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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51370 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51370)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Father Ignatius of St. Paul,
-Passionist., by Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Life of Father Ignatius of St. Paul, Passionist.
- The Hon. & Rev. George Spencer
-
-Author: Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto
-
-Release Date: March 5, 2016 [EBook #51370]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FATHER IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Don Kostuch
-
-
-
-
-Life of
-Father Ignatius of St. Paul,
-Passionist.
-
-
-
-{i}
-
-{ii}
-
-[Picture and autograph of Fr. Ignatius]
-
-{iii}
-
-
-LIFE OF
-
-_Father Ignatius of St. Paul,_
-
-PASSIONIST
-
-(The Hon. & Rev. George Spencer).
-
-_Compiled chiefly from his_
-
-Autobiography, Journal, & Letters.
-
-BY
-
-The Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto,
-
-Passionist.
-
-
-
-
-DUBLIN:
-
-James Duffy, 15, Wellington Quay;
-And 22, Paternoster Row, London.
-
-1866.
-
-[The right of translation is reserved.]
-
-{iv}
-
-Cox And Wyman,
-
-Classical and General Printers,
-Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, W.C.
-
-{v}
-
-_To the Very Reverend_
-
-Father Ignatius Of The Infant Jesus,
-
-Passionist,
-
-Long The Director Of Father Ignatius Of St. Paul,
-
-For Nine Years The Faithful Steward Of The Anglo-Hibernian
-
-Province, Which He Found A Handful And Made A Host,
-
-This Volume,
-
-Written By His Order And Published With His Blessing,
-
-Is Dedicated,
-
-To Testify The Gratitude All His Subjects Feel, And The Most
-Unworthy Of Them Tries To Express,
-
-By His Paternity's
-
-Devoted And Affectionate Child,
-
-The Author.
-
-{vi}
-
-{vii}
-
-Preface.
-
-
-Great servants of God have seldom been understood in their lifetime.
-Persecution has assailed them often, from quarters where help would be
-expected in their defence. Even holy souls are sometimes mistaken
-about the particular line of virtue which distinguishes their
-contemporaries from themselves. St. John of the Cross, St. Joseph
-Calasanctius, and St. Alphonsus Liguori, have had the close of their
-lives embittered, as we might call it, by domestic persecution; and it
-was some time before their splendour, as they vanished from the
-horizon of life, rose again to its zenith, and outshone its former
-glory. If the impartial eye, with which we read their actions, fails
-to find a plea for the manner they have been dealt with, let us
-remember that we have no interests at stake--no false colouring of
-passion to blind us. Death, indeed, does not always mow down mistaken
-notions with the life of him about whom they are taken up. We must,
-however, be thankful that it slays so many {viii} wrong impressions,
-and attribute the residue to other causes.
-
-Justice to the dead is an impulse of nature; and those who would
-qualify praise of the living by the mention of unworthy actions or
-inferior motives, will qualify blame of the dead by a contrary
-proceeding. This instinct has its golden mean as well as every other.
-If an ancient Greek ostracised a man because he was praised by every
-one, many moderns will defend a man because he is similarly blamed.
-
-Whenever there exists a difference of opinion about a man during life,
-it requires some length of time after he has departed, for prejudice
-to settle to the bottom, and allow his genuine character to be seen
-through clearly.
-
-These facts, and the experience of history, lead us to conclude that a
-man's life cannot be impartially written when his memory is yet fresh
-in people's minds. Thousands have had opportunities of judging, and
-bring their impressions to compare them with the page that records the
-actions from which they were taken; and if they be different from the
-idea the biographer intends to convey, it is not probable that, in
-every case, their possessors will be content to lay them aside. It is
-supposed, moreover, that a biographer owes a kind of vassalage to his
-subject--that he is obliged to defend him through thick and {ix }
-thin--in good and evil report. He is obliged, according to
-traditionary, though arbitrary laws, to suppress whatever will not
-tell in his favour, to put the very best face upon what he is
-compelled to relate, and to make the most of excellencies. His
-opinion, therefore, must be received with caution, for it is his duty
-to be partial, in the most odious sense of that word, and it would be
-a capital sin to deviate from this long-established rule.
-
-These difficulties do not beset the life that is here presented to the
-public. Father Ignatius had his alternations of praise and blame
-during life; but those who thought least of him were forced to admit
-his great sanctity. If this latter quality be conceded, apology has no
-room. An admitted saint does not require to be defended; for the
-_aureola_ of his own brow will shed the light through which his
-actions are to be viewed. We see, therefore, no wrong impressions that
-require to be removed--no calumnies that have to be cleared
-away--nothing, in fact, to be done, except to give a faithful history
-of his life. For this reason, we venture to publish this work before
-the second anniversary of his death; and it would have been published
-sooner, if the materials from which it is composed could have been
-arranged and digested.
-
-Again, he was heedless of the praise or blame of {x} men himself, and
-it would be an injustice to his memory to wait for a favourable moment
-for giving his thoughts publicity.
-
-Those who expect to find nothing in the lives of holy people but
-goodness and traits of high spirituality, will be disappointed when
-they read this. Those who are accustomed to read that some saints
-indeed have lived rather irregularly in their youth, but find
-themselves left in blessed ignorance of what those irregularities
-were, will also be disappointed. They shall find here recorded that
-young Spencer was not a saint, and they shall be given data whereon to
-form their own opinion too. They shall see him pass through various
-phases of religious views, and shall find themselves left to draw
-their own conclusions about his conduct throughout.
-
-And now, perhaps, it is better to give some reasons why this course
-was adopted in writing his life, rather than the usual one. Besides
-that already given, there are two others.
-
-In the first place, ordinary, well-meaning Christians feel
-disheartened when they find saints ready to be canonized from their
-infancy, and cannot think of the Magdalenes when they find the
-calendar full of Marys, and Agneses, and Teresas. Neither will they
-reflect much on an Augustin, when the majority are Sebastians and
-Aloysiuses. Here is an example to help these people on; and they are
-the greater number. {xi} We have therefore shown Father Ignatius's
-weak points as well as his strong ones; we have brought him out in his
-written life precisely as he was in reality.
-
-He comes before us with a mind full of worldly notions, he traces his
-own steps away from rectitude, he makes his confession to the whole
-world. How many will see in the youth he passed, far away from God and
-grazing the edge of the bottomless precipice, a perfect illustration
-of their own youth. Let them then follow him through life. They shall
-find him a prey to the worst passions, anger, pride, and their kindred
-tendencies. They shall see him put his hand to the plough, and,
-according to the measure of his grace and light, subduing first one,
-and then another of his inclinations. They can trace his passage
-through life, and see that he has so far overcome his passions that an
-equivocal warmth of temper is a thing to be wondered at in him. There
-is a servant of God that gives us courage, we need not despond when he
-leads the way for us. Occasional imperfections are mentioned towards
-the latter part of his life. These only show that he was a man and not
-an angel, and that a defect now and again is not at all incompatible
-with great holiness.
-
-There was a reality about the man that can never leave the minds of
-those who knew him. He hated shams. He would have the brightest
-consequences of {xii} faith realized. He would not have the Gospel
-laws be mere matter of sentimental platitudes, but great realities
-pervading life and producing their legitimate effects. He went into
-them, heart and soul; and the few points in which he seemed to go this
-side or that of the mean of virtue in their observance, we have
-recorded, that others may see how he observed them. Exceptions show
-the beauty of a rule; and this is the second reason why we have
-written as a historian and not as a panegyrist.
-
-And now for an account of the materials from which the memoir has been
-compiled. He wrote an account of his life about the year 1836. He was
-then on a bed of sickness from which he scarcely expected to rise; but
-we shall give his own reasons for writing what he has written. The
-autobiography begins thus:--
-
- "When a man comes before the world as an author, there is much
- danger of his being actuated by motives of which he does not like to
- acknowledge the influence, and people are so naturally disposed to
- suspect the motive to be something different from that which ought
- to be the leading one of all our important actions, and especially
- of those which are possessed by our religious actions; namely, the
- honour of God, and our own neighbour's good; that the common preface
- to such works is, to guard the author against the imputation of
- vanity or of self-love, in some one {xiii } or other of the
- contemptible forms in which it rules so widely in this poor world of
- ours. Such introductory apologies, on the part of an author, will not,
- I believe, meet with full credit with those who know the world.
- Those who are most obviously the slaves of self-will, will,
- generally, be loudest in their protestations of the purity and
- excellence of their motives; so that my advice to those who wish to
- establish in the minds of others a good opinion of their sincerity,
- would generally be, to say nothing about it, and let their conduct
- speak for itself. Yet this is not what I intend to do in the
- commencement of my present work. What I have undertaken is, _to give
- to the public_ a history of my own mind. I shall make it my study to
- recollect with accuracy and to state with truth the motives, the
- impressions, and the feelings by which I have been guided in the
- important passages of my past life; and therefore there seems to be
- some peculiar reason, from the nature of the work itself, why I
- should commence by stating why I have undertaken it. Yet I will not
- venture to say positively what are my motives. I rather shall state,
- in the sight of God and of my brethren, what are the motives which I
- allow myself to entertain in deliberately presenting a history of my
- thoughts _to the public_. My readers are at liberty to judge me in
- their own way, and suppose that I deceive myself in the view I take
- of my own intentions as much or as little as to them shall seem
- probable. Of this {xvi} which, have obliged me to leave my flock to
- the care of others, while my proper business is to be, for a time,
- to recover my health by rest and relaxation. Here then is an
- opportunity for undertaking something in the way of writing; and I
- am about to make what I conceive is the most valuable contribution
- in my power to the works already existing for the defence of our
- Holy Faith.
-
- "I have not the knowledge requisite for producing a learned work,
- nor am I ever likely to acquire it. A work of fancy or invention is,
- perhaps, yet further out of my line. I never had any talent for
- compositions in which imagination is required. I hardly ever wrote a
- line of poetry except when obliged to it at school or college. But
- it requires neither learning nor imagination to give a simple
- statement of facts, and there is a charm in truth which will give to
- a composition, which bears its stamp, an interest more lively,
- perhaps, than what the beauties of poetry and fiction are employed
- to adorn.
-
- "I believe the history of the human mind must always be interesting.
- If the most insignificant of men could but be taught to write a
- correct account of what has passed within his soul, in any period of
- his existence, the history would be full of wonders and instruction;
- and if, with God's help, I am able to fulfil my present undertaking,
- and to give a picture of my own mind and heart, and recount, with
- truth and {xvii} perspicuity, the revolutions which have taken place
- within me, I have no doubt the narrative will be interesting. The
- minds and hearts of men are wonderfully alike one to another. They
- are also wonderfully various. Read the history of my mind and you
- will find it interesting, as you know a book of travels is, through
- countries which you have visited. You will see your own heart
- represented to you, and be, perhaps, pleasingly reminded of the
- feelings, the projects, the disappointments, the weaknesses of days
- gone by. But I have a greater object before me than your amusement.
- I desire your instruction. I may, perchance, throw on some passage
- of your history, on some points of the great picture which a
- retrospect of your past life presents to you, a more correct light.
- I may show you where your views of things might have often been more
- true than they were at the time, when your steps might have been
- more prudently, more happily taken, and by the consideration of
- mistakes and errors which I have afterwards acknowledged, though
- once blind to them, and from which I have recovered through the
- goodness of God, you may be assisted to take some steps forwards in
- the path of truth and happiness.
-
- "I do not, however, propose to myself the benefit of others only in
- this composition. The noblest and the most useful study of mankind
- is man; but, certainly, this study is in no way so important as when
- it {xviii} is in the contemplation of ourselves that we follow it
- up. It is a high point of wisdom to know and understand other men;
- but we know nothing that will indeed avail us if we know not
- ourselves. Hence, while I am undertaking a history of myself for the
- instruction of others, I purpose, at the same time, and in the first
- place, to gain from my researches instruction for myself. In now
- recollecting and declaring the doings of God towards me, and my
- doings towards Him, I most earnestly desire an advancement in myself
- of love and humility; would that it might be an advancement in
- perfection! I began this work with fervent prayer that I may be
- preserved from the snares with which it may be accompanied; above
- all, that I may not make it an occasion of vain-glory, and so turn
- what ought to be done for God's service and for others' good into an
- offence of God and my own exceeding loss; but that, being delivered
- from the danger, I may find it the occasion of exceeding spiritual
- benefit to myself, if it be not to any others."
-
-The reader must take what Father Ignatius writes of himself with some
-qualifications. He seems to have had an invincible propensity to put
-his worst side out in whatever he wrote about himself. He did not see
-his own perfections, he underrated his knowledge, his mind, his
-virtues. He saw good in every one except himself. But it is needless
-to speak much on {xix} this point, as his candour and simplicity are
-sure to make every reader favourable.
-
-It is to be regretted that the autobiography does not reach farther
-into his life than his ordination as a minister. How gratifying it
-would have been if we could read his interior conflicts, his exterior
-difficulties, his alternations of joy and sadness, in the sweet,
-affectionate style which tells us his early life. But the reason must
-have been:--He had little to charge himself with; he had no faults
-serious enough to lower him in the esteem of men from that time
-forward, and therefore he did not write.
-
-The next source of information is his journal. He began to keep a
-journal in 1818, when he first went to Cambridge, and continued it
-uninterruptedly down to 1829, a short time before his conversion. We
-have found nothing in the shape of a diary among his papers, from that
-time until the year 1846, a few months before he became a Passionist,
-except a journal of a tour he made on the Continent in 1844, and that
-is given entire in the third book. The journal from 1846, until a few
-days before his death, is a mere record of dates and places in which
-he has been and persons he spoke to. It is so closely written that it
-is scarcely readable by the naked eye, and he gives in one page the
-incidents of six months. This journal was of great use to him. It
-helped his memory and prevented his making mistakes in the multitude
-of scenes through {xx} which, he passed. It is also a valuable
-contribution to the annals of our Order.
-
-Besides these two sources of information regarding his life, we have
-had access to a multitude of letters, running over the space of
-upwards of forty years. He preserved a great many of the important
-letters he received; and several of his friends, who preserved letters
-received from him as treasures, kindly lent us their stock for the
-preparation of this volume. His Eminence the late Cardinal Wiseman
-gave us what letters he possessed, and promised to contribute some
-recollections of his friend, but was prevented by death from
-fulfilling his promise. Our thanks are due to their Lordships, the
-Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne, the Right Rev. Dr. Wareing, the Right Rev.
-Dr. Turner, the Right Rev. Dr. Grant, the Right Rev. Dr. Amherst, and
-to several clergymen and lay persons, for their kindness in sending us
-letters and furnishing us with anecdotes and pleasing recollections of
-Father Ignatius. Among the latter we are under special obligations to
-Mr. De Lisle and Mr. Monteith. In truth we have found all the friends
-of Father Ignatius most willing to assist us in our undertaking. Nor
-must we forget several religious who have helped us in every possible
-way. The information gathered from the correspondence has been the
-most valuable. His letters were written to dear friends to whom he
-laid the very inmost of his soul open,--fervent souls, who sympathized
-{xxi} with his zealous exertions and profited by his advice in
-advancing themselves and others in the way of virtue.
-
-The Dowager Lady Lyttelton has kindly furnished us with dates and
-accurate information about the members of the Spencer family, and as
-she is the only survivor of the children of John George, Earl Spencer,
-we hope the memory of her dear brother will serve to alleviate the
-weight of her advancing years, and prolong them considerably to her
-children and grandchildren. We beg to express our sincere thanks for
-her ladyship's kindness.
-
-A fourth and not a less interesting source of information has been our
-own memory. Father Ignatius was most communicative to his brethren;
-indeed he might be said to be transparent. We all knew him so well. He
-related the anecdotes that are given in his memoir to us all; and when
-each Father and Brother gave in his contribution, the quantity
-furnished would have made a very entertaining life of itself. Their
-thanks must be the consciousness of having helped to keep him yet
-amongst us as far as was possible.
-
-These, then, are the sources from which the following pages have been
-compiled. The facts related may therefore be relied upon as perfectly
-authentic. We possess the originals of the matter quoted--vouchers for
-every opinion advanced, and the anecdotes can be corroborated by half
-a dozen of witnesses.
-
-{xxii}
-
-Seeing that his life had been so diverse, and that the changes of
-thought which influenced the early portion of it were so various, it
-was thought best to divide it into four distinct books. The first book
-takes him to the threshold of the Anglican ministry; the second into
-the fold of the Church; the third into the Passionist novitiate; and
-the fourth follows him to the grave.
-
-We shall let the details speak for themselves, and only remark that
-there is an identity in the character as well as in the countenance of
-a man which underlies all the phases of opinion through which he may
-have passed. It will be seen that, from childhood to old age, Father
-Ignatius was remarkable for earnestness and reverence. Whatever he
-thought to be his duty he pursued with indomitable perseverance. He
-was not one to cloak over a weak point, or soothe a doubt with a
-trumped-up answer. He candidly admitted every difficulty, and went
-with unflagging zeal into clearing it up. This was the key to his
-conversion. He had, besides, even in his greatest vagaries, a
-reverential spirit with regard to his Creator, which formed an
-atmosphere of duty around him, outside which he could not step without
-being stung by conscience. A sting he never deadened. These were the
-centripetal and centrifugal forces that kept his life balanced on an
-axis that remained steady in the centre during his every evolution.
-
-{xxiii}
-
-We have endeavoured to be faithful to his memory. We have tried, as
-far as we could, to let himself tell his life; we have only arranged
-the materials and supplied the cement that would keep them together.
-Whether the work has suffered in our hands or not is immaterial to us.
-We have tried to do our best, and no one can do more. If any
-expressions have escaped us that may appear offensive, we are ready to
-make the most ample apology, but not at the sacrifice of a particle of
-truth. If, through ignorance or inadvertence, errors have been
-committed, we hold ourselves ready to retract them; and retract,
-beforehand, anything that may, in the slightest degree, be injurious,
-not to say contrary, to Catholic doctrine, and submit ourselves
-unreservedly in this point to the judgment of ecclesiastical
-authority.
-
-
-_St. Joseph's Retreat, Highgate, London, N.,
-Feast of the Epiphany, 1866._
-
-{xxiv}
-
-{xxv}
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-BOOK I.
-
-_Father Ignatius, a Young Noble._
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-His Childhood--Page 1
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-Four First Years At Eton--6
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-His Two Last Years At Eton--12
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-Private Tuition Under Mr. Blomfield--18
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-He Goes To Cambridge--22
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-His First Year In Cambridge--28
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-Conclusion Of His First Year In Cambridge--42
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-Second Year In Cambridge Takes His Degree--48
-
-{xxvi}
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Travels On The Continent--57
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-English Life In Naples--65
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-Continuation Of His Travels--74
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-An Interval Of Rest And Preparation For Orders--91
-
-
-
-BOOK II.
-
-_Father Ignatius, an Anglican Minister._
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-He Is Ordained, And Enters On His Clerical Duties--103
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-He Mends Some Of His Ways--110
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-He Receives Further Orders--117
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-Mr. Spencer Becomes Rector Of Brington--122
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-Changes In His Religious Opinions--127
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-Opposition To His Religious Views--134
-
-{xxvii}
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-Progress Of His Religious Views--142
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-Some Of The Practical Effects Of His Views--148
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-Scruples About The Athanasian Creed--155
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-Incidents And State Of Mind In 1827-28--166
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-The Maid Of Lille--174
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-Ambrose Lisle Phillipps--186
-
-
-
-BOOK III.
-
-_Father Ignatius, a Secular Priest._
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-His First Days In The Church--199
-
-CHAPTER II.
-Mr. Spencer In The English College, Rome--206
-
-CHAPTER III.
-Father Spencer Is Ordained Priest--212
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-Father Spencer Begins His Missionary Life--220
-
-{xxviii}
-
-CHAPTER V.
-Prospects Of Widening His Sphere Of Action--226
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-Newspaper Discussions, Etc.--232
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-Private Life And Crosses Of Father Spencer--240
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-Association Of Prayers For The Conversion Of England--248
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-His Last Days In West Bromwich--258
-
-CHAPTER X.
-Father Spencer Comes To Oscott--264
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-Some Of His Doings In Oscott College--270
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-Some Events Of Interest--275
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-His Tour On The Continent In 1844--280
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-Close Of His Career In Oscott;
-And His Religious Vocation--343
-
-{xxix }
-
-BOOK IV.
-
-_Father Ignatius, a Passionist_
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-The Noviciate--351
-
-CHAPTER II.
-His First Year As A Passionist--361
-
-CHAPTER III.
-A Peculiar Mission--368
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-Death Of Father Dominic--374
-
-CHAPTER V.
-Spirit Of Father Ignatius At This Time--380
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-His Dealings With Protestants And Prayers For Union--387
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-Father Ignatius In 1850--393
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-A New Form Of "The Crusade"--400
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-Visit To Rome And "The Association Of Prayers"--413
-
-CHAPTER X.
-A Tour In Germany--428
-
-{xxx}
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-Father Ignatius Returns To England--436
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-A Little Of His Home And Foreign Work--443
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-Sanctification Of Ireland--449
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-Another Tour On The Continent--453
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-Father Ignatius In 1857--458
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-His "Little Missions"--464
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-Father Ignatius At Home--469
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-A Few Events--477
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-Trials And Crosses--483
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-Foreshadowings And Death--495
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-The Obsequies Of Father Ignatius--504
-
-{xxxi}
-
-BOOK I.
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Young Noble._
-
-
-{xxxii}
-
-
-{1}
-
-[Image of Cross]
-I X P
-
-
-
-LIFE OF FATHER IGNATIUS
-OF ST. PAUL, PASSIONIST.
-
-
-
-BOOK I.
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Young Noble._
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-His Childhood.
-
-
-Saint Paul gives the general history of childhood in one sentence:
-"When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I
-thought as a child." The thoughts and ways of children are wonderfully
-similar; the mind is not sufficiently developed to give direction to
-character, and the peculiar incidents that are sometimes recorded to
-prove "the child the father of the man," seem more the result of
-chance than deliberation. With all this, we like to bask our memory in
-those sunny days: we love to look at our cradles, at where we made and
-spoiled our little castles, and we recall the smallest incidents to
-mind, as if to try and fancy we could be children again. This natural
-sentiment makes us anxious to know all about the infancy and childhood
-of those whose life has an interest for us; {2} although knowing that
-there can be nothing very strange about it; and even, if there be,
-that it cannot have much weight in moulding the character of our hero,
-and less still in influencing our own. The childhood of Father
-Ignatius forms an exception to this. It is wonderful; it shaped his
-character for a great part of his life. Its history is written by
-himself, and it is instructive to all who have charge of children.
-Before quoting from his own autobiography, it may be well to say
-something about his family; more, because it is customary to do so on
-occasions like the present, than to give information about what is
-already well known.
-
-His father was George John, Earl Spencer, K.G., &c., &c. He was
-connected by ties of consanguinity and affinity with the Earl of
-Sunderland and the renowned Duke of Marlborough; was successively
-member of Parliament, one of the Lords of the Treasury, and succeeded
-Lord Chatham as First Lord of the Admiralty on the 20th of December,
-1794. This office he retained until 1800, and, during his
-administration, the naval history of England shone with the victories
-of St. Vincent, Camperdown, and the Nile. Perhaps his term of office
-was more glorious to himself from the moderation and justice with
-which he quelled the mutiny at the Nore, than from the fact of his
-having published the victories that gave such glory to his country. He
-married, in 1781, Lavinia, the daughter of Sir Charles Bingham,
-afterwards Earl of Lucan. Five sons and three daughters were the issue
-of this marriage. Two of them died in infancy. The oldest, John
-Charles, Lord Althorp, succeeded his father in 1834, and died
-childless in 1845; the second, Sarah, is the present Dowager Lady
-Lyttelton; the fifth, Robert Cavendish, died unmarried in 1830; the
-sixth, Georgiana, was married to Lord George Quin, son to the Marquis
-of Headfort, and died in 1823; the seventh, Frederick, father of the
-present earl, succeeded his eldest brother in 1845. The youngest, the
-Honourable George Spencer, is the subject of the present biography.
-
-He was born on the 21st of December, 1799, at the Admiralty in London,
-and baptized according to the rite of {3} the Church of England, by
-the Rev. Charles Norris, prebendary of Canterbury. Whether he was
-taken to Althorp, the family seat in Northamptonshire, to be nursed,
-before his father retired from office in 1800, we have no means of
-knowing; but, certain it is, that it was there he spent his childhood
-until he went to Eton in 1808. We will let himself give us the history
-of his mind during this portion of his existence: the history of his
-body is that of a nobleman's child, tended in all things as became his
-station:--
-
- "My recollections of the five or six first years of my life are very
- vague,--more so by far than in the case of other persons; and
- whether I had any notions of religion before my six-year-old
- birthday, I cannot tell. But it was on that day, if I am not
- mistaken, that I was taken aside, as for a serious conversation, by
- my sister's governess, who was a Swiss lady, under whose care I
- passed the years between leaving the nursery and being sent to
- school, and instructed by her, for the first time, concerning the
- existence of God and some other great truths of religion. It seems
- strange now that I should have lived so long without acquiring any
- ideas on the subject: my memory may deceive me, but I have a most
- clear recollection of the very room at Althorp where I sat with her
- while she declared to me, as a new piece of instruction, for which
- till then I had not been judged old enough, that there was an
- Almighty Being, dwelling in heaven, who had created me and all
- things, and whom I was bound to fear. Till then, I believe, I had
- not the least apprehension of the existence of anything beyond the
- sensible world around me. This declaration, made to me as it was
- with tender seriousness, was, I believe, accompanied with gracious
- expressions, which have never been, in all my errors and wanderings,
- obliterated. To what but the grace of God can I ascribe it, that I
- firmly believed from the first moment this truth, of which I was not
- capable of understanding a proof, and that I never since have
- entertained a doubt of it, nor been led, like so many more, to
- universal scepticism; that my faith in the truth of God should have
- been preserved while for so long a time I lived, as I afterwards
- did, wholly without its influence?
-
-{4}
-
- "I continued, with my brother Frederick, who was twenty months older
- than myself, under the instruction of this same governess, till we
- went to Eton School. I do not remember the least difficulty in
- receiving as true whatever I was taught of religion at that time. It
- never occurred to me to think that objections might be made to it,
- though I knew that different religious persuasions existed. I
- remember being told by our governess, and being pleased in the idea,
- that the Church of England was peculiarly excellent; but I remember
- no distinct feelings of opposition or aversion to the Catholic
- religion. Of serious impressions I was at that time, I believe, very
- susceptible; but they must have been most transient. I remember,
- more than once, distinctly saying my prayers with fervour; though,
- generally, I suppose, I paid but little attention to them. I was
- sometimes impressed with great fear of the Day of Judgment, as I
- remember once in particular, at hearing a French sermon read about
- it; and, perhaps, I did not knowingly offend God, but I could not be
- said to love God, nor heartily to embrace religion, if, as I
- suppose, my ordinary feeling must have corresponded with what I
- remember well crossing my mind when I was about seven years
- old,--great regret at reflecting on the sin of Adam; by which I
- understood that I could not expect to live for ever on the earth.
- Whatever I thought desirable in the world,--abundance of money, high
- titles, amusements of all sorts, fine dress, and the like,--as soon
- and as far as I understood anything about them, I loved and longed
- for; nor do I see how it could have been otherwise, as the holy,
- severe maxims of the Gospel truth on these matters were not
- impressed upon me. Why is it that the truth on these things is so
- constantly withheld from children; and, instead of being taught by
- constant, repeated, unremitting lessons that the world and all that
- it has is worth nothing; that, if they gain all, but lose their
- souls, they gain nothing; if they lose all and gain their souls,
- they gain all? Why is it that they are to be encouraged to do right
- by promises of pleasure, deterred from evil by worldly fear, and so
- trained up, as it seems, to put a false value on all things? How {5}
- easily, as it now appears to me, might my affections in those days
- have been weaned from the world, and made to value God alone? But
- let me not complain, but bless God for the care,--the very unusual
- care, I believe,--which was taken of me, by which I remained, I may
- say, ignorant of what evil was at an age when many, I fear, become
- proficients. This blessing, however, of being wonderfully preserved
- from the knowledge, and consequently from the practice, of vice, was
- more remarkably manifested in the four years of my life succeeding
- those of which I have been now writing."
-
-The instilling into young minds religious motives for their actions
-was a frequent topic of conversation with Father Ignatius in his
-after-life. He was once speaking with some of our young religious on
-this subject in general; one of them remarked how easy it was to act
-upon holy motives practically, and instanced his own childhood, when
-the thought that God would love or hate him kept him straight in his
-actions: this was the simple and perpetually repeated lesson of his
-mother, which he afterwards forgot, but which finally stopped him in a
-career of ambition, and made him a religious. The old man's eye
-glistened as he heard this, and he sighed deeply. He then observed
-that it confirmed his opinion, that parents ought to instruct their
-own children, and never commit them to the mercies of a public school
-until they were perfectly grounded in the practice of virtue and
-piety. The next chapter will show why he thought thus.
-
-{6}
-
-CHAPTER II.
-Four First Years At Eton.
-
-
- "The 18th of May, 1808, was the important day when first I left my
- father's house. With a noble equipage, my father and mother took my
- brother Frederick and me to the house of the Rev. Richard Godley,
- whom they had chosen to be our private tutor at Eton. He lived, with
- his family, at a place called the Wharf, about half a mile from the
- college buildings, which we had to go to for school and chapel
- across the playing-fields. Oh! how interesting are my recollections
- whilst I recall the joys and sorrows of Eton days; but I must not
- expatiate on them, as my own feelings would lead me to do with
- pleasure. What I have to do now is to record how the circumstances
- in which I was then placed have contributed to influence my
- religions principles, and formed some links in the chain of events
- by which I have arrived at my present state, so different from all
- that might then have been anticipated. Mr. Godley I consider to have
- been, what I believe my parents likewise regarded him, a strictly
- conscientious and deeply religious man; and I must always account it
- one of the greatest blessings for which, under God, I am indebted to
- their wisdom and affection, that I was placed in such hands at so
- critical a time. I do not intend, in all points, to declare my
- approbation of the system which he pursued with us: but how can I be
- too grateful for having been under the strict vigilance of one who
- did, I am convinced, reckon the preservation of my innocence, and
- the salvation of my soul, his chief concern with me? I remained with
- Mr. Godley till the Midsummer holidays of 1812. My brother left Eton
- and went to sea in the year 1811.
-
-{7}
-
- "Those who know what our public schools are, will reckon it, I
- believe, almost incredible that I should be four years at Eton, and
- remain, as I did, still almost ignorant of what the language of
- wickedness meant. Mr. Godley's yoke I certainly thought at the time
- to be a heavy one. Several times each day we were obliged to go
- across the playing-fields to school, to chapel, or to absence (which
- was the term by which Etonians will yet understand the calling over
- the names of the boys at certain times); so that during the daytime,
- when in health, we could never be more than three hours together
- without appearing with the boys of the school. Mr. Godley, however,
- was inexorable in his rule that we should invariably come home
- immediately after each of these occasions: by this we were kept from
- much intercourse with other boys. Most grievous then appeared my
- unhappy lot, in the summer months especially, when we had to pass
- through the playing-fields, crowded with cricketers, to whom a lower
- boy, to fag for them and stop their balls, was sure to be an
- important prize, whose wrath we incurred if we dared despise their
- call, and run on our way; whilst, if we were but a few minutes late,
- the yet more terrible sight awaited us of Mr. Godley's angry
- countenance. We had not exemption from one of these musters, as most
- boys had who lived at a distance from the school, yet none of them
- were bound like us to a speedy return home. It seemed like an
- Egyptian bondage, from which there was no escape; and doubtless the
- effect was not altogether good upon my character. As might be
- expected, the more we were required to observe rules and customs
- different from others, the more did a certain class of big bullies
- in the school seem to count it their business to watch over us, as
- though they might be our evil geniuses. A certain set of faces,
- consequently, I looked upon with a kind of mysterious dread; and I
- was under a constant sense of being as though in an enemy's country,
- obliged to guard against dangers on all sides. Shrinking and
- skulking became my occupation beyond the ordinary lot of little
- schoolboys, and my natural disposition to be cowardly and spiritless
- was perhaps increased. I say _perhaps_, for other {8} circumstances
- might have made me worse; for what I was in the eyes of the masters
- of public opinion in the school, I really was--a chicken-hearted
- creature, what, in Eton language, is called a _sawney_. It may be,
- that had I been from the first in free intercourse among the boys,
- instead of being a good innocent one, I might have been, what I
- suppose must be reckoned one of the worst varieties of public-school
- characters, a mean, dishonourable one. Whatever I may have lost from
- not being trained, from the first of my Eton life, in the perfect
- spirit of the place, could I possibly have escaped during that time
- in any other way the utter corruption of my morals, at least the
- filling of my mind with familiar images of all the most foul
- iniquity? For, alas! where is the child from the age of eight till
- twelve who, without one compassionate friend, already strong in
- virtue to countenance and to encourage him, shall maintain the
- profession of modesty and holiness against a persecution as
- inveterate and merciless in its way as that which Lot had to bear at
- Sodom? Was not the angel of God with me when He preserved me for so
- long from all attacks of this kind in such a place as Eton was in my
- time? How can I remember Godley but with veneration and gratitude,
- who, though, it may be, not so considerately and wisely as might be
- possible (for who is as wise as he might be?), kept me, I might say,
- almost alone untainted in the midst of so much corruption.
-
- "Yet, till the last year of my stay with him, I did not learn
- decidedly to love religion. It was still my task and not my
- pleasure. At length, my brother Frederick being gone to sea, and two
- other boys, Mr. Godley's stepsons, who were with us under his
- instructions, being sent to school elsewhere, I remained his only
- pupil, and, I may almost say, his chief care and joy. He felt with
- me and for me in the desolation of my little heart, at being parted
- from my first and hitherto inseparable mate, and I became his almost
- constant companion. It is not difficult to gain the confidence of a
- simple child: he spoke almost continually of religious subjects, and
- I learnt to take his view of things. I certainly did not begin to
- lose my pleasure in life. Death {9} was an idea which still was
- strange to me; and I did not come to an understanding of the great
- doctrines of Revelation. I remember not to have taken much notice of
- any peculiar articles of faith; but still believed implicitly,
- without argument or inquiry, what I was taught. I can now hardly
- give an account of what were the religious ideas and impressions
- which began so greatly to engage my mind, except that I took my
- chief delight in hearing Mr. Godley speak about religion, that I had
- a great abhorrence and dread of wickedness, thought with pleasure of
- my being intended to be a clergyman, as I was always told I should
- be, and admired and loved all whom I was taught to look upon as
- religious people. All these simple feelings of piety, which were
- often accompanied with pure delight, were greatly increased in a
- visit of six weeks which I paid, with Mr. Godley, to his mother and
- sisters at Chester. He was a Prebendary of that cathedral, and of
- course had to spend some time there every year in residence.
- Usually, when he went from home, from time to time, he was used to
- get one of the other tutors at Eton to hear my brother's and my
- lessons, and to look over our exercises; but in the last summer I
- staid with him, with my father's consent, he took me with him. Mr.
- Godley's sisters, who showed me great kindness, like him, I suppose,
- had no wish concerning me than to encourage me in becoming pious and
- good, and I got to read a few pious books which they recommended.
- 'The Pilgrim's Progress,' Doddridge's 'Life of Colonel Gardiner,'
- Alleine's 'Alarm,' were some which I remember taking great effect
- upon me; so that when I returned from Chester to Eton, though I
- cannot recall many particulars of my feelings, I know that the chief
- prevailing one was, an ardent desire to keep myself untainted at
- Eton, and to keep from all fellowship with the set of boys whom I
- knew to be particularly profane mockers of piety. I bought a book of
- prayers, and during the three weeks that I yet remained with this
- tutor, after our return from Chester, and when first I went home to
- the summer holidays, I took no delight like that of being by myself
- at prayer. Ah! how grievous would be the thought if we could but
- understand how to {10} lament such a calamity as it deserves, of a
- pious child's tender, pure soul denied, made forgetful of all its
- good, and hardened. O God, grant me wisdom to understand the
- magnitude of such an evil, grant me a heart now at length to mourn
- over the devastation and uprooting which it was, at this time, Thy
- holy will to permit, of all those fair flowers of grace which Thy
- hand had planted in my heart; and grant me to mourn my fall, that I
- may now once at last recover that simplicity of childlike piety, the
- feelings of which I now recollect, indeed, though faintly, but never
- have since again enjoyed. Oh! God, if a child's love, pure through
- ignorance of sin, is never to be mine again, oh! give me at least
- that depth of penance for which my fall has given me such ample
- matter.
-
- "It occurred not to my mind to consider whether the new thoughts
- which occupied my mind, and the books in which I took such pleasure,
- would be approved of at home. I took them with me to the holidays.
- It was judged, as was to be expected, by my parents, that Mr.
- Godley's views of religion were not such as they would wish to be
- instilled into me; and it was determined that I should leave his
- house and be placed with one of the public tutors at Eton. It is a
- difficult thing to classify religious Protestants, and so I do not
- here pronounce Mr. Godley and his sisters to have been Evangelical,
- or Calvinistic, nor give them any distinctive title. They did not,
- as far as I remember, inculcate upon me any peculiar notions of
- religion, but they certainly were not in the way which is usually
- called orthodox Church of England religion, though indeed it is
- difficult to define exactly what this is. It was likely, or rather
- morally certain, that while with Mr. Godley, I should follow his
- guidance, and take his views; so I was to be placed among the other
- boys, as I imagine with the idea likewise, that I should gain in
- this way more of the advantages supposed to belong to the rough
- discipline of a public school. I do not understand how it was that I
- received the intimation of this change with so little sadness.
- Distant evils, as we all know, lose their sting strangely; and,
- having the holidays before me when this change was declared, I {11}
- felt no trouble about it then. It is easy to talk a docile child
- into agreement with any plan made for him by those whom he is used
- to confide in; and so I remember no difficulty when my books were
- taken away, and I had no more persons by to bring my former thoughts
- to remembrance, in quietly discontinuing my fervent practices."
-
-{12}
-
-CHAPTER III.
-His Two Last Years At Eton.
-
-
- "In the course of September, 1812, I began a new stage of my life by
- entering at the Rev. ***'s, where I was, alas! too effectually to be
- untaught what there might be unsound in my religion, by being
- quickly stripped of it completely. The house contained, I think, but
- about ten or twelve boys at the time I went to it, a much smaller
- number than the generality of boarding houses about the school; and,
- dreadful as was its moral condition, it was respectable in
- comparison to others. There is no doubt that it was recommended to
- my parents because its character stood high among the rest. The boys
- were divided into three or four messes, as they were called. Each of
- us had a room to himself and a separate little establishment, as the
- boys had allowances to provide breakfast and tea for themselves, and
- we did not meet in common rooms for private study, as in some
- schools. In order to make their means go farther, two or three would
- associate together and make a joint concern; and very comfortable
- some would make themselves. But comfort was not what I had now to
- enjoy.
-
- "I have adverted already to the system of fagging at our public
- schools. The law is established immemorially at Eton that the upper
- boys, those of the fifth and sixth class, have an authority to
- command those below them. This law, though understood and allowed by
- the masters, is not enforced by them. They will interfere to check
- and punish any great abuse of the power of the upper boys; but the
- only power by which the commands of these masters are to be enforced
- is their own hands; so that a boy, though by rank in the school a
- fag, may escape the burdens to be imposed if he have but age and
- strength and spirit to {13} maintain his independence. Each upper
- boy may impose his commands on any number of inferiors he may please
- at any time and in any place, so that an unhappy lower boy is never
- safe. Nothing exempts him from the necessity of immediately quitting
- his own pursuits and waiting on the pleasure of an unexpected
- master, but being under orders to attend his tutor, or a certain
- number of privileged excuses in matters about which those potentates
- condescend to consider the feelings of the subalterns, and where
- public opinion would condemn them if they did not--such as being
- actually fagging for some one else, being engaged to play a match at
- cricket which his absence would spoil. It was this sort of
- out-of-door casual service which alone I had to dread as long as I
- was in Mr. Godley's house. When I went to Mr. ***, I had to serve my
- apprenticeship in domestic fagging, which consisted in performing to
- one or more of the fifth or sixth form boys in the house almost all
- the duties of a footman or a waiter at an inn. The burden of this
- kind of servitude of course depended, in the first place, on the
- temper of one's master, and then on the comparative number of upper
- and lower boys in a house. During the time I had to fag at Mr.
- ***'s, but especially in the latter part of it, the number of fags
- was dismally small, and sometimes heavy was my yoke.
-
- "But it is not this which gives to my recollection of that period of
- my life its peculiar sadness. I might have made a merry life in the
- midst of it, like that of many another school-boy, and I was merry
- sometimes, but I had known better things. I had once learnt to hate
- wickedness, and I never could find myself at ease in the midst of
- it, though I had not strength to resist it openly. The first evening
- that I arrived at this new tutor's house, I was cordially received
- to mess with the set of three or four lower boys who were there.
- These were quiet, good-natured boys; but, to be one with them, it
- was soon evident that the sweet practices of devotion must be given
- up, and other rules followed from those I knew to be right. I was
- taken by them on expeditions of boyish depredation and pilfering. I
- had never been tempted or invited before to anything like this, and
- {14} it was misery to me, on account of my natural want of courage
- as well as my tender conscience, to join such enterprises. Yet I
- dared not boldly declare my resolution to commit no sin, and I made
- a trial now of that which has been so often tried, and what has
- often led to fatal confusion--to satisfy the world without
- altogether breaking with God. One day we went to pick up walnuts in
- a park near Eton; another day to steal beans or turnips, or the
- like, from fields or gardens; then, more bold, to take ducks and
- chickens from farmyards. It is a common idea that this kind of
- school-boys' theft is not indeed a sin. At Eton it certainly was not
- so considered. A boy who stole money from another boy was disgraced,
- and branded as a wretch almost beyond forgiveness, whereas for
- stealing his school-books, he would not be blamed; and for robbing
- orchards or farmyards he would be honoured and extolled, and so much
- the more if, in doing it, one or two or three together had violently
- beaten the farmer's boy, or even himself. But where is the reason
- for this distinction? The Word of God and a simple conscience
- certainly teach no such difference. At any rate, I know, to my
- sorrow, that the beginning of my fall from all that was good, was by
- being led to countenance and bear a part, though sorely against my
- better will, in such work as this.
-
- "This was not the worst misery. My ignorance in the mysteries of
- iniquity was soon apparent. However much I strove to keep my
- countenance firm, I could not hear immodesties without blushing. I
- was, on this account, a choice object of the fun of some of the
- boys, who took delight in forcing me to hear instructions in
- iniquity. One evening after another, I well remember, the quarters
- would be invaded where I and my companions were established; all our
- little employments would be interrupted, our rooms filled with dirt,
- our beds, perhaps, tossed about, and a noisy row kept up for hours,
- of which sometimes one, and sometimes another of our set was the
- principal butt. I was set up as a choice object, of course, on
- account of my simplicity and inexperience in their ways, so that
- some of the partners of these plagues with me would blame me for
- being so silly {15} as to pretend ignorance of what their foul
- expressions meant; for they could not believe it possible that I
- should really be so simple as not to understand them. I maintained
- for some time a weak conflict in my soul against all this flood of
- evil. For a little time I found one short space of comfort through
- the day, when at length, after an evening thus spent, I got to bed,
- and in secret wept and prayed myself to sleep; but the trial was too
- strong and too often repeated. I had no kind friend to speak to.
-
- "Mr. Godley still lived at the Wharf, and though he seemed to think
- it right not to press himself upon me, he asked me to come and dine
- when I pleased. Two or three times I went to dine with him, and
- these were my last really happy days, when for an hour or two I
- could give my mind liberty to feel at ease, and recollect my former
- feelings in this kindly company. But I could not, I dared not, tell
- him all I was now exposed to, and so I was left to stand my ground
- alone. Had any one then told me that by myself I must not hope to
- resist temptation, and rightly directed me how to call on God for
- help, I have since thought I might have stood it; but I had not yet
- known the force of temptation, nor learnt by experience the power of
- God to support the weak. My weakness I now felt by clear experience,
- and after a short conflict,--for this battle was soon gained by the
- great enemy who was so strong in the field against me,--I remember
- well the conclusion striking my mind, that the work of resistance
- was useless, and that I must give up. Where were you, O my God,
- might I now exclaim, to leave me thus alone and unprotected on such
- a boisterous sea? Ah! my Lord, I have never found fault with thy
- divine appointments in thus permitting me to fall. Only I say, as
- before, give me grace now fully to recover what I lost; and I will
- ever bless thee for allowing me to have known so much evil, if it be
- but that I may warn others,
-
- "It might be, perhaps, ten days after my arrival at Mr. ***'s, when
- I gave up all attempt to pray; and I think I did not say one word of
- prayer for the two years and more that I afterwards continued there.
- I remember {16} once being by, when one of the most rude and hard of
- my tormentors was dressing himself, and, to my surprise, turned to
- me, and, with his usual civility, said some such word as, 'Now hold
- your jaw;' and then, down on his knees near the bed, and his face
- between his hands, said his prayers. I then saw for a moment to what
- I had fallen, when even this fellow had more religion than unhappy I
- had retained; but I had no grain of strength now left to rise. One
- would think that in the holidays my change would have been
- discovered; for I imagine that I never knelt down even at home
- except in the church. But, alas! little did my family suspect what a
- place was Eton; or, at least, if a suspicion comes across parents'
- minds of what their children are exposed to in public schools, they
- generally persuade themselves that this must be endured for a
- necessary good, which is, to make them learn to know the world.
-
- "When I had ceased attempting to maintain my pious feelings, the
- best consolation I had was in the company of a few boys of a spirit
- congenial to what mine was now become. All the time that I remained
- at Eton I never learnt to take pleasure in the manly, active games
- for which it is so famous. It is not that I was without some natural
- talent for such things. I have since had my time of most ardent
- attachment to cricket, to tennis, shooting, hunting, and all active
- exercises: but my spirit was bent down at Eton; and among the boys
- who led the way in all manly pursuits, I was always shy and
- miserable, which was partly a cause and partly an effect of my being
- looked down upon by them. My pleasure there was in being with a few
- boys, like myself, without spirit for these things, retired apart
- from the sight of others, amusing ourselves with making arbours,
- catching little fishes in the streams; and many were the hours I
- wasted in such childish things when I was grown far too old for
- them.
-
- "Oh! the happiness of a Catholic child, whose inmost soul is known
- to one whom God has charged with his salvation. Supposing I had been
- a Catholic child in such a situation--if such a supposition be
- possible--the pious feelings with which God inspired me, would have
- been under {17} the guidance of a tender spiritual Father, who would
- have supplied exactly what I needed when about to fall under that
- sense of unassisted weakness which I have described. He would have
- taught me how to be innocent and firm in the midst of all my trials,
- which would then have tended to exalt, instead of suppressing, my
- character. I would have kept my character not only clear in the
- sight of God, but honourable among my fellows, who soon would have
- given up their persecution when they found me steadfast; and I might
- have brought with me in the path of peace and justice many whom I
- followed in the dark ways of sin. But it is in vain to calculate on
- what I might have been had I been then a Catholic. God be praised,
- my losses I may yet recover, and perhaps even reap advantages from
- them."
-
-{18}
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-Private Tuition Under Mr. Blomfield.
-
-
- "Had the public masters of the school been attentive to the
- advancement of the scholars in learning while negligent of their
- morals, and had I been making progress in my studies while losing my
- innocence, I might have continued longer in that place; for I did
- not fall into gross, outward, vicious habits, and it is possible
- that no difference was perceived in my behaviour at home. But I
- suppose my father saw a wide difference between the care which Mr.
- Godley bestowed on me and that which boys in the public tutors'
- houses could receive. I know not exactly the reasons that led to the
- change; but, in the Christmas holidays at the end of the year 1813,
- Mr. Blomfield was invited to Althorp, and he was pointed out to me
- as my intended future tutor. Many of my readers will know at once
- that he is now'[Footnote 1] the Protestant Bishop of London. My
- father had presented him somewhat before this period with the
- rectory of Dunton, in Buckinghamshire, having been led to do so by
- the distinguished character which he heard of him from Cambridge for
- he did not personally know him when he offered him this piece of
- preferment. From the time that I made his acquaintance, and received
- some directions from him for private reading at Eton during the
- remaining time of my stay there, I began to take some more decided
- interest than I had yet done in advancing myself in literary
- knowledge. This, as well as my growing older and more independent of
- other boys, and falling in {19} with more sensible companions, gave
- to my mind a more satisfactory turn during my last year at Eton.
- There was no return, though, to religion whilst I remained there,
- nor was there likely to be; and so, most blessed was the change for
- me when, before Christmas 1814, I left Mr. ***'s, and, after
- remaining at home for about three months in company with my brother
- Frederick, returned for the first time from sea, I went to Mr.
- Blomfield's in March, 1815. I staid there till near the time of my
- first going to Cambridge, which was in the summer of 1817.
- Simplicity and purity of mind, alas! are not regained with the
- readiness with which they are lost: the falling into bad company and
- consenting to it will utterly ruin all innocence. The removal of
- occasions may prevent the growth of evil habits and the farther
- increase of corruption; but this alone will not restore that blessed
- ignorance of evil which was no longer mine. My residence with
- Blomfield was, however, the means to me of great good. Here I was
- confirmed in that love for study and knowledge of which I have
- already noticed the commencement. He had himself, as is well known,
- though still young, gained a reputation for classical learning among
- the scholars of England and the Continent; and his example and
- conversations inspired me with desires for the like distinctions, to
- which he gave all possible encouragement. This I reckon to have been
- a considerable advantage to my religious welfare; for, although the
- motive I set before me was merely worldly, and the subjects which I
- studied had little of a good and much of a bad tendency, as must
- needs be the case with pagan literature, yet, by gaining a habit for
- study, I was directed in a line widely distinct from the most
- vicious of the society through which I was afterwards to pass; and,
- by being a reading man at Cambridge, I was saved from much
- perversion."
-
- [Footnote 1: This was written in 1836. See Preface.
- Dr. Blomfield died in 1857.]
-
-We shall be pardoned for interrupting the course of this interesting
-narrative, by inserting an anecdote, which shows how unchanged was his
-opinion on the merits of pagan literature. In a conversation with his
-religious companions, shortly before he died, he happened to say
-something about the discoveries of Cardinal Mai among the Bobbio {20}
-manuscripts. Some one remarked that it was nothing less than Vandalism
-for the old monks to erase one of the classic authors, and write some
-crude chronicle or other over it. "Well," replied Father Ignatius, "I
-suppose the monks had as much respect for Virgil and Ovid as the
-angels have."
-
-To resume.
-
- "But what was of the chief importance to me at this time was, being
- in a house and with company, where, if subjects of religion were not
- so much put before me as with Mr. Godley, and if I was not
- constantly exhorted and encouraged in simple piety, I and my fellow
- pupils felt that no word of immorality would have been anywise
- tolerated. Prayers were daily read in the family, the service of the
- Church was performed with zeal and regularity, the Sunday was
- strictly observed, and a prominent part of our instruction was on
- matters of religion. It was also to me an invaluable benefit, that
- the companion with whom I was principally associated, during the
- chief part of my time at Dunton, was one who, like me, after a
- careful education at home, where he had imbibed religious feelings,
- had gone through the corruptions of another public school, but was
- now, like me, happy to find himself in purer air.
-
- "With him I was confirmed at Easter, 1816, by Dr. Howley, then
- Protestant Bishop of London, now Archbishop of Canterbury. It was an
- incalculable blessing to me, slave as I was to false shame, and
- cowardly as I was to resist against bold iniquity, that I now had
- had a period granted me, as it were, to breathe and gain a little
- vigour again, before the second cruel and more ruinous devastation
- which my poor heart was shortly to undergo. I prepared seriously for
- my confirmation, and for receiving the Sacrament from time to time,
- and recovered much of my former good practices of private devotion.
- I remember especially to have procured once more a manual of
- prayers, and during the last months of my stay at Dunton I spent a
- long time in self-examination by the table of sins in that book,
- somewhat similar to our Catholic preparation for confession. But,
- alas! I could go no further than the preparation. Oh! the great
- enemy of our souls knew well what he was {21} doing in abolishing
- confession. As before, when I first lost my innocence and piety at
- Eton, confession would, I am convinced, have preserved me from that
- fall; so now that I was almost recovering from the fall, if I had
- had the ear of a spiritual father to whom I might with confidence
- have discovered the wounds of my poor soul, he would have assisted
- me utterly to extirpate the remains of those evil habits of my
- heart. He would have shown me what I knew so imperfectly, the
- horrible danger of the state in which I had been so near eternal
- damnation; he would have made me feel that holy shame for my sins,
- which would have overcome that false earthly shame by which I still
- was ready to be mastered; and he would, in short, have poured in
- that balm and oil which the ministers of God possess, to heal, and
- strengthen, and comfort me for my future trials, so that I might
- have stood firm against my enemies. But it pleased Thee, O my God,
- that once more, by such sad experience, I should have occasion to
- learn the value of that holy discipline of penance, the power and
- admirable virtue of the divine sacraments, with the dispensation of
- which Thou hast now entrusted me, that I may be a more wise and
- tender father to Thy little ones whom Thou committest to my care."
-
-{22}
-
-CHAPTER V.
-He Goes To Cambridge.
-
-
-Young Spencer went with Mr. Blomfield to Cambridge in the spring of
-1817, and was entered fellow commoner of Trinity. He returned,
-immediately after being matriculated, to his family, and spent the
-summer in cricketing and sea-bathing, in Ryde, Isle of Wight, and
-hunting or shooting at Althorp. On Saturday, October 18th, he came to
-London with his parents. He and his brother Frederick went about
-shopping, to procure their several outfits for the University and the
-sea. On the morning of the 21st October, he set out from his father's
-house to Holborn, to catch the seven o'clock fly for Cambridge. This
-vehicle, which has been so long superseded by the Eastern Counties
-Railway, was filled with passengers before the Spencer carriage
-arrived. He then took a post chaise at ten o'clock, and arrived in
-Cambridge a little before six in the evening. All that remained of
-that day, and the greater part of the next, was spent in getting his
-rooms furnished, hiring his servant, making a few acquaintances,
-meeting those he knew before, and the other employments of a freshman.
-His tutor in classics was Mr. Evans, who long continued in the same
-capacity at Cambridge, and had the reputation of being a most upright
-man. For mathematics he had a Mr. Peacock, who afterwards became Dean
-of Ely, and restored the cathedral there. He fell into good hands,
-seemingly, as far as his studies were concerned. He does not seem to
-have been less fortunate in the choice of his companions. He is very
-slow in making friends; one he does not like for being "too much of
-the fine gentleman;" another invites him, and he remarks: "I suppose I
-must ask him to dinner or something {23} else; but I should not wish
-to continue acquaintance with him, for though he is good-natured, he
-is likely to be in a bad set." He also goes regularly to visit Mr.
-Blomfield, who resided in Hildersham, and advises with him about his
-proceedings. He also avoids needless waste of time, and says in his
-journal: "They all played whist, in their turns, but Bridgman and
-myself; which I am glad I did not, for I like it so well that I should
-play at it too much if I once began." Besides these precautions, and a
-feeling of indignation that bursts out now and again when he has to
-note a misdemeanour in his associates, he reads seven hours a day on
-an average. These conclusions are collected from the notes of a
-journal he wrote at the time; they mark a very auspicious beginning;
-and, being clear facts, will serve as a kind of glass through which
-one may read the following from his autobiography.
-
- "My intentions were now well directed (on entering Cambridge). I
- began well, and for a time did not give way to the detestable
- fashions of the place, and was not much ashamed in the presence of
- the profligate. I was very happy likewise. I found myself now for
- the first time emerged from the condition of a boy. I was treated
- with respect and kindness by the tutors and fellows of the college;
- my company was always sought, and I was made much of by what was
- supposed to be the best--that is, the most well-bred and
- fashionable, set in the University. I had all the health and high
- spirits of my age, and I now enjoyed manly amusements, being set
- free from the cowardly feeling of inferiority which I had to oppress
- me at Eton. My first term at Cambridge--that is, the two months that
- passed before the first Christmas vacation after my going there--
- was, as I thought, the happiest time I had yet known. I find it
- difficult, however, now to understand that happiness, and still more
- to understand the religious principle which had more or less some
- influence over me, when I remember one circumstance which by itself
- proves my religion to have been absolutely nugatory, and which, I
- remember well, most grievously spoiled my happiness. As to my
- religion, I do not remember that at that time I said any private
- prayer. {24} I suppose I must have discontinued it when I left Mr.
- Blomfield's, or soon after. Yet I had a sort of principle which
- guarded me from joining in the profane contempt of God's worship
- which prevails generally in the College chapels at Cambridge, and
- for a long time from consenting to the practice of open
- immoralities, or even pretending to approve them, though almost all
- the young men whom I knew at Cambridge either notoriously followed
- or at least sanctioned them."
-
-He alludes to "one circumstance" in the last extract as being a test
-of his depth in religious matters, which it will be interesting to
-have in his own words. It occurred before his entering Cambridge; but
-as it considerably influenced his feelings during his stay there, it
-may as well find its place here.
-
- "The circumstance to which I allude was something of an affair of
- honour, as the world blindly calls it, into which I got engaged, and
- which had so important an influence upon my religious feelings for
- about two years that I will here particularly relate the
- circumstances of it. In the last summer vacation, before my going to
- Cambridge, I attended, with my father, the Northampton races, in our
- way from the Isle of Wight to visit my brother at his place in
- Nottinghamshire. I had begun, at that time, to be extremely fond of
- dancing, as well as cricket, shooting, and the like amusements. At
- this race ball at Northampton, I enjoyed myself to the full; but,
- unwittingly, laid the foundation for sorrow on the next day.
- Fancying myself a sort of leader of the gaiety, in a set which
- seemed to be the most fashionable and smart of the evening, I must
- needs be making up parties for select dances; which proceeding was,
- of course, taken by others as intruding on the liberties of a public
- entertainment; and it happened that, without knowing it, I barred
- out from one quadrille which I helped in forming, the sister of a
- young gentleman of name and fortune in the county. I was in the mean
- time making up a party for a match at cricket on the racecourse for
- the next day, and this gentleman was one of my chief helpmates. The
- next day, while busy in collecting our cricketers to go {25} to the
- ground, I met him in the street, and he gave me the hard cut. I knew
- not what it meant, and simply let it pass; but on the morning after,
- I was surprised at receiving a letter from him to tell me what was
- my offence: it ended with the words (which are deeply enough
- impressed on my memory not yet to be forgotten), 'If I did not look
- upon you as a mere boy, I should call you in a more serious manner
- to account for your rudeness.' He then told me where he might be
- found the following day. Without much reflecting on this unpleasant
- communication, I showed it to my father, who was near me, with
- several other gentlemen of the county, when I received it. He asked
- me whether I had meant any rudeness, and when I told him I had not,
- he bid me write an apology, and particularly charged me not to
- notice the concluding taunt. He afterwards mentioned it to two
- others of these gentlemen, who both agreed that I had done right in
- sending such an answer. But soon after my mind fell into such a
- torment as I had never yet known. The answer was certainly right
- according to Christian rules, and I suppose the laws of honour would
- not have required more; but, at the time, I know not whether it
- would not be esteemed in his mind and that of the friends whom he
- might consult, to be too gentle for a man of courage. A most
- agonizing dilemma I was now in, neither side of which I could
- endure. On the one hand, I could not bear to look on death, and
- standing to be shot at was what nothing but a fit of desperation
- could bring me to. On the other, that awful tyrant, the world, now,
- as it were, put forth his hand and claimed me for his own. To lose
- my character for courage, and be branded as a coward, was what I
- could not anyways endure. I went with my father in the carriage to
- sleep at Loughborough; and when, at the inn, I retired from him to
- my bedroom, the tumult of my mind was at its height. I had all but
- determined to set off and go that very night to the place assigned
- me by this gentleman, who by one disdainful expression had now
- mysteriously become, as it appeared, the master of my doom; and,
- renewing the quarrel, take my chance of the consequence. But again,
- I saw this would {26} not save my honour, if it were already
- compromised. It was clear that a change of mind like that would
- hardly satisfy the world, which does not forgive a breach of its
- awful laws on such easy terms. I finally slept off my trouble for
- the present; but my soul remained oppressed with a new load, which
- almost made me weary of my life. I remained convinced that I had not
- reached the standard of courage in this affair; and I felt,
- therefore, that it depended on the good-nature of this gentleman
- whether my character should be exposed or not. He did not reply to
- my letter of explanation. Was he satisfied or not? During my first
- term at Cambridge he was expected there, and I was even invited to
- meet him at a wine party, as one who was known to be one of his
- neighbours and friends. I dared not show any reluctance to meet him,
- lest the whole story should be known at Cambridge; and if I did meet
- him, was he again to treat me with disdain? If he did, how should I
- avoid a duel? I knew that having anything to do with a duel was
- expulsion by the laws of the University; but if I, coward as I was,
- had not yet made up my mind, as I had, that I must run the chance of
- his shot, if he chose still to resent the affront, no wonder, if the
- spoiling of my prospects in life, by expulsion from Cambridge, was
- not much regarded. The present distress was evaded by his not
- coming, as was expected. After this I desired one person who knew
- him as a friend, and to whom alone I had explained my case, to write
- and ask whether my apology had appeared to him sufficient. The
- answer to this was an assurance that the thing had been no more
- thought of; but it was two years before I met him in person, and by
- his courteous manner was finally satisfied that all was right
- between us. I might think it impossible that the great question
- could be overlooked by men, what is to become of them in eternity,
- if I had not had the experience of my own feelings in such an
- occasion as this. In that memorable evening at Loughborough, I did
- not indeed altogether overlook the moral question--Is a duel wrong?
- I had made the most of what I had heard said in palliation of it by
- some moralists; I could not find any ground, however, to think it
- right before {27} God; yet the thought of having, perhaps before the
- next day was past, to answer in the presence of God for having
- thrown away my life in it, was not the consideration which deterred
- me from the rash resolution. Now, how stands the world in England on
- this question? It is clear that a Catholic, whether ecclesiastic or
- layman, has no choice. He must either utterly renounce his religion
- or duelling. A maintenance of the abominable practice by which
- duelling is justified would deprive him of communion with the
- Church. But how stand Protestants? The clergy are exempted from this
- law by the world. But how many Protestant laymen are there of the
- rank of gentlemen who dare to proclaim that they detest duelling,
- and that they would sooner bear the disgrace of refusing a challenge
- than offend God by accepting it, or run the risk of offending God?
- for I suppose the greater part would try an argument to prove that
- it may be excusable. The clergy generally, I believe, reckon it
- decidedly a wicked worldly law, yet they receive laymen to communion
- without insisting on this enormous evil being first abjured. I do
- not, however, here propose a further discussion of the question
- generally. To this law of the world, miserably as it tormented me
- for a time, I believe I am indebted spiritually more than can well
- be understood: at least to the misery which it occasioned me. I have
- heard it related of blessed (now Saint) Alphonsus Maria di Liguori
- that he owed his being led to bid adieu to the world and choosing
- God for the portion of his inheritance, to making a blunder in
- pleading a cause as an advocate. Having till that time set his
- happiness on his worldly reputation for talent, he then clearly saw
- how vain, were the promises of the world, and once for all he gave
- it up. I knew not, alas! whither nor how to turn for more solid
- consolation, and thus the spoiling of my happiness, which had
- resulted from a mistake in a ball-room, did not teach me to be wise;
- but it contributed materially, and most blessedly, to poison my
- happiness at this time. Yet, in a general way, I went on gaily and
- pleasantly enough, for serious reflections, on whatever subject it
- might be, had no long continuance."
-
-{28}
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-His First Year in Cambridge.
-
-
-What strikes a Catholic as the most singular feature in Protestant
-education is the want of special training for the clergyman. A dozen
-young men go to the University for a dozen different purposes, and
-there is the same rule, the same studies, the same moral discipline
-for all. Such, at least, was the rule in the days of Mr. Spencer's
-college life. It seems extraordinary to the Catholic student, who has
-to learn Latin and Greek only as subsidiary instruments to his higher
-studies; who has to read two years philosophy and four years theology,
-and pass severe examinations nine or ten different times in each,
-besides a general one in all, before he can be qualified to receive
-the priesthood. The clerical training with us is as different from
-that through which young Spencer had to pass as one thing can be from
-another.
-
-His life for the first year may be very briefly told. He hears from
-Mr. Blomfield that he is to attend divinity lectures, and he forthwith
-begins. He is advised by a Professor Monk, afterwards Protestant
-Bishop of Gloucester, to stand for a scholarship, and he does so after
-getting Blomfield's consent. This makes him study very hard for some
-time, and though he did not succeed, the taste he had acquired by the
-preparation did not leave him till the end of the year, when he came
-out in the first class, having left his competitors, with one
-exception, far behind. He also spends some hours every day in athletic
-exercises, is very fond of riding, goes now and again to London and
-Althorp to amuse himself with attending the theatres, dining out,
-shooting partridge, and playing at Pope Joan. He relaxes {29} in his
-determination to avoid whist, and indulges so far that he puts a note
-of exclamation in his journal at having returned to his chambers one
-night without having had a game. This seems to be the regular course
-of his life at Cambridge, a course edifying indeed, if compared with
-the lives of his companions. He says:--
-
- "I have observed before that the example and conversation of Mr.
- Blomfield, while I remained with him, gave an impulse to my mind
- towards the love of literary pursuits. I did not think, however, of
- exerting myself particularly in that way till the end of the first
- term, when I was persuaded by Mr. Monk, the Greek professor, now
- Protestant Bishop of Gloucester, to be a candidate for a university
- scholarship. Dr. Monk was four years senior to Mr. Blomfield, and I
- understood from him that he had been of great service to him in the
- same way, when at college, encouraging his exertions and studies. I
- was told that I passed this examination creditably, but I did not
- stand so high among the competitors as to make it desirable that I
- should repeat the attempt afterwards, and the only honours that I
- tried for were confined to Trinity College. I was thus stimulated
- during this time to more than common exertions; it gave me a
- disposition to study which continued through my time at Cambridge,
- and was the only good disposition which was encouraged in me. I have
- reason then to remember with gratitude those who helped me in this
- way; though it is a lamentable thing that, being there professedly
- as a student for the church, in what is the proper seminary for
- ecclesiastics of the Church of England, I cannot call to mind one
- word of advice given me by anyone among my superiors or companions
- to guard me against the terrible dangers with which I was surrounded
- of being entirely corrupted, or to dispose me towards some little
- care of my spiritual concerns.
-
- "My studies I followed with great zeal all the time I was at
- Cambridge; but, as is generally the case there with those that aim
- at places in the public examinations, I managed them without proper
- distribution of time. By running through the journal I kept at the
- time I find that, when {30} first I began to read hard, I have often
- sat without moving from my table and read the clock round, that is,
- from three or four in the afternoon to the same hour the next
- morning, for the sake of doing what was counted an extraordinary
- feat. There is no doubt that reading with regularity a smaller
- number of hours every day would be more available for the attainment
- of learning than these immoderate surfeits of study, as one may call
- them; I only interposed a few days of amusement, when hardly any
- work was done. In the long run, such a course as mine could not
- answer, for it was sure to hurt the health and prevent the
- attainment of the real end of all a young man's studies, which is,
- acquiring knowledge to be turned to account in after life. Few young
- men at Oxford or Cambridge, I suppose, have wisdom enough to
- calculate this in advance. The object which they aim at is present
- distinction, and outstripping their fellows in the race for college
- prizes; and, as far as my experience goes, a glut of reading, if the
- health does but stand it without breaking down, is the way to make
- the most of one's chance at a public examination.
-
- "The time of my being at Cambridge is one so interesting to me in
- the recollection, that I cannot satisfy myself, when giving an
- account of my progress through life, without dwelling at some length
- upon it. My college course was not very long. At the time when I was
- at Cambridge, honorary degrees were conferred on the sons of
- noblemen at the end of two years' residence, by which they came to
- the enjoyment of the rank and all the privileges of a Master of
- Arts, which title was not to be attained, in the ordinary course, in
- less than six or seven years. And what shortens the college life
- much more is the extravagant length of the vacations; so that what
- is reckoned one year at Cambridge is not more than five months'
- actual residence in the University. Yet this is a most important and
- critical period, and the short two years during which I was an
- undergraduate at Cambridge were of immense importance in my destiny.
- How vast is the good, of which I have learned the loss, but which I
- might have gained, had I then known how to direct my views! On the
- other hand, how {31} may I bless God for the quantity of evil from
- which I have been preserved, and how wonderful has been my
- preservation! When I remember how destitute I was of religion at
- this time, I must say that I have to wonder rather at my being
- preserved from so much evil, than at my having fallen into so much.
- And how can I bless God for his exceeding goodness of which I am now
- reminded, when I think how, against my own perverse will, against my
- foolish, I must say mad wishes, I was prevented by his Providence
- from being at this time irrevocably ruined and lost? What can I
- return to Him for this blessing? One principal intention in my
- present work is to record the sentiments of gratitude, however weak
- and most unworthy, with which I at least desire my soul to be
- inflamed, and which I hope will engage all the powers of my soul
- throughout eternity. Most gladly, if it were for His honour and for
- the edification of one soul which by the narrative might reap
- instruction, I would enter before all the world into a more detailed
- explanation of this my wonderful deliverance; but this I must not
- do, for I must not be the means that others, hitherto in the
- simplicity of holy ignorance, should be made acquainted with the
- dark iniquity of which the knowledge has once infected my own
- unhappy understanding. Be this enough to say on this point, which I
- was obliged to touch, lest it should seem unreasonable that I should
- speak of my case as one of most marvellous and almost unparalleled
- mercy, when the circumstances which I may now detail, and what are
- generally known among my most intimate companions, do not justify
- such feelings in the review of it.
-
- "By the great mercy of God, I had provided for me a refuge and, as
- it were, a breathing time, between Eton and Cambridge. At Mr.
- Blomfield's, my progress in evil was checked, and I had time to
- prepare myself for the University with good resolutions, though I
- knew not what sort of trials I should meet with there, nor had I
- learnt how unavailing were my best resolutions to support me, while
- yet I had not wholly put my confidence in God's grace. The vacation
- which came between my leaving Dunton and going to Cambridge I spent
- chiefly in the Isle of Wight, and my {32} soul was almost wholly
- occupied that summer about cricket. I never became a great cricketer
- myself; I had lost the best time for gaining the art while at Eton;
- but, this summer, what perseverance and diligence could do to make
- up for lost time, I think I did. Oh! that I might have the same
- degree of zeal now in serving the Church of God, and collecting and
- instructing a faithful flock, as I then had in seeking out, and
- encouraging and giving and procuring instruction for my troop of
- cricketers. The occupation of my mind on this subject was enough to
- drive away any ardent attention to religion as well as to study. I
- may say, in favour of this passion for cricket, that it was one of
- the pursuits which I took to at the recommendation of my mother. I
- remember generally that when anything in the way of amusement or
- serious occupation was suggested to me by her, or anything else but
- my own fancy, nothing more was required to make me have a distaste
- for it. Otherwise, how many useful accomplishments might I have
- gained which would now have been available to the great objects I
- have before me. My dear mother wished me to learn fencing when I was
- at Eton, and a good deal of time I spent, and a good deal of money
- must have been paid by my father to Mr. Angelo, the fencing-master
- who came to Eton. It might have been better for me to have gained
- perfection in this exercise, by which it is related that St. Francis
- of Sales acquired in part that elegance of manner and nobleness of
- carriage through which he gained so many souls to Christ. While
- other boys made fencing their amusement, I always would have it as a
- task, and of course gained nothing by it. At a later period, when we
- were at Naples, and I had a weakness in my eyes which made such an
- employment suitable, my mother would have had me learn music. She
- gave me a guitar, and would have paid for my lessons; but I could
- not take to it, and have thus lost the advantage which, since I have
- become a Catholic, I should have so much valued of understanding the
- science of music, seeing that the trifling knowledge I do possess is
- of so much use. There is the apology, then, for my cricket mania;
- that she proposed my taking to it in the {33} summer I speak of. I
- was surprised to find myself willing to acquiesce in the suggestion.
- What I did take to I generally followed excessively, and she did not
- calculate on the violence with which I followed up this. I got into
- very little bad company by means of this pursuit, and perhaps, on
- the whole, I rather gained than lost by it. It was manly and
- healthful, and though, when in the heat of it, I thought it almost
- impossible I should ever give it up, yet when I took Orders I did
- give it up; and if it was in itself of no use, I hope that one
- sacrifice, among the many I was obliged to make and, thank God, did
- willingly make to more important objects, it was not without value.
- Thus much for my cricketing; I mention it here as being the only
- distinct cause to which I can attribute my losing before I went to
- Cambridge the habits of serious thought and of regular prayer, which
- I have observed I regained in a good degree towards the latter part
- of my Dunton time.
-
- "I nevertheless was full of good purposes. I desired and was
- resolved to keep myself from giving countenance to immorality as
- well as practising it, though after having once given way at Eton, I
- hardly ever dared to say a word or even to give a look in
- disapproval of whatever might be said or done before me by bold
- profligates. I could not bear to appear out of the fashion; so that
- when other boys at Eton used to talk of the balls and gay parties
- which they had been to in their holidays, I was quite ashamed, when
- asked what I had done, to say that I had been to no balls; for to my
- mother I am greatly indebted for her wise conduct in this respect,
- that she did not, as was done by others, make us men before our
- time. So, although I detested and from my heart condemned the
- fashionable immoralities of the young men with whom I came to be
- associated about the time of my going to Cambridge, I hardly dared
- declare my mind, except sometimes, almost in confidence, to one who
- seemed to be like myself. Oh! what good might I have done had I then
- known the value of God's grace, and, despising the world, boldly
- stood up for the cause of virtue, at the same time continuing to be
- gay and cheerful with my companions, and taking a leading part {34}
- in all innocent and manly diversions, and in the objects of
- honourable emulation which were set before me and my fellows. I know
- how much I might have done by supporting others, weak like myself,
- by acting at this time as I ought to have done, by what I felt
- myself on one or two occasions when such support was given me. I
- thank God that the memory of my brother Robert, who died in 1830,
- commanding the _Madagascar_, near Alexandria, now rises before me to
- claim my grateful acknowledgment as having twice given me such help
- at a critical time. Never was a man more calculated than he to get
- on, as it is said, in the world. He was brave and enterprising, and
- skilled in all that might make him distinguished in his profession;
- at the same time he was most eager in the pursuit of field sports
- and manly amusements; and in society was one of the most agreeable
- and popular men of his day. Once I remember complaining to him that
- I was ashamed of having nothing to say before some ladies about
- balls, when I was about sixteen. 'What a wretched false shame is
- that!' said he to me. From that time I became more ashamed of my
- shame than I had been before of my want of fashion. More important
- yet was the service he did me when he was about to go on one of his
- cruises as commander of the _Ganymede_. I was talking with him, the
- last evening before he left London, about the Easter before I went
- to Cambridge. He knew well what I should be exposed to better than I
- did and charged me to take care never to laugh or look pleased when
- I was forced to hear immoral conversation. What rare advice was this
- from the mouth of a gay, gallant young officer; and if there were
- more of his character who were not ashamed to give it to their young
- brothers and friends, how many might be saved, who are now lost,
- because they do not see one example to show how a manly, fashionable
- character can be maintained with strict morality and modesty. These
- few words from him were of infinite service to me. They made deep
- impression on me at the time I heard them, and the resolution which
- I then made continued with me till after I had been some time at
- Cambridge, when the battle I had to bear against the universal
- fashion {35} of iniquity once more, as formerly, at Eton, proved too
- strong for me, and I again gave way. My fall now was gradual. I
- began with the resolution to avoid all expenses which would
- embarrass me with debts, and to keep from several fashionable
- amusements which would engage too much time. For awhile, on this
- account, I would not play at cards; but in less than half-a-year
- this determination failed, and I wasted many an evening at whist of
- my short college life. I soon grew careless, too, about my expenses,
- and should have been involved in great embarrassments, had it not
- been for my brother's (Lord Althorp's) generosity, who, hearing from
- me at the end of my first year that I was in debt, gave me more than
- enough to clear it all away; and, thus having enabled me to set my
- affairs again in order, was the means of saving me from ever
- afterwards going beyond my means extravagantly. I might, however,
- have given way in some such resolutions as not playing at cards; I
- might have entered into some expenses which I shunned at first,
- without losing my peace of mind, and again defiling my conscience,
- of which the good condition was partly restored; but these were not
- the crying evils of the place. In the set with which I was now
- associated in the University, gambling was not at that time much
- practised, and not at all insisted on. There were occasional drunken
- parties, and it was with difficulty that I kept out of them; but the
- system of violently forcing people to drink, as well at the
- Universities as throughout genteel society in England, had fallen
- off before my time. There were some sets where drinking was
- practised at Cambridge much more excessively than in what called
- itself the best set of all. I could not help, without offending the
- laws of society, being present at a considerable number of dinners
- and suppers where men drank immoderately, but I was permitted to
- keep myself sober without much difficulty; one or two gave me
- countenance thus far, though any intimation of disapproving of what
- others did, on religious or moral grounds, I felt would not have
- been anyways tolerated; and so I ventured not. Swearing was among
- them rather unfashionable than {36} not. Some undergraduates were
- notorious for profane and impious language; and this was excused,
- and tolerated, and made fun of, but it was not common, and many
- among us made no difficulty of condemning it. I therefore never fell
- into this habit. The crying, universal, and most frightful evil of
- the place was open immorality. There was at Cambridge, in my time, a
- religious set, who were sometimes called Simeonites, from Mr.
- Simeon, one of the great leaders and promoters of the Evangelical
- party in these latter days, who was minister of one of the small
- churches in Cambridge, and for many years attracted into his
- influence a certain number of young men. Among these open vice was
- not countenanced; but not so the set to which I principally
- belonged, and these were as distinct as if they had not belonged to
- the same University. I was introduced to some few of these, and
- rather valued myself on having an acquaintance with them, as well as
- with many of the purely reading men; and my fashionable friends did
- not altogether object to it, though I was generally a little ashamed
- at being seen with any of them, and avoided any frequent intercourse
- with them. I have wondered since that, if it were only from mere
- curiosity, I should never once have gone to hear Simeon preach, but
- so it was. I understood nothing whatever of what is in England
- called Evangelical religion. Indeed, I thought nothing of religion;
- had I paid any attention to it at this time, I could hardly have
- escaped seeing how desperate was the course which I was following,
- and I might perhaps have taken a strong resolution, and have joined
- the serious party at once; but, very likely, I should have found the
- power of fashion at that time too great, and, by knowing more of
- religion, should only have made my conscience more guilty; and so I
- believe it may be better that none ever spoke to me on the subject
- all the time. I repeat it, that in our set, whatever other deviation
- from the most established fashion was tolerated, any maintenance of
- chastity or modesty was altogether proscribed. It was not long,
- then, before I found myself beat out of the position I endeavoured
- to maintain. During the first term I stood my ground rather better.
- One reason for this was, {37} that among what were called the
- freshmen--that is, those who entered with me on my college life,
- there were several who were not initiated in vicious practices.
- These, remaining for a time more or less in their simplicity, gave
- me some countenance in not going at once in the way of the veteran
- professors of evil. But as I saw some of them grow by degrees
- shameless and bold, and soon beginning to join their older brethren
- in upbraiding my weakness and folly for not being like the rest, I
- found all my resolution failing, and, alas! many a deliberation did
- I take whether I should not at length enter the same way with them.
- I was still withheld, though it was not the fear of God which
- restrained me. I knew that my entering a course of open profligacy
- would not be tolerated by my parents. I had a character for
- steadiness among the tutors and fellows of the college, which I was
- ashamed to lose; though even before them I found it sometimes to
- answer best not to appear different from other young men. Besides,
- as I had resisted the first period of attacks, and established among
- my companions a kind of character of my own, I felt that even they
- would be astonished if I at last declared myself as one of their
- sort. I could not bear the thought of their triumph, and the horrid
- congratulations with which I should be greeted, if once I was found
- going along with them in open feats of iniquity. Oh! how grievous is
- the reflection that by such motives as these I was restrained. I was
- longing often to be like them. I could not bear the taunts which
- were sometimes made at me. Here again some of the old Etonians
- perhaps would bring up the remembrance of my ancient propensity to
- blush, and would take pleasure in putting me again to confusion.
- Occasionally, by strange interpositions of Divine Providence, I was
- hindered from accomplishing purposes of evil which I had, in a sort
- of desperation, resolved by myself to perpetrate, by way of being
- decided one way or other, like a man on the brink of a precipice
- determining to throw himself down in order to escape the uneasy
- apprehension of his danger. One way or another I was restrained, so
- that it has afterwards appeared to me as if I had but barely stopped
- short of {38} taking the last decisive steps by which I might be
- irrevocably ranked among the reprobate. I never thought at the time
- of this danger, otherwise I could hardly have borne my existence;
- but, as it was, my mind at times was gloomy and miserable in the
- extreme. To make me yet more so, at the end of my first year I began
- to be afflicted with bilious attacks, arising, perhaps, from my
- imprudent management in regard to study, to diet, and to hours; and
- these occasioned exceeding depression of spirits, under which I used
- to fancy myself the most unhappy of creatures. I had no knowledge of
- the power of religion to set me free, and make me superior to all
- external sensible causes of depression, and I knew no better than to
- give myself up to my low feelings when they came upon me, till some
- distraction removed them, or till the fit passed away of itself.
- Many times at Cambridge, in order to hold up my head in a noisy
- company after dinner, I drank wine to raise my spirits, though not
- to great excess, yet enough to teach me by experience how mistaken
- is the calculation of those who, when in sorrow, seek to cheer
- themselves in that way, or in any way but by having recourse to God
- by prayer and acts of resignation. I remember well once being told
- by a good aunt of mine, that it was quite wrong to give way to my
- depression, about which I one day complained to her, and that
- religion would surely cure it; but the time was not come for me to
- understand this truth, and I took no notice of her words.
-
- "In the meantime I continued zealous about my studies. I did not
- stop to ask _cui bono_ was I working in them. Had I seen how utterly
- vain was a first-class place or a Trinity prize-book, which I had
- set before me as the object of my labours, I should have found but
- little consolation and refreshment to my melancholy reflections in
- these pursuits. On the contrary, I should only have pined away with
- a more complete sense of the truth of the Wise man's sentence which
- Almighty God was teaching me in His own way, and in His own good
- time: '_Vanity of vanities, and all is vanity_' but to serve Thee
- only. I do not mean that if rightly followed, such academical
- honours are worth nothing. I wish {39} I had followed them more
- prudently and effectually. They were the objects set before me by my
- superiors at the time, and I should say to another in my place that
- he should do his best to gain the highest place in a spirit of
- obedience, and for the honour of God, to whom we owe all the credit
- and influence in the world which, by just and honourable exertions,
- we can gain. In recollecting, therefore, how I exerted myself, and
- succeeded in these attempts, I am dwelling on one of the most happy
- points of view which that part of my life suggests to me; for though
- I did not do this _as_ I ought, yet I was doing _what_ I ought, and
- by doing so was preserved from much evil, and God knows how far the
- creditable footing I gained at Cambridge in the studies of the place
- may yet be available for a good end."
-
-It is hard to believe young Spencer was so utterly devoid of religion
-as he here describes himself to be; we draw a more favourable
-inference from a journal he kept at the time. Noticing the death of
-the Princess Charlotte, he says: "It appears to be the greatest
-calamity that could have befallen us in public, and it is a deplorable
-event in a private point of view. It must be ascribed to the
-interposition of Providence, which must have some end in view beyond
-our comprehension." He speaks of the death of Mrs. Blomfield thus--"It
-is for her a happy event, after a life so well spent as hers has
-been." A few pages further on he has these words about the death of
-another friend of his. "I was extremely shocked to-day at hearing that
-James Hornby died last Friday of apoplexy. It was but a short time
-past that I was corresponding with him about the death of Mrs.
-Blomfield; and little he or I thought that he would be the next to go.
-The last year and a half I stayed at Eton I lived in the greatest
-intimacy with him, which had afterwards fallen away a little; but he
-was very clever and promising, and I always was fond of him. It must
-be a wise dispensation of Providence, and may be intended as a warning
-to us, in addition to those we have lately had in the deaths of
-Maitland and Dundas. God grant it may be an effectual one!"
-
-These are not the spontaneous expressions of one altogether {40} a
-stranger to piety, though they may very well be put down as the
-transient vibration of chords that had long lain still in his heart,
-and which these rude shocks must have touched and made audibly heard
-once more. This conclusion is more in accordance with other remarks
-found scattered here and there in the same journal. He criticises
-sermons and seems to like none; he is regular at chapel and puts on
-his surplice on the days appointed; but he refuses to take the
-sacrament for no conceivable reason but that he does not care about
-it, and hears it is administered unbecomingly. He is shrewd and
-considerate in his remarks upon persons and things; yet there is
-scarcely a line of scandal or uncharitableness in the whole closely
-written volume. When he records a drunken fit or a row, he suppresses
-the names of the rioters; and if he says a sharp word about a person
-in one page, he makes ample amends for it in many pages afterwards; by
-showing how mistaken he was at first, and how agreeable it was to him
-to change his opinion upon a longer acquaintance. This might not
-appear very high praise; but let us take notice of his age and
-circumstances, and then perhaps it may have its value. He was a young
-man, just turned eighteen; he had been brought up in splendour at
-home, and in a poisonous atmosphere at school. That he was not the
-vilest of the vile is to be wondered at more than that he preserved as
-much goodness as he did. Where is the young man, of even excellent
-training, who will be able to contend, unaided and taunted, against a
-whole college of the finest youth of any country? His motives may be
-beneath a Christian's standard, but the fact that with this weak
-armour, the bare shadow of what it might be, he made such noble
-resistance and passed almost unscathed through the furnace into which
-he was cast, only shows what he would have done had he been imbued
-with the teachings of a higher order. The very human respect and
-worldly considerations that succeeded in keeping him from vice,
-acquire a respectability and a status in the catalogue of
-preservatives from the fact of their being successful in his case. His
-was a fine mind, and one is moved to tears at seeing this noble
-material for sanctity thus tossed {41} about and buffeted by a herd of
-capricious companions who could not see its beauty. Let us take up any
-young man's journal of his age and read some pages of it, what shall
-we find? Jokes played upon green freshmen, tricks for outdoing
-proctors, records of follies, or perchance pompous unreality put on to
-conceal all these or worse. His diary is the generous utterance of a
-noble mind; it is candid, true, conscientious, and puts a failing and
-a perfection of the writer side by side. It is no wonder that he was
-loved and courted, and that his companions had acquired an esteem for
-him in college, which years and toils have not succeeded in lessening.
-His keen grief at the deficiencies of his college life only shows to
-what height of sanctity he had reached, when what another might boast
-of wrung from him these lamentations.
-
-{42}
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Conclusion Of His First Year In Cambridge.
-
-
-The events recorded in his journal at this time could very
-conveniently be swelled into chapters, if one had a mind to be
-diffuse. To trace the fortunes of the gentlemen he comes in contact
-with--Denison, Wodehouse, Carlisle, Hildyard, Brougham, and a host of
-others, who afterwards shone in different circles, High Church
-controversies, pleadings at the bar, parliamentary debates, and Irish
-Lord-lieutenancies,--would form some very interesting episodes. We
-should add many titles to the off-handed surnames of the collegian's
-journal, and say a few words about how those dignities were procured,
-earned, and worn by the possessors. It might be, perhaps, interesting
-to some readers to know how many gay young noblemen were enticed into
-becoming sons-in-law to some very reverend doctors. All this and more
-Mr. Spencer notes down in the journal, but it is not our theme.
-
- "I have before observed that about my first Christmas I was
- encouraged by Mr. Monk and by Mr. Blomfield, who had removed from
- Dunton and lived then about ten miles from Cambridge, to undertake a
- contest for a University prize; but from this I afterwards drew
- back. I followed up then principally the object of getting into the
- first class at the Trinity College examinations, which took place at
- the end of each year, and which is an honour much esteemed, on
- account of that College standing so high in the University, though
- of course it is not on a level with the honours gained in
- examinations where competitors are admitted from the whole body of
- students in the University. It was one object of silly ambition at
- Cambridge to do well in the examinations without having appeared to
- {43} take much trouble about it. During my second term I fell into
- the idea of aiming a little at this, and I went to many more
- parties, and took more time for various amusements, particularly
- cards, than I allowed myself in the first term. Had I not been
- checked for this, I should probably have lost much ground in my
- race. But a check did come to me at Easter, when I went to town, and
- one evening expressed to my father and mother something of
- self-congratulation for having united so much amusement with my
- studies. My mother saw the danger I was now falling into, and, as it
- seemed to me, with too great severity, for an hour together
- represented to me the absurdity of my notions, and upbraided me with
- going the way to disappoint all their prospects. I had no thought of
- bringing such a reproof upon myself, and went to bed actually crying
- with mortification. However, it had its effect, and I was thankful
- for it afterwards. The next term, which was the last and critical
- one before the examination, I spent in very severe and regular
- study, and cared not how some idle ones might derogate from my
- success, and comfort themselves for their inferiority by the
- thought, that I had read so hard as to take away from my merit. At
- length, on the 18th May, 1818, the very day, as I observed, on
- which, ten years before, I had gone to Eton, I went into the
- examinations in which was to be gained the little share of credit in
- this way which was to fall to my lot. They lasted for a week; and, a
- day or two after, I received a note from Mr. Amos, now a
- distinguished ...... in London, who was one of the examiners, and a
- great friend of mine, which filled me with exultation: 'I have the
- greatest pleasure in informing you that you are in the first class.
- Ollivant is only eight marks above you, and you and he have left all
- the rest of the class at a long, very long, distance.' I afterwards
- learnt that the highest number of the marks was between 1,600 and
- 1,700, and that while Ollivant and I were near together at the head,
- the next to me was at the distance of 291. Lord Graham, now Duke of
- Montrose, was one of the first class, and if he had read as much as
- I did, there is no doubt he would have been before {44} me. I was
- told at the same time that I learnt the above-named particulars, as
- I find it in my journal, that 'I was best in mathematics, and
- Grahame next, although Grahame was first in algebra;' after which I
- thus expressed my ambition at the time: 'I hope that Grahame will
- not read for next year's examination, and if my eyes last out (for
- at that time I was under some apprehension on that point) I may have
- a chance of being first then, which would be delightful.' Such is
- all earthly ambition, and, as in my case, so always its
- effects--disappointment and mortification. Had I offered all my
- studies to God, and worked for Him, depending on His help, I should
- have done much more. I should have enjoyed my successes more purely,
- and should have been guarded from all disappointment. The second
- year's examination is much more confined to mathematics than to
- classics, and had I been wise and regular and well-disciplined in my
- mind, I might have gained that _first_ place which I was aiming at,
- for Grahame did not read for it. As it was, Ollivant, who was some
- way behind me in the first year, got up his ground, and beat me in
- the second year's examination, in which, though I was second again,
- I had no remarkable superiority over the one who came next to me."
-
-Spencer formed the acquaintance of Sir Thomas Fremantle while they
-were both at Dunton under the charge of Mr. Blomfield. Fremantle went
-to Oxford and he to Cambridge, but they continued the intimacy, begun
-here, to which Spencer pays cordial tributes of unfeigned gratitude.
-Sir Thomas was a welcome guest at Althorp; he and George used to spur
-each other on to renewed exertions in the pursuit of literary honours.
-Spencer formed a plan for the long vacation, and went, on March 25, to
-Oxford, to lay the subject before Fremantle; it was, that they should
-go somewhere and read together. Spencer got into the coach in London,
-and arrived in Oxford at twelve at night. He lionised the place next
-day, was introduced to different celebrities, and dined and "wined" in
-the most select companies his friends, Fremantle and Lord Wilton,
-could muster for his reception. He lived during the time in the rooms
-of a {45} fellow commoner of Oriel. He did not leave a single
-department unvisited. He played at tennis with a Mr. Denison; compared
-the agreements and disagreements of their ways there with those of
-Cambridge; the only thing noteworthy he chose to put down in his
-diary, as the result of his comparison, is, that (when he plays cards
-in W ***'s rooms, where there are four tables) "they play high, and I
-do not like the kind of party so well as those at Cambridge."
-
-Spencer continued in Cambridge, and read, or idled, as the tone of his
-mind directed, until the 31st of July, 1818. This morning he set off,
-at half-past five, in the _Rising Sun_, for Birmingham; he falls in
-with a brilliant Etonian, who recounts the progress of things at his
-old school; and has to sleep in what he calls "the most uncomfortable
-and uncivil inn I have ever seen." He sets off on another coach next
-morning for Shrewsbury, and finds, to his agreeable surprise, that
-Fremantle travelled by the inside of the same vehicle. They both
-travel together into Wales, having first procured a supply of candles,
-tea, and other commodities for housekeeping, which they did not hope
-to find at hand where they were going to. After many long stages,
-up-hill and down-hill, among Welsh mountains, and strange
-fellow-travellers, they arrive at Towyn, at ten o'clock at night on
-the 2nd of August, having been nearly three days performing a journey
-which can now be accomplished in a few hours.
-
-Towyn is a little town in Merionethshire, situated on the sea coast,
-on a neck of land formed by a graceful little creek, into which the
-River Doluny empties itself, and a kind of sloping arm of the channel.
-Here Spencer and Fremantle took up their residence for the long
-vacation, in a nice little house for which they paid ten guineas a
-month. They had the whole premises to themselves, with a waiting-man
-named Davis, and a maid Kitty. Their mode of life was very regular.
-They rose early, bathed in the sea, which rolled its waves against
-their premises, breakfasted, and studied till two o'clock. It was
-customary with them then to go out exploring with dog and gun until
-dinner, dine at five, take another stroll, and read again until they
-thought it time to take tea, {46} and chat until bed-time. Each in
-turn was steward for a week; they purchased their own provisions in
-the little town, thus making a regular home there for the term of
-their stay. They read pretty well for the first week or two;
-afterwards they got so fond of brisk air and the adventures they came
-across in their daily walks, that the reading became less agreeable,
-and soon irksome. The first adventure recorded in the journal is the
-following. They were both returning home after a two hours' vain
-pursuit of game, and came across a gouty old gentleman, who asked them
-a number of impertinent questions. He then asked them to dine, but
-finding out on inquiry that he was "a notorious blackguard," although
-great in lands and money, they politely declined his invitation.
-Another time they rode a great way up the country and stopped at a
-pretty place, which they found, to their chagrin, not to be a fairy
-castle exactly, but "a grand shop for gossip, kept by two old ladies,
-assisted by a third," at whose qualifications in point of age the
-reader is left to make guesses. Another day they went out to shoot,
-and met another serious adventure, which is thus noted: "I got an
-immense ducking in a black mud ditch, which came up to my middle or
-higher, and Fremantle got a wetting too, but not so serious as mine."
-Things go on smoothly now for about a week; they receive several
-visits from neighbouring gentry, and the way in which the return to
-some of them is described gives us a fair specimen of the flow of
-spirits Spencer enjoyed at the time. "Saturday, Aug. 15.--We made
-ourselves greater bucks than usual to-day, and set off at two to call
-on Mr. Scott, near Aberdovey. He takes pupils there. We came home to
-dinner at half-past five; and after dinner (still greater bucks) we
-went to drink tea at Bodalog, with Mr. and Mrs. Jeffreys, and came
-home at half-past ten (14 miles walking)." The next adventure was one
-in which they tried their hands at shooting on the river with Mr.
-Jeffreys' long gun; whether the weight of the instrument, or an effort
-to reach the game that it killed, drew them nearer the water than they
-intended, he tells us that they "got quite soused in the water," and
-figured at the gentleman's dinner-table in two complete sets of the
-apparel of {47} the old man, to the no small amusement of the company.
-Nothing remarkable occurred after this to the two friends, except a
-trip to Aberystwyth, where they lodged a few days, met a few old
-acquaintances, and enjoyed a ball that was given to the ladies and
-gentlemen who were there for the season; until the 14th of September.
-This day they had a great battle of words with their landlord, who did
-not like their leaving him so soon: in this, however, they came off
-victorious. They both travel through Wales, visit Snowdon, Carnarvon,
-and meet a body of Cambridge men reading with a tutor at Conway.
-
-September 29th, he took the mail to London, and thus ended his long
-vacation. He stays at Wimbledon with his own family until the time for
-returning to Cambridge again. He relates in the journal that a man
-comes to teach Lady Spencer, his mother, how to bind books. This may
-be thought a strange kind of recreation for a lady of high rank; but
-it will not when we read that "this was the same person who set off
-the fashion of _shoemaking_!"
-
-He concludes his first year in Cambridge thus:--"This day's journal
-completes a year from the time I began to keep my history. It has
-indeed been an important year in my life the first in which I have
-been my own master, and have, I fear, settled my character with all
-its faults. Several things which I have both done and undone I shall
-never cease regretting. I have only to _thank God_ that there is no
-more reason for regret. With my reading, on the whole, I am as well
-satisfied as I ever expected." Two words are underlined in this
-extract; they were often on his lips till the day of his death, and
-frequently formed the subject of his sermons. If his character had its
-faults settled with it in his own estimation, it is pleasing to see
-the habit of resignation existing as a virtue in him even at this age.
-It was one that was confirmed in him afterwards, to an eminent degree.
-
-{48}
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Second Year In Cambridge--Takes His Degree.
-
-During the first term of his second year in Cambridge, his average
-hours of reading decreased; yet he had still a taste for study, and
-had not yet thrown aside what remained of his former ambition to
-distinguish himself. He and the Duke of Montrose declaim on the
-respective merits of Charles V. and Francis I.; they tossed up for
-sides, and Charles V. fell to Spencer. This keeps him at hard study
-for some time; meanwhile he hears Ollivant declaim, and thinks he will
-get both prizes. After the declamation, in which he comes off more
-creditably than he expected, he has half a hope of a prize, which he
-says he should be surprised though delighted to receive. He did get
-one, but not so high as he expected. Here and there in his journal at
-this time a few expressions of discontent escape from him about
-Cambridge; the cause being partially what has been related in the
-chapter before last. This had also, conjointly with another
-circumstance, the effect of cutting short his University career. He
-writes in the autobiography:--
-
- "I made some good progress during this year, but I should have done
- much more had I been constantly regular. I must have suffered great
- loss by my interruptions, as I find by my journal that for about
- four weeks at the end of the long vacation, when I had come home and
- was taken up with shooting, I did not make one hour's study; and two
- more long intervals of cessation from reading took place in the
- Christmas and Easter vacations, when a little steady application, if
- it were but for three hours a-day, would have kept my mind
- attentive, and given me a great advantage. After my first
- examination, I entertained some thoughts {49} of waiving my
- privilege of taking an honorary degree, and going through the Senate
- House examinations with a view to University honours; but I lost all
- wish to remain at Cambridge towards the end of the second autumn. I
- was at times quite disgusted with the place, for such reasons as I
- have stated; besides which, my father and mother had made a plan,
- which pleased me greatly, of going for a year on the Continent, in
- which I was to accompany them. My brother Frederick, who was come
- home about this time, was to be of the party likewise, and happy was
- I in the prospect of being again some time in his company; but as an
- opportunity occurred for him to go to South America, with Sir Thomas
- Hardy, with the hope of being made Commander, this professional
- advantage was justly preferred."
-
-Some of the heads at Cambridge as well as Lady Spencer urged him at
-this time to stand for a fellowship, but he gave up the idea, and it
-ended in his joining a new club they had formed--the Eton club. These
-clubs at the Universities are looked upon with no great favour by
-proctors and others who have charge of the morals of the students.
-Their dinners entail great expenses on the members, and they end as
-the first meeting did in his case: "They all made an enormous row, and
-I too, by the bye." He came to spend the Christmas of 1818 at Althorp,
-and closes the year with a succession of parties, Pope Joan, and
-bookbinding. There is one little incident recorded in his journal at
-this time which gives us a perfect insight into his character. One
-might expect that at this age, nineteen, he would be very romantic and
-dreamy, and that we should find many allusions to those topics which
-engross so much of the time of novel-reading youths and maidens
-nowadays. Nothing of the sort. There is an affair of the heart, but
-his conduct in it, with his remarks on it, are worthy of a
-sexagenarian. At a party, which took place at his father's, he dances
-with various young ladies, among the rest a certain Miss A., who, he
-says, "was a great flame of mine two years ago; she is not so pretty
-as I thought her then, but she is a delightful partner. I was again in
-love, but not violently to-night." Two or three days after this, he is
-at another party, and {50} dances with a new set of partners to the
-extent of three quadrilles. Of one of these he thus speaks--"I was
-delighted with Miss B., who is a pleasant unaffected girl, and I am
-doomed to think of her I suppose for two or three days instead of Miss
-A. I was provoked that she would not give me her fan at parting." Was
-it not cool and thoughtful of him to mark out the time such a change
-of sentiment was likely to last? The next page of the journal brings
-the subject before us still more clearly. His mother took him for a
-walk around Althorp, and told him that she was planning a house for
-the parsonage at Brington: "Which they say is to be mine when I am old
-enough; it might be made a most comfortable and even a pretty place,
-and if I live to come to it I can figure to myself some happy years
-there with a fond partner of my joys, if I can meet with a good one.
-'Here then, and with thee, my N.' [Footnote 2] would have been my
-language some time ago; but how my opinions even of such important
-things change with my increasing years. This thought often occurs to
-me, and will I hope prevent me from ever making any engagements which
-cannot be broken, in case my fancy should be altered during the time
-which must elapse before the completion of them." It will be seen,
-further on in the biography, how this affair ended. There is a very
-good lesson in what he has left for young men of his age. If reason
-were allowed to direct the affections, many would be preserved from
-rash steps that embitter their whole lives. It seems amusing to a
-Catholic to find the prospects of a clergyman's happiness so very
-commonplace; but it will be a relief to learn by-and-by how very
-different were his ideas when he became a clergyman, and built and
-dwelt in that identical parsonage that now existed only in his own and
-his mother's mind. He gets a commission in the Northamptonshire
-Yeomanry before returning to Cambridge for Hilary term this year.
-
- [Footnote 2: A quotation, as the reader may remember,
- from _Guy Mannering_.]
-
-Studies seem to him a necessary evil now, and he writes with a kind of
-a sigh of relief when he notes, a few pages on, that he has taken his
-last compulsory lesson in Latin. {51} Balls and parties of all kinds
-are his rage. George and a friend of his had notice of a ball coming
-off in Northampton in a few days, and he heard that his "ladye love"
-would be one of the company, so they determined to be there. He writes
-letters, gets an invitation for his friend, and makes all the
-preparation possible for a week previous. The day comes, it is rainy;
-but, no matter, they pack their best suits into trunks, bring the
-necessary apparatus for making a good appearance, they search the town
-for a conveyance, and at length procure a team for a tandem at
-Jordan's. Off they go, eighteen miles the first stage, then eight
-more; they bait their horses and dine; off again for full sixteen
-miles. He has also to run the risk of a cross-examination from
-whatever members of his family he may happen to meet at the ball, and
-to answer the difficult question, "What brought you here?" It is
-raining in torrents, it is a cold February day; but all difficulties
-appear trifles to the two young adventurers as they urge their team
-over the hills and plains of Northamptonshire. Even Spencer boasts in
-his journal that he is now a first-rate whip. They arrive in high
-glee, forgetting their hardships in the glow of anticipation, and are
-greeted with the bad news, as they jump from their conveyance, that
-the ball has been put off until next month. To make matters worse, the
-bearer of these unfavourable tidings assured them that he wrote to
-them to give this information, and they had an additional motive to
-chagrin in the fact of their having forgotten to ask for their letters
-in the hurry and anxiety to come off. He notes in the journal--"Feb.
-10. We set off again in our tandem for Cambridge, truly _dimissis
-auribus_, but with a resolution to try again on the 5th March." On the
-5th of March they faithfully carried out this resolution. The ball
-took place, but the ladies they were anxious to meet did not come, so
-they only half enjoyed the thing. Spencer took a hack and rode off to
-Althorp to make his appearance at his father's. He was very nervous
-about the prospect of a meeting with his parents, and having to give
-an account of himself. Fortunately the Earl was deep in some measure
-for furthering George's happiness, and looked upon his son's {52}
-arrival as an auspicious visit. Everything thus passed off smoothly,
-and the youngsters arrived in Cambridge with their tandem "without
-accidents, but with two or three narrow escapes." His journal here has
-few incidents out of the ordinary line of his daily life; he learns to
-wrestle with success; so as to bring his antagonist to the ground with
-a dilapidation of the _res vestiaria_. He practises a good deal at
-jumping, and one day, in clearing a hedge, a bramble caught his foot,
-which brought him with violence to the ground; by this mishap his eye
-was ornamented with a scar which gave him some trouble afterwards. He
-also gets a shying horse to ride: this noble charger had a particular
-dislike to carts: he shied at one in the market-place in Cambridge,
-and soon left his rider on the flags. Spencer mounted again, but found
-on his return, after a good ride, that his toe was sprained, and it
-kept him indoors for five or six days. This chapter of accidents was
-amply counterbalanced by the agreeable fact that he had just attended
-his twenty-fifth divinity lecture, and had obtained the certificate
-which was to insure him the imposition of his bishop's hands, whenever
-he might think it convenient to put himself to the trouble of going
-through the ceremony. His course is now coming to an end; he becomes a
-freemason, and rises four degrees in the craft before the end of June.
-A bishop visits Trinity College, and standing in solemn grandeur, with
-a staff of college officers dressed out in their insignia encircling
-him, his lordship delivers a grave expression of his displeasure at
-the stupidity some twenty students gave evidence of during their
-examination. Spencer comes out in the first class once more; his
-brother Frederick is in Cambridge at the time, and as soon as the
-result is known they take coach for London. Here they spend their time
-agreeably between dining at home and abroad, going to Covent Garden,
-and taking sundry lessons from an Italian dancing-master, until July
-5th, when George returns to Cambridge to take out his degree. We will
-hear himself now giving an account of this great event.
-
- "My college labours terminated with the end of the second year's
- college examination for the classes, which took {53} place on the
- 1st of June, 1819. On the 5th of June the result was declared, when,
- as I have before said, I was in the first class again, and second to
- Ollivant. This was rather a disappointment, and gave me some
- reasonable discontent. For the cause of my not being, as I might
- have expected, as far above the others as I had been the year
- before, I saw clearly was a degree of carelessness in my reading,
- especially of one subject that is, the three first sections of
- Newton's Principia, which were appointed for the second year's
- reading, and for which I had not had a taste as for other parts of
- mathematics. However, the time was now past to recover my place, and
- soon the importance of this little matter vanished into nothing. I
- then went to London till the beginning of July, when I returned to
- Cambridge to receive my degree as Master of Arts from the Duke of
- Gloucester, who came in person at the commencement of this year to
- confer the degrees as Chancellor of the University, and to be
- entertained with the best that the colleges could raise to offer him
- in the way of feasts and gaieties. My Cambridge cares and troubles
- were now well-nigh past, and I enjoyed greatly the position I held
- at this commencement as steward of the ball, and a sort of leader of
- the gaieties in the presence of the Royal personages, because I was
- the first in rank of those who received their honorary degrees.
-
- "From this time there has been a complete cessation with me of all
- mathematical studies, and almost of all my classical, to which I
- have hardly ever again referred. For when I again returned to
- regular study, I had nothing in my mind but matters of theology. It
- was at this time, after leaving Cambridge, when I remained
- principally fixed as an inmate in my father's house, till I was
- settled in the country as a clergyman, that I was in the character
- of what is called a young man about town. It was with my dear
- brother Frederick, who was at home at the time, as I before
- observed, that I began in earnest to take a share in the enjoyment
- of London life. I have seen the dangers, the pleasures, and the
- miseries of that career, though all in a mitigated degree, from the
- happy circumstance of my not {54} being left alone to find my way
- through it, as so many are at the age of which I speak. With many,
- no doubt, the life in London is the time for going to the full depth
- of all the evil of which Oxford or Cambridge have given the first
- relish. My father and mother were not like many aged veterans in
- dissipation--whom in the days when the fashionable world was most
- accounted of by me, I have looked on with pity--who to the last of
- their strength keep up what they can of youth, in pursuing still the
- round of the gay parties of one rising generation after another.
- They (my parents) hardly ever went into society away from home. They
- kept a grand establishment, when in London, at Spencer House, as
- well as at Althorp in the winter, when the first society, whether of
- the political, or the literary and scientific, were constantly
- received. It would, therefore, have been unreasonable in me to be
- fond of going out for the sake of society, when, perhaps, none was
- to be met with so interesting as that at home; besides this, my
- father and mother were fond of being surrounded by their family
- circle; and if I or my brothers, when staying with them in London,
- went out from home several times in succession, or many times a
- week, they would generally express some disappointment or
- displeasure; and though I used at the time to be sometimes vexed at
- this kind of restraint, as I was at other restraints on what I might
- have reckoned the liberty of a young man, I used generally, even
- then, to see how preferable my condition was. I now most clearly see
- that the feelings of my parents in this matter were most reasonable,
- and that it was a great blessing to me that I was situated in such
- circumstances. They were desirous that we should see the world, and
- when any amusement was going on, or party was to take place, which
- she thought really worthy of attention, as not being so frivolous as
- the general run of such things, my mother zealously assisted in
- procuring us invitations, and providing us with needful dresses; as,
- for instance, at this time she gave to my brother Frederick and me
- very handsome full-dress uniforms (his being, of course, that of a
- naval officer, mine of the Northamptonshire Yeomanry, in which I
- then held a commission), {55} that we might appear at balls and
- parties where full-dress was required, such as foreign ambassadors
- sometimes gave. These were, she thought, really worth going to on
- account of extraordinary or remarkable characters who came to them,
- whether English or foreigners. Thanks to their regular domestic
- habits, and to the strict authority which my mother still kept over
- us all, while being at Spencer House, I should have found it almost
- as difficult as in a well-regulated college to go into any
- extravagant irregularities, and so I was hardly tempted to do so. My
- feeling habitually was to try and avoid invitations and engagements
- from home, far from seeking them eagerly."
-
-The incidents we are able to add from his journal during the interval
-between leaving Cambridge and going abroad are very meagre, yet, since
-they are characteristic of the man's feelings, a few will be inserted.
-From the journal: "Tuesday, July 20. We got up and went to a dreadful
-formal breakfast at 10½. At one we were dressed, and the company began
-to arrive for a public breakfast, to be given to-day to the people of
-the county in honour of the marriage of Lord Temple. The collation was
-in the greenhouse, and lasted off and on till about 6!" He goes
-through the particulars of the entertainment, the quadrilles and
-country dances, the partners' perfections, &c., &c.; but when Lady
-Buckingham asked himself and his brother to stay a little while
-longer, much as they liked it, they would not do so, because their
-mother desired them to be home at a certain time. One must admire his
-obedience even at the expense of his enjoyment, when he might
-calculate upon the implicit consent of his mother to their acceding to
-such a request, and from such a quarter. Another thing we gather from
-this is, that F. Ignatius, even when a youth, could never bear what
-was formal or ultra-refined; he always liked natural ease and
-unaffected simplicity. "We find him turn away from a blue-stocking,
-and steal three days' thoughts from his "flame" to bestow them on one
-more unaffected and simple. The next incident he chooses to record is,
-that the clergyman of the church he used to attend had gone to spend
-his honeymoon, and that a preacher whom he did not admire took his
-pulpit {56} in his absence. There are some partings of friends, and a
-great variety of amusements, to fill up the pages for a month or so.
-Father Ignatius used to tell a very remarkable anecdote about this
-period of his life; he used it to illustrate the sacrifices that
-people can willingly make for the law of fashion, and how reluctant
-they are to make even the smallest for the love of God. There was a
-great ball to be given somewhere in London; it was to be a most
-splendid affair, full in all particulars of dress and etiquette, and
-one of those that the Countess Spencer thought really worth going to.
-A celebrated _coiffeur_ was imported direct from Paris, and he had a
-peculiar style of hair-dressing that none of that craft in London
-could hope to imitate with success. All the _belles_, marchionesses of
-high degree, who intended figuring at the ball, hired the French
-_coiffeur_. He accepted all the engagements, but found they were so
-many that it would take twenty-four hours' hard work, without a
-moment's repose, to satisfy all. He had to begin at three o'clock in
-the afternoon of the day preceding the ball, and Father Ignatius knew
-one lady who was high upon his list. She had her hair dressed about
-four, and, lest it might be disarranged, slept in her arm-chair, with
-her neck in stocks, for the night. This lady, be it remembered, was no
-foolish young _belle_, but a matron who might have conveniently
-introduced her granddaughter to the circle she attended. "These
-people," he used to say, "laugh at the folly of St. Peter of Alcantara
-and other mortified saints; and we, who aspire to be saints, will
-undergo with difficulty what worldlings cheerfully endure for vanity
-and folly." He often laughed at this, and often laughed others into
-seriousness at his comments on it.
-
-{57}
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Travels On The Continent.
-
-Spencer's thoughts now seemed perpetually fluttering around the
-expectation of going abroad and seeing wonders. This idea comes out at
-most unexpected times in the journal, it forms a parenthesis in
-everything he considers bearing seriously upon his welfare. At one
-time he is disappointed in not having his brother for companion, at
-another he hopes his parents will not consider this trip travelling
-enough for him; he expects, too, that the parental reins will be
-slackened somewhat; and even it crosses his mind, as a kind of remote
-probability, that he may perchance be allowed to take a tour by
-himself. All that was hopeful in these day-dreams was gratified, and
-some of them to an extent that he was very far from imagining at the
-time. The great day did arrive at last; the evening before, the
-different branches of the family came to dine at Wimbledon, where the
-Earl was then staying. They were very serious, as they were going "on
-a formidable expedition next morning." In the morning, the different
-articles of luggage were sent before them on a van; and, after parting
-with Lords Althorp, Lyttelton, and their families, the party started
-for the Continent. It consisted of Lord and Lady Spencer in one
-carriage, George and the physician in another, and the servants in a
-third. They had a courier employed, Luigi Cavani, whose office it was
-to ride ahead of the cavalcade, and provide horses and other
-necessaries at the next stage. They set sail at Dover at six o'clock
-on the evening of the 14th September, and, after what was called a
-favourable passage, arrived in Calais the next morning at half-past
-seven o'clock. One can leave London Bridge nowadays at the time they
-left Dover Harbour, and be in Paris before they landed. {58} He says
-in the autobiography:
-
- "It was on the 15th of September, 1819, that we landed at Calais a
- day most interesting to me, as I then considered, because the first
- of my setting foot in a foreign land, but much more, I now must
- reckon, as being the first on which I trod Catholic ground and
- entered a Catholic church." In the journal he says: "Dr. Wilson and
- I walked about a little (in Calais) to the market-place and the
- church, both which were extraordinary to the greatest degree in my
- eyes. Sept. 16. We breakfasted at eight, and then started on our
- journey. 1st went my father and mother in their carriage with 4
- horses; 2ndly. Dr. Wilson and I in a hired _calèche_ with two
- horses. 3rd. Drewe and the maids, in one with three horses; and
- last, the _fourgon_, with 3. This was the order of march. I was
- amused extremely by the difference of this and our English posting.
- The appearance of the postilions is so new to me, as they crack
- their long whips over their heads, and the little horses with their
- rope harness look so mean. Luigi rode post to order horses and
- manage everything for us, and was always found waiting at every
- relay."
