror in which we learn to know the Sun of
+ Justice, by the perfections with which he has enriched His divine
+ Mother.... It is on one side, the picture of what we should be, and
+ on the other, an eloquent lesson of what we should practice. The
+ shining purity of the Immaculate Mary, reveals to us the beauty of
+ our soul, created in the image of the thrice holy God, and exciting
+ in us, the love of that amiable virtue which makes us resemble the
+ angels, it necessarily inspires us with the most vivid horror of
+ evil, and causes us to shun the slightest imperfections, since they
+ tarnish this divine resemblance.
+
+ And, as though it were not enough to excite our fervor by the
+ sight of her ravishing beauty, this faithful Virgin discovers to
+ us the means of preserving innocence or recovering it, should we
+ have been so unfortunate as to lose it. This is the lesson of the
+ symbolic figures engraven on the reverse of the medal: "Nothing
+ shall be written on the reverse of the medal; ... what is already
+ there says enough to the Christian soul." The Sacred Heart of
+ Jesus and Mary placed beneath the cross tell us that purity is
+ preserved or restored by love and union with our Lord.... Love
+ covers a multitude of sins; love is the bond of perfection, the
+ consummation of all virtues.... Love assures fidelity. It must
+ be stronger than death to make us die to the world, to sin and
+ ourselves, that we may be attached inseparably to Jesus crucified.
+ There is also another lesson to be learned--that taught by Mary's
+ holy name, united to the sign of the cross. It is placed above the
+ two hearts because true love leads to sacrifice; it immolates, it
+ fastens, it nails to the cross of Jesus Christ, and this union of
+ sufferings on earth is the pledge of a glorious and eternal union
+ hereafter.
+
+ Children of Mary, respond to her loving tenderness; be docile to
+ the salutary lessons of our divine Mother, gratefully acknowledge
+ this inappreciable testimony of her ingenious liberality. Go to
+ Mary with the simplicity of a child, who lovingly clings to her
+ bountiful hand until he obtains the object of his desires. Amidst
+ all the storms of life, let your eyes be fixed upon this Star of
+ the Sea. Invoke Mary; ever seek her amiable protection; she will
+ never refuse to hear our petitions. May her remembrance and love
+ reign always in our minds and hearts! May we repeat incessantly
+ this sweet invocation: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for
+ us who have recourse to thee!" and when strength and speech have
+ failed us may the Miraculous Medal be pressed to our dying lips,
+ and the last throb of our heart protest that we wish to die
+ murmuring: "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have
+ recourse to thee!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ EXTRAORDINARY GRACES
+
+ OBTAINED THROUGH THE INSTRUMENTALITY OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL.
+
+ I.
+
+ _Graces Obtained from 1832 to 1835._
+
+
+"Bless the God of heaven," said the angel to Tobias and his son; "chant
+His praises among all mankind for the blessings with which He has
+loaded you, for it is good to conceal the secret of the king, but it is
+glorious to reveal and publish the works of God. _Elenim sacramentum
+regis abscondere bonum est; opera autem Dei revelare et confiteri
+honorificum est._"[18] Blessed, then, always and everywhere, be the God
+of heaven and earth, for the numberless benefits He has been pleased to
+confer upon us through Mary! Let us adore the mysterious destiny of
+the Mother of the King of Kings, "who, by reason of this title, truly
+merits the name of Queen," says St. Athanasius; and let us rob neither
+God nor Mary of the honor and glory due them. Let us publish the
+Lord's works of power and goodness to man through the mediation of the
+Immaculate Virgin, whom He has established Depositary and Dispensatrix
+of the treasures of His mercy, that mercy which embraces our corporal
+infirmities as well as spiritual needs.
+
+ [Footnote 18: Tob., xii, 7.]
+
+An account of the extraordinary graces obtained by means of the
+Immaculate Conception Medal will be for all Christian souls a source of
+precious benedictions. At the view of these prodigies of mercy, these
+marvelous cures and conversions, the reader will be led to thank God
+and glorify His Holy Mother; those who have already loved Mary will be
+incited to still greater love; careless Christians, those who are tried
+by suffering, those who have the misfortune to be in a state of sin,
+will feel their confidence awakened, and they will tenderly invoke her
+whom the Church so justly styles Health of the weak, Refuge of sinners,
+Comforter of the afflicted.
+
+Experience proves this. Every one knows, moreover, that an example of
+virtue or an event which clearly reveals God's agency, acts much more
+powerfully on the soul than a simple consideration of the subject or a
+series of arguments. "_Verba movent, exempla trahunt_--words can move,
+example attract."
+
+We also hope for something more from the publication of these
+accounts--we hope by them to convince the faithful that Mary's dearest
+title is that of Immaculate, and that she knows not how to refuse the
+petitions of those who, with lively faith, invoke her by this dearest
+title. It is, moreover, the Church of Rome which thus reveals, as it
+were, all the merciful tenderness of Mary's Heart, and presents us the
+devotion to her spotless Conception as the sure means of enriching
+ourselves from the exhaustless treasures of that Heart and according
+to all our necessities. "_Sacra Virgo Maria ... sentiant omnes tuam
+juvamen quicumque celebrant tuam sanctam Conceptionem_;"[19] and
+surely this prayer of the Mother of all churches--prayer which we
+might readily style prophetic--has long since been answered. We have
+recently seen a compilation, made in 1663 by a Jesuit father, with
+the approbation of the Ordinary, containing an account of sixty-two
+conversions or cures effected in different places by the invocation
+of Mary conceived without sin, and apparently nothing less than
+miraculous. It is also a well known fact, mentioned in the life of
+B. Peter Fourrier, founder of the Congregation of Notre Dame, that
+these simple words, "Mary was conceived without sin," worn with faith,
+brought relief to a multitude of sick persons during an epidemic. The
+same means obtained not less visible protection at Nemours, when that
+city was in imminent danger of being sacked, and also at Paris in 1830.
+But we confine ourselves to the graces obtained through the Miraculous
+Medal. Our choice of examples will show that, in bestowing especial
+favors upon France, the Immaculate Mary gives no less striking proofs
+of her protection in other countries where the medal is known and
+piously worn.
+
+ [Footnote 19: Offic. Concept. B.V.M.R. viii.]
+
+Among the traits of protection obtained through the medal in the
+diocese of Paris, nine (three conversions and six cures) underwent a
+detailed examination, and were pronounced veritable by the Promoter in
+the investigation of 1836. We mention them in this edition, adding to
+each one's title the word--Attested.
+
+Quite a number of incidents printed in the edition of 1842 we have
+omitted here, in order to insert (without greatly increasing the size
+of the volume) more recent accounts equally reliable, thus proving that
+the medal is not less miraculous in our day than at the time of the
+apparition.
+
+The extraordinary graces of which it has been the instrument, would
+have formed an uninterrupted series from the year 1832 till the
+present, if unfortunately, neglecting to keep note of them, an interval
+of several years had not crept into the documents in our possession.
+
+For the future, please God, no such omission will occur, and all the
+authenticated accounts which come to our knowledge will be carefully
+registered for the glory of Mary conceived without sin, and the
+edification of her servants.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT ALENCON--1833.
+
+ The 14th of April, 1833, there was brought to the hospital of
+ Alencon (Orne) a sick soldier, who came from the hospital of Vitre
+ (Ile-et-Vilaine). His impiety there had greatly distressed the
+ hospitable ladies of St. Augustin, in charge of that establishment,
+ a circumstance communicated to us by persons who witnessed the
+ insulting manner in which he rewarded the kind attentions of their
+ unfailing charity. Arrived at the hospital Alencon, we soon saw
+ what he was, irreligious, impious, and brutally rude. The chaplain
+ hastened to visit him, and condole with him on his sufferings; and
+ as the opening of the Jubilee very naturally paved the way for a
+ few words on that extraordinary grace, he gently exhorted the sick
+ man to imitate the example of other soldiers who were preparing to
+ profit by it, but his words were answered by insults. The chaplain
+ did not insist, and contented himself for several days with merely
+ visiting him, and kindly sympathizing with his sufferings; the sick
+ man scarcely replied, and seemed much annoyed, even at the visits.
+
+ The Daughters of Charity in charge of this hospital, met with no
+ better treatment, notwithstanding the kind attentions they lavished
+ on him. His malady increased; seeing that it was becoming very
+ necessary for him to receive the consolations of religion, the
+ chaplain urged him again to make his peace with the good God, but
+ he was answered by blasphemies. "Ah! yes, the good God, little He
+ cares for me." In answer to this the abbe made a few observations
+ full of charity, and the patient continued: "Your good God does
+ not like the French; you say He is good and He loves me; if He
+ loved me, would he afflict me like this, have I deserved it?"
+ These outbursts of impiety only inflamed the charitable zeal of
+ the minister of a God who died for sinners, and inspired him with
+ forcible language, to depict the justice and merciful goodness of
+ the Lord. The sick man soon interrupted him by invectives: "You
+ worry me; let me alone; go away from here; I need neither you nor
+ your sermons," and he turned over to avoid seeing the priest.
+ His treatment to the Sisters was no better; and he continued to
+ utter the most horrible blasphemies against religion, and those
+ who reminded him of it; he carried this to such a degree, that
+ the other soldiers were indignant, especially at his outrageous
+ behaviour, after any one has spoken to him about his soul, or there
+ had been prayers or a little spiritual reading in the room--he
+ appeared dissatisfied, until he had vomited forth his stock of
+ blasphemies and imprecations. Some days passed and nothing was
+ said to him on the subject of religion, but every care for his
+ bodily comfort was redoubled; no one now scarcely dared hope
+ for his return to God, for his malady increased, and likewise
+ his impiety; all contented themselves with praying for him, and
+ recommending him to the prayers of others. The Sister in charge of
+ that ward, having great confidence in the Blessed Virgin's promises
+ to all under the protection of the medal, felt urged interiorly
+ to hang one at the foot of his bed; she yielded to the apparent
+ inspiration, and, unknown to him, the medal was there. He still
+ showed no signs of relenting, and even became indignant when some
+ of the other soldiers prepared themselves, by confession, to gain
+ the Jubilee. The medal had now been six days hanging at the foot of
+ his bed, and many and fervent were the prayers offered up to God
+ for this miserable creature's conversion, although nearly every one
+ despaired of it. One day, when all the convalescents of the ward
+ were assisting at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, the Sister
+ approached his bed, detached the medal and held it up before him.
+ "Look," said she, "at this medal, it is miraculous; I hung it to
+ your bed several days ago, and thereby put you under the Blessed
+ Virgin's especial protection. With her powerful assistance, I
+ confidently hope for your conversion. Look at this good Mother, she
+ is praying for you now." He never raised his eyes, but already was
+ grace working in his heart, for he showed no signs of irritation
+ which had heretofore been the inevitable consequence of mentioning
+ religion. Profiting by this, the Sister spoke to him of God's
+ mercy, and begged him again to cast a glance at the medal she had
+ just hung at the foot of his bed on the inner side. After being
+ repeatedly urged, he opened his eyes and looked towards it. "I do
+ not see your medal," said he to the Sister, "but I see the candle
+ which, doubtless, you have just lit; yes, it is certainly a light."
+ It was five o'clock in the afternoon, June 13th; his bed was so
+ placed that it could not receive any reflection of the sun's rays,
+ and the chaplain, after examining the spot felt assured, that at
+ no time could a reflection strike it in that direction. "You are
+ mistaken," said she, "look at it carefully." He repeated in the
+ most positive manner, "I see it distinctly, it is certainly a
+ light." Astonished beyond expression, but fearing her patient's
+ sight was affected, the Sister showed him other and more distant
+ objects; these he distinguished perfectly, and continued to see
+ this light for a quarter of an hour. During this interval, the
+ Sister spoke to him of God; suddenly, fear and love filled his
+ heart. "I do not wish to die as I am!" he exclaimed, "tell the
+ chaplain to come immediately and hear my confession." Hearing one
+ of the other patients utter an oath, "oh! make that miserable man
+ hush!" said he, to the Sister; "oh! I beg you to make him stop
+ swearing."
+
+ "I was still ignorant," says the chaplain, "of the origin and
+ effects of this medal. It was a very familiar object, and I
+ regarded it as nothing more than an ordinary medal. When told
+ that the sick man wanted me, I went joyfully, and saw for myself
+ what a complete change had taken place in him. Congratulating
+ and encouraging him, without knowing the cause of this change,
+ I hastened to ask him if he wished me to hear his confession.
+ He replied in the affirmative, and made it without delay; I had
+ every opportunity of admiring his good will and the pleasure he
+ manifested at each repetition of my visit. I endeavored to make him
+ explain himself, and asked if he had not acted from mere civility
+ or a desire to rid himself of the importunities by which he had
+ been so long beset. "No," he answered, "I sent for you, because
+ I wished seriously to make my confession and arise from my state
+ of sin." Henceforth he was no longer the same man; he was now as
+ docile, patient, gentle and edifying in all his words and ways,
+ as he had formerly been unmanageable, brutal and scandalous.
+ He eagerly desired the Last Sacraments, which, after proper
+ preparation, he received with lively faith. His happiness seemed
+ beyond expression, and though suffering intensely, no one ever
+ heard the least sign of impatience escape his lips. He continued
+ to give the most unequivocal signs of a true conversion; peace and
+ resignation were depicted in his countenance, and to his last sigh,
+ which he breathed June 27th, 1833, did he persevere most faithfully.
+
+NOTE.--These details are attested by M. Yver Bordeaux, chaplain of the
+Hotel Dieu; by the Sisters of Charity; by a woman patient named Bidon;
+Julien Prevel, an infirmarian; by Jean Francois Royer, of the Seventh
+Cuirassiers; Marie Favry, infirmarian, all eye witnesses, besides
+a large number of other soldiers who left the city whilst we were
+investigating the matter.
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE AURELIE B. (PARIS)--1833. _Attested._
+
+The account of this cure was sent us by the person herself in the month
+of May, 1834.
+
+ The 3d of November, 1833, I was attacked by a typhoid fever, for
+ which I was treated by a skillful physician and the Sisters of
+ Charity, who spared no pains for my recovery. At the end of a month
+ I was able to take a little nourishment, and I had the happiness
+ of assisting at the Holy Mass and receiving Holy Communion on the
+ Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I was still very weak, and
+ utterly incapable of any exertion. In this state of exhaustion, I
+ took a little chocolate. The fever soon returned, and continued
+ with daily increasing violence until Christmas. Then the physician
+ said there was no longer any hope of my recovery. Another physician
+ was called in, who, after an examination, declared me consumptive
+ to the last degree, but said they might try the effect of a few
+ blisters. Those proved of no benefit. The 27th of December, the
+ physicians finding me extremely ill, informed the Sisters that my
+ death was imminent. Moreover, I had been cold for two days. About
+ half-past six that day, I received the last Sacraments, and at nine
+ every one thought I would soon breathe my last. Suddenly, one of
+ the good Sisters around my couch thought of putting the medal on
+ me. I kissed it continually with great confidence, and began to
+ feel better. My condition next morning was a matter of astonishment
+ to the physician, and I continued to improve so rapidly that,
+ at the end of two days, the fever had entirely disappeared. My
+ appetite was ravenous, I soon resumed my occupations, and ever
+ since have been in perfect health. I doubt not, Monsieur, that I
+ owe my recovery to Mary, my good Mother, my love for whom seems to
+ have increased; my greatest happiness being to decorate her altars,
+ and my most earnest desire that of consecrating myself to God in a
+ Community whose works have so touching a connexion with the sublime
+ destiny of the Mother of Jesus; it is under her protection I expect
+ the accomplishment of my designs.
+
+ Yours very respectfully,
+
+ AURELIE B.
+
+NOTE.--The nine Sisters of the establishment have attested the truth
+of these details, and one of the two physicians does not hesitate to
+declare her recovery supernatural.
+
+Moreover, this young person has ever since remained in perfect health.
+Her prayers are granted, the Immaculate Mary has also obtained for her
+the grace of being received into the Community she wished to enter,
+which is the reason we do not give her name.
+
+
+ CURE OF A RELIGIOUS (PARIS)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+This fact is known to many; however, to prevent too great a number
+of visitors, the Superior requests us not to publish the name of the
+Community.
+
+A young religious, twenty-seven and a-half years old and eight years
+professed, in an Order especially consecrated to the Blessed Virgin
+(Paris), had been kept in the infirmary by various maladies, for the
+space of five months. At the very time she appeared convalescent, an
+accident of the gravest nature happened; her left thigh bone became
+disjointed and shrunken, the limb was attacked by paralysis, and the
+sick religious lay upon her bed one month, without experiencing the
+slightest alleviation from human remedies. Two physicians and a surgeon
+being consulted at various times, pronounced the displacing of the bone
+due an irritating humor; but they could not check it, even by means of
+cauterizing and issues, so that after a long and painful treatment,
+she remained a cripple. She now had recourse to the Blessed Virgin as
+a child to its good mother; a religious of the house having brought
+her one of those medals called miraculous, which had been given her,
+she received it gratefully, applied it to the afflicted member and
+commenced, Saturday, March 1st, 1834, a novena to the Blessed Virgin.
+All human remedies seemed unavailing; she lost her appetite and was
+unable to sleep. She was also racked with high fever; however, having
+snatched a little repose during the Wednesday night after beginning
+the novena, she was suddenly awakened by a very painful commotion,
+which re-established the bones in their place; the leg which had been
+shortened about six inches, became lengthened almost even with the
+other, and recovered its usual strength. On visiting her next morning,
+the physicians were greatly astonished, but gave orders that she should
+not yet leave her bed. On Sunday, the last day of the novena, the fact
+of the cure was established beyond a doubt. The religious arose quite
+naturally, and without any assistance, ran to kiss the feet of Mary's
+statue, placed over the infirmary fire-place; then, dressed in her
+habit, and accompanied by the Mother Infirmarian, she descended about a
+dozen steps to the chapel to adore the Blessed Sacrament, after which
+she repaired to the community room, where the Superior with her Mothers
+and Sisters were assembled, to give her the kiss of congratulation.
+This touching scene was terminated by the recitation of the _Te Deum_,
+and _Sub Tuum_. No trace of disease remained, except a slight weakness
+for a few days, and as this was felt only in the sound limb, it was
+evidently the result of her having been six months in bed.
+
+Two of the physicians acknowledged, with all the Community, that it was
+a supernatural favor. One of them has even declared in a certificate
+of May 4th, 1834, that without wishing to characterize a fact as
+extraordinary, he observes that in this circumstance there are: 1st,
+spontaneous disjointing; 2d, spontaneous diminution, three days
+convalescence, and these last two are, to the extent of his knowledge,
+without parallel in the records of surgery.
+
+The religious has never had another attack of this infirmity.
+
+
+ CURE OF A SICK PERSON (CHALONS SUR MARNE)--1834.
+
+The Abbe Begin, an eye-witness of this cure, which took place at the
+hospital St. Maur, where he is chaplain, has prepared a verbal process
+which attests: 1st, that the patient was really afflicted; 2d, that she
+was cured March 14th, 1834; 3d, that she declares no other means were
+employed than the medal and prayer. This verbal process is signed by a
+hundred persons of the above-mentioned hospital.
+
+ "Madame C.H., a widow, aged seventy, a charity patient at the
+ hospital St. Maur, was, in consequence of a fall the 7th of
+ August, 1833, crippled to such a degree that it was with great
+ difficulty she could walk, even with the aid of a crutch, and
+ sometimes the additional assistance of another person's arm; she
+ could scarcely seat herself, and to rise was still more of an
+ effort. To ascend the stairs was almost impossible, she could
+ accomplish it only by grasping as she went along whatever lay
+ within reach. She could not stoop or kneel; the left limb, which
+ was the principal seat of her malady, she dragged helplessly after
+ her, not being able to bend it.
+
+ "Such was her sad condition at the beginning of March, 1834.
+ However, she heard something that enkindled a ray of hope in her
+ heart. Some one had spoken to her the January previous of a medal
+ said to be miraculous; it bore on one side the image of Mary
+ crushing the infernal serpent's head, her hands full of graces
+ figured by rays of light proceeding from them, and the invocation:
+ 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' on the other, the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, with
+ the letter M surmounted by a cross. She was also informed of the
+ wonders it had wrought, and her heart awoke to the consoling hope
+ of realizing some benefit from the medal which had been promised
+ her. How she sighed for the happy moment when it would be in her
+ possession! How long the time of waiting appeared! At last, her
+ desires were gratified; the 6th of March she received, as if
+ it were a present from Heaven, the long wished-for medal, and
+ hastened, by the reception of the Sacrament of Penance, to prepare
+ herself for the desired favor. Next day, the first Wednesday in
+ the month, she commenced by Holy Communion a novena to the Sacred
+ Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Twenty times, day and night, did she
+ press to her lips the precious medal hung around her neck. For
+ several days of the novena, our Lord severely tried her faith
+ anew. Her sufferings increased greatly, likewise her fervor and
+ confidence, and soon the most blessed results were the recompense
+ of this poor woman's prayers.
+
+ "Seven days of the novena had not elapsed ere she was relieved of
+ the sufferings that had so cruelly afflicted her for seven months.
+ I could not depict the astonishment and admiration of every one,
+ who saw on the morning of March 14th this person so helpless
+ the very evening before, walk with all ease imaginable, bend,
+ kneel, go up and down high steps. One spoke of it to another for
+ mutual edification, and, in turn, came to congratulate her on her
+ recovery, and give thanks to God and Mary. The Superior, who had
+ bestowed constant care upon the sick woman during her crippled
+ state, and had thus been a daily witness of her sufferings,
+ returned solemn thanks for this extraordinary grace, the whole
+ Community chanting a _Te Deum_ in their chapel.
+
+ "P.S.--I forgot to say that the widow has the free use of all her
+ limbs, and has never since had a return of her former infirmity."
+
+The following is what Monseigneur thought proper to append to the
+verbal process, an extract from which we have just read: "We certify
+that credence can, and ought to, be placed in the testimony of the Abbe
+Begin, that of the Sisters and so many other eye-witnesses who have
+spoken conscientiously and from no motive save that of zeal for the
+truth.
+
+ "[Dagger] M.S.F.V., Bishop of Chalons.
+
+ "_Chalons, May 30, 1834._"
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS OF M. DE CASTILLON, CAPTAIN IN THE 21ST LIGHT GUARDS;
+ AND OF A WOMAN--1834.
+
+ Extract from a letter of Sister C. (Herault) to M.E.:
+
+ "_November 13, 1834._
+
+ "It should be the duty of children to glorify their mother, and
+ a very sweet one it is for me to acquaint you with two incidents
+ manifesting the boundless charity of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+ "The first relates to a sick soldier in our house. Though we
+ had already witnessed the efficacy of the medal, in effecting
+ the conversion of several soldiers most obstinate in resisting
+ grace, no conversion was so striking as this. M. Frederick de
+ Castillon, aged thirty-five, Captain in the 21st Light Guards,
+ entered the hospital, April 29th, in the last stage of consumption,
+ and attacked by paralysis of the left side. We nursed him a long
+ time, his condition grew alarmingly worse, but how could we
+ mention religion to a young soldier who boasted of having none?
+ I kept myself always informed of his state, and contented myself
+ (apparently) with watching the progress of the disease. Several
+ times I attempted to make him realize his danger, but in vain. One
+ day, when he was much worse, and I had an opportunity of seeing
+ him alone, I ventured to inquire if he were a Catholic. 'Yes,
+ Sister,' he replied, looking steadily at me. I then asked him to
+ accept a medal, to wear it, and frequently invoke the Immaculate
+ Mary, telling him at the same time that, if he did so with faith,
+ this good Mother would obtain for him all the graces he needed, for
+ bearing his sufferings patiently and meritoriously. He received it
+ gratefully, but did not put it on.
+
+ "But our confidence in the Blessed Virgin's influence over him
+ was not diminished, especially when we saw him place the medal
+ on the side of his bed. The Sister in charge of that hall had
+ already slipped one in his pillow-case. Several days passed, his
+ strength was gradually ebbing away, and after many ineffectual
+ efforts to obtain his consent to see a priest, I asked a clergyman
+ to visit him notwithstanding, and I introduced him into the sick
+ man's presence just as some one came to tell me he could not live
+ through that night (October 15th). We found him extremely ill,
+ but still inflexible. After a few moments, I withdrew, and left
+ him alone with the charitable priest, who could get nothing from
+ him but these despairing words: 'Leave me in peace, to-morrow I
+ shall be dead, and all will be over!' Of course, there was nothing
+ else to be done but comply with his request, and you can imagine
+ how painful it was. We redoubled our petitions to the Immaculate
+ Virgin, and this good Mother soon wrought a change in the
+ unfortunate man's heart.
+
+ "Next day, he asked the physician to tell him candidly if his case
+ were hopeless, because he wished to arrange his affairs. That same
+ evening, as soon as the Sister in charge of the hall entered, he
+ said to her very gently and penitently: 'Oh! how sorry I am to have
+ treated the Superior so badly, and the good priest she brought
+ me! Present my apologies to them, I beg you, and ask them to come
+ again.' You know we delayed not a moment in going to see him.
+ Next morning he began his new life, and during the nine days M.
+ Castillon still lived the chaplain visited him several times every
+ day, remaining two hours at a time. One of his brother officers,
+ coming to see him just after his first confession: 'If you had
+ been here a few minutes sooner,' said M. de Castillon, with an
+ utter disregard of human respect, 'you would have found me in good
+ company. I was with the cure, and I could not have been in better.'
+ He had the happiness of receiving the Last Sacraments with the most
+ admirable dispositions. Here are his dying words, which he asked
+ this gentleman to commit to writing: 'I die in the religion of my
+ fathers, I love and revere it, I humbly beg God's pardon for not
+ always having practiced it publicly.' And he expired in the peace
+ of the Lord, October 23d.
+
+ "I now relate the second conversion, that of a woman who, for
+ eighteen years, had been a public scandal, living with a wretch who
+ had abandoned wife and children for her. To such wicked conduct,
+ she added a more than ordinary degree of impiety, boasting that
+ she believed neither in God nor hell, and mocking at everything
+ religion held sacred. Although dangerously ill, she declared that
+ never would she make a confession. Sister N., seeing the rapid
+ progress of the disease and near approach of death, had recourse
+ to the Blessed Virgin; she put a medal around the woman's neck,
+ and began a novena for her conversion, relying upon the assistance
+ of her who, every day, gives us continually increasing proofs
+ that she is our Mother and a most merciful one. Before the novena
+ was finished, this poor creature, yielding to grace, made her
+ confession, and renounced forever the wretch who had been her
+ curse, manifesting as much sorrow for her past life, and proving
+ herself as pious as she had heretofore been shamelessly impious.
+
+ "The above facts, Monsieur, I have thought it my duty to make known
+ to you, for the edification of the faithful and the glory of Mary.
+ May these examples of her power and bounty, lead all sinners to
+ cast themselves into her arms!"
+
+NOTE.--These two events are truly a confirmation of what St. Bernard
+says, "that no one ever invokes Mary in vain;" but what a misfortune
+for those who refuse her succor! A very reliable individual once told
+us, that a sick person to whom a medal had been given, and who began
+to feel the effects of grace, suddenly insisted upon having the medal
+taken off, saying: "It hurts me; I can wear it no longer." To quiet him
+it was taken off, and he soon expired without the slightest sign of
+conversion. The person relating this, was an eye-witness; it happened
+in the month of October, 1834.
+
+
+ CONVERSION AND CURE OF MME. PERON AND CURE OF HER
+ DAUGHTER.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--It is Mme. Peron herself who gives us all the details. She lives
+in Paris, rue des Petites-Ecuries, No. 24. We quote her own account,
+written February 26th, 1835, from her dictation, and in presence of the
+Sister who visited her in her sickness.
+
+ "I was sick eight years, and afflicted with very considerable
+ hemorrhages. I suffered much and almost continually. I was without
+ strength; I took but little nourishment, and that little increased
+ my malady, which was gradually exhausting me. I do not remember
+ to have had during these eight years, more than eight entire days
+ of relief from pain; the rest of the time I passed on the bed,
+ unable to perform the work necessary to aid my poor husband in
+ supporting the family. I have even been confined to my bed as
+ long as eighteen months without intermission. I consulted several
+ physicians, who prescribed the remedies usual in such cases, but
+ all to no purpose. My husband, not being able to afford such
+ expense, and seeing no hope of my recovery, lost courage and was
+ almost in despair. Some kind persons sought to cheer him: 'You must
+ not be so low-spirited, my poor Bourbonnais, you must bear up under
+ these trials and show your strength of character; your wife is very
+ sick, but she will recover and your friends will not abandon you.'
+ As for myself, seeing that medicines had no effect and cost us a
+ great deal of money, I dispensed with doctors, and was a long time
+ without seeing one, having resigned myself to a slow death.
+
+ "A neighbor who understood my position, came one day to see me,
+ and urged me not to give up thus, but to have the physician again.
+ I opposed it, because we had not the wherewith to remunerate him.
+ She then proposed to call in a Sister of Charity. I observed that
+ not being in want, perhaps the Sisters would refuse to come, as it
+ might thus deprive of their services, others more unfortunate than
+ myself. This good lady insisted, and I yielded.
+
+ "Next morning, I received a visit from Sister Marie (of St. Vincent
+ de Paul's parish), who brought me some assistance, encouraged me to
+ support my sufferings, and did her best to console me. I can truly
+ say that happiness entered my house with this good Sister. She
+ soon sent a physician, who, after examining me and understanding
+ my case, told her, as I have since learned, that it was a hopeless
+ one, I had a very little while to live, and ought to be sent to
+ the hospital to spare my family the sad spectacle of my death.
+ Hearing this, Sister Marie believed it her duty to give my soul
+ especial attention. I was not an enemy to religion, but I was
+ not very practical; I went sometimes to the parish functions,
+ when my sufferings and occupations permitted, but (and I say it
+ to my shame) I had not approached the Sacraments for years. When
+ the Sister, after several other questions, asked me if I went to
+ confession, blushing, I said 'no.' She begged me to do so, and
+ I replied: 'When I am cured, I will.' The good Sister, little
+ satisfied with my evasive answer, urged me again to see a priest.
+ 'Sister,' said I, 'I don't like to be persecuted with things of
+ this sort, when I am cured I will go to confession.' I saw that
+ this answer grieved her, but she never remitted her visits and kind
+ attentions. My malady increased. One Saturday or Sunday night, at
+ the commencement of October, 1834, my whole body was cold, and
+ vainly did my friends endeavor to restore a natural warmth, the
+ chill of death seemed on me. They spoke of reciting the prayers
+ for the dying; I understood a part of what was said, but myself
+ was speechless. Whilst I was so ill, my husband told our eldest
+ daughter to go to bed, and he, thinking me easier because I was
+ feebly breathing, threw himself, without undressing, upon the bed
+ to snatch a little repose; but, getting up a few minutes later, he
+ came to me, put his hand on my face, and was horrified to find it
+ covered with a cold sweat. He thought me dead, and called aloud:
+ 'Euphemie,' (this is our eldest daughter's name), 'Euphemie, alas!
+ thy mother is dead!' Euphemie arose and mingled her lamentations
+ with those of her father. Their cries awakened Madame Pelleve, our
+ neighbor, who came to console them. 'Ah! madame,' said my husband,
+ on seeing her, 'my wife is dead!' Having begged him to be resigned
+ to God's will, this lady approached me, and, placing her hand upon
+ my heart: 'No,' she exclaimed, 'she is not dead, her heart still
+ beats.' They kindled a fire, and succeeded in restoring a little
+ warmth to my body.
+
+ "Madame Pelleve went betimes to inform Sister Marie of all this,
+ and the latter hastened to tell the physician. 'I am not at all
+ surprised,' he answered; 'this lady has two incurable diseases.
+ Besides these hemorrhages, she is in the last stage of consumption,
+ as I have already told you, and if not dead before this, she will
+ not live through the day.' My chest had, indeed, been very weak for
+ some time, and the physicians in consultation had all said I could
+ never be cured.
+
+ "At two o'clock in the afternoon I received a visit from Sister
+ Marie, who found me not quite so ill; I could speak. 'Do you
+ love the Blessed Virgin very much?' said she. 'Yes, Sister,' I
+ had indeed always practiced some devotion in honor of this good
+ Mother. 'If you love her very much, I can give you something to
+ cure you.' 'Oh! yes, I shall soon be well.' I spoke of death, for
+ I felt that it was near. Then she showed me a medal and said:
+ 'Take this medal of the Blessed Virgin, who will cure you, if you
+ have great confidence in her.' The sight of the medal filled me
+ with joy; I took it and kissed it fervently, for I truly longed to
+ be cured. The Sister now recited aloud the little prayer which I
+ could not read, and urged me to repeat it daily; I promised to add
+ five Paters and five Aves. She then put the medal around my neck.
+ At that instant, there passed through me a new, strange feeling,
+ a general revolution in my whole body, a thrill through all my
+ members. It was not a painful sensation, on the contrary, I began
+ to shed tears of joy. I was not cured, but I felt that I was going
+ to be cured, and I experienced a confidence that came not from
+ myself.
+
+ "Sister Marie left me in this state; after her departure, my
+ husband who had remained motionless at the foot of my bed said:
+ 'Put all your confidence in the Blessed Virgin; we are going to
+ make a novena for you.' Towards evening I could raise myself up in
+ bed, which was very astonishing, considering my extreme exhaustion,
+ but a few hours previous. On Tuesday I requested some broth,
+ which was given me at last, and a little while after I took some
+ soup. My strength returned; I felt that I was cured. Finally, on
+ Thursday, I wished to go to church to thank the Blessed Virgin.
+ This suggestion was opposed, but I insisted and at length went.
+ Whilst on the way and alone (for I preferred going by myself), I
+ met Sister Marie, who did not recognize me; I took her hand: 'Oh!'
+ said she, 'it is really yourself!' 'Yes, Sister, it is I indeed; I
+ am going to Mass: I am cured!' 'And what has cured you so quickly?'
+ 'The Blessed Virgin, and I am going to thank her.' The Sister was
+ lost in astonishment. I recounted to her how it had all come about
+ in less than three days, and I kept on to church and heard Mass.
+ Since then, I have had no return of my malady; I enjoy good health;
+ I go about my duties, performing a regular day's work, and to the
+ Miraculous Medal am I indebted for it all."
+
+Not only Madame Peron's body but her soul, did the Blessed Virgin
+restore to health; she soon chose a Director and went to confession,
+and she has continued to do so ever since; her life is really very
+edifying. As she deeply regrets having lived so long estranged from
+God, her greatest happiness now is in frequently approaching the
+Sacraments; two things awaken her tears, the recollection of her past
+life, and gratitude for her twofold recovery.
+
+Nor is this all; the Blessed Virgin seems to have chosen this family
+for the purpose of displaying in it the wonders of her power. Madam
+Peron had a daughter aged sixteen, who, after her mother's recovery,
+gave herself to God in an especial manner, employing in exercises of
+piety, all her leisure moments, and edifying her companions in the
+parish confraternity, whenever she could take part in their devotions
+for she lived in another quarter.
+
+The father also was deeply touched at the favors accorded his wife; he
+wears the medal, and he has experienced its blessed effects.
+
+Madame Peron has still another daughter, a little girl six years and
+a-half old, who had great difficulty in speaking, or rather, who did
+not speak at all, although she was not mute. Her utterance was so
+impeded, that she scarcely ever finished a word, thus disconcerting
+the most patient. It was so much the more deplorable, as she was
+quite a bright child. 'What a pity she does not talk!' said everyone
+who witnessed her infirmity. When Sister Marie saw this little girl,
+'Why do you not send her to school,' said she to the mother, 'instead
+of keeping her home all day?' 'You hear how she talks,' answered
+the mother, who did not like to have her child's infirmity exposed.
+However, she yielded to the Sister's wishes, and little Hortense was
+sent to the Sister's parish school. Her imperfect speech did not
+improve, it would sometimes take her five minutes to pronounce half
+a word. Some days after, Sister Marie, who deeply pitied the child,
+spoke to her mother of a novena for curing this defect. "Cure Hortense,
+Sister! it is impossible, it is a natural defect!" The Sister, with
+increasing anxiety insisted. The novena was commenced on Saturday;
+it consisted in hearing Mass every day, and reciting a few prayers
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. The medal was hung around the little
+girl's neck, and she was to take part in all the exercises of the
+novena. For several days there was no change, but Thursday after the
+Mass of the Blessed Sacrament, Hortense, on leaving church, could
+speak as distinctly and with as much ease as any one. Those who first
+heard her were struck with admiration, the news soon spread, and from
+all sides came persons to see her; they questioned her, and the child
+answered, they scanned her to see if it were really the same, and
+recognizing her, they returned, saying: "This is certainly a great
+miracle, a sudden cure of a natural defect!"
+
+Little Hortense, showing her medal with delight, would say to all who
+knew and congratulated her: "The Blessed Virgin has cured me."
+
+In thanksgiving for so great a benefit, the child was consecrated
+to Mary on the 21st of November, Feast of the Presentation, in the
+same chapel where the apparition of the medal took place, and, in
+commemoration of this great event of her life, she was to wear only
+blue and white until her First Communion. Previous to this ceremony,
+she made her confession, with every evidence of understanding
+thoroughly the importance of the act. When asked if she loves the
+Blessed Virgin, "Oh! yes," she answers, "I love her with more than all
+my heart!" an expression invented, it seems, solely by the fulness of
+her gratitude. She prizes her brass medal so highly, that she would
+not exchange it for one of silver or gold, and she wishes it put in the
+tomb with her when she dies. "We hope, Hortense," said her father not
+long ago, (he always finds a new pleasure in hearing her talk), "we
+hope, when you die, that you will leave us this medal as a souvenir of
+yourself and a relic of the Blessed Virgin." "Certainly, papa, if it
+gives you so much pleasure, but I promised the Blessed Virgin, the day
+of my consecration, that the medal should never leave me, but should
+even descend with me into the tomb when I died."
+
+We publish these details, with the cordial approbation of this family,
+fully imbued with ever increasing gratitude to Mary Immaculate.
+
+These two accounts have been confirmed by nine other persons.
+
+
+ CONVERSION OF SEVERAL SOLDIERS (HOTEL DES
+ INVALIDES)--1834.--_Attested._
+
+NOTE.--All these edifying details, which have already produced a most
+beneficial effect upon many young men, were given us and attested by
+Sisters Radier and Pourrat, who, having charge of that ward, were
+witnesses of the facts, and also instruments of divine mercy in
+operating these prodigies.
+
+ "We had in St. Vincent's ward, number 20, royal hotel des
+ Invalides, Paris, a soldier who had been spitting blood about six
+ months, and who, it was thought, would soon die of consumption. He
+ was naturally polite and grateful for the attentions bestowed upon
+ him, but he showed no signs of religion; his morals were bad, and
+ it was a well-known fact that, for twenty years, his life had been
+ one of scandal.
+
+ "It appeared, however, that faith was not entirely extinguished in
+ his heart, for another patient, his neighbor, being on the point
+ of death and refusing to see a priest, this one entreated him to
+ yield, and was instrumental in bringing about his conversion.
+ Alas! his own turn soon came, we saw him growing worse day by day,
+ he was wasting visibly, and had not once mentioned receiving the
+ Sacraments. As he had urged his neighbor to prepare for death, we
+ hoped he would make his own preparation, without being reminded
+ of it, or, at least, that he would willingly comply with the
+ first suggestion. On the contrary, he absolutely resisted all our
+ entreaties, saying: 'I am an honest man, Sister, I have neither
+ killed nor robbed.' 'Even so,' we would answer, 'we all stand in
+ need of God's mercy, we are all sinners.' 'Oh! Sister, just leave
+ me in peace, I beg you.'
+
+ "However, he began to realize that he had been sinking for several
+ days, and he said aloud: 'There is no hope for me!' This thought
+ appeared to distress him. One day (it was Wednesday, the 26th of
+ November), the disease took such a sudden turn for the worse, we
+ feared he would not live through the day, and, being unable to
+ make any religious impression on him, we warned the chaplain of
+ his condition and his resistance to all our entreaties. The latter
+ went to see him. Our patient received him with great respect, but,
+ wishing to get rid of him adroitly, said: 'I am acquainted with the
+ cure.' A little while after, the cure visited him, and conversed
+ with him some time. On leaving his bedside, the venerable, zealous
+ pastor came to us and said: 'Your patient is very low, and I have
+ not succeeded in getting him to do anything for his soul; indeed,
+ I did not urge him too much, for fear he might say _no_, and then
+ would not revoke it, like so many others, after once giving a
+ decided negative.'
+
+ "The same day a lady of his acquaintance also came to see him, and
+ earnestly but vainly urged him to make his peace with God. To get
+ rid of her importunity he said: 'I know the cure; he has already
+ been to see me, and will return this evening.' The cure returned
+ indeed, according to promise; the sick man, on seeing him, jumped
+ out of bed to show that he was not so ill as to make confession a
+ very pressing matter. The cure, a true Samaritan, rendered him all
+ the little services imaginable, helping him back to bed, and even
+ offering to dress his blister; he then spoke to him about his soul,
+ but without avail, for after an hour's conversation he came to us
+ and said: 'I am deeply grieved, for I have done my utmost, but it
+ has had no effect upon him.' We asked the cure if we must call him
+ during the night, in case the sick man grew worse. 'I think,' said
+ he, 'you had better not, unless he asks for me.' A little later one
+ of us reminded him again of the chaplain, who was passing, but he
+ got enraged and began to swear, so that we had to drop the subject,
+ despite our distress at the thought of his appearing so unprepared
+ before his God. Our grief was so much the greater in proportion to
+ his extreme danger, for the death rattle was already in his throat,
+ and it did not seem possible that he could survive the night. It
+ was then my young companion said to me: 'Oh! Sister, perhaps our
+ sins, as our holy St. Vincent says, have been the cause of this
+ man's impenitence.' Expecting nothing more from the patient, Sister
+ Radier now turned all her hopes towards the Blessed Virgin. During
+ night prayers thoughts of the medal came into her mind, and she
+ said to herself: 'If we put the medal on him perhaps the Blessed
+ Virgin will obtain his conversion,' and she determined to make a
+ novena. After prayers she said to her companion: 'Let us go see the
+ sick man and put a medal on him; perhaps the Blessed Virgin will
+ grant our petitions.' She went immediately, and found him up and
+ in a state of great agitation, and about to leave the room; all
+ the other patients saw it clearly, and said that it was with the
+ intention of committing suicide. The Sister cautiously took away
+ his knife and whatever else might be used in this way, slipped
+ unperceived the medal between his two mattresses, and returned to
+ us very sadly, saying: 'Let us fervently invoke the Blessed Virgin,
+ for I very much fear this poor man will kill himself during the
+ night.'
+
+ "Next day, immediately after rising, and even before seeing the
+ Sister who had kept watch, one of us hastened to visit our patient,
+ and not without most dire forebodings, but, to our astonishment,
+ his mind was calm and he seemed better. On inquiring how he felt,
+ 'Very well, Sister,' he answered, 'I passed a good night, I slept
+ well (which I have not done for a long time), and I am better in
+ consequence.' As the Sister retired, he called to her, saying:
+ 'Sister, I wish to make my confession, oh! send the cure to me!'
+ 'You wish to confess?' replied the Sister, 'take care; are you
+ going to do as you did all day yesterday, do you really want him?'
+ 'Yes, Sister, upon my honor.' 'Well, since you wish him, I will go
+ for him, it will certainly be well for you to confess your sins,
+ for it is said that your life has not always been edifying.' Then,
+ without the slightest human respect, he began to mention his sins
+ aloud, and with great sentiments of compunction; we could scarcely
+ induce him to stop. The cure came, and he made his confession,
+ which lasted an hour. Afterwards, one of us having come to see
+ him, he exclaimed joyfully at our reproach: 'Oh! Sister, how happy
+ I am, I have been to confession, I have received absolution, and
+ the cure is to return this evening. Since my First Communion, this
+ is the happiest day of my life!' He appeared deeply affected, and
+ expressed a most ardent desire to receive the good God. 'Do you
+ know what we did?' 'What was it, Sister?' 'We put between your
+ mattresses a Miraculous Medal of the Blessed Virgin.' 'Ah! then,
+ that is why I passed such a comfortable night; moreover, I felt as
+ if there was something about me that wrought a wonderful change,
+ and I do not know why I did not search my bed; I thought of doing
+ so.' The Sister then produced the medal, which he kissed with
+ respect and affection. 'It is this,' he exclaimed, 'that gave me
+ strength to brave human respect. I must place it on my breast; I
+ will give you a ribbon to attach it to my decoration,' (he wore the
+ cross of honor.) The first ribbon offered being a little faded,
+ 'No, Sister,' said he, 'not that, but this; the Blessed Virgin must
+ have a new ribbon.' The Sister, regarding his weak state, placed
+ the medal in such a manner that it was somewhat concealed. 'Oh! do
+ not hide it, Sister,' said he; 'put it beside my cross, I shall not
+ blush to show it.'
+
+ "In the afternoon the cure asked us how our patient was, and he
+ was not less edified than ourselves at the account we gave of his
+ admirable dispositions. Preparations were made to give him the last
+ Sacraments. At the sight of the Holy Viaticum, he was so penetrated
+ with emotion that he begged pardon aloud of God for all the sins
+ of his life in detail, and it was with the utmost difficulty he
+ could be persuaded to lower his voice, his heart being too full
+ to contain itself. He passed the following night and the next day
+ in the same dispositions of faith, regret and piety, until Monday
+ morning, December 1st, when he peacefully rendered his soul to God,
+ and we have every confidence that it was received into the arms of
+ His mercy.
+
+ "We relate what we saw and heard; it took place in our ward, which
+ numbers sixty patients, the majority of whom witnessed a part of
+ these details."
+
+NOTE.--Before burial, the Sister took the medal off his corpse, and the
+patient in the next bed begged to have it, so persuaded was he that it
+had been the instrument of this touching conversion.
+
+This consoling return to God was followed by several others not less
+striking or less sincere, and in that very institution, by the same
+means--the medal. Quite lately two have taken place, but the details
+are so very much like the above that for this reason alone we refrain
+from giving them.
+
+All this has been confirmed by M. Ancelin, cure of the Invalides.
+
+
+ CURE OF M. FERMIN, A PRIEST--1834.
+
+This account was sent us by the Superior General of St. Sulpice, who
+was anxious that we should have it. The venerable priest of this very
+estimable Community, who was favored with this grace, wrote the details
+himself, and they were attested by the Superior and the Director of the
+grand Seminary of Rheims, both of whom were witnesses.
+
+ "To the glory of Mary conceived without sin, I, Jean Baptiste
+ Fermin, unworthy servant of the Blessed Virgin, and subject of M.
+ Olier, have, together with my Superior and confreres, thought it
+ my duty to transmit to our very honored Father, an account of the
+ special favor accorded me.
+
+ "Many persons knew what I suffered for six whole years, how I
+ was worn out with a nervous, worrying cough, whose attacks were
+ so frequent and so prolonged that one can scarcely imagine how I
+ ever survived them. My physician himself told me that, for the
+ first three years, my life was in imminent danger, and if in the
+ last three I was less exposed to death at every step, as it were,
+ the giving way of my stomach, the weakness of my chest, were such
+ that all my days were filled with bitterness, and new crosses
+ were laid upon me. In this condition, what ecclesiastical fasts
+ could I keep? Four or five years ago, the desire of complying,
+ in some degree, with the precepts of the Church led me to fast
+ the Ember week before Christmas, and the prejudice to my health
+ was such that I was not permitted to fast again even for a day.
+ Abstinence from meat became impossible, and for having attempted
+ this slight mortification, how much I suffered in consequence, even
+ in the very month of July, 1834! Whilst my health was so impaired,
+ and I saw only a lingering end to my afflictions, it pleased my
+ Superiors to give me a year's rest. I received with gratitude this
+ additional evidence of their consideration for me, and endeavored
+ to co-operate with them in re-establishing my health, of which they
+ had been so thoughtful; but, in my condition, the recuperative
+ powers of nature were of slight avail. Even amidst perfect
+ quiet and rest for four whole months, I experienced but little
+ alleviation of my sufferings, for though my chest became, at least,
+ apparently stronger, my stomach grew weaker and more disordered,
+ so that I was obliged to diet, which, added to the dieting I had
+ already practiced, reduced me to such a state of exhaustion that I
+ could not foresee the consequences.
+
+ "O, Mary, how deplorable was my condition when you cast upon
+ me a look of mercy! The 15th of November, 1834, I was sent a
+ medal, struck in honor of the Immaculate Conception, and already
+ celebrated as the instrument of many miracles. In receiving it,
+ I was penetrated, for the first time, with a strong feeling
+ of confidence, that this was the Heaven-sent means by which I
+ would reach the end of my afflictions; I had not foreseen this
+ hope, still less had I excited it, for I believe I can say,
+ conscientiously, that I felt naturally disinclined to ask a favor
+ of which I deemed myself unworthy. However, the feeling became so
+ strong that I thought it my duty to consider it prayerfully next
+ morning; and not to oppose so good an impulse, I determined to
+ make a novena, and I commenced it on the 16th. From that moment my
+ confidence was boundless, and like a child who reasons no longer,
+ but sees only what he feels sure of obtaining, it sustained me
+ amidst the new trials to which I was subjected; for on the 19th,
+ and several days after, my sufferings were redoubled, affecting at
+ once both stomach and chest. On the 22d I felt considerably better,
+ on the 23d I believed myself strong enough to abandon a diet on
+ which I had subsisted a long time, and on the 24th I wished to eat
+ just what was served the Community; that very morning I commenced,
+ like the hearty seminarians, to take a little dry bread and wine,
+ and it agreed with me. Thus my desires were accomplished. I had
+ implored the Blessed Virgin to give me health to live according
+ to the rule, and she had done so; but a good Mother like Mary
+ would not leave her work imperfect, and she chose the very day of
+ her Conception to bestow upon me her crowning favors. I was still
+ troubled with a slight indisposition of the stomach accompanying
+ digestion after dinner, but it was not positive suffering, and even
+ this remnant of my old infirmity disappeared entirely. On the eve
+ of that Feast my devotion to Mary, which had lost a little of its
+ first fervor, was, when I least expected it, excited anew, and I
+ felt urged to implore the consummation of a good work so happily
+ begun. I did so that evening, and next morning at prayers, at Mass,
+ at my thanksgiving, and it was in finishing this last exercise
+ before a statue of the Blessed Virgin, after a most fervent prayer,
+ that I realized the recompense of my confidence--I felt assured
+ that my petitions had been granted. Since then I have experienced
+ no indisposition worthy of attention. I was able to fast the Ember
+ week before Christmas and the eve of that great solemnity; I sang
+ the ten o'clock High Mass the fourth Sunday in Advent; I followed
+ all the offices of the choir on those days the Church consecrates
+ to the celebration of our Divine Master's birth, and, instead of
+ regretting these efforts, I find in each one of them a new motive
+ for blessing the Lord and testifying my gratitude to our good
+ Mother.
+
+ J.B. FERMIN."
+
+
+ "Though surpassing our hopes, we have witnessed the speedy and
+ perfect recovery of M.J. Fermin, which appears to be something
+ supernatural, since he employed no other remedies than great
+ devotion to the Blessed Virgin and a novena in her honor.
+
+ "AUBRY, RAIGECOURT GOURNAY."
+
+
+ II.
+
+ _Graces Obtained during the Year 1835, in France, Switzerland,
+ Savoy and Turkey._
+
+
+ CURE OF MADEMOISELLE JOUBERT.
+
+NOTE.--The account of this very striking cure was sent us by M.
+Poinsel, Vicar General of Limoges, whom I took the liberty of asking
+for it.
+
+ "_Bishopric of Limoges._
+
+ "Glory to God! honor to Mary!
+
+ "The 10th of February, 1834, Mlle. Joubert, aged twenty-nine
+ years, a person of solid piety, was suddenly cured of a painful
+ and very serious infirmity. For more than a year, she had carried
+ her left arm in a sling, by reason of an unaccountable disease
+ which extended from the shoulder to the hand, and was of such a
+ nature that the afflicted member seemed dead; when necessary to
+ be handled, it had to be done with extreme precaution, and even
+ then the pain was so excessive that often the patient fell sick
+ in consequence. The disease was successively styled rheumatic
+ gout, inflammatory and gangrenous rheumatism; science employed in
+ combating it, baths, shower baths, poultices, liniments of all
+ sort, vain remedies which only aggravated the evil and varied
+ the suffering. Sometimes amputation was spoken of: 'Would to
+ God, Mademoiselle, you had but one arm!' said the physician,
+ not concealing his anxiety and fears of her death, as spring
+ approached, for the diseased arm was pale, livid, and frightful to
+ behold.
+
+ "The young lady, a true Christian, was resigned to all; by
+ meditations upon the cross, she encouraged herself to suffer,
+ and, perceiving the progress of the disease, she thought only of
+ dying the precious death of the just. A friend, one day, proposed
+ to her that she should wear the medal with confidence, and make a
+ novena to Mary. She acted upon the suggestion; at the end of the
+ novena, on the usual day of her confession (she was accustomed to
+ confess weekly), she approached the sacred tribunal, and lo! at the
+ very instant when recollected, contrite and humbled, she received
+ the moral effect of the priest's benediction and holy words, an
+ extraordinary physical change took place in the arm heretofore
+ judged incurable, it suddenly became unloosed and free, all
+ suffering vanished! 'I scarcely knew where I was,' said she, 'but
+ it seemed to me as if a cord that had been tightly drawn around my
+ arm was unwound, ring after ring, and I was cured! My surprise, my
+ joy, were extreme and beyond all power of expression!'
+
+ "On reaching home, she exclaimed: 'A miracle! light a taper, light
+ two, come, come, see the miracle! I can move my arm, animation is
+ restored to it, I am cured!' Oh! how great the joy of that family!
+ They surrounded the favored one, they looked at, they touched the
+ resuscitated member, they tested its powers in various ways, making
+ her lift divers objects and execute a variety of movements; then,
+ all the members of this truly Christian family, moved even to
+ tears, fell on their knees, and recited that hymn of thanksgiving,
+ the _Te Deum_.
+
+ "Since then, (that is, for more than a year), her arm has been
+ perfectly well. The physician himself was struck with this event,
+ which it would be difficult to attribute to concealed resources,
+ or the sudden agency of nature. What is nature without the
+ intervention and action of God? He is sole Master of nature, life
+ and death are at His will. It is not necessary, then, to reason so
+ much on the subject; a little faith will easily make us recognize
+ here a special grace of God, through the intercession of Mary, our
+ kind, sweet Mother, to whom we must ever repair, invoking her with
+ love and confidence.
+
+ "Such is the simple and conscientious account of the event given
+ me, the undersigned, by the person herself, in answer to my
+ questions, in the presence of an intelligent, reliable individual
+ who saw all, having several times dressed the arm, and who, by
+ reason of her skill and long experience, was well calculated to
+ judge of the danger.
+
+ "In attestation of which, etc.
+
+ "POINSEL, Vicar General.
+
+ "_February 14, 1835._"
+
+These details are confirmed by two letters of Madame and Mademoiselle
+Joubert, by the testimony of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity
+of Limoges, and that of M. Dumonteil, a lawyer and friend of the family.
+
+
+ CONVERSIONS AND CURES WROUGHT IN SWITZERLAND.
+
+Letter from Sister Boubat, Superioress of the Daughters of Charity in
+Chesne:
+
+ "_February 12, 1835._
+
+ "I have not great miracles to recount to-day, but the facts I give
+ are certainly very striking traits of protection. However, I shall
+ tell them just as they are, and let you judge of them for yourself.
+ Those of which I was not an eye-witness have been told me by very
+ reliable parties who were.
+
+ "1st. A woman who had been sick a long time, and given up by the
+ doctors, received, one evening, the Miraculous Medal, and was
+ restored to her usual health that night; feeling perfectly well,
+ she said to her husband next morning that she would get up and
+ prepare breakfast. He treated this as nonsense, and when she really
+ did arise, his astonishment was great, and beyond all bounds when
+ he found that her health was fully restored.
+
+ "2d. In the same village, a young mother had two children, one six
+ the other eight years old. The latter was attacked by a violent
+ malady, described to me as a convulsion, and died in a few days.
+ The younger had a similar attack, and seemed on the verge of death.
+ The poor mother was in the depths of grief, when some one thought
+ of offering her a medal. She received it as a treasure. It was
+ evening; she put it on the dying child, who soon fell asleep, and
+ slept soundly the whole night. In the morning he awoke perfectly
+ cured! This good woman afterwards came to me to get medals for
+ herself and some others. Oh! I wish you could have seen her as she
+ wept for joy whilst expressing to me, with all simplicity, the
+ transports of her soul! Never will I forget it, so deep was the
+ impression it made upon me.
+
+ "3d. A child five years old had been racked for several months by a
+ fever, which resisted all efforts to check it. One day, he was in
+ his grandmother's arms when the paroxysm began. This woman, full of
+ faith, applied the medal; the child soon grew better, and the fever
+ never troubled him again.
+
+ "The attending physician was a relation; on seeing him after this,
+ the child ran towards him, exclaiming with all the animation and
+ artlessness of his age: 'I am cured, but it was not you who cured
+ me, it was the medal.' He repeats these words nearly every time he
+ sees the doctor.
+
+ "4th. A young man, on his death-bed, filled all his friends with
+ serious apprehensions for his salvation. After several vain efforts
+ of the most charitable zeal, the cure induced him to accept a
+ medal, and very soon the dying man expressed a wish to confess. He
+ expired in the most edifying dispositions.
+
+ "5th. Three sinners obstinately refused to assist at the exercises
+ of a mission given in their parish, and even sought to oppose it.
+ One of the missionaries persuaded them to accept a medal, and as
+ soon as they had received it, a great change was visible. They
+ not only made the mission, most devoutly, but became its zealous
+ advocates.
+
+ "I get these details from a very venerable cure, who gave them to
+ me himself.
+
+ "6th. There came to me recently a woman from the neighboring
+ mountainous district, who said without any previous explanation:
+ 'You cured one of my daughters whom all the physicians had given
+ up; I now wish you to give me the same thing.' I tried at once to
+ recollect what medicines I had prescribed, and asked question after
+ question concerning the nature of the malady, so as to know what
+ remedy I had dispensed. After puzzling my brain to discover, she
+ told me it was a piece, thus suddenly reminding me that I had given
+ a medal to a young woman from that place, who came to consult me
+ about her failing health. To verify the fact, I sent word for the
+ young woman to come to see me.
+
+ "I pass over in silence a multitude of other events which, without
+ being termed miracles, are none the less real graces; and in my
+ eyes one most precious and great grace for us is, that the Blessed
+ Virgin deigns to make use of our poor little house to propagate
+ devotion to her. Oh! if you could see these good mountaineers
+ of every age and sex come with the greatest confidence and most
+ touching simplicity, asking for _na medaillot_--a medal. It has
+ affected me deeply, and I cannot sufficiently express my gratitude
+ to our tender and Immaculate Mother.
+
+ "Even Protestants have asked us for these medals, and I am
+ assured it was with perfect sincerity. The pastors in Savoy are
+ also very zealous in propagating this devotion to Mary. Since
+ reading the notice, they have mentioned it from the pulpit to
+ their parishioners, many of whom have, in consequence, procured
+ the medal. Likewise, do we see young men about to enter the army
+ fortify themselves with it, and persons undertaking a voyage
+ wearing it as their safeguard; indeed, every one has recourse to it
+ as the universal remedy for soul and body."
+
+
+CURE OF SISTER HYACINTHE, A RELIGIOUS OF CALVARY.
+
+It is the Mother General of the Community who has given us these
+details. Her letter is dated February 7th, 1835.
+
+ "I am overwhelmed with joy; our poor patient is perfectly cured
+ by virtue of the Miraculous Medal. I could say our patients,
+ for our prayers were offered both for the paralytic and that
+ young person whom I told you had been sick eleven months;
+ she was able to remain out of bed only a few hours each day;
+ whenever she could go to Mass, and that was rarely, she had to
+ be assisted, and the support of an arm was necessary when she
+ approached the Holy Table. Since Thursday she walks alone and
+ eats without experiencing the slightest symptom of her former
+ infirmity, except a little weakness. I hope the Lord will
+ finish His work and restore her to perfect health; but let us
+ speak of our dear Sister.
+
+ "The following is a copy of the account I wrote of this marvel
+ to our holy Bishop day before yesterday, after Mass:
+
+ "'I acquaint Your Grace with an incident of God's great mercy,
+ displayed to our Community in the sudden cure of one of our
+ choir religious, named Hyacinthe, aged forty-seven years.
+ This good Mother, the 14th of last January, had a stroke of
+ paralysis. It did not affect her head, but immediately fixed
+ itself in the left side, which became motionless and devoid
+ of feeling. We hastened to summon the physician, who bled
+ her freely in the arm; next day we tried leeches, medicines,
+ a blister on the neck, and three days after one upon the
+ paralyzed limb, but all of no avail. The poor patient, as well
+ as ourselves, must submit to the decrees of Him who strikes
+ and heals at will. At the end of fifteen days I was inspired
+ with the thought of making a novena in honor of the Immaculate
+ Conception, the medal of which, called the miraculous, we all
+ wear. On the fourth day of the novena, as we were about to
+ recite the prayers around her bed, the good Mother desired Holy
+ Communion. She was taken to the choir by three persons; after
+ receiving, the limb felt a little better, and she could return
+ with the aid of two persons only. Her confidence in the Mother
+ of God increased daily; yesterday she asked permission to come
+ down on the last day of the novena, and this morning, with the
+ assistance of a cane and some one to support her, she came down
+ and had the happiness of receiving Holy Communion. Immediately
+ after, we finished the novena prayers, just at the end of which
+ she was seized with a pain in the paralyzed arm, followed by an
+ icy chill and then a sensation of extreme heat. She came to me
+ with both arms lifted, exclaiming, "I am cured!" And perfectly
+ cured she was, being able to walk and use her limbs as freely
+ as if she had never felt a symptom of paralysis.
+
+ "'To give you an idea of our joy and gratitude, Monseigneur,
+ would be impossible. The patient fainted, and I came very near
+ doing the same; it was with difficulty I could continue our
+ prayers of thanksgiving, so marvelous did it seem that the Lord
+ should have granted this favor to our Community, under the
+ government of one of His most unworthy servants.'
+
+ "I send you this copy, which we had kept, of the letter.
+
+ "In the same letter I asked Monseigneur's permission to have
+ a _Te Deum_ chanted at the end of Benediction. His Grace
+ hastened to send word that he not only permitted but ordered
+ it, which order was joyfully complied with. The Vicar General,
+ our Superior, wrote, asking me to defer our Vespers half an
+ hour, as he wished to assist at the _Te Deum_. Several other
+ ecclesiastics also came, and saw our healed ones blessing God.
+ Since that day our good Mother Hyacinthe follows the rules,
+ complies with all her duties, and has never felt the least
+ return of her malady.
+
+ "This miracle created great excitement in our city; the
+ laborers who were working at the house having learned it on
+ the spot, immediately spread the news; the evening previous,
+ they had seen our poor Sister dragging her limb, a cane in
+ hand, and almost carried by two persons, and next morning they
+ beheld her perfectly cured! These men, who have seldom much
+ religion, sang the praises of God's power, and asked me to
+ give them medals. I gave a medal to each with great pleasure.
+ Clergymen have come to learn the particulars of this event, and
+ I let the miraculously cured herself recount the wonders of the
+ Lord.
+
+ "I must not omit informing you that the physician having vainly
+ exhausted all remedies, had been nine days without seeing the
+ patient; and the very eve of her recovery he told one of our
+ boarders that the disease having settled itself he believed
+ our afflicted one might be able to walk, but she could never
+ use her arm again. On coming next day to visit his other
+ patients, he was surprised beyond expression when she appeared
+ before him perfectly cured. Wishing to get his candid opinion
+ on the subject, I remarked that probably it was not real
+ paralysis, but only a numbness. 'It was a strongly marked case
+ of paralysis,' he answered, 'and there is certainly something
+ supernatural in her recovery.'
+
+ "In thanksgiving we continue the novena prayers, but preface
+ them with the _Laudate_.
+
+ "Make such use of this letter as you may deem advisable. If
+ you insert it in the notice, you are at liberty to name our
+ city and house. Oh! how we long to spread abroad the knowledge
+ and love of God's power, signally displayed in answer to our
+ invocation of the Immaculate Mother of His Divine Son.
+
+ "SISTER ST. MARIE,
+ "_Superioress of Calvary of Orleans_."
+
+
+CURE OF MADAME LEBON (DIJON).
+
+NOTE.--"The venerable lady upon whom this cure was wrought
+belongs to a highly honorable family of Dijon, and her personal
+character is very well calculated to inspire the utmost confidence,"
+says _L'Ami de la Religion_, in its issue of April 17th, 1835.
+Moreover, the letter she wrote, March 12th, to one of her friends, and
+which she was anxious should be transmitted to us, is accompanied by
+the certificates of the pastors of St. Michael of Dijon, of Dampierre
+and Beaumont-sur-Vingeanne, also of five members of the municipal
+council, and several other very reliable persons, some of them members
+of her family; more than this, it is followed by a detailed account
+given by the medical attendant, who had charge of her case for sixteen
+years.
+
+ "_Dijon, March 12, 1835._
+
+ "_Madame and Dear Friend_:
+
+ "You ask me the details of the miraculous manner in which it
+ has pleased God to restore me to health. Well! it might be
+ summed up in these few words: I implored Mary to obtain my
+ recovery, and she did obtain it instantly; having said this,
+ you know all, but you desire me to recall the circumstances of
+ my sickness and my experience subsequent to the cure. I give
+ them as follows:
+
+ "You doubtless remember that, for more than twenty years, I
+ could not walk, in consequence of an abscess on the intestines,
+ which left me in such a state of sensibility that ever after a
+ walk of more than a hundred steps I was exposing myself to the
+ most serious accidents. Neither are you ignorant of the fact
+ that, nearly fifteen months ago, by reason of influenza, a
+ second abscess formed, and so increased the irritability that I
+ hovered between life and death, and even when at my best I was
+ scarcely able to drag myself from one room to another. But you
+ have probably never heard that, since the 1st of last December,
+ my condition was so critical that, with great difficulty, could
+ I remain out of bed three or four hours at a time, which made
+ me, as well as those around me, think my end was near and I
+ would not survive the spring.
+
+ "This was my condition, dear friend, when some one mentioned
+ to me the medal of the Immaculate Virgin, and urged me to get
+ it. I was a long time deciding to do so, for I considered it
+ presumptuous to solicit the cure of an infirmity the physicians
+ had pronounced incurable. At last, having thought, on the one
+ side, that the more desperate the malady, the greater God's
+ glory should He deign to cure it; and, on the other, that He
+ had wrought the most wonderful miracles for those who were
+ least worthy, I decided to mention it to my confessor. I did
+ so, and he encouraged me to make the novena.
+
+ "The 2d of February, Feast of the Purification, the first
+ day of the novena and one ever memorable for me, I was taken
+ to church in a carriage; my daughter, sole confidante of my
+ intentions, assisted me to the Blessed Virgin's altar, where,
+ after hearing Mass as well as my infirmity would permit, I
+ received Holy Communion. Scarcely had I knelt to make an act
+ of adoration, when I was obliged to take my seat. A Sister of
+ Charity, whom I did not know was there, for I had not hoped to
+ receive the medal just yet, put it on my neck. Immediately,
+ I got on my knees to beg the Mother of the afflicted to
+ intercede with her divine Son for the restoration of my health,
+ should He foresee that it would be conducive to God's glory and
+ her honor, to my salvation and the happiness of my husband and
+ children. Scarcely had I pronounced a few words, petitioning
+ our Lord to graciously hear His holy Mother's prayer, ere Mary
+ had interceded and God in His great mercy had hearkened; I was
+ cured, Madame, entirely cured.... I finished all the prayers
+ of thanksgiving after Communion and those of the novena on my
+ knees, and, without experiencing the slightest inconvenience,
+ my malady had disappeared and I have never felt the slightest
+ symptom of it since. I walked, unassisted, to the church door,
+ sent away the carriage and returned home on foot.
+
+ "I have given you a detail of the facts, but to express the
+ feelings that filled my heart on re-entering my house would be
+ impossible; my joy, my astonishment, were boundless; I could
+ hardly realize it myself. Cured in an instant! The thought was
+ overpowering! It seemed as if I must be in a dream, but my
+ husband's astonishment, my mother's, and that of the servants,
+ who, seeing the great change wrought in me, although they were
+ ignorant of the means, could not forbear exclaiming: 'But a
+ miracle must have been worked upon you!' convinced me that I
+ was not asleep.
+
+ "Since that time I walk as well as any one; scarcely was my
+ novena finished ere I could go from one end of the city to the
+ other. It has not been six weeks since my cure, and I have
+ already walked more than three miles at a time, and could have
+ accomplished twice as much. You see, Madame and dear friend,
+ that the miracle is a most striking one.
+
+ "I now beg of you, as well as all other pious souls, to unite
+ heartily with me in thanking God and His august Mother.
+
+ "Your ever devoted
+ "ELIS. M. DARBEAUMONT LEBON."
+
+The physician's certificate ends thus: "Whatever may have been the
+cause of a cure, heretofore regarded as impossible by all the doctors
+who attended Mme. Lebon, it should be considered none the less certain
+and positive, for the evidence of the fact is indubitable.
+
+"Wherefore, I sign the present attestation, which I declare sincere and
+true.
+
+ "FOURNIER, Doctor.
+"_Dampierre, March 19, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT AT SMYRNA AND CONSTANTINOPLE.
+
+Extract of a letter from M. Le Leu, Lazarist missionary:
+
+ "_Constantinople, March 16, 1835._
+
+ "It has been a long time since I proposed writing you something
+ about the medal. In my eyes, one of the greatest miracles it
+ has ever worked is the rapidity of its propagation and the
+ confidence it inspires. By our demands upon you for medals, you
+ may judge of their effect in this country. We could dispose
+ of thousands and yet not satisfy the innumerable calls we
+ have for them. At Smyrna, it is the same. We had occasion to
+ send a few into the interior of Asia, and the Blessed Virgin
+ showed herself no less powerful or beneficent there than in
+ Europe. At Angora, an old man was deprived of the use of all
+ his limbs, and had neither walked nor worked for years; he
+ lived in frightful poverty, and sighed for death, for he was
+ especially grieved at being so long a burden upon a family in
+ indigent circumstances. (In this country there are numbers of
+ Armenian families very devoted to the Blessed Virgin, and this
+ was one of them.) He had no sooner heard of the Miraculous
+ Medal, than he solicited the happiness of obtaining and wearing
+ it. In these countries the Faith has retained its primitive
+ simplicity; this recipient of a medal does not content himself
+ with praying before it, or hanging it around his neck, but he
+ kisses it with profound respect and applies it to the affected
+ part; the Blessed Virgin cannot resist such confidence, and the
+ good old man instantly recovers the use of his limbs--he now
+ works and supports himself.
+
+ "Here is another incident: A young woman belonging to a
+ respectable and very pious family had, for a long time, been
+ a prey to a disease, the nature of which neither the French,
+ Greek nor Turkish physicians could understand. Its symptoms
+ were most violent pains in the side, which prevented her
+ walking, eating or sleeping, and which sometimes disappeared,
+ only to return with renewed violence. Having heard of our
+ medal, this lady felt interiorly urged to employ it for her
+ recovery, but believing herself unworthy of obtaining a direct
+ miracle, she besought the Blessed Virgin to enlighten the
+ physician and make known to him the proper remedy. Thereupon,
+ she went to the country. At the end of several days, she was
+ astonished to see her physician, who exclaimed as soon as he
+ saw her: 'Madame, good news! I have found the remedy for your
+ disease. I am sure of it; in a few days you will be perfectly
+ well. I do not know why it is, but your case has constantly
+ occupied my mind since your departure, and by a careful study
+ of it I have at last discovered the cause of the disease and
+ the manner of treating it.' The lady recognized at once that
+ this knowledge came from above, and she had not implored Mary
+ in vain. To-day she is in excellent health. It was from the
+ mouth of her mother I received these details. 'O Monsieur,'
+ exclaimed this good mother, 'how happy I am at my poor
+ daughter's recovery! It is the Blessed Virgin who has restored
+ her to me. If you could only get me a few more of these medals;
+ I am overwhelmed with requests for them.' The physician himself
+ published the details I have just given. So persuaded is he of
+ the efficacy of the medal that he calls it his final remedy,
+ and advises his patients to wear it whenever he is at a loss
+ concerning their malady. And the Blessed Virgin has rewarded
+ his faith; for one of his own daughters, a most pious person,
+ but in miserable health, has just experienced its beneficial
+ effects.
+
+ "I could mention numberless other incidents, as many
+ conversions as cures, but one more will suffice for to-day.
+ Not long ago the mother of a family had every symptom of an
+ attack of apoplexy; she had already lost consciousness, when
+ her son, a very pious young man, who wore one of these medals,
+ took it off his neck and put it around hers. He then ran for a
+ doctor and a priest. On reaching the house they were all three
+ astonished to find that she had quite recovered. That evening
+ the son asked his mother for the medal, and she returned it,
+ but a moment after was stricken with another attack. The
+ protection of the Blessed Virgin seemed to have been withdrawn
+ with this sign of her power. He immediately put the medal on
+ her neck again, this time to remain, and she has been well ever
+ since.
+
+ "Oh! do not delay, I beg you, in sending us the medals we have
+ asked of you."
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF AN OLD MAN AT CASTERA-LES-BAINS.
+
+NOTE.--These details are sent us and attested by M. Bellos,
+clerk of registration at Auch, and by other very reliable persons.
+
+ "In the early part of March, 1835, an old man in the parish of
+ Castera-les-Bains (Gers), fell dangerously ill. The venerable
+ parish priest, M. Barere, hastened to visit him, hoping he
+ might persuade the poor creature to cast himself into those
+ arms that were extended on the cross for all sinners. Our
+ patient, who had not been to confession for long years,
+ received him like an infidel as he was, refused all religious
+ assistance, and ended by saying: 'M. cure, I would rather
+ lose my speech than comply with your wishes!' The charitable
+ pastor retiring, though very reluctantly, now thought of the
+ Miraculous Medal he wore, and, taking it off, gave it to one
+ of the household with instructions to put it in the patient's
+ bed; advising, however, in case the ruse were discovered, no
+ allusion to the subject, so as to spare the unhappy one all
+ occasion of invective against religion. But, oh! marvelous
+ to relate! a little while after, the dying man awakens as if
+ from a profound slumber, and earnestly begs that the cure
+ be sent for to hear his confession. At this news, the good
+ pastor flies to his lost sheep, who receives him with every
+ expression of joy, begs his pardon, and asks to receive the
+ Sacrament of Penance. It would be superfluous for us to dwell
+ at length upon the sentiments and language of the charitable
+ minister of religion. He was so touched by his penitent's
+ dispositions, that he did not hesitate to take him the Holy
+ Viaticum next morning. Many of the faithful accompanied the
+ Blessed Sacrament to the sick man's chamber; confessing again,
+ he abjured his errors before all the assistants, and earnestly
+ entreated them to pardon the scandal his past conduct had
+ given them. Every one was affected to tears, and it was in
+ the midst of this universal emotion that he received the good
+ God, with the deepest sentiments of humility and compunction,
+ and recommending himself to the prayers of all present. In the
+ course of the following night, fearing he might be carried
+ off by a spell of weakness, he requested Extreme Unction, and
+ received it with the same evidences of faith and piety. This
+ conversion was followed by his perfect recovery, and the good
+ old man now blesses Divine Providence, which, through Mary's
+ protection, rescued him from the borders of a frightful abyss
+ into which his infidelity would have plunged him forever.
+
+ "The undersigned, who got these details from the mouth of
+ the cure of Castera, vouches for their authenticity. He has
+ neither added to nor taken from them in the slightest, knowing
+ full well that the Blessed Virgin has no need of falsehoods
+ to prove her power and goodness. It is, then, on his word of
+ conscience he gives this fact, which none of the inhabitants of
+ Castera and the neighboring country would deny, even were he
+ incredulous."
+
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE MORVILLIERS, ACKNOWLEDGED AS MIRACULOUS BY ALL THE
+PARISH.
+
+ "_Hangest_ (_Somme_).
+
+ "I have mentioned to you the cure wrought by the Miraculous
+ Medal upon a person aged fifty years; the fact is
+ incontestable. Rosalie Morvilliers, the recipient of this
+ favor, had never been free from suffering since her seventh
+ year; an affection of the nerves caused almost constant
+ palpitations of the heart and severe headaches, which, however,
+ did not hinder her performing some slight work without
+ aggravating the malady. But about five years ago, she was
+ afflicted by an unmistakable attack of epilepsy, which threw
+ her family into the greatest consternation. Henceforth, she was
+ obliged to keep her bed, and saw no one but her most intimate
+ friends; the very sight of a face that was not familiar was
+ sufficient to throw her into dreadful convulsions for several
+ hours. Independent of any external cause, these paroxysms
+ usually came on three times a day, and so violent were they,
+ that it was with great difficulty she could be kept in her
+ room; she uttered most frightful cries, her features were
+ horribly distorted, her mouth covered with foam, and, indeed,
+ according to the testimony of those who usually witnessed the
+ attacks, it was some time before she regained consciousness.
+
+ "Such was her condition when some one gave her a Miraculous
+ Medal. She received it with the greatest confidence, and
+ immediately applied it to that part of her head where the
+ pain was most acute; the pain disappeared immediately. From
+ that moment she felt urged to make a novena in honor of the
+ Immaculate Conception for the cure of her epilepsy. But
+ diffidence in mentioning the matter to her director made her
+ defer the execution of this pious design six weeks. At length,
+ she yielded to her desires, saying she felt fully persuaded
+ that this novena would ensure her recovery through the Blessed
+ Virgin's intercession, and her confidence was not misplaced.
+ The cure immediately began the novena, engaging in it the
+ sodality of the Holy Family. Whilst at Mass on the morning of
+ the last day, the 17th of Mary's month, the patient was seized
+ with the most violent attack possible, the worst she had ever
+ had, although during the novena, the paroxysms had increased
+ in intensity. Suddenly it ceases. A number of persons begin to
+ pray and recite the chaplet; the patient, regarding them with
+ a smile, gently falls asleep. A few minutes after, she opens
+ her eyes and exclaims: 'I am cured! I am cured! The Blessed
+ Virgin has just cured me of epilepsy! Oh! how good she is, how
+ powerful! It seems to me as if there had just been a general
+ revolution throughout my body. I feel confident, my friends,
+ that this disease has been banished from my system forever.'
+
+ "It was very easy for the assistants to believe that some
+ extraordinary change had really been wrought in her, for her
+ countenance presented not the slightest vestige of the attack.
+ She now desired to communicate, and oh! with what transports of
+ faith, gratitude and love she received the good God!
+
+ "The noise of this cure soon reached the neighboring villages.
+ How beautiful yet, Monsieur, is the simplicity of the faith in
+ these rural districts! Henceforth, every one wished to wear the
+ medal.
+
+ "This event took place on the 17th of May, at nine o'clock
+ in the morning. Since that time the patient has not felt the
+ slightest symptom of epilepsy. She leaves her room, walks about
+ the garden, and receives visitors indiscriminately, without
+ experiencing any ill effects. However, the Blessed Virgin
+ did not cure all her infirmities; she still has the nervous
+ affection that existed before the epileptic attacks, but I
+ should observe that as the novena was made solely for the cure
+ of epilepsy, the Blessed Virgin has obtained all that was asked
+ of her.
+
+ "This, Monsieur, is the exact statement. Some, no doubt, would
+ attribute the cure to natural causes; as for ourselves, we,
+ like the patient, feel convinced that it was owing to Mary's
+ powerful intercession. The cure agrees with us, and so do all
+ who glory in the truths of religion. Honored, then, be the
+ power and goodness of Mary conceived without sin!"
+
+
+CURE OF A DAUGHTER OF CHARITY AND ANOTHER PERSON (DIOCESE OF MOULINS).
+
+The following letter was sent by a gentleman of unquestionable veracity
+to the _Journal du Bourbonnais_, and published in its issue of June 6,
+1835:
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "We are all Mary's children; at the foot of her Divine Son's
+ cross did her maternal heart adopt us as her own. All ages
+ have felt the salutary effects of her powerful protection; our
+ fathers have admired them, we ourselves admire them, and our
+ days are filled with marvels. Even recently has she appeared,
+ shedding torrents of grace upon a privileged kingdom, and this
+ kingdom is France. The vision is verified, for the age which
+ saw it has also witnessed the multiplication of countless
+ miraculous cures and conversions.
+
+ "And shall Bourbonnais, our dear country, be excepted in the
+ distribution of Mary's favors? Oh! no; it also shall have a
+ share in this harvest of glory. The truly astonishing rapidity
+ with which the thousand Miraculous Medals brought to our city
+ have been disposed of is to me a sufficient guaranty of our
+ hopes, and it would keep one's pen in daily use to note the
+ wonderful traits of Mary's protection.
+
+ "1st. Sister Chapin, of St. Joseph's Hospital, was for more
+ than two years racked by pains and a fever that defied all
+ medical skill.
+
+ "This angel of earth lamented her inability to fulfil the
+ duties of her noble vocation; far from abating, her charity,
+ zeal and resignation seemed to increase with her gradually
+ declining health, which now excited our serious fears. Having
+ vainly exhausted all the resources of medicine, she turned her
+ back upon art and nature that she might address herself to
+ faith alone. Full of confidence in the Miraculous Medal, she
+ began a novena to Mary for the recovery of her health. Before
+ the novena was ended, both pains and fever had disappeared, and
+ henceforth, she began a new existence, her strength returned,
+ and she is happy to prove herself by deeds (fulfilling with
+ ease the most painful duties) what her virtues have ever
+ proclaimed her, a true daughter of St. Vincent de Paul.
+
+ "2nd. Yesterday, again, was witnessed in our Bourbonnais,
+ another wonderful trait of Mary's protection. Here are the
+ facts: On Monday, June 1st, at eight o'clock in the evening,
+ in the parish of Montilly, near the borders of Allier and the
+ castle of Beau-Regard, a woman was stricken with a violent
+ rush of blood to the head; the lamentations and piercing cries
+ of the family attracted their neighbors. Two alarming crises
+ succeeded; they were followed by a third, which was thought to
+ be mortal. The patient, after violently struggling against the
+ combined efforts of four men to restrain her, fell motionless
+ and apparently lifeless; her limbs were stiff and chill, her
+ face a livid blue, her features distorted, her eyes fixed, her
+ respiration insensible, death seemed imminent. This frightful
+ attack had lasted about half an hour, when some one present
+ thought of the Miraculous Medal; she approaches the dying woman
+ and lays the medal upon her lips. At that instant the latter
+ arouses from her slumber, she breathes, she clasps her hands
+ as if thanking the person who had restored her to life she
+ recognizes all around her, speaks to them and thanks them for
+ their kind attentions.
+
+ "The next morning, Tuesday, it was not at the gates of death
+ she was to be found, but in the streets of Moulins, where I saw
+ her myself and spoke to her.
+
+ "Pardon me, O divine Mary, if among a thousand striking
+ traits of your power and goodness, I dwell upon some which
+ are comparatively slight, it is only because of their recent
+ occurrence in our very midst. Happy shall I esteem myself to
+ awaken among my brethren a passing tribute to Faith, that
+ living, salutary Faith, whose efficacy I have experienced, and
+ whose truths I long to see planted and nourished in all hearts!
+
+ "Deign to accord, etc."
+
+We have learned that Sister Chapin's recovery is permanent.
+
+
+CURE OF MARIE LACROIX (DIOCESE OF LANGRES).
+
+NOTE.--It is M. Barillot, Vicar General, who sends us this
+account:
+
+ "_Bishopric of Langres, June 20, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "M. Regnault, cure of Ormoy, canton of Chateau-Villain, in our
+ diocese, an excellent pastor and judicious priest, writes me
+ the subjoined letter of the 19th inst.:
+
+ "'A very extraordinary thing has just taken place in my
+ parish. A young woman aged twenty went blind in consequence
+ of a fall; her hip was displaced, and she lost all use of
+ her limbs, except the arms. For three months she was at a
+ hospital of Bar-sur-Aube, under treatment for these severe
+ afflictions, but in vain. At last, judging her case hopeless,
+ the physicians sent her back to her parents at Ormoy. Here,
+ as at Bar-sur-Aube, she endured for three months incredible
+ sufferings, not even being able to turn herself in bed or
+ change her position in the slightest. Her recovery was now
+ despaired of by all, and lately the minister received a
+ petition (with the accompanying certificates of the two
+ physicians who had attended her at Bar-sur-Aube) asking her
+ admission into the hospital of Quinze-Vingts. Meanwhile,
+ this young woman, who had always appeared to me very pious
+ and submissive to God's will, having received a Miraculous
+ Medal, immediately begins a novena. Seven days elapse, and
+ her sufferings, far from diminishing, are intensified; on the
+ eighth she is bathed in a profuse perspiration, after which she
+ suddenly rises, dresses herself, and walks through the streets
+ to church, to the great astonishment of all the people, who,
+ seeing her, cannot restrain their tears.