-
-We quote this in full to give an idea of how noblemen travelled in the
-not very olden time. If George was much surprised at the church in
-Calais, his wonder knew no bounds when he entered the Cathedral in
-Amiens, and saw "Mass performed by separate Priests at different
-Altars, and people at each." This is a mystery to Protestants who see
-Catholic rites for the first time. They are taught to look upon true
-worship as consisting in the meaning of some well-written sentences,
-pronounced with emphatic unction, and responded to with some degree of
-fervour. The service, the fine old psalms, anthems, and collects of
-the Prayer-Book, issuing forth in melodious accents from the lips of a
-God-fearing man, is about the highest kind of public worship they can
-have any notion of. The sermon is first with some, second with others;
-but whatever place the peculiar excellence of the preacher, and the
-effects of it on a given occasion, may gain in the heart of an
-individual, it may be taken for granted that the service comes before
-the sermon in the abstract. But service and sermon must be heard, and
-{59} listened to, and understood. With this idea in their minds, and
-accustomed to see the minister assume a manner and mien calculated to
-produce prayerful thoughts in his congregation, they are surprised, if
-not shocked, at the Catholic Mass. They find the Priest hurrying off
-through Latin prayers, and producing breathless attention by his own
-silence; they see him arrayed in unintelligible attire, moving one way
-and another, bowing, genuflecting, standing still, or blessing. They
-scarcely understand a word or gesture, and feel perfectly sure that
-the old woman who beats her breast and counts her beads by the side of
-their staring effrontery is as much in the dark as themselves, if not
-more. They have seen one evidence more of the humbug of Popery, and
-bless God that Cranmer procured them another ritual. It is not our
-object to explain Catholic mysteries, but it may be as well to hint
-that if a stranger to Jerusalem happened to wander to Calvary on the
-great day of the Crucifixion, and believed in the divinity of the
-Victim who hung upon the Cross, he would find more devotion in
-kneeling in silence at His feet, than in listening to the most
-eloquent declamation he could hear about it. Such is the case with the
-Catholic now as then; he knows the same Victim is offered up still,
-and when the great moment arrives in the middle of the Mass, he would
-have everything to be hushed and silent, except the little bell that
-gives him notice of the awful moment. A reason why there should be
-people at the different altars lies in this: that there is the same
-Sacrifice on each, and one may happen to come into the church at a
-time when it would be more convenient to hear Mass at some one place
-than at another. The course of their journey lay through Paris, which
-they entered from St. Denis by Montmartre. They remained some days
-there to see Notre Dame, and Paris from its summit, admire the length
-of the Louvre, and visit Fontainebleau. In the course they took by
-Auxerre, Maison Neuve, Dijon, Poligny, and Morey, in order to cross
-Mount Jura and to see Mont Blanc on their way to Switzerland, they
-have to endure many privations. The inns are bad, the cooking is
-inferior, and they have to undergo discomforts while sleeping in {60}
-the _châlets_ of mountaineers, who were not accustomed to have their
-quiet invaded by such state visits every day. All this they bore
-manfully until they arrived in Geneva, which they find "crammed with
-English." It strikes George as extraordinary that the Genevese should
-have their shops in the top story of their houses. He misses the
-morning service in the Calvinist Church on Sunday; thinks their
-afternoon function very like the Scotch, and sensible. He gives vent
-to his indignation at finding "a number of blackguard fellows playing
-cards and smoking, publicly, at a cafe, whilst there were only twenty
-at church." He is disappointed, therefore, at not finding Geneva the
-devout, religious place he imagined it to be. He sees a few of the
-sights with Dr. Wilson, and they cross the Lago Maggiore in a boat,
-whilst the rest of the company go round it by land. They all meet
-together in Milan; there they find Lord Lucan. He goes to see the
-_Duomo, Brera,_ theatres; and admires the fine streets, shops, &c.,
-and says the Cathedral is unique. He had the pleasure of meeting the
-famous Angelo, afterwards Cardinal, Mai at the Ambrosian Library. He
-went to the Cathedral on Saturday to see _Mass performed_, and was
-disappointed at not hearing the organ. He had, however, quite enough
-of the rite on Sunday, October 17th:--
-
- "At 10½ I went to the _Duomo_, and got into a little gallery over
- the choir, from whence I saw the ceremonies for the anniversary of
- the consecration of the church. There was a procession all round the
- building, with incense burning, and with the Priests singing anthems
- all the time, and a quantity of _other mummery_, the sight of which
- might well have driven Calvin to the extremities which he went to in
- the contrary way. The whole service is always in Latin, so that the
- people may not reap even the smallest benefit from it."
-
-We shall give another extract from the journal, as it shows the state
-of his mind at the time:--
-
- "This day completes the second year of my journal. How quick are
- they flown! those two years which are supposed to be the happiest in
- life. I think any time in life is happy if one knows the secret of
- making {61} it so. I have not learnt it yet, and have had a great
- deal of unhappiness since going to College. But for what? Nothing
- but my own imagination and weaknesses, for everything which
- generally gives happiness I have enjoyed. I have made several
- friends, been successful enough in my College studies, and have
- never wanted anything; but I have a morbid constitution which makes
- me raise phantoms of unhappiness where there is none, and clouds the
- fairest scenes with a veil of melancholy. This must be conquered,
- somehow or other, or I shall be a creature useless to others and
- tormenting to myself."
-
-He feels much distaste at what he terms the dirty style in which an
-Italian gentleman chooses to live, because that gentleman finds
-himself quite comfortable without such furniture and appliances as are
-deemed essential in England. He happened to be a man fond of books,
-and spent his spare time in libraries and academies.
-
-The travellers leave Milan after a fortnight's stay, and proceed
-through Placentia, Parma, Modena, and Bologna. Here the celebrated
-Cardinal Mezzofanti called upon them, and Spencer remarks that the
-only thing worth seeing, as far as he has gone, in Italy, are churches
-and their ornaments. He singled out one of those latter for special
-remark, as we find by the following passage:--
-
- "Oct. 30. At nine o'clock Dr. Wilson's friend, a lawyer, took him
- and me up to a church on the mountain, near the town, famous for a
- picture--done, as they say, by St. Luke! There is a fine arcade to
- it for 2½ miles, and pilgrims go by this to adore this nonsense!"
-
-Their next stay is at Florence, where he had the ill-luck of not
-providing against mosquitoes, who took the liberty of biting him
-heartily the first night he slept there. News reaches him next day
-that a great friend of his at Cambridge, a Mr. Gambler, has obtained a
-fellowship in Trinity. This makes him merry all the evening. They halt
-again for some rest at Perugia. All he says about this classic town
-is, "Before breakfast the Doctor and I saw a gallery of frightful old
-pictures, and other _maraviglia_ of {62} Perugia, and then set off,
-still through mountainous country, to Spoleto. They start for Rome
-next day, they see it fifteen miles off, but he does not seem to have
-had a single spark of enthusiasm as he looks upon the great mistress
-of the world for the first time. Of course Rome, as the capital of
-Christendom, was not likely to stir up his best feelings, when we
-remember the then frame of his religious mind. At all events, cold and
-listless as it might be, he entered Rome on Wednesday, the 10th
-November, 1819. The first thing he and his father with the Doctor did
-on arriving, was to pay a visit to St. Peter's. "We saw it inside and
-out. It was most glorious: but its size from some reason or other
-disappoints me, as it does all strangers; it improves upon
-acquaintance, I fancy." How like Byron's opinion. "Childe Harold:"
-Canto iv. 65:--
-
- "Enter: its grandeur overwhelms thee not;
- And why? it is not lessened: but thy mind,
- Expanded by the Genius of the spot,
- Has grown colossal, and can only find
- A fit abode wherein appear enshrined
- Thy hopes of immortality; and thou
- Shalt one day, if found worthy, so defined,
- See thy God face to face, as thou dost now
- His Holy of Holies, nor be blasted by His brow."
-
-He visits next the Capitoline, the ancient Forum, and the Coliseum; he
-remarks: "this last is quite stupendous, and quite answers my
-expectations. I could not yet understand the plan of the staircases
-and seats. _The Pope has stuck it all over with little chapels_." He
-meets Tom Moore, and spends a day with him and other merry companions
-in Tivoli.
-
-He stayed in Rome this time only a week: for on the 17th November they
-all started for Naples. In passing through Terracina he meets what
-Catholics will recognize as a _svegliarino_. It is customary, when a
-mission is being given in some parts of Italy, for one of the
-missioners to go out, accompanied by a bell, and such companions, lay
-and clerical, as wish to take part in the ceremony, go {63} around the
-village, and preach from a table in three or four different places.
-This has a remarkable effect--the listless loungers who prefer basking
-in the sun, or swallowing maccaroni, to going to the church for the
-sermons, are thus roused so far as to put their heads out of the
-window or door and ask what's the matter. By-and-bye the crowd
-thickens, one looks inquisitively at the other, and when their
-curiosity has been worked upon sufficiently, the missioner gets up,
-and in a fiery zealous discourse puts the fear of God into his
-hearers. Thousands are brought to repentance by these means every
-year. The sermon, of course, is not a polished oration, with points of
-rhetoric to suit the laws of criticism. It is rather broken and
-inflamed, short and telling sentences, and delivered with all that
-unction and impetuosity for which Italians are remarkable; and which
-is anything but intelligible to an Englishman, who is accustomed to
-the measured discourses of a London Churchman. Accordingly we find
-this proceeding thus dotted down in the journal:--"At Terracina we
-were very much _amused_ by a procession of penitents with the Bishop
-of Terracina, and an extravagant sermon preached by a priest from a
-table before the inn." At that time, how little could he foresee that
-he should afterwards give such a mission in Italy himself, and
-further, to the utmost of his power, with equal zeal, though with more
-sedateness, even such an _extravaganza_, as it now appeared to him.
-His style of preaching, however, as we shall hereafter see, was never
-such as to qualify him for an emphatic _svegliarino_.
-
-On November 21 they arrive in Naples, not very pleasantly, as Lady
-Spencer had suffered from the roughness of the road, and was obliged
-to rest a night in Capua, and George was suffering from a soreness in
-his eye. These inconveniences were forgotten for a moment on meeting
-Lord George Quin and his lady, daughter to Lord Spencer. Young Spencer
-was delighted with the children, though they could only speak French
-or Italian. The soreness of his eye keeps him at home next day, which
-he enjoys as he has full opportunity of chatting with his sister, whom
-he {64} seems to have loved very much. He has already alluded to the
-plan his mother formed for his learning to play on the guitar; so we
-shall not quote any of the handsome greetings which the guitar-master
-receives as he comes to inflict the penance of making his pupil tune
-the strings of this romantic instrument.
-
-{65}
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-English Life In Naples.
-
-
-The English who wintered in Naples at the same time with the Spencer
-family seemed to have formed, as they generally do, a special caste.
-They dined together, drove out together, they laughed at the churches,
-and crowded the opera. Their conduct in the latter place did not seem
-to be very edifying to the Neapolitans, who, perhaps, may have thought
-it was an English custom to see a nobleman "tumbling tipsy one night
-into Earl Spencer's box," to the no small disedification of the whole
-family, who were models of sobriety and decorum. The English, by
-forming their own circles in this exclusive manner, and by their
-external deportment on various occasions, keep away the higher and
-more pious grades of society in Catholic cities. The scoffers at
-monachism and priestly rule are freely admitted within the English
-pale, and pay for their hospitality, by catering to the worst
-prejudices of their entertainers, and maligning their neighbours. It
-is very often a repetition of the fable of the sour grapes. For this
-we have ample testimony in the writings of our contemporaries, which
-we will strengthen by quoting Father Ignatius's own words a little
-later. The better Italians sometimes laugh at all this, so that John
-Bull is become a by-word among them for exclusiveness and arrogant,
-selfish pride. The blame lies with the English.
-
-They sometimes found disagreeable incidents from the clashing of
-tastes and customs. On the 8th of December they made the round of the
-churches, but were sorely piqued that the Neapolitans had too much
-respect for our Blessed Lady to open the operas and theatres on the
-evening {66} of the Feast of her Immaculate Conception, so they had to
-content themselves with whist, and discordant notes from George's
-guitar. Another of these crosses occurred a few days after. George
-made a lame excursion to Vesuvius, and when groaning from toothache on
-his return, heard that the father of his bosom friend, Sir Thomas
-Fremantle, senior, was dead. To make matters worse, the remains could
-not be interred in a cemetery, and the _Inglesi_ had to pay the last
-sad rites to their friend in a private garden. On Christmas Day they
-had service at the Consul's, and then they walked about, and had their
-whist for the rest of the day. The old year was danced out at a grand
-quadrille party, of which more hereafter; and George tells us very
-carefully that "a set of us drank in the new year in _diavolone_." How
-remarkable, at every turn, and even by such chance and off-hand
-expressions, to note the contrast between the George Spencer of that
-day and the subject of divine grace he afterwards became!
-
-It is a relief to begin the new year 1820 with recording an exception
-made to the general custom above. George was presented by his father
-to King Ferdinand, and all the _nobili Inglesi_ were invited to join
-in the festivities with which it was customary to usher in the new
-year. For the rest, the evenings and early part of the mornings are
-spent in a continual whirl of amusement, and it would require a page
-to number up the balls and dances he figured in. He visits also the
-Carthusian and Camaldolese monasteries, but makes no comments. He goes
-two or three times to see Vesuvius and the crater and the lava, of
-which he gives a very nice description; after this he is allowed, by
-special favour, to be at the Royal chase: this puts him in great
-humour, for, besides the sport it afforded in the way of getting shots
-at such choice game as wild boars, it gave him an opportunity of
-seeing the "King and all his court, to which nothing can be similar."
-
-Towards the end of January, Lord and Lady Spencer determined on
-returning to England, and offered to leave George to travel through
-the sights of Southern Italy. He perceives, in a few days, the tokens
-of an inclination in his {67} parents to have his company, and goes
-straightway to the Honourable Augustus Barrington, who was to be his
-fellow-traveller, and breaks off the plan they had formed. It was only
-after very pressing instances from his father and mother that he could
-be persuaded to take up the first plan anew. A portion of his
-autobiography will throw some light upon many things we have only just
-touched upon, and, therefore, it is better to quote it here, though it
-might come in more opportunely at the conclusion of his first tour
-abroad.
-
- "It is extraordinary, indeed, that I should have remained a whole
- year on the Continent and never once have seriously taken into
- consideration the subject of the Catholic religion. Such was the
- case; and I returned to England, as far as I can remember, without
- one doubt having crossed my mind whether this was the true religion
- or not. ...
-
- And now for a little recollection of the state of my mind during
- this period of travelling, and its moral effects upon me. During all
- this time I continued, thank God, wholly convinced that a course of
- iniquity would not answer; and had I met with any among the young
- men, my associates, who would have dared to speak out fully in
- favour of morality, I should, I believe, have been ready to agree
- with him. But where were such to be found? I had now grown so far
- more independent of the world, that I had not open assaults to bear
- continually against for not running with the rest. Many of the young
- men who maintained their character as free licentious livers, yet
- professed some degree of moderation and restraint in their
- indulgences. Some I remember, who professed to keep clear of immoral
- practices, and no doubt their sincerity in this might be depended
- on; for where no credit but dishonour would be the reward of steady
- conduct, there was no temptation to pretend to it falsely. But I
- remember now but one who dared to allude in my hearing--and that was
- but once, I think, in private--to the consequence of this sin in
- another world, and to maintain that it was better to avoid it for
- fear of punishment hereafter. While, then, I still knew that the way
- of evil was all wrong, and would have been most happy if the fashion
- of wickedness could have been at {68} an end; and though I never
- once, as far as I know, was the first to introduce immodest
- conversation, and hardly ever heard it introduced by others without
- inward repugnance, and seldom joined in it; yet I never dared
- declare how much I hated it, and was still in the most awful and
- desperate state of wishing I had been like the worst, sooner than be
- thus subject to the torment of being put to shame before bold
- profligates. While with my parents, I have before said, I was under
- good surveillance, and could not think of being detected by them in
- any evil. How shall I ever be thankful enough for all this? My
- father's character was such that though many who were often in his
- company were men whom I have known, when out of it, to delight in
- most abominable things, I knew of none who ever dared in his sight
- to do more than covertly allude to them. I was therefore happy in
- this respect whenever he was near; but when once more left to
- myself, I again returned to those fearful deliberations of which I
- have before spoken of, as it were, selling myself, for a time at
- least, to work wickedness without restraint. It may be well
- conceived how miserably fallen and corrupt must have been my heart
- when such purposes were entertained within it; and if, partly
- through some remains of the holy impressions of my childhood, which
- still operated on my poor, degraded heart as a kind of habit not yet
- quite worn off; partly by a sense of the shame and misery I should
- have before my family and some more whom I knew in the world, who
- would be themselves most afflicted if they heard of my fall from the
- good dispositions which they had known in me; partly from a fear of
- ridicule, even from the profligate, if, after all, I was to fell;
- partly by the wonderful providence of God, which (I acknowledge)
- most wisely and most tenderly, yet strongly interposed at times to
- baffle the madness of my designs when about to be accomplished--if,
- I say, thus I have been in a degree preserved, God knows I have no
- credit due to me: God knows that from my heart I take only shame and
- confusion of face to myself in the remembrance, of my very
- preservation. Towards the latter part of my stay abroad, I began to
- be in some way weary of this uncertain state of mind. I {69} was
- always expecting to take Orders when I should reach the age; and as
- I knew that then I should not be expected by the world to join in
- its fashionable vices, and should even suffer in public estimation
- if I did, my thoughts began to be rather better directed, and I took
- pains from time to time to overcome some of the evil that was in
- me."
-
- "It is wonderful that any good disposition should have lived within
- me, when every remembrance of religion seems to have been put out of
- my mind. I now could hardly understand how this should have indeed
- been the case, if I had not a clear remembrance of certain
- circumstances which plainly show what was the state of my mind. On
- the 27th January, 1820, I went up Mount Vesuvius with Dr. Wilson,
- when, as we were looking into the crater of the volcano, a discharge
- of red-hot stones took place. I heard them whistle by me as they
- ascended, and though it was of no use to attempt to get out of the
- way, I hurried back a few steps by a natural impulse, and
- immediately saw a lump of red-hot stuff twice the size of one's head
- fall on the spot where I had been standing just before. We
- immediately ran down the side of the mountain, and reached a place
- about a quarter of a mile distant from the mouth of the crater, from
- whence we could see the upper cone of the mountain. Just then a
- grand explosion took place, which shook the whole mountain, and a
- vast quantity of these masses of fiery red stuff was spouted out
- from the crater, which in its return appeared entirely to cover the
- whole space over which we had been running five minutes before. Here
- was an evident escape which, in a mind possessed with any religion
- at all, could not fail of awakening some serious reflections. Alas!
- I never thought of the abyss into which I must have fallen had not
- the good angel, who watched and guided me through so many perils
- which I thought not of, then preserved me. When I came down in the
- evening to Naples, the only effect was that I was pleased and vain
- at having a good adventure to relate, and showing off a spirit of
- bravery and indifference, when some blamed me for my rashness.
-
- "Another circumstance I may record to show how free from all
- religious fear my mind was. I have before noticed {70} the fits of
- melancholy which became habitual to me during the last part of my
- Cambridge life. These came, I think, to their greatest height in the
- last half of the time I spent at Naples. The interesting excitement
- of our journey, the company of my sister when I first came to
- Naples, and the gaieties of which I had my fill there, and which at
- first had all the charm of novelty, kept me from much thought of any
- kind, and I enjoyed the balls, the concerts, the grand operas, the
- enchanting rides of Naples, for a month or six weeks, almost without
- a cloud. At least I used always to count that my brightest period in
- the way of enjoyments. Unhappy those who have health and spirits and
- talents to enable them to please and be pleased long together in
- such a round of vanity! To my great vexation I found myself again
- attacked with my old enemy, melancholy; do what I would, I could not
- drive away those fits of gloom. They were caused partly by the
- effect on my health of too much good living, and bad hours; but the
- chief cause was the intrinsic worthlessness of all such pleasure,
- which will discover itself sooner or later to every one even of its
- most devoted lovers, and which happily showed itself to me sooner
- than others. Oh! what frivolous causes did my happiness then seem to
- depend on! Not dancing to my satisfaction in one quadrille, fancying
- that some of my favourite partners were tired of my conversation,
- and that the nonsense of some other silly youth pleased her better,
- was enough to turn what I flattered myself was about to be a bright
- and pleasant evening into gloom and sadness. Sometimes, without an
- assignable cause, my spirits failed, as at others an equally
- frivolous reason would remove my clouds and make me bright again;
- but gradually the gloomy moods gained ground, and grew more dark and
- tedious. I remember comparing notes with another young man, who was
- like me a victim of the dumps, and finding some satisfaction in the
- sympathy of a fellow-sufferer, who, with a smile at the absurdity of
- such feelings, of which he was well sensible while he avowed them,
- exactly described to me my state of mind when he said that under
- them he fancied himself the most unfortunate of mankind, and would
- willingly have {71} changed places with the most despicable and
- wretched of men, not to say with any animal almost. Poor blind fools
- that we were! We could not between us suggest the way to be happy
- which is open to all.
-
- "I remember well coming home one night from a ball, which, by my
- journal, I find to be on the 25th January, when, as I wrote at that
- time, I was more miserable than ever I was in that way. I went to
- bed, and heard a noise like a creak in the ceiling of my room. I
- felt a wish that it would break through and crush me. How I used to
- wish at that time I had the sort of bold, firm heart which appeared
- through some of the young manly faces which I used daily to meet--to
- whom low spirits was a thing unknown. I knew not that I was
- quarrelling with the most choice of God's mercies to me, without
- which I should probably have been irrevocably lost. I still, to this
- day, am used to the visits of my feelings of dejection, but, thank
- God, I know better how to receive them; and, far from wishing them
- away, I rather fear their departure, and desire they may never leave
- me. For if I have within me one bright, heavenly desire, I owe it to
- these feelings, which first poisoned my pleasure in the world, and
- drew me at length to seek for it elsewhere, and now I wish never to
- have peace within my breast while one desire lives there for
- anything but God.
-
- "Yet that thought of wishing even to be crushed, that I might escape
- from my miserable feelings, shows how far I was at that time from
- knowing how great a cause for sorrow I really had in the state of my
- soul--which, if I had known it, must have driven away all imaginary
- griefs--nor from what quarter I should seek for happiness; and it is
- a wonder that it took so long a time, and so many repetitions of the
- same lesson, before I began to correspond with the gracious purpose
- of my Heavenly Teacher; of Him who was thus correcting me, that I
- might at length love Him, and love Him willingly. How was it that I
- could have lived so long without being awakened to one sentiment of
- religious fear? ...
-
- "But now we must return to the Catholic Faith. The main object of
- this memoir being to trace the steps of my {72} progress towards
- Catholicity, it would be expected that the period of my residence
- for a whole year in Catholic countries must be most interesting.
- Indeed it is wonderful that this year of my life should have been,
- as it appears to me to have been, quite neutral in its effects. I
- certainly made no progress towards my present faith. This would not
- be extraordinary; for how many Protestants by their travels abroad
- not only make no progress towards Catholicity, but are made its
- violent enemies. But, undoubtedly, this was the effect produced on
- me. It seems that at this time I was under the influence of
- altogether other objects and notions from any connected with
- religion. What I sought was, first, my own pleasure--next, only
- general information; what I was chiefly controlled by was human
- respect. Having no care at all about religion in any form, the
- question of which was the right form never troubled me, and so the
- observations which I could not help making on the Catholic religious
- practices which I saw, were very superficial. It might be
- interesting to transcribe a few passages from my journal which show
- what was my mind.
-
- "It is remarkable how easily one's mind takes in and rests contented
- in the belief of false and prejudicial representations of things. I
- never had had much pains taken with me to set me against the
- Catholic religion; but though I knew nothing of what it was, I
- rested in the conviction that it was full of superstition, and, in
- fact, as good as no religion at all. I never opened my mind all the
- time I was abroad to the admission of any idea but this; and so I
- looked on all the Catholic ceremonies which I saw, in this perverted
- light. I did not fall in the way of anyone to set me right; for I
- was contented to go on in the stream of the English society with
- which almost all the towns in Italy were filled, and if any really
- zealous exemplary Catholics are sometimes mingled with them, they do
- not find it available or prudent to introduce the mention of
- religion; while there will be always some who have no objection to
- seek to please them by encouraging their prejudices, which they do
- effectually by telling stories--some true, perhaps, some obviously
- false--of the Priests and Religious. Such a person, {73} who bore
- the title of Abbate, and therefore must have been professedly a true
- Catholic, we fell in with at Milan; he assisted my father in his
- search after curious books. I remember some of his conversations,
- and I find notice in my journal of his dining with us, and being
- 'very amusing in some stories about the Catholic processions.' The
- impression on my mind was that the whole system of religion which we
- saw was mere formality, people being taught to content themselves
- with fulfilling some external rules, and the clergy making it their
- business to keep them in the dark. I took little notice of religious
- matters till we entered Italy. There Milan was the first town we
- stopped at. On the Sunday after our arrival was the anniversary of
- the consecration of the church. I saw the ceremonies in the
- Cathedral, the very place where St. Augustine's heart was moved and
- his conversion begun, by hearing the strains of holy music, perhaps
- the same which I then heard. But very different was the effect on
- me; here are the wise remarks inserted in my journal." [Footnote 3]
-
- [Footnote 3: The passage is given in page 60.]
-
-The autobiography breaks off abruptly here; but in order to fit the
-remarks to the events which they concern, we have kept one or two
-paragraphs in reserve for another place.
-
-{74}
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-Continuation Of His Travels.
-
-After staying about three months in Naples, Spencer sets out with
-Barrington, to travel through Sicily, on the 27th February. The voyage
-was very smooth until they came to Stromboli, and passed near the cave
-of AEolus, who "puffed at them accordingly," and delayed their landing
-at Messina until March 2. He goes to a ceremony in the cathedral
-there, and says, "the priests seem nourishing and very numerous here."
-On his way to Mount Etna he remarks, with a kind of incredulous air,
-that he went to see the lions of the five chestnuts and the bridge,
-which has the same legend attached to its origin as the Devil's Bridge
-in Wales, "dogs being, in both cases, sent over first to pay the
-forfeit for having built it." [Footnote 4]
-
- [Footnote 4: The most circumstantial legend bearing upon the remark
- in the text is that about the Bridge of Rimini. Here there was a
- fearful rapid, without a stone within the distance of 70 miles that
- was available for building purposes. The bridge-builder of the town
- may or may not have had the contract; but, at all events, he set
- down in a confused state of mind as to how it might be done. The
- devil appeared to him and contracted for the building of the bridge
- on these easy terms--getting the first that crossed it for his own.
- The bargain was struck, and in the twinkling of an eye some
- thousands of infernal imps were scampering down the mountains with a
- gigantic stone on the shoulder of each. One-third of them were quite
- sufficient, and the arch-fiend who presided over the building cried
- out, that no more were wanted: when each devil threw down his load
- where he happened to be when the master's yell reached his ears.
- This is said to account for the rocks one sees strewn about near
- this bridge. The bridge itself is a circle, and was built in one
- night, and indeed some kind of infernal machine would seem necessary
- to remove the blocks of stone of which it is composed. Now came the
- trial. The Christian builder of bridges had no fancy for going to
- hell, and he was too charitable to send anyone else there. He
- bethought him of an expedient, and calling out his dog he took a
- small loaf, and threw it across the bridge with all his might. The
- dog, of course, ran after it. Whereupon the devil seized him, and in
- a rage flung him up to somewhere near the moon, and the dog falling
- from this height upon the bridge, made a hole in its only arch which
- cannot be filled up to this day. The legend embodies at least a
- specimen of the Catholic instinct: viz., the anxiety of the devil
- for our destruction, and how all hell thinks it cheap to turn out
- for a day's hard labour in the hopes of gaining one single soul.]
-
-{75}
-
-He chiefly lodges in convents during his rambles through Sicily, the
-inns being so very bad that they drive travellers away. He and his
-companion sleep in different convents, and are very well treated; but
-that scarcely evokes a word of thanks. Poor monks! they have a bad
-name in Protestant nations, and what would be praiseworthy in others
-is only an equivocal quality in them. This is very sad; that men who
-have bid farewell to the world should, on that very account, be
-considered hardly entitled to the bare rights of human beings. Yet go
-on, poor souls, in your vocation; your Master before you received the
-same treatment from the world, and you are not greater than He.
-Spencer meets one or two monks whom he likes pretty well--one was the
-superior of the Carmelites at Grirgenti. The rest he calls "stupid
-friars," "lazy monks," and so forth, according to the tone of mind he
-happens to be in. In one monastery they shut the door of the room
-allowed them in the face of one of the brethren, because, forsooth,
-they were "bored by visits from the monks." His journey does not
-always lie through convents, and he meets others who are not monks;
-one of these was a wine-merchant at Marsala, a native of England. It
-seems the pair of tourists were received as handsomely by their
-countryman as they had been by the "stupid friars," for he is thus
-described in the journal: "He seems to think himself commissioned to
-keep up the English character in a strange land, for he is a John Bull
-in caricature in his manner." We are also told, a little lower down,
-that he is very hospitable to all English who pass by that way. They
-had the novelty of seeing an {76} Italian Good Friday in Marsala; the
-impression is thus noted:
-
- "Friday, Mar. 31.--This was Good Friday. The first, and I hope the
- last, I shall spend without going to church; not that I should not
- like to be abroad another year. We were reminded of the day by
- quantities of groups representing the Passion and Crucifixion,
- almost as large as life, carried about on men's shoulders, which,
- absurd as they are, seemed to make an impression on the populace.
- Men dressed in black accompanied them, with crowns of thorns and
- crosses. It strikes me as direct idolatry, nearly. The gentry were
- all in mourning, and the sentinels had their muskets with the
- muzzles inverted. We all three (Sir H. Willoughby accompanied
- Barrington and Spencer) took a walk up to the top of Monte di
- Trapani, the ancient Eryx, where is a town of the same name. We
- examined what was to be seen there, and came down again to dinner.
- We dined at 6½, and had _some meat_, which we have not been able to
- get for some days, it being Passion Week." He spent Easter Sunday in
- Palermo, and here are his comments on its observance:
-
- "Sunday, April 2, Easter-day.--We set off from Ahamo about 7¼. I
- walked on for an hour, and then rode forward all the way to
- Monreale, where I stopped an hour till the others came up. We then
- proceeded together to Palermo. In the villages we passed, the people
- were all out in their best clothes, which was a very pretty sight.
- Bells were clattering everywhere, and _feux de joie_ were fired in
- several villages as we passed, with a row of little tubes loaded
- with gunpowder, in the market-places, and processions went about of
- people in fancy dresses with flags and drums. This religion is most
- extraordinary. It strikes me as impious; but I suppose it takes
- possession of the common people sooner than a sensible one."
-
-He completed the tour of the island by arriving in Messina, after a
-most successful attempt to see Mount Etna, on the 14th of April. They
-left Sicily for Reggio in a boat, and arrived there "with a good
-ducking." They both went to visit Scylla, which was guarded as a
-citadel by armed peasants. The sturdy yeomen refused to admit them,
-whereupon George, with true English curiosity, climbed up the wall to
-{77} get a peep at the sea, and perhaps inside. Scarcely had he got
-half-way up when he was taken prisoner by the sentinel. He was
-accordingly invited to visit the interior of the castle, and had to
-gaze at the bleak walls of its keep for an hour, until Willoughby
-procured his release from the commandant. They travelled on, and
-George does not seem to be satisfied with the people of Salerno, whom
-he designates as "surly and gothic." He heard his companions had to
-get an escort of gendarmes, to save them from robbers, all along here.
-Returns to Naples, April 26, delighted at being safe in life and limb;
-he goes to the old lodgings to a party, and reflects thus on his
-return: "I came home about one, rather sad with seeing the
-representation of what I had enjoyed in the winter--but all the people
-changed. _Gaiety after all does not pay_." This last sentence is not
-underlined by Spencer himself. It is done to point a moral that may be
-necessary for a certain class of persons. It is often supposed that
-monks, and the like people, paint the world blacker than it is in
-reality, and that it is a kind of morose sourness of disposition that
-makes recluses cry down the enjoyments of those outside convent-walls.
-This line will perhaps defend F. Ignatius from such an imputation. He
-wrote that after the pure natural enjoyment of scenery had been
-compared with the excitement of a ball-room; if he thought, in his
-wildness, that gaiety did not pay, no wonder that his opinion was
-confirmed in the quiet tameness of his after-life. A passage from the
-autobiography, omitted above, comes in here opportunely. He was
-speaking of the absence of the fear of God from his miserable mind:--
-
- "This was almost true concerning the entire period. One occasion I
- will mention when I was impressed with some shame at my wretched
- state. While I was making the tour of Sicily, my father and mother
- left Naples in the _Revolutionnaire_, a fine frigate which had been
- placed at their disposal, and by which they went to Marseilles, to
- shorten their land journey homewards. When I returned to Naples I
- found a long letter from my father, full of kindness and affection
- for me, in which he explained to me his wishes as to the course of
- my journey home. This letter I believe I {78} have not kept, but I
- remember in it a passage nearly as follows: 'As to your conduct, my
- dear George, I need not tell you how important it is for your future
- happiness and character that you should keep yourself from all evil;
- especially considering the sacred profession for which you are
- intended. But, on this subject, I have no wish concerning you but to
- hear that you continue to be what you have hitherto been.' 'Ah!'
- thought I to myself, 'how horrible is the difference between what I
- am and what this sentence represents me.' But worldly shame was yet
- more powerful in me than godly shame, and this salutary impression
- did not produce one good resolution."
-
-On May 3rd, 1820, he came to Rome a second time. His first visit this
-time also was to St. Peter's, which, he says, "looked more superb to
-me than ever." He attended Cardinal Litta's funeral from curiosity,
-and has no remark about it worth extracting. There are two passages in
-the journal relating to the ceremonies of Ascension Thursday and
-Corpus Christi, which may be interesting as being indicative of his
-notions of Catholic ritual:--
-
- "Thursday, May 11.--Got up early, and wrote till breakfast. At 9½
- went off with Barrington and Ford to St. John of Lateran, where
- there were great ceremonies to take place for the Ascension Day. The
- old Pope was there, and was carried round the church blessing, with
- other mummeries. It was a fine sight when he knelt down and prayed
- (or was supposed to do so) in the middle of the church, with all the
- Cardinals behind him. Now this goes for nothing in comparison to
- what it must have been when the Pope was really considered
- infallible (_sic_). We then all went out of the church to receive
- the blessing, from the principal window in the façade. The Pope came
- to this in his chair, and performed the spreading of his hands very
- becomingly. The whole thing was too protracted, perhaps, to be as
- striking as it should; but I was not as disappointed as I expected
- to be. The cannonry of St. Angelo and the band certainly gave
- effect; and the crowd of people on the space before the church was a
- scene to look at."
-
-{79}
-
- "Thursday, June 1.--To-day is the feast of Corpus Domini, one of the
- greatest in the Catholic Church; so at eight we went, having
- breakfasted [a fact, by the bye, he seldom omits to mention], to St.
- Peter's, to see the _funzioni_, which are very grand on this
- occasion. There was a great procession round the _cortile_--first of
- the religious orders, about 450 monks only; and the boys of St.
- Michael's Hospital, of the Collegio Romano, &c. Then came curates,
- and priests temporal and secular, prelates, and monsignores, the
- ensigns or canopies of the seven basilicas with their chapters, and
- the priests belonging to them following; next came bishops, then
- cardinals, and then the Pope, carried on four men's shoulders. He
- was packed up on the top of the stand with his head out alone. He
- seemed more dead than alive, and worse than on May 11 at S.
- Giovanni's. The group of people about him, with their robes and
- splendid mitres, made a very brilliant sight. The former part of the
- procession rather showed the decadence of the Church from a great
- height, than its present glory. After the Pope came the _guardia
- nobile_, and other soldiers, in splendid uniforms. After the
- procession there were functions in the Church, and a benediction
- from the Altar, and which I did not see so well. St. Peter's never
- showed so well as with a crowd of people in it, when one may
- estimate its dimensions from the comparison of their littleness."
-
-This is a fair specimen of how a candid, prejudiced Protestant stares
-at Catholic services. He puts down as undisputed that all is absurd
-before he goes, and if the Man of Sin himself, the poor Pope, is in
-the middle of it, it rises to the very highest pitch of abomination. A
-man who could consider holiday attire and exultation impious on Easter
-Sunday, and the mourning and fasting and processions of Good Friday
-something worse, cannot be very well qualified to comprehend the
-Ascension and Corpus Christi in Rome. Catholics _do_ believe in the
-authority of the Pope and the power of the Keys, and also in the Real
-Presence; will it not follow, as a natural conclusion, that the four
-quarters of the globe should get its spiritual Father's blessing one
-day in the year, and that we should try to find out the best way of
-honouring our Incarnate God in the Blessed Sacrament? {80} But
-consistency is not a gift one finds among Protestants, especially when
-they give their opinion on what they think too absurd to try to
-understand. They must admit the Catholic ceremonial is imposing; but
-then it is only to quarrel with it for being so. They can understand
-pageantry and pomp in honouring an earthly monarch; but does it occur
-to them that every best gift is from above, and that the King of kings
-should be honoured with every circumstance of splendour and oblation a
-creature can offer?
-
-One or two of the salient points of his character come out in a few
-extracts we shall produce from the journal now. He says, on leaving
-Rome--"How delightful, and yet how melancholy, was my walk about those
-dear rooms at the Vatican; after next Thursday I believe I am never to
-see them again, so farewell to them now." This illustrates his better
-nature; he was very affectionate, and could love whatever was really
-worth loving; he was not very demonstrative of this feeling, but when
-it came to leave-taking, he had to give vent to it. A peculiar caste
-of his mind was to listen to every proposition, and weigh the reasons
-adduced to support it. If they were unanswerable, he at once admitted
-it, and, if possible, tested it by experience. This was the great key
-to his conversion and subsequent life. In conversation, perhaps, with
-a medical friend, he was told that it was far the best way, whilst on
-the move in travelling, neither to eat nor drink. This was supported
-by reasons drawn from the digestive principles, and so forth. He
-thought it was well proved, and could find no valid objection against
-it, so he determined to try it, and travelled from Rome to Sienna
-without tasting a morsel for forty-two hours, and says in his
-journal--"It is much the best way in travelling." In Florence we have
-other tokens of the regret with which he parts from his friends; and
-in the same page a very different feeling on parting with some
-Franciscans. These "entertained him uncommonly well for mendicants,"
-and showed him all their treasures of art and piety with the greatest
-kindness; yet it did not prevent him calling them "lazy old monks"
-when they let him away at three o'clock in the morning.
-
-{81}
-
-He walks about the country a good deal, and finds it pleasant, "as the
-common people here are much more conversable than ours." This striking
-difference between a Catholic and a Protestant peasantry is patent to
-the most superficial observer. The poor Irish, French, or Italian
-labourer, who can neither read nor write, is quite at his ease with
-the merchant or the noble. He will have his joke and his laugh, very
-often at the expense of his superior, and never outstep the bounds of
-due respect. He is light-hearted and gay everywhere, and the exact
-opposite of the English navvy.
-
-The real cause of the difference is the want of religion in the poor
-Briton. The Catholic religion inculcates humility on the great. It
-brings the Lord of the Manor and his servant to the same confessional
-and the same altar: they may be as far asunder as pole from pole
-outside the church, but inside it they are both on a level. The works
-of mercy are insisted on, and high-born ladies are most frequently the
-ministering angels of the poor man's sick-bed, and the instructors of
-his children, and nurses of his orphans. "Blessed are the poor" is not
-a dead letter in Catholic theology, and until it be, and that poverty
-becomes felony, the same ease and happiness will pervade the peasantry
-of Catholic countries, which now gives them such grace and beauty. The
-doctrine of self-worship and money-adoration can never fuse races;
-there is a wide wide chasm between the upper and the lower orders in
-Protestant countries, which no amount of mechanics' lectures, and
-patronizing condescension, can bridge over, as long as the germs of
-the worldly system remain rooted in the education and manners of the
-people. Of course, these remarks do not apply to the general state of
-things, for there is oppression in Catholic countries as well as
-elsewhere; they simply concern the working of a Christian principle,
-if it get fair play.
-
-He visits Pisa, Lucca, Carrara, Sestri, and stops at Genoa. A bit of
-the Protestant breaks out here. "We went to see that foolish _sacro
-catino_ at the Cathedral, which I have no doubt is glass instead of
-emerald." He says {82} again: "It makes me rather onked to be alone
-now, though sometimes I wish to be so. But the only solitude that is
-disagreeable is among numbers in a large town. The solitude of the
-Apennines, and such places as last night's habitation, is a pleasure
-to me." Now one _vetturino_ hands him over "to another more blackguard
-than himself" on his way to Bologna, where he has a very satisfactory
-meeting with Mezzofanti once more. Off he starts through Ferrara,
-Rovigo, and Padua, for Venice; he visits the Piazza S. Marco, and is
-told complacently by a French doctor, who proved to be a terrible bore
-by-and-by, that it is nothing to the Palais Royal. He visits Mantua on
-a pilgrimage to Virgil's birthplace, and says of a sight he saw by
-accident: "I was amused by a figure of S. Zeno, just like a smiling
-Otaheitan idol of the largest dimensions, which is the great protector
-of the town." It is not hard to tell which way his devotion lay.
-Spencer and a Mr. Lefevre, who was now his travelling companion, go to
-a _villegiatura_ here, and are splendidly entertained for a couple of
-days. They travel on for Germany through the Tyrol; from Verona to
-Riva they chiefly travel by the Lago di Garda, and the only incidents
-he chooses to record, until they come to "dem goldenen Adler" (the
-golden Eagle) at Brixen, are the cicerone's opinions of Catullus, whom
-that well-informed individual thought to have been a brigand chief.
-They had to bring the bill of fare before the police in Riva, but were
-not successful in getting a single charge diminished; he enjoyed a
-good deal of idyllic life along here, and did not seem to think much
-_pro_ or _con_ of the little town of Trent, though one should fancy he
-would say something, if it were only a few angry words about the Great
-Council.
-
-He considers the Germans more honest than the Italians, and was
-inclined to admire their solidity and steadiness; but his driver fell
-asleep on their way to Innspruck, and let the reins fall on the
-horse's neck when descending a steep, and he veers round to the
-opinion that if they were a little livelier, it would be much better.
-On his way through Bavaria to Munich he thinks the country very like
-England--well cultivated and flourishing. "The costumes extraordinary,
-{83} but not so pretty as the Tyrolese. The people themselves, both
-men and women, are the ugliest race I ever saw." They had letters of
-introduction to Prince Loewenstein and Count Peppenheim, two
-aides-de-camp of the King of Bavaria; they were invited to a royal
-_chasse_. Perhaps it is as well to give the whole account from the
-Journal, as it conveys an idea of German sports too fine to be
-overlooked.
-
- "Monday, Aug. 21.--At 4½ this morning we started for the _chasse_ in
-the mountains about three leagues off. At the end of two leagues we
- were stopped and obliged to walk, as the road became too narrow for
- the King to pass us, in case we had been in the way when he came up.
-So we walked the rest till we came to the toils where Loewenstein
- received us. The _chasse_ was in a deep valley, shut in on the sides
-by precipitous rocks: into this they had tracked about 80 or 90 head
- of deer, and shut them in by toils at both ends; then little green
- enclosures were made for the guns to be posted in. We had one of
- these guns given us in conjunction with other spectators, the
- shooter who was to have been there not having arrived. Before the
- line was a broad course of a torrent, and beyond that was a wood
- into which they had forced the game, and from which they drove it
- again with dogs, and even into the way of the guns. This went on for
- 4 or 5 hours, during which they cannonaded very quick, but with
- little effect, for I never saw a much greater proportion of misses.
- The result was about 70 head of deer. We were much surprised in the
- middle of the time at seeing Devon walk up. He came from Salzburg
- for the purpose of this _chasse_, and stayed with us through it.
- After it we were standing near the place where the King was counting
- out the game, when Peppenheim presented us to him, and he asked us
- to dine at Berchtesgaden. As our carriage was so far off, we were
- obliged to be carried as we could, and I was taken in by
- Loewenstein, who is, by the bye, about the fattest man in Bavaria.
- We dressed directly, both ourselves and Devon, who had nothing here;
- and even so we were late for dinner. However, the King was so
- gracious and good-humoured that it all went off capitally. It was an
- interesting dinner for the faces that {84} we saw. Eugene
- Beauharnais, Prince Schwartzenberg, Reichenbach, engineer, Maréehal
- Wrede, and about 16 more, were there. We stayed till about 6, and
- then came home.
-
- "Tuesday, Aug. 22.--To-day we again followed the motions of the
- Court. Devon came over with horses from Hallein, where he had
- returned last night; and so we went about comfortably.
- Schwartzenberg took us to a famous machine of Mr. Reichenbach's,
- without the King. This machine is employed to raise the salt water,
- which is brought from the mines here, and convey it over the
- mountains to Reichenhall, about 3 leagues distant, where is a
- manufactory for extracting the salt. The reason of this is, that
- there is not enough wood for consumption here. It is a vast
- forcing-pump, which is worked by fresh water from a height of 400
- feet, and raises the salt water 1,200. This water is in the
- proportion of 53 to 44 heavier than fresh water. I did not
- understand the whole explanation, being in German, but I admired the
- machine, which works in a room so quietly as actually not to be
- perceptible from the noise, except a little splashing. After this we
- came to a miserable dinner at the inn, which was too full to attend
- to us. At 1½, about, we started again to a romantic lake, König See,
- where another scene of this royal drama was to be enacted. The King
- came, with his whole party, an hour after us, and we were invited by
- Loewenstein into his royal boat, which was rowed by 11 men and one
- pretty damsel. "We went all down the lake, with several other boats
- full following, one of which had 4 small cannons, which they
- constantly discharged for the echo. The thing we came though for
- was, two artificial cascades from the top of the mountains, one in
- the course of a small torrent, which had been stopped above and made
- into a lake, full of large pieces of timber, which were precipitated
- all at once with surprising effect. The other was a dry cascade,
- down which two heaps of timber were discharged, like the launching
- of a ship from an inclined plane, the smallest of which, as I could
- judge from below, was twice the height of a man, and four times the
- length at least. The finest part of this was the prodigious {85}
- splashing at the bottom, which resembled, in appearance and sound, a
- line of cannonading. By way of sport, this is the most superb
- child-amusement one could conceive. We rowed back in the same boat,
- and disembarked about sunset. We proceeded directly to a salt-mine,
- without the King, where was to be an illumination. We all were
- decked out in miners' habits, and embarked, in little carts drawn by
- two men, down a shaft 1,800 feet long, lighted by candles all the
- way, ourselves having one each, like white penitents. At the end of
- this we were surprised by entering a large chamber, perhaps 200
- yards round, with a gallery at the top; the whole was surrounded by
- festoons of lamps, and below it was a rich star of fire, which
- showed the depth of the mine off to great advantage. A band of music
- was playing, and mines were exploded at the bottom with really
- tremendous noise. Altogether, this scene pleased me more than any I
- have seen here, or perhaps anywhere.
-
- "Wednesday, August 23.--At 5 we started in the carriage, with
- Devon's servant, for the second _chasse_ (of chamois); we found
- ourselves among a long train of other carriages also going there. We
- passed through the _chasse_ of Monday, and went about 3 miles
- further on foot. We found that of 60 chamois which had been
- collected in the toils, 40 had escaped; so the _chasse_ was but of
- about an hour's duration before they were all killed. The stands of
- shooters were confined, so we were made to climb up a little
- mountain, or rather a large rock, from which we had an excellent
- view of everything. The scenery was superb and wild. Before, behind,
- and everywhere, were immense mountains of solid and shagged rock,
- 9,000 feet high above the sea, with nothing like vegetation but
- patches of stunted firs, which did not, even so, reach halfway up
- their height, and looked like moss. It made a contrast with the
- tameness of the _chasse_, where about 16 chamois were driven about
- and killed out of little boxes, in an enclosure of a few acres. It
- was not so fine in that respect as the deer _chasse_. The King asked
- us again to dinner, near a small house in the valley of the deer
- _chasse_ (Wimbach). The table was put on a platform under a
- sycamore-tree in a glorious situation. {86} I was unexpectedly
- called upon to sit next to Prince Schwartzenberg, and always called
- _milord_, which probably was the original mistake. The whole
- business went off very satisfactorily. The King's manners are most
- affable, and made everything comfortable about him."
-
-After this grand performance, our tourists took a ride through a
-salt-mine, astride of a plank, with a man before and behind running as
-fast as could be; they come finally to daylight, and shortly
-afterwards to Salzburg. They travelled the country to Lintz, and
-sailed down the Danube to Vienna, where they found the police
-"ridiculously strict about passports." A few days after their arrival
-in Vienna they took a drive through the _Prater_, and "during the
-drive we conversed on the subject of family calamities, and on one's
-means of bearing them. Soon after we came home, Lord Stewart's
-_attaché_, Mr. Aston, called with a letter for me from Mr. Allen,
-which told me of the horrible news of my brother Bob's death in
-America, killed in an affray with his first lieutenant! How strangely
-fulfilled were our yesterday's prognostics. This is a sort of thing
-that is too great and deep an accident to feel in the common way. I
-hardly understand it at this distance: I shall though before long. I
-went with Lefevre after dinner to Lord Stewart's, where I found a
-German courier was to start soon for England. I shall accompany him."
-This is from the Journal; we shall now give an extract from the
-Autobiography:--
-
- "My first tour abroad was suddenly terminated at Vienna by a letter
- which I received to recall me home, from the Rev. J. Allen, now
- Bishop of Ely. This letter gave me notice of the supposed death of
- my brother Robert, in South America, who, it was reported, had been
- killed in an affray with his first lieutenant. This most strange
- story, for which there was not the slightest foundation in truth,
- was conveyed to our family in England in such a way as gained it
- entire belief, and all had been for two or three weeks in deep
- mourning and under the greatest affliction, when the falsehood of
- the report was discovered. This affliction was considered a
- sufficient cause for gathering together all the {87} members of the
- family who were at liberty to come home; and so I was desired to
- return immediately. I bought a carriage at Vienna, and, travelled
- for some nights and days without ceasing, during which I thought to
- try an experiment on how little nourishment I could subsist; and
- from a sort of curiosity to amuse myself, for I can hardly attribute
- it to a better motive, I accomplished a fast which it would appear a
- dreadful hardship to be reduced to by necessity, and a very small
- approach to which, in these times, would be by most persons looked
- on as a most unreasonable austerity. I passed those successive
- intervals of 38, 50, and 53 hours, as I find in my journal, without
- touching the least particle of food to eat or drink; and what I took
- between the intervals was only a little tea and bread and butter.
- This matter is not worth noticing, except to show that, as I went
- through this, while travelling, which is rather an exhausting
- employment, without the least detriment to my health, and without a
- feeling of hunger almost all the time, it is a sad delusion for
- people in good health to fancy they need so many indulgences and
- relaxations to go through the fasts appointed by the Church.
-
- "It was when I got to Calais that I went to the English news-room to
- see further accounts in the newspapers of my brother's death, the
- report of which, though at first I had some suspicions it might be
- false, I afterwards had made up my mind entirely to believe. My joy
- was exceeding great at finding an explicit contradiction to it in
- one of the latest papers. I remember going on my knees to thank God,
- in the news-room, when I found myself alone, which I believe was the
- first occasion for a long, long time I had made a prayer of any
- sort, or gone on my knees, except in church-service time. This I
- never gave up entirely, and during this time I never gave up
- receiving the Sacrament explicitly, though I do not find that I
- received it all the time I was abroad. I did not intend to commit
- acts of hypocrisy, but must have gone on from custom and a certain
- sense of propriety, without considering that I was mocking God."
-
-{88}
-
-On his arrival at Althorp he found the family all in the most joyous
-mood possible. A little passage of his Journal gives an idea of the
-character of the noble family in their relations with the tenantry:--
-
- "Friday, Sept. 22. Bread and meat given to the poor of Brington,
- Brampton, and Harleston, as a rejoicing for Bob's recovery. Three
- oxen were killed, and the effect seemed very good. They gave some
- lively cheers as they departed."
-
-He goes to London, and hears Henry Brougham's speech on Queen
-Caroline's trial; and immediately after, he starts for Switzerland to
-see his sister, Lady Georgiana Quin. We shall relate this in his own
-words in the Autobiography:--
-
- "I became so fond of the business of travelling that, as I was
- returning homewards, my mind was occupied constantly with plans for
- further excursions. I intended to have gone with Lefevre from Vienna
- to Dresden and Berlin on our way home, but I could not think of
- regarding this as my last journey. I was longing to see Greece. I
- had had thoughts of Spain, Russia, Egypt, and various indeed have
- been the fancies and inclinations which have passed through my mind.
- The regular travelling mania had its turn about this time, and I
- wonder not, by my feelings then, at so many of our countrymen, whom
- I have known myself, who have left England for a short excursion,
- and not having professional engagements, nor wise parents and
- relations, as I had, to control them, have become regular wanderers,
- and have spent, in travelling about, the years on the good
- employment of which, at home, depended mainly their success in
- after-life. It may be judged how truly I was possessed with this
- spirit of wandering, at the time of which I speak, by my remaining
- but one fortnight at Althorp with my family before I was again on
- wing. My sister, Lady Georgiana Quin--whose society had made to me
- one of the chief charms of the winter at Naples, and whose being at
- Naples with Lord George, her husband, and her children, had been the
- main inducement for my father and mother to make an undertaking, at
- their age, and with their habits, so extraordinary as this long
- journey--had left Naples during my tour in Sicily, and was settled
- at a country-house called the Château de Bethusy, near Lausanne. I
- proposed going to {89} see her, and to give her the full account of
- all that concerned the strange report about my brother Robert. I
- wonder at my having had my parents' consent to make another
- departure so soon, and with apparently so insufficient an object. I
- suppose they thought it reasonable to give me this liberty, by way
- of compensation for the sudden cutting-off of my first grand tour.
- This time I passed by Dieppe to Paris, thence by Lyons to Bethusy,
- where, having stayed a fortnight--the pleasantest, and, alas! almost
- the last days I had in my sister's company--I returned by Nancy to
- Paris, and thence through Calais to England. I reached Althorp on
- the 19th of November, 1820. And so the fancy for travelling soon
- died away, as my prospects for fresh journeys met with no
- encouragement at home; and here is an end of all my travellings for
- mere travelling's sake. When next I left England, it was, thank God,
- with thoughts and views far other than before."
-
-An extract from the Journal of this time may not be without
-interest:--
-
- "October 17, 1820.--With this day's journal ends the third year that
- I have kept it. This year has been the most interesting and varied I
- have ever passed, and probably ever shall, for my travelling will
- not last long. I certainly have reaped advantages in some respects,
- and great ones. I have had experience in the world, and have learnt
- to shift for myself better than I could have done by any other
- means. I have, I hope, increased the confidence of my family in me;
- and, above all, I have nearly expelled that melancholy disposition I
- gained at college; but most active I feel I must be to prevent its
- return when I again remain quiet in England. I have still a damper
- to my prospects that occasionally overwhelms me, but I must, I
- trust, get over that too; as I have now persuaded myself on sober
- reflection, though I am sadly slow in beginning to act on the
- principle, that one quality alone is within all our reach, and that
- one object alone is worth trying for. God grant this thought may
- often occur to me. I have this year enjoyed the pleasures and
- diversions most enlivening, and which I always most desired; but
- even they are insufficient to make {90} one happy alone, though
- nearer to it than any others. Let us then look to what certainly
- can."
-
-This train of thought seemed to have occupied his mind between his
-leaving Paris, and returning to it again during the last visit to his
-sister. There is one paragraph in the Autobiography which refers to
-both; here it is, and it is the last morsel of that interesting
-document that remains unwritten in his life:--
-
- "The most remarkable impression of religion which I remember in all
- this period, was in a place where it might have been least expected.
- No other than the Italian Opera at Paris. I passed through that
- city, as I have said before, in my last journey to Lausanne, and on
- my return a month later. Both times I went to see the opera of _Don
- Giovanni_, which was the piece then in course of representation. I
- conceived that after this journey I should give up all thoughts of
- worldly vices. I was likely to be fixed at home till the time of my
- ordination, and should assume something of the character of a
- candidate for holy orders. In short, I felt as if it was almost my
- last occasion, and I was entertaining, alas! some wicked devices in
- my mind when I went to this most dangerous and fascinating opera,
- which is in itself, by the subjects it represents, one of the most
- calculated to beguile a weak soul to its destruction. But the last
- scene of it represents Don Giovanni, the hero of the piece, seized
- in the midst of his licentious career by a troop of devils, and
- hurried down to hell. As I saw this scene, I was terrified at my own
- state. I knew that God, who knew what was within me, must look on me
- as one in the same class with such as Don Giovanni, and for once
- this holy fear of God's judgment saved me: and this holy warning I
- was to find in an opera-house at Paris."
-
-{91}
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-An Interval Of Rest And Preparation For Orders.
-
-This chapter begins with his twenty-first birthday. He comes before
-us, a fine young man nearly six feet high, graceful and handsome, of
-independent mien, winning manners, and all the other attributes of
-gentlemanly perfection that are calculated to make him an object of
-attraction. His journal, even then, tends to show his worst side; we
-find self-accusations in every page, and the round of enjoyments
-broken in upon by serious correctives. For the great problem which
-moralists solve so easily, and those whom the solution concerns keep
-away from consideration, we will find in his life a golden key. It is
-too soon yet to speak about the special workings of Divine Grace in
-his soul; but, even so far off, we can find glimmerings of the
-glorious sun of his after-life. Let us look into the world, we find
-thousands that really enjoy and luxuriate in gay parties, balls,
-pastimes, and pleasures, without a pang of remorse, and others with
-sensibilities as keen, if not keener, for the relish of these
-luxuries, plunging into them with a kind of intoxicating gusto, and
-coming out fagged and disgusted, when they were perhaps thought the
-very soul and life of the company. We are told of a patient dying of
-melancholy who called in a doctor to prescribe for him; the
-prescription of the medical man was, that he should go and hear Mr.
-N., a celebrated comic actor, for a number of nights successively, and
-the remedy was guaranteed to prove infallible, for no one could listen
-to him and not laugh himself to hysterics. "Ah, my dear friend,"
-answered the patient, "I am the veritable Mr. N. myself." It is
-sometimes argued that small minds of a feminine caste, composed of the
-ingredients {92} which the "Spectator" wittily discovers in the
-dissection of a beau's head, can be content with frivolities, whilst a
-grand intellect is only made indignant by them. We could quote
-examples to bear us out in a conclusion the direct contrary of this.
-How, then, can we solve the problem? Why can some live and die in a
-whirl of dissipation with apparent relish, whilst others get clogged
-by a few balls, and fling worldly enjoyment to the winds on account of
-the very nausea it creates? It may be considered as "going into the
-sacristy" to say that those whom God chooses for great things, He
-weans from pleasure by a salutary dissatisfaction? so the point will
-not be insisted on. The only ordinary way in which it can be accounted
-for is, that the lovers of pleasure deafen the voice of conscience,
-whereas the others give this good monitor room to speak, and
-occasionally lend an ear. Whichever way we please to look upon F.
-Ignatius at this period of his life, we shall find ample material for
-theorizing on the unreality of worldly joys. He concludes the first
-volume of his Journal with the following considerations:--
-
- "Dec. 31.--I have ended this year, as the last, with a very pleasant
- evening, as far as noise and fun can make it. But a more reasonable
- way would be (as I am now in my room, with my watch in my hand,
- nearly on the stroke of twelve) to end it in making good resolutions
- for the year to come,--which may, I hope, pass as prosperously, and
- more usefully, than the last. The new year is now commenced, and I
- recommend myself to the protection and guidance of Almighty
- Providence to bring me safely and well to the end of it. I now bid
- farewell to this journal-book, which is but a record of my follies,
- and absurdities, and weaknesses, to myself, who know the motive of
- the actions which are here commemorated, and of many more which I
- have done well to omit. There is no fear of my forgetting them, nor
- do I wish it. The less other men know about my inward thoughts, the
- better for me in their estimation."
-
-Many of the readers of this book will feel disposed to disagree with
-the last sentence. We have had his interior {93} before us, as clearly
-perhaps as any other man's we can possibly call to mind, and yet there
-is scarcely one that must not admire and love him as well, for the
-sacrifice he made for their benefit in exposing his interior, as for
-the beautiful sight that very disclosure gives them of his noble
-heart. It is not very easy to write an interesting chapter about this
-portion of his life; the Autobiography is run out, and the Journal
-gives no incident of any great importance till we come to the
-subject-matter of the next volume. Let us string together a few of the
-leading events, especially such as may be calculated to give us some
-idea of his mind and occupations.
-
-He begins the volume by writing down that he got up rather earlier
-than usual, played at battledore and shuttle-cock with Lady Georgiana
-Bingham, and kept up to 2,120 hits. He is disappointed then in a day's
-sport, and gives this account of his evening: "I was rather bilious
-and nervous to-night, and consequently would have preferred being out
-of the way, but from a wrong principle, I fear, viz., because I
-thought I should seem rather dull and ill-humoured. But what if I did,
-to the gay people that do not, nor wish to, know? And what if I did,
-to those who do know how far it is real, my ill-humour?" It was
-customary, as he told us some chapters back, for the Spencer family to
-spend Christmas at Althorp, and collect many of their immediate
-relatives about them during the time. The place is beautifully
-disposed for every kind of enjoyment; there are landscapes and
-pictures for the ladies to draw from, fine grounds for the gentlemen
-to shoot over, everything that generosity and princely goodness could
-procure to make the evenings as lively and entertaining as possible.
-Balls and dances were, of course, a _sine qua non_. Let us not,
-however, imagine it was all dissipation at Althorp. Lords Althorp and
-Lyttelton used, every Sunday and often on week days, to read a sermon
-to the assembled guests from some of the Anglican divines, and
-sometimes, too, from the French, as we may see in a remark in the
-first chapter. The party at Althorp this Christmas did not go beyond
-three-and-twenty. George, notwithstanding {94} the sour extract quoted
-above, went into the sports with heartfelt glee occasionally, and, as
-a proof of this, it is enough to say that he danced, in one night, in
-seven country dances and eight sets of quadrilles. He says in one
-place: "Lyttelton, Sarah (Lady Lyttelton), and I, breakfasted
-together, talking of a wise resolve of Nannette's, to pull down a
-house she had just finished at Richmond, because it was not pretty
-enough for the inhabitants to look at."
-
-He goes to London as soon as the Christmas party is broken up, where
-he dines chiefly at home, but is about occasionally, seeing his old
-friends, and different things that pleased his whim or his taste. One
-of these was "seeing the King going in state, and the nobility as
-contented as if they never said a word against him on the Queen's
-trial;" another was hearing Bishop Van Mildert preach. He has the good
-fortune of meeting Sir Walter Scott at his father's, and says "We all
-stayed the evening listening to him telling Scotch stories." His next
-evening would be, perhaps, in the House of Lords or Commons, and all
-the family seemed in a great stir to be present at the debates on the
-"Catholic Question." What opinions they held about it do not appear
-from the Journal; but there is nothing said there against Catholics
-since he left Italy.
-
-He begins to clear away the mist that lay between him and the
-parsonage. He puts himself a little in the way of learning something
-of what a clergyman could not be respectable without. His first essays
-in this direction were, to hire a "dirty Jew master" to teach him
-Hebrew, and to go occasionally to Mr. Blomfield's, who was rector of
-Whitechapel, to dine and talk with clerical company. The first time he
-tried this is told as follows:--
-
-"I took up Fremantle, and we went together to Blomfield's to dine. We
-met Dr. Lloyd, Mr. Rennel, Mr. and Mrs. Lyall, Mr. Watkinson, Mr.
-Mawman, Mr. Tavel, and one more clergyman--a proper High Church set,
-with language of intolerance. I was much amused though by observing
-them." So much for his first lesson in church polity. That he was not
-extravagant at this time is evidenced {95} by a little incident. He
-found himself the possessor of a good sum, and had been, for some
-time, putting part of his allowance aside until he finds himself able
-to pay his brother, Lord Althorp, what he lent him to pay off his
-debts in Cambridge, as early as the 7th of April. "This was a very
-busy day. I first went to Althorp to offer him payment of a large debt
-I owe him, but he refused it very generously, and made me rich in a
-moment by so doing."
-
-He pays off the Jew on the 25th of April, having had his lectures from
-the 8th of March previous. This apparent falling away from the spirit
-of his vocation, was redeemed in a few days, by his falling half in
-love with some very high lady. He crosses himself immediately for the
-absurdity, and wishes she were a clergyman's daughter. This fit wears
-out completely in ten days' time. Lord John Russell and Sydney Smith
-dine at his father's, and he says of the latter: "Sydney Smith is a
-new person on my list, and very entertaining he is." The author of
-"Peter Plimley's Letters" must certainly have been an agreeable guest.
-On the 15th of June he gives the following note:--"My father and I
-went to see the marriage of Mr. Neville and Lady Georgiana Bingham, in
-the Portuguese Catholic Chapel, in South Street, close to Vernon's
-house. Dr. Poynter, the Catholic bishop of London, performed it, and
-gave us a long-prosy dissertation on the sacrament of marriage." The
-scene changes now to Ryde, Isle of Wight, where the family go to spend
-the summer. George occupies his time there in riding, fishing (with no
-success), boating, cricketing, and doing the tutor to a young ward of
-his father. He also learnt perspective from a Mr. Vorley, and his
-opinion of him is, that "he talks more nonsense than any one I know in
-a given time." He remained his pupil until he "picked his brains,"
-which did not require much time or application seemingly. He hears of
-Napoleon's death, and comments thereon thus:--"We heard this morning
-of Bonaparte being dead in St. Helena. It does not make so much noise
-as one would have thought his death must eight years ago. For one
-thing, it will save us £150,000 a year."
-
-{96}
-
-St. Swithin's Day, July 15. "It rained all morning, which is ominous.
-"This kept them indoors, and it was well, for they were all in a
-bustle preparing for the coronation of William IV. The countess and
-her maids were busy at the laces and the freshening of faded colours,
-until the earl's state robes were got ready; when he was called upon
-to fit them on, that the keen glance of ladies' eyes might see if
-there was a flaw or a speck to be removed. George was present at the
-time, and says: "My father put on his robes, and was looked at by a
-room full of ladies and gentlemen." George himself, by the way, makes
-some bold efforts at grandeur, and succeeds in getting into the Peers'
-quarter of Westminster Abbey, at the coronation, "dressed in red coat,
-with ruffs." After the coronation, they return to the Isle of Wight,
-and George resumes his sports, with a little variation namely, that he
-hears a "twaddle preacher," and receives the Sacrament without much
-preparation, a proceeding he thus defends:--"I never can be satisfied
-by any motives that occur for refusing on account of short notice, and
-I think that when the Office is performed with devotion and sincerity,
-to the best of one's ability, it is always profitable."
-
-It may be objected that we do not give more numerous extracts from the
-Journal; but we think it would tire the patience of readers to be
-told, gravely and solemnly, such grand events as, "George Lyttelton,
-Lord Lyttelton's eldest child, got into breeches to-day." Matters
-kindred to this, with the hours of dining, and names of the guests,
-form the bulk of the diary.
-
-Towards the end of this year, 1821, he finds himself alone in Althorp,
-waiting for the collecting of the Christmas party there, and muses
-thus:--"I wish I might go on living as I now do, without any company
-and nonsense. I have daily amusement, and, withal, get through a good
-deal of reading." This last clause will make many expect that
-Tillotson or Jeremy Taylor is in his hands for a great part of the
-day. It may be so, but we are told in the same page:--"In the evening
-I read 'Guy Mannering;' for a novel, when once begun, enslaves me." He
-was very fond of the Waverly Novels, and seems to have read them as
-{97} they came out. He misses a hunt, through mistake, and says; "I
-was annoyed to-day at the hoy I made in my manoeuvres; but I am
-ashamed of being so, for it all came from my odious vanity, and
-sensibility to the opinion of all the fools I met with." On his
-twenty-second birthday he makes these reflections:--"This anniversary
-becomes uninteresting after passing 21. But it should be a useful
-annual admonition to make the best of our short, fleeting life. What
-are called the best and happiest years of life are already past with
-me. God grant that I make those that remain more profitable to others,
-and consequently to myself. As to happiness, I think my temper and
-dispositions have prevented my having my share to the full of youthful
-pleasures; so I may look forward to the future for better
-circumstances: if I can but tutor my mind into contentment at my
-situation, and an engrossing wish to make my duty the leading guide of
-my actions. Indolence and irresolution are my stumbling blocks."
-
-The new year of 1822 was danced into Althorp by a grand ball. Three
-days after he had a narrow escape with his life; he went out
-partridge-shooting with Lord Bingham, and this gentleman's
-powder-flask took fire, and burst in his hand. George and the
-attendants were nearly blown up, and Lord Bingham was severely
-scorched. This he considered the greatest danger he was ever in, and
-thanks God for his escape. The impression, however, did not last long;
-for he tells us, as the result of a game of cards, on the same
-night:--"I did not get to sleep for a long time for thinking over a
-trick at cards which E---- did. I succeeded in discovering it." When
-the Christmas party is dissolved, George's comments are: "I am sorry
-they are all going, though the young damsels have caught nothing of my
-heart."
-
-There is an event now to be recorded. He becomes a magistrate, and his
-first essay in court makes him think the business very amusing. He
-shouts huzza! on hearing that his brother Robert is about to come
-home. True, however, to his character, of never undertaking anything
-unless he knew its obligations sufficiently to be able to acquit
-himself {98} in them to the satisfaction of his conscience, he goes to
-London, and studies "Blackstone's Commentaries," to qualify him for a
-proper discharge of his duties as a magistrate. He dines, dances, goes
-to balls and theatres, pays visits and bills during his stay in
-London, notwithstanding.
-
-Now he begins to prepare seriously for his future profession. Full
-nine months before he is to receive Orders, on March the 12th he
-begins to write a sermon. That is the point; let a man give a sermon,
-and he may become a minister any day, provided he has an earl or a
-viscount at his back, and a bishop who sits _tête â tête_ with either
-in the House of Lords, and has two or three sons whom he wishes to put
-into posts of honour. The sermon is everything. Any one can read the
-Service, provided he has a good voice and distinct utterance; but the
-sermon--that requires brains, views, style, and paper. How these
-things can be done without we shall see further on. For the present,
-poor George did not discover the secret. He could bowl to a wicket,
-play cribbage, read Walter Scott, and shoot partridges, but where was
-his theology? The twenty-five lectures were buried long ago under some
-stone between Cambridge and Althorp. Well, the fact of it was, he must
-do something. He goes to hear the "crack" preachers of London, and
-even the "twaddle" ditto. He catches up some idea from them, borrows
-the book Lord Althorp reads from on Sunday afternoons, and gets an
-idea of what a sermon is like. He sets to, therefore, to write one
-himself, and in six months that sermon is finished.
-
-One could not expect him to be a bookworm just now. Lord Palmerston is
-at a stag-hunt, and patronized the young candidate. Washington Irving
-dines at his father's, and George has to take notes of his "Yankee
-twang, sallow complexion, and nasal sounds." He used to say to us that
-one who saw Irving, and heard him speak, could never believe he was
-the author of "The Traveller" or "Bracebridge Hall," and much less of
-"Knickerbocker's History of New York." Irving himself alludes to this,
-when he says, somewhere, that the London people {99} "wondered that he
-held a quill in his hand, instead of wearing it in his scalp-lock." He
-gets over all this after the Ryde recreation, and the hunting at
-Wiseton, when, towards the end of September this year, he bids
-farewell to his military life as a cornet in the Yeomanry of
-Northampton. This is as a preparation for his Orders; but they come
-upon him still unexpectedly when he receives a letter from the Bishop
-of Peterborough, on the 5th of October, to signify that he would have
-Ordination on the 22nd of December following. He writes to the
-Diocesan Examiner to ask what books he is to read, and how he is to
-prepare, and that gentleman graciously tells him that he need not
-trouble himself; that he knows, from the respectability of his family,
-he must be already quite prepared. [Footnote 5] George is contented
-for the present, but he has an eye to the future; he borrows,
-therefore, some twelve of the Wimbledon clergyman's best sermons, and
-says "that will set me up for a start." He then goes on retreat about
-the 16th of December, and his day is divided into four principal
-parts, making allowances for dinner and {100} sleep, consisting of
-shooting, cribbage, whist, and sermon writing or copying, as the case
-might be. On the 18th, two days before, he adds one more spiritual
-exercise to his usual ones; he reads a novel. The next day he goes off
-to Peterborough, and dines with the Dean and his wife, "who are to
-feed him" whilst he is there. His examination is gone through--one of
-the Thirty-nine Articles to be translated into Latin, and he has an
-_exposé_, with illustrations, on the nature of mesmerism, for the rest
-of the terrible ordeal. This passed successfully, he comes home to the
-Dean's house, bids good night to the _materfamilias_, and collects his
-spirits for the great occasion. He is wrapt in sublime ecstacy, and
-bursts forth into the following exclamation in his Journal: "I am 22
-years old, and not yet engaged to be married!"
-
- [Footnote 5: Here is a copy of the letter with which he was
- favoured from that dignitary:
- " Yarmouth, Norfolk, October 12.
-
- "My Dear Sir,
- "I am sorry my absence from Cambridge may have made me appear
- neglectful in answering your letter, but I have some consolation
- in thinking that you will not have suffered by the delay. As far
- as I am concerned, in my character of examiner, it is impossible
- that I could ever entertain any idea of subjecting a gentleman
- with whose talents and good qualities I am so well acquainted as I
- am with yours, to any examination except one as a matter of form,
- for which a verse in the Greek Testament, and an Article of the
- Church of England returned into Latin will be amply sufficient.
- With regard to the doctrinal part of the examination, that is
- taken by the Bishop himself, but it is confined entirely to the
- prepared questions, which are a test of opinions, not of
- scholarship. This information, then, will, I trust, be
- satisfactorily, and will leave you at liberty to pursue your
- theological studies in that course which you yourself prefer, and
- which I am confident will be a good one. I really am unable to say
- whether the Bishop of Peterbro' requires a certificate of the
- Divinity Lectures or not, but I know that he does not in all cases
- make it a _sine qua non_; at any rate, I think you had better send
- for it, as it will give the professor but very little trouble to
- forward it under cover to your father.
-
- "If I can be of the least service in answering any other queries,
- or in any other way whatever, I beg you will, at any time, give me
- a line; and believe me, my dear Sir,
-
- "Yours very sincerely,
- "T. S. Hughes.
- "I shall not be in Camb. till the beginning of next month."]
-
-{101}
-
-BOOK II.
-
-_F. Ignatius, an Anglican Minister._
-
-
-{102}
-
-{103}
-
-BOOK II.
-
-_F. Ignatius, an Anglican Minister._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-He Is Ordained, And Enters On His Clerical Duties.
-
-
-The Establishment retains in her written formularies a great deal of
-what looks very like Catholic. She has an attempt at a profession of
-faith; a kind of a sacramental rite, as a substitute for the Mass; a
-mode of visiting the sick, a marriage service, baptismal service,
-burial service, and an ordinal; even something like the Sacrament of
-Penance can be gleaned from two or three clauses in the Book of Common
-Prayer. How much of sacramental power there may be in those several
-ordinances is very easily determined; we admit none whatever in any
-except baptism--the judicial voice of the Establishment leaves its
-efficacy an open question--and matrimony. Of late, some amongst them
-have felt their want of sacramental wealth so keenly, that they would
-fain persuade themselves the shells of Catholic rites, which the
-Reformers retained, were filled with sacramental substance. To give
-this theory some show of plausibility, they claimed valid orders.
-Pamphlets and books have been written on two sides of this question
-until there seems scarcely any more to be said upon it, so we just
-mention what is the Catholic opinion on the validity of Anglican
-orders.
-
-{104}
-
-With what Protestants think of them we have no immediate concern; nor
-would it be an easy matter to extract anything definite from the
-multitude and contrariety of opinions on this one point.
-
-We hold them to be simply _null_; they do not even come up to doubt;
-for if the Archbishop of Canterbury became a Catholic to-morrow, and
-wished to exercise any ministry, he would be obliged to receive all
-the orders from the first tonsure upwards, absolutely, and without
-even an implied condition. This has always been the practice: and, the
-Church's acting thus, at the period which is now involved in
-obscurity, is the best _de facto_ argument that the orders of the
-Establishment were then, as they are now, a human designation, and
-nothing more. There is nothing sacramental in Anglican orders, and
-there never was, since England broke away from the Church, and,
-consistently enough, orders were expunged from the Protestant
-catalogue of sacraments in the very infancy of the Reformation. They
-still keep up a semblance of orders: they have what they call the
-diaconate, the priesthood, and the consecration of bishops. A deacon
-is ordained much in the same way as our own deacons, and he can
-perform all the duties of the parish, with the exception of the
-Communion Service.
-
-We see a man marked out by an Anglican bishop for ecclesiastical
-duties, without any sacramental grace, spiritual character, or
-jurisdiction, for no less a work than the care of immortal souls. Let
-us see now what instruments he has wherewith to accomplish this.
-
-He had once two Sacraments--the Lord's Supper and Baptism; the former,
-Catholics know to be an empty ceremony, and perhaps it would nearly be
-a Protestant heresy to say it was much more. Baptism they had as Turks
-have, and as every lay man and woman in the world, who performs the
-rite properly, has. Now their judicial decisions do not consider it
-worth the having; so, as far as in themselves lies, they have tried to
-deprive themselves of it. The practical means of sanctification a
-minister has to use are chiefly four: prayer, preaching, visiting, and
-reading. The reading part may evidently be performed as well, if not
-{105} better sometimes, by a layman. The visiting is often better done
-by the clergyman's wife or daughter than by himself, for, in attention
-to sickness and sweet words of consolation, the female gifts seem the
-more effectual. All that remains to him, peculiarly for his own, is
-the preaching, and the respectability of character his own conduct and
-regard for his position may give him. His power is altogether
-personal, and if he be an indifferent preacher or a careless liver, he
-loses all.
-
-Whether candidates for orders, or even the ordained of the Anglican
-Establishment, take this view of their position, one cannot be sure;
-but, from the acts and words of Mr. Spencer, we can form a tolerable
-conjecture of what he thought and intended when he took deacon's
-orders from Dr. Marsh, Protestant Bishop of Peterborough, on the 22nd
-December, 1822. He makes no preparation whatever, nor does he seem to
-fancy that it is an action that requires any. He gives an account of
-the ordination, which he was pleased to call, "talking of business,"
-when making his arrangements for it, a few pages back in the Journal,
-and, as a piece of business, it is gone through by him. We transcribe
-his own words:--
-
- "Sunday, Dec. 22. I breakfasted with Mr. Gibbs and Mr. Gregory at
- the inn (Peterborough) at 8. At 9, two others of the candidates, Mr.
- Pearson and Mr. Witherall, joined us, and we went to the palace,
- from whence the bishop led us into the church, when we were
- ordained. The service took an hour, including the Sacrament which he
- gave us. I commenced my church-reading then by reading the gospel in
- the service. I went (a clergyman) to the deanery. At 11 we went all
- together from the palace to church, when Mr. Parsons preached a good
- long sermon--at us very palpably. We then went to a cold collation
- at the palace till evening church, which we attended. After that we
- received our letters of orders and licences, and paid our fees."
-
-It may be said that this is a very nice little account squeezed into a
-journal, and one could not expect enthusiastic bursts about the gift
-of the spirit and the power of {106} the Church, in a book allotted to
-the bare recording of events. So be it. But there are enthusiastic
-exclamations about less important things in that same little book, and
-if ordination looked anything to Mr. Spencer than a condition _sine
-qua_ of his getting fixed in his future position, he would have noted
-it. The absence of deep religious feeling at this period of his life
-may account in a great measure for this coolness; but perhaps the not
-believing there was anything sacramental in the rite itself may give a
-more satisfactory explanation. To wind up the matter in a few
-words--he said grace for the family at dinner that evening, and then
-read his _novel_ quietly in his room, because the day was not
-favourable for any field sport.
-
-These few explanations were deemed necessary for appreciating the
-tenor of his life from this moment forward. It will run counter to all
-anticipated results in the direction of excellence, and will even go
-far beyond what its first evidences would warrant one to expect. He
-looked his position in the face at the very outset: he saw that he had
-souls to look after, and he knew that he could not do that without a
-course of consistent conduct beseeming his character. For the first
-few days things went on much as of old. The family were still spending
-the winter in Althorp, and he joined in all the pastimes by which they
-whiled away the short days and cheered the long nights. It was
-requisite, however, that the cousins and nearer relations, should see
-and hear George in his new position, if it were only to have something
-to talk about when they came to London. Accordingly, he assisted in
-the Communion Service on Christmas Day by administering "the cup,"
-first to his father, and then to others. He did not "think the thing
-so formidable," and it wore off the apprehension he had of appearing
-in public sufficient for him to give his first sermon on Sunday, Dec.
-29. It was on the Birth of Christ, and he says, "Althorp and Duncannon
-were my audience;" whether they were a whole or a part of the
-audience, it is not easy at this distance to discover.
-
-He might be now considered fairly launched into his new element. The
-rector of Great Brington, a Mr. Vigoreux, {107} was away on the
-continent, and the parish was left to the care of the young curate. He
-had three or four villages, numbering about 800, in his parish, some
-distance apart, and he lived in Althorp himself. On the 1st of
-January, 1823, he sets vigorously to work, and, regardless of wind or
-weather, walks out from breakfast until about six o'clock every day,
-visiting the people. After the first few days he gets quite interested
-in the work, and is cheered on by his success in making up
-differences, consoling the dying, and assisting the poor. Two notes
-from the Journal will illustrate how he felt with regard to this
-visiting:--"Feb. 10. Went to Little Brington, where I paid 20 visits
-among the poor. Feb. 11. Visited 15 or 20 houses; this work is very
-amusing to me now. I hope I shall never get tired of it, or be
-disgusted by bad success to my lectures."
-
-The principal work he tries to accomplish by his visits is, the
-supplying those deficiencies he finds in the people with regard to
-what he conceived to be sacraments. His very first round through the
-parish showed him how few were up to the mark of good Christians. Many
-Dissenters chose to dispute his right to lecture them, and were not
-slow to produce clauses of protection for themselves; and his having
-"a discussion with one roaring Methodist," did not lessen the
-difficulty of making them tractable sheep. Discussions proved to be a
-means of widening the breach, and simple kindness left things where
-they stood. Something positive he must mark out as a duty to his
-flock, and then exhort them to it. Instinct led him to the sacraments.
-He found great numbers unbaptized, believing in a spiritual
-regeneration, and scoffing at the idea of heavenly virtue being in a
-drop of water; he found more still, and these among the baptized, who
-had as little love for the Lord's Supper as he had himself once. Now
-these could very easily be managed by exhorting them to read the
-Bible, lending them a copy if they had not one, recommending family
-prayers, and kindness and justice towards all men. Mr. Spencer thought
-otherwise. He began with baptism, and within the first fortnight of
-his clerical life he baptized the nine children of a blacksmith. This
-was a good beginning, and encouraged {108} him to persevere, but he
-did not find many so malleable as the offspring of this son of Tubal
-Cain.
-
-In the next sacramental duty he did not see his way so clearly as in
-the first. In the Church of England, the _Sacrament_, as it is
-emphatically called, must be administered three times a year, may be
-once a month, and cannot be unless there be a number of communicants.
-Giving the _Sacrament_ once a week is considered very High Church, and
-to give it every morning is going a little too far. Superstitious
-reverence and indifference keep the majority away from this rite, and
-few come, except they get a monomonia for manifesting their godliness
-in that special direction. This fact will account for Mr. Spencer's
-hesitation, when he took to Christianizing his flock by making them
-approach the Sacrament. He makes many promise to come, and gets a
-neighbouring clergyman to administer it in their own houses to some
-decrepid old people, who could not come to church. He preaches on
-this, and "hopes he has not been wrong;" he discusses the propriety of
-his proceedings with his older brethren in the ministry. The result
-seems to confirm him in his ideas, and he preaches a second time, and
-gives appendices to his sermon in every visit, about going to the
-Lord's Supper. He still "hopes he is not wrong." He works very hard at
-this point, however, and on the first Easter Sunday of his ministry,
-he gives God thanks and prays against pride, at having 130
-communicants. There was another little incident on the same day as a
-set off to his success in beating up the parish; when he opens the
-sermon-cover from which he used to read his MS., he finds he had put
-the wrong sermon there, and had to preach extempore the sermon he
-intended to have read: of course, it was not to his satisfaction,
-though the people scarcely knew the difference.
-
-One sad event cast a cloud over the beginning of his clerical life:
-the sister he loved so much, and whose company and conversation he
-thought more than an equivalent for the gayest party, Lady Georgiana
-Quin, died in London. He was very much afflicted by it, and even in
-after-life he would be deeply moved when speaking of this sister. He
-{109} did not delay long in London, but came home in a day or two
-after the funeral.
-
-Excepting this short interval, his time was spent at home in the most
-ardent fulfilment of the duties his fervour imposed upon him. Not only
-did he go about from house to house, but he would spare a day or two,
-in each week, when he went into Northampton for the sessions, and
-visit the neighbouring clergy. It was his custom to discuss points of
-duty with them; to invite them to Althorp, and spend evenings in
-clerical conversation. He accompanied them on their visits to the sick
-and other parochial employments, to learn, by a comparison of the
-different ways of each, which would probably be best for himself. He
-reads such books as the "Clergyman's Instructor," and other books of
-divinity and sermons; he never fails to write a sermon every week, to
-catechise the children on a Sunday, visit the schools, and try to make
-every one as faithful in the discharge of their duties as he was in
-his own. About Easter some members of his family came to Althorp, and
-he relaxes a little for their sakes, and freely joins them in all his
-former amusements; not, however, omitting any of his visits,
-especially to the sick and dying.
-
-{110}
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-He Mends Some Of His Ways.
-
-
-About the middle of April he came to London for three weeks' holidays.
-He calls it "a smoky odious place," and says that entering it makes
-him "miserable." He is soon immersed in the customs of his society in
-the metropolis, and his feeling of uneasiness wears off. His little
-experience in parish work brings a great many things to his knowledge,
-of which he had not the slightest idea before. He is at a great loss,
-also, how to meet the difficulties he encounters, and doubts whether
-his proceedings in what he considered his duty have been quite right.
-Dr. Blomfield had always been a kind of spiritual director to Mr.
-Spencer: to him he goes now for a thorough investigation of his
-principles and even doctrines. Extempore praying was a thing Dr.
-Blomfield never liked, and its adoption by Mr. Spencer shows a leaning
-to Evangelical if not Methodistic spirituality. Whether it was this
-point, or another of the many things upon which clergymen of the
-Establishment agree to differ, that they discussed, we cannot say; but
-the result was far from consoling to either. He says: "I want some
-setting to rights in point of orthodoxy I find. I only hope that my
-decision in regard to my conduct may not be influenced by ambition or
-worldliness on the one hand, nor by spiritual pride on the other."
-Here may be seen that real sincerity and disinterestedness which
-guided his every step through life. If we analyze the sentence, it
-looks as if the arguments of his adviser are taken in part from the
-sources which Mr. Spencer hopes will not influence his decision; and
-this conclusion is borne out by a letter which will be given further
-on, when his confidence {111} in the Church of England became
-thoroughly shaken. It must not be supposed from this that Dr.
-Blomfield was guided himself by these motives, though hints to that
-effect were often rife in his lifetime; but it is natural enough that
-the doctor should propose family considerations among his other
-arguments, especially if he thought those not quite persuasive.
-
-Mr. Spencer goes to the theatre, and it was the last time in his life.
-His account of how that change was wrought in him, gives us one of
-those peculiar instances in which ridicule proved to be more powerful
-than logic or decorum. He attended Drury Lane Theatre with one or two
-friends, and in some part of the performance a parson was fearfully
-caricatured, and drew bursts of laughter and applause from the
-audience. This touched him sorely; eyes were pointed towards him; his
-friends laughed the more, in proportion to the efforts considerations
-for him made them use, in suppressing their feelings. He went forth
-from the theatre thoroughly vexed, and vowed he would never go to a
-theatre again. The Journal does not give a solitary instance in which
-this resolve was deviated from afterwards. This incident had also the
-effect of making him consider the propriety of several other
-unclerical pursuits, which he followed, as much since his ordination
-as he did before. It was not, however, till towards the end of this
-year that he began to retrench them, and a little of the same power of
-ridicule came to his assistance then also.
-
-His great concern was the union of all the sects in his parish. He
-knew very well that our Lord gave but one system of Christianity, and
-that _yea_ and _no_ upon any important point could not proceed from
-His lips or be parts of His doctrine. He thought conciliatory measures
-the best to effect his purpose, and he even adopted some of the ways
-of Dissenters in order to be all to all towards them. On this he seems
-to have been lectured by Dr. Blomfield with some profit, for, on his
-return home, he says: "Whit-Sunday. I gave a strong sermon against the
-Dissenters, founded on Whit-Sunday," In a few days he pays "an
-unsatisfactory visit" to one family, and says: "They are {112} the
-hardest schismatics I've got; children unbaptized, &c." This seems
-High Church language, and his feeling of opposition to Evangelicals,
-which finds expression in a few places, now makes one suppose he was
-"a proper High Church man." He labours hard for several weeks to
-prepare children for confirmation. He has 80 of them ready, and was so
-pleased with the whole affair, that he moved the printing of the
-bishop's charge, as he proposed his lordship's health in a speech
-after the dinner. The Sunday after he goes round to every house, and
-gives final admonitions to those on whom the bishop imposed hands a
-few days before.
-
-To help him in his incipient dislike of Methodism he has a very
-curious conversation with a great "professor" of that persuasion. This
-was an old woman whom he was in the habit of visiting whenever he made
-his rounds where she lived. On his entrance, they both knelt down and
-prayed alternately for some time, each, out loud and extempore, for
-the edification of the other. When this rubric was carried out, they
-talked at full length and breadth on the unconverted and the elect,
-with sundries other kindred subjects, and this he used to style
-"comfortable conversation." Sometimes the tone of conversation would
-vary, and once it ran upon the line of self-accusation. The old lady
-very humbly accused herself of a great many faults in general, and
-signified to Mr. Spencer that she would be very much obliged to any
-one who would point out her particular faults, and help her in
-correcting them. Emboldened by this, he ventured, after a long
-preamble, to suggest that there was one thing he would like to see
-corrected in her, as it seemed to be the only speck on the lustre of
-her godliness. "What is that?" asked she, rather curiously and
-impatiently. "Well, it is that you are rather fond of contradicting
-people." "No, I am not," was the reply. "You have just contradicted me
-now." "No, I haven't." "Well, you have repeated the same fault." "I've
-done no such thing," was the petulant rejoinder. Of course, he saw it
-was useless to proceed further, and his visits became fewer for some
-time. This {113} anecdote he used to relate with peculiar tact and a
-most graphic imitation of the old lady's manner.
-
-Before giving his own account of the rise and fall of his High Church
-notions, it may be well to mention another incident that occurred
-about this time, towards the end of 1823. He determines to give up
-shooting and dancing. He told an anecdote about how the first of these
-sports fell into disfavour with him. There was a shooting party in
-Althorp on a certain day, and George was in the very thick of it. So
-anxious was he to distinguish himself in bringing down game, that he
-would run to take position for a shot with his double-barrel gun
-loaded, and a cartridge stuck in either corner of his mouth, ready for
-action, so as not to lose a minute in charging. He did great execution
-that day, and bagged probably more braces than any other. In the
-evening one of the company showed great anxiety to get possession of
-something, and eventually succeeded; whereupon, one present said, with
-a waggish look at George, "You've made a parson's shot at it." This
-struck him very forcibly, and suggested the resolution, which he
-finally came to and kept, of giving up shooting. There is no
-particular anecdote about his abstinence from dancing, we only know
-that at this time he refuses to go to a ball, makes his pastoral
-visits instead, and declares that he feels far more comfortable after
-this than when he has been "pleasuring."
-
-The following is taken from a letter published by Father Ignatius in
-the _Catholic Standard_ in December, 1853:--
-
- ... "When I was ordained deacon in the Church of England at
- Christmas, 1822, I had, I may say, all my religious ideas and
- principles to form. I do not so well know how far this is a common
- case now. I have reason to think it was a very common one then. My
- mind was possessed with a decided intention of doing good, and I was
- delighted with the calling and life of a clergyman; but my ideas
- were very vague indeed as to what a clergyman was meant for or had
- to do. Very naturally, however, on becoming acquainted with my
- parishioners, among whom the Wesleyan Methodists, the Baptists, and
- the Independents had been gaining ground for some time previously, I
- {114} concluded that I had to oppose their progress, and to draw
- back those who had joined them. This disposition in me was highly
- gratifying to some of the elder clergy in my neighbourhood, who came
- to make acquaintance with me as a new neighbour, especially to one
- old man, an ardent lover of High Church principles, who, to confirm
- me in them, gave me a book to read entitled 'Daubeny's Guide to the
- Church,' in which the divine authority of the Church, the importance
- of Apostolical succession, of episcopal government, the evil and sin
- of schism, and other ecclesiastical principles, were most lucidly
- and learnedly demonstrated. So I thought then; and, as far as my
- recollection goes, I should say now that I thought rightly. I was
- exceedingly captivated by these principles, which were to me quite
- new, and I found myself now ready to carry on my arguments with
- dissenters as a warrior armed; whereas in the beginning I had
- nothing but zeal in my cause to help me. I did not gain upon them;
- but this new light was so bright in my own mind, that I had no doubt
- of prevailing in time. But there was one weak point in the system I
- was defending which I had overlooked. It was after a time pointed
- out to me, and my fabric of High Churchism fell flat at once, like a
- child's castle of cards.
-
- "I was at this time living at Althorp, my father's principal
- residence in the country, serving as a curate to the parish to which
- it was attached, though the park itself is extra-parochial. Among
- the visitors who resorted there, was one of the most distinguished
- scholars of the day, to whom, as to many more of the Anglican
- Church, I owe a debt of gratitude for the interest which he took in
- me, and to the help I actually received from him in the course of
- inquiry, which has happily terminated in the haven of the true
- Church. I should like to make a grateful and honourable mention of
- his name, but as this has been found fault with, I forbear. I was
- one day explaining to him with earnestness the line of argument
- which I was pursuing with dissenters, and my hopes from it; I
- suppose I expected encouragement, such as I had received from many
- others. But he simply and candidly said, 'These would be {115} very
- convenient doctrines, if we could make use of them, but they are
- available only for Roman Catholics; they will not serve us.' I saw
- in a moment the truth of his remark, and his character and position
- gave it additional weight. I did not answer him; but as a soldier
- who has received what he feels to be a mortal wound, will suddenly
- stand still, and then quietly retire out of the _mêlée_, and seek a
- quiet spot to die in, so I went away with my High Churchism mortally
- wounded in the very prime of its vigour and youth, to die for ever
- to the character of an Anglican High Churchman. Why did not this
- open my eyes, you will say, to the truth of Catholicity? I answer,
- simply because my early prejudices were too strong. The unanswerable
- remark of my friend was like a _reductio ad absurdum_ of all High
- Church ideas. If they were true, the Catholic would be so: _which is
- absurd_, as I remember Euclid would say. 'Therefore,' &c. The grand
- support of the High Church system, church authority, having been
- thus overthrown, it was an easy though gradual work to get out of my
- mind all its minor details and accompaniments, one after another;
- such as regard for holy places, for holy days, for consecrated
- persons, for ecclesiastical writers; finally, almost all definite
- dogmatic notions. It would seem that all was slipping away, when,
- coming to the conviction of the truth of Catholicity some years
- after, it was with extraordinary delight I found myself picking up
- again the shattered dispersed pieces of the beautiful fabric, and
- placing them now in better order on the right foundation, solid and
- firm, no longer exposed to such a catastrophe as had upset my
- card-castle of Anglican churchmanship. This little passage in my
- ancient religious history is so sweetly interesting to me in the
- remembrance, that I have looked into an old diary which I used to
- keep at the time, to make out the dates, and I find by this that the
- duration of my High Church ideas was shorter than I should have
- imagined; but it was a period crowded with new, bright ideas, and
- naturally seems longer than it is. I will, to please myself,
- perhaps, more than my readers, give the dates. I note that, Dec. 24,
- 1823, the great scholar of whom I have {116} spoken came to Althorp;
- Jan. 23, 1824, he goes away. This was his last visit, for he died
- the summer following, as I find it was on the 28th of June, 1824,
- that, in passing by Oxford with my eldest brother, we called at the
- Hall of which he was superior, to inquire how he was. He was
- sick--then on his death-bed." [Footnote 6]
-
- [Footnote 6: The name of the gentleman referred to above was Dr.
- Elmesly.]
-
-{117}
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-He Receives Further Orders.
-
-
-The complete levelling of his church principles left him at a loss
-which way to turn. The divided state of his parish, and the number of
-sects, seemed to be perpetually harassing his mind. He set about
-converting them by other ways than exhibiting his "card-castle;" he
-tried to open the doors of the Establishment as wide as he could, so
-as to admit if possible all classes of religionists to her communion.
-Of a conversation upon this point with Lord Lyttelton, he says, "In
-the evening I had a walk with Lyttelton, and was filled with scruples
-about the Athanasian Creed by him unintentionally. I had a great war
-with my conscience in the evening, at bed-time." These scruples slept
-for some time on account of a soporific which Dr. Blomfield
-administered to him; but they arose again, and were not settled till
-he became a Catholic. Various discussions procure him "lights about
-the Methodist practice," and "distressing thoughts;" so he gives up
-that field of working now for another.
-
-This other field was showing good example of the different works of
-mercy, and he even tries Catholic ascetism. He takes such an interest
-in the poor of his parish that he goes to the hospitals, attends
-dissecting-rooms, and assists at a dispensary until he learns enough
-about medicine to enable him to make prescriptions for the sick poor.
-He spends evenings in making pills, and one day when a poor man broke
-his thigh, Mr. Spencer went and set it for him, and it was so well
-done that they did not change it when he was brought to the infirmary.
-The exertion this cost him nearly made him faint.
-
-{118}
-
-The next thing he notes is, "I read a most persuasive sermon of
-Beveridge's about fasting; I examined the question in other books, and
-by God's grace I am resolved no longer to disregard that duty." He
-applied for advice about fasting, as was his invariable practice when
-he took up any idea out of the ordinary line. He went to a
-neighbouring clergyman, whom he considered well versed in the matter,
-and, though this gentleman discourages the practice, Mr. Spencer
-adopts it notwithstanding, since his arguments are too weak. These are
-the principal events out of his ordinary work, except his giving up
-card-playing, from the beginning of the year 1824 until the 12th of
-June, when we find him again in Peterborough, on the eve of receiving
-priest's orders.
-
-The demolition of his High Church notions, as well as the tone of mind
-in which he received the former orders, might lead one to anticipate
-that he received these second orders somewhat after the fashion of a
-new step in the army. But it was quite the contrary. His notions of
-orders were higher; he looked upon this step as an important one, and
-he tells us, some days before, "I walked to-day in The Wilderness at
-Althorp, ruminating on my approaching ordination." He also read the
-Ordination Service over and over, a good many times. On the evening
-before the ordination, whilst the Bishop and various clergymen, and
-their ladies, with whom he dines, candidates included, amuse
-themselves with a game of whist, Mr. Spencer refuses to play. We can
-contrast his reflections now with those used on a similar occasion a
-year and a half ago:--
-
- "Trinity Sunday, June 13.--A beautiful day. I was awake from six,
- and thought a great deal of my intended step to-day. At 11 we all
- attended the Bishop to church, and the prayers, ordination, and
- sacrament were performed all moat satisfactorily to me. I am now
- bound by the awful tie of priesthood; and most solemnly, at the
- time, did I devote myself to the service of my Master. May the
- impression never fade away!"
-
-Shortly before this he heard of Dr. Blomfield's promotion to the see
-of Chester, who, in answer to his letter of congratulation, offered
-him the office of chaplain. He accepted it, in a long letter to his
-old tutor, immediately he returned {119} from Peterborough. Up to this
-time Mr. Spencer had been reading the Anglican divines,--Tomline,
-Jeremy Taylor, Wheatley, Bull, Hooker, &c.; now he begins to read the
-Fathers of the Church. The first he takes up is St. John Chrysostom
-_On the Priesthood_. His opinion upon some of the doctrines he met
-with there is nicely told in the letter to the _Catholic Standard_,
-from which the passage in the last chapter has been quoted.
-
- "I had to make a long journey with my brother, in his carriage, on
- that long day, June 28, from Althorp, near Northampton, to
- Southampton. It was before the epoch of railroads; and I see we
- started at half-past three. I was seeking a book to occupy me during
- this long journey (N.B. no Breviary to recite in those days), and,
- in the library at Althorp, I hit upon a copy, in Greek, of St. John
- Chrysostom on the Priesthood. Nothing better. I had heard this work
- highly praised, and I hoped to find some animating matter for the
- exercise of my calling as a clergyman. I was not disappointed in
- this hope; but when I came to what the saint says about the holy
- Eucharist, as, of course, the grand circumstance which exalts the
- Christian priest, I was overcome with surprise. I read, and read it
- again. Is it possible! I thought to myself. Why, this is manifest
- popery. He certainly must have believed in the Real Presence. I had
- no idea that popish errors had commenced so soon; yes, and gained
- deep root, too; for I saw that he wrote as of a doctrine about which
- he expected no contradiction. What was my conclusion here? you will
- ask. Why, simply this--_the Saint has erred_; otherwise this capital
- tenet of popery is true--_which is absurd_. I brought in my Euclid
- here, as on the previous 31st of December. I see that on the
- following day I was in the cabin of the vessel in which we crossed
- to the Isle of Wight, reading _Jeremy Taylor's Worthy Communicant_.
- St. John Chrysostom, I have no doubt, had been thrown overboard, not
- into the sea--which was making me then rather sick--as the volume
- was not my own to dispose of thus; but he had been thrown overboard
- with a whole multitude of Saints and Fathers besides, convicted with
- him, and condemned for {120} popish errors, into the black gulph of
- the dark ages; or rather, I had, by an act of my judgment, extended
- the borders of that gulph several centuries back, as the Regent's
- Canal Company are doing with their reservoir near our house, by Act
- of Parliament, over some of our land, so as to flood him and his
- contemporaries, and, of course, all after them till Luther rose to
- set up a dyke and save on dry land those who had courage to step out
- on the land of Gospel light which he first had re-discovered. I soon
- came to look on our English Reformers of the Church of England as
- the greatest and most enlightened men since the time of the
- Apostles."
-
-He does not give up his asceticism, though he feels the pain of it;
-and well he might, for he would sometimes eat nothing until six
-o'clock in the evening, and be all the day going through his parish,
-or writing sermons if the day were wet. He says in the journal of one
-of those days: "A fasting day till dinner made me very miserable, and
-makes me doubt the excellency of this means .... dinner did me good."
-He improves upon the fasting, however, by adding another day every
-week, when he finds that it really helps him to eradicate his passions
-and raise up his mind to heaven. The bodily pain consequent on want of
-food was not the only thing Mr. Spencer had to endure from his
-fasting. It was a practice that had a popish air about it; his friends
-and members of his family grew indignant that he should be making
-himself peculiar. He had to bear the brunt of all their remarks; he
-did so willingly, and would sit down to the family breakfast to feed
-on their rebukes and send his portion down untasted, whilst the rest
-took their meal. He also reads Thomas-a-Kempis's "Imitation of
-Christ," and we see evidences of that remarkable spirit for which he
-was afterwards distinguished--thanking God for everything. He becomes
-a secretary to the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge: that
-institution was a favourite of Dr. Blomfield's, and he may have
-induced Mr. Spencer to patronize it. When Mr. Spencer saw how well it
-worked in its department, he thought of a scheme for improvising
-something of his own. He does not give particulars {121} of what it
-was; but he submitted it to his Bishop, who "threw cold water on it,"
-and Mr. Spencer simply thanks God for being thwarted. He is completely
-wrapped up in his clerical duties, so much so that he does not give
-the full time to his summer vacation in Ryde; he is always impatient
-to get back to his parish when some pressing business requires him to
-leave it; and even, while away, he is perpetually visiting clergymen,
-and talking upon matters belonging to his office. He seems though,
-ever since the destruction of his High Church principles, to be
-getting every day more Evangelical in his words and actions.
-
-{122}
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Mr. Spencer Becomes Rector Of Brington.
-
-Mr. Vigoreux, Rector of Brington, sent in his resignation of the
-living to the Bishop towards the close of the year 1824. The letters
-which are found among Father Ignatius's papers show this transaction
-to have been very creditable to the Spencer family. The old rector was
-on the continent,--he seems to have been very much in debt to Lord
-Spencer, and upon his resigning his living, Lord Spencer not only
-cancelled the debt, but made him so far independent for life, that the
-old clergyman, in sheer gratitude, ordered £7. 10s. to be distributed
-every year among the poor of the parish, whilst he lived. George was
-transported with delight at the news, which was given him by a lawyer
-in Northampton, on the 8th November in this year, that Mr. Vigoreux
-had resigned. Mr. Spencer is full of his secret, and he and a brother
-clergyman have a very pleasant evening in telling "secrets" to each
-other--George about the rectorship, his friend about his intended
-marriage. Things go on quietly now until the usual Christmas
-assemblage of the family at Althorp, and George's reflection on his
-birthday is this: "That my life past, in the main, has been mis-spent,
-wasted, and worse than wasted. Last year I have become confirmed in
-the first of all professions, and I truly desire that I may grow riper
-and stronger in my office." For a while he resists the temptation to
-join in the sports of the young gentlemen at Althorp; at length he
-gives in; he plays a few rubbers at whist in compliment to his father,
-and thanks God that he plays worse and worse every day. He also takes
-a few shots; but finding his old {123} eagerness returning, he throws
-up the gun at once, and goes to visit the sick and the poor.
-
-On the 12th January he is presented by his father with the living of
-Brington, is instituted by the Bishop two days after, and inducted by
-a neighbouring clergyman on the 20th of the same month. He is now in
-possession of a good income, can afford to pay a curate to do his
-drudgery, and might follow the example of non-residence which was then
-so common; but he does nothing of the kind. A fat parsonage does not
-come to him with an arm-chair or a sofa, and invite him to sit down
-and take his rest. He considers now that the weight of the charge
-obliges him to redouble his labours; he continues to write his sermons
-twice over, and never misses to have one for every Sunday. It was his
-custom to give, what he called a lecture, on Sunday evenings,--he now
-gives a full sermon; he also increases the days of attendance in
-church as far as he can, for we find him beating up for an attendance
-on Ash-Wednesday; and this he calls an innovation. He gets a little
-keener in the spirit of asceticism just now, for he tries to conceal
-his austerities; and on a day he fasted till six he says: "I wish I
-could root out that devil of ambition and vain-glory." Probably it was
-about this time that the incident happened he used often to relate to
-his religious brethren in after-life. One day he thought to conceal
-his fast; but the housekeeper brought up the toast for breakfast, and
-if he sent it down untouched she would have discovered his abstinence;
-he put it in the cupboard and locked it up; by-and-by the odour it
-emitted perfumed the whole place, to the no small astonishment of the
-housemaid. The end of it was, that every one discovered what he tried
-to conceal even from one.
-
-We find a thorough absorption of his energies in the work of his
-ministry apparent in every page of his journal, as also from the
-testimony of those who knew him at that period. One little remark will
-throw light upon his interior:--"My dear Lyttelton,--Sal and the
-children went away at 6½. I heard the sad departing wheels out of bed.
-Thank God I have heretofore found happiness in my solitude, and shall
-do {124} so again, I trust. His word, and the way of His Commandments,
-they are my joy. May I grow in the knowledge and practice of them, and
-I desire no more for this world." Another instance of his devotion to
-his ministry may be seen in the following:--"Tuesday, March 22.--Rose
-(a neighbouring clergyman) and I began talking about 8½, and hardly
-ceased till 12 at night. Our subject was religion and the Church,
-chiefly."
-
-What beautiful material was there in this excellent clergyman! and had
-he been where his spirit would be understood, or where one knew how to
-direct him, what might he not become? He found himself in a Church
-where spirituality and asceticism are exotics, and cannot thrive,
-notwithstanding that the Scriptures are so emphatic in exhorting us to
-practise them. Then, if he took them up, he knew not how far to go, or
-at what point to restrain himself. He had no manuals, no guides; but
-vague attempts at fulsome piety written for fellow-workmen, who
-differed with him on the very first principles of faith. He was,
-therefore, utterly left to his own views and fancies, and what he
-considered grace and inspiration. He was getting too unworldly for his
-position, too single-minded, and too earnest for the easy-going
-clerical gentlemen who formed the bulk of his acquaintances. Not that
-the majority did not do their duty. To be sure they did; but what was
-it? To read a sermon from a desk on a Sunday; to pay visits, and read
-a chapter of the Bible to a dying sinner. The Evangelical counsels,
-without which, in some degree or other, Christian _perfection_ is
-unattainable, are exploded anachronisms in the Established of souls,
-as the outcry against those within its pale, who try to revive them,
-but too clearly proves. Ecclesiastical virtue, with them, does not
-differ from secular virtue, any more than the virtue of a Member of
-Parliament differs from that of a Town Councillor. They are both
-expected to be gentlemen, and to keep the rules of propriety the
-public thinks proper to expect from their position. That is all. "Oh!"
-as poor Father Ignatius used to say, "shall these dry bones live?"
-Thou knowest, Lord, whether they shall or not; they don't; and in his
-{125} time they were farther from it than they are now. We must
-therefore expect, from the nature of the case, what is to follow in
-the next chapter. He goes perfectly astray, in his pursuit after what
-the "Church of his baptism" could not give him. It was fortunate that
-he strayed in the end from a wrong path into the right one, by the way
-of too far East being West.
-
-Easter Sunday in this year he counts the happiest day he spent up to
-this, though he had only fifty-eight communicants, a decrease since
-his first Easter. His point of bringing all to the sacrament was not
-carried. He had even bishops opposing him in this, as in everything
-else that was not half world, half God.
-
-The next thing he notices is, that an archdeacon gave a good charge,
-"though against the Catholics,--a questionable topic." Mr. Spencer had
-no special love for Catholics; on the contrary, he thought themselves
-absurd, their doctrines abominable, and their ceremonies mummery. He
-was of the Spencer family though, and in them there was an inbred love
-of justice and fair-play. Lord Spencer and his son, Lord Althorp, both
-favoured and spoke for emancipation. They thought the Catholics
-aggrieved, and if they were Turks, they did not see why they should
-cease to be men and subjects of the English crown. That was plain
-common sense; besides, Mr. Spencer had not got so high in Church views
-as some of his friends, who favoured Catholics before their elevation
-and opposed them after it, to please a king. The Spencers were
-generously liberal in all their dealings, and even when the subject of
-this biography, the delight of the family, thought fit to become a
-Catholic, their conduct towards him was worthy of their name. We shall
-have to refer to this afterwards; the allusion is made now only to
-show that the tenour of their opinions was not the creature of a whim
-or an ephemeral fancy, but a grave, steady, and well-disciplined
-feeling. Praise be to them for it. Would that their imitators were
-more numerous.
-
-He has also another project on hand at this time, besides the
-evangelizing of his flock. He begins to build a new rectory. He gets
-an architect from London; has {126} suggestions from the family about
-the length and breadth of the apartments; others, more poetical,
-survey the site to give their sentiments about the view from the
-parlour window; the older portion have their say about the comfort of
-the different rooms, with regard to size, position, and plastering.
-Some few even make presents of articles of furniture, and a near
-relation gives him a beautiful bed, which commodity has many
-paragraphs of the journal dedicated to its praises and suitableness.
-The building is at last begun, and we must say something of the
-progress of his interior castle whilst we let the bricklayers obey the
-orders of the builder and architect.
-
-
-{127}
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Changes In His Religious Opinions.
-
-For some time we are getting glimpses of his ways of thought, or
-rather of his ways of expressing his thoughts. We read, "godly
-dispositions," "mature unto repentance," "ripe for glory,"
-"comfortable conversations," "springs in barren soil," and the
-"_seeing_ of spiritual _blindness_." All these indicate the leaning of
-his mind, and recall the language of Cromwellian "Saints," and
-Bunyan's dreams. The strangest part of his proceedings now was the way
-in which he became "justified." It is hardly necessary to mention that
-in Calvinistic theology, which forms the basis, if not the
-superstructure, of the principal part of Evangelical postulates, the
-body of believers are divided into _elect_ and _reprobate_, or
-_justified_ and _unconverted_. The election or justification is a
-sentiment coming from what is supposed to be the assurance of an
-interior spirit that one is to be saved. With them, happy the man or
-woman who possesses this testimony, and miserable the wretch to whom
-it is not given. There is for these latter only an everlasting groping
-in the dark, and a seeking for light, while the _insured_ can go
-through this vale of tears in exultation and gladness of spirit. Mr.
-Spencer was not well versed in this particular doctrine, and a poor
-woman, whom he met one day in Northampton, undertook to bring him to
-the "true Gospel light" by the "pure milk of the Word." She put
-together a few of those passages from the New Testament, which are
-generally misquoted in support of this outlandish theory, and her
-interpretation convinced Mr. Spencer, so that he felt justified, all
-at once. This good woman proved to be a great trouble to him
-afterwards; she would harangue him, {128} once a week, on his
-unconverted state, even after the _assurance_. Her letters came
-regularly, four large pages, badly and closely written; and when she
-had done canting on spirituality, she would fill up what remained with
-the scandals of the unconverted among whom she lived, and complaints
-at the cold treatment she received from many. She became a kind of
-apostle among the Dissenters, and it was only when she had been living
-on Mr. Spencer's charity for a few years that he discovered where the
-strength of her spirit lay. He had reasons for not trusting to the
-genuineness of her piety, though she kept continually writing from
-North Shields, where she lived, sometimes in good and sometimes in bad
-circumstances, since the regeneration of Mr. Spencer. When she
-received one letter in which her sanctity was made little of, she laid
-the blame on slanderous tongues, and talked about suicide. Mr. Spencer
-then dropped the correspondence, and gave her a sum of money to
-purchase a like favour on her side.
-
-He used to amuse us much by relating the system of self-laudation and
-encouragement that kept the Evangelicals interested in each other. One
-day he was describing how a clerical friend of his became justified.
-He had travelled a good distance, and was pretty tired; the family he
-thought proper to honour with his holy presence in a certain town,
-prepared him a most excellent breakfast. He ate with the appetite of a
-very hungry man, and when a more secular guest would have said, _O jam
-satis_, he jumped up from the table and shouted with ecstatic delight,
-"I am justified." He never doubted of his election to glory after
-that, as far as Father Ignatius knew. The most extraordinary feature
-in their modes was, that a kind of telegraphic communication was kept
-up with each other, all over the country, for the purpose of making
-the elect aware of the latest addition to their numbers. On finding
-his brethren were disposed to laugh at the extravagant madness of this
-kind of religion, he grew quite serious, and said: "They are really in
-earnest, poor things, and we ought not to laugh at them, only to pray
-that their earnestness might be properly directed." One will say:
-Could any man or woman with a {129} grain of common sense, go on
-thinking and talking this kind of unreality, which we commonly call
-_cant?_ As a fact, they do, and we have proof positive of it in Mr.