+
+ "'I questioned her closely, but did not express my opinion
+ on the subject. I went to Bar-sur-Aube to get additional
+ information; the physician declares it astonishing, especially
+ when we consider her former hopeless condition. The hospital
+ Sisters, the cures of Bar-sur-Aube, the patients, all say it is
+ truly a miracle. The people of Ormoy and even of the vicinity,
+ who come to see her, wonder that I do not mention it from the
+ pulpit. I beg of you to let me know how to act in the affair,
+ and also that you will speak to the Bishop about it.'
+
+ "The Bishop has since sent word through me to the cure
+ of Ormoy, to publish this miraculous occurrence to his
+ parishioners; he has also charged me with forwarding you a copy
+ of the good cure's letter, leaving to your discretion the use
+ you may make of it.
+
+ "I am, etc.,
+
+ "BARILLOT, Canon, Vicar General."
+
+Before printing this, we wished to ascertain if the cure were
+permanent, and the Vicar General sent us the following response from
+the cure of Ormoy:
+
+ "The cure is permanent; for several months past the young
+ woman has been with the Ursulines of La Chapelle, who consider
+ her physically able to share in the labors of the house; her
+ condition having been attested by three doctors. Her sudden
+ recovery, as above mentioned, leads us to believe that it was
+ surely supernatural. I was far from meriting this favor which
+ has been granted my poor parish. I hope the Blessed Virgin will
+ finish her work.
+
+ "_November 3, 1835._"
+
+
+CURES WROUGHT IN THE CHABLAIS DISTRICT (SAVOY).
+
+ "_The Borders of Lake Geneva, June 18, 1835._
+
+ "_Monsieur_:
+
+ "The country purged of Calvin's heresy by the labors of
+ Geneva's holy bishop, is not a stranger to the blessings
+ figured by the medal's mysterious rays. This wonderful
+ instrument of Mary's liberality has been propagated with
+ astonishing rapidity, though only a few months since we heard
+ of it in our midst. I consider it a pious obligation to offer
+ you a few small stones towards the construction of that temple
+ of glory now in process of erection, to the honor of her,
+ who has lately proved herself more powerful and merciful on
+ earth than ever before. I am a young villager living amidst my
+ family; I do not announce miracles to you, but merely recount
+ facts just as I have seen or heard them. I could have subjoined
+ a list of signatures, but I did not judge it necessary, the
+ docile, religious heart deeming them superfluous, and the
+ skeptic, fraudulent, like the facts. On a perusal of the first
+ few phrases in each incident, persons living in the vicinity
+ will recognize the individuals concerned, and thereby be more
+ deeply impressed.
+
+ "1st. In the month of July, 1824, Mlle. C., aged twenty-nine
+ years, bade, as she thought, a last adieu to her family; she
+ and some other generous companions were going to one of the
+ large cities in southern Italy to consecrate themselves there
+ to the service of the sick and poor. After a few months'
+ novitiate in a religious house devoted to works of this nature,
+ she was attacked by one of those debilitating, wasting maladies
+ that physicians are at a loss to define. Attributing it to the
+ climate, the Superiors, after twenty-two months' ineffectual
+ treatment at the novitiate, sent her to breathe her natal
+ air. But change of air proved vain also, and the doctors at
+ last ceased their visits, judging the re-establishment of
+ her health an impossibility. About six years ago, she had
+ improved sufficiently to walk a few steps beyond her chamber,
+ and even remain in the open air some minutes, but amelioration
+ was illusory, and since 1830 she had not been able to leave
+ her couch of suffering except for a few instants. Many times
+ during these last five years was she apparently on the verge
+ of death, and that for several consecutive days, always,
+ however, retaining her hearing and intellectual faculties,
+ since she could respond by signs to the priest who visited
+ her. It was he who gave me these particulars. Her condition
+ had become such that it was judged advisable to administer the
+ Last Sacraments. This house was now a school of edification,
+ where Christians might study the price of sufferings and the
+ heroism of patience. Finally, about the end of last April,
+ this poor creature, so tortured for the past eleven years,
+ conceived a hope of relief through the Miraculous Medal,
+ but, mistrusting the somewhat extraordinary impressions the
+ thought made upon her imagination, it was only from obedience
+ she could be induced to commence a novena. The sole exercises
+ consisted of repeating, three times a day, the invocation: 'O
+ Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to
+ thee!' On Wednesday, April 24th, the second or third day of
+ the novena, she felt an irresistible desire to arise. It was
+ yet very early in the morning; a little child assisted her
+ to dress. Finding that her limbs support her, she begins to
+ think it must be something miraculous, and, filled with joy,
+ she wishes to announce the news to her mother, who is in an
+ adjoining room. Arrived at the door, she is seized with fright,
+ and precipitately turns back; but, being reassured of her newly
+ restored strength by the facility with which she reaches her
+ own chamber, she overcomes herself, and, retracing her steps,
+ seeks the embraces of her mother, her sister and brother.
+ Her unexpected appearance fills them with great emotion, and
+ abundant tears attest the depths of their joy and gratitude. A
+ clergyman, who often visited this lady, soon heard rumors of
+ her recovery, but gave no credit to them. Meeting her mother
+ on the street not long after, she burst into tears at sight
+ of him, and was unable to express the cause of her emotion.
+ Suspecting it, he went immediately to the house, and saw for
+ himself what a miracle had been wrought. With Mlle. C., he
+ unites in blessing her powerful protectress, the Immaculate
+ Mary.
+
+ "Since that time, April 24, to the present date, June 18th,
+ Mlle. C. rises about seven o'clock, hears Mass on her knees,
+ employs herself in various duties during the day, makes visits
+ and walks of half an hour's or even an hour's duration, and
+ continues well, even her complexion begins to assume a healthy
+ tinge. Her legs are still a little swollen, and she cannot yet
+ take much nourishment.
+
+ "The sudden appearance of this person, whom every one had
+ known to be seriously afflicted for eleven years, created an
+ extraordinary sensation. All eyes were fixed upon her, and many
+ persons even followed her. This took place in the capital of
+ the province.
+
+ "2d. In the month of August, 1833, my sister, at the sight of
+ a child who barely missed falling through an open trap door,
+ was suddenly attacked by frightful nervous convulsions, which
+ henceforth returned daily, and even as often as fifteen times
+ a day. It was only at the end of two months that remedies, and
+ a four weeks' strict hospital treatment, succeeded in checking
+ them. Last year, they manifested themselves again in the month
+ of February, but disappeared, leaving her a prey to great
+ weakness, and a fever that kept her in bed four weeks.
+
+ "In the February of this year, the nervous convulsions
+ returned, and with a frequency and force that were truly
+ alarming. The patient wasted visibly, the paroxysms were
+ renewed seven and ten times a day, and were of a most frightful
+ character; the circulation of her blood seemed checked, her
+ feet and hands were deathly chilled, she jerked her head with
+ violence and precipitation, an agitated cry escaped her breast;
+ the attack lasted from three to six minutes, and left her
+ completely exhausted. The witnesses of this painful spectacle
+ were affected to tears. She was taken to a skillful physician,
+ who after seeing her in one of these convulsions, pronounced
+ the case hopeless, saying, 'it baffled him, he could not
+ understand it.' However, he prescribed remedies. Meanwhile, the
+ first medals arrived in our midst. On Shrove Tuesday, my sister
+ had five attacks, which she assured me were the worst she had
+ ever had. Next day, wearing the medal, she began a novena, and
+ the two convulsions she had that day were the last; never since
+ has she felt the slightest symptom (and that without employing
+ the prescribed remedies), neither has she had a sign of the
+ fever, which last year replaced the less violent convulsions.
+ This cure was wrought in an insensible, but very efficacious
+ manner, the first day of a novena made through the medal. My
+ sister immediately resumed the manifold duties of a laborious
+ household. She attributes, and we also, her recovery to Mary
+ alone. Thousands of times be love and glory to this good Mother!
+
+ "3d. In the Chablais district, on the frontiers of the canton
+ of Geneva, lived a poor widow, the mother of quite a large
+ family. This good woman, about sixty years old, had a natural
+ predisposition to paralysis. At the age of forty-eight, an
+ attack of this disease deprived her of the use of her left
+ arm. At intervals since then, she has had spells of illness
+ so serious and so protracted, that at least a hundred times
+ she seemed on the verge of the tomb. She never consulted a
+ physician, but animated with a lively, persevering faith, she
+ employed only supernatural means. 'God and the Saints are the
+ only good doctors,' she would say, and 'God and the Saints'
+ rewarded her confidence. She has recovered from these hopeless
+ maladies in an extraordinary manner. On the first of last
+ March, her left foot lost the power of supporting her body
+ in walking, doubtless owing to her natural predisposition to
+ paralysis. Persons informed on the subject have given the
+ following description of the convulsive movements of this poor
+ woman's foot: suspended, it preserved its natural position, but
+ on putting it to the ground, it immediately lost its balance;
+ her body was bent, her knee turned out, the sole of her foot
+ exposed, and the left side of her foot was the foundation of
+ support for the left limb in walking. She went thus to church,
+ distant about four minutes' walk; but even in that short space
+ of time, the convulsive movements of the foot were sometimes
+ such that she was not able to keep her balance, but fell to
+ the ground. Every one pitied her, she was always calm and
+ perfectly resigned. Her children had made for her an iron
+ brace which reached to the knee, but after a trial, she was
+ obliged to discard it, the remedy causing more suffering than
+ the disease. During the Lenten season, some charitable persons
+ advised her to seek Mary's assistance through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The good widow did so, and wore her medal with the
+ utmost confidence. On Holy Saturday, she perceived that her
+ foot had become steady; the next day, Easter, without any
+ remedies having been used, it resumed its natural position, and
+ since that time, though a little weaker than the right, not
+ once has it given way or turned. She attributes her recovery to
+ the Blessed Virgin, whom she invoked by wearing the medal, so
+ justly styled miraculous.
+
+ "I could cite many other less striking cases; one time it is a
+ hardy peasant who attributes to Mary's intercession relief from
+ violent pains; another time, a little child, who in a few days,
+ is completely cured of a large tumor under its arm, accompanied
+ by fever; a mother who tells me how her daughter's ill health
+ is sensibly improved by the application of the medal; or a
+ Protestant girl, who, after wearing it, abjures heresy, etc.
+ Nearly all the children of our village wear the Miraculous
+ Medal around their neck, they recite the invocation, they kiss
+ the precious image and give it to their little sisters and
+ brothers in the cradle to kiss.
+
+
+III.
+
+_Graces obtained from 1836 to 1838 in France, Italy, Holland, etc._
+
+
+CONVERSION AND CURE OF M. GAETAN (BOULOGNE).
+
+This account was sent me by the cure of Boulogne, February 8, 1836.
+
+ "In my parish, a young man named Gaetan U---, aged twenty-seven
+ years, was leading a life of criminal intimacy with a woman.
+ Several years after abandoning his mother and brother, that he
+ might be under no restraint in his shameless course, he was
+ prostrated by a serious pulmonary attack. M. Jean Pulioli, an
+ excellent physician, undertook the case; but the violence or
+ the disease overcame his skill, and the patient (still in the
+ house of the bad character with whom he lived,) was reduced to
+ such a deplorable state of exhaustion, that he could not move
+ himself. From the beginning of his sickness he had insisted
+ that he would not be worried by a priest. But the disease
+ making very rapid progress, the doctor believed it his duty to
+ warn a priest of his condition. My chaplain went immediately
+ to see him, and earnestly entreated him to put an end to this
+ scandalous state of affairs by marrying the woman, but all in
+ vain. I then paid him a visit, and besides remarking in him
+ neither any intention of marrying her nor of separating from
+ her, I perceived from the excuses he gave, that his soul was
+ enshrouded in impenetrable indifference. Having uselessly
+ exhausted all efforts to effect a change, I concluded it would
+ be better to leave him awhile to quiet and serious reflection,
+ and return later to know his decision. I urged him to seek
+ the mediation of that refuge of sinners, the Blessed Virgin,
+ and slipping the Miraculous Medal under his pillow, I left.
+ There was no necessity for my returning to learn his decision,
+ he sent his mother for me, with whom he had become reconciled
+ in the meantime; after informing me of the very just reasons
+ he had for not marrying the woman, he asked me if I would
+ not request her to leave, a commission I willingly accepted.
+ She consented, and immediately abandoned the house. The sick
+ man's peace and joy at this were indescribable; when I showed
+ him the medal, he kissed it most fervently and impulsively,
+ notwithstanding his state of exhaustion. Then, with every mark
+ of sincere repentance, he confessed, received the Holy Viaticum
+ and Extreme Unction, for we expected each moment he would
+ breathe his last. This occurred January 19, 1836. Interiorly,
+ he enjoyed unspeakable peace, a favor he always attributed to
+ the Blessed Virgin. From this time he began to improve, and
+ in a few days his health was completely re-established. He
+ continues to persevere in his good resolutions, and full of the
+ tenderest affection for his celestial Benefactress, he still
+ reverently wears the medal I gave him, often kissing it with
+ truly filial love.
+
+ "Monsieur, I was a witness of the above-mentioned fact; I send
+ it to you, not only with the permission of the newly converted
+ and cured, but at his request, and I hope that the knowledge
+ will redound to the honor and glory of the Omnipotent God, who,
+ through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin, has wrought
+ this double miracle.
+
+ "I subjoin the certificate of the physician who attests the
+ disease and its cure."
+
+
+CURE OF A JUDGE AT NAPLES.
+
+The judge of the civil tribunal of Naples, M. Joseph Cocchia, seriously
+debilitated by a chronic disease of the bowels, was afflicted with most
+violent pains, accompanied by a spasmodic sensation that, continually
+increasing, banished sleep and appetite, and perceptibly diminished
+his frame. This was followed by a bilious gastric fever, long and
+obstinate, of fifty days duration. When freed from the fever, the sick
+man found himself in a frightful state of emaciation and exhaustion;
+signs of inflammation in the bowels, and such extreme irritation that
+the least jolt induced fever, made skillful physicians fear lest these
+were the symptoms of an incurable malady still more deplorable. Whilst
+in this pitiable condition, there reached the sick man's ears accounts
+of the prodigies Divine mercy had wrought in favor of those who wore
+the medal; he eagerly asked for one, and received it with faith;
+henceforth, he had no longer any need of medical assistance, for he
+recovered the strength and perfect health he now enjoys.
+
+
+CURE OF F.P. DE MAGISTRIS.
+
+M.F. Paul de Magistris, aged seven years, was attacked about the
+middle of November, 1835, by a bilious gastric fever, which, by reason
+of accompanying circumstances, threatened to shorten his life. After
+three weeks' illness, his nervous system was also attacked, and he
+became a prey to a state of profound drowsiness that resulted in the
+loss of reason and speech. His afflicted parents, seeing the obstinacy
+of the disease, notwithstanding all efforts of medical skill to the
+contrary, considered the case hopeless, and their child lost to them.
+On the evening of January 9th, the cure administered Extreme Unction,
+believing, as did all the assistants, that the little sufferer had but
+a few hours to live. A young person, who came to the house, having
+mentioned the Miraculous Medal brought from France by the priests of
+the Congregation of the Mission, it was immediately procured, and,
+with confidence in its healing powers, applied to the child, whilst
+all present knelt around his bed and recited the _Ave Maris Stella_.
+Scarcely had they finished, ere he was considered out of danger. With
+renewed confidence in the medal, it was resolved to begin a novena
+in honor of the Blessed Virgin. During its progress, the disease
+diminished perceptibly, and the child has now entirely recovered. Its
+parents, as well as other persons of credit and veracity, among them
+the attendant physician, attest that, having witnessed his deplorable
+condition, they feel convinced his recovery was a miracle, resulting
+from the application of the medal.
+
+_February 22, 1836._
+
+
+CURE OF A DROPSICAL MAN (SWITZERLAND).
+
+ "_Soleure, January 19th, 1836._
+
+ "Baptiste, a wood sawyer, whom you knew during your sojourn
+ in this city, was confined to his bed two whole months by
+ an attack of the severest form of dropsy on the chest. One
+ of our best physicians, who attended him at the beginning
+ of his sickness, having told Baptiste's wife that the case
+ was a hopeless one, the family decided to consult another,
+ M. Gougelmann, at Attyswill, a league from Soleure. After
+ seeing the patient, he also gave the same opinion, and the
+ poor wife's distress was beyond expression. A pious lady,
+ witnessing her grief, gave her a Miraculous Medal. The sick
+ man's arms, legs, and whole body were greatly swollen. His
+ breath was short, and he had scarcely any power of motion; his
+ back, and his elbows upon which he was obliged to lean, were a
+ mass of sores. In this pitiable state, death might be expected
+ any moment. His confessor having come to visit him, brought
+ the Notice of the miracles wrought through the Miraculous
+ Medal. The sick man on receiving it began to read it aloud,
+ greatly to the astonishment of his wife and the priest, who
+ were both witnesses that he had been almost past the power
+ of speech but a few minutes before. And he continued reading
+ thus until he had finished the little book (it was one of the
+ first editions). This was the evening of January 19. His wife,
+ overcome with fatigue, fell asleep for a few moments, his
+ children were in an adjoining room expecting at any instant to
+ hear the sad news of their father's death. He slept a little
+ towards three o'clock in the morning, and on awaking found
+ himself so well that it was impossible to resist the desire of
+ rising from his bed and throwing himself on his knees before a
+ crucifix, in thanksgiving to Our Lord and His divine Mother.
+ His wife awoke, and not seeing him in bed, called to know where
+ he was. 'I am well; the Blessed Virgin has cured me,' was the
+ answer of Baptiste, whom she perceived kneeling before the
+ crucifix. The children, hearing the noise, hastened to their
+ father's presence, believing him about to breathe his last,
+ but judge of their surprise at finding him restored to health,
+ and his sores perfectly healed! Imagine, if you can, the joy
+ of this poor family, and the happy effects the news of this
+ wondrous cure produced upon the many who heard it. Baptiste has
+ had excellent health ever since."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF FRANCOIS WENMAKERS, OF BOIS-LE-DUC (HOLLAND).
+
+The _Noord Brabander_, a Holland journal, printed at Bois-le-Duc,
+contains in number 68 the following account of an extraordinary cure,
+which is attributed to the Blessed Virgin:
+
+ "_Bois-le Duc, June 6th, 1836._
+
+ "The 25th of last April, Francois Wenmakers, a young
+ apprentice, aged fourteen years, fell from a height of
+ about sixteen feet. An affection of the brain and an almost
+ complete paralysis of the lungs, larynx and oesophagus were
+ the result; he was not in a condition to take any medicine
+ into his stomach, or even to swallow the least liquid, and he
+ was deprived of consciousness. One of the physicians, feeling
+ worried at his fixed stare, advised the administration of
+ Extreme Unction; and yet another, the eve of his recovery,
+ declared him on the verge of death. The sick man moreover,
+ had become nearly blind the last few days. On the 1st of May,
+ advantage was taken of a lucid interval, to give him the Holy
+ Viaticum; and on the 4th of the same month, he received Extreme
+ Unction from one of the chaplains of St. Jean. His parents, who
+ immediately after his fall, had hung a medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception around his neck, seeing there was now no hope of his
+ recovery, except in the divine goodness and the intercession
+ of the Blessed Virgin, began, on the 16th of May, a novena in
+ honor of the Mother of God. Three days after, about six o'clock
+ in the morning, the patient suddenly asked his mother if the
+ medal around his neck were blessed. She answered yes, regarding
+ the question as the effect of delirium. He immediately
+ kissed it, and sat up for the first time since the fall, for
+ heretofore he had been stretched out helpless on the bed, and,
+ for some days past, had been deprived of the use of his limbs.
+ 'Something tells me,' he exclaimed, 'that I must get up, that
+ I am cured!' The astonishment of those present may easily be
+ imagined. The mother called his sisters, who repaired to the
+ room with an elder girl, and they, seeing that he stoutly
+ persisted in declaring himself cured, persuaded his mother to
+ let him rise. He did indeed get up, and pointing to a picture
+ in the room, representing the medal, he said: 'It is this good
+ Mother who has cured me.' From that moment the boy's health was
+ perfectly re-established, and his intellectual faculties were
+ brighter than ever.
+
+ "Reflections here are superfluous. Glory to God and her who
+ thus rewards the confidence of her servants! The parents and
+ their child will ever remember the blessing they have received,
+ and never cease to publish it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF ROSALIE DUCAS, OF JAUCHELETTE (BELGIUM).
+
+Rosalie Ducas, of Jauchelette, near Jodoigne, aged four years and
+a-half, was, on the 9th of November, 1835, suddenly struck with total
+blindness without the slightest premonitory symptoms; there was no
+disease, no weakness, she was in apparently perfect health. Not only
+was the least light, but the least breath of air so painful, that her
+face had to be kept constantly covered with a cloth four doubled. This
+poor child's sufferings night and day, were heart-rending! At last the
+mother herself was taken sick. Some pious individual procured her a
+blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception. She took it and commenced
+a novena. Another medal was put on the child's neck, the 11th of June,
+1836, about six o'clock in the evening; at midnight, the little one
+ceased its moans, on the fourth or fifth day of the novena, it opened
+its eyes. The mother and father redoubled their prayers to the Blessed
+Virgin, and on the ninth day, towards evening, the child recovered its
+sight entirely, to the great astonishment of the neighbors and all who
+were witnesses of the occurrence.
+
+ "The cure of Jodoigne-la-Souveraine, who had given the medal,
+ has himself seen the child who lives not more than half a
+ league distant; he positively asserts that it has perfectly
+ recovered its sight, and that not the slightest vestige of the
+ attack remains, which fact is well known, and contributes not a
+ little in exciting devotion to the Immaculate Mary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSION OF THE FATHER OF A FAMILY (BELGIUM).
+
+ "There are still in existence here some families who,
+ persistently recognizing in the present clergy only a purely
+ civil power, hold themselves utterly aloof, live in a state of
+ schism, and comply with none of the duties of religion.
+
+ "One of these miserable creatures was afflicted with a virulent
+ cancer on the side of his face, which for a long time had been
+ eating away the flesh. The malady increasing, I believed it my
+ duty to visit him and offer the consolations of my ministry.
+ I saw him several times, he was suffering greatly; the
+ oesophagus was exposed, the right side of his emaciated face
+ presented only a deep sore, the eye, starting from its socket,
+ hung suspended over a terrible disfigured mouth; his tongue
+ caused him acute pain; his condition was pitiable indeed,
+ especially as he seemed determined to die impenitent. He was
+ a rough, blunt man, who wanted to hear nothing about priests
+ or Sacraments. In vain was he reminded of our Lord's bountiful
+ kindness and the rigors of His justice, nothing touched
+ him; to all expostulations his invariable reply was: 'God's
+ mercy is great, I will confess to God, the Blessed Virgin,
+ to St. Barbara and the good Saints.' He was the counterpart
+ of those men to whom Jesus Christ said: '_In peccato vestro
+ moriemini_--you shall die in your sin.'
+
+ "His relations and numerous friends endeavored both by prayers
+ and entreaties to snatch him from perdition, but on the other
+ side visited daily and sustained by his old associates in
+ impiety, he persisted in dying as he had lived, in schism.
+
+ "In the meantime, I was obliged to be absent several days. This
+ period was for him one of Divine mercy. A lady of the parish
+ made a last attempt to recall him to God, by bringing him one
+ of those medals of the Immaculate Conception called miraculous.
+ She sent it to him with the request to wear it and put all his
+ confidence in the Blessed Virgin. The sick man took the medal,
+ kissed it respectfully, and put it under his pillow. In giving
+ it to him, his daughter had taken care to acquaint him with
+ its origin and advantages, at the same time urging him, as
+ usual, to make his confession. 'Leave me in peace,' was the
+ wretched father's reply, and she could say no more. Next day,
+ a neighboring cure was sent for to administer Extreme Unction
+ to another person in the parish. He came, and forgetting, as
+ it were, the one for whom he had been sent, he thought only of
+ the cancerous patient. 'I felt,' he afterwards told me, 'an
+ inexplicable and irresistible desire to visit him, I could not
+ have returned without seeing him.' He asks some one to announce
+ his arrival to the sick man; this person speaks to the latter,
+ and urges him to confess. 'The cure of P. is here,' she adds,
+ 'and would like to see you, if you have no objection.' 'Well,
+ yes, let him come.' The cure went to him immediately; at first
+ there was a slight air of resistance about the patient, but it
+ vanished, the hour of grace had come, he confessed with every
+ indication of true repentance, and received Extreme Unction
+ with an indescribable peace and joy, that never faltered during
+ the four remaining days of his life. The Holy Viaticum could
+ not be administered because he was not able to swallow.
+
+ "At noon, on the 18th of last May, the month consecrated to
+ Mary, he died, aged seventy-eight.
+
+ "Except his former companions in irreligion, this conversion
+ was a subject of rejoicing to the parish, and doubtless it
+ will rejoice all the servants of Mary who hear of it. May this
+ example, among thousands, inspire sinners with great confidence
+ in the Blessed Virgin, propagate devotion to her, and multiply
+ the medal styled miraculous!
+
+ "I have thought it a duty to give these few details, for the
+ purpose of making known the truly visible effects of the
+ protection of the Mother of God, and the ever impenetrable
+ springs of grace in regard to man.
+
+ "I have the honor to be, Monsieur, with great esteem, &c."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ANTOINETTE VAN ERTRYCK (BOIS-LE-DUC).
+
+ "The protection of the Blessed Virgin, which for the last few
+ months has shown itself so powerful in a neighboring kingdom,
+ has also wrought wonders in Bois-le-Duc. Mary has here likewise
+ given equal proofs of her maternal bounty when we have implored
+ her intercession.
+
+ "Mlle. Antoinette Van Ertryck, aged twenty-five years, was for
+ more than twenty months deprived of the use of her limbs; they
+ were stiff and paralyzed, almost without feeling, and stretched
+ motionless on a sort of bench made for the express purpose.
+ Medicine afforded no relief. In this sad condition, wearing
+ a blessed medal of the Immaculate Conception, she thought of
+ making a novena in honor of the Feast, to recover her health.
+ On the last day of the novena, she made a fervent communion.
+ Even after the departure of the priest, who came to administer
+ the Blessed Sacrament, there seemed no change for the better,
+ but she felt a shiver through all her body, like the impression
+ often experienced from sudden cold. Just whilst finishing the
+ last prayers, however, she seemed to hear an interior voice
+ saying to her: 'You are cured.' On attempting to move, she
+ found that her limbs had become flexible, and she was able to
+ walk. The miracle was wrought on Saturday, May 16th. The next
+ day, Sunday, she went to church to return thanks for this
+ blessing to the common Mother of all the faithful. The people
+ of our city, always distinguished for their veneration for the
+ Blessed Virgin, and their confidence in her intercession are
+ not wanting in gratitude, and this new favor will but increase
+ their devotion to Mary Immaculate.
+
+ "The duration of the malady, the inutility of medical skill,
+ and her astonishing sudden cure are attested by the doctor.
+
+ "A. BOLSIUS, M.D."
+
+
+CURE OF A YOUNG GIRL AT CRACOW, POLAND.
+
+Extract from a letter of the Countess Lubinska:
+
+ "_March 12th, 1837._
+
+ "I took into my service, the 20th of last December, a young
+ girl whose excellent qualities elicited my deepest interest.
+
+ "After being with me some months, she began to suffer most
+ acute pains in the head; the remedies we employed affording
+ no relief, the attending physician advised her to keep her
+ bed, and did not conceal from her his opinion that these pains
+ proceeded from the humor flowing constantly from her ears, and
+ which seeming to be upon the brain, threatened her life, or at
+ all events, her reason.
+
+ "What confirmed this opinion was the fact that whenever she
+ walked rapidly or stooped, she was forced by the pain to throw
+ her head back, as she assured me various times during her
+ sickness. The continued suffering induced her, at last, to
+ follow the physician's advice, and consent, if necessary, to
+ the operation of trepanning. I shuddered at the very idea, and
+ made her promise to ascertain if a delay of ten days would be
+ attended with any serious consequences. Upon a negative answer
+ from the physician, I stopped all medicines and determined
+ to try the efficacy of the Miraculous Medal. This was on a
+ Saturday, and the very day observed by her as a strict fast,
+ in thanksgiving to the Blessed Virgin for having miraculously
+ cured her of a mortal typhus, after her mother had dedicated
+ her to Mary. Her confidence in Mary was great; and as I did
+ not give her the medal for some hours after promising it,
+ she told one of her friends, as I have since learned, that
+ her impatience to receive it was almost beyond bounds, and
+ assured her that she would not have hesitated between it and
+ two thousand francs had she been allowed a choice, and we
+ must remember that this girl was very poor. To display more
+ clearly the miraculous nature of the cure, God permitted her
+ sufferings to increase to such a degree that very day, that
+ notwithstanding her patience and resignation, it seemed as
+ if she really could not endure them much longer. Knowing her
+ lively faith and confidence, I deemed it unnecessary to enter
+ into a detailed account of the salutary effects of the medal;
+ I gave it to her; she immediately made with it the sign of
+ the cross upon her poor head, repeated the invocation and
+ fell asleep amidst excessive sufferings. On awaking she was
+ perfectly cured, and has never since experienced the slightest
+ symptom of the disease.
+
+ "Filled with sentiments of the deepest humility and the
+ most lively gratitude, the miraculously cured now wishes to
+ consecrate herself to God in the religious life.
+
+ "Blessed a thousand times be God and the Immaculate Mary, and
+ may we ever appreciate such boundless mercy!"
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. REGNAULT, MAYOR OF POITIERS.--1837
+
+The following account was sent us by the abbe of Chazelle:
+
+ "_Poitiers, June 12th, 1837._
+
+ "M. Regnault, mayor of Poitiers, had exercised his functions
+ since the year 1830. In some difficulties, occurring during his
+ administration, with the bishop and several of the clergy, he
+ had shown himself just and equitable. His charity to the poor
+ was well known. But far different are these moral virtues,
+ which generally receive their recompense here below, from the
+ Christian virtues so seldom rewarded, except in a better world!
+ M. Regnault never appeared at church, except when his presence
+ as mayor was necessary. A prey for some time to a grave malady,
+ he continued to exercise his functions as long as possible,
+ imposing upon himself for that purpose many sacrifices, and
+ displaying an admirable zeal; but, vanquished by the disease,
+ he was at length forced to suspend his duties, and, since the
+ 1st of last January, to resign altogether. The cure of St.
+ Hilaire, having learned the alarming state of his parishioner's
+ health, hastened to visit him, and offer the consolations of
+ his ministry, but in vain. He repeated his visits. He was
+ received into the house, but not taken to see the patient. He
+ now sent word to the latter that he was at his command, and
+ would come immediately when sent for. Meanwhile, the disease
+ made such rapid progress that there was no longer any hope of
+ recovery. Several of his friends, interested in his salvation,
+ were grieved to see him so near death without the slightest
+ preparation for it. One of them brought him a Miraculous Medal,
+ and, not being able to see him herself, she asked a woman
+ about the house to give it to him for her. The woman did so,
+ and, fearing he might reject it with contempt, she begged him
+ to receive it for the donor's sake. He took it, saying: 'It is
+ a medal of the Blessed Virgin; I accept it respectfully, God
+ is not to be trifled with.' And, putting it under his pillow,
+ he sent a kind message of thanks to the lady who had given
+ it. Some moments after, he takes it out, contemplates it, and
+ kisses it respectfully.
+
+ "Having placed his temporal affairs in order, he now expresses
+ a wish to do the same with his conscience, and requests his
+ attendants to send for the parish cure. The latter hastens to
+ the sick man's bedside. 'I have made you come in a hurry,'
+ says the patient, 'I want to have a conversation with you.'
+ After this conversation, he asks the cure to return next day,
+ as he wishes time to prepare himself for the grand action he
+ contemplates. 'The step I am about to take,' he adds, 'I do
+ with full knowledge and entire conviction.' The cure of St.
+ Hilaire, with whom, as mayor, he had just had a law-suit,
+ suggested that he make his confession to some other priest; he
+ answered that he wished no one but his pastor. Next day, the
+ cure returned, and as he addressed his penitent by the title of
+ M. the Mayor: 'Do not call me that,' said M. Regnault; 'you are
+ now my father, I am your son, I beg you to address me thus.'
+ The cure paid him frequent visits, and as the disease continued
+ to progress, he suggested administering the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction. 'I have not been confirmed,' replied the
+ pious patient, 'I ardently desire to receive Confirmation.'
+ The bishop was soon informed, and, readily forgetting all
+ subject of complaint, and thanking God for this unexpected
+ change, the venerable prelate went at once to the sick man.
+ The happy dispositions of the latter touched him deeply, and he
+ administered to him the Sacrament of Confirmation the very day
+ of his receiving Extreme Unction and the Holy Viaticum.
+
+ "It is impossible to give an idea of M. Regnault's faith
+ and truly angelic fervor during this ceremony, or the deep
+ impression made upon him at seeing Monseigneur enter his
+ chamber. It was Saturday, January 21st, the eve of Septuagesima
+ Sunday. Monseigneur addressed him in a few words full of
+ unction and charity, and to inspire him with hope, reminded
+ him of the very touching parable of the next day's Gospel, the
+ laborers in the Father's vineyard, who coming at the last hour
+ received the same recompense as those who had borne the heat
+ and burden of the day. All the assistants were deeply affected
+ at this edifying spectacle, and many were moved to tears.
+ The bishop, on leaving, charged the cure to testify again to
+ M. Regnault how great consolation he had experienced at this
+ happy change, and how much he had been edified at his piety
+ during this touching but long ceremony. 'As first magistrate
+ of the city,' he answered, with a peaceful smile, 'I ought to
+ set good example to those under my administration.' The cure
+ sought by repeated visits to sustain this new-born piety,
+ already tried most severely by the excruciating sufferings of
+ the malady, sufferings which the patient bore with calmness
+ and resignation, offering them to God in expiation of his past
+ offences. To recompense his services to the city during his
+ administration, the government bestowed upon him the cross of
+ honor. The cure could not refrain from congratulating him. 'I
+ do not know,' was the modest answer, 'I do not know what I
+ have done to merit it,' and when reminded of his services to
+ the city, 'Oh! do not speak of them,' said he, 'such things
+ might awaken self-love!' What immense progress virtue makes
+ in the soul in a very little while! It was in these happy
+ dispositions he died, the 2d of the following February, Feast
+ of the Purification. The whole city of Poitiers, we might say,
+ assisted at the funeral. The bishop, the authorities, and
+ a host of other distinguished personages came to pay their
+ tribute of gratitude and admiration to his memory, and the
+ prefect congratulated the cure of St. Hilaire on so wonderful a
+ conversion."
+
+
+MARY'S PROTECTION OF A LITTLE CHILD (PARIS).
+
+Madame Remond, living number 70, rue Mouffetard, held at her chamber
+window, on the second story, one of her children, aged twenty-two
+months. Fainting suddenly, she fell back into the room, and the
+child was precipitated upon the pavement below. Immediate death
+might naturally have been expected as the inevitable consequence of
+such a fall; but no, wonderful to relate, the child was not injured.
+After reading the Archbishop's circular (upon the occasion of the
+consecration of the church of Notre Dame de Lorette), in which he
+recommends all the faithful to wear the Miraculous Medal, the pious
+parents had hastened to procure one and put it on their child. The
+Immaculate Mary did not fail to reward their piety. On picking the poor
+little creature up, and examining it, not even the slightest bruise was
+discovered. As the mother was a long time recovering from her swoon, it
+caused great anxiety, and several physicians were called in to see her.
+They also saw the child, and declared its escape wonderful indeed. But
+by way of precaution, they applied a few leeches to it, and a poultice
+to one knee which seemed to be the seat of some slight pain. The child
+had been eating an instant before this terrible fall, which, strange
+to say, occasioned no vomiting, and immediately after being picked up
+it took all the little delicacies offered it. Every one declared this
+occurrence a miracle, and the innocent little creature itself seemed
+to proclaim it, by kissing the medal and pressing it to its lips,
+especially when the subject was mentioned, as we ourselves witnessed
+when the father showed him to us the 25th of June, 1837.
+
+ "The mother recovered perfectly, and she never ceases to thank
+ the Immaculate Mary for the double protection she considers due
+ the medal."
+
+
+THE ARCHCONFRATERNITY OF NOTRE DAME DES VICTOIRES.
+
+Scarcely six years since the apparition of 1830, and already the
+designs of Providence were realized; the Miraculous Medal had awakened
+devotion to the Blessed Virgin, belief in the Immaculate Conception had
+penetrated all classes of society, and the innumerable favors accorded
+those who fervently recited the prayers revealed by Mary, had clearly
+proved how she prizes this first of all her privileges. But so far, her
+servants remained isolated, having no bond of union, no central point
+where they could meet; the majority of those who wore the medal as the
+livery of the spotless Virgin, knew neither the place, the mode, nor
+date of its origin.
+
+God was now about to complete the work, by giving to this devotion, an
+organization and fixed exercises which favored its development, and
+increased the efficacy of prayer, by the power of association.
+
+Towards the end of the year 1836, a man was raised up to execute the
+divine plans; this man was M. Dufriche Desgenettes, cure of Notre Dame
+des Victoires, Paris. From 1820 to 1832, in charge of St. Francis
+Xavier's Church, he numbered among the religious establishments of his
+parish, the Mother House of the Daughters of Charity, where the Blessed
+Virgin had appeared. He was one of the most earnest in thanking God for
+this grace, and most eager to propagate the medal. It was his desire
+that the privileged chapel should become a pilgrim shrine, but this
+desire not being realized, he was chosen by Providence to supply the
+substitute.
+
+Let us quote his own words, relating how he was led to found the
+Archconfraternity of the Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary. "There
+was in Paris, a parish scarcely known even to many of the Parisians.
+It is situated in the centre of the city, between the Palais Royal
+and the Bourse, surrounded by theatres and places of dissipation, a
+quarter swallowed up in the vortex of cupidity and industry, and the
+most abandoned to every species of criminal indulgence. Its church,
+dedicated to Notre Dame des Victoires, remained deserted even on the
+most solemn festivities.... No Sacraments were administered in this
+parish, not even to the dying.... If, by dint of novel persuasion, the
+cure obtained permission to visit a person dangerously ill, it was not
+only on condition of waiting until the patient's faculties were dimmed,
+but also on another almost insuperable condition, that of presenting
+himself in a secular habit. What benefit were such visits? They were
+merely a useless torment to the dying."[20]
+
+ [Footnote 20: Manual of the Archconfraternity, edition of 1853.
+ p. 84.]
+
+Such was the parish confided to M. Desgenettes. With the hope of
+recalling to God, even a few strayed souls, the poor cure, for four
+years, employed every means that the most active zeal could suggest,
+but in vain. Sad and grieved beyond measure, he thought of quitting
+this ungrateful post, when a supernatural communication revived his
+drooping courage.
+
+On the 3d of December, Feast of St. Francis Xavier, thoroughly
+penetrated with the inutility of his ministry in this parish, he
+was saying Mass at the Blessed Virgin's altar, now the altar of the
+Archconfraternity.... After the _Sanctus_, he distinctly heard these
+words pronounced in a very solemn manner: "Consecrate thy parish to the
+most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary." They did not strike his ears,
+but seemed to proceed from an interior voice. He immediately recovered
+peace and liberty of spirit. After finishing his thanksgiving, fearing
+to be the dupe of an illusion, he endeavored to banish the thought of
+what was apparently a supernatural communication, but the same interior
+voice resounded again in the depths of his soul. Returned to his house,
+he begins to compose the statutes of the association, with a view of
+delivering himself from an importunate idea, and scarcely does he take
+his pen in hand, ere he is fully enlightened on the subject, and the
+organization of the work costs him nothing but the manual labor of the
+writing.[21]
+
+ [Footnote 21: Manual of the Archconfraternity, p. 7.]
+
+The statutes prepared, are submitted to Mgr. de Quelen who approves
+them, and the 16th of the same month, an archiepiscopal ordinance
+erects canonically the Association of the Holy and Immaculate Heart
+of Mary for the conversion of sinners. The first meeting took place
+on Sunday, the 11th of December. In announcing it at High Mass, the
+pious pastor expected to see in the evening not more than fifty or
+sixty persons at most. Judge of his astonishment on finding assembled
+at the appointed hour, a congregation of about five hundred, a large
+proportion of whom are men! What had brought them? The majority were
+ignorant of the object of the meeting. An instruction explaining the
+motive and end of the exercises made a deep impression; the Benediction
+was chanted most fervently, and there was a notable increase of fervor
+during the Litany of the Blessed Virgin, especially at the thrice
+repeated invocation: "_Refugium peccatorum, ora pro nobis._" The cause
+was gained, Mary took possession of the parish of Notre Dame des
+Victoires.
+
+The good cure still doubted; to assure himself that the association was
+truly the work of God, he demanded a sign, the conversion of a great
+sinner, an old man on the borders of the tomb, who had several times
+refused to see him. His prayer was granted, the old man received him
+gladly, and became sincerely converted. It was not long before new
+graces showered upon his parish increased M. Desgenette's confidence,
+numberless sinners changed their lives, indifferent Christians became
+practical and fervent, the offices of the Church were attended, the
+Sacraments frequented, the apparently extinguished Faith was relighted,
+and this parish, lately so scandalous, soon became one of the most
+edifying in Paris.
+
+The Confraternity of the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary was
+not to embrace one parish only. God willed that it should extend
+throughout France, and even the entire world. M. Desgenettes, who
+understood this design, addressed himself to the Sovereign Pontiff,
+and obtained, April 24th, 1838, a brief, erecting the association into
+an Archconfraternity, with the power of affiliating to itself other
+associations of the same kind throughout the Church, and granting them
+a participation in the spiritual favors accorded it. From this day, the
+Archconfraternity developed wonderfully, and became an inexhaustible
+source of graces. The church of Notre Dame des Victoires was henceforth
+numbered among the most celebrated sanctuaries in the world. At all
+hours may the faithful be seen around its altars in the attitude of
+prayer and recollection. The re-unions which take place every Sunday
+present a touching spectacle, a dense crowd composed of persons of
+every condition, who, after fervently chanting Mary's praises, listen
+attentively to a long series of petitions received in the course of the
+week from all quarters of the globe.
+
+These present a picture of all the miseries, all the sufferings, all
+the corporal and spiritual necessities possible; to which are added
+numberless acts of thanksgiving for benefits obtained through the
+associates' prayers. These petitions are so multitudinous that they
+cannot be announced except in a general manner and by categories; they
+actually amount, each week, to the number of twenty-five or thirty
+thousand, and, for the entire year, form a total of a million and
+a half. At the time of its founder's death, the Archconfraternity
+numbered fifteen thousand affiliated confraternities in all quarters of
+the globe, and more than twenty million associates. At the beginning of
+this year, 1878, the affiliated confraternities amount to 17,472.