-Spencer himself. It is astonishing to see a man of his position, good
-sense, and education, talk and write in the strange way he does,
-whilst this mood of mind lasted. Not only does he write so; he holds
-conversations with every one whom he meets about the state of their
-soul, and those which he calls _interesting_, others considered very
-probably the reverse. He also takes soundings of people's spiritual
-depth, and is seldom consoled at the result. He is satisfied with no
-one, except two or three of his immediate neighbours who were fed
-mostly on his bounty or served in his house or garden. He goes at this
-time (September, 1825) to attend Dr. Blomfield as chaplain through the
-visitation of the diocese of Chester. He is very zealous throughout,
-and converses on spiritual subjects with Dissenters of all kinds as
-well as Churchmen; he does not even leave behind the followers of
-Joanna Southcote. Some were supposing once, in his presence, that it
-was impossible for followers of Joanna Southcote, and the like, not to
-be fully aware that they were being deluded. Father Ignatius said it
-was not so, and related a peculiar case that he witnessed himself. He
-happened to be passing through Birmingham (perhaps it was after he
-became a Catholic), and had occasion to enter a shop there to order
-something. The shopkeeper asked him if he had heard of the great light
-that had arisen in these modern times. He said no. "Well then,"
-repeated the shopman, "here, sir, is something to enlighten you,"
-handing him a neatly got up pamphlet. He had not time to glance at the
-title when his friend behind the counter ran on at a great rate in a
-speech something to the following effect. That the four Gospels were
-all figures and myths, that the Epistles were only faint
-foreshadowings of the real sun of justice that was now at length
-arisen. The Messias was come in the person of a Mr. Ward, and he would
-see the truth demonstrated beyond the possibility of a doubt by
-looking at the Gospel he held in his hand. Whilst the shopman was
-expressing hopes of converting him, he took {130} the opportunity of
-looking at the pamphlet, and found that all this new theory of
-religion was built upon a particular way of printing the text, _Glory
-be to God on high, and on earth peace to_-WARD'S _men_. On turning
-away in disgust from his fruitless remonstrances with this specimen of
-WARD'S _men_, he found some of WARD'S _women_ also in the same place;
-and overheard them exclaiming, "Oh! little England knows what a
-treasure they have in ---- jail." The pretended Messias happened to be
-in prison for felony at the time. He assured us that these poor
-creatures were perfectly sincere and earnest in the faith they had in
-this malefactor.
-
-The characteristic features of the Low Church school, or whatever name
-the religious bias of Mr. Spencer's mind at this time may be called,
-are, a certain self-sufficiency and rank spiritual pride. It begins
-with self and ends with self. From self springs the assurance of
-salvation, for self's sake, too, and every one must feel him_self_ in
-this mood before he can rely on himself. When this fancy gets
-possession of a person's mind, they forthwith turn apostles, borrow
-the language of inspiration even for table-talk, and no person is in
-the way of salvation at all who does not completely fall in with the
-stream of the new flood of ideas this notion brings into the
-"_regenerated_" mind. No matter how worthy or great any person may
-seem to the reprobate world, and did seem to the newly-made "saint"
-before the assurance, they are now dark, lost, but hopeful if they
-listen patiently to one half-hour's discourse upon the movements of
-the Spirit. The vagaries of each mind are in proportion to the
-imagination, and the facilities for expanding them by giving them
-expression. But far or near as they may go, self, proud self, is the
-beginning and end of them all.
-
-The woman who was instrumental in "regenerating" Mr. Spencer writes in
-one letter to say that she has "no pride," and that no one ever could
-accuse her of being infected with this passion. At the same time, ay,
-in the very next sentence, we have wrath and indignation at some of
-the unregenerate who do not think proper to pay court to her. The
-sweeping condemnations hurled against two or {131} three worthy
-clergymen, which opened Mr. Spencer's eyes to the imposition practised
-upon him, are further evidences of the same spirit. Mr. Spencer's own
-ways of acting will be a fair sample of this kind of thing. During his
-visit to Chester in 1825, he lectures the Bishop on several different
-occasions, and considers himself quite qualified to do so by virtue of
-the new spirit he has imbibed. One of the conversations he describes
-thus:--"After dinner we had an animated discussion, in which I took a
-lead against the field almost. Before going to bed, I had half an
-hour's private conversation with the Bishop, most interesting _on his
-account_. I humbly thank God who has heard my prayers, and made me a
-lowly instrument in His hands for the good of this already admirable
-man." In the next sentence he tells us that, in travelling home to
-Althorp, "I did not read much, but thank God was enabled to keep my
-mind in godly meditation almost all the way. God knows how blind and
-perplexed I am still." We have taken the liberty to mark some words in
-italics in the first quotation, as they show what is confirmed by
-other passages, too numerous to be quoted, how high he had risen in
-his own estimation when he considered a bishop benefited by half an
-hour's conversation with him. He is very hopeful, though, of bringing
-all the world to his ideas, and says of his family: "God grant me the
-continuance of that kindness which lies between me and all my family
-till such time as their hearts may be truly opened to my word."
-Another reason why we are rather sparing in extracts is a respect for
-a passage which occurs here in the journal. "I have put down many
-circumstances in this journal relating to private discussions with
-persons in religion. Should they fall into strange hands, be they
-bound in conscience to use them discreetly." We simply quote what is
-necessary to give a correct notion of the state of his mind. He
-carried his zeal a little too far betimes, "he went so far as to
-consider it the duty of a clergyman to call on and rebuke any brother
-clergyman, whom he might consider negligent in his ministerial
-office."
-
-{132}
-
-Thus a fellow-clergyman writes:--
-
- He got into some difficulties at this time in consequence of
- reporting to his bishop a clergyman who would not listen to his
- remonstrances; but mutual explanations succeeded in making
- everything right. The clergyman in question lived away from his
- cure, and thought proper to enjoy unclerical, but otherwise
- harmless, sports. Mr. Spencer, of course, was against this, but did
- not succeed in imbuing the other with his sentiments.
- Notwithstanding these notions of self-righteousness, he was far from
- incurring much censure for officiousness. His character and mode of
- life gained him so much respect that he could administer even
- reproof without provoking anger, except where it was too richly
- deserved. A letter of Dr. Blomfield's to him after this visit, bears
- out this remark. The Bishop says: ... "I hope you will look back on
- your visit to Chester with pleasure. You may have the satisfaction
- of believing that you have done good to many _young_ clergymen, who
- had an opportunity of conversing with you, if not to many _old_
- ones. I was very glad to set before them the example of a young man
- of rank and good prospects devoted in singleness of heart to the
- duties of his holy calling."
-
-That his single-mindedness and piety should have thus led him astray
-is not to be wondered at; for, besides the want of a state where such
-virtues could be properly cultivated, he had to breathe a religion
-whose first principles tend directly that way. The exercise of private
-judgment in what primarily concerns salvation must always lead one
-astray, because articles of faith are not creatures of human
-intelligence, neither are they within its compass to understand. He
-had, of course, a private judgment shackled by contradictions, as
-every subscriber of the Thirty-nine Articles has. He had an authority
-to obey which gave a dubious sound, and he was told plainly by the
-same voice that itself was defectible; the only tie to obedience was
-the condition on which he discharged his clerical functions; it was
-natural that he should see through this, from his very single-mindedness,
-and overlook the conditions while trying to unravel the knots with
-which they bound him. His birthday reflections this year, 1825, show
-that he did not begin to retrace his steps. They are as follows:--
-
-{133}
-
- "Dec. 21. ...
- This day sees me 26 years old, and blessed be my Almighty Protector,
- the last year has greatly advanced me in hope and knowledge of
- salvation. A reference to my observations last birthday shows me a
- great alteration in my views. What admirable methods does He employ
- in bringing sinners to himself? During the last half-year I reckon I
- must fix the time when by the most unlikely means God has brought me
- to faith and knowledge of His grace. I solemnly devote the next year
- and every day and hour and minute of my future life to coming nearer
- to Him, to learning His ways and word, and to leading others to the
- same knowledge, in which He has caused me to exult with a joy
- formerly unknown."
-
-{134}
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-Opposition To His Religious Views.
-
-
-Mr. Spencer was so taken with his new birth that he tried to have all
-his friends and acquaintances born again after his own fashion. He
-made no secret, therefore, of his religious leaning; by letter and
-word of mouth he tried to bring all to his side. We find, from his
-correspondence at this time, a shower of letters from every point of
-the clerical compass where there was authority or influence enough to
-muster a cloud for their discharge. In looking over such of the
-letters as he has thought well to preserve, one is struck at once with
-the diversity of opinion. It is better not to give names, perhaps; but
-a few sentences from each may not be out of place.
-
- Rev. Mr. A.--"I have read your letter through with great care, and I
- can say with truth, that it has produced much the same effect upon
- the eye of my mind which the full blaze of the meridian sun
- sometimes produces upon the natural eye. It has been almost too much
- for me." The letter goes on encouraging him in his spirit,
- fortifying him against all carnal opposition. This gentleman is of
- the same mind as Mr. Spencer, but more glowing in his zeal for the
- great cause of Gospel freedom.
-
- Rev. Mr. B.--"I address myself to one who, from that love of Christ
- which passeth knowledge, has evinced an anxiety for me, who am less
- than the least of all saints, and an unprofitable minister of the
- Gospel of God." This gentleman's language is of the right stamp; but
- he does not agree so perfectly, and arranges for a meeting, where
- they are to have a mutual adjustment of ideas.
-
-{135}
-
- Rev. Mr. C.--"This is very well at the commencement. I trust the
- Lord will add more, in the best sense of that expression."
-
- Rev. Mr. D.--".... To this I will never consent [renewing left off
- discussions], being satisfied (as I have before stated to you) that
- every man who is able and willing and sincerely endeavouring to
- learn and practise his duty, ought to be left in the quiet and
- undisturbed possession of his own conscience, and not forced from it
- against his will by others who happen to form a different judgment.
- In our former conversations, you told me, as plainly as language
- could well do, though perhaps not entirely at one interview, that
- you considered me to be an unconverted sinner, as destitute of the
- truth as any heathen could be, and in a state of perdition; and you
- seemed to think that I could be recovered from that fearful
- condition by that horrid system of indiscriminate condemnation and
- terror which prevails (I find) at Northampton in its most odious
- form, and which I believe to be essentially opposed to the
- principles of the Christian religion, as it is repugnant to those
- natural feelings of kindness and benevolence which God has implanted
- in the human breast."
-
-It might be fairer to transcribe his entire letter; but then the other
-letters have the same claim, and that would make a new volume, for
-some of the letters extend over fifteen pages of foolscap paper,
-closely written. The sum of the remaining part is this, that he is
-twenty-one years in holy orders, and that God could not have allowed
-him to be in error all that time. He says that, "I never can for one
-moment admit that any one is more anxious for my happiness than I am
-myself, nor that any person has a greater right to decide than I have
-by what means that happiness shall be sought. A man's own
-conscientious judgment is the proper guide in such cases." He then
-refers Mr. Spencer to others more learned than he for the discussion
-of those matters, and mentions the Bishop of Chester and John Rose,
-"whose qualifications for the task are incomparably superior to mine."
-This gentleman seems to hesitate between Mr. Spencer's opinions and
-his own, and is rather uneasy lest he might be wrong, yet does not see
-{136} the use of troubling himself, as it is all the same in the end,
-when one tries to do what his conscience tells him is right.
-
-Rev. Mr. E. is a doctor, so let us listen to him. After a rhetorical
-preface, in which he would make excuses but would not, because they
-were such friends and did not want them, for handling his friend so
-summarily, he thus launches forth:--
-
- "Although there can be but _one_ line of duty marked out in the
- situation of _every_ clergyman, and although, before God, the
- humblest and the loftiest in that profession are equally bounden to
- _pursue_ the same line of duty, and are, moreover, equally frail and
- 'found wanting,'--yet I cannot bring myself to consider yours as by
- any means an _ordinary_ case."
-
-After thus magnifying the importance of his subject, he neither agrees
-nor disagrees, but discountenances Mr. Spencer's practices on
-prudential motives. He staves off the whole matter of doctrine, and
-talks about discipline.
-
-The next quotation will be from a bishop. He very wisely and keenly
-observes:--
-
- "Amidst a great deal that is excellent and of right spirit in your
- observations, there is a presumption and self-confident tone, which
- is altogether new in _you_, and in my opinion not very consistent
- with real humility. In fact, I almost wonder that this symptom, if
- you have ever recalled to mind your conversations, or read over your
- letters when written, has not made you doubt the reality of what you
- call your conversion; for I remember perfectly well your having
- observed to me, that the extreme confidence of those who hold
- Calvinistic opinions as to their own case, and their extreme
- uncharitableness towards, or rather _concerning_ others, were strong
- indications of some radical error in their notions, and so they will
- ever be considered by those who take the same view with St. Paul of
- Christian charity."
-
-The Bishop then states the case very clearly at issue between them,
-and points how far they agree and disagree upon the point of
-_assurance_ and reliance on the merits of Christ, and proves his side
-of the question by Scripture, Anglican divines, and common sense.
-
-{137}
-
-It is a very singular thing that this bishop, when he first heard of
-the manifestations of Mr. Spencers Calvinistic spirit, concludes a
-short letter to him thus:--
-
- "I recommend to your perusal a most interesting tract, which Blanco
- White has just published, 'The Poor Man's Preservative against
- Popery.'
-
- "Ever yours affectionately,
- *****"
-
-These specimens are picked at random from a heap of letters. It looks
-incomprehensible to a Catholic how such a state of things could be
-possible in a system calling itself a Church. Not one of these, who
-were the clergy working with him in the same field and in the same
-way, dared to say, or knew how to say, "You have uttered a heresy."
-Some agreed with him, some applauded him, some wanted to be left alone
-in their old doctrines, and some begged leave very politely to differ
-from him, and gave their reasons for so doing. The Bishop argued
-warmly against him, but Mr. Spencer took up his lordship, and argued
-quite as warmly for the other side of the question. If he did not put
-them among the reprobate, they should very likely have let him alone.
-Such was the state of _dogma_ in the Establishment in the beginning of
-1826; it is scarcely improved, except in its own way, in 1865. No
-definite teaching, nothing positive, nothing precise, all mist, doubt,
-uncertainty, except that Popery is anti-Christian and subversive of
-human liberty.
-
-It is very hard to imagine, much less to realize, how these lukewarm
-expressions of assent and dissent turned, in a few months, into a
-tempest of opposition. Perhaps the following guess would nearly
-account for it. We may conclude from the letter of Lady Spencer to Dr.
-Blomfield (given in his life, page 70), on his being appointed to the
-see of Chester, that she and Lord Spencer knew something about the
-making of bishops and the mode of their _translation_. If she took
-such an interest in a stranger, but a friend, it is not wonderful that
-she should take a similar, if not a greater, interest in seeing a
-mitre on the head of her own son. Lord Liverpool had not yet retired
-from the head of the ministry, {138} and if his politics and Lord
-Spencer's were sufficiently of accord to promote the man whom the Earl
-patronized, they would be able to do a like service to the Earl's own
-son in due course. Extreme Low Church views would never do for the
-Episcopal Bench in those days, though many were raised to that dignity
-with little High Church views. Whether Mr. Spencer's opinions clouded
-this bright future, or that the noble family would feel it a disgrace
-to have a son so methodistical, or whether real anxiety for his
-spiritual welfare, or an endeavour to prevent a future that the
-Bishop's ken seemed to have forecasted, troubled his parents, it is
-difficult to say. At all events, Mr. Spencer's religious notions
-caused a great commotion in the family, whilst those who abetted and
-encouraged him went on preaching their sermons and reading their
-services in their position, with one exception, and nobody seemed to
-mind them.
-
-Lady Spencer took her son to London, in the beginning of the year
-1826, to have his new notions rectified by Dr. Blomfield. This good
-doctor immediately prescribed for his patient, for he did not need
-much feeling of his spiritual pulse after their correspondence. The
-interview is thus described:--
-
- "Jan. 24.--My mother allowed me her carriage after breakfast, to go
- and see the Bishop of Chester. I did not find him at home, and so
- came directly back again. He was so good as to call on me
- afterwards, and sat talking with me a considerable time. His
- conversation was most pleasing to me, though I could see that we did
- not fully agree in our view of Christian doctrine (_sic_). He
- desired me to read Sumner's 'Apostolical Preaching,' which I sent
- out for and began doing before dinner."
-
-His obedience to directors of all kinds was remarkable; but the
-results were invariably contrary to their expectations. He began this
-book at once, and be it remembered, he had read it twice before. Next
-day he read on, and "marked many passages which he thought decidedly
-wrong." He goes out a little, sees an old friend, and delights in
-reading Cowper's "Task," exclaiming, "It is a great thing to be a true
-Christian." He visits the Bishop in a day or two; they hold a
-discussion, but part in charity; and the result was, {139} that Mr.
-Spencer wrote him "the memorable letter" which scarcely left his
-lordship a hope of salvation if he did not at once get assured of his
-election.
-
-A correspondence ensues now, which terminates in a promise given and
-accepted of a longer stay in London, where matters may be settled in
-conversation to their mutual satisfaction. In the mean time, Mr.
-Spencer returns to his parish, and begins reading the New Testament in
-Greek (another of Dr. Blomfield's prescriptions). As he lays down the
-volume one day he exclaims, "How do I want the milk of God's word!"
-
-An old lady whom he visits, in illness, dozes into a stupor, and
-awakens unto Gospel faith. One evening he says:--"I spent this evening
-with a mixture of scrupulosities and comforts, but trust soon to find
-out what is the true Gospel freedom." There seem still some relics of
-the old asceticism left in him, for on having to go to Peterborough on
-some business, he says:--"I started in a chaise for Peterborough. I
-had scruples about the heavy expense of this mode instead of coaches;
-but I was consoled by the opportunity I had on the way of calling at
-Titchmarsh, and having half an hour's conversation with Lyttelton
-Powys. I got to Peterborough at 4½, dined with the dean and his lady
-at 6, and spent the evening in hearing extracts from his intended life
-of Bentley. I found myself in a land, alas! of spiritual barrenness;
-but water-springs may rise in dry ground."
-
-It was about this time, March, 1826, that he seems to have given up
-reading anything in the way of theology, except the Bible. He gives an
-odd dip into Cowper's poems, by way of recreation. He came across a
-book called "The Convent," but immediately "discovered it to be
-anti-Christian." This apparent quiet is, however, disturbed by the
-play of the clerical artillery around him. The tone of one or two
-extracts from the letters he received now will give an idea of the
-vantage-ground these good champions of orthodoxy thought proper to
-take. One writes:--
-
- "I know you did think it un-Christian-like to converse or employ the
- mind much on any subject but religion. To this almost entire
- exclusion of all other topics I decidedly object, {140} on the
- ground of its having a strong tendency to engender a pharisaical
- spirit, and of its being inconsistent with the common duties and
- occupations of life marked out for us by Providence, and contrary to
- the true interests of genuine Christianity. And my opinion in this
- respect has the sanction of some of the most excellent characters I
- have ever known--persons eminent alike for sound wisdom and
- discretion, and for a quiet and unostentatious, but sincere and
- fervent piety.
-
- "I cannot conclude this letter without remarking, that all your
- conversations with me, since you adopted your present views, have
- convinced me more and more that my own religious opinions are sound
- and yours erroneous; and that every day's experience confirms and
- strengthens me in the conviction, that the religious system which
- your friends at Northampton are pursuing (whatever charm it may have
- for enthusiastic minds) _is not the religion of the Bible_."
-
-This is from the grumbler quoted above, as may be seen by the
-style and sentiment.
-
-Our friend the doctor calls him to task in this manner:--
-
- ".... You are endeavouring to make up for past deficiencies, or to
- atone for past errors, by renewed activity or rather extraordinary
- efforts. This you do in perfect sincerity; and, I believe, heartily.
- In consequence, instead of _one_ sermon on a Sunday there are _two_;
- instead of a _quarterly_ there is a _monthly_ sacrament; and, in
- addition, an evening lecture, with prayers, is pronounced every
- Wednesday evening. Now, supposing you had not taken this
- unfavourable opinion of your past feelings and views, would you have
- adopted such regulations? I think you would _not_; and yet, be it
- observed, the necessity for them was and is a matter totally
- irrelevant to your own private feelings."
-
-The rest of this letter, the doctor's second, is to sober down Mr.
-Spencer's fervour, and make him go on quietly, hoping thus to slacken
-his enthusiasm and bring him to his former frame of mind.
-
-It is sad to see a clergyman called to task for not being more worldly
-and less zealous. He is, in fact, too much like a Catholic Saint to be
-endured in the Establishment. {141} He must eventually abandon it, or
-be stoned to death with hard words in it. We see the chink now through
-which the first alternative gleamed on the Bishop; and we see the
-disposition of Providence in moving him to confine himself to the
-Bible, when some plausible Anglican work might have burnished up what
-he had of Catholic instinct, and made it seem gold.
-
-{142}
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Progress Of His Religious Views.
-
-
-It must not be supposed that Mr. Spencer broke away from the
-Establishment by the religious notions he took up at this time; on the
-contrary, his great hope is that he shall unite all the sects to her,
-and he fancies they are being realized now among the Methodists in his
-own parish. His cardinal point of opinion at this time was, that the
-articles and formularies of the Anglican Church required some kind of
-soul to put life into them and make them touch the heart; that this
-life had been allowed to eke out of the Church in the days bygone, and
-that it was high time to bring it back; the wording of the Church's
-text-books gave room for his interpretation, and his whole line of
-procedure was but acting upon it. Others interpreted differently, some
-did not interpret at all; with both classes of opponents he maintained
-an opposition so satisfactory to himself that his notions only gained
-a stronger hold of his mind every day. We shall give some specimens of
-the arguments urged against him by the second class of opponents, who
-were chiefly influential members of his own family. One writes,--his
-father:--
-
- "I will commission Appleyard to get the Hebrew grammar you mention
- and send it down, and I am very glad to hear that you intend to
- revive that study, which must be so useful to a clergyman, and which
- will I hope be an advantage to your mind by varying the objects to
- which you apply it, and by that means tend to relieve it from the
- effects of too intense an application to the more difficult and
- abstruse points of religious study; which, if not under the
- corrective guidance of greater learning and experience than it is
- possible for you yet to have, might lead into the {143} wildness of
- enthusiasm, instead of the sensible and sound doctrine which it
- becomes an orthodox minister of an Established Church to hold for
- himself and to preach to others."
-
-Another,--his mother:--
-
- "Infinite peril attends the setting our duties and religious notions
- in too austere a point of view, and seeming mystic and obscure modes
- of speech when describing religious sentiments; and disparaging
- every effort to do right except it tallies exactly with some
- indescribable rule of faith which cannot be comprehended by
- simple-minded and quiet-tempered piety, is of all things the most
- dangerous, since the risk is dreadful either of disgusting, or
- repelling, or alarming into despair. Nothing proves the perfect
- ignorance of human character and the art of persuasion than this
- process. It never can do to terrify into doing right,--stubbornness
- and hopelessness must ever be the consequence of such ill-judged
- zeal; and to the preacher uncharitableness and spiritual pride.
- Milton's beautiful meditation of our Saviour, in 'Paradise
- Regained,' has two lines which exactly fill my idea of what ought to
- be the mode of doing good by precept:--
-
- "By winning words to conquer willing hearts,
- And make persuasion do the work of fear."
-
- .... Do not permit yourself to judge uncharitably of the motives of
- others because their religious sentiments are not always floating on
- the surface of their words and actions."
-
-The remonstrances descend in a graduated scale from these elegant
-remarks, through letters from old schoolfellows in an off-hand style;
-frisky young matrons twit him in a very airy kind of argument, and all
-seems to wind up in a flourish from a young officer, "How dy'e do, my
-dear old parson; ever in the dumps, eh?"
-
-The long visit to London is at length brought about. He writes in the
-journal:--"April 13, 1826. At 9 set off for London. I leave Althorp
-for a longer period than I have since taking orders. May God make it a
-profitable excursion!" This visit was planned by the family and {144}
-Dr. Blomfield, when they saw letters were unavailing, in order that
-Spencer might be brought, by conversing with his old master, into
-tamer notions on religion.
-
-He accordingly dines and speaks with the Bishop and some clerical
-friends, but the result was this note in the journal:--"I feel myself
-in this great town like St. Paul in Athens. Not one like-minded man
-can I now think of to whom I can resort. But God shall raise me some."
-The next Sunday after his arrival in London he is asked by Dr.
-Blomfield to preach in St. Botolph's Church, Bishopsgate street. This
-sermon was to be a kind of profession of his faith. His own
-commentaries on it are thus: "I had the wonderful glory of preaching a
-full and free gospel discourse in the afternoon to a London
-congregation, and God gave me perfect composure and boldness; and
-although he liked not the doctrine, the Bishop was perfectly kind to
-me afterwards." The Rev. Mr. Harvey, Rector of Hornsey, says, in a
-letter he had the kindness to write to one of our fathers: "My first
-acquaintance with Mr. Spencer was about 1824 or 1825, when I was
-curate of St. Botolph's, Bishopsgate, of which Archdeacon Blomfield,
-afterwards Bishop of London, was rector. Mr. Spencer had been a pupil
-of the Bishop's, and was always regarded by him with great interest.
-He generally came to him to stay for a few days in the spring, and
-used then to come and see me, and accompany me in my pastoral visits.
-He was a person of a most tender and loving spirit, very distrustful
-of himself, and very anxious to arrive at truth. On one occasion I
-remember his preaching on a Sunday afternoon at St. Botolph's, when
-Dr. Blomfield, then Bishop of Chester, read prayers. To the surprise
-of every one he took the opportunity of explaining his particular
-views of religion, which were then decidedly evangelical, intimating
-to the congregation that they were not accustomed generally to have
-the Gospel fully and faithfully preached. The Bishop of course was
-pained, but merely said, 'George, how could you preach such a sermon
-as that? In future I must look over your sermon before you go into the
-pulpit.' I do not vouch for the details, but this is what {145} I
-recollect as far as my memory helps me at this distance of time."
-
-Mr. Spencer went to hear others preach, and forms his opinions of each
-according to his way of thinking. Here are some specimens:--
-
- "The Bishop of Bristol preached in the morning for the schools, a
- sermon worthy of Plato rather than St. Paul." Another day: "Went
- with all speed to Craven Chapel, where I heard Irving, the Scotch
- minister, preach nearly two hours. I was greatly delighted at his
- eloquence and stout Christian doctrine, though his manner is most
- blameably extravagant." Another day: "I went with Mr. A---- and Miss
- B---- to hear Mrs. Fry perform, and was delighted with her
- _expounding_ to the prisoners in Newgate."
-
-He seems to advance more and more in his own religious views; and he
-says his father was wretched about them. He gets an opportunity of
-preaching in the West End of London, and writes thereupon: "O my God,
-I have testified thy truth to east and west in this horrid Babylon."
-He soon after returns home, and is so far improved that he determines
-to preach extempore for the future; in this he succeeds very well.
-What led him to this resolve was the facility with which he could
-maintain a conversation on religious topics for any length of time,
-and the rational supposition that he might do the same, as well in the
-pulpit as in the parlour.
-
-A letter to the Rev. Mr. Harvey, which is the only one that we have
-come across of those written by him at this time, gives a fair idea of
-the state of his mind: it was written on his return to Althorp after
-this London visit.
-
- "_August 3, 1826._
-
- "My Dear Harvey,--Bishop Heber's sermon I think beautiful. I am also
- pleased with all that has come of late from Bishop Sumner. His
- apostolic preaching does not fully satisfy me, and I have little
- doubt, from his writings, that he would not consider it as exactly
- representing his present views. .... It must be admitted that St.
- Paul's sins before his conversion are not so heinous as {146} those
- of many who have not ignorance and unbelief to plead in their
- favour. .... With regard to the question whether we be under guilt
- and eternal wrath, or in the favour of God and on the way of life,
- it seems to me highly dangerous to look to any distinction but this
- plain one, 'He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the
- Son of God hath not life.' .... Having thus ventured an opinion to
- you, I will go on to say that I wish I could have some conversation
- with you at large on these matters. I do not wish to introduce
- discussions on these points with my brethren, except when I am led
- to it by circumstances, and therefore I never entered on the subject
- with you during my stay in London. I have sometimes blamed myself
- for it, because you seemed to me to be so candid and unprejudiced
- that I might have done so without any risk of displeasure. I now
- tell you that I was much pleased always with the spirit of your
- sermons and with all your feelings, as far as I could judge of them
- from conversation; but I could plainly perceive that your views of
- fundamental doctrines were not what, I am convinced, are the right
- ones according to the Word of God and the Articles of our Church.
- The Bishop would have told you, I suppose, that he and I were at
- variance on these points, though in mutual regard and attachment I
- humbly trust we never before were so nearly united. Indeed, I never
- had an argument with him which did not leave me in admiration of his
- genuine meekness and charity. .... I reckon him very nearly right,
- and I am sure that he has real humility and an inquiring spirit; and
- so I firmly trust that, by God's blessing, he will be led to
- acknowledge the whole truth, and that very shortly. .... All that I
- venture to say is that he has not, to my mind, yet taken the right
- view of the plan of Redemption. But I am so convinced of his being
- on the right way to it, that I could almost engage to acknowledge my
- own views wrong (though I have not a single doubt of them now), if,
- before his departure, which God send may be distant, he does not
- declare his assent to them. I believe that you are just of the same
- mind on these things, as I was myself a year or two ago. {147} You
- probably know that my present views are of comparatively recent date
- with me. They are, in fact, what I have at last settled into, after
- two or three years of extreme doubts and oscillations and
- scrupulosities. I thank God that from all these He has delivered me,
- except the trouble and annoyance of my own evil heart, from which,
- however, I do not expect complete freedom, while in this tabernacle.
- As to writers on the subject, I have none, besides the formularies
- of our Church, whose doctrines and principles I like better than
- Thomas Scott's. There are some points of discipline, however, in
- which I do not go along with him. But I now attach myself most
- exclusively to the Word of God and prayer, as the method of
- increasing in knowledge, and feel delighted in the freedom which I
- have gained from the variety of opinions of learned men, which used
- to perplex me so grievously."
-
-This is what he looked upon as being in the Gospel freedom, that he
-was free from doctors; and it is a freedom. If Anglican doctors were,
-like our theologians, all of a mind in doctrine, with a certain margin
-for diversity of opinion in things of minor consequence, or in the way
-of clearing up a difficulty, it might be borne; but when one has
-theologians for guides who agree about as much as one living clergyman
-agrees with another, it is surely a freedom to be delivered from a
-yoke that presses on so many sides, and forces so many ways at once.
-
-{148}
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Some Of The Practical Effects Of His Views.
-
-
-It is high time that we should turn from the abstract consideration of
-Mr. Spencer's views, and test their efficiency by the great standard
-of good and evil--facts. The facts, bearing upon our subject, which
-the Journal gives up to this period of his life, the close of 1826,
-and beginning of the next year, may be summed up in few words. One old
-woman was the only one of whom he could say, "she seems fully
-established in religion;" and it is remarkable that this very person,
-Mrs. Wykes, became a Catholic later on. All the rest were in different
-stages of fermentation; some "hopeful," some "promising," some
-"ripening unto light," and so forth: they ripen more and more
-according to the number of his visits; but if it should happen that
-they did not need material help from him, they very soon got back to
-their old way again, and poor Mr. Spencer used to return, after his
-day's apostleship, much humiliated at his want of success. In fact,
-his missionary work was a perfect representation of Protestant
-missions to the heathen. He distributed Bibles and blankets,
-prayer-books and porridge, and three of his best and most hopeful
-proselytes went mad, and were sent to the county lunatic asylum. Of
-himself, he tells us that he used to spend from two to three hours
-daily in godly contemplation. Of this he began to get tired after some
-time, and gives the following extraordinary notions of his interior
-state:--
-
- "Sep. 2. I was employed chiefly in reading Gr. Testament; but I find
- myself very far yet from that state of real activity of mind which I
- ought to gain. I wish for such experience in Christ as not to need
- spiritual exercises as constantly as I now do to keep up communion
- with God, and so have more time for active labour."
-
-{149}
-
- "Sep. 12. I went to Nobottle at 12 and returned at 3. I called in
- every house except Chapman's, and, alas! I found _not one soul_ over
- whom I could rejoice as a true child of God. Yet there are signs of
- hope in a few. What an awful scene it would be if I had eyes to see
- it, or how great is my deliverance, who, though not less deserving
- perdition than any, am yet planted in the House of God, and rejoice
- through Christ in the hope of His glory."
-
-He begins the new year, 1827, with the following:--
-
- "I have found my mind so far from settled that I never saw myself
- more in need of God's grace. But I shall find it."
-
-Strange prophecy; he was determined never to rest content until he
-could feel right with regard to God and his salvation, and it is
-needless to say that he was far from this, notwithstanding his great
-Calvinistic assurance.
-
-Every new Dissenting minister that comes into his parish, he makes it
-his business to call upon and see if they could not unite their
-respective flocks, even by compromising differences. He sometimes
-comes home flushed with hope, and then, when he tries to persuade his
-fellow-clergymen of the Establishment to make advances to Methodists
-or Baptists, their coldness brings his hopes to nought. Nothing
-disheartened, he comes to the charge again, and is buoyed up, the
-whole time, by the hope of one day or other seeing his beloved people
-in one fold, under the care of one shepherd.
-
-He removes in the middle of this year to the house he built for
-himself at Great Brington, and he learns the pleasures of housekeeping
-in a few weeks by the difficulties he encounters in the management of
-servants. The rest of the year, until towards October, goes on rather
-calmly; no incident of importance occurs except the preaching of his
-Visitation Sermon. The Bishop of Peterborough, Dr. Marsh, comes to
-make his diocesan visitation in Northampton, and the Honble. and Rev.
-Mr. Spencer is asked to preach before him. He does so very nervously,
-and although he introduces one passage into that sermon indicative of
-his peculiar views, the Bishop was so pleased with it, {150} that he
-ordered him to print it. It was printed accordingly, and Mr. Spencer
-sent copies to all the friends he could remember; he even sent some
-across the Atlantic to old schoolfellows. Between thanks for the
-reception of this favour, and mutual acknowledgments of esteem and
-regard, with compliments and returns of the same, an interval is given
-him to prepare for another storm on the score of his opinions.
-
-The second volume of his diary concludes with some distressing
-discussions and family animadversions on his ways of thinking. It
-sounds rather strange in Catholic ears that lay people should deem
-themselves qualified to lecture a clergyman on what he ought to
-believe and teach; it ought not, if he remembers that we are speaking
-of a land of private judgment, where every one is qualified to think
-and dictate to his neighbour. The friends take their arguments now
-from a different point. Mr. Spencer had built his new rectory and gone
-to live there; the architect had done his part so well, that he would
-sometimes come off the coach, when passing near Brington, so that he
-might have another look at this specimen of material comfort. It was
-furnished, too, in a befitting style, for George went even to London,
-and took counsel with his mother and others on what things were proper
-and best suited for a parsonage. The best upholsterers were made to
-contribute from their stock of cupboards, beds, mattresses, chairs,
-and tables, and when the van arrived at Brington, there were several
-connoisseur female relatives invited to give their opinions on the
-colouring and papering of the rooms, the hanging and folds of the
-window curtains, and the patterns of the carpets. All was finally
-arranged to the satisfaction of all parties, and only one thing was
-wanting,--"the partner of his joys," or troubles, as they would be
-now, poor man.
-
-Bright ideas struck his friends about this time. It was thought, in
-very high and intellectual circles, that if the young rector of
-Brington were married, he would settle down quietly in the snug
-parsonage, and make metaphysical ideas give way to the realities of
-life. This they concluded was the short road to his settlement, and he
-himself used {151} often to tell how long arguments on religious views
-often ended with, "Well, George, get yourself a wife, and settle down
-like your neighbours, and all these dreams will vanish." To their
-surprise, however, they found the young rector as difficult of
-persuasion in this point as in his other notions; but experience gave
-them the advantage over him here, and they were determined not to be
-foiled. The want of a house to bring the bride to, was thought to be
-the sole objection heretofore, and perhaps it was; that was now
-removed. Suggestions to that effect reach him in letters from his
-friends about this time. The following is a specimen:--
-
- "It is probable that I shall return to Brington for the winter. If N
- *** or N *** succeeds in a matrimonial alliance on your account, I
- hope you will speedily let me know; perhaps an insinuating
- advertisement in the _Morning Post_ might be useful to you. Joking
- apart, I shall be most happy when the time comes for wishing you
- joy."
-
-Insinuations and arguments did not avail, so they had recourse to
-stratagem. One would not like to suspect that the Bishop of Chester
-was let into the secret, though he ought to be a capital hand at such
-things, as he had the hymeneal knot twice tied upon himself. However
-that may be, the plot was laid, hatched, and the eggs broken as
-follows:--Towards the end of October, 1827, he accompanied Dr.
-Blomfield on a visitation through the diocese of Chester. He was taken
-a little out of his way in order to preach in a church near
-Warrington. The rector of this place asked him specially;--what was
-his surprise to find his "old flame," Miss A ***, as mentioned in a
-former chapter, there ready prepared to be one of his listeners. He
-walked with her to church, and was delighted with her company; he used
-to say he never preached, whilst a minister, with greater satisfaction
-than on that day. Coming home from church he had to hear out
-compliments about his preaching, and he spent the evening with a
-clerical party--one was a clergyman who was about being married to the
-sister of Mr. Spencer's favourite. It was thought everything would
-come round then, and that some kind of arrangement would be made for
-the future; but Mr. Spencer, though pleased, {152} was not anywise
-romantic, nor apt to put his head into a halter from which it would
-not be so easy to draw it back. It was well, however, that he was
-pleased, and he evinces as much himself in his Journal, when he says:
-
- "Sunday, Oct. 21.
- I begin this volume with one of the most interesting Sundays I have
- ever spent. After breakfast with Mr. ***'s family, we went to church
- about half a mile from the house, where I preached the first sermon
- which it has been given me to preach in this diocese; and I am
- pleased that it should be in this church and before N *** N ***
- among other hearers, with whom I now converse as pleasingly as in
- former times, but on higher subjects. With her and her sister I
- walked home, and again to evening service, where I read prayers and
- Mr. *** preached."
-
-But this argument met the fate of all that had been spent on him for
-the last three years. It seemed all settled as far as he was
-concerned; for there was no doubt on the other side. He got into his
-carriage to drive up to Althorp, and ask his father's consent. When
-near the door, he called to the driver to stop, and turn to the
-rectory. He had just formed the resolution _never to marry_. It was
-not that he did not like the intended partner, it was an affair of
-long standing; but he remembered the words of St. Paul: "He that is
-unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may
-please the Lord: But he that is married careth for the things that are
-of the world, how he may please his wife" (1 Cor. vii. 32, 33, Prot.
-version). No one was ever able to shake this resolution, and the
-repeated attempts of others to do so only strengthened it the more. He
-often related this incident to us, and when asked, if he then thought
-of the Catholic priests, "Oh, I might, but I thought it was some
-superstitious motive that made them live single; I thought I made a
-new discovery myself;" he would reply.
-
-A change takes places now in his finances. He was Always extremely
-charitable, and his housekeeper tells of his equipment, when going out
-to make his parish rounds, of a morning. He would carry a bottle of
-wine in his coat pocket, and as much money as he could possibly spare.
-{153} These he distributed among the sick and the poor. He used also
-to buy them medicines, and procure them clothes. Of course it was
-found soon that a very large income would not suffice for the
-liberality of the son, so Lord Spencer came to an arrangement with
-him. He allowed him a liberal yearly income; but George feels it
-rather hard, and complains of his straitened means in two or three
-places of his Journal. However, he set to make the best of it, and
-began by retrenchment from his own table. "By way of retrenchment, I
-have left off wine and puddings or tarts, and I have reduced my
-quantity of clean linen to wear." Ever himself, what he spared from
-his own table he brought to the poor. "We shall transcribe the simple
-account of this period of his life given us by Mrs. Wykes, who knew
-him from a child.
-
- "His great charity to the poor and wandering beggars was unbounded.
- At times he gave them all the money he had, and stripped himself of
- his clothes to give them to the distressed; and when he had nothing
- to give, he would thank God he had only His holy truth to impart,
- and would speak of the love of God so fervently, that he would call
- forth tears from the poor objects of misery who came many miles to
- beg money or clothes of him. Many impostors presented themselves
- with the rest, but even those he thanked God for, and thought
- nothing of relieving them, as he said he lost nothing by them, but
- got a lesson of humility. Some poor afflicted mendicants would
- present themselves with loathsome sores, and these he would assist
- in dressing and try to cure. His house was always open for the
- distressed, and he often longed to make an hospital of it for the
- poor. He was all for gaining souls to God; he would often walk to
- Northampton to visit the lodging-houses, and most infamous dens of
- the dissolute, to speak to them of God's holy law and mercy to
- sinners. Indeed his whole time was devoted to doing good. He did not
- often allow himself the privilege of riding, but would walk to
- Northampton or further, carrying his clothes in a knapsack strapped
- over his shoulders, and would smile at the jeers and laughs against
- him, glorying in following out the practice of the Apostles. He
- fasted as well as he knew {154} how, much stricter than when he
- became a Catholic. In fact he allowed nothing to himself but plain
- living, and willingly granted better to others. He gave no trouble,
- but was always ready to wait upon others, and make them happy and
- comfortable. He was always ready to hear complaints, and turn
- everything into the goodness of God. He was indeed the father of the
- poor, and a peace-maker, though meeting with many contradictions,
- particularly among the Dissenters. He bore all with patience and
- cheerfulness, and went on hoping all would end well in due time."
-
-The last _effect_ we shall record in this chapter is another passage
-from his Journal:--"Saturday, Nov. 17. To-day I called on Mr.
-Griffiths, Independent minister at Long Buckley, with whom I had one
-or two hours' conversation of a very interesting kind. I see clearly
-that all is not right with the Church." He means the Church of
-England, of course.
-
-{155}
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Scruples About The Athanasian Creed.
-
-
-In the December of 1827 the old scruples, that came into his head some
-two years before, about the Athanasian Creed revived. Perhaps it is
-better to give the words of the Journal before going into particulars
-on this point. He says--
-
- "Tuesday, Dec. 4.--.... Thursby came to dine and sleep here. We
- conversed till nearly 12, almost incessantly, about his concerns
- first, then about mine. I let him know my thoughts of resigning my
- preferment on account of the Athanasian Creed. He was at first very
- much displeased at them, but seemed better satisfied as I explained
- myself."
-
- "Wed., Dec. 5.--I came down after a wakeful night, and much
- confirmed in my resolution to take decided steps about declaring
- against the Athanasian Creed. Thursby seemed to coincide much more
- nearly with my views. We talked on this and other topics until 11 or
- 12, when he went away. I went out in Great Brington till 2; dined;
- then ran to Althorp .... came back and wrote long letters to my
- father and the Bishop of Chester, about my intended declaration, and
- probable resignation of my living. I here solemnly affirm that
- before last week I had no sort of idea of taking this step. I am now
- writing on Friday, fully determined upon it. The circumstances which
- led me to this decision are:--1st. My many conversations of late,
- and correspondence with, dissenting ministers, by whose words I have
- been led to doubt the perfectness of our Establishment. 2ndly. My
- discussions and reflections about retrenchments, leading me to
- consider the probability of more preferment, and how I could accept
- it. 3rdly. The quantity of Church preferment which has been of late
- {156} changing hands, by which I have been led to think how I should
- answer an offer myself. And, 4thly. My thoughts about signing
- Baily's boy's testimonial, which has led me to reckon more highly on
- the value of my signature."
-
-From the letters of those who undertook the setting of Mr. Spencer's
-troubles at rest, it appears that his difficulties about the
-Athanasian Creed did not arise from the doctrines there put forth
-about the Blessed Trinity and Incarnation; but that he objected to the
-terminology as un-Scriptural, and to the condemning clauses in the
-beginning and end of the Creed. Dr. Blomfield is the first to reason
-with him; his answer to the letter above-mentioned is couched in the
-following terms:--
-
- "The letter which I have just received from you astonishes and
- confounds me; not that I ought to be surprised at anything strange
- which you may do, after what I have lately witnessed and heard; but
- I must say, in plain terms, that your letter is the letter of an
- insane person. You profess to be willing to ask advice and hear
- reasoning, and yet you take the most decided steps to wound the
- feelings of your friends and injure the cause of the Church, without
- giving those whom you pretend to consult an opportunity of
- satisfying your doubts. You suffer your father to be with you two
- days without giving him a hint that you were meditating a step
- incomparably the most important of your life, and most involving his
- happiness; and then, in the midst of his security, write him a
- letter, not to tell him that you are doubtful on certain points and
- wish to be advised, but that your mind is made up and you are
- determined to act. Surely common sense and filial duty ought to have
- suggested the propriety of waiting till you had communicated with
- me, although even to me you do not state what your doubts and
- difficulties are with sufficient precision to enable me to discuss
- them; but you write a long panegyric upon your own sincerity and
- humility, of which I entertained no doubt, and thus, after repeated
- conferences with Dissenting ministers and Roman Catholic priests,
- far more astute and subtle reasoners than yourself, you are worked
- up into an utter disapprobation of one of the articles of our
- Church, having all along concealed your doubts from your nearest and
- dearest {157} friends, and from me, who had an especial claim to be
- made acquainted with them. Is this sincere and judicious conduct?"
-
-He proceeds to some lengths in this style, then tells him that it is
-one thing to doubt of the truth of a doctrine, and another thing to
-believe it to be false, and that one should take no step of importance
-until he thought in the latter way. He tells him to be quiet for some
-time, and give him the objections one by one. This Mr. Spencer does,
-and the answer is partly, that given in Dr. Blomfield's life, page 85,
-and partly, another letter he wrote to him within a fortnight's time.
-The argument of this good ecclesiastic shapes itself thus:--
-
- "The general proposition of excluding all from salvation who do not
- believe the doctrine of the Trinity and Incarnation, as set forth in
- the Athanasian Creed, is laid down with certain limitations. The
- Protestant Church does lay it down thus, as is evident from certain
- quotations from the Articles. Besides, she never intends to
- pronounce a condemnation on any, like the Church of Rome. The
- meaning, therefore, of these clauses is an assertion of the truth of
- the doctrine simply; and for this he quotes the opinion of some
- commissioned interpreters and the admission of "the most scrupulous
- and captious Baxter that such exposition may be received."
-
-This is the sum of Dr. Blomfield's argument; he gives several other
-authorities for his opinion. We need not be surprised that the
-argument was not convincing; and Mr. Spencer says, in his Journal:--"I
-had a letter from the Bishop of Chester this morning, which was weak
-in argument and flippant; I hope good may result from it." The
-weakness of the Bishop's argument arises from the dilemma in which he
-was placed. If he said the Anglican Church does really condemn all who
-hold not her doctrines, then she would arrogate to herself the claim
-of infallibility which she takes good care to disclaim, and even makes
-an article to that effect. If she does not condemn, what is the
-meaning of allowing the clauses to remain in her formularies, and
-require her ministers to subscribe, read, and preach them? His only
-line of argument, considering his position, was to {158} steer a
-middle course, and this he endeavoured to do, and succeeded pretty
-well. But shifting difficulties by trying to reconcile contradictions,
-is a process that may calm an easy-going mind, previously disposed to
-indifference, but never can satisfy a clear, earnest one, that seeks
-the truth in all its terrible reality and straightforward meaning. A
-Church composed of a mass of heterogeneous elements in doctrine and
-practice, must be very hard set indeed when driven to give an account
-of herself. The wonder is, that she cannot see the absence of a Divine
-guidance, even in the admissions she is forced to make, if not in the
-very nature of her own human constitution. Only a Catholic can account
-for a creed, and if there was not a body of living teachers with the
-promise of Divine direction in their formal decisions and utterances,
-the Church that Christ established would not exist; and only Catholics
-can claim and prove this very hinge of their system, which
-pseudo-bishops have their hits at when they writhe under the pressure
-of difficulties they cannot answer.
-
-The letter of this Bishop did not settle Mr. Spencer's mind--it
-unsettled him the more. Two or three clergymen were invited to talk
-him back to the old way, but with similar success. Lord Spencer then
-gets one of the London clergy to undertake the task which foiled so
-many. We give the father's letter of introduction, as it is so
-characteristic of his paternal affection and concern, and at the same
-time his due consideration for his son's conscientious difficulties.
-The Earl was staying in Althorp for a few days, and left this letter
-for George on his departure:
-
- "Your mother writes me word that Mr. Allen, of Battersea, will come
- and dine with her to-morrow, and remain here nearly the whole week.
- I am very happy at this, because, if you are sincere (and I do not
- now mean to question your sincerity) in wishing for information,
- instruction, and advice, I know of no man--either high or low,
- clerical or secular--more able to afford them to you, more correct
- in his doctrines and character, or more affectionately disposed to
- be of all the service he can to every one connected with {159} us,
- and to you in particular. But, my dear George, in order to enable
- yourself to derive all the benefit that may unquestionably be
- derived from serious and confidential communications on a most
- important subject, with such a man, you must be more explicit, more
- open, and more confidential with him than, I am grieved to think,
- you have yet been, either with your excellent friend the Bishop of
- Chester, or even with me, though I allow that in the conversations
- we have had together _in this visit_ to you here, I saw rather more
- disposition to frankness on your part than I had before experienced.
-
- "I should not thus argue with you, my dear George, if I did not from
- my heart, as God is my judge, firmly believe that your welfare, both
- temporal and eternal, as well as the health both of your body and
- mind, depended upon your taking every possible means to follow a
- better course of thinking, and of study, and of occupation, than you
- have hitherto done since you have entered the profession for which,
- as I fondly hoped, and you seemed fitted by inclination, you would
- have been in due time, if well directed and well advised, formed to
- become as much an ornament to it as your brothers are, God Almighty
- be thanked for it, to those they have entered into.
-
- "I still venture to hope, though not without trembling, but I do
- hope and will encourage myself in the humble hope, which shall be
- daily expressed to the Almighty in my prayers, that I may be
- permitted, before I go hence, to witness better things of you; and I
- even extend my wish that when I return hither on Friday, I may have
- the satisfaction of learning that your interviews with Mr. Allen,
- who I have no doubt will be well prepared to hear and to discuss all
- you have to say, have had a salutary effect; and that our private
- domestic circle here may be relieved from the gloom which, for some
- time past, you must have perceived to overhang it when you made part
- of it, and afford us those blessings of home so comfortable and
- almost necessary to our advancing age. I write all this, because,
- perhaps, if I had had the opportunity, my spirits, which are {160}
- always very sensitive, might prevent me from speaking it. God bless
- you, my dear George.
-
- "Your ever affectionate father,
- "Spencer."
-
-The conferences he held with this Mr. Allen are faithfully noted in
-the Journal, and many and long they were. To-day conversing, to-morrow
-reading Hay and Waterland together, on the Athanasian Creed. He became
-no better, but a good deal worse, and the _finale_ was that he wrote
-to his own Bishop, Dr. Marsh, of Peterborough, to resign his living or
-have his doubts settled. This was early in the year 1828.
-
-This Bishop answers him thus:--
-
- "In reference to the doubts which you expressed in a former letter,
- you say: 'All that I was anxious about was to avoid any just
- imputation of dishonesty, by keeping an office and emoluments in the
- Established Church, while I felt that I could not heartily assent to
- her formularies.'
-
- "If this difficulty had occurred to you when you were a candidate
- for Holy Orders, it would certainly have been your duty, either to
- wait till your doubts had been removed, or, if they _could not_ be
- removed, to choose some other profession or employment. Whoever is
- persuaded that our Liturgy and Articles are not founded on Holy
- Scripture cannot conscientiously subscribe to the latter, or declare
- his assent to the former. To enter, therefore, on a profession which
- requires such subscription and assent, with the _previous belief_
- that such assent is not warranted by Scripture, is undoubtedly a
- sacrifice of principle made in the expectation of future advantage.
- But you did _not_ make such a sacrifice of principle. ... Whatever
- doubts you _now_ entertain, they have been imbibed since you became
- Rector of Brington; and you are apprehensive that it may be
- considered as a mark of dishonesty, if, oppressed with these
- difficulties, you retain your preferment.
-
- "I know not at present the kind or the extent of these difficulties,
- and therefore can only reply in general terms. I have already stated
- my opinion on the impropriety of {161} entering the Church with the
- previous belief that our Liturgy and Articles are not founded on
- Scripture. But if a clergyman who believed that they were so at the
- time of his ordination, and continued that belief till after he had
- obtained preferment in the Church, begins at some future period to
- entertain doubts about certain parts either of the Liturgy or the
- Articles, we have a case which presents a very different question
- from that which was considered in the former paragraph. In the
- former case there was a choice of professions, in the latter case
- there is not. By the laws of this country a clergyman cannot divest
- himself of the character acquired by the admission to Holy Orders.
- He can hold no office in the State which is inconsistent with the
- character of a clergyman. To relinquish preferment, therefore,
- without being able to relinquish the character by which that
- preferment was acquired, is quite a different question from that
- which relates to the original assumption of that character: Nor must
- it be forgotten that a clergyman may have a numerous family
- altogether dependent on the income of his benefice, whom he would
- bring therefore to utter ruin if he resigned it.
-
- "On the other hand, I do not think that even a clergyman so situated
- is at liberty to substitute his _own_ doctrine for that to which he
- objects. By so doing he would directly impugn the Articles of our
- Church, he would make himself liable to deprivation, and would
- justly deserve it. For he would violate a solemn contract, and
- destroy the very tenure by which he holds his preferment.
-
- "But is there no medium between an open attack on our Liturgy and
- Articles and the entertaining of doubts on certain points, which a
- clergyman may communicate in confidence to a friend, in the hope of
- having them removed? If, in the mean time, he is unwilling to
- inculcate in the pulpit doctrines to which his doubts apply, he will
- at the same time conscientiously abstain from inculcating doctrines
- of an opposite tendency. Now, if I mistake not, this is precisely
- your case. And happy shall I be if I can be instrumental to the
- removal of the doubts which oppress you. I am now at leisure; the
- engagements which I had at Cambridge {162} respecting my lectures
- are finished; you may now fully and freely unburden your mind, and I
- will give to all your difficulties the best consideration in my
- power. "I am, my dear Sir,
-
- "Very truly yours,
- "Herbert Peterborough."
-
-This letter evoked a statement of the precise points, and the
-following was the answer:--
-
- ".... I now venture to approach the difficulties under which you
- labour, and I will take them from the words you yourself have used
- in your letter of April 30. In that letter, speaking of the Church,
- you say, 'I cannot at this time state any paragraph in her
- formularies and ordinances with which I cannot conscientiously
- comply, except the Athanasian Creed.' You then proceed in the
- following words: 'and now I must go on to state wherein I differ
- from this Creed: not in the parts which may be called doctrinal;
- that is, where the doctrine itself is stated and explained.' And you
- conclude by saying, 'the parts of the Creed to which I object are
- the condemning clauses.' And you object to the clauses on the
- grounds that they are not warranted by the declaration of our
- Saviour recorded in Mark xvi. 16, on which passage those clauses are
- generally supposed to have been founded. Whether they are so
- warranted or not depends on the extent of their application in this
- Creed, which begins with the following words:--'Whosoever will be
- saved, before all things, it is necessary that he hold the Catholic
- faith, which faith, except every one do keep whole and undefiled
- (entire and unviolated, Cath. trans.), without doubt he shall perish
- everlastingly. Now the Catholic faith is this, that we worship one
- God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity.' So far, then, it is evident
- that they only are declared to be excluded from salvation who do not
- hold the Catholic faith, that is, as the term is there explicitly
- defined, who do not hold the doctrine of the Trinity in Unity. Now
- this doctrine has been maintained, with very few exceptions, by
- Christians in general from the earliest to the present age. It was
- the doctrine of the Greek Church {163} ...... and all the Reformed
- churches. To exclude from salvation, therefore, only those who
- reject a doctrine which is received by Christians in general, is a
- very different thing from the denial of salvation to every one who
- does not believe in all the tenets of a particular Church. The
- doctrine, _nulla salus nisi credas in Trinitatem_, bears no
- resemblance to the sweeping declaration _nulla salus extra Ecclesiam
- Romonam_. Surely, then, we may appeal to Mark xvi. 16, combined with
- Matthew xxviii. 19, in order to prove that a belief in the Trinity
- is necessary to salvation, and consequently to prove that those two
- passages warrant the deduction, that they who reject the doctrine of
- the Trinity will not be saved. The two passages must be taken
- together, in order to learn the whole of our Saviour's last command
- to his Apostles. If, then, our Saviour himself commanded his
- Apostles to baptize 'in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and
- of the Holy Ghost,' and then added, 'he that believeth and is
- baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned;'
- it really does appear that our Saviour himself has warranted the
- opinion that a belief in the doctrine of the Trinity is such a
- fundamental article of the Christian faith that they who reject it
- do so at their own peril.
-
- "But you think that the anathema of our Saviour in Mark xvi. 16, had
- a different application from the corresponding anathema in the
- Athanasian Creed. Our Saviour spoke of those to whom the Gospel had
- been preached, as appears from Mark xvi. 15. And if the anathema in
- the Athanasian Creed had a more extensive application, or if it were
- meant to include not only those who wilfully rejected the doctrine
- of the Trinity when it had been duly explained to them, but those
- also to whom the doctrine had never been preached, and whose want of
- belief arose merely from a want of knowledge, I should likewise
- admit that the anathema of the Athanasian Creed derived no authority
- from Mark xvi. 16. But I see no reason whatever for the opinion that
- the anathema of the Athanasian Creed includes those who have never
- heard of the doctrine. Neither the Creed itself, nor the
- circumstances under which it was {164} composed, warrant such an
- opinion. Whoever was the author of it, the Creed was framed during
- the controversy which then distracted the whole of the Christian
- Church. It applied, therefore, immediately and exclusively to those
- who were partakers in or acquainted with the controversy. It could
- not have been originally intended to apply to those who had never
- heard of the controversy or the doctrine controverted. It would be,
- therefore, quite uncritical to apply it at present in a way which
- was not originally intended. Nor does the language of the Creed
- itself warrant any other application. When it is declared necessary
- to _hold_ the Catholic faith, and to _keep_ the Catholic faith, that
- necessity can apply only to those to whom the Catholic faith has
- been _presented_. Unless a man is previously put in possession of a
- thing, he cannot be said either to _hold_ it or to _keep_ it.
-
- "Surely the most conscientious clergyman who believes in our
- Saviour's declaration, recorded in Mark xvi. 16, may read without
- scruple the similar declaration in the Athanasian Creed. And if, on
- the authority of our Saviour, he may read the anathema in the
- beginning of the Creed, he may, without scruple, read the less
- strongly expressed anathema in the end.
-
- "In the hope that, after reading this letter, your mind will become
- at ease, I subscribe myself, dear Sir,
-
- "Very truly yours,
- "Herbert Peterborough."
-
-This letter is a tolerable specimen of the Bishop's power of
-reasoning, and very sharp it is too; but it does not exactly meet Mr.
-Spencer's difficulties. He might object:--"What passage of Scripture
-warrants our uniting together the two passages from St. Mark and St.
-Matthew?" And "being _presented with_ a thing is not exactly the same
-as _being in possession of_ a thing." "We should have the same warrant
-for the remaining clauses of the Creed as for the first three,
-otherwise, according to the Articles, we are not bound to receive
-them; then why not erase them?' The Bishop would have no resource
-here, except to fall back {165} upon the Church, and that was not the
-point at issue; so perhaps he did well not to try. He uses tradition,
-and Dr. Blomfield authority; but these could have no weight against a
-Bible Christian, as Mr. Spencer was then.
-
-A Catholic could very easily solve the difficulty. The Church has used
-these terms to express her doctrine, and she says this is the revealed
-doctrine; therefore it must be. No one can be saved who does not
-believe the Trinity and Incarnation, implicitly or explicitly; those
-to whom it has never been properly proposed, implicitly, and those to
-whom it has, explicitly. Some theologians will have explicit credence
-required of both classes, and say that God would even send an angel to
-a savage, if he placed no obstacle, and reveal this mystery to him
-rather than that he should die without it. And now it will seem very
-strange to say that this doctrine is less terrible than the Protestant
-open-arm theory. Yet, so it is, for we allow many Socinians and
-ignorant Protestants and others to be in good faith, and perhaps never
-have had this doctrine properly proposed to them. We suspend our
-judgments with regard to them, and say if they live well they may be
-saved. That is more than the Bishop of Peterborough could allow,
-according to his principles.
-
-{166}
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Incidents And State Of Mind In 1827-28.
-
-
-His life, though perpetually floating on religious discussions and
-doctrinal scruples, found other matters to check its course and employ
-it otherwise for a few days more. The family were all in a great glow
-of delight towards the close of the year 1827, in consequence of the
-Honourable Frederick Spencer, who was commander of the _Talbot_
-man-of-war, having distinguished himself at the battle of Navarino.
-George, of course, was overjoyed; here was his brother, who pored over
-the same lesson, played at the same games, and contended about the
-same trifles as himself, crowned with laurels and in the flush of
-victory. George loved him dearly, and these well-earned honours
-imparted a season of sunshine to the clergyman, which all his gospel
-fervour had failed to do up to this. Lord Spencer alludes to it in the
-touching letter given in a former chapter; but like everything human,
-this rose had its thorns. After the letters announcing the startling
-determination which called forth the efforts of ecclesiastical
-learning quoted in the last chapter, a great dulness fell over the
-family circle. Mr. Allen did not clear the atmosphere, and Mr. Spencer
-tells us feelingly in his Journal that his mother did not exchange one
-cordial sentence with him during the whole term of her Christmas stay
-at Althorp. This he felt, but bore in the spirit of a martyr; it was
-inflicted upon him for what he thought right before God, and he tried
-to make the best of it, wishing, but unable, to change the aspect of
-things. The Bishop of Peterborough's letter had the effect of quieting
-him for some time, in so far as he did not feel himself called {167}
-upon to preach against what he did not assent to, but was content with
-letting it remain in abeyance.
-
-The old way of settling him is again revived. During the last week of
-February, 1828, he notices three or four long conversations about
-matrimony; he takes the subject into consideration, and reads the
-Epistles to St. Timothy for light: but he is not convinced, and
-continues in his determination. He might foresee the settlement of
-ideas that would result from this step, if he considered the trouble
-of setting his money affairs in order, which forced itself upon him
-now. He says: "I was employed almost all day till three o'clock in
-putting my papers to rights. I feel that I have been careless in all
-matters of business, and this is wrong; for it leads me to be
-chargeable and dependent on others, and that a minister especially
-must guard himself against. It greatly shortens my powers of
-liberality, and it makes men despise me. On all these accounts I trust
-I shall overcome the evil, and be a good man of business." He is as
-good as his word. He sends a full and clear account of his affairs to
-his father, and his lordship makes an arrangement that places his son
-in independence, whilst he is able at the same time to get clear of
-all difficulties and debts incurred by his building.
-
-To turn to his spiritual progress. He is not a whit nearer Catholic
-faith now than he was when he returned from Italy, except that the
-time is shorter. On June 29 he says: "It was St. Peter's day, and I
-preached on the pretensions of the Pope." He also holdeth a tea-party
-in the true Evangelical style, and says: "To-day the candle of the
-Lord burnt brightly within me." He buys a mare about this time, which
-does not seem to be as amenable as her master would wish, and he says
-thereupon: "This mare disappoints me rather, and puts to shame my
-boasting of God's blessing in buying her. Yet I shall not be ashamed
-of my faith some day or other." It was usual with him at this time,
-when he had a servant to choose, a journey to take, or anything
-special to get through, "to seek the Lord in prayer therefor," and
-proceed according to the inspirations he might get at the moment.
-Bishop Blomfield scolds him {168} heartily about this, and shows him
-the folly of using one faculty for a thing which God has given him
-another for, and proceeding in his ordinary actions without the
-ordinary means placed in his way. This was, of course, a delusion of
-his; but two or three disappointments convinced him of its being akin
-to tempting God.
-
-He accompanies Dr. Blomfield in his visitation this year also, and he
-gets very severely handled by him on the score of his religious views,
-in the presence also of two other clergymen. The lecture turned
-chiefly upon the inculcation of humility, and the subduing of that
-spiritual pride which the Bishop noticed in a former communication. A
-few days after this lecture, which sank deeply into Mr. Spencer's
-mind, as a whole company were seated at dinner with the Bishop, a
-letter arrived from the Duke of Wellington, announcing the translation
-of Dr. Blomfield from Chester to London. This was July 25, 1828. His
-reflections upon this news are: "God be praised;" and the next day he
-says: "I wrote a sermon for to-morrow, and spent much time in prayer
-for a quiet mind and superiority to the snares of ambition. It was a
-most boisterous day, almost continual thunder and pouring rain. I
-found fault with a good deal said by the Bishop in regard to his
-promotion, but I pray that I may judge myself and not others."
-
-He now relaxes a little in his Puritanism; he gives dinners, invites
-guests, and notes that he has to pray against being too particular
-with regard to his guests. A pretty large company dine at the rectory.
-This is an essay in parties, and ladies are invited for the first time
-since he commenced housekeeping. He had the ominous number of thirteen
-at table, and it could not pass off without some mishap or other.
-Contrary to old wives' rules, the servant was the unfortunate one. We
-will let himself tell the story. "Mrs. Nicholls was in great misery
-about breaking the dish, which made her send up the haunch of venison
-upside down. I have cause to be thankful for this, as the means by
-which God will humble her. The evening passed off well, and thank God
-I was not careful or shy."
-
-He comes across a Baptist minister, who so far outdid {169} him in the
-Methodistic way of talking, that he writes: "I consider him a very bad
-specimen of cant." After this, his outlandish gospelling comments upon
-trifles and iotas begin to disappear. He becomes more rational, gets
-into the ways of the world, reads newspapers, and is a very sensible
-kind of man altogether. He notes in his Journal, here and there, that
-he carries his own bundle, and works a part of the day at manual
-labour in his garden. He also remarks that, the coldest day he ever
-remembered, he went out without gloves or great-coat, and was unable
-from numbness to write his sermon when he came home. He goes on the
-coach next day in the same trim, and says he wants "to give an example
-to the poor," and that "God preserved him from catching cold." Very
-likely he had given the great-coat to some poor man the day before.
-After a few complaints of quarrels among the clergy, and the manner in
-which he has been treated by his family for the last three years on
-account of his religious scruples, he concludes the year 1828 with the
-following reflection:--"I now look back to this time a year ago, and
-observe what I felt and wrote then, that God only knows where I should
-be at present. Wondrously am I now placed still where I was, and in
-all respects more firmly settled. Yet only confirmed in my
-disagreement with the powers of the Church; but they have not been
-willing to attend to me, and so when my thoughts become known, they
-will be more sound and influential. What I now pray is, that I may be
-led to a state of heart above the world, and may live the rest of my
-time always longing for the presence of Christ, which I shall one day
-see. While I abide in the flesh, may it be to no purpose but the good
-of God's flock, and may I be led to suffer and to do many and great
-things for His sake."
-
-At this time he extends his correspondence to Mr. Irving, the founder
-of the Irvingites, and is so struck by what that gentleman says on the
-second coming of our Lord, that he begins to prepare himself for it.
-He never let us know how far he went on in this preparation.
-
-So far is he now, February 1829, from Catholicity in his opinions,
-that his father thinks it necessary to rebuke him {170} for the
-violence of a sermon he preached on the Catholic question; against
-them, of course, for his father was always a stanch advocate of
-Emancipation. Little he knew that on that day twelve months he would
-be a Catholic himself.
-
-It is recorded in the Journal here, that thieves broke into the
-parsonage one night. Mr. Spencer heard them; he arose, called a
-servant or two, pursued the delinquents, and captured them. This feat
-tells rather in favour of his bravery, and might qualify the opinion
-he had of himself on this point.
-
-We shall give the result of the Creed question in his own words, as
-given in the account of his conversion:--
-
- "My scruples [about the Athanasian Creed] returned after a sermon
- which I preached on Trinity Sunday, 1827, in defence of that very
- Creed. I observed that the arguments by which I defended the
- doctrine of the Trinity itself were indeed founded on Scripture, but
- in attempting to prove to my hearers that a belief of this doctrine
- was absolutely necessary for man's salvation, I had recourse to
- arguments independent of Scripture, and that no passage in Scripture
- could be found which declares that whosoever will be saved must hold
- the orthodox faith on the Trinity. I had this difficulty on my mind
- for eight or nine months, after which, finding that I could not
- satisfy myself upon it, I gave notice to my superiors that I could
- not conscientiously declare my full assent to the Thirty-nine
- Articles. They attempted at first to satisfy me by arguments; but
- the more I discussed the subject the more convinced I became that
- the Article in question was not defensible, and after fifteen
- months' further pause, I made up my mind to leave off reading the
- Creed in the service of my Church, and informed my Bishop of my
- final resolution. Of course, he might have taken measures to oblige
- me to resign my benefice, but he thought it more prudent to take no
- notice of my letter; and thus I remained in possession of my place
- till I embraced the Catholic faith.
-
- "The point on which I thus found myself opposed to the Church of
- England appears a trifling one; but here was enough to hinder all my
- prospects of advancement, and to {171} put it in the power of the
- Bishop, if at any time he had chosen to do so, to call on me to give
- up my benefice. It is easy to conceive that under these
- circumstances my mind was set free, beyond what could be imagined in
- any other way, to follow without prejudice my researches after
- truth. I lost no opportunity of discoursing with ministers of all
- persuasions. I called upon them all to join with me in the inquiry
- where was the truth, which could be but one, and therefore could not
- be in any two contrary systems of religion, much less in all the
- variety of sects into which Christians are divided in England. I
- found little encouragement in any quarter to this way of proceeding,
- at least among Protestants. Those sectarians of a contrary
- persuasion to myself, to whom I proposed an inquiry with me after
- truth, I found generally ready to speak with me; but they did not
- even pretend to have any disposition to examine the grounds of their
- own principles, which they were determined to abide by without
- further hesitation. My brethren of the Established Church equally
- declined joining me in my discussions with persons of other
- persuasions, and disapproved of my pursuit, saying that I should
- never convert them to our side, and that I only ran the risk of
- being shaken myself. Their objections only incited me to greater
- diligence. I considered that if what I held were truth, charity
- required that I should never give over my attempts to bring others
- into the same way, though I were to labour all my life in vain. If,
- on the contrary, I was in any degree of error, the sooner I was
- shaken the better. I was convinced, by the numberless exhortations
- of St. Paul to his disciples, that they should be of one mind and
- have no divisions; that the object which I had before me, that is,
- the reunion of the differing bodies of Christians, was pleasing to
- God; and I had full confidence that I was in no danger of being led
- into error, or suffering any harm in following it up, as long as I
- studied nothing but to do the will of God in it, and trusted to His
- Holy Spirit to direct me.
-
- "The result of all these discussions with different sects of
- Protestants was a conviction that no one of us had a correct view of
- Christianity. We all appeared right thus far, in {172} acknowledging
- Christ as the Son of God, whose doctrines and commandments we were
- to follow as the way to happiness both in time and eternity; but it
- seemed as if the form of doctrine and discipline established by the
- Apostles had been lost sight of all through the Church. I wished,
- therefore, to see Christians in general united in the resolution to
- find the way of truth and peace, convinced that God would not fail
- to point it out to them. Whether or not others would seek His
- blessing with me, I had great confidence that, before long, God
- would clear up my doubts, and therefore my mind was not made uneasy
- by them. I must here notice a conversation I had with a Protestant
- minister about a year before I was a Catholic, by which my views of
- the use of the Scriptures were much enlightened, and by which, as it
- will be clearly seen, I was yet farther prepared to come to a right
- understanding of the true rule of Christian faith proposed by the
- Catholic Church. This gentleman was a zealous defender of the
- authority of the Church of England against the various sects of
- Protestant Dissenters, who have of late years gained so much
- advantage against her. He perceived that while men were allowed to
- claim a right of interpreting the Scriptures according to their own
- judgment there never could be an end of schism; and, therefore, he
- zealously insisted on the duty of our submitting to ecclesiastical
- authority in controversies of faith, maintaining that the Spirit of
- God spoke to us through the voice of the Church, as well as in the
- written word. Had I been convinced by this part of his argument, it
- would have led me to submit to the Catholic Church, and not to the
- Church of England; and, indeed, I am acquainted with one young man,
- who actually became a Catholic through the preaching of this
- gentleman--following these true principles, as he was bound to do,
- to their legitimate consequences. But I did not, at this time,
- perceive the truth of the position; I yet had no idea of the
- existence of Divine, unwritten Tradition in the Church. I could
- imagine no way for the discovery of the truth but persevering study
- of the Scriptures, which, as they were the only Divine rule of faith
- with which I was acquainted, I thought must of course be sufficient
- for our {173} guidance, if used with an humble and tractable spirit;
- but the discourse of this clergyman led me at least to make an
- observation which had never struck my mind before as being of any
- importance,--namely, that the system of religion which Christ taught
- the Apostles, and which they delivered to the Church, was something
- distinct from our volume of Scriptures. The New Testament I
- perceived to be a collection of accidental writings, which, as
- coming from the pens of inspired men, I was assured must, in every
- point, be agreeable to the true faith; but they neither were, nor
- anywhere professed to be, a complete and systematic account of
- Christian faith and practice. I was, therefore, in want of some
- further guidance on which I could depend. I knew not that it was in
- the Catholic Church that I was at length to find what I was in
- search of; but every Catholic will see, if I have sufficiently
- explained my case, how well I was prepared to accept with joy the
- direction of the Catholic Church, when once I should be convinced
- that she still preserved unchanged and inviolate the very form of
- faith taught by the Apostles, the knowledge of which is, as it were,
- the key to the right and sure interpretation of the written word."
-
-It was in April, 1829, that he wrote the letter to the Bishop which
-was not taken notice of. He next withdrew his name from some
-societies--such as the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, &c.
-This act so displeased Dr. Blomfield, that he writes to say Mr.
-Spencer is no longer his chaplain. At the suggestion of some member of
-his family, he wrote an apology, and was restored again to favour and
-to his office. On May 22, 1829, the Journal suddenly breaks off, and
-he did not resume it again until the 1st of May, 1846. The events of
-the seventeen years intervening can be gathered from his
-correspondence, though, perhaps, not with the precision that would be
-desirable.
-
-{174}
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-The Maid Of Lille.
-
-
-Incidents overlapped each other so thickly, and were of such different
-tendencies during the last two years of Mr. Spencer's life as a
-minister, that we have judged it better to give them singly, even at
-the expense of a little sacrifice of the order of time. One of these,
-and an important one, is selected for the subject of this chapter. On
-the 23rd of November, 1827, just before his Athanasian scruples had
-risen to their height, as he returned from his pastoral visitation, he
-found a letter, purporting to be from a gentleman in Lille, "who was
-grievously troubled about the arguments for Popery." This letter
-contains little more than a statement of tendencies towards
-Catholicity in the writer, with extracts from Papin, _De la Tolérance
-des Protestants_, to account for them. The extracts draw a parallel
-between the Church and a well-regulated kingdom, in many of her
-doctrines and chief points of her discipline. It was anonymous, and
-reasons were assigned for withholding the writer's name. Mr. Spencer,
-ever anxious to counsel the doubtful, lost no time in answering, and
-sent off a long letter to his unknown friend by that evening's post.
-It was shortly after this that he wrote the letters to his father and
-Dr. Blomfield about the resignation of his preferment, and whether the
-Lille letter had anything to do with increasing his doubts, or not, is
-a question. It had, however, one effect: it made him anxious to find
-out what kind of people Catholics were; and an incident that occurred
-about the same time aided this curiosity. There were some soldiers
-quartered in Northampton, and, as Mr. Spencer was talking to some of
-the officers in the court-yard of the barracks, the {175} Catholic
-priest entered, to look after such of the soldiers as might require
-his spiritual care. He saw the priest, and spoke to him; and, finding
-out the object of his mission, kindly introduced him to one of the
-officers, who, in consideration of Mr. Spencer, got all due attention
-paid to the priest; and the good parson was assured that he succeeded
-to his satisfaction before he left the place. A few days afterwards he
-met the priest, who thanked him for his charity, and said it was
-Providence sent him there at such a time, and arranged that his duty
-could be discharged among the soldiers with ease and honour, which had
-often-times to be done amid insults, or at least coldness on the part
-of the military authorities. Mr. Spencer began to think, "Really these
-Papists believe in Providence!" This wonderful discovery made him
-think they believed a little more also, and that they were not quite
-such idolaters as he had been taught to suppose. Another letter from
-the Lille correspondent confirmed him in this, and shook him in many
-of his older notions. He dines, in a few days after this despatch,
-with the celebrated Dr. Fletcher and a Miss Armytage, at Lady
-Throckmorton's. He has a long conversation with the last of the Douay
-controversialists after dinner; but the only effect produced is this:
-"I am thankful for the kindness of both those Papists. The Lord reward
-them by showing them His truth." He invites Dr. Fletcher to dinner at
-Brington--a favour the Doctor avails himself of on the 27th March,
-1828. Another letter from his friend at Lille makes him acknowledge
-that he has not had proper notions of Catholicity; in his own words:
-"I expected easily to convince him that the Catholic Church was full
-of errors; but he answered my arguments. .... I discovered by means
-of this correspondence that I had never duly considered the principles
-of our Reformation; that my objections to the Catholic Church were
-prejudices adopted from the sayings of others, not the result of my
-own observation. Instead of gaming the advantage in this controversy,
-I saw, and I owned to my correspondent, that a great change had been
-produced in myself. I no longer desired to persuade him to keep in the
-communion of the Protestant Church, {176} but rather determined and
-promised to follow up the same inquiries with him, if he would make
-his name known to me, and only pause awhile before he joined the
-Catholics. But I heard no more of him till after my conversion and
-arrival at Rome, when I discovered that my correspondent was a lady,
-who had herself been converted a short time before she wrote to me. I
-never heard her name before, [Footnote 7] nor am I aware that she had
-ever seen my person; but God moved her to desire and pray for my
-salvation, which she also undertook to bring about in the way I have
-related. I cannot say that I entirely approve of the stratagem to
-which she had recourse, but her motive was good, and God gave success
-to her attempt: for it was this which first directed my attention
-particularly to inquire about the Catholic religion, though she lived
-not to know the accomplishment of her wishes and prayers. She died at
-Paris, a year before my conversion, when about to take the veil as a
-nun of the Sacred Heart; and I trust I have in her an intercessor in
-Heaven, as she prayed for me so fervently on earth."
-
- [Footnote 7: The lady's name was Miss Dolling.]
-
-This was the last of F. Ignatius's romances, and a beautiful one it
-was. As it may be interesting to see what was in those famous letters,
-we think it well to give a few extracts:--
-
- The line of the lady's argument is this. That Scripture without
- Tradition is quite insufficient for salvation. We cannot know
- anything about the Scriptures themselves, their composition,
- inspiration, interpretation, without Tradition. Besides the New
- Testament was not the text-book of the Apostles--it is a collection
- of some things they were inspired to write for the edification of
- the first Christians and others who had not seen our Lord; and the
- Epistles are a number of letters from inspired men bound up together
- in one volume. The body of doctrine, with its bearings, symmetry,
- extent, and obligation, was delivered orally by the Apostles, and
- the Epistles must be consonant to that system as well as explanatory
- of portions of it. Only by the unbroken succession of pastors from
- the Apostles to the present time, can we have any safeguard as {177}
- to what we are to believe, and how we are to believe. The Apostles
- and their successors were "to teach all nations," and Christ
- promised them and them alone the unerring guidance of the Holy
- Spirit. She then assigns to tradition the office of bearing
- testimony to what the doctrines of the Church have been, and are at
- present. The definitions of Councils are simple declarations that
- such and such is the belief then and from the beginning of the
- Catholic Church. They state what is, not invent what is to be. Now
- history, or written tradition, as contra-distinguished from
- Scripture, testifies to every single tenet of the Catholic
- Church--her creeds, liturgy, sacraments, jurisdiction. It testifies
- unerringly, too, even from the objections of heretics, to the fact
- that this Church has been always believed divine in her origin,
- divine in her teaching, infallible and unerring in her solemn
- pronouncements. This is fact, and who can gainsay it?
-
-This peculiar way of arguing, by making tradition or history bear
-witness to the existence of the Church, as well as to what she always
-declared to be her doctrine, is a very felicitous shape to cast her
-arguments into. It draws the line between faith and the evidence of
-faith. Evidence, human evidence of the first grade of moral certainty,
-says: The Church believed this, and that, and the other, at such and
-such times, and not as a new, but as an old doctrine, that came down
-from age to age since the Apostles. The same evidence says: that she
-believed them as revealed by God, and that she could not be mistaken
-on account of His promise. That she never swerved, and never will
-swerve, from one single article which she has once believed. If this
-Church be not _The Church_ of Christ, I ask you where is it to be
-found?
-
-In the second letter she says:
-
- "After much reflection I must confess to you their system appears
- reasonable, natural, and convincing. With us, they consider the Holy
- Scriptures as the most respectable testimony of our faith, and they
- profess a strict adherence to them; they have for them the greatest
- respect; and the Catholic priests support from the Bible what they
- {178} teach the people, and I am certain that they study and
- understand the Scriptures as much as our ministers. The principal
- difference I remark is, that they do not undertake to interpret them
- according to their own opinions: they say that the inspired writings
- are replete with mysteries, which the eye of man cannot penetrate;
- and that He alone who gave them is able to comprehend their
- sublimity; consequently, to follow the impulse of reason in
- explaining them, would be incurring the danger of falling into
- error, and leading others into the same path. For this cause the
- Catholic minister will not suffer the Holy Scriptures to be
- separated from the instruction of their predecessors up to the
- Apostles; not that they by any means give the word of man precedence
- to the Word of God, since they believe that man alone cannot explain
- it, for 'who,' they ask, 'assisted at the council of the Almighty?'
- But they believe that those who heard the Apostles preach,
- understood the true meaning of their words; and that their immediate
- successors, _especially_, educated by them, and who taught the
- Gospel during the life of their instructors, necessarily understood
- the meaning of their writings, the doctrine of which was undoubtedly
- conformable to what they taught verbally. ...."
-
- "St. Paul, in his Epistles to the Colossians, informs us that the
- Gospel was preached to all the world. This being the case, I see no
- possibility of introducing any new doctrine. The Apostles threatened
- with eternal punishment those who did not believe what they taught
- in the name of Jesus Christ. And whoever would have the temerity to
- add to the primitive doctrine they visited with a like anathema.
- Tell me, now, how could the Church have introduced such a doctrine
- as that of the Real Presence, after a priest has pronounced the
- words, "This is my body"? How is it possible that the faithful could
- reconcile themselves to the idea of acknowledging and adoring Jesus
- Christ present on the altar, as He was in the manger at Bethlehem,
- and as He is in Heaven at the right hand of His Father, if this
- doctrine had not always been received and believed as it is at
- present by the Roman Catholic Church? {179} Christians who knew the
- value of salvation could not so easily be deceived; several among
- them would have remonstrated against this superstition and idolatry.
- Do we find that they have done so?"
-
- "I imagine myself in idea at the period of the Reformation, and
- consider the belief and customs of that time. All Europe, the
- provinces of Asia and Africa which had not embraced Mahomedanism,
- admitted and believed the contrary to what Calvin taught, especially
- concerning the Lord's Supper. I should be glad to hear your
- impartial opinion on this subject. Where did Calvin find this
- doctrine? As I observe, he did not learn it in the schools, nor in
- any book, nor in his own family, nor in the temple of God; the
- innovation was universally opposed; a million voices remonstrated
- against his impiety. What right had he to be believed? He proposed
- only the interpretation which _he_ gave to the words of Jesus
- Christ, _This is my body_. He supported his opinion in no other way,
- he proved it by no miracles, and therefore did not deserve belief,
- since he gave no proofs of a divine mission. He was but a man, and,
- what is more, one of whom historians do not speak as being virtuous.
- Tell me, then, how can I acknowledge that he possessed the Holy
- Spirit, knew the meaning of Scripture. .... listen to and follow a
- young man in his opinion and oppose the rest of the world. Could
- that be wisdom?
-
- "But supposing, my dear sir, the Church to be in error, or even
- liable to err, how can we possibly profess to believe any mystery?
- For to have faith, it is impossible to doubt or hesitate. And if I
- believe not, I am lost. I am already condemned. 'He that believeth
- not is already judged.' If the Church be liable to error, may I not
- reply to our ministers:--'I doubt the truth of what you preach: I am
- not obliged to believe you'? You tell me I am not obliged to believe
- what _you_ so charitably wrote to me, and many passages of which
- letter have sensibly affected me: to whom, then, must I have
- recourse? You give me reason to conclude that you are not certain of
- the assistance of the Holy Ghost, as you do not oblige me to believe
- what you {180} say, but you desire me to compare your words with the
- Scriptures, and to reject them if I don't find them conformable to
- the Word of God. How can I imagine myself more certain than you that
- I rightly interpret them, or that I have the assistance of Heaven? I
- must continue to doubt during the rest of my life, and remain an
- unbeliever.
-
- "You say, 'if a man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine
- whether it be of God.' To do the will of God is certainly to listen
- to those God has sent to teach us. ....
-
-She quotes several authorities bearing witness in their day that the
-supremacy of the Pope was then believed to be of divine right, and
-closes the list with Sir Thomas More.
-
- "By the grace of God I have always professed the Catholic religion.
- Having, however, often heard the power of the Pope was of human
- institution, I resolved to weigh the matter without, at the same
- time, injuring my faith. For seven years I followed up this study: I
- drank at the fountain head: I went to the origin of things. At
- length I found that the pontifical power is not only useful and
- necessary--but, strictly lawful and of divine appointment. ..."
-
- "I cannot admit the system of _particular_ inspiration, since I see
- many, pretending to be inspired, fall into manifest contradictions,
- and consequently into error. .... I admit with you that divine
- authority must fix the faith of men. Where am I to find it? It must
- exist somewhere. ...."
-
-The third letter is partly a continuation of the second, and partly on
-a new plan; so a few extracts from it must be welcome, especially as
-it really did such work upon poor Mr. Spencer's mind.
-
- .... "It is certain that Jesus Christ founded a Church upon earth
- for the salvation of man; where, then, is it? This is certainly the
- whole question among the different sects opposed to each other. ....
- I must necessarily enter the true Church, for I cannot be saved in
- that which is false. ....
-
- .... "I am persuaded the Catholics do not found their belief on the
- opinions and interpretations of men; {181} their authority is Jesus
- Christ, God Himself; certainly that must be infallible, and the
- reason of man ought to bend to it. They believe in such and such
- doctrines because Jesus Christ and His Apostles taught them; this is
- the simple and reasonable motive of their faith. The doctrine of
- Jesus' and His Apostles is not an opinion, but a fact, which I see
- so completely proved by an assemblage of facts and circumstances so
- striking, that, not to be convinced of its truth, would be to
- renounce all common sense. .... The fact that the Catholic Church is
- in possession of the true doctrine is a fact proved like all other
- historical facts; it is proved by a weight of testimony given by
- persons who saw and heard themselves. Observe, it is not the
- opinions or interpretations given by those persons which are
- advanced as proofs, as you suppose in your letter; but all these
- holy persons have shed their blood to support and defend the truth,
- not of their opinions, but of what they have seen or heard. I can
- understand that fanaticism would induce a man to sacrifice his life
- to support a favourite opinion, but it has never yet been seen that
- any one would lose his life to prove that he had seen or heard
- things which he, in fact, had not. Tradition is not, therefore, as
- you suppose, the opinions and interpretations of the Fathers, but
- their testimony to what they saw, heard, taught, and practised. In
- the same way, the general Councils have fixed the sense of Scripture
- only by declaring the fact that such has been the universal doctrine
- since the Apostles. It is the assemblage of these proofs that brings
- conviction to the soul; they must all be seen united and compared,
- and this is undoubtedly a laborious study.
-
- "The Catholics believe that their Church is in possession of the
- doctrine taught by Christ, and listen to it as they would to Him.
- Judge from this how strong and lively must be the faith of a
- Catholic, how firm and immovable, since the voice of their Church is
- the voice of their Saviour, and the interval of eighteen hundred
- years disappears as they every day hear the voice of Jesus. There
- cannot be any division in this Church. It being an historical fact
- that the same doctrine has been taught from the beginning by the
- {182} infallible mouth of Jesus Christ and His Apostles, it follows
- that _all_ must yield to that authority, and that the rash
- individual who would dispute, disputes as it were with Jesus Christ,
- and consequently ought to be driven from the flock. ....
-
- "The Catholics say:--_without the Scriptures we should not hear the
- Saviour speak, but without tradition we should not know what He
- says_. ....
-
- "Why are not _our_ eyes opened--having every day proof that private
- interpretation is at fault?--let us try. Take your Bible, and read
- whatever passage you please; I also will read it. Let us both, then,
- invoke the assistance of God, and do you candidly think our
- inspirations would agree as to the sense of the passage? I think
- not. However, should we differ, who is to decide which is in error?
-
- ....
-
- "I see by your letters you have not always had the same opinion on
- all points that you have at this time. ... What warrant have you
- that you are better inspired now than before? Inspiration does not
- cause change of opinion.
-
- ....
-
- "We have in our country written laws of ancient date. Suppose some
- persons, even of great learning, were to give them a different
- interpretation to that hitherto received, would not they be
- confounded by showing them, by means of history or tradition, that
- the King himself who made these laws, his ministers and successors,
- have always understood and executed them in a different sense. That
- is the way Catholics avoid all difficulty. ....
-
- "You are in error as to the Pope if you suppose that formerly, or
- now, Catholics give him their faith, as Calvinists do to Calvin, &c.
- I thought the same. The Pope is simply the chief administrator; the
- doctrines he has the stewardship of do not come from him or any
- other Pope, as that of Calvinism from Calvin; it comes from Jesus
- Christ, from His Apostles, and from their churches throughout the
- world. An administrator is not the master of the doctrines with
- which he is entrusted. The Pope and Bishops are charged to preserve
- the doctrine, to propagate it and {183} defend it against all
- attacks of the enemies of Jesus Christ.
-
- ....
-
- "You interpret the text, 'lo! I am with you _always_,' that God
- promised His Holy Spirit to every individual; but that I am inclined
- by no means to admit. The whole of the passage must be considered.
- It was not to every one He addressed these words; it was only to His
- Apostles that He said, 'Go and teach all nations .... behold, I am
- with you.' From this it is clearly to the Apostles and their
- successors that He promised the Holy Spirit. I see in these words
- that they received from God himself the formal order or mission to
- go and preach, not what they found written, but what He had taught.
- .... I see also by these words that sovereigns of this world have
- not received the power of sending ministers to teach the Gospel, and
- certainly by so doing they usurp the power given to the Apostles and
- their successors. What we have to find is, to whom God has said, 'Go
- and teach.' It is physically impossible that it should concern our
- ministers, since they are established by temporal authority."
-
-About the Reformers she says:--
-
- "Can man reform the work of his Creator?"
-
- "You say you will never claim any name but that of Christian, but
- still it is not with you a matter of indifference what communion you
- belong to; therefore, this being the case, it is not sufficient to
- bear the name of Christian, and say we trust in Jesus; we must be
- sure that the doctrines we adopt are really his. For it is not being
- a Christian to embrace doctrines contrary to those given by our
- Saviour; it is assuming the name of Christian without being certain
- we are so; we must find if we are in communion with His Church.
- Without faith there is no salvation; this cannot mean a faith of our
- own choosing, but what God has been pleased to command we should
- believe. ....
-
- "Many of our ministers are ignorant or wicked enough to accuse
- Catholics of idolatry. It is Jesus Christ they adore really present
- though invisible in the Eucharist. They very loudly exclaim among us
- against images, &c. All this is nothing; on all sides that Church
- presents images to {184} render their faith more lively, and to
- induce them thereby to adore God the more truly in spirit and in
- truth."
-
-These are arguments of no little strength, to say the least of them.
-It would be a pleasure to transcribe the letters _in extenso_, but the
-three cover thirty-two pages of closely-written letter-paper, and
-would consequently take up too much room in a biography. Some
-sceptically-inclined person will probably say,--"she had some Jesuit
-or other astute Romish priest at her elbow when she wrote these
-letters." The writer can only tell his reader that he verily suspects
-as much himself. But before any of us jump at a conclusion, it might
-be well to consider this sentence which occurs towards the end of the
-third letter. "Do not think I am under the influence of some priests
-who have induced me to undertake this examination. It was a lawyer
-first awakened my curiosity, telling me you may read in vain and
-argue--you will not, you cannot find the truth unless you pray for it
-as the free gift of God; and to obtain this you must be humble, your
-conscience must be as pure as you can make it: God alone can be your
-help; pray to Him unceasingly."
-
-However we may think about their real author, the matter itself is
-very good, and their consequence to Mr. Spencer was of vital
-importance. There are no rough copies of his answers to the unknown to
-be found among his papers, or it would be very interesting to place
-them side by side with what we have quoted. The result of these
-letters we have in his account of his conversion:--
-
- "After this period I entertained the opinion that the Reformers had
- done wrong in separating from the original body of the Church; at
- any rate, I was convinced that Protestants who succeeded them were
- bound to make a reunion with it. I still conceived that many errors
- and corruptions had been introduced among Catholics, and I did not
- imagine that I could ever conform to their faith, or join in their
- practices, without some alterations on their part; but I trusted
- that the time might not be distant when God would inspire all
- Christians with a spirit of peace and concord, which would make
- Protestants anxiously seek to be {185} re-united to their brethren,
- and Catholics willing to listen to reason, and to correct those
- abuses in faith, and discipline which kept their brethren from
- joining them. To the procuring such a happy termination to the
- miserable schisms which had rent the Church, I determined to devote
- my life. I now lost no opportunity of conversations with Protestants
- and Catholics. My object with both was to awaken them to a desire of
- unity with each other; to satisfy myself the more clearly where was
- the exact path of truth in which it was desirable that we should all
- walk together; and then to persuade all to correct their respective
- errors in conformity with the perfect rule, which I had no doubt the
- Lord would in due time point out to me, and to all who were ready to
- follow His will disinterestedly. I thought that when Catholics were
- at length willing to enter with me on these discussions with
- candour, they would at once begin to see the errors which to me
- appeared so palpable in their system: but I was greatly surprised to
- find them all so fixed in their principles, that they gave me no
- prospect of re-union except on condition of others submitting
- unreservedly to them; and, at the same time, I could see in their
- ordinary conduct and manner of disputing with me nothing to make one
- suspect them of insincerity, or of want of sufficient information of
- the grounds of their belief. These repeated conversations increased
- more and more my desire to discover the true road, which I saw that
- I, at least for one, was ignorant of: but I still imagined that I
- could see such plain marks of difference between the Catholic Church
- of the present day and the Church of the primitive ages as described
- in Scripture, that I repeatedly put aside the impression which the
- arguments of Catholics, and, yet more, my observation of their
- character, made upon me, and I still held up my head in the
- controversy."
-
-{186}
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-Ambrose Lisle Phillipps.
-
-
-The close and warm friendship between Father Ignatius and Mr.
-Phillipps has scarcely a parallel in ancient or modern history. They
-became acquainted in 1829; and until death suspended their mutual
-communication for awhile, they ever wrote, spoke, and thought, with
-more than a brotherly--ay, more than any human or natural affection.
-The Christian patriotism of each, which prayed and laboured to bring
-their countrymen to the blessings they themselves had received, may
-have fostered this beautiful love; and even the different spheres in,
-as well as means by, which they felt themselves called to prosecute
-the work of their predilection may have helped to keep it ever warm
-and new; but there was a something in it which reminds one of David
-and Jonathan, that spread over it a grace and splendour far above what
-it is given us now and then to behold. This chapter will show the rise
-of their mutual affection, and show where lay the basis of the edifice
-gratitude and charity helped to fashion.
-
-Father Ignatius says, in the account of his conversion:--
-
- "Near the end of the year 1829 I was introduced to young Mr.
- Phillipps, eldest son of a rich gentleman in Leicestershire, whom I
- had often heard spoken of as a convert to the Catholic religion. I
- had for a long time been curious to see him, that I might observe
- the mode of reasoning by which he had been persuaded into what I
- still thought so great an error. We spent five hours together in the
- house of the Rev. Mr. Foley, Catholic Missionary in my
- neighbourhood, with whom I had already had much intercourse. I was
- interested by the ardent zeal of this {187} young man in the cause
- of his faith. I had previously imagined that he must have been
- ignorant on the subject of religion, and that he had suffered
- himself to be led blindly by others; but he answered all my
- objections about his own conversion with readiness and intelligence.
- I could not but see that it had been in him the result of his own
- diligent investigations. I was delighted with what I could observe
- of his character. I was more than ever inflamed with a desire to be
- united in communion with persons in whom I saw such clear signs of
- the Spirit of God; but yet my time was not fully come. I fancied, by
- his conversation, that he had principles and ideas inconsistent with
- what I had learned from Scripture; and in a few days I again put
- aside the uneasiness which this meeting had occasioned, and
- continued to follow my former purpose, only with increased
- resolution to come at satisfaction. He was, in the meanwhile, much
- interested in my case. He recommended me to the prayers of some
- religious communities, and soon after invited me to his father's
- house that we might continue our discourses. I was happy at the
- prospect of this meeting, and full of hopes that it would prove
- satisfactory to me; but I left home without any idea of the
- conclusion to which it pleased God to bring me so soon."
-
-Mr. Phillipps wrote to him:--
-
- "My Dear Sir,--We expect the Bishop of Lichfield here on the 25th
- January, and I have ventured to hope that I might be able to induce
- you to come here at that time, to meet him and stay the week. I hope
- so the more, as I think your conversation might induce him, as well
- as my father, to think more seriously on that awful subject on which
- we conversed when I had the great happiness of being introduced to
- you at Northampton. I assure you, a day has not passed without my
- offering up my unworthy prayers to Almighty God in your behalf; and
- I cannot refrain from again saying, that I hope one day we shall be
- united in the same faith of the One Holy and Apostolic Church of
- Jesus Christ. How great is the consolation to belong to that holy
- Church which alone Jesus Christ has founded, which alone He has
- illustrated with a never-failing succession of {188} pastors and of
- miracles, from which all others have separated, and out of which I
- find in the Holy Scriptures no covenanted promise of salvation! The
- Catholic Church alone has converted those nations which have been
- brought to the faith of Christ; and as, on the one hand, no man
- could at this moment be a Protestant had not Luther and the other
- Reformers existed, so, on the other, neither Luther nor any
- succeeding Protestant could derive any knowledge of Christianity but
- from the Catholic Church. How sublime are the promises of Christ,
- 'Upon this Rock I will build My Church, and the gates of Hell shall
- not prevail against it.' .... 'Going, therefore, teach ye all
- nations.' .... 'And lo! I am with you all days, even unto the end of
- the world.' Now to what Church was this promise made (a promise
- which involves infallibility; for it would be blasphemy to say that
- the God of Truth could commission a Church to teach the world, if
- that Church could possibly teach error)? Certainly not to Churches
- (sects, I should say) which separated from the parent Church fifteen
- hundred years after the promise was given, and therefore came into
- existence fifteen hundred years too late to be the Church of Christ.
- And to what do the sects have recourse? To groundless accusations of
- the Church of God, involving the charge of idolatry; but this very
- charge condemns them, '_ex ore tuo judico te_.' for, by saying that
- the Church fell into idolatry, and that that justifies their
- separation, they admit that there was a time when the Church was not
- guilty of idolatry. Now how are the promises of Christ verified, if
- His Church could ever become idolatrous? I find in no part of
- Scripture any prediction that the Church of Christ should ever
- become idolatrous, and that then it should be lawful to separate
- from her. Christ said simply, 'I am with you all days,' and 'he that
- believeth and is baptised shall be saved, and he that believeth not
- shall be condemned.' It is in vain to urge that St. Paul speaks of
- the 'man of sin,' and of 'a falling away,'--he speaks not of the
- Church; and the very expression 'a falling away' shows that it is
- not the Church, but sects, to which he alludes--for the Church never
- fell away from any previous Church,--this is matter of {189}
- history; but all the sects, all schismatics, all heretics, fell away
- from the Catholic Church of Christ,--this is equally matter of
- history. No. St. Paul, the ever-glorious apostle and doctor of the
- Gentiles, spoke of Arius, Luther, Calvin, Knox, and Henry VIII., and
- all other heresiarchs, all of whom did apostatize and 'fall away,'
- and have by their schisms and endless divisions, and the spirit of
- infidelity resulting from them, paved the way for the Man of Sin,
- the great Antichrist, who may perhaps shortly appear, the last
- development of Heresy and Liberalism. But how shall sectaries take
- refuge in the mysterious predictions of the Apocalypse? As well
- might that atrocious assassin who killed Henry IV. find some excuse
- in the hidden words of that volume. But I might pursue the question
- still further. What right have sects to the Bible? Jesus Christ gave
- it to us, and these men have stolen our book. If they say He did not
- give it to us, I reply, then they ought to cease to believe that
- Jesus Christ ever existed, for that is no more a matter of history,
- nor a more certain fact, than His commission to His Church to teach
- all nations all truth.
-
- "But I must conclude. I have not written all this without some fear;
- but, my dear Mr. Spencer, I know it is a subject which is deeply
- interesting to you, and, therefore, however ill I may have said it,
- I have said it with the less hesitation. Will you write me a line to
- say if you can come here? I do hope you will. My father says he had
- the pleasure once of meeting you at Mr. Thornton's.
-
- "Believe me, my dear Mr. Spencer,
- "Most sincerely yours,
- "Ambrose Lisle Phillipps.
-
- "Clarendon Park, Loughbro',
- _"Dec._ 30."
-
-The letter in which Father Ignatius signified his acceptance of this
-invitation is still extant, and was lent by Mr. Phillipps to the
-Passionists for this "Life." It is interesting, as the last vibration
-of the needle to the pole of Catholic truth, as well as for the idea
-it gives of his state of mind at that time. We give it, therefore, in
-full. He wrote it from {190} Althorp, where the family were assembled,
-as usual, for the Christmas holidays.
-
- "Althorp, _Jan_. 4, 1830.
-
- "My Dear Sir,--I received your kind invitation to Garendon on
- Saturday; but I thought it best to postpone answering it for a day
- or two, that I might consider what I had better do. If the visit
- which you propose to me had been an ordinary one, I suppose I should
- have declined it for the present, as I believe my father and mother
- will be at Althorp till about the 25th January, and I seldom go out
- when they are here. But as you invite me in the hope, and with a
- desire, that good may be done by my going, I believe I should be
- sorry afterwards if I refused. I therefore have told my father of my
- intention, and, if nothing happens to prevent me, I will be with you
- on Monday the 25th. As to the hour of my arrival, I cannot just now
- tell how the coaches run between Northampton and Loughborough; but I
- conclude I shall be with you in good time. And now that I have
- determined to go, I am really thankful that another opportunity of
- conversing with you is given me so soon; and I trust that our
- intercourse will be blessed for our own good and that of others. And
- if the step you have taken in becoming a Roman Catholic is correct,
- according to the will of Christ, I have no doubt that my
- conversation with you will be of use in drawing me nearer to the
- right point. If, as I still am convinced, there is some error in
- your views, let us agree in hoping that our intercourse may be
- likewise profitable to you. I have been confirmed, by every
- conversation which I have had with Roman Catholics, in the
- persuasion that there is something materially wrong in what we may
- call the Protestant system; and I have spoken my mind to this effect
- as often as occasion has been given me. But if our union with the
- Roman Catholic Church involves a declaration of my belief of all
- that she teaches, and a submission to all her authority, as their
- subjects are set forth in Bossuet's Exposition and Catechism, I am
- not as yet one of the body; and I am reduced to the conviction that
- somewhere or other there is an error among {191} you. One thing I
- have learnt in the course of these inquiries is that the Scriptures
- of the New Testament are not, as I formerly used to regard them
- through want of consideration, the formal canon of the Christian
- faith. It is as clear to me as I suppose you could wish it to be,
- that the oral tradition of Christ to Peter and the other Apostles,
- and that of the Apostles to the Churches, is the rule of Christian
- doctrine, and with all my heart I seek for the knowledge of what
- they taught, and have been frequently struck with the desirableness
- of a clear and definite authority to which we might refer, when I
- have observed the mischief into which Christians have fallen by
- following each his own judgment. I do not see how I should be
- stopped from at once becoming Catholic, under this impression, if it
- was not that on comparing the state of the doctrine and discipline
- of the Roman Church with what the Scriptures plainly teach me of the
- state of the Apostolic Church, and the method of their doctrine, I
- see such an obvious and plain difference, and I cannot be convinced
- but that, between their time and that of the Council of Trent,
- improper use has been made of the Church's authority. I am waiting
- to learn what is the right way, which God knows and He alone; and I
- can only hope for His guidance of me into the right way by standing
- ready for conviction when the means of it are offered to me. I
- declare myself to be in doubt. But that doubt gives me no
- uneasiness, for my hope of salvation is simply founded on Jesus
- Christ crucified; whom I expect to meet, as one of His redeemed
- ones, when He returns. It is not any works of righteousness which I
- can do, nor any outward profession of doctrine which I can make,
- that can justify me. I am justified freely by the grace of God
- through faith in Jesus Christ, to whom I give myself, to learn of
- Him and follow Him whithersoever He leadeth. You will find me as
- open to instruction and conviction as you seemed to think me at Mr.
- Foley's; and I will weigh what you say, though you should decline to
- meet me on the same terms, and declare yourself determined to give
- your mind no more to inquiry. Yet, for your own sake and the sake of
- others, who will of course be more disposed to attend to you if they
- see you {192} candid and still humble and doubtful of your own
- judgment, I wish you to resolve that you will meet me as I come to
- you, determined that we will, with the blessing of God, come to one
- mind, at the cost of all our respective prejudices. We should not
- meet as polemics determined on victory, but in the spirit of
- meekness and mutual forbearance. Then God, who sees the heart, if he
- sees us truly thus disposed, will know how to make his truth shine
- clearly to us both. Above all, let us pray for each other, and for
- all, but especially those who most nearly belong to us, and be
- encouraged by the promise, 'If any two of you shall agree as
- touching anything that ye shall ask, on earth it shall be done for
- them of My Father, who is in heaven.' Pray give my respectful
- compliments to your father, whom I remember well meeting once at
- Brock Hall, and of whom I have often heard the Thorntons speak with
- great regard; and to carry to him my best thanks for his kind
- permission to you to receive me in his house. Perhaps I shall write
- to the Bishop of Lichfield, to tell him that I expect to meet him
- there. I hope nothing will prevent his coming. And if we are allowed
- to have freedom of conversation with him on these things, which I
- pray to God may be given us, I must particularly interest you to
- hear and consider what he says with meekness and humility, though
- you may have the clearest conviction that he is in error. Surely his
- age and rank, and the work to which he has sincerely devoted
- himself, and his relation to you, make this a double duty; and, by
- acting so, you will not be hurt, for though you may be perplexed for
- awhile, God will not suffer you to lose one point of what is really
- good, but will finally establish you the more firmly for acting in
- this humble spirit.
-
- "Believe me, dear Sir,
- "Yours most sincerely,
- "George Spencer."
-
-He relates, in the _Account of his Conversion_, the effects of this
-visit:--
-
- "On Sunday, 24th January, 1830, I preached in my church, and in the
- evening took leave of my family for the {193} week, intending to
- return on the Saturday following to my ordinary duties at home. But
- our Lord ordered better for me. During the week I spent on this
- visit I passed many hours daily in conversation with Phillipps, and
- was satisfied beyond all my expectations with the answers he gave to
- the different questions I proposed, about the principal tenets and
- practices of Catholics. During the week we were in company with
- several other Protestants, and among them some distinguished
- clergymen of the Church of England, who occasionally joined in our
- discussions. I was struck with observing how the advantage always
- appeared on his side in the arguments which took place between them,
- notwithstanding their superior age and experience;[Footnote 8] and I
- saw how weak was the cause in behalf of which I had hitherto been
- engaged; I felt ashamed of arguing any longer against what I began
- to see clearly could not be fairly disproved. I now openly declared
- myself completely shaken, and, though I determined to take no
- decided step until I was entirely convinced, I determined to give
- myself no rest till I was satisfied, and had little doubt now of
- what the result would be. But yet I thought not how soon God would
- make the truth clear to me. I was to return home, as I have said, on
- Saturday. Phillipps agreed to accompany me on the day previous to
- Leicester, where we might have further conversation with Father
- Caestryck, the Catholic missionary established in that place. I
- imagined that I might take some weeks longer for consideration, but
- Mr. Caestryck's conversation that afternoon overcame all my
- opposition. He explained to me, and made me see, that the way to
- come at the knowledge of the true religion is not to contend, as men
- are disposed to do, about each individual point, but to submit
- implicitly to the authority of Christ, and of those to whom He has
- committed the charge of His flock. He set before me the undeniable
- but wonderful fact of the agreement of the Catholic Church all over
- the world, in one faith, under one head; he showed me the assertions
- of Protestants, that the Catholic Church had altered her doctrines,
- were {194} not supported by evidence; he pointed out the wonderful,
- unbroken chain of the Roman Pontiffs; he observed to me how in all
- ages the Church, under their guidance, had exercised an authority,
- undisputed by her children, of cutting off from her communion all
- who opposed her faith and disobeyed her discipline. I saw that her
- assumption of this power was consistent with Christ's commission to
- His Apostles to teach all men to the end of the world; and His
- declaration that those who would not hear the pastors of His Church
- rejected Him. What right, then, thought I, had Luther and his
- companions to set themselves against the united voice of the Church?
- I saw that he rebelled against the authority of God when he set
- himself up as an independent guide. He was bound to obey the
- Catholic Church--how then should I not be equally bound to return to
- it? And need I fear that I should be led into error by trusting to
- those guides to whom Christ himself thus directed me? No! I thought
- this impossible. Full of these impressions, I left Mr. Caestryck's
- house to go to my inn, whence I was to return home next morning.
- Phillipps accompanied me, and took this last occasion to impress on
- me the awful importance of the decision which I was called upon to
- make. At length I answered:--
-
- [Footnote 8: Phillipps was then about 17 years of age.]
-
- "'I am overcome. There is no doubt of the truth. One more Sunday I
- will preach to my congregation, and then put myself into Mr. Foley's
- hands, and conclude this business.'
-
- "It may be thought with what joyful ardour he embraced this
- declaration, and warned me to declare my sentiments faithfully in
- these my last discourses. The next minute led me to the
- reflection,--Have I any right to stand in that pulpit, being once
- convinced that the Church is heretical to which it belongs? Am I
- safe in exposing myself to the danger which may attend one day's
- travelling, while I turn my back on the Church of God, which now
- calls me to unite myself to her for ever? I said to Phillipps: 'If
- this step is right for me to take next week, it is my duty to take
- it now. My resolution is made; to-morrow I will be received into the
- Church.' We lost no time in despatching a messenger to {195} my
- father, to inform him of this unexpected event. As I was forming my
- last resolution, the thought of him came across me; will it not be
- said that I endanger his very life by so sudden and severe a shock?
- The words of our Lord rose before me, and answered all my doubts:
- 'He that hateth not father and mother, and brothers and sisters, and
- houses and lands, and his own life too, cannot be my disciple.' To
- the Lord, then, I trusted for the support and comfort of my dear
- father under the trial which, in obedience to His call, I was about
- to inflict upon him. I had no further anxiety to disturb me. God
- alone knows the peace and joy with which I laid me down that night
- to rest. The next day, at nine o'clock, the Church received me for
- her child."
-
-{196}
-
-{197}
-
-
-BOOK III
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Secular Priest_.
-
-
-{198}
-
-{199}
-
-BOOK III.
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Secular Priest_.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-His First Days In The Church.
-
-
-Conversions to Catholicism were not such every-day occurrences, some
-thirty years ago, as they are now. The disabilities under which
-Catholics laboured politically, before 1829, made them hide their
-heads, except when forced into public notice by efforts to break their
-shackles. The religion that civilized England, and consecrated every
-remarkable spot in it to the service of God, had become a thing of the
-past, and the relics of Catholic piety that studded the land were
-looked upon as the gravestones of its corse, or the trophies of
-vanquishing Protestantism. Not only was Catholicity supposed to be
-dead in England, but its memory was in execration; nurses frightened
-the children with phantoms of monks, and mountebank preachers took
-their inspiration from the prejudices they had imbibed in childhood.
-The agitation about the _Veto_, and the Debates on the Catholic
-question, which filled the public mind about the year 1830, and for
-some ten years before, showed that Catholicity had not died, but only
-slept. The Catholics emerged from their dens and caverns; they bought
-and sold, spoke and listened, like their neighbours; and the King was
-not afraid of a Catholic ball when he took his next airing {200} in
-Hyde Park. The Catholic Church had been barely given leave to eke out
-its declining days, with something like the indulgence allowed a
-condemned criminal, when, to the astonishment of all, it sprung up
-with new vigour, and waxed and throve in numbers and in position. It
-was considered worth a hearing now, and faith came by hearing to many,
-who would have been horrified before at opening by chance such an
-antichristian thing as a Catholic book. A conversion, then, rather
-stunned than embittered the relatives of the convert. The full tide of
-Tractarianism had not yet set in, and the systematic pitchforks of
-private persecution and stately rebuke, that were afterwards invented
-to stop it, were not so much as thought of. The conversion of the
-Honourable George Spencer happened in those peculiar times. His family
-were partially prepared for it, for fluctuating between so many
-religious opinions as he had been for so long, and earnest, too, in
-pushing arguments to their furthest length, it was often half
-suspected that he would go to Popery at last. There he was now, a
-child of the Catholic Church, shrived and baptized according to her
-ritual. His die was cast. He was fixed for ever. His wandering was at
-an end. With the exception of his house-keeper, who laid her down to
-die for sheer affliction at the news, we are not aware that many
-others were much moved by what they considered his defection.
-Doubtless, his father and the immediate family circle felt it deeply;
-his Protestant vagaries had caused them sleepless nights and silent
-afternoons, and the Church of which he became a member was not likely
-to seem less absurd to them than it once seemed to himself. But then
-he was incorrigible; there was no use talking to him; he would have
-his own way, and there was what it led to.
-
-Lord Spencer was always favourable to Catholics, but it was in the
-spirit of generosity to a fallen, or justice to an injured people. He
-never dreamt his own son would be one of the first to reap the benefit
-of the measures he advocated in Parliament. The letter he received
-from Leicester in January, 1830, must have been a shock indeed.
-Besides, a member of this aristocratic house descending to such a
-level {201} must be considered a family disgrace--an event to be wept
-over as long as there was one to glory in the name of Spencer, or feel
-for its _prestige_. Taking all these things into account, and many
-other minor considerations, it would be no wonder if Mr. Spencer was
-treated with harshness, and banished Althorp for ever. Nothing of the
-kind. His father was very considerate; and liberal, too, in making a
-provision for his son's future maintenance. George himself was
-received on friendly terms by every branch of the family, and, so far
-from avoiding him or mortifying him, they seemed all to have respected
-his sincerity. He wrote to Dr. Walsh, the Vicar Apostolic of the
-central district, immediately after his reception into the Church,
-placing himself as a subject at his lordship's disposition. Mr.
-Spencer's idea was to be ordained as soon as possible, and come back
-to his own parish to preach, like St. Paul, against his former
-teaching. This intention was checked by the Bishop's writing word for
-him to put off his first Communion a little longer, and to come and
-meet his Lordship in Wolverhampton towards the middle of February.
-This letter he received in F. Caestryck's, in Leicester, three days
-after his reception. He thinks the arrangement excellent. He spent a
-fortnight in the priest's house at Leicester, and he used often to say
-that this good priest's way of settling difficulties, though it might
-look unsatisfactory, was the very best thing that ever occurred to
-him. He made Mr. Spencer fully aware of the great dogma of the
-Church's infallibility before he received him. F. Caestryck was one of
-those good emigre priests who were well up in the Church's positive
-and moral theology, but cared very little for polemics. Whenever Mr.
-Spencer asked him "Why was anything such a way in Catholic teaching?"
-the old man simply replied: "The Church says so." This was very wise
-at such a time; the period for reasoning and discussion was passed,
-and the neophyte had to be taught to exercise the faith he had adopted
-now. He learnt the lesson very well, and was saved from the danger of
-arguing himself out of the Church again, as some do who do not leave
-their private judgment outside the Church-door, at their conversion.