+
+A bulletin, issued monthly, gives an account of the progress of the
+Archconfraternity, the exercises which take place at Notre Dame des
+Victoires, the graces obtained, etc. The first nine numbers were
+published by M. Desgenettes himself, but at irregular intervals; they
+are full of interest and edification.
+
+Amidst the wonderful success of his work, the venerable pastor, far
+from seeking any of the glory, thought only of humbling himself;
+regarding his share in it as naught but that of a simple instrument, he
+confesses even his resistance to the inspirations of grace, his doubts,
+his incredulity;[22] he will not admit that he may be called the
+founder of this work of mercy; it is God who has done all, it is the
+Immaculate Heart of Mary, that has opened to poor sinners a new source
+of graces, as for himself, he was not even the originator of the idea.
+
+ [Footnote 22: Manual of the Archconfraternity, page 86.]
+
+These sentiments reveal the soul of a saint; the true servants of
+God are always humble of heart, and the good they accomplish is in
+proportion to their self-abasement.
+
+In his deep gratitude to God, the pious cure never forgot the bond
+attaching Notre Dame des Victoires to the chapel of the Daughters of
+Charity; he always loved this blessed sanctuary; it was there Mary had
+concealed the source of those vivifying waters which flowed through
+his parish; it was there this Mother of divine grace had promised
+those benedictions which the Archconfraternity reaped so abundantly.
+To preserve the remembrance of this mysterious relation, he desired
+that the medal of the association should be the Miraculous Medal.
+Henceforth, the influence of this medal became confounded with that
+of the Archconfraternity, the extraordinary graces attributed to the
+former were often due the associates' prayers, and reciprocally, for
+example, the conversion of M. Ratisbonne. In this case, as in many
+others, two equally supernatural means united to obtain the same result.
+
+It is related that M. Desgenettes, seeing the Daughters of Charity
+frequently around the altar of the most Holy Heart of Mary at Notre
+Dame des Victoires, would sometimes say to them: "My good Sisters, I
+am much pleased to see you in my dear church, but know that your own
+chapel is the true pilgrim shrine, it is there you have the Blessed
+Virgin, there she manifested herself to you."----
+
+The Miraculous Medal, as revealed to Sister Catherine, bears on the
+reverse the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, the first crowned with
+thorns, the second pierced by a sword. These are symbols which all
+comprehend. Are they not, at the same time, a prophetic sign?
+
+We are permitted to recognize here a foreshadowing of that devotion
+which would be rendered by the Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des
+Victoires, to the most Holy and Immaculate Heart of Mary.
+
+We may likewise see pre-figured, that later development in our day, of
+devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, a devotion born in France, and
+which the entire nation wishes to proclaim amidst pomp and grandeur,
+by the construction of a splendid monument, that from the heights of
+Montmartre, shall overlook all Paris.
+
+Thus by a mysterious gradation, the medal of the Immaculate Conception
+has conducted us to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, and the Heart of the
+Mother has introduced us into the Heart of the Son, the adorable Heart
+of Jesus, that Heart which has so loved men, and which saves nations as
+well as individuals.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1838 to 1842, in Greece, America, China, etc._
+
+CURE WROUGHT IN SANTORIN (GREECE)--1838.
+
+
+Letter of M.N., Priest of the Mission, in Santorin:
+
+ "Mme. Marie Delenda, wife of M. Michel Chigi, son of the
+ Vice-Consul from Holland to Santorin, for seven years had
+ suffered most excruciating pains, inducing such a state of
+ nervous sensibility, that she was unable to bear the least
+ excitement. She had had several children, but they all died
+ before birth and receiving baptism. The physicians consulted,
+ declared unanimously, that her disease was incurable, and that
+ none of her children would ever come into the world alive.
+ Greatly distressed at such a sad prospect, she had recourse to
+ the Miraculous Medal, and obtained from it what medical skill
+ was unable to effect; her next child, born not long after, was
+ a fine, live, healthy one. Her husband, as pious as herself,
+ was transported with joy and gratitude. 'Behold!' said he to
+ the attendant physician, and conducting him to an image of the
+ Immaculate Mary, 'Behold our Protectrice, our Liberatrix, the
+ Mother of our child!' The physician knelt, said a prayer and
+ retired. Since then, the mother's health is good; at least she
+ has had no relapse of her former apparently incurable disease,
+ which recovery is sufficient to attest the protection of Mary
+ Immaculate. Full of gratitude, the two spouses have never
+ ceased to urge the erection of the altar and inauguration of
+ the image of Mary Immaculate, in fulfillment of their promise.
+
+ "Several other miraculous cures have also been wrought there
+ through the invocation of Mary Immaculate. I am assured of
+ this; four of them are well attested, and really marvelous.
+ The bishop, the clergy, the people of Santorin, are all ready
+ to affirm my assertions, and not one of them but would be
+ more likely to exaggerate than detract from my account. When
+ Monseigneur went to visit the Chigi family after the birth
+ of their child, he asked to see the image, and looking at
+ it, said: 'This is the second miracle wrought in Santorin by
+ the Immaculate Virgin. The first is known to me through the
+ confessional, and consequently, I cannot divulge it.'
+
+ "It was on the 28th of May, the inauguration of the image of
+ the Immaculate Conception took place. Monseigneur himself
+ officiated in the translation, after the High Mass and
+ procession terminating the Forty Hour's Devotion at the
+ cathedral. The image was placed upon an altar prepared for the
+ purpose, in the court-yard of the donor's house. From the altar
+ to the outer door, a very prettily decorated arched pathway
+ was formed by means of drapery, and upon the threshold, was a
+ triumphal arch. All the pavement, not only in the court but
+ even to our church, was covered with flowers and fragrant
+ grasses. Monseigneur, preceded by the clergy, and followed by
+ all the Catholics and a number of Greek schismatics, repaired
+ to the place where the image was exposed. Having incensed it,
+ he intoned the _Ave, Maris Stella_, and the procession began
+ to move. The clergy with the cross at their head commenced to
+ defile. Then came two young girls bearing each a banner of
+ white silk, whereon was depicted the spotless Virgin, these
+ were suspended diagonally at the entrance of the sanctuary.
+ Next, were two more young girls holding extended, the front of
+ the altar representing the reverse of the medal, and finally,
+ the image borne by the donor and one of his nearest relatives.
+ Monseigneur walked immediately after, and behind him, Mme.
+ Chigi holding her child in her arms and accompanied by her
+ sister. The people were not in the ranks of the procession,
+ but ranged along each side, that they might readily see the
+ image and kiss it as it passed, which they did with so much
+ eagerness and enthusiasm that there was considerable danger
+ of its meeting with an accident. This, however we averted
+ by many precautions, and at length reached the church. At
+ the entrance, another very beautiful triumphal arch had been
+ erected, surmounted by a large representation of the reverse
+ of the medal upon a floating banner, bearing the inscription:
+ '_Ave, Maria Immaculata_.' The church door was decorated with
+ drapery, likewise the interior of the walls, which were also
+ hung with flowers, verdant crowns and garlands. The image was
+ now placed upon a temporary throne, which had been prepared
+ until a more suitable one could be erected. Another High Mass
+ was celebrated, at the end of which the children chanted
+ alternately with the choir the '_Te Mariam laudamus_,' this
+ being the first time it was ever heard in this country. The
+ other individuals I have already mentioned as having been cured
+ through the Immaculate Mary's intercession, made each one a
+ votive offering to her image. One gave a veil, another a pretty
+ golden cross, which decorated the Blessed Virgin's bosom during
+ the ceremony; a third proposed having a silver crown made in
+ fulfillment of her vow, but she was advised to give something
+ else, since several others in unison had already promised a
+ most beautiful golden crown."
+
+
+CURE OF MLLE. ELISE BOURGEOIS.
+
+Letter of the Superior of the Daughters of Charity, in Troyes:
+
+ "_Troyes, March 4th, 1842._
+
+ "In 1838, we had in our work-room a young woman, named Elise
+ Bourgeois, aged eighteen years, who, after great suffering, was
+ attacked by an anchylosis in the knee. For seven months and a
+ half she suffered excruciatingly, and her malady had reached
+ the crisis. Her limb had shrunk up about two inches, and she
+ could not walk without the aid of a cane or some one's arm. On
+ the 8th of April, which was Monday in Holy Week, one of our
+ young Sisters told me that the Notice contained an account of a
+ Christian Brother, whose foot on the point of being amputated,
+ was cured by the sole application of the Miraculous Medal,
+ one night when his sufferings were greater than usual. I now
+ reproached myself for having allowed this poor child to be so
+ long afflicted, without our once thinking of having recourse
+ to Mary for her recovery; and ascending to the work-room, I
+ related to the children this account of the Christian Brother,
+ and told the young woman to arouse her faith, to put all her
+ confidence in Mary Immaculate, to apply the medal to her knee,
+ and commence a novena with her companions. All Tuesday night
+ her sufferings were great indeed, she said it seemed as if
+ all her bones were dislocated. Nor was she able to obtain a
+ moment's repose the next day. There now issued from a little
+ hole which had formed in her knee, a quantity of serous
+ matter. The day following, she arose with much difficulty,
+ and was taken to the chapel where she heard Holy Mass. At the
+ elevation, she placed her sound knee upon the bench, saying
+ most fervently to the good God: 'Since Thou art present, deign
+ to cure me, that I may be entirely Thine.' She immediately felt
+ something like the touch of a hand, which replaced the bones in
+ their natural position, and lengthened the shrunken limb; but
+ she did not yet dare rest upon it, for fear of injury. At the
+ end of Mass, she knelt to receive the priest's benediction, and
+ in spite of herself, she rested her weight upon the afflicted
+ knee. She remained in the chapel with her companions to say her
+ prayers and thank the Blessed Virgin for the great favor just
+ obtained. From that time she has never suffered the slightest
+ pain in the limb, and it appears perfectly sound.
+
+ "As soon as the children perceived that she was cured, they
+ declared it a miracle, and all hearts were filled with the
+ deepest emotion and gratitude. Elise now asked permission
+ to go to the cathedral to confession; a request I granted
+ reluctantly, although she assured me she was not suffering in
+ the slightest, yet she had not been out for seven months and
+ a-half, and I could scarcely realize her recovery. Several
+ Masses of thanksgiving were said in our chapel, during the
+ first of which we had the Blessed Sacrament exposed, and the
+ _Te Deum_ chanted. The noise of this miracle soon spread
+ throughout the city, and several persons came to see the healed
+ one. She also requested permission to go to the house of one
+ of her uncles, who had a very impious neighbor, that had been
+ informed of her miraculous recovery, but who had also been told
+ that he need not believe until he had seen Elise for himself.
+ He was perfectly convinced, acknowledged it beyond denial, and
+ said that in thanksgiving, a _Te Deum_ should be chanted in the
+ cathedral.
+
+ "I forgot to say, that our physician had seen this young woman
+ two months before her recovery and pronounced the disease
+ incurable. I had also had her examined by a surgeon, who
+ ordered much blistering, but without expecting a cure."
+
+Accompanying this letter are the signatures of seven Sisters of Charity
+and twenty-three other individuals, witnesses of the miracle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+A TRAIT OF PROTECTION. (TEXAS).
+
+The following was sent us by Mgr. Odin, Vicar Apostolic of Texas, in a
+letter dated April 11th, 1841.
+
+ "I had, in the city of Nacogdoches, an opportunity of
+ witnessing how Mary Immaculate loves to grant the prayers of
+ those who put their trust in her. A Maryland lady, on leaving
+ her native State to settle in Texas, had received a Miraculous
+ Medal; her confessor, on giving it to her, exacting the
+ promise, that she would never omit the daily recitation of the
+ little prayer, 'O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who
+ have recourse to thee!' and assuring her at the same time that
+ this good Mother would never allow her to die without the last
+ consolations of religion. She faithfully complied with her
+ promise. For four years she was confined to her bed, and often,
+ it was thought, at the point of death, but her confidence in
+ Mary, always inspired her with the hope of receiving the last
+ Sacraments ere leaving this world. As soon as she heard of our
+ arrival, we were summoned to her bedside; she received the Holy
+ Viaticum and Extreme Unction, and expired a few days after,
+ filled with gratitude for her celestial Benefactress.
+
+
+CURES AND INCIDENTS OF PROTECTION. (CHINA).
+
+In a letter of July, 1838, Mgr. Rameaux, Vicar Apostolic of the
+provinces of the Kiang-Si and Tche-Kiang, in sending us the invocation
+of the medal translated into Chinese, says, that the Chinese have
+a great devotion to this little prayer, and always follow the _Ave
+Maria_ by a recitation of it. He also informed us, that Mgr. de
+Bezy, Vicar Apostolic of the Hou-Kouang, and M. Perboyre, Missionary
+Apostolic, would transmit to us several accounts of miraculous marks
+of protection. We received these accounts some months later, and quote
+them as follows:
+
+ "1st. In the province of the Hou-Kouang, a Christian had been
+ racked by a terrible fever for two months, accompanied by
+ constant delirium. Three physicians had attended him, but in
+ vain. Finding himself on the verge of death, he sent for me to
+ administer the Last Sacraments. I gave him the Holy Viaticum,
+ but deferred Extreme Unction, seeing that my duties would
+ retain me in that locality some time longer. I made him a
+ present of the medal, and advised a novena, assuring him, that
+ if it were for the benefit of his soul, he would be restored to
+ health. He began the novena; on the seventh day, the fever left
+ him, and on the eighth he had recovered his usual strength.
+ On the ninth day of the novena he came to see me, and assured
+ me that he was perfectly well. I reminded him of thanking the
+ Blessed Virgin for so great a favor, and he promised to recite
+ with his friends the Rosary in her honor. But our Christian,
+ pre-occupied with various affairs that his sickness had
+ interrupted, forgot the promise. Five days after, he had a
+ relapse. This made him conscious of his fault; he approached
+ the Sacraments again, and began another novena. Though he
+ continued to grow worse from day to day, I still had great
+ hopes that the Immaculate Mary would come to his assistance,
+ and I assured him of his recovery before the end of the novena.
+ My confidence was not deceived; he recovered entirely, to
+ the great astonishment of all the Christians. This time his
+ gratitude was effectual, and the fever did not return.
+
+ "2d. In Tien-Men, a village of the same province, the
+ Christians, numbering about two hundred, are distinguished
+ for their piety and a great devotion to the Blessed Virgin.
+ For eight years, successive inundations had reduced these
+ Christians to extreme poverty; but this year, at the first
+ sign of an overflow, they had recourse to Mary Immaculate by
+ means of the medal, and soon the waters retired without doing
+ the slightest harm to the Christian territory, whilst that of
+ the pagans was devastated. And our Christians now return most
+ grateful thanks to their good Mother for the abundant harvest
+ they have just gathered.
+
+ "3d. The following account was sent us by M. Perboyre, in
+ a letter of August 10th, 1839. The reader will learn, with
+ interest, that this is the same missionary who, arrested a
+ month after for his religion, so generously confessed the Faith
+ one whole year amidst the most frightful tortures, and at last
+ consummated the sacrifice by his glorious martyrdom, September
+ 11th, 1840.
+
+ "Whilst I was giving a mission to the Christians of the Honan
+ province, November, 1837, they brought to me a young woman
+ who had been afflicted with mental aberration for about eight
+ months, telling me she was very anxious to confess, and, though
+ she was incapable of the Sacrament, they begged me not to
+ refuse her a consolation she appeared to desire so earnestly.
+ Her sad condition of mind precluded all idea of her deriving
+ any benefit from the exercise of my ministry, but I heard her
+ out of pure compassion. In taking leave of her, I placed her
+ under the especial protection of the Blessed Virgin--that is,
+ I gave her a medal of the Immaculate Conception. She did not
+ then understand the value of the holy remedy she received;
+ but, from that moment, she began to experience its beneficial
+ effects, her shattered intellect improving so rapidly that,
+ at the end of four or five days, she was entirely changed. To
+ a complete confusion of ideas, to fears that kept her ever in
+ mortal agony, and which, I believe, were the work of the demon,
+ succeeded good sense, peace of mind and happiness. She made her
+ confession again, and received Holy Communion, with the most
+ lively sentiments of joy and fervor. This especial instance
+ of Mary's generosity will doubtless surprise you little, you
+ who know so well that the earth is filled with her mercy; but
+ your hearts will be excited anew to fervent thanksgiving for
+ this particular favor, which is the principal reason of my
+ acquainting you with it."
+
+_1st. Letter from a Missionary of Macao, dated August 25th, 1841:_
+
+ "A widow who had but one son, reared like herself in paganism,
+ saw him suddenly fall under the power of the demon; his
+ paroxysms were so furious that all fled before him, and he ran
+ through the fields uttering the most lamentable cries. Anyone
+ that attempted to stop him was immediately seized and thrown to
+ the ground. His poor mother was in despair, and almost dying
+ of grief, when Divine Providence deigned to cast upon her a
+ look of compassion. One day when he was unusually tormented,
+ the young man fled hither and thither like a vagabond, not
+ knowing where he went; everyone tried to stop him, but he
+ brutally repulsed all who lay hands on him. The most merciful
+ God permitted a Christian to be among the number of those
+ who witnessed this spectacle. Animated with a lively faith,
+ and touched at the unfortunate creature's sufferings, the
+ Christian told all who were pursuing the demoniac to desist,
+ that he unaided could arrest him, that he would quiet him, and
+ restore him docile and gentle to his mother. This language
+ astonished the pagans, but they did as requested, although
+ thinking the Christian ran a great risk. Our good Christian
+ wore the Miraculous Medal of the Immaculate Mary; taking it
+ in his hands he approached the possessed, and showing it to
+ him he commanded the demon to flee and leave the young man in
+ peace. The demon obeyed instantly, and the young man seeing
+ the medal in the Christian's hands, humbly prostrated himself
+ before the miraculous image, without knowing what it was. The
+ pagans, watching from a distance, were greatly astonished.
+ The Christian now commanded the young man to rise and follow
+ him, and still holding in his hand the medal, which was as a
+ magnet attracting the young pagan, he thus conducted him to
+ his mother. 'Mother,' he exclaimed, to her great consolation,
+ as soon as he saw her, 'Do not weep any more, I am freed from
+ the demon; he left me as soon as he perceived this medal.'
+ Imagine the poor mother's joy, on hearing these words! She was
+ perplexed to know whether it was a dream or a reality! The
+ Christian reassured her, and recounted all that had passed,
+ adding, that her son would never be possessed again, if she
+ renounced her idols and became a Christian. She promised
+ sincerely, and they immediately began to divest their altar
+ of its false gods. Then the Christian, feeling assured they
+ would be faithful when instructed in the truths of religion,
+ withdrew, laden with the thanks of both mother and son for the
+ inestimable service he had just rendered them."
+
+_2d. Extract of a Letter from M. Faivre, Priest of the Mission in the
+Province of Nankin, May 6th, 1841:_
+
+ "The two great means God uses for the accomplishment of good
+ in this Mission are our Lord's cross and the Immaculate
+ Mary's protection. As to the most powerful protection of Mary
+ conceived without sin, we have experienced it so often, and in
+ so especial a manner, both as regards ourselves and the welfare
+ of the Mission, that it would be tedious to recount in detail,
+ even if I wished to do so, all the favors we have received at
+ her maternal hands.
+
+ "Seeing the Blessed Virgin's clemency towards us and our
+ Christians, we have done all we could to honor her and advance
+ her honor among the Christians, by seeking to inspire them
+ with the most lively confidence in this good, holy Mother.
+ On the Feast of the Assumption, 1839, we consecrated this
+ Mission to her, and ever since it has been called Mary's
+ Diocese. We have given as a rule to our virgins especial
+ devotion to the Immaculate Conception. We have established Mary
+ Immaculate patroness of the seminary Providence has created
+ in this Mission. (This seminary now numbers six scholars who
+ lead lives of regularity and edification, and make rapid
+ progress in the study of Latin.) One of our virgins, already
+ advanced in age, had been for several years confined to her
+ bed, without the slightest hope of recovery, the thirteen
+ physicians who had been successively consulted having declared
+ her malady incurable. Seeing her end approach, she asked for
+ the missionary, that she might receive the Last Sacraments. He
+ came, and administered the Sacraments of the dying, exhorting
+ her to accept death in a spirit of conformity to the will of
+ God. She replied that she was fully resigned to His holy will,
+ and had no hope of deriving any benefit from human means, but
+ she felt convinced that if she could get a Miraculous Medal,
+ her health would be restored. The missionary, seeing so much
+ faith and confidence, gave her the one he wore, having no other
+ convenient just then, and recommended her to make a novena in
+ honor of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin. All
+ the family joined her in making the novena, and from the fifth
+ day she was entirely cured. The attending physician, who was a
+ pagan, coming to see her at the end of the novena, was utterly
+ surprised to find her so well, and he eagerly inquired what
+ extraordinary remedy had been employed to effect such a change.
+ She replied that she had used no remedies, but the Lord of
+ Heaven had restored her health. The physician returned, filled
+ with veneration for the Lord of Heaven, who had displayed such
+ great power; and the virgin, in expression of her gratitude to
+ the Immaculate Mary, her august Benefactress, donated three
+ hundred piastres to repair a chapel dedicated to Mary."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. RATISBONNE, AN ISRAELITE.
+
+ _Rome, 1842._
+
+M. Alphonse Ratisbonne belonged to a Jewish family of Strasburg,
+distinguished in the world as much for its social position as the
+universal esteem in which it was held; he himself was a member of
+a society for the encouragement of labor, contributing thus to the
+benefit of his unfortunate brethren. Towards the end of the year 1841,
+he became affianced to a young Jewess, who united in her person all
+those qualities calculated to assure his happiness. Before entering
+upon this new state of life, he decided to take a pleasure trip to the
+East, visiting on the way some of the most remarkable cities of Italy.
+There was nothing, he thought, interesting to him in the Eternal City,
+so from Naples he would direct his course to Palermo; but Divine mercy
+called him, though he did not recognize the voice; he is constrained,
+as it were, by a secret design of Heaven, to change his determination,
+and visit Rome. It was in this centre of Catholic unity that the God
+of all patience and goodness awaited him, it was here that grace was
+to touch his heart. But what were his dispositions? Thou, O Lord,
+knowest them!... His hatred of Catholicity was very far from suggesting
+a thought of his ever embracing it. He felt for our holy and sublime
+religion that violent animosity which could not contain itself, which
+chafed at anything reminding him of Christianity, and which had even
+grown more rancorous since his brother M. Theodore Ratisbonne's
+abjuration of Judaism and reception of Holy Orders. He could not
+pardon this desertion, and his implacable hatred increased with time.
+But the innocent object of his aversion never ceased to supplicate
+Heaven to shed a ray of divine light upon the deluded brother, who
+loaded him with indignation and contempt. Made sub-Director of the
+Archconfraternity of Notre Dame des Victoires, he often implored the
+associates' prayers for this brother's conversion.
+
+Such were M. Ratisbonne's sentiments when he entered Rome. He had
+scarcely arrived ere he thought of leaving; everything he saw in the
+Holy City urged him to hasten from it, everything excited him to
+declaim against what shocked and vilified his belief.... He was not
+proof, however, against a species of emotion in visiting the church
+of Ara Coeli; but it was an emotion which lost all its influence,
+(if influence it could be said to have exerted upon this heart buried
+in the shades of death,) when he understood that it was the general
+effect produced by the first sight of this remarkable monument. So, far
+from giving way to it, he hastened, on the contrary, to affirm that
+it was not a Catholic emotion, but an impression purely religious. In
+traversing the Ghetto, his hatred against Christianity was still more
+inflamed at witnessing the misery and degradation of the Jews; as if
+the chastisement of that deicidal people had been inflicted by the
+children of the Church, as if this people had not called down upon
+itself the vengeance of innocent blood!
+
+Before leaving Rome, M. Ratisbonne was to visit one of his childhood's
+friends, an old schoolmate with whom he had always kept up an intimacy,
+although their religious belief was so widely at variance. This friend
+was M. Gustave de Bussiere, a zealous Protestant, who several times had
+endeavored to profit by their intimacy, by persuading M. Ratisbonne
+to embrace Protestantism, but the latter was immovable, and the two
+friends, after useless discussions, usually ended by a renewal of
+their faith in two words, expressing most emphatically how invincible
+each deemed himself. "Headstrong Jew!" said one; "Enraged Protestant!"
+replied the other. Such was the result of these conversations, which
+never succeeded in shaking the opinion of either, or dissipating any
+of their deplorable errors. This opposition of principles, however,
+did not estrange their friendship. M. Ratisbonne called to see M.
+De Bussiere, and was admitted by an Italian servant. He inquired
+for M. Gustave de Bussiere, but this gentleman was absent, and by a
+providential mistake the servant introduced him into the salon of M.
+Theodore Bussiere, Gustave's brother, whom M. Ratisbonne had seen but
+once. It was too late to withdraw, and though somewhat disconcerted
+at the mistake, he stopped to exchange a few words of courtesy with
+his friend's brother. M. De Bussiere had had the happiness of abjuring
+Protestantism, and he was a zealous advocate of the Faith he had
+so lately learned to prize. He knew that M. Ratisbonne was a Jew;
+he received him with affectionate eagerness, and the conversation
+naturally turning upon the various places of interest in Rome visited
+by the young French traveler, it soon drifted into a religious
+discussion. M. Ratisbonne did not disguise his real sentiments, he
+expressed his animosity against Catholicity, his inalterable attachment
+to Judaism and to the baron De Bussiere's solid arguments, his only
+replies were the frigid politeness of silence, a smile of pity, or new
+protestations of fidelity to his sect, repeating that a Jew he was born
+and a Jew he would die!
+
+It was then that M. De Bussiere, not the least discouraged by M.
+Ratisbonne's emphatic language, and impelled by a secret impulse
+of grace, thought of offering him the Miraculous Medal. Doubtless
+this idea appears rash to many, and many would have banished it as a
+veritable folly, but the simplicity of faith teaches us to discern
+things by a very different light from that in which they are revealed
+to the world. Filled with this holy fearlessness of the Saints, M. De
+Bussiere presents the young Jew a medal of the Immaculate Conception.
+"Promise me," said he, "to always wear this little image, I beg you not
+to refuse me." M. Ratisbonne, unable to conceal his astonishment at
+so strange a proposition, rejects it instantly with an expression of
+indignation that would have disconcerted any other than his new friend.
+"But," continues our fervent Catholic undismayed, "I cannot understand
+the cause of such a refusal, for, according to your view of things, the
+wearing of this object must be to you a matter of total indifference,
+whilst it would be a real consolation to me if you would condescend to
+my request." "Ah! I will comply, then, if you attach so much importance
+to it," replied the other with a hearty laugh; "I should not be sorry,
+moreover, to have an opportunity of convincing you that Jews are not
+so headstrong as they are represented. Besides, it will give me an
+interesting chapter to add to my notes and impressions of travel." And
+he continued to jest on the subject in a manner rather painful to the
+Christian hearts around him.
+
+During this debate, the good father of the family had told his two
+little daughters (interesting children, whom an eminently religious
+education had already imbued with sentiments of piety), to put the
+precious medal on a cord. They did so, and gave it to their father,
+who hung it around the young Israelite's neck. Encouraged by this
+first success, he wishes to go still farther. He attempts nothing less
+than binding M. Ratisbonne himself to ask the favor and protection of
+Mary, of Mary whom he despises without knowing, Mary whose image he
+receives most reluctantly! M. De Bussiere presents him a paper upon
+which is written St. Bernard's powerful invocation, the _Memorare_....
+This time, the Jew can still less dissimulate his displeasure, it seems
+tried to the utmost; but the baron feels himself actuated by a secret
+impulse, that urges him to persevere in his solicitations, and conquer.
+He repeats his request, and even goes so far when he presents the
+prayer as to beg M. Ratisbonne to take a copy of it for him, as he has
+but one. M. Ratisbonne, convinced that resistance is useless, rather
+than repeat his refusal prefers acceding to the request, and thus
+ridding himself of such vexatious importunity. "Agreed," said he, "that
+you take my copy and I keep yours." And, hastening to this indiscreet
+zealot, he retired, murmuring to himself: "I really wonder what he
+would say if I were to insist upon his reciting the Jewish prayers?
+I must admit that I have, indeed, met a striking original!" It was
+thus he left this house of benediction and salvation, ignorant of the
+treasure he bore with him, the key of Heaven that had been given him;
+the image of the Mother of holy hope he wore upon his heart, and whose
+blessed effects he would so soon experience.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. De Bussiere, deeply grieved at the young Jew's levity, united with
+his family in conjuring the God of mercy to pardon the words of one who
+knew not what he said; and he recommended his dear children to lift
+up their hands to the Refuge of Sinners, supplicating her to obtain
+the gift of Faith for this poor soul in the shades of darkness and
+error!... O Mary! your tender love graciously welcomed these prayers of
+the innocent, they penetrated your maternal heart, and soon obtained
+the object of their desires. The zeal of this devout servant of the
+Queen of Heaven was not confined within the narrow limits of his own
+family circle.... Going, that evening, according to a pious custom in
+Rome, to keep watch before the Blessed Sacrament with the prince B.
+and some other friends, he also engaged their prayers for the young
+Israelite's conversion.... Let us follow attentively all the details
+preceding the ever memorable day which was to crown M. De Bussiere's
+pious efforts. Let us not forget that a generous Christian, elevated by
+a lively faith above the vain prejudices of the world, and docile to
+the secret inspirations of grace, becomes the instrument of Providence
+in procuring God's glory and the salvation of a soul.
+
+Meanwhile, M. Ratisbonne was making arrangements to leave Rome; he
+had already fixed upon the day of his departure, and had come to say
+good-bye to his friend and acquaint him with his intention of starting
+the next evening. "Going!" replied M. De Bussiere; "do not think of
+it. I want you to grant me just eight days longer; our conversation of
+yesterday occupies my thoughts more than ever; let me entreat you to
+prolong your stay, and let us go to the diligence office to countermand
+your order." It was in vain. M. Ratisbonne declined, saying he had
+already decided to go, and had no motive for deferring his departure.
+Under the pretext of a very imposing ceremony which was to take place
+at St. Peter's, M. De Bussiere forced, rather than persuaded him to
+remain a few days longer.
+
+We shall not here enter into a detailed account of what passed
+between them from the moment M. De Bussiere's constancy gained the
+last triumph--that is, from the 16th of January to the 20th--inasmuch
+as there was not the slightest sign of the happy change, either in
+the language or conduct of M. Ratisbonne, towards the new friend
+divine Providence had given him, in spite of himself. He could not,
+however, avoid receiving this new friend's civilities, or refuse to
+be accompanied by him in visiting the various places of note in the
+Eternal City. M. De Bussiere, full of hope against all human hope,
+allowed no opportunity to escape of enlightening his young friend; but
+not one consoling response could he obtain, M. Ratisbonne, by jest and
+raillery, always avoiding the arguments he would not take the trouble
+to refute, always ridiculing Catholicity, and thus afflicting the heart
+of the servant of Jesus Christ by responding coldly to the assiduity of
+his zeal, the serious nature of his propositions. "Make your mind easy;
+I will think of all this, but not at Rome. I am to spend two months
+at Malta; it will serve to while away the time." He was astonished at
+the imperturbable tranquillity with which M. De Bussiere persevered in
+trying to convince him; he could not understand that union of serenity
+(which religion alone inspires) with that ardent desire (that he
+doubtless attributed to obstinacy) of leading him to a new belief, for
+which, according to his own words, he felt more aversion than ever. To
+him this tranquillity appeared incomprehensible. M. De Bussiere did
+not hesitate to express his belief in the triumph of his cause; for
+instance, in passing the _Scala Sancta_ with the young Israelite, as
+he pointed it out he bared his head respectfully and said aloud, as
+if in a voice of prophecy, "Hail, holy staircase! here is a man who
+one day will ascend your steps on his knees." This was on the 19th.
+M. Ratisbonne's only response was a disconcerting peal of laughter,
+and the two friends separated again, without the slightest religious
+impression having been made upon the Israelite, although, unknown to
+human ken, he was on the eve of the brightest day of his life.
+
+During this short interval, M. De Bussiere tasted the bitterness of
+losing one of his dearest friends. M. De La Ferronays died suddenly on
+the evening of the 17th, leaving to his family and all who knew him
+the sweet hope that he had bid adieu to this perishable life only to
+enter upon the joys of a blissful immortal one. Doubtless this event
+contributed to the young Israelite's speedy conversion, for whilst on
+earth M. De La Ferronays had prayed for him, and we have every reason
+to believe that he soon became his advocate in heaven. M. De Bussiere
+had informed this dear friend of his hopes and the means employed for
+gaining the young Israelite to Jesus Christ, and he had received the
+consoling answer: "Do not be uneasy; if you have succeeded in making
+him say the _Memorare_, he is yours." ... Such was the admirable
+confidence of this fervent Christian in the powerful protection of the
+most compassionate Virgin Mary!
+
+Yet notwithstanding the bitterness of the sacrifice Heaven had just
+demanded of the Baron De Bussiere, he found it hard to part from this
+young man whom he longed to conquer to the Faith, and the resignation
+of his grief was a new prayer attracting the Divine mercy. Immediately
+after leaving him on the 19th, he went to prostrate himself beside the
+remains of his virtuous friend, begging that friend's assistance from
+the heights of heaven in obtaining what had been already recommended to
+his prayers on earth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thursday, 20th.--M. Ratisbonne's dispositions are not changed in the
+least; he never raises his thoughts above terrestrial things, the
+religious discussions of the preceding days have not even fixed his
+attention, or apparently not excited in his soul the slightest anxiety.
+As to his false belief, he never dreams of taking one step towards a
+knowledge of the truth; M. De Bussiere is not with him to continue the
+conversation on religion, and he dismisses the subject from his mind.
+Leaving the cafe, he meets one of his fellow-boarders; they discourse
+of balls and other frivolous amusements in such a way as to convince
+one that he was surely not engrossed with anything serious. It was then
+noon, and two hours later the young Jew had seen the light, two hours
+later he eagerly desired the grace of holy baptism, two hours later he
+believed in the Church!... Who is like to Thee, O my God? Who can thus,
+in an instant, triumph over human reason, and force it to render homage
+to Thy sovereign truth?... Ah! it is Thyself, Thyself alone, Lord, it
+is the prerogative of Thy mercy to work such prodigies! Let us return
+to our Israelite.
+
+It is one o'clock; M. De Bussiere must repair to the church of
+St. Andrew delle Fratte to make some arrangements for the funeral
+ceremonies of M. De La Ferronays, which take place on the morrow. He
+sets out, and on the way happily meets M. Ratisbonne, who joins him,
+with the intention of taking one of their usual walks, when M. De
+Bussiere had fulfilled the imperative duty that required his immediate
+attention.... But the moment of grace has come. They enter the church,
+where various decorations already announce the morrow's ceremonies;
+the Israelite inquires the meaning of them, and M. De Bussiere, having
+replied that they were for the funeral obsequies of M. De La Ferronays,
+the intimate friend he had just lost, begs him to wait there an
+instant, whilst he goes into the house to execute a commission with
+one of the monks. M. Ratisbonne then glances coolly around the church,
+seeming to say by his air of indifference, that it is not worth his
+attention. We must remark that he was then at the epistle side of
+the altar. M. De Bussiere returns after an absence of about twelve
+minutes, and is surprised at not seeing his young companion. Could he
+have grown weary of waiting in a place that inspired only repugnance
+and disgust?... He knew not, and sought M. Ratisbonne. What was his
+astonishment at finding him on the left hand side of the church,
+kneeling, and apparently wrapt in devotion!... He could scarcely
+believe his eyes, and yet it was no mistake.... It was in the chapel
+of the archangel St. Michael that the prince of darkness had just been
+crushed.... A great victory already rejoiced all Heaven.... The young
+Jew was vanquished.
+
+M. De Bussiere approaches, but he is not heard; he touches his
+friend, but he cannot distract him; he touches him again, but still
+no response; he repeats it a third or fourth time, and at last M.
+Ratisbonne turns to answer, and his tearful countenance, his utter
+inability to express what has passed, his hands clasped most fervently,
+partly reveal the heavenly secret. "Oh! how M. De La Ferronays has
+prayed for me!" he exclaims. This is all he says. Never did M. De
+Bussiere enjoy a more consoling surprise. The bandage of error blinding
+the young Israelite had fallen, and M. De Bussiere's heart was filled
+with the most lively gratitude to God.... He raises his young friend,
+who was completely overcome by this celestial visitation; he takes
+him and almost carries him out of the church.... He is all eagerness
+to know the details.... He asks M. Ratisbonne to reveal the mystery,
+and begs him to say where he wishes to go. "Lead me," replies the new
+Paul, completely vanquished, "lead me where you will.... After what
+I have seen, I obey." ... And not being able to say more, he draws
+forth the unknown treasure he had been wearing upon his heart for four
+days. He takes the dear medal in his hands, he covers it with kisses,
+he waters it abundantly with tears of joy, and amidst his sobs escape
+a few words expressive of his happiness, but which a profound emotion
+almost prevents his articulating. "How good is God! What a plentitude
+of gifts! What joy unknown! Ah! how happy I am, and how much to be
+pitied are they who do not believe!" And continuing to shed torrents
+of tears over the miseries of those whom Faith has never enlightened,
+he already feels the holy desire of seeing the kingdom of Jesus Christ
+extended throughout the world. He can scarcely himself understand such
+a transformation, and amidst the various feelings surging through his
+heart, he interrupts his tears, his exclamations and his silence, to
+ask M. De Bussiere if he does not think him crazy.... Then answering
+his own question, "No," he continues: "I am not crazy.... I know well
+what I think and what passes within me.... I know that I am in my right
+mind.... Moreover, everybody knows that I am not crazy!" By degrees,
+these first transports of emotion give place to a more composed frame
+of mind; he can at last express his new desires, his new belief, and
+he asks to be conducted to the feet of a priest, for he craves the
+grace of holy baptism.... Already favored with the most lively Faith,
+he aspires after the happiness of confessing his Divine Master in the
+midst of torments and recalling the sufferings of the martyrs he had
+seen represented upon the walls of St. Etienne le Rond; he wishes to
+shed his blood in attestation of his Faith as a disciple of Jesus
+Christ.... Meanwhile, he has told M. De Bussiere nothing of the sudden
+blow that vanquished him, and he refuses to tell except in the presence
+of God's minister; "for what he saw he ought not, he could not reveal
+except on his knees."
+
+Father De Villefort, of the Society of Jesus, is chosen to receive
+the neophyte and hear this consoling secret, which will reveal the
+excess of Divine mercy towards the soul of the young Israelite. M. De
+Bussiere himself conducts him to the Reverend Father, who welcomes him
+tenderly.... Then, in the presence of M. De Bussiere, M. Ratisbonne
+takes in his hand the medal, the dear pledge of the Immaculate Mary's
+protection, and again covers it with respectful kisses, mingled with a
+shower of tears. He endeavors to overcome his emotion, and exclaims in
+a transport of joy: "I have seen her! I have seen her!" Conquering his
+feelings, he continues his narration, interrupted from time to time by
+the sighs of an overburdened heart.
+
+ "I had been in the church but an instant, when suddenly I was
+ seized with an inexplicable fear. I raised my eyes, the whole
+ edifice had disappeared from my view, one chapel alone had,
+ as it were, concentrated all the light, and in the midst
+ of this effulgence there appeared standing upon the altar the
+ Virgin Mary, grand, brilliant, full of majesty and sweetness,
+ such as she is represented upon the medal--an irresistible
+ force impelled me to her. The Virgin made me a sign with her
+ hand to kneel, and she seemed to say: 'It is well.' She did not
+ speak to me, but I understood all."
+
+[Illustration: _APPARITION OF THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL_
+
+_To M. Ratisbonne, January 20, 1842, in the Church of St. Andrew,
+delle Fratte, in Rome. "She did not speak one word to me," said M.
+Ratisbonne, "but I understood it all._"]
+
+He ceased, but this short account eloquently revealed the abundant
+favors with which his soul had just been inundated. Reverend Father De
+Villefort and the pious baron listened with a holy joy, mingled with an
+involuntary feeling of religious awe, at thoughts of the infinite power
+which had just triumphed by such a striking manifestation of mercy....
+The mystery was revealed, but M. Ratisbonne, now the disciple of the
+most humble of Masters, a God annihilated, expressed a wish to have the
+wonderful vision kept a profound secret; he even earnestly entreated
+that it should be, but Father De Villefort considered it wiser not
+to yield to the neophyte's modesty, God's glory, the Immaculate
+Mary's honor, demanding that such a miracle should be proclaimed. M.
+Ratisbonne's humility gave way to obedience. In the brief narration
+just quoted, one thing especially had struck the Reverend Father,
+"She did not speak to me, but I understood all!" What, then, had he
+understood, he who, having hitherto lived in the shades of darkness,
+found himself in an instant instructed in heavenly knowledge? What,
+then, had he understood, he who was suddenly recalled from the bosom of
+death which he loved, to a new life which but a short time previous he
+had solemnly declared he would ever ignore, 'a Jew he was born and a
+Jew he would die?' What had he understood, he the young Jew, so lately
+headstrong in his belief, an avowed enemy of Catholicity, but who now
+humbly prostrates himself at the feet of our Lord's minister to retract
+his words and renounce his own will, for he declares that, after what
+he has seen, he obeys?... What has he understood? What has he seen? He
+has seen the Mother of divine grace, the bright aurora of the Sun of
+Justice; he has understood the gift of God, the eternal truth ... the
+unity of the Church, its infallibility, the sanctity of its morals, the
+sublimity of its mysteries, the grandeur and elevation of its hopes....
+He has understood Heaven, and henceforth everything is changed for
+him, everything is renewed within him, he is no longer the same. His
+desires, projects, thoughts, earthly affections, where are they in the
+brilliancy of this celestial radiance? Vain prejudices of error, where
+are they?... The Immaculate Mother of Jesus has rent asunder the band
+that veiled the young Israelite's eyes, and the shades of error are
+dissipated, the blind man sees the light, and his joy is inexpressible,
+for he knew not till then the true gifts, the blessings promised the
+children of the true Church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Ratisbonne had heretofore been completely ignorant of the truths
+of Catholicity, he acknowledges that he had never read even one book
+calculated to enlighten him on the subject, his hatred of Christianity
+kept him aloof from all that might change his views in regard to it.
+He blasphemed without examining the object of his blasphemy, he judged
+without hearing, he despised without investigating.... And behold!
+in spite of himself, in an instant, in defiance of all his past
+protestations, he bends, he falls, he is conquered!
+
+Rejoice, O Mary! for the dew of grace has not descended upon an
+ungrateful soil.... No; not in vain at your mysterious school has he
+learned all this privileged soul of your love, this heart that your
+incomparable beauty, your ineffable bounty have vanquished for Jesus
+Christ!