-
-{202}
-
-Scarcely anything is so remarkable as the readiness with which, on his
-reception, he laid down all notions of his being a minister of God.
-One short extract from a letter to his housekeeper, enclosing money
-from Leicester, to pay bills, will illustrate this: "If you have an
-opportunity, tell those who choose to attend, that I have acknowledged
-the authority of the Catholic Church, and therefore resigned my
-ministry for the present. If they care for my advice, tell them to
-send for Mr. Foley (the priest at Northampton), and hear him as the
-minister of God." This letter was written before he was a week a
-Catholic, and it promises well for his future that he does not
-arrogate to himself the office of teacher before he is commissioned,
-much less before he is sufficiently instructed. Many, in their first
-fervour, make false steps in the way he avoided which it is often
-difficult to retrace. The glow of happiness at finding one's self in
-_the Church_ ought to be allowed to subside, and to allow the newborn
-judgment to be capable of discretion, before beginning to dabble in
-theology.
-
-He pays a visit to Brington in a few days, in company with F.
-Caestryck, and writes beforehand to his housekeeper to collect a few
-of his faithful listeners, that he may get them a few words of advice
-from a real live priest. It seems, from hints thrown out here and
-there in his letters, that Bishop Walsh was for his going to Rome to
-prepare himself for Orders. This was a drawback to his own plan, but
-events will show how wisely the Bishop arranged. Mr. Spencer's anxiety
-to be ordained at once and sent out to preach is an evidence of the
-strength of his faith. He imagined the Sacrament of Orders would have
-infused all ecclesiastical knowledge into his soul, and it was only
-when he had to work hard at the study of theology that he perceived
-the wisdom of blind submission to the judgment of his superiors. He
-goes to London to consult Dr. Bramston as to what he had better do,
-and he gives the result in a letter to Mr. Phillipps.
-
- "London, _Feb_. 18, 1830.
-
- "My Dear Ambrose,--I write from Bishop Bramston's study; he has left
- me there, and is gone to transact a little {203} business in another
- room. I have passed through my interview with my father, and thank
- God for it. His kindness was very great, joined with great depth of
- feeling. I will tell you more of it soon, when we meet. I shall
- leave London on Saturday for Northampton, where I am to be at Lady
- Throckmorton's till Monday. I shall then proceed to Birmingham by a
- coach which passes through Northampton from Cambridge, at one or two
- o'clock. On the next day, Tuesday, I will go to Wolverhampton, where
- I hope to meet you, my dear brother. I shall have plenty more to
- tell you then. Now, let it suffice to say that all my family and
- Bishop Bramston are decidedly for the Roman plan. I suppose the Lord
- so intends it. His will be done and His glory advanced; I will be as
- wax in His hand. My father has made me quite comfortable for money,
- and in the most prudent way. Farewell, my brother, and believe me,
-
- "Your affectionate
- "George Spencer."
-
-He expressed his gratitude, again and again, for the manner in which
-his family received him, especially as he knew that his late step was
-looked upon by them as "an unmixed evil." They were even willing to
-receive him as a guest wherever they might be staying except at
-Althorp; and, at Dr. Bramston's suggestion, he agreed to these terms,
-as well as made up his mind not to go to Brington again, in compliance
-with his father's wishes. These matters he arranged in a few days; he
-pensioned off one or two of his servants, he made his will about his
-stock of sermons, and it was, "Give them to the new incumbent, and let
-him do what he likes with them."
-
-He had some difficulty in obeying his Bishop with regard to "the Roman
-plan," as he calls it. It was the first test of his obedience. He
-thought it was because the Bishop was weak enough to yield to the
-wishes of his family that he was sent. These wishes appeared to him to
-proceed from principles to which the Church's policy should not suit
-itself. There would be a noise made in the papers about his
-conversion, and his friends would have to answer {204} questions about
-him in inquisitive circles. His father did not wish him to go to
-Brington, and he himself was most anxious to use the influence he
-possessed over his dependants in order to their conversion. To avoid
-these inconveniences and clashing of motives they desired he might be
-absent from England for some time. Some of his friends also thought
-going to Rome would make him Protestant again; for, he says in a
-letter written a few days after his arrival in Rome, "You see now that
-coming to Rome does not open my eyes and make me wish myself a
-Protestant again. You may tell all Protestants that I am under no
-charm, and if anything occurs to make me see that ours is an apostate
-Church, I shall not, I trust, perversely suffer my fate to be bound up
-with hers, and consent to die in her plagues." The public parade of
-Catholic ceremonial had not formerly produced the best of effects upon
-him, and perhaps it was expected the old feelings would be revived by
-seeing the same things once more.
-
-The very reasons his friends had for detaining him might urge the
-Bishop to hasten his departure. His anxiety to go and preach
-Catholicity in Brington was not quite according to prudence, for
-though he might know the principal dogmas of faith and believe them
-firmly, he still needed that Catholic instinct and mode of thought
-which can nowhere be imbibed so quickly or so surely as in Rome. There
-are many traits of Protestant _viewiness_ to be seen in his letters at
-this period, but,
-
- "Quo semel imbuta est recens servabit odorem,
- Testa din."
-
-It would not have been so easy to bring these properly into subjection
-whilst he had the thousand-and-one forms of Protestant errors seething
-around him, and would be forced by his zeal to seek out ways of making
-Catholic truth approach them. Where everything was Catholic to the
-very core, in might and majesty, was the best school for tutoring him
-into Catholic feelings and ideas. It was well also to let him see the
-force of prejudice, by making him experience in himself how
-differently things seem according {205} to the state of one's mind. If
-he was shocked at Rome as a Protestant, it was well to let him know
-that it was because he was unable to understand as a Protestant what
-gave him so much joy and edification, when he could see with Catholic
-eyes.
-
-A courier was leaving London for Ancona, and as he did not see any
-reason for delay, he took a seat with him, and started for Rome on the
-1st March, and arrived on the 12th, the feast of St. Gregory. He
-contrived to make the acquaintance of Mr. Digby in Paris, and hear
-mass three times during his journey, which was considered a very
-quickly made one in those days. He also had a very pleasing interview
-with Cardinal Mezzofanti in passing through Bologna.
-
-{206}
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Mr. Spencer In The English College, Rome.
-
-
-On the evening of his arrival in Rome he went to the English College
-and presented himself to Dr. Wiseman, the late Cardinal, who was the
-rector. Dr. Wiseman had heard of his conversion, but did not expect to
-see him so soon, and while they were conversing and giving and
-receiving explanations, two letters arrived by post from Bishops
-Bramston and Walsh, which put everything in its proper place. Here
-then we have this distinguished convert lodged in a student's cell to
-prepare for receiving real Orders in due time. He gives his
-impressions of the college in a letter to Mr. Phillipps, written about
-a week after his arrival, as follows:--
-
- "I have felt most completely comfortable and happy ever since I have
- been here. The life of the college is of course regular and strict.
- I could not have believed in the existence of a society for
- education such as this, half a year ago. Such discipline and
- obedience, united with perfect freedom and cordiality, is the fruit
- of the Catholic religion alone, in which we learn really to look on
- men as bearing rule in God's name, so that they need not keep up
- their influence by affectation of superiority and mysterious
- reserve. I do not know all the members of the college by name even
- yet, but, as far as I do, I can speak only in one language of them
- all. I have kept company principally with the rector and
- vice-rector, as I am not put on the footing of the ordinary
- students, being a _convictor_, that is, paying my own way, and also
- brought here under such peculiarity of circumstances as warrants
- some distinction, though I desire to make that as little as
- possible. I do not go with the others to the public schools, but am
- to study at home under Dr. Wiseman and Dr. Errington. The rules
- {207} of the house I observe, and indeed so do the rectors as the
- rest."
-
-The peace of sober college life could not long remain unalloyed, if it
-were to be lasting. Whilst Mr. Spencer was studying his Moral or Dogma
-by the little lamp, and unmoved except by the anxiety to read faster,
-in order to be sooner in the field to work for God, the world outside
-was not disposed to forget him. Various rumours were set afloat about
-Northampton concerning him; one would account for his sudden
-disappearance, another for his resignation of his living, a third
-would set about unravelling the popish plots of which he must have
-been a dupe. These were trifling pastimes, which could be ungrudgingly
-permitted for the better savouring of devout tea-parties: but surmise
-will not be content with all this. There was his housekeeper, who
-became ill immediately, and was near dying. What did that mean?
-Slanderous reports were set on foot, and the answer to them is the
-most complete refutation that could possibly be given, while it is at
-the same time a proof of his virtue. On May 17th, 1830, he thus writes
-from the English college to the housekeeper, who had mentioned the
-matter in a letter to him:
-
- .... "I see that it has pleased God that you should suffer under
- calumny; thank God, most undeserved. It is evident that this slander
- affects my character as much as yours, and there is hardly a state
- of life to be conceived where such imputations are more injurious
- than a priest's; yet if all men should believe it, and I should live
- and die under this evil report, God forbid I should willingly
- repine. It would be no trial to suffer calumny, if it was not at
- first a painful thing; and therefore I do not wonder, nor find fault
- with you, at your being greatly afflicted when you were so insulted
- and abused as you describe; but, my dear girl, you should not have
- _allowed_ this to weigh upon your mind. You have more reason to
- grieve for this proof of how weak your faith and love to God is,
- than for the slander. I think it was a mistake that you did not tell
- me of this at Northampton. I trust I should then and shall always
- {208} rejoice, when I am counted worthy to suffer reproach for the
- sake of Christ; and I thank God that such is this reproach. I
- deserve reproach enough, it is true; and both you and I, if we look
- through our past lives, shall see that we deserve this and much more
- for our sins. Let us then learn to accept the bitter words of
- unfeeling men, as David did the curses of Semei, as ordered by God
- for our chastening, that we may be purified by them, and He will
- then turn their calumnies into greater honour one day or other.
- Though you had better have told me, as I might have helped you at
- once to overcome your annoyance, yet it may have been better for you
- to suffer it thus long, that you may learn how much you do care for
- character, and may henceforth give that up as well as everything
- besides that you love on earth. If you are so afflicted at a false
- reproach against you, what would your feelings have been if the Lord
- had seen fit to prove you, by suffering you indeed to fall; and
- where is your strength or mine, that we should be innocent in
- anything for a day, except through His grace? Just think over the
- matter with yourself, and let this word of advice be sufficient, and
- let me have the happiness of knowing that you are again what I
- remember you, patient, and meek, and cheerful, and allowing nothing
- to concern you but to please God more and more, and work out your
- salvation. I see by your letter, which I look at again, that you
- certainly would have told me of this at Northampton, had you judged
- for yourself, and perhaps it was right that you should act in it as
- you were advised. Therefore, do not take what I say now as if I had
- anything but the sincerest love and respect for you; I only speak to
- warn you of your spiritual wants, in which I partake with you. A
- woman's feelings are more tender, of course, under such cruel
- insults. When my feelings are hurt I find the same proof that I do
- not love God as I ought to do, and surely we never can have too much
- of that love. How infinitely blessed are you that you are singled
- out from the herd of those who prosper in the world, and have all
- men speaking well of them, and are permitted to walk in the way by
- which alone we can attain to the kingdom set before us. Remember the
- most blessed and {209} glorious Virgin, Mary, of all creatures the
- most beloved and most worthy to be loved of God, who was saluted by
- an angel as full of grace, and is now in heaven, Queen of Angels,
- and Prophets, and Apostles, and Martyrs. How was her infinite honour
- of being mother of God made the occasion of most cruel suspicions
- against her heavenly purity. If she was content to bear this with
- perfect meekness and humility for God's sake, surely you may say
- with her, 'be it done unto me according to thy word,' whether He
- shall order you to bear this or any other trouble. If occasion is
- put before you to prove yourself undeserving of such imputations, do
- not neglect to use it, for God's honour, which suffers by our being
- supposed guilty, and for the good of your slanderers, who may be
- brought to repentance by a due reproof; but take no pains about it,
- except in prayer to God, and in examining throughout all your past
- ways, what may be the cause of the affliction as ordered by Him. I
- am sure I can hardly find anything to accuse you of. I used to
- delight in your conversation, and you did in mine; but, thank God,
- great as my sins have been, I never, I believe, said a word to wound
- your delicacy, and you never transgressed the bounds of respect
- which a servant ought to show towards a master. But those who, for
- their own sorrow, will not learn what the joys of spiritual
- friendship are, cannot understand any intimacy but that which is
- sensual and gross. As, therefore, I left home so suddenly, and they
- could not again understand the possibility that my faith should be
- so suddenly established, and that, for the sake of it, I was willing
- to give up my home, and as you showed such emotion at learning that
- I was to leave you, these people had no way to account for the whole
- matter but imputing to us shameful guilt."
-
-From Mr. Spencer's charity before he became a Catholic we may conclude
-what it must have been now. It would seem that, in temporals, he had
-not those difficulties in the way of his conversion that beset many
-Protestant clergymen who depend solely on their livings. But, the
-sacrifices he willingly made, prove that the prospect of sheer want
-even would not have deterred him from following God's {210} call. A
-few days after his conversion he went to see the Dominican Fathers at
-Hinckley, and said, in conversation, "I suppose it is not lawful for
-me to receive the fruits of my benefice, now that I have ceased to be
-a minister of the Establishment." One of them said, "Certainly not."
-Whereupon he asked for a sheet of paper, wrote a letter to the
-Protestant bishop in a few minutes, resigning his cure, and simply
-said, as he impressed the seal, "There goes £3,000 a year." He was
-then wholly dependent on his father's bounty, and if unworthy motives
-had had any force with Earl Spencer, his son might have found himself
-penniless. From the allowance granted him he received monthly whilst
-in Rome much more than was sufficient to pay his way in the college.
-It was remarked, however, that the day after he got his money he had
-not a farthing in his possession, and on inquiry it was found that
-what remained from the college pension he distributed regularly among
-the poor. Dr. Wiseman turned the channel of his charity to a more
-profitable object, knowing how much he would be imposed on by the
-Roman beggars, and several monuments still look fresh in the chapel of
-the English College, which were repaired by what remained over and
-above what was absolutely necessary of his income. It seems as if he
-never could bear to be the possessor of money; he would scruple having
-it about him. He was known, even when a minister, to draw money out of
-the bank in Northampton, and give the last sixpence of it to the poor
-before he got to Brington.
-
-Before August, 1830, he received minor orders, and immediately after
-hears the news that Mary Wykes, his housekeeper, has become a
-Catholic. It is a singular fact that she took his conversion so to
-heart that she nearly died, and was yet the first to follow his
-example. She was delicate in health, of a respectable family in his
-parish, and Mr. Spencer acknowledges that he is under many obligations
-to her father. He settles an annuity of £25 or £30 a year upon her for
-life, and writes to her from the English College thus: "Pray to God to
-give you a tender devotion to her whom He loves above all creatures,
-and who of all creatures is the most pure, amiable, and exalted. I
-dare say you will {211} have found difficulty, as I have done, in
-overcoming the prejudices in which we have been brought up against
-devotion to the Saints of God; but let this very thing make you the
-more diligent in asking of God to give you that devotion to them which
-He delights in seeing us cultivate."
-
-On the 13th of March, _Sabbato Sitientis_, 1831, he received the
-Subdiaconate, This is the great step, as Catholics know, in the life
-of one destined for the priesthood. The Subdiaconate imposes perpetual
-celibacy, with the obligation of daily reciting the divine office, and
-it is then the young cleric is first styled Reverend. It is said that
-a few days after his receiving this sacred order, a message was sent
-him by his family not to become a priest, as it was feared his brother
-would have no issue, and George was looked to as the only source
-whence an heir presumptive could arise for the earldom. He simply
-answered, "You spoke too late," an answer he would have given whether
-or no, as he had long ago determined never to marry. It was at this
-time also he wrote, at the request of the Bishop of Oppido, the
-_Account of my Conversion_,--a work well known to English readers.
-
-{212}
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-F. Spencer Is Ordained Priest.
-
-
-Father Spencer, ever since he first turned completely to the service
-of God, was determined to do whatever he knew to be more perfect. He
-did not understand serving God by halves; he thought He deserved to be
-loved with "all our strength, all our mind, and above all things."
-This he knew to be a precept, a strict command given by our divine
-Lord. How it was to be observed was his difficulty. He was groping in
-the dark hitherto, and though not making many false steps, still far
-from clearly seeing his way to perfection. The exactness of Catholic
-theology, which sifts every question to the last atom, made him meet
-this one face to face.
-
-The first difficulty he had to master was the received axiom that _the
-religious state is more perfect than the secular_. He could not see
-how a vow, which apparently takes away a man's liberty, could increase
-the merit of actions done under it. As the vow of obedience is the
-principal one in religion, so much so that in some orders subjects are
-professed by promising obedience according to the rule, its
-explanation would remove the difficulty. Two things principally
-constitute the superiority of _vowed actions_. One, that they must be
-of a better good; the second, that the will is confirmed in the doing
-of them. A vow must be of a good better than another good--such as
-celibacy better than marriage, poverty better than riches, obedience
-to proper authority better than absolute liberty. The state of
-religion which takes these three walks of life as essential to its
-constitution is insomuch better than any other state. But the question
-comes, why not observe poverty, chastity, and obedience, without
-vowing them? "Would it not be better that {213} the practice of these
-virtues should be spontaneous, than that a person should put himself
-under the moral necessity of not deviating from it? No; because it is
-a weak will which reserves to itself the right of refusing to
-persevere in a sacrifice. If a man intends to observe chastity, but
-reserves to himself the right to marry whenever he pleases, he
-signifies by his state of mind that he may some day repent of his
-choice, and makes provision for that defalcation. That is a want of
-generosity, it is a safety valve by which trusting to God's grace
-escapes, and perfection can never be attained while one has the least
-notion of the possibility of doing less for God than he does. "He that
-puts his hand to the plough and turns back is not worthy." By a vow, a
-person not only resolves to do for the present what is perfect, but to
-continue doing it for life, and as the person knows right well that
-his natural strength will not carry him through, he trusts the issue
-to God's goodness. This fixing of the will, and narrowing, as far as
-possible, the range of our liberty, is an assimilation of the present
-state to the state of the blessed. They do the will of God and cannot
-help doing it, they have no liberty of sinning, and the vow of
-obedience by which a man binds himself to do God's will, manifested to
-him through his superiors or his rule, takes away from him the least
-rational inclination for liberty to sin. Not only that, but he makes
-it a sin to recede from God one step, and he sacrifices to his Creator
-a portion of the liberty that is granted to us all. It is a sin for a
-man who has a vow of chastity to marry, though naturally he was
-perfectly free to do so. He sacrificed that freedom to God, and lest
-he might be inclined to backslide at any future day he put the barrier
-of this moral obligation behind him. The person under vow is God's
-peculiar property; all his actions are in a certain sense sacred, and
-of double merit in His sight. Be it remembered that a religious makes
-this sacrifice freely, and it is in this free dedication to God's
-service perpetually of body, soul, and possessions, without reserving
-the right to claim back anything for self, that the special excellence
-of the religious state consists.
-
-{214}
-
-There are several other less cogent arguments in favour of the
-religious state, as that without it we should not have the Evangelical
-virtues practised which form the principal part of the note of
-holiness in the Church. That it is easier to practice great virtue in
-a monastery than in the world, and that more religious have been
-canonized than seculars since the time of the martyrs.
-
-Father Spencer came to understand that the religious state is more
-perfect than the secular, though he knew that many seculars are far
-more perfect than some religious, but one point he could never get
-over, and that was since vows undoubtedly do raise the merit of one's
-actions, why cannot people take and observe vows without shutting
-themselves up within the walls of a convent? He consulted many grave
-theologians, doctors, and even cardinals, for the solution of this
-problem. He was told, to be sure, that it was quite possible in the
-abstract to have a people observing vows, but that in practice it
-proved to be chimerical and Utopian. _What is possible can be done_,
-was his maxim, and he resolved to begin with himself. He was told by
-Dr. Wiseman and Cardinal Weld that he seemed to have a religious
-vocation. He wrote accordingly to his diocesan, Dr. Walsh, who
-dissuaded him from becoming a religious by saying that, though it was
-a better state, a secular priest could be more useful in England.
-Others differed from this opinion, but F. Spencer heard in it the
-voice of his Superior, and resolved to obey it for the present. This
-settled matters for the time, but his _view_ could never be got out of
-his head. He gets thoroughly engrossed now with his approaching
-ordination. It grieves him to see souls lost in heresy and sin in a
-way that few grieve; for, the concern he felt for the spiritual
-destitution of his country began to tell upon his health. It is feared
-he will die; he begins to spit blood, and several consumptive symptoms
-alarm his physicians. He is removed to Fiumicino, and writes a long
-letter from his sick bed there to Mr. Phillipps. In this letter he
-hopes his friend may be caught into the Church like his patron, St.
-Ambrose. Here we have the first evidence of his getting thoroughly
-into a Catholic way of thinking. {215} Nothing strikes a cold,
-careful, Catholic, who has been brought up in a Protestant atmosphere,
-so much as the wonderful familiarity of Spanish and Italian boys with
-the lives of the Saints. They quote a Saint for everything, and they
-can tell you directly how St. Peter of Alcantara would season his
-dinner, or how St. Rose of Lima would make use of ornaments. Father
-Spencer has paragraphs in every letter at this time full of hints
-taken from Saints' lives, showing that he evidently gave a great
-portion of his time to learn ascetic theology in these remarkable
-volumes. He is wishing also that Mr. Digby should become a priest, but
-in both cases he was doomed to be disappointed so far, though both his
-friends graced, by their virtues, the state of life in which they
-remained. He was ordained Deacon on the 17th December, Quater tense,
-1831; and on the 26th of May, 1832, two years and four months after
-his reception into the Church, he was ordained Priest by Cardinal
-Zurla. He thus writes to Mr. Phillipps on the event: "I made my
-arrangements directly (on being called off suddenly to England) for
-ordination to the priesthood on St. Philip Neri's Day, and saying my
-first mass on the day following, which was Sunday. How will you
-sympathise with my joy when, in the middle of my retreat, Dr. Wiseman
-told me, what none of us had observed at first, that the 26th May was
-not only St. Philip's feast at Rome, but in England that of St.
-Augustine, our Apostle, and that he should ask Cardinal Zurla to
-ordain me in St. Gregory's Church, which his Eminence did. It was at
-St. Gregory's only that we learned from the monks that the next day
-was the deposition of Venerable Bede."
-
-The coincidences are really remarkable with regard to his destination
-for the English mission. He was born on the feast of the Apostle St.
-Thomas; he arrived in Rome, as a Catholic, on the feast of St.
-Gregory; he was ordained on the feast of St. Augustine of Canterbury;
-he said his first mass of St. Bede, by special leave from the Pope, on
-that Saint's day. He was ordained by a Cardinal of the Camaldolese
-branch of the Benedictine Order, to which St. Augustine belonged; and
-he got the blessing and commission of {216} Pope Gregory XVI., a
-member of the same order; and under all these auspices set out
-directly for England.
-
-During his stay in Rome he made the acquaintance of our Father
-Dominic. This was a great happiness to him. Father Dominic was on fire
-for the conversion of England, and Father Spencer echoed back, with
-additions, every sentiment of his zealous soul. They spoke together,
-they wrote to each other, they got devout people to pray, and prayed
-themselves every day, for the conversion of England. We cannot know
-how far prayers go, we only know that the continual prayer of the just
-man availeth much; and therefore, it might not seem safe reasoning, to
-attribute effects that can be traced to other causes to the prayers of
-some devout servants of God. Without attempting to assign causes, we
-cannot help remarking the fact that these two holy souls began to
-pray, and enlist others in praying, for England's conversion in 1832,
-and that the first number of the "Tracts for the Times" appeared
-before the end of 1833. Neither of them had anything to do with the
-Tracts, if we except a few letters from Father Dominic in a Belgian
-newspaper, as writers or suggestors of matter; but both took a deep
-interest in them, and fed their hopes, as each appeared more Catholic
-than the one before. He spends a week with Father Dominic in Lucca, on
-his way to England, and in Geneva happened one of those interesting
-events with which his life was chequered. He thus tells it in a letter
-to the _Catholic Standard_ in 1853:--
-
- "I went one day, at Genoa (see Chap. IX., Bk. i.), in 1820, to see
- the great relics in the treasury of the Cathedral. Relics, indeed,
- were little to me; but to get at these, three keys from various
- first-rate dignitaries, ecclesiastical and civil, were necessary.
- This was enough to make a young English sight-seer determined to get
- at them. A young priest, the sacristan of the Cathedral, received me
- and the party I had made up to accompany me, and showed us the
- precious treasures. I did nothing but despise; and yet why should I,
- or other Protestants, look on it as a kind of impossibility that any
- relic can be genuine? However, so I did; and I let the sacristan
- plainly know it. Yet he was not vexed. Nay, he treated {217} me with
- great affection, and said, among other things, 'The English are a
- worthy, good people, _brava nazione_; if only it had not been for
- that moment, that unhappy moment!' 'What moment do you mean?' said
- I. 'Ah! surely,' he replied, 'when Henry VIII. resolved on revolting
- against the Church.' I did not answer, but I thought within myself,
- 'Poor man, what ignorance! what infatuation! And what were my
- thoughts of that moment of which he spoke? My thoughts on this head
- had been formed in my young days, and, oh! how deep are first young
- thoughts allowed to take firm root undisturbed! When I was a
- child"----
-
-Here he relates the discourse of his sisters' governess about the
-English Reformation, given in a former chapter. "When, accordingly,
-the Genoese priest thus spoke I thought, Poor, blind man! little he
-knows what England gained at that same moment for which he pities it.
-... I cannot but add to this last circumstance, that twelve years
-later I was returning from Rome--a priest! I came by sea. Stopping one
-day in the harbour of Genoa, I went on shore to say mass at the
-Cathedral, and found the same priest still at the head of the
-sacristy--the same benign features I saw, but somewhat marked with
-age. I asked him did he remember and recognise the young English
-disputer? _O altitudo_! .... And is it I whom they would expect to
-give up my poor countrymen for hopeless? No! leave this to others, who
-have not tasted like me the fruits of the tender mercies of God."
-
-As soon as he arrived in England, he went to see his family, who were
-in Ryde for the summer, according to their custom. He was cordially
-welcomed; but it must seem a cold thing for a newly-ordained priest to
-come to a home where not a brother or sister would kneel to get his
-blessing, nor father nor mother be in ecstacy of joy at hearing him
-say mass for the first time. This was in July, 1832. Early in August
-he met several priests at Sir Edward Doughty's, Upton House,
-Dorsetshire; and Lady Doughty says:--"Mr. Spencer greatly edified all
-who then met him by his humility, fervour, and earnest desire for the
-conversion of England. On the 11th of August he left Upton, {218}
-accompanied by Dr. Logan, for Prior Park. On that morning, as the
-coach from Poole passed at an early hour, Mr. Spencer engaged one of
-the men servants to serve his mass at five o'clock. The servant went
-to call him soon after four, but finding the room apparently
-undisturbed, he proceeded to the little domestic chapel, and there he
-found Mr. Spencer prostrate before the altar in fervent prayer, and he
-then rose and said mass; the servant's conviction being, that he had
-been there in prayer all night."
-
-An incident occurred, as Father Spencer was passing through Bordeaux
-on his way to England, which deserves especial mention, if only to
-recall the droll pleasure he used to experience himself, and create in
-others, while relating it. He met there a great, big, fat convert, who
-had just made his abjuration and been baptised. Father Spencer
-questioned him about his first communion, and the trouble of preparing
-himself "in his then state of body" seemed an awful exertion. However,
-after a great deal of what the gentleman termed "painful goading,"
-Father Spencer succeeded in bringing him to the altar. The fat
-gentleman sat him down afterwards to melt in the shade of a midsummer
-June day in Bordeaux, grumbling yet delighted at the exertion he had
-made. The Bishop of Bordeaux was giving confirmation in some of the
-churches in the town, and Father Spencer thought he should not lose
-the opportunity of getting his fat friend to the sacrament. He knew
-how hateful exertion of any kind was to the neophyte, who, though he
-believed all the Catholic doctrines in a kind of a heap, was not
-over-inclined for works of supererogation. He resolved to do what he
-could. He went to him, and boldly told him that he ought to prepare
-himself for confirmation. "What!" exclaimed the gentleman, making an
-effort to yawn, "have I not done yet? Is there more to be got through
-before I am a perfect Catholic? Oh, dear!" And he moved himself. He
-was brought through, however, to the no small inconvenience of himself
-and others, and many was the moral Father Ignatius pointed afterwards
-with this first essay of his in missionary work.
-
-{219}
-
-At Prior Park, Father Spencer met Dr. Walsh, and he was appointed to
-begin a new mission in West Bromwich; he sets about it immediately,
-and gets an altar for it from Lord Dormer in Walsall. He met Dr.
-Wiseman, who came to England about this time, and they are both
-invited by Earl Spencer to spend a day at Althorp. The Earl was
-charmed with Dr. Wiseman, and Father Spencer exclaims, in a letter,
-"What a grand point was this! A Catholic priest, and a D.D., rector of
-a Catholic college, received with distinction at a Protestant
-nobleman's!" He met some of his old parishioners, and was welcomed by
-them with love and kind remembrances. His church in West Bromwich was
-opened on the 21st November, 1832, and he was settled down as a
-Catholic pastor near where he hunted as a Protestant layman, and
-preached heresy as a Protestant minister.
-
-{220}
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-F. Spencer Begins His Missionary Life.
-
-
-Far different is the position on which Mr. Spencer enters towards the
-close of 1832, from that which he was promoted to in 1825. Then he
-took the cure of souls with vague notions of his precise duty; now he
-took the cure of souls as a clearly defined duty, for the fulfilment
-of which he knew he should render a severe account. Then he received a
-large income from the bare fact of his being put in possession of his
-post; now he has to expend even what he has in trying to provide a
-place of worship for his flock. Then, there were eight hundred souls
-under his charge, most of them wealthy and comfortable, and all
-looking up to him with respect for being his father's son; now he
-could scarcely count half that number as his own, scattered among
-hovels and garrets; amid their more opulent neighbours, who mocked him
-for being a priest. He then dwelt with pleasure on his rich benefice,
-and on the rising walls of his handsome rectory; now he prayed the
-bishop to put him into the poorest mission in the diocese, and
-delighted in being housed like the poor. The life he led as a priest
-in West Bromwich is worthy of the ancient solitaries. He began by
-placing all his property in the bishop's hands, and his lordship
-appointed an _Econome_, who gave him now and again such sums as he
-needed to keep himself alive, give something to the poor, and supply
-his church with necessaries. He keeps an account of every farthing he
-spends, and shows it to the Bishop at the end of the quarter, to see
-if his lordship approves, or wishes anything to be retrenched for the
-future. His ordinary course of life was--rise at six, {221} Meditation
-Office and Mass, hear some confessions, and, after breakfast, at ten,
-go out through the parish until six, when he came home to dinner, and
-spent the time that was left till supper in instructing catechumens,
-reading, praying, or writing. He had no luxuries, no comforts, he
-scarcely allowed himself any recreation, except in doing pastoral
-work. He leaves two rooms of his little house unfurnished, and says he
-has something else to do with the money that might be thus spent. Much
-as he loved Mr. Phillipps, he did not go to see him after his
-marriage, because he thought it was not necessary to spend money in
-that way which could alleviate the poverty of a parishioner; and
-because he did not like to be a day absent from his parish work as
-long as God gave him strength. During the first year of his residence
-at West Bromwich he opens three schools; one of them had been a
-pork-shop, and was bought for him by a Catholic tradesman. Here he
-used to come and lecture once or twice a week, and is surprised and
-pleased to find a well-ordered assembly ready to listen to him. He
-says in a letter at this time: "I go to bed weary every night, and
-enjoy my sleep more than great people do theirs; for it is the sleep
-of the labourer." He is rather sanguine in his hopes of converting
-Protestants; but, although he receives a good many into the Church, he
-finds error more difficult to root out than he imagined. He bears up,
-however, and a letter to Mr. Phillipps will tell us what he thought;
-he says: "Keep England's conversion always next your heart. It is no
-small matter to overturn a dynasty so settled and rooted as that of
-error in this country; and how are we possibly to expect that we shall
-be made instruments to effect this, unless we become in some measure
-conformable to the characters of the Saints who have done such things
-before us? Yet let us not give up the undertaking, for as, on the one
-hand, no one has succeeded without wonderful labour and patience, so,
-on the other, none ever has failed when duly followed up. Let us not
-be discouraged by opposition, but work the more earnestly: and as we
-see people about some hard bodily exertion begin with their clothes
-on, but, when they find {222} the difficulty of their job, strip first
-the coat, then the waistcoat, then turn up their sleeves, and so on,
-we must do the same. God does not give success at once, because He
-wishes us better than to remain as we are, fettered and attached to
-the world. If we succeeded before all this encumbrance is stripped
-off, we should certainly not get rid of it afterwards." He did "turn
-up his sleeves," and toil, no doubt, at converting his neighbours; he
-opened a new mission in Dudley towards the Christmas of 1833; he first
-began in an old warehouse, which he fitted up with a chapel and seats,
-and turned one or two little houses adjoining into a sacristy and
-sitting-room for the priest who might come there to officiate.
-
-He goes on in this even course for the whole of the two first years of
-his life in West Bromwich, without any striking event to bring one
-part more prominently forward than another. His every day work was
-not, however, all plain sailing; in proportion as his holiness of life
-increased the reverence Catholics began to conceive for him, it
-provoked the persecution and contempt of the Protestants. He was
-pensive generally, and yet had a keen relish for wit and humour. He
-was one day speaking with a brother priest in his sacristy, with sad
-earnestness, about the spiritual destitution of the poor people around
-him, who neither knew God, nor would listen to those who were willing
-to teach them. A poor woman knocked at the sacristy door, and was
-ordered to come in; she fell on her knees very reverently, to get
-Father Spencer's blessing, as soon as she approached him. His
-companion observed that this poor woman reminded him of the mother of
-the sons of Zebedee, who came to Our Saviour _adorans_. "Yes," replied
-Father Spencer, with a very arch smile, "and not only _adorans_, but
-_petens aliquid ah eo_" Such was his usual way; he would season his
-discourse on the most important subject--even go a little out of his
-way for that purpose--with a pointed anecdote, or witty remark.
-
-All did not feel inclined to follow the old woman's example in the
-first part of the above scene, though many were led {223} to do so
-through their love and practice of the second. A person sent us the
-following letter, who still lives on the spot that was blessed by this
-holy priest's labours, and as it bears evidence to some of the
-statements we have made from other sources, it may be well to give it
-insertion:--
-
- "I was one of his first converts at West Bromwich, and a fearful
- battle I had; but his sublime instructions taught me how to pray for
- the grace of God to guide me to his true Church. He was ever
- persecuted, and nobly overcame his enemies. I remember one morning
- when he was going his accustomed rounds to visit the poor and sick,
- he had to pass a boys' school, at Hill Top; they used to hoot after
- him low names, but, seeing he did not take any notice, they came
- into the road and threw mud and stones at him; he took no notice.
- Then they took hold of his coat, and ripped it up the back. He did
- not mind, but went on all day, as usual, through Oldbury, Tipton
- Oudley, and Hill Top, visiting his poor people. He used to leave
- home every morning, and fill his pockets with wine and food for the
- poor sick, and return home about six in the evening, without taking
- any refreshment all day, though he might have walked twenty miles in
- the heat of summer. One winter's day he gave all his clothes away to
- the poor, except those that were on him. He used to say two Masses
- on Sunday, in West Bromwich, and preach. I never saw him use a
- conveyance of any kind in his visits through his parish."
-
-It could not be expected that the newspapers would keep silence about
-him. He gets a little in that way, which he writes about, as
-follow:--"Eliot (an apostate) has been writing in divers quarters that
-I know of, and I dare say in many others (for he was very fond of
-letter-writing), the most violent abuse of the Catholic Church, and of
-all her priests, excepting me, whom he pities as a wretched victim of
-priest-craft. I still hope there is some strange infatuation about him
-which may dissipate, and let him return; but if not, the Church has
-ramparts enough to stand his battering, and I am not afraid of my
-little castle being shaken by him. I feel desirous rather than not
-that he should publish the {224} worst he can about me and mine in the
-Protestant papers. It will help to correct us of some faults, and
-bring to light, perhaps, at the same time, something creditable to our
-cause."
-
-He must have felt the extraordinary change in his state of mind and
-duty now to what he experienced some four or five years before. There
-are no doubts about doctrines, nor difficulties about Dissenters; his
-way is plain and clear, without mist or equivocal clause; there is but
-one way for Catholics of being united with heretics--their
-unconditional submission to the Church. There is no going half-way to
-meet them, or sacrificing of principles to soothe their scruples;
-either all or none--the last definition of the Council of Trent, as
-well as the first article of the Apostles' Creed. If he has
-difficulties about any matter, he will not find Bishops giving him
-shifting answers, and seemingly ignorant themselves of what is the
-received interpretation of a point of faith. He will be told at once
-by the next priest what is the doctrine of the Church, and if he
-refuses to assent to it he ceases to be a Catholic. This looks an iron
-rule in the Church of God, and those outside her cannot understand how
-its very unbending firmness consoles the doubtful, cheers the
-desponding, strengthens the will and expands and nourishes the
-intellect.
-
-A priest has many consolations in his little country parish that few
-can understand or appreciate. It is not the number and efficiency of
-his schools, the round of his visits, or the frequency of his
-instructions. No; it is the offering of the Victim of Salvation every
-morning for his own and his people's sins, and it is the conveying the
-precious blood of his Saviour to their souls, through the Sacraments
-he administers. Only a priest can understand what it is to feel that a
-creature kneels before him, steeped in vice and sin, and, after a good
-confession, rises from his knees, restored to God's grace and
-friendship. All his labours have this one object--the putting of his
-people into the grace of God, and keeping them in it until they reach
-to their reward. There is a reality in all this which faith alone can
-give that makes {225} him taste and feel the good he is doing. A
-reality that will make him fly without hesitation to the pestilential
-deathbed, and glory in inhaling a poison that may end his own days, in
-the discharge of his duty. He must be ever ready to give his life for
-his sheep, not in fancy or in words, but in very deed, and thus seal
-by his martyrdom both the truth which he professes, and his love for
-the Master whom he has been chosen to serve.
-
-The number of priests who die every year, and the average of a
-missionary priest's life, prove but too clearly how often the
-sacrifice is accepted.
-
-
-{226}
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Prospects Of Widening His Sphere Of Action.
-
-
-Towards the close of the year 1834, Earl Spencer died. George, of
-course, felt it deeply; he loved his father with, if possible, more
-than filial affection, for he could look up since his childhood to his
-paternal example; and all the virtue he was able to practise during
-his younger days, despite the occasions into which he was cast, he
-attributed chiefly to the influence of his father's authority. The
-country lost a statesman, and the Catholics an advocate in the noble
-earl; his death was therefore regretted by more than his immediate
-family; but there was one great reason why his son felt so deeply--his
-father had not died a Catholic. There were many things to make up for
-his exclusion from the _mementoes_ of his son in the mass, as not
-being one of those _qui nos praecesserunt cum signo fidei_; such as,
-his real natural goodness, his acting up to his lights, and his kind
-treatment of his son; but they were, of course, poor, weak
-assuagements to the stern fact that he could not pray publicly for the
-repose of his soul, and only, by the merest conditional permission,
-even privately. Father Spencer goes shortly after to Althorp. The new
-earl thinks proper to prohibit his brother speaking to any except
-those of his own rank while visiting there. He had, of course, his
-reasons, but it was a sore trial to Father Spencer, who ever loved the
-poor, and never felt so happy as when exercising his patience in
-listening to the detailed account of their sufferings, or in trying to
-relieve them by words or alms. He put up with it, and a _thank God_
-soon made him at home amid lords and ladies for the time of his short
-stay.
-
-{227}
-
-It may strike some person as a very strange thing that this
-illustrious convert and great saint, as he really was and appeared to
-be, should be shut up in a poor hamlet whose name does not appear even
-on railway maps, and not located in some resort of pride and fashion.
-But the Honourable and Reverend George Spencer had seen enough of
-fashion and gentility to be thoroughly disgusted with both the one and
-the other. He understood no way of going to heaven except that which
-Our Lord pointed out to us and went Himself first for us to follow,
-the way of the cross in poverty and humility. Hence he applied to
-Bishop Walsh for the poorest and worst mission in the diocese. If one
-will not be inclined to give this good Bishop credit for forwarding
-the apostolical intentions of his young priest, let him know that
-there might be also a more inferior motive why he should accede to his
-request. Priests with private incomes can better subsist in poor
-missions than those who depend on the charity of their flocks; and we
-find at present that many, who have property of their own, are
-appointed, notwithstanding the honourable and creditable prefixes to
-their names, to missions which are not able to support a priest from
-their internal resources. These two reasons put together will account
-for the placing of the Hon. and Rev. George Spencer in the mission of
-West Bromwich.
-
-St. Thomas defines zeal, "an intense love by which one is moved
-against and repels whatever is detrimental to the good of his friend,
-and does his best to prevent whatever is against the honour or the
-will of God." Alphonsus Rodrigues says: "It is the love of God on
-fire, and a vehement desire that He should be loved, honoured, and
-adored by all; and so intense is it, that he who burns therewith tries
-to communicate its heat to every one." This effect of zeal is the
-special gleam by which the shining of great saints can be
-distinguished from ordinary servants of God. They are filled with the
-love of God, they overflow with it, and dash off floods that sweep
-down vice and sin by their impetuosity. When obstacles occur to show
-that the time is not opportune, or that the sluices should not yet be
-drawn, the saints are far from languishing into ordinary ways. No; the
-springs are open afresh, their hearts are filling the more {228} they
-are pent up, and seek avenues on every side and in every way in which
-they may possibly allow some heavenly water to escape. Such was the
-zeal of St. Chrysostom, who would be blind if his audience could but
-see. Such was the love of St. Francis Xavier, who went through unknown
-and almost inaccessible regions to convert the heathen. Such was the
-love of St. Teresa, who sighed that she was not a man, because her sex
-and state forbade her to be an apostle. Such was the Psalmist, when he
-said, "The zeal of Thy house has eaten me up."
-
-The difference between heavenly zeal and fanaticism is, that one is
-willing to be directed, the other breaks the bonds of authority. One
-acts sweetly and consistently, the other intemperately and rashly. One
-distrusts self, the other begins and ends with self.
-
-Father Spencer was full of zeal. It was, in fact, his zeal that
-brought him into the Church. Now that he found himself commissioned to
-propagate God's kingdom, his zeal arose to that of the saints, and
-began to burst forth and devise means by which that kingdom could be
-speedily and perfectly spread. He devised plans for the sanctification
-of the clergy by introducing a kind of religious life amongst them; he
-formed plans for the perfection of the laity, after an old but
-abandoned model, which will be described; he had conceived plans of
-founding a religious institute, of which a devout soul he knew was to
-be first rev. mother; he had plans of preaching, away at some place or
-places which he does not tell us about; he had plans for finding out
-the secret by which the Jesuits became such successful missionaries;
-he had plans of going to Cambridge for an installation, and bearding
-the lion of heresy and error in his very den;--and all these he
-proposed from time to time to his director and diocesan superior, but
-all met the one fate of being drowned by the cold water thrown upon
-them. He complains a little, in a letter he wrote at this time, of
-"the slowness of Catholic prelates with regard to schemes;" but after
-being told to lay them aside, he resigns himself with perfect
-submission. He finds out, in a short time, that the Catholic prelates
-were right, and he drops his wings completely, by saying: "I am
-resolved to give up forming plans {229} for the future, and I shall
-try to gain more love of God and devotion to the Blessed Virgin. This
-again He must give me, and Mary must gain it for me; or rather, I must
-charge her to persevere in making this request for me, whether I
-forget it occasionally or not." Besides the crossing of his plans, he
-has another cross to endure; he loves to visit Hagley, where Lady
-Lyttelton, his sister, generally lived, and he is received only on
-condition that he will not speak of religion. This he feels hard, as
-he loved this sister very much, and thought he could not show a
-greater proof of his affection than that of communicating to her, if
-possible, what he prized more than his life--his faith.
-
-One plan he forms, however, which does not meet with the disapproval
-of his superiors, and that was, to go to London and beg among his
-aristocratic friends for funds for a new church he intended building
-at Dudley. He seems to have succeeded pretty well, as there is a nice
-gothic church there at present, which was built by him. We have only
-one peculiar incident of his first begging tour.
-
-He took it into his head to go and ask a subscription of the Duchess
-of Kent, mother to our Queen. He was received kindly by the Duchess,
-and the Princess Victoria was allowed to be present at the
-conversation. Father Spencer spoke for some time about the lamentable
-state of England, on account of its religious divisions; he gave a
-short account of his own conversion, and wound up by putting forward
-the claims of the Catholic Church to the obedience of all Christians,
-as there ought to be but one fold under one shepherd. It may be said
-that he formed a very favourable opinion of the Princess from this
-meeting; he said once, when relating the story: "I considered the
-Princess very sensible and thoughtful. She listened with great
-attention to everything I said, and maintained a respectful silence,
-because she sat beside her mother. I had great hopes of her then, and
-so far they have not been disappointed. I hope ye will all pray for
-her, and we may one day have the pleasure of seeing her a Catholic."
-This he said in 1863, and then he was firmly convinced that the
-Duchess herself had died a Catholic.
-
-He returned soon to his mission in West Bromwich, and {230} writes, in
-a letter to Mr. Phillipps: "I had a project in my head when I
-returned, more extensive than any that filled it of late. That is,
-going to Dublin to see if there I might find some unknown mine out of
-which I could draw what I want for Dudley. This soon grew into the
-thought of a tour round Ireland, and the subject of collecting alms
-for Dudley soon began to look trivial and secondary. I could hardly
-contain myself at the thoughts of preaching all over Ireland the
-conversion of England, and exhorting them all to forget their earthly
-miseries in the view of our spiritual ones, and to begin to retaliate
-the evils they have endured in the way of the true Christian, not by
-violent opposition, but by rendering good a thousandfold, or rather
-beyond reckoning." This scheme was put off for some time, by the
-advice of the Rev. Mr. Martyn, who seems to have been his director.
-
-In the beginning of August, 1835, Father Spencer got a severe attack
-of illness: it proceeded principally from over-exertion. He began to
-spit blood, and as soon as his friends heard of it, his sister, Lady
-Lyttelton, and his brother-in-law, Lord George Quin, came for him and
-took him to Hagley, where he might be carefully nursed until he should
-recover. They set him down to say mass in Stourbridge, and allowed him
-all the spiritual aid he wished for, even going so far as to invite a
-priest to come and stay with him, and make Hagley his home for the
-time. This was in keeping with their usual kindness, and Father
-Spencer never forgot it; nay, he would treasure up the least act of
-kindness done him by any one, much more so when received from those
-who differed from him in religious matters. He writes now, apparently
-under the shadow of death: one thing looks strange to him when he
-thinks of dying, that he cannot see why God gives him such a strong
-desire for an apostolic life if it be not sometime carried into
-effect. "It may be that He will give me the merit of the desires
-without their accomplishment, but this seems less probable. His will
-be done. I only mention this to prevent your being discouraged on my
-account. What is an illness in His sight? It is easier to restore me
-my vigour than at first to give it to me. Let us only wait prepared
-for quick {231} obedience to His call, whether for this world or the
-next." In another letter, written about the same time, he says: "What
-I am further to do must be decided by my present _bodily_ director,
-Dr. Johnstone, to whom for my correction and humiliation the Bishop
-has committed me."
-
-It seems most likely that he wrote the autobiography during this
-illness; it has the marks and tokens of his then state of mind upon
-the first part of it at least.
-
-After his recovery there is talk of his being made a bishop, and some
-of his friends are doing their best, by writing and so forth, to help
-his promotion to the mitre. No better idea can be given of the way he
-felt with regard to this matter, than by introducing a letter he wrote
-at the time to one of his friends:
-
- "I know you are as eager about everything that concerns me as about
- your own matters; and that you are now boiling to come and be busy
- about this most interesting affair. Yet it will prove better to go
- on quietly. To be sure I should exult if it please God of His own
- will to enlarge my powers and faculties of advancing His kingdom,
- trusting to Him to furnish me with graces sufficient; but the call
- must be clear, and His will manifest, or, I thank God, I have made
- up my mind to answer, I stir not. And how can I know this but by the
- rule of obedience? Many reasons strike me _pro_ and _con_.
- immediately; but these I had better not meditate upon. I shall leave
- it to Dr. Walsh to decide whether I accept or do not. I cannot be
- right any other way. If he chooses to hear me plead the cause for
- myself, stating what I think are the motives _pro_ and _con_., I
- will do it when he likes; if not, it is certainly better not to go
- against him. I was at Prior Park three years ago, when Dr. Baines
- knows that I refused the offer of an Irish clergyman to propose me
- for an Irish bishopric, on Dr. Walsh's judgment, and he approved of
- that decision. No doubt he will of this."
-
-We hear nothing further of this, so it is likely Dr. Walsh judged it
-proper for him to refuse the contemplated honour.
-
-{232}
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-Newspaper Discussions, Etc.
-
-
-From the end of the year 1835 to the middle of 1836, Father Spencer
-was more or less engaged in newspaper controversy with some ministers.
-The first champion of Protestantism, or rather assailant of
-Catholicism, he condescended to argue with was a Mr. Gideon Ouseley.
-This gentleman is described in a letter written at the time as a "Low
-Church parson, or Methodist, of Armagh." There may be some distinction
-between the two characters, but it is only fair to say that we freely
-grant him the benefit of the doubt. They had a paper fight about the
-usual topics of controversy, beginning with mis-statements of doctrine
-from Mr. Ouseley and explanations from Mr. Spencer, and continuing
-through a very brisk parrying of logical thrusts to a conclusion which
-ended by the newspaper refusing to insert any more letters. Some good
-effects may have been produced by the controversy, which seldom
-happens, and also some breaches of charity; but there is one
-circumstance worthy to be mentioned, though perhaps it cannot well be
-traced back to _The Watchman_ newspaper, that this same Rev. Gideon
-Ouseley is, at the time these pages are writing, the officiating
-chaplain of the _soi-disant_ monks of Norwich, Br. Ignatius and his
-companions.
-
-The next adversary was a Mr. Dalton. Father Spencer expends some very
-good arguments on him, among others, the following in the first
-letter: "You and other Protestants may say that they consider this
-doctrine (transubstantiation) unscriptural; but the arguments by which
-you endeavour to impugn it never are scriptural. I once used to argue
-against it myself, and the best arguments I could find were from {233}
-reason." There may be fault found with this argument, because a thing
-could be unscriptural, though its denial or refutation were not; but
-F. Spencer establishes the positive side of the question afterwards.
-And the argument was good thus far that its denial is an Article of
-the 39, which should be proved by "sure warranty of Scripture." He
-does so in a passage which begins thus: "If Scripture be appealed to
-simply, I know not how any one can deny that it speaks altogether in
-our favour, whenever the Eucharist is mentioned or alluded to. When we
-are asked for proofs of our doctrine we invariably begin by an appeal
-to the simple words of Christ given in Scripture. 'This is my body,'
-'This is my blood,' which, taken as they stand, can agree with no
-doctrine but the Catholic."
-
-F. Spencer thought he had a gentleman to deal with in his adversary,
-but found that he had overrated the attributes his charity supposed
-him to possess. He pointed an argument upon the unity of our teachers
-as contradistinguished from sectarian ones, by bringing in Mr. Dalton
-and his brother us an example. At this Dalton took offence, and F.
-Spencer made a most ample and beautiful apology. This evoked all the
-bile of his opponent in a flourish of trumpets, by which he boasted of
-a post relinquished in the argument, which really argued gain in F.
-Spencer as a Christian antagonist. He flung out then in glorious
-confusion--imperfect councils, bad popes, Spanish inquisitions, just
-as they came to hand. When Spencer saw this, he thought of answering
-him according to his folly, and instead of analyzing his "concentrated
-lozenge," wrote something in the style of cudgelling him for the fun
-of the thing next time. Here is an extract from his next letter, which
-is produced more as a specimen of his humour than of his logic:--
-
-A sentence of Mr. Dalton's letter ran thus:
-
- "But let me first remind you what our view of private judgment is.
- Do we mean that every man may set up as an interpreter of Scripture,
- that every shoemaker and ploughman (as Catholics say) may become a
- preacher? By no means; we recognise authority when it is scriptural,
- and believe that an authorized ministry is God's mode of extending
- the Bible."
-
-{234}
-
-Father Spencer replies:--
-
- "Now this sentence suggests so many reflections to me that I hardly
- know which way to begin with it. I will first try what a little
- paraphrase will do, and explain what I think might perchance have
- been in your mind when you wrote it, and you may tell me whether I
- am near the mark before I make further comments on it. I would
- figure you to myself as reasoning thus with your self:--The right of
- private judgment must be maintained in some form, or else even we
- ministers shall not be able to stand our ground against the
- Romanists. If we allow of any reasonable notion of Church authority
- when we talk to them, they will hook us up again, and we shall not
- be able to assert even our own liberty to interpret as we like. But,
- on the other hand, if we put away talking of Church authority when
- we mount our pulpits, and impart the word to our hitherto obedient
- poor followers, they will begin to ask themselves, what need, then,
- is there of our reverend guides? Why should we pay any more tithes,
- and seat rents, and church rates, and Easter offerings, and the
- like? Yea! then would be sad danger that our craft would come to be
- set at nought, and the Temple of Great Diana (the Church of Great
- Elizabeth) would be reputed for nothing, and therefore we must teach
- people that there is such a thing as ministerial authority at least,
- if we cannot make much of an attempt to prove ecclesiastical
- authority; we must take care to maintain that to be capable of being
- a minister, a man must be able to read the New Testament in Greek,
- and the Old in Hebrew, at least, have a smattering of Hebrew, or
- else we shall have shoemakers and plough-men setting up opposition
- without being able to put them down; for they will be able to match
- us in what we must hold forth as the grand proof of the ministry,
- viz., that a man should be able to quote texts at pleasure, and talk
- about them so rapidly and unintelligibly as to make a congregation
- think him mighty wise and deeply spiritual. Such are the men who
- must be proclaimed worthy of great honour and admiration, but, above
- all, of ample revenues. Never mind how many contradictory systems
- enter into their respective reverend heads, we must persuade the
- {235} people, as long as they will swallow it, that they all speak
- by the Holy Ghost. It would, indeed, be more according to Scripture
- and reason, if all who professed to be led by the Spirit taught one
- doctrine; but this we can never bring about, unless we all get back
- to popery: and, indeed, it is not needful, nor even expedient, for
- the purpose we have before us, which is not to speak sound words
- which cannot be reproved, but such words as will keep together our
- congregation, and suit their tastes. Now as the tastes of men are so
- various, it is absolutely necessary that the doctrines we give them
- should vary too, and, therefore, as we know that Bible truth is but
- one, and the Bible, nevertheless, is the book out of which we must
- all pretend to teach, we cannot sufficiently praise the cleverness
- of those gifted individuals, who, by organizing a sort of
- skirmishing ministry, to take the place of the old uniform heavy
- phalanx of the Romanists, one fit _to extend the truth of the
- Bible_, so as to suit the tastes of all sorts of men, have enabled
- so many of us to extract from the pockets of all a genteel
- maintenance for our wives and families. I have in this paraphrase
- found myself obliged to pass over one word when you speak of _God's_
- mode of _extending_ the truth of the Bible. This operation, I think,
- God had never anything to do with. I believe that 1,800 years ago,
- God did, by his only Son, institute a ministry as his mode of
- _preserving_ the truth of the Bible, but _extending_ the truth of
- the Bible is a very different sort of affair. These words, though
- rather obscure, yet seem to convey very felicitiously the idea of
- what the Gospel ministers of the present day have accomplished, that
- is, making the Bible truth so extensive as to embrace all the
- various contradictory systems--Church of England, High, Low,
- Evangelical, _et hoc genus omne_. But the time would fail me to tell
- a tenth part of the glorious variety which the spiritual bill of
- fare of the nineteenth century presents to the dainty taste of our
- countrymen. This plan of truth extension is a wonder which was
- reserved for the wisdom of our preachers to contrive and to
- develope, under the guidance of a wiser spirit than that of man, and
- yet certainly not the spirit of God. The ancient saints had no {236}
- more idea of it than Archimedes had of a hydraulic press. I have
- taken the liberty of playing upon your exposition of authority, to
- show how vain it is to attempt to uphold anything like a legitimate
- authority, and the right of private judgment together. I do not
- wonder that you got rather into a perplexity in trying to explain
- how they may be reconciled. The Church of England has tried to
- explain this matter in her 20th Article, but finds it too hard. She
- just says, 'the Church hath authority in controversies of faith,'
- but leaves it to her children to guess whether this authority be
- divine or human, infallible or fallible, granted her by the King of
- Heaven or the king of England. She intimates, indeed, that it is not
- quite to be depended on, by the next words, in which it is said, 'it
- is not lawful for the Church to ordain anything contrary to God's
- word written:' but again we are left to divine who the judge is, who
- is to keep the Church in order: is it the king, or every licensed
- preacher, or every single Christian? ..... Ah! these Articles are
- troublesome things. I have known what it is to be under those
- shackles, and what it is to be set free from them."
-
-In the next letter, his opponent complains that Father Spencer has
-_hurt his feelings_, and made his _heart sicken_, which complaint the
-_wily priest_, as he was termed, began to answer thus:--
-
- "I have heard of certain ladies who have recourse to a method
- something like this to escape being kept in order by their husbands,
- and who silence everything that is said against their humours by
- falling into hysterics. A tender husband will once or twice perhaps
- be melted by the alarming spectacle; he will run and fetch the
- smelling-bottle, ring for the servants, beg pardon, and say pretty
- things to compose his dear partner's mind again. But when he finds
- that as soon as she has gained her point she gets well directly, and
- is more saucy and wilful than before--if he wishes to be happy, or
- to make her so--he will be what she calls cruel next time, and let
- her get well by herself till she is tired of fainting fits. Now,
- sir, I have once been tender-hearted over you .... I apologized ....
- {237} In the next letter you took advantage of this to make an
- impertinent remark. This discovered to me that your feelings need
- not be so tenderly dealt with, and I proceeded with my disagreeable
- questions, and shall still do so at the risk of your telling me in
- the next letter that I have not only sickened you, but made you
- quite faint away."
-
-After thus sickening his delicate friend, he sums up in the last
-letter and answers the difficulties objected to him very well indeed.
-We forbear introducing purely controversial matter, except in as far
-as it bears upon the peculiar gifts or manner of Father Spencer. There
-is nothing but what any ordinary priest of fair acquirements could
-have said in defence of our doctrines in the remainder, except that
-the answer to the hackneyed objection about some councils being of
-doubtful authority is very clearly and forcibly given.
-
-A third champion entered the lists before these had been "conquered"
-enough to think themselves qualified "to argue still." This was a Rev.
-W. Riland Bedford. Indeed, he was so impatient of distinguishing
-himself by the honour of having once engaged with so respectable a
-foe, that he could not wait until Mr. Dalton was ousted. Besides, it
-is very likely he thought Mr. Dalton was missing fine opportunities of
-giving clever strokes, by spending too much time in quarrelling with
-the ungenerous hits of his adversary or, perhaps, he thought he did
-not take the proper instruments of warfare. However, he made a grand
-stroke, and aimed also at what he believed to be the most vulnerable,
-as well as the most defenceless, spot in the person of F. Spencer's
-system. Here we might be corrected by the _Maid of Lille_, who said,
-very pertly, to Mr. Spencer once: "Catholics have no systems." They
-have doctrines. At all events, Mr. Riland Bedford did attack F.
-Spencer, and lest he might lose by being single-handed, a brace of
-them--Revs. Messrs. M'Ghee and himself--made an onslaught on Revs.
-Messrs. M'Donnel and Spencer, thereby intending, of course, to make a
-grand breach in Popery. The subject of their letters was the treating
-of certain sins by our moral theologians. F. Spencer made use of the
-usual line of defence here, but {238} he added also an _argumentum ad
-hominem_. "St. Paul, in the chapter above referred to (Rom. i.), tells
-us that there were no sins more prevalent in his day, and none more
-destructive, than that grievous class of sins to which these questions
-relate. The afflicting experience of the pastors of the Church leads
-them to fear that no less awfully in these times and in this country,
-do habits of the like crimes make ruin of thousands of souls; and
-_your own recollection of the University, where, I suppose, you were
-educated for holy orders, must convince you that our fears are not
-unfounded. For what must be expected in the body of the people, when,
-among those who are preparing to be their pastors, at the most
-critical time of their life, there are so few who dare openly to
-withstand the prevailing fashion of iniquity, and so many who profess
-to despise morality and chastity as a thing to be ashamed of._" F.
-Spencer was tripped up in some allusions he made to a Protestant
-attempt at a prayer-book, of which there were two or three editions;
-but, since he happened not to be correct as to one edition, and to
-miss something about another, still, though his argument was not
-thereby weakened, but Rev. Mr. Riland Bedford thought it was, and so,
-or nearly so, the matter ended.
-
-F. Spencer was induced to begin this paper controversy by the hope of
-conveying some information about Catholic dogmas to those who would
-not read Catholic books, but would, and did, read newspapers. Shortly
-after, he learnt, by one instance, what little good generally comes of
-this kind of contention. He paid a visit to Hagley, and, in a
-conversation with Lord Lyttelton, asked him if he had seen the
-_Birmingham Gazette_ lately. "Yes," replied the other, "but delicacy
-forbade me to allude to your share in that concern." The sum of it was
-that his lordship thought George under a perfect delusion, and
-wondered he was not confounded at such powerful refutations as his
-adversary's were. All F. Spencer wrote looked to him perfectly
-trifling; so much so, that he had made up his mind to take George in
-hand himself, and convert him back again, and was then {239} actually
-getting up some little theology to aid him in doing so more summarily.
-This George took in very good humour, and hoped good from, especially
-as Lord Lyttelton appeared to be the leader in the family in point of
-religion. He was doomed to a sad disappointment; for Lord Lyttelton
-died shortly after this conversation, and, as far as documentary
-evidence goes, without having had another conversation with Father
-Spencer.
-
-{240}
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Private Life And Crosses Of F. Spencer.
-
-
-It could scarcely be supposed that the self-denying, laborious life of
-F. Spencer in West Bromwich, which has been already alluded to, could
-be one of those effervescent fits that pass away with the newness of
-change, when one remembers his life as a Protestant minister. He did
-not abate one iota of his mortifications or labours, but he became
-systematized with them, and managed, under the advice of his director,
-to keep from extremes. He no longer scrupled paying for a conveyance,
-if he thought the object of his journey was worth more than the
-coach-fare. For letters, he followed the same rule, though, as he was
-in a position to obtain franks very frequently, he had not so much
-difficulty to put up with in the matter of paying heavy postage. To
-bear these remarks out, we have some of his own letters, but the
-letter of a lady, who made his acquaintance some time about 1835, and
-had frequent opportunities of observing him up to the time of his
-becoming a Passionist, will be more satisfactory than snatches of
-sentences here and there, which accidentally tell what he was doing.
-
- "In the year 1835 I first became acquainted with the Catholic
- religion, and, in consequence, with the Hon. and Rev. George
- Spencer, who instructed and afterwards received me into the Church.
- From that time till the present I never for a moment doubted of his
- extraordinary sanctity. He never in all his discourses with me,
- which were numerous, spoke of anything but with an aim to the glory
- of God. I knew his housekeeper at West Bromwich, a very good woman,
- who has been dead many years. She told me that she many times found
- him, very early in the morning, {241} cleaning his own shoes, and
- she dare not let him see her for fear of confusion. She often
- remarked that he spent a very long time in the exercise of prayer
- and meditation. He was so zealous for the salvation of souls that
- whenever he saw any new comer in his chapel he would find them out,
- go to their houses and speak with them; he thus brought many into
- the Church. Although he was insulted in all kinds of ways, on his
- walks, he rejoiced and thanked God for all. When he opened his
- mission in Dudley, rather than go to a public inn he slept, wrapped
- up in a large rough cloak, on the bare floor of what served as for
- sacristy, and continued to do so for some time until he had a proper
- place prepared. Many nights at his own home he used to disturb the
- bed a little, but it was found that he had not lain in it at all for
- the whole night. When he was instructing me in the year 1836, he
- broke a blood-vessel, and though the blood literally flowed from his
- head into a dish, he continued on the instructions. He visited the
- sick constantly. On one occasion he went to see a poor woman, who
- had not one to attend her; she became very restless whilst he was
- there, and wanted to go downstairs; he wrapped her up in a blanket
- and carried her down. She was no sooner down than she wanted to be
- brought up again; he brought her up, too; she got quiet then,
- listened to him, and after a short time expired before he left the
- room.
-
- "At one house where he visited, a child was suffering from a bad
- mouth, so that it was quite distressing to look at it. Father
- Spencer laid his finger on the child's tongue, and said, 'It will be
- well;' in a half-an-hour afterwards it was quite well. Once my
- grandmother was at the point of death; he came and blessed her, and
- in a day or two she was quite well." Miraculous cures are wrought
- very frequently by priests' blessings. "Whatever thou blessest shall
- be blessed," is not pronounced in vain at their ordination; and "we
- must," as Father Ignatius would say pointedly to those who reflected
- little on them, "remember that our Lord's words do deserve some
- little attention." Faith can remove mountains, and it is only proper
- and just that faith could do something less. Since the faith of the
- person {242} "made whole" is often as powerful as the faith of the
- servant of God, each side escapes the vanity of having wrought
- wonders, by attributing the effect to the other. "He generally went
- to the kitchen himself, or other places, to get what he wanted, and
- would often do without a thing, rather than trouble his housekeeper
- or a servant, if he knew them to be engaged. He wished to be not
- only his own servant, but the servant of everybody as far as he
- could. He used to beg of my father and me to pray that he might
- become poorer than the poorest man we ever knew. He even once asked
- my father to pray that he might become so poor as to be compelled to
- _lie down and die in a ditch_. I never saw him out of heart or in
- the least discouraged, however difficult a case he might come
- across: he would generally say, 'We must go on, rejoice and thank
- God; it will all come right in the end.' One of his former high-up
- friends and he were walking by a lunatic asylum once, and his friend
- remarked that he should soon be fit for admission there. This he
- used to relate with as great glee as if he had received a first-rate
- compliment, perhaps greater. When he visited our house in the
- country once, he struck his head against a beam somewhere, and I was
- astonished at hearing him exclaim, 'Served me right.'"
-
-Several dear friends die about this time, and the conflict between
-affection and religious detachment is beautifully pourtrayed in the
-yielding of the former to the latter by several remarks of his own and
-others, which we subjoin.
-
-He hears of the death of Cardinal Weld about the beginning of the year
-1837, and thus writes to Mr. Phillipps about it: "You have heard, of
-course, of Cardinal Weld's death. I have felt that it is to me like
-the loss of a father almost; for he treated me as a child, as no doubt
-he did a great many more. But we must not give way to sorrows, for we
-have enough to do with our feelings in the battle against present
-evils, without wasting them on evils which are irremediable." The next
-death he heard of was that of the Honourable George Quin, a nephew of
-his, and he wrote to Mr. Phillipps: "That is another warning to us to
-pray better for the remainder, when one of our four families is {243}
-carried off before the fruit of our prayers appears." Somewhere about
-this time Lord Lyttelton dies also, without having succeeded in the
-project he formed last year, nor did poor Father Spencer succeed much
-in bringing him over to his side. He always respected this good
-brother-in-law, and the feeling was returned. He felt greatly for his
-loss, as well as for the bereavement of his sister. To add to his
-trials, a change comes over the relations between him and his family.
-Hitherto it was stipulated that Father Spencer was to be always
-received as a welcome guest provided he never spoke on religious
-subjects. The Bishop thinks it, as of course it was, unfair to place
-restrictions upon him, and not leave the matter to his own discretion.
-It was not quite becoming for a priest to pay visits, and keep his
-lips closed by contract on everything that was proper to his sacred
-character. On the other hand, the family did not like to have their
-agreeable parties disturbed by controversy, which was likely to draw
-out hotter words than was suitable to the state of things. Both sides
-had some kind of reason to show, and Father Spencer was placed between
-them. He communicated the decision of his bishop to the more
-influential members of the Spencer family, but he found they would not
-bend. He cheerfully gives up visiting, and even consoles some of his
-friends who manifest their concern that he should be debarred a
-pleasure so innocent and apparently so justifiable. How much he felt
-this, notwithstanding his cheerful resignation, may be seen from the
-following testimony, of one who knew him well, to the affection he had
-for Lady Lyttelton, his sister, who still survives:--
-
- "In the year 1837 Mr. Mackey (Mrs. Mackey writes the letter) was
- engaged painting a picture for Father Ignatius, for his chapel at
- West Bromwich, and we saw a great deal of him. He was devotedly
- attached to his sister, Lady Lyttelton, and he often used to speak
- of her loving care of him when a boy; and once, when I quoted those
- lines of Gray:--
-
-{244}
-
- "'See the wretch that long was toss'd
- On the stormy bed of pain,
- At once regain his vigour lost,
- And breathe and walk again.
-
- The meanest note that swells the gale,
- The simplest flower that scents the dale,
- The common sun, the air, the skies,
- To him are opening Paradise--'
-
- he was much affected, and said he had not heard them since his
- sister, Lady Lyttelton, repeated them to him after recovering from
- an illness when he was young. There was, also, a song he sang
- occasionally at our house, because she liked it, and had taught it
- to him. He sang it with such feeling that it always moved me to
- tears, and as soon as I heard of his death I began to sing it, and
- it kept recurring to me all day. I seemed to rejoice for him in the
- song. These are the words: they are Moore's:--
-
- "'The bird, let loose in Eastern skies,
- When hastening fondly home,
- Ne'er stoops to earth her wing, nor flies
- Where idle warblers roam.
-
- But high she shoots through air and light,
- Above all low delay:
- Where nothing earthly bounds her flight,
- Nor shadow dims her way.
-
- So grant me, Lord, from ev'ry care,
- And stain of passion free,
- Aloft through virtue's nobler air,
- To wing my course to thee.
-
- No sin to cloud, no lure to stay,
- My soul as home she springs,
- Thy sunshine on her joyful way,
- Thy freedom on her wings.'
-
- He was always very much moved when speaking of Lady Lyttelton."
-
-It was no small sacrifice to submit with cheerfulness to the
-circumstances which prevented him visiting this sister, now that she
-had become a widow and had need of a consoler to help herself and
-children to bear their affliction. He simply says: "I find all my
-crosses and vexations to be blessings; and directly I made the
-sacrifice of feeling to duty, God sent me the best set of catechumens
-I have had yet. {245} Among others, a man and wife who have been
-_male_ and _female_ preachers, among the Primitive Methodists, or
-Ranters."
-
-His great friend and director, the Rev. Mr. Martyn, was the next of
-whose death he heard. This good and virtuous priest was more than a
-friend to Father Spencer. He served his novitiate to the work of the
-English mission, under his direction in Walsall, for three months
-before he came to West Bromwich. He had been his confessor and guide
-in all his practices of piety until now. He managed his affairs with
-as much interest as if they were his own; he was ever ready with his
-counsel and assistance, and seems to have taken the Dudley mission as
-soon as Father Spencer had built the church there. Father Spencer
-preached his funeral oration, and paid the last tribute of respect to
-his mortal remains in the very spot where he so often profited by his
-counsels. Here there was no cause of regret, except for the good
-priest's widowed flock, for his saintly life gave strong hopes of a
-blessed eternity.
-
-It was said, in a former chapter, that he gave all his money to the
-Bishop, and had sums given him now and again, of which he returned an
-account at stated times, to see if the way in which he spent them
-would be approved of. It may be interesting to know how he kept these
-accounts. Fortunately a few leaves of the book in which they were
-noted have been found among his papers, and from them we make the
-following extract:--
-
-{246}
-
-1838. £ s. d.
-
-Dec. 1. Mrs. Nicholl's rent paid up to Nov. 12 1 0 0
- Advanced to Mr. Elves 0 10 0
- Mr. Davis, for a walk to Walsall 0 1 0
-
- 2. Letter to Paris 0 1 5
-
- 3. Omnibus to and from Birmingham 0 2 0
- Given to Bridget Cullinge 0 2 0
- Shoe-string 0 0 6
- Mrs. Cooper.
- Housekeeping 1 1 7
- Washing 0 5 8
- Postage 1 1 9½
- Watchman 0 0 9
- Mr. Elves 0 3 6
- Betsy Hawkins, quarter's wages 0 15 0
- Mrs. Cooper, towards wages 5 0 0
- Advanced to Mr. Elves 5 0 0
-
- 4. Mrs. Whelan 0 10 0
- John and Barney White, for a message 0 1 0
- Elizabeth Morley 0 1 0
-
- 5. Armytage, 6d.; Mrs. Brown, 1s. 0 1 6
- Coals, paid Mr. Pearse 1 6 3
-
- 6. P. O'Brien, 2s.; Peggy, 1s. 0 3 0
- Boy who brought horse 0 1 0
- Gordon, butcher's bill 5 19 0
- Sealing-wax 0 0 6
- Letter to Dr. Wiseman 0 2 3
-
- 7. Mrs. Cottril, 1s. 6d.; Mrs. Gale, 1s. 0 2 6
- Turnpike, 8d.; Chs. Gordon, 6d. 0 1 2
-
- 8. Gig-whip, 2s. 6d.; turnpike, 8d. 0 3 2
- Morris, for Mrs. Callaghan's rent 0 15 0
- Shenton, for holding the mare 0 1 0
- Clothes-brush 0 2 6
-
- 9. Conway, 7s.6d.; school-window mended,6d 0 8 0
-
- 10. Turnpike, 4d.; horse at Dudley, 6s. 0 6 4
- Hat at Domely's 1 1 0
- Mrs. Brown, tailor's 0 2 0
- Gloves 0 1 10
- Armytage, 6d.; lucifers, 2d. 0 0 8
-
- 11. Stuff to make a collar, &c. 0 3 9
- Two dozen Douay Catechisms 0 4 0
- Carriage of parcel to Dr. Fletcher 0 1 2
-
- 12. John Collinge, 1s.; P. O'Brien, 2s. 0 3 0
- Adv. to Mr. Elves 0 1 0
-
- 13. Adv. to Mrs. Cooper, for wages 6 0 0
- Housekeeping 0 17 10
- Ribbon for stole 0 5 2
- Parcel, 8s. 2d.; postage, 3s. 8d. 0 11 10
- Washing, 4s. 9d.; Mr. Elves, 8d. 0 5 5
-
-To this may be added, that on the credit side he puts his instalments
-from the Bishop, and every single penny he gets in the shape of
-offerings, seat-rents, alms, &c., &c. There have also remained,
-between some of the leaves of this account-book, a few little slips of
-paper, on which he pencilled whatever he paid or received when away
-from home, so as to be able to note it down when he came back. It
-{247} may be well to remark that the extract given above cannot be
-taken as an average of his expenditure, as December is a month when
-bills come in thicker than in other months of the year.
-
-It will be remembered that this mode of managing his household
-affairs, was the result of the trial Father Spencer made of the vows
-of religion in his secular state, which has been alluded to in a
-former chapter.
-
-{248}
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Association Of Prayers For The Conversion Of England.
-
-
-It was in the year 1838 that he began the great work to which his life
-and energies were afterwards devoted--the moving of the Catholics
-everywhere to pray conjointly for the conversion of England. Before
-this time he and a few of his friends prayed privately, said or heard
-masses for this intention, and encouraged one another by letters and
-conversations to perseverance in so holy a practice. Now he went to
-work on a larger scale. How this change in the working of his zeal was
-brought about will be best seen from a letter he wrote to Dr. Briggs
-in November, 1838. Before, however, quoting it, it may be well to
-remark that the cause of his going to France with Mr. Phillipps was
-that he was breaking down in health, hard-worked by two laborious
-missions, for which he had no assistant since Mr. Martyn's death, and
-that his doctor advised change of air and rest. Here is the letter:--
-
- "London, Nov. 5, 1838.
-
- "My Dear Lord,--I hope I shall be doing right to explain to your
- lordship the real circumstances of the transaction which, you may
- perhaps have been told, has been adverted to in _The Times_
- newspaper of Nov. 3, and some other paper since; which states, from
- the _Gazette de France,_ that I have been at Paris, with Mr. Ambrose
- Phillipps, busy in establishing an association of prayers for the
- conversion of England to the Roman faith. I am certainly ready to
- plead guilty on this charge; but I do not find cause to repent of
- it. However, a good thing may be done so out of place and out of
- time as to make it not worth much, and it may be necessary,
- therefore, that I should explain myself before I am approved of in
- what I have been {249} doing in Paris. In the first visit which I
- paid to the Archbishop on my arrival at Paris, I was saying, what I
- say continually, that what we want above all in England is good
- prayers; and that it would be a great benefit if the French would
- undertake to unite in prayer for us. I did not think of making any
- proposal for an actual arrangement of the kind till the Archbishop
- himself (then Monseigneur Quelin) encouraged, and almost obliged, me
- to do all I could by the zealous manner in which he took up the
- idea. He appointed that I should meet him after two days at St.
- Sulpice, where seventy or eighty of the clergy of Paris were to be
- assembled to offer him an address of thanks for a retreat which he
- had given them. After the business was concluded, he introduced me
- to them, and having explained how I came to be there, he proposed
- that they should undertake to pray for the conversion of England on
- every Thursday. The proposal was most favourably received, and I
- heard of its being acted upon by many offering their mass on the
- first Thursday. This encouraged me to go on. I obtained a circular
- letter of introduction to the superiors of religious houses, and
- visited about twenty of the principal. All of them undertook to
- offer their prayers as I asked them, and to write to their sister
- houses through France. The General of the Lazarists, and the
- Provincial of the Jesuits, undertook to recommend it to their
- brethren; but what I thought more satisfactory yet was, that all the
- Archbishops and bishops whom I could meet with in Paris promised to
- recommend the prayers in their dioceses and provinces; so that it
- appeared to me that there was reason to say that all France would
- soon be united in this prayer, and I trust other countries of Europe
- will follow their example. I remember, at the time when your
- lordship received me with much kindness at Halford House, on our
- speaking of the importance of prayers being regularly said for the
- conversion of England, and you told me of what had been done at
- Ushaw under your direction. I forget whether I said to you that I
- had then lately adopted the practice of offering my mass every
- Thursday regularly for that intention. I took this from the nuns of
- Mount {250} Pavilion, with whom I had become acquainted the summer
- before, but especially what they do on Thursday, when there is high
- mass and exposition all the day, and a solemn act of reparation for
- the outrages committed against the Divine Eucharist. It seemed to me
- that this was a devotion peculiarly suited to the object of
- obtaining from Almighty God graces for England, one of whose most
- crying sins is; _the blasphemy of the Blessed Sacrament authorized
- by law for three centuries_.
-
- "I had only proposed the idea, however, to a few priests of my
- acquaintance, to unite in saying mass for England on that day, and
- was rather waiting for some plan to be suggested for a general union
- of prayers in England by some one of authority. But, as nothing had
- been done, and when I found myself engaged in this pursuit at Paris,
- it was necessary to propose something definite, I have nothing
- better than to request prayers from all the faithful for England,
- all days and at all times, but especially to offer mass on Thursday,
- if they be priests and at liberty, or communion, or assistance at
- mass, or visits to the Blessed Sacrament, or, in short, whatever
- they did for God, particularly on that day, for England's
- conversion.
-
- "The manner in which this request was accepted by all the good
- people whom I saw was most consoling to me; and it appears to me
- that I am bound to make it known in England, to those whose judgment
- is most important, and whose approval would most powerfully
- recommend the Catholics in England to correspond with the zealous
- spirit exhibited in behalf of our country by France.
-
- "It is not for me to suggest to your lordship what might be done. I
- only venture to hope that you may think this matter perhaps worthy
- of your attention, and will perhaps mention it to the clergy as
- occasion may present itself. I would add, that in France the
- superiors of several seminaries were most ready to undertake to
- recommend it to the students, and it pleased me particularly to
- interest those communities in behalf of England, because the
- devotion might so well spread in that way through all classes. Would
- your lordship think fit to mention the subject at Ushaw? {251} I
- have nowhere asked for any particular prayers to be said as that
- might be burdensome; but simply that this intention might be thought
- of at least, if nothing more was done in reference to it.
-
- "I beg again to be excused for my boldness in thus addressing you,
- and am your lordship's
-
- "Obedient humble servant,
- "George Spencer."
-
-The passage he alludes to in _The Times_ was as follows:--
-
- "The Hon. and Rev. George Spencer, brother to the present Earl, who
- was converted from Protestantism to the Catholic faith some years
- ago, has lately been passing some time at Paris, with Mr. Ambrose
- Phillipps, a gentleman of distinction of Leicestershire, eldest son
- of the late member for the northern division of the county. They
- have been busily occupied there in establishing an association of
- prayers for the conversion of this country to the Roman faith. They
- have had several interviews with the Archbishop of Paris on this
- subject, who has ordered all the clergy to say special prayers for
- this object in the _memento_. A number of the religious communities
- in France have already begun to follow the same practice."
-
-This paragraph was taken up, of course, and commented upon by the
-second-rate papers. To be sure, the whole thing was magnified into
-nothing less than a grand stir for a Papal aggression, which, if it
-did not make the English shore glitter some day with French bayonets,
-was certain to cram every workshop and church with Jesuits in
-disguise.
-
-The Bishops were all favourable to Father Spencer's zealous ideas;
-they gave him leave to speak on the subject with all the priests; they
-mentioned it in their pastorals: but they did not wish him to go too
-publicly to work, as they rather feared the spirit of the times, and
-did not know when another Gordon riot might arise and overthrow what
-they had been building up since the Emancipation. In the meantime, the
-work was progressing rapidly. A Dutch journal reached him which let
-him know that all the seminaries and convents in Holland had given
-their Thursday devotions for England. A good {252} priest wrote from
-Geneva to say that the programme should be widened, and that all
-heretics and separatists ought to be included as well as England. To
-this Father Spencer consented after some deliberation, and in the
-space of about six months all the Continent were sending up prayers
-for England's conversion. He makes speeches at formal dinners and
-public meetings, and always introduces this topic; whereupon the
-reporters conceive a terrible rage, and puff the matter into all the
-taverns and offices of London, Liverpool, and Manchester. Of course,
-all this is accompanied with gross misrepresentations and personal
-abuse. Of the former point he thus speaks in a letter:--"The
-misrepresentations, as far as I have seen them in the public papers,
-by which they have endeavoured to obstruct the proposed good, are so
-glaring that I think all thinking persons must be benefited by reading
-them." "My notion was to ignore the English public altogether, and go
-on with my work as if it did not exist." "The opposite papers have
-certainly helped me and well, in making the matter as public as I
-could wish, without a farthing's cost to me, and in a way in which I
-cannot be accused of being the immediate agent of its publicity, as it
-was put about as though to annoy me, but they are pleasing me without
-intending it." This was the good-humoured way in which he took all
-that was personal in the journalistic tirades. It gives one an idea
-both of his great zeal and the great virtue with which he accompanied it.
-
-He now writes to the Irish Archbishops, and receives very encouraging
-answers. So much did they enter into his sentiments that, in a meeting
-of the Irish episcopate in Dublin, they gave his proposals a good
-share of their attention, and approved of them.
-
-This he accounted great gain. It was the prayer of the martyr for his
-persecutor, of Stephen for Saul, and of Our Lord for the Jews. Poor
-Ireland had groaned and writhed in Saxon bondage for centuries. She
-saw her children scattered to the winds, or ground by famine and
-injustice beneath the feet of the destroyer; and, at the voice of a
-Saxon priest, she turned round, wiped the tear from her eye, {253}
-pitied the blindness of her oppressor, and offered up her sufferings
-to Heaven to plead for mercy for her persecutor. The cry was a solemn
-universal prayer, framed by her spiritual leaders, and carried to
-every fireside where the voice of the Church could drown the utterings
-of complaint. F. Spencer thought more of the prayers of the Irish than
-of all the Continent put together; these were good, but those were
-heroic. He began to love Ireland thenceforward with an ever-increasing
-love, and trusted chiefly to the faith and sanctity of her children
-for the fulfilment of his zealous intentions.
-
-He pushed his exertions to Rome also, by writing to Dr. Wiseman, and
-asking him to see the devotion carried out in the Eternal City and the
-provinces. It met the same success as in France, Belgium, Holland, and
-Ireland. There is a letter extant which Dr. Wiseman wrote to F.
-Spencer about this time (it is dated Ash Wednesday, 1839), and it must
-be interesting, both for its intrinsic merit as well as the giving an
-evidence of the harmony of feeling and sentiment that bound the great
-cardinal and the zealous priest together since their first
-acquaintance until they both went, within a few months of each other,
-to enjoy the eternal reward of their labours in England and elsewhere,
-for God's glory:--
-
- "Rome, _Ash Wednesday_, 1839.
-
- "My Dear Friend,--I must not delay any longer answering your kind
- and interesting letter. Its subject is one which has long occupied
- my thoughts, though I never contemplated the possibility of
- enlisting foreign Churches in prayer for it, but turned my attention
- more to exciting a spirit of prayer among ourselves. I will enter on
- the matter in hand with the most insignificant part of it, that is,
- my own feelings and endeavours, because I think they may encourage
- you and suggest some thoughts upon the subject. In our conference
- this time last year, I spoke very strongly to the students upon the
- wants of England, and the necessity of a new system in many things.
- One of the points on which I insisted was the want of systematic
- prayer for the conversion of England, and, at the same time, of
- _reparation_ for her defection. I observed that it is the only
- country {254} which has _persisted in_ and _renewed_, in every
- generation, _formal acts of apostacy_, exacting from every
- sovereign, in the name of the nation, and from all that aspired to
- office or dignity, specific declarations of their holding Catholic
- truths to be superstitious and idolatrous. This, therefore, assumes
- the form of a national sin of blasphemy and heresy--not habitual,
- but actual; it is a bar to the Divine blessing, an obstacle of a
- positive nature to God's grace. It calls for contrary _acts_, as
- explicit and as formal, to remove its bad effects. Now what are the
- points on which this blasphemous repetition of national apostacy has
- fastened? They are chiefly two: Transubstantiation and the worship
- of the Blessed Virgin. These, consequently, are the points towards
- which the reparation and, for it, the devotion of Catholics should
- be directed in England. I therefore proposed, and have continued to
- inculcate this two-fold devotion, to our students on every occasion.
- I have for a year made it my daily prayer that I might be
- instrumental in bringing back devotion to the Blessed Eucharist, its
- daily celebration, frequent Communion, and _public_ worship in
- England; and, at the same time, devotion to the Blessed Virgin,
- chiefly _through the propagation of the Rosary_. (My reasons for the
- choice of the Rosary I shall, perhaps, not be able to explain in
- this letter.) Allow me to mention, as I write to you, quite
- confidentially, that the idea struck me one afternoon that I
- happened to be alone in the Church of St. Eustachio, observing that
- the altar of the Blessed Sacrament was that of the Madonna; this led
- me to earnestly praying on the subject of uniting those two objects
- in a common devotion in England, and offering myself to promote it.
- Several things led me to feel strongly on the subject which, being
- trifles to others if not to myself, I omit. First, as to the Blessed
- Eucharist, my plan was different from yours in one respect, that,
- instead of fixing on one day, I proposed to engage priests to say
- mass for the conversion of England on different days, so that every
- day twenty or thirty masses might be said for its conversion, and in
- expiation to the Blessed Sacrament. At such a distance from the
- field of action, I could do but little; I therefore made the few
- priests who have left since last {253} year at this time put down
- their names for two days a month, for mass for these purposes,
- intending to fill up my list as I could. One of them, Mr. Abraham,
- writes that he observes his engagement most punctually. With all
- deference, I submit to you whether, while Thursday remains the day
- for general prayer, every priest (for I should think none would
- refuse) would choose a couple of days a month, or a day each week,
- for these purposes. In a sermon in the Gesù e Maria, last spring, I
- alluded to a hope I fondly cherished, that public reparation would
- before long be made in England to the Blessed Sacrament, and this
- brought me a letter from a devout lady, earnestly begging I would
- try to have something done in that way, and naming persons in
- England most anxious to cooperate in anything of the sort. My idea
- was borrowed from my excellent friend, Charles Weld, and consisted
- in _Quarant' Ore_, not confined to one town, but making the circuit
- of all England, so that by day and night the Adorable Sacrament
- might be worshipped through the year. I have proposed it to Lord
- Shrewsbury, for I think it should commence with the colleges,
- convents, gentlemen's chapels, and large towns, in which I trust
- each chapel would consent. As the Exposition at each place lasts two
- days, it would require 182 changes in the year, or, if each would
- take it twice a year, 91. There are about twenty-five religious
- communities and colleges; the chapels in large towns could afford to
- make up other twenty-five. I think that many pious people would like
- to have the _Exposition_, and gladly contribute the expense, and the
- _giro_ might be published for the year in each directory. I must say
- I should set myself against the common practice of keeping the
- Blessed Sacrament in a _cupboard_ in the vestry, without a light
- even, and never having an act of adoration paid to it, except at
- mass. Security from sacrilege must be purchased, but not by a sort
- of sacrilege which it always looked to me; the faithful should be
- encouraged to visit the Blessed Sacrament during the day. Secondly,
- as to the devotion to the Blessed Virgin, I proposed the forming of
- Confraternities of the Rosary, and, while Saturday should be the
- general day for the devotion, I would have different congregations
- {256} fix on different days, so that each day the powerful
- intercession of the Blessed Virgin might be invoked upon us and upon
- our labours, and reparation be made to her for the outrages
- committed against her. I offered Mr. Oxley and Mr. Procter to write
- a little treatise on the Rosary, if they would disseminate it. _One_
- of my reasons for preferring the Rosary, both for myself and English
- Catholics, is what ordinarily forms an objection to it. Pride, when
- we come to pray, is our most dangerous enemy, and I think no better
- security can be given against it than to pray as the poor and
- ignorant do. Do we then _wish_ that God should judge us by the
- standard of the wise who _know_ their duty, or by that of the poor
- little ones? If by the latter, why spurn the prayers instituted for
- them, and say, 'We will not use them, but the prayers better suited
- to the learned.' The 'Our Father' was appointed and drawn up for men
- who said 'Lord, teach us how to pray.' It is a prayer for the
- ignorant, as is the Rosary. But more of this another time. It was my
- intention to have begun daily prayers for England last St. George's
- Day; I was prevented from drawing them up, but hope to begin this
- year. In the meantime, I took out of our archives a printed paper,
- of which I enclose a copy, showing that prayers for the conversion
- of England, &c., have in former times occupied the attention of our
- college, which blessed beads, &c., for the purpose of encouraging
- them, and that the Holy See conferred ample spiritual privileges
- upon the practice. You will see how the Rosary is particularly
- privileged. This paper, through Giustiniani, I laid before the
- Congregation of Indulgences to get them renewed for prayers for
- England, and was told that it would be better to draw up something
- new, suited to present times, when Indulgences would be granted. So
- far as to my views and ideas before your better ones reached me, and
- I willingly resign all my views and intentions in favour of yours.
- Now, as to what is doing here. On the Feast of St. Thomas we
- distributed to all the cardinals that came, a copy of your sermon
- received that morning, with a beautiful lithograph of St. Thomas,
- Cant., executed in the house at some of the students' expense, to
- propagate devotion to him. {257} Cardinal Orioli declared that he
- had for years made a _memento_ for England in his mass, and Cardinal
- Giustiniani told me the other day that every Thursday he offers up
- mass for its conversion. There is a little religious weekly journal
- published here for distribution among the poor, and it has lately
- been in almost every number soliciting prayers for the same purpose.
- Its principal editor, an ex-Jesuit, Padre Basiaco, called on me the
- other evening, and told me, as a singular coincidence, that since he
- was in his noviciate he has made it a practice to pray on Thursday
- for that object. To show you to what an extent the pious custom is
- spreading, the Austrian Ambassador the other evening told me that
- his little boys (about seven and eight years old) prayed every
- Thursday morning for the conversion of England; and that having been
- asked by their mother on that day if he had prayed for it, one of
- the little fellows replied, 'No, mamma; it is not Thursday.' Surely
- God must intend to grant a mercy when He stirs up so many to pray
- for it, and that, too, persons having no connection with the object,
- except by zeal or charity. I am going, in a day or two, to concert
- with Pallotta the best means of propagating this devotion, both in
- communities and among the people. I perfectly approve of enlarging
- your original plan so as to embrace all that are in error. I am in
- favour of giving expansion to charities in any way, and
- _Catholicising_ our feelings as much as our faith. We are too
- insular in England in religion as in social ideas. This was one of
- my reasons for wishing to have the _oeuvre_ unconnected with
- domestic purposes, which would, however, be benefited by the greater
- energy which the spirit of charity would receive by being extended.
- I am endeavouring to excite in the students as much as I can the
- missionary spirit; all the meditations are directed to this. By the
- missionary spirit I do not mean merely a parochial, but an apostolic
- spirit, where each one, besides his own especial flock, takes an
- interest in, and exerts himself for the benefit of the entire
- country, according to the gifts he has received. Remember me in your
- prayers, and believe me your sincere and affectionate friend,
-
- "N. Wiseman."
-
-
-{258}
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-His Last Days In West Bromwich.
-
-
-The account given of Father Spencer's zealous labours for the
-conversion of England would be incomplete if something were not added
-to show how he succeeded in bringing persons into the Church in the
-locality of which he had the spiritual charge. There is no record of
-the number he received, and only from stray notes, from various
-sources, can some instances of his way of working be given. He was not
-a great preacher, as all knew; but there was a peculiar spirit in what
-he said which seemed to impress his discourse upon the hearer as if it
-came not from himself. This want of human eloquence was a drawback to
-him inasmuch as it was not likely to bring crowds to hear him. An
-anecdote or two will illustrate this. Once he was asked to preach in
-Manchester, and many Catholics who heard of it went, of course, to
-hear the convert who was talked and written about so much. Among the
-rest, one young man who had beforehand built castles in his own mind
-about the glowing eloquence he should hear. To his disappointment, the
-preacher was cold, dry, and tame. He was not too pleased, but some way
-or another every word took effect upon him, and he could not quit
-thinking of the sermon, and the peculiar way in which many things were
-said. The end of it was, that he became, some time after, a
-Passionist, and was one of those in whom Father Ignatius found great
-consolation, on account of the zeal he showed and continues still to
-show, in the pursuit of the darling objects of Father Ignatius's life.
-A lady was more pointed in her remarks. She went to hear him on some
-other great occasion, and she said:--"I saw him go into the pulpit; I
-heard him address {259} the people, and I was waiting all the time
-thinking when will he have done talking and begin to preach, until, to
-my surprise, I found what purported to be a sermon coming to a
-conclusion, yet I can remember to this day almost everything he said."
-
-From the little weight Father Spencer laid upon human learning in the
-work of conversion, one would be tempted to suppose he undervalued
-what he did not possess. No greater mistake could be made. He was a
-Cambridge first-class man, and must therefore be a good mathematical
-and classical scholar. He spoke Italian and French almost without a
-grammatical fault, and conversed very well in German. He was well read
-in the English Protestant divines, and knew Catholic theology with
-accuracy, and to an extent which his academical course would not lead
-us to expect. It may be said that his youth and manhood were spent
-over the pages of the best English writers, and in the company often
-of the best living authors. Althorp and Spencer House were famous for
-their literary coteries, and the son of an earl who patronized men of
-talent, and gave unmistakable proofs of great talent himself, was not
-one to let such opportunities pass without profit.
-
-He trusted little, however, to the sway of intellect, and put his hope
-in fervent petitions for divine grace. He told Dr. Wiseman that he
-should apply his mind to something more practical than Syriac
-manuscripts, or treatises on geology, and that he would rather see him
-taken up with what suited a priest on the English mission as it then
-was. The rector, of course, took the rebuke as humility dictated; but
-we should certainly be sorry that he had not written his _Connexion
-between Science and Revealed Religion_, and his _Lectures on the
-Eucharist_. Spencer, to be sure, was mistaken in this; but the idea
-gave a bent to his mind, which he could hardly be expected to change
-when hampered with the work of a parish.
-
-They who knew him well can give testimony to his high attainments, and
-all who ever heard him speak of himself can bear a more ample
-testimony still to the very low opinion he had of his own
-acquirements. It is no wonder that he {260} wrote no books; the little
-he did publish in the way of newspaper letters and sermons during his
-last years in West Bromwich, did not produce much apparent effect. It
-is not our province to review these here, but it is well to say that
-the sermons rank far above his spoken ones in point of style and
-matter, especially the French sermon he preached in Dieppe in 1838.
-
-The prayers, to which he chiefly trusted for the conversion of his
-countrymen, did not bring much evident gain. Others reaped what he
-sowed in this way, and he tells us in the Dieppe sermon that during a
-confirmation Dr. Walsh gave in that year he had 600 new converts to
-impose hands upon.
-
-His field at this time was confined mostly to his conversation and
-example; to both of which his name and reputation added something in
-the eyes of the world. These gave him leave to speak at least, and
-procured him listeners where other priests would not obtain a hearing.
-And he had no small power in word and example, as all who knew him are
-aware, and a few incidents may serve to illustrate.
-
-As to his conversation, its peculiar charm consisted in the importance
-of its drift, and the nice sweet humour by which he rendered it
-agreeable. Besides, it may be safely said, that there scarcely ever
-was a man so happy in his illustrations, or in the homely way in which
-he put an argument, or answered an objection. This last property can
-be seen from the following passage, which is quoted from one of his
-letters to a newspaper:--
-
- "I was once attacked by a stanch Church of England man, who had been
- an old sailor, and had lost an arm in the service, for what he
- thought was unworthy of my character and family, leaving my colours
- and changing sides. I answered him thus: Suppose you, my friend, had
- entered a ship bearing the King of England's flag and pennant, and
- gone out and fought many a battle against French cruisers, but then
- found out by chance that the captain of the ship was an outlawed
- pirate, who had no right to the colours which he wore, and was
- making you fight for himself, not for your king, would you let me
- call you a deserter if the next time you came within hail of a {261}
- true king's ship you jumped overboard and swam to her? The good
- sailor seemed to understand me, and said no more about leaving my
- colours."
-
-It was remarked that very few ever went to speak with him in earnest
-about their soul with any kind of docility, whom he did not succeed in
-bringing into the Church. Then his example was a continual sermon. He
-preferred the poor, not as poor wretches on whom he thought it was
-heroic to spend a few kind words of mawkish pity, but, in order to
-make them feel as if they were his brothers and sisters. He would come
-into their hovels, sit down with them, and even take a cup of tea
-there, which he might have refused at a richer place. They represented
-to him the person of Jesus Christ, who said, "The poor you have always
-with you," as a substitute for Himself.
-
-His patience was no less wonderful. One day he was walking with a sort
-of bag on his shoulder, when an insolent fellow came out before him
-and spat in his face. His housekeeper was with him, helping to carry
-some articles, for he was then going to say mass in one of the little
-places he had opened near Bromwich. She of course fired with
-indignation at once, and said: "You wicked man! how dare you spit in
-the face of Lord Spencer's son, and he such a good gentleman? "Mr.
-Spencer took out his handkerchief, wiped his face, and only said to
-the housekeeper: "And how dare you be angry? I am proud of being
-treated as my dear Lord was;" and went on his way as if nothing had
-happened. He did not even allude to it again.
-
-He was also very abstemious, and never took wine or spirits for a
-number of years; indeed, he may be said to have tasted none except as
-medicine since he became a Catholic, and for sometime before. His
-bishop told a very curious anecdote about this. Father Spencer took
-very little sleep, and in fact he so shortened his time of rest that
-often, when returning home from a sick call, he would be nodding
-asleep up the street, and walk like a man who had taken "a little more
-than was good for him." He was reported to the bishop as being seen in
-this state. The bishop was amused first, and then surprised; but when
-he found {262} out the cause, notwithstanding that he was edified, he
-made the good priest sleep a little longer every night. This only
-shows how captious were the people he had to deal with, and how easily
-they might have been scandalized. Yet he was venerated by all
-Catholics as a saint, and Protestants began to respect him after some
-time as a really good man, and a server of the Lord according to his
-conscience. The opinion of his sanctity was not merely superficial
-hearsay; his brother priests, who knew him most intimately, and were
-not the persons to take the appearance of holiness for the reality,
-are all of one opinion, that his life was the life of a great saint. A
-student writes to Father Spencer's assistant, Rev. Mr. Elves, in 1838,
-from Rome, in the following terms:
-
- "It must be a very great source of edification to you to be the
- companion of Mr. Spencer, and I well know he has got in you a friend
- willing and ready to imitate his holy example. I am sorry that
- illness obliges him to retire from you for the present, but it will
- be a consolation for you to think that he has gone to gather more
- strength for the contest. Many a time I have dwelt with delight on
- the idea of being at some future period his fellow missioner, for I
- feel it would be a source of zeal and fervour to me to live with
- such a person, and I hope and pray God my wishes may be fulfilled,
- and that I may have such a companion, or rather such a director,
- during the first years of my missionary career."
-
-This letter must have been an answer to the account the priest sent
-his young friend of the holiness of his companion.
-
-Again, Father Spencer never heeded what we call the public, as he said
-himself he wished to ignore its existence; and strange enough by that
-very means he gained its esteem. This is best illustrated by what
-happened on his return from France, in '38. He saw the clergy there of
-course go about in their soutanes and full ecclesiastical costume; and
-he did not see why he might not do the same. He ignored the public,
-put on his cassock, and went in full priestly costume everywhere. He
-went to towns, into trains and omnibuses, walks the streets, and he
-gives the result in a letter to a friend thus: "This has not procured
-me one {263} disrespectful word, which is worthy of remark here, for I
-do not think I ever passed two or three weeks in this place without
-being hooted after by boys or men somewhere."
-
-Thus we have the servant following his Master, drinking in insults as
-sweet draughts in silence and humility; and when he was supposed to be
-ground to the very earth by ignominy, gaining a respect, a love, and a
-reputation that is as fresh to-day in his old parish among not only
-those who knew him but their children who heard of him. Yes, this day,
-more than 25 years in distance of time, he is, if possible, more
-venerated and more regretted than the day he resigned the pastoral
-charge of West Bromwich.
-
-
-{264}
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Father Spencer Comes To Oscott.
-
-
-The Bishop, Dr. Walsh, calls Mr. Spencer to Oscott College towards the
-end of April or perhaps in the beginning of May, 1839. The object of
-this change was, to give him the spiritual care of the students, in
-order that he might shape their characters, and infuse into them that
-apostolic spirit of which he had already given such proofs. Here is
-one other instance of the true way to real distinction in greatness in
-the Catholic Church, lying through the road humility and its
-concomitant virtues points out. Father Spencer sought to be unknown;
-he petitioned for the poorest and the most unprovided mission. In his
-little parish he found his earthly paradise, and the toils and
-troubles he went through, to make his practice keep pace with his
-fervour, formed the links of his happiness. He prayed, he lectured, he
-heard confessions; he sought the stragglers in their haunts of
-idleness; he had no idea of extending his sphere of action beyond the
-limits of his mission, and, he even made the half of that over to
-another, that his working could be the more effectual as its space was
-narrowed. Every plan he devised for doing good on a large scale was
-fated to become abortive. His natural means of influence he had cast
-aside; he gave up writing in newspapers, and let dogs bark at him
-without stooping to notice them; his high connections were virtually
-sundered when he gave up paying visits to his family; his property he
-divested himself of altogether, and grieved that the steward who was
-appointed to look after him took too much care of him, and did not let
-him feel what it was to be poor indeed. Here then is the young
-nobleman transformed into the {265} priest, and stripped of
-everything, which priests who were not noble often pursue as necessary
-for their position; ay, thoroughly shorn to the bare condition of a
-priest. He was a priest and nothing more, and that is saying a great
-deal. If priests were always mere priests they would always be great
-saints. But when a priest dips his sacred character into worldly
-pursuits, riches, human aims and ways; when that sublime dignity he
-has received is trampled upon by his own self, and is saturated in the
-deep dye of worldliness, he ceases to be great, inasmuch as he ceases
-to be a priest in sentiment and action. It is often supposed that a
-priest has to do many things in consideration of "his cloth." Many
-actions that humility dictates are considered _infra dig_. It would be
-so, for instance, to carry one's own bundle, polish one's shoes, allow
-a navvy to spit in one's face, or a ragamuffin to tear one's coat,
-without handing him over to the police. St. Francis Xavier did not
-think it _infra dig_ to wash his own shirt, and Father Spencer was
-very much of that saint's way of thinking on this and kindred points.
-
-When, however, he had arrived at the lowest depth of humiliation he
-could possibly reach, like his Divine Master, he began to shine forth
-and to move the whole world. We have traced above how this change came
-about. He used to speak to every one, merely as agreeable matter of
-hopeful conversation, about the conversion of England, and get them
-also to pray for it. His crusade was quite accidental as far as his
-own preconceived notions were concerned. He went to France with Mr.
-Phillipps, much against his will, and found himself all of a sudden
-launched into the great work of his life, by the encouraging words of
-French prelates. He was not the man to lose an opportunity of doing
-good through lack of energy or fear of opposition. He could brave
-everything for God's glory. If there was anything that helped him best
-in his work, it was the opposition he encountered. He knew that, and
-therefore every new stroke levelled against him from friends or foes
-was a fresh impetus to new exertions. Hence he is now the
-correspondent of the heads of the Catholic Church at home {266} and on
-the continent; all the religious orders have heard of him and his zeal
-for England; seculars have heard; priests, nuns, monks, all chime in
-with his notions; many because they were glad to have the opportunity,
-many because they did not wish to be behind their neighbours, and all
-because it was a good, holy, and laudable thing to pray for the
-conversion of heretics.
-
-He says little about his property or what is being done with it in any
-of the letters that remain after him; but a bishop in whose diocese he
-lived has told us something. Mr. Spencer had from his father's will
-and testament £3,600 in some funds, besides an annuity of £300 for
-life, to which £300 were added _ad beneplacitum dantis_. His moderate
-way of living took very little from this sum every year, so all the
-remainder, with the interest of some years, was at the bishop's
-disposal. Two missions, Dudley and West Bromwich, were founded by him
-with this property, at least for the greater part; and the ground upon
-which the present college of Oscott stands was bought chiefly with
-what Father Spencer gave the bishop. He gave a pension to his old
-housekeeper, which she still receives, and whilst his property was
-thus doing good for others and the Church, he would not travel in a
-first-class carriage on the railway, and often walked from Oscott to
-Birmingham, in order to be able to give the fare for his journey to
-some persons along the way.
-
-He had done more than this: he was in close correspondence with Dr.
-Gentili and Father Dominic. He paved their way, and worked upon the
-opinions of many whose influence was required for their introduction
-into England. Dr. Gentili was a personal friend of his, and so was
-Father Dominic; but Father Spencer thought the claims of the former
-somewhat stronger for reasons which can only be surmised. Mrs. Gaming,
-his cousin, to whose letters we owe a great deal of the information we
-are able to glean concerning their transactions, was the great
-advocate of the Passsionists. She so pressed the matter upon him that
-he gets rather impatient, and tells her to mind her prayers and leave
-these things to others. Our Fathers agreed in General {267} Chapter,
-in 1839, to send a colony to England; but as there was no provision
-made nor opening offered, for some years more this decision, was not
-carried into effect. The Passionists refer their coming to England,
-under God, to Cardinal Wiseman, acknowledging at the same time that
-Father Spencer did something towards the work. He also had a good deal
-to do with the coming of the Trappists to Loughborough, near Mr.
-Phillipps's. In all these three events he works in his own quiet way,
-beneath the surface, writing and advising, and doing what lay in his
-power consistent with other duties.
-
-He keeps up correspondence by letter with some of his old friends at
-college, and with one or two of the Tractarians, Mr. Palmer, the
-author of the "Church of Christ," among the number. An old friend of
-his writes to him from among the Irvingites, and Father Spencer writes
-to another in these terms:--"The supposed miraculous voice, to which
-that party (the Irvingites) attend, has named 12 men as Apostles, who
-expect shortly to be endued with miraculous powers to enable them to
-restore the Church in its perfect beauty. Drummond the banker is one.
-Spencer Percival, and my great friend Henry Bridgman, Lord Bradford's
-brother, others." It is not a little strange that this Mr. Bridgman
-comes into the journal of Father Ignatius's Cambridge life very
-frequently, and mostly in the character of a Mentor.
-
-Father Ignatius never gained much from correspondence, sought on his
-part, with leading men in the great religious movements of the period.
-But whenever others sought his advice, they generally became
-Catholics. They were disposed for truth, and he could remove
-objections, tell them of books, and pray for them. He broke off this
-kind of unasked-for correspondence at this time, but he resumed it
-again on a different footing, as shall be related in its place.
-
-He had another means of doing good now, which could not come into his
-line while simple pastor of a country district. The college of Oscott
-was a place worth seeing, if not as a specimen of architecture, at
-least as being the stronghold of Catholicism, and the centre of a
-great deal of {268} intellectual and moral training. Many of his great
-friends, who could not hitherto devise any plausible plea for visiting
-him in his retirement, could find one immediately now, from the place
-he dwelt in as well as the position he there held. His name was also
-noised abroad, and persons would feel some curiosity for the
-acquaintance of one who was moving heaven and earth for their
-conversion. Accordingly, we find that he entertains his two brothers,
-the then earl and his successor, on one day; Lord Lyttelton and Mr.
-Gladstone on another day, and so forth. Thus, that particular power he
-possessed in his conversation had a field upon which it could be
-brought into requisition, in a manner which former arrangements had
-debarred to him.
-
-Several of the sermons he preached were published and distributed.
-There was no faculty of his, natural or supernatural, no good deed he
-was capable of doing, that did not come into play far better by his
-late transfer to Oscott. He was also practised in the drudgery of a
-missionary priest--that sphere of action which fills up a priest's
-ordinary life; and he was able from experience to teach others, not
-only how to prepare themselves, but how to succeed with profit to
-themselves and others in this work. He had also peculiar advantages
-here; he could give the young ecclesiastics not only the abstract
-rules for missionary labour, but a taste and relish for it, for very
-seldom can one succeed well if his tastes run counter to his duties.
-He did this by continuing in Oscott his old parish work; he visited
-the sick, brought them the sacraments; he gave a portion of every day
-to his favourite work, and by the incidents he came across, and the
-results of his labours, he raised up the young gentlemen's notions to
-the looking upon that as the poetic side of their ministry which is
-generally supposed to be the most prosaic. This is a great secret in
-the training of young men; to tell them best is best, and prove it to
-them, will convince them of course; but it will not lead them; there
-must be some grace, some romantic aspect put upon the thing, and then
-it entices them of itself. This was Father Spencer's secret, and,
-indeed, it might be said that it was his rule. He writes in a letter
-now, that he condemns asperity in controversy, {269} and that civility
-and good breeding, with pity and love, is the way to confound
-opponents; and that he would rather see a clever argument unanswered
-than met with pungency and acrimony. This might be quarrelled with,
-for in war all things are lawful; but the real state of opinion to
-which he came on these matters was, that opponents were surer to be
-conquered by being enticed than driven. Let the Catholic religion but
-be seen in its native beauty, and thousands will be led to examine it.
-
-
-{270}
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-Some Of His Doings In Oscott College.
-
-
-Father Spencer's way of training young men has been already hinted at.
-He carried it out while he remained in his new office; he would go
-heartily into all their sports, make up their matches for cricket, and
-even give the younger ones instructions in the art. They had all a
-high opinion of his sanctity, and therefore the keeping of their
-juvenile spirits in order was not always a difficult matter. Oscott
-contained at the time 140 students, 30 only of whom were
-ecclesiastics. Among the lay students, who are mostly younger than the
-others, and have a notion too that because they do not intend to be
-priests they are not obliged to be so guarded as the rest, there were
-several who were not very manageable. One day a class he had in hand
-were rather uproarious; he quietly advised them to come to better
-sentiments; his words were, however, lost, and the noise was not
-abated. He remonstrated again, but all to no purpose. At length he got
-a hearing, and said: "Since I cannot correct you, and do not wish to
-chastise you, I shall pray to God to chastise you Himself." This, said
-in his sad mood, had such an effect upon the boys that it was never
-forgotten, and he never had the least difficulty with his class again.
-
-On another occasion he did something in execution of his duty, which
-gave great offence to one of the young men. This young man grossly
-insulted him, in words that shocked all who were within hearing, and
-particularly reflected on the Father's character as a gentleman and a
-man of honour. The insult must have been the more galling as the
-person who was guilty of it was by birth and education in the position
-of a gentleman. One calm and placid look was the {271} only answer
-from Father Spencer, which reminded many present of our Lord's look at
-Peter after his denial. For this anecdote and the next we are indebted
-to the Right Rev. Dr. Amherst.
-
- "When he (Father Spencer) was a superior at Oscott, I had the good
- fortune to be under him. He frequently visited me and several of my
- companions in our rooms, where he would talk with greatest
- earnestness of the conversion of England, of the sanctification of
- the priesthood, and of the entire devotedness which should
- characterize a priest. Sometimes his visits took place late at night
- after we were gone to bed, when, if we were not asleep, he would sit
- upon a chair, a table, or the edge of the bed, and speak of his
- favourite themes for an hour. Once I remember awaking in the
- morning, after one of these visits, and expecting to find the father
- still seated on my bed, not perceiving that the night had passed. He
- had, no doubt, found that I had gone asleep, and went away quietly."
-
-Another time one of the students, a young man about 17, who is now a
-zealous priest in the English Mission, happened to be out shooting
-somewhere. He took a shot at a blackbird, and some poor old woman was
-within range, and received a shot just over the eye. She cried out
-that she was shot, and one may imagine the embarrassment of the young
-student. She recovered, however; but in a year or two after the
-occurrence, a quack doctor applied some remedies to a new swelling in
-the eye, and swelling and remedies resulted in her death. There was an
-inquest held in Birmingham, to which the student was summoned. Whilst
-awaiting the day, the poor fellow was in very low spirits, as might be
-expected. Father Spencer went to his room to console him, and said
-that he had no reason to be cast down, that it was quite accidental,
-and permitted by God as a trial, with a great deal more. It was of
-little use, the poor student said, "but they might transport me."
-"Beautiful, beautiful," exclaimed the good Father; "fine field for the
-exercise of apostolic zeal among the poor convicts." "But then they
-might even hang me," rejoined the student. "Glorious sacrifice," said
-Father Spencer; "you {272} can offer your life, though innocent in
-this case, in satisfaction for your other sins." Well, the student,
-though he thought the sentiments very high for his grade of
-spirituality, did not fail to profit by them, and tells the story to
-this day with a great deal of interest. Thus did Father Spencer work
-among the students, a model in all virtues, and so sweet and holy in
-his manner that his words went to the very heart with effect.
-
-This was how he went on in the ordinary routine of the work allotted
-to him; but his zeal could not be bounded by such a sphere, he had
-tried what expansion could do, and he sought by grand schemes to get
-other ways of doing good. His great notion was "perfection for all."
-"Be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect," was ever ringing
-in _his_ ears, and he desired to see that great counsel of our Divine
-Lord acted upon with more earnestness. He would do his share; he had
-long been living like a religious, and practising the three
-evangelical counsels with success. He wanted now to extend the same
-rule to others. Of course, he did not find many to adopt his notions,
-but lest priests might be considered to assume too much in condemning
-his plans, he was advised to put his ideas on paper, and send them to
-Rome. He did so, and the answer of the Roman Censor was unfavourable.