+
+We see, indeed, that, from the moment his eyes are opened to the
+light, he adores the mysteries he formerly despised, loves what he
+hated, venerates what he ridiculed, and proves himself as humble
+and submissive to the Church as the most fervent Christian. That
+very day, he goes to the basilica of St. Mary Major, in tribute of
+gratitude to her who had just descended from Heaven, to bring him the
+gift of Faith, and its attendant blessings; thence he repairs to St.
+Peter's, to declare in that sanctuary dedicated to the Prince of the
+Apostles, his belief in the truths that Peter taught. M. De Bussiere,
+who found a pious delight in offering to God this conquest of grace,
+accompanied him on his holy pilgrimage, and conversed intimately with
+him, they had but one heart and one soul. A new Paul, Ratisbonne, in
+what he experienced, at the moment the Blessed Virgin gently forced
+him to prostrate himself at her feet, to receive the light of Heaven,
+recognized the strength of Him who vanquished His persecutors.... The
+profound emotion, the holy awe that filled the neophyte on entering
+a church, declared more fully the secrets that had been revealed to
+him.... Penetrated with the liveliest faith for the great Sacrament
+of love, he could not approach the altar, he was overwhelmed at the
+thought of the Real Presence of the God who resides in the Most
+Holy Sacrament. He considered himself unworthy to appear in this
+august Presence, as he was yet stained with original sin, and M. De
+Bussiere relates, that he took refuge in a chapel, consecrated to the
+Blessed Virgin, exclaiming: "I have no fears here, for I feel myself
+under the protection of a boundless mercy." O Mary! you opened your
+maternal heart, and there he concealed himself, knowing that divine
+justice yields to mercy, when the guilty soul has found and invoked
+with confidence the Refuge of Sinners.... So great was the fervent
+neophyte's happiness when in the temple of the Lord, that he was unable
+to find words expressive of his happiness. "Ah!" said he in a holy
+transport, "how delightful it is to be here! How great reason have
+Catholics to love their churches and to frequent them! How zealous
+they should be in ornamenting them! How sweet to spend a lifetime in
+these holy places! They are truly not of earth but of Heaven!" Ah! are
+we not confounded and abashed by the fervor of him who has just been
+born into the truth! What would he think of the coldness, the levity,
+the ingratitude of the majority of Christians?... Let us acknowledge
+it to our confusion; there is a Host who dwells in our midst, and
+whom we know not; we who eat at His table, who feed upon His own
+flesh, the Bread descended from Heaven, and behold! a young Israelite,
+instructed but a few hours in the wonders of God's love, teaches us how
+we must conduct ourselves in the presence of this Host, and with what
+sentiments our hearts should then be filled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next day, the news of this wonderful conversion had spread through
+Rome; every one was anxious to learn something about it, and collected
+with pious curiosity the various statements in circulation; every one
+wished to see the newly converted and hear his account.... General
+Chlabonski even went to M. De Bussiere's house. "So you have seen the
+image of the Blessed Virgin," said he, accosting the neophyte. "The
+image?" answered the latter, "ah! it was no image, but herself I saw;
+yes, M. her real self, just as I see you now!" We must here remark that
+to the Church alone, appertains the power of judging and qualifying
+this vision; but every one was impressed with the fact, that mistake
+or illusion seemed impossible, considering the young Israelite's
+character, education, prejudices and horror for Christianity; moreover,
+in this chapel there was neither statue, picture nor any representation
+whatever of the Blessed Virgin. And we love to quote here the words of
+a wise man, who, referring to the event, says, "that without one grain
+of exaggeration, just as it happened, just as all Rome narrates it, the
+unexpected fact, the public fact of this conversion, considering all
+the circumstances, would of itself be a miracle, if a miracle had not
+caused it."
+
+M. Ratisbonne reluctantly gave the details of what he had seen. When
+questioned closely as to what took place at the moment he found himself
+environed by this celestial effulgence, he answers ingenuously that he
+could not account for the involuntary impulse causing him to leave the
+right hand side of the church for the chapel on the left, especially
+as he was separated from it by the preparations for the morrow's
+ceremonies; that, when the Queen of Heaven appeared before him in all
+the glory and brilliancy of her immaculate purity, he caught a glimpse
+of her incomparable beauty, but immediately realized the impossibility
+of contemplating it, that urged by the desire, three times had he
+endeavored to lift his eyes to the face of this Mother of mercy, whose
+sweet clemency had deigned to manifest herself to him, and three times,
+in spite of himself, had his gaze been stayed at sight of the blessed
+hands, whence escaped a torrent of graces. "I could not," he told us
+himself after his arrival, "I could not express what I saw of mercy and
+liberality in Mary's hands. It was not only an effulgence of light,
+it was not rays I distinguished, words are inadequate to depict the
+ineffable gifts filling our Mother's hands, and descending from them,
+the bounty, mercy, tenderness, the celestial sweetness and riches,
+flowing in torrents and inundating the souls she protects."
+
+In the first moments of his conversion, M. Ratisbonne gave vent to some
+of those thoughts which strongly pre-occupied him, those outpourings
+of a fervent heart which happily, are still preserved. "O my God!"
+he exclaimed in a transport of astonishment and gratitude, "I, who
+only half an hour before was blaspheming! I, who felt such violent
+hatred against the Catholic religion!... Every one of my acquaintances
+knew full well, that to all human appearances, it was impossible for
+me ever to think of changing my religion. My family was Jewish, my
+betrothed, my uncle were Jewish. In embracing Christianity, I know that
+I break away from all earthly hopes and interests.... And yet I do
+it willingly; I renounce the passing happiness of a future which was
+promised me; I do so without hesitation, I act from conviction; ...
+for I am not crazy, and have never been; they well know it.... Who,
+then, could refuse to believe me, and believe in the truth?... The most
+powerful interests enchained me to my religion, and consequently all
+should be convinced that a man who sacrifices everything to a profound
+conviction must sacrifice to a celestial light, which has revealed
+itself by incontrovertible evidence. What I have affirmed is true. I
+know it, I feel it; and what could be my object in thus betraying the
+truth and turning aside from religion by a sacrilegious lie?... I have
+not said too much; my words must carry conviction."
+
+The Baron De Bussiere had the consolation of entertaining at his own
+home the new son Heaven had given him; the young Jew remained there
+until the retreat preceding his baptism. It was right and just,
+indeed, that this friend should gather the first bloom of a heart
+refreshed by the dew of grace, that he should be the happy witness of
+the wonders wrought in that soul.... M. Ratisbonne himself had need
+of a confidant, some one that understood him thoroughly, and to whom
+he could communicate the emotions of his heart.... It was in moments
+of sweet intimacy, when alone with his friend, that he could give
+full vent to his feelings, and, in unison with him, admire the loving
+designs of divine Providence, and the means that had dissipated such
+deplorable errors. He bewailed the blindness in which he had lived!...
+"Alas!" said he, "when my excellent brother embraced Catholicity,
+and afterwards entered into the ecclesiastical state, I, of all his
+relatives, was his most unrelenting persecutor.... I could not forgive
+his desertion of our religion--we were at variance, at least; I
+detested him, though he had none but the kindest thoughts for me....
+However, at the time of my betrothal, I said to myself that I must be
+reconciled to my brother, and I wrote him a few cold lines, to which
+he replied by a letter full of charity and tenderness.... One of my
+little nephews died about eighteen months ago. My good brother, having
+learned that he was seriously ill, asked as a personal favor that the
+child be baptized before its death, adding, with great delicacy, that
+to us it would be a matter of indifference, whilst to himself it would
+be a veritable happiness, and he hoped we would not refuse. I was
+infuriated at such a request!
+
+"I hope, oh! yes, I hope that my God will send me severe trials, which
+may redound to His honor and glory, and convince all that I am actuated
+by conscience...." What generosity of heart! What knowledge! His eyes
+are scarcely opened to the truths of Catholicity, ere he embraces
+them in their full extent.... He knows already that the cross is the
+distinctive mark of the children of the Church, of God's elect, and
+this cross which so many Christians drag reluctantly after them, he
+greets, he awaits, he desires.... Moreover, it had been shown to him in
+a very mysterious manner; for he relates that the night preceding his
+conversion there was constantly before his eyes a large cross without
+the Christ, that the sight really fatigued him, although he considered
+it of no importance. "I made," said he, "incredible efforts to banish
+this image, but in vain. It was only later, when having, by chance,
+seen the reverse of the Miraculous Medal, he recognized the exact sign
+which had struck him.
+
+Divine Providence, looking with a loving eye upon this young convert,
+directed his steps, and in these early days of his conversion, led
+him to a venerable Father who was to give him very precious counsel,
+upon the life of abnegation and perpetual sacrifice he had embraced.
+This servant of the Lord, immediately lay before him the importance
+of the step he had taken, the trials awaiting him, the temptation that
+would most assuredly beset his path, and without fearing to shake
+his constancy, he read him a few verses of the second chapter of
+Ecclesiasticus, upon the trials testing the virtue of the true servant
+and friend of God. With pleasure we quote here a part of this good
+priest's instructions:
+
+ "My son, when thou comest to the service of God, stand in
+ justice and in fear, and prepare thy soul for temptation.
+ Humble thy heart and endure; incline thy ear, and receive the
+ words of understanding; and make not haste in the time of
+ clouds. Wait on God with patience; join thyself to God and
+ endure, that thy life may be increased in the latter end. Take
+ all that shall be brought upon thee; and in thy sorrow endure,
+ and in thy humiliation keep patience. For gold and silver
+ are tried in the fire, but acceptable men in the furnace of
+ humiliation. Believe God, and He will recover thee; and direct
+ thy way, and trust in Him. Keep His fear, and grow old therein."
+
+M. Ratisbonne listened in respectful silence to these words of life; he
+cherished the remembrance of them, and the eve of his baptism, he asked
+the Reverend Father to put them in writing that he might meditate upon
+them the rest of his days.... It was accomplished, the joys of earth
+were sacrificed to the glory of bearing the cross of Jesus Christ....
+He was initiated into heavenly secrets by reason of those favors the
+Immaculate Mary had conferred upon him.... He already felt the strength
+that God communicates to the soul, resolved to share the sorrows of its
+divine Master.
+
+Ten days elapsed between the happy moment of the young Israelite's
+sudden comprehension of the truth, and his baptism. The Mother of Mercy
+had brought him from Heaven, the torch of Faith; in enlightening his
+intelligence, she had touched his heart; he sighed after the happy day,
+when the Church would admit him among the number of her children, and
+it was on the 31st of January, this tender Mother opened to him all
+her treasures, clothed him with innocence, called down upon him the
+plenitude of the gifts of the Spirit of love, and invited him to the
+banquet of Angels that she might give him the Bread of life.
+
+The Gesu was the church selected for this solemn ceremony. Long before
+the appointed hour, it was filled with a devout, eager multitude, all
+anxious to get as near as possible to the holy altar. Nothing disturbed
+the beauty or serenity of the occasion, no cloud dimmed the brightness
+of this heavenly festival, which inundated truly Christian hearts with
+the purest joys.
+
+M. Ratisbonne, clothed in the white robe of the catechumen, appeared
+about half-past eight, accompanied by the Reverend Father Villefort,
+(whose consoling duty it had been to prepare the neophyte for this
+beautiful day), and the Baron De Bussiere, his god-father. They
+conducted him into the chapel of St. Andrew, where the touching
+ceremony was to take place. An object of the most profound curiosity,
+the fervent neophyte, wrapt in recollection, awaited with angelic
+serenity, the solemn moment.... The pious Romans gave vent to their
+feelings by words and gestures, kissing their chaplets in an effusion
+of grateful love for Mary Immaculate, the cause of our joy.... They
+pointed out one to another the zealous baron, whom divine Providence
+had chosen to give the Miraculous Medal to the young Israelite. "He is
+a Frenchman," they repeated, "He is a Frenchman! Blessed be God!"
+
+His Eminence, the Cardinal Vicar, was to receive M. Ratisbonne's
+profession of Faith. He appeared at nine, clothed in his pontifical
+robes, and commenced the prayers prescribed for the baptism of adults.
+
+The prayers terminated, His Eminence went in procession with the
+clergy to the foot of the church; the young Israelite was conducted
+to his presence. "What do you ask of the Church of God?" "Faith,"
+was the immediate answer. "What name do you wish?" "Mary," said the
+neophyte, in a tone of tender gratitude; Mary, who had opened to him
+the path of salvation; Mary, who was to conduct him into the new life;
+Mary, who will one day introduce him into the City of the Saints,
+whence she descended to lead him to the divine fold.... Then followed
+his profession of Faith, his solemn promises.... He believes all,
+he promises all, he accepts all, he wishes to be a Christian, he is
+already one at heart.... His desires are gratified, the vivifying
+waters are poured upon his head, the grace of holy baptism has invested
+him with all the rights of his eternal heritage, the spirit of darkness
+is confounded. Behold the child of God, the brother of Jesus Christ,
+the new sanctuary of the Spirit of love, the favorite of the Queen of
+Heaven, the friend of Angels and the well-beloved son of Mother Church!
+
+It was on this occasion that the Abbe Dupanloup, who happened to be in
+Rome at the time, celebrated before an immense audience the infinite
+mercies of God and the Immaculate Mary's miraculous protection of a
+child of France. We cannot refrain from inserting here a few fragments
+of the account printed at Rome. It is well calculated to increase
+devotion to Mary:
+
+ "How admirable are the thoughts and ways of divine Providence,
+ and how deplorable the lot of those who neither comprehend nor
+ bless them. For such, the life of man is only a sad mystery,
+ his days a fatal series of events, man himself a noble but
+ miserable creature, cast far from Heaven upon this land of
+ tears, to live here in perpetual darkness, to die in despair,
+ oblivious of a God who heeds neither his virtues nor his
+ sorrows.... But, no; Lord, Thou art not forgetful of us, and
+ life is not thus; despite our infinite misery, thy Providence
+ watches over us, it is far above the heavens, more boundless
+ than the sea--it is an abyss of power, wisdom and love.----
+
+ "Thou hast made us for Thyself, Lord, and our hearts are never
+ at rest until they repose in Thee! We feel an insatiable need,
+ which stirs the depths of our being, which consumes us, and
+ when we yield to it, we inevitably find Thee!
+
+ "I bless Thee especially, I adore Thee, when from the depths of
+ Thy eternity, Thou dost remember compassionately the lowliness
+ of our being, the dust of which we are fashioned; when from the
+ heights of heaven, Thou dost cast a glance of pity and love
+ upon the most humble of Thy children; when, according to the
+ Prophet's expression, 'Thou dost move heaven and earth,' and
+ work innumerable marvels to save those who are dear to Thee, to
+ conquer one soul!
+
+ "O, you, upon whom, at this moment, all eyes are bent with
+ inexpressible emotion, with the tenderest love; for it is God,
+ it is His mercy we love in you, in you whose presence in this
+ holy place inspires these thoughts, tell us yourself what were
+ your thoughts and ways, by what secret mercy the Lord pursued
+ and reclaimed you?
+
+ For who are you? What do you seek in this sanctuary? What are
+ these honors you seem to bear? What is this white robe in which
+ I see you clothed? Tell us whence you came and whither you
+ were going? What obstacle has suddenly changed your course?
+ For walking in the footsteps of Abraham, your ancestor, whose
+ blessed son you are this day, like him, blindly obedient to
+ the voice of God, not knowing whither your journey tends, you
+ suddenly find yourself in the Holy City.... The Lord's work was
+ not yet accomplished; but it is for you to describe to us the
+ rising of the Sun of truth and justice upon your soul, for you
+ to picture its brilliant aurora.... Tell us why you enjoy, like
+ ourselves, perhaps more keenly than ourselves, the good word,
+ the virtues of the future and all our most blessed hopes....
+ Tell us, for we have the right to know, why you enter into
+ possession of our goods as your heritage? Who has introduced
+ you among us, for yesterday we knew you not, or rather we knew
+ you.... Oh! yes, I shall tell all; I know the joy that will
+ fill your heart at my revealing your miseries as well as the
+ celestial mercies.----
+
+ "You did not love the truth, but the truth loved you. To
+ the purest and most ardent efforts of a zeal that sought
+ to enlighten you, did you oppose a disdainful smile, an
+ indifferent silence, a subtle response, a haughty firmness, and
+ sometimes blasphemous pleasantries. O patient God! O God, who
+ lovest us in spite of our miseries! Thy mercy has oftentimes
+ a depth, a sublimity, a tenderness and, allow me to say it, a
+ power and delicacy that are infinite!
+
+ "Suddenly a rumor is circulated throughout the Holy City, a
+ rumor that consoles all Christian hearts, he who blasphemed
+ yesterday, who this morning even ridiculed the friends of
+ God, has become a disciple of Christ; celestial grace has
+ touched his lips, he utters now only words of benediction
+ and sweetness, the most vivid lights of the evangelical law
+ seem to beam from his eyes; we may say that a celestial
+ unction has taught him all things. Whence does he receive this
+ enlightenment of the eyes of the heart, that heart which sees
+ all, which has understood all? O God! Thou art good, infinitely
+ good, and I love to repeat those sweet words, so lately on the
+ blessed lips of him, whose memory is henceforth ineffaceably
+ impressed upon our hearts. We wept over him a few days ago,
+ we still regret him, but we have dried our tears. 'Yes, Thou
+ art good, and the children of men have truly called Thee the
+ good God!' (Last words of M. de La Ferronays.) Thou dost set
+ aside the laws of nature, Thou dost account nothing too much to
+ save Thy children! When Thou dost not come Thyself, Thou dost
+ send Thy angels!... O God! shall I here relate all? I ought
+ to enjoin reserve upon my speech.... But who is she? _Quae est
+ ista?_ I cannot say the word, and yet I cannot be silent.
+
+ "Hail Mary! You are full of grace; _Ave, gratia plena_, and
+ from the plentitude of your maternal heart, you love to bestow
+ your gifts upon us. The Lord is with you, _Dominus tecum_,
+ and it is through you He is pleased to descend to us! And now
+ to praise you worthily, I must borrow the images of Heaven or
+ speak the inflamed language of the prophets! For, O Mary! your
+ name is sweeter than the purest joys, more delightful than the
+ most exquisite perfumes, more charming than the harmony of
+ angels, _in corde jubilus_; more refreshing to the faithful
+ heart than honeycomb to the wearied traveler, _mel in lingua_;
+ more encouraging and cheering to the guilty but repentant heart
+ than the evening dew to the leaves parched and shriveled by
+ the mid-day sun, _ros in herba_. You are beautiful as the orb
+ of night, _pulchra ut luna_; you, who guide the bewildered
+ traveler; you are brilliant as the aurora, _aurora consurgens_;
+ fair and pure as the morning star, _stella matutina_; and it is
+ you who precede the dawn of the Sun of Justice in our hearts.
+
+ "O Mary! I can never portray all your loveliness and grandeur,
+ and it is my joy to succumb beneath the weight of so much
+ glory! But since I speak in the midst of your children, your
+ children who are my brothers, I shall continue to proclaim
+ your praises from the depths of my heart's affection.... At
+ your name, O Mary, Heaven rejoices, earth quivers with joy,
+ hell fumes with impotent rage.... No, there is no creature so
+ sublime or so humble, that invoking you, will perish. Those
+ august basilicas, erected by the piety of mighty nations,
+ those golden characters, those rich banners worked by royal
+ hands, likewise the modest offerings of the sailor in your
+ lowly chapels, in the crevices of the rock, on the shores of
+ the sea, or even your humble picture which martyr's hands have
+ traced upon the catacombs, all attest your power in appeasing
+ the tempests of divine wrath, and attracting upon us heavenly
+ benedictions.
+
+ "O Mary, I have seen the most savage wilds of nature smile
+ at your name and blossom into beauty; the pious inhabitants
+ of the deserts celebrate your glory, the mountain echoes,
+ the torrent billows, vie with one another in repeating your
+ praises. I have seen great cities bring forth and cherish,
+ under the shadow of your name, the purest and most noble
+ virtues. I have seen youth, with generous impulse, confident
+ ardor, and the inexpressible charm of virtue irradiating its
+ countenance, prefer your name and the happiness of celebrating
+ your festivals to all the enchantments of the world and its
+ most brilliant destinies! I have seen old men, after a godless
+ life of sixty or eighty years, rise upon their couch of pain,
+ to remember at the sound of your name the God who had blessed
+ their early infancy; you were to them as a pledge of security
+ and of peaceful entrance into the Eternal City! O Mary, who are
+ you then? _Quae est ista?_ You are the Mother of our Saviour,
+ and Jesus, the fruit of your womb, is the God blessed from
+ all eternity. You are our Sister, _soror nostra es_; though a
+ child of Adam like ourselves, you have not participated in our
+ sad heritage, and our woes excite your deepest and most tender
+ compassion.
+
+ "O Mary! you are the masterpiece of the Divine power! You are
+ the most touching invention of God's goodness! I could not say
+ more--you are the sweetest smile of His mercy! O God, give eyes
+ to those who have them not--eyes that they may see Mary and
+ understand the beautiful light of her maternal glance; and to
+ those who have no heart give one, that they may love Mary; for
+ from Mary to the Word Eternal, to the Beauty ever ancient and
+ ever new, to that uncreated Light which strengthens the feeble
+ sight and appeases every desire of our souls, from Mary to
+ Jesus, from the Mother to the Son, there is but a step!----
+
+ "Our dearly beloved brother--and I am happy to be the first
+ to call you thus--behold under what favorable auspices you
+ enter this new Jerusalem, the tabernacle of the Lord, 'the
+ Church of the living God, which is the pillar and ground of
+ truth. But before delivering your heart to these emotions of
+ joy, there is one severe lesson it should learn this day; and
+ since I am destined to be the first to announce to you the
+ words of the Gospel, I shall conceal from you nothing of the
+ austerity it inculcates. 'You have understood all,' you say;
+ but let me ask if you have understood the mystery of the cross.
+ Ah! be careful, for it is the foundation of Christianity. I
+ speak now not only of that blessed cross which you lovingly
+ adore, because it places before your eyes Jesus crucified in
+ expiation of your sins, but borrowing the emphatic language of
+ an ancient apologist of our Faith, I shall say to you: 'This is
+ no question of the cross that is sweet for you to adore, but
+ of the cross to which you must soon submit.' _Ecce cruces jam
+ non adorandae, sed subeundae._ Behold what you must understand if
+ you are a Christian and what baptism must disclose to you!...
+ Moreover, in vain would I endeavor to dissimulate the truth, by
+ saying that your future may reveal no crosses; I see them in
+ store for you. No doubt, we must venerate them afar off, but
+ it is infinitely better to bend beneath their weight when laid
+ upon us, and courageously carry them. I shall be mistaken, if
+ the evangelic virtues are not increased and fortified in your
+ soul by patience. And blessed be God for it! You have been
+ introduced into Christianity through Mary and the Cross!...
+ It is an admirable mode of introduction! And again I repeat,
+ blessed be God for it! For I say to you, He has given you
+ ears to hear and a heart to feel this language! Son of the
+ Catholic Church you will share your Mother's destiny! Look
+ at Rome, Rome where you have just been born into the Church;
+ her heritage here below, is always to combat and always to
+ triumph. Moreover, nothing astonishes her; and after eighteen
+ centuries of combats and victories, it is here, in the centre
+ of Catholic unity, at the foot of the Apostolic See, that focus
+ whence daily emanate the most vivid and purest rays of Faith,
+ piercing the shades of paganism, error and Judaism, that the
+ Church has poured over your forehead the beneficent water of
+ celestial regeneration. What do I say? It is Peter himself, the
+ Moses of the new law, worthily represented by the first Vicar
+ of his august Successor, who has struck for you the mysterious
+ rock, the immovable stone. _Petra erat Christus_, whence gush
+ forth those waters springing up unto eternal life.
+
+ "But I have said enough; I retard your happiness. Heaven, at
+ this moment, regards you with love, the earth blesses you
+ and Jesus Christ awaits you; go forward then; angels have
+ commenced the feast, and the friends of God continue it with
+ you here below! And even he who seems dead in our eyes, and
+ whose heart is living in the hand of the Lord! you know him,
+ his supplications and prayers have been poured forth in your
+ behalf; the solemn moment has now arrived! Abraham, Isaac,
+ Israel, the patriarchs and prophets from their heavenly abode
+ encourage you, and Moses blesses you, because the law in your
+ heart has developed into the Gospel; mercy and truth sustain
+ you, justice and peace attend you, repentance and innocence
+ crown you.... And finally, it is Mary who receives and protects
+ you!
+
+ "O Mary! it is a necessity and a duty for us to repeat once
+ more this prayer, this cherished prayer, and I know that not
+ one of all the multitude here assembled, but will fervently
+ repeat it with me: 'Remember, O most pious Virgin Mary, that
+ no one ever had recourse to thy protection, implored thy aid
+ or sought thy mediation, without obtaining relief. Groaning
+ under the weight of our sins, we come, O Virgin of virgins, to
+ cast ourselves in thy arms, and do most humbly supplicate thee.
+ O Mother of the Eternal Word, to remember the just, remember
+ sinners, remember those who know thee, and those who know thee
+ not; remember our woes and thy mercy.' I shall not say remember
+ this young man, for he is thy child, the sweet and glorious
+ conquest of thy love, but I shall say, remember all those dear
+ ones for whom he offers this day, the first prayers of his
+ Catholic heart; restore them to him in time and eternity.----
+
+ "And since I am a stranger here (no, let me recall my words,
+ no one is a stranger in Rome, every Catholic is a Roman), but
+ since we were both born on the soil of France, I think my
+ prayers find an echo in the hearts of all who hear me, when I
+ say: remember France, she is still the home of noble virtues,
+ generous souls, heroic love.... Restore to the Church in France
+ her pristine beauty."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Holy Sacrifice terminated the imposing ceremony. Our new Christian,
+overwhelmed beneath the weight of so many favors, had to be assisted
+to the Holy Table, where he received the Bread of Angels as the seal
+of his celestial alliance. Inundated with happiness, the tears gushed
+from his eyes, and after receiving, it was necessary to assist him
+to his place.... A number of pious Christians participated in the
+divine banquet, to which the Church so tenderly invites all her happy
+children, and the admirable spectacle of a blessed union with their new
+brother, was another edifying episode of this memorable day.
+
+The _Te Deum_ which followed, that most fervent hymn of gratitude,
+arising from every heart and mingling with the sound of all the
+bells, was not less impressive. "I pray God," wrote a witness of this
+ceremony, "never to let the memory of what I experienced during these
+three hours be effaced from my heart; such an impression is, beyond
+doubt, one of the most precious graces a Christian soul can ever
+receive."
+
+Clothed with innocence, enriched with the gifts of Heaven, admitted
+to its joys, buried in the sweet transports of gratitude and love, M.
+Ratisbonne could not relinquish immediately his dear solitude. He had
+made one retreat, as a preparation for the reception of these three
+grand Sacraments, and he was filled with ineffable consolation; feeling
+now the necessity, the imperative duty of returning thanks to his
+Benefactor, he wished to commence a second retreat, so that afar from
+the world, he might be deaf to the confused noises of its frivolous
+joys, and amidst the silence of a sweet peace, celebrate the Lord's
+magnificence, chant hymns of gratitude, taste in secret and at leisure
+the gifts which had been imparted to him, and the new treasures he
+possessed.
+
+Another grand consolation was in store for him. He sighed after the
+happy moment when he could prostrate himself at the feet of the
+Sovereign Pontiff, and there testify his submission to and love for
+that holy Church who had just admitted him into the number of her
+cherished children. An audience was granted him. The two friends, M.
+Ratisbonne and the Baron de Bussiere, were conducted into the presence
+of His Holiness by the reverend Father General of the Society of Jesus.
+Having bent the knee three times before the Vicar of Jesus Christ, they
+received in unison, that holy and desirable benediction, which many
+pious Christians esteem themselves happy in obtaining, after long and
+wearisome journeys. They were welcomed with truly paternal tenderness
+by the venerable Pontiff, who conversed some time with them, and loaded
+them with tokens of his favor. M. Ratisbonne knew not how to express
+his admiration for the great simplicity, humility and goodness of this
+worthy Successor of the Prince of the Apostles. "He was so exceedingly
+kind," has M. Ratisbonne told me several times since, "as to take
+us into his chamber, where he showed me near his bed, a magnificent
+picture of my dear medal, a picture for which he has the greatest
+devotion. I had procured quite a number of Miraculous Medals. His
+Holiness cheerfully blessed them for me, and these are the weapons I
+shall use in conquering souls for Jesus Christ and Mary."
+
+The Holy Father crowns all his favors, by presenting M. Ratisbonne
+a crucifix, a precious souvenir which the young Christian will ever
+cherish, clinging to it in his combats and his sorrows, as a weapon
+that must assure him the victory over hell. A new soldier of Jesus
+Christ, he needs no other arms than the cross and Mary Immaculate,
+signal protectors that will guide him in the ways of justice, and one
+day, usher him into the light of eternal felicity.
+
+Shortly after his second retreat, M. Ratisbonne made preparations for
+his return to France, and bade adieu to the Holy City, though not
+without the sweet hope of again offering there his tribute of fervent
+thanksgiving. We have seen and conversed with him many times. The first
+emotions of a boundless and almost unparalled happiness are past,
+but the fruits remain; daily does the precious gift of Faith strike
+deeper root into this soul regenerated by the waters of holy Baptism;
+and the divine life, which was communicated to him on the day of his
+baptism, our new brother nourishes by the frequent reception of the
+Holy Eucharist, and a withdrawal from all worldly society; for whilst
+awaiting the manifestations of the Lord's will in regard to his future,
+he feels the necessity of preserving, in the secrecy of a peaceful and
+recollected life, the treasures he has received.
+
+M. Ratisbonne's conversion, publicly styled a miracle, excited too much
+interest and comment for the Holy See to allow it to pass unnoticed.
+The Sovereign Pontiff ordered a canonical examination according to the
+rules of the Church. The Cardinal Vicar prescribed an investigation.
+Nine witnesses were examined; all the circumstances weighed, and
+after a favorable conclusion, the most eminent Cardinal Patrizzi,
+"pronounced and declared the 3d of June, 1842, that the instantaneous
+and perfect conversion of Alphonse Marie Ratisbonne, from Judaism to
+Catholicity, was a true and incontrovertible miracle, wrought by the
+most blessed and powerful God, through the intercession of the Blessed
+Virgin Mary. For the greater glory of God and the increase of devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin Mary, His Eminence deigns to permit the account
+of this signal miracle, not only to be printed and published but also
+authorized."--A picture commemorative of the apparition of the Blessed
+Virgin to M. Ratisbonne, a representation of the Virgin of the medal,
+was placed in the chapel of St. Andrew's Church, where the miracle had
+taken place.
+
+A few days after his return to France, M. Ratisbonne, in token of
+his gratitude, and with the intention of obtaining his family's
+conversion, felt urged to erect a chapel under the invocation of Mary
+Immaculate, in the Providence orphanage of the Faubourg St. Germain,
+Paris. The laying of the corner stone took place May 1st, 1842, and
+the sanctuary was finished and dedicated May 1st, 1844, with great
+solemnity, in the presence of the founder of the house, M. Desgenettes,
+cure of Notre Dame des Victoires, the Baron de Bussiere, M. Etienne,
+Superior General of the Priests of the Mission and daughters of
+Charity, M. Eugene Bore, then a simple layman, but afterwards M.
+Etienne's immediate successor, the abbe de Bonnechose, later an
+Archbishop and Cardinal, and many other distinguished persons.
+
+The pious convert often repaired to this sanctuary to mingle his
+prayers with those of the Daughters of Charity and their dear orphans;
+and many times has he also enjoyed the ineffable consolation of
+celebrating the Holy Sacrifice and thanking his celestial Benefactress,
+before the beautiful picture of the Immaculate Conception placed above
+the high altar, as a souvenir of the miracle of St. Andrew delle
+Fratte, for M. Ratisbonne is now a priest. Not content with leading a
+pious life in the world, he has renounced forever the joys and hopes
+of time to embrace the ecclesiastical state, which consecrated him
+unreservedly to God. For several years past he has been associated with
+his beloved brother Theodore in the order of Our Lady of Sion, the
+object of which congregation is the conversion of Israelites.
+
+
+V.
+
+_Graces Obtained from 1843 to 1877, in France, Germany, Italy, America._
+
+
+CURE OF A LITTLE GIRL (PARIS)--1843.
+
+This account was sent us in the month of January, 1877, by the very
+person who was cured:
+
+ "About the 15th of December, 1843, a little girl, Zenobie de
+ M., just one year old, was attacked, at the same time, by
+ water on the chest, a disease of the bowels, and cerebral
+ congestion. Dr. Flandrin, a friend of the family was called in
+ immediately, and gave the child every attention, but his skill
+ was powerless, and the family was plunged in the deepest grief.
+ The child's eldest sister alone cherished a faint hope in the
+ depths of her heart; she had intended consecrating herself to
+ God in a religious state, and had always regarded the birth
+ of this little one as a gift of Providence, sent to take her
+ place in the family, and console her afflicted parents. God
+ will not, she thought, take back the child. In her room was a
+ picture representing the apparition of the Miraculous Medal;
+ she knelt before it, begging the child's recovery, and renewing
+ her promises of embracing a religious life should the petition
+ be granted. This generous offering she kept a secret. A little
+ while after, the doctor came and declared the child's case
+ hopeless, and moreover, its recovery not desirable as it would
+ remain imbecile, paralyzed or blind. He proposed, however, a
+ consultation with M. Blache, physician of the Necker hospital,
+ who prescribed energetic treatment, but said, 'this child
+ cannot live.'
+
+ The poor mother, deeming it inadvisable to cause the little
+ creature unnecessary suffering, gently laid it in the cradle,
+ saying with the faith and resignation seen in none but a
+ Christian mother: 'The Lord gave it to me, the Lord wishes
+ to take it away, may His holy will be accomplished!' In the
+ afternoon, one of the aunts came to accompany the elder sister
+ to church, and whilst their prayers ascended to the Most
+ High, more for the mother than the child, this mother obeys
+ spontaneously a supernatural impulse, and taking the Miraculous
+ Medal as a last hope, she applies it to the body of the child,
+ and repeats with confidence the invocation: 'O Mary! conceived
+ without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!' The
+ plaintive cries ceased, and when M. Flandrin came that evening
+ to see if the little one were still alive, he was greatly
+ surprised to perceive a faint improvement since morning, the
+ whole body covered with a gentle perspiration, and the little
+ paralyzed arm able to move in any direction. 'But what a pity,'
+ said he, 'the child will be blind,' which indeed it seemed to
+ be already, as a light passed several times before its eyes
+ produced no effect whatever.
+
+ "The mother who had not yet mentioned her secret, waited until
+ all had left the room, then taking her dear medal, she lay it
+ upon her infant's eyes and repeated the invocation. After a
+ sound sleep of about twenty-four hours, little Zenobie awoke,
+ recognizing all around her, and smiling upon all, her sight was
+ restored!
+
+ "The child's father, penetrated with faith and piety, said:
+ 'Assuredly, God alone has restored our child to us; henceforth,
+ she shall be called Marie, that she may ever bear in mind
+ to whom she is indebted for life.' An attack of measles now
+ supervened and finished the work, according to the doctor, by
+ absorbing the water on the brain, and throwing out upon the
+ surface of the skin the heretofore internal malady. A small
+ gold cross, having engraven upon it the memorable date of this
+ miraculous cure, was hung around the neck of little Marie, who
+ is now a Daughter of St. Vincent de Paul."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A CAPTAIN IN THE AUSTRIAN ARMY.
+
+Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1860:
+
+ After the war in Italy, a Polish regiment passed through Gratz;
+ the captain, attacked by a violent hemorrhage, was obliged
+ to stop at the general hospital, in charge of the Daughters
+ of Charity. Their constant and unremitting attentions did
+ not retard the progress of the disease, and his life was in
+ imminent danger.
+
+ Full of consideration, gratitude and politeness for those
+ who nursed him, he nevertheless expressed great displeasure
+ whenever they approached him on the subject of religion; he
+ had requested to be spared the visits of the chaplain of the
+ regiment, and as to the hospital chaplain, he dared not present
+ himself. It was necessary to keep the patient very quiet, and
+ avoid all worry, for the least excitement might cause a mortal
+ hemorrhage.
+
+ A Sister, who had been watching by his couch one night, left,
+ in mistake, a little book containing an account of favors
+ obtained through the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The sick
+ man took the book and read a few pages; another Sister coming
+ into his room, he showed her a passage, and said, putting his
+ hand to his forehead with a significant gesture: "Here, Sister,
+ just read this nonsense; as for myself, I cannot understand
+ how any one can write such books--if I may dare, let me beg you
+ to take this away."
+
+ Vain was every effort to reach his heart by pleasant
+ distractions, by engaging his attention or his interest; he
+ was insensible to all. A few days after the occurrence just
+ mentioned, a Sister ventured to offer him a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin suspended to a cord, so that he might wear it
+ if he wished. He was too polite to refuse the present, but he
+ let it remain just where the Sister had put it. His servant,
+ though a devout Christian, dared not speak to him of receiving
+ the Sacraments, and, although the patient expected to leave the
+ hospital soon, it was very evident to all else that the fever
+ was daily sapping his strength and rapidly conducting him to
+ the tomb. Much grieved at his condition, and especially his
+ impenitence, the Sisters determined to make one last effort
+ to save this soul. And what was it? They wrote the Blessed
+ Virgin a note, as follows: "Grant that, by some means, most
+ holy Mother, he may accept your medal, prepare him yourself to
+ receive the Sacraments, and assist him at the hour of death.
+ O Mary! conceived without sin, pardon our temerity, we attach
+ this note to your statue, and leave it there till you deign to
+ hear our prayers."
+
+ The chief physician of the hospital said, one day, to the
+ Sister on leaving this patient's room: "The captain will die
+ without the Sacraments, he seems inflexible." "Oh! as to that,"
+ she replied, "the Blessed Virgin will not fail to overcome his
+ obstinacy." Three or four days elapsed; one morning the sick
+ man requested the Sister to put the medal around his neck,
+ which she did most joyfully. In the afternoon, he called her
+ again: "Sister," said he, "I beg you to send for the chaplain
+ of my regiment to hear my confession, so that to-morrow I may
+ receive the Holy Eucharist and Extreme Unction." The worthy
+ priest was happy to answer the summons; he remained a long time
+ with the sick man, and next morning, after celebrating Mass at
+ the altar of the Immaculate Conception, he administered to him
+ the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction. We were all edified at
+ the dying man's piety. He cherished his medal with religious
+ fidelity, often asking for it and kissing it tenderly. A few
+ days after receiving the Last Sacraments, he rendered his
+ soul to God, saved, as we have every reason to hope, by the
+ intercession of Mary conceived without sin.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A HARDENED SINNER.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity at Issoudun,
+1862:
+
+ In the month of August, 1862, a young man aged twenty-nine, and
+ who had been married several years, was dying of consumption.
+ Vainly did his friends endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ eternity; every idea of religion seemed extinguished in his
+ heart, and he positively refused to see the priest. A pious
+ acquaintance informed the Sisters of his deplorable state;
+ one of them went immediately to see him. She met with a cool
+ reception, but was not the least disconcerted, and spoke to him
+ very kindly, proposing to send him a physician, and adding,
+ that she would supply all necessary medicines and nourishment.
+ "I need neither doctors nor medicines," was the reply, "I am
+ going to die, and I ask only that you will let me die in
+ peace." His poor wife, who was present, holding their little
+ child in her arms, said to him with tears: "Accept Sister's
+ offer, and perhaps you will recover," but he made no answer;
+ and the Sister now turning to his wife, endeavored to console
+ her, by promising to send the doctor and return soon herself.
+ The doctor came and met with no better reception. In a few days
+ the Sister presented herself again, and was received as before,
+ all her advances eliciting no response save a frigid silence;
+ but naught discouraged, she returned day after day, though her
+ reception was always the same. As the young man grew worse,
+ the Sister's prayers increased, and she felt inspired to offer
+ him a medal of the Immaculate Conception, still hoping that
+ the good God would lead back to the fold, this poor strayed
+ sheep. "I accept a medal!" he exclaimed vehemently, "and what
+ do you wish me to do with it? It would suit my wife or child
+ well enough, but as for myself, I want no medals!" The Sister
+ withdrew from the contest for the time, but not discouraged,
+ she returned to the charge next morning. "Ah," said she
+ pleasantly, "you are going to take the medal to-day?" "You know
+ what I told you yesterday," he answered, "besides, Sister,
+ I am afraid of becoming imbued with your sentiments should
+ I accept it, for I perceive that you are much more unhappy
+ than I care about being." A ray of happiness illumined the
+ Sister's countenance, for she knew that he who fears is already
+ conquered. After plying her with questions about religion, he
+ concluded thus: "After all, death will be a great relief to
+ me; I have twice made an unsuccessful attempt at committing
+ suicide. I suffer so much that I desire nothing but to die as
+ soon possible." Next day, the Sister asked her Superioress to
+ visit him and offer him the medal. She did so, and he not only
+ accepted it, but at last consented to see the priest. When our
+ Sister next saw him he was completely changed, and expressed
+ his joy at the priest's visit, and his desire of seeing him
+ soon again. "Sister," said he, "I am too miserable, I wish to
+ be like you." The priest did not delay his second coming, and
+ the poor, suffering creature, having made his confession, asked
+ for Holy Communion, which he had not received for many years,
+ but this favor was denied him, his throat being so inflamed
+ that he could swallow only a few drops of liquid. His last days
+ were sanctified by the most admirable resignation; no one ever
+ heard him utter a complaint, he asked for one thing only, the
+ visits of the priest and Sister, which alone seemed to afford
+ him any consolation. And on the Feast of All Saints, evincing
+ every mark of a sincere conversion, he breathed his last.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A MALEFACTOR.
+
+A Letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland)--1865:
+
+ There was brought to our hospital, a young man of notoriously
+ bad character. He entered our doors blaspheming, and as the
+ physician had told the Sister that he had but a few days to
+ live, she essayed a few words of piety and consolation, to turn
+ his attention to the state of his soul; but he answered her by
+ maledictions. At last, one day she said to him, "My friend,
+ since you will not listen to me, I will ask my Superioress
+ herself to come." "Let her come," was his reply, "if she were
+ to tell me to hang myself, I would obey her, but as for
+ confession, she may talk about that as much as she pleases,
+ I shall never yield." These words were followed by so many
+ blasphemies, that it was with a very heavy heart the poor
+ Sister sought her Superioress. "Have you given him a medal?"
+ said the latter. "A medal!" was the reply, "he would throw it
+ away." "Ah, well, we must put one under his pillow and trust to
+ prayer, for it is useless to talk to him; tell him only that I
+ say he is not worthy of going to confession, and I forbid his
+ doing so."
+
+ As soon as the Sister who was nursing him left the presence
+ of her Superioress, the latter threw herself upon her knees
+ and began to repeat that beautiful prayer, the _Remember_. In
+ a very few minutes the Sister returned, this time shedding
+ tears of joy. "Ah, Sister," said she, "he wishes to confess;
+ as soon as I had put the medal under his pillow and recited
+ the _Remember_ for him, I delivered your message." "Indeed!"
+ said he, rising from his seat, "Well, I would just like to see
+ the person that could prevent it; tell your Superioress that
+ to-morrow morning at eight o'clock, I am going to pay the cure
+ a visit."
+
+ The Sisters felt a little troubled concerning a confession
+ apparently dictated by the spirit of contradiction, but their
+ fears were dissipated when the penitent returned bathed in
+ tears. He had just been to Holy Communion; asking the Sisters'
+ pardon for his past misconduct, he begged them to implore the
+ Blessed Virgin to let him live eight days longer, that he might
+ weep for his sins. This favor was granted him, and daily did he
+ bedew his pillow with tears. At the end of the eight days he
+ died, blessing God, and pressing the medal to his lips.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN ACTRESS.
+
+A letter from the Superioress of the Daughters of Charity, at the
+Hospital of Beuthen (Prussian Poland), 1865:
+
+ Some years ago, a young Protestant woman, belonging to a troupe
+ of comedians, arrived in Beuthen with her company. The good God
+ permitted that she should find lodgings in a Catholic family,
+ with whom she soon essayed a controversy. "Mademoiselle," said
+ the master of the house, "it would be better for you to go see
+ the Sisters about these things; the Blessed Virgin has wrought
+ wonders in their establishments, I am sure you would return
+ fully enlightened on the subject you have been discussing."
+ The young girl laughed at such a proposition; but a few days
+ after, impelled by curiosity, she repaired to the hospital
+ and asked for the Sister-Servant. "Invite her in," said the
+ latter, who had already heard of the young actress; "no doubt,
+ the Blessed Virgin has something in store for her here." After
+ a few formalities of etiquette, our visitor introduced the
+ subject of religion, and attempted to enter into a controversy
+ with the Sister. "Alas! Mademoiselle," replied the latter, "the
+ poor Daughters of Charity have neither the time nor learning
+ necessary for a discussion of these subtle questions, but they
+ have other arms with which to vanquish you;" and, smiling, she
+ presented her disputant a little medal of the Blessed Virgin.
+ "Promise me to wear this slight souvenir, it will be a constant
+ reminder that we are praying for you." She allowed the Sister
+ to put the medal on her neck, and retired rather pleased with
+ her visit.
+
+ From this day, the Sisters at the hospital began to recommend
+ the young actress to Mary conceived without sin. Not many
+ weeks after, the cure said to the Sister-Servant: "Do you
+ know, Sister, that Mademoiselle M., who spent the most of
+ her time promenading with gentlemen and smoking cigars, now
+ comes to me for religious instruction? In a little while she
+ will make her abjuration." And, indeed, it was not very long
+ before she repaired to the hospital. "Sister," said she to the
+ Sister-Servant, "I am going to confession to-day, and to-morrow
+ I make my First Communion. On my first visit here, I was
+ enraged at you. I could have fought you, and cast to the winds
+ this medal that I now kiss. From the very moment you put it on
+ my neck, an unaccountable change was wrought in me." Next day,
+ the church was filled with Protestants and Jews, all anxious
+ to witness a ceremony which had excited so much comment. After
+ her reception into the Church, the young convert, on the eve of
+ her departure, paid another visit to the Sister Servant, and
+ the latter saw by her very countenance what great changes grace
+ had wrought in this soul. "Well," said the Sister, just to try
+ her, "here is a silver medal to replace yours which has become
+ very black." "Oh, no," was the earnest, prompt reply, as she
+ tenderly pressed her own medal, "I would not exchange this for
+ any other in the world, for it is since I began to wear it my
+ soul has awaked to a new life."
+
+ Some years later, the Sister received a letter dated from
+ Rome, it was from the young convert, who wrote to her as
+ follows: "Sister, Providence has led me to Rome, and it is no
+ longer Mlle. M. you must address, but Sister St.---- of the B.
+ convent. Your desires are accomplished; I now belong entirely
+ to God, as I once did to the world; the Blessed Virgin
+ vanquishes souls with other arms than those of controversy."
+
+We must add, to the praise of the young actress, that her moral
+character was always irreproachable.
+
+The Superioress of the hospital at Beuthen, in narrating these facts,
+adds: "I could mention, for the greater glory of God and honor of the
+Immaculate Mary, numberless incidents of this kind, but lack of time
+and my weak eyes prevent my giving the details. I will say, however,
+and that without the slightest exaggeration, that not a week passes
+but the Blessed Virgin bestows upon our patients at the hospital some
+new proof of her maternal bounty. The medal, so dear to us, is really
+miraculous, and the instrument by which we snatch from destruction
+souls that have cost Our Lord so much. Ah! how numberless, in this
+unhappy land, the snares of the enemy of our salvation to entrap souls;
+but to vanquish him, I everywhere circulate the Miraculous Medal (you
+know what numbers we get), and my confidence in Mary is never deceived."
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROMINENT FREE MASON.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States), 1865._
+
+ Among the patients at the great Charity hospital, New Orleans,
+ was a very prominent Free Mason. His hatred of religion was
+ displayed in a thousand ways; not only did he interdict the
+ Sister who nursed him any allusion to his salvation, but
+ he even habitually repaid by harsh and injurious words her
+ kindness and attention to his physical sufferings. If others
+ ventured to mention the subject of religion to him, they were
+ received with jeers and banters. Several times was he at
+ the point of death, and yet, sad to relate, his dispositions
+ remained the same. At last, when the Sister saw that he had but
+ a few hours to live, she stealthily slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his bolster, and said interiorly to the Blessed Virgin:
+ "My dear Mother, you know I have spared no effort to touch this
+ poor man's heart, but in vain; now I abandon him to you, it
+ is you who must save him; I leave him entirely in your hands,
+ and shall try to divest myself of all anxiety concerning him."
+ That evening, in making her rounds, she glances at him and
+ learns from the infirmarian that ever since her (the Sister's)
+ last visit, he had been very calm and apparently absorbed in
+ thought. On inquiring of the patient himself how he felt, she
+ was astonished at his polite answer, but remembering that she
+ had entrusted him entirely to the Blessed Virgin's care, she
+ did not venture a word about his soul, and bidding him good
+ night, she left the room.
+
+ About nine o'clock, he called the infirmarian, and asked for a
+ priest; knowing his former bitterness, the infirmarian thought
+ it a joke and treated it accordingly; the patient repeated his
+ request, but with no better success. Then he began to weep
+ and cry aloud for a priest; all the other patients were mute
+ with astonishment, and the infirmarian unable to resist such
+ entreaties went for the chaplain and the Sister. The dying
+ man requested Baptism, which was administered immediately, as
+ well as Extreme Unction, and before morning he had rendered
+ his account to the Sovereign Judge. His body was interred with
+ Masonic rites, but his soul, thanks to the powerful protection
+ of Mary Immaculate, had been carried by angels to the bosom of
+ its God.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SICK PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ At the same hospital in New Orleans, a Sister for a long time
+ had vainly endeavored to convince a Protestant of the most
+ essential truths of religion, that he might receive Baptism,
+ but he was deaf to all her persuasions. One day she showed him
+ a Miraculous Medal, and related its origin. He appeared to
+ listen somewhat attentively, but when she offered it to him,
+ "Take it away," said he, in a tone of great contempt, "this
+ Virgin is no more than any other woman." "I am going to leave
+ it on your table," was the Sister's reply, "I am sure you will
+ reflect on my words." He said nothing, but to put it out of
+ sight, placed his bible over it. Every day, under the pretext
+ of arranging and dusting his room, the Sister assured herself
+ that the medal was still there. Several days elapsed, during
+ which the patient grew worse; one night, whilst lying awake
+ racked with suffering, he perceived a brilliant light around
+ his bed, though the rest of the room was enveloped in darkness.
+ Greatly astonished, he succeeded, in spite of his weakness, in
+ rising and turning up the gas, to discover if possible, the
+ cause of this mysterious light. Finding none, he returned to
+ bed, and a few minutes after, he perceived that the luminous
+ rays escaped from the medal. He then took it in his hands,
+ and kept it there the remainder of the night. As soon as the
+ Sisters' rising bell rang (which was four o'clock), he called
+ the infirmarian, and begged him to tell the Sister he desired
+ Baptism. The chaplain was immediately informed. "Impossible!"
+ he exclaimed, for having had frequent conversations with the
+ sick man, he was well aware of his sentiments, and could
+ scarcely believe him in earnest. Nevertheless, he obeyed the
+ summons, and finding the patient really disposed to profit by
+ his ministry, he administered the Last Sacraments, and shortly
+ after receiving which the poor man died, blessing God and the
+ Blessed Virgin for the graces bestowed upon him.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT GIRL.
+
+ _New Orleans, (United States)._
+
+ A poor young Protestant girl, brought to our hospital to be
+ treated for a grave malady, had so great a horror of our holy
+ religion, that at the very sight of a Catholic near her,
+ she acted like one possessed. The presence of a Sister was
+ especially irritating, and one day she even went so far as to
+ spit in the Sister's face, but the latter, nothing dismayed,
+ and ever hoping that the God of all mercy would change this
+ wolf into a lamb, continued her kind attentions, the more
+ disrespectful her patient, the more gentle and considerate
+ the Sister. The latter was at last inspired with the thought
+ of slipping a Miraculous Medal between the two mattresses;
+ she acted upon the inspiration, and the following night the
+ Immaculate Mary's image became an instrument of salvation and
+ happiness to a guilty soul. Pitching and tossing upon her bed
+ by reason of a high fever, the patient, in some unaccountable
+ manner, found the medal, and the Sister's astonishment next
+ morning at seeing her clasping it in her hands, and covering
+ it with kisses, was second only to that she experienced on
+ perceiving the wonderful transformation grace had wrought in
+ this poor creature's soul. A supernatural light had revealed
+ to her the sad state of her conscience; her criminal life
+ filled her with horror, and, penetrated with regret for the
+ past, she sighed only for holy Baptism. After the necessary
+ instruction, she was baptized; and, during the remainder of her
+ sickness, which was long and tedious, her patience and fervor
+ never faltered. She persevered in these edifying sentiments,
+ until a happy death placed the seal upon the graces she had
+ received through the intercession of Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A PROTESTANT.
+
+ _New Orleans (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant gentleman had spent four years at the hospital,
+ sometimes in one hall, sometimes another. As his malady had
+ not been very serious, no one had considered it necessary to
+ speak to him concerning his soul. However, when his condition
+ became more aggravated, the Sister, after invoking the Blessed
+ Virgin's assistance, told him the physician considered his case
+ dangerous, and she thought he ought to receive Baptism, without
+ which no one could be saved. He listened attentively, then
+ turning to her, said: "Sister, if I were to ask you to become
+ a Protestant, would you comply with my request?" "No," was
+ the decided answer. "Well, then," he continued, "rest assured
+ that it is just as useless for you to attempt persuading me to
+ become a Catholic."
+
+ In spite of this positive refusal, she let no occasion pass
+ without enlightening him, were it ever so little, upon some
+ of the truths of religion. One day, showing him a Miraculous
+ Medal, she told him he would confer a great favor on her by
+ reciting the little invocation: "O Mary! conceived without
+ sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee!" "What, Sister! a
+ Catholic prayer! that is impossible, I cannot!" She said no
+ more, but slipped the medal under his pillow, and there it
+ remained untouched for several days, during which time she
+ redoubled her attentions to the physical necessities of the
+ poor patient, who gradually grew weaker. At last, one evening
+ she said to him: "Well, Henry, are you not going to do what I
+ asked you?" "Yes, Sister, I most earnestly desire to become a
+ Catholic." The chaplain was called immediately; he had barely
+ time to administer Baptism and Extreme Unction, ere the dying
+ man's regenerated soul was carried by angels to the abode of
+ the blessed.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG METHODIST.
+
+ _St. Louis (United States), 1865._
+
+ A young man, a Methodist, arrived at the hospital in an
+ extremely weak condition. The physician at once pronounced
+ his case hopeless, and said he had but a few days to live.
+ Consequently, the Sister's first care was for his soul.
+ Questioning him, she soon learned that he believed neither in
+ the efficacy nor necessity of Baptism, and all her efforts
+ to induce him to receive this Sacrament were unavailing. He
+ had no desire for any conversation on the subject, and his
+ invariable reply to all her arguments was: "I believe in Jesus,
+ that suffices; I am sure of being saved." The Sister redoubled
+ her prayers, for in them lay her only hope, and time was
+ precious. A good priest visited him every day; once, after a
+ much longer visit than usual, he told the Sister on leaving the
+ room it was impossible to do anything with that man, unless
+ God wrought a miracle in his favor, and they must entreat Him
+ to do so. The poor man persisted, indeed, in refusing all
+ spiritual succor, though receiving gratefully the attentions
+ bestowed upon his body. His strength diminished day by day,
+ and he calmly awaited death; one thought alone disquieted
+ him, that of never seeing his mother and dying afar from her.
+ Perceiving himself on the brink of the grave, he called one of
+ his companions whom he begged to be with him at that fearful
+ moment, and write the particulars of it to his mother. Whilst
+ he made this request, the Sister slipped a Miraculous Medal
+ under his pillow, confidently believing that Mary would not let
+ this soul entrusted to her perish; yet he was already in his
+ agony. Two Sisters watched beside his bed till midnight, when
+ obliged to retire, they left him in charge of an infirmarian
+ and the young man who had promised to be with him at the hour
+ of death. Apparently he had not more than half an hour to
+ live, so next morning when the infirmarian came to meet the
+ Sister, she was prepared for news of the patient's death, but
+ to her astonishment the infirmarian exclaimed: "Come Sister,
+ come see him, he is restored to life!" He then told her that
+ the patient, to all appearances, had been dead an hour; that
+ the friend and himself had rendered all the last duties to the
+ body, having washed and dressed and prepared it for the grave;
+ then the young man went to bed, and he alone remained with
+ the corpse. After watching near it some time, he approached
+ to bandage the jaws, but what was his fright whilst thus
+ engaged, to see the dead man open his eyes! The Sister heard
+ no more, but eagerly hastened to the spot, and found the man
+ still breathing. With a great effort he said: "Oh! what a
+ blessing that you have come!" In reply, she exhorted him to
+ receive Baptism, and told him that he was indebted to the
+ Blessed Virgin for this prolongation of his life. "I wish to
+ be baptized," said he, and when the Sister replied that the
+ priest would come, "Oh! that will be too late!" was his pitiful
+ answer. The other patients now joined their entreaties to his,
+ and the Sister, after reciting aloud the acts of faith, hope,
+ charity and contrition, which the dying man endeavored to
+ repeat, with hands clasped and eyes raised to Heaven, baptized
+ him. Whilst the regenerating waters flowed upon his soul,
+ transports of love and thanksgiving escaped his lips. Half
+ an hour later, he closed his eyes, never to open them here
+ below. All that the infirmarian related of his first death, was
+ confirmed in the most positive manner, by the Protestant friend
+ who had assisted in preparing him for the grave.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. F----
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A Protestant named F---- was brought to our hospital in an
+ advanced stage of consumption. He detested the Catholic
+ religion most heartily, and received the Sisters' services
+ with extreme repugnance. His physical strength diminished
+ perceptibly, but his mind retained its energy and clearness.
+ By degrees, the odor escaping from his decayed lungs, became
+ so intolerable that all abandoned him. M. Burke, a missionary
+ priest and the Sisters, being the only persons who had the
+ courage to go near him, and pay any attention to his comfort.
+ Yet neither priest nor Sister dare mention religion. They
+ contented themselves with putting a Miraculous Medal under
+ his pillow, and invoking her, who so often deigns to display
+ her power in favor of those who deny it. She did not delay in
+ granting their petition. A few days later, as the Protestant
+ minister left the ward, after making his usual distribution of
+ tracts, the sick man said to the Sister, "Sister, it is done;
+ I am converted." "Ah," said the latter interiorly, "our good
+ Mother has accomplished her work." And it was indeed true; for
+ the patient requested a priest, was instructed, and in a few
+ days received the Sacraments of Baptism, the Holy Viaticum and
+ Extreme Unction, with inexpressible fervor. The very expression
+ of his countenance was changed; the happiness that inundated
+ his heart beaming from every feature. "Ah!" said he, "my
+ sufferings are great, but I feel that I am going to Heaven;
+ the truth has made me free." In these happy dispositions, he
+ expired, promising that in heaven he would pray for all who had
+ been instruments of his conversion.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBAPTIZED PATIENT.
+
+ _St. Louis, (United States)._
+
+ A patient brought to the hospital in a hopeless condition,
+ openly manifested his hatred of Catholicity. Yet, as he was in
+ imminent danger of death, the Sister, profiting by a moment in
+ which he seemed a little better disposed than usual, ventured
+ to ask him if he would be baptized; he answered roughly, "No,
+ that he scarcely believed in baptism, and not at all in
+ Catholic baptism, that in case of his recovery, perhaps he
+ would receive baptism by immersion, and become a member of some
+ church, but that would never be the Catholic Church." "At any
+ rate," added he, "I am not going to torment myself now about
+ such things." The poor Sister having no other resource than the
+ Blessed Virgin, and seeing that the young man approached his
+ end, stealthily slipped a medal under his pillow. Next morning
+ it was picked up by the infirmarian, who, thinking the Sister
+ had dropped it accidentally, was about to return it, but the
+ patient opposed him; the little image pleased his fancy, and he
+ wanted to keep it himself. To quiet him, the infirmarian was
+ obliged to ask Sister if the patient might have it. The request
+ was granted. Towards evening some one came to the Sister with a
+ message from the patient, he wished to see her. "Sister," said
+ he as soon as she approached, "you have told me I could not be
+ saved without Baptism; let me be baptized, for I wish to be
+ saved." Filled with joy at this news, she began to instruct and
+ prepare him for the ceremony. It took place next morning, and
+ during the course of the day, this soul, now the child of God,
+ went to repose in the bosom of its celestial Father, to bless
+ and thank Him for all eternity for His mercies.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A YOUNG GIRL.
+
+_Buffalo (United States)._
+
+ A young Protestant girl about twenty years of age came to the
+ hospital, covered from head to foot with a disgusting itch,
+ which the physician pronounced incurable. The Sister who
+ dressed her sores, told her that the Blessed Virgin could
+ obtain her recovery, and would do so, if she wore the medal and
+ relied upon the Blessed Virgin's intercession. The poor girl
+ knowing her case was deemed hopeless by the physician, answered
+ bluntly: "I do not believe in your Blessed Virgin, and I want
+ no medal." "Very well," replied the Sister, "then you may keep
+ your sores." A few days after she asked for a medal herself,
+ put it on her neck, received instruction and was baptized, and
+ in a short time she left the hospital perfectly cured, greatly
+ to the astonishment of the physicians, who had all pronounced
+ her malady incurable.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SINNER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria)._
+
+ An artist whose life had been far from edifying, was an
+ inmate of our hospital. One morning the Sister was greatly
+ surprised at his expressing a desire to confess. Perceiving
+ her astonishment, he said: "This morning, Sister, the chapel
+ door was slightly open, and from my bed I could see the Blessed
+ Virgin's statue." (It was that of the Immaculate Conception.)
+ "It appealed so strongly to my heart, that I have had no
+ peace since. I must put my conscience in order." He did go to
+ confession, not once, but several times, and he often expressed
+ great regret for his past life. "Ah!" he would say, "what a
+ life I have led, and how sad the state of my soul when Mary
+ came to my aid." When asked what he supposed had attracted
+ Mary's compassion, he answered: "I was merely looking at the
+ statue, no thought of religion was in my mind; when suddenly,
+ recollections of my past life filled me with fear, and Mary
+ at the same time inspired me with a horror for sin." In
+ this instance, repentance and reparation were the immediate
+ consequences of the Immaculate Mary's merciful and maternal
+ glance.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A GREEK SCHISMATIC.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria.)_
+
+ A Greek schismatic, attacked by a mortal malady, was brought to
+ the hospital. He declared his intention of remaining attached
+ to the errors in which he had been educated, and the Sisters,
+ seeing his determination, entrusted him to the Blessed Virgin,
+ consecrating him to her by placing under his pillow a medal,
+ which for him proved truly miraculous. One day, a Franciscan
+ Father visited the sick, and the young man asked the Sister
+ to bring the good Father to see him. He conversed a long time
+ with the latter, but manifested no intention of becoming a
+ Catholic. Meanwhile, he grew worse, and, one day, when taken
+ with a hemorrhage, he asked for this Father, "because," said
+ he, "I wish to embrace the Catholic religion." The Sister
+ was surprised, for she had said nothing to persuade him, but
+ the Blessed Virgin had accomplished her work without earthly
+ assistance. He confessed and made his abjuration; he even
+ requested the Reverend Father to announce, in a loud voice, to
+ the other patients that he entered the Church of his own free
+ will. His attacks of vomiting made the priest hesitate to give
+ him the Holy Viaticum, but he insisted so strongly, and had so
+ ardent a desire to receive, that the good God permitted these
+ spells of vomiting to become less frequent, so that he could
+ make his first and last Communion at the same time, which he
+ did with inexpressible fervor and consolation. Interrogated on
+ the subject of his conversion, he answered: "For a long time I
+ felt that everything earthly was of little value, and I sought
+ for the true and lasting." During the delirium of his last
+ moments, he spoke continually of a white robe. The grace of
+ Baptism had clothed his soul in spotless raiment, and to Mary's
+ intercession was he indebted for it.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN APOSTATE.
+
+ _Austria, 1866._
+
+ In one of the prisons confided to the care of the Daughters of
+ Charity, was a young man belonging to a respectable Catholic
+ family, whose shame and disgrace he had become. After a short
+ stay, he fell sick, and his condition necessitated removal
+ to the infirmary; faithful to his principles of impiety, he
+ absolutely refused all spiritual succor, and whenever he saw
+ one of the chaplains pass, he either turned away his head or
+ concealed it under the bedclothes. All the Sisters begged the
+ Superioress to make one last effort for his soul. She paid him
+ a visit, and was received politely, but to rid himself of her
+ importunity, he avowed himself a Protestant, and related how
+ he came to forsake the Faith, after making the acquaintance
+ of several very bad characters, his companions in crime and
+ his counselors in advising him to become a Protestant. The
+ Sister asked him if he felt no remorse for such conduct, but
+ he became enraged and exclaimed aloud: "I am a Protestant, and
+ I wish to live and die a Protestant!" Seeing it impossible
+ to do anything with the miserable creature, she interiorly
+ recommended him to the Refuge of Sinners, and merely asked him
+ to accept the medal she offered, to wear it and sometimes kiss
+ it. He seemed quite pleased to get rid of her so easily, and
+ placing all her confidence in Mary, she withdrew.
+
+ The poor man passed a sleepless night, our Blessed Mother
+ touched his heart, and very early next morning he sent word
+ to the Sister that he wanted a priest to receive his solemn
+ profession of Faith, in reparation of his scandalous apostasy
+ and crimes. But his reputation was such that the prison
+ chaplain doubted his sincerity, and would not go to him except
+ upon repeated solicitations of the Superioress. He was deeply
+ affected at witnessing the change grace had wrought in this
+ soul, and the consequent compunction with which the prodigal
+ confessed his sins. The dying man then made a public abjuration
+ of his errors, and expired a few minutes after, in the grace of
+ God and under the protecting smile of Mary.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SOLDIER AT THE HOSPITAL OF CAVA.
+
+ _Cava, (Italy), 1866._
+
+ A young soldier suffering from disease of the chest, was
+ brought to the Military Hospital of Cava. His first question
+ was to ask if the Sisters had charge of that hospital; on
+ receiving an affirmative answer, he said to himself: "They will
+ bother me about going to confession, so I shall call myself a
+ Jew to get rid of them," and Jew he was designated on the card
+ of admission. Perceiving the serious nature of his malady, the
+ Sisters to whose especial care he had been confided, visited
+ him as often as possible. One of them offered him a medal
+ of the Immaculate Conception; regarding it with a smile of
+ pity, he said: "I accept it, because it would not be polite
+ to refuse, but believe me, I consider it a mere plaything and
+ nothing more."
+
+ Every time the chaplain visited the hall, to speak a word of
+ consolation to one and another, the poor Jew covered his head.
+ The Sister sometimes ventured a few words to him about the good
+ God, but he would never reply, and her approach was the signal
+ for his feigning sleep. One evening when he appeared worse than
+ usual, two Sisters went to see him just before they retired
+ for the night. On hearing them approach, he exclaimed: "O
+ Sister, a priest!" The chaplain was immediately summoned to his
+ bedside, the poor dying man repeating all the while: "A priest!
+ a priest!" As soon as the chaplain came, the patient made his
+ profession of Faith in a very audible voice; he then confessed,
+ and just as the priest, in administering Extreme Unction, was
+ anointing the ears, the penitent rendered his soul to God,
+ leaving us the consoling hope that it had found mercy in its
+ Maker's sight.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A WOUNDED SOLDIER.
+
+ _Palermo (Italy), 1866._
+
+ In 1866, at the Military Hospital of Palermo, was a poor man
+ who had just undergone the amputation of his left arm. His
+ impiety was so great, that the Sister felt constrained to
+ remove a large crucifix that had been placed near his bed, for
+ he covered it with invectives. The miserable man's bodily
+ infirmities were as hopeless as his spiritual, yet no one could
+ succeed in inducing him to give any attention to his soul, or
+ even to listen to a word about the good God. What could be done
+ in such an extremity? The poor Sister was in great distress,
+ when one day whilst dressing his wounds she was inspired to
+ slip a medal of the Immaculate Conception between the bandages
+ around the stump of the amputated member. Next morning, on
+ witnessing the great change that had been wrought in her
+ patient's spiritual condition during the night, she was less
+ astonished than happy, for she had confidently relied upon the
+ Blessed Virgin. He asked for a priest, who came immediately;
+ he confessed, publicly repaired the scandals of his past life,
+ and received with piety the Holy Viaticum and Extreme Unction.
+ His few remaining days were spent in blessing that God who had
+ shown him such boundless mercy. "Oh! how good God is!" did
+ he repeat incessantly to his companions, "I have committed
+ manifold sins and He has pardoned me all!"
+
+
+CURE OF AN AUSTRIAN OFFICER.
+
+ _Hospital of Gratz (Austria), 1867._
+
+ An officer in the garrison at Gratz, suffered from a serious
+ wound in the right arm. He was brought to the general hospital,
+ that he might be more conveniently under the especial treatment
+ of M. Rzehazeh, a very eminent surgeon. The latter exhausted
+ all his skill, but in vain, and after a few weeks he saw the
+ necessity of amputation to save the officer's life. Learning
+ the doctor's decision, the patient was deeply grieved, and
+ his oppressed heart sought refuge in piety. He who had never
+ spoken of God, who had accepted a proffered medal only from
+ courtesy, now appeared to experience a genuine satisfaction
+ when the Sisters told him they would implore the Blessed Virgin
+ in his behalf. During the few days immediately preceding the
+ operation, he felt inspired with a great confidence in his
+ medal, and frequently repeated the invocation engraven upon it:
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse
+ to thee!" The danger was now imminent, and the amputation,
+ which must not be delayed, was to take place on the morrow. One
+ of the Sisters, perceiving that the young officer's confidence
+ expressed itself in continual prayer, suggested that evening
+ that he lay the medal upon his afflicted arm, and let it remain
+ all night, a suggestion which was joyfully received. Next
+ morning she hastened to ascertain her patient's condition, and
+ get the medal. He had spent a quiet night, his sufferings being
+ less severe than usual; and the Sister, whilst attributing his
+ improvement to the anodynes prescribed, understood full well
+ that the precious medal had also been instrumental in procuring
+ relief, and that Mary had looked compassionately upon him;
+ but she did not yet realize the full extent of the blessing.
+ The surgeon came a few hours after, and whilst awaiting his
+ assistants, he carefully examined the wounded arm, he touched
+ it, he probed it, and to his great astonishment, perceived that
+ amputation was not necessary. The other doctors on arriving,
+ confirmed his opinion of this surprising change. The officer
+ was mute with happiness, and not until he found himself alone
+ with the chief surgeon did he impart to the latter, as a
+ secret, his opinion as to the cause of this wonderful change.
+ On leaving him, the surgeon (notwithstanding the injunction
+ of secrecy), could not refrain from saying to the Sister: "I
+ believe the Sisters of Charity have engaged the good God in
+ this case."
+
+ The officer's arm was entirely healed; a few weeks later he
+ left the hospital, taking with him the precious medal as a
+ memento of gratitude and love for Mary Immaculate.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+CONVERSION OF M. N---- AT LIMA.
+
+Letter from a Daughter of Charity in Lima (Peru), 1876:
+
+ M. N---- had been suffering a long time from hypertrophy of
+ the heart, the physicians having vainly exhausted all the
+ resources of their skill, were forced to tell the family that
+ he was beyond the power of human aid, and should look to the
+ state of his soul, sad news for this father of a family, and a
+ man devoid of religion. In vain did his relatives and friends,
+ with all possible delicacy, endeavor to turn his thoughts to
+ religion and induce him to receive the Sacraments; he would
+ hear nothing on the subject; a priest, who was an intimate
+ friend of the family, attempted to second their efforts, but he
+ met with no better success; the sick man became exasperated at
+ all allusions to religion, he blasphemed everything relating to
+ it, sparing not even the Blessed Virgin.
+
+ One day, after listening to an account of the conversion of
+ M.----, of Lima, our patient's relatives expressed a desire
+ of having recourse to similar means for their dear one's
+ conversion. "It is very simple," said the person addressed,
+ "you have only to ask Sister N., of St. Anne's Hospital for a
+ medal, she got one for M. Pierre, she will not refuse you."
+ One of his nephews immediately repaired to the hospital and
+ returned with a medal. A niece offered it to him; "Mamma,"
+ said she, "sends you this medal and begs that you will wear
+ it." "Certainly," was the reply, "I will wear it for her sake,
+ but I want everybody to understand that I have no notion of
+ confessing."
+
+ He spent a quiet night, and was quite pleased next morning to
+ find himself somewhat better. "Euloge," said he, to one of his
+ nephews, "what preparation should a person make who intends
+ taking a long journey?" Euloge, who thought he certainly
+ must be in a dream to hear his uncle speak thus, inquired
+ to what journey he alluded. "Ah!" was the answer, "I speak
+ of Eternity." The poor young man, delighted at such a happy
+ change, replied that the best preparation was to put one's
+ conscience in order by making a good confession. "I will do so,
+ send me a priest," said his uncle. As soon as the clergyman
+ arrived and heard his confession, he administered the Holy
+ Viaticum. All the assistants were overcome with emotion when
+ they saw the sick man, almost in his last agony, supported by
+ his children, to receive on bended knee, the God who had just
+ pardoned all the sins of his life. A few moments after, he
+ blessed his children, gave them his parting counsel, and died
+ in sentiments of piety rivaling his past irreligion. His family
+ was deeply grateful to Mary Immaculate for this token of her
+ favor.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF AN UNBELIEVER.
+
+Letter from a Sister of Charity in Lima, Peru, 1877:
+
+ An old lady whose youth had been pious, having lost her Faith
+ by reading bad books, had not frequented the Sacraments for
+ thirty-five years. The Sister with whom she lived was carried
+ to her grave, after an illness of only five days, and it was
+ natural to suppose that the Christian death of one so dear
+ would have softened her heart; on the contrary, it embittered
+ her the more, and she vented her grief in blasphemies. A
+ Sister of Charity witnessing this scandal, and not being able
+ to soothe the poor creature, was inspired with the thought
+ of giving her a medal of the Blessed Virgin; the old lady
+ accepted, and wore it for several days, during which she
+ appeared greatly pre-occupied, and somewhat less confident in
+ her scepticism; but having yielded to a diabolical suggestion,
+ that urged her to lay the medal aside, doubtless because grace
+ tormented her conscience with keen remorse whilst the medal
+ was on her person, she fell back into an habitual hardness
+ and melancholy that she styled peace. The Sister perceived
+ this, and inquired if she still wore the medal; on receiving
+ a negative answer, our good Sister represented the danger
+ to which her soul was exposed without it, and the old lady
+ promised to put it on again. Many prayers were offered up
+ for her, and at the end of fifteen days, the Sister, who was
+ greatly interested in this poor woman's soul, paid her another
+ visit; perceiving no change in her sentiments, she inquired
+ immediately if the medal had been resumed. The poor woman, who
+ was very uncouth, dared not speak, but made a sign with her
+ head which revealed all. "What have you done with it, and where
+ is it?" asked the Sister. The old lady replied that it was in
+ her wardrobe, and she had made several ineffectual efforts to
+ put it on again. The Sister understands that this miserable
+ soul is under some diabolical influence, holding her aloof from
+ aught calculated to reclaim her to God; she feels that now
+ is the moment for prompt action, and in a tone of severity,
+ says: "Very well, since you will not wear the medal, I abandon
+ you entirely." These words produced the desired effect; the
+ old lady ran to the wardrobe, and taking up the medal, put it
+ around her neck this time to remain. Soon experiencing the
+ sweet and powerful influence of Mary Immaculate, so justly
+ called the Gate of Heaven, in a few days she assisted at the
+ Holy Sacrifice and listened to the instruction, and from that
+ time was entirely changed; she confessed and made her Easter
+ Communion, and the deepest compunction and gratitude are now
+ the abiding sentiments of her heart. She wished to remain
+ at the church door, feeling herself unworthy to penetrate
+ further into the sacred edifice, and it was with the greatest
+ difficulty her friends could prevail upon her to accept a place
+ nearer the altar. She never ceases to thank God and Mary; and
+ she told the Sister that, from the moment the medal was on her
+ neck, she knew neither peace nor rest till she had returned to
+ her duties, so great are the power and love of that Virgin who
+ is the sovereign Terror of demons.
+
+
+CONVERSION OF A SCANDALOUS SINNER.
+
+ _Moirans, 1877._
+
+The Superioress of the Sisters of Charity at Moirans, relates as
+follows a very consoling conversion, redounding to the glory of Mary
+Immaculate:
+
+ "The most important manufacturer of our village, who employed
+ from four to five hundred men and women, has just died, and
+ contrary to all expectations, his death was penitent and
+ consoling. He had been impious and immoral, and the profligate
+ characters in his workshops were a curse to the surrounding
+ country. His rudeness was such, that everybody trembled before
+ him. His wife and two daughters, pious Christians, silently
+ bewailed his misconduct; and as for myself, I had barely
+ sufficient acquaintance with him to render justifiable my
+ calling upon him in any urgent need.
+
+ "One morning I received a message in great haste; this person
+ was very sick and wished to see me. I went at once, but the
+ disease was of so serious a character and its progress so
+ rapid, that I saw the poor man on the verge of the grave ere
+ I could find a means of turning his thoughts to eternity.
+ I had told his wife and daughters to give him a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, but he refused to accept it, and
+ we were reduced to the necessity of stealthily putting it
+ under his pillow. On the third day, as I was about to leave,
+ after rendering him all the care and attention in my power,
+ he wished, in the effusion of his gratitude, to shake hands
+ with me. I profited by the opportunity to tell him how much
+ pleasure he could give me by consenting to receive the cure,
+ who had just come to see him. He made a sign in the affirmative
+ and with a smile that very rarely parted his lips. We went
+ out of the room, leaving him alone with the priest, whom he
+ had welcomed cordially. In half an hour the latter returned
+ blessing God, for the sick man had made his confession. He
+ now consented to wear the medal, and that evening he received
+ Extreme Unction, but not the Holy Viaticum, as he had spells
+ of suffocation. I asked his wife to let his employees see him,
+ that they might be edified at their patron's conduct. The
+ request was granted, but not many came, as the workshops were
+ closed at this hour; those who did come, prayed a few minutes
+ beside him. Next morning his family was greatly rejoiced at his
+ apparent physical improvement, but their hopes were deceived,
+ and very soon his last agony began. He was recommended to
+ the prayers of the parish; the whole village manifested a
+ touching interest in his condition, and his employees all came
+ to see him. The throng around the dying man was renewed every
+ quarter of an hour, and we recited the _Chaplet_ aloud, a most
+ appropriate devotion for this occasion, the last moments of
+ one whom the Blessed Virgin had snatched from eternal misery.
+ Amidst this concert of praises to Mary, he expired. The
+ Christian Brothers, to whom he had been very hostile, willingly
+ aided us in rendering to him the last duties of religion."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+PROGRESS OF THE DEVOTION TO MARY
+
+
+ CROWNED BY THE DEFINITION OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.--I. OUR
+ LADY OF LA SALETTE.--II. THE CHILDREN OF MARY.--III. THE DEFINITION
+ OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION.
+
+_I.--Our Lady of La Salette.--1846._
+
+
+In her first manifestation to Sister Catherine, July 19, 1830, the
+Immaculate Virgin announced the disasters which threatened France;
+grief was depicted upon her countenance, tears stifled her voice, she
+earnestly recommended prayer to appease the wrath of God.
+
+Sixteen years later, this Mother of mercy, appearing to two little
+shepherd children upon one of the summits of the Alps, repeated, in a
+most solemn manner, the same warnings and the same counsels. The first
+apparition remains in obscurity, but a knowledge of the second has
+been spread throughout the world, and with most consoling results. The
+miracle of La Salette has greatly increased devotion to the Blessed
+Virgin, and given Christians a clearer idea of the important duties
+of penance and prayer, which, in reality, are the embodiment of all
+practical piety.
+
+We quote the best authenticated account of La Salette, that of the Abbe
+Rousselot, who himself received it from the mouths of the children.
+
+ "Two peasant children, Melanie Mathieu, aged fourteen years,
+ and Maximin Giraud, aged eleven, both simple and ignorant, as
+ might naturally be expected of their age and condition, were
+ together upon the mountain of La Salette, which overlooks a
+ village where they were at service under different masters.
+ Their acquaintance was very slight, their first meeting having
+ been only the day before the occurrence we are about to relate.
+ When the _Angelus_ announced the hour of noon, they went to
+ soak their hard bread in the water of a spring. After this
+ rural repast, they descended a little farther, and laying down
+ their crooks beside another spring, then dry, they seated
+ themselves a slight distance apart, upon a few stones which had
+ been piled up there, and went to sleep.
+
+ "It was Saturday, September 19th, 1846, and eve of the day on
+ which fell the Feast of Our Lady's Seven Dolors.
+
+ "'After taking the cows to water, and eating our lunch,' says
+ Maximin, 'we went to sleep beside a stream, and very near a
+ spring which was dry. Melanie awoke first, and aroused me to
+ hunt our cows. We crossed the stream, and going in an opposite
+ direction, saw our cows lying down on the other side, and not
+ very far off.'
+
+ "'I came down first,' says Melanie; 'when I was within five or
+ six steps of the stream, I perceived a light like that of the
+ sun, but even more brilliant and not the color of sunlight,
+ and I said to Maximin: Come quick to see the bright light down
+ here.' 'Where is it?' inquired Maximin, coming towards me. 'I
+ pointed with my finger in the direction of the spring, and he
+ stood still when he saw it. Then the light seemed to open,
+ and in the midst of it appeared a Lady, she was seated, and
+ her head resting upon her hands.' 'We were both frightened,'
+ continues Maximin, 'and Melanie, with an exclamation of terror,
+ let fall her crook.' 'Keep your crook,' said I, 'as for me,
+ I am going to keep mine. If it does anything to us, I will
+ give it a blow with my crook.' And the Lady arose. She crossed
+ her arms, and said to us: 'Come to me, my children, do not be
+ afraid. I am here to tell you something very important.' All
+ our fears vanished, we went towards her and crossed the stream,
+ and the Lady advancing a few steps, we met at the place where
+ Melanie and I had fallen asleep. The Lady was between us, and
+ she wept all the time she was talking. 'I saw her tears flow,'
+ adds Melanie.
+
+ "'If my people,' said she, 'do not humble themselves, I shall
+ be forced to let them feel the weight of my Son's uplifted arm.
+ I have stayed it heretofore, but it now presses so heavily that
+ I can scarcely support it much longer. And all the while I am
+ suffering thus for you, I must pray without ceasing if I wish
+ to prevent your abandonment by my Son. And, moreover, you do
+ not appreciate it.'
+
+ "'In vain will you pray, in vain will you strive, never can you
+ recompense what I have undergone for you. I have given you six
+ days of the week wherein to work, the seventh I reserved for
+ myself, and even that is denied me! It is this which weighs
+ down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'Even those who drive carts must curse, and mingle my Son's
+ name with their oaths.'
+
+ "'These are the two things that weigh down my Son's arm.'
+
+ "'If the harvest fails, it is for no other reason than your
+ sins. I tried last year to make you see this in the failure of
+ the potato crop. You took no account of it. On the contrary,
+ when you found the potatoes rotted, you swore and mingled my
+ Son's name with your maledictions. The potatoes will continue
+ to rot, at Christmas there will be none.'
+
+ "I did not know what this meant," said Melanie, "for in our
+ part of the country we do not call them potatoes. I asked
+ Maximin what they were, and the Lady said to me:
+
+ "'Ah! my children, you do not understand me, I will use other
+ language.'
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin now repeated the preceding in _patois_, and
+ the remainder of her discourse was also in _patois_. We give
+ the translation as follows:
+
+ "'If you have wheat, it must not be sown, the animals will
+ devour what you sow; and should any remain, it will yield
+ naught but dust when threshed.'
+
+ "'There will be a great famine. Before the famine comes, little
+ children under seven years of age, will be seized with fright
+ and die in the arms of those who are holding them. Some will do
+ penance by reason of the famine. Even the nuts will fail and
+ the grapes rot.'
+
+ "After these words, the beautiful Lady continued to speak aloud
+ to Maximin. Though seeing the motion of her lips, Melanie hears
+ nothing. Maximin receives a secret in French. Then the Blessed
+ Virgin addresses herself to the little girl, and Maximin ceases
+ to hear her voice. She likewise confides to Melanie a secret
+ in French, but a more lengthy secret it appears than that
+ entrusted to Maximin. Continuing her discourse in _patois_, and
+ so as to be heard by both, she adds: 'If they turn aside from
+ their evil ways, the very rocks and stones will be changed into
+ heaps of grain, and potatoes will be found scattered over the
+ fields.'
+
+ "The Queen of Heaven then addressed herself more directly to
+ the children.
+
+ "'Do you say your prayers with devotion, my children?'
+
+ "'Oh, no, Madame,' they both answered, 'we say them with very
+ little devotion.'