-This was a heavy blow, but he submitted at once, and thanked God he
-had superiors who could find out his faults, and knew how to correct
-him without human respect. We have reason to suppose this censor was
-no other than Dr. Wiseman, for he and Father Spencer differed a little
-about the introduction of religious orders into England. Father
-Spencer said his hope was not in religious orders, but in secular
-priests living the lives of religious. This was why he took no leading
-part in bringing Passionists or others into his country; he had a
-great opinion of their holiness, and wished to see them working for
-the conversion of England, but rather at a distance than in the field.
-
-To add to his crosses, Dr. Baines published a pastoral towards the end
-of the year 1839, in which he gave no hopes of the conversion of
-England, and prohibited public {273} prayers being made for that end.
-This was a terrible blow to poor Father Spencer; he wrote as if he did
-not well understand what he had to say, and the thing looked to him so
-uncalled-for and so uncharitable, that he was unable to explain
-himself. He was, however, pleased to find out afterwards that this
-very opposition gave new strength to the cause.
-
-In a sermon which Father Spencer preached in Manchester, in May, 1839,
-he used some expressions that gave offence to Catholic principles. The
-drift of the discourse is that Catholics and Protestants should
-sacrifice everything except truth itself for peace sake. In bringing
-this principle into application, he says the Catholics should offer
-themselves open to conviction, and be ready to lay down their belief,
-if it could be proved not true. He uses the following words:--
-
- "The truth of my faith as a Christian and a Catholic is, to my mind,
- a certainty, because I have evidence that it was taught by God, who
- cannot deceive nor be deceived. Will that evidence be weakened by
- fresh examination and discussion? and do I anyways make an unholy or
- a perilous concession, when I declare myself ready to renounce my
- belief, if it were sufficiently shown to me that the evidences on
- which I believe it to be divine are wrong? I embraced and hold it
- now, because the evidence of its truth, was, and is to my mind
- unanswerable. I show no doubting of its truth, but, on the contrary,
- I declare how little doubt I have of its truth, when I profess
- myself with all my heart willing to renounce it if proved not true,
- and to embrace any form of doctrine which shall be presented in its
- place on sufficient grounds of credibility. This is the spirit in
- which I wish all Catholics would offer themselves to discussion with
- our Protestant brethren."
-
-If he meant this as a bold assertion of the certainty with which he
-held the Catholic faith, and would offer these terms because convinced
-of the utter impossibility of proving him to be wrong, it might be
-barely tolerated. It is a form of speech that has sometimes been used
-by controversialists--Maguire, for instance--but it has none the less
-been always considered rash. That this was the sense in which {274}
-Father Spencer used it, is abundantly evident from other parts of the
-sermon. However, the proposition that a Catholic and a Protestant may
-meet on equal terms to discuss their tenets, each open to conviction
-by the other's arguments, is simply erroneous and scandalous, to say
-nothing more. We cannot do such a thing without denying the very basis
-of our faith. Our faith is not opinion, nor is it certainty simply. It
-is something more. It is a divine virtue infused into our souls,
-whereby we believe certain things. We must use reason to come to the
-evidence of faith, but faith once obtained must never be left at the
-mercy of the fickleness and weakness of any individual's understanding
-or power of argument.
-
-To lay down the proposition we animadvert on, would be equivalent to
-denying the objectivity of faith altogether. Whether a Catholic
-reasons well or ill, answers arguments or is confounded, his faith is
-the same; it is not his faith simply, but the faith of the Catholic
-Church, the faith given by God, which no man can add to or take from.
-Nay, the very putting of oneself in the position here mentioned is a
-real tempting God, if not undermining faith itself, by laying it open
-to the possibility of doubt. There is no use in deceiving Protestants,
-therefore, by apparent concessions like the rash offer which we said
-might be tolerated. It is impossible; our terms are fixed, and we are
-fixed in them, so that it is merely an exaggeration, in its mildest
-form. When, therefore, Father Spencer lays it down thus, and says that
-it is the spirit in which he would wish all Catholics to discuss, he
-may be fairly taxed with the second interpretation. Whether or no, it
-was wrong to preach it to all Catholics. Fancy a poor woman, who could
-scarcely read, entering into a discussion with an educated Protestant
-on these terms. He was of course called to order for this sermon, but
-his Catholic spirit was his safeguard. He first wondered how he had
-been wrong, but even laymen point out his mistake to him, and a word
-from the Bishop is enough to make him retract. Thus he soon found out
-the keenness of Catholic instinct to anything coming from a priest
-that even grazes the brink of error.
-
-
-{275}
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-Some Events Of Interest.
-
-
-In the year 1840 Father Spencer had the happiness of hearing that his
-great friend, Dr. Wiseman, was consecrated bishop, and was coming from
-Rome to be coadjutor to Dr. Walsh, and take up his residence in the
-very College of Oscott where he himself was. Another event occurred,
-of no less interest. One of his brother priests, Dr. Wareing, was
-consecrated Bishop of Ariopolis, and Vicar-Apostolic of a new
-district, the Eastern district in England. Father Spencer preached the
-consecration sermon; and these two additional bishops in England
-raised his hopes of the spread of the Catholic faith. It may not be
-out of place to insert a sentence or two from a letter this venerable
-bishop, who has retired from his pastoral duties in consequence of ill
-health for some time past, has written to one of our fathers.
-
- "On many occasions, while at Oscott College, the Superior, and
- myself among the rest, often thought his zeal too unbounded and
- rather imprudent, and could not sanction some of his projects and
- undertakings. Though it cost him much, he always obeyed, and used to
- pray that Heaven would direct his superiors, whose direction he
- never refused to obey. I believe he never wished for anything but
- the will of God, and waited patiently for its accomplishment. I
- remember also on one occasion hearing him say, 'How _beautiful_ it
- would be _to die in a ditch, unseen and unknown_.' [Footnote 9]
- These were his very words; and I was forcibly struck when I {276}
- heard of the exact circumstances of his holy death, to see how his
- wish and prayer were granted to him."
-
- [Footnote 9: This was his continual aspiration. He wished to die
- like his Lord, deprived of human aid and sympathy.]
-
-He receives news in the beginning of the year 1841 of six nuns having
-bound themselves by vow to pray for the conversion of England. But a
-more beautiful and consolatory piece of information still was, that a
-French missioner had formed an association in Persia of prayers for
-the same object. He goes to London and preaches in several churches,
-among others, in Lincoln's-Inn Fields, of course about the conversion
-of England, for he scarcely ever preached a sermon in which he did not
-introduce this topic; nay, he never held a half-hour's conversation
-without introducing it.
-
-It was about this time, too, that he came across Mr. Pugin the elder.
-His first meeting was rather characteristic of both. Father Spencer
-had preached a sermon somewhere on the conversion of England, and he
-gave benediction after it. Pugin came into the sacristy. The famous
-Goth saw Father Spencer in a Roman cope, and he comes up to him in a
-kind of nettlesome mood, saying, "What! convert England with such a
-cope as that?" Father Spencer says in a letter written at this time,
-"I am not possessed with the enthusiastic zeal for correct forms
-(Gothic) which some are. It is not my special calling .... Mr. Pugin
-is the authority to which I would defer in these matters." The only
-other opinion of Pugin's he records in his letters, is that he said to
-Father Spencer one time, "It is absurd to expect to get anything for
-one's works from booksellers or publishers."
-
-Another event that gave him joy, and afterwards a good deal of sorrow,
-was the conversion of a well-known, clergyman. This remarkable convert
-lived some time in Oscott after his conversion. Father Spencer took
-him with him sometimes on his parish duties, and had great hopes of
-him. These were all disappointed when, in a couple of years, he went
-back again after being ordained priest and having said mass. Father
-Ignatius often spoke of him, often visited him, and asked others to
-pray for him. He used to tell us one curious anecdote about him.
-Shortly after his apostasy, {277} he was invited to a tea-party where
-Evangelical ladies assembled to congratulate themselves, and sip their
-tea with new relish by having it sugared with some telling remarks of
-the lately-rescued slave from Popery. He was put several questions,
-such as "What do you think of Transubstantiation?" He answered, "Oh,
-that's as plain as possible in the Bible," and so forth. They were, of
-course, egregiously disappointed. Father Ignatius used to lament with
-peculiar anguish over this sad case. He always hoped for his return to
-the Catholic faith, and, strange enough, one of the first pieces of
-news in the way of conversion which we heard after Father Ignatius's
-death, was his return to the faith he had deserted.
-
-In the middle of the year 1842, he visits Ireland for the first time;
-he preaches in several places, in Dublin; especially for the Jesuits,
-in Gardiner Street; the Franciscans, Merchant's Quay. All, of course,
-about the conversion of England. He says: "My argument was, that the
-Irish having been specially victims of oppression under England, if I
-could gain the Irish to pray for England, prayers springing from such
-charity would be irresistible." He made a kind of a tour through
-Ireland, and got as far as Tuam. He feared the Archbishop of Tuam,
-knowing his opposition to England, and his detestation of English
-rule. For that very reason Father Spencer was the more anxious to
-convert him, or make him return good for evil. What was his surprise
-when he found the Archbishop not only kind and Irish in his
-hospitality, but really favourable to his projects. His grace got
-Father Spencer to preach, and promised him that he would give the
-substance of the same sermon to his people in their own sweet ancient
-tongue on the next Sunday. He was so enchanted at this, that he wrote
-off almost to every friend he had in the world about it. Though he
-often felt afterwards the powerful blows Dr. McHale delivered at
-England's doings, he never could forget his kind reception of himself,
-and always mentioned his grace's name with gratitude and reverence,
-only wishing that he would not be so hard on England.
-
-The next event he writes about was the arrival in England {278} of
-Father Dominic of the Mother of God (Passionist), and his staying at
-Oscott for some time in order to learn English and wait for an opening
-in Aston to begin the first retreat of the English province. Before we
-quote his account of Father Dominic, it may be well to give a rather
-characteristic remark of his which occurs in the letter to Mrs.
-Canning, who was a great promoter, in the letter-writing way, of
-Father Dominic's coming. He says, "Your accounts of yourself are
-always interesting, as they must be in all cases where a person knows
-how to delineate accurately his own interior; for, in seeing the
-picture of another well drawn, we always may discern little touches of
-our own portraiture which had before perhaps escaped us, and that
-gives all the pleasure of sympathy, which is one of the realest
-pleasures."
-
-Further on in the same letter he writes:--
-
- "Padre Domenico has had his cross to bear with us, all this time; it
- is not like what usually makes crosses for people. He mourns over
- having plenty to eat, having windows which keep the weather out,
- having chairs to sit _on_, and tables to sit at, and longs to be in
- his house, which I suppose will not have much of all this to trouble
- him. I have to try to console him now and then, which I do by
- telling him that I never hear of anything brought about in our
- ecclesiastical arrangements without long delay, and yet all comes
- right at last, with patience. I tell him also that he must have
- known enough of the deliberativeness with which things of the kind
- are settled by the known slowness of all things at Rome. However,
- why should you have to bear this burden with us? You will, I hope,
- be consoled before long by hearing that they are settled, and going
- on, and have first a chair, then a table, then a kettle, and likely
- to have a smoke-jack, toasting-fork, and such like in due course,
- and, what will be not less interesting in its way, having good
- novices, and plenty of converts."
-
-The next thing he speaks about is not one event, but a series, though
-all only items in a great result for which he continually prayed and
-laboured--the conversions, which multiplied every day. In 1843 he says
-that converts are {279} received in Birmingham at the rate of one a
-day, and many more elsewhere. He also mentions with great satisfaction
-that within the last year, 1842, three Anglican clergymen, four Oxford
-students, two countesses, and two earls' daughters had become
-converts. Although Father Spencer mentions these particularly, it is
-not to undervalue conversions from an humbler grade of life he does
-it. The soul of the beggar is as precious in the eyes of God, _apud
-quern non est acceptatio personarum_, as the soul of the king. Father
-Spencer did not undervalue the conversions of the middle and lower
-classes on the contrary, he worked hard to get as many as possible
-from them. He had always notions of a great move towards Catholicity,
-and he thought that if the higher ranks took the lead in this, the
-others would follow.
-
-In 1844, he mentions his going to Nottingham with a large party, among
-whom is Mr. Ward, "one of the most advanced Oxford clergy. Oh! that he
-would come a little further, but at present he seems to have no
-thoughts of it. God knows whether he may not soon get a little help
-onwards. Make a good prayer for this." Mr. Ward did get certainly
-onwards. Here and there we find sighs escape him about his beloved
-people of Northampton and Brington. He did assuredly love his native
-place intensely, and it must have been a trial to his feelings that he
-could do nothing externally towards alleviating its spiritual
-destitution.
-
-
-{280}
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-His Tour On The Continent In 1844.
-
-
-In 1844 he became so nervous and weak that he was forbidden exertion
-of any kind; his ailment is manifest in his tremulous handwriting. On
-medical advice, he takes a tour on the Continent with Mr. and Mrs.
-Phillipps and their children. His account of this tour is preserved in
-a Journal, and we think it well to give it entire, without any
-compression.
-
- On Wednesday, July 3rd, 1844, I set off from Grace Dieu Manor for a
- tour on the Continent with my dear friend, Ambrose Phillipps, his
- wife, his two eldest boys, Ambrose and Edward, and John Squires, his
- servant. He took his carriage, in which he and his family sat on the
- railway from Loughborough to London, while I went in a second-class
- carriage. We arrived at the Burlington Hotel, and dined about 7
- o'clock. Afterwards we went out different ways. I called at Dr.
- Griffiths, but he was not at home. I had tea with Dr. Maguire, whom
- I found at home; we had an hour's talk, about the Oxford men
- principally. Got home about 10.
-
- Thursday, July 4.--Went with the Phillippses to Father Lythgoe's, in
- Bolton Street, where I said mass, and breakfasted at 10. I went to
- see Dr. Chambers, in Brook Street, being ordered by Dr. Wiseman to
- consult him as to the propriety of taking a long tour, as is
- proposed by Phillipps. Dr. Chambers recognized me at once, as I used
- in 1824 or 1825 to follow his visits to the patients in St. George's
- Hospital, with a view to learn medicine. He judged it quite
- necessary that I should have at least three months' absence from
- work, and approved of my travelling with {281} moderate exertion. So
- I am fixed at last to set off. God knows how I shall go through. The
- present plan is to go through Belgium, to Munich, the Tyrol, Venice,
- Milan, Turin, Lyons, Paris, and home; and my purpose is to get
- prayers for England's conversion, and to see men rather than places
- and things. After Dr. Chambers, I went to the Bank, to get my letter
- of credit, then to Buckingham Palace, to see my sister. After I had
- waited a half-hour she returned from her drive, and took me to her
- nursery apartments at the top of the house. I had my first glance at
- Prince Albert, going out to ride with Colonel Bouverie. From Sarah,
- I went to Lyttelton's house, 39, Grosvenor Place, where I found
- Caroline Lyttelton was expected home in an hour, and so I went on to
- call on Sisk, who was out, and I came back and saw Lyttelton, with
- whom I went in his carriage towards the House of Lords, and was set
- down in St. James's Street. On the table in Grosvenor Place I saw
- what I was 21 years ago, in a miniature painted by Ross--a blooming
- rosy youth. I did not believe it till Caroline told me. I came to
- dine with Sarah at 8, and staid till 10. Our conversation was most
- interesting, about the Queen and the children, and the great people
- from abroad, &c., whom she saw; above all, the Czar and the Duke of
- Wellington. She set me down at our hotel at 10½, after calling at
- Neville Grenville's, where I saw Lady Charlotte and a large family.
-
- Friday, July 5th.--Mass and breakfast as yesterday. About 11 started
- for Dover, in the same order as from Loughborough; arrived at 5. I
- went to call on Mr. Savage, the priest, my old companion at Rome. He
- does not seem a movement man. He came to tea with us.
-
- Saturday, July 6th.--As the packet was to start at 7, I missed
- saying mass. As it happened, we had to wait on board till 9 for the
- mail. We had intended to cross to Ostend, but Phillipps, getting
- afraid of the long crossing for sickness, so we all agreed to prefer
- the shorter-by-half passage to Calais. We had a good passage, but we
- all were miserable; the two boys were very sick. However, as the
- French boatmen assured us, the tread of the dry land of {282} France
- worked wonders to cure us all. We went to Dessin's Hotel. I was full
- well reminded of September, 1819, my first landing in France, and of
- divers other epochs, Sept. 1820, Nov. 1820, and Feb. 1830. Before
- dinner we went to the church to give thanks, and commend our future
- to God. I asked _le Suisse de l'Eglise_ (the verger) to pray for
- England. Nothing else done at Calais. We started in the afternoon
- for S. Omer, which we reached late. The country we passed was very
- fertile; for the first time I have seen cultivation which struck me
- as superior to English; the state of the people is manifestly more
- happy and prosperous. After tea I went to the Grand Vicaire, M.
- Dumez, to ask leave for mass, &c. I had forgotten to get credentials
- from Dr. Wiseman, and so he hesitated, but gave the _celebret_. I
- went on, though tired, to M. Durier, Curé de Notre Dame, who
- received me most cordially, and on my stating my errand, pressed me
- to preach at the high mass on the morrow. I hesitated, but he came
- with me to our hotel, and Phillipps joined in pressing it, and so I
- wrote a quarter of an hour's worth before going to bed, hoping I was
- not out of rule, but doubting.
-
- Sunday, July 7.--Said mass at Notre Dame, a fine Gothic church; went
- home to breakfast, and back to high mass at 9½. After the Gospel, M.
- Durier first read the _annonces_, the Epistle, and the Gospel, and
- introduced my object to the people. Then I went into the pulpit, and
- made my address without any difficulty. He then rose opposite to me,
- and pledged himself and his flock to pray for England. After mass, I
- went a round of the convents of the town with an old man sent from
- one of them with me. The convents which promised their prayers were
- the following:
-
- Les Ursulines, 37 nuns; 300 scholars.
-
- Les Soeurs Hospitalières de S. Louis.
-
- L'Hospice de S. Jean, served by nuns.
-
- L'Hôpital Général des enfants trouvés, &c.
-
- Les Religieuses de la Sainte famille.
-
- Le Couvent du Saint Sacrement,
- where are only 3 nuns, the Superioress an Englishwoman, who
- observed that in her profession, when prostrate--a time when it
- is said the chosen prayer is sure to be granted--the first thing
- she asked was England's conversion.
-
- Les Frères des Écoles Chrétiennes.
- The Superior promised to recommend the prayers to his brethren
- of 30 houses in this district, who meet in August for a retreat.
-
-{283}
-
- "We proceeded at 3 to Lille, stopping at the exit from St. Omer to
- see the ruined Abbaye de St. Bertin. We stopped at Cussel, a place
- on the top of a mountain commanding a grand prospect over a vast
- plain richly wooded and cultivated. The maître d'hôtel wanted us
- sadly to stay, but we went on, after a walk to the top of the mount,
- and to the church. We came late to Lille, and not finding room at
- l'Hôtel de l'Europe, we put up at l'Hôtel de Gand, not a very nice
- one, in the Grande Place.
-
- Monday, July 8.--I first went to the Church of St. Catherine, to see
- Abbe Bernard, my friend, introduced by Mrs. Canning. He was gone,
- yesterday, to Paris. I then went to Rue Royale, No. 61, memorable
- for ever as the direction to which my letters from Brington to Miss
- Dolling were addressed. M. Friot Chombard, who lives there, was also
- absent from Lille. I then went to the Church of St. Étienne, where
- the Grand Doyen lived; and, having seen him, I said mass. I then
- called on him in his house, and obtained his promise to advocate the
- cause of England. After breakfast, I went to the Church of St.
- Maurice, which is called the Cathedral. It is the first I have seen
- with four aisles. I saw nothing more in Lille; we left it about 12,
- and reached Tournay about 2. I went at once to the Évéché, where I
- found the Bishop's Secretary, who took me to a great convent of
- nuns, which the Bishop has founded, and is building this house for.
- It is to contain sixty nuns, and a great number of _pensionnaires_.
- I was presented to his lordship in the garden, and obtained a full
- promise of his patronage of the cause of England. I came back to
- dine at the Hotel (du Singe d'Or); to my surprise and pleasure,
- Talbot came in with Phillipps, who had met him in the Cathedral.
- After dinner, he and I took a {284} carriage and went to see the
- Passionists au Château d'Ere, about three miles off. Le Père Pierre,
- Superior of the house, received us with all kindness. He has three
- companions priests, and three brothers. They were building a church
- of good size, and seem to prosper; but he complains that no
- postulants come; they have received not one cleric yet. He thinks
- they fear the bare feet. He came back with us to Tournay, to see
- Phillipps. Soon after, we started on our way to Brussels; still by
- post horses, as all the way from Calais. We stopped at Alte to
- sleep. The hotel was one of the most agreeable and cheapest, though
- small.
-
- Tuesday, July 9.--There are two churches at Alte. I went to St.
- Julien's, and said mass. Afterwards I introduced Phillipps and
- Madame to the Doyen, M. Picquart, who was most pleasing and full of
- knowledge, and promised all for England. We here had a contest with
- John, which threatened his being sent home, but he came round before
- the day was out. We started at 10 for Brussels. The country not
- equal to France. We came to the Hôtel de Belle Vue, in the Place
- Royale. Having engaged a suite of rooms, we sat down at once at the
- _table d'hôte_. After it, I went to seek for the Abbé Donnet, to
- whom I had a note from Seager. He was out. I then went to Ste.
- Gudule, the cathedral, and saw the Vicaire, a Dutch priest, with
- whom I settled to say mass to-morrow. Then I took a _vigilante_
- (i.e. a cab) to the College de St. Michel, of the Jesuits, where I
- saw the Second Superior. Then to the Redemptorists, where the
- Superior took up the cause warmly. Home to tea.
-
- Wednesday, July 10.--Went at 7 to Abbé Donnet; then to mass at Ste.
- Gudule. At 9, Abbé (Chanoine) Donnet called, and, after an hour's
- talk about Oxford, took us to Monsignor Pacci, the Pope's Nuncio,
- Archbishop of Damietta. He is a most holy-looking man; conversed
- with us most kindly; knew much about the Oxford people; promised his
- help. I then let the Phillippses go their way, intending to make a
- day of canvassing convents. But M. Donnet took me only to three, and
- then had to go his way at 12. The three were:--
-
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, Rue de l'Étoile, 14 nuns.
-
- Pauvres Claires, Rue de Manige, Maison Mère a Bruges, 13 nuns.
-
- Couvent de Bellaymont. Chanoinesses Régulières de St. Augustin.
- Unique Maison.
-
-{285}
-
- After this, I went to Ste. Gudule, and met Phillipps, with whom I
- went to the Jardin Botanique, and to the hospital for old men. It is
- a grand establishment, by private charity. It contains 700 old men,
- of whom 100 pay for themselves; the rest are kept free, and with
- wonderful regard to their comforts. I called on a curé close by,
- thinking to get the prayers of these _vielliards_; but he took me
- for a begging priest, and turned me out of doors. _Deo gratias_.
- Thence to the Musée, a collection of pictures, which hardly paid the
- trouble of looking at. After dinner at the _table d'hôte_, we took a
- carriage to go to Jette St. Pierre, to meet the Cardinal Archbishop
- of Malines, at the Convent of the Sacré Coeur there. On the way we
- saw an interesting church; outside was a tomb of Madame Malibren. At
- Jette, Madame de Wall, my friend of 1832 at Bordeaux, introduced us
- to the Cardinal. This was a consolation indeed. He undertook to
- recommend England to all the Bishops of Belgium, invited me to their
- meeting on the 29th July, and promised that all their priests and
- convents should engage in the cause. This is a noble convent. Madame
- de Wall said they prayed for England every half-hour in the day.
-
- Thursday, July 11.--Said mass at St. Jacques, in the Place Royale.
- Went to Malines by the _chemin du fer_, Phillipps in the carriage on
- a truck, I in a _char-à-banc_. Arrived at l'Hôtel de la Grue just in
- time for the _table d'hôte_, on which I only remark the immense
- length of time taken to dine. After it, we went to the Petit
- Séminaire, where we were warmly greeted by the Abbé Bonquéan, our
- friend of Oscott and Grace Dieu. He took us about to a few places;
- and at 5 to the Salut, at the Cathedral; after which he introduced
- Miss Young, the convert, sister to Isabella. She went with us to
- Hanicq's, the printer's, and to a fine old church, &c. I visited no
- convents, reserving this for my return. Opposite our hotel, the
- grand {286} Theatre des Lapons forced itself to be noticed till late
- at night.
-
- Friday, July 12.--After mass and breakfast, we went to visit the
- Cardinal Archbishop, who graciously gave me a paper of testimonial,
- which will, I hope, save some trouble. His countenance and manner
- are highly prepossessing. At 12 we started for Antwerp, by railway,
- leaving the carriage at the station at Malines. We arrived at the
- Hôtel St. Antoine, just in time for the _table d'hôte_ at 2. There I
- met Mr. Blore, with his daughter, now grown a fine young woman.
- After dinner, to the Cathedral. I need not speak of the glorious
- tower, 466 feet high. What attracted our attention most was the
- wonderfully beautiful restoration of the stalls in oak carved work;
- 40,000 francs have been spent in this already, and not half the
- stalls are finished, and this actually in process of work is more
- pleasing to see than the most beautiful morsels of ancient work, for
- the promise it gives of better days. The pulpit is a mass of
- exquisite carving, in a style seemingly favourite in this part of
- Belgium. The most beautiful we saw was at Brussels, Ste. Gudule,
- where, below the preacher, are seen Adam and Eve banished from
- Paradise; and above, the head of the serpent, who winds round the
- pulpit, crushed by Mary. The same style of carving is around the
- pulpit at Marines, Louvain, &c., but is seen no more at Liége. After
- seeing the cathedral, we went to the Musée, containing first-rate
- specimens of Rubens, citizen of Antwerp; as also of Van Dyke and
- Quintin Matsys, of whom there is an excellent picture of the Descent
- from the Cross. Finding myself near the College of the Jesuits, I
- went in and saw the Rector, who took up our cause zealously. He
- walked home with me to see Phillipps, and they soon got intimate.
-
- Saturday, July 13.--After mass in the cathedral, we went, by last
- night's appointment, to visit the Superior of the Jesuits, who
- showed us his house. Then, Phillipps going to see some churches,
- &c., I went with a lay brother, given me for guide by the Superior,
- to visit convents.
-
-{287}
-
- We called at the following:--
-
- Coletines, près la Porte Rouge, 28 nuns
-
- Dames de l'Instruction Chrétienne, 17 nuns
-
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, 20 nuns
-
- Soeurs Grises, 34 nuns
-
- Soeurs Noires, 49 nuns
-
- Apostolines, in two houses, 67 nuns
-
- Soeurs de Charité, 12 nuns
-
- Béguinage (that is, a collection of houses, in which Sisters live
- under a Superioress, not bound by vows for life) 54 nuns
-
- Except the latter, where I was referred to the Director, who was not
- so attentive, all received the proposal warmly. The brother was my
- interpreter with many, who did not know French. At 1 we got home,
- and I took the Phillippses to the curé of the cathedral, who
- introduced to us M. Durlet, the young architect, who, with a partner
- at Louvain, is doing the beautiful work in the choir. We went into
- the cathedral again, and I was prevented going to two remaining
- convents, but the curé promised to do it for me. M. Durlet came to
- dine with us at the _table d'hôte_. I just called at l'Hôtel du
- Park, to see Miss Dalton, who is ill there. Mr. Turpin and Mr.
- Crowe, two Lancashire priests, are with her. The former accosted me
- in the cathedral. We set off then to Malines by the railway; there
- met Abbé Bonquéan; had tea, and went on to Louvain. We got in late,
- in heavy rain; Phillipps had to walk from the railway a mile in the
- rain. I went first to the Hôtel de Suide, where I found Dr.
- Ullathorne and Mr. Hansom, his architect.
-
- 7th Sunday af. Pent. July 14.--I had my palpitation worse than ever
- to-day. I wish to attribute it to my two days' abstinence, and not
- to my walking after convents. It went off after breakfast. I said
- mass at the Cathedral St. Pierre. High mass at 10. It was one of
- extreme opposition to plain chant, with drums and orchestra. In this
- church remember the beautiful tabernacle, a stone pinnacle, on the
- Gospel side of the altar. There was no _prône_, and a second high
- mass immediately after. The Hôtel de Ville is a famous piece of
- Gothic, not so admirable to my view as {288} that at Brussels, which
- is much larger, not so highly wrought, and has a beautiful spire.
- After dinner, at 1, with Dr. Ullathorne, and at the _table-d'hôte_,
- we went to see M. and Madame de Coux. We got into interesting talk
- with him on matters religions, ecclesiastical, and political. He is
- a professor of political economy, a Frenchman, brought up in England
- under old Dr. Woods. We went on till after 5, and so missed the
- _salut_, sermon, and procession at the church. He took us to the
- University, where we saw Abbé Malou, who claimed me as an old
- acquaintance, one of the three at the Collegio Nobile whom I knew at
- Rome. He is Professor of Dogmatic Theology, most learned, high bred,
- and amiable. M. Bonquéan came kindly to meet us from Malines, and
- was with us till 6. After having spent nearly an hour with M. Malou,
- who showed us the library (10,000 vols.) of which he is keeper, we
- went to tea with M. de Coux, and came home at 9½.
-
- Monday, July 15. St. Swithin.--Mass at St. Pierre, for the Feast _de
- Divisione Apostolorum_. After breakfast I went again to M. de Coux,
- who took me to see a M. Mühler, whom he recommended as tutor to John
- Beaumont. At 12, railway to Liege. Dined at 5, at l'Hôtel de France.
- At 6, _salut_ at St. Denys. Before dinner I went to the
- Redemptorists, but found Père Van Held and Deschamps out of town.
- The Bishop also away. We went at 7 a walk to a bookseller's, from
- which I went in quest of the Grand Vicaire. I met an old priest in
- the street, Abbé Marsomme, who took me to M. Jacquenot, the second
- Grand Vicaire, and then walked home and took tea with us. These two
- promised to spread prayer for England through Liege. I wrote to Mrs.
- Beaumont before bed.
-
- Tuesday, July 16.--Our Lady of Mount Carmel.--Mass at St. Denys,
- where is a beautiful piece of old oak carving. Phillippses received
- communion. After breakfast, at 9, we went to high mass at the
- cathedral. It was solemn plain chant. The church has many
- stained-glass windows, like those of Ste. Gudule, Brussels, of 1550,
- much gone off from the older time. The pulpit is new carved oak,
- with a beautiful tower with pinnacles above, a great improvement on
- {289} the carved pulpit above named, though not so costly perhaps.
- The church is much debased, as usual, in other parts. We met
- Chanoine Erroye, who took us to the other great church, St. Jacques,
- which rivals or surpasses the cathedral. The ceiling coloured,
- though like the cathedral. They are doing a great deal to restore
- this church. The Doyen was there overlooking the work. The stained
- glass was much better than at Brussels, but not the best (date
- 1527); not so far down hill. The Chanoine then took us to the Abbé
- Marsomme, who is Director of an hospice with 19 nuns, taking care of
- 180 old women, beautifully kept. The Quarant' Ore was being
- celebrated in this church. It is kept up in Liége all the year
- round, and comes four times to each church. We then went with the
- Chanoine Erroye to the Grand Séminaire. The library is beautiful.
- There are here 120 students; and at the Petit Séminaire, 360. They
- go through nine courses at the Petit, and three at the Grand, so
- that 40 are sent on the mission every year, and 40 more come on
- below. Came home to _table d'hôte_ at 1. After it we made an attempt
- to go to Angleur, 3 miles off, where Mrs. Ambrose's father, Hon.
- Thomas Clifford, who died at Liége in 1817, is buried. We were
- stopped by mud and rain, and came back, seeing the church of Ste.
- Croix, which was not very remarkable (_Mem_. a dog carrying the keys
- as porter), and St. Martin, a fine church of second rate, but famous
- as the place where, at one of the side altars, the feast of Corpus
- Christi was celebrated for the first time, owing to the inspirations
- received by a nun called Soeur Julienne. The 6th Centenary will be
- held in 1846. We met a young, amiable-looking priest in the church.
- He promised to think of England at the altar, in the special mass of
- the Blessed Sacrament, which is celebrated at it every Thursday,
- whatever feast may interpose. It was heavy rain, and we came home to
- _salut_ at St. Denys, and thence to the hotel. I wrote up a good
- deal of this journal.
-
- Wednesday, July 17. St. Osmond.--We took a stouter equipage, and got
- to Angleur early. I said mass, and the Phillippses communicated over
- the place of her father's repose. The boys served the mass. The
- Curé, Matthias Jn. Convardy, who remembered Mr. Clifford while
- himself quite {290} young, gave us breakfast after, very kindly. All
- these priests were warm for England. We returned to Liége, and I
- went to the banker; then home to dinner at 1. Then went off by
- railway to Aix-la-Chapelle. It passes through beautiful romantic
- scenery. There is no railway with so many tunnels in the distance. I
- got into conversation with a party of Oxonians going to spend the
- long vacation at Baden. One of them, Mr. G. F. Brown, of Trinity,
- was full of information, and quite moving on, a great friend of W.
- Palmer, of Magdalen. He promised to visit Oscott. We came to the
- Hôtel Nuelleus, a very grand one. I went to the Chief Canon, the
- Grand Vicaire being gone to Cologne, and got leave for mass
- to-morrow. We are now in Prussia, and all on a sudden all
- German--hardly a word of French spoken. We had tea, and I finished
- my Journal up, in my room, after saying matins.
-
- Thursday, July 18.--I went to the cathedral, and after mass, saw the
- wonderful relics which are preserved in the sacristy of the
- cathedral. This cathedral consists of a round Byzantine building,
- which was built by Charlemagne as the chapel to his palace; and a
- high Gothic choir, which was added to it after the palace had been
- burnt down. A young priest showed the relics; he is always in
- waiting for the purpose, except for the time of high mass and
- office. The great relics--viz., the dress of the Blessed Virgin, the
- clothes which our Lord had on Him on the cross, and the cloth into
- which John Baptist's head fell--are kept in a magnificent chest,
- which is shown, but is only opened every seven years, and when a
- crowned head comes. The next time is July 10, 1846. Above this chest
- is one containing the bones of Charlemagne, whose skull and
- spine-bone, and even hunting-horn, are shown in separate
- reliquaries. His crown and sword are at Vienna. Here is shown also
- the girdle of our Lord, of leather, with Constantine's seal upon it;
- the rope with which he was tied to the pillar; the girdle of Our
- Lady; and many other glorious relics less important. The interior of
- the doors enfolding these treasures is lined most beautifully with
- paintings of Albert Durer, and many admirable Byzantine paintings.
- {291} These relics were principally given to Charlemagne by the
- Caliph, Haroun Alraschid. The cases were gifts of several emperors,
- &c., as Lothaire, Charles V., Philip II. They were preserved in the
- French Revolution by a priest, who conveyed them to Paderborn and
- hid them. After breakfast I returned to the cathedral with Phillipps
- for high mass, which was in solemn plain chant, and then saw the
- relics again at 11½, after going to the Palais de Justice. At 12 I
- got a little dinner, and went by the railway to Grand, parting from
- the Phillippses, please God, for a fortnight only. I went to bed at
- the Hôtel de Flandre, leaving no luggage--all left at Malines.
-
- Friday, July 19.--Went to the cathedral to say mass. My morning was
- taken up with going to the railway about my poor luggage, which at
- last I saw, and visiting the Provincial of the Jesuits, to see about
- my retreat. I dined at the hotel. The cathedral is a most beautiful
- specimen of the Greek fittings in a Gothic church. I did not stop to
- have the finest pictures uncovered, for I had my business to see
- after. Two other beautiful churches, St. Nicholas and St. Michael.
- No signs here of Gothic restorations. At 3 I went with the
- Provincial to Franchismes, where they have bought an ancient
- Prémontré Abbey, which does not preserve much of the abbey still,
- except some corridors, once, as it seems, cloisters. It is, however,
- a beautiful establishment for its end. I saw and spoke to two
- English and one Irish novice, of course about England. I went back
- to Gand; and there Père Coultins, by desire of the Provincial, went
- with me to the Recollets, a reform of the Franciscans; their chief
- house is at St. Froud. Then to the Pauvres Claires; and then to one
- of the two Béguinages. Here are establishments, in one of which 800,
- and in the other 300, _quasi_ nuns live in a cluster of separate
- houses.
-
- Their origin is immemorial. They are bound by vows of obedience and
- chastity, not poverty, for the time that they remain. Hardly ever
- does one return to the world. The Père Coultins promised to visit
- for me the other convents of the town. This is what I could do for
- Ghent. At 6, I started by railway to Louvain, where I was received
- as an {292} old acquaintance at the Hôtel de Suide. The Provincial
- sends me here for my retreat. In the train to Malines, I had Mr.
- Maude and Mr. Perry. Finished Journal, and to bed at near 12.
-
- Saturday, July 20.--After mass at the cathedral, and breakfast, I
- went to the Seminary of the Jesuits, with a letter from the
- Provincial to Père Rosa, the rector. He introduced me to Père
- Vanderghote, who is to direct my retreat, and left me with him. We
- went to walk about the town, called on M. Malou, who undertook to
- translate a prayer from Dr. Wiseman's prayers for England, into
- French. I called on Mr. De Coux, and at I dined with these two
- fathers, and we went into the garden. I then wrote to Dr. Wiseman,
- Phillipps, and M. Bonquéan, and at ¼ to 5 began my retreat for eight
- days please God, till the end of which my present journal intermits.
- _Orate pro me omnes qui diligitis Deum_.
-
- Monday, July 29.--I rose this morning out of my retreat, hoping that
- by the help of Almighty God I may preserve some of its fruit
- durably. I said mass once more at 7½ in the private chapel, then
- after a conversation with my kind Father Vanderghote, I went to the
- College du Saint Esprit, where I saw M. Malou, and then went into
- the hall, where theses were defended by a young priest called
- Bacten, and then degrees conferred, and a discourse in Latin
- pronounced by Abbé Malou. The Nuncio and the Bishop of Amiens were
- there, with many others. At 2 I dined with M. Malou. The chief
- guests were the Grand Vicaire de Bruges, a monseigneur, and Abbé
- Marais, of the Sorbonne; much conversation was on England, and some
- good interest excited. I went again to see Père Rosa, and
- Vanderghote, and at 6½ was on the railway to Malines with a
- multitude of priests. I went to the Petit Séminaire, and supped, and
- M. Bonquéan walked with me to the Grue.
-
- Tuesday, July 30.--Said mass at the cathedral, and then at 8 went to
- the Archbishop's palace, where, with much trouble, I got at the
- Chanoine's private secretary, who introduced me to the Cardinal and
- his five suffragan Belgian {293} Bishops of Bruges, Tournay, Gand,
- Namur, and Liege, sitting after breakfast. I sat down, and in a
- short conversation a great deal seemed to be done for the cause. I
- was desired to draw up documents with M. Bonquéan to-day, and to
- dine with the prelates at 1 to-morrow, to hear their conclusion.
- _Laus Deo semper_. At 10½ I went to M. Bonquéan, where I found two
- young Oxford men, whom I afterwards found were Christie of Oriel and
- his brother. They went with M. Bonquéan and me on all our rounds to
- the convents of the town to-day. At 12 I dined at the Petit
- Séminaire, then, with M. Bonquéan and M. Vandervelde, who was very
- zealous for England, I began to prepare for to-morrow; at 4½ the
- Christies came, and we walked till 7. The convents which we went to,
- and which all promised, and (except one which was cold) all with
- great warmth, were:--
-
- Les Soeurs Hospitalières de Ste. Elisabeth, 21 nuns.
-
- Les Marie Colae 17 nuns.
-
- Soeurs de Charité, not St. Vincent's, but a house under the
- direction of the Grand Séminaire, 23 nuns.
-
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, Abbé Bonquéan is Director here; we saw an
- interesting English novice, and stayed some time, 30 nuns.
-
- Les Soeurs Apostolines, 24 nuns.
-
- Les Pauvres Claires, not so zealous, 25 nuns.
-
- Lastly, we visited a new house and institute called Frères de la
- Miséricorde, lately founded by a canon of the cathedral, by name
- Scheppers. There are now 27 brothers, of whom 25 are on their
- mission, which is to enter, several together, the prisons of the
- country, and devote themselves to the spiritual and bodily care and
- cure of the prisoners. The Government favours them remarkably; it
- seems a most notable institution, and the founder was a most
- interesting man. He promised warmly to engage all his brethren. At
- 7½ I went to the station, and met Elwes, on his way home from
- Kissengen. I brought him up, and we had supper at the Grue. I went
- to bed after a good bit of work to be got up, office, Journal,
- account, &c.
-
-{294}
-
- Wednesday, July 31. St. Ignatius.--Elwes and I said mass at the
- cathedral. From 10 till near 1 he and I were both at work copying an
- address for the Bishops, of which I thought to give each a copy. At
- one I went to dine at the Cardinal's. There were there six Bishops
- and the Nuncio, and many of the chief clergy. I sat next to Mgr. de
- Namur; afterwards I took an hour's walk in the garden, and at 4
- attended the meeting of the Bishops, who came to a happy resolution
- of granting an indulgence of 40 days for every mass, every
- communion, even hearing mass, or saying it with a memento for
- England, and reciting a prayer which they determined on. The
- Cardinal was full of noble kindness. This grant was more than I had
- proposed in my paper, and so my morning's work and Elwes's was
- useless in a very agreeable way. I went to the Grue and found M.
- Bonquéan and the Christies with Elwes. In packing up I found my
- passport was lost, and went off, therefore, uncertain whether I
- could pass the frontier without writing for one to Brussels. The
- Christies travelled with me. I had some interesting conversation
- with each about their position in the Church of England. They took
- it with great gentleness, and answered well. They seem not to have
- thought of coming over, and yet to be in good disposition to do what
- they shall see right. We met very agreeably with the very priest of
- whom we have heard so much, who learnt English to instruct a lady in
- his parish near Bruges, whose daughter was already a convert, and
- writes letters to Dr. Wiseman for publication in England (Miss
- Heron). We became great friends, and he, with another young priest,
- his neighbour, who are taking a little tour together, came with us
- to the Aigle Noir, nearer the Redemptorists than l'Hôtel de France.
- We were very nearly upset in the omnibus, as we came up from the
- station; it was overloaded with luggage, and struck the wheels on
- the right in the sand, having got off the paving. We got out,
- unhurt, into another omnibus passing by; supper, and to bed.
-
- Thursday, August 1.--Said mass at the Redemptorists. Le Père Van
- Held invited us all to breakfast, i.e., the Christies {295} and the
- priests, our new friends. I met there the Bishop's secretary, who
- gave me a letter to the Governor of Liege, Baron Van der Stein, who,
- happily, was come this morning into town, and gave me my passport. I
- then went on with my _vigilante_ to see the Miss Nicholls, who have
- been living two years at the Benedictine convent, Quai d'Avroy. I
- met them last at Boulogne, in 1838. They promised to be busy in
- getting prayers. I then visited the Jesuits' College, and Abbé
- Marsomme. Dined at 1 at the _table d'hôte_ with the Christies, whom
- Père Van Held had sent about sight-seeing with one of his priests.
- At 2.45 we took the convoy to Cologne, which we reached duly at 9¼,
- and went to the Hôtel du Douane, Gasthof zum Kölner Dom, close to
- the cathedral; we took a walk round the cathedral by moonlight after
- supper.
-
- Friday, August 2.--I went to say mass in the cathedral, which we
- then looked round. It gives a melancholy spectacle of what miserable
- times have been gone through while it remained thus unfinished so
- long; but it is a consolation to see the glorious restoration now
- going on. The most beautiful points of the decoration of the choir
- are the fresco paintings above the pillars, and the rich gilded
- diapering on the lower part of them round the choir, in which one
- column alone is finished; and beautiful figures under canopies on
- each column, half-way to the top. The building is surrounded with
- great masses of stones for the completing of it. It is expected that
- it will be finished, fit for consecration, in four years, but not
- quite complete till twenty years hence, please God, if we have
- peace. After breakfast we went to call on Professor Michel, at the
- Seminary. He could not come with us. We saw the Jesuits' church, and
- returned to assist at part of a requiem mass at the cathedral, the
- anniversary of the Archbishop Ferdinand. I spoke to the
- Vicar-General about England, then went home, wrote to M. Malou,
- dined alone; and at 1 set off by a steamboat on the Rhine for
- Koenigswinter, parting from the Christies in the boat. I had nothing
- very remarkable in the passage; reached Koenigswinter at 5. I took
- up my lodgings at the Hôtel de Berlin, where the Phillippses had
- been for twelve days. {296} They came in from a ride in the
- mountains about 6, and we went to tea with Count and Countess
- Kurtzrock. He is Mrs. Ambrose's second cousin. Their daughter Marie
- and her governess gave us music.
-
- Saturday, August 3.--Said mass at the little church at Sta. Maria.
- The altar with altar-cloth only over the altar stone. The rest of
- the altar was brown wood. We breakfasted with Mrs. P.'s aunt, La
- Baronne de Veich, whom they are visiting. She lives in a small house
- with two nieces, Antoinette and Fanny Lutzou. At 10 we went across
- the Rhine to Gothsburg, a watering-place, where Mrs. Amherst and
- daughter have been staying; but they are gone to Italy. We walked up
- to a castle battered into ruin in the Thirty Years' war, overhanging
- the town. The little church half-way up the hill is a bad specimen
- of taste enough inside. We came back to dinner at the Baroness's at
- 2. I went home for two hours, then walked with Phillipps and Tony,
- as they call Antoinette, to see a house which she is undertaking to
- form into an asylum for old poor women; back to tea, and home to the
- hotel at 9.
-
- Sunday, August 4. 10th after Pentecost, here marked 9th.--I heard
- mass at 7 with the famous Kirchen Gesang, of whom I heard from Dr.
- Sweers while translating Overbury's Life. All the people sang German
- hymns through the whole mass with wonderful unison. After it I said
- mass. At 10 was the high mass, i.e., another mass with Kirchen
- Gesang, rather more solemn; and a sermon. I came home then and wrote
- a letter to the Vicar-General at Cologne. I received from M.
- Bonquéan my book of papers pro Anglia, which I had left at Malines.
- At 1, dinner. Professor Schutz, of the University of Bonn, came to
- dine. We saw him off at 3, and then found that some one must go to
- Bonn to get money from the bank; so I took the charge, that I might
- see Bonn. I crossed the Rhine in a boat, and met an omnibus which
- took me on the road I travelled in 1820. The cathedral at Bonn,
- called the Münster, is of a style older than Gothic, but not quite
- Byzantine, something like our Saxon churches. The choir is elevated
- high above the nave, which sinks below the level outside, or the
- outside {297} must have risen. Some arches are Gothic. The
- University is a large building, what would be called Grecian. In
- front of it is a handsome promenade or park. At 7½ I called a second
- time at Professor Schutz's house, and found him with M. Marais, of
- the Sorbonne. He gave me coffee, &c. His rooms are full of
- curiosities from Palestine and Egypt. In 1819, 1820, and 1821, he
- was travelling, commissioned by Government, a literary journey
- through Egypt, Abyssinia, &c. He is Professor of Scripture, a great
- Orientalist, a friend of Dr. Wiseman's. We spoke about Humanarianism
- and Overbury, and the Paris University, &c. I went out and met my
- omnibus at a ¼ to 9, crossed the Rhine, and got home at 10.
-
- Monday, August 5. Sta. Maria ad Nives.--Mass at 7½; at 9 we went to
- a high mass de requiem. They always sing one for every person who
- dies; and when the family can afford it, bread is given to the poor,
- as was done to-day. I stayed at home nearly, till one, then dinner
- at la Baronne's. Mr. Ambrose was not there, having had a fall
- yesterday, and taking rest for precaution. After dinner, looked over
- the Life of Napoleon in German; came home till I went to tea. The
- Count and Countess Kurtzrock and daughters came. The Countess
- promised to be an associate for England, and to spread it at
- Hamburg, where they live.
-
- Friday, August 6th.--Mass at 6. I started at 7.30 by a steamer for
- Mayence. We passed Coblentz (lat. _confluentia_), at the confluence
- of the Moselle and the Rhine, at 1, and then dined (_table d'hôte_)
- on deck. We made agreeable acquaintance with two priests, M. Bandry,
- Chanoine of Cologne, and M. Steigmeier, a P.P. in the Black Forest.
- The first went off at Coblentz, the second spoke only Latin; both
- were highly interested for England. I was busy a good deal with
- reading German, with a dictionary. The weather was beautiful till
- about 6, when suddenly a terrible squall of wind, and thunder and
- lightning came on. The steamer was driven aground on a sand-bank,
- and seemed likely to capsize with the wind and waves. Terrible
- fright and crying among ladies and children. We seemed to think
- little of the rain and lightning which gleamed on every side {298}
- of us. It was very frightful; at least, it appeared so, and I saw
- what a warning was given here to be ready at a moment. No great
- preparation, I found, would be likely to be made in a time like
- that. It brought on me a palpitation which lasted till morning. We
- got off after ten minutes, as the storm blew over, and got to the
- Hôtel du Rhine at Mayence (Mainz) about 9. My greatest alarm since
- Messina.
-
- Wednesday, Aug. 7. San. Gaetano. Remembered Affi, 1820.--Said mass
- at the cathedral. This is a venerable old church, St. Boniface's
- see. It is something like our Norman style of architecture; at the
- west end is a remarkable baptistery, with a high vaulted roof now
- opening to the church. There are many fine monuments, and many more
- of the worst style; fauns and dragons supporting archbishops, &c.
- They showed us a holy-water stoup, where Gustavus Adolphus, having
- ridden into the church, made his horse drink! Near the church is a
- statue of Guttenburg, the first printer, claimed as a citizen of
- Mainz; bas-reliefs by Thorwaldsen. We had not time to see more. I
- was not disposed, with my palpitation just subsiding, to go after
- the Archbishop or others. We started past for Manheim; on the way we
- looked at the torn-down cathedral of Worms, in a later style than
- Mayence, and very venerable. This place was famous in the contests
- between Charles V. and Luther. We dined at Manheim, then took the
- railway to Heidelberg, where we put up at the Badische Hof. We saw
- nothing at Manheim but the appearance of the town, which is very
- handsome. A French gentleman whom I met in the town, Girardon, of
- Lyons, said the ducal palace was very grand.
-
- Thursday, Aug. 8.--I went out at 9½, having had rather a bad night,
- and said mass at the Jesuits' old church, which is now the only
- exclusively Catholic church in Heidelberg. The curé lives in an old
- college; the church was dreary and empty, and things seem to be at a
- low point. We went after breakfast in a carriage to the ruins of the
- castle, which are fine in their way, but not of the right style.
- Luther was fostered here by the Elector Palatine. It was burnt by
- {299} lightning in 1764. In the altar we saw the great tun, which is
- no wonder to my mind. At 11 we took the railway to Baden, through
- Carlsruhe. There we took a walk before dinner, saw the gaming-table,
- which is a famous occupation here; I never saw one before in a
- public saloon. I met Mr. Woollett. a Catholic of London, and his two
- daughters. He wants confession to an English priest, and I went with
- him to the convent of the Sepulchrines to see about it. They
- promised prayers for England. 12 nuns; the same order as New Hall;
- dinner at 5. Then we took a carriage to the ruins of the old castle,
- much grander than at Heidelberg. I did not venture to go up the
- castle, as I felt myself not fit. We came back to tea with Mrs.
- Craven, née La Ferronaye, wife of the English _Chargé d'affaires_,
- who is a convert. We met l'Abbé Martin de Nerlieu, curé de S. Jaques
- à Paris, and his vicaire, and Miss Jane Young. Home at 9½.
-
- Friday, August 9.--I had to take a carriage and go at 6 o'clock to
- Lichtenthal, a mile or two from Baden, where the Herr Landherr is
- curé, and has power to give leave to hear confessions. There is a
- convent there of 18 nuns, Bernardines, who promised to pray for
- England. I returned and said mass at the convent in Baden, having
- first heard the confessions of Mr. Woollett and Miss Young's maid. I
- thought that night, as I lay in bed with my heart beating, that I
- must see a doctor to-day, and consult about the propriety of
- travelling; but the Phillippses both reasoned against this, and I
- saw it differently by daylight. We dined at the _table d'hôte_ at 1,
- and then set off on our way towards Munich. We travelled to-day
- through the grand scenery of the Black Forest, and arrived at 9 at
- Neuenburg, where there was a very civil host, and a nice inn, though
- a second rate.
-
- Saturday, August 10. St. Lawrence.--The first, I think, (no, except
- 1835), on which I have lost mass since my priesthood; but there was
- no Catholic church. We made a slow day's journey; we began badly by
- going the first stage to Wildbad, from which we returned nearly to
- Neuenburg, as it seemed on our road right. The reason was, as we
- {300} thought, that they directed us wrong yesterday, and sent us a
- longer road, whereas we should have got straight to Wildbad, without
- going to Neuenburg. We should have had a chapel at Wildbad, where a
- priest came during the season only. We got to Stuttgard at 5, and
- had a splendid dinner at the hotel. We met an old courier of Mr.
- Phillipps's, afterwards clerk at the Foreign Office, who lives here
- on a pension from England. He knew Cavani. He lives now at this
- hotel. Stuttgard seems an uninteresting place for a capital; has
- 4,000 inhabitants only. It is well to have seen it. We went on again
- in the evening to get to Göppingen, where we we were told there was
- a Catholic church, and we did not get to bed till 2; I fasting for
- to-morrow, and fearing a bad night.
-
- Hôtel de la Poste, Sunday, Aug. 11.--I slept well, after all. I got
- up at 8, and we started directly in heavy rain for Gross Eplingen,
- two miles on our way, where the nearest Catholic church was. There
- was none in Göppingen. We arrived at the middle of the parochial
- mass. The Kirchen Gesangen are very impressive. After it I said
- mass, and after visiting the pastor, we went on to Ulm, which we
- reached at 5 about. Radhoff (Wheat) Hotel. Before dinner we went and
- spent a long time in the old cathedral, now a Lutheran church, and
- for that reason, however strangely, preserved wonderfully from
- spoiling. It was most magnificent; the aisles divided by most
- elegant pillars, a most glorious tabernacle, still standing, far
- surpassing Louvain. The old triptic, with a beautiful group in
- wood-carving, still over the altar; a beautiful pulpit in the style
- of the tabernacle; the screen was gone; and the stained glass
- preserved only in the choir and one or two more places; but so far,
- I thought it the richest I knew. It was wonderful how much better
- was the appearance of the church than if it had been in Catholic
- hands. After dinner was busy upstairs till 10½.
-
- Monday, Aug. 12.--Got up at 5½; we were taken to the Catholic
- church, a poor thing, compared with the ancient one. I said mass
- there at 8; at 9½ we started for Augsburg. There was nothing
- remarkable on the way but the {301} excessive slowness of the
- Bavarian post-boys; they are remarkable, I believe, among the
- Germans. We dined about 5, at a small town called Tusmarchausan, a
- neat, clean, country town. Talked French with an old Italian who
- attends at the inn, and Latin with a Dominican priest, in a blue
- great-coat and Hessian boots. We set off again at 7, and reached
- Augsburg at 9½ or 10. Put up at the Three Moors,--Drei Mohren.
-
- Tuesday, Aug. 13.--Went to say mass at the Church of St. Ulrick, at
- the altar of St. Afra, whose body was shown in a glass case over it,
- as it is within the octave of her feast. She was martyred at
- Augsburg, under Domitian. After breakfast, I went to the bank, then
- to the cathedral, where there was a high mass _de requiem_; then I
- went to seek the Chanoine Stadler, a great friend of the English. I
- first saw another canon, and the Dean, at the consistorium; spoke
- about England. I found Canon Stadler at a convent called _of the
- English nuns_, because founded by English 200 years ago; an
- examination of the girls under education was going on. The
- Regierung's President and other personages were there. I sat near
- the canon at this for half an hour; then went home to dinner. There
- came to dine a Scotch Kirk minister, who was at the convent which I
- visited, Mr. ---- He is almost a Catholic in doctrine, but is
- connected with the Apostolics in England, and so has, I think, no
- disposition to turn now. Canon Stadler came late to dinner, and
- persuaded me to put off our journey to Munich from the three to the
- seven o'clock train. He took us to the Church of the Holy Cross, to
- see the miraculous Host, which, in 1194, was stolen by a woman of
- Augsburg, taken home, and wrapped in wax. After five years, she
- confessed it, and brought it back. On opening the wax, the priest
- found the appearance changed into that of flesh and blood. It has
- been preserved ever since, and has been the means of many miracles.
- We saw it in an _ostensoire_, quite bright-red. The choir of the
- church is surrounded with pictures on the subject. We then went to
- the convent again, from, whence the Scotch gentleman took me to the
- bishop, whom we found near the cathedral. He talked no French, and I
- {302} recommended England as I could in Latin. We went to the Canon
- Stadler's house, where the Phillippses were waiting; we parted from
- him, and came and had tea at the Hof, and then took railway to
- Munich. We reached the Bayerische Hof, Hôtel de Bavière, at 9 3/4.
- This is one of the largest hotels in Europe, they say.
-
- Wednesday, Aug. 14. Vigil of the Assumption.--I said mass in the
- cathedral, which is near our hotel. It is a high, large building,
- but very much disfigured. We all stayed at home till 12; then
- Phillipps and I went to call on Dr. Döllinger, who was out. I had to
- dine alone, as it is reckoned wrong for a priest to _manger gras_ on
- a fasting day in public. After dinner, we all went to see the new
- Church of St. Louis, decorated splendidly by the King. Then the
- Church of St. Blaise in the faubourg, also decorated by him, both
- built by the town. We thought them very beautiful, but decidedly
- falling short of the right mark in point of style. In Ludwig Church
- is a _chef d'oeuvre_ of Cornelius, "The Last Judgment." It is not to
- our taste, nor to the king's; for Cornelius went away to Berlin,
- disgusted with the king's not admiring it. Among other defects,
- there are no real altars, only portable stones to be let into
- scagliola altars, which in Ludwig Kirche are all exactly one like
- the other. At 7, I went to the Franciscan convent, to confess to
- Père Constantius. He introduced me to the Provincial and community
- at supper. I spoke of England in lame Latin. At supper, in the
- hotel, we were joined by Mr. Wake, son of the Rev. Mr. Wake, of
- Courtene Hall, who recognised me, after about seventeen years. He
- alarmed us with his idea that a war will break out between France
- and England about Pritchard. What a war would this be!
-
- Thursday, Aug. 15. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.--I had
- some difficulty in getting leave to hear the Phillippses'
- confessions, but I succeeded, and said mass at nine, during the high
- mass, with drums and all sort of music. We went again to mass at 11;
- then Phillipps and I went and found Döllinger, who came back and
- dined with us at the _table d'hôte_. Then we walked with him to see
- Mr. and Mrs. Phillipps. He is a Professor of law, son of an
- Englishman {303} in Prussia. Then we went to see old Mr. Gorres, one
- of the first minds in Germany. At 8, we went to tea with Mr. and
- Mrs. Rio, the sister to Jones of Llanarth. We found there Mr.
- Dugdale, a northern English priest, and others. The conversation was
- very agreeable. Mrs. Rio is very infirm with sciatica, or settled
- pains like it.
-
- Friday, Aug. 16.--Mass at the cathedral at 11. We went with Mr.
- Dugdale to the Pinacotheke, a grand building of this king,
- containing the vast collection of pictures which I saw with Lefevre
- at Schlussheim in 1820. What struck me most was the gallery on one
- side of the building, ornamented like Raphael's, in the Vatican. We
- dined at two; then went to see the new palace, which is opened at
- times regularly to all visitors. We went among a party of all sorts.
- I was recognised by Lady Lowther--that was, at least. This was from
- Lowther Castle, 1816. In the palace, the floors are beautiful
- wood-work, inlaid. Some rooms have fine pictures of the former
- German history, of Charlemagne, Barbarossa, Rodolph of Hapsburg, &c.
- The hall of audience is surrounded with striking colossal statues of
- ancient dukes of Bavaria. We cannot say much for the two rooms of
- Bavarian beauties; the king's fondness for them is not edifying,
- they say. From the palace we went to the studios; at half-past 7
- went to tea at Dr. Döllinger's, and met almost all whom we visited
- yesterday, and, besides, Mr. Windischmann, canon of the cathedral. I
- got a long conversation with him in English. He became very zealous
- for promoting the prayers for England. There was there Mr. Raby, of
- Leicester, who was at Munich with his mother; his sister is become a
- nun at Nymphenburg.
-
- Saturday, Aug. 17.--Said mass at the cathedral at 8½. After
- breakfast, I visited Mr. and Mrs. Farrell and their family, who are
- in this hotel. He is uncle to John Farrell. She said she had seen me
- at Leamington with Mr. Martyn. Then Count de Senufft Pilsach,
- Austrian ambassador, to whom Mr. Phillipps brought a note from
- Father Lythgoe, called. We then walked to the palace, and saw the
- rich chapel, in which many relics are kept in cases of gold and
- silver, with pearls and jewels, some carved by Benvenuto Cellini;
- the right hand {304} of St. John Baptist and St. Chrysostom among
- them, and some earth stained with the blood of Our Lord. A little
- triptic used on the scaffold by Mary Queen of Scots. We then went to
- the palace of the Duc de Leuchtenberg, son of Eugene Beauharnais.
- One room full of modern paintings, and another much larger, with a
- very choice collection of the Italian and Flemish schools, struck
- me. Dr. Döllinger dined with us, and then took us to the Public
- Library, a magnificent building, calculated for 1,000,000 volumes,
- and containing now 500,000, lately built by Ludwig I. We stayed a
- long time looking about it, and then went on to the University,
- another new building, very splendid. Dr. Döllinger is rector this
- next year. The library here is of 200,000 vols.; he is the chief
- librarian of it. We returned at 8, looking in, _en passant_, to the
- Ludwig Kirche. A beautiful sunset.
-
- Sunday, August 18.--I went by invitation to say mass at the Auer
- Kirche, _i.e._, the new Gothic church in the suburb Au. Trusting to
- the fine sunset of last night, I took no umbrella, and very nearly
- got a wetting before I got home. At 9, Mr. Schlager called on me. He
- is studying the law, and looks so smart that I did not of myself
- recognize him. We went to high mass at the Theatine church. At 12, I
- went with Mr. Windischmann, to be presented to the Nuncio, Mgr.
- Vichi, to plead for England. I could not do much, as other visitors
- came in. After dinner, we went to seek vespers unsuccessfully at the
- Theatine church. At 5, we took a carriage, and went to the Sisters
- of Charity, where we got on badly for want of German, and saw
- nothing but the church, where service was going on. We then went to
- the public cemetery, near it. It is in the style of Père la Chaise,
- but inferior. What is remarkable is the place where the bodies newly
- dead are exposed for three days before burial. We saw several behind
- glass windows, dressed out and adorned with flowers. After coming
- home, I went at 7½ to Professor Görres's. He has open house for the
- circle of his friends every Sunday evening. Dr. Döllinger wished us
- all to go, but Phillipps thought it hardly proper without an
- invitation. There were twelve at supper; among them Dr. {305}
- Döllinger, Phillipps, Moy. The party was very agreeable, though I
- knew nothing of the German conversation, except what Dr. Döllinger
- translated to me. I came home at half-past 10.
-
- Monday, August 19.--Said mass at the cathedral. Mrs. Dugdale came
- after breakfast, and went with us to the Glyptotheke, where are some
- fine pieces of ancient sculpture. I suppose the AEgina marbles are
- among the most valued. They are of an earlier style than the perfect
- models of Greek sculpture, finely designed but stiff. The whole
- thing is too heathenish and so immodest. It is a mystery to me how
- all these sights are consistent with Catholic principle, especially
- the Venuses and Adonises by Christian masters, like Canova. The
- building is very noble. We went thence to what was far more
- satisfactory, the Basilica, built on the plan of the old church of
- St. Paul, at Rome, 300 feet long, with two ranges of glorious holy
- pictures, one range being the whole history of our English St.
- Boniface. I hope this is there as a memorial of what Germany owes to
- England, and as an excitement to pray for us. I came back to receive
- Mr. Schlager to dine with me at the _table d'hôte_. Phillipps dined
- at Mr. Rio's, where I joined them at 3, having first gone with Mr.
- Schlager to his lodgings. Rio talked splendidly about England, and
- Dr. Döllinger promised to write articles to call to prayer for it. I
- came home at 5, said office in the cathedral, and at 7½ we went to
- supper with Dr. and Mrs. Phillipps, where we met all the circle, the
- Görreses, Windischman, Döllinger, Rios, Mrs. Raby, Mrs. Dugdale, &c.
-
- Tuesday, August 20. St. Bernard.--Mass at the cathedral at 10. I
- took a carriage and went with Mrs. Dugdale and Mrs. Raby to
- Nymphenburg, where is the principal convent of the English nuns, of
- which I saw a house at Augsburg. There are ten houses in Bavaria;
- Mrs. Raby's daughter is a novice there. We stopped a good while, and
- I hope a good step was taken in my work. Mr. Dugdale promises to
- follow up ardently the begging prayers. I came home before 2, and
- stayed at home till 5, when we went with the two boys to a grand
- dinner with le Comte de Zeuft, {306} the Austrian ambassador. There
- were twenty at table: the Nuncio, Mr. Aebel, minister of the
- interior, the chief Catholic physician, a Polish Countess Kitzka,
- and all our friends the Professors were there. I sat between Dr.
- Phillipps and Windischman. We stayed till near 10. The Comte de
- Zeuft promised great help for England. It is my first opening in
- Austria. Mrs. Aebel assured me that the Government would be well
- pleased with whatever was done in this way, which is a great point
- secured. I also had an interesting talk on the subject with the
- Countess Kitzka, who proposed prayer for Poland also on Saturdays.
- This was, in short, a productive evening.
-
- Wednesday, August 21.--Mass at the cathedral. I walked with Mr.
- Dugdale to the convent of Sisters of Providence joining the great
- hospital we failed in entering on Sunday. We got one nun who spoke a
- little French to show us over the hospital, but we made little of
- gaining prayers. I found palpitations coming from the walk, and so I
- came home and stayed till I went with Phillipps to dine at 4 with
- the Nuncio. The chief guests were Comte de Zeuft and Baron Frujberg,
- _conseilleur d'état_, and twelve or fourteen more. The Nuncio took
- charge of the little prayer for England adopted by the Belgian
- bishops, and promised to get ample indulgences at Rome for the
- masses, communions, and prayers for England. We came home and took
- Mrs. Phillipps to tea at Dr. Döllinger's, Baron Frujberg, Rio,
- Hüffler, the historian of the German popes of the 11th century.
-
- Thursday, August 22.--Mass at 8. I stayed at home writing to Dr.
- Wiseman from 11 to 12; then went with Dr. Döllinger to be presented
- to Madame di Frujberg, and her sister Amelia de Mongeras. Talked
- about England and prayers. At home I found Comte de Zeuft and the
- Nuncio paying a visit. Then dinner at 2½. Mr. Windischman took me to
- see the Archbishop, 84 years old. He has his intellect quite sound,
- and was favourable to the prayers, but not very zealous. I came home
- and stayed till 7, writing to Mrs. Beaumont and Mrs. Canning, saying
- office, &c. At 7 Mr. and Mrs. Rio and two children, Dr. Phillipps,
- {307} Döllinger, and Windischman came to tea and supper, so a
- parting visit. Little Miss Rio got sick with the smoke in the salon.
-
- Friday, August 23.--Mass at 7½ in the cathedral for the last time.
- After breakfast a visit from Mr. Dugdale and old Görres, and a talk
- with Mr. Woodwich, a very nice young Anglican, whom Phillipps met at
- Cologne, and came yesterday to Munich. The horses came for our
- departure at 11, but we did not start till ¼ to 1. I sat in the
- carriage saying office. We had a pretty journey, approaching a line
- of fine mountains. We reached a town called Tegern See, and we put
- up at Le Troitteur Hof. When we came to dine, we found ourselves
- worse off than we have yet been. No bread without aniseed, and
- hardly enough to eat for all but me, who took meat. However, this is
- an interesting spot. Out of my window I have a sweet view of the
- lake and mountains opposite, with a bright moon upon them.
-
- Saturday, August 24.--I went before 7 to find the old priest to say
- mass. The church is a handsome one attached to a large building
- which once was a Benedictine convent, but was turned by the old
- king, my former acquaintance, into a country palace. Prince Charles
- lives here now. The old priest was one of the monks. There are four
- now alive out of forty-three. We started at 9, and went through
- beautiful mountain scenery, especially that part of the road which
- lies along the bank of Achensee, a beautiful blue lake. We dined at
- about 2, at Achenthal, just before coming to the lake. We were
- delayed by a spring breaking, and only reached Schwartz, a town of
- 4,500 people. The inn La Poète is kept by Anthony Reiner, one of a
- family of three men and a sister, who about 1830 were 2½ years in
- England, singing Tyrolese songs, and made £4,000. Mrs. Ambrose heard
- them at Sir Thomas Acland's. We had tea in the billiard-room, and
- saw some beautiful play.
-
- Sunday, Aug. 25.--I said mass at 6½, at the Franciscan church. In
- the convent are twenty-one priests and twenty-five students, besides
- lay brothers. I recommended England and was kindly heard. After
- breakfast we went together to the parish church; at 8 a sermon
- begins--we heard the end of it, preached by a Franciscan. Mass
- follows the {308} sermon. The style of music, both here and in the
- Franciscan church, where I heard part of the high mass, is high
- figured. We set off for Innspruck after. It was raining all the way.
- We arrived at 2 at the Golden Sun (die goldene Sonne), in a fine
- wide street. We had dinner, during which we were surprised and
- pleased by a visit from Mrs. Amherst and Mary. She has a house in
- this street, and saw us pass by. Three daughters are with her. Soon
- after we went to see the Franciscan church, in which is the famous
- monument of Maximilian, and round it bronze figures of illustrious
- personages, and on the side a marble monument of Hoffa. They are not
- all saints, and it is thought to be an unbecoming ornament to a
- church. They certainly cause distractions by the number of people
- who come to see the sculpture, which makes this small church almost
- like a Glyptotheke. After this, Mrs. Amherst took me to the
- Redemptorists, where Father Prost talks English, and received me
- most cordially, and presented me to the Rector. I then went to the
- Franciscan convent, where, as at Munich, I saw the fathers at
- supper, and recommended England to the Provincial, who promised to
- convey my wishes to the 300 subjects of the 10 houses of his
- province. In this little house there are eight priests. He sent a
- man to take me to the Decanus, living near the parish church, to ask
- for leave to hear confessions to-morrow. He was a most amiable, kind
- old man, and promised to speak for me to all the clergy. I went to
- meet our party at tea with the Amhersts at 7, and had a very
- pleasant evening. Home at 9¼.
-
- Monday, Aug. 26th.--Father Prost gave himself to me all to-day. I
- went to say mass at the Redemptorist church; breakfasted there; then
- went out with him to the hospital of the Sisters of Charity, where
- there are 15 nuns, and it is the mother house of about eight houses
- in all. They are under the direction of the Redemptorists. Then to
- the Jesuits' college, where we saw the Rector; then to dine with the
- Redemptorists at 12. They are about ten in number. The Rector is
- most zealous for my cause. At 2 we walked out of the town to a fine
- Premonstratensian {309} abbey to which belong 42 monks; but about
- half are employed as coadjutors to parish priests. The Abbot
- received us very kindly, and showed us all over his house, which has
- a great suite of fine rooms, full of pictures of great personages.
- We came back to settle for my departure to-morrow; and lastly
- visited the Servites. They have a fine large house in the great
- street. Their number is only fifteen. Lastly, we called on a lady
- who can talk English, having learned it, where Father Prost did, in
- America. I went at 6½ to tea with the Amhersts, among whom I also
- found William just come. I went home to stay at the Redemptorists,
- in order to be able to say mass to-morrow. The Rector and Father
- Prost sat some time with me.
-
- Tuesday, Aug. 27th.--Said mass at 3½; at 4½, Father Prost saw me in
- the still-wagen, or omnibus, for Brixen. I forgot to say that
- Phillipps agreed with me to meet at Caldaron on Thursday. They went
- off yesterday by Landeck, Marenn, &c., for finer scenery. I took my
- way to see the Bishop of Brixen. My principal companions were four
- students at the Inspruck University, going out for their vacations.
- They were two couples of brothers, one called Ehrhart, the other
- Benz, all of Inspruck. The weather was become beautiful, and we went
- through splendid scenery. We went over the Brenner mountain, and
- were going till 8 o'clock at night. We stopped three times for
- refreshment: at Matraey, Strarzing, and Mittewald. We came to the
- Kreutz Hof--the Cross Inn--at Brixen, where I took my bed. First, I
- went to see a pleasing old priest, by name Graffanara, who is
- Domscholasticus here, and whom I saw by chance at Inspruck. He told
- of the Bishop being gone to Botzen, and introduced me to the Decanus
- and Parish Priest, to settle for mass to-morrow.
-
- Wednesday, Aug. 28th. Great St. Augustine's.--I was up soon after 3,
- and went to the Pffarr-Kirche, where I said mass at 4. The Pffarr
- treated me with extraordinary respect and kindness, and came back
- with me to my inn, where I started again, with the same company, to
- Botzen, in another still-wagen, at 5. We followed the downward
- course of a beautiful torrent, through rocks and mountains {310} all
- the way, till we reached Botzen, at 12. I went to the Kaiser's
- Krone, and dined at the _table d'hôte_ at 12½, next to an English
- gentleman, by name Harley, who was chiefly taken up with attacks on
- cookery out of England. He was a man of much information, and gave
- gloomy accounts of the prospect of war with France. His father was
- an admiral. I stayed at home till 4½, then went out to the Capuchins
- and then to the Capellani--the Paroco being out. The chief Capellano
- came back with me to the hotel, and waited till the Bishop of Brixen
- came in. He had been out in the country. I was admitted to see him,
- but quite disappointed in my hopes of finding help from him. He gave
- me no signs of zeal, and hardly spoke of England. Perhaps it may be
- for the better some way. No doubt disappointments are good for me,
- and so thank God for this one. I afterwards went to the Franciscans,
- where I found real sympathy in one of the fathers, with whom I
- walked in the garden. This was a refreshment after the Bishop. In
- the evening I had a visit from the young Baron Giovanelli, whose
- father has some authority about sending people to see Maria Mörl. He
- could hardly speak Italian, and though very civil, did not help me
- much.
-
- Thursday, 29th.--The good Bishop sent me to-day a present of a large
- number of religious prints, with German instructions, and showed
- thus his good will to me; and I hope it may be well for my cause. At
- 7½ I said mass in the cathedral. At 10 I went in a one-horse
- carriage to Calddaron, or more rightly Caltern. I went directly to
- see Father Capistrano, confessor to Maria Mörl, at a Franciscan
- convent, and then dined at the White Horse inn. At 4½, according to
- his direction, I went to the convent of the Tertiariae, where Maria
- Mörl has been for ten years, being removed from her father's house
- by the Bishop, at her own request, to avoid being seen by so many
- people. I waited in the convent church till Father Capistrano, who
- is a tall and venerable monk, I suppose of forty-five years old,
- came to call me, with eight or nine other persons, to see the
- _estatica_. (N.B. Father Capistrano told me that the Bishop of
- Brixen is very deaf, and probably understood nothing of {311} what I
- talked about, which explains all my disappointment.) We went into a
- small room within her convent, rather darkened, where the first
- sight of Maria on her knees upon her bed was most striking. She
- kneels with her head and eyes fixed upwards, her hands joined before
- her breast, just below the chin, and her body leaning forwards in a
- position out of the centre of gravity, in which, ordinarily, no one
- could continue without support. It is most moving to see her thus--I
- think more so than in any of the other positions which she assumed.
- This was the time when on every Thursday she goes through the
- contemplation of the Agony of Our Lord; and so, soon after we came
- in, she being quite unconscious of what goes on around her, began to
- make signs in her throat of earnest emotion, and then, clenching her
- hands together, she dropped her head over them, her long, flowing
- hair being thrown forward over her face, as it were accompanying our
- Lord in the commencement of His prayer in the garden; after about
- five minutes thus, she suddenly bends down, placing her face between
- her knees, as when our Lord was prostrate in His agony. After
- another five minutes, she rises, her face again fixed with
- expression of intense earnestness on heaven, and her arms extended
- back downwards, as expressing perfect resignation. After five or ten
- minutes thus, she returns calmly to her original attitude of prayer,
- and thus remained till Father Capistrano spoke to her by name,
- saying a few words almost indistinctly, and she instantly returned
- to herself, reclined back on her bed, and, without exertion of
- moving her limbs, appeared simply recumbent, with the bed-cover over
- her whole body. I did not see her rise again, but this is done
- instantly without effort, in the same way. The moment that she was
- thus awakened from the ecstasy, she looked round on us all with
- great good-humour, and smiled; and, being forbidden to speak, she
- made many signs, asking questions of some whom she knew before. One
- priest, il Conte Passi, offered her some cotton perfumed from the
- body of Sta. Maria Maddalena di Pazzi; but she would not have it,
- nor smell it, refusing it in a truly pleasant way. I spoke of
- praying for England, and she nodded graciously, but did not take
- much {312} apparent notice. I suppose she does it about nothing but
- what comes by obedience. If the conversation had a pause, she
- immediately became again absorbed in God till Father Capistrano
- recalled her again. After a proper time, he gave us signs to retire;
- on which she earnestly made signs for a cartoon-box full of holy
- prints to be brought, and she began with great earnestness to turn
- them over, seeming to recollect herself very intently. She then gave
- me two, and afterwards another. I was struck when I saw the first
- was a figure of St. George, as she had not heard my name I knew.
- Afterwards, I supposed she might allude only to England, as she knew
- I was English. Soon after, she fell back into ecstasy as she lay,
- and we went away. I walked down to the inn with Conte Passi and a
- priest of the place, who visits her nearly every day. I began a
- letter, when, about 6, I was agreeably surprised by seeing Phillipps
- and his party drive up. He and I went to the Franciscan convent, but
- could not see Father Capistrano. Conte Passi and I slept in the same
- room, and into a third bed tumbled some one else, I thought, like
- the ostler, after we were in bed. I slept none the worse, and why
- should I?
-
- Friday, Aug. 30.--Said mass in the parish church at eight. Phillipps
- after breakfast went and had a long conversation with Father
- Capistrano, who received to-day a letter from the Bishop of Trent,
- to give leave for all of us to see the _estatica_. Phillipps came
- back with wonderful accounts of Father Capistrano's views of the
- future in the Church. He has no bright anticipations. I wrote all
- the morning, letters to Dr. Döllinger, Signor Giovanelli, and Mr.
- LeSage Ten Broek. We dined at 1. At 2½ we all went to the convent
- church, where, as yesterday, P. Capistrano came to take us to la
- Mörl. Three o'clock, being the time of Our Lord's death, this is the
- subject of her contemplation at that time every Friday. Soon after
- we came in, from the attitude of prayer in which we found her as
- yesterday; she again clasped her hands, and, looking up with an
- expression of suffering, she continued for some time to make a sort
- of sobbing noise, and stertation, as I have seen people dying of
- apoplexy; this grew more painful till, exactly at {313} three, she
- dropped her head forward, and her hands yet clasped hung down before
- her and so she remained quite motionless, still leaning forward
- beyond the perpendicular, "_inclinato capite emisit spiritum_." This
- continued till, at one of those almost inaudible suggestions of the
- confessor, she fell back on the bed, as yesterday, but still in
- ecstasy, and extended her hands in the form of a crucifix. The
- fingers were guttered over the palm of the hands, but yet we saw
- plainly in the palm the sacred stigma. I saw it yesterday outside
- both her hands, quite plainly, as she was distributing the prints.
- The marks are not as of an open wound, but red cicatrices like those
- represented in pictures of Our Saviour when risen from the dead.
- Father Capistrano said that she eats a little bread and fruit
- occasionally, not every day; she communicates three or four times a
- week; she sleeps generally in the night, I understood, but her
- spirit still continues in a less degree of contemplation. She had a
- younger sister with her in the convent, to wait on her. The Emperor
- allows her 400 florins a year. On more solemn feasts, the ecstasy is
- more intense, and she then appears for a time raised above the bed,
- touching it only with the tips of her feet. The priest whom I saw
- yesterday says that he has himself passed his hand at those times
- under her knees without touching them. It is a rule that no money is
- given by visitors either to her or the convent. We went away, and
- prepared for our departure about 4. I engaged a small one-horse
- carriage to go to _Egna_ in Italian, in German _Neumarkt_, intending
- to see the _Addolorata_, and to meet the Phillippses again at
- Venice. I began to have a distaste to the rude-looking driver, at
- the first sight, still more, when I found that the carriage belonged
- to a priest who had come from Egna this morning. I made it straight
- for time by taking him with me. A second nuisance was, finding, when
- I set off, that Phillipps had to go to the same place, as his first
- stage towards Trent. In a narrow road down the hill, out of Caldaro,
- we met an immense number of carts, loaded with hay, and drawn by
- oxen, from eighty to a hundred, which was a good delay, and
- Phillipps's carriage got terribly scratched in passing one. At {314}
- Egna, I put up at the Krono. I went out to see a priest, who took me
- to the Franciscans about saying mass tomorrow. I preached England.
-
- Saturday, Aug. 31.--I fell into the hands of the sulky driver of
- yesterday, who undertook to find me a mule to go over the mountains
- at once to Capriana, but he came last night to say none was to be
- found; I heard before that there was danger of this in harvest time.
- I therefore first said mass at the Franciscans', at 3 o'clock,
- doubtful whether it was not uncanonically early, and at 4 went with
- my friend driving me, with one horse on the left of the pole, to
- Cavallesi, a small town in the mountains, which we reached at 8
- o'clock. There I saw the physician of Dominica Lazzari, whom Count
- Passi told me to go to. He was very civil, and recommended me a
- pleasant guide, who at 9 set off, walking by the pony which I rode
- to Cavallesi. The day was beautiful, and not too hot for me, though
- it was for him on foot. It was a most interesting, picturesque ride
- of 2¼ hours, reminding me of my Sicilian and other rides long since,
- and I was surprised how this seemed to agree with me now. Capriana
- is a little very poor village, occupying a spot on an open space,
- high among the mountains. The very first cottage in the body of the
- town, and one of the poorest, is where this wonderful being spends
- her suffering days. The Medico Yoris had written me a note to the
- primissario, or second priest to the curate, who is Dominica's
- confessor, who might have helped me about seeing her; but he was not
- at home, so we went to the house at once. The door of the little
- place, a part of a building, where Dominica lives with her sister,
- was locked. The sister was out. I heard her groaning slightly at
- every breath. She made something of an answer when my guide knocked.
- He went to seek her sister, and came back saying that she begged us
- to delay a little, as others had been with her, and she was much
- fatigued. So we went to the Osteria, and got the best they could
- give, which was a _brodo d'acqua_, in English, I fancy, tea-kettle
- broth. This shows that the place is not chosen for its riches to be
- honoured by God with His wonders. After this pause we returned to
- the little house, {315} which has a Tyrolese roof overhanging, and a
- little gallery outside her door. The sister, who is married and has
- her children about her, took us in, and in an inner room we saw the
- Addolorata in her bed. Her appearance naturally will not have been
- interesting, like that of Maria Mörl, but rather of an ordinary
- young countrywoman, of low stature, like her sister. She has
- ordinarily the appearance of great pain and suffering; but when I
- spoke to her about England, she lifted her eyes and moved her hands
- in a way more earnest than _l'estatica_, and showed great feeling at
- the thought of its conversion. Now for her appearance: her face was
- almost all covered with clotted blood, which flowed, I suppose,
- yesterday morning, for so it does every Friday, from the punctures
- as of thorns on her brow. These were not, as I expected, irregularly
- placed as by a crown of thorns made at hazard, but they formed a
- line close together on the forehead, and do not go round the head to
- the back part. Her legs were gathered up as if the sinews were
- contracted; her body, the doctor told me, is all covered with sores,
- which, the more that is done to cure, the worse they grow. She keeps
- her hands clenched before her heart, and groans slightly with every
- breath. On her hands were seen stigmata, much more marked than Maria
- Mörl, like fresh wounds by a nail passing through and sinking into
- the flesh. Her sister said the same was the case with her side and
- feet. I only spoke to her a little about England, and was delighted
- at her manner then, which shows how superior she is to her pains. It
- seems to distress her to be too near her, and as I have learned
- since it does. She is always hot; her sister was fanning her all the
- time, and in the depth of winter it is the same thing, when snow
- drives into her room. She also gives her prints; she made her sister
- show her prints out of a little case, and when she has chosen them
- she kisses them and gives them to each with great kindness. There
- were a young man and woman there, who offered money for them to her
- sister, but she will take nothing. The sight of her is not at first
- so striking and pleasing as of la Mörl, but the remembrance is more
- impressive. It seems a state more meritorious, more humble. It is
- more poor, and patient. {316} Having been delayed so long, I could
- not get to Cavallesi till 3; the sulky face of the driver betokened
- no good for my return; the horse, too, he said was ill, and in fine,
- he brought me to Egna just too late for the still-wagen to Lavorno,
- and I was not so patient as I ought to have been after seeing that
- example, but I was helped by it a little. I had to take a carriage
- for myself and the same miserable driver, who was going to sleep all
- the way, and grunted at me once when I awoke him. I got to a nice
- inn at Lavorno, the white house again.
-
- Sunday, Sept. 1.--I started at 5 by a still-wagen for Trent, all
- alone in it. I came to the Rose Inn, and waited to say mass at the
- Church di S. Maria Maggiora, where the Council of Trent was held,
- and prayed, as usual on Sundays, for the gift of Faith, which was
- appropriate here. The church is quite uninteresting in appearance. I
- breakfasted at a cafe, and went about my way of travelling; then at
- ¼ to 11 went and heard the end of a high mass. I thought to be in
- time for all. After it I was very happy in getting myself introduced
- to the Bishop, who was extremely agreeable, and said he prayed daily
- for England, and promised to recommend it to Maria la Mörl, and to
- all the clergy. I left, as if I need take no more trouble about
- Trent. I went to the Rosa, and stayed there quiet till dinner at
- 12½, and then till 4, writing my long days of late in the Journal.
- At 4, I got into a carriage carrying four inside to Roveredo, where
- I got to the Corona, and went to bed at 8½ or 9.
-
- Monday, Sept. 2.--I set off soon after 3½ with an old _vetturino_,
- who rather displeased me last night in making his bargain, by his
- flattering way; but I found him a nice old man, and very civil. We
- got to Bosketto, on the banks of the Adige (which indeed we followed
- all day), at 7¼. I said mass and breakfasted. Then we went on to
- dine at a single house, called Ospitaletto. We stayed from 12 to 2;
- I wrote two letters. We then started and got to Verona at 4, to the
- Hotel di Londra. I took a _laquais de place_, and walked to Count
- Persico's house. I was sorry to find him in the country. Then to the
- Jesuit Noviciate, where I {317} thought I might possibly find
- Connolly. The Superior showed me Padre Odescalchi's room, where he
- passed his noviciate. I recommended myself to his prayers. I had
- been reading on the road his memoirs, given me at Louvain. The
- Superior promised to recommend England. I went then to the
- cathedral, and the Bishop being out, I saw the Vicario, who kindly
- promised to speak for me to the Bishop. I then went into the
- cathedral, where there was a brilliant illumination, and a most
- solemn benediction, and then a litany before the altar of the
- Blessed Virgin, which reminded me of the holy litanies of Rome. I
- have seen nothing like this on the Continent, nor have I seen a town
- so full of respectable clergy in every part. Came home and to bed at
- 8½.
-
- Tuesday, Sept. 3rd.--Started at 4 with my new _vetturino_, who
- cheated me as usual, but was civil. It rained almost all day. I said
- mass at a place called Montebello, and got to Vicenza to dine at
- 11½. Then started for Padua with a new _vetturino_, and had for
- company an old and a young Roman priest. The old one was Bighi, a
- well-known professor, who taught Dr. Wiseman and S. Sharples, &c.,
- and was full of kindness to me. I talked myself almost hoarse with
- him. They stopped at Padua. I went on railroad to Venice. I sat by a
- priest of Illyricum of the _scuole pie_ of St. Joseph Calasanctius;
- but what was wonderful was my being in the midst of Mrs. Neville and
- her family, whom Mrs. Rio desired me to see, coming back from a
- visit to Vicenza. We kept together all across the Sayburne, and made
- a great acquaintance. I got into a gondola, and had to go a great
- round to put down another young man, who had already engaged it. I
- had a great battle about my fare, and for a wonder I conquered. I
- waited a little, having my chocolate, when Phillipps and all came
- in, and we made a happy meeting, giving an account of our respective
- travels.
-
- Wednesday, Sept. 4th.--I went at 7 to say mass at San Marco, but was
- obliged to wait till 8, as they are very strict here not to allow a
- priest to mass without leave from the Patriarch, except the first
- day, when, as to me, leave {318} is given. I breakfasted at a cafe,
- then went with Phillipps to St. Georgio dei Greci, and heard a high
- mass of the schismatic Greeks, of whom there is a colony at Venice;
- the occasion was the octave of the Assumption, old style. The mass
- was all celebrated behind a close screen; which is open part of the
- time, but not during the most solemn part. After the consecration,
- the host and chalice are carried outside this screen in procession,
- and presented for adoration; one man before us was making his
- prostrations all the time. The priests had chasubles, hanging evenly
- all round to near the ankles; they lifted them to use their hands;
- there is no musical instrument, but singing all the time. I then
- went to the Cancellaria to get my licence to say mass, and then to
- Mrs. Neville at the Corte dell' Albero. She soon after took me to
- the Armenian College, where the examinations were just finished.
- There are eighteen scholars, with two priests over them, in an old
- grand palace of a ruined family of Pesaro. The _vicario_ and several
- others from the island were there. We talked much about England. I
- came to dinner at the Tavola, returned at 4, Then we went to the
- Island of St. Lazzaro, to see Padre Pasquale and the Archbishop
- Sutrio Somal (as the name sounds), great friends of Phillipps at
- Rome in 1831, and of mine, too. When we came back. I went in a
- gondola to Mrs. Neville, and back to tea.
-
- Tuesday, Sept. 5.--This being the feast of St. Lorenzo Giustiniani,
- I went out at 6¾ to find the church where his body is laid. He died
- in the very hotel where we are. The church I went to in a gondola in
- rain to St. Pietro at Castello--the ancient patriarchal church--and
- said mass at the high altar, where he lies. I walked back in rain,
- without umbrella, as I lost mine yesterday. I bought another. At 12,
- Padre Raffaelle, an Armenian priest, Mrs. Neville's confessor, to
- whom she introduced me yesterday, called and took me to the
- patriarch, Cardinal Monico, who received most graciously my
- propositions for England. I am to call again with the Phillippses on
- Saturday, and get something more exactly settled about the prayers;
- we then went across the Great Canal to the Del Redentore, where
- {319} is a convent of eighty Capuchins. The church is reckoned a
- _chef d'oeuvre_ of Palladio, built _ex voto_ by the Republic, after
- a plague. We saw the guardian, who is also provincial; he learned
- our want, and promised for his own house and ten others of the
- province. I came back to dinner. A Greek priest whom Phillipps got
- acquainted with the other day, came to dine with us, and sat till 9.
- His conversation was very interesting as showing the ideas of the
- Greeks about the Roman Church, and their doctrines on many points
- varying from ours. What a terrible evil is that of separation of
- nearly half of Christendom! The greater reasons to hasten the
- reunion of England, that we may draw the others.
-
- Friday, Sept. 6.--The two Neville boys came with me to St. Marco,
- and served my mass, as their mother had desired. After breakfast, I
- called on Mrs. Neville, who was not up, then went to Palazzo Pasaro,
- to Padre Raffaelle. He came with me first to the Franciscans; the
- guardian promised for his house of fifty, and for three or four at
- some distance from him. Then to the Dominicans, who are fifteen, a
- new establishment a year old. Then to the Jesuits, who are eight in
- number, only this summer returned to their old church, which is one
- of the most remarkable for its ornaments in Venice, white marble
- inlaid with black. I remembered it well from twenty-six years ago.
- The superior, Padre Ferrario, is going to Rome to-morrow, and
- promised to see about my matters there with Cardinal Acton and the
- general of the Jesuits. I came home in haste, and found Phillipps,
- and Mrs. Neville and her friends with her, gone to St. Marco, where
- we followed them to see the treasury--_i.e._, the inestimably rich
- treasures brought by Doge Dandolo from Constantinople, just before
- it was taken by the Turks. The chief thing is an antependium and a
- reredos of massive gold, with splendid pearls and enamels. Mrs.
- Neville took us to the Convent of the Visitation, where is preserved
- the heart of St. Francis of Sales, which was brought from France
- when the Revolution drove off all religious. They could not show
- this relic; but promised prayers, and to write to other houses.
- There were there {320} forty nuns. Back to dinner at the _table
- d'hôte_. After dinner we went all together to see the only large
- Gothic church in Venice, called St. ---- di Frari, which is the
- Venetian for Frati; it used to be the Franciscan church, and their
- house is turned into a public Archivium. Phillipps said they
- deserved it for having such a palace. The church is a fine one, and
- has some good morsels; but what is most startling, or rather
- glaring, is the immense marble monument to Canova--a pyramid, with a
- heathen procession into it. His heart is here. His right hand in an
- urn at the Arcadinia. We tried at St. Sitorstro (Silvestro) to
- assist at the 40 _ore_, but all was over. We came back by a fine
- star light, and went to St. Marco, where we had ices at Floriano's
- _café_, and heard military music. Canonico Pio Bighi, and his young
- companion Don Giovanni Moneti, joined us, _ad cor. sat._ We came
- home at 9.
-
- Sept. 7th.--Said mass at St. Marco, on the altar where the
- miraculous picture of Our Lady is, by St. Luke. The Greek priest
- told us there existed seventy-five of them. I went at 8½ to the
- Jesuits, to give a letter for Cardinal Acton, about indulgences for
- prayers for England, to Padre Ferrarrio, the Superior, who sets off
- to-day for Rome. I found Mrs. Neville and Father Raffaelle talking
- to him. The latter kindly went around with me to-day again. We went
- first to the Institute of St. Dorothea, founded lately by Conte
- Passi and his brother, which we desired to see. The Superioress was
- out, but another made excellent promises.--15 nuns. Then to St.
- Lucia, to the Sisters of Charity, and another house dependent on
- them. In the latter was an Armenian lady who spoke English, having
- been six years at Hammersmith Convent. The Superioress of the chief
- house spoke of Gentili with great respect; she knew him when she was
- at the house at Verona. She promised me for thirteen houses under
- her authority. Then we went past the Jesuits to a house of Reformed
- Franciscans (Zoccolanti). St. Michele di Marano. Promised for three
- houses as large as this, about twenty-six, and many more smaller.
- This is where Gregory XVI. was educated, made his novitiate, and was
- Superior. We saw the outside of his room; the key could {321} not be
- got. We got back at 12½. I went with Phillipps to the Cardinal
- Patriarch, as appointed before. I gave him the prayer for England
- which I gave to Padre Ferrario, and he promised to speak with him
- also. Thence to the Accademia, where for two hours we looked at the
- pictures and statues. It did not greatly answer me. Thence left our
- cards on the Duc de Levis, who, with his master the Due de Bordeaux,
- is at the Albergo Reale. Then dined. Another _maigre_. After I did
- not go out with them, as I had office to say. At 7½ we had a party
- to tea--the Greek priest, with Mrs. Neville and three children. They
- stayed till past 11.
-
- Monday, Sept. 8. Nativity of Blessed Virgin.--I said mass at S.
- Marco. We went to the high Armenian mass at S. Lazzaro at 10. We
- were a little late. After it we stayed there with our friends the
- fathers till vespers and benediction, at 3. And after that, dinner
- at 4. Mrs. Neville and family were there too. It was an interesting
- day for seeing and conversing. I saw, in the visitors' book, my name
- under Lefevre's, written by him July, 1820. We sat in the cloister,
- with the old Archbishop, &c., till twilight. He made us presents of
- many handsome books printed there. We came back to S. Marco, and sat
- to hear the band, &c. On coming home, at 7½, we were in great demand
- with cards and notes, left by the Duc de Levis, to invite us to the
- Duc de Bordeaux's (Comte de Chombard) salon at 7. We were all thrown
- back by Phillipps having no dresses to go in. So we had to keep easy
- at home.
-
- Sunday, Sept. 9.--Mass at the cathedral (S. Marco). P. Raffaele and
- the Greek priest came to breakfast. At 10 I had a visit from the
- Superioress of the Institute of Sta. Dorothea and a companion. At
- 10½ we went to visit the Duc de Bordeaux, who gave us a quarter of
- an hour's most affable conversation, spoke with great kindness of
- his reception in England, and asked after Dr. Wiseman, &c. His
- confessor, the Abbé Trélouquet, was introduced to us, and came in
- our gondola to Mrs. Neville, of whom we took leave. Mr. Trélouquet
- promised to engage the French royal {322} family in prayers for
- England. He said, the Duc de Bordeaux had spoken of my asking him at
- Oscott. We went then to S. Tommaso, where I left the Phillippses and
- went to the banker, Holme, who is Armenian consul. Then back to S.
- Tommaso, where I found them looking at an extraordinary collection
- of relics made by a priest, who devoted himself to the work when all
- things were in confusion in the revolution. He gave the collection
- to the church, on condition of their being open to the public for
- veneration. The chief relic is some of the blood of Our Lord, in a
- beautiful gold or gilt reliquary. I found there Monsignor Arfi, the
- Pope's Caudatario, and invited for England. I then went to Padre
- Raffaele, at the college, and went with him to see the two brothers,
- priests Cavanis, founders of an excellent institute of _Scuole di
- Carità_. They are in a poor house, with a few companions; one of
- them complained that no one helped them; but they are like their
- patron S. Joseph Calasanctius, losing ground in old age, but with
- hope of better things. P. Raffaele, who has indeed been an angel to
- me in Venice, came with me to the inn where they were at dinner. At
- 4 we left Venice, with pleasant remembrances. We crossed the lagune
- in a procession of boats, and got into the railway carriage, which
- took us to Padua about 7. At the Stella d'Oro I went out to try to
- find the Bishop; but he was not in town.
-
- Tuesday, Sept, 10.--I went to St. Antony's church at 7½ to say mass.
- Before going I met Dr. Roskell, of Manchester, just come with a
- Manchester party on a rapid tour. I could not have the altar of St.
- Antony, which seems always occupied. I spoke to the Superior of the
- house of Conventual Franciscans attached to the church, 50 in
- number, who promised to recommend my cause. I came back in a little
- carriage with Phillipps. We started at 9 for Verona, dined at
- Vicenza; then I took a carriage and called on the Bishop, Monsignor
- Capellari, a good old man, who received me graciously. We stopped in
- going out of Vicenza to see Palladio's Olympic Theatre, built to act
- the OEdipus Tyrannus in 1585. This pretends to nothing but paganism.
- We reached Verona at 7. I went out to see {323} the Bishop, who was
- quite gracious; he begins his retreat with his clergy to-morrow, and
- promised to begin then and recommend England. I then called at Conte
- Persico's, who is in town, but was just gone to the theatre. Home,
- and to bed at 9½.
-
- Wednesday, Sept. 11.--Up soon after 5, and at 7 said mass in St.
- Anastasius, a large church close to the hotel. Soon after Conte
- Persico came to return my visit, and sat a good while with me, then
- with the Phillippses, to whom I introduced him. He is grown very
- old, being now 67. He said he was married two years after I had seen
- him before, and was now by accident in town with his wife. I thought
- him very like his old father. At 10 we went in a carriage to see the
- tombs of the Scaligeri, formerly tyrants of Verona, fine Gothic
- structure; then the Amphitheatre, and the church of St. Zenone,
- where I saw the image of the saint again which I before laughed at,
- as a thing so to be treated, in 1820. I then called at Conte
- Persico's, and saw his lady. At 12½ we set off for Dezenzano, a
- beautiful spot at the town end of the Lake di Garda. We arrived at
- 6, and had a pleasant evening in a little room of the Albergo
- Imperiale, looking over the lake. I wrote to Mrs. Neville and Abbé
- de Baudry.
-
- Thursday, Sept. 12.--There was rain in the night, leaving us a fine
- day without dust. I said mass at 6½ in the parish church. We went to
- dine at the Duc Torri, at Brescia. I went to see the Bishop, who
- received me very courteously. There I met a Philippine lay-brother,
- who introduced me to the church of his order, Sta. Maria della Pace,
- then to five or six of the fathers sitting together. I had a fine
- opportunity of recommending England. They are the only religious
- house in Brescia (of men at least). After dinner at 3 we set off for
- Bergamo, when we came to Albergo Reale at 9 o'clock. I got up to my
- knees in a stream near the road at the wet stage, but hope no harm
- from it.
-
- Friday, Sept. 13.--Anniversary of my first coming abroad, 1819. I
- got up soon after 5, said mass in a church opposite the inn,
- breakfasted at a café, then walked up the beautiful road to the high
- town called the _Città_, where our {324} inn was is the borga.
- Between them there are about 36,000. In the _Città_ I met a priest,
- by name Giuseppe Caffi, belonging to the collegiate church, who,
- when I asked him for Count Papi, volunteered to be my guide
- altogether. He showed me the cathedral, his own church, Sta. Maria,
- and a little convent church, Church of the Benedictine Nuns,
- beautifully gilt. He also went with me to the Bishop, who gave me
- one of the best receptions. By the same good hap as at Verona, the
- priests were in retreat. He introduced me to the Abbate Vittadini,
- conductor of the retreat, who promised to speak of England to the
- clergy. He was already full of zeal for it; he knew a good deal of
- the state of things with us. When I wrote my name, he knew it well,
- and it had a good effect. I went with Abbé Caffi to the palace of
- Count Papi; all were away. He came with us to the hotel, and soon we
- started for Milan. We arrived at 3, and found rooms in the best
- hotel (de la Ville). _Tables d'hôte_ at 5. I said office, and just
- got time to look in the cathedral before dinner, and again after we
- all went. It was beyond my recollections of old. I admired the
- ceiling, which seemed all beautiful openwork; I did not remember
- this. It seemed to be only painted so. How I remember Lord Kinnaird
- taking my mother to it. We tried two other churches to find
- Benediction in vain. Then I went with Phillipps to a bookseller's.
-
- Saturday, Sept. 14.--Up at 5½. I went to say mass at the cathedral,
- and finding that the Roman rite is not allowed in the church alone,
- I was in the happy necessity of celebrating in the chapel of St.
- Charles, in the crypt, which is almost reserved for strangers. I
- waited over two masses. After breakfast we had a visit from Count
- Mellerio, Rosinini's great friend. Phillipps and I went with him to
- his palace, and saw Abbate Polidori, who lives there. Mrs. Ambrose
- came with the carriage to pick us up, and I went to the Church of
- St. Celso, and to the great hospital fitted up for 3,000 patients;
- then to vespers at the Duomo, and at 3½ to dine with Count Mellerio.
- I sat near Polidori. Before we parted he and Signer Mercati seemed
- gained for England. At 6½ we went to a Benediction at the Duomo,
- only of relics {325} of the Passion, and not very solemn. This was
- by occasion of the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross to-day. I
- then went to the Archbishop's palace to find the Grand Vicar, to get
- leave for confessions to-morrow, and without expecting it saw the
- Cardinal himself instead. As Count Mellerio was to prepare my way
- to-morrow, I did not speak of England. When I got home I found
- Mellerio at the inn, bringing a permission from the Grand Vicar. To
- bed after 10. I have got unwell to-day in the inside,--between
- yesterday's _maigre_ and the fruit, I suppose.
-
- Sunday, Sept. 15.--We went together this morning to the old basilica
- of St. Ambrose, where I said mass at the saint's tomb, in the crypt.
- The Phillippses received communion. Then we saw the splendid
- covering of the altar above, in the church. It is exposed only on
- three days at mass--St. Ambrose, SS. Gervase and Protase, and Corpus
- Christi. SS. Gervase and Protase's relics are there, with St.
- Ambrose's. This altar cost to a bishop who gave it, 80,000 sequins
- of gold, about the year 1000. I spoke to the Directeur du Séminaire
- de Chamberry, who was there, and he promised to speak of England. We
- went home to breakfast at 10½. Assisted at high mass in the Duomo
- again; not so solemn as yesterday. The procession of the Blessed
- Sacrament before it did not please me much. After high mass I went
- to call on the Cardinal again. I was not so much disappointed as in
- the case of the Bishop of _Brixen_, for I had heard nothing
- promising about this interview as in the other cases; but I felt as
- one defeated when I went away. I went to the Piazza del Castello to
- see the Contessa del Verme and her sister, English people, converts
- to whom Abbate Vittadini, at Bergamo, recommended me. Her sister,
- Miss Mary Webster, is just about entering the order of the
- Visitation here. The Count came in just when I was gone out, and
- followed me to S. Alessandro, of the Barnabites, which he had heard
- me ask for as I left his house. I brought him to see Phillipps. We
- dined at 3½, and at 4½ went to the Arena, or Amphitheatre, where
- there was a grand _spettacolo nautico e pirotecnico._ The arena was
- full of water, and we had five races of boats, three of men, one of
- {326} women, and one of boys rowing; then a procession of two great
- illuminated galleys filled with musicians; then what struck me most,
- as most new to me, the ascent of fifty fine balloons; then of one
- very large one; then a splendid display of fireworks, ending as
- often with an illuminated palace, with an inscription _alle scienze,
- alle letters, alle arti_, as the spectacle was in honour of the
- Sixth Italian Scientific Congress, now being held here. We got home
- at ¼ to 9; I almost well again.
-
- Monday, September 16.--I said mass at St. Fidele, formerly one of
- the three Jesuit churches. At 8 we set off in a carriage to see the
- Certosa of Pavia. We got to it at 10½, and were two hours examining
- its beautiful details. Women are now forbidden entrance into the
- choir, and so Mrs. Ambrose had to stay in the body of the church,
- while we, with other people who had come to see it, saw the rich
- high altar and many of the finest things. There are not many
- precious stones, like rubies, emeralds, &c., but a profusion of
- altar-fronts of Pietra-dura, beautiful _alto relievos_ in marble,
- and many fine pictures. The convent is but lately reinhabited. Count
- Mellerio was the means of replacing monks there. They are all
- French. We saw the Prior, who knew Michael MacMahon. He promised to
- recommend England not only here, but by letter in other houses. We
- dined at an inn half a mile from the church, called Albergo della
- Certosa, and came back to Milan by 5. I got off near the Contrada S.
- Maria Falconeria, to call at a convent of Sisters of Charity of the
- same order as those of Sta. Lucia, at Venice. I saw the Superioress.
- Then I went to the Count del Verme's palace. La Contessa was
- confined this morning. I saw Miss Webster, who spoke about two
- English girls whom they are instructing, wishing me to receive the
- confession of one who cannot speak Italian. I went out with the
- priest who instructs them, Don Gaetano Fumagalli, to see them. We
- first went to the convent of the Salesiani, 54 nuns (visitation),
- into which Miss Webster is about to enter, and though the time was
- past, we saw the mistress of novices through the grate, who was very
- gracious about England. Then we went to a high story in a house
- where these girls lodge, paid {327} for by the Cardinal. After
- coming home I went, on an invitation obtained by the Conte del
- Verme, to a grand assembly and concert at the Accademia, or the
- _Nobil Società_. The gayest rooms I have seen a long time. I came
- home soon after ten, for I knew nobody there, and was almost the
- only priest I saw; certainly the only one in a cassock.
-
- Tuesday, September 17.--Mass at St. Fidele. At 8 Count Mellerio
- came, and we started for his villa at Gernetto, beyond Monza. He
- took Mrs. A. and Amb., and I and a boy went in our carriage, with
- four vetturino horses. We stopped at Monza to see the glorious relic
- of the Iron Crown given by the Empress Helena to Constantine, in
- which is inserted, as a ring of iron within a larger ring of gold,
- one of the nails of Our Lord's crucifixion beat out into that form.
- It has crowned from thirty to forty kings of Italy. Among them,
- Napoleon last but one. Other grand relics of the Passion are with
- it, two thorns, and a piece of the sponge. Other relics are in the
- sacristy. This is kept over an altar within rich doors. The
- Canonico, who was with us in the church, promised to recommend
- England. We went on to the palace of the Archduke, surrounded by a
- park fifteen miles round, dressed like an English park, a noble
- palace. Then on to Gernetto, where we were for two or three hours
- before dinner walking gaily with the Count round his beautiful
- grounds. The villa is very handsome. Two priests of the
- neighbourhood dined with us at 3. One told me that Count Mellerio is
- one of the richest, or rather the richest nobleman in Milan,--about
- £15,000 a year of our money. He is alone, having lost his wife and
- four children. He came back with us to our hotel, where I found
- Count del Verme to tell me that the confession of the girls was put
- off. They have been left here by their mother. Their parents, ----
- and Ann Carraway, live at Newcastle-under-Lyne. Their grandfather
- and mother, James and Mary Freakley, at Cheapside, Handley. I went
- with the Count to the assembly of the learned men who are now met in
- Milan,--not so smart as yesterday, but very numerous. Then to a
- café, to read news about the effects of O'Connell's liberation.
-
-{328}
-
- Wednesday, September 18.--I went with Phillippses to the Duomo to
- say mass for them at St. Charles's tomb, but I found it occupied,
- and so I went to San Fidele again, came back to breakfast, and saw
- Conte Mellerio, who had called. Then went with them to the Brera,
- where I went quickly through the gallery, and left them, taking the
- carriage to go to the hospital of the Fate-bene Fratelli, which is a
- fine establishment for 100 sick. The Vicario, whom I saw, promised
- to recommend England to the Provincial, who is here, and through him
- to the thirty brothers here, and five houses in Lombardy--_vento_.
- Then I went to the bank. Dined at 1, and at 2 we started with a
- Swiss _voiturier_, whom we had engaged to take us to Geneva. We
- passed the beautiful triumphal arch, L'Arco della Pace, reckoned the
- finest in the world, ancient and modern. We got to sleep at a nice
- inn, in a place called Casiua buon Jesu. I wrote a letter to Dr.
- Wiseman.
-
- Thursday, September 19. San Januarius.--I said mass at the little
- oratory of the village. There is mass here only on Sundays
- generally, but the bell rung three times for my mass, and we had a
- full chapel. This chapel not very neat; it seemed used for a
- school-room. We started at ½ past 7, and reached Avona at 12 to
- dine. How I was struck with the remembrance of the last time in this
- place with my father and mother, after coming in a boat with Dr.
- Wilson from Bavino. The inn is a fine new house since then. We saw a
- steamboat pass, which plies daily the whole length of the lake. I
- missed going to St. Charles's statue and the seminary near it,
- belonging to the diocese of Novara, where I should have liked to go
- to preach England. After dinner we started and went round to Strass,
- where we stopped and went up the mountain's side to see Rosmini's
- Novitiate, which overlooks the village. It is a large house, without
- beauty or character, unhappily. We knew we should not find Rosinini,
- who is at Roveredo. We saw Segnini and two other priests, Paoli and
- Gagliardi. They have thirty novices. The situation is beautiful. The
- ground belonged before to Madame Bolognaro, who has a large house in
- the town, where, while we were at the convent, the Bishop of {329}
- Novara came. I would not have failed to ask an audience had I been
- alone, but I made the priests promise to speak to him of England. We
- took a boat to go to the Isola Bella, to see the palace and gardens
- on our way to Bavino, the carriage going on there by itself. It was
- almost dark when we got there, and we could only see the suite of
- grand rooms and pictures, and the chapel with the old family tombs
- brought from Milan, by candlelight. _Mem_. A room of rockwork
- underneath the chief suite, where Bonaparte dined, and the bedroom
- he slept in. The whole of this grandeur is made worse than worthless
- by the indecent statues and pictures which are all about the place.
- We got to Bavino at 8; a nice new inn.
-
- Friday, Sept. 20.--Ember Day, but no fast for me! I got to say mass
- at 4½, and we started at 6 to ascend the Simplon. The day was
- beautiful. We got to Domodossola at 11. We went up the beautiful
- road to the Monte Calvario, of which Gentili has made me think so
- much, first having taken a look at their college in the town, where
- there are 19 boarders and more than 200 out-students. At the Calvary
- two priests received us kindly. Along the road to it are chapels
- with the stations represented in groups of figures as large as life,
- well executed; only two or three are complete. The situation here
- again is admirable. The house and church not remarkable. I was well
- received for England. Coming down, which I did after the rest, I
- visited a pretty Capuchin convent, half-way up, of fifteen friars,
- and had a good reception (promise to write to the other houses).
- After dinner at 2 we set off for Simplon, which we reached after 8.
- The _voiturier_ (coachman), to spare his horses, put us on
- post-horses at his own expense. The road on the Piedmontese side is
- sadly dilapidated. It was broken down (by water, as it seems) six
- years ago, and the King of Sardinia will not have his part repaired,
- to make people go by Mount Cenis and Turin. Put up at the Simplon
- Inn.
-
- Saturday, Sept. 21. St. Matthew.--I said mass at 7, spoke to the
- curé after, who promised for England. We started at 8; we still had
- two hours going up the hill. {330} About the summit is the Hospice
- de St. Bernard, begun by Bonaparte. I remember it in an unfinished
- state. It now contains four or five priests, and some brothers. We
- stopped and saw the Prior, M. Barras, who promised kindly to
- recommend England to the mother house. Phillipps bought a puppy of
- the famous breed, three months old, who was added to our company in
- the carriage. We reached Brigy between 12 and 1. I went out before
- dinner, and saw the Superior of the Jesuits' College here, who is a
- nice old man, and received us very kindly. I hurried away quickly,
- thinking to return again after dinner, but the dinner was long after
- time, and we had at once to set off for Turtinan, which we reached
- at 6½. We went out before tea to see a waterfall: it was a dark, wet
- walk, for rain was beginning.
-
- Sunday, Sept. 22.--I said mass at 5. Soon after 6 we set off for
- Sion. Arrived at 10, and found a grand military pontifical high mass
- begun in the cathedral. I never heard drums and cannon and the word
- of command in a mass before. The music was not military, but noisy
- figured. The occasion of the solemn mass was the feast of St.
- Maurice, patron of the Valais. After mass the Bishop walked with a
- great procession about the town, with a feretrum, with relics of St.
- Maurice. The chief part are at the town of the name, which we are to
- pass to-morrow. The procession had an excellent effect. I went then
- to the Jesuits' College, and spoke to the Rector, who told me the
- first I had heard of the attempt at revolution in the month of May
- here, which was defeated in a gallant style by the inhabitants of
- the Valais arming to the number of 10,000, from a population of
- 70,000, under an old French officer, _i.e._, a Swiss, trained in the
- French army, who repelled the party of the Jeune Suisse, who
- otherwise would have overturned religious order, and perhaps, as he
- said, have massacred all the religious. Young Bodenham was in their
- house when the danger threatened. The Rector was very kind, but did
- not promise much. I went then to dine at a _table d'hôte_, but soon
- got off, and went to the Bishop lately consecrated, who came from
- table to speak with me. He was educated at the Collegio Germanico;
- knew Baldacconi and Father Daniel. {331} He promised his help. I
- then went to a Capuchin convent outside the town. The guardian, a
- young man, was rather cold, but said meanwhile that he always prayed
- for England, as ordered in the Confrérie de l'Immaculé Coeur. Then
- to a convent of Ursulines, close to the Bishop's; eleven nuns (well
- received); then in a hurry to an hospital outside the town on the
- other side, with eight nuns. The director gave me one of my most
- favourable receptions, and promised that the nuns should change
- their day of communion from Friday to Thursday to meet my wishes. We
- set off at 2 for Martigny, which we reached at 5½. It has a
- different look from 1819, the year after the inundation. I called on
- the curé, who is one of the monks of Grand St. Bernard, with the
- white linen scapular to represent the surplice, which they always
- wear as canons regular of St. Augustine, to which they belong. He
- was very good about England. From thence, I went to an hospital kept
- by six French nuns, to receive poor travellers, female St.