+
+ "Our divine Mother continued: 'Ah! my children, you must say
+ them fervently evening and morning. When you have not the time,
+ and cannot do better, say an _Our Father_ and a _Hail Mary_;
+ and when you have the time you must say more.
+
+ "'No one goes to Mass, except a few aged women; all the rest in
+ summer spend Sunday working, and in winter, when at a loss for
+ something to do, they go to Mass only to ridicule religion; and
+ during Lent they frequent the shambles as if they were dogs.'
+
+ "After a few more words, reminding Maximin that he had already
+ seen the failure of the grain, the august Queen finished in
+ French as follows: 'Ah! my children, tell this to all my
+ people.' And before leaving them, she repeated the command.
+
+ "The two children add: 'Then she ascended about fifteen steps,
+ to the place where we had gone to look after our cows. Her feet
+ barely touched the surface of the verdure, which did not even
+ bend beneath her, she glided over the surface as if suspended
+ in the air, and impelled by some invisible power. We followed
+ her, Melanie a little ahead, and I two or three steps from the
+ Lady's side. The beautiful Lady was now gently elevated to
+ about the height of a yard,' said the children. 'She remained
+ thus suspended in the air for a moment. She glances up to
+ Heaven and then at the earth, her head disappears from our
+ view, next her arms, and lastly her feet. She seemed to melt
+ away. There remained a brilliant light that gleamed upon my
+ hands, and the flowers at her feet, but that was all.'
+
+ "At the first words of his son's narration, Maximin's
+ father began to laugh, but very soon recognizing the marks
+ of incontestable sincerity, he hastened to comply with
+ his Christian duties, so long neglected. The neighboring
+ inhabitants followed his example, there were no more
+ blasphemies, no more profanation of Sunday, the whole country
+ was soon transformed, even maternally. Like those of Jonas to
+ Nineveh, the prophetic warnings of the divine Messenger were
+ conditional. They were fulfilled in general, as can still be
+ remembered."[23]
+
+ [Footnote 23: Several details of this account have been derived
+ from "Illustrious Pilgrim Shrines."]
+
+The apparition of La Salette, as is the case with all extraordinary
+events, was variously appreciated even among Catholics, some receiving
+the account with enthusiastic confidence, others strongly contesting
+the reality. But for a long time doubts have ceased, Providence having,
+by numberless miracles, confirmed the faith of those who believed;
+and the mountain sanctified by Mary's presence, has never ceased to
+be visited by pilgrims from the most distant countries. Mgr. De
+Bruillard, Bishop of Grenoble, anxious to prevent illusion on so
+important a question, nominated a commission composed of most competent
+persons, to examine and pass judgment upon this apparition. The result
+being in the affirmative. His Grace, in a circular of September 19th,
+1851, declared as follows:
+
+ "We assert that the apparition of the Blessed Virgin to two
+ little peasants, the 19th of September, 1846, upon one of the
+ peaks of the Alps, situated in the parish of La Salette, of
+ the archpresbytery of Corps, bears every mark of truth, and
+ that the faithful are confirmed in believing it indubitable and
+ certain.
+
+ "Wherefore, to testify our lively gratitude to God and the
+ glorious Virgin Mary, we authorize the devotion to Our Lady of
+ La Salette."
+
+The circular, before publication, was submitted to the Holy See, whose
+approval it received, and Mgr. De Bruillard's two successors have
+always endorsed his appreciation of the apparition.
+
+Consequently, this devotion is invested with every guarantee of
+authenticity that the severest criticism could exact.
+
+A church of the Byzantine style and graceful appearance is erected
+upon the holy mountain, near where the apparition took place. The
+identical spot remains uncovered, and the grass still grows upon the
+soil hallowed by Mary's sacred footsteps; a series of crosses, fourteen
+in number, to which are attached the indulgences of the _via crucis_,
+indicate the path she took. The spring, formerly intermittent, has
+been inexhaustible since the apparition, and its waters have worked
+miracles. Near the church, a convent has been built to accommodate the
+numberless pilgrims, who daily resort hither in the favorable season.
+Numerous chapels, dedicated to Our Lady of La Salette, are scattered
+throughout Christendom, and abundant graces repay the faith of those
+who in these sacred shrines invoke her intercession.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+_II.--The Children of Mary.--1847._
+
+Rome, the guardian of our Faith and Catholic traditions, has given
+municipal privileges to the Children of Mary, in consecrating to them
+a chapel in one of her most celebrated churches, St. Agnes Beyond the
+Walls. The Italian sodalities are all inscribed there, and represented
+by a group of the children of Mary surrounding this young Saint, who
+in the third century was martyred for her virginity. They seem to say
+to her, "Agnes, you are our eldest Sister, the well beloved of Jesus
+Christ and His Mother."
+
+This place of honor, this representation proclaims most eloquently,
+that the Children of Mary form in the Church, a family as ancient as
+Catholicity itself.
+
+Nearly nineteen centuries ago, Jesus, our Redeemer, was in the agony
+of death upon the tree of the cross, which his love had chosen as the
+instrument of our redemption; "seeing," says the Evangelist, "that all
+was consummated" for our salvation, He wished to place the seal upon
+His work, by making His last will and testament.
+
+Looking first at Mary, His Mother, and then at John, the beloved
+disciple, he made John a Child of Mary in these memorable words: "_Ecce
+Mater tua, ecce filius tuus_: Behold thy Mother, behold thy son."
+
+Such is the origin of the Children of Mary. We believe with the holy
+Church, that the eternal Word, after becoming incarnate to render men
+redeemed with His blood, the Children of His heavenly Father, gave them
+also, at the hour of His death, His own Mother to be theirs. We know
+likewise, that among the children of every family, there is always one
+most tenderly attached to the mother, for instance, Jacob and Rebecca;
+John and Mary.
+
+Even so, in the bosom of the great family of Catholicity, do we find in
+all ages, souls jealous of rendering to Mary the most intimate filial
+devotion, selecting her in an especial manner, for their model and
+protectress.
+
+Such are the religious orders particularly devoted to her service,
+also, the confraternities established for the same purpose in many
+parishes. The Society of Jesus, which was founded in the sixteenth
+century, laboring zealously to extend the glory of God among the youth
+under its charge, found no means so effectual in forming hearts to
+virtue and piety, as that of placing them under Mary's protection; and
+the celebrated Association of the Prima Primaria, canonically erected
+by Pope Gregory XIII, in 1584, became the parent stem of all the
+congregations, subsequently found in honor of the Mother of God.
+
+It was reserved for our age, to give full development to this fruitful
+devotion, by popularizing and thus making it a powerful means of
+salvation. In placing themselves under the patronage of the Immaculate
+Conception, the Children of Mary cannot fail to obtain from their
+divine Mother the most abundant and precious benedictions.
+
+In 1830, the Immaculate Virgin had uttered a prophecy which resounded
+incessantly in the heart of the missionary, to whom was confided the
+account of the apparitions of the medal. "The Blessed Virgin wishes
+you to found a congregation, of which you will be the Superior, a
+confraternity of Children of Mary; the Blessed Virgin will bestow many
+graces upon it as well as upon yourself, indulgences will be granted
+it. The month of Mary will be celebrated with great solemnity; Mary
+loves these festivals; she will requite their observance with abundant
+graces."
+
+But why this command and this prediction of the Queen of Heaven to her
+servant, in regard to something which was not all new?
+
+Sodalities of the Children of Mary already existed among the numberless
+youths educated by the Fathers of the Society of Jesus. And following
+their example, the Ladies of the Sacred Heart had formed similar
+associations among their scholars, and in 1832, had even established
+them for ladies in the world, under the invocation of the Immaculate
+Conception. It would seem then that a new work was superfluous.
+
+It is true, Associations of the Children of Mary already existed and
+accomplished much good, but they were confined to a few isolated
+places, and recruited from a chosen class, they were not popular;
+and Mary designed as elements of the future work, that multitude of
+young girls in the ordinary walks of life, surrounded by all the
+trials, exposed to all the dangers of the world, who to-day form her
+blessed family, whose innocence she guards, whose modest virtues she
+encourages, and from whom she receives in exchange, a tribute of love,
+praises and a visible service acceptable to her heart. Let us speak
+a word concerning its establishment. When the apostolic heart of M.
+Aladel received Sister Catherine's consoling predictions, he did not
+fully comprehend how he, a simple missionary, should accomplish the
+designs of the Queen of Heaven.
+
+Whilst quietly awaiting the propitious hour and means foreseen by
+Providence, he seized every opportunity of speaking to the children and
+young people of Mary's bounty and the happiness of belonging to her.
+His simplicity and animation, when discoursing upon this his favorite
+theme, attracted all hearts; his listeners hung entranced upon the good
+father's words; and the unction of grace sustaining the ardor he had
+enkindled, the associations were formed by way of trial, in the houses
+of the Daughters of Charity, where M. Aladel had officiated.
+
+Such were those of the Providence Orphanage in Paris, of the House of
+Charity of St. Medard, of the Madeleine; also, those of St. Flour,
+Mainsat, Aurillae, established from 1836 to 1846. The young girls, who
+were externs, very soon rivaled the inmates of the establishments in
+obtaining similar favors; several new associations were begun in the
+year 1846, those of St. Vincent de Paul, St. Roch, St. Paul, St. Louis,
+in Paris, and others in Toulouse, Bruguiere, etc., in the province.
+
+Whilst in Rome in 1847, M. Etienne, Superior General of the Priests
+of the Mission and Daughters of Charity, obtained from the Sovereign
+Pontiff a rescript dated June 20th, empowering him and his successors
+to establish among the scholars attending the schools of the Daughters
+of Charity a pious confraternity, under the title of the Immaculate
+Conception of the Most Blessed Virgin, with all the indulgences
+accorded the Congregation of the holy Virgin established at Rome for
+the scholars of the Society of Jesus.
+
+Three years later, the Sovereign Pontiff extended a similar favor to
+the youths educated by the Priests of the Mission; also, to the little
+boys in charge of the Daughters of Charity.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+From this time, 1847, thanks to the benediction of Pius IX, the
+Sodality of the Children of Mary, spread rapidly in all quarters of
+the globe, wherever the Daughters of Charity were established. A
+manual containing the rules of the Association, its privileges and
+obligations, was compiled by M. Aladel, the Director of the work. The
+livery naturally adopted by the Children of Mary was the Miraculous
+Medal, suspended from a blue ribbon.
+
+The new Association from its very origin gave a wonderful impulse to
+youthful piety; humble girls, earning their daily bread, practiced the
+most heroic virtues, under the influence of a desire to become faithful
+Children of Mary; and, sustained by the same spirit, the poorest
+courageously resisted temptation, and complied with those duties so
+little esteemed at the present day--filial devotion and self-denial.
+
+[Illustration: _The Miraculous Medal adopted as the Livery of the
+Children of Mary._]
+
+To these precious fruits are also joined some beautiful flowers of
+devotion; how eagerly the Children of Mary repair to re-unions of the
+Association, especially on all their Mother's feasts, chanting her
+praises and exciting one another to fervent piety.
+
+But the death of these young girls is still more admirable than their
+life; many of them stricken down in the very bloom of youth, fortified
+with their medal and ribbon as with a precious talisman, smile at death
+and defy hell.
+
+Thirty years have passed since the grain of mustard seed was confided
+to the earth, and it has now become an immense tree, whose branches
+overshadow the most distant countries. Europe numbers nearly a thousand
+of these Sodalities, about six hundred being composed of externs, or
+mixed associates. They amount, in other portions of the world to nearly
+two hundred. This displays the visible effects of the benediction of
+St. Peter's Successor; the promises made in 1830 were not realized
+until they had received the approbation of the Vicar of Jesus Christ,
+Pius IX, whose name will always be dear to the Children of Mary.
+
+The Associations vary in number from ten to three hundred sodalists,
+which gives us an average of eighty thousand young girls, courageously
+holding themselves aloof from satan's snares and pomps, and leading a
+life of purity and piety amidst the seductions of a corrupt world.
+
+Surely this must be a miracle of God's right hand and Mary's bounty!
+
+We have thought it would not be uninteresting to the readers, to give
+the statistics for the end of the year 1877, of the Sodalities of the
+Children of Mary, established in the houses of the Daughters of Charity
+throughout the world.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF THE _SODALITIES OF CHILDREN OF MARY_.
+
+
+ SODALITIES.
+ _Internal._ _External SUMMARY.
+ and
+ Mixed._
+ France 287 451 } Internal Sodalities 287
+ } External and Mixed 451
+
+ _Europe._
+
+ (Exclusive of France.)
+ Belgium 11 14 }
+ Switzerland 1 7 }
+ Italy 55 64 }
+ Spain 17 25 }
+ Portugal .. 1 } Internal Sodalities 100
+ Great Britain 2 13 } External and Mixed 153
+ Poland 8 9 }
+ Prussia .. 5 }
+ Austria 4 11 }
+ Greece .. 1 }
+ Turkey 2 3 }
+
+ _Asia._
+
+ Turkey 2 7 } Internal Sodalities 2
+ Persia .. 2 } External and Mixed 10
+ China .. 1 }
+
+ _Africa._
+
+ Egypt 3 2 } Internal Sodalities 6
+ Algeria 3 17 } External and Mixed 20
+ Canary Isles .. 1 }
+
+ _America._
+
+ United States 11 44 }
+ Guatemala 4 3 }
+ Brazil 11 9 } Internal Sodalities 54
+ Peru 9 6 } External and Mixed 81
+ La Plata 1 6 }
+ Chili 3 1 }
+ Cuba 5 4 }
+ Mexico 9 7 }
+ Ecuador 1 1 }
+
+ _Oceanica._
+
+ Philippine Isles 1 6 } Internal Sodalities 1
+ } External and Mixed 6
+
+ --- --- ----
+ Total 450 721 Total 1,171
+
+
+_III.--Definition of the Immaculate Conception._
+
+We have observed several times in the course of this work, that the
+principal end of the apparition of 1830, was to popularize belief
+in the Immaculate Conception. The facts we have related, prove most
+conclusively that, thanks to the Miraculous Medal, this object has been
+fully attained.
+
+As a preparation for the accomplishment of this great design,
+Providence placed in St. Peter's chair, a Pontiff animated with the
+most filial tenderness for Mary, and inspired him from the beginning
+of his pontificate, with the desire of glorifying the most holy Mother
+of God, by proclaiming the Immaculate Conception an article of Faith.
+And this hope, this desire, had Pius IX, in the ninth year of his
+reign, the happiness of realizing amidst the universal applause of the
+Catholic world.
+
+We quote below from M. Villefranche's beautiful History of Pius IX, the
+account of this memorable event:
+
+ "By an Encyclical dated from Gaeta, Pius IX had interrogated
+ the Episcopacy of the Universal Church, on the subject of the
+ belief in the Immaculate Conception. The answers received were
+ six hundred and three in number. Five hundred and forty-six
+ Bishops earnestly entreated the doctrinal definition, a few
+ hesitated, though only as to whether it were an opportune
+ moment or not for the decision, for the sentiment of the
+ Catholic world was in unison as regards the belief itself.
+
+ "To assist at this solemnity, Pius IX summoned to his presence,
+ all the Bishops who could repair to Rome. They came five
+ hundred and ninety-two in number, and from all quarters of
+ the globe except Russia, where they were held in check by
+ the suspicious despotism of the Emperor Nicholas. These
+ prelates put the finishing touch to the work of the commission
+ charged with preparing the Bull; but at the very moment of
+ making the final pause in its rendition, it was asked if the
+ Bishops assisted there as judges, to pronounce the definition
+ simultaneously with the Successor of St. Peter, and if their
+ presence must be mentioned as judges, or, if the supreme
+ judgment should not be attributed to the word of the Sovereign
+ Pontiff alone. The debate terminated suddenly, as if by the
+ inspiration of the Holy Spirit. 'It was the last sitting,' says
+ Mgr. Audisio, an eye-witness; 'the hour of noon had just been
+ sounded, every knee was bent to recite the _Angelus_. Then each
+ one resumed his place, and scarcely had a word been spoken,
+ when there arose a universal acclamation to the Holy Father,
+ a cry of eternal adherence to the Primacy of St Peter's See,
+ and the debate was ended:' '_Petre, doce nos; confirma fratres
+ tuos!_ (Peter, teach us; confirm thy brethren!)' And the
+ instruction these pastors asked of the supreme Pastor was the
+ definition of the Immaculate Conception.
+
+ "The 8th of December, 1854, was the grand day, the triumphal
+ day, which, according to the beautiful words of Mgr.
+ Dupanloup's circular, 'crowns the hopes of past ages, blesses
+ the present age, evokes the gratitude of future generations,
+ and leaves an imperishable memory; the day that witnessed
+ the first definition of Faith, which was not preceded by
+ dissension and followed by heresy.' All Rome rejoiced. Immense
+ multitudes, representing every tongue and nation on the globe,
+ thronged the approaches to the vast Basilica of St. Peter's,
+ far too small to accommodate all who came. Soon, the Bishops
+ were seen forming into the line of march, ranged according to
+ their seniority, and followed by the Cardinals. The Sovereign
+ Pontiff, amidst the most brilliant surroundings, appeared
+ last, whilst the chant of the Litany of the Saints, wafted to
+ Heaven, invited the celestial court to unite with the Church
+ militant in honoring the Queen of Angels and men. Seated upon
+ his throne, Pius IX received the obeisance of the Cardinals and
+ Bishops, after which the Pontifical Mass began.
+
+ "When the Gospel had been chanted in Greek and Latin, Cardinal
+ Macchi, Dean of the Sacred College, accompanied by the Dean of
+ the Archbishops, and the Dean of the Bishops present, with an
+ Archbishop of the Greek rite and one of the Armenian, presented
+ themselves at the foot of the throne, and supplicated the
+ Holy Father, in the name of the universal Church, to raise
+ his Apostolic voice and pronounce the dogmatic decree of the
+ Immaculate Conception. The Pope replied that he willingly
+ granted this prayer, but ere doing so he would invoke once more
+ the assistance of the Holy Spirit And, now, every voice united
+ in the solemn strains of the _Veni Creator_. When the chant had
+ ceased, the Pope arose, and in that grave, sonorous, majestic
+ voice, to whose profound charm millions of the faithful have
+ borne testimony, commenced reading the Bull.
+
+ "He established: first, the theological motives for belief in
+ Mary's privilege; then he adduced the ancient and universal
+ traditions both of the East and West the testimony of religious
+ orders and schools of theology, of the holy Fathers and
+ the Councils, and finally, the pontifical records, ancient
+ as well as modern. His countenance, as he pronounced the
+ words inscribed upon these pious and magnificent documents,
+ betrayed his emotion. Several times he was so overcome that
+ for a few moments it was impossible for him to proceed. 'And
+ consequently,' he adds, 'after having offered unceasingly in
+ humility and fasting, our own prayers and the public prayers
+ of the Church to God the Father through His Son, that He would
+ deign to direct and confirm our thoughts by the inspiration of
+ the Holy Spirit, after having implored the assistance of all
+ the celestial court, ... in honor of the holy and indivisible
+ Trinity, for the glory of the Virgin Mother of God, for the
+ exaltation of the Catholic Faith and the increase of the
+ Christian religion, by the authority of Our Saviour, Jesus
+ Christ, the blessed Apostles, Peter and Paul, and our own.'----
+
+
+ "Here his voice was stifled with emotion, and he paused an
+ instant to wipe away the tears. The assistants, deeply affected
+ as well as himself, but mute with respect and admiration,
+ awaited in profound silence the continuation. In a clear,
+ strong voice, slightly elevated by enthusiasm, he proceeded:
+
+ "'We declare, profess, and define, that the doctrine affirming
+ that the Blessed Virgin Mary was preserved and exempt from
+ all stain of original sin, from the first instant of her
+ conception, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of
+ men, is a doctrine revealed by God, and for this reason, all
+ the faithful must believe it with firm and unwavering faith.
+ Wherefore, if any one should have the presumption, which
+ God forbid, to allow a belief contrary to what we have just
+ defined, let him know that he wrecks his faith and separates
+ himself from the unity of the Church.'
+
+ "The Cardinal Dean, prostrating himself a second time at the
+ feet of the Pontiff, supplicated him to publish the Apostolic
+ letters containing the definition; the Promoter of the Faith,
+ accompanied by the Apostolic Prothonotary also presented
+ themselves, to beg that a verbal process of the decree be
+ prepared. And now the cannon of the castle of St. Angelo and
+ all the bells of the Eternal City, announced the glorification
+ of the Immaculate Virgin!
+
+ "In the evening, Rome, enwreathed in illuminations, and crowned
+ with inscriptions and transparencies, resounded with joyous
+ music, and was imitated at that very time by thousands of
+ cities and villages all over the face of the globe. If we were
+ to compile an account of the pious manifestations relating to
+ this event, it would fill, not volumes, but libraries. The
+ Bishops' responses to the Pope before the definition were
+ printed in nine volumes; the Bull itself, translated under
+ the care of a learned French Sulpitian into every tongue and
+ idiom of the universe, filled about ten volumes; the pastoral
+ instructions, publishing and explaining the Bull, and the
+ articles on the subject in religious journals, would certainly
+ require several hundred, especially if we add thereto the
+ poems, scraps of eloquence, and descriptions of the monuments
+ and fetes. We should not omit mention here of the spontaneous
+ and incomparable periodical illuminations at Lyons, each time
+ the course of the year brings round the memorable 8th of
+ December."
+
+Pius IX knew that the Catholic movement leading to the definition of
+the Immaculate Conception had originated in France, and he was happy to
+see the French people enthusiastically welcome the Pontifical decree
+of December 8th, and celebrate with unparalleled magnificence Mary's
+glorious privilege. Henceforth, the love he bore that country was
+firmly rooted in his heart, and her misfortunes had but increased his
+tenderness and compassion. It consoles us to insert here the prayer to
+the Blessed Virgin which he composed, and recited daily to obtain for
+her the protection of the Queen of Heaven:
+
+ "O Mary! conceived without sin, look down upon France, pray for
+ France, save France! The greater her guilt, the more need of
+ your intercession. Only a word to Jesus reposing in your arms,
+ and France is saved."
+
+ "O Jesus! obedient to Mary, save France!"
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+THE MIRACULOUS MEDAL AND THE WAR.
+
+
+The wars which have taken place since the year 1854, the epoch of the
+definition of the Immaculate Conception, have presented a spectacle to
+which the world was unaccustomed. Not only were _priests_ called upon
+to administer to the spiritual necessities of the soldiers in camps
+and ambulances, but _Sisters_ also were charged with the care of the
+sick and wounded. The priest's cassock and the robe of the religious,
+became almost as familiar to the eye as the military costume itself!
+Sisters of Charity accompanied the armies in the wars of the East, in
+1854; in Italy, in 1859; in the United States, in 1861; in Mexico, in
+1864; in Austria and Prussia, in 1866; in France and Germany, in 1870;
+and we find them ministering to the Russian army and also the Turkish
+ambulance in 1877. For them no enemies existed; the camps of both
+belligerents claimed their attention, they were equally devoted to all
+who needed their ministry of charity.
+
+During the hardships and dangers of war, chaplains and Sisters could
+not fail to invoke the Blessed Virgin, and the Miraculous Medal
+naturally became the sign of the soldier's devotion and the pledge
+of our merciful Mother's protection, against the moral and physical
+dangers war brings in its train. The medal was profusely distributed;
+it was accepted and worn with confidence; even Protestants and
+Schismatics asking eagerly for it; officers as well as private soldiers
+attaching it to their uniforms when they set out for the combat; the
+sick employed it to obtain recovery, or at least, an alleviation of
+their sufferings; the dying kissed it with love; many attributed to it
+their preservation in battle, and a still greater number were indebted
+to it for their eternal salvation.
+
+In proof of the above, we shall present some facts, selected from the
+thousands related in the correspondence of the missionaries and Sisters
+who followed the several armies.
+
+
+WAR IN THE EAST, FROM 1854 to 1856.
+
+ "On the Feast of the Assumption, we shall have at Varna, a
+ beautiful religious ceremony, at which the whole army will
+ assist. I have brought from Constantinople a banner of the
+ Blessed Virgin; this we will set up, and confidently invoking
+ Mary, we know she will obtain the cessation of the cholera, and
+ success of our arms."[24]
+
+ [Footnote 24: Letter of Mr. Bore, Aug. 13, 1854.]
+
+ "The inmates of our hospital of Pera, at Constantinople, number
+ about twelve hundred, including sixty officers. These gentlemen
+ receive the Miraculous Medal with joy and gratitude. Endeavor
+ to find some good souls who will send us a large supply of
+ these pious objects."[25]
+
+ [Footnote 25: Letter of a Sister, September 29.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "The three patients whose confessions I heard were poor
+ Irish. They manifested great resignation in their sufferings;
+ all three asked for, and gratefully received a medal of the
+ Immaculate Conception. An English officer (a Catholic), who
+ wore with pious confidence the medal of Mary, told me that
+ several of his colleagues, though Protestants, had accepted the
+ medal and preserved it respectfully, and that the cholera and
+ balls of the Russians had, so far, spared them."[26]
+
+ [Footnote 26: Letter of Mr. Bore, October 25.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Even amidst the turmoil of war, and in spite of the multitude
+ of sick and wounded, the Catholics of Constantinople celebrated
+ solemnly the definition of the dogma of the Immaculate
+ Conception. Mr. Bore wrote as follows, March 22d, 1835: 'The
+ _triduum_ of thanksgiving for the declaration and promulgation
+ of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception was fixed for the
+ Feast of Saint Joseph. We have endeavored to unite, in the
+ expression of our joy, with that of the faithful throughout the
+ Catholic world, and to imitate, to the best of our ability,
+ those magnificent and most consoling manifestations that have
+ taken place in France, who in this has shown a true love for
+ the Mother of God, a love already repaid by a new development
+ of national strength and vigor. The zeal and skill of our dear
+ Sisters in charge of the adjoining establishment have greatly
+ contributed to the splendor of the feast. The good taste
+ and experience of one of them suggested to her the idea of
+ substituting for the large picture over the main altar a figure
+ of the Immaculate Conception; the Blessed Virgin was crowned
+ with golden stars, her dress and drapery were rich and radiant
+ in a glory of gauze, the whole framed in lilies. The head,
+ borrowed from the portrait of a Circassian lady, and the golden
+ crescent under her feet, were happy indications, both in color
+ and emblem, of the events transpiring around us. A Catholic
+ Armenian lady lent a set of diamonds, which flashed back the
+ myriad flames of tapers and candles contained in candelabras,
+ hidden in the abundance of lilies. This illumination,
+ improvised by our pupils in imitation of those they knew would
+ take place throughout France, was indeed an honor to their
+ taste and piety.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "We sometimes meet with sick persons, who, through human
+ respect, ignorance, or indifference, are prevented from
+ receiving the succors of religion. We give them a medal of
+ the Immaculate Conception, and the Blessed Virgin charges
+ herself with their conversion. Nearly always, without any
+ other inducement, and, as it were, of themselves, they ask for
+ the priest and prepare to receive the Sacraments, manifesting
+ the most lively sorrow for having offended God and abused His
+ benefits. I could cite examples by thousands."
+
+ "Numbers of soldiers wear the Miraculous Medal, the scapular, a
+ reliquary, a cross, or sometimes not one but all of these, and
+ those who do not possess these articles are happy to receive
+ them. In a word, the army is, in a great measure, Catholic, and
+ knows how to pray."
+
+ "A soldier wounded in both legs at the battle of Alma, received
+ for more than two months, the unremitting attention of the
+ physicians and Sisters though without experiencing any relief.
+ Having despaired of saving his life otherwise, the surgeons
+ decided upon amputation. They began by the limb which was most
+ shattered. Next day the patient was in a hopeless condition;
+ there was no question of further amputation. Recourse was
+ then had to supernatural remedies; a novena was made to the
+ Immaculate Mary, and in a few days the patient showed signs of
+ improvement. He is now cured, and his piety and good example
+ are the admiration of his comrades."[27]
+
+ [Footnote 27: Report of Mr. Doumerq, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A patient who was brought in yesterday, refused to go to
+ confession. I placed under his pillow a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, and left him quiet, continuing to give him assiduous
+ care. This morning he called me, and in a resolute tone,
+ inquired if people here died like dogs. 'I am a Christian, and
+ I wish to confess.' 'Yesterday I proposed confession,' said
+ I, 'but you objected, and even sent the priest away.' 'It is
+ true,' he replied; 'but I am sorry for having done so; I wish
+ now to see him as soon as possible.' Since his confession
+ he is completely changed; and calmly awaits the approach of
+ death."[28]
+
+ [Footnote 28: Letter of a Sister, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the Russian prisoners brought to Constantinople after
+ the battle of Tchernaia, many wore the medal of the Immaculate
+ Conception. By this I understood at once that they were
+ Catholics and Poles."[29]
+
+ [Footnote 29: Letter of Mr. Bore, August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "A young lieutenant in the eighty-fifth regiment, had been
+ wounded in the skull, and when brought to the hospital, his
+ throat was gangrened, and he could scarcely speak. A secret
+ sympathy attracted us towards each other, and he accepted
+ gratefully the services I rendered him. As he was evidently
+ sinking, I spoke to him of the Blessed Virgin, and alluded to
+ the medal he wore around his neck. He smiled, and replied by
+ pressing my hand. When his confession (during which he regained
+ his voice and strength) was finished, he said: 'Monsieur abbe,
+ I have a favor to ask of you.' 'What is it, my friend? tell
+ me; I am anxious to gratify you.' 'Be so kind,' said he, 'as
+ to inform Father Bore that I am here, and am very ill.' These
+ words pierced my heart; however, I was able to answer him:
+ 'Father Bore is he who now speaks to you.' Raising his eyes
+ moistened with tears, and, again pressing my hand, he added:
+ 'I am the brother-in-law of your dear friend, Mr. Taconet, and
+ also brother of the captain of zouaves, whom you assisted a
+ year ago at Varna.' I then recognized in him Mr. _Ferdinand
+ Lefaivre_; he had been recommended to me by a pressing letter
+ from Mr. Taconet, but this letter reached me only after my
+ young friend's death. Mr. Taconet wrote that, on the eleventh
+ of May, the lieutenant with his family had heard Mass at the
+ church of Notre Dame des Victoires, and that he did not doubt
+ but the Blessed Virgin would watch over a life so precious.
+ His hope was not misplaced, for the Blessed Virgin called him
+ to herself, fortified with the Sacraments, on the day of her
+ triumph."[30]
+
+ [Footnote 30: Letter of August 25, 1855.]
+
+ "While we were invoking our Immaculate Mother, on the eve of a
+ combat, in which one of our young soldiers was to take part for
+ the first (and perhaps last) time, he arose and went to Mary's
+ altar; kneeling an instant, he arose again, and hung around
+ the statue's neck a silver heart, in which were inscribed his
+ name and the names of his parents. I feel, as St Vincent has
+ forcibly expressed it, that he did not perform this act of
+ devotion without tearful eyes and a sobbing heart."[31]
+
+ [Footnote 31: Letter of Sister M----, 1855.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A serious fire had broken out in the city of Salonica. The
+ flames soon appeared opposite the Sisters' house, the buildings
+ on the other side of the street, a few yards distant, being
+ seized and devoured by the fire, which the wind continued to
+ fan into activity. Already the Sisters' roof and that of the
+ adjoining house were covered with dense smoke. I cast therein
+ several Miraculous Medals. There was no prospect of human
+ succor, as the rumor of there being powder in the vicinity had
+ caused every one to seek safety in flight. I also retired,
+ deeming it useless to expose myself longer; and besides, I was
+ obliged to go to the assistance of a poor man, who, partially
+ intoxicated, persisted in remaining near the fire. I returned
+ shortly after, expecting to see our houses in flames; I doubted
+ not but they would be wholly consumed. As I approached, a
+ young man stopped me on the way, and said: 'Your property
+ is saved, sir; the Sisters' house is not even in danger.'
+ Only on reaching the scene could I be convinced that he had
+ spoken truly. It would be impossible to express my emotion at
+ the sight. I sent to inform our dear Sisters of the fact and
+ they could scarcely credit this marvellous preservation. It
+ suffices to add, that all Salonica is unanimous in pronouncing
+ it a miracle."[32]
+
+ [Footnote 32: Letter of Mr. Turroque, July 16, 1856.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In an ambulance crowded with Russians was a young Pole,
+ severely wounded and suffering intolerable pain; he earnestly
+ invoked the sweet and merciful Virgin Mary. By his side lay
+ a Russian Protestant, wounded also, and attacked by violent
+ dysentery. So offensive was the odor from his disease, that
+ both patients and nurses complained. He appeared utterly
+ indifferent to everything concerning religion. He took no
+ notice of the Sister as she passed and repassed; he never
+ even deigned to look at her. The young Pole, on the contrary,
+ called her frequently, and gratefully received her care and
+ consolations. One evening our young Catholic was suffering more
+ than usual; the pain drew tears from his eyes; his groans and
+ cries were incessant. He called the Sister and begged her to
+ help him, saying his patience was exhausted; he was in despair;
+ his sufferings were excruciating. The Polish Sister, consoling
+ and encouraging him, bade him have confidence, and gave him
+ a medal to apply to the wounded limb. The young man followed
+ her suggestion; and laying his hand on the medal to keep it in
+ place, he soon fell asleep. Our Protestant appeared unconscious
+ of what was going on, yet he had seen and examined all. Some
+ days after, he called our Polish Sister to him, (she was the
+ only one who could understand him) and said: 'Sister, please
+ give me what you gave this young man that did him so much
+ good, for I suffer greatly!' 'My friend, she replied, I desire
+ nothing better than to relieve you also; but you lack what
+ effected his cure, faith and confidence. You Protestants deny
+ the power of the Blessed Virgin; you do not acknowledge her as
+ your Queen, your Advocate, your Mother. So what can I do? It
+ was a medal of Mary that so speedily relieved your neighbor,
+ the young Pole.' 'Give me one also, Sister,' he answered; 'I
+ believe all that you tell me; you do good to every one, why
+ should you deceive me?' 'But,' said the Sister, 'have you
+ confidence in Mary, the Mother of God? Do you believe in her
+ mercy and her power?' 'I believe all that you believe, Sister,
+ since Mary hears the prayers of the unfortunate, and brings
+ relief to the suffering, she cannot deceive us!' The Sister,
+ much consoled at hearing these words, gave him a medal, and
+ our admirable talisman effected in his soul most gratifying
+ results. He asked to receive instruction from a priest, and
+ after some days employed in studying the holy doctrines of
+ the Church, and in assiduous prayer to Mary he abjured his
+ errors. As he had been separated from the other patients, on
+ account of the unpleasant odor we have mentioned, he was at
+ full liberty to act as he wished. After his baptism, and the
+ reception of the holy Eucharist, being unable to restrain
+ his transports, he exclaimed: 'Oh! how happy I am! My heart
+ has never known such joy! I am content to die, and I do not
+ regret having been struck on the battlefield! To my wound do
+ I owe my salvation. Oh! how we poor Protestants are deceived!
+ By what lies are we led astray! How good God is to rescue me
+ from error! May the sweet and holy Virgin be known and loved
+ always and everywhere!' And in these beautiful dispositions, he
+ expired."[33]
+
+ [Footnote 33: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ "A sergeant advanced in years had been suffering for three
+ months from a severe dysentery; one morning the Sister who was
+ visiting the sick found him in tears. 'Ah! my brave soldier,'
+ said she, 'what is the meaning of all this grief?' 'O Sister,'
+ he exclaimed, 'lend me patience, for mine is exhausted. I am
+ in despair; I can endure my sufferings no longer; I feel that
+ I am going to die, and just at the time I was to receive a
+ pension--at the very moment I hoped to return to my country
+ with honor and see my family once more. Must I die afar from
+ home and leave my bones in a strange land?' Groans were
+ mingled with his words, and his gestures had all the violence
+ of despair. The Sister who relates the fact says: 'My heart
+ ached at witnessing the grief of this brave man, with his white
+ hairs and numerous scars. However, as my tears would not have
+ dried his, I tried to rouse his courage by other means, and I
+ promised him a perfect cure if he would unite in prayer with
+ our little family at the hospital. Giving him a Miraculous
+ Medal, I recommended him to God and Mary with my whole heart.
+ We made a novena to the Immaculate Virgin, and ere its
+ termination our sergeant was entirely cured."[34]
+
+ [Footnote 34: Letter of Sister M----, July 9, 1857.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Every evening our soldiers assembled around the Sisters in
+ charge and sang pious canticles; they even composed music and
+ words suited to the occasion. These they intoned, uniting
+ their deep, sonorous voices with the Sisters'. In unison and
+ harmony of mind as of voice, they repeated in chorus the sacred
+ names of Jesus and Mary as a rallying cry of hope, confidence
+ and triumph--a chant of love, a united echo of heaven and
+ country. Then their hearts thrilled with joy inexpressible,
+ and they were filled with pride and happiness at the thought
+ of belonging to that France who imparts to her children the
+ heroism of courage and the virtue of the perfect Christian.
+ During the month of May our military concerts were multiplied;
+ all were rivals in zeal. The altars were adorned with admirable
+ piety and taste, notwithstanding our extreme poverty. Entire
+ trees were felled to assist in concealing the dilapidated state
+ of the barracks, which had been converted into chapels. Had
+ our soldiers been free to do so, they would have despoiled the
+ gardens of the Turks to adorn the sanctuary of the Queen of
+ Heaven.
+
+ "In the ambulances of Pera some of the most zealous soldiers,
+ both officers and privates, wished to present Mary a solemn
+ homage of their devotedness and gratitude. They chose a heart
+ as the symbol of their sentiments. All the balls extracted
+ from their wounds were collected to compose the offering. But
+ a soldier suddenly exclaimed with enthusiasm: 'Comrades, what
+ are we doing? Shall we offer the Blessed Virgin a schismatical
+ heart? All these balls are Russians!' 'True,' replied another,
+ 'these balls are Russian; we must have French balls. Let us ask
+ the Russians for those we sent them.' 'Stay,' said a third,
+ 'you have forgotten that these Russian balls are stained with
+ our blood!' 'Well, then, let us use them,' suggested a fourth,
+ 'the French balls will form the centre.' They went immediately
+ to ask the Russians for the French balls. These were willingly
+ given. The heart was prepared; their names inscribed on it with
+ the designation of the regiment, and the offering was presented
+ to Mary amid the most lively acclamations and transports of joy
+ and gratitude."[35]
+
+ [Footnote 35: Letter of Sister M., July 9, 1857.]
+
+
+ITALIAN WAR, 1859.
+
+Letter of Sister Coste:
+
+ _Gaeta, December 18th, 1860._
+
+ During the siege of Gaeta, the Sisters of Charity willingly
+ remained in the city, to assist the sick and wounded
+ Neapolitans. They felt that there was no greater security
+ against the dangers to which they were exposed, than that of
+ recommending themselves and their abode to the protection
+ of the Blessed Virgin, by means of the Miraculous Medal.
+ Their Superioress, Sister Coste, wrote December 18th, 1860:
+ "Frequently the cannon roars in our ears; bombs whiz around us,
+ but divine Providence is our shield. The first night of our
+ sleeping at the palace, we were saluted by the Piedmontese, who
+ sent us a multitude of bombs; one of them burst just outside
+ our room, and you might have supposed a thunderbolt had fallen.
+ Yet, the precious medal of our Immaculate Mother, which we
+ had placed at all the doors and windows, shielded us from the
+ danger. A large piece of iron detached itself from the bomb
+ above mentioned, and remains in the wall, a visible testimony
+ of Mary's protection. This circumstance reanimated our
+ confidence, and we hesitate not to pass through the streets,
+ notwithstanding the whizzing of projectiles."
+
+
+UNITED STATES.
+
+Extracts of letters written by Sisters of Charity during the War of
+Secession, from 1861 to 1865:
+
+ _"Military Hospital (House of Refuge),_ }
+ _"St. Louis, Missouri._ }
+
+ "Many of our poor soldiers scarcely knew of the existence of
+ God, and had never even heard baptism mentioned. But, when
+ the Sisters explained to them the necessity of this Sacrament,
+ and the goodness of God, who, by means of it, cleanses us from
+ the original stain, and adopts us as His children, they were
+ filled with the deepest emotion, and often shed tears. On one
+ occasion, a patient said: 'Sister, do not leave me; tell me
+ more about that good God whom I ought to love. How is it that
+ I have lived so long and have never heard Him spoken of as you
+ have just done? What must I do to become a child of God? 'You
+ must,' replied the Sister, 'believe and be baptized.' 'Well,
+ baptize me,' was his answer. The Sister persuaded him to await
+ the arrival of Father Burke, who would be there next morning.
+ The patient consented reluctantly. 'Ah!' said he, 'it is very
+ long to wait, and I am so weak; if I die unbaptized, I shall
+ not go to Heaven.' To relieve his anxiety, the Sister promised
+ to watch near him and administer baptism, should she perceive
+ any unfavorable change in his condition. 'Now,' said he, 'I am
+ satisfied; I rely on you to open for me the gates of Heaven;
+ it is through your intervention I must enter.' He spent a
+ quiet night. Next morning, Father Burke admitted him into the
+ Catholic Church, by the Sacrament of Baptism, which he received
+ with admirable piety. A crucifix was presented him; grasping it
+ eagerly, he kissed it, saying as he did so: 'O my God! I did
+ not know Thee or love Thee before coming to this hospital!'
+ Then, turning to the Sister, he said: 'Sister, I have forgotten
+ the prayer you taught me;' and he repeated after her several
+ times, 'My Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit, sweet
+ Jesus, receive my soul.' He died pronouncing these words."
+
+ "The precise number of baptisms cannot be ascertained; there
+ were probably seven hundred during the two or three years of
+ our residence in the hospital. Five hundred Catholics who
+ had led careless or sinful lives returned sincerely to God
+ and resumed the practice of their religious duties. A great
+ number of these had received no other Sacrament than that of
+ Baptism, and they made their first Communion at the hospital.
+ The majority of the newly baptized died; the others on leaving
+ asked for medals and catechisms, saying they desired to
+ instruct themselves and their families."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier named Nichols fell dangerously ill, and in a few
+ days was reduced to the last extremity. Vainly did we strive
+ to touch his heart and awaken him to a sense of religion.
+ His sufferings were terrible; both day and night was he
+ denied repose, and he could scarcely remain a moment in the
+ same position. His condition was most pitiful. Many of his
+ companions, knowing that he had never been baptized, and having
+ perceived the beneficial effects of baptism upon others, begged
+ the Sisters to propose to him the reception of this Sacrament,
+ thinking it might be a comfort to him, and not being aware of
+ the many efforts that had already been made to induce him to
+ believe in its necessity and efficacy. However, we redoubled
+ our efforts, and placed a Miraculous Medal under his pillow.