- Bernardites. The Superioress was very agreeable and zealous. They
- are going directly to France to make their retreat with 600 other
- nuns, assembled under the Bishop of Belley. She promised to get him
- to recommend it to them all. I came back to tea after a happy,
- successful day (Hôtel de la Cigne). Alpine strawberries at tea.
-
- Monday, September 23.--I said mass at 6. Came away, fearing it would
- be too late, without saying farewell to the Prior, which was
- mortifying, as there was time enough. We went to dine at St.
- Gingolph, beautifully placed on the bank of the Lake of Geneva. On
- the way we stopped at St. Maurice, where we saw in the church the
- rich shrine of St. Maurice, containing his body, and several others;
- two of the sons of Sigismund, King of Burgundy, who did penance
- here, after putting them to death. In the abbey, which is of the
- Canons Regular of St. Augustine, I saw the superior, who is a bishop
- _in partibus_; he spoke very kindly about England. I also met a nun
- there of a convent of Sisters of Charity, who promised for Thursdays
- at St. Gingolph. I went to the curé, where the Vicar introduced me
- to several priests dining with him, who became greatly interested,
- and {332} promised to speak to the Bishop of Annecy, and to their
- _confrères_ at Thonon, where we came to sleep. I called on the curé,
- who promised, but I could not quite satisfy myself about him; but
- was quite satisfied with the brothers of the Christian Doctrine;
- there are eight. The Superior promised well, and sent two brothers
- home with me to the inn. The names of the priests at St. Gingolph
- were:--M. Veuillet, Curé de Désingy; M. Maitre, Curé de Novel; M. La
- Croix, Vicaire de Chilly; and M. Pollien, Vicaire de St. Gingolph.
- The first most interesting: the last extremely tall.
-
- Tuesday, Sept. 24. B.M.V. di Mercede.--At 5½ I went to the Convent
- of the Visitation, where there are thirty-four nuns, who have
- recovered their house after the Revolution. The Superioress received
- me most kindly, and promised all. I then went to the Sisters of
- Charity, who have two houses--a _pensionnat_ and an hospital. The
- Superioress was not up. I left my card with a lay sister. I then
- went and said mass at the parish church. The Phillippses went to
- communion. It was at the altar of St. Francis of Sales, in this, the
- first church which he (or any other one) regained from the
- Calvinists--St. Hippolyte. I offered the mass for the recovery of
- our dear cathedrals. The curé spoke to me again, and much more
- zealously promised all for Thonon, M. De la Millière. We ought to
- have gone to the Château d'Allinges, where St. Francis lodged when
- he began the holy work. The chapel has been wonderfully preserved,
- and lately reopened, Sept. 14, 1836. On our way to Geneva, where we
- arrived at 12½, we read some of the account of his mission. We came
- to the Hotel de Bergues, a new grand house in a new part of the
- town, built out on the lake about 1834. I took a carriage to
- Plainpalais, and brought back my good friend l'Abbé de Baudry. I
- dined after at the _table d'hôte_. He is a tall, venerable old man,
- dressed in his cassock, as all the priests are. His account of
- things here was better than I thought. We set off at 3½, and could
- not get farther than Nyon, where Phillipps and I went to see the
- curé and his church, all new. There was no mission here till 1831.
- We interested him for England, I hope. The hotel is de la Couronne.
- In {333} every room, as at Geneva, is a New Testament of the Geneva
- Bible Society.
-
- Wednesday, Sept. 25.--I went at 5 to say mass at the new church; the
- curé, M. Rossiaud, got up to serve it, and came with me to see us
- off. We went up the Jura; but the grand view of Mont Blanc was
- clouded, so we have but once seen it dimly. Yesterday evening we had
- a troublesome sorting of all our baggage at Les Rousses. We dined at
- St. Laurent. I went to the curé, M. Gottez, who spoke painfully of
- the state of France (I think too much so), but brightened up when we
- were about England. We went on to Champagnole, at the Hôtel de la
- Poste, a nice little inn. Phillipps and I went to the church; and I
- called and saw the curé, like Dr. Rock in looks. He accepted my
- appeal agreeably.
-
- Thursday, Sept. 26.--I got to say mass at the parish church, at 5.
- The curé, M. Patit, and the vicaire, M. Bouvet, were both up, and
- the latter walked back with me to the inn, la Poste. We started at
- 6½; dined at 1 at l'Hôtel de France, at Dole: we got there at 12. I
- went out and saw a father at the Jesuits', who received me very
- agreeably; and then a nun at the Visitation Convent. The Jesuit
- promised for all the convents himself. The Prince and Princess Doria
- were come to the inn, on their way to Italy. When we came back, I
- went to see them after our dinner. We went on through Auxonne, where
- Phillipps and I went to see the church,--_diligence_ to Dijon.
- Arrived at the Hôtel de la Cloche at 7½. I went out to see the
- Bishop, but he was out. I called at the Séminaire, and saw the
- Superior and others, who were very kind, and spoke of Brother Luke
- asking them; then back to supper; after which I went again to the
- évêché, and waited in the porter's lodge, talking to a nice old man
- of eighty about the Revolution, &c., till the Bishop came in. He,
- Monseigneur Rivet, promised his help very graciously. I got home at
- 10, having also tried in vain to get at the sacristan for mass
- tomorrow.
-
- Friday, Sept. 27.--I went out at ten minutes to 4, to try once more
- the sacristan's bell, but no answer, and so I had {334} to come back
- and give up mass, as we were to start at 5. We took provisions in
- the carriage, and we had no mind to stop all day, till at 7½ we
- reached St. Florentin, a town of 2,400 people, in the diocese of
- Sens. The weather was beautiful, and we admired the high cultivation
- and seeming prosperity of the country. We passed a fine château at
- Aucy le Franc, of the Duce or Marquis de Clermont-Tonnerre. At St.
- Florentin I went out and saw the curé and the sacristan, to provide
- better for mass to-morrow than today. Hôtel de la Poste.
-
- Saturday, Sept. 28.--Got up about 3. At a quarter to 4 I went to the
- sacristan, and with him to the church, and said mass; a pretty
- little Gothic church. We set off at a quarter to 5, with provisions
- again, for Paris, which we entered about 11 at night. We stopped at
- Sens to see the cathedral. I first went to the archévêché, and was
- most graciously received by the Archbishop, Monseigneur Mellon
- Jolly, a young man translated here from Séez last March. He said he
- had introduced prayers for England at Séez, and would begin again
- now. He took me into the cathedral, and left me to see the trésor,
- where the Phillippses already were. The most precious relic was of
- the true cross, as the sacristan said, the largest in the world; but
- he could not know of Rome and Jerusalem. It was given by
- Charlemagne. There are two pieces, placed in a cross under crystal;
- I should say the upright piece of nine or ten inches, the transverse
- of four or five, well polished. What was perhaps most interesting to
- us was the case containing St. Thomas of Canterbury's chasuble, alb
- with apparel, stole, &c., from which the late Archbishop separated
- what he gave to Dr. Wiseman. There is also an arm of St. Lupus, a
- case of St. Gregory's relics, from which some have been begged for
- Rome. We stopped again at Fontainebleau, and took a rapid view of
- the palace. The servant who led said it was the finest in the world.
- I think he must be partial, as the sacristan this morning about the
- relic of the cross. Louis-Philippe has done a good deal here; spent
- 800,000 fr. in ornamenting one room. I was much pleased with the
- gallery with pictures of the history of France. This is the {335}
- finest matter for a palace. There was much very indecent. After this
- it began to rain till we got to Paris. We got rooms at the Hôtel de
- l'Europe, just opposite the gardens of the Tuileries. Nothing could
- be better.
-
- Sunday, Sept. 29.--I went at 7½ to say mass at the Madeleine, that
- glorious church for its style. Then home to breakfast, and then,
- with the rest, to high mass at Notre-Dame; one of the grandest plain
- chant masses I ever was at. There I met Mr. Moore, of Birmingham;
- and I went with him after, in his hackney-coach, on a few errands,
- and at last to the English convent, from whence he takes one of the
- Misses Bingham to the convent at Handsworth. Then I went again to
- Notre-Dame, and very much to my loss: I came too late for vespers.
- After, I went to St. Jacques, but did not find the Curé de Noirlieu,
- nor his vicaire. I came back by the omnibus to dine at the
- _restaurant_, and directly we went to Notre-Dame des Victoires,
- where we assisted at the service, from 7 to 20 minutes to 10. It was
- wonderful to see the attention of the people all this time. The old
- curé, after the sermon by another priest, gave the _annonces_ in an
- interesting way. We heard him recommend England. I went in to ask
- him.
-
- Monday, Sept. 30.--I said mass at the Madeleine. After breakfast, I
- went to Mr. Blount, the banker, who told me that Heneage was to be
- in Paris on Thursday, the very day we go away. Then to the post, and
- find no letters; then by omnibus to St. Sulpice (where the retreat
- of the clergy begins to-day), to see the Archbishop. I was
- introduced to him in a room, where he was among several priests. I
- got on but poorly. He was gracious, but made little of the affair.
- The secretary of Mgr. Quelin was there. He testified to his
- recommending the thing before, but no effect followed. This was
- damping enough, though I knew something to the contrary. The
- Archbishop sent me to M. Vollemaux (Mr. Hand's friend), who conducts
- the retreat, and he promised to recommend England this evening. So
- the point is gained; though, judging from the tone in which he spoke
- of England, it is not so promising a prospect as some. But among 600
- priests some will be inspired, let {336} him speak as he may. I then
- went to the rue de Chaillot, to seek Captain Cooke, to know about
- John Beaumont. Had to come back empty, and stopped at home, not very
- well, till 5½, when Phillippses came in from St. Denis to dinner.
- After dinner Mr. Gordon, of the _Univers_, came to tea, and stopped
- till 10 nearly.
-
- Tuesday, Oct. 1.--I went to say mass at Notre-Dame des Victoires, in
- les Petits Pères, at 8½. I breakfasted near them, and had a talk
- with Abbé Desgenettes. Then went to breakfast _à la fourchette_, at
- 11, with M. Noirlieu, Curé of St. Jacques, and his vicaire,
- Bourjéant. The latter forced me, against my will, to have some
- papers with an image and a prayer for England printed. It is the
- like case with Belgium. I hope it may be well, as it certainly was
- not my will, and so the denial of my will may be a blessing. We then
- went to call on the nuncio, Mgr. Fornari; and then to the engravers
- for this said work. Mgr. Fornari is grown very stout and unwieldy,
- but was very kind and pleasing; he encouraged my pursuit and this
- printing. We went home again to St. Jacques to _rédiger_ the
- prayers, when again my friend would have his way against my mind in
- a point or two. I came thence to the Bank, M. Blount's, then home,
- and dined alone; then went to call on Captain Cooke, to ask about
- John Beaumont, who, it seems, does not come to Paris at all; then
- home, where I found the Phillippses going out to a spectacle, and so
- I had to go off and try to stop at l'Abbé Desgenettes', who was to
- come to see him, but he was already from home, and so I came back
- and received his visit, when I pressed him for England, and he took
- it well.
-
- Wednesday, Oct. 2.--By desire of M. Gallard, Vicaire of the
- Madeleine, expressed by M. Bourgoiner, I said mass there. After
- breakfast, I called on Mrs. Heneage and her daughter, 17, rue St.
- Florentin; then took omnibus to St. Denis, where I looked through
- the church below ground and above. It is greatly altered since
- 1838--wonderful work of painting and stained glass, yet a very
- little is done of what has to be done. I came back by omnibus to
- Porte St. Martin; then walked home at 6. I dined with Captain
- Cooke--a family dinner, purely English, as he is himself. {337} I
- liked his conversation much, blunt and plain as it is. He talked of
- his twenty years' service--Egypt--America. I came home at 8 to meet
- MM. Noirlieu and Bourgoigne and Gordon, who came to tea and made
- interesting company till 11, I think.
-
- Thursday, Oct. 3.--Said mass at St. Roch; after, I went to the
- Jesuits, Rue des Postes, and saw the Provincial, M. Boulanger; then
- to the Sisters of Charity, Rue de Bac; the Sacré Coeur, where Mad.
- de Gramont gave me a most amiable reception; the Lazarists, Rue de
- Sevres; then I tried to see one of the Society of St. Vincent de
- Paul, and went with a zealous young clerk from their office, 37, Rue
- de Seine, St. Germain, to seek an _avocat_ at the Palais de Justice.
- I was handing about the engravings, which were ordered on Tuesday,
- and which are well received. The sister, deputed to see me at the
- Sisters of Charity, alone, was cold. She was the same as six years
- ago, when she was very gracious. I came home to dine at 1 alone; at
- 2 I went to see Heneage, just arrived at his father and mother's
- from Dieppe. I sat an hour very happily with him, and came home at
- the time appointed to go away, but it was deferred till to-morrow.
- So I went to the chief house of the Ecoles Chrétiennes, about 126,
- Rue du Faubourg St. Martin. The Superior-General was very
- favourable, and promised to recommend England to his community of
- 300, and to the 400 houses of his order. I then took omnibus to the
- Rue de Bac, and had an interesting conversation with Abbé Dubois,
- now eighty years old. Ever since 1838, he prays for England every
- day in the mass. He is in retreat. He receives a pension of £100 a
- year from England. I went again and had tea with him, and so
- finished the day happily.
-
- Friday, Oct. 4.--Mass at St. Roch. We started for Boulogne at 9½. We
- stopped on the way to see the Church of St. Vincent de Paul,
- building in most splendid style, in form of a basilica inside, but
- with a portico without. Then I stopped at St. Denis, and walked
- round it again; saw in addition the winter choir most richly
- adorned. _Mem._--The twelve Apostles holding the consecration
- crosses round the walls. We went on to dine at Beauvais. We went,
- when {338} it was growing dark, to take a look at the cathedral. The
- choir alone complete--the finest in the world. We said that the
- French, with their present zeal and prosperity, would finish this
- cathedral if the peace lasts ten more years. I left them in the
- church, and went to see the Bishop. He was at dinner, but came out
- and introduced me to the party, namely, the directors of the
- Seminary (among them my acquaintance, M. Bareau), and some Jesuits.
- He was most kind and favourable, and promised before them all that
- he would say mass for England once a week for a year. The others all
- sympathised. After this beautiful incident, I came home, and we
- dined at the Écu de France. We afterwards drove on to Grandvilliers;
- arrived at 11. The King of the French dined there yesterday; the
- landlady was in raptures at it; there was the Queen, and in all
- twenty-six, at table.
-
- Saturday, Oct. 5.--As they failed to awake me, I missed saying mass.
- We set off at 6½, and went, almost without a stop, dining in the
- carriage (135 kilometres, about 85 miles), to Boulogne, where we
- stopped at the Hôtel des Bains. I went directly to see the Grand
- Doyen, who was very kind. Returning, I found Mr. Digby with them.
- Louis-Philippe's birthday--71 years old.
-
- Sunday, October 6.--I said mass at 8½; got back to breakfast, and
- then we went together to the high mass, sung by Dr. Walsh, Bishop of
- Halifax. He had no mitre. After this, Mrs. Canning met me in the
- sacristy, and we went to her house, No. 5, Rue de Doyen. At 2 we
- walked to the Haute Ville, where we visited the Visitation Nuns in
- their grand new house, twenty-seven in number, and the Ursulines,
- fifty-two in number; then to M. Haffreingue. At 6 I went to dine
- with the Digbys; saw Mrs. Digby for the first time. The Phillippses
- were there, and four or five more. I walked back with the Doyen in
- heavy rain at 10, and entered my lodgings with L'Abbé Daniel, 73,
- Grande Rue.
-
- Monday, October 7.--I went with Mrs. Canning to the Visitation
- Convent, and said the community mass at 9. After it we breakfasted
- in the parlour at 11. M. Haffreingue came in with the Phillippses,
- who had breakfasted {339} with him, and the Superioress, an English
- lady of the name of Muller, and other nuns, showed us round the
- house, which is most stately and beautiful, though it would have
- been wonderfully better had the money been spent on Gothic work.
- Mrs. Canning and I left at 12½, and called on Mr. Errington. We came
- down to dine at 2. The Doyen and M. Daniel came. The Bishop also
- came to luncheon at 8. I went up to the Haute Ville, and first
- called on M. Gillies, a Scotch gentleman, converted last year; then
- went to Digby's for the evening. Besides Phillippses, &c., I saw
- Nicholas Ball. Came back at 10½.
-
- Tuesday, October 8.--Said mass at 7½; then went to breakfast with
- Mrs. Canning. About 11 we set off for the Haute Ville, and went once
- more to the Visitation Convent, where we were allowed to see the
- whole community through their grate for three quarters of an hour,
- that I might do my best to recommend England, which I tried to do.
- Then I visited M. Gillies, and got down to dinner at 2¼. M. Le
- Cointe, M. Le Roy, and M. Daniel, dined with us. After dinner we
- went out and visited, first, the Soeurs Grises, an austere convent
- of poor nuns, who teach school. They have 900 girls under care. The
- Superioress promised for all; if she fulfils it, it is a fine gain.
- Then to the Ecoles Chrétiennes. They are seventeen brothers,
- teaching 1,100 boys in different schools. They were very
- encouraging; promised for themselves and the boys. After an hour's
- office and tea, I went to the Haute Ville to see Phillipps and his
- party at Digby's for the last time, as they go to-morrow. Met Mr. W.
- Jones and wife, and others. Then at 9 I went to visit Judge Ball at
- the Hôtel de Londres. The Bishop and others were there. The family
- was Mr. Ball, Nicholas, and Alexander, and a daughter.
-
- Wednesday, October 9.--I said mass at the Ursulines at 7½, first
- addressing them on England for a quarter of an hour. Then
- breakfasted, during which six English nuns were in attendance, and
- Miss Swift. Then my cousin and I walked to the Annonciades, when we
- could not see the Superioress; then to the Dames de Notre-Dame du
- bon Secours (_gardes malades_, seventeen nuns). Then in the Basse
- Ville {340} to the Hospitalieres (thirteen nuns); these promised
- well. Then I went home to office till dinner at 2. Mrs. Canning and
- M. Tallier, Curé de Nemfchatel, who takes care of them, came over to
- meet me. At 4 M. Thillay came. These two promised to do all they
- could. At 5 Mrs. C. and I walked to the steamboat office,
- post-office, &c. Came back to office and tea. Then I went up to
- change my quarters, and pass some days at the college with M.
- Haffreingue. I first called and saw Mrs. Gillies. I sat some time
- with M. Haffreingue, and to bed at 10.
-
- Thursday, October 10.--Said mass at ¼ to 8. At 10 Dr. Walsh came up
- and sung mass _de Spiritu Sancto_, for the opening of studies. The
- boys came back yesterday. I assisted him as Assistant Deacon. At 1½
- we dined. The Bishop, M. O'Reilly, and a M. Cardham, a London
- convert, were all the strangers. The rest were the professors of the
- house. After dinner we had toasts, cheers, and speeches, on England,
- Mr. O'Reilly leading it. At 10, I went and saw Abbate Melia at Mrs.
- Errington's. He is going to replace Baldacconi in London. Then to
- Mrs. Canning's to tea. Returned for night prayers at 7½. Supper
- comes after. I talked to M. Haffreingue about architecture.
-
- Friday, October 11.--I said mass at 7½ in the chapel of Notre-Dame
- de Boulogne; breakfasted with M. Haffreingue. At 10 I called on
- Digby, then Mrs. Canning, and Mrs. Gillies. I dined in the
- Infirmary, to eat meat with M. Grettan, the English teacher, and
- little Rosamel, grandson of a great admiral. M. Haffreingue and I
- took a walk, and went through the crypt of the cathedral. Night
- prayers and supper in the refectory at 7½. After it, M. Haffreingue
- and I went to call on Mrs. Muller and Digby.
-
- Saturday, October 12.--Said mass in the Chapelle de Notre-Dame. Miss
- Muller breakfasted with us. She is the great support of M.
- Haffreingue's great work of building the cathedral, having begged
- for it for years past. I asked her to have prayers made for England,
- as M. Haffreingue announces the cathedral to be undertaken mainly
- for that enterprise. She promised to interest the poor. I thought of
- my sermon, and did other things till near 12. When I {341} went out,
- called on Mr. Stewart, a Scotch pastrycook, lately converted and
- received by Sisk. At 1, I dined (_gras_) with Mrs. Canning. After,
- called on Lady Burke and her two daughters, near the Porte. Came
- back after; walked an hour in the Grande Salle with Haffreingue,
- talking over projects for England and France.
-
- Sunday, October 13.--Got up after 7, and sung high mass in the
- chapel at 9. After it I went to Mrs. Canning's till dinner time,
- when I returned and dined in the refectory. The afternoon was mostly
- preparing my sermon, which I preached on the conversion of England
- at the _salut_ at 7. The boys clapped their hands to my surprise
- when I entered the refectory to supper; in token of acceptance, I
- hope. I got on better than I could have thought, and was not a bit
- tired. After supper I went with M. Haffreingue and M. Le Roy; a
- farewell visit to Digby. It blows hard, and I fear it will be a bad
- passage to-morrow, or none at all.
-
- Monday, October 14.--The Abbate Melia, Dr. Baldacconi's intended
- successor, came to sing songs, and breakfast at the college, and
- went down with me to the port. Mr. Bodenham came with us, too. We
- waited from 9 till 10.20 before they set off. They seemed to fear
- the wind. When we got out it was a most stormy passage to
- Folkestone, of three hours. I stood up all the way, holding on,
- talking with M. Crawley, of the Hotel, Albemarle Street, except we
- were nearly sick. We swung through the narrow walk of Folkestone
- Harbour, and were at once smooth, and soon on England's soil. It was
- a long work passing the Custom House, but we got off by a train at
- 3.49. I set Mr. Melia down at Pagliano's, where we found Dr. Walsh
- (of Halifax), and had tea. Sisk and Mgr. Eyre came in by good
- fortune, and I went with them home to their quarters at the Chelsea
- chapel-house.
-
- Tuesday, October 15.--Said mass at 8½. Then went to try Dr.
- Chambers, who is out of town. Then to Spence House, and saw
- Appleyard. By his advice, I determined to go to Windsor to-day, the
- Queen being just now away. I called on Father Lithgoe, and attended
- a meeting of ladies at Sisk's, then off by the Great Western Railway
- to Slough, {342} and so to Windsor. I saw Caroline at Lady Grant's,
- where she lodges, close to the Castle, where I dined at 8, first
- having seen Sarah at the Castle, and the Prince of Wales, with whom
- she was playing. He is a weakly-looking child of four, but noble and
- clever looking. He behaved prettily to us all in going off to bed.
-
- Wednesday, October 16.--After sleeping at the Castle Inn, I walked
- to the Catholic chapel at Chrom, attended last Sunday by
- Louis-Philippe, who charmed them all. I said mass, and then Mr.
- Wilson took me in a gig a mile on to call on Mr. Riley, at Forest
- Hill. He was out. I thence called to Windsor, and was with Sarah
- from 12 to 1½, while the children were asleep. Then went down to
- Eton, called on Mr. Coleridge, then walked about the well-known
- places, the chapel, the cloisters, where I left a card on Wilder,
- now a fellow. I went and mused over the place which once was
- Godley's, but all is levelled. I stood by the oak-tree there, saw
- the boys assembling for 3 o'clock school, and talked to some. I
- brought back many a scene thirty years and more ago. At 3, started
- back and dined with Sisk. After dinner we went to see Mrs. Bagshawe
- and Mrs. Jauch back in an omnibus.
-
- Thursday, October 17.--Mass at 8½. Went to see Dr. Watson, whom I
- found to be my former friend, fellow of St. John's. It was a good
- account of me, thank God. Then to Mr. Nerincx, at Somers Town. Then
- to Mr. Morel, at Hampstead, and Mrs. Sankey, near him; then called
- at the Sardinian Chapel, and home to dine, and sit the evening with
- Sisk.
-
-Friday, October 18.
-
-(_This journal breaks off here, and is not resumed._)
-
-
-
-{343}
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-Close Of His Career In Oscott; And His Religious Vocation.
-
-
-During the year 1845 his attention was greatly occupied with the
-converts that were coming daily into the Church through the Oxford
-movement. As Father Spencer was not a mover in it, and as its history
-has been written over and over by different members of it, it would be
-superfluous to give anything like a sketch of it in such a work as
-this. Father Spencer seemed to have great interest in Dr. Newman, as
-also Dr. Ward, Canon Oakeley, and Father Faber. Many of them go to
-Oscott, some to be received, and some to make their studies for the
-Church; and in the beginning of the year 1846 he writes that he had
-twelve who were Anglican clergymen assisting at his mass one day in
-Oscott, and that there were three more who might have been, but were
-unable to come.
-
-He takes advantage of the Feast of St. Pius V. to preach his famous
-sermon on Ezekiel's vision of the dry bones. In a few days he assists
-at the ordination of the present Bishop of Northampton, the Right Rev.
-Dr. Amherst. A number of converts received orders at the same time,
-and Father Spencer had the pleasure of assisting at the ceremony. He
-resumes his Journal in May, 1846, and we find these two entries in it:
-
- "Tuesday, June 9.--We had news to-day of the death of Pope Gregory
- XVI. on the 1st of June, after fifteen years and four months'
- pontificate. God grant a holy successor, full of fortitude and love,
- especially for England."
-
- "June 22. News of Cardinal Feretti being Pope (Pius IX.). The brave
- Bishop of Imola, who stopped the progress of the insurgents in 1831.
- I am perfectly satisfied."
-
-{344}
-
-He went into retreat at Hodder under the direction of Father Clarke,
-S.J., and the result of that retreat was that he became a Passionist.
-We shall give a letter he wrote to Mr. Phillipps at the time, in which
-he gives a full account of how this was brought about.
-
- "St. Benedict's Priory, Feast of St. John Cantius,
- "Oct. 22, 1846.
-
- "My Dear Ambrose,--Yesterday, for the first time this long time, I
- heard where you were, and that you were within reach again of a
- Queen's head. This was from Mrs. Henry Whitgrave, next to whom I sat
- at dinner yesterday, at the Clifford Arms, Great Heywood, after the
- opening high mass of the new chapel there, which she and her husband
- came from Rugeley to attend. I determined not to lose another day in
- writing to you, lest you should hear from others, which I should not
- be pleased with, the news I have to give about myself. Perhaps you
- have already heard of it; but it is not my fault that you have not
- had the news from me. The news in question is that I am going to
- become a Passionist. You have frequently told me your persuasion,
- that what would be for my happiness would be to join a religious
- institute, and therefore I am confident you will rejoice with me at
- my prejudices being overcome, my fond schemes of other plans of my
- own set aside, and this good step at length determined on; though I
- can imagine that you will perhaps regret that the body which I join
- is not that with which you are most connected yourself, the
- Institute of Charity. Surprised I dare say you will not be much.
- Many others have received the declaration of this intention without
- any surprise, and only told me that they had been used to wonder how
- I did not long ago take such a step. You will only be surprised and
- wonder how I have come to this mind, after such decided purposes, as
- I have always expressed the contrary way. I can only say, Glory be
- to God, to our Blessed Lady, and St. Ignatius. It was entirely owing
- to the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius, which I have gone
- through twice, and only twice, in private and alone in the effective
- way. Once was at Louvain, where {345} you parted from me two years
- ago to go to Königswinter, and the other time was this summer, when
- I went for a retreat at Hodder Place, under your friend Father
- Thomas Clarke, who is Master of Novices there. For two or three days
- in the course of the former of these retreats, I was brought (for
- the first time) to doubt whether I ought not to give up my own
- ideas, and take to the regular established course of entering
- religion; and the old Jesuit who directed me in that retreat, when I
- expressed these new ideas, seemed at first to think they would lead
- to this conclusion. But I suppose I was not ripe for it, or God's
- time was not come. It ended by his telling me to put aside all those
- thoughts, and go on as I was. So I did, and was without any idea of
- the kind till the middle of this second retreat, which I entered
- with no view but to get on better where I was for another year. The
- same meditations raised up again the same battle within me as at
- Louvain, and I saw no way but to go into the matter, and make my
- election according to the rules given by St. Ignatius; which, if
- they were applied more often to questions of importance which people
- have to settle, ah! we should have many resolutions come to
- different to what are come to in the world. I soon came to determine
- for a change of state; then came the question which body to choose,
- and for a whole day nearly this was working my thoughts up and down.
- I could see no prospect of deciding between the two which came
- before me at first and for which I found my feelings and my judgment
- alternately inclining me--these were the Jesuits and the Institute
- of Charity. I saw no prospect of making up my mind that day, though
- Father Clarke told me now was the time for such a choice, and not
- when I had gone out again into the world, and I knew that God whom I
- had sought in solitude would give me light. At last, when I had just
- finished my last meditation of that portion of the retreat, and
- still could not settle, I thought I must have recourse after the
- retreat was over to Father Dominic, as a neutral judge, to help me
- to choose between the other two; when, in a minute, as in the fable
- of the two men who found the oyster and called in the third to judge
- between {346} them, I saw that Father Dominic himself was to have
- me, such as I was, and all my doubts vanished. Father Clarke came
- soon afterwards to pay me his daily visit, and confirmed my choice
- with a manner and tone as unhesitating as the choice itself had
- been, and would not let me afterwards give way to the fear of any
- difficulties, saying, once for all, when I was questioning how I
- could get over some of them, 'Well, if you do not get over them, God
- has been deceiving you.' How I extol now and praise the practice of
- spiritual exercises, and St. Ignatius, the great founder of the
- system of them, and the Jesuits in their conduct of them, as
- exemplified in Father Clarke, whose way with me so completely gave
- the lie to what people are disposed to think, that the Jesuits must
- bring everything and everybody to themselves when they get them into
- their hands. I intend to express my sense of obligation to them and
- St. Ignatius, by taking his name as my future designation, after I
- am admitted to the religious habit. So I hope in time I may come to
- be known no more by my own name, but by that of _Ignatius of St.
- Paul_. And as God gives me this _nomen novum_ may he add the _manna
- absconditum_, and make me in spirit as different from what I have
- been as in name. It is a great satisfaction that all this was
- settled without Father Dominic or any Passionist having a hint of
- it, till I went up to London three days after the retreat, to tell
- him of the determination I had made. The next day I came back to
- Oscott, and told Dr. Wiseman. He was, of course, surprised at the
- news, and at first seemed to think I could not be really in earnest,
- but ever since has acted in the most considerate and kind manner
- towards me. My move, I am sorry to think, must entail on him and
- dear Bishop Walsh serious inconveniences, not so much for the loss
- of my services where they had placed me, for I hope if I live I may
- serve them better as I shall be circumstanced hereafter, as I was
- doing little at Oscott, but from the withdrawal of my funds, which I
- fear may take place perhaps even to their entire amount, but
- certainly in great part. Not that any part goes to the congregation
- (of the Passion); thank God, I am received there _in formá pauperis_
- and all {347} which remains to me would be left to the Bishop; but
- my dear brother seems quite determined to make my vow of poverty as
- much one in earnest as it can be; and so, bitter as that part of the
- trial is, God bless him for it! I think I must have told you how my
- income came to me. My father left me a certain capital quite
- independently, which went long ago to building churches, and £300 a
- year to be paid to me as long as I did not put it out of my own
- power, in which case it was to be in the power of my brother, now
- living, and other trustees, to be employed to my advantage. My late
- brother gave me as much more of his own free will, and this brother
- has hitherto continued this, but now says that he cannot give it to
- support Catholicity; and as he will not use it himself, it is to go
- for my lifetime to religious and charitable purposes such as he
- thinks fit. So half of my money is clean gone, and the other half
- depends upon what interpretation the law puts on the terms of my
- father's will. Bishop Wiseman takes this so beautifully and
- disinterestedly, that I trust the loss he thus bears for God's sake
- will be more than amply compensated to him. My sister, Lady
- Lyttelton, takes my change beautifully."
-
-The pecuniary losses his ecclesiastical superiors would sustain
-prevented them giving him the opposition they otherwise would. It
-would not look well to try to keep him out of religion, under the
-circumstances; and besides, Cardinal Wiseman was not the person to
-prevent his priests becoming religious, if he were only convinced they
-had a vocation.
-
-When Father Spencer was on his way to London to consult with Father
-Dominic about his reception, a musket went off by accident in the
-carriage he was in, and the ball passed through the skylight. This
-gave him rather a start, and made him think a little about the
-shortness of life. He appears to have found Father Dominic giving a
-retreat to the nuns of the Sacré Coeur, who are now at Roehampton. The
-saintly Passionist was delighted with the news, and Father Ignatius
-used to say that he seemed to be more delighted still at the fact that
-he was not bringing a penny to the order. On his return to Oscott, the
-first thing we heard {348} was that a Quaker had been converted by a
-sermon he preached in Birkenhead, which sermon he thought himself was
-about the worst he ever delivered. He meets a little opposition,
-however; they wish him to stay until his thoughts get settled into
-their original state after the retreat. He fears this to be a
-stratagem of the enemy, and, lest it might make him lose his vocation,
-he makes a vow of entering religion at or before Christmas. When this
-became known, nobody could in conscience oppose him, for only the Pope
-could dispense him from entering now.
-
-At length everything is settled. His £300 income remains to the Bishop
-and his brother promises to provide for his pensioners. All things
-being thus arranged, he visits all the poor people about Oscott and
-West Bromwich, to give them a parting advice and blessing, spiritual
-and temporal. He writes to all his friends, packs up his books and
-other smaller movables, receives two converts--Laing and Walker--gets
-Dr. Wiseman's blessing, and has his carriage to the train, takes third
-class to Stafford, and on his birthday, 21st December, 1846, at 8
-o'clock in the evening, arrives at Aston Hall, to enter the
-Passionists' noviciate.
-
-
-{349}
-
-
-BOOK IV.
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Passionist._
-
-
-{350}
-
-
-BOOK IV.
-
-_F. Ignatius, a Passionist._
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-The Noviciate.
-
-
-Religious orders in the Church may be compared to a vast army,
-composed of different regiments, with different uniforms, different
-tactics, and different posts in the kingdom of God, offensive and
-defensive, against the kingdom of Satan. The Pope is the head of all,
-and various generals bear rule, in his name, over the forces who have
-chosen them for their leaders.
-
-Some religious orders fill chairs in universities; others are charged
-with the instruction of youth. Some watch by the sickbed; others
-ransom captive slaves, or bring consolation to the miserable in
-prisons and asylums. Some, again, work at the rooting out of sin and
-disorders at home, whilst others carry the light of the Gospel to the
-heathen. Some pitch their tents in deserts or mountain fastnesses,
-whilst a more numerous body take up their abode in the abandoned
-purlieus of crowded cities.
-
-Every religious order has some one characteristic spirit, a mark by
-which it may be distinguished from the others. This may be called the
-genius of the order. It is mostly the spirit that animated the founder
-when he gathered his first companions around him, and drew up the code
-by which {352} their lives were to be regulated. This spirit may be
-suited to one age and not to another; it may be local or universal; on
-its scope depends the existence and spread of the order; its decay or
-unsuitableness will portend the extinction of the body it animated.
-
-This spirit may take in the whole battle-field of religion, and then
-we see members of that order in every post in which an advantage may
-be gained, or a blow dealt upon the enemy. It may take in some parts
-and leave the rest to the different battalions that are already in
-charge, prepared to render assistance in any department as soon as its
-services may be needed.
-
-The religious order known as the Congregation of the Passion has a
-peculiar spirit and a special work. It was founded by Blessed Paul of
-the Cross in the middle of the last century, and approved by Benedict
-XIV., Clement XIV., and Pius VI. Its object is to work in whatever
-portion of the Church it may have a house established, for the
-uprooting of sin, and the planting of virtue in the hearts of the
-faithful. The means it brings to this, in addition to the usual ones
-of preaching and hearing confessions, is a spreading among Christians
-a devotion to and a grateful, lively remembrance of the Passion of our
-Lord. The Passionists carry out this work by missions and retreats, as
-well as parish work in their own houses. If circumstances need it,
-they take charge of a parish; if not, they do the work of missioners
-in their own churches. They teach none except their own younger
-members, and they go on foreign missions when sent by His Holiness or
-the Propaganda.
-
-To keep the members of an order always ready for their out-door work,
-there are certain rules for their interior life which may be likened
-to the drill or parade of soldiers in their quarters. This discipline
-varies according to the spirit of each order.
-
-The idea of a Passionist's work will lead us to expect what his
-discipline must be. The spirit of a Passionist is a spirit of
-atonement; he says, with St. Paul: "I rejoice in my sufferings, and
-fill up those things that are wanting of the sufferings of Christ, in
-my flesh for His body, which is the {353} Church." Coloss. i. 24. For
-this cause, the interior life of a Passionist is rather austere. He
-has to rise shortly after midnight, from a bed of straw, to chaunt
-matins and lauds, and spend some time in meditation. He has two hours
-more meditation during the day, and altogether about five hours of
-choir-work in the twenty-four. He fasts and abstains from flesh meat
-three days in the week, all the year round, besides Lent and Advent.
-He is clad in a coarse black garment; wears sandals instead of shoes;
-and practises other acts of penance of minor importance.
-
-This seems rather a hard life; but an ordinary constitution does not
-find the least difficulty in complying with the letter of the rule. It
-is withal a happy, cheerful life; for it seems the nature of penance
-to make the heart of the penitent light and gladsome, "rejoicing in
-suffering." Two facts are proved by experience. First, that scarcely
-one ever left the order on account of the corporal austerities, though
-they are used as a plea to justify the step by those who lose the
-religious spirit. Secondly, longevity is more common amongst us than
-any other order, except perhaps the Cistercians, whose rule is far
-more severe than ours. A Passionist is bound by this rule only within
-the retreat, as houses of the order are called; outside, he follows
-the Gospel ordinance of partaking of what is set before him, and
-suiting himself to the circumstances in which he is placed. The
-Superior, moreover, has a discretionary power of granting exemptions,
-in favour of those who require some indulgence in consequence of
-illness or extra labour.
-
-It will be seen, from this sketch, that Passionists have to lay up a
-stock of virtue, by a monastic life at home, in order that their
-ministrations for their neighbour may be attended with more abundant
-fruit. They unite the active and contemplative spirit, that both may
-help to the saving of their own souls by qualifying them better for
-aiding in the salvation of others.
-
-This was the kind of life Father Spencer began to lead on his
-forty-seventh birthday. For a man of his age, with habits formed, with
-health subject to occasional shocks, it was certainly a formidable
-undertaking. There was little of {354} human glory to eclipse those
-difficulties in the community he entered. Four foreign fathers, living
-in a wretched house, as yet unable to speak passable English, without
-a church, without friends, without funds, without influence, formed
-the principal portion of the community of Aston Hall. These were,
-Father Dominic, Father Gaudentius, Father Constantine, and Father
-Vincent. None of these four fathers are in the province at present.
-Fathers Dominic and Constantine are dead. Father Gaudentius is a
-member of the American province; and Father Vincent, after many years
-of zealous missionary work in these countries, was called to Rome,
-where he now holds the office of Procurator-General. They had one
-student, two lay brothers, and Father Spencer was to be the second of
-two novices. The Passionists had already been four years in England,
-and, through trials and difficulties, from poverty and misunderstandings,
-had worked their way up to the precarious position in which he found
-them. He was, therefore, a great acquisition to the struggling
-community. True, he brought no earthly riches; but he brought what was
-more valued, an unearthly spirit--he brought humility, docility, and
-burning zeal.
-
-The fathers knew him for a long time, and scarcely required proofs to
-convince them of his having a religious vocation, since he had
-practised the vows before then in a very perfect way, considering his
-state. He gave clear proofs of his spirit on the eve of his coming to
-Aston. He came, as he glories in telling Mr. Phillipps, _in formâ
-pauperis_. Some of his friends wished to give him the price of his
-habit by way of alms; he would not accept of it. He then reflected on
-the poverty of the Passionists, and thought it would be well if he
-brought even so much, whereupon he proposed to beg the money. The
-largest alms he intended to receive was half-a-crown. He was forbidden
-to do this by his director, and obeyed at once: thus giving a proof of
-his spirit of poverty and obedience.
-
-Notwithstanding all this, the fathers were determined to judge for
-themselves, and try by experiment if any aristocratic _hauteur_ might
-yet lurk in the corners of his {355} disposition. Our rule, moreover,
-requires that postulants be tried by humiliations before being
-admitted to the habit; and many and various are the tests applied,
-depending, as they do, on the judgment of the master of novices. One
-clause of the rule was especially applicable to Father Spencer: "_Qui
-nobili ortus est genere, accuratiore et diuturniore experimento
-probetur_; "and the strict Father Constantine, who was then the
-master, resolved that not a word of it should be unfulfilled. A day or
-two after his arrival, he was ordered to wash down an old, rusty
-flight of stairs. He tucked up his sleeves and fell to, using his
-brush, tub, and soapsuds with as much zest and good will as if he had
-been just hired as a maid-of-all-work. Of course, he was no great
-adept at this kind of employment, and probably his want of skill drew
-down some sharp rebukes from his overseer. Some tender-hearted
-religious never could forget the sight of this venerable ecclesiastic
-trying to scour the crevices and crannies to the satisfaction of his
-new master. He got through it well, and took the corrections so
-beautifully, that in a few days he was voted to the habit.
-
-On the afternoon of the 5th January, 1847, vespers are just concluded,
-and the bell is rung for another function. People are hurrying up to
-the little chapel, and whispering to each other about the scene they
-are going to witness. The altar is prepared as for a feast. The
-thurifers and acolytes head the procession from the sacristy; next
-follow the religious; then Father Dominic arrayed in surplice and
-cope. After him follows Father Spencer, in the costume of a secular
-priest. He kneels on the altar step; he has laid aside long before all
-that the world could give him; he has thrown its greatness and its
-folly away as vanities to be despised, and now asks for the
-penitential garb of the sons of the Passion, with all its concomitant
-hardships. He had not yet experienced the happiness it brings: he had
-only begun to earn it by broken rest, fasts, and humiliations. Father
-Dominic blesses the habit, mantle, and cincture; he addresses a few
-touching words to the postulant, and prepares to vest him. In the
-presence of all he takes off the cassock, the habit is put on and
-bound with a leathern {356} girdle, a cross is placed upon his
-shoulder, a crown of thorns on his head, benedictions are invoked upon
-him according to the ritual, the religious intone the _Ecce quam
-bonum_, Our Lord gives His blessing from the Monstrance, and the
-Honourable and Reverend-George Spencer is greeted as a brother and
-companion by Father Dominic, under the new name of Father Ignatius of
-St. Paul. Thus ended the function of that day, and the benisons of the
-rite were not pronounced in vain.
-
-It is the custom with us to drop the family name on our reception, to
-signify the cutting away of all carnal ties, except inasmuch as they
-may help to benefit souls. A religious should be dead to nature, and
-his relationship henceforth is with the saints. This is why, among
-many religious orders of men, and nearly all of women, some saint or
-some mystery of religion to which the novice is specially devoted is
-substituted instead of the family name. In most cases, also, the
-Christian name is changed; this, following the example of our Lord,
-who changed the names of some of the Apostles, is useful in many ways,
-as well to typify newness of life as to help in distinguishing one
-from another when the aid of family names is taken away. Father
-Ignatius gave his reasons above for preferring this name, and events,
-both before and after, make us applaud the fitness of the choice.
-
-A novice's life is a very eventless one; it has little in it of
-importance to others, though it is of so much consequence to himself.
-The coming of a postulant, the going away of a newly-made brother, the
-mistakes of a tyro at bell-ringing, chanting, or ceremonies, are of
-interest enough to occupy several recreations. The absence of
-soul-stirring news from without gives these trifles room to swell into
-importance. When the little incidents are invested with ludicrous or
-peculiar circumstances, they often have a sheet of the chronicles
-dedicated to their history by the most witty or least busy of the
-novices.
-
-A postulant ran away the day after Father Ignatius was clothed; he
-heard the religious take the discipline, and no amount of explanations
-or coaxing could induce him to {357} accustom his ear to the noise,
-much less his body to the stripes, of this function. The senior novice
-left at the same time; he was a priest, and died on the London mission
-the very same year as Father Ignatius. In a few days more Father
-Dominic caught a novice dressing his hair and giving himself airs
-before a looking-glass. His habit was stripped off, and he was sent to
-the outer world, where, perhaps, the adorning of his good looks was of
-more service to him than it was at Aston Hall.
-
-It is a received tradition in the religious life that vocations which
-are not tried by difficulties seldom prove sea-worthy, so to speak.
-Before or after the novice enters, he must be opposed and disappointed
-in some way; he has to pay dear for the favour of serving God in this
-state of life, if he be destined to act any important part in the
-Church as a religious. Father Ignatius had his trials. He found it
-difficult to pick up all the _minutiae_ of novice discipline: he
-suffered a little from homesickness, and these, joined to chilled
-feet, a hard bed, and meagre food, did not allow him to enjoy to any
-great extent the delightful sensation known as _fervor novitiorum_. He
-got over all this, as we see from a letter he wrote to a friend in
-March:--
-
- "I am here in a state in which not a shadow of trouble seems to
- come, but what I cause for myself. With a little humility there is
- peace enough. I suppose I shall have some more troubles hereafter if
- I live. I have not been so well for several years. Some would have
- thought a Lent without a bit of meat would not have done for me; but
- I have seen now since Shrove Tuesday, and, in Lent or out of it, I
- never have been better. So in that respect, viz., my health, I
- suppose my trial here is satisfactory."
-
-A rude shock was in store for his health which he little anticipated
-when he wrote those lines. This was the terrible year of famine in
-Ireland, that year which will be remembered for ever by those who
-lived in the midst of the harrowing scenes that overspread that
-unhappy country. Poor famishing creatures, who had laid their fathers
-or mothers, and perhaps their children, in coffinless graves, begged
-their way to England, and began that tide of {358} emigration which
-has since peopled Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, and London, with
-such crowds of Catholics. Every ship brought its cargo of misery, and
-the hapless victims were forced by their poverty to seek for lodgings
-in dens of vice, or employment where virtue was not paramount. They
-thus imbibed a poison to their morals which has not yet been
-completely purged out of the thousands who have had to follow the
-footsteps of their famine-stricken predecessors. Numbers of the poor
-Irish gathered around Stone and Aston; fever broke out amongst them,
-and the wards of the workhouse infirmaries were unable to contain even
-a moiety of the sufferers. Every hovel and barn had their burning
-occupants, and even charity itself seemed frightened from giving
-assistance. The priest was, of course, busy; and, fortunately for
-Aston, more than one priest could be had to attend the dying.
-
-All our fathers were at the bed of death many times in the day. Father
-Gaudentius was struck down with fever, Father Vincent followed next.
-The duties now devolved upon Father Dominic and Father Ignatius. The
-poor novice was prostrated by the pestilence, after administering the
-last rites of the Church to many. He gets a very malignant attack, and
-in a few days is at the point of death. He prepared for his last
-passage with the most beautiful dispositions. He thanked God for the
-privilege of his state, and was particularly delighted at the prospect
-of dying a martyr to his charity. He receives the Viaticum and Extreme
-Unction, makes his profession as on death-bed, becomes insensible, and
-is given an hour to live by the doctors. The religious commence a
-novena, in which they are joined by the people, for his recovery. God
-preserved him to his brethren and their flock, for he began
-immediately to mend. We may form an idea of this poor community, all
-the active members, except Father Dominic, dying, or in feeble
-convalescence; their resources, perhaps, run out; and all the energy
-they had left taxed to its utmost to answer the calls of duty. Few as
-they were, they had not the least idea of sparing themselves. They
-still hoped to increase and multiply; but, after the example {359} of
-Him who increased by dying, and likened the progress of His Church to
-the dying of the grain of corn in the soil of its growth.
-
-Charitable friends came to their assistance, and amongst the rest,
-Earl Spencer sent a handsome sum to pay doctors' expenses for his
-brother. This was considerate, indeed, and as soon as Father Ignatius
-could manage a pen, he wrote to thank him for his charity. Numbers
-were deeply concerned for our novice, and two or three Catholic nobles
-invited him to come and stay with them during his convalescence.
-Father Dominic did not think him sufficiently ill to warrant his
-sleeping out of the house, so their kind offers were thankfully
-declined.
-
-This illness was a double blow to Father Ignatius: he had just
-received orders from his Superior to prepare for the missions when it
-came on. An end was put to his preparation for the time, but he
-resumed the task as soon as the doctors allowed him.
-
-During his noviciate he had two kinds of trials to endure, besides
-those mentioned already. Father Constantine was remarkable for his
-meekness and charity; but he put on extra severity for Father
-Ignatius. His companions tried to show him some marks of distinction,
-and would offer to relieve him from works that were humiliating, or
-likely to be galling to one of his standing. The latter trial he
-complained of, and he was troubled at the other because some of of the
-religious complained of the novice-master's severity towards him. He
-had some more mortifications of the kind he playfully told us a few
-chapters back, as affecting Father Dominic in Oscott. He was troubled
-with chilblains, and was obliged, in consequence, to wear shoes and
-stockings for a great part of his noviciate. This he looked upon as a
-great grievance, inasmuch as he could not live like the others. When
-at last the chilblains got well, and he was allowed to put on the
-sandals, he felt overjoyed, and even writes a letter to congratulate
-himself on his happiness.
-
-He writes two or three letters, in which he notes his astonishment at
-the Irish being so negligent in England, who had been so regular at
-home. He says, they all send {360} for the priest, and show great
-signs of repentance when dying; but, out of a number he attended, only
-one returned to the Church after recovery. "Still," he says, "it would
-be long till one of them would answer as the English pensioner is
-reported to have done on his death-bed. The minister talked much about
-Heaven and its happiness, but the patient coolly replied, 'It's all
-very well, sir; but old England and King George for me!'"
-
-His noviciate glides quietly on to its end; and except his ordinary
-work of attending to a mission in Stone besides his home duties,
-nothing occurs to break the monotony.
-
-At length, on the 6th of January, 1848, Father Ignatius and Father
-Dominic remain up after matins. We are told in the Journal, that the
-novice made his confession and had a long conference with his
-director, in preparation for the great event of his profession. Father
-Dominic was going off that day, but the conveyance disappointed him,
-he was obliged to wait till the next. That evening Father Ignatius is
-once more in the midst of a moving ceremony: on his knees, with his
-hands placed in Father Dominic's he pronounces his irrevocable
-consecration by the vows of his religious profession.[Footnote 10] The
-badges are affixed to his breast, the sacrifice is completed--and well
-and worthily was it carried out. It is easier to imagine than to
-describe the joy of the two holy friends, so long united in the bonds
-of heavenly charity, as they spoke that day about their first
-acquaintance, and wondered at the dispositions of Providence, which
-now made them more than brothers.
-
- [Footnote 10: The profession on death-bed is conditional, so that
- if a novice recovers, after thus pronouncing his vows, he has to
- go on as if they had not been made.]
-
-
-{361}
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-His First Year As A Passionist.
-
-
-Shortly after his profession, Father Ignatius was sent out on
-missions. The first mission he gave, with Father Gaudentius, was to
-his old parishioners of West Bromwich. Crowds came to hear him; some
-to have another affectionate look, and hear once more the well-known
-voice of their old pastor; others from curiosity to see what he had
-been transformed into by the monks. This mission was very successful,
-for, besides the usual work of the reconciliation of sinners, and the
-helping on of the fervent, there were fifteen Protestants received
-into the Church before its close. He gives another mission somewhere
-in the Borough, London, with the same companion. During this mission
-he hears that his style of preaching is not liked much by the Irish;
-he feels a little sad at this, as he fears the work may fail of
-success through his deficiency.
-
-The preaching of Father Ignatius was peculiar to himself; he cannot be
-said to possess the gifts of human eloquence in the highest degree,
-but there was a something like inspiration in his most commonplace
-discourse. He put the point of his sermon clearly before his audience,
-and he proved it most admirably. His acquaintance with the Scriptures
-was something marvellous; not only could he quote texts in support of
-doctrines, but he applied the facts of the sacred volume in such a
-happy way, with such a flood of new ideas, that one would imagine he
-lived in the midst of them, or had been told by the sacred writers
-what they were intended for. Besides this, he brought a fund of
-illustrations to carry conviction through and through the mind. His
-illustrations were taken from every phase of life, and every kind of
-{362} employment; persons listening to him always found the practical
-gist of his discourse carried into their very homestead; nay, the
-objections they themselves were prepared to advance against it, were
-answered before they could have been thought out. To add to this,
-there was an earnestness in his manner that made you see his whole
-soul, as it were, bent upon your spiritual good. His holiness of life,
-which report published before him, and one look was enough to convince
-you of its being true, compelled you to set a value on what he said,
-far above the _dicta_ of ordinary priests.
-
-His style was formed on the Gospel. He loved the parables and the
-similes of Our Lord, and rightly judged that the style of his Divine
-Master was the most worthy of imitation. So far as the matter of his
-discourses were concerned, he was inimitable; his manner was peculiar
-to himself, deeply earnest and touching. He abstained from the
-rousing, thundering style, and his attempts that way to suit the taste
-and thus work upon the convictions of certain congregations, showed
-him that his fort did not lie there. The consequence was, that when
-the words of what he jocosely termed a "crack" preacher would die with
-the sound of his own voice, or the exclamations of the multitude,
-Father Ignatius's words lived with their lives, and helped them to
-bear trials that came thirty years after they had heard him.
-
-Towards the end of his life, he became rather tiresome to those who
-knew not his spirit; but it was the tiresomeness of St. John the
-Evangelist. We are told that "the disciple whom Jesus loved" used to
-be carried in his old age before the people, and that his only sermon
-was "My little children, love one another." He preached no more, and
-no less, but kept perpetually repeating these few words. Father
-Ignatius, in like manner, was continually repeating "the conversion of
-England." No matter what the subject of his sermon was, he brought
-this in. He told us often that it became a second nature to him; that
-he could not quit thinking or speaking of it, even if he tried, and
-believed he could speak for ten days consecutively on the conversion
-of England, without having to repeat an idea.
-
-{363}
-
-He got on very well in the missions: he took all the different parts
-as they were assigned him; but he was more successful in the lectures
-than in the great sermons of the evening. His confessional was always
-besieged with penitents, and he never spared himself.
-
-The late Cardinal, who was the chief mover in bringing the Passionists
-to England, wished to have a house of the order in the diocese of
-Westminster (then the London District), to which he had been recently
-translated. Father Dominic entered heartily into the project, and
-Father Ignatius with him. After a few weeks' negotiation, they took
-possession of Poplar House, in the west end of Hampstead, towards the
-end of June, 1848. A new foundation was, in those days, as it is
-still, a formidable undertaking. The ground has generally to be
-bought; a church and house built upon it; the necessary machinery to
-set it going to be provided, and all this from nothing but the
-Providence of God, and the charity of benefactors. Under a more than
-ordinary pressure of their difficulties, the house was opened, and
-after many changes and removals, it has finally fixed itself on the
-brow of Highgate Hill, under the name of St. Joseph's Retreat.
-
-He notes in his Journal that the place in Hampstead brought some sad
-thoughts into his mind, as it was within sight of where his sister,
-Lady Georgiana Quin, died in 1823. He tells us also that he was
-benighted somewhere in London, and had to beg for a bed for the first
-time in his life. On a fine summer's day he sauntered leisurely
-through the grounds of Eton, ruminating over the scenes of forty years
-before, when he first became a child of what proved to him a novercal
-institution.
-
-He was not destined to labour much, this time, for the London house.
-Father Dominic took the charge of it, and appointed Father Ignatius
-Rector of St. Michael's, Aston Hall, a post that became vacant by the
-death of Father Constantine. Father Ignatius thus mentions the matter
-in one of his letters:--
-
- "It was just such a death as one might expect of him (Father
- Constantine). I was thinking and saying to some one before, he would
- be attending to his duties and giving directions in the house to the
- last. In his {364} agony, he heard the clock strike, and, mistaking
- the hour for another when some bell has to ring, he asked why the
- bell did not ring for such a duty. It is recorded that what was most
- remarkable in him was his gentleness and patience; and that indeed
- was very striking. He must have suffered heavily to die in a
- lingering way by a cancer, but he never was disturbed, and went on
- saying mass, and doing all that was to be done, as long as he could
- stand to it. His loss makes, as you have heard, a great change in my
- position. I never dreamt of being a Superior for years to come, and
- thought I had come to an end, almost for life, of keeping accounts
- and ruling household affairs. But God's will be done. It is a great
- comfort, as I find, to be in the rule of good religious, to what it
- would be to have people under one who seek their own gain and
- pleasure."
-
-Ruling, even thus, did not turn out so easy a matter; for it is
-recorded in the Journal, that Father Dominic gave him "a long lecture
-about the proper way of ruling," which he seems to have drawn down
-upon himself by some mistakes.
-
-In the beginning of September, this year, he gave his first retreat.
-It was to the students of Carlow College. This event gave him a fresh
-start in his great work. Since 1844, when he made the tour on the
-Continent, procuring prayers for England, his zeal in the cause seems
-to have slumbered somewhat. Not that he was the less anxious for the
-return of his countrymen to the faith of their fathers, but he did
-not, perhaps, see any opportunity open for moving others in a general
-way to help the work by their prayers. It is rather a wonderful
-disposition of Providence that his energies should be renewed in
-Ireland, and that, too, in '48. Extracts from a few letters will show
-how it happened. In a letter to Mrs. Canning, he says:--
-
- "My last journey to Ireland was, in the first place, to preach a
- retreat in Carlow College, which was the first and only retreat I
- have been on alone; secondly, to beg in Dublin for our church and
- house; thirdly, I got full into the pursuit of prayers for England
- again. I had hardly expected anything could be done in this last way
- under the excited state of feelings in Ireland against England. I
- began, {365} however, speaking in a convent in Carlow, and so warm
- and beautiful was the way in which these nuns took it up, that I
- lost no occasion after of saying mass in some convents every
- morning, and preaching to them upon it; and the zeal which they
- showed has given me a new spring to push it on in England.
- Accordingly, I have been preaching many times on it since I have
- been this time in Lancashire. I only ask now _one Hail Mary_ a day
- to be said by every Catholic for the conversion of England. Here is
- a great field to work upon. You want to be doing something for
- England, I know; why not take up this object, and in every letter
- you write abroad or at home make people promise to do this, and make
- every man, woman, and child do it too. If millions would do as much
- as this, we should have thousands who would offer themselves up as
- victims to be immolated for the object, and we should have grand
- results. Above all, let it be done in schools at home; so that all
- the young may be trained to pant for this object, as young Hannibal
- for the destruction of Rome; and a foundation will be laid for the
- work to go on after we are all dead, if no fruit appears before."
-
-In a letter to Father Vincent, he writes almost in the same strain:--
-
- "My journey to Ireland was satisfactory in several respects to a
- certain degree. It answered well for begging purposes. With all
- their poverty, they are so generous that I made one of my best
- week's begging in Dublin. I hope for a great deal more in November,
- when I am going again to preach in Dublin, and will stay as long as
- I can. I picked up also one novice, not a cleric, but, I hope, a
- very promising lay brother. I think there will be many good subjects
- for us in Ireland, when we are better known there.' (In this his
- expectations were most signally realized.) "I also got into the
- pursuit of prayers for England again. I said mass, and preached
- after mass ten times in convents on the subject, and the zeal and
- charity with which it was taken up by the good religious quite gave
- me a new spring in that cause. I have begun preaching in England for
- prayers. Will you help me in this? I have been writing, with Father
- {366} Dominic's approval, to our General, to obtain some indulgences
- for those who will join in those prayers."
-
-In this year, Father Ignatius lost two great friends by death, Dr.
-Gentili and the Rev. Wm. Richmond. He had several conversations with
-the former, who was then giving his last mission in Dublin, and
-assisted on his return to England, at the death-bed of Mr. Richmond.
-He used to relate how this worthy man became a Catholic, as an
-instance of the ways of God in conversion. When Richmond was a boy, he
-went to see an uncle of his, who was a priest. One day he saw candles
-lit in the church in clear daylight. On entering, to satisfy himself
-that nothing was wrong, he saw his uncle issuing from the sacristy, in
-the most fantastic garb he ever beheld. He ran out of the church in a
-fright, and scarcely came near his uncle for three days. He did sum up
-courage enough to approach at length, and the end was that he became a
-priest himself, and outshone his uncle.
-
-During the visit Father Ignatius paid to Ireland, according to
-promise, in the November of this year, he preached in several places
-on the conversion of England. He went to Maynooth, and addressed the
-junior students at night prayer and the seniors at morning prayer, on
-the same subject. He remains nearly a month in Ireland this time. He
-meets a few secular people who are not so kind and generous in
-listening to him as nuns and students. One day he begged of a
-gentleman, who immediately began to grope in his pocket for a coin
-which he should consider worthy of offering. Whilst the search was
-going on, Father Ignatius ventured to ask prayers for the conversion
-of England. "England!" said the gentleman; "I pray for England! Not
-I." And he turned off with a refusal, and left his petitioner to find
-another benefactor.
-
-When he returned to England, he preached everywhere, to priests, nuns,
-and people; he wrote and spoke continually for prayers for England.
-The only change in his system since the former crusade was, that the
-prayer he asked for was defined. It was only _one Hail Mary_ daily.
-This prayer he was especially fond of using; he said it for every
-person and everything. The antiphon of the Church, {367} "Rejoice,
-Virgin Mary, thou alone hast destroyed all heresies throughout the
-world," was continually in his heart. The devotion of the people of
-Ireland to our Blessed Lady brought this out; and it was remarked by
-himself and others, that when once he had put the great object of his
-endeavours under the protection of Mary, he never cooled or slackened,
-but always progressed with blessings.
-
-The last day of this year was spent as all such days of his life,
-since he turned thoroughly to God's service, in being awake and in
-prayer at midnight.
-
-
-{368}
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-A Peculiar Mission.
-
-
-Father Ignatius had an idea in his mind for a number of years, and saw
-no practical way in which it might be realized. He looked forward,
-with a pleasing anticipation, to the prospect of going about from
-parish to parish on a kind of itinerary mission. The thing was unusual
-in our day, and he saw no plea by which it could be justified to
-others, or he should have gone on it long before. He proposed it at
-last to his Superiors, and the circumstances of his position
-wonderfully favoured its prosecution.
-
-Voluntary poverty was raised to a virtue by the example and teaching
-of our Divine Lord, and poverty must always have a counterpart. To be
-poor is to be dependent, and want is ordained for the sanctification
-of plenty. When our Divine Master said that it was difficult for the
-rich man to be saved, He subjoined that with God all things are
-possible. The miseries of the poor are the channels through which
-riches can flow into Heaven, and make friends to their possessors of
-the mammon of iniquity.
-
-In the dispensation of Providence, the Church watches over the
-interests of all her children, and whilst she proclaims the severity
-of the Gospel maxims, she provides for their observance. She must
-preach poverty of spirit, from the text of the sermon on the Mount,
-and she manages to make kings who are richer than David live after
-God's own heart. The beautiful harmony between rank and lowliness,
-authority and submission, prosperity and adversity, has long ago been
-arranged by the practice of the ages of faith, and by the Pontifical
-constitutions which impress the seal of the Fisherman upon the usages
-of Catholicity.
-
-{369}
-
-In no department of Catholic polity is this superior wisdom so well
-exemplified as in the rules of mendicant orders. The Church takes the
-noble from his seat of power, she makes him cast his coronet at the
-feet of Peter, and stretch out his hand to his former vassal for the
-paltry morsel that is to sustain his future existence. She forbids him
-to accumulate; she makes him give back a thousand-fold what he
-receives. By thus bringing down the pride of power and making it pay
-court to the discontented child of penury, she reconciles man with
-Providence and suffuses reverence through the crowd, who might grumble
-at greatness, by making their lord according to the world their
-servant according to the Gospel.
-
-The constitutions of the Congregation of the Passion are framed upon
-the spirit of the Church. If a man of property joins our poor
-institute, he cannot bring his possessions with him to enrich the
-community he enters; for Blessed Paul has not allowed them to have any
-fixed revenue. He may, indeed, give a donation towards the building of
-their church, the furnishing of their poor schools, or the paying off
-the debts they were obliged to contract to secure the ground upon
-which their monastery is built; but that is left to his own charity.
-He is supposed by our rule to hand over his property to a relative or
-a charitable institution, and reserve to himself the right to take it
-back, in case he may not persevere in his vocation, or abandon the
-life he has embraced.
-
-Thus deprived of stable funds, we are to rely upon the Providence of
-God; and we can give Him glory by confessing that we never yet found
-His word to fail, "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and his justice,
-and all these things shall be added unto you." Betimes we may have to
-send a brother to ask for some assistance from kind benefactors; but,
-as a rule, God inspires many to befriend us without our asking. The
-duties of missions and retreats, and the preparation for them, prevent
-us from digging a livelihood out of the earth; but the sweat of our
-brow that is thus spent earns our bread by procuring us friends.
-People crowd to our churches, and leave thank-offerings there to prove
-the reality of their devotion; and, as an ancient {370} father of ours
-once said, "our support comes in through the choir-windows."
-
-When we have to build a church or a house, we must follow the custom
-of surrounding priests; but, as our working is not purely local, we
-send a father or brother to distant countries, and try not to be too
-burthensome to our neighbours. Charity endureth all things; but the
-branch of charity which is exercised in the giving of alms is not
-always content to be too much importuned, or called upon too often.
-Charity therefore requires that those who plead for the exercise of
-one arm do not strain the other, and it makes provision against
-provoking anger or ill-feeling from the weaknesses it tries to cure by
-stirring to activity.
-
-In the year 1848 the fathers at Aston Hall stood in sore need of a
-church. Hitherto they had turned a room upstairs into a temporary
-chapel; and, inconvenient as it might be to have people going so far
-into a religious house, they would have borne up longer, had not a
-builder told them that anything like a crowd would bring the whole
-place down about their ears. Father Ignatius mentions this in a letter
-he wrote to Mrs. Canning. "It will," he says, "be a great addition to
-us to have a respectable church, instead of our chapel up-stairs; but
-we should not have had a plea for asking for it, if this chapel had
-not been so good as to give us notice to quit, by becoming cracky a
-little."
-
-Here, then, was an opportunity. Some one should go out and beg. Father
-Ignatius was commissioned to write letters, but though the first was
-answered by a cheque for £100, with a promise of more, there was not
-enough forthcoming to enable them to build. Could he not do two things
-at once? Could he not ask for prayers as well as alms? Did not the
-very plea of begging give him a right to go to different places, even
-from parish to parish, and speak publicly and privately? It did. And
-he was forthwith sent out to carry into execution the dreams of half a
-life, which he scarcely ever expected to realize. He first began this
-peculiar mission of his by going through the towns with a guide, like
-ordinary questers: in a few years the plan developed itself into the
-"little missions."
-
-{371}
-
-His first begging tour was through Birmingham, Derby, Nottingham,
-Oscott, Leamington, and Wolverhampton. In a few months he sallies
-forth again, and Liverpool is the theatre of his labours. Many and
-rude were the trials he had to endure in this humiliating work. He
-thus playfully alludes to some of them:
-
- "I am on a begging mission here at Liverpool, in which I find rough
- and smooth, ups and downs, every day. The general result is very
- fair. I have been here since Monday, the 8th of May" (he writes on
- the 20th), "and have got more than £100, but with hard walking. I
- am, however, quite well, and the inflammation of my eye quite
- gone--nothing left but a little haziness. It lasted five weeks
- without relenting at all. If it had gone on, I must have stayed at
- home; but it just began to improve before I started, and has got
- well, _tout en marchant_. My present life is very pleasant when
- money comes kindly; but when I get refused, or walk a long way and
- find every one out, it is a bit mortifying. That is best gain for
- me, I suppose, though not what I am travelling for. .... I should
- not have had the time this morning to write to you, had it not been
- for a disappointment in meeting a young man, who was to have been my
- begging-guide for part of the day; and so I had to come home, and
- stay till it is time to go and try my fortune in the enormous
- market-house, where there are innumerable stalls with poultry, eggs,
- fruit, meat, &c., kept in great part by Irish men and women, on whom
- I have to-day, presently, to go and dance attendance, as this is the
- great market-day. I feel, when going out for a job like this, as a
- poor child going in a bathing machine to be dipped in the sea,
- _frisonnant_; but the Irish are so good-natured and generous that
- they generally make the work among them full of pleasure, when once
- I am in it."
-
-One sees a vast difference between begging of the rich and of the
-poor. If the latter have nothing to give, they will at least show a
-kind face, and will not presume to question the priest about his
-business; whereas some of the former, because they have something
-which they will not give, either absent themselves or treat the priest
-unkindly for {372} asking. For what? Because he begs. It is not for
-himself: he even retrenches necessaries from his own table in order to
-spare something for the house of God. And what, after all, does he
-ask? The price of an hour's recreation, or an extra ornament, that may
-be very well spared. That is all. The priest wants people to look
-after their own interests, to send their money before them to heaven,
-instead of wasting it on vanity or sin. And because he does this, and
-humbles himself for the sake of his God, he must be made to feel it.
-Father Ignatius was keenly alive to this, and the way he felt for
-those who forgot themselves by sending him away empty was far more
-afflictive than the personal humiliation. He could thank God for the
-latter, but he could not do so for the former.
-
-Once he was fiercely abused, when begging, and as the reviler had come
-to a full stop in his froward speech, Father Ignatius quietly
-retorted: "Well, as you have been so generous to myself personally,
-perhaps you would be so kind as to give me something now for my
-community." This had a remarkable effect. It procured him a handsome
-offering then, as well as many others ever since.
-
-Another day he knocked at a door, and was admitted by a very
-sumptuously attired footman. Father Ignatius told the servant the
-object of his visit, his religious name, and asked if he could see the
-lady or gentleman of the house. The servant strode off to see, and in
-a few seconds returned to say that the gentleman was out, and the lady
-was engaged and could not see him, neither could she afford to help
-him. He then remarked that perhaps she was not aware that he was the
-Honourable Mr. Spencer. The servant looked at him, bowed politely and
-retired. In a minute or two Father Ignatius hears a rustling of silks
-and a tripping of quick steps on the stairs. In came my lady, and what
-with blushings and bowings, and excuses and apologies, she scarcely
-knew where she was until she found herself and him tête-à-tête. She
-really did not know it was he, and there were so many impostors. "But
-what will you take, my dear sir?" and before he could say yea or nay
-she rung for his friend the footman. Father Ignatius coolly said, that
-he did not {373} then stand in need of anything to eat, and that he
-never took wine; but that he did stand in need of money for a good
-purpose, and if she could give him anything in that way he should be
-very glad to accept it. She handed him a five-pound note at once,
-expressing many regrets that something or other prevented its being
-more. Father Ignatius took the note, folded it carefully, made sure of
-its being safely lodged in his pocket, and then made thanksgiving in
-something like the following words: "Now, I am very sorry to have to
-tell you that the alms you have given me will do you very little good.
-If I had not been born of a noble family, you would have turned me
-away with coldness and contempt. I take the money, because it will be
-as useful to me as if it were given with a good motive; but I would
-advise you, for the future, if you have any regard for your soul, to
-let the love of God, and not human respect, prompt your alms-giving."
-So saying, he took his hat and bid his benefactress a good morning.
-
-Many were the anecdotes he told us about his begging adventures; but
-it is next to impossible to remember them. In every case, however, we
-could see the saint through the veil his humility tried to cast over
-himself. Whether he was received well or ill, he always tried to turn
-his reception to the spiritual benefit of those who received him. He
-made more friends than any person living, perhaps, and never was known
-to make an enemy; his very simplicity and holiness disarmed malice. He
-says, in a letter, upon getting his first commission to go and quest:
-"I am to be a great beggar!" His prognostication began to be verified.
-Strange fact, the Honourable George Spencer a beggar! And happier,
-under all the trials and crosses incident to such a life, than if he
-had lived in the luxury of Althorp. Religion is carrying out to-day
-what its Founder began eighteen hundred years ago. He left the kingdom
-of heaven to live on the charity of His own creatures.
-
-{374}
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Death Of Father Dominic.
-
-
-We group the incidents of this chapter around this sad event: some of
-them were the last these two bosom friends did together, and the
-others were occasioned by their separation.
-
-Early in January, 1849, Father Ignatius went, at the invitation of Mr.
-John Smith, of Button, to see a spot of ground upon which that worthy
-man intended building a church and house for a community of
-Passionists. Father Ignatius did not like the situation; but as soon
-as he spoke to Father Dominic about it, they both came to St. Helen's
-Junction to see if two heads might not be wiser than one. Father
-Dominic landed on the platform a little before Father Ignatius, who
-had been delayed somewhere on the way. He went immediately to look for
-the great benefactor. A fine-looking, open, plain man saluted him, and
-he thought this must be a Catholic, and likely he knows the person I
-am looking for. "Do you know where lives a certain Mr. Smith?" asked
-Father Dominic. "I should think I did," answered his new friend, and
-after a few minutes' conversation the father was satisfied, for he was
-no other than Mr. Smith himself. They both walked over a considerable
-extent of ground, within which Mr. Smith told the good father to make
-his choice of a site. He had selected that whereon St. Anne's Retreat
-now stands, when Father Ignatius arrived. Father Ignatius hesitated a
-little before giving his consent, and it was only when Father Dominic
-said emphatically, "The house that is to be built here will yet be the
-largest and best we shall have in England," that he fully agreed. That
-prophecy is noted in a {375} journal Father Ignatius kept at the time,
-and he wondered afterwards how the church and monastery that arose on
-that dreary spot verified it to the letter. It is the best and largest
-we have in England at the present moment, and Father Dominic never saw
-a stone of its foundations laid.
-
-Fathers Dominic, Ignatius, and Vincent, give a mission in Romney
-Terrace, Westminster, in March. Shortly after they give another in
-High Street, Dublin. At this mission they introduced the Italian
-ceremonies, such as peacemakers (persons appointed to reconcile those
-at variance), special sermons for different classes of people, bell
-for the five _paters_, and public asking of pardon by the
-missionaries. It fell to Father Ignatius to be spokesman in this
-latter ceremony, and sore straitened was he to find out in what
-particular the fathers had offended, that he might therefrom draw the
-apology for their act. He searched and searched, and at last
-remembered his own proneness to nod asleep when too long in the
-confessional. This was the plea he made, and we must say it was a very
-poor one: it gives, however, a good idea of his candour, and want of
-unreality. These demonstrations were found to be unsuited to the
-genius of the people, and have been suffered to fall into desuetude
-ever since.
-
-Father Ignatius goes next on a begging tour through Manchester,
-Sheffield, and the north of England. He called at Carstairs House, on
-his way to Glasgow and Edinburgh, to visit his friend Mr. Monteith.
-Mr. Monteith was received into the Church by Dr. Wiseman, when Father
-Ignatius lived in Oscott. Father Ignatius was his god-father. A
-friendship then began between them which never cooled; they kept up a
-correspondence from which many important hints have been borrowed for
-this book, and it was from Mr. Monteith's place the soul of Father
-Ignatius took its departure for a better world. Mr. Monteith extended
-the friendship he had for Father Ignatius to his other religious
-brethren, and time after time has he given them substantial proofs of
-its depth and generosity.
-
-Father Ignatius and he had been for some time in correspondence about
-founding a house of Passionists {376} somewhere near Lanark or
-Carstairs; but circumstances over which they had no control prevented
-them coming to a conclusion. The Vincentians have well and worthily
-taken the place, and the first house of our order founded in Scotland
-was St. Mungo's, Glasgow, a few months after Father Ignatius's death.
-It was he who opened Mr. Monteith's domestic chapel, and said the
-first mass in it. And it was in the same chapel the first mass was
-said for his own soul in presence of the body.
-
-He says in the Journal:--
-
- "Tuesday, Aug. 14.--Went to London with Father Dominic. We had a
- fine talk with Dr. Wiseman. We dined at 12½ in King William Street
- with Faber and the Oratorians.
-
- "Wednesday, Aug. 15.--Sung mass at 10 and preached, Prepared in a
- hurry for my journey. Went off at 3½ for the Continent."
-
-He never saw Father Dominic in the flesh again.
-
-On the 27th of August, 1849, Father Dominic and a brother priest were
-travelling by railway to Aston. In the morning, before leaving London,
-the companion asked Father Dominic to bring him with him; he had just
-arrived from Australia, and wished to see some of his old companions
-at Aston Hall. Father Dominic thought this was not reason enough for
-incurring the expense of the journey; he demurred, but at length
-assented. It was fortunate he did. When they came as far as Reading,
-Father Dominic became suddenly ill. He was taken out on the platform,
-and as the people were afraid of an epidemic, no one would admit the
-patient into his house. There lay the worn-out missionary, who had
-prayed and toiled so long for the conversion of England, on that bleak
-desolate-looking platform, abandoned by all for whose salvation he
-thirsted, with only a companion kneeling by his side to prepare him
-for eternity. But the coldness and want of hospitality of the people
-gave him no concern: other thoughts engrossed him. A few minutes he
-suffered, and in those few he made his preparation. He made
-arrangements for the government of our houses, he gave his last
-instructions to his companion, he invoked a blessing upon England, and
-then placidly {377} closed his eyes for ever upon this wicked world,
-to open them in a brighter one. He died abandoned, and almost alone,
-but he died in the poverty he had practised, and the solitude he
-loved.
-
-Father Ignatius was in Holland at the time. On his arrival at our
-house in Tournay he heard a rumour of Father Dominic's death. He gave
-no credit to it at first; a letter written to him about it went
-astray; and it was not until about a fortnight after it happened that
-he saw a paragraph in a newspaper, giving the full particulars. He
-hastened home at once to England, and the first thing he heard from
-Dr. Wiseman was that Father Dominic had nominated him his successor.
-
-Father Ignatius, when his provisional appointment had been confirmed
-in Rome, could only look forward to trials and difficulties such as he
-had never to get through before. We had then three houses of the order
-in England, and one in Belgium, which were united under one Superior,
-acting as Provincial. The houses were not yet constituted into a
-canonical province. The fewness of the members, and their ignorance of
-the customs and ways of a strange country, increased the difficulties.
-That year, indeed, four excellent priests, who have since worked hard
-on the English mission, came from Rome; but they could as yet only say
-mass, on account of their imperfect acquaintance with the English
-language.
-
-Then, the existence of each house was so precarious that the smallest
-gust of opposition seemed sufficient to unpeople them. Aston Hall was
-struggling to build a church, in which undertaking that mission was
-destined to exhaust all the life it had; for it eked out but a dying
-existence from the time the church was opened, until it was given up
-in a few years. The retreat at Woodchester seemed to have lacked any
-spirit of vitality from the absence of the cross in its foundation.
-The generosity of a convert made everything smooth and convenient in
-the beginning, but the difficulties that led at length to our leaving
-it were already threatening to rise. The house in London was doomed to
-be transplanted to the wilderness of The Hyde, even before {378} the
-death of Father Dominic, and St. Anne's, Sutton, was not yet begun.
-
-This was the material position of the Passionists when Father Ignatius
-became Superior, or _quasi_ Provincial. To add to this, the fathers
-were not first-rate men of business. They could pray well, preach and
-hear confessions, but they gave people of the world credit for being
-better than they were. Some of their worldly affairs became,
-therefore, complicated, and Father Ignatius, unfortunately, was not
-the man to rectify matters and put them straight. He was a sage in
-spirituals, but the very reverse in temporals.
-
-Many of the religious became disheartened at the prospect. Some lost
-their vocations. Many fought manfully with contending difficulties,
-weathered all the storms, and, tempered and taught by those days of
-trouble, look with smiling placidity on what we should think serious
-crosses in these days. Such is the beginning of every religious
-institute; it grows and thrives by contradiction and persecution.
-Human foresight prophesied our destruction then, and could not believe
-that in sixteen years we should have seven houses in this province,
-with an average of about twenty religious for each. The ways of God
-are wonderful.
-
-This kind of confession was necessary, in order that readers might
-have an idea of Father Ignatius's position after the death of Father
-Dominic.
-
-He set to work at once, first carrying out Father Dominic's
-intentions, and then trying some special work of his own. The new
-church at Woodchester was consecrated by Dr. Hendren and Dr.
-Ullathorne, and Dr. Wiseman preached at the opening. The new church of
-St. Michael's, Aston Hall, was opened in the same year. On the 7th of
-November the community of Poplar House, two priests and a lay brother,
-move to The Hyde.
-
-Father Ignatius, with Fathers Vincent and Gaudentius, give a mission
-in Westminster, and they venture out in their habits through the
-streets of London. This mission brought out some of Father Ignatius's
-peculiarities. In the instruction upon the sanctification of holy
-days, which it was his duty to give, he proposed that the Irish should
-make {379} "a general strike, not for wages, but for mass on
-festivals." He went to visit Father Faber, who was ill at the time;
-they became engrossed in conversation, when Father Ignatius looked at
-his watch and said he should get away to prepare his sermon or
-instruction. Father Faber said this was a very human proceeding, and
-was of opinion that missionaries should be able to preach like the
-Apostles, without preparation. Father Ignatius turned the matter over
-in his mind, reasoned it out with himself, and thenceforward never
-delivered what might be called an elaborate discourse.
-
-It may be remarked, before closing the chapter, that Father Dominic,
-at Father Ignatius's suggestion, ordered, in the beginning of 1849,
-three Hail Marys to be said by us after Complin for the conversion of
-England. The practice is still continued, and has been extended to our
-houses on the Continent and in America.
-
-
-{380}
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Spirit Of Father Ignatius At This Time.
-
-
-So much has to be said about the exterior actions of Father Ignatius,
-that one is apt, in reading them, to forget the spirit in which they
-were done. It is true that it is by the nature of the actions
-themselves a judgment can be formed of what that spirit must have
-been, but then they are liable to a false construction.
-
-He was chiefly remarkable for his spirit of poverty. It was not alone
-that he loved poverty, and tried to observe his vow, but he refined
-this observance to an exquisite degree, by trying to treat himself and
-get others to treat him like a mean beggar. He wished to feel poverty,
-and sought hardships in things that were easy enough, for that end.
-When he went by train he always took a third-class ticket, and was
-most ingenious in his defence of this proceeding. If some one objected
-to him that the third-class carriages generally contained rough, low,
-ill-bred, and coarsely-spoken fellows, he gently answered: "Yes; you
-may find a thick sprinkling of blackguards there." "Whether or no," he
-would say again, "the third class is the poor man's class, and it
-ought to be mine." One time he was expected to preach a grand sermon
-in some town or other; the lord of the manor, a Catholic, ordered his
-carriage, with livery servants, and came himself to bring him in state
-to the priest's house. He waited for the good father on the platform,
-looking at the doors of the different first-class carriages, and
-condescending to give a glance or two towards the second. What was his
-surprise when Father Ignatius, habit and sandals and a', got out of a
-third. "My dear Father Ignatius," he half indignantly exclaimed, "why
-do _you_ travel by {381} third class?" "Well," replied Father
-Ignatius, "because there isn't a fourth."
-
-This idea that he was a poor man and ought to live like one he carried
-out in everything. He might be generally seen with a large blue bag.
-This bag was not of a respectable make or durable material; no, it was
-made of some kind of drogget, like an ordinary sack, and had a thick
-clumsy tape that gathered in the mouth of it, and closed it with a big
-knot. When he had a long journey before him he brought a pair of
-these, and tying them together put the knot upon his shoulder, and
-would trudge off six or seven miles with one dangling in front and
-another behind. If somebody offered him a seat in a car or wagon, he
-gladly accepted it; if not, he did without it. On this same principle
-he seldom refused a meal when out; and if he wanted something to eat,
-he generally went and begged for it at the first house he came to. At
-home he usually washed and mended his underclothing and stockings (the
-stockings, by the way, would have blistered the hardest foot after his
-mending), and whilst he was Superior he would never allow anyone to do
-a menial service for him. He had a great dread of the slightest
-attempt at over-nicety in a priest's dress; it was anguish to him to
-see a priest, especially a religious, with kid gloves, neat shoes, or
-a fashionable hat. His own appearance might be put down as one degree
-short of slovenliness. Be it remembered that this was not his natural
-bent. We are told by those who knew him when a young man, that he
-would walk a dozen streets in London, and enter every hosier's shop,
-to find articles that would suit his taste in style and fitting; it
-had been almost impossible to please him in this respect; whereas,
-when a religious, he would as soon wear a cast-off tartan as anything
-else, if it did not tend to bring a kind of disrespect upon his order.
-He wore for several years an old mantle belonging to a religious who
-died, and would never leave it off as long as there was room for
-another patch upon it, unless the Provincial gave him strict orders to
-do so.
-
-He was scrupulously exact in fulfilling the rules and regulations of
-the Congregation, so much so that even in {382} those cases in which
-others would consider themselves dispensed, he would go through
-everything. It is our rule to chant the entire of the Divine Office in
-choir; the rector is supposed to give a homily or two, called
-_examens_, every week to the religious. When there is not a sufficient
-number to chant, of course no law human or divine would require us to
-do so; and if there be not a congregation, one is not expected, in the
-ordinary course of things, to preach to empty benches. Father Ignatius
-was as keenly aware of the common-sense drift of this kind of
-reasoning as any one could be, but he so overcame the promptings of
-human considerations, that a literal observance, in the face of such
-plain exceptions, seemed his ordinary way of acting. There are two
-instances in point that occurred about the year 1849. The two priests
-who formed the choir of the community at The Hyde remained in bed one
-night, either from illness or late attendance at sick-calls, and
-Father Ignatius was the only priest present. He chanted the whole of
-matins and lauds by himself, and went through it as formally as if
-there were twenty religious in choir. Another day the priests were
-out, and he and two lay brothers only remained at home; he preached
-them the _examen_ just the same as if the choir was full. Another time
-the alarum that used to go off at one o'clock, at that time for
-matins, missed. Father Ignatius awoke at three o'clock, and he
-immediately sprung the rattle and assembled the religious for matins.
-At half-past four the night work in choir was over: half-past five was
-then the hour of rising for prime. Father Ignatius kept them all in
-choir until the time, and had the bells rung, and everything else in
-due order. This does not argue a kind of unreasoning observance in
-him, out of time and out of place. On the contrary, he well knew that
-it was inconvenient, but he thought God would be more glorified by it
-than by an exemption from what was prescribed. One anecdote he used to
-relate to us convinced us of that. He often related with particular
-tact how once in Aston Hall, Father Dominic did not hear the bell for
-matins. He awoke at half-past two; everything was still. He went and
-sounded the rattle with a vengeance, {383} as if every sound was meant
-to say, "I'll give a good penance to the brother that forgot to put up
-the alarum." When he had done sounding he dropped the instrument at
-the choir door, and went in with a taper to light the lamps. What was
-his mortification to find all the religious just concluding their
-meditation with a smothered laugh at their Superior.
-
-Two other tokens of his spirit at this time must be illustrated
-together. He was a very cool reasoner; it might almost be said that he
-scarcely ever grew hot in dispute, and always gave his adversary's
-arguments due consideration. At the same time he was far from being of
-a sceptical cast of mind. If an argument approved itself to him, no
-matter how trifling it might be intrinsically, he felt bound to admit
-it, and adopt it, if practical, unless he could refute it completely.
-Again, he had a thorough disregard of human respect. "What will people
-say?" or "How will it look?" never entered into the motives of his
-actions; and if it did, he would consider himself bound to go straight
-and defy them. What did he care about the opinion of the world? It
-was, he knew, seldom led by sound reason, and therefore beneath his
-consideration.
-
-He found that the Oratorians began to go about in their _soutanes_; he
-had a talk with Father Faber about it, and forthwith resolved to go
-about in his habit. Cardinal Wiseman approved of it, if done with
-prudence, and Father Ignatius began at once. In a letter to Mr.
-Monteith he says:--"I court the honour of following the Oratorians
-close in this" (confining ourselves to the work of our vocation), as I
-have done likewise in beginning to wear the habit." He used to relate
-an amusing adventure he once had in a train with his habit on. At a
-certain station a middle-aged gentleman, with his little daughter,
-were getting into the carriage which Father Ignatius had to himself,
-as every one shunned his monkish company. The little girl got afraid,
-and would not enter. The gentleman bravely ventured in, to set an
-example to his child, but all to no avail,--the girl was still afraid.
-At last the man said out loud, "Come on, child; the gentleman won't
-bite!" meaning Father Ignatius. {384} The child summed up courage when
-she heard the paternal assurance of safety to her skin, and got to a
-seat. She bundled herself up in the corner diagonally opposite the
-monk, tried to appear as near the invisible as she could, and stared
-wildly on the strange spectacle for a long time. Her father got into
-conversation with Father Ignatius, began deciphering the badge by
-means of all the Greek and Latin he could bring to his assistance, and
-became quite interested in the genial conversation of the good priest.
-When the child heard her father laugh, she began to edge up near the
-stranger, and, before they separated, father and child were convinced
-that monks were not such frightful things as they appeared at first
-sight. We shall have other adventures to relate about his habit
-further on.
-
-Another peculiar characteristic of his spirit was his great devotion
-to the Blessed Virgin. He set more value on a Hail Mary than any
-conceivable form of prayer. He went so far in this, that he had to be
-reasoned out of its excess afterwards by one of his companions. He did
-everything by Hail Marys; he would convert England by Hail Marys; and
-in the year 1850 he obtained a plenary indulgence for the three Hail
-Marys for the conversion of England. When any one asked him to pray
-for them, he promised a Hail Mary. This was very praiseworthy in him,
-as we know how hard it is even for some to go heart and soul into the
-Catholic instinct of devotion to the Mother of God. They must have
-their qualifications, and their terms, and their conditions, as if,
-forsooth, she ought to be obliged to them for acknowledging her
-privileges at all. The worst of it is, that Catholics often tone down
-their books of devotion and expressions to suit the morbid tastes of
-ultra-Protestants, or the fastidiousness of some whitewashed Puseyite.
-It may be thought prudent to do so; but it is disgraceful, mean, and
-dishonourable, to say the least of it.
-
-These are the most prominent outlines in Father Ignatius's spirit at
-the time we are writing about, and if we add to them a great devotion
-to the sacrifice of the mass, we shall have his soul in a fair way
-before us. He never missed celebrating, if he possibly could; and
-often he arrived at {385}
-
-11 o'clock in the day at one of our houses, after travelling all
-night, and would eat nothing until he had first said mass. A month
-before he died he travelled all night from Glasgow to London, and said
-mass in Highgate at 11 o'clock. He was jaded, weak in health, but he
-would not lose one sacrifice: it was of too great a value, and he had
-received too many favours through it, to omit it on light grounds.
-This was a life-long devotion of his, and it is the essential one for
-a priest of God.
-
-From what has been said, we can form a fair estimate of his character
-as a Passionist. One is so obvious that it requires no mention at all,
-and that was his zeal for the conversion and sanctification of souls.
-So far did this go, that he seemed led by it blindly and wholly. This
-was his weak, or, perhaps more properly, his strong point. Go with him
-in that, and you covered a multitude of sins.
-
-Another essential was his "thanking God for everything." This he
-carried so far that he became perfectly insensible to insults,
-mockeries, and injuries, and yet he felt them keenly. At one time he
-used to pass late at night by a lonesome lane that led to our last
-house at The Hyde. He heard rumours of some evil-disposed wretches
-having intended to shoot him. One night he heard a rustling in the
-hedge as he was walking on, and the thought struck him that perhaps an
-assassin was lying in ambush for him. The religious asked him what
-were his thoughts. "Well," said he, "I hoped that when the bullet
-struck me I would have time to say, _'thank God for that'_ before I
-died."
-
-From this rough sketch of his spirit it will be seen that he had too
-little of the serpent, in the Gospel sense, to make a good Superior.
-He was too simple and confiding for that; he did not know how to
-suspect, and any one that knew how to get into his views could do what
-he pleased. At the same time, all reverenced him as a saint, and every
-day of his religious life increased the estimation in which he was
-held by his own brethren. This is the more valuable as it is the
-private life of most men which lowers them in the eyes of those who
-have the opportunity of observing them. Father Ignatius tried always
-to make the subject-matter of {386} his conversation as edifying as
-possible; it was withal so beautifully interspersed with amusing
-anecdotes, that it could not fail to interest all. He had a peculiar
-tact for relating stories, and a wonderful memory; he was unrivalled
-in his power of mimicry, and he enjoyed fun with the greatest relish.
-It was the opinion of every one who knew him intimately, that nothing
-came under his notice which he could not turn to pointing the argument
-of a sermon or furthering the glory of God. He christianized
-everything; and did so with such grace, that the love of what he
-remodelled was increased for its new aspect.
-
-
-{387}
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-His Dealings With Protestants And Prayers For Union.
-
-
-The kindly feelings Father Ignatius always showed for Protestants laid
-him open to the charge of a want of appreciation for the blessings of
-faith, or of not hating heresy as saints have hated it. Although his
-whole life and actions amply refute either conclusion, some of the
-incidents of this period of his life bring out his conduct in this
-respect in its real character.
-
-He tried to extend the benefit or plea of invincible ignorance as
-widely as possible. He laboured and reasoned, with a warmth unusual to
-him, to remove the notion some Catholics have, that the majority of
-Protestants know they are wrong, but from some unworthy motive will
-not give up their errors. His proofs of the position he chose to take
-here were not certainly the most convincing, for his stock argument
-was to quote himself. It did of course occur to him that its point
-could be retorted by the fact of his becoming a Catholic for his _bona
-fides_; but he took up the argument then by saying we were therefore
-to hope for the conversion of England. His idea of England's apostasy
-was mainly this: that the body of the people had been swindled out of
-their religion by the machinations of a few crafty, unprincipled
-statesmen, at the time of the Reformation. A system of misrepresentation
-and false colouring of Catholic doctrines and practices was invented
-and handed down from generation to generation, which impregnated the
-minds of children with the notion that Catholicity and absurdity were
-one and the same thing. From this point of view did he look at the
-millions who groped in the {388} darkness of error, blaspheming the
-doctrines of Jesus Christ, and imagining they were thereby doing Him a
-service. He took then the side of pity, which always inclines one to
-the lessening of faults.
-
-He lamented nothing more than the loss of faith in England, and he
-thought that a harsh, iron way of dealing with Englishmen would close
-their hearts against grace altogether. This led him to use the mildest
-terms he could find,--nay, the most respectful,--in speaking of
-Protestants. He would never call them "heretics," nor their ministers
-"parsons." "Separated from the Church," "Church of England people,"
-"Dissenters," "Clergymen," were his usual terms, and he would often
-also speak of them as "our separated brethren."
-
-This twofold aspect of his bearing towards Protestants certainly
-proceeded alike from charity and zeal. It was a common remark with
-him, that we ought not to suppose people bad and evil-disposed unless
-we are certain of it, neither should we hurt their feelings by
-opprobrious epithets. And if we intend to do them any good we should
-be the more cautious still as to our thoughts and words. He used to
-sigh when he had done speaking of the state of religion in England,
-but he would immediately start up as if from a reverie and say, "Shall
-we not do something to save our poor countrymen?" So far was he from
-sympathizing with the mildest form of error, that even in scholastic
-questions he would always take the safer side. In his love for the
-heretic, therefore, no one could ever find the least sympathy with the
-heresy; or if he called the error a polite name, it was only to gain
-admission to the heart it was corroding, in order to be allowed to
-pluck it out. If we take into account his great love for souls, it
-will seem wonderful that he did not burst out at times into
-indignation against what destroyed so many; but we must remember that
-such a thing as fierce outbursts of any kind were most unsuitable to
-his spirit. His love would make him try to eliminate from those who
-had died external to the Church, all the formal heresy he possibly
-could; and he felt special delight in the fact that the Catholic
-Church forbids us to judge the {389} damnation of any particular
-individual as certain. But then let us think for a moment of what he
-did to uproot heresy. He spoke, he wrote, he preached, he toiled for
-thirty years incessantly almost for this single object. Any one that
-weighs this well will be far from judging that he had the least
-sympathy with error. His kindliness, therefore, for Protestants, and
-his belief that the vast majority of them were in good faith, so far
-from making him sit down at ease and enjoy his own faith, and not
-bestir himself unless Protestants thrust themselves upon him to claim
-admission into the fold, produced directly the opposite effect. Their
-not being so bad as was generally imagined, buoyed his hope in their
-speedy recovery; their being so near the truth, as he charitably
-supposed, made him strain every nerve to compel them to come across
-the barrier that separated them from him.
-
-One of the means he adopted for reuniting Protestants to the Catholic
-Church laid him open to another serious charge, which was, if
-possible, more groundless than the last. In January, 1850, he began to
-go about and call upon Protestants of every description--ministers of
-church and state nobles and plebeians. His object was to get them all
-to pray for unity. To state plainly his way of action, it was
-this:--He intended to ask all Protestants "to pray for unity in the
-truth, wherever God knows it to be." This, he said, was of course to
-pray for conversion to Catholicism unknown to themselves; it was
-taking the enemy by stratagem in his own camp. Objections were made in
-different quarters against the proposition. Some said it was not
-acting fairly and candidly; he then used to qualify it by telling them
-that he knew very well the truth lay in the Catholic Church alone, and
-so did every Catholic, and that if any Protestant asked him he would
-plainly tell him so. Others then said, Protestants would be all
-praying for proselytes to their own persuasions, for they were all in
-good faith, and thought themselves in the truth. These and sundry
-other objections were made to this mode of proceeding; it was looked
-upon with suspicion, as savouring too much of communication with
-heretics, and he never got a {390} superior to approve of it, neither
-was it condemned. So it remained to the last an agitated question,
-which none of us would enter into, and which himself adopted with a
-kind of tentative adhesion. There was nothing wrong, certainly, in
-getting Protestants to pray for unity; but then, "unity in the truth,
-where God knew it to exist," was a very indefinite thing to propose to
-them. Questions might be raised which could only be answered in one
-way. What kind of unity? External or internal, or both? "Where does
-God know the truth to exist? Must we all put ourselves in a Cartesian
-doubt for a starting-point? And so on. The only answer could be--The
-Catholic Church. And might he not as well ask them to pray for that at
-once? Father Ignatius was not at all obstinate in sticking to this
-proposal as a theory he might reduce to practice, it came up at times
-in his conversation, and was dropped as easily.
-
-The mistake it led to was, however, rather serious: it was supposed
-that Father Ignatius looked favourably on, if he did not entirely
-coincide with, a society called "The Association for Promoting the
-Unity of Christendom," designated by the letters A.P.U.C. With this
-society Father Ignatius never had anything to do; he detested its
-principles, although he hoped it would do good in its way. He wished
-it to be confined to Protestants. One leading principle of the
-A.P.U.C. was certainly somewhat akin to some of Father Ignatius's
-dreams--conversions _en masse_; but his notions and those of the
-Association were widely different. They were for coming over in a
-great, respectable body, whose size and standing would deserve to
-receive great concessions in the way of discipline, as the condition
-of their surrender. Father Ignatius was for an unconditional
-submission of each individual, and could not allow any one to wait at
-the door of the Church for a companion to enter with him. The _en
-masse_ of Father Ignatius was no more nor less, then, than this: that
-the people of England should throw off their prejudices and begin in a
-body to examine candidly the grounds of the Catholic faith. He was
-glad that the Association existed, because it carried out so much of
-his wishes; but it {391} went too far for him, and in a prohibited
-line, when it asked for Catholic prayers and sacrifices, and for
-Catholic members. He never, therefore, gave his name to it, though
-often and repeatedly solicited to do so. His greatest friend was
-publicly known to be a member of the Association, and much as he loved
-and honoured him, Father Ignatius had no hesitation in saying of him,
-_in hoc non laudo_. Even so late as the year '63 or '64, he received a
-bundle of their official papers, with a private letter from the
-secretary and a number of the _Union Review_; he was seen to scan them
-over, and then throw them into the fire. About the year '50 or '51,
-when he was always going about asking for prayers for unity, after the
-new idea that struck him, an incident occurred to bear out what is
-here said. He happened to be speaking with a roomful of Protestant
-clergymen on this very subject. They listened to him very attentively,
-raised objections, had them answered, and finally agreed to the
-justness of his proposals. They agreed, moreover, to kneel down then
-and pray together for unity, and asked Father Ignatius to join them.
-He refused at once. They pressed him on every side, and said, among
-other things, that he ought to set them this example. He jumped up
-with indignation, and said, in a manner quite unusual to him, "I'd
-rather be torn in pieces by forty thousand mad dogs than say a prayer
-with you." He hereupon left the room, and became more cautious for the
-future as to how and when he asked them to pray for unity. The reason
-of this abrupt proceeding was the law that forbids all Catholics to
-communicate with heretics in divine things. Joint prayer, of course,
-is against this law.
-
-It is singular that, though he has left behind his thoughts drawn out
-in full upon all the ideas he took up from time to time about the
-conversion of heretics and the sanctification of Catholics, there is
-nothing left among his papers upon this project. We may conclude from
-this, as well as what has been said above, that while he looked upon
-the Unionists with kindness, he never adopted their principles; and
-such of his notions as seemed congenial to theirs will be {392} found,
-on examination, to be totally different. This it was necessary to
-remark, as many very well informed Catholics thought poor Father
-Ignatius came under the censure of the Inquisition, _in re_ A.P.U.C.
-It was quite a mistake, and he should have endorsed that censure
-himself, if he lived, and freely as he avoided what drew it down
-before he died.
-
-
-{393}
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Father Ignatius In 1850.
-
-
-This year was so full of events interesting to Father Ignatius, that
-there is no leading one round which others may be grouped to head the
-chapter. He expected to be called to Rome towards Easter; he had even
-written to the General, and had received letters to that effect. The
-object of this visit will be best understood from the following
-extract from a letter written at this time, dated from 13, Garnault
-Place, Clerkenwell, London:--
-
- "I am here on a mission with Father Gaudentius, and as we have not
- yet great press of work, I will write to tell you of an important
- feature in my prospects for the present year. It is, that I am going
- to Rome about Easter. About the time I saw you last I wrote to the
- General, saying that I thought this would be a good step. After that
- I thought no more about it till the other day a letter came from
- him, in which he approved the proposal; and so, after a mission
- which we are to give at St. George's from the first to the fourth
- Sunday in Lent, I propose starting. I shall be, I expect, about four
- months absent. I propose begging my way there, through France or
- Germany, which will make the journey last a month or six weeks;
- then, after stopping six weeks or two months in Italy, to make
- acquaintance with our Senior Fathers, and inform myself, as much as
- possible, of all the ways and spirit of our congregation (of which,
- of course, now I am very ignorant), I hope to bring back the General
- with me to make a visitation of his flock."
-
-Before giving the mission in St. George's, he wrote to his sister,
-Lady Lyttelton, to tell her of his intended journey to Rome, and of a
-visit he would pay her before starting. Her {394} ladyship was then in
-Windsor Castle, and we shall give her reply, as it shows the genial
-affection that always existed between them, and at the same time
-accounts for his not having gone to Windsor in his habit, as was often
-supposed.
-
- "_Windsor Castle, Jan. 28th._
-
- "My Dear Brother,--I am very much obliged to you for your kindly
- telling me your plans, and giving me a hope of seeing you before you
- go to Rome. The period you mention as the probable one for your
- mission at St. George's, will most likely be the very best for me to
- see you, as we shall probably remove to London about the middle of
- February, and remain till after Easter; so I shall look forward with
- much pleasure to an occasional visit. I am much obliged to you for
- telling me of the intended change in your dress. I should never have
- guessed its probability, having erroneously believed it simply
- illegal; but I find that was a mistake. You will, I hope, not wonder
- or blame me, if I beg you to visit me at my own little home, No. 38,
- St. James's Place, and not at the Palace, when you are looking so
- remarkable. I don't want to figure in a paragraph, and so novel a
- sight in the Palace might lead to some such catastrophe. A day's
- notice of your visit will always enable me to meet you, and Caroline
- and Kitty, and probably others of those that remain to me of my
- ancient belongings, may thereby sometimes get a glimpse of you,
- though we should be always able to have our _coze_ in a separate
- room. I almost wish you would take me under your cowl to Rome. How I
- should like once more to see the Colosseum (and to learn to spell
- its name), and the Vatican! but hardly at the cost of a long
- journey, either.
-
- "Fritz and Bessy [Footnote 11] are coming here next Thursday on a
- two days' visit to the Queen, and when I have seen them I will tell
- you of their plans. I suppose they will be at Althorp till after
- Easter. Believe me, my dear brother,
-
- "Very affectionately yours,
- "S. Lyttelton."
-
- [Footnote 11: Lord and Lady Spencer.]
-
-
-{395}
-
-When Father Ignatius went to St. James's Place to pay the visit
-arranged for in this letter, he experienced some difficulty in getting
-as far as his sister. The porter who opened the gate did not know him,
-and was, of course, astonished to see such a strange figure demanding
-an interview with his mistress. He would not let him in until he got
-special orders from Lady Lyttelton herself. Father Ignatius used to
-contrast this servant's mode of acting with that of another who
-admitted him once to Althorp. This last servant did not know him
-either; but seeing he looked tired, he took him into his lodge, got
-him some bread and cheese and a glass of ale for refreshment.
-By-and-by the Earl passed, and was highly amused at seeing George
-regale himself with such satisfaction on the servant's fare. The
-servant made some apologies, but they were quite unnecessary, for
-Father Ignatius never forgot his kindness, and used to say that he
-enjoyed the porter's pittance far more than the viands of the "Big
-House," as he used to call it.
-
-Father Ignatius was seldom at home up to June, when he went to visit
-our religious in Belgium, who were subject to his jurisdiction; he had
-given a mission in Garnault Street, a retreat to our religious in
-Aston Hall, a mission in St. George's, Southwark, a retreat to nuns in
-Winchester, a retreat to people in Blackbrook, and a retreat in
-Sedgley Park. On his return from Belgium he remained in London, and
-preached in different churches, besides giving a retreat to the people
-in Winchester, and visiting several Protestant ministers, until the
-mission in Maze Pond. This was so badly attended that he used to
-preach in the courts, beating up for an audience. In giving an account
-sometimes of the visits above mentioned, he used to tell about an old
-minister he and another of our fathers once called upon. This
-gentleman suffered from gout, and was consequently rather testy; he
-had a lay friend staying with him at the time of the two Passionists'
-visit. He called the fathers idolaters, and insisted, right or wrong,
-that our Lord used the word "represent" when he instituted the Blessed
-Sacrament at the Last Supper. It was in vain that all three tried to
-convince him of his mistake. When, at last, the passage {396} was
-pointed out to him, and that he had assured himself, by inspecting
-title-page and royal arms, that the Bible was a genuine authorized
-version, he was so far from giving in that, like the wolf in the
-fable, he immediately indicted them on another plea. This incident
-Father Ignatius used to recount to show how far ignorance hindered the
-removal of prejudice.
-
-His Roman plan fell to the ground in the beginning of July, when he
-received a letter to announce the coming of Father Eugene as
-Visitor-General to England. Father Ignatius went to meet him to
-Tournay, and escorted him to England, where his passing visit became a
-fixed residence to the present day. This happened towards the end of
-July. Father Ignatius then gave retreats to the priests in Ushaw
-College, to the nuns in Sunderland, and came to London to arrange
-about our taking St. Wilfrid's from the Oratorians. He went through
-all this before the end of August, and was in Carlow on the 4th of
-September, to give two retreats at the same time to the students of
-the College and the Presentation nuns.
-
-On the 8th of September he went to Thurles. The Irish bishops were
-assembled there for the most important synod held since Henry VIII.'s
-proposals were rejected. The synod was held to make canons of
-discipline, and laws for the new _status_ the Church had gained in
-Ireland. The rough-and-ready ceremonial that had to be used in times
-of persecution was laid aside, after it had done good work in its day,
-and one more systematic was decreed for the administration of the
-sacraments. Here the Irish prelates were assembled, and Father
-Ignatius thought it a great opportunity for opening his mind and
-stating his views to Ireland by letting them known to her hierarchy.
-His account of the visit to Thurles is thus recorded in his journal:--
-
- "Sept. 8.--Mass at 5. Railway to Thurles at 6½. Put up at the
- Christian schools. Dined there at 4. Saw the Primate, &c., at the
- College. Begged of the bishops, &c.
-
- Tuesday, Sept. 9.--Mass at 6, at the Monk's Altar. Begged on from
- the bishops. At 10, the great ceremony of concluding the synod, till
- 2. The Primate preached. Dr. Slattery sang {397} mass. I walked in
- the procession. At 5, dined with the bishops, &c., at the College.
- Made a speech after dinner on the Crusade."
-
-After his visit to Thurles, he came back to Carlow and gave a retreat
-to the lay students in their own oratory. He then went off on a
-begging tour through Kildare, Carlow, and Kilkenny. Whilst in Kilkenny
-he went to look at the old cathedral (now in Protestant hands); his
-_cicerone_ was a very talkative old woman, who gave him a history, in
-her own style, of the crumbling worthies whose names he deciphered on
-the different monuments. One account she told with especial gusto: the
-last moments of an old lady "of the Butlers." This old lady, according
-to the _cicerone's_ account, had once been a Catholic, and on her
-death-bed wished to receive the rites of the Church. She was told that
-if she died a Catholic, those to whom her property was willed would be
-disinherited, and that the property would pass over to others. She
-hesitated some time on hearing this announcement, and after a few
-minutes' reflection expressed her decision as follows, "Oh, well; it
-is better that one old woman should burn in hell than that the family
-of the Butlers should lose their estate." She died shortly after--a
-Protestant. Father Ignatius used to say that he never was more
-surprised than at the manner of his guide as she concluded the climax
-of her narrative. She seemed to think old Granny Butler's resolution
-showed the highest grade of heroic virtue and self-sacrifice.
-
-In Carrick-on-Suir he says: "Made the best day's begging in my life up
-to this, £50." He then went to Tipperary, Cork, visited all the
-convents and priests, came to Birr, spent an afternoon with Lord Ross
-and his telescope; begs in Limerick, Drogheda, Newry, Dundalk, Ardee,
-Castle-blaney, Carrickmacross, Londonderry, Strabane, Omagh. When he
-was in Omagh there was a tenant-right meeting, and he went to hear
-Gavan Duffy. He begs through Dungannon, Lurgan, Enniskillen,
-Ballyshannon, Clogher. He then came to Dublin, from which he paid
-flying visits to a few convents, and to the colleges of Maynooth and
-All-hallows. He returned to England on the 17th of November; {398}
-and, during his two months' tour in Ireland, he had preached
-seventy-nine sermons, on the conversion of England chiefly.
-
-He heard of the re-establishment of the hierarchy in England while
-travelling in Ireland, and one of his first acts, on returning to
-London, was to pay his respects to his old friend, the new Cardinal.
-This year we were put in possession of St. Saviour's Retreat,
-Broadway, which has been the noviciate of the order since. St. Anne's,
-Sutton, was also colonized about the same time. Father Ignatius gave a
-mission in Glasgow during this Advent, and brought two young priests
-with him to train into the work of the missions. One of them was
-Father Bernard, and he gives wonderful accounts of Father Ignatius's
-labours. He slept but about four hours in the twenty-four, and was all
-the rest of the time busy either in the confessional or on the
-platform, with the exception of the time he took to eat a hurried meal
-or two.
-
-In going through Liverpool on his return from Glasgow, in his habit, a
-crowd gathered round him to hoot and insult him. In his journal he
-says: "I got two blows on the head," for which he took good care to
-thank God. The year is concluded by preaching in Dublin, and giving
-the _renewal_ retreat to the Sisters of Mercy in Birr.
-
-Any one that will glance over this year of his life, and see him
-perpetually moving from place to place, will certainly think he had
-little time to himself. It was about this time that he made the
-resolution of never being a moment idle, a resolve he carried out to
-the last. During this year and the preceding he was occupied in
-translating into English Da Bergamo's _Pensieri ed Affetti_. The
-greater part of this book, which was published by Richardson, under
-the name of _Thoughts and Affections on the Passion_, was translated
-by Father Ignatius, on railway stations, while waiting for trains, in
-every place, before or after dinner, in intervals between confessions,
-in all kinds of out-of-the way places; and so careful was he to fill
-up every moment of time that we see noted in his journal his having
-done some of Da Bergamo in the fore cabin of the steamer that took him
-{399} from Holyhead to Kingstown. He wrote it mostly in pencilling, on
-the backs of envelopes, scraps of paper of all sizes, shapes, and
-quality; so that it was nearly as difficult to put those sibylline
-leaves in order and copy from them as it was to translate, if not more
-so. Besides this he wrote a number of letters; and his letters were no
-small notes with broken sentences, but long lectures on difficulties
-of conscience, written with a care and consideration that is perfectly
-surprising when one reflects upon his opportunities. He used to say
-that no one should ever excuse his not answering a letter for want of
-time: "If the letter is worth answering we ought to get time for it,
-for it becomes a kind of duty." He certainly had no time to spare or
-throw away, but he had always enough for any purpose in which charity
-or obedience could claim him. His days were indeed full days, and he
-scarcely ever went to bed until he had shaken himself out of nodding
-asleep over his table three or four times. No one ever heard him say
-that he was tired and required rest; rest he never had, except on his
-hard bed or in his quiet grave. If any man ever ate his bread in the
-sweat of his brow, it was Father Ignatius of St. Paul, the
-ever-toiling Passionist.
-
-
-{400}
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-A New Form of "The Crusade."
-
-
-We find Father Ignatius, at the beginning of the year 1851, begging in
-Ireland. It was not his custom to go regularly from house to house; he
-preferred collecting people together, and addressing them, and, if
-this were not practicable, getting permission from the priests to
-speak to their flocks on Sundays and festivals. He wanted prayers more
-than money, and he was delighted that the plea of begging justified
-his moving about, and gave him a kind of faculty to preach on his
-favourite topic, "the conversion of England." Oftentimes the spiritual
-interfered with his temporal interests, as when an Irishman, who was
-about to give him an alms, refused it as soon as he spoke about
-England. Strange enough, Father Ignatius thought England-hating
-Irishmen the very best subjects to practise his art of persuasion on.
-He thought them true souls, sensitive of their wrongs, and valued them
-far more than those who lauded England through lack of patriotism.
-
-He met many adventures during this begging tour in Ireland. In one
-parish, the priest promised to allow him to preach to his congregation
-on the Sunday, and collect from them. The priest did not seem to
-possess indifference to earthly things, or generosity either, in a
-very high degree; for, when Father Ignatius came to his place on
-Saturday, his reverence told him that he intended to claim the
-collection in the church, whilst Father Ignatius might stand at the
-door and beg for himself as the people were going out. Father Ignatius
-thanked God, and was content, only remarking that, with the priest's
-permission, he would prefer {401} to hold his hat under a large tree
-that grew near the church-door, instead of at the door itself.
-
-He preached at the last mass, and never said a word about where or
-when he was to receive the people's offerings; the collection was made
-by the priest, and a most miserable one it proved to be. Father
-Ignatius held his hat under the tree, and, since the day in
-Carrick-on-Suir, never had such a collection. It was a marvel to him;
-he could not account for it, and he was the more surprised when he
-compared notes with the parish priest after all was over. He found out
-the solution of the mystery that same evening. It seems that, on
-Saturday, he told a respectable lady in the neighbourhood of the
-priest's decision. She, without telling him a word of what she
-intended doing, went home, sent her servant through the village, and
-collected twelve stalwart active young men; she harangued them on what
-the priest was about to do, and sent them all off to different parts
-of the parish to tell the people of it, and also of the spot where
-Father Ignatius would receive their offerings. The people had reason
-to think their pastor was a little fond of money, and their
-indignation at his proceeding helped to increase their liberality.
-
-He begged at this time in Borris O'Kane, Limerick, Ennis, Gort,
-Galway, Loughren, Ballinasloe, Mullingar, and preached 101 sermons
-since the previous 5th September. His begging tour ends in Dublin,
-about March, where he begins a new campaign of what he terms "his
-crusade."