+ His comrades regarded his sufferings as a visible chastisement
+ of his impiety. We could not induce him to pronounce the name
+ of God, but he implored the physician, in the most heart
+ rending accents, not to let him die. Four days passed without
+ the least change, when one of his companions, who appeared
+ the most deeply interested in his welfare, said to him, with
+ eyes filled with tears, how much he regretted to see him die
+ thus, utterly bereft of a hope for the future. The other
+ soldiers had engaged this man to acquaint the patient with his
+ danger, and persuade him to make his peace with God, for they
+ saw that human respect alone prevented his showing any signs
+ of repentance. This last effort of charity was crowned with
+ success; he called for the Sister, and when she came, said to
+ her: 'Sister, I am ready to do all you wish.' After instructing
+ him in what was necessary for salvation, and feeling convinced
+ of the sincerity of his dispositions, she asked him by whom
+ he wished to be baptized. 'By any one you please,' was his
+ answer. But, to be sure that he did not desire a Protestant
+ minister, she said: 'Shall I send for the priest who attends
+ this ward?' 'Yes,' he replied, 'it is he I wish to baptize
+ me.' The priest was sent for without delay, and we had the
+ inexpressible consolation of seeing this poor sinner admitted
+ into the number of the children of God by the very person who,
+ a few days previous, had been an object of his raillery. He
+ became perfectly calm, and expired shortly after, invoking the
+ holy name of Jesus."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Among the patients was a poor young man named William Hudson,
+ who for a long time refused to receive baptism. The Sisters,
+ however, nowise discouraged, explained to him the Sacrament
+ of Baptism, and instructed him in the mysteries of our holy
+ religion, and the Sister, under whose immediate charge he
+ was, hung a medal around his neck. Finally, he asked to speak
+ to good Father Burke; was baptized, and expired in the most
+ edifying dispositions, pronouncing the holy name of Mary.
+ Several others followed his example, and made their peace with
+ God before death."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Mr. Huls, a man of thirty-five, though convinced of the
+ necessity of baptism, postponed the reception of it from day
+ to day. Knowing that he had but little attraction for our holy
+ religion, I forbore to mention the subject too frequently.
+ Nevertheless, seeing that death was rapidly approaching, I
+ placed a medal under his pillow and begged the Blessed Virgin
+ to take charge of his salvation. The next day, just as I was
+ turning away after giving him a drink, he called me and said:
+ 'Sister, what ought I to do to prepare for the next world?' I
+ told him that it was necessary to repent of his sins, because
+ sin is the greatest of evils, and it had caused the sufferings
+ and death of our Lord Jesus Christ; that God's goodness and
+ mercy towards sinners are infinite, and that He is always ready
+ to pardon us, even at the last moment, if we sincerely return
+ to Him. I urged him to cast himself with confidence into the
+ arms of this merciful Father, who earnestly desired to open
+ for him the gates of the Eternal City, and I added that it was
+ absolutely necessary to be baptized. He assured me that he
+ believed all I had said to him; he then repeated with fervor
+ the acts of faith, hope, charity, contrition, and resignation
+ to the will of God. Seeing that he was entering into his agony,
+ I baptized him; the Sacraments appeared to revive his strength.
+ He began to pray, and made such beautiful aspirations of
+ love and gratitude to God, that one might have said his good
+ angel inspired them, particularly the act of contrition. I
+ remained with him to the last, praying for him, when he had not
+ strength to do so himself; if I paused a moment through fear of
+ fatiguing him: 'Go on Sister,' he would say in dying accents,
+ 'I can still pray.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Another soldier, William Barrett, scarcely twenty years of
+ age, was almost in a dying condition when brought to the
+ hospital. After doing all I could for the relief of his poor
+ body, I inquired very cautiously as to the state of his soul.
+ Alas! it was deplorable; not that he had committed great
+ crimes, but that he was entirely ignorant of everything
+ relating to his salvation. He had never said a prayer, and he
+ hardly knew of the existence of a God. My first conversation
+ with him on the subject of religion, was not altogether
+ pleasing to him, for he did not understand it; but when I
+ had briefly explained the principal articles of Faith, he
+ listened very attentively, and begged me to tell him something
+ more. When I told him that our Lord had loved us so much as
+ to become man and die on a cross for our salvation, he could
+ not restrain his tears: 'Oh!' said he, 'why did no one ever
+ tell me that? Oh! if I had only known it sooner! How could I
+ have lived so long without knowing and loving my God!' I now
+ prepared him to receive the Sacrament of Baptism, and tried
+ to make him sensible of God's great mercy, in bringing him to
+ the hospital, that he might die a holy death. He understood
+ this and much more, for grace had spoken to this poor heart,
+ so truly penetrated with sorrow for sin. 'I wish to love God,'
+ said he, 'but I am such a miserable creature! I would like to
+ pray, but I do not know how. Sister, pray for me, please.' I
+ promised to do so, and offering him a medal of the Blessed
+ Virgin, I told him that by wearing it, he would secure the
+ intercession of the Mother of God, who is ever powerful with
+ her divine Son. He gladly accepted the medal, put it around
+ his neck, and repeated, not only the aspiration, O Mary!
+ conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee,
+ but other prayers, to obtain the grace of a happy death. He
+ then asked me when I would have him carried to the river, for
+ he was under the impression that he could not be baptized
+ without being immersed. I explained to him the manner in
+ which the Catholic Church administers this Sacrament, and the
+ dispositions necessary for receiving it. Listening eagerly to
+ every word I uttered, 'Pray with me, Sister,' said he, 'come
+ nearer, that I may hear you better, for I do not know how to
+ pray.' He repeated with great fervor all the prayers I recited,
+ and thought only of preparing himself for his baptism which
+ was to take place on the following day. From that time he
+ wished to converse with the Sisters only. If his companions or
+ the attendants came to him, he answered them in a few words,
+ evidently showing that he desired to be alone with his God. One
+ of the officers asked him, if he wished any one to write to his
+ family. 'Do not speak to me of my family now,' said he, 'the
+ Sisters have written to my parents. I wish for nothing but to
+ pray and to be baptized.' And the words ever on his lips, were
+ these: 'O God, have mercy on me, a sinner.' Towards evening he
+ became so weak, that I thought it best to remain with him. At
+ three o'clock in the morning, fearing that he was in his agony,
+ I administered the Sacrament of Regeneration; he lived till
+ seven o'clock. The fervor with which he united in the prayers
+ was truely edifying; even when scarcely able to speak, he tried
+ to express his gratitude to God for His goodness and mercy to
+ him. He was most anxious to quit this world, that he might go
+ to that Father, who had admitted him into the number of His
+ children, and whom he so earnestly desired to see and know."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "A soldier, advanced in age, told me one day, that in his
+ country the prejudices of the people were so strong against our
+ Faith, that they would refuse hospitality to a traveler did
+ they know him to be a Catholic; as to himself, he had never
+ met with a Catholic previous to his coming to the hospital;
+ but what he had seen here (nothing comparable to which had he
+ ever witnessed among Protestants), was sufficient to convince
+ him of the truth of Catholicity; that he had belonged to the
+ Presbyterian Church, but he would remain in it no longer, and
+ desired to be instructed in our holy religion. I gave him
+ a catechism and some other books, which he read with great
+ attention. Perceiving that his end approached, he asked for a
+ priest and was baptized. 'If it were the will of God,' said he,
+ speaking of his property, which was considerable, 'I should
+ like to live a little longer and enjoy my fortune; but if the
+ Lord wills otherwise, I am ready to leave all.' He was ever
+ repeating these words: 'Not as I will, O Lord, but as Thou
+ wilt.' From the moment of his baptism, he applied himself
+ most diligently to a profitable disposition of the remainder
+ of life, that he might prepare for his journey to eternity.
+ At times, when he felt a little stronger, he studied the
+ catechism; and when he could no longer hold a book, he prayed
+ and meditated in silence. One day as I was giving him a drink,
+ he showed me his medal. 'Ah!' said he, tears of gratitude
+ streaming down his cheeks, 'behold! my Mother. I kiss her
+ every hour!' He prayed constantly, even when he could neither
+ eat, drink, nor sleep. Once when he was extremely weak, the
+ attendants having changed his position, he fainted, and rallied
+ only with great difficulty. On perceiving that I was trying to
+ restore him: 'Ah! Sister,' said he, 'why did you not let me
+ go?' He also remarked to the attendants, that he feared the
+ Sister would prolong his life for a month, but his fears were
+ not realized; in a few days he slept the sleep of the just.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "One of the soldiers, who had been a long time in the hospital,
+ having fallen very ill, I tried to persuade him to make his
+ peace with God, before going to meet that God as his Judge. My
+ efforts met with little success; he did not admit the necessity
+ of baptism, and he was not in the least concerned about his
+ salvation. But he accepted a medal, and without being aware of
+ it, he swallowed some drops of holy water. Then I recommended
+ him very earnestly to the Blessed Virgin, and in a few days
+ after he asked to be instructed, and was baptized. We could not
+ give him greater pleasure than to pray beside him. He received
+ Extreme Unction with deep and sincere devotion, and expired in
+ the most happy dispositions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In the hospital was a soldier named Sanders, who, though not
+ very ill, was unable to join his regiment. He had no idea of
+ religion. I remarked that he observed us very closely, as if
+ examining our conduct; nothing escaped him. Before leaving, he
+ came to bid me good-by and thank me for the care I had bestowed
+ upon him. I was somewhat surprised, as I had had no occasion of
+ serving him; but, seeing he was so well disposed, I profited by
+ the opportunity to offer him a medal and a book explaining the
+ Catholic Faith. He accepted them with gratitude, and returned
+ to his regiment. A year later, he came again to the hospital,
+ hastening to inform me of his conversion, and seeking a priest,
+ by whom he was gladly instructed and received into the fold
+ of the Holy Church. 'I owe my conversion,' said he, 'to the
+ intercession of the Immaculate Mary and your prayers, and it
+ has been my happy lot to bring other souls to God.' This was,
+ indeed, the case; employed in a military hospital, where he was
+ the only Catholic, by his zeal and solicitude he instructed
+ many poor sick, called a priest, had them baptized, and enjoyed
+ the consolation of procuring eternal happiness for a large
+ number of his fellow-soldiers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "In 1862, a Sister of the hospital at New Orleans gave a medal
+ to one of the attendants on the point of setting out for the
+ army, and she advised him to keep it always about him. Some
+ time after, he returned, having received a slight wound on
+ the head. On seeing the Sister, he exclaimed: 'Sister, here
+ is the medal you gave me; it has saved my life! Just in the
+ midst of battle, the string by which the medal hung around my
+ neck broke, and whilst the cannons were roaring around us, I
+ attached it to a button of my uniform; all my companions fell,
+ and I escaped with this slight contusion.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"_Military Hospital of Philadelphia._
+
+ "A soldier was brought to the hospital grievously wounded. A
+ few questions which the Sister put to him on the subject of
+ religion revealed the fact, that not only was he not baptized,
+ but also most ignorant of the truths essential to salvation.
+ The Sister then began to instruct him, and with all requisite
+ prudence, gave him to understand that the physicians despaired
+ of his recovery. From this moment he listened with the deepest
+ interest to explanations of the catechism; and, one day, when
+ Sister had spoken to him of the necessity of that Sacrament
+ which renders us children of God and heirs of heaven, he joined
+ his hands and said in the most beseeching tone: 'Oh! do not let
+ me die without baptism!' The Sister then asked him from what
+ minister he desired to receive this Sacrament and he replied:
+ 'From yours; from him who says Mass in the Sister's Chapel.'
+ Before the close of the day, Father MacGrane had satisfied
+ the sick man's pious desire, and the new Christian, filled
+ with joy, incessantly repeated acts of love and gratitude. The
+ physician, making his evening visit, found him so ill, that
+ he directed the attendant to watch him all night, saying he
+ might die at any moment. Before retiring, the Sister gave him a
+ medal of the Blessed Virgin, and briefly narrating to him how
+ this tender Mother had often wrought miraculous cures by means
+ of her blessed image; she encouraged the dying man to address
+ himself to Mary with entire confidence.
+
+ "Next morning she was surprised to find him better; but he
+ was much troubled about 'his piece,' which he could not find;
+ he feared it had been taken away. The Sister soon found and
+ restored it to him; receiving it most joyfully, he asked for a
+ string and placed the medal over his wound. When the physician
+ came, which was soon after, he was no less surprised than the
+ Sister at perceiving the change in his patient's condition.
+ The patient, (Duken by name), continued to improve, and in a
+ few weeks he could walk with the aid of crutches. His first
+ visit was to the chapel; from that day, whenever we had Mass,
+ he rose at five o'clock in order to assist at it; and so eager
+ was he for Father MacGrane's instructions, that the intervening
+ time from one Sunday to another seemed to him very long. He
+ attributed his cure to the Blessed Virgin, and it was indeed
+ most remarkable; for he was out of the physician's hands long
+ before many other soldiers of the same ward whose wounds were
+ less dangerous, and who had received the same attentions, were
+ able to leave their beds. He asked for a furlough that he might
+ visit his wife, whom he was very anxious to see a member of the
+ true Church, but 'knowing her prejudice against Catholics, he
+ dared hope for such a happiness.' It was, nevertheless, granted
+ him; she consented to be baptized with her children, and Duken
+ returned to the hospital, blessing God and the holy Virgin for
+ the wonderful graces bestowed on his family.
+
+ "Our Sisters of the South, like those of the North, were
+ in great demand wherever sufferings and miseries claimed
+ relief, and they responded to the call with a holy courage and
+ eagerness.
+
+ "In these divers localities was the Miraculous Medal the
+ instrument God frequently employed in delivering souls from
+ the yoke of Satan. How often have we seen Mary's image
+ kissed respectfully by lips which had formerly uttered only
+ blasphemies against the Mother of God! Every one asked for
+ a medal; some, no doubt, urged by curiosity or the desire
+ of possessing a souvenir of the Sisters, as they themselves
+ acknowledged; but, even so, they could not carry upon
+ their person this sweet image, without growing better and
+ experiencing the effects of Mary's protection. In nearly every
+ case, what rendered the triumph of grace still more remarkable
+ was the fact of its acting upon men who were not only ignorant,
+ but fanatical, hating the name of Catholic, and excited to
+ fury at the sight of a priest. A Sister relates that she
+ ventured, one day, to ask a soldier, who was in the threshold
+ of eternity, if he had been baptized. 'No,' was the reply, in
+ a voice of thunder; 'no, and I have no wish to be plunged in
+ water just now. Let me alone!'
+
+ "'Recommending him to Mary,' says the Sister, 'I left him.
+ Towards evening, I heard a noise in the ward in the direction
+ of his bed, and the attendant came in haste to say that the
+ patient had sent for me.' 'Ah!' said the latter, in a tone
+ very different from that of his morning's speech; 'I am dying,
+ baptize me, I beg of you.' 'Giving him briefly the necessary
+ instruction, I administered the holy rite, and a few hours
+ later he peacefully expired.'
+
+ "Rarely did these poor soldiers complain of their fate; though
+ but little accustomed to the rigors of military life, they bore
+ them with admirable patience. However, there was one exception
+ to the general rule, that of an old soldier, who murmured
+ continually and accused God of afflicting him unjustly.
+ Arguments were worse than useless, they served but to aggravate
+ the evil. Failing in this means to bring him to a better state
+ of mind, I offered him a medal of the Blessed Virgin. By
+ degrees, his complaints ceased, his countenance became composed
+ and serene, and I had the consolation of seeing him expire in
+ the most edifying dispositions."
+
+
+THE WAR BETWEEN PRUSSIA AND AUSTRIA, 1866.
+
+Letter of Mr. Stroever, Priest of the Mission, July 1st, 1867:
+
+ "The wounded arrive in great numbers, and all our houses are
+ filled. Every one wishes to have a medal; I inquired of one,
+ who had begged for a medal at any price, if he were a Catholic.
+ 'No,' was the answer; 'I am a Protestant but I would like to
+ have it as a souvenir of yourself;' and he received it most
+ gratefully.
+
+ "We observe a certain degree of piety among the soldiers,
+ and the sick are most eager to receive the Sacraments. The
+ Protestants show a remarkable inclination to Catholicity. Not
+ only the private soldiers, but even persons of distinction,
+ wishing to have medals, scapulars or a crucifix. They take no
+ measures to conceal these objects of devotion, and no one seems
+ surprised at seeing them on their persons."
+
+
+REMINISCENCES OF THE COMMUNE, PARIS, 1871.
+
+Notes of a Sister of the Hospital d'Enghien:
+
+ "During the siege, we had placed Miraculous Medals over all the
+ doors and windows of the house. As one of our Sisters expressed
+ the intention of concealing them, Sister Catherine exclaimed:
+ 'No, no; they must be seen; put them in the middle of the
+ principal entrance.'
+
+ "During the few days immediately preceding our departure from
+ the house, the federal national guards said to one another:
+ 'Let us go and ask the venerable Sister Catherine for medals;
+ she has given some to our comrades who have shown them to us,
+ we would like to have them too.' 'But you, poor creatures,'
+ replied a Sister, 'you have no faith, no religion, what good
+ will the medal do you.' 'Very true, Sister,' said they, 'we
+ have not much faith, but we believe in the medal; it has
+ protected others, it will also protect us, and when we go to
+ battle, it will help us to die as brave soldiers.' Good Sister
+ Catherine gave medals to all who presented themselves, and
+ many, who belonged to the enemy, sent their comrades to procure
+ them.
+
+ "After the army had entered Paris, thirty of the wounded
+ insurgents, before being brought to trial, were sent to the
+ Hospital d'Enghien to be nursed by the Sisters. The house
+ was already transformed into an ambulance, and we were
+ obliged to take one of the dormitories of the orphans for the
+ newly-arrived patients. The appearance of these men were so
+ frightful, that Sister Eugenie who had been appointed to attend
+ them, had not the courage for the first two days to make any
+ suggestions to them concerning religion; but finally, feeling
+ that she must comply with her duty, and urged by the advice of
+ a companion, she went to Sister Catherine and asked for medals
+ for the insurgents. Sister gave them cheerfully, and encouraged
+ her to use this powerful means of inspiring these unfortunate
+ men with Christian sentiments. Animated by this thought, Sister
+ Eugenie repaired to the ward, and much affected, proposed
+ to say evening prayers. 'Yes, Sister,' answered some among
+ them. Trembling, she began; but at the _Creed_, overcome by
+ excitement and terror, she wept like a child, and was obliged
+ to pause. When she recovered her voice, it was not to continue
+ the prayers, but to tell the prisoners how much she felt at the
+ thought that on the morrow, they would be judged and perhaps
+ condemned; then making them a brief exhortation, inspired by
+ the circumstances, she offered to give each one a medal of the
+ Blessed Virgin, begging them to retain it about their person,
+ happen what might. The proposition was accepted immediately,
+ but Sister Eugenie was too frightened to give the medal into
+ their hands; in the middle of the night, when all seemed to be
+ asleep, she quietly placed a medal under each one's pillow.
+ How great was her joy next morning, to see all these poor
+ insurgents with the medal around their neck.
+
+ "The Superioress came into the hall where the men were
+ collected and asked if they wished a priest to come and hear
+ their confessions. All consented with unequivocal signs of
+ gratitude. A good priest, one of the hostages of the Commune,
+ came and heard their confession. On leaving them he seemed
+ much consoled, and said he had every reason to hope for their
+ salvation. The unfortunate men left the house at seven o'clock,
+ and were conducted to Versailles; they were calm and resigned,
+ and when about to leave, showed the Sisters the medal they
+ wore. Doubtless, God accepted the sacrifice of their life in
+ atonement for their faults."
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+Recent Apparitions of the Blessed Virgin
+
+_IN FRANCE, ITALY AND GERMANY_.
+
+THE CONFIDENCE WITH WHICH THESE APPARITIONS SHOULD INSPIRE US.
+
+
+The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, has, in our
+age, brought to its climax, devotion to the Blessed Virgin. Divine
+Providence employed twenty-four years in preparing the world for this
+great event; we have seen in the preceding chapters, how much the
+apparition of 1830, contributed thereto, and how powerful the influence
+of the Miraculous Medal in propagating this devotion. Since this time a
+second period of twenty-four years has elapsed, during which devotion
+to the Immaculate Mary has shone as a radiant star in the firmament
+of the Church, spreading everywhere the light of truth and the warmth
+of true piety; and, by a gentle yet efficacious impulse, producing
+unanimity of mind and heart in the great Catholic family.
+
+Since the definition, as well as before it, France continues to be the
+privileged country of Mary; nowhere else are miracles so numerous, or
+graces so abundant. Whence arises this glorious prerogative? So far as
+we are permitted to penetrate the secrets of God, it appears to us, to
+our understanding: France who has wrought so much evil by disseminating
+philosophical and revolutionary doctrines, is to repair the past by
+propagating truth, and Mary desires to prepare her for this mission.
+Everyone knows, moreover, that the French character possesses a force
+of expansion and a power of energy that render the French eminently
+qualified to maintain the interests of truth and justice. Then, again,
+is not France the eldest daughter of the Church, since she was baptized
+in the person of Clovis, the first of the Most Christian Kings; and in
+virtue of this title, is it not her duty to devote herself under the
+patronage of her Mother in heaven to the defence of her Mother on earth?
+
+Be the motives of Mary's predilection for the French nation what they
+may, the fact is incontrovertible. Nevertheless, the Blessed Virgin has
+not forgotten other Catholic countries; they also have had their share
+in the singular favors she has so generously dispensed in our days.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF LOURDES.--1858.
+
+Four years after the definition of the Immaculate Conception, Mary
+vouchsafed to manifest herself anew to the world, and this time, as if
+in token of her gratitude, she took the glorious name the Church had
+just decreed her: "_I am the Immaculate Conception_." It was in France
+that the vision of the medal took place, preparatory to the act of
+December 8th, 1854; it was also in France, at Lourdes, in the diocese
+of Tarbes, at the base of the Pyrenees, that Mary came in person, to
+testify and proclaim that privilege which she prized above all others.
+In 1830, she choose a young, unlettered Sister for her confidant; in
+1846, she addressed herself to two poor peasant children; in 1858, she
+also selects one in the humblest ranks of life as the depository of her
+merciful designs.
+
+Bernadette Soubirous, born at Lourdes in 1844, of poor parents, was
+a young girl of weak and delicate health; she could neither read nor
+write; she knew no prayers but her _Chaplet_, and she could speak only
+the _patois_ of the country. "On February 11th, 1858," says she, "my
+parents were in great perplexity for want of wood to cook the dinner. I
+put on my hood, and offered to go with my younger sister Marie and our
+friend, the little Jeanne Abadie, to pick up some dead branches." The
+three children repaired to the bank of the Gave, opposite the grotto
+of Masabielle; in which were collected the sand and branches of trees
+drifted there by the current. But to reach the grotto, it was necessary
+to wade through the shallow bed of the river. Marie and Jeanne took off
+their shoes without hesitation; Bernadette delayed and feared to cross,
+as she was suffering from a cold. Whilst thus deliberating, she was
+astonished by a rushing of wind, instantly repeated, though the trees
+near the river were motionless. One vine only was slightly agitated,
+an eglantine, which grew in the upper part of this natural grotto.
+This niche and the wild rose within reflected a most extraordinary
+brilliancy; a Lady of admirable beauty appeared in the niche, her feet
+resting on the eglantine, her arms gracefully bent, and her hands
+joined; with a sweet smile, she saluted the child. Bernadette's first
+emotion was one of fear; she instinctively grasped her chaplet, as if
+seeking defence in it, and she tried to raise her hand to make the sign
+of the cross, but her arm fell powerless and her terror increased. The
+Lady also had a _Chaplet_ suspended from her left wrist; taking it in
+her right hand, she made a very distinct sign of the cross, and passed
+between her fingers the beads (white as drops of milk); but her lips
+did not move. She smiled upon the shepherdess, who, reassured from
+this moment, recovered the use of her arm, made the sign of the cross
+and recited the _Chaplet_. The little Bernadette remained on her knees
+nearly an hour, in ecstacy. At length, the Lady made her a sign to
+approach, but Bernadette did not move. Then the Lady, extending her
+hand, smiled, and, bowing as if bidding farewell, disappeared. Returned
+to herself, Bernadette thought of rejoining her companions, who, having
+seen nothing, were at a loss to understand her conduct. She entered
+the water, which she found, to her surprise, of a gentle warmth. On
+reaching home, she imparted the secret to her sister, and then to her
+mother, who did not credit it.
+
+However, the child being tormented by an earnest desire to behold the
+apparition again, her parents granted permission for her return to the
+grotto with several companions; the same manifestation took place and
+the same ecstacy. On Thursday, February 18th, she again repaired to the
+grotto; the apparition was visible for the third time, and the Lady
+requested Bernadette to come there daily for a fortnight. Bernadette
+promised. "And I," replied the Lady, "promise to render you happy not
+in this world, but the next."
+
+On the succeeding days, the young girl went to the grotto, accompanied
+by her parents and an ever increasing crowd. None of them saw or
+heard anything. The transfiguration of the countenance of Bernadette
+announced the presence of a supernatural being, who urged the child to
+pray for sinners.
+
+On the sixth day of the fortnight, the august Lady revealed to
+Bernadette three secrets, forbidding her to communicate them to any
+one. She taught her a prayer, and charged her with a message. "You will
+go," said she, "and tell the priest that a chapel must be built here,
+and that the people must come here in procession."
+
+Bernadette communicated this order to the cure, but he hesitated to
+believe the child, and told her to ask the Lady for a sign which might
+confirm her words, for example, to make the wild rose which winter has
+divested of its leaves, break forth into blossom, then the month of
+February.
+
+The Blessed Virgin did not judge proper to grant the miracle, but she
+tried Bernadette's obedience, by commanding her to kiss the ground
+on several occasions, and to climb the rock on her knees, praying
+meantime for sinners. One day she enjoined upon her to go and drink at
+the fountain of the grotto, to wash therein, and to eat of a certain
+herb which grew in that place. Bernadette saw no fountain, and no one
+had ever heard of one in the grotto, yet on a sign from the Lady, the
+docile child dug the earth with her fingers, and discovered a muddy
+water which, notwithstanding her repugnance, she used as commanded.
+
+At the end of several days, the little thread of muddy water had become
+a limpid and abundant spring, and what was still more marvelous, it
+wrought innumerable prodigies. On February 26th, by the use of this
+water, a man who had gone blind twenty years previous, by the explosion
+of a mine, recovered his sight, and on the last day of the fortnight, a
+child dying, or as was supposed, dead, regained life and health in the
+waters of this fountain.
+
+We will not dwell here upon the persecutions directed against
+Bernadette by the magistrates, or upon the vexations besetting the
+pilgrims who flocked hither from all parts of the world. Every one has
+read these details in the work of M. Lasserre, who so ably depicts the
+dignity and firmness displayed in the affair by the parish priest, M.
+Peyramale.
+
+The apparition of March 25th, has a special significance. Bernadette,
+on several occasions, inquired the Lady's name. At this question, the
+vision, on the day mentioned, unclasped her hands, the chaplet of
+golden chain and alabaster grains sliding on to her arm. She opened her
+arms and directed them towards the earth, as if to indicate that her
+virginal hands were filled with benedictions for the human race; then
+raising them towards the celestial country, whence descended on this
+day the divine messenger of the Annunciation, she clasped them with
+fervor, and looking towards heaven with an indescribable expression
+of gratitude, she pronounced these words: "_I am the Immaculate
+Conception_." Having said this, she disappeared, and the child found
+herself and the multitude in presence of a bare rock.
+
+The Immaculate Virgin appeared to Bernadette twice again; on Easter
+Monday, April 5th, and July 16th, the Feast of our Lady of Mount
+Carmel.
+
+The following 28th of July, the Bishop of Tarbes named a commission of
+inquiry, composed of ecclesiastics, physicians and learned men. July
+18th, 1862, he published a decree concerning the events that had taken
+place at Lourdes; it was couched in the following words:
+
+ "We judge that the Immaculate Mother of God did really appear
+ to Bernadette Soubirous, Feb. 11th, 1858, and on succeeding
+ days to the number of eighteen times in the grotto of
+ Masabielle, near the city of Lourdes; that this apparition
+ bears all the characteristics of truth, and that the faithful
+ may rely upon its reality."
+
+Mary had petitioned that a chapel be built upon the spot. The first
+stone was laid in the month of October, 1862, the piety of pilgrims
+furnishing the necessary funds for the erection of the edifice, and on
+the 21st of May, 1868, the Holy Mass was celebrated there for the first
+time, in the crypt which was to bear the new sanctuary. The connection
+existing between the apparitions of 1858 and 1830 is indicated by two
+painted windows in the sanctuary, one of which represents Bernadette's
+vision, the other that of Sister Catherine.
+
+The pilgrimage to Lourdes has assumed vast proportions; thanks to the
+railroads, the pilgrims each year number hundreds of thousands, coming
+from every quarter of the globe, and countless miracles recompense the
+faith of those who seek in this sanctuary the merciful power of the
+Immaculate Mary.
+
+The grotto of Lourdes, reproduced in a thousand places, has become one
+of the most popular objects of devotion.
+
+As to Bernadette, the interest and veneration attached to her have not
+in the least affected her candor and simplicity. She has retired to the
+convent of Sisters Hospitallers of Nevers, and nothing distinguishes
+her from the most humble of her companions.
+
+
+OUR LADY OF PONTMAIN (DIOCESE OF LAVAL).--1871.
+
+ "France, having been invaded by the Prussians, was conquered;
+ Paris was besieged and suffered the horrors of famine,
+ aggravated by the rigors of an extremely cold winter. It
+ was at this period the Blessed Virgin vouchsafed to appear,
+ bringing words of hope and consolation to the people of her
+ predilection. The place favored with this apparition was the
+ little town of Pontmain, situated about four leagues from
+ Fougeres, on the confines of the dioceses of Laval and Rennes.
+ It was Monday, January 17th, 1871, about six o'clock in the
+ evening; Eugene Barbedette, a child aged twelve years, looking
+ from the door of the barn where he was occupied with his father
+ and younger brother, Joseph, aged ten years, perceived in the
+ air, a little above and behind the house of the family of
+ Guidecoq, which was opposite him, a tall and beautiful Lady,
+ who smiled upon him. He called his brother, his father, and
+ a woman of the village who was talking to him at the moment.
+ But his brother was the only one except himself who saw the
+ vision, and both gave exactly the same description of this
+ wonderful being. The Lady was clothed in a wide-sleeved blue
+ robe, embroidered with golden stars. Her dress descended to
+ the shoes, which were also blue, fastened with a clasp of
+ gold-colored ribbon. She wore a black veil, covering a portion
+ of her forehead and falling behind her shoulders to the girdle.
+ Upon her head was a golden circle like a diadem, and with no
+ ornament but a red line passing through the middle. Her face
+ was delicate, very white, and of incomparable beauty.
+
+ "In a little while, quite a crowd had collected around the
+ barn-door; Madame Barbedette, the Sisters in charge of the
+ parish school, the venerable cure, and more than sixty other
+ persons, but of all these, only two shared the happiness of the
+ Barbedette children. These two were also children, boarders
+ at the convent. Frances Richer, aged eleven years, and Jane
+ Mary Lebosse, aged nine and a half. The other spectators were
+ witnesses only of the joy and happiness of the four privileged
+ ones, but all were convinced that it was truly the Blessed
+ Virgin who had appeared.
+
+ "The Blessed Virgin's attitude was at first, that seen in the
+ Miraculous Medal. After the parish priest arrived, a circle of
+ blue was formed around the apparition, and a small red cross
+ like that worn by pilgrims, appeared on the Blessed Virgin's
+ heart. All began to pray. Suddenly the vision was enlarged,
+ and outside the blue circle, appeared a long white strip or
+ band, on which the children saw letters successively traced
+ and forming those words: '_But pray, my children. God will, in
+ a short time hear you. My Son allows himself to be touched by
+ your supplications._' Then, raising her hands, as if in unison
+ with the singing of the canticle, '_Mother of hope_,' there
+ appeared in them a red crucifix at the top of which was the
+ inscription: _Jesus Christ_.
+
+ "This prodigy was visible for three hours. After juridical
+ information, Mgr. Wicart, Bishop of Laval, confirmed by a
+ solemn judgment, the reality of the apparition.
+
+ "On the 17th of January, 1872, the first anniversary of the
+ event, a beautiful statue representing the apparition, was
+ solemnly set up, in presence of more than eight thousand
+ pilgrims, and a magnificent church is now in course of erection
+ on the spot.
+
+ "The Holy See has authorized the clergy of the diocese of Laval
+ to recite the _Office_ and celebrate the Mass of the Immaculate
+ Conception, every year, on the 17th of January; and by Papal
+ brief, an archconfraternity, under the title of _Our Lady of
+ Hope_, has been instituted in the parish of Pontmain."[36]
+
+ [Footnote 36: Extract of a relation approved by the Bishop of
+ Laval.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We could enumerate many other apparitions of the Blessed Virgin in
+France, but, not having been approved, by ecclesiastical authority, we
+dare not give them as authentic. We shall mention only the apparitions
+with which Miss Estelle Faguette was favored with at Pellevoisin, in
+the diocese of Bourges. The instantaneous cure of this lady, afflicted
+by a malady judged incurable, may be regarded as evidence of the truth
+of the account. Moreover, the Archbishop of Bourges appears to have
+considered it reliable, as he has authorized the erection of a chapel
+in memory of the event. On the 14th of February, 1876, the Blessed
+Virgin appeared to Miss Faguette, and the vision was repeated fifteen
+times in the space of ten months. Mary's attitude was similar to that
+represented on the Miraculous Medal, except that the rays proceeding
+from her hands were replaced by drops of dew, symbols of grace. A
+scapular of the Sacred Heart of Jesus was on her breast.
+
+Mary expressed her love for France, but complained of her admonitions
+being disregarded. She recommended fervent prayer, by the fulfillment
+of which duty we may confidently rely upon God's mercy.
+
+ "What have I not done for France?" said she. "How many
+ warnings have I not given! Yet, this unhappy land refuses to
+ listen. I can no longer restrain my Son's wrath. France will
+ suffer. Have courage and confidence. I come especially for the
+ conversion of sinners. You must pray; I set you the example.
+ My Son's heart has so great love for my heart that He cannot
+ refuse my petitions. You must all pray, and have confidence!"
+ Showing the scapular, she said: "I love this devotion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Who has not heard of the wonderful manifestations of the Blessed Virgin
+in Italy of late years? How many thousands of persons, moved by piety
+or curiosity, have visited the Madonnas of Rimini, of San Ginesio,
+of Vicovaro, of Prosessi, etc., and have witnessed the movement of
+the eyes, the change of color, and other miraculous signs certainly
+attributable to none but a supernatural power. It does not appear,
+however, that Mary has, in this country, presented herself in person,
+though here she receives the most sincere and abundant tributes of
+affection. Doubtless, she considers any stimulus to the faith of its
+people unnecessary. And besides, may we not say that she has fixed her
+abode in Italy, since her own house, the house of Nazareth, wherein the
+mystery of the Incarnation was accomplished, and where dwelt the Holy
+Family, has been transported thither by the hands of angels?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whilst the Prussian government is persecuting the Church, the Blessed
+Virgin vouchsafed to appear in the two most Catholic provinces of her
+kingdom, and in two opposite frontiers, near the banks of the Rhine
+and in the Grand Duchy of Posen. Does she not seem to say to the good
+people of these localities, that they must have confidence and that
+God will conquer their enemies? We must remark that on both of these
+occasions, Mary announces herself as the _Virgin conceived without
+sin_.
+
+We give an abridged account of these two apparitions, which we have
+every reason to consider supernatural. The second vision had been
+formally approved by the Bishop of Ermeland.
+
+On the 3rd of July, 1876, at Marpingen, an inconsiderable village of
+the district of Treves (Rhenish Prussia), the Blessed Virgin appeared
+to three little girls, in a pine forest about the hour of the evening.
+The three children were each about eight years of age, and belonged
+to families of poor, honest farmers residing in the village. They
+perceived a bright light, and in the midst of it a beautiful Lady
+seated, holding a child in her right arm. The Lady and child were clad
+in white, the Lady crowned with red roses, and in her clasped hands, a
+little cross.
+
+The vision was renewed several times. To the childrens' questions as
+to her name, she answered; "_I am she who was conceived without sin_;"
+and when asked what she desired, the reply was: "That you pray with
+fervor, and that you commit no sin." Several sick persons were cured by
+touching the place which the children pointed out as that occupied by
+the Blessed Virgin. These facts are incontestable; but they have not
+yet been examined by ecclesiastical authority.[37]
+
+ [Footnote 37: Extract from _Catholic Annals_.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the village of Grietzwald, in Varmia, one of the ancient provinces
+of Poland annexed to Prussia, four young girls, poor and of great
+innocence, were favored on various occasions for two months, beginning
+June 27th, 1877, with apparitions of the Blessed Virgin, who appeared
+sometimes alone, sometimes carrying the Child Jesus, holding in his
+hands a globe surmounted by a cross. Both Mother and Child were clothed
+in white.
+
+To the children's question: "Who are you?" the apparition answered, on
+one occasion: "I am the Blessed Virgin Mary, _conceived without sin_;"
+and another time, "_I am the Immaculate Conception_."
+
+In the first apparition, our Lady's countenance was sad, and she even
+shed tears; afterwards, it betokened joy. She asked that a chapel be
+erected and a statue of the Immaculate Conception placed therein. At
+each apparition she blessed the crowd, which was always numerous; she
+blessed also a spring, which has since then furnished an abundant
+supply of water, effecting miraculous cures. She recommended the
+recitation of the _Rosary_, and exhorted all to fervent prayer, and
+confidence in the midst of the trials which were to come.[38]
+
+ [Footnote 38: Letters from Poland.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+These recent apparitions of the Blessed Virgin have founded new
+pilgrimages, the faithful flocking to the favored spots in honor of the
+Mother of God, and ask for the graces which she bestows with a truly
+royal liberality. At the same time her ancient sanctuaries, far from
+being neglected, have only become more endeared to piety, many having
+been reconstructed with magnificence, or at least most handsomely
+embellished; it suffices to mention Fourvieres, Notre-Dame-de-la-Garde,
+Rocamadour, Boulogne-sur-mer, Liesse and Buglose.
+
+The coronation of the most celebrated statues of the Blessed Virgin,
+in the name and by the munificence of Pius IX, was the occasion of
+imposing solemnities, and also a means of infusing into the devotion of
+the people greater vigor and fervor.
+
+The exercises of the Month of Mary have extended to the most humble
+villages, and there is scarcely a parish without its confraternity in
+honor of the Blessed Virgin.
+
+Science, eloquence, poetry, music, sculpture, painting and architecture
+have rivalled one another in celebrating the glory of the Virgin Mother.
+
+What may we deduce from this wonderful increase of devotion to the
+Immaculate Mary?
+
+The impression naturally produced is that of confidence. A society
+which pays such homage to Mary, cannot perish. If, as St Bernard says,
+it is unheard of that any one has been forsaken who had recourse to
+her intercession, how were it possible that the fervent prayers of an
+entire people should fail to touch her heart? No, the future is not
+without hope; the mediation of Mary will save us.
+
+The venerable Grignion of Montfort, in his _Treatise_ on true devotion
+to the Blessed Virgin has written these lines: "It is by the Blessed
+Virgin Mary, Jesus Christ came into the world; it is also by her,
+that he is to reign in the world. If then, as is certain, the reign
+of Jesus Christ will come, so likewise is it certain that this reign
+will be a necessary consequence of the knowledge and reign of the
+Blessed Virgin. Mary, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, produced that
+most stupendous of all creations, a Man-God, and she will produce by
+the power of this same Holy Spirit, the greatest prodigies in these
+latter times. It is through Mary the salvation of the world began, it
+is through Mary the salvation of the world is to be consummated. Mary
+will display still greater mercy, power and grace in these days. Mercy,
+to bring back poor sinners; power, against the enemies of God; grace,
+to sustain and animate the valiant soldiers and faithful servants of
+Jesus Christ, combating for His interests. Ah! when will arrive the
+day that establishes Mary mistress and sovereign of hearts, to subject
+them to the empire of Jesus?... Then will great and wonderful things be
+accomplished.... When will this joyful epoch come, this _Age of Mary_,
+in which souls absorbed in the abyss of the interior of Mary, will
+become living copies of the sublime, original, loving and glorifying
+Jesus Christ?"
+
+Father de Montfort adds, in addressing our Saviour: _Ut adveniat regnum
+tuum, adveniat regnum Mariae!_ May the reign of Mary come that they
+reign, O Jesus, may come!
+
+Is not this the _Age of Mary_? Was there ever in the Church, a period
+in which Mary was, if we may thus express it, so lavish of favors as
+in these, our days? Was there ever a period in which she has appeared
+so frequently and familiarly, in which she has given to the world,
+admonitions so grave and maternal; in which she has worked so many
+miracles; and poured out graces so abundantly? The reader of this
+volume will answer unhesitatingly, that no period of history offers
+anything comparable to what we have witnessed in our own days.
+
+It is true, that the day of triumph announced by the venerated
+Montfort, appears far distant; one might say that the kingdom of God on
+earth is more compromised than ever. The wicked make unexampled efforts
+to demolish the social edifice; they are numerous, powerful, and
+possessed of incalculable resources. But for the Church, when all seems
+lost, then is her triumph at hand. God sometimes permits the malice of
+men to exceed all bounds, that His power may be the more manifest when
+the moment of their defeat arrives.
+
+All the united efforts of the Church's enemies in the course of ages,
+all their errors, hatred and violence directed against her, the Spouse
+of Christ, are now concentrated in what is termed the Revolution--that
+is, anti-Christianity reduced to a system and propagated throughout the
+world, it is Satan usurping the place of Jesus Christ.
+
+But He who has conquered the world, and put to flight the prince of the
+world, will not permit Himself to be dethroned. He will reign, and even
+now, before our eyes, is His kingdom being prepared, by the mediation
+of the Immaculate Mary, of whom the promise was made that _she should
+crush the serpent's head, and to whom alone belongs the privilege of
+destroying all heresies arising upon earth_.
+
+
+ _THE END._
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: The book included a decorative image at the
+beginning of each chapter.
+
+The labels for these have been removed in the text version of
+this book
+
+The oe ligature has been expanded. There were many printer's errors in
+this publication, which have been corrected.
+
+ Page 25 Extraordinay is now extraordinary.
+ Page 112 physican is now physician.
+ Page 158 Physycian is now for physician.
+ Page 258 Prepartion is now preparation.
+ Page 266 Tranformed is now transformed.
+
+Inconsistent use of accents has resulted in 2 words being
+amended. Chalons is now Chalons, and Eugene is now Eugene.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Miraculous Medal, by Jean Marie Aladel
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