-
-He preached some controversial lectures in Dublin, dined and talked
-with Dissenting ministers, wrote a little newspaper controversy, and
-had a meeting in the Rotundo. This very active kind of work did not
-seem to suit his taste or spirit, and he changed very soon to another
-and a more congenial one--the conversational mode of advancing the
-Catholic cause.
-
-He visited the leading men both in the Establishment and in the
-offices of State, and the conferences he held with them are so
-interesting that we shall relate a few of them in his own words. The
-extracts are taken from letters {402} published by him in 1853, in the
-_Catholic Standard_, now _The Weekly Register_:--
-
-
- _Interview with Lord John Russell._
-
- One day early in February, 1850, I had been on an expedition down to
- Westminster. I look back on all my walks during a certain period,
- that is, while I was constantly wearing my Passionist habit, as
- _expeditions_. Indeed they were eventful ones in their way. I was
- returning through Parliament Street; and having an hour to dispose
- of, as I passed by Downing Street, I thought I would now try, what I
- had long thought of, to have a conversation with the Premier. I
- asked, "Is Lord John Russell at home?" The messenger [query?] who
- came to the door looked at my figure with some surprise, then said,
- "Yes, sir, but he is engaged at present?" I said, "Will you be so
- good as to say to him that Lord Spencer's brother would wish to
- speak with him?" "Walk in, sir," he answered; and to my surprise, I
- must say, I found myself at once in a waiting-room, and five minutes
- later was introduced to Lord John. He rose to me, and kindly pointed
- to a chair. I said, "Do you remember me, my Lord?" "Oh, yes," he
- answered. I then proceeded: "I hardly know whether what I am now
- doing is wise or not; but I will explain my reason for asking to see
- your lordship and you will judge. You are aware, probably, that it
- is now some twenty years since I became a Catholic. Ever since that
- time, my whole mind has been bent on leading others to the same
- faith, and, in short, on the conversion of this country to
- Catholicity. For this end I have endeavoured, as far as it was
- possible, to move all Catholics throughout the world to pray for the
- conversion of England. I have also spoken with as many as I could of
- the leading men among the clergy of the Church of England and among
- Dissenting ministers, to move them also to pray that God would bring
- this country to unity in the truth wherever he sees it to be. I am
- almost always received agreeably on these occasions; for all seem to
- agree in what I think cannot be denied, that if there is anything
- which {403} threatens ruin to the power and prosperity of this
- country it is our religious divisions." His lordship here, without
- speaking, intimated, as I understood, his assent to this last
- sentence; but interrupted me by asking more particularly: "What do
- you propose to Dissenters?" "The same," I said, "as to Anglicans; I
- conceive this prayer is proper for them all alike." ... I proceeded:
- "Among Catholics I find myself constantly met by the objection, that
- if they came forward openly, as I wish them to do, it would offend
- those in power in England. I answer them, I am convinced it would
- not; but in order to satisfy others rather than myself, I have at
- last thought it well to come to the first authority and ask. I will
- remark to your lordship why I say this. Among all Catholics, I am
- particularly intent on moving the Catholics of Ireland to undertake
- this cause. I first went to Ireland for the purpose in 1842. Now I
- look upon it as certain, that if the Irish had then undertaken, as I
- wished them, to pray for the conversion of England, and had
- persevered in that work out of charity, they would not, in 1848,
- have thought of making pikes against England; and this would have
- saved our Government some millions of pounds, perhaps. Pikes are
- well enough in their place, but I consider that charity would not
- have prompted the making of them on this occasion. Again, I will say
- that my favourite individual object in Ireland is to enlist in my
- cause your lordship's illustrious correspondent, Dr. M'Hale; and it
- is my opinion that it would improve the style of his letters if
- there were introduced into them some expressions of charity towards
- England." Lord John slightly smiled, and then proceeded with his
- answer, as follows: "In answering you, I beg to be understood that I
- do not speak as a minister; but I will tell what I think as an
- individual. The entire liberty which exists in this country for
- every one to think as he pleases, and to speak what he thinks, makes
- it appear to me difficult to conceive how a reunion of all the
- different religious opinions could be effected. That is at least a
- distant prospect. But anything which would tend to a diminution of
- the spirit of acrimony, and of the disposition of people of opposite
- opinions to misrepresent one another's views, must {404} do good."
- Then he added, in a very pleasing tone: "And I will tell you, that I
- consider the body to which you belong is the one which suffers the
- most from such misrepresentations." I said then: "After hearing your
- lordship's answer, given with such kindness, I am quite happy at
- having come; and I think I may infer from what you have said, that
- you perfectly approve of my proceedings, for the tendency of them
- entirely is to remove the misapprehensions which exist, on both
- sides, of the others principles. I am convinced that Catholics
- generally have a mistaken idea of what respectable Protestants are;
- and there is no doubt Protestants are very widely wrong in their
- opinions of Catholics. I am working to counteract this error on both
- sides."
-
- To this he did not reply; and as I had gained all that I desired, I
- rose to take my leave, and said: "I frequently say to persons with
- whom I have had conversations like this, what I will now say to your
- lordship, that I do not promise secrecy concerning them; but I
- request, as a favour, that if they should ever hear of my making
- what they consider an improper use of anything that they have said,
- they would call me to account for it." On this sentence, likewise,
- he made no remark, but added again: "I repeat once more that I have
- not spoken as a minister, as I do not think this is a matter with
- which I have any concern in that character." I replied: "I
- understand you, my Lord; yet I will say that it appears to me, that
- I have reasons to have addressed your lordship in your public
- character." His lordship smiled, slightly bowed, and I withdrew.
-
-
- _Interview with Lord Clarendon._
-
- I am very happy at finding myself with my pen in hand, to give an
- account of my interviews with another distinguished member of our
- Government; at least, as far as what passed bears on the subject of
- these letters, the enterprise of England's conversion:--I mean Lord
- Clarendon, while he was Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. His lordship and
- I were formerly fellow-collegians and friends at Cambridge; {405}
- but from the year 1819, when I left Trinity College, we never saw
- each other till November 13, 1850, when I had an audience from him
- at the Viceregal Lodge in the Phoenix Park, at Dublin. When I had
- been in Ireland in 1848, the thought had crossed my mind that I
- should be pleased to have a conversation with him, but I put it away
- as a strange idea, not worth entertaining. In 1850, I returned to
- Ireland, and starting from the Synod of Thurles, at the beginning of
- September, I had what I would call my grand campaign among the Irish
- people. From the beginning of September to the end of April, I
- preached 170 sermons to them on the enterprise of the conversion of
- England, which at that time I used to call the _Crusade for
- England_; besides a number, past reckoning, of addresses to convents
- and schools, and private conversations to the same intent. This
- career was interrupted in the middle of November, when I came for
- six weeks to England. As I was approaching Dublin to cross the
- water, my strange idea revived, but its aspect was more inviting.
- The result of my visit to Lord John Russell had been so encouraging,
- that I wrote to Lord Clarendon, and asked permission to pay him my
- respects, as I passed through Dublin. He sent me a very kind answer
- to the place which I had pointed out, naming an hour on the day
- named above--half-past one, November 13--at which time I was
- introduced into his private room at the Lodge. One of his first
- remarks was that circumstances were greatly changed with us both
- since our last meeting. Indeed, they were, as any one would have
- said who had seen him as George Villiers, of St. John's, and me as
- George Spencer, of Trinity, walking together in our college gowns,
- at Cambridge, and now should see him in his grand Viceregal Palace,
- and me before him in my poor Passionist's habit; and is it not
- something to be looked upon with satisfaction, that we should now
- have a conversation for an hour and a half, of which, though the
- matter was something far more weighty than what would very probably
- have occupied us then, the tone which he gave to it was such, that
- one might have supposed our familiar acquaintance had never been
- interrupted? The conversation was throughout very interesting to me;
- {406} but this does not seem to me the time nor the place to relate
- what passed, excepting those passages which bore directly upon my
- present subject.
-
- I do not remember how, in the course of it, Lord Clarendon was led
- to say: "I see in the papers that you have been preaching in several
- places." I answered: "Yes, I have; and the principal object of my
- asking for this interview with your lordship, was to tell you the
- subject of my preaching, and to ask what you think of it. I am
- preaching to the Irish people a crusade for the conquest of
- England."
-
- I am not clear whether it was before saying these words, or after,
- that I related to him the conversation I had had with Lord John
- Russell in the same way in which it was given in my last letter.
- However this might be, I perfectly remember the way in which he
- replied. He appeared at the first moment to be surprised; then fixed
- upon me one rather searching look; and then deliberately said:
- "Taking the view of things which you do, I think you are right."
-
- * * * *
-
- Lord Clarendon, knowing that I was next day to start for England,
- concluded by most kindly expressing a wish to see me again, when I
- should be passing at some future time through Dublin.
-
- After six weeks I returned to renew my circuit in Ireland, and
- returning to Dublin about the middle of January, though I had no
- reason particularly for wishing to speak again with Lord Clarendon,
- I considered that it was in some way a duty of propriety to ask for
- an interview, as he had been pleased to request it at the close of
- the first visit. Accordingly, after some time for reflection, I
- wrote him a letter to this effect, and he appointed me half-past
- eleven on Saturday, February 8, 1852. This time it was in Dublin
- Castle that I saw him, being ushered into his private room through
- the muskets, bayonets, and other arms--not ancient pieces, for
- curiosity, as at Alton Towers, but arms of the most modern style,
- ready for use--with which the hall and great staircase seemed to me
- as though wainscoted throughout. I apologised soon after entering at
- taking up so much of his time; and again somewhat later I offered to
- {407} withdraw, however interesting was the conversation to myself.
- He answered, "Oh, no! I am very glad to see you. They will soon tell
- me of Sir Thomas Reddington being come for business: till then I am
- free." I will now relate only one or two passages of this
- conversation, as being, I conceive, of peculiar consequence to my
- present purpose. I was saying something of my continued endeavours
- to move the Irish to pray for England, and I suppose remarking that
- this must have a salutary effect on the feelings of the people. He
- said with an incredulous smile: "And do you think the Irish pray for
- England?" "I have no doubt whatever," I answered, "that a great many
- do, but it is as yet nothing to what I desire to bring them to."
- With a still more incredulous look, he added: "Do you think they
- pray for England at Maynooth?" "Well, my Lord,' I only know that
- whenever I visit Maynooth the superiors appoint me a time for
- addressing the students assembled (he looked evidently pleased at
- hearing this); and will you listen," I continued, "to a sentence of
- one of my half-hour's addresses to them? I began it without well
- knowing what I was going to say; but when I had finished I said to
- myself, I have said one good thing at least which I shall one day
- turn to account. It was soon after the publication of Lord John
- Russell's Durham letter. I said to them, 'Will you allow me to offer
- you one word of advice? You will just now be tempted most probably
- to say some violent things; especially some violent things of Lord
- John Russell. Now I would ask you, Do you know Lord John Russell? I
- suppose one and all would tell me _no_. The advice I was going to
- offer is that you should not speak evil of what you do not know.'"
- Lord Clarendon said: "Did you say that?" I said: "Yes, my lord." He
- added emphatically: "That _was_ good." After I had risen to leave
- him, I said: "My Lord, I have been often citing your Excellency,
- since our first conversation, as one of those who entirely approve
- of my proceedings." "What do you mean?" he quickly answered. "Did I
- not tell you I would shed the last drop of my blood to stop the
- progress of your religion?" "I perfectly remember that," I said;
- "what I mean is that you approved of my way of {408} acting,
- considering what I am." "Oh," he replied, "I understand you. If
- every one acted as you do, we should have nothing to complain of."
- This conversation lasted from three-quarters of an hour to an hour.
-
-
- _Interview with Lord Palmerston_.
-
- I am sometimes reminded of a story I heard of a groom, who had to
- show off one of his master's horses, which he wished to sell. Among
- all the other good qualities for which he had praised the animal, as
- he stood behind him in the stable, being asked by the intended
- purchaser, "What do you say of his temper?" he had just answered,
- "Oh, he is as quiet as a lamb," when the horse kicked out, struck
- the poor groom full in the pit of the stomach, and drove the breath
- out of him. But he must stand to his text, and with wondrous
- promptness he was just able to utter, "Ach--playful toad!" So I
- will have our poor people hoped for, prayed for, borne with and
- loved, with all their effigy burnings, with all their meetings to
- hear Dr. Cumming or Mr. Stowell, with all their awful Popery
- sermons, and, moreover, with the two or three thumps on the head,
- and other pieces of genteel treatment which I met with myself, while
- I walked about in my habit, before the Derby proclamation gave me
- some time to breathe again.
-
- After this preface as an apology, if it is one, for my last
- sentences of last week, and for standing to _my_ text, in spite of
- all that can be urged, I proceed to another of my narratives, which,
- if not the most interesting and important in my eyes, is not the
- least so; and, after which, in reply to such as might mention some
- of the English rudenesses to us, and say to me, "What do you say to
- that?" I would just say, "What do _you_ say to this?"--I mean my
- interview with Lord Palmerston.
-
- Through the month of May of the year 1851, I was engaged to preach
- evening lectures in one of the London chapels, and I had my days to
- devote in a great measure to the pursuit, so inconceivably
- interesting to me, of conversations with leading people on my great
- topic. I was at {409} that time greatly debilitated, and could walk
- but very little, and to relieve me, therefore, as well as to enable
- me to make the most of my time, a generous friend, who was
- interested in my proceedings, furnished me with means to go from
- house to house in a cab. One of these bright forenoons, I turned
- into Carlton Gardens, and asked to see Lord Palmerston. I was not an
- entire stranger to him, any more than to the other two noble persons
- of whom I have already written. It will not be foreign to my purpose
- to relate how my acquaintance with his lordship had been formed. May
- I venture to call it a friendship? It was at the close of a long run
- with Lord Derby's stag-hounds; I mean the grandfather of the present
- earl, I think in 1821; we finished, I think, twenty-four miles from
- London, and I was making up my mind for a long, tedious ride home on
- my tired horse (for I was not up to having second horses and grooms
- in my suite on those occasions), when Lord Palmerston, who was
- likewise in at, not the death, but the taking (I forget the proper
- sporting term) of the stag, understanding my case, and knowing me by
- sight, though I think till then we had never spoken, gave my horse
- in charge to his groom, and took me home with himself in a
- post-chaise. For the short remaining time of my being known as a
- young man about town, as we met at one party or another, Lord
- Palmerston continued to accost me with a kind word, to which I had
- good reason, it will be allowed, to respond in the best manner I
- knew how. At the close of the London season of 1822 I made my bow,
- and withdrew from that stage to prepare for taking orders, and,
- except an interview of a few minutes in 1834, we had never met till
- I appeared before the now far-famed and, by many, dreaded Foreign
- Secretary, with my Passionist habit and sandalled feet for a private
- audience. Like what Lord Clarendon said in the Park Lodge, Dublin, I
- might have said here, "Great changes, my lord, since we first spoke
- together!" On this occasion, however, no time was spent in mere
- conversation. I had called, as I have said, in the forenoon. His
- lordship had sent me a message as being busy, requesting me to call
- again at two o'clock. On entering his private room, I found {410}
- him engaged in looking over what seemed official papers, which he
- had upon his knee, while we spoke, though without the least sign of
- impatience or wish to get rid of me; but I saw that what became me
- was to enter on business at once without waste of time or words. I
- do not remember all the words which I used in this interview so well
- as what I said to Lord John Russell and Lord Clarendon. The position
- was not now so new and striking to me. I think I began without any
- kind of apology; for his lordship's looks gave me no feeling that
- any was needful or expected. I said, "that in coming to speak to his
- lordship on this subject, I had not so much in view to ascertain
- more and more that there was no danger of what I proposed causing
- offence to our Government, as I thought what I had heard from others
- was sufficient proof of this; but I wished to put as many of our
- public men as I could meet with in possession of all my intentions
- and proceedings, in order that if, at last, I succeeded, as I hoped,
- in moving the Catholics to be interested about them, and these
- matters came before the public, they might know from myself in
- person what I really intended, and might be enabled, if they thought
- well, to do me justice." This was the substance of what I said to
- him. Having thus concluded, I awaited his answer, which was about as
- follows:--"As you wish to know what I think of your doings, I must
- say I do not by any means agree with you in considering it a
- desirable result that this country should again be brought under
- subjection to Rome. I do not profess to take my view from the
- elevated and sublime ground on which you place yourself; I mean, I
- speak not with reference to religious interests, but to political;
- and as a politician, when we consider the way in which the Pope's
- government is opposed to the progress of liberty, and liberal
- institutions, I cannot say that I wish to see England again under
- such influence." Thus far, I do not mean to say, that what I heard
- was anything agreeable to me. Neither the matter nor the tone were
- agreeable to me. There was something sarcastic in his tone. And does
- that suit my purpose? it may be asked. I answer, "It does very
- well." Could it be expected that he would speak very agreeably and
- favourably {411} of the end I told him I was aiming at? If he had,
- that would, I conceive, have just thrown a doubt on the sincerity of
- what he said immediately after, in a tone simply and perfectly
- agreeable, on the effect likely to result immediately from what I
- was doing: and this was: "But as to what you are doing, as it must
- tend to conciliate Catholic powers towards England, what have I to
- say, but that it is excellent?" or some such word expressing full
- and cordial approbation. After this, he went on with some remarks on
- the establishment of the Hierarchy, which, of course, were in
- accordance with what he had, I think, been saying a few days
- previously in Parliament, complaining of it as offensive and
- injurious; but on this part of the conversation I need not dwell, as
- it had no bearing on the subject which I had proposed to him. With
- regard to that, my impression on leaving him was this: that he had
- listened with attention to what I had said, had at once perfectly
- understood me, had answered me so as to make me perfectly understand
- him on the subject simply and openly, and that what he had said was
- entirely satisfactory to me. I could wish for nothing more; except,
- of course, what St. Paul wished for in the presence of Festus and
- Agrippa. I then rose: so did he; then shook hands with me, and most
- kindly thanked me for having renewed our old acquaintance. To the
- account of this conversation with Lord Palmerston, I will add, that
- I asked, in the same bright month of May, for an interview with Lord
- Derby. He requested I would rather explain myself in writing: which
- I did; and received in answer from him a most condescending and kind
- letter, in which, while he asserted his own steadfast adherence to
- the Church of England, he declared his opinion that no one could
- reasonably find fault with me for exerting myself as I did to
- advance what I believed to be the truth.
-
-Besides these interviews just recorded in his own words, he had
-several others with minor celebrities. He met some Protestant bishops;
-among the rest, Dr. Blomfield, whom he tried to move to praying for
-unity. Dr. Blomfield promised. Some of the bishops refuse to see him,
-and {412} others are "out" when he calls. He had an interview with Dr.
-Cumming, and the doctor's account of it did not eventually serve to
-raise that gentleman in the estimation of honourable or sensible
-people. He records in his journal being sent away ignominiously by
-Baptist and Methodist ministers, and, after one of these rebuffs, on
-May 24, 1851, he got so fearful a mobbing, when coming along the
-Charter House in London, that he was nearly killed. Had not some good
-shopkeeper opened his door for him, and helped him to a cab by a back
-passage, he believed he would certainly have fallen a victim to the
-fury of the crowd.
-
-The day after this adventure, he assisted in Warwick-street at the
-ordination of his Grace the present Archbishop of Westminster, as
-sub-deacon.
-
-He is a few months on the Continent again in this year. He preaches in
-French through Lille, Liège, Maestricht, Aix-la-Chapelle, always upon
-"the crusade." Before arriving in Cologne he had his address
-translated into German, in order to be able to speak to the Prussian
-children and people upon his favourite theme. As he was walking
-through Cologne one day, he accidentally met his brother, Lord
-Spencer. Lord Spencer wondered at the figure approaching him, and
-thought he recognized the features. At length he exclaimed, "Hilloa,
-George, what are you doing here?" "Begging," replied Father Ignatius.
-Those who knew them were much gratified at seeing the earl and the
-monk having a little friendly chat about old schoolboy days. Both
-seemed a little embarrassed and surprised at first, but after a minute
-or two they were quite at home with each other.
-
-He prepared a petition for the King of Prussia, who was visiting
-Cologne, requesting an audience; but, after waiting patiently a few
-days, he writes in the journal: "The King is come and gone, but no
-notice of me. I must be content with _Rex regum_." He received a
-letter from Father Eugene a day or two before this, summoning him home
-to England for our Provincial Chapter, and his tour terminates on the
-21st August.
-
-
-{413}
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Visit To Home And "The Association Of Prayers."
-
-
-At the Provincial Chapter, Father Ignatius was chosen Rector of St.
-Joseph's Retreat, The Hyde. It was also arranged that before
-proceeding further with his projects and schemes for prayers and
-unity, he should submit them to the Roman _Curia_. He accordingly
-starts for Rome on September 4, and arrives at the Retreat of SS. John
-and Paul on the 13th. We shall let himself relate the events and
-success of this expedition.
-
- "I went on then, taking occasions as they were offered me to move
- Catholics to interest themselves in it till September, 1851, when I
- went to Rome. I had other reasons for going; but it might well be
- expected that what mainly interested me was to recommend the cause
- of England's conversion in the centre of Catholicity, and to obtain
- from the Holy See sanction and authority for pursuing this end as I
- had been doing before, or in whatever way would be deemed
- preferable. I was four months and a half at Rome, with the
- interruption of a fortnight, during which I was engaged on a mission
- in the country with some of our Fathers. My affair had to be
- transacted, as may be supposed, chiefly at the Propaganda, where the
- affairs of all Catholic missions are managed and directed, much in
- the way that our Board of Admiralty directs all the naval operations
- of this country, but under entire dependence on his Holiness and
- obedience to him--the secretary of the Propaganda, Monsignor
- Barnabò, having regularly once a week, that is, every Sunday
- evening, an audience of the Pope, to make him reports, and to
- receive his orders. For the first six weeks or two months I felt my
- footing at the Propaganda more or less {414} doubtful and
- precarious. I did not gain much attention. This was mortifying; but
- I see, and I saw it then, to be right. The Propaganda is a place
- where all Catholic schemers and projectors in matters of religion
- try to get a hearing--as our Admiralty is besieged, I suppose, by
- all who think they have an important proposal to make for naval
- enterprise or improvement. They must be kept at arm's length for a
- time, till it is judged whether their ideas are worth attending to.
- It was on the 1st of November that it happened that I dined at the
- College of Propaganda, and sat next to Monsignor Barnabò, who made
- me a remark about in these words: 'Surely if you can convert
- England, we should gain half the world--or all the world,' I forget
- which. I answered, 'Well, Monsignor, and why not try?' Nothing more
- was said then; but it seemed to me as if this was the turning-point
- of my fortunes at Rome. Certain it is, that from that time Monsignor
- Barnabò, in the midst of all his pressing affairs, was invariably
- ready to listen to me at the office or at his own house, read
- through all my long memorials, spoke for me to the Pope whenever I
- asked him, and gained me what I asked on this matter, had my papers
- printed free of cost at the press of the Propaganda, &c. It had been
- told me previously by one of the minutanti (under secretaries) of
- the Propaganda, Monsignor Vespasiani, that my proposals would be
- looked upon more favourably, if England were not mentioned as the
- only object of interest. He adverted especially with great feeling
- to the case of the Greeks, of whom he spoke as possessing genius and
- capacity for such great things, if they were only reunited to the
- Church. At his suggestion I drew up, in concert with one of our
- Fathers, a paper of proposals for an Association for the Conversion
- of all separated from the Church, giving reasons, however, as I do
- in the little paper of admission to our Association, why we should
- direct our immediate aim at the recovery of those nations which have
- been separated from the Church by heresy or schism, and why, among
- these, England should still be regarded as the most important and
- leading object. This document was read by Mgr. Barnabò, who ordered
- 5,000 copies to be printed by the press of the {415}
- Propaganda--rather, he told me, to order as many as I wished, as
- well as of another shorter paper containing an invitation to prayer
- and good works for the conversion of all separated from the Church,
- but especially of England. This shorter one was prepared at the
- express desire of the Cardinal-Vicar of Rome, and distributed by his
- order through all the religious houses of the city. To pass over
- other details, it was on the 26th of November that I received a
- letter of recommendation, addressed by the Cardinal-Prefect of
- Propaganda to all Bishops, Vicars-Apostolic, and Superiors of
- Missions in the world, desiring them to receive me favourably and to
- assist me in my designs to the utmost of their power. The words in
- Latin at this part of the letter are the following:--'... Proindeque
- illum sacrae congregationis testimonialibus hisce literis instructum
- esse volumus, ut omnes Episcopi, Vicarii Apostolici, et Missionum
- Superiores benigne illum excipere, ac pro viribus piissimis ejusdem
- votis favere haud omittant.' As I have not this letter at hand while
- writing, I quote this part from memory. The former part, of which I
- have not the words by heart, expresses why this recommendation was
- to be given me; namely, because my zeal for promoting the Catholic
- faith, especially among my people of England, was highly to be
- commended. Now, if the Propaganda should have ever heard anything
- true about how I carried on my ordinary duties in England, they
- could only have heard that I had not incurred suspension, though I
- might have deserved it; and that, in comparison with my brother
- priests in our great towns, for instance, what I had done for
- religion must be put down as next to nothing. The only thing on
- which they could ever have heard me spoken about as remarkable must
- have been my exertions, which, against my wishes, I must certainly
- concede to have been _singularly_ active and persevering in calling
- people's attention to the object of the _conversion of England_ and
- to prayers for it.
-
- "I was surprised at receiving this letter; but I was not satisfied
- with it: it sharpened my appetite to get more. I returned to the
- Palace of the Propaganda to give thanks for it, and then asked for a
- special letter to the Prelates of {416} Ireland. I do not here enter
- into details about this: I intend, if permitted, explaining all
- which regards this subject in some letters addressed especially to
- the Irish people, in the _Tablet_. I mention it here only to quote
- from this second letter the words in which is explained more
- particularly the idea which was formed at the Propaganda of the
- object which they were recommending. They call it 'Opus quod
- Reverendus Pater Ignatius promovere satagit, ut nempe Catholici pro
- Acatholicorum, praesertim Angliae, conversione veluti agmine facto,
- ferventiori jugiter ratione preces fundant ....' which I thus
- translate: 'The object which the Rev. Father Ignatius is engaged in
- promoting, namely, that Catholics should, as it were, form
- themselves into an army set in array, and with continually
- increasing fervour pour forth prayers for the conversion of
- non-Catholics, but especially of England." Now, I do not know how
- these documents may strike others; but it seems to me that if, after
- having taken a journey to Rome on purpose to plead my cause there,
- and after having received letters like these in answer to my
- appeals, I was just now to relax in my zeal to promote prayers and
- good works for the conversion of Protestants, but especially of
- England, this would be not falling into the views of the Holy See,
- as some seem to think it would, but rather showing indifference and
- almost contempt for them, and repaying with ingratitude the great
- favours which I have received. I must reserve to another letter some
- account of my interviews with his Holiness in person.
-
- "I am, Sir, your faithful servant in Jesus Christ,
- "Ignatius Of St. Paul, Passionist."
-
-
-Here is the account of the audiences he had with the Pope on the
-subject of prayers for the conversion of England. It is taken from his
-letters to the _Catholic Standard_:--
-
- Audiences With Pope Pius IX.
-
- I beg to give an account of what passed upon the subject of the
- conversion of England in the audiences I was allowed {417} by the
- Holy Father. They were three. The first was on September 16, 1851,
- three days after my arrival in Rome; the second, December 23; the
- third, January 30, 1852, the day before I left Rome. It was on my
- return home in the evening after that last audience that I met Mgr.
- Vespasiani, the prelate whom I have before named as one of the
- Minutanti of the Propaganda, the first person in office at Rome who
- gave full and attentive consideration to my proposals. This was on
- the 14th of October, 1851. Full of satisfaction as I was, I
- expressed to him anew my gratitude for that favour, adding that now
- I was leaving Rome, I felt as if I had nothing more to ask. All was
- gained. Such, indeed, were my feelings then. He kindly accepted my
- acknowledgments, and seemed to sympathize in my satisfaction, but
- looked incredulous as to my having nothing more to ask, and with a
- smile, said something to this effect, "You will want plenty more;
- and, when you desire, you will command our services." I suppose he
- was right. My feeling was then, and I conceive it was well grounded,
- that, as far as regarded the mind of his Holiness, I had gained all,
- on the subject which most engaged me, and which I am now pursuing;
- and I felt as if in having reached this point all was done. So, I
- trust, it will prove in time; but I see plainly enough there is work
- to be done before the mind of the Holy Father will be carried out;
- others must be moved to correspond with it. I must explain myself by
- stating facts. In my first two audiences, I think I may say that the
- principle was approved by his Holiness, that Catholics might be
- moved all through the world to engage in the enterprise of
- converting England; but that he must not be represented as caring
- for England exclusively, as he was father to all. There was no
- objection here expressed to my being specially interested for my own
- country. On the contrary, the Pope agreed to, and approved of, my
- continuing to urge the Roman people to join in this cause, as well
- as pursuing the same object in Austria, whither I told him I was
- going, and elsewhere. In my second audience I said to him: "Holy
- Father, may I repeat truly here what I am saying outside? I am
- openly stirring the people of Rome to a third conquest of England.
- {418} Rome conquered England once, under Julius Caesar, by the
- material sword. Rome conquered England a second time, more
- gloriously, under St. Gregory I., by the Word of God. I am calling
- on Rome to undertake this conquest again, under Pius IX., when it
- will be a vastly more important one than heretofore, and by means
- more glorious and more divine, because referring more purely the
- glory to God, being chiefly holy prayer." The Pope did not speak in
- answer to this appeal; but, if I rightly judged, his manner and
- looks expressed his acceptance and approval of the idea better than
- words could have done. However, though I might say I had succeeded
- as well as I could have expected in these first two audiences, the
- second of which I looked upon as final, as in it I had taken my
- leave of his Holiness, there was yet something wanting. I was
- preparing to leave Rome not quite satisfied, though I knew not how
- to better my position. I will relate how the happy conclusion was
- brought round. My departure was unexpectedly delayed in order that I
- might assist at a mission to be given by our fathers, in the town of
- Marino, on the Alban mountains, which was in the diocese of the
- Cardinal-Vicar, at whose request the mission was given. I went to
- the mission, not so much to work, as to see, and hear, and learn for
- myself; but the crowd of penitents was such, that during the last
- week of it I gave myself entirely to the confessions; and having no
- part in the preaching, I never did such a week's work at confessions
- as that. I returned to Rome alone on January 18, to prepare for my
- departure, leaving the other Fathers to begin a second mission at
- Albano; and it struck me my week's work for the Cardinal-Vicar need
- not be altogether its own reward. I visited him the next day, as to
- make a report of the mission, which was highly satisfactory. I then
- said, "I have done a heavy week's work for your Eminence, and I come
- to claim _il mio stipendio_ (my pay)." "And what," said he, "is
- that?" "A few minutes' patience," I replied, "to hear me again on
- the cause of England. I want Rome to be effectually moved." "But,"
- said he again, "what can we do? I have distributed your papers. I
- will recommend {419} it again; what more do you want? Perhaps the
- Pope could suggest something; go to him again." I answered, "I have
- had my final audience, and received his last blessing. Can I go
- again?" "Oh, yes. Go; you may use my name." I went straight to the
- Vatican, and Monsignor Talbot placed me, according to custom, in a
- saloon, through which the Pope was to pass at three o'clock, to take
- his daily drive. I told his Holiness what had brought me again
- before him. I had received recommendations to all the world, but I
- was particularly intent on moving Rome. "Surely," he said, "that is
- the most important place. Write me a memorial, and we will consult
- over it." I lost no time in doing so. In it I dwelt on two objects;
- first, I entreated the Holy Father to take such measures as he might
- in his wisdom think fit, to move all Christendom to undertake the
- recovery of the nations which had been lost to the Church, and
- specially England. And with regard to Rome, I stated the case thus.
- I had received from the congregations through which his Holiness
- intimates his pleasure to the whole Church, an earnest
- recommendation to all Bishops to support me to the utmost of their
- power in my enterprise. Was it to be conceived, I asked, that the
- Bishop of the first See was alone excluded from this recommendation?
- Surely not; and therefore in the name of his Holiness, as head of
- the Universal Church, I appealed to his Holiness as Bishop of Rome,
- and entreated that he would give an example to all other Bishops,
- how a mandate of the Holy See ought to be obeyed. It was not for me
- to offer directions how this should be done; but if I were to make a
- suggestion, I would ask that a Prelate should be named, with an
- authority to engage the help of other zealous ecclesiastics, and
- with them to instruct the people of Rome in the importance and
- beauty of the work, and to engage them in it with persevering zeal.
- I took this memorial to the Cardinal-Vicar, who read through the
- latter part with me, and said, with an air of satisfaction, "_That
- will do; that will do very well_"--promising to present it to the
- Pope. I begged him to say besides, that the Prelate I had in my mind
- was Monsignor Talbot. This was on January 23. On the 26th, Monsignor
- {420} Barnabò told me that all had been favourably received. I
- thought I had nothing to do but to arrange with Monsignor Talbot
- what he might do, and for this purpose I went on the 30th of January
- to see him, accompanied by one of our Fathers. I had bid him
- farewell, when my companion said, "May we see the Pope?" I was
- rather annoyed at this: the sight of the Pope intended was merely to
- be once more placed in his way as he would pass one of the saloons:
- and I felt it would be unreasonable and intrusive for me to be seen
- there again; but I thought it would be selfish to disappoint my
- companion, who had sacrificed so much of his time to gratify me, and
- I said nothing. We were, therefore, taken into the saloon, as it was
- just the time for the Pope's drive. There, however, we waited one
- quarter, two quarters, three quarters of an hour. I concluded, what
- was the case, that the Pope was not going out, and expected
- presently to be told to go away. Instead of this Monsignor Talbot
- came and beckoned us into the Pope's private room, where he was
- sitting in the window recess perfectly at his ease, and received us
- with these words addressed to me:--"Well, Father Ignatius, we have
- done something now." "Indeed, Holy Father," said I, "this is true. I
- see this work now in the way to become the most favoured of all,
- entrusted, as it is, to a Prelate who has his time so disposed that
- one week he is free to work, and the other he returns to attendance
- on your Holiness to make his reports, and receive new instructions."
- "Not only so," replied the Pope, "there are four of them. He has but
- one week entirely engaged with me; besides the one out of four
- wholly free, he has but two or three hours every day on duty in the
- other two. But remember, I will not have England alone thought of."
- "Holy Father," I said, "this alteration has been made. The
- undertaking is for all separated nations; England being proposed
- only as the most important point of attack, on several accounts. I
- beg, however, to ask that the term heretics may not be used as the
- general designation of those we pray for. I do not confess to wilful
- heresy before my conversion. I do not confess for this sin for my
- countrymen at large." "Ah! what say you?" answered the Pope; then
- {421} he reflected for a moment and graciously bowed. In accordance
- with this request, in my letter from the Propaganda the term is not
- _haereticorum_, but _acatholicorum praesertim Angliae_. I went on:
- "Holy Father, I ask one more favour. Cardinal Fornari has agreed, if
- he is named by your Holiness, to accept the charge of Protector to
- this work." "What need of this?" answered the Pope; "I have desired
- the Cardinal-Vicar to recommend the work to Rome, and Cardinal
- Fornari is a Roman. Is that not enough?" "Holy Father," I replied,
- "what is requested is, that he should be empowered to act in it as
- Cardinal." After another pause his Holiness again graciously bowed
- and said: "Well, be it so." Thus the discourse on this subject
- terminated: and, if I have intelligibly explained myself, will it
- not be allowed that I had reason to go home satisfied, in the
- reflection that the work of the conversion of Protestants, but
- chiefly England, was now erected--as far as regarded the part which
- the holy Father had to take in it--into what may be almost called a
- congregation in the Holy City, to be composed of prelates and
- ecclesiastics, of whom the first active member was among his
- Holiness's domestic attendants; and the Cardinal Protector was one
- of the most distinguished of the Sacred College, who in his first
- conversation with me declared his most lively interest in England,
- as having himself, as Professor in the Roman Seminary, directed the
- studies in Theology of Cardinal Wiseman, and four others, now
- Bishops in England, besides two deceased. I must close this long
- letter with one more fact, which came to my knowledge, bringing home
- to me the consoling conviction, how deeply the heart of our Holy
- Father is interested in the great work. When I was in Paris, this
- cause of England was ardently taken up by a gentleman noted for his
- Catholic zeal, a distinguished merchant in Havre. On my leaving
- Paris he begged me to give him a letter of credentials, that, in his
- mercantile travels, he might in my name interest Bishops and other
- leading personages in our favour. In November last he enclosed me a
- letter he had received from the Vicar-General of Nantes, to whom he
- had applied to recommend this object to his Bishop. It was in these
- {422} terms: "I will gladly perform your commission, and I have no
- doubt his Lordship will comply with your wish; the more so that,
- returning from Rome a few days back, I have brought to him a message
- to the same effect from his Holiness. In my first audience the Pope
- said to me: 'Tell the Bishop of Nantes, from me, that I desire he
- will pray, and cause others to pray, a great deal for England. The
- position of the Church in that kingdom interests me deeply; I am
- always thinking of it.' In my second audience the Holy Father
- repeated to me the same words, and in a tone of feeling such as I
- can never forget. I am convinced this subject occupies his mind
- continually." Is it, now, to be supposed that the Holy Father is
- averse to English and Irish Catholics praying especially for
- England, and praying much for it? Is it not, on the contrary, to be
- inferred from these statements, and those of my last two letters,
- that it would console his heart to see them devotedly engaged in the
- work? I think this is the conclusion to which we shall all arrive,
- and that this happy result may in due time--and why not soon?--be
- abundantly realized.
-
-He says in another letter:--
-
- "I begin with repeating again the words of St. Jerome to Pope
- Damasus: 'He who gathereth not with thee scattereth,' and I renew my
- declaration that if I thought that by exerting myself to move the
- Catholics of England and Ireland, and, in general, of all the world,
- to the enterprise of gaining England, my country, back to the faith
- of our fathers, I was not working in accordance with the mind of his
- Holiness, I should not dare to proceed. Will my dear Catholic
- brethren meet me with the assurance that if it appears by facts that
- this enterprise is according to his mind, they will heartily devote
- themselves to the cause and help us?
-
- "It seems to me still, as it always did, impossible to conceive how
- these efforts, carried on as they are proposed to be, in perfect
- accordance with devoted loyalty to the State, and in a spirit of
- ardent charity towards our fellow-countrymen, should not be
- gratifying to the Church of God and to its Head. Many times have I
- repeated in sermons to the Irish people during the days of the
- troubles of his Holiness: {423} 'You have joined with noble
- generosity in assisting the Holy Father by subscriptions of money,
- you have entered fervently into prayer for him, will you not do one
- thing more to console him? Let him hear that you are determined that
- my country, with its great resources and power, shall once more be
- his.' This was, I think, a reasonable natural suggestion.
-
- "It was, accordingly, a surprise to me, and at the same time a pain,
- when I was told by one, about the beginning of the year 1851, that
- his Holiness was become almost averse to our efforts in behalf of
- England; as on being applied to for some new indulgence for certain
- prayers for England, he would not grant the petition unless Italy
- was comprehended in the intention of the prayers. Another said
- positively that the Pope would give no more indulgences for prayers
- for England. These things were said, as so many more things have
- been said, apparently in a half-joking tone, to mortify me in what
- is known to be a tender point. "Well, everything may turn to account
- for good, if we pay attention. These remarks helped to stimulate me
- to ascertain perfectly what the truth of the case is, and they now
- give me occasion to explain publicly some of the facts on which the
- matter has to be judged.
-
- "In May, 1850, a student of the English College at Rome, just
- ordained, went to receive the Pope's blessing before his return to
- England. He presented a crucifix to his Holiness, and begged for an
- indulgence of 300 days for whoever kissed this crucifix, and said a
- Hail Mary for the conversion of England. The Pope sat down and wrote
- with his own hand at the foot of the petition, that he granted 300
- days' indulgence for those who should offer a devout prayer, as for
- instance a Hail Mary, for the conversion of England. When this was
- reported to me, as there appeared some kind of ambiguity in one
- expression of the Pope's writing, I wrote to Monsignor Talbot,
- begging that he would ascertain from his Holiness whether we were
- right in interpreting the sentence as granting the indulgence
- generally without any reference to the crucifix. The answer was,
- 'Yes.' Evidently then, at this time, the Pope was disposed to grant
- more in favour of England than he was asked. How are {424} we to
- account for the seeming alteration in his dispositions? One way is
- to suppose that the Pope had ceased to wish prayers to be made for
- England. Monsignor Talbot, when I saw him at Rome in September,
- 1851, gave me another reason. 'The Pope,' said he, 'is determined he
- will give no more indulgences for England. People seem not to care
- for them. No account is made of them. Let them first show they value
- what they have.' No authority, on such a point, could be preferable
- to that of Monsignor Talbot, who spends his life in personal
- attendance on his Holiness; and according to him, the Pope did, in a
- tone of some displeasure, refuse one or two such requests, the
- displeasure was not because people prayed too much for England, but
- because they did not pray enough, and on this account, did not
- deserve any more encouragement. This view I maintain with the more
- confidence, inasmuch as after that displeasure had been expressed, a
- petition was made on March 9, 1851, by some English ladies in Rome
- for a plenary indulgence to be gained once a month by those who
- should daily pray for the conversion of England: it was granted as
- stated in our admission papers. I infer from this, that if only the
- Holy Father perceived that the Catholics of England were really in
- earnest in the cause, there would be no bounds to the liberality
- with which he would encourage them; but no one likes to go on giving
- favours to persons who seem not to value them; and he who has the
- dispensing of the favours of Almighty God from the treasuries of the
- Church, must not consent to their being undervalued.
-
- "But now, it will be asked, what encouragement did I myself receive
- from his Holiness during the four months and a half that I spent in
- Rome, as a kind of representative of this cause of the conversion of
- England? I need not say that, in going to Rome, I was desirous to
- move all hearts there to an enthusiastic devotion to this
- enterprise, as I had endeavoured to do in Ireland, in France, in
- Belgium, and Germany. I fain would not have lost an occasion of
- preaching in churches, addressing religious communities, the
- children of schools, wherever I could find them assembled. I did not
- expect, however, to be able at once to run such a career in {425}
- Rome, as in ordinary towns, and I was greatly satisfied with what
- was allowed me. Whatever difficulty or check I might have met with,
- it came not from his Holiness. The proper authority to apply to in
- this case was the Cardinal-Vicar; that is, he who administers the
- very diocese of Rome as the Pope's Vicar-General. He at once agreed
- to my visiting convents and schools, and exhorting them to the great
- work; but for preaching in churches, there must be, he said, express
- sanction from the Pope. The Holy Father was consequently consulted
- by Monsignor Talbot, and answered that he had no objection, but left
- it to me to make arrangements with the rectors of the churches. The
- number of monasteries and schools in which I made my allocutions on
- the conversion of England, is past my remembrance. Almost day by
- day, for about two months of my time, this was my leading pursuit. I
- wish it to be clearly understood that all this time I spoke all that
- was in my mind with as complete freedom from reserve as I am known
- to exercise here. To the authorities in Rome, who are not wanting in
- vigilance, all must have been known; and one word from them of
- objection to the subject, or to my manner of treating it, spoken to
- my superiors, would have at once stopped me. The number of churches
- in which I spoke was not so great. I used generally to ask leave
- myself to address convents and schools. I saw that it would not be
- becoming to offer myself thus to speak in churches at Rome; but
- among others I may mention particularly, that I preached by
- invitation, in English, in French, and in Italian, in those of the
- large and frequented churches S. Andrea della Valle, S. Luigi de'
- Francesi, and S. Andrea della Fratte; and the Pope himself spoke to
- me of this last discourse in a tone of satisfaction. He would not
- have been opposed, as far as could be observed, if, instead of three
- churches, I could have made up a list of three hundred.
-
- "Another means I took for moving the Roman people was, by the papers
- printed for me by the Propaganda, of which I spoke in my last
- letter. The first of these was thus headed:--'Association of Prayers
- and Good Works for the Conversion of those who are separated from
- the Holy Catholic Church, but especially of England.' Before this
- {426} writing was printed, I gave a copy of it to Monsignor Talbot,
- to lay before the Pope. He returned it to me, with this addition in
- his own hand:--
-
- "'His Holiness has deigned to grant to this pious work his special
- benediction.
-
- "'George Talbot, Cameriere Segreto.
- "'_Nov_. 15, 1851.'
-
- "To this is appended the petition presented for me by Monsignor
- Barnabò, for the extension of indulgences, as follows:--
-
- "'Most Blessed Father,--Ignatius of St. Paul (Spencer), Passionist,
- Provincial Consultor in England, prostrate at the feet of your
- Holiness, states that, being desirous of extending the Association
- of Prayers already existing for England, in favour of all those who
- are separated from the Holy Church, and being sensible that a fresh
- spiritual attraction is necessary in order to move all the faithful
- to enter on this holy enterprise, most humbly implores your
- Holiness, that you would be pleased to extend the three hundred
- days' indulgence already granted by your Holiness to whoever prays
- for the conversion of England, to this new work, and moreover grant
- one hundred days for whatever good work may be done in favour of
- this Association.'
-
- "Monsignor Barnabò reported, that though the Pope adverted to his
- former declaration, that he would give no more indulgences on this
- account, he granted this petition in the most gracious manner. The
- date of this grant is Nov. 16, 1851.
-
- "It is evidently intimated here, that while granting his sanction to
- the extension of the enterprise, he renewed his sanction to it in
- its original form. I must here conclude, and defer again to another
- letter what I promised before, that is, some account of what passed
- in the audiences to which I myself was admitted by his Holiness."
-
- An incident happened towards the end of Father Ignatius's audiences
- with the Holy Father, highly characteristic. Father Ignatius had
- made arrangements for a begging tour in Germany, and intended to
- inaugurate it by trying what {427} he could do in that line in Rome
- itself. Our General forbade him to beg of his Holiness, and Father
- Ignatius had made up his mind before to do so. After the prohibition
- he began to doubt whether it was binding, as the Pope was a higher
- superior than the General. He consulted an astute Roman theologian
- on his doubt, and the answer given was, "Lay the doubt itself before
- the Pope."
-
- Father Ignatius had an audience in store for him for a different
- matter, and when it was over, he said, in the greatest simplicity,
- "Holy Father, I have a scruple on my mind, which I would wish to
- speak about, if I might be permitted." "Well, and what is it?" He
- here told the Pope just as he was advised. The Pope smiled, handed
- him ten _gregorine_ (about £25), and told him not to mind the
- scruple.
-
-
-{428}
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-A Tour In Germany.
-
-
-Father Ignatius left Rome with the Holy Fathers blessing on both his
-spiritual and temporal projects. On his way to Germany, whither he was
-bound for a twofold begging tour, he preached everywhere to religious,
-priests, nuns, people, and children, upon the conversion of England.
-He went further than mere exhortation, he tried to get the Bishops and
-religious to take up his ideas, now stamped with the approbation of
-Rome, and propagate them among those under their jurisdiction. He met
-with kindness and encouragement in every town and hamlet until he came
-to Laibach. Here the police seized him and sent him away. At Gratz he
-met with a better reception. Throughout, the priests and religious
-receive him with a something approaching to honour, and so do the
-nobility, but government officials and the like treat him rudely
-enough.
-
-When he arrived in Vienna, he found a way of conciliating these
-officers of justice and their subalterns. Graf (Count) O'Donnel took
-him to the Secretary of Police, and procured him a safe-conduct,
-whereby this kind of annoyance was put an end to for the future. Great
-personages patronize him--among the chief were Prince Esterhazy,
-Counts O'Donnel and Litchenstein. Through their kindness and his own
-repute, he is favoured with interviews from the members of the royal
-family. A few of these in his own words must be interesting:--
-
- "While at Rome, I heard one day the wonderful account of the _coup
- d'état_ of the now Emperor of the French. I thought with myself that
- moment, here is a man for me--perhaps _the_ man. If he survive the
- assaults of his enemies, {429} and become established in power over
- France, he is the man evidently for great designs; the people whom
- he rules are the people to follow him in them; and he has a mind, so
- I conceived, to understand how utterly insignificant are all
- enterprises, in comparison with those which have the glory of God
- and the salvation of souls for their end. But will he, can he, be
- moved to take up the great cause? I got an introduction to the
- French ambassador at Rome, in order to open my way to an interview
- with his chief. This may be in reserve for me some future day; but I
- was first to see another great man--the young Emperor of Austria.
-
- "I think an account of this audience, and some accompanying
- circumstances, will be interesting in more points of view than one.
- After leaving Rome at the beginning of February, I went to Vienna,
- and stopped there three weeks before coming home. The Emperor had
- just left Vienna for Venice when I arrived, and did not return till
- a fortnight after. In consequence of this, I sought for, and had
- audience of all the other members of the royal family then in the
- town. Many may not be aware of the circumstances under which the
- present Emperor was raised to the throne. Everything connected with
- this young man is to me full of a kind of poetic interest. He is the
- eldest son of the Archduke Francis Charles and the Archduchess
- Sophia, a princess of Bavaria. His father is brother to the
- ex-Emperor Ferdinand.
-
- "It is said that in 1848, at the time when the insurgents had gained
- possession of Vienna, and the court was in flight, some one asked
- the Empress Mary Ann, a Sardinian princess, 'Madam, have you ever
- thought of an abdication?' 'I have, indeed,' answered she; 'but what
- is to follow?' The Emperor had no children, and his next heir was
- his brother the Archduke. Both of them have been always highly
- respected as most amiable and religious men, but are not of
- abilities or character to bear the charge of an empire under such
- circumstances. The abdication, then, of the reigning Emperor would
- not have been a remedy to existing evils, unless his brother joined
- in the sacrifice of his claims, and made way for the succession of
- his son. This {430} arrangement, however, was effected; and, if what
- I gathered from conversations and observation is correct, it is to
- the two ladies whom I have mentioned, that the empire is indebted
- for it. Do not they deserve the admiration of the present and future
- generations, and to have their place among the _valiant women_, for
- renouncing the honours of an imperial crown, for the public good? Be
- this as it may, the announcement was made to the young prince, then
- eighteen years of age, that the crown was his. It is said that he
- burst into tears at hearing it, and begged two days for reflection,
- during which he went to confession and communion, to obtain light
- from God, and concluded with giving his consent. His career has been
- conformable with this beginning. Among other things, I may mention
- that one of his first acts was, of his own mind, to repeal the
- oppressive laws of Joseph II., and to restore liberty to the Church.
- Could I do otherwise than long to interest such a soul as this in
- the great cause I was supporting? Shall I succeed in the end? I had
- an audience of the Archduchess Sophia, the Emperor's mother, before
- his return from Venice. It is under her care and guidance, as I was
- assured, that his character has been formed; and it was touching to
- hear her make me a kind of apology for what might, perhaps, be taken
- as a defect in his manner. I told her I was desirous of an audience
- of his Majesty. She said, 'You will certainly obtain it;' and she
- added, "You will perhaps think him cold, but he is not so.' This
- corresponds with what she said to a friend of mine, a German
- literary character, who was likewise about to have his first
- audience from the Emperor. The Archduchess said to him, 'His manner
- is not winning, like that of Carl [meaning her third son, the
- Archduke Charles], but he has greater depth of character; from his
- childhood upwards I never knew him say a word merely to please;
- every word is from his heart.' These few words of his mother are to
- me a most precious comment on what passed between the Emperor and me
- when I had my audience. I was introduced into a large saloon on one
- of the days of public reception. The Emperor stood alone in the
- middle of it; behind him, to the left, was a small table, on which
- was a pile of {431} memorials which he had already received. He was
- in military uniform. I should be glad to convey the impression which
- his appearance, and the few words he spoke, made on me. A young
- emperor, I suppose, has great advantage in gaining upon one's
- feelings, if he will in any degree do himself justice. In this case,
- I say, that I never was more satisfied, not to say captivated, with
- my observations on any person. His figure is not in itself
- commanding; but there was in his air and manner and tone a union of
- grace and affability, dignity, wisdom, and modesty, which I do not
- remember to have seen equalled. I was greatly struck, on my
- entrance, with what appeared to me such a contrast between what I
- witnessed and the receptions usually given by great personages who
- wish to be gracious. Ordinarily, my impression is that they
- overwhelm one with many words, which often mean nothing. The Emperor
- was perfectly silent. I had time to think with myself, after I had
- approached him, 'Am I then to speak first? So it was. I have a very
- clear recollection of what was said.
-
- "'I have requested this audience,' I said, 'to represent to your
- Majesty the object for which I am travelling. It is to move
- Catholics throughout the world to interest themselves in obtaining
- the return of my country to the Catholic faith. On this, I am deeply
- convinced, depends entirely the happiness of my country; and, I
- conceive, nothing would more contribute to the happiness of other
- nations of the world.'
-
- "The Emperor seemed to intimate assent to this, and said with great
- grace: 'I am happy to hear that things go on better in England in
- regard to religion than they have done.'
-
- "'There is much,' I said, 'to encourage hopes; but we want great
- help. I am come to ask the help of Austria. I do not take on me to
- prescribe what your Majesty in person might do in this cause. As the
- principal means to be employed is prayer, I am aware that it belongs
- rather to Bishops to direct such movements; but I ask help and
- sympathy from all. I thought it could not be anything but right to
- ask your Majesty's.'
-
-{432}
-
- "He answered: 'I will interest myself as much at possible.'
-
- "I added: 'I have said, I did not intend to propose any line of
- action to your Majesty; but I may explain myself further. It is to
- the Bishops that I make my principal appeal to interest the people
- in this object. Now, I am aware that they would and must be averse
- to any public measures which might seem to involve political
- inconvenience: I would, therefore, ask of your Majesty, that if the
- bishops are pleased to act, the Government should not object to it,
- as I conceive there would be no reason.'
-
- "The Emperor said something to the effect, as I thought, that he saw
- no reason to object to what I said.
-
- "I was aware that my audience could not be a long one, and I now put
- my hand to the breast of my habit to take out a memorial, which I
- had been directed to present on this occasion, for permission to
- collect subscriptions in the empire.
-
- "He thought I was about to offer him papers on the subject on which
- I had been speaking, and said: 'You probably have some papers which
- will explain your wishes.'
-
- "I said: 'I have; but they are not in a becoming form to present to
- your Majesty.'
-
- "I had, in fact, two little addresses printed on poor paper, in
- German, for distribution; and I brought them forward.
-
- "He immediately put out his hand to take them, and said, with a
- smile and manner of truly high-bred courtesy: 'Oh! I will read them;
- 'and he laid them on the table by him.
-
- "I then presented my written memorial, and then, on his slightly
- bowing to me, I withdrew."
-
- Another letter says:--
-
- "In my last letter I repeated the words in which that wise and
- excellent Princess, the Archduchess Sophia, described the character
- of two of her sons: 'The Emperor seems cold, but he is not so. He is
- not winning and amiable like Carl, but he has more solidity and
- depth.' I remarked that to me these words were a most interesting
- commentary {433} on what passed in the short audience I had from the
- young Emperor; and if I succeeded in my description of it, I am sure
- others will think with me. I will now give some account of my
- audience with the third brother, the young Archduke Charles. The
- second brother, whose name I do not now remember, was not in Vienna
- at the time. He is a seaman, and I suppose it is intended that under
- his auspices the Austrian navy should be advanced to greater vigour
- and efficiency, while the Emperor and Charles attend mainly to the
- army. The empire possesses two splendid ports--Trieste and Venice;
- and past history proves what may be done with the latter alone.
-
- "I made acquaintance with a Swiss ecclesiastic in Vienna (Mgr.
- Mislin), who bore a part in the education of all three of these
- princes. I had told him what were my desires concerning them; that
- is, to inspire them with ardent zeal for the great work of the
- reunion of Christendom, but especially the reconquest of England for
- the Church. One day the Abbé called to see me, at the palace of the
- Pope's Nuncio, where I was staying; and as I was out, he left word
- that he wished to see me without delay. He had to tell me, as I
- found, that the Archduke Charles, with whom he regularly goes to
- dine every Friday, had said to him on the last of these occasions,
- 'Do you know Father Ignatius?' 'Yes,' he answered, 'very well.' 'Do
- you think,' added the Prince, 'I could see him? I wish it very
- much.' 'Oh,' replied the Abbé, 'there will be no difficulty; 'and at
- once an hour was fixed--two o'clock on the 11th of March. It
- happened, however, that notice was received that at this very time
- the Emperor was to arrive from Trieste, and the Archduke had to go
- to the railway terminus to meet him. My audience was deferred till
- half-past three; and I went with the Abbé to the private entrance of
- the imperial palace to see them arrive. They were driven up from the
- station in a light open carriage; and it was thus, side by side,
- that I first saw them both. I may be mistaken, but in my poetic
- recollections and visions of Vienna, if I, who am no poet, may so
- speak, these two brothers are charmingly conjoined in my mind. At
- half-past three, then, I went to {434} the Archduke's apartments in
- the Burg, as it is called--a great mass of building, which includes
- the Emperor's town residence, apartments for all the royal family,
- several public offices, extensive quarters for troops, &c.--and was
- immediately introduced to him in a large drawing-room, where he kept
- me a good half-hour in lively conversation. My impression of him
- was, of a bright, buoyant youth, full of shining prospects of his
- future career; in which, though, perhaps, somewhat unconsciously to
- himself, he is both qualified by circumstances and character, and
- nobly disposed to exert himself for everything great and good. All
- this, however, is yet to be developed and consolidated by age,
- reflection, and experience. I should say, not so much that he
- himself is eagerly grasping at facts with which to store his mind,
- to be in due time digested, matured, and acted upon, as that
- Providence is turning to account his natural youthful eagerness, and
- shall we say, curiosity, to do this for him. May it prove that I am
- not forming over bright and groundless visions!
-
- "The Archduke was dressed in a plain cavalry uniform. He was then
- about 19 years old, and very young-looking for his age. My object
- was to impress him with the grand importance of the enterprise which
- I was proposing as proper to form the dearest and constant aim of
- his brother's reign; that is, the restoring union to Christendom,
- having peculiarly in view the reconciling England to the Church. 'I
- have no wish,' I said, 'to see him, the Emperor, less devoted to his
- army: let him watch with constant care over all the interests of his
- Imperial dignity; but let him be devoted, above all and in
- everything, to the glory of God, and the repairing the losses of the
- Holy Church; and if it pleases God he should live, he will have a
- career more glorious, and leave a name greater than Charlemagne.' He
- said, 'Surely what you propose is most important. It is a matter to
- be deeply deplored that so many German states are cut off from the
- Church.' ..... I do not remember clearly much more of what passed
- in this conversation, and in truth it is not of so much consequence;
- for his words are not all weighed, solid, and worth recording, like
- those of his more {435} sage brother. All have not the same gifts,
- natural or spiritual; and it is not well they should. Of course, it
- is not well, because God has ordered it thus. But I could see in the
- diversity of these young men what might be wonderfully combined for
- doing great things. Charles would not be the one to govern and
- control, and he has not this to do. The Emperor has; and he is cut
- out for it. But then perhaps he is not one to win and conciliate
- those who do not know how to value all superior qualities like his;
- yet this is necessary in such times, especially when sound,
- old-fashioned loyalty is not much known. But let the two brothers
- work together; let their hearts be one, and let that one purpose be
- directed to noble ends, and it will be well for them, for the
- empire, and for Europe. Charles will supply what the other wants. I
- asked Monsignor Mislin one day, with an anxious feeling, whether
- they were really affectionate, loving brothers, and the answer was
- satisfactory."
-
-
-{436}
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-Father Ignatius Returns To England.
-
-
-He lands at Dover on the 1st April, 1852, comes home, sets his house
-in order at the Hyde, and goes, after Holy Week, to see Father Eugene,
-the Provincial, at St. Wilfrid's, to give an account of himself. His
-name was about this time in every one's mouth, his doings were
-canvassed by friends and foes, and many and various were the opinions
-held about him. In the meantime he went on with his ordinary duties.
-He gives the retreat in Sedgeley Park again, and one to the
-congregation at Havant. It was whilst here, in the house of Mr.
-Scholfield, that he read Lord Derby's proclamation against appearing
-abroad in the religious habit.
-
-Father Ignatius had to return to London next day, and did not wish to
-violate this prohibition. He was sadly at a loss; he had brought no
-secular clothes with him, and the gentleman with whom he was staying
-was short and stout, so that it was hopeless to think of getting
-anything suitable from his wardrobe. The butler was taxed for a
-contribution; all who had an article to spare gave heartily, and the
-Monk was, after some ingenuity, equipped in the following fashion: A
-pair of very light shoes, fitting badly and pinching sorely, a pair of
-short coloured pantaloons, a great pilot overcoat, a Scotch cap, cut
-so as to make it fit his head, formed the _cap-à-pie_ of Father
-Ignatius. He took refuge in Spanish Place until the darkness of night
-might save him from his juvenile friends along the Edgware Road, who,
-if they recognised him in his new fashion, would treat him to a more
-than ordinary share of ridicule. He took off the shoes when outside
-London, and one may imagine the surprise of {437} the religious when
-he entered the choir thus arrayed, in the middle of matins, to get
-Father Provincial's permission to _change!_
-
-Our Fathers shortly after were convoked by the Provincial to a kind of
-chapter. Among other matters submitted to their consideration, came
-the doings of Father Ignatius. There were cavils on all sides, from
-within and without, and many thought that it was his imprudence that
-drew forth the proclamation. The nature of the charges against him
-will be seen from an apologetic letter of his to the _Standard_:--
-
- To The Editor Of The "Catholic Standard."
- Jesu Christi Passio.
-
- Sir,--I remarked in my last, not as a complaint, but quite the
- contrary, that I have often heard that good Catholics have suspected
- me to be not right in my head, because of my strange devotion to the
- conversion of England and of the many strange things which this
- fancy, as it seems to them, has led me to do. So far, indeed, am I
- from being surprised at or vexed by them, that I fairly declare that
- something like a suspicion of this kind sometimes flashes across my
- own mind. Suppose, for instance, I might hear of any one becoming
- deranged or being in danger of it, I have felt at times something
- like a sympathetic chord struck in my own mind, which seems to say,
- "Are people right, perhaps, after all? Am I not really mad on this
- point?' And it may take me a moment's thought to keep my fair even
- balance. How do I keep it?--Not as I might have done, some thirty
- years ago, by recollecting, what when young I used to hear said by
- my relations, with self-congratulation, "Well, thank God, there is
- no taint of madness in our family!--"No; I get my satisfaction
- independently of this, from a twofold consciousness, to one branch
- of which I could not have referred then--that is, from the
- consciousness, first, of a yet unimpaired memory concerning what I
- have seen and said and heard within reasonable limits of time; and
- secondly, from the consciousness, glory be to God for {438} it, of
- (may I say it without rashness?) a perfect Catholic, Apostolic,
- Roman faith. I _remember_--I cannot be mistaken in this--that, not
- two years ago, I spent four months in Rome, and spoke out there all
- my thoughts on this subject, as far as I had opportunity given,
- without a shadow of reserve, to the first authorities of the Church;
- and that it ended by my receiving and having in my possession
- documents fully approving of what I had been doing and purposed to
- do, from the first authorities of the Church, to which I may add the
- mention of testimonials signed by the Generals of the Dominicans, of
- the Conventual Franciscans, of the Franciscans _Strictioris
- Observantiae_, and of the Capuchins, recommending me to all local
- superiors of their respective orders, to the end that they should
- receive me to hospitality in all their houses, allow the use of
- their churches to preach in, and assist me in every possible way in
- my purposes. I have then said to myself, "It would indeed be no
- ordinary sort of madness breaking out for the first time in a
- family, which should have the marvellous power of communicating
- itself, infecting and dragging after it such a number of certainly
- very respectable heads; to which I may add, that the foundation, as
- it were, of all these testimonials, was a letter from his Eminence
- the Archbishop of Westminster, given me when I went into Germany in
- the summer of 1851, renewed with a fresh signature in 1852, after
- all my vagaries (?) at Vienna had taken place. In this letter,
- written in French by the hand of his Eminence himself--of whom I
- never heard any one express the idea that he was touched in the
- brain--he states that "having perfectly known me from the time of my
- conversion [I feel an intimate conviction in myself no one knows me
- better] he does not hesitate to recommend me to all the Catholics of
- the Continent, particularly to all bishops and ecclesiastics,
- secular and regular, as worthy of all their consideration and of
- their support, in the matters about which I should be engaged." No;
- I say, that on divine principles, almost as well as human, it is too
- much to imagine that I have been mad, thus far; whatever may be the
- case hereafter. Protestants, at least some of them, might say so,
- and might {439} think it too. No wonder. But will this remonstrance
- suffice to put an end to such insinuations from good Catholics?
- Mind, I am not displeased at them; nay, I relish these insinuations
- beyond what I can express. I have solid reasons for this; but I
- desire for the future to forego this personal consolation, for the
- sake of the souls of my poor countrymen, and of hundreds of millions
- more throughout the world, which I have the conviction might be
- saved, if the Catholics of England and Ireland would at length have
- done with their objections, and undertake with all their heart the
- gaining of this kingdom to God and His Church--and a reputed madman
- is not likely to move them to it. I cannot but think that the
- authorities under whose sanction I have acted might be considered a
- sufficient defence against objections to the movement which I call
- for so pertinaciously. I will, however, proceed to answer one by one
- the remarks which I supposed in my last letter might be passed on my
- narrative of proceedings at Vienna. First, I supposed some would
- smile at my ignorance of the world, in expecting that in our days
- young princes like the Emperor of Austria and his brother should
- have any dispositions to enter into ideas like mine. But why not?
- Are they not good ideas? at least, I think them so; and am I to
- think a person incapable of great and good designs because he is an
- emperor--a prince? There is no doubt that because he is a prince, he
- is immensely more responsible for the objects which he pursues; and
- that the glory of God would be incomparably more advanced by his
- devoting himself to heavenly pursuits than if he were an ordinary
- person; and are we tamely to surrender to the service of the world,
- and of the Prince of this world, all who have power to influence the
- world, and be content on God's behalf to have none but the poor and
- weak on the other side? I know it is in the Word of God that not
- many wise, not many noble, &c., are called. God has chosen the poor
- in this world; but yet there has been a St. Henry, an emperor; a St.
- Stephen, King of Hungary; a St. Louis of France; a St. Edward the
- Confessor, and so many more; and what magnificent instruments have
- such {440} men been for exalting the Church, converting nations, and
- saving souls! If they have been few in comparison with kings and
- emperors whose views have been all temporal, is that a reason
- against trying to add one or two more to their number? I think it is
- a reason why we _should_ try; and if we are to try, let us do it in
- the spirit of hope, or we shall do it very languidly. If after all
- we fail, what have we lost by trying and by hoping? You may answer,
- we shall suffer disappointment. Ah! who says that? No! no
- disappointment for those who hope in God and work for Him
- legitimately. It would make my heart bleed, if I had a heart fit for
- it, to think of the noble, truly princely youths in question,
- sinking down to the wretched level of worldly, selfish, immoral,
- useless men of power, of whom the world has borne so many; and for a
- time, if but for a time, I have indulged bright visions about them;
- not mere dreamy visions, for their education, the circumstances of
- their elevation, the young Emperor's career hitherto, his late
- wonderful deliverance from assassination, in which he behaved, as
- report says, in away to encourage all such thoughts as mine--all
- these are reasons on my side; but suppose I am disappointed there;
- suppose no one sympathizes in my thoughts; suppose the Emperor has
- forgotten all about my appeal, and I never travel more, or never
- more to Vienna, and no one else will take any trouble about it--is
- God's arm shortened? Are there no other emperors, or kings, or
- queens for Him to choose among, if emperors He has need of for the
- work? My friends, fear not. I do not intend to be disappointed, and,
- what is more, I shall not be, nor will any of those be who work for
- the saving of souls, even on the very largest scale, unless we are
- so foolish as to turn back and grow slack. But is it not an error,
- it will be asked, a mistake to wish kings and emperors to interfere
- in such things? I know many persons of great consideration have this
- thought; but the mistake seems to me to lie in not making a
- distinction between such interference as that of Constantius,
- Valens, Julian, in old times; Henry IV. and Joseph II. of Austria,
- Henry VIII. of England, and that of such princes as I have named
- above, whom the Church has canonized for {441} what they did for
- her. This is my opinion, others have theirs; how shall we decide?
- Can we here again know the mind of Rome; and will not that have some
- weight in settling the question? I will just relate what took place
- there relative to this matter. When preparing to leave Rome for
- Vienna, I desired to obtain from the Austrian Ambassador there a
- letter, which might facilitate my access to the Emperor, on which I
- had set my heart. But I understood the Ambassador himself was not
- easily accessible, and that I had better obtain a note of
- introduction to him, and from no one would it be so desirable as
- from Cardinal Antonelli, the Pope's Secretary of State. I obtained
- an audience from him and made my request. He answered: "We have a
- nuncio at Vienna; it will do better for you to have a letter from me
- to him." Of course I accepted this spontaneous offer most
- thankfully. The Cardinal desired me to tell him what I wished at
- Vienna, I said: "An audience of the Emperor: and as I am asking the
- favour of your Eminence to assist me in obtaining it, it seems right
- you should know for what end I desire it. It is to propose to the
- Emperor to take to heart my great object of the conversion of
- England, and of Protestants in general, and to move his subjects to
- it." The Cardinal explained to me some circumstances in the position
- of the Emperor, which made it unlikely that he would be led to take
- any open steps of this kind; but he gave me the letter without a
- word of objection to my wish, on principle; and it was on my
- presenting it to the Nuncio, that he most graciously desired that I
- should lodge in his palace all the time that I was in Vienna. As I
- have been led to mention this audience with Cardinal Antonelli, I
- think others may share with me in the feelings of satisfaction and
- admiration with which the remainder of what passed impressed me. I
- took occasion from finding myself in company with the Pope's
- Secretary of State, to make an additional effort towards moving Rome
- in the great cause; and as, by his office, he had to regard the
- political effect of a decided movement such as I was begging, I
- urged my conviction that no political ill consequences need be
- feared from the Holy Father calling on all Christendom to {442} move
- in this spiritual enterprise. He interrupted me with saying: "The
- Holy Father fears no man and nothing in the world." He adverted to
- the position in which he had seen him at Gaèta, and said: "The
- political power of the Holy See depends on its weakness." I do not
- remember the exact words; but they amounted to a noble adoption by
- the Apostolic See of the famous Apostolic sentiment: "When I am
- weak, then am I strong," in relation not only to the wielding of its
- own inalienable spiritual sovereignty, but to its accidental
- temporal power, in the exercise of which we perhaps should not
- expect always to see the Divine principle so prominent. This
- discourse gave me the consoling assurance that when the mind of his
- Holiness should be guided by the light which is in him, to judge
- that the time is come for a powerful call on Christendom to move
- forward in the great enterprise, no human considerations will check
- his steps. The Holy Father knows no fear of man.
-
- I am, your obedient servant,
- Ignatius Of St. Paul, Passionist.
-
-The joyous way in which he received crosses and mortifications may be
-seen from this letter. It seemed as if nothing could ruffle his
-temper. He remarks on the Proclamation, in a letter he wrote to make
-arrangements for saying mass in a private chapel: "There ought to be
-something in the way of a cassock too, as the Queen and Lord Derby
-have been pleased to make the country too hot for me to keep on my
-wearing of the habit for the present. At least so it seems."
-
-When he attended the meeting of our Fathers, alluded to above, he
-travelled by train, with his habit slung over his shoulder, and the
-sign conspicuous, saying, "Since they won't let me wear my habit like
-a religious, I shall carry it like a slave."
-
-
-{443}
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-A Little Of His Home And Foreign Work.
-
-
-Father Ignatius gives a retreat to the nuns of Lingdale House, and
-comes immediately after to Oscott, where the first Provincial Synod of
-the English Hierarchy was being held. He presents a petition to the
-Synodal Fathers, and receives encouragement to prosecute his work of
-moving all whom he can to pray for the conversion of England. His next
-mission was to make the visitation of our Belgian houses for the
-Provincial; when he found himself again abroad, he took advantage of
-the opportunity. He goes to different places, and finds many Belgian
-and French bishops who preach upon his _oeuvre_, and recommend it by
-circulars to their clergy. These journeys he paid for by begging
-wherever he went, and the object he begged for is seen from a letter
-of his to Mr. Monteith, dated Lille, Aug. 24, 1852:--
-
- "My dear Mr. Monteith,--Here I am, writing to you again, and you
- will soon see that what brings me to this is, as usual, want of
- money--_auri fames_. The case stands thus: I am on travel again,
- with commission of finding means to build our house near London, of
- which I am rector, or rather I am rector of a little place which
- stands on the ground, and erecter rather than rector _ex officio_ of
- the house that is to be there. I have my ideas how we might get
- means for this expense, and for all other expenses; and, moreover,
- how means could be got for all the houses in England and Scotland
- too. I am following the end as well as I can, all alone, by the way
- which seems to me the best and only one; but my being alone makes
- the progress slow. Hitherto, my ideas are to others like
- dreams--empty dreams, {444} though I have a pocket-book full of
- recommendations from Rome to support them, which encourage me to
- think I am not mad, when, by the manner in which I see people
- sometimes look at me, I should almost think I was. I allude chiefly
- to the way in which, in a company of English Catholics, the mention
- from me of the idea, _conversion of England_, immediately silences a
- company in the most animated conversation, as if I had said, 'Next
- week I am going to be crowned King of France!' ... Though I speak as
- I do, I am not without encouragement and fine prospects; but I want
- to hasten things, as souls by thousands and millions perish by
- delays; and this I will not, if I can help it, have to answer for.
- An Englishman's regular, natural way to get his matters attended to,
- is a steady, persevering grumble. He grumbles over one step, then
- grumbles over the next, however comfortable and happy he may be over
- what he has gained.
-
- "Last week I was at Cambrai, where there was a most remarkable
- centenary feast, in honour of Notre Dame de Grâce. There is there an
- old picture of Our Lady, brought from Rome 400 years ago, and
- installed in the cathedral in 1452, which has been a centre of
- devotion ever since. This was the year for the grand solemnity;
- pilgrimages coming all the week from the diocese and farther. The
- most remarkable of the pilgrims unquestionably was Cardinal Wiseman,
- who came to preside over the procession and solemnities of the last
- day. He sung mass, and preached his first sermon in France, which
- was one of the most eloquent I ever heard from him, or any one,
- notwithstanding his imperfect diction. It was all to the point of
- moving the French Episcopate and nation to prayers for the
- conversion of England. So, if I live, I have little or no doubt of
- succeeding in time, but, meanwhile, I must poke here and poke there
- for money, till it begins to come freely of itself. As to what the
- Continent could do if their heart was once moved, I am convinced by
- the history of the Crusades. If the Catholic nations were now
- engaged in a material war, there would be armies on foot, and fleets
- at sea, the cost of which, for one week, would be enough to build
- cathedrals for all our bishops. {445} Why not the same money drawn
- to effect the spiritual conquest? Because they do not care about it.
- Then, let us make them; and how? The first step, of course, must be
- to care for it ourselves. '_Si vis me flere, dolendum est primum
- ipsi tibi._' And what can we do to bring our English and Scotch to
- this?--Grumble at them, I suppose."
-
-On his return from France in September, himself and Father Eugene came
-to the determination to move away from The Hyde, if a more convenient
-site could be procured. The reason of this was chiefly the
-unsuitableness of the place to the working of our vocation. It was too
-solitary for missionaries, and there was no local work for a number of
-priests. Some of the fathers disguise themselves in secular suits,
-less unseemly than that in which they once beheld Father Ignatius, and
-go in search of a place, but without success. Father Ignatius gave a
-mission at this time in Kentish Town, and he little thought, as he
-took his walk along the tarred paling in Maiden Lane, that inside lay
-the grounds of the future St. Joseph's Retreat.
-
-Towards the end of the year 1852, Father Ignatius accompanies as far
-as London Bridge a colony of Passionists, whom Dr. O'Connor, the
-Bishop of Pittsburg, was bringing out to the United States. These
-Passionists have grown in _gentem magnam_, and the worthy Bishop, like
-another Odescalchi, resigned his crosier, and became a Jesuit.
-
-He concludes this year and begins the next giving retreats. The scenes
-of his labours in this department were Somers Town, Blandford Square
-(London), our own house, Dudley, and Douay. He also assisted at a
-mission in Commercial Road, London, E.
-
-The heaviest part of his work, as a member of The Hyde community, was
-attending to the parish, which, with the Barnet Mission, then under
-our charge, was equal in area to many a diocese in Catholic countries.
-Father Ignatius often walked thirty miles in one day on parochial
-duty. To give an idea of how he went through this work, one instance
-will suffice. On one day to went to Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum, and
-from all the unhappy inmates he was able to get one confession. Next
-day he walked to give {446} the Holy Communion to this single
-penitent, and walked afterwards to Barnet before he broke his fast.
-This must be a distance of at least fifteen miles.
-
-In May, 1853, he gives a retreat to his old parishioners of West
-Bromwich, another in Winchester in July, to the nuns in Wolverhampton
-in August, and to the people in Oxburgh in October, and in Southport,
-Lancashire, in Advent.
-
-The 16th of November this year was a great day for our congregation.
-It was the first feast of Blessed Paul of the Cross, our holy founder.
-There was a great re-union of the chief fathers of the order in St.
-Wilfrid's--the Bishops of Birmingham and Southwark, and Dr. Ullathorne
-and Dr. Grant assisted at the solemnity. Father Ignatius was there, of
-course. Father Paul was beatified on the 28th September, 1852. Our
-religious had prayed and worked for the great event, and had now the
-happiness of seeing him raised to the altar.
-
-He stays at home a great deal now, as a rector ought to do, except in
-intervals of missions and retreats; and the lion's share of parish
-work falls to him. He sends one of the priests of his community to
-France to beg for the house; but he had, in a very short time, to send
-him money for his expenses home. He then concludes that he should
-himself be considered beggar-in-chief, and accordingly goes out for a
-few days to collect alms in London. With his alms, he collects into
-the Church a young Puseyite minister, who is now a zealous priest on
-the London mission.
-
-Father Ignatius visits the neighbouring ministers, but not as
-formerly; he simply goes to see his old acquaintances, and if the
-conversation could be transferred from compliments and common-place
-remarks to matters of higher interest, he was not the man to let the
-opportunity pass by. Among his old friends in the Anglican ministry
-there seemed to have been few for whom he always cherished so kindly a
-regard as the Rev. Mr. Harvey, Rector of Hornsey. That excellent
-clergyman used to visit Father Ignatius, and receive visits from him
-on the most friendly terms to the end.
-
-Thus did he spend his time, until Father Pius, the brother {447} of
-our present General, who died in Rome in 1864, came to visit the
-province, or branch of the order in England, in 1854. This visit made
-a change in Father Ignatius's position.
-
-A number of houses of a religious order are placed under the direction
-of one superior, who is styled a Provincial. With us the Provincial
-has two assistants, who are called Consultors. The superior of each
-house is called a Rector, and it is his duty to see after the
-spiritual and temporal concerns of his own community. A rector,
-therefore, has more home work, by virtue of his office, than any other
-superior. A consultor may live in any house of the province, has no
-special duty _ex officio_ except to give his advice to the Provincial
-when asked, and may be easily spared for any external employment. This
-office Father Ignatius used to term as _otium cum dignitate_, though
-the _otium_ he never enjoyed, and felt rather awkward in the
-_dignitas_.
-
-In 1854, he was made first Consultor, and relieved from the drudgery
-of housekeeping for his brethren. Before leaving The Hyde for a new
-field of labour, he went to see his nephew in Harrow, which was only a
-few miles from our retreat; but was not admitted. He took another
-priest with him, and both were hooted by the boys. It seems pardonable
-in a set of wild young schoolboys to make game of such unfashionable
-beings as Catholic priests; but it shows a great want of good breeding
-in schoolboys who are afterwards to hold such a high position in
-English society. This remark is forced upon us by the fact that none
-of us ever passed through Harrow without meeting a somewhat similar
-reception. A school of inferior rank might set Harrow an example in
-this point. We have passed Roger Cholmley's school in Highgate, time
-after time, often in a large body, and have met the boys in threes and
-fours, and all together, and never yet heard a single insult. What
-makes the difference?
-
-On the 8th of September, 1854, Father Ignatius left The Hyde for
-Ireland. He begs this time through the principal towns in Munster, and
-says he was very kindly received by all. He preached sermons during
-this journey, all on the {448} conversion of England. He gained more
-prayers this time than on a former occasion, because his work came to
-the people with blessings and indulgences from the Father of the
-Faithful. He used to tell an amusing anecdote in reference to this
-mission. Somewhere he had preached on the conversion of England, and
-recommended the prayers by the spiritual profit to be derived from
-them. An old woman accosted him as he was passing by, and he had just
-time to hear, "Father, I say the three Hail Marys every day for
-England." Father Ignatius was much pleased, and made inquiries after
-the old lady, doubtless intending to constitute her a kind of apostle
-in the place. She was brought to see him; he expressed his thanks and
-pleasure that she had entered so thoroughly into his views, and asked
-her would she try to persuade others to follow her example? "Me get
-people to pray for England!" she answered; "I pray myself three times
-for the sake of the indulgence, but I curse them 300 times a day for
-it, lest they might get any good of my prayers!" He reasoned with her,
-to be sure, but did not tell us if the success of his second discourse
-was equal to the first.
-
-
-{449}
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-Sanctification Of Ireland.
-
-
-In a letter written by Father Ignatius in December, 1854, is found the
-first glimpse of a new idea: the Sanctification of Ireland. This idea
-was suggested to him by the faith of the Irish people, and by their
-readiness to adopt whatever was for their spiritual profit. His
-intending the Sanctification of Ireland as a step towards the
-Conversion of England, laid the scheme open to severe criticism. It
-was said that England was his final object; that Ireland was to be
-used as an instrument for England's benefit; that if his patriotism
-were less strong, his sanctity would be greater. If these objections
-were satisfactorily answered, they might be given up with a hint that,
-"it was a very Irish way to convert England, by preaching in the bogs
-of Connaught." The best refutation of these ungenerous remarks will
-be, perhaps, a simple statement of what his ideas were upon the
-subject. His great desire was that all the world should be perfect. He
-used to say Our Lord had not yet had His triumph in this world, and
-that it was too bad the devil should still have the majority. "This
-must not be," he would say; "I shall never rest as long as there is a
-single soul on earth who does not serve God perfectly." The practical
-way of arriving at this end was to begin at home. England had not
-faith as a nation, so there was no foundation to build sanctity upon
-there. England, however, had great influence as a nation all over the
-world; she showed great zeal also in her abortive attempts to convert
-the heathen. If her energies could be turned in the right direction,
-what grand results might we not anticipate? Another reflection was,
-England has had every means of conversion tried upon her; {450} let us
-now see what virtue there is in good example. To set this example, and
-to sow the seed of the great universal harvest, he would find out the
-best Catholic nation in the world, and bring it perfectly up to the
-maxims of the Gospel. This nation was Ireland, of course, and it was
-near enough to England to let its light shine before her. What he
-wished for was, to have every man, woman, and child in Ireland, take
-up the idea that they were to be saints. He would have this caught up
-with a kind of national move. The practical working of the idea he
-embodied in a little book which he wrote some time afterwards, and
-preached it wherever he addressed an Irish congregation. The banishing
-of three great vices--cursing, company-keeping, and intemperance--and
-the practice of daily meditation, with a frequent approach to the
-sacraments, were the means. If Ireland, so he argued, took up this at
-home, it would spread to England, the colonies, and to wherever there
-was an Irishman all over the world. All these would be shining lights,
-and if their neighbours did not choose at once to follow their
-example, we could at least point it out as the best proof of our
-exhortations. This is a short sketch of the work he now began, and it
-was a work his superiors always encouraged, and which he spent his
-life in endeavouring to realise.
-
-One objection made against this scheme touched him on a tender
-point--his love of country. Many Catholics, especially English
-converts, thought the words of Ecclesiasticus applicable to England:
-"Injuries and wrongs will waste riches: and the house that is very
-rich shall be brought to nothing by pride: so the substance of the
-proud shall be rooted out."--Eccl. xxi. 5. These were of opinion that
-England must be humbled as a nation, and deeply too, before she could
-be fit for conversion. This Father Ignatius could not stand. He
-writes, in a letter to Mr. Monteith: "As my _unicum necessarium_ for
-myself is the salvation and sanctification of my own soul, so my
-wishes and designs about England, which, according to the order of
-charity, I consider (in opposition to many English Catholics,
-especially converts), I ought to love first of all people, are, singly
-and {451} only, that she may be brought to God, and in such a way and
-under such circumstances, as may enable her to be the greatest
-possible blessing to the whole world. I have heard plenty, and much
-more than plenty, from English and Irish Catholics (very seldom,
-comparatively, from those of the Continent), about the impossibility
-of this, except by the thorough crushing of the power of England. I
-say to all this, _No, no, no!_ God can convert our country with her
-power and her influence unimpaired, and I insist on people praying for
-it without imposing conditions on Almighty God, on whom, if I did
-impose conditions, it would be in favour of His showing more, and not
-less abundant, mercy to a fallen people. Yet, though I have often said
-I will not allow Miss This, or Mr. That, to pronounce sentence on
-England, still less to wish evil to her (particularly if it be an
-English Mr. or Miss who talks), I have always said that if God sees it
-fit that the conversion should be through outward humiliations and
-scourges, I will welcome the rod, and thank Him for it, in behalf of
-my country, as I would in my own person, in whatever way He might
-think fit to chastise and humble me."
-
-He returned to London in the beginning of 1855, to give the retreat to
-our religious. His next work was a mission, given with Father
-Gaudentius in Stockport. After that, he gave a mission with Father
-Vincent in Hull; in returning from Hull, he stopped at Lincoln to
-visit Mr. Sibthorpe. He spends a week in our London house, and then
-gives a retreat by himself in Trelawny. His next mission was in
-Dungannon, Ireland, and as soon as he came to England for another
-retreat he had to give in Levenshulme to nuns, he takes advantage of
-his week's rest to visit Grace Dieu, and have what he calls "a famous
-talk" with Count de Montalembert, who was Mr. Phillipps's guest at the
-time.
-
-The scene of his labours is again transferred. We find him in July
-giving a mission at Borris O'Kane, with Father Vincent and Father
-Bernard and another immediately after, at Lorrha. At one of these
-missions, the crowd about Father Ignatius's confession-chair was very
-great, and the people were crushing in close to the confessor's knees.
-One woman, {452} especially, of more than ordinary muscular strength,
-elbowed back many of those who had taken their places before she came;
-she succeeded in getting to the inner circle of penitents, but so near
-the person confessing that the good father gently remonstrated with
-her. All to no purpose. He spoke again, but she only came nearer. At
-length he seized her shawl, rolled it up in a ball, and flung it over
-the heads of the crowd; the poor woman had to relinquish her position,
-and go for her shawl, and left Father Ignatius to shrive her less
-pushing companions. His fellow missioners were highly amused, and this
-incident tells wonderfully for his virtue, for it is almost the only
-instance we could ever find of his having done anything like losing
-his temper during his life as a Passionist. He gives a retreat in
-Birr, in Grantham Abbey, a mission in Newcastle, and another in St.
-Augustine's, Liverpool, before the end of the year.
-
-It was his custom, since his first turning seriously to God's service,
-to be awake at midnight on New Year's Day, and begin by prayer for
-passing the coming year perfectly. He is in St. Anne's, Sutton,
-Lancashire, this year. He begins the new year, 1856, by giving a
-mission with Father Leonard in our church at Sutton, with a few
-sermons at a place called Peasly Cross, an offshoot of the mission we
-have there.
-
-We close this chapter by a notion of Father Ignatius's politics. He
-was neither a Whig, a Tory, nor a Radical. He stood aloof from all
-parties, and seldom troubled himself about any. He says in a letter to
-a friend who was a well-read politician:--"How many minds we have
-speaking in England!--Gladstone, Palmerston, Bright, Phillipps,
-yourself, and, perhaps, I should add myself, and how many more who
-knows? all with minds following tracks which make them travel apart
-from each other. I want to set a road open, in which all may walk
-together if they please--at least with one foot, if they must have
-their own particular plank for the other."
-
-
-{453}
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-Another Tour On The Continent.
-
-
-The Provincial once more sent Father Ignatius to beg on the Continent.
-He tried to do a double work, as he did not like to be "used up" for
-begging alone, and the plea of begging would find him access to those
-he intended to consult. This second work was a form into which he cast
-his ideas for the sanctification of the world. The way of carrying out
-these ideas, which has been detailed, was what he settled down to
-after long discussion and many corrections from authority. The
-pamphlet which he now wrote had been translated into German by a lady
-in Münster. In it he proposes a bringing back of Catholics to the
-infancy of the Church, when the faithful laid the price of their
-possessions at the feet of the Apostles. He proposed a kind of
-Theocracy, and the scheme creates about the same sensation as Utopia,
-when one reads it. Like Sir Thomas More, Father Ignatius gives us what
-he should consider a perfect state of Christian society; he goes into
-all the details of its working, and meets the objections that might
-arise as it proceeds. The pamphlet is entitled _Reflectiones
-Propositionesque pro fidelium Sanctificatione_."
-
-On February 14, 1856, he leaves London, and halts in Paris only for a
-few hours, on his way to Marseilles. There he sees the Archbishop, and
-begs in the town; he returns then to Lyons, where he has several long
-conferences with Cardinal de Bonald. We find him in Paris in a few
-days, writing circulars to the French bishops, of whom the Bishop of
-Nancy seems to have been his greatest patron. He writes a letter to
-the Empress, and receives an answer that the Emperor would admit him
-to an audience. In a day or two {454} Father Ignatius stands in the
-presence of Napoleon III., and it is a loss that he has not left us
-the particulars of the conference in writing, because he often
-reverted to it in conversation with a great deal of interest. He found
-at his lodgings, on returning from a _quête_ a few days after, l,000f.
-sent to him as a donation by the Emperor.
-
-His good success in the Tuileries gave him a hope of doing great
-things among the _élite_ of Parisian society. He is, however, sadly
-disappointed, and the next day sets off to Belgium.
-
-Arrived in Tournai, he sends a copy of the French circular to the
-Belgian bishops. This does not seem to be a petition for alms, as we
-find him the same evening travelling in a third-class carriage to
-Cologne, without waiting for their Lordships' answers.
-
-During his begging in Cologne, he says mass every morning in St.
-Colomba's (Columb-Kille's) Church; perhaps the spirit of hospitality
-was bequeathed to the clergy of this Church by their Irish patron, for
-he appears to have experienced some coldness from the _pfarren_ of
-Cologne.
-
-In Münster he is very well received. The Bishop is particularly kind
-to him, and looks favourably on his _Reflectiones_; besides that, his
-lordship deputes a priest to be his guide in begging. Father Ignatius
-notes in his journal that he preached extempore in German to the
-Jesuit novices, and that one of the fathers revises and corrects the
-German translation of the _Reflectiones_. The priest deputed for guide
-by the Bishop of Münster was called away on business of importance,
-and Father Ignatius finds another. This Kaplan "lost his time
-smoking," and our good father gave up, and went off by Köln to
-Coblentz.
-
-He finds the bishop here very kind, but is allowed to beg only of the
-clergy; the Jesuits give him hospitality. A cold reception in Mantz,
-and a lukewarm one in Augsburg, hurry him off to Munich. He submits
-the _Reflectiones_ to Dr. Döllinger, who corrects them and gives them
-his approbation.
-
-From Munich he proceeds to Vienna. A part of this journey, as far as
-Lintz, had to be performed by an _eilwayen_ {455} or post car. The
-driver of this vehicle was a tremendous smoker, and Father Ignatius
-did not at all enjoy the fumes of tobacco. He perceived that the
-driver forgot the pipe, which he laid down at a _hoff_ on the way,
-while slaking his thirst, and never told him of it. He was exulting in
-the hope of being able to travel to the next shop for pipes without
-inhaling tobacco smoke, when, to his mortification, the driver
-perceived his loss, and shouted out like a man in despair, _Mein
-pfeiffe! Mein pfeiffe!_--My pipe! My pipe! To increase his passenger's
-disappointment, he actually turned back a full German league, and then
-smoked with a vengeance until he came to the next stage.
-
-Father Ignatius sends a copy of the _Reflectiones_ to Rome, on his
-arrival in Vienna, and presents it with an address at an assembly of
-Bishops that was then being held.
-
-He has audiences with the Emperor and Archduke Maximilian, now Emperor
-of Mexico, as well as with the Nunzio, and all the notabilities,
-clerical and secular, in the city.
-
-Immediately after, somehow, he gets notice to quit from the Superior
-of a religious community, where he had been staying, and all the other
-religious houses refuse to take him in. He was about to leave Vienna
-in consequence, as he did not like putting up in an hotel, when some
-Italian priests gave him hospitality, and welcomed him to stop with
-them as long as he pleased. As a set-off to his disappointment, the
-Bishop of Transylvania is very kind to him, and Cardinal
-Schwartzenberg even begs for him. He met the Most Rev. Father Jandel,
-General of the Dominicans, in the Cardinal's Palace, and showed him
-the _Reflectiones_. The good disciple of St. Thomas examined the
-document closely, and Father Ignatius records his opinion, "he gave my
-paper a kick." Notwithstanding this sentence, he went on distributing
-copies every where; but his tract-distribution was stopped in a few
-days by a letter he received from our General.
-
-When he sent the little pamphlet to Rome it was handed for criticism
-to the Lector (or Professor) of Theology in our retreat, who was then
-Father Ignatius Paoli, the present Provincial in England. The critique
-was very long and {456} quite unfavourable; it reached him, backed by
-a letter from the General, which forbade to speak about the counsels
-for the present. He records this sentence in his journal in these
-words:--"June 17. A letter from Padre Ignazio, by the General--Order
-to stop speaking of the counsels, &c. _Stop her, back her. Deo
-gratias!"_ This was a favourite expression with him whenever a
-Superior thwarted any of his projects: it was borrowed from the
-steamboats that ply on the Thames, and Father Ignatius considered
-himself as in the position of the little boy who echoes the orders of
-the master to the engineers below. He used to say, "What a catastrophe
-might one expect if the boy undertook to give an order of his own!"
-
-Whilst in Vienna he received a letter from Father Vincent, telling him
-of our having established a house of the order near Harold's Cross,
-Dublin. Father Ignatius accompanied Father Vincent when they were both
-in Dublin, before the German tour began, in his search for a position,
-and Rathmines was selected. The excellent parish priest, Monsignor
-Meagher, had just opened his new church, and laboured hard to have a
-religious community in his district. He therefore seconded the
-intentions of our people, and in a short time a house was taken in his
-parish, and every day cements the connexion between us and this
-venerable ecclesiastic. A splendid edifice has since been built during
-the Rectorship of Father Osmond, and chiefly through his exertions.
-
-Father Ignatius went to two or three towns, where the police would not
-allow him to beg unless patronised by a native priest, and not being
-able to fulfil these conditions he was obliged to desist.
-
-This was Father Ignatius's last visit to Germany; he had been there
-five times during his life. The first was a tour of pleasure, all the
-rest were for higher objects. He seems to have had a great regard for
-the Germans; he considered them related by blood to the English, and
-although he himself was of Norman descent, he appears to have a
-special liking for the Saxon element in character. He preferred to
-{457} see it blended certainly, and would consider a vein of Celtic or
-Norman blood an improvement on the Teutonic.
-
-There were other reasons. St. Boniface, the Apostle of Germany, was an
-Englishman; St. Columbanus and St. Gall might be said to have laboured
-more in Germany than in their native Ireland. The Germans owed
-something to England, and he wished to have them make a return.
-Besides, the Reformation began in Germany, and he would have the
-countrymen of Luther and of Cranmer work together to repair the
-injuries they had suffered from each other. This twofold plea was
-forced upon him by a German periodical, which advocated the cause of
-the "Crusade" even so far back as 1838. Father Ignatius also knew how
-German scholarship was tinging the intellect of England, and he
-thought a spread of devotion would be the best antidote to
-Rationalism. The reasons for working in France, which he styled "that
-generous Catholic nation," were somewhat different, but they have been
-detailed by himself in those portions of the correspondence respecting
-his crusade.
-
-He visits Raal, Resburg, Baden, Ratisbonne, and Munich; hence he
-starts for London. Here he arrives on the 4th of October. He did not
-delay, but went straight to Dublin, and stayed for the first time in
-Blessed Paul's Retreat, Harold's Cross. This house became his
-head-quarters for some time, for we find him returning thither after a
-mission in Kenilworth, and one in Liverpool, as well as a retreat for
-nuns, which closes his labours for the year 1856.
-
-
-{458}
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-Father Ignatius In 1857.
-
-
-Seven years, according to physiologists, make a total change in the
-human frame, such is the extent of the renewal; and although the laws
-of spirit do not follow those of matter, it may be a pleasing problem
-to find out how far there is an analogy. The chapter of 1850 was
-headed like this; let us see if the events of both tell differently
-upon Father Ignatius.
-
-The first event he records in the Journal for this year is the
-reception of Mrs. O'Neill into the Church. This good lady had then one
-son a Passionist; she was what might be called a very strict and
-devoted Protestant, although all her children were brought up
-Catholics by her husband. She loved the son who first joined our order
-very tenderly, and felt his becoming a monk so much that she would
-never read one of his letters. The son was ordained priest in
-Monte-Argentaro, and the first news he heard after he had for the
-first time offered up the Holy Sacrifice, was that his mother had been
-received in our retreat in Dublin by Father Ignatius. She was induced
-by another son, who lived in Dublin, to attend benediction, and our
-Lord gave her the grace of conversion with His blessing. She is now a
-fervent Catholic, and another son and a daughter have since followed
-the example of their brother. The mother finds her greatest happiness
-in what once seemed her greatest affliction. Such is the power of
-grace, always leading to joy through the bitterness of the cross.
-
-The next event is the death of Father Paul Mary of St. Michael. This
-saintly Passionist was the Honourable Charles Reginald Packenham, son
-of the Earl of Longford. He {459} became a convert when captain in the
-Guards, and shortly after joined our Institute. He was the first
-rector of Blessed Paul's Retreat, and having edified his brethren by
-his humility and religious virtues for nearly six years, the term of
-his life as a Passionist, died in the odour of sanctity. He had been
-ailing for some time, but still able to do a little in the way of
-preaching and confessions. It was advertised that he would preach in
-Gardiner Street, Dublin, on Sunday, March 1. He died that day at one
-o'clock A.M., and Father Ignatius went to preach in his stead; it
-created a sensation when the good father began by asking prayers for
-the repose of the soul of him whose place he came to fill.
-
-In a letter Father Ignatius wrote at this time we have his opinion of
-Father Paul Mary: ".... As to the Passionists, I do not think those
-who managed our coming here (to Dublin) which was all done during my
-absence in Germany, had any idea of serving England. I believe the
-prime instigator of the move was Father Paul Mary, who was born in
-Dublin, and was through and through an Irishman in his affections,
-though trained in England. He, to the last, had all the anti-English
-feelings, which prevail so much through Ireland, and never would give
-me the least hope of his being interested for England. I fall in,
-notwithstanding that, with all the notions of his great virtue and
-holiness which others have; and I think, moreover, that the best
-Catholics in Ireland are to be found among those who have been the
-most bitterly prejudiced against England. But I think there is in
-reserve for them another great step in advance when they lay down this
-aversion and turn it into divine charity in a heroic degree."
-
-Father Ignatius always felt keenly Father Paul Mary's not taking up
-his ideas about England with more warmth. When he was on his
-death-bed, Father Ignatius spent many hours sitting by him. In one of
-their last conversations, Father Ignatius urged his pleas for England
-as strongly as he could; when he had done, and was waiting for the
-effect, Father Paul said, in a dry, cold manner: "I don't think
-Ireland has got anything to thank England for." These words were
-perpetually ringing in the ears of Father {460} Ignatius; they were
-the last Father Paul ever said on the subject, and the other used to
-say: "Oh, I used to enjoy his beautiful conversation so much, but I
-never could hear one single kind word for England."
-
-This year a general chapter of our Congregation was held in Rome. This
-is an important event, and only occurs every six years. It is here the
-head superiors are elected, points of rule explained, and regulations
-enacted for the better ordering of the different houses all over the
-world, according to circumstances of time and place. The Provincial
-and the two Consultors of each Province are obliged to attend. Father
-Ignatius was therefore called to travel abroad once more. When in
-Rome, he employed all the time that was left from capitular duties in
-holding conferences with our students, and trying to get some papers
-he brought with him approved. Among others, he brought the paper that
-was "kicked" by Father Jaudel, and condemned by one of our
-theologians. The only one in Rome who approved of it was the Abbate
-Passaglia. Cardinal Barnabò listened to all Father Ignatius had to
-urge in its favour; but did not approve of it. He had to return
-without gaining anything this time; except that the Roman Lector was
-become his Provincial. In a few years afterwards, when we read of
-Passaglia's fall, Father Ignatius was heard to say: "Passaglia and
-Döllinger were the only theologians who approved of my paper. I
-suppose I need not flatter myself much upon their _imprimatur_."
-
-He was remarked to be often abstracted when he had many crosses to
-bear. One day he was going through Rome with one of our Religious, and
-passed by a fountain. He went over and put his hand so far into one of
-the jets, that he squirted the water over a number of poor persons who
-were basking in the sun a few steps beneath him. They made a stir, and
-uttered a few oaths as the water kept dashing down on them. The
-companion awoke Father Ignatius out of his reverie, and so unconscious
-did he seem of the disturbance he had unwittingly created, that he
-passed on without alluding to it.
-
-On his return home now, as Second Consultor, he is sent {461} to beg
-again in Ireland. He makes the circuit of Connaught this time. He
-took, in his journey, Roscommon, Castlerea, visits the O'Connor Don,
-Boyle, Sligo. Here he was received very kindly by the Bishop and
-clergy. He had for guide in Sligo, a Johnny Doogan, who seems to have
-amused him very much. This good man was chief respondent at the
-Rosary, which used to be said every evening in the church. One night
-the priest began, "Incline unto my aid, O Lord." No answer. "Where are
-you, Johnny Doogan?" asked the priest. Johnny, who was a little more
-than distracted in some corner of the church, replied, as if suddenly
-awoke: "Here I am, your Reverence, and 'my tongue shall announce thy
-praise.'" He next passes along through Easky and Cullinamore to
-Ballina. He gives a retreat to the Sisters of Mercy here, and during
-it, makes an excursion to Enniscrone. He went next to Ballycastle,
-Killala, Castlebar. Here he went to visit his cousin, Lord Lucan, and
-is very kindly received. During the course of conversation, he asked
-Lord Lucan if he had not heard of his conversion? "Oh yes," he
-replied, "I heard you were wavering some thirty years ago." "But I
-have not wavered since," replied Father Ignatius. He then went to
-Ballinrobe, Westport, Tuam, Athenry, and back to Dublin, by Mullingar.
-This tour took nearly two months. He gives a retreat in the beginning
-of September to the nuns of Gorey, and after it, begs through Wexford,
-and the southwest portion of Leinster. The only thing remarkable about
-these excursions is, that he notes once, "I am ashamed to think that I
-have not begged of any poor people to-day."
-
-In December, 1857, his brother Frederick, Lord Spencer, died. This
-brother was Father Ignatius's companion at school, and it is
-remarkable that he was the only one of the family who used any kind of
-severity towards him. He says, in a letter written at this time, "I am
-twelve years an exile from Althorp." Shortly before the Earl died, he
-relented, and invited Father Ignatius to stay at the family seat a few
-days. The letter joyfully accepting the invitation was read by the
-brother on his bed of death. It is only right to observe that the
-present Earl has been the kindest {462} of all, and treated his uncle
-with distinguished kindness for the few years he was left to him. He
-even gave him back the portion of his income which his father diverted
-to other uses.
-
-Another letter he wrote in December, gives an idea of his spirit of
-resignation. It seems a Rev. Mother wrote to him in a state of alarm
-that some of the sisters were inclined to go away. Here is a part of
-his answer: "I will see what I can do with the sisters who are in the
-mood to kick, bite, or run away. If they take to running, never mind
-how many go, let them all go, with _God bless them, and thank God they
-are gone_, and we will hope their room will be worth as much as their
-company."
-
-Lest the allusion to his exile from Althorp might be taken in a wrong
-sense, it is well to give a passage from a letter Father Ignatius
-wrote after the death of his brother. "I dare say you have not heard
-that just before my brother's death I had written to him about a case
-of distress, which he had before been acquainted with, telling him, at
-the same time, of what I was about, and among other things, that I was
-going to London to open a mission in Bermondsey on the 10th of
-January. He sent me £3 for the person I wrote about, and invited me to
-stop at Althorp a couple of nights on my way, not demanding any
-positive promise about religion as beforetime, but only saying that he
-thought I might come as a private friend without seeing it necessary
-to hold spiritual communications with the people in the neighbourhood.
-I answered that I would come with pleasure on these terms, and that
-even if he had said nothing, prudence would dictate to me to act as he
-wished. This was a most interesting prospect to me, after my twelve
-years' exile from that home, and I intended to come on the 7th of
-January. It was only a day or two before my leaving Dublin for this
-journey, that I was shown a notice in the paper of his death, and the
-next day had a letter about it from my sister. He must have received
-my letter on the very day that he was taken ill. These are remarkable
-circumstances. What will Providence bring out of them?" {463} He felt
-the death of this brother very much, and was known to shed tears in
-abundance when relating the sad news to some of his friends. He said
-very sadly, "I gave myself up to three days' sorrowing for my dear
-brother Frederick, but I took care to thank God for the affliction."
-
-
-{464}
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-His "Little Missions."
-
-
-On the 21st of June, 1858, Father Ignatius began to give short
-retreats, which he designated "little missions." This was his work the
-remaining six years of his life; anything else we find him doing was
-like an exception.
-
-The work proposed in these missions was what has been already
-described in the chapter on the sanctification of the Irish people. He
-wanted to abolish all their vices, which he reduced to three capital
-sins, and sow the seeds of perfect virtue upon the ground of their
-deep and fertile faith. Since he took up the notion that Ireland was
-called to keep among the nations the title of _Island of Saints_,
-which had once been hers, he could never rest until he saw it
-effected. He seems to have been considering for a number of years the
-means by which this should be brought about, and he hit upon a happy
-thought in 1858.
-
-This thought was the way of impregnating the minds of all the Irish
-people with his ideas. He found that missions were most powerful means
-of moving people in a body to reconciliation with God, and an
-amendment of life. He perceived that the words of the missionaries
-were treasured up, and that the advices they gave were followed with a
-scrupulous exactness. Missions were the moving power, but how were
-they to enter into all the corners of a kingdom? Missions could only
-be given in large parishes, and all priests did not set so high a
-value upon their importance as those who asked for them. If he could
-concentrate the missionary power into something less solemn, but of
-like efficacy, and succeed in carrying that out, he thought it would
-be just {465} the thing. This train of deliberation resulted in the
-"little missions."
-
-A "little mission" is a new mode of renewing fervour; Father Ignatius
-was the originator and only worker in it of whom we have any record.
-It was half a week of missionary work in every parish--that is, three
-days and a half of preaching and hearing confessions. Two sermons in
-the day were as much as ever Father Ignatius gave, and the hours in
-the confessional were as many as he could endure.
-
-This kind of work had its difficulties. The whole course of subjects
-proper to a mission could not be got through, neither could all the
-penitents be heard. Father Ignatius met these objections. "The eternal
-truths," as such, he did not introduce. He confined himself to seven
-lectures, in which the crying evils, with their antidotes, were
-introduced. As far as the confessions were concerned, he followed the
-rule of moral theologians that a confessor is responsible only for the
-penitent kneeling before him, and not for those whose confession he
-has not begun. He heard all he could.
-
-His routine of daily work on these little missions was to get up at
-five, and hear confessions all day until midnight, except whilst
-saying mass and office, giving his lecture and taking his meals. He
-took no recreation whatever, and if he chatted any time after dinner
-with the priest, the conversation might be considered a continuation
-of his sermon. At a very moderate calculation he must have spent at
-least twelve hours a day in the confessional. Some of these apostolic
-visits he prolonged to a week when circumstances required. He gave 245
-of these missions from June, 1858, to September, 1864; he was on his
-way to the 246th when he died. A rough calculation will show us that
-he must have spent about twenty-two weeks every year in this
-employment. Let us just think of forty journeys, in cold and heat,
-from parish to parish, sometimes on foot, sometimes on conveyances,
-which chance put in his way. Let us follow him when he has strapped
-his bags upon his shoulder, after his mass, walking off nine or ten
-miles, in {466} order to be in time to begin in another parish that
-evening. Let us see the poor man trying to prevent his feeling pain
-from his sore feet by walking a little faster, struggling, with
-umbrella broken, against rain and wind, dust, a bad road, and a way
-unknown to add to his difficulties. He arrives, he lays down his
-burden, puts on his habit, takes some dinner, finishes his office,
-preaches his first discourse, and sits in the confessional until
-half-past eleven o'clock. Let us try to realize what this work must
-have been, and we shall have an idea of the six last years of Father
-Ignatius Spencer's life.
-
-We give a few extracts from his letters, as they will convey an idea
-of how he felt and wrought in this great work.
-
-On the 10th of August, 1858, he writes from the convent in Kells,
-where he was helping the nuns through their retreat:--
-
- "I have an hour and a half before my next sermon at 7; all the nuns'
- confessions are finished, and all my office said; I have therefore
- time for a letter. I have not had such an afternoon as this for many
- months. The people of this town seem to think the convent an
- impregnable fortress, and do not make an assault upon me in it. If I
- was just to show myself in the church I should be quickly
- surrounded. The reflections which come upon me this quiet afternoon
- are not so bright and joyous as you might expect, perhaps, from the
- tone of my letter to M ----, but rather of a heavy afflicting
- character; but all the better, all the better. This is wholesome,
- and another stage in my thoughts brings me to very great
- satisfaction out of this heaviness. I do not know whether I shall
- explain myself to you. I see myself here so alone, though the people
- come upon me so eagerly, so warmly, and, I may say, so lovingly; yet
- I have not one on whom I can think as sympathising with me. I see
- the necessity of a complete radical change in the spirit of the
- people, the necessity, I mean, in order to have some prospect of
- giving the cause of truth its victory in England, and making this
- Irish people permanently virtuous and happy. This is what I am
- preaching from place to place, and aiming at instilling into the
- people's minds in the confessional, at {467} dinner-tables, in cars
- on the road, as well as in preaching; and, while I aim at it, the
- work is bright enough."
-
-Oct. 11, 1860, he writes:
-
- "I can hardly understand how I can go on for any long time more as I
- am doing, and not find some capable and willing to enter into them.
- Here I am through the 112th parish, with the same proposals which no
- one objects to, but no one enters into nor seems to understand."
-
-May 6, 1861.--
-
- "It seems my lot to be moving about as long as I can move. I am very
- happy in the work I am about when I am at it, but I have always to
- go through regret and sorrow before moving, particularly when
- leaving my home. ... I have now gone through 132 parishes. No
- movement yet, such as I am aiming at. It always goes on in the form
- of most interesting missionary work, and is a most agreeable way of
- doing my begging work. I have been through 123 of these parishes
- without asking a penny from any one, but they bring me on an average
- more than £21 a parish in _Ireland_. I have worked through eleven
- parishes in the diocese of Salford (England) out of that number, and
- these do not yield half the fruit of the Irish missions in point of
- money, but are otherwise very satisfactory.''
-
-In a letter written in December of the same year:
-
- "I am preparing for another year's work like the last, going from
- parish to parish through Ireland, collecting for our Order, and at
- the same time stirring the people to devote themselves to their
- sanctification. They give their money very generously, they listen
- kindly to my sermons, and I never have a minute idle in hearing
- confessions; but hitherto there is no attention such as I wish paid
- to my proposals. I have made these little missions now in 160
- parishes in Ireland, and to eleven Irish congregations in England. I
- am, thank God, in as good plight as ever I was in my life for this
- kind of work, and this seems to give a hope that I may at length see
- the effect of it as I wish, or the fruit may spring up when I am
- dead and buried. If death comes upon me in this way, I will at least
- rejoice for myself that I am dying more like our Lord than if I
- finished my course {468} crowned with the most brilliant successes;
- for when He died people would say He had utterly failed, but He was
- just then achieving His victory. Whatever way things take we cannot
- be disappointed if we keep faithful to God."
-
-The lovingness described as subsisting between himself and his dear
-Irish people gave rise to many incidents, amongst which the following
-is rather peculiar. At one place, where he had just concluded a little
-mission, the people gathered round him when he was about to go away.
-He heard many say, "What will we do when he is gone?" and several
-other exclamations betokening their affliction at having to part from
-him. He turned round and asked all he saw to accompany him to the
-railway station. When they arrived there he addressed them again in
-something like these words: "Now, stand here until you see the train
-start, and when it is out of sight, I want you all to say, '_Thank
-God, he is gone_.'"
-
-He met a great many refusals and cold receptions on these missionary
-tours, but in general he was very well received. The exceptions were
-dear to him, as they were profitable to himself, and he seldom spoke
-of them unless there was some special lesson they were calculated to
-convey.
-
-
-{469}
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-Father Ignatius At Home.
-
-
-The work of the little missions kept Father Ignatius very much away
-from the community. His visits at home were like meteor flashes,
-bright and beautiful, and always made us regret we could not enjoy his
-edifying company for a longer time. Those who are much away on the
-external duties of the Order find the rule a little severe when they
-return; to Father Ignatius it seemed a small heaven of refreshing
-satisfaction. His coming home was usually announced to the community a
-day or two before, and all were promising themselves rare treats from
-his presence amongst them. It was cheering to see the porter run in,
-beaming with joy, as he announced the glad tidings, "Father Ignatius
-is come." The exuberance of his own delight as he greeted, first one,
-and then another of his companions, added to our own joy. In fact, the
-day Father Ignatius came home almost became a holiday by custom. Those
-days were; and we feel inclined to tire our readers by expatiating on
-them, as if writing brought them back.
-
-Whenever he arrived at one of our houses, and had a day or two to
-stay, it was usual for the younger religious, such as novices and
-students, to go to him, one by one, for conference. He liked this very
-much, and would write to higher Superiors for permission to turn off
-to Broadway, for instance, on his way to London, in order to make
-acquaintance with the young religious. His counsels had often a
-lasting effect; many who were inclined to leave the life they had
-chosen remained steadfast, after a conference with him. He did not
-give common-place solutions to difficulties, but he had some peculiar
-phrase, some quaint axiom, some droll {470} piece of spirituality, to
-apply to every little trouble that came before him. He was specially
-happy in his fund of anecdote, and could tell one, it was believed, on
-any subject that came before him. This extraordinary gift of
-conversational power made the _Conferences_ delightful. The novices,
-when they assembled in recreation, and gave their opinions on Father
-Ignatius, whom many had spoken to for the first time in their life,
-nearly all would conclude, "If there ever was a saint, he's one."
-
-It was amusing to observe how they prepared themselves for forming
-their opinion. They all heard of his being a great saint, and some
-fancied he would eat nothing at all for one day, and might attempt a
-little vegetables on the next. One novice, in particular, had made up
-his mind to this, and, to his great surprise, he saw Father Ignatius
-eat an extra good breakfast; and, when about to settle into a rash
-judgment, he saw the old man preparing to walk seven miles to a
-railway station on the strength of his meal. Another novice thought
-such a saint would never laugh nor make anybody else laugh; to his
-agreeable disappointment, he found that Father Ignatius brought more
-cheerfulness into the recreation than had been there for some time.
-
-In one thing Father Ignatius did not go against anticipation; he was
-most exact in the observance of our rules. He would be always the
-first in for the midnight office. Many a time the younger portion of
-the community used to make arrangements overnight to be in before him,
-but it was no use. Once, indeed, a student arrived in choir before
-him, and Father Ignatius appeared so crestfallen at being beaten that
-the student would never be in before him again, and might delay on the
-way if he thought Father Ignatius had not yet passed. He seemed
-particularly happy when he could light the lamps or gas for matins. He
-was childlike in his obedience. He would not transgress the most
-trifling regulation. It was usual with him to say, "I cannot
-understand persons who say, 'Oh, I am all right if I get to
-Purgatory.' We should be more generous with Almighty God. I don't
-intend to go to Purgatory, and if I do, I must know what for." "But,
-Father Ignatius," a father would say, {471} "we fall into so many
-imperfections that it seems presumption to attempt to escape scot
-free." "Well," he would reply, "nothing can send us to Purgatory but a
-wilful venial sin, and may the Lord preserve us from such a thing as
-that; a religious ought to die before being guilty of the least wilful
-fault." We saw from this that he could scarcely imagine how a
-religious could do so, or, at least, that he was very far from the
-like himself.
-
-One time we were speaking about the Italian way of pronouncing Latin,
-which we have adopted; he noticed some imperfections, and one of the
-Italian Fathers present remarked a few points in which Father Ignatius
-himself failed. One of them was, that he did not pronounce the letter
-_r_ strong enough; and another, that he did not give a its full sound
-when it came in the middle of a word. For some time it was observed
-that he made a most burring sound when he pronounced an _r_, and went
-so far in correcting himself in the other particular as to sin against
-prosody. Sometimes he would forget little rubrics, but if any one told
-him of a mistake, he was scarcely ever seen to commit it again.
-
-Whenever he had half an hour to spare he wrote letters. We may form an
-idea of his achievements in this point, when he tells us in the
-Journal that on two days which remained free to him once he wrote
-seventy-eight. A great number of his letters are preserved. They are
-very entertaining and instructive; a nice vein of humour runs through
-all those he wrote to his familiar friends.
-
-These two letters may be looked upon as the extremes of the sober and
-humorous style in his letter-writing:--
-
- "When I used to call on you, you seemed to be tottering, as one
- might say, on your last legs. Here you are, after so many years,
- without having ever seen health or prosperity, and with about as
- much life in you as then, to all appearance. All has been, all is,
- and all will be, exactly as it pleases God. This is the truth, the
- grand truth, I would almost say the whole and only truth. There may
- be, and are, plenty of things besides, which may be truly affirmed,
- yet this is the whole of what it concerns us each to know. For if
- this is once well understood, of course it follows that we {472}
- have but one affair to attend to, that is, to please God; because
- then, to a certainty, all the past, present, and future will be
- found to be perfectly and absolutely ordered for our own greatest
- good. If this one point be well studied, I think we can steer people
- easily enough out of all low spirits and melancholy. Many people can
- see the hand of God over them in wonderful mercy in their past
- history, and so be brought to a knowledge that their anxieties, and
- afflictions, and groans, in those bygone days were unreasonable
- then. "Why do they not learn to leave off groaning over the present
- troubles? Because they do not trust God to manage anything right
- till they have examined His work, and understood all about it. But
- He, will be more honoured if we agree with Him, and approve of what
- He does before we see what the good is which is to come of it. In
- your case, if we go back to the days when I first saw you at ----,
- when your father was in a good way of work, and you were in health,
- there was the prospect then, I suppose, before you of getting well
- settled in the world; and if all had continued smooth and
- prosperous, you might now be a rich merchant's wife in Birmingham,
- London, or New York, reckoned the ornament of a large circle of
- wealthy friends, &c. But might there not, perhaps, have been written
- over you as your motto? _Wo to you rich, for you have received your
- consolation. Wo to you that laugh now for you shall mourn and weep_.
- You may be disposed to answer, you do not think you would have been
- spoiled by prosperity. But if you are more or less troubled or
- anxious at being in poverty, sickness, or adversity, it shows that
- you would be, just in the same measure, unable to bear prosperity
- and health unhurt. Wealth and prosperity are dangerous to those only
- who love them and trust in them. If, when you are in adversity, you
- are sorry for it, and wish for prosperity, it shows love for this
- world's goods, more or less. And if a person loves them when he has
- them not, is it likely he would despise them if he had them? God
- saves multitudes by poverty and afflictions in spite of themselves.
- The same poverty and afflictions, if the persons corresponded with
- God's providence and rejoiced in them, would make them {473}
- first-rate saints. The same may be said, with as great truth, of
- interior afflictions, scruples, temptations, darkness, dryness, and
- the rest of the catalogue of such miseries. A person who is
- disquieted and anxious on account of these, either does not
- understand that God's gifts are not God, or if they do understand
- it, they love the gifts of God independently of the giver. And so I
- add that such a one, if he enjoyed uninterrupted peace and serenity
- of soul, would stop very short indeed of the perfection of love to
- which God intends to lead him if he will be docile. Now, as to your
- case, if you are still alive and still serving God, and desiring to
- do so better and better, it is clear that your afflictions, exterior
- and interior, have not spoiled or ruined you. And as God loves our
- peace and happiness, we may conclude that he would not have kept you
- down and low, if it had not been necessary for your good. What have
- you to do at last? Begin again to thank, praise, bless, adore, and
- glorify God for all the tribulations, past and future, and he may
- yet strengthen and preserve you to do abundance of good, and lay up
- a great treasure in heaven."
-
-The next letter is to a nun about a book which was supposed to be
-lost:--
-
- "The second perpetual calendar has been found. I had no thought it
- would; but took my chance to ask, and somebody had seen it, and it
- was looked for again and found. It has been a clumsy bit of business
- on our part; but it ends right. It gives another example of the
- wisdom of a certain young shepherdess celebrated in the nursery in
- my early days--
-
- "'Little Bopeep
- Has lost her sheep,
- And doesn't know where to find them.
- Let them alone,
- And they'll come home,
- And bring their tails behind them.'
-
- "There is great philosophy in the advice given to the heroine of
- these lines.
-
- "It seems by what you said the other day, that you {474} expected a
- long tail to this sheep, but I don't think the tail ever grew. Any
- way, it never brought a tail so far as this house. However, if there
- does exist a tail to it, I recommend to you the calm philosophy of
- little Bo-peep, and it will, I dare say, follow in time."
-
-The little rhyme given above was a favourite with Father Ignatius.
-When he saw any one looking for a thing with anxiety he generally
-rhymed it out with peculiar emphasis. It might be safely said that he
-never wrote a letter, preached a sermon, or held a conversation
-without introducing resignation to the will of God, the desire of
-perfection, or the conversion of England.
-
-As he was always a Superior, the religious could come to him and speak
-whenever they pleased. He was ever ready to receive them, he laid down
-his pen, or whatever else he might be at, directly he saw a brother or
-father wished to speak to him, and he listened and spoke as if this
-conversation was the only duty he had to discharge.
-
-In recreation he was a treasure. We gathered round him by a kind of
-instinct, and so entertaining was he that one felt it a mortification
-to be called away from the recreation-room while Father Ignatius was
-in it. He used to recount with peculiar grace and fascinating wit,
-scenes he went through in his life. There is scarcely an incident in
-this volume that we have not heard him relate. He was most ingenuous.
-Ask him what question you pleased, he would answer it, if he knew it.
-In relating an anecdote he often spoke in five or six different tones
-of voice; he imitated the manner and action of those he knew to such
-perfection, that laughter had to pass into admiration. He seldom
-laughed outright, and even when he did, he would very soon stop. If he
-came across a number of _Punch_, he ran over some of the sketches at
-once and then he would be observed to stop, laugh, and lay it down
-directly, as if to deny himself further enjoyment. It is needless to
-say there was nothing rollicking, or off-handed in his wit--never; it
-was subdued, sweet, delicate, and lively. He would introduce very
-often amusing puzzles, such as passing the poker around, or the game
-of "He can do little who cannot do that, that, that." Then to see his
-{475} glee when some one thought he had found out the secret by his
-keenness of observation, and was far from it; and how he laughed at
-the _denouement_ of the mystery, when all was over, was really
-delightful. He often made us try "Theophilus Thistlethwick," and
-"Peter Piper," and used to enjoy the blunders immensely. In fact, a
-recreation, presided over by Father Ignatius, was the most innocent
-and gladsome one could imagine.
-
-He had a few seasons of illness in the closing years of his life; in
-1861 he was laid up for several days with a sore foot, in Highgate.
-When one of us is ill, it is customary for the members of the house to
-take turn about in staying with him, and we are allowed to go at all
-times to visit an invalid. Whenever Father Ignatius was asked how his
-foot was, he would say it was "very well," because it brought him some
-pain, and that was a valuable thing if we only knew how to turn it to
-good account. He felt very grateful for the smallest service done him
-in sickness. It is supposed that he wrote more letters during his
-illness, and held more "profitable" conversations than in any other
-equal period of his life. No one ever found him idle. He read, or he
-wrote, or he talked, or he prayed, or he slept. Lying awake and
-listless in bed, even when suffering from acute pain, seemed an
-imperfection to him. Complaint was like a language he had forgotten,
-or knew not, except as one knows sin by the contrary virtue.
-
-He suffered greatly from drowsiness. When he went to meditation he
-would nod asleep, and the exertions he made to keep himself awake made
-us pity him. He would stand up, even sometimes on one foot, extend his
-arms in the form of a cross, and do everything he could possibly think
-of in order to keep awake. During his rectorship in Button, after
-returning from a sick call on a cold winter's evening, he was obliged
-to walk about saying his office. He dared not sit down, or he would go
-off asleep, and had to avoid going near a fire, or no effort could
-keep him awake. Notwithstanding this, he was the first to matins, and
-seldom went to bed again before prime. When others were ill, Father
-Ignatius was all charity; he would make sure first that {476} they
-took their sickness in a right spirit, and thanked God for it, then he
-would see that all kinds of attention were paid to them. As for sick
-calls, no matter at what hour of the day or night they came, he would
-be the first to go out and attend them. He liked assisting at
-death-beds; he felt particular pleasure in helping people to heaven.
-
-He received all kinds of visitors. He went immediately to see any one
-that wanted to speak to him, and never kept them a moment waiting if
-he could possibly help it. When distinguished visitors were coming he
-did not make the least preparation, but just treated them like any one
-else. His sister promised to visit him in Highgate in December, 1859.
-Neither she nor any member of his family had ever been in one of our
-monasteries; he therefore looked upon this as a kind of event. Father
-Ignatius had a wretched old mantle, and one of the students went to
-him to offer him his, which was quite new, for the day. He would not
-at all accept of it, and lectured the other upon human respect for his
-pains.
-
-He was very fond of conducting the walk the students take every week.
-He brought the London students often through the City, and wonderful
-was his knowledge and reminiscences of the different places they
-passed by. He took them once to the Zoological Gardens. They went
-about looking at the different beasts, and he had his comments to make
-on each. He drew a moral reflection from the voraciousness of the
-lion, the fierceness of the hyaena, the vanity of the seal, and the
-stupor of the sloth. When he saw the flamingo, he stayed full ten
-minutes wondering what might be the use of its long, thin legs. The
-hippopotamus amused him beyond all. "Look at his big mouth," he would
-say; "what in the world does he want it for? Couldn't he eat enough
-with a smaller one?" During their walks, a lord, perhaps, would turn
-up, and address him as, "Ho, Spencer! is this you? How d'ye do? It is
-some years since I saw you?" After a few words they would part, and
-then he'd tell his companions about their college days, or field
-sports.
-
-
-{477}
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-A Few Events.
-
-
-In 1858 we procured the place in Highgate, known now as St. Joseph's
-Retreat. The Hyde was never satisfactory; it was suited neither to our
-spirit nor its working. At last Providence guided us to a most
-suitable position. Our rule prescribes that the houses of the Order
-should be outside the town, and near enough to be of service to it.
-Highgate is wonderfully adapted to all the requisitions of our rule
-and constitutions. Situated on the brow of a hill, it is far enough
-from the din and noise of London to be comparatively free from its
-turmoil, and sufficiently near for citizens to come to our church. The
-grounds are enclosed by trees; a hospital at one end and two roads
-meeting at the other, promise a freedom from intrusion and a
-continuance of the solitude we now enjoy. Father Ignatius concludes
-the year 1858 in Highgate; it was his first visit to the new house.
-
-Towards the end of the next year we find him once more in France with
-our Provincial. They went on business interesting to the Order, and
-were nearly three weeks away. Father Ignatius ends another year in
-Highgate. It was then he translated the small "Life of Blessed Paul"
-from the Italian, a work he accomplished in about one month with the
-assistance of an _amanuensis_.
-
-He gave a mission with three of the fathers in Westland Row, Dublin,
-in the beginning of the year 1860, and started off immediately after
-for his circuit of little missions. Our Provincial Chapter was held
-this year, but all were re-elected; so Father Ignatius remained as he
-was, second Consultor. It was this year he visited Althorp, after an
-absence of eighteen years from the home of his childhood. This visit
-{478} he looked back to with a great deal of satisfaction, and his joy
-was increased when Lord and Lady Sarah Spencer returned his visit in
-Highgate, when he happened to be there, the next year. The friendly
-relations between him and his family seemed, if possible, to become
-closer and more cordial towards the end of his life.
-
-He told us one day in recreation, when some one asked what became of
-the lady he was disposed to be married to, once in his life: "I passed
-by her house a few days ago. I believe her husband is a very excellent
-man, and that she is happy."
-
-In 1862 he visited Althorp again. We saw him looking for a lock for
-one of his bags before he left Highgate for this visit, and some one
-asked him why he was so particular just then. "Oh," he said, "don't
-you know the servant in the big house will open it, in order to put my
-shaving tackle, brush, and so forth in their proper places, and I
-should not like to have a general stare at my habit, beads, and
-sandals." There was, however, a more general stare at them than he
-expected. During the visit, the volunteer corps were entertained by
-Lord Spencer. Father Ignatius was invited to the grand dinner; he sat
-next the Earl, and nothing would do for the latter but that his uncle
-should make a speech. Father Ignatius stood up in _his_ regimentals,
-habit, sandals, &c., and made, it seems, a very patriotic one.
-
-This visit to Althorp Father Ignatius loved to recall to mind. It was
-a kind of thing that he could not enjoy at the time, so far did it go
-beyond his expectations. He went merely for a friendly visit, and
-found a great many old friends invited to increase his pleasure. When
-the ladies and gentlemen went off to dress for dinner, it is said that
-Father Ignatius told Lady Spencer that he supposed his full dress
-would not be quite in place at the table; he was told it would, and
-that all would be much delighted to see a specimen of the fashions he
-had learnt since his days of whist and repartee in the same hall. At
-the appointed time he presented himself in the dining-room in full
-Passionist costume. Lord Spencer was quite proud of his uncle, and the
-speech, and the cheer with which it was greeted at the {479}
-Volunteers' dinner only enhanced the mutual joy of uncle and nephew.
-
-As usual, this joy was tempered, and the alloy was administered by a
-clergyman, who evidently intended to get himself a name by putting
-himself into print in one of the local papers. This was a Mr. Watkins.
-He wrote a letter to the _Northampton Herald_, containing a great deal
-of shallow criticism and ignorant remarks on Father Ignatius, and a
-sermon he preached at the opening of the cathedral. A smart paper
-warfare was carried on for some time between the two, which earned the
-Rev. Mr. Watkins the disapproval, if not the disgust, of his
-Protestant clerical and lay neighbours. This was rather a surprise, as
-all the old acquaintances of the _quondam_ Mr. Spencer had the highest
-regard for him; but this writer seems to have been one who never had
-the opportunity of forming a just opinion of his abilities or
-character. Ignorance may excuse his blunders, but the longest stretch
-of charity can scarcely overlook his manner of committing them.
-
-After the visit to Althorp, Father Ignatius went to see Mr. De Lisle
-at Grace Dieu, and was present at the blessing of the present Abbot of
-Mount St. Bernard's. The secretary of the A. P. U. C. sent him another
-letter after this visit, which met the fate of similar communications
-on former occasions.
-
-We find him in the beginning of the year 1863 in Liverpool, engaged in
-a mission at St. Augustine's.
-
-After this mission he came to Highgate, on his way to Rome for our
-general chapter, and the few days he had on his hands before his
-departure were spent in visiting Lord Palmerston, Mr. Gladstone, and
-other notabilities, as well as receiving a visit from his nephew.
-
-He arrived in Rome for the last time on the 22nd April, 1863. How
-strangely do his different visits to this city combine to give an idea
-of the stages of opinion through which his chequered life was fated to
-pass. In 1821, he entered it, promising himself a feast of
-absurdities, determined to sneer at what he did not understand, and
-repel by his thick shield of prejudice whatever might force itself
-{480} upon him as praiseworthy. He found something in his next visit
-in the pagan remains to please his Protestant taste, and left it for
-Germany with a kind of regret. In less than ten years he is there to
-despise the glory of the Caesars, and thinks more of a chapel which
-Peter's successor has endowed or adorned, than the platforms on which
-the fangs of the leopard tore the flower of our martyrs. His other
-visits were mostly official. He came glowing with the fervour of new
-projects, and left with only their embers generating a new step in his
-spiritual progress. Rome was always Rome, but he was not always the
-same. Any one who takes the trouble to compare his different visits
-with each other cannot fail to learn a lesson that will be more
-telling on his mind, than what comments upon them by another's pen
-could produce.
-
-The General Chapter Father Ignatius was called to attend in 1863 had
-to deal with subjects that deeply concerned the interests of our
-Order. In this Chapter, our American province was canonically erected
-in the United States. A colony of ten Passionists was sent to
-California, and the Hospice of St. Nicholas, in Paris, established.
-Father Ignatius had, as usual, some papers to submit to the Roman
-Curia. The work to which his "little missions" were devoted had not
-yet received the seal of the Fisherman, and, until it was so blessed,
-its excellence could be a subject of doubt. He did receive the
-pontifical benediction for this, and for the institution of a new
-congregation of nuns, and began to enjoy the riches of this twofold
-blessing before he took his departure from the Eternal City.
-
-Father Ignatius, ever himself, did not lose sight of lesser claims on
-his gratitude in the greater ones his zeal proposed to him. There was
-a family whom he had received into the Church during the course of his
-labours on the secular mission. The father, and four daughters, and a
-son, were all baptized by him. They were his great joy. He first
-received one girl, then the father, then another (who dreaded to speak
-to him), a third, and a fourth yielded to his charity and meekness in
-following the workings of grace. For them he always entertained a
-special regard, he would stay with {481} them when missionary work
-called him to a town in which they dwelled, and delighted to caress
-their children, edify themselves, and make himself at home in their
-dwellings during his stay. He obtained a rescript granting them a
-"plenary indulgence," signed by the Holy Father himself, which is
-still treasured up as a beautiful heirloom in their families. These
-favoured objects of his predilection were Mrs. Macky, of Birmingham;
-Mrs. Richardson and Mrs. Marshall, of Levenshulme, Manchester.
-
-Before leaving Rome in 1863 he preached to nuns and schools, upon the
-conversion of England, with the same zeal as he did in 1850, if not
-with greater. That leading star lived with him; it is to be hoped it
-has not died with him. If the nineteenth century were an age of faith,
-and that the belief in God's miraculous interposition would move any
-to make experiments of holy wonders, we should expect to find engraved
-on his heart after death: "The Conversion of England!"
-
-On June 21, after exactly two months' stay, he left the terrestrial
-Rome, or city of God, for ever. He arrives in London on the 3rd
-August, visits convents for his "crusade," now doubly dear to him;
-communicates his glad tidings to the infant congregations of nuns of
-Sutton, and holds himself in readiness for the approaching provincial
-chapter. The nuns here mentioned are a society established, a few
-years before, by our Father Gaudentius. Their primary object is the
-care and instruction of factory girls, their subsidiary one, the plain
-instruction of poor children.
-
-Father Ignatius loved this institute. One of his common sayings was,
-"I do not understand how a girl with a wooden leg, no means and great
-docility, cannot make the evangelical vows," and he found himself at
-home with a sisterhood where his problem would be solved in part at
-least. He brought their rules to Rome, at this time, and received all
-the Pontifical sanctions he could possibly expect under the
-circumstances.
-
-On August 21 of this year, our Provincial Chapter was held at
-Broadway. Here Father Ignatius was elected Rector of St. Anne's
-Retreat, Sutton. He entered on the {482} office with a great deal of
-zeal and courage. In his first exhortation to the religious, he
-remarked that "new brooms sweep clean," but as he was a broom a little
-the worse for wear, which had been trimmed up for action after having
-so long lain by, the aphorism could not apply so well to him. It was
-nine years since he had filled the office of rector before, and the
-interval taught him many things regarding religious discipline which
-he now brought into action.
-
-His rule might be called _maternal_ rather than paternal, for it was
-characterized by the fondness of holy old age for youth. One change
-remarked in him, since his former rectorship, was, his spicing his
-gentle admonitions with a good deal of severity when occasion required
-it. He spoke to the community, after the evening recreation, once upon
-the conversion of England, and the bright look the horizon of
-religious opinion wore now in comparison to the time he first began
-his crusade. He hoped great things for England. At this part of his
-lecture, some ludicrous occurrence, which he did not observe, made one
-of the younger religious laugh. Father Ignatius turned upon him, and
-spoke with such vehemence that all seemed as if struck by a
-thunderbolt. They never heard him speak in that way before, and it was
-thought by many that the meek father could not "foam with
-indignation," even if he tried.
-
-Towards the close of 1863 he professed several of the nuns of the Holy
-Family, for whom he had procured the indulgences at Rome, and he
-assisted at the deathbed of their first rev. mother early in 1864.
-
-
-{483}
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-Trials And Crosses.
-
-
-The days of the religious life of Father Ignatius might be numbered by
-his trials and crosses. It was not that a goodly share fell to him, as
-became his great holiness; but he happened to be so very keenly tried,
-that what generally assuages the bitterness of ordinary trials served,
-by a special disposition of Providence, to make his the more galling.
-His trials were multiplied in their infliction; the friends to whom he
-might unburthen himself were often their unconscious cause; and the
-remedies proposed for his comfort would be generally an aggravation of
-his sufferings. He had an abiding notion of his being alone and
-abandoned, which followed him like a shadow, even unto the grave. This
-feeling arose from his spirit of zeal. He burned to be doing more and
-more for God's glory every day, and sought to communicate to others
-some sparks of the flames that consumed himself. His projects for
-carrying out his ideas seldom met the cordial approval of superiors,
-and when he received such sanction, it was only after his schemes had
-been considerably toned down. This restraint he had always to bear.
-
-When his plans were tolerated, or even approved, he could not find one
-to take them up as warmly as he wished. In fact, he found no second.
-Catholics have an instinctive aversion to anything that wears the
-appearance of novelty in their devotions. Father Ignatius's plans for
-the sanctification of Ireland, the conversion of England, and the
-perfection all should tend to, were very good things. No one could
-have the least objection to them; but, somehow, every one could not
-see his way to working them out. When {484} Father Ignatius proposed
-the means he intended to adopt, the old Catholic shrugged his
-shoulders as if he had heard a temerarious proposition. It was new;
-the good old bishop that gave his life for his flock, or the saintly
-priest he had listened to from childhood, never proposed such a thing.
-He never read it in his books of piety, and though it seemed very
-good, it "did not go down with him." He listened to the holy
-Passionist, because he reverenced him; but he never encouraged his
-zeal with more than a cold assent.
-
-Father Ignatius found this want of correspondence to his suggestions
-in every person even his own brethren in religion failed to be of
-accord with him. He was perpetually speaking upon his favourite
-topics, and never seemed satisfied with the work of his
-fellow-labourers if they did not take up his ideas. He often drew down
-upon himself severe animadversions on account of this state of mind.
-When fathers returned to the retreat, tired and wearied after a number
-of missions, they felt it rather hard to be told that they had done
-very little, because they had not set about their work in his way. He
-would be told very sharply that they should wish to see what he had
-done himself; that his chimerical notions looked well on paper, or
-sounded nicely in talk; that there was a surer way of guiding people
-to heaven than talking them into fancies beyond their comprehension.
-These remarks only served to bring out the virtue and humility of the
-saintly man. He became silent at once, or turned the conversation into
-another channel.
-
-He had a still severer trial in this point. He very frequently
-attributed the caution of his superiors to want of zeal, and used to
-lecture them without human respect on what he thought to be their
-duty. On one occasion he went so far as to complain of this to
-Cardinal Wiseman; but the explanation was so satisfactory that he gave
-expression to different sentiments for the future. Whenever they spoke
-positively, he immediately acquiesced, and was most exact in carrying
-out their injunctions. His zeal was unbounded, and one of his
-superiors always said: "Father Ignatius will become a saint by the
-very thwarting of his plans." If he had not the virtue of submitting
-his judgment, it is hard to {485} say into what extravagances he might
-rush. This one trial was the staple of his religious life for more
-than thirty years.
-
-We shall now give a few instances from his letters, and from anecdotes
-recorded of him, to show the spirit with which he bore this and
-kindred trials and crosses.
-
-In 1853 he received a very severe letter from one of our Belgian
-fathers, who is in high repute for learning and virtue. He forwarded
-the letter to Father Eugene, who was then Provincial, accompanied by
-these remarks:--
-
- "I thought of answering the enclosed letter from Father ---- at
- once, before sending it to your Paternity; but, on looking it over
- again, I have changed my mind. The rule which I make for myself is,
- to mind what my superiors say on this matter and the conversion of
- England, and to charge them to stop my proceedings if they
- disapprove of them. I shall take what they say as coming from God,
- who has a right to dispose of all souls, and who may judge that the
- time for grace in England is not come, or never has to come.
- Besides, they are the proper judges whether my proceedings are
- correct _in toto_ or in part. Your Paternity has lately expressed
- your mind upon the matter, and I have no scruple on the subject; but
- it is well you should know what others feel. I beg you to take this
- letter from Father ---- as kindly meant, and, with me, to be
- thankful for it."
-
-Another to his Provincial:--
-
- "With regard to the principal topic of your Paternity's letter, I
- will first thank you, and thank God that I am thought worthy to be
- spoken and written to, without dissimulation or reserve, of what
- people think of me. If I make use with diligence of their remarks, I
- shall be able to gain ground in the esteem of God, and, perhaps,
- also in men's esteem; but that is not of consequence. Now, I suppose
- it would be best not to have said so much in explanation of my
- intentions in time past; and certainly I have said things which were
- vexing in the course of these explanations. It is no justification
- of this to allege that your Paternity's style of writing admonitions
- and reproofs is more severe than that of some persons, because I
- ought to receive {486} all with joy. But the cutting tone of some of
- your letters excites me to answer more or less in a cutting tone on
- my side, and I have given way to this temptation. It appears to me,
- it would be better if with me and others your tone was not so
- cutting. But God so appoints it for us, and so I had better prefer
- his judgment to my own, and persevere correcting myself, till I can
- answer cutting letters with the same gentle, affectionate language
- as I might the mildest ones. In this way I shall be the greatest
- gainer. So I will conclude with leaving it to your Paternity to
- decide in what tone you will correct me--only begging that you will
- not omit the correction when you see me in the wrong, and that you
- will inflict it, for charity's sake, at the risk even of suffering
- pain from my hasty and improper answers, which I cannot expect to
- correct at once, though I will try to do it. Will you let me meet
- you at the station when you pass through London, and accompany you
- to the station for the Dover Railway?"
-
-In another letter, he writes:--
-
- "I am frequently assailed with black doubts about the prudence of
- all my proceedings; but these pass by, and I go on again with
- brighter spirits than ever, and, in the end, I am astonished how
- Providence has carried me clear of danger and perplexities when they
- have threatened me the most. I trust it will be so now.
-
- "I beg your Paternity will write to me again what you decide about
- St. Wilfrid's functions, and tell me what I can do by writing
- letters or otherwise. I feel better qualified to do what I am told,
- than to give advice what others should do."
-
-As may be seen from some of the letters introduced above, Father
-Ignatius had to endure trials from the want of sympathy with his ways,
-in many of the English converts. One celebrated convert went so far as
-to prohibit his speaking of the conversion of England to any of the
-members of a community of which he was Superior. Another used to tell
-him that "England was already damned," and that it was no use praying
-for it. A third treated him to some sharp cuts about the work of his
-little {487} missions, when answering an application of Father
-Ignatius to give one in his parish. These and many other crosses of
-the like nature, he used to complain of with deep feeling among his
-fellow religious. It is remarkable that those who crossed him had
-great respect for his holiness, and, very likely, their opposition
-proceeded from not giving him credit for much prudence.
-
-An incident that happened to him in one of his journeys in Ireland
-will give an idea of how he bore humiliations. He was walking to one
-of the principal towns in Tipperary, and a vehicle overtook him on the
-road. The man in the car took compassion on the poor old priest, and
-asked him to "take a lift." Father Ignatius took his seat at once;
-before they had proceeded far together, his companion perceived that
-he spoke in an "English accent," and began to doubt his being a
-priest. There had been some ugly rows in the town, lately, on account
-of a gang of "soupers" that infested it, and it struck the good
-townsman that his waggon was carrying a veritable "souper. "What,"
-thought he, "if the neighbours should see me carrying such a precious
-cargo?" And, without asking or waiting for an explanation, he
-unceremoniously told Father Ignatius "to get down, for he suspected he
-wasn't of the right sort." Father Ignatius complied at once, without
-the least murmur. When the man was about a mile ahead of his late
-fellow-traveller, and could not stifle the remorse occasioned by his
-hasty leave-taking, he resolved to turn back and catechise him. The
-result satisfied him, and the good father was invited to take a seat a
-second time. To atone for his almost unpardonable crime, as he thought
-it, the man invited him to stay at his house for the night, as it was
-then late. Father Ignatius said he was due at the priest's house, but
-in case he found nobody up there, he should be happy to avail himself
-of his friend's hospitality. They parted company in the town; Father
-Ignatius went to the priest's, and the other to his home. They were
-all in bed in the presbytery, and no answer was returned to the
-repeated knocks and rings of the benighted traveller. He went to the
-friend's house, but found _they_, too, were gone to bed. No word was
-left about {488} Father Ignatius, and his strange accent made the
-housewife refuse him admittance. He went off without saying a word in
-explanation. The man bethought himself shortly after, and sent
-messengers to seek him, who overtook him outside the town, walking off
-to the next, which he expected to reach before morning.
-
-Another time he undertook the foundation of a convent in
-Staffordshire. With his usual indifference in matters temporal, he
-made no material provision whatever for the reception of the sisters,
-except a bleak, unfurnished house. The reverend mother came, with
-three or four sisters, and was rather disconcerted at what she found
-before them. Father Ignatius was expected in a day or two, and as the
-time of his arrival approached, the reverend mother went into the
-reception-room, and there sate--
-
- "A sullen dame,
- "Nursing her wrath to keep it warm."
-
-Father Ignatius got a very hot reception. The lady scolded him
-heartily for his carelessness, and descanted most eloquently on the
-wants and grievances she had to endure since her arrival. He replied
-calmly that it was not his fault, that that department of the
-proceedings devolved on the parish priest. This only fired her the
-more--"Why didn't he tell the parish priest?" He then waited, quietly
-standing until she had exhausted her stock of abuse; whereupon he
-asked if she had done, and on receiving a nod in the affirmative, he
-said: "Oh, well, I know how I must approach your ladyship in future, I
-must make three bows in the Turkish fashion." So saying, he bowed
-nearly to the ground, retreated a step and bowed again, a third step
-backwards brought him to the door of the apartment, and when he had
-bowed still deeper than before, he stood up straight, took out a purse
-with some sovereigns in it, and spun it to the corner of the room in
-which the good nun sat petrified with astonishment:--"Take that now,
-and it may calm you a bit," was the good morning he bid her, as he
-closed the door after him, and went his way.
-
-The tongue of slander assailed him again the last year of {489} his
-life. We will give the occurrence in the words of the only one to whom
-the reverend mother told it in confidence. Father Ignatius himself
-never spoke of it.
-
- "As our dear Lord loved him much, he wished to try him as he had
- tried the dearest and best-beloved of his servants. Therefore he
- permitted that his character should be assailed in the most vile
- manner by one who, through mistaken zeal, gave out the most
- injurious insinuations regarding our dear father and the late
- reverend mother. When Father Ignatius heard of it, he sent for the
- reverend mother to exhort her to bear the calumny with love and
- resignation. In speaking to her he said that God had asked all of
- him, and he had freely given all but his good name, and that he was
- ready now to offer as it had pleased God to ask for it; for all
- belonged to Him and he thanked Him for leaving him nothing. 'Will
- you not.' he continued, 'do the same? Do you not see that God is
- asking you for the dearest thing you can give? Give it, then,
- freely, and thank Him for taking it, for don't you see that by this
- you are resembling Him more closely? Besides, He has permitted this
- to happen, and if we do not give up our good name, which already
- belongs to Him, cheerfully and willingly, He will take it, in spite
- of us, and we shall lose the merit of our offering. How foolish,
- therefore, is it to go against God! Let us resign ourselves
- unreservedly into his hands. However, to remove any scandal that
- might follow, and to show this good priest that I have no
- ill-feeling against him, I will go and visit him on friendly terms.'
- And so he did."
-
-Besides casual attacks of illness brought on by his want of care or
-great labours, he suffered during the latter part of his life from
-chronic ailments. His heart often troubled him, and medical men told
-him that he would very likely die of disease of the heart. He had an
-ulcer in one of his ancles for a number of years, and was often
-obliged to keep his bed on account of it. No one ever heard him
-complain, and yet his sufferings must have been very acute. We never
-remarked him rejoice so much over this painful sore, than when one of
-the fathers, who respected him much, and {490} wanted to test his
-mortification, became a Job's comforter. He said: "You deserve to be
-lame, Father Ignatius, you made such use of your feet in the days of
-your dancing and sporting, that Almighty God is punishing you now, and
-the instruments of your pleasure are aptly turned into instruments of
-pain." He said it was quite true, and that he believed so himself, and
-that his only wish was that he might not lose a particle of the merit
-it would bring him, by any kind of complaint on his part. He got a
-rupture in 1863, and he simply remarked, "I have made another step
-down the hill to-day."
-
-Whilst labouring under a complication of sufferings he never abated
-one jot of his round of duties, though requested to do so by his
-subjects. He was Superior, and exercised his privilege by doing more
-than any other instead of sparing himself. He did not take more rest
-nor divide his labours with his companions. During the time of his
-rectorship in Sutton, he used to preach and sing mass after hearing
-confessions all morning; attend sick calls, preach in some distant
-chapel in the evening, return at eleven o'clock, perhaps, and say his
-office, and be the first up to matins at two o'clock again. The only
-thing that seemed to pain him was a kind of holy envy. He used to say
-to the young priests: "Oh, how well it is for you that are young and
-buoyant, I am now stiff and old, and must have but a short time to
-labour for Almighty God; still I hope to be able to work to the last."
-This was his ordinary discourse the very year he died, and the young
-fathers were much struck by the coincidence between his wishes and
-their completion.
-
-Father Ignatius Paoli, the Provincial, gave the cook orders to take
-special care of the indefatigable worn-out Rector. He was not to heed
-the fasts of the Rule, or at least to give the Superior the full
-supply of meagre diet. Father Ignatius took the indulgence thankfully
-for two or three days after returning from a mission; but when he saw
-a better portion served up for himself oftener than was customary for
-the other missionaries, he remonstrated with the brother cook. Next
-day he was served in the same manner, he then gave a prohibition, and
-at last scolded him. {491} The good brother then told him that he was
-only carrying out the Provincial's orders. Father Ignatius was silent,
-but, after dinner, posted off to the doctor, and made him give a
-certificate of good health and ability to fast, which he forwarded to
-the Provincial. Father Provincial did not wish to deny him the
-opportunity of acquiring greater merit, and, at the same time, he
-would prolong so valuable a life. To save both ends he placed him
-under the obedience, as far as regarded his health, of one of the
-priests of his community, whom he strictly obeyed in this matter
-thenceforward.
-
-Once he went on a sick-call in very wet weather, and either a cramp or
-an accident made him fall into a dirty slough, where he was wetted
-through and covered with mud. He came home in this state, and finding
-a friend of his at the house, who more or less fell into his way of
-thinking, he began to converse with him. The good father began to
-speak of the conversion of England, and sat in his wet clothes for a
-couple of hours, and likely would have stayed longer, so thoroughly
-was he engrossed with his favourite topic, if one of the religious had
-not come in, and frightened him off to change garments by his surprise
-and apprehension.
-
-He seemed indifferent to cold; he would sit in his cell, the coldest
-day, and write until his fingers became numbed, and then he would warm
-them by rubbing his hands together rather than allow himself the
-luxury of a fire. He went to give a retreat somewhere in midwinter,
-and the room he had to lodge in was so exposed that the snow came in
-under the door. Here he slept, without bed or fire, for the first
-night of his stay. It was the thoughtlessness of his entertainers that
-left him in these cold quarters. In the morning some one remarked that
-very probably Father Ignatius slept in the dreary apartment alluded
-to. A person ran down to see, and there was the old saint amusing
-himself by gathering up the snow that came into his room, and making
-little balls of it for a kitten to run after. The kitten and himself
-seem to have become friends by having slept together in his rug the
-night before, and both were disappointed by the intrusion of the
-wondering visitor.
-
-{492}
-
-His humility was as remarkable to any one who knew him as was his
-zeal; and on this point also he was well tried. It is not generally
-known that in the beginning of his Passionist life he adopted the
-custom of praying before his sermons that God's glory would be
-promoted by them and himself be humiliated. At the opening of Sutton
-Church in 1852, he was sent for from London to preach a grand sermon
-in the evening. A little before the sermon he was walking up and down
-the corridor; the Provincial met him and asked more in joke than
-otherwise: "Well, Father Ignatius, what are you thinking of now?" "I
-am praying," he replied, "that if it be for the glory of God my sermon
-may be a complete failure as far as human eloquence is concerned." We
-may imagine the surprise of his Superior at hearing this extraordinary
-answer; it is believed that this was his general practice to the end.
-Contrary to the common notion that prevails among religious orders, he
-wished that the Order would receive humiliations as well as himself.
-He wished it to come to glory by its humiliations. On one occasion, he
-expected that the newspapers would make a noise about something that
-might be interpreted as humiliating to the community of which he was
-Superior. Father Ignatius addressed the community nearly in these
-words: We shall have something to thank God for tomorrow; the
-Protestants will make a great noise in the papers about this affair,
-and we must be prepared for a full feast of misrepresentations. Let us
-thank God now in anticipation." He was disappointed, however, as the
-papers were content with a bare notice of the matter.
-
-Many persons did not give him credit for great humility; they thought
-his continual quoting of himself, and his readiness to speak about his
-doings, was, if not egotism, at least inconsistent with profound
-humility. We cannot answer this imputation better than by giving
-Father Faber's description of simplicity, which every one knows to be
-the very character of genuine humility:--
-
- "But let us cast an eye at the action of simplicity in the spiritual
- life. Simplicity lives always in a composed consciousness of its own
- demerit and unworthiness. It is {493} possessed with a constant
- sense of what the soul is in the sight of God. It knows that we are
- worth no more than we are worth in His sight, and while it never
- takes its eye off that view of self, so it does not in any way seek
- to hide it from others. In fact it desires to be this, and no more
- than this, in the eyes of others; and it is pained when it is more.
- Every neighbour is, as it were, one of God's eyes, multiplying His
- presence; and simplicity acts as if every one saw us, knew us, and
- judged us as God does, and it has no wounded feeling that it is so.
- Thus, almost without direct effort, the soul of self-love is so
- narrowed that it has comparatively little room for action; although
- it never can be destroyed, nor its annoyance ever cease, except in
- the silence of the grave. The chains of human respect, which in the
- earlier stages of the spiritual life galled us so intolerably, now
- fall off from us, because simplicity has drawn us into the unclouded
- and unsetting light of the eye of God. There is no longer any
- hypocrisy. There is no good opinion to lose, because we know we
- deserve none, and doubt if we possess it. We believe we are loved in
- spite of our faults, and respected because of the grace which is in
- us, and which is not our own and no praise to us. All diplomacy is
- gone, for there is no one to circumvent and nothing to appropriate.
- There is no odious laying ourselves out for edification, but an
- inevitable and scarcely conscious letting of our light shine before
- men in such an obviously innocent and unintentional manner that it
- is on that account they glorify our Father who is in
- Heaven."--_Blessed Sacrament_, Book II., c. vii.
-
-The secret by which Father Ignatius arrived at this perfect way of
-receiving trials was his _thanking God_ for everything. When some one
-objected to him that we could not thank God for a trial when we did
-not feel grateful, "Never mind," he would say, "you take a hammer to
-break a big stone; the first stroke has no effect, the second
-seemingly no effect, and the third, and so on; but somewhere about the
-twentieth or hundredth the stone is broken, and no one stroke was
-heavier than the other. In the same way, begin to thank God, no matter
-about the feeling, continue, {494} and you will soon break the hardest
-difficulties." His maxims and sayings on resignation would fill a
-good-sized volume were they collected together. We shall conclude this
-chapter with one picked by chance from his letters:
-
- "In trials and crosses we are like a sick child, when its mother
- wants it to take some disagreeable medicine. The child kicks and
- screams and sprawls, and spits the medicine in its mother's face.
- That is just what we do when God sends us crosses and trials. But,
- like the mother, who will persevere in giving the medicine until the
- child has taken enough of it, God will send us crosses and trials
- until we have sufficient of them for the health of our souls."
-
-
-{495}
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-Foreshadowings And Death.
-
-
-Father Ignatius, for some months before his death, had a kind of
-sensation that his dissolution was near. He paid many _last_ visits to
-his old friends, and, in arranging by letter for the greater number of
-flying visits, he used generally to say, "I suppose I shall not be
-able to pay many more." Writing to Mrs. Hutchinson in Edinburgh from
-St. Anne's Retreat, Button, in March, 1864, he says: "When I wrote to
-you some months ago in answer to your kind letter, I think I expressed
-a hope that I might again have the pleasure of conversation with you
-before the closing of our earthly pilgrimage. It was a distant and
-uncertain prospect then. Now it is become a near and likely one, and I
-write to express my satisfaction at it." He was heard to say by many
-that the volume of his journal he was writing would last him till the
-end of his life, and it is a curious circumstance that the last page
-of it is just half-written, and comes up to September 18, less than a
-fortnight before his death.
-
-Our Father-General came from Rome to make the visitation of this
-province in May, 1864, and Father Ignatius acted as interpreter
-throughout the greater part of the visit. He was as young as ever in
-his plans for the conversion of England, sanctification of Ireland,
-and advancing all to perfection; and the approbation of the General to
-the main drift of his projects inflamed him with fresh ardour. A
-characteristic incident occurred during this visit. The Father-General
-was inspecting the books Father Ignatius was obliged to keep, as
-Rector of Sutton, and he found them rather irregular. The entries were
-neither clear nor orderly, and it was next to an impossibility to
-obtain any {496} exact notion of the income and expenditure of the
-house. The General called the Rector to his room, in order to rebuke
-him for his carelessness. He began to lecture, and when he had said
-something rather warm looked at Father Ignatius, to see what effect it
-might produce, when, to his surprise, he found that he had nodded off
-asleep. He awoke up in an instant, and complimented the Father-General
-on his patience. Such was the indifference he had reached to by the
-many and cutting rebukes he had borne through life.
-
-In August, 1864, Father Ignatius wrote a long letter to Father
-Ignatius Paoli, our Provincial, about his doings, and he seemed as
-fresh in them as if he had but just commenced his crusade. We shall
-give one extract from this letter:
-
- "I could hardly have the spirit to keep up this work (the
- sanctification of Ireland) if it was not for aiming at a result so
- greatly for the glory of God, and working with a resolution to
- conquer. How exceedingly would it add to my spirit if I knew that
- our body was penetrated with the same thought, and we thus were
- supporting each other!"
-
-So late as September 8 he had prepared a paper embodying his
-intentions, which he intended to submit to Roman authority. Ever
-himself to the last.
-
-Before leaving the retreat for his "_raid_" as he called it, in
-Scotland, he called all the members of the community, one by one, to
-conference; he did the same with a convent of nuns, of which he had
-spiritual charge. He gave them all special advices, which are not
-forgotten, and his last sermon to his brethren, a day or two before he
-left, on the conversion of England through their own sanctification,
-was singularly impressive. It moved many to tears; and, those who
-heard him, say it was the most thrilling ever heard from him on the
-subject. In talking over some matter of future importance with his
-Vicar, before he left for Scotland, he suddenly stopped short, saying,
-"Others will see after this," or some such words. All those who spoke
-with him confidentially recall some dubious half-meaning expressions
-that seemed to come from an inward consciousness of his approaching
-end.
-
-He was remarked to be very sombre and reflective in his {497} last
-missions, but now and then his usual pleasant mood would show itself.
-The Rev. M. Conden, the priest at Cartsdyke, Greenock, in whose church
-he gave a little mission from September 14th to the 18th, writes as
-follows about his stay with him:--
-
- "He preached morning and evening, heard confessions daily, pledged
- 200 young teetotallers, and received about £14 in voluntary
- offerings, for which he seemed most grateful. This mission, he said,
- was his 242nd of the kind; and the number of his teetotallers, since
- he himself took the pledge from Father Mathew in 1842, was 60,000.
-
- "Every moment of his time here (refection hours alone excepted),
- from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., was employed either in the mission
- exercises, or at his office, or in prayer, or in writing letters to
- arrange his future movements. He never rested. He seemed to have
- vowed all his time to some duty or other.
-
- "Wood Cottage (late the Free Church Manse, but now the priest's
- house in Cartsdyke) rests on an eminence overlooking the town,
- harbour, and bay of Greenock, and is at a distance of from five to
- ten minutes' walk from St. Laurence's chapel. I noticed that the
- zigzag uphill walk fatigued him, and I offered to provide a
- conveyance; but he would not permit me, 'as he could not read his
- office so well in the carriage as when walking.'
-
- "As he passed twice or thrice daily to and from my house and the
- chapel, his massive form and mild mien, his habit half concealed by
- his cloak, his broad-brimmed hat, and his breviary in hand,
- attracted the attention of the old and the curiosity of the young.
- One day, some of the latter followed him and eyed him closely,
- through the lattice-work in front of the cottage, until he had
- finished his office in the garden. He then turned towards the
- youngsters, and riveted his looks on them with intense interest and
- thoughtfulness. You might have imagined that they never had seen his
- like before, and that he had seen children for the first time in his
- long life. At length one of the lads broke the spell by observing
- {498} to the others in a subdued and doubting tone, 'A big
- Hie-lander!' 'A Highlander,' said Father Ignatius, turning to me;
- 'they take my habit for an elongated kilt.'
-
- "At dinner he was always very happy and communicative, that day in
- particular.
-
- "'My religious habit,' said he, 'subjected me to many humorous
- remarks before the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and to annoyances
- after it. One time a boy would cry out at me, "There's the Great
- Mogul;" another, "There goes Robinson Crusoe." "That's Napoleon," a
- third would shout; whilst a fourth, in a strange, clear, wild,
- musical tone, would sing out: "No, that's the devil himself." But,
- he continued, 'nothing half so sharp was ever said of me as of a
- very tall, lath-like Oratorian, who stood leaning, one day, against
- a wall, musing on something or nothing. Some London wags watched him
- attentively for some time, and, being divided in their opinions
- about him, one of them at length ended the dispute by observing, in
- a dry and droll way, "Why, that fellow must have grown by
- contract!"'
-
- "Even after his frugal refection, Father Ignatius would never rest.
- Then, too, he must either read his breviary, or say his rosary, or
- write letters. On the day he finished his mission (Sunday, September
- 18), I besought him, as he had allowed himself little or no sleep
- since he began it, before proceeding to Port-Glasgow, to commence a
- new mission there that same evening, to recline on the sofa, even
- for half an hour. 'Oh no!' said he; 'I shall try to have my nap in
- the carriage, on my way.' The distance from Cartsdyke to Port
- Glasgow being no more than two or three miles, and there being a
- toll-bar about midway, he could have very little of his nap.
-
- "During his mission here, he remarked repeatedly, both publicly and
- in private, that his health was never better, and his mind never
- clearer. He promised himself yet twenty years to work for the
- conversion of England, the sanctification of Ireland, and the unity
- of all in the faith. Might he not live to see this realized? Twenty
- years might {499} do it, and were not his physical and mental powers
- fresh enough?
-
- "But, with all this hope of heart and soul, I could, now and then,
- notice a shade of apprehension passing over his countenance, and
- hear, not without tears, his humble, but earnest self-reproaches at
- his inability to 'brighten up.' The manner in which he did this
- showed me plainly that he had a strong presentiment of his
- approaching end.
-
- "My cottage being at some distance from my chapel, the bishop had
- allowed me to fit up in my house a little oratory, where I might
- keep the Blessed Sacrament, and say mass occasionally. By the time
- that Father Ignatius had concluded his mission, I had completed my
- oratory, and asked him to bless it. 'Under what title?' he asked.
- 'Under that of "Our Lady of the Seven Dolors," this (Sunday,
- September 18) being that festival of hers,' I replied. Father
- Ignatius became silent and absorbed for a considerable time and then
- said:--
-
- "'Beautiful title! and appropriate! Here are the stations of the
- Cross! And this is the Feast of the Seven Dolors! Beautiful title!'
-
- "'This,' he continued, 'reminds me of what I once read of St. Thomas
- of Canterbury. When passing for the _last_ time through France to
- England, he was asked, by a gentleman who entertained him, to bless
- a little oratory which might be a memorial of his visit. "Under what
- title?" asked the Archbishop. "I shall leave the selection to your
- grace," said the host. "Well then," rejoined the Archbishop, "let it
- be to the _first English martyr_." He was _himself_ the first
- martyr.
-
- "'Our Lady of Dolors!' Beautiful Title! I am a Passionist. Here are
- the stations of the Cross; and this is the Feast of the Seven
- Dolors,' repeated Father Ignatius; and again he became absorbed and
- silent, so long that I thought he wanted never to bless my little
- oratory. He blessed it, however; and now is it by mere accident that
- on this, the eve of St. John of the Cross, Father Ignatius's
- disciple and friend, Father Alban, comes to bless the oratory cross,
- {500} and set up the little memorial tablet which I have prepared
- with the following inscription?--
-
- ORATE PRO ANIMA
-
- REV SSMI. PATRIS IGNATII (SPENCER)
- QUI DIE OCTODECIMO SEPTEMBRIS, A.D. 1864.
-
- HOC ORATORIUM
-
- SUB TITULO 'B. V. MARIAE DE SEPTEM DOLORIBUS,'
-
- BENEDIXIT.
-
- R.I.P."
-
-
-In a letter to Father Joseph about this time, Father Ignatius says:--
-
- "I proceed to say that I have two more moves fixed: for Sunday the
- 18th, to Port Glasgow; Thursday the 22nd, to Catholic Church, East
- Shaw Street, Greenock. _During the week following I shall suspend
- missionary work, and make my visit to Mr. Monteith, and re-commence
- on Sunday morning, October 2nd. I have got two places to go to in
- Scotland, Leith and Portobello, and I wish to get one more to go to
- first._"
-
-This sentence we put in italics, as it seems to signify a clear
-foreknowledge of his death. This one other place he did get, and it
-was Coatbridge, his last mission. His letters, after this, are more
-confused about his future; it would seem his clear vision failed him.
-At all events, this much may be gathered from his words, that he
-_knew_ for certain his dissolution was near, and _very probably_ knew
-even the day. There is nothing whatever in his plans for the future to
-militate against this conclusion. The most definite is the following,
-which we quote from his last letter to Father Provincial, dated from
-Coatbridge, Sept. 28: "I _am going_ on Saturday to Leith; on Thursday,
-Oct. 6, to Portobello; on Monday, Oct. 10, to Carstairs (Mr.
-Monteith's), for a visit and _repose_." Did he know that repose was to
-be eternal? He kept to his first arrangement about the visit; but we
-must hear something about his last little mission.
-
-We subjoin two accounts of this mission. The first was sent us by a
-gentleman, Mr. M'Auley of Airdrie, who {501} attended the mission, and
-the next by the Rev. Mr. O'Keefe, the priest.
-
-Mr. M'Auley writes:
-
- "I was witness to his missionary labours for the last five days of
- his life in this world. On Sunday, the 25th September, Rev. Michael
- O'Keefe, St. Patrick's Catholic Chapel, Coatbridge (a large village
- two miles from Airdrie, and eight from Glasgow), announced to his
- flock that Father Ignatius would open a mission there on the
- following Tuesday evening at eight o'clock, and close it on Saturday
- morning, 1st October. Accordingly, the beautiful little church was
- crowded on Tuesday at eight, when the saintly father made his
- appearance and addressed the people for upwards of an hour. He gave
- them a brief outline of his conversion, his different visits to
- Ireland and the Continent, the grand objects he had in view--namely,
- the conversion of his country to the Catholic faith, the faith of
- their fathers; as also, the conversion of Scotland and the
- sanctification of Ireland. He then showed the power of prayer, and
- said that the conversion of Great Britain could only be attained by
- prayer. He said the sanctification of Ireland should begin by
- rooting out the vices and disorders which prevail. These, he
- remarked, were drunkenness, cursing, and company-keeping, and that
- they would form the subjects of his discourses for the three
- following evenings.
-
- "He then showed the utility of missions, and mentioned that this was
- his 245th; and closed, as he did on the subsequent evenings, by
- saying three _Hail Marys_ for the conversion of England, one for the
- conversion of Scotland, and one for the sanctification of Ireland.
- Each of the first three was followed by, _Help of Christians, pray
- for us;_ that for Scotland by, _St. Margaret, pray for us;_ and that
- for Ireland by, _St. Patrick, pray for us_. He also mentioned that
- he had received from his Holiness, Pope Pius IX., an indulgence of
- 300 days for each Hail Mary said for the conversion of England. On
- the following four days he said mass every morning at seven o'clock,
- and, on the three first, heard confessions from six o'clock in the
- morning until eleven at night, with the exception of the time
- required for {502} his devotions and meals. On Saturday morning he
- heard two confessions before mass. I was the last he heard, and I
- trust the fatherly advice he then gave me shall never be eradicated
- from my memory."
-
-Father O'Keefe writes:--
-
- "I am just in receipt of your letter, and beg to inform you that I
- have not words to express the sorrow I feel for the sudden death of
- the good and holy Father Ignatius. _Deo gratias_, there is one more
- added to the Church triumphant. He reached my house about five
- o'clock on the 27th ult., and left this on Saturday morning at a
- quarter-past nine o'clock, during which time he enjoyed excellent
- health. He told me that he was going direct to Leith, to open his
- little mission there on Saturday night; and thence to Portobello for
- the same purpose, after he had done at Leith. He also told me that,
- after finishing his mission at Portobello, he would return home to
- St. Anne's Retreat. He intended to pay a visit to Mr. Monteith this
- week. On Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights he had supper at
- half-past ten o'clock, and then returned to the confessional until
- about a quarter-past eleven. On Friday night he told me to defer
- supper till eleven; yet, late though it was, he returned after
- supper to the confessional, and remained there until a quarter-past
- twelve. When he came in, I said: 'I am afraid, Father Ignatius, you
- are over-exerting yourself, and that you must feel tired and
- fatigued.' He said, with a smile: 'No, no; I am not fatigued. There
- is no use in saying I am tired, for, you know, I must be at the same
- work to-night in Leith.' He retired to his room at half-past twelve
- o'clock, and was in the confessional again at six o'clock in the
- morning. He said mass at seven; breakfasted at half-past eight; and,
- as I have already said, left this at a quarter-past nine for the
- train. On seeing him, after breakfast, in his secular dress, I
- remarked that he looked much better and younger than in his
- religious habit. The remark caused him to laugh very heartily. It
- was the only time I saw him laugh. He said: 'I wish to tell you what
- Father Thomas Doyle said when he saw me in my secular dress: "Father
- Ignatius, you look like a {503 } broken-down old gentleman." And he
- enjoyed the remark very much.'"
-
-The remainder of his life is easily told. He arrived at Carstairs
-Junction at 10.35 a.m.; came out of the train, and gave his luggage in
-charge of the station master. He then went towards Carstairs House,
-the residence of Mr. Monteith. There is a long avenue through the
-demesne for about half a mile from the station, crossed then at right
-angles by another, which leads to the grand entrance; this avenue
-Father Ignatius went by. He had just passed the "rectangle," and was
-coming straight to the grand entrance, when he turned off on a bye
-path. He perceived that he had lost his way, and asked a child which
-was the right one. He never spoke to mortal again.
-
-On a little corner in the avenue, just within sight of the house, and
-about a hundred paces from the door, he fell suddenly and yielded up
-his spirit into the hands of his Creator. May we all die doing God's
-work, and as well prepared as Father Ignatius of St. Paul!
-
-
-{504}
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-The Obsequies Of Father Ignatius.
-
-
-The divine attribute of Providence to which he was so fondly devoted
-during life guided him in his last moments. He did not intend to visit
-Carstairs before the 10th of October, but our Lord, who disposes all
-things sweetly, had ordained otherwise, by the circumstances. The
-train he came by was due at the junction at 10.35, and the train for
-Edinburgh would not start before 11.50. He had more than an hour to
-wait, and he thought perhaps he might as well spend part of that time
-at Mr. Monteith's as at the Railway Station; besides he could get a
-fast train to Edinburgh at 3.0, which would bring him to Leith a few
-minutes after six, and this would be time enough, as his mission was
-to commence on the next day, Sunday. Such seems to have been the
-simple combination of circumstances that directed his steps to
-Carstairs House, as far as human eye can see. We cannot but admire the
-dispositions of Providence; had he taken any other train, he might
-have died in the railway carriage, or at a station. How convenient
-that he died within the boundaries of the demesne of a friend by whom
-he was venerated, and to whose house he was always welcome!
-
-And then how remarkable was that other circumstance of his being
-alone. Servants and workmen were passing up and down the place the
-whole morning, but at the moment God chose to call his servant, no
-human eye saw him, and no hand was ready to assist him. On measuring
-the respective distances from where he had turned off the avenue, to
-where his body was found, and to the house, it was seen that, had he
-gone on straight, he would have {505} fallen just on the threshold. It
-was God's will that angels instead of men should surround his lonely
-bed of death.
-
-He must have arrived at the spot where his body was discovered about
-11 o'clock. A few minutes after, one of the retainers was passing by,
-and ran at once to the house to give the alarm that a priest lay dead
-at such a part of the avenue. Mr. Monteith, and Mr. Edmund Waterton,
-who was on a visit there at the time, were going out to shoot. They
-laid down their guns, and went in haste to the spot. Monteith did not
-recognize the features; they were drawn together by the death-stroke.
-They searched for something to identify him. What was the good man's
-surprise when he found among the papers of the deceased a letter he
-had written himself to Father Ignatius a few days before. The truth
-then flashed across him. It was no other than his own godfather, his
-constant friend and counsellor, the man whom he venerated so much,
-Father Ignatius the Passionist. Immediately, a doctor was sent for,
-the body, which all now recognized, was brought to the nearest
-shelter, and every available means tried to restore consciousness, but
-to no effect. Medical examination showed that he died of disease of
-the heart, and in an instant. The spot whereon he lay bore the impress
-of his knee, and the brim of his hat was broken by his sudden fall on
-the left side. As soon as they were certain of life being extinct, the
-body was brought into the house, the luggage was sent for, a coffin
-was provided, the secular dress was taken off, and the corpse robed in
-the religious habit. The sacristy was draped in black, and two
-flickering tapers showed the mortal remains of a pure and saintly
-soul, as they lay there in a kind of religious state for the greater
-part of three days.
-
-Telegrams were sent immediately to our principal houses, and to
-members of the Spencer family by Mr. Monteith. The shock was great,
-and not knowing the manner of his death did not serve to make it the
-less felt. Fathers of the Order went from the different retreats to
-Carstairs, and arrived there, some on Sunday, and some on Monday
-morning. Those who went were struck by the appearance of the corpse;
-the marble countenance never looked so noble as in {506} death, and we
-looked with silent wonder on all that now remained of one whom the
-world was not worthy of possessing longer.
-
-About 10 o'clock a sad cortége was formed, and the coffin was carried
-by the most worthy persons present to the train that conveyed it to
-Button. Every one on hearing of his death appeared to have lost a
-special friend; no one could lament, for they felt that he was happy;
-few could pray for him, because they were more inclined to ask his
-intercession. The greatest respect and attention were shown by the
-railway officials all along the route, and special ordinances were
-made in deference to the respected burthen that was carried.
-
-Letters were sent to the relatives of Father Ignatius by our Father
-Provincial, and they were told when the funeral would take place. No
-one came, and those who were sure to come were unavoidably prevented.
-Lord Lucan had not time to come from West Connaught, and Lord Spencer
-was just then in Copenhagen. His regard for his revered uncle, and his
-kindly spirit, will be seen from the following letter, which was
-published in the newspapers at the time, and is the most graceful
-tribute paid to the memory of Father Ignatius by any member of his
-noble family.
-
- "_Denmark, Oct_. 16, 1864.
-
- "Rev. Sir,--I was much shocked to hear of the death of my excellent
- uncle George. I received the sad intelligence last Sunday, and
- subsequently received the letter which you had the goodness to write
- to me. My absence from England prevented my doing what I should have
- much wished to have done, to have attended to the grave the remains
- of my uncle, if it had been so permitted by your Order.
-
- "I assure you that, much as I may have differed from my uncle on
- points of doctrine, no one could have admired more than I did the
- beautiful simplicity, earnest religion, and faith of my uncle. For
- his God he renounced all the pleasures of the world; his death, sad
- as it is to us, was, as his life, apart from the world, but with
- God.
-
- "His family will respect his memory as much as I am sure you and the
- brethren of his Order do.
-
-{507}
-
- "I should be much obliged to you if you let me know the particulars
- of the last days of his life, and also where he is buried, as I
- should like to place them among family records at Althorp.
-
- "I venture to trouble you with these questions, as I suppose you
- will be able to furnish them better than any one else.
-
- "Yours faithfully,
- "SPENCER."
-
-The evening before the funeral the coffin was opened, and the body was
-found to have already commenced to decompose. The tossing of the long
-journey from Scotland and the suddenness of the death caused this
-change to come on sooner than might be expected. A privileged few were
-allowed to take a last lingering look at the venerable remains, many
-touched the body with objects of devotion, and others cut off a few
-relics which their piety valued in proportion to their conception of
-his sanctity.
-
-At 11 o'clock on Thursday, October 5th, the Office of the Dead
-commenced. A requiem mass was celebrated, and the funeral oration
-preached by the Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne, Lord Bishop of Birmingham,
-and particular friend of the deceased. We give the following extracts
-from an account of the funeral as given by the _Northern Press_; the
-Bishop's sermon is taken from the _Weekly Register_.
-
- At eleven o'clock the solemn ceremonies commenced. The church, which
- was crowded, was draped in black, and the coffin (on which were the
- stole and cap of the deceased nobleman) reclined on a raised
- catafalque immediately outside the sanctuary rails. On each side of
- the coffin were three wax-lights, and around were ranged seats for
- the clergy in attendance. Solemn Office for the Dead was first
- chanted, and amongst the assembled clerics were the following: The
- Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne (Lord Bishop of Birmingham); Benedictines:
- Right Rev. Dr. Burchall (Lord Abbot of Westminster), Very Rev. R. B.
- Vaughan (Prior of St. Michael's, Hereford), Very Rev. T. Cuthbert
- Smith (Prior of St. George's, Downside), Very Rev. P. P. Anderson
- {508} (Prior of St. Laurence's, Ampleforth); the Revds. P. A.
- Glassbrooke, R. A. Guy, J. P. Hall, and Bradshaw (Redemptorists);
- the Very Rev. Canon Wallwork, the Rev. Fathers Walmsley, Grimstone,
- Costello, Kernane (Rainhill), M. Duggan, M.R. (St. Joseph's,
- Liverpool), S. Walsh (of the new mission of St. John the Evangelist,
- Bootle); Father Dougall; Father Fisher, of Appleton; Father O'Flynn,
- of Blackbrook, near St. Helen's; and the priests and religious of
- the Order of Passionists, who were represented by members of the
- order from France, Ireland, and England. A number of nuns of the
- convent of the Holy Cross, Sutton, occupied seats beside the altar
- of the Blessed Virgin, and with them were about twenty young girls
- apparelled in white dresses and veils, with black bands round the
- head, and wearing also black scarfs. When the Office for the Dead
- had concluded, a solemn Requiem Mass was begun. His Lordship the
- Bishop of Birmingham occupied a seat on a raised dais at the Gospel
- side of the altar; and the priests who celebrated the Sacred
- Mysteries were:--Celebrant--the Very Rev. Father Ignatius (Paoli),
- Provincial of the Order of Passionists in England and Ireland;
- Deacon--the Very Rev. Father Eugene, First Provincial Consulter;
- Sub-deacon--the Very Rev. Father Bernard, Second Provincial
- Consulter; Master of the Ceremonies--the Very Rev. Father Salvian,
- rector of St. Saviour's Retreat, Broadway, Worcestershire. The mass
- sung was the Gregorian Requiem, and the choir was under the
- direction of the Rev. Father Bernardine (of Harold's Cross Retreat,
- Dublin, and formerly of Sutton). Immediately after the conclusion of
- the Holy Sacrifice, the Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne ascended the
- pulpit (which was hung in black) and preached the funeral sermon.
-
- His Lordship, who was deeply affected, said:--The wailings of the
- chant have gone into silence, the cry of prayer is hushed into
- secret aspiration, and stillness reigns, whilst I lift my solitary
- voice, feeling, nevertheless, that it would be better for me to weep
- over my own soul than to essay to speak the character of him who is
- gone from the midst of us. A certain oppression weighs upon {509} my
- heart, and yet there rises through it a spring of consolation when I
- think upon that strength of holiness which has borne him to his end;
- who, if I am a Religious, was my brother; if a Priest, he was of the
- Holy Order of Priesthood; but he was also, what I am not, a
- mortified member of an institute devoted to the Passion of our Lord,
- who bore conspicuously upon him the character of the meekness and
- the sufferings of his Divine Master.
-
- My text lies beneath that pall. For there is all that Death will
- ever claim of victory from him. The silver cord is broken, and the
- bowl of life is in fragments; and yet this death is but the rending
- of the mortal frame that through the open door the soul may go forth
- to its eternity; upon the brink of which we stand, gazing after with
- our faith, and trembling for ourselves whilst we gain a glimpse of
- the Throne of Majesty, on which sits the God of infinite purity,
- whose insufferable light searches our frailty through.
-
- I will not venture to recount a life which would ask days of speech
- or volumes of writing, but I will endeavour at least to point to
- some of those principles which animated that life, and were its stay
- as well as guidance. For principles are like the luminaries of
- Heaven, or like the eyes that cover the wings of the Cherubs that
- sustain the Chariot of God in the vision of Ezechiel. They are
- luminous points planted in the midst of our life, which enable us to
- see whatever we look upon in a new light, and to enhance the scene
- of our existence. Listen, then, dearly beloved, and hang your
- attention on my voice, whilst I speak of him who was once called in
- the world the Honourable and Rev. George Spencer, a scion of one of
- the noblest houses of the nobility of this land, but who himself
- preferred to be called Father Ignatius of St. Paul, of the
- Congregation of Regular Clerics of our most Holy Redeemer's Passion,
- a name by which he was loved by tens of thousands of the poor of
- these countries, and known to the Catholics of all lands.
-
- Father Ignatius was born in the last month of the last year of the
- last century; at the time when his father was First Lord of the
- Admiralty. Brought up in the lap of luxury, and encircled with those
- social splendours that belong {510} to our great families, he was
- educated as most of our noble youths are; sent early to Eton, and
- thence to Cambridge. I will not stay to trace his early life. In his
- twenty-second year he received Anglican orders, and was inducted
- into the living that adjoined the mansion of his fathers, where, for
- seven years, he toiled to disseminate to those around him what light
- of truth had entered his own mind. He himself has recorded that he
- had about 800 souls committed to his care. And here we begin to see
- the opening of that genuine purity and earnestness in his character
- which he developed with time to such perfection. His simplicity of
- soul and passionate love of truth enabled him to see some of the
- leading characteristics of truth in its objective nature. He saw
- that truth was one, and that the Church, which is the depository and
- the voice of truth, must of necessity be one. He found his parish
- divided by the presence of the sects of Unitarians, Anabaptists, and
- Wesleyans. These he sought out, conversed with them, and discussed
- with them the unity of truth and the authority of the Church. But
- the more he urged them with his arguments the more he found that
- they threw him back upon himself, forcing him to see, by the aid of
- his own sincerity and love of truth, that he stood upon something
- like the self-same grounds which he assailed in them. The very
- sincerity with which he read the Gospel; the sincerity with which he
- prayed; the sincerity with which he strove to penetrate into those
- duties and responsibilities which then appeared to him to be laid
- upon his conscience; and his sincere love of souls, drew his own
- soul gradually and gently towards the one broad horizon of truth and
- the one authority. He had already, from reading the Gospel,
- determined on leading a life of celibacy as the most pure and
- perfect, and to keep himself from the world for the service of his
- Divine Master. And what effect that resolve had in humbling his
- heart and bringing down the light and grace of God into his spirit,
- he himself has told us in that narrative of his conversion which he
- drew up at the request of a venerable Italian bishop, soon after his
- conversion. The results, I say, he has told us; he presumes not to
- point to any cause as in himself.
-
-{511}
-
- But whilst yet perplexed between the new light he was receiving, and
- the resistance of the old opinion which he had inherited, he
- received a letter from an unknown hand, inviting him to examine the
- foundations of his faith; this led to correspondence, and so to
- contact with members of the Church, and the errors which had
- encompassed him from his birth dispersed by degrees, until at last
- the daylight dawned upon him, and grew on even to mid-day, and he
- hesitated not, even for one week, but closed his ministry, and
- entered into the Church of God and the fulness of peace. Then it was
- he found that the correspondent who had awakened him to inquire was
- a lady, who, converted before himself, was then dying in a convent
- in Paris which she had but recently entered; and he hoped, as he
- said, to have an intercessor in heaven in one who had so fervently
- prayed for him on earth.
-
- No sooner had Father Ignatius entered the Church than he put himself
- with all simplicity and obedience under the guidance of the
- venerable prelate, my predecessor, Bishop Walsh, who sent him to
- Rome, there to enter on a course of ecclesiastical studies. In 1830,
- there we find him in the holy city, imbibing that Apostolic light,
- and bending himself over the written laws of that truth which was to
- fit him, not only for the priesthood, but also for a singular call
- and an unprecedented vocation. Father Ignatius was marked out by the
- Providence of God for a special apostleship, and he had something
- about him of the spirit of the prophet and of the eye of the seer.
- He pierced in advance into the work to which God called him, and
- there were holy souls who instinctively looked to him as an
- instrument for the fulfilling of their own anticipations. There was
- in Italy a Passionist Father, who from his youth had had written in
- his heart the work of England's conversion. It had been the object
- of all his thoughts, and prayers, and hopes. Father Dominic had
- moved all the souls he could with kindred ardour for this work. And
- before they had ever beheld each other, the hearts of those two men
- were sweetly drawn together. Let us hear what Father Dominic writes
- to an English gentleman, himself a convert, ardent for the
- conversion of his {512} country, on the day of Mr. Spencer's first
- sermon in Rome, after being ordained deacon:--"On this day," he
- writes, "on this day, the feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus, Mr.
- Spencer begins in Rome his apostolic ministry; to-day, he makes his
- first sermon to the Roman people in the church of the English. Oh
- what a fortunate commencement! Certainly that ought to be salutary
- which commences in the name of the Saviour. Oh, how great are my
- expectations! God, without doubt, has not shed so many graces on
- that soul to serve for his own profit alone. I rather believe He has
- done it in order that he might carry the Holy Name of Jesus before
- kings, and nations, and the sons of Israel. Most sweet Name of
- Jesus, be thou in his mouth as oil poured out, which may softly and
- efficaciously penetrate the hardest marble."
-
- This was written by a man who had never stepped on English soil,
- about one whom he had never seen in the flesh, but whom he felt to
- have one common object in one common spirit with himself. But it was
- written by a man in whose heart God had written in grace the
- words--_England's Conversion_.
-
- It was whilst yet a Deacon, that Father Ignatius was visited at the
- Roman College by a Bishop who had come to Rome from the farthest
- corner of Italy, who on his soul had also the impression that great
- conversions were in store for England, and who asked that his eyes
- might be blessed with so rare a spectacle as that of a converted
- Anglican minister; and it was at the request of the Bishop of
- Oppido, for the edification of his flock, to whom the news had
- reached, that Father Ignatius wrote the narrative of his conversion;
- the translation of which brings us in view of another of those
- remarkable men who were then preparing themselves for entering on
- the work of the English mission, for that translation was done in
- Rome by Dr. Gentili.
-
- It was under the direction of Cardinal Wiseman, then President of
- the English College, that Father Ignatius was pursuing his studies,
- when, at the end of two years, he broke a blood-vessel, and was
- summoned, in consequence, {513} by Bishop Walsh, to hasten his
- ordination and return to England. Cardinal Wiseman arranged that he
- should receive the order of priesthood from the Cardinal Vicar in
- that very Church of St. Gregory, from which the Apostles of England
- had been sent to our shores, and that he should say his first mass
- on the Feast of that Venerable Bede, whose name is so intimately
- entwined with the literature, the religion, and the history of
- England. How Father Ignatius himself viewed these signs and his
- approaching ordination, he himself expressed in a letter to Father
- Dominic, in these terms: "Ten days ago I received orders from my
- Bishop, Dr. Walsh, to proceed to England without delay. You know the
- value and security of obedience, and will agree with me that I ought
- not to doubt of anything. The first festival day that presented
- itself for ordination was that of St. Philip Neri. Judge, then, what
- was my joy when, after that day had been fixed upon, I discovered
- that it was also the Feast of St. Augustine, the first Apostle of
- England, sent by St. Gregory. It seems to me that Providence wishes
- to give me some good omens. It is enough, if I have faith and
- humility."
-
- Of the grace of humility, that virtue of the heroic virtues which
- had already taken possession of his heart, I cannot give you better
- proof than his own communing with the heart of Father Dominic, who
- had hinted rumours of his rising to ecclesiastical dignities. He
- writes in reply: "I can assure you it would give me the greatest
- displeasure. My prayer is that God would grant me a life like that
- of His Son and the Apostles, in poverty and tribulations for the
- Gospel. I must submit, if it be His will to raise me to any high
- worldly dignity; but it would be to me the same as to say that I am
- unworthy of the heavenly state, which I long for upon earth. Jesus
- Christ sent the Apostles in poverty. St. Francis Xavier, St.
- Dominic, and so many other great missionaries, preached in poverty,
- and I wish to do the same, if it be the will of God."
-
- Here you behold the heart of this ecclesiastic, so young as yet in
- the Church, yet so mature in spiritual sense. On his return home, he
- meets his dear friend Father Dominic {514} face to face for the
- first time, in the diocese of Lucca, and the latter writes to his
- friend in England:--
-
- "How willingly would I go to England along with dear Mr. Spencer;
- but the time destined by the Divine mercy for this has not yet
- arrived. I hope, however, that it will arrive. I hope one day to see
- with my own eyes that kingdom, which for so many years I have borne
- engraven on my heart. May God be merciful to us both, that so we may
- meet together in the company of all our dear Englishmen above in
- heaven, to praise and bless the Divine Majesty throughout all ages."
-
- I have lingered upon the first communing together of these two men,
- because it is so instructive to see how it was not merely in the
- schools, even where religion was studied under the shadow of the
- successor of St. Peter, but still more by drawing fire from the
- hearts of saintly men, that Father Ignatius was prepared for his
- future work. Returned to England, he has left it on record how
- affectionately he was received by his venerable father and his noble
- brother, Lord Althorp, then in the midst of his official career as a
- chief leader of the destinies of his country. Who that remembers
- those days does not recall the amenities of a character of humanity
- so gentle and true, that even in the midst of the most intense
- political strife he embittered no one, and drew on him no personal
- attack. By his noble relatives, Father Ignatius was received with
- the old affection, and their entire conduct towards him was an
- exception indeed to the treatment which so many members of other
- families have experienced in reward for their fidelity to God and to
- their conscience. For fifteen years Father Ignatius toiled in the
- work of the mission in the diocese of Birmingham, generously
- expending both himself and the private funds allowed him by his
- family in the service of souls. He founded the mission of
- Westbromwich, and the mission of Dudley; he raised there churches
- and schools, and preached and conversed with the poor unceasingly.
- He was called to Oscott, and a new office was created for him, that
- of Spiritual Dean, that he might inspire those young men who were
- preparing for the ministry with his own {515} missionary ardours.
- The office began with him, and ended when he left the establishment,
- although unquestionably one of the greatest functions which could be
- exerted in our colleges would be the office of enkindling in
- youthful hearts that fire of charity for souls which is the true
- creator of the missioner. But the time was coming when he was to
- pass from the ordinary life of a missioner, led in an extraordinary
- manner, and to pass into that religious congregation where he was to
- carry out his special mission, his Apostleship of prayer. During
- those fifteen past years he had not lost sight of Father Dominic. In
- 1840, that holy man, with the name of England written on his heart,
- reached Boulogne with a community of his brethren. In the same year
- he visited Oscott, where those two men of God embraced each other
- anew; and in the following year the desire and prayer of so many
- years was realized. The Passionist Fathers were established at
- Aston, in Staffordshire, with Father Dominic as their head and
- founder; and whoever will look over the correspondence, so deeply
- interesting at this moment, which is printed as an appendix to the
- life of the Blessed Paul of the Cross, will see how great a part the
- Rev. George Spencer had in the work of bringing the Passionists into
- England.
-
- It was in the year 1846, that, making a retreat under the Fathers of
- the Society of Jesus, God revealed to his heart his vocation to join
- the Passionists, and become the companion and fellow worker with
- Father Dominic. He cast himself at the feet of that holy man, and
- petitioned for the singular grace of being admitted to the Order.
- Their joint aspirations for England had brought them together, and
- their love of the Cross made them of one mind, and after the first
- ironic rebuff with which the spirit of the petitioner was tested, I
- can imagine the smile with which that man of God, so austere to
- himself whilst so loving to his neighbour, recalled the time, long
- past, when they wondered if ever they should meet in the flesh face
- to face. There before him was the man drawn by his prayers into his
- very bosom, of whom he had predicted, sixteen years ago, that he
- would carry the name of Jesus for the conversion of England {516}
- before the kings and nations of the earth. In the Order he was
- distinguished by his simplicity, his humility, his
- self-mortification, his patience in suffering, and his obedience. I
- would gladly dwell on the traits of those virtues which formed his
- personal character, but time urges me to proceed. He filled
- successively the office of Consultor, of Novice-master, and of
- Rector, and it was to him that Father Dominic provisionally
- consigned his authority at his death. But his great and singular
- work was his Apostleship of prayer for England. Many had been the
- questionings in many hearts, as to whether this country would ever
- in any serious numbers return to the faith or not. And many had been
- the speculations as to how this could be accomplished; some dreamt
- it must come by missions; others, by learned writings; others, by
- the preaching of the Gospel; some had one scheme, some another, but
- in each there was something defective, something not altogether
- divine; something that was human, and resting more or less on the
- will of man. But Father Ignatius consulted the light and grace of
- his own soul, he penetrated to the true principle, he recalled his
- own history, he saw that conversion is the work of God, that the
- work itself is the work of grace, and that all that man can do, is
- to invoke God to put forth His power. Prayer that is pure, sincere,
- earnest, and of many souls, God always hears and inclines to grant.
- There are many ways of approaching to God, but there is one which He
- loves for its tender alliance with the Divine Humanity, for its
- humility and its beautiful faith, and that is the approach through
- her who is at once the Virgin Mother of God and ours. Let us plead
- to God through the Mother of God, and let her plead for her sons on
- earth to her Son in Heaven, and behold our prayer is tripled in its
- strength. So Ignatius looked to God through the eyes of Mary, prayed
- to God through the heart of Mary, and appealed through the purity of
- Mary, for a people who had forgotten her. And he went forth on his
- Apostleship of prayer over Italy and France, and Hungary and
- Austria, and the rest of Germany; and over Belgium and England, and
- Ireland and Scotland, and he corresponded with the other kingdoms of
- Christendom. He {517} went before emperors and kings, and before
- ministers of state, and asked them to pray for the conversion of his
- country. He sought the Bishops in their dioceses, and the priests in
- their parishes, and holy religious in their convents, and devout lay
- persons in their houses, and prayed them to pray to God, and to set
- other souls to pray for the conversion of England. His faith was
- strong that from her conversion a great radiation of truth would
- spread forth in the world, and that all that was needed was the
- general prayer of believing souls, that God might grant so great a
- grace to the world. And so the name of Father Ignatius grew familiar
- on the lips of Christendom. Prayer arose in many countries; the
- Bishops issued pastorals, a day in the week was appointed for prayer
- for England. Prelates spoke of it in synods, and the clergy
- discussed it in their conferences. And all pious souls added on new
- prayers to their habitual devotions for the conversion of England.
- And as for the apostle of this prayer, he went on nourishing the
- flame which he had enkindled, and stirring the zeal of his brethren
- until, to use his own words, often repeated to his superior, this
- prayer, and the preaching of this prayer to God through Mary, had
- become a part of his nature, an element inseparable from his
- existence. He had but recently recommenced the work of this mission
- in a somewhat altered form, basing the conversion of the English
- upon the sanctification of the Irish people, but still his cry
- was--Pray for England. There can be no doubt, as sundry facts point
- out, but that he had a strong impression of late that his end was
- drawing near. And not long before his death he called the brethren
- individually to his room, and exhorted each with solemn earnestness
- to be instant in the mission of prayer for England.
-
- And what has been the result of this Apostleship? That result Father
- Ignatius himself summed up but a few days before his death. On the
- 8th of September, he addressed a letter to an Italian periodical,
- from which I translate the following passage as the fit conclusion
- of this subject. He says:--
-
- "It is more than thirty-four years since a worthy Bishop of a
- Neapolitan diocese came to seek me in the English {518} College at
- Rome, wishing to look with his own eyes upon a converted Anglican
- clergyman; a sight so grateful to a noble Catholic heart, and in
- those days so rare. On what proof he spoke, I know not, but he
- assured me that the first Carmelite Scapular ever given, and given
- by that English Saint, Simon Stock, was secretly kept in England,
- and that he looked on this as a pledge that our country would one
- day come back to the faith. Be this assertion well or ill founded,
- the memory of him who made it is dear to me as is the memory of the
- presence of every one who bespeaks hope and peace for England.
-
- "What have we seen in our days? Conversions to the faith so numerous
- and so important that the whole world speaks of them. And this
- movement towards Catholicism is of a character so remarkable, that
- the history of the Church presents nothing like it.
-
- "It is true that other nations have been converted, whilst England
- has stood to her Protestantism; but a first step has been made in
- this country, which, as far as I know, has no parallel. In other
- cases, it was the sovereign who made the first movement, having had
- no learned opposition or persecution from his subjects; and, as in
- the instance of St. Stephen, of Hungary, the conversions which
- followed came easily, and as it were naturally; or conversion began
- with the poor, who, though it cost them persecution and privation,
- had yet but little to lose. But this has not been the case in
- England. Here the work of conversion grew conspicuous among the
- ministers of the Protestant Church, of whom hundreds of the most
- esteemed and learned have been received into the bosom of the
- Church, and also among the noble and the gentle families of the
- kingdom; so that it may be said that scarcely is there a family that
- is not touched by conversion, in some near or more distant member of
- it. I say that this order of conversion is new, this operation of
- grace is most singular. Great numbers of those clergymen had
- prospects before them by remaining in Protestantism, flattering
- enough, of earthly felicity, wealth, and honour; and by their
- conversion they fell upon poverty, distress, and contempt,
- especially those men who, by reason {519} of their families, could
- not embrace the clerical state. The sacrifices of the lay gentry
- have not always been so great; but even here how many have closed
- against themselves the path of honours and distinctions; how many
- have been discarded by their kindred and friends; how many of the
- gentle sex have abandoned the prospect of a settlement in life
- befitting their rank and station; while all have turned from the
- world to obey the voice of God; and that, in a country like this,
- where the world holds out allurements so specious and so attractive
- in every kind.
-
- "But these great results can neither be attributed to the force, the
- eloquence, or the industry of man. Man has positively had no part in
- the work, except by prayer, and this praying has been professedly
- offered to God through Mary; through whom all the heresies of the
- world are destroyed."
-
- I have no time to dwell upon this summary of results so beautifully
- told and so remarkably timed. But it is impossible not to notice
- that the great tide of conversion that has flowed so unusually, has
- passed through the two classes to which Father Ignatius himself
- belonged, that of the clergy and that of the gentry. It is a
- wonderful result following a most unprecedented combination of the
- voices of Catholic souls of many nations in prayer, set in motion by
- the very man who is summing up the result of the work, before he
- goes to his reward; nor do I believe, although his tongue is silent,
- and his features settled into cold obstruction, as we looked on them
- last night, that the prayer of his soul has ceased; no, his work
- goes on, his Apostleship is not dead. Purged by the sacrifice, I
- seem to see his spirit all this time. For you know that when a holy
- man quits this life, and has not loved it as he has loved God, he
- goes away no further than God, and God is very near to us. Have you
- never lost a dear parent or a child, and have you not found that
- when freed from the body the spirit of that one had more power over
- you; seemed to be freer to be with you at all solemn times, and to
- impress you with its purely spiritual qualities and virtues, all
- gross things having ceased though the purification of death and the
- final grace? and so I conceive his {520} spirit standing by my side
- and saying still, at each interval of my voice,--"Pray for England:
- pray for her conversion." To you, fathers of the rude frieze,
- brethren of his Order, with the name of Christ on your breast, and
- the love of His passion in your heart, he says--"Pray for England:
- pray for her conversion." Superiors of the Benedictine Order, whom a
- special circumstance has brought here to-day, Father
- President-General, representative of St. Benedict, as of St.
- Augustine, and monastic successor of that first Apostle of England,
- to you, and to you, Priors of the Order, he says--"Fail not from
- the work of your forefathers, pray for England: pray for her
- conversion." To you, brethren of the priesthood, men consecrated to
- this mission, who know his voice familiarly, to you he says with the
- burning desire of his heart,--"Pray for England: pray for her
- conversion." Daughters of the virginal veil, who are his children,
- whilst in the inferior soul you suffer the grief of loss, in your
- superior soul you rejoice that he is with God; to you also he
- says:--"Pray for England: pray for her conversion." Dearly beloved
- brethren, how often in his missions and his ministries has he
- written those words upon your hearts. Let them not die out. Let them
- live on with something of his flame of charity. Be you as his
- missioners; carry these words to your children and your brethren. He
- prays yet, and will ever pray until the work be finished. Even in
- the presence of his God, neither the awe nor the majesty of that
- unspeakable presence can I conceive as interrupting the prayer which
- has become a portion of his nature--"God, have mercy on England.
- Turn, O Jesus, Thy meek eyes upon that people. Let pity drop from
- Thy glorious wounds, and mercy from Thy heart. In what she is blind,
- in what she sins, forgive her, for she knows not what she does. Have
- mercy on England." When joined to his beloved Dominic, and with
- blessed Paul, and meeting Gregory, and Augustine, and Bede, I
- conceive him urging them to join yet more earnestly with the prayers
- he left ascending from the earth, following his mission still in the
- heavens; nay, even pressing to be heard in the circles of the
- angels, whose meekness and purity he loved so well, and {521} still
- his cry is: "Pray for England: pray for her conversion."
-
- It remains for us to turn one last look upon his mortal remains, to
- consider our own mortality, and to prepare us for our approaching
- end. How beautiful, how sublime was his departure. Father Ignatius
- had often wished and prayed that, like his Divine Lord, like St.
- Francis Xavier, and like his dear friend and master in the spiritual
- life, Father Dominic, he might die at his post, yet deserted and
- alone. God granted him that prayer. He had just closed one mission
- and was proceeding to another; he turned aside for an hour on his
- way to converse with a dear friend and godson; he was seen ten
- minutes before conversing with children. Was he only inquiring his
- way, or did he utter the last words of his earthly mission to those
- young hearts? And here alone, unseen but of God and His angels, he
- fell down, and that heart which had beaten so long for the love and
- conversion of England stopped in his bosom. Crucified was he in his
- death as in his life to this world, that he might live to God.
-
-When his lordship, the Bishop, descended from the pulpit, the
-procession to the place of burial was formed, and issued from the
-church in the following order, the choir singing the _Miserere_:--
-
- The Children of the Schools of the Convent of the Holy Child.
-
- The Rev. Father Bernard (Superior of the Order of Passionists,
- Paris), carrying a Cross, and having on each side an Acolyte,
- bearing a lighted candle.
-
- The Thurifer.
-
- Boys two abreast.
-
- The Regular Clergy.
-
- The Secular Clergy.
-
- THE COFFIN.
-
- The Lord Bishop of Birmingham.
-
- The Laity.
-
-As the melancholy _cortége_ moved along, the clergy chanted the
-_Miserere_, and when the procession arrived at the vault, {522} the
-coffin (which was of deal) was placed inside a leaden one, which was
-again enclosed in an outer shell of oak. Upon this was a black plate,
-bearing the following inscription:--
-
- FATHER IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL
-
- (THE HON. AND REV. GEORGE SPENCER)
-
- DIED OCT. 1, 1864, AGED 65 YEARS.
-
- _R. I. P._
-
-Placed inside the coffin was a leaden tablet, on which the following
-was engraved:--
-
- "MORTALES EXUVIAE
-
- "Patris Ignatii a S. Paulo, Congregationis Passionis, de Comitibus
- Spencer. Minister Anglicanus primum; dein, ad Ecclesiam Catholicam
- conversus, sacerdotio Romae insignitus est anno 1832. Mirum, qua
- animi constantia per triginta et amplius annos pro conversione
- patriae laboraverat. Inter alumnos Passionis anno 1847 adscriptus,
- omnium virtutum exemplar confratribus semper extitit. Angliam,
- Hiberniam, Scotiam, necnon Italiam, Germaniam, et Galliam
- peragravit, populum exhortans ad propriam sanctificationem, et ut,
- veluti sacro agmine inito, preces fundant pro conversione Anglise.
- Dum perjucundum opus in Scotia prosequeretur, calendis Octobris anni
- 1864, sacrificio missae peracto, ad invisendum antiquae
- consuetudinis amicum (Dom. Robertum Monteith) pergens, ante januam
- amici repentino morbo correptus, a Deo cujus gloriam semper
- quesierat et ab angelis quorum puritatem imitaverat, opitulatus,
- supremam diem clausit, aetatis suae anno 65to. Requiescat in pace."
-
- TRANSLATION.
-
- The mortal remains of Father Ignatius of St. Paul, belonging to the
- Congregation of the Passion, and of the noble family of Spencer. He
- was at first an Anglican minister; then, having been converted to
- the Catholic Church, was ordained into the priesthood at Rome in
- the year 1832. It is wonderful with what constancy of mind for more
- than thirty years he laboured for the conversion of his country.
- {523} He was numbered among the sons of the Passion in the year
- 1847, and always presented an example of all virtues to his
- brethren. He travelled through England, Ireland, Scotland, and even
- Italy, Germany, and France, exhorting the people to their own
- sanctification, and forming themselves, as it were, into a sacred
- army, to pour forth prayers for the conversion of England. While he
- was prosecuting his pleasing work in Scotland, on the 1st of
- October, 1864, and, having offered up the sacrifice of the mass, he
- was going on a visit to a friend he had long been acquainted with
- (Mr. Robert Monteith), when he was carried off by sudden death in
- front of his friend's door, being assisted by God, whose glory he
- had ever sought, and by the angels whose purity he had imitated. He
- closed his life in the 65th year of his age. May he rest in peace."
-
-When all the arrangements were completed, the coffin was placed upon
-the tier appropriated for its reception, and the bishop and clergy
-retired.
-
-Thus has ended the life of one who for fifteen years pursued his
-missionary work, as a priest of the Order of the Passion, with an
-ardour that has seldom been surpassed. Truly may it be said of him,
-"Dying, he lives."
-
-Favours are said to have been obtained from heaven through his
-intercession, since his death; and it is even recorded that miracles
-have been performed by his relics. These facts have not been, as yet,
-sufficiently authenticated for publication; and, therefore, it is
-judged better not to insert them. We confidently hope that a few years
-will see him enrolled in the catalogue of saints, as the first English
-Confessor since the Reformation.
-
-Every step we make, as we recede from this last scene, brings us
-nearer to the moment when the requiescat ought to be heard over
-ourselves. For
-
- "The pride of luxury, the pomp of power,
- And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave,
- Await alike the inevitable hour;--
- The paths of glory lead but to the grave."
-
-How vain is a life spent in pursuit of riches! when the {524} shroud
-that envelops our bones will have to be given us. How vain are the
-appliances of comfort and pleasure which wealth can spread around us!
-when the body we pamper is to be the food of worms. How vain, is power
-and extent of territory! when the snapping of the thread of our
-existence will leave us completely in the hands of others, and confine
-us to less than seven feet of earth.
-
-Let the example of the holy Passionist, whose life we studied, make us
-recognise this truth, before it is too late--that all is vanity but
-the service of God. He tasted the sweets of this world until he found
-out their bitterness; let his example deter others from plunging into
-the whirl of dissipation, from which few can come out uninjured. He
-laid down his honours, his titles, his property, at the foot of the
-cross, and he joyfully placed _its_ transverse beams upon his
-shoulder. There was nothing this world could give him which he did not
-sacrifice unhesitatingly. He never took back from the altar a single
-particle of the offerings he placed upon it. Since the moment he
-understood that the end of his existence was the happiness of the
-blessed, he went straight to his eternal goal, and turned not to the
-right hand nor to the left. God was always in his mind; God was on his
-lips; God was in his works. We cannot admire his sacrifices, for it
-would be a mistake to suppose his mind was not noble enough to feel
-that all he could give was only a barter of earth for heaven.
-
-Let the world applaud its heroes, and raise expensive monuments to
-remind others of their renown. Father Ignatius sought not the praise
-of the world; its frowns were all he desired. He looked not for its
-sympathy, he crossed its ways, he gave the lie to its maxims, he
-trampled it under his feet. But the servants of God will not forget
-him. They will turn off the high road to come as pilgrims to the spot
-where his pure soul left its earthly tenement. To mark out the place,
-Mr. Monteith has erected a cross upon the corner of the avenue where
-the saintly father fell. Subjoined is an engraving of the monument,
-and it fitly closes up this history, as it perpetually points to his
-example.
-
-{525}
-
-
-ON THIS SPOT THE HONBLE. AND REV. GEORGE SPENCER,
-IN RELIGION, FATHER IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL, PASSIONIST,
-WHILE IN THE MIDST OF HIS LABOURS
-FOR THE SALVATION OF SOULS, AND THE RESTORATION OF HIS
-COUNTRYMEN TO THE UNITY OF THE FAITH, WAS SUDDENLY
-CALLED BY HIS HEAVENLY MASTER TO HIS
-ETERNAL HOME. OCTOBER 1ST, 1864.
- _R.I.P._
-
-
-{526}
-
-Cox And Wyman,
-Classical And General Printers,
-Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields.
-
-
-[Transcriber's Note: The following list contains the words and names
-flagged by the spell check, and verified by inspection.]
-
-AEgina
-AEolus
-Abbate
-Abbaye
-Abbé
-Aberdovey
-Aberystwyth
-Acatholicorum
-Accademia
-Achensee
-Achenthal
-Acland
-Addolorata
-Adige
-Adolphus
-Adonises
-Aebel
-Affetti
-Affi
-Afra
-Agneses
-Agrippa
-Ahamo
-Aigle
-Airdrie
-Aix
-Alban
-Albano
-Albemarle
-Albergo
-Albero
-Alcantara
-Alessandro
-Alleine
-Aloysiuses
-Alphonsus
-Alraschid
-Alte
-Althorp
-Ambrosian
-Amelia
-Amhersts
-Amiens
-Amphitheatre
-Ampleforth
-Anastasius
-Ancona
-Angleur
-Angliae
-Angliam
-Anglicanus
-Anglise
-Annecy
-Annonciades
-Antonelli
-Apostolical
-Apostolici
-Apostolics
-Apostolines
-Apostolorum
-Appleyard
-Arcadinia
-Archimedes
-Archivium
-Ardee
-Arfi
-Argentaro
-Ariopolis
-Arius
-Armagh
-Armytage
-Athenry
-Aucy
-Auer
-Augsburg
-Augustin
-Augustine
-Augustus
-Auxerre
-Auxonne
-Avona
-Bac
-Bacten
-Badische
-Bagshawe
-Baily
-Baines
-Bains
-Baldacconi
-Ballina
-Ballinasloe
-Ballinrobe
-Ballycastle
-Ballyshannon
-Bandry
-Barbarossa
-Bareau
-Barnabites
-Barnabò
-Barnet
-Baronne
-Barras
-Barrington
-Basiaco
-Basse
-Battersea
-Baudry
-Bavino
-Bavière
-Bayerische
-Beauharnais
-Beauvais
-Bede
-Bella
-Bellaymont
-Belley
-Benvenuto
-Berchtesgaden
-Bergamo
-Bergues
-Bermondsey
-Bernardine
-Bernardines
-Bernardites
-Bertin
-Bessy
-Bethusy
-Beveridge
-Bighi
-Bingham
-Birkenhead
-Birr
-Bishopsgate
-Blackbrook
-Blackstone
-Blaise
-Blanc
-Blanco
-Blandford
-Blore
-Blount
-Bobbio
-Bodalog
-Bodenham
-Bolognaro
-Bolton
-Bonald
-Boniface
-Bonquéan
-Bootle
-Bopeep
-Borris
-Bosketto
-Bossuet
-Botanique
-Botolph
-Botzen
-Boulanger
-Boulogne
-Bourgoigne
-Bourgoiner
-Bourjéant
-Bouverie
-Bouvet
-Bracebridge
-Bradshaw
-Brampton
-Bramston
-Brenner
-Brera
-Brescia
-Bridget
-Bridgman
-Brigy
-Brixen
-Brock
-Broek
-Buckinghamshire
-Bunyan
-Burchall
-Béguinage
-Béguinages
-Caesars
-Caestryck
-Caffi
-Calasanctius
-Caldaro
-Caldaron
-Calddaron
-Callaghan
-Caltern
-Calvario
-Camaldolese
-Cambrai
-Cameriere
-Camperdown
-Cancellaria
-Canonico
-Canova
-Cantius
-Capellani
-Capellano
-Capellari
-Capistrano
-Capitoline
-Capriana
-Capua
-Cardham
-Carità
-Carlow
-Carlsruhe
-Carlton
-Carnarvon
-Carrara
-Carraway
-Carrick
-Carrickmacross
-Carstairs
-Carthusian
-Cartsdyke
-Casiua
-Castello
-Castlebar
-Castlerea
-Catholicam
-Catholici
-Catholicising
-Catullus
-Caudatario
-Cavallesi
-Cavani
-Cavanis
-Cavendish
-Cellini
-Celso
-Cenis
-Certosa
-Chaillot
-Chamberry
-Chanoine
-Chanoinesses
-Chapelle
-Chargé
-Charité
-Charnpagnole
-Cheapside
-Childe
-Cholmley
-Chombard
-Christies
-Chrom
-Chrysostom
-Chrétienne
-Chrétiennes
-Churchism
-Cigne
-Città
-Claires
-Clarendon
-Clerkenwell
-Clermont
-Clogher
-Coatbridge
-Coblentz
-Coeur
-Cointe
-Colae
-Coleridge
-Coletines
-Collegio
-Collinge
-Colney
-Colomba
-Colossians
-Columb
-Columbanus
-Comitibus
-Complin
-Comte
-Conden
-Confrérie
-Connaught
-Connexion
-Constantius
-Consultors
-Conte
-Contessa
-Contrada
-Convardy
-Conventual
-Cooke
-Cornelius
-Corte
-Costello
-Cottril
-Coultins
-Councillor
-Couronne
-Courtene
-Couvent
-Coux
-Covent
-Cowper
-Cranmer
-Crawley
-Croix
-Cromwellian
-Crowe
-Crusoe
-Cullinamore
-Cullinge
-Cumming
-Cussel
-Cuthbert
-Damasus
-Damietta
-Dandolo
-Daubeny
-Decanus
-Denison
-Denys
-Deo
-Deschamps
-Desgenettes
-Dessin
-Deum
-Devon
-Dezenzano
-Dieu
-Digby
-Digbys
-Directeur
-Divisione
-Doddridge
-Doge
-Dolors
-Doluny
-Domely
-Domenico
-Domini
-Domitian
-Domodossola
-Domscholasticus
-Donnel
-Donnet
-Doogan
-Doria
-Dorsetshire
-Douane
-Douay
-Dougall
-Drei
-Drogheda
-Drummond
-Drury
-Dubois
-Duc
-Dudley
-Dugdale
-Duggan
-Dumez
-Duncannon
-Dundalk
-Dundas
-Dungannon
-Dunton
-Duomo
-Durer
-Durier
-Durlet
-Désingy
-Döllinger
-EXUVIAE
-Easky
-Ecclesiam
-Ecclesiasticus
-Ecoles
-Econome
-Edgware
-Egna
-Ehrhart
-Elmesly
-Elwes
-Ely
-Ennis
-Enniscrone
-Enniskillen
-Episcopi
-Eplingen
-Errington
-Erroye
-Eryx
-Esterhazy
-Etonians
-Eustachio
-Eyre
-Ezechiel
-Falconeria
-Ferdinand
-Feretti
-Ferrara
-Ferrario
-Ferrarrio
-Ferronaye
-Festus
-Fidele
-Fiumicino
-Flandre
-Florentin
-Floriano
-Folkestone
-Fontainebleau
-Fornari
-Francesi
-Franchismes
-Frari
-Fratelli
-Frati
-Fratte
-Freakley
-Fremantle
-Friot
-Froud
-Frujberg
-Frères
-Fumagalli
-Gaetano
-Gagliardi
-Gallard
-Galliam
-Galway
-Gand
-Ganymede
-Garda
-Gardiner
-Garendon
-Garnault
-Gasthof
-Gaudentius
-Gavan
-Gaèta
-Genevese
-Genoese
-Gentili
-Georgiana
-Georgio
-Germain
-Germaniam
-Germanico
-Gernetto
-Gervase
-Gesang
-Gesangen
-Gesù
-Ghent
-Gibbs
-Gideon
-Gillies
-Gingolph
-Giovanelli
-Girardon
-Giuseppe
-Giustiniani
-Glassbrooke
-Gloucester
-Glyptotheke
-Godley
-Gorey
-Gorres
-Gort
-Gothsburg
-Gottez
-Graf
-Graffanara
-Grahame
-Gramont
-Grandvilliers
-Grantham
-Gratz
-Greci
-Greenock
-Grenville
-Grettan
-Griffiths
-Grimstone
-Grirgenti
-Grises
-Grosvenor
-Grue
-Grâce
-Gudule
-Gustavus
-Guttenburg
-Général
-Göppingen
-Görres
-Görreses
-Haffreingue
-Hagley
-Halford
-Hallein
-Hampstead
-Handley
-Handsworth
-Hanicq
-Hapsburg
-Harleston
-Haroun
-Havant
-Havre
-Headfort
-Heber
-Hendren
-Heneage
-Heywood
-Hiberniam
-Highgate
-Hilary
-Hildersham
-Hildyard
-Hilloa
-Hinckley
-Hippolyte
-Hodder
-Hoffa
-Holborn
-Holme
-Holyhead
-Hornby
-Hornsey
-Hospitalieres
-Hospitalières
-Howley
-Humanarianism
-Hyde
-Hôtel
-Hüffler
-Ignatii
-Ignatius
-Ignazio
-Illyricum
-Imola
-Imperiale
-Inglesi
-Innspruck
-Inspruck
-Irvingites
-Isabella
-Isola
-Italiam
-Jacquenot
-Jandel
-Januarius
-Jaques
-Jardin
-Jauch
-Jaudel
-Jeffreys
-Jesu
-Jette
-Jeune
-Johnstone
-Julien
-Jura
-Kells
-Kempis
-Kenilworth
-Kentish
-Kernane
-Kildare
-Kilkenny
-Killala
-Kille
-Kinnaird
-Kirche
-Kirchen
-Kissengen
-Kitzka
-Knickerbocker
-Koenigswinter
-Kreutz
-Krone
-Krono
-Kurtzrock
-Köln
-Kölner
-König
-Königswinter
-L'Arco
-L'Hospice
-L'Hôpital
-Lago
-Laibach
-Laing
-Lanark
-Lancashire
-Landeck
-Landherr
-Lapons
-Lateran
-Lavinia
-Lavorno
-Lazarists
-Lazzari
-Lazzaro
-LeSage
-Leamington
-Lefevre
-Leicestershire
-Leinster
-Leith
-Leuchtenberg
-Levenshulme
-Lichfield
-Lichtenthal
-Liguori
-Lingdale
-Lintz
-Litchenstein
-Lithgoe
-Liège
-Liége
-Llanarth
-Loewenstein
-Londonderry
-Londra
-Londres
-Longford
-Lorenzo
-Lorrha
-Lothaire
-Loughborough
-Loughren
-Louvain
-Lowther
-Lucan
-Lucca
-Luigi
-Lurgan
-Lutzou
-Lyall
-Lyne
-Lythgoe
-Lyttelton
-M'Auley
-M'Donnel
-M'Ghee
-M'Hale
-MacMahon
-Mackey
-Macky
-Maddalena
-Madeleine
-Maestricht
-Maggiora
-Maggiore
-Maguire
-Mahomedanism
-Mai
-Maison
-Maitland
-Malibren
-Malines
-Malou
-Manheim
-Manige
-Mannering
-Mantua
-Mantz
-Marais
-Marano
-Marenn
-Marlborough
-Marsomme
-Martigny
-Martyn
-Marys
-Maréehal
-Matraey
-Matsys
-Matthias
-Maude
-Mawman
-Maximilian
-Mayence
-Maynooth
-McHale
-Meagher
-Melia
-Mellerio
-Mellon
-Mercati
-Mercede
-Merionethshire
-Messias
-Methodistic
-Mezzofanti
-Mgr
-Mildert
-Millière
-Mirum
-Miserere
-Mislin
-Missionum
-Miséricorde
-Mittewald
-Modena
-Mohren
-Moneti
-Mongeras
-Monico
-Monreale
-Mont
-Montalembert
-Montebello
-Monteith
-Montmartre
-Montrose
-Monza
-Morey
-Morley
-Moselle
-Moy
-Mullingar
-Mungo
-Musée
-Mère
-Mörl
-Mühler
-Münster
-Namur
-Nannette
-Nantes
-Navarino
-Neill
-Nemfchatel
-Neri
-Nerincx
-Nerlieu
-Neuenburg
-Neumarkt
-Neuve
-Newgate
-Newry
-Nicholl
-Nicholls
-Nives
-Nobil
-Nobottle
-Noires
-Noirlieu
-Nore
-Northampton
-Northamptonshire
-Nottinghamshire
-Novara
-Nuelleus
-Nunzio
-Nymphenburg
-Nyon
-O'Connell
-O'Donnel
-O'Flynn
-O'Kane
-O'Keefe
-O'Reilly
-OEdipus
-Oakeley
-Observantiae
-Octobris
-Odescalchi
-Oldbury
-Ollivant
-Omagh
-Omer
-Oppido
-Oratorian
-Oratorians
-Orioli
-Osmond
-Ospitaletto
-Ostend
-Osteria
-Otaheitan
-Oudley
-Ouseley
-Overbury
-Ovid
-Oxburgh
-Oxley
-Oxonians
-Pacci
-Packenham
-Paderborn
-Padua
-Pagliano
-Palais
-Palladio
-Pallotta
-Palmerston
-Paoli
-Papi
-Papin
-Paroco
-Pasaro
-Pasquale
-Passaglia
-Passi
-Passio
-Passionis
-Passionists
-Passsionists
-Patit
-Patris
-Pauvres
-Pavia
-Pazzi
-Pearse
-Peasly
-Pensieri
-Peppenheim
-Percival
-Persico
-Perugia
-Pesaro
-Peterborough
-Peterbro
-Petits
-Pffarr
-Phillippses
-Picquart
-Piedmontese
-Pietra
-Pietro
-Pilsach
-Pinacotheke
-Pio
-Pittsburg
-Placentia
-Plainpalais
-Polidori
-Poligny
-Pollien
-Poole
-Porte
-Portobello
-Poste
-Postes
-Powys
-Poynter
-Poète
-Premonstratensian
-Pritchard
-Protase
-Prémontré
-Pugin
-Puseyite
-Père
-Pères
-Quarant
-Quater
-Quelin
-Quin
-Quintin
-Raal
-Raby
-Radhoff
-Raffaele
-Raffaelle
-Rainhill
-Rathmines
-Ratisbonne
-Reale
-Recollets
-Reddington
-Redemptorist
-Redemptorists
-Redentore
-Reggio
-Regierung
-Reichenbach
-Reichenhall
-Reiner
-Religieuses
-Rennel
-Resburg
-Reverendus
-Revolutionnaire
-Riland
-Rimini
-Rios
-Riva
-Robertum
-Roch
-Rodolph
-Rodrigues
-Roehampton
-Romae
-Romney
-Romonam
-Rosamel
-Roscommon
-Rosinini
-Roskell
-Rosmini
-Rossiaud
-Rotundo
-Rousses
-Roveredo
-Rovigo
-Royale
-Rugeley
-Ryde
-Régulières
-Sabbato
-Sacrement
-Sacré
-Sainte
-Salesiani
-Salford
-Salle
-Salut
-Salvian
-Sancto
-Sankey
-Saul
-Sayburne
-Scaligeri
-Scheppers
-Schlager
-Schlussheim
-Scholfield
-Schutz
-Schwartzenberg
-Scotiam
-Scylla
-Seager
-Sebastians
-Secours
-Sedgeley
-Sedgley
-Segnini
-Segreto
-Semei
-Sens
-Senufft
-Sepulchrines
-Servites
-Sestri
-Sevres
-Sharples
-Shenton
-Shrewsbury
-Sibthorpe
-Sigismund
-Silvestro
-Simeon
-Simeonites
-Simplon
-Sion
-Sisk
-Sitientis
-Sitorstro
-Slattery
-Sligo
-Snowdon
-Società
-Socinians
-Soeur
-Soeurs
-Somal
-Somers
-Sonne
-Sophia
-Southcote
-Southport
-Southwark
-Spence
-Spencers
-Spiritu
-Spoleto
-Sta
-Stadler
-Stafford
-Staffordshire
-Ste
-Steigmeier
-Stockport
-Stourbridge
-Stowell
-Strabane
-Strarzing
-Strass
-Strictioris
-Stromboli
-Stuttgard
-Subdiaconate
-Suide
-Suir
-Suisse
-Sulpice
-Sumner
-Sunderland
-Superiores
-Superioress
-Sutrio
-Sweers
-Swithin
-Syriac
-Séez
-Séminaire
-Tallier
-Tavel
-Tavola
-Tegern
-Teresas
-Terracina
-Tertiariae
-Theatine
-Theophilus
-Thillay
-Thistlethwick
-Thonon
-Thornton
-Thorntons
-Thorwaldsen
-Throckmorton
-Thurles
-Thursby
-Tillotson
-Tipperary
-Tipton
-Titchmarsh
-Tivoli
-Tolérance
-Tomline
-Tommaso
-Tonnerre
-Torri
-Tournai
-Tournay
-Towyn
-Tractarianism
-Tractarians
-Trapani
-Trappists
-Trelawny
-Trieste
-Trinitatem
-Troitteur
-Trélouquet
-Tuam
-Tubal
-Tuileries
-Turpin
-Turtinan
-Tusmarchausan
-Tyrannus
-Tyrolese
-Ullathorne
-Ulm
-Ulrick
-Univers
-Upton
-Ursulines
-Ushaw
-Valais
-Valens
-Valle
-Vanderghote
-Vandervelde
-Veich
-Venuses
-Verme
-Vespasiani
-Veuillet
-Vicaire
-Vicarii
-Vicario
-Viceregal
-Vichi
-Victoires
-Vigoreux
-Ville
-Villiers
-Vincentians
-Vittadini
-Vollemaux
-Wallwork
-Walmsley
-Walsall
-Wareing
-Warrington
-Warwick
-Waterland
-Waterton
-Watkinson
-Waverly
-Wesleyans
-Westbromwich
-Westland
-Westport
-Wexford
-Wheatley
-Whelan
-Whitechapel
-Whitgrave
-Wildbad
-Wilfrid
-Willoughby
-Wilton
-Wimbach
-Wimbledon
-Windischman
-Windischmann
-Wiseman
-Wiseton
-Witherall
-Wodehouse
-Wolverhampton
-Woodchester
-Woodwich
-Woollett
-Wrede
-Wykes
-Wyman
-Yarmouth
-Yoris
-Zebedee
-Zeno
-Zenone
-Zeuft
-Zoccolanti
-Zurla
-absconditum
-acatholicorum
-acceptatio
-accuratiore
-adorans
-adscriptus
-advices
-aetatis
-agmine
-alb
-aliquid
-alle
-altitudo
-alumnos
-amici
-amicum
-amplius
-ancles
-angelis
-animi
-anni
-anno
-annonces
-annos
-antependium
-antichristian
-antiquae
-anyways
-apologised
-apostacy
-apostleship
-apostolical
-apud
-arbours
-archévêché
-ardour
-ardours
-argumentum
-armour
-arti
-ascetism
-athanasian
-attaché
-auri
-availeth
-avocat
-banc
-baptised
-beforetime
-behaviour
-believeth
-bene
-benedixit
-beneplacitum
-benigne
-blameably
-blaney
-blessest
-blomfield
-blushings
-bono
-bonum
-borga
-bowings
-brava
-brington
-brodo
-bromwich
-buon
-burnings
-burthen
-burthensome
-café
-calendis
-candour
-capite
-capitular
-careth
-catechise
-catino
-celebret
-centre
-chasse
-chemin
-cheque
-chequered
-châlets
-château
-clausit
-coffinless
-coloured
-colouring
-colours
-committest
-confluentia
-confratribus
-confrères
-congregationis
-connexion
-conseilleur
-consistorium
-constantia
-consuetudinis
-contradistinguished
-controverted
-conversable
-conversione
-conversus
-convictor
-correptus
-corruptions
-corse
-cortile
-cortége
-counsellor
-coze
-cracky
-credas
-criticises
-cudgelling
-cui
-cujus
-curé
-d'Allinges
-d'Avroy
-d'Ere
-d'Oro
-d'acqua
-d'affaires
-d'hôte
-d'hôtel
-d'état
-dantis
-decrepid
-defectible
-defence
-dei
-dein
-del
-della
-des
-despatch
-despatching
-develope
-diaconate
-dignitas
-dignitate
-diligitis
-disant
-disedification
-disfavour
-dishonour
-dishonourable
-diuturniore
-dolendum
-doloribus
-dost
-drogget
-duelling
-dum
-dura
-ecce
-ecstacy
-eilwayen
-ejusdem
-emisit
-employments
-endeavour
-endeavoured
-endeavouring
-endeavours
-endureth
-enfants
-engraven
-equalled
-erecter
-esse
-est
-estatica
-eventless
-examen
-examens
-excipere
-exhortans
-experimento
-exposé
-extenso
-extitit
-fames
-famille
-fastnesses
-faubourg
-favere
-favour
-favourable
-favourably
-favoured
-favourite
-favours
-façade
-felicitiously
-fer
-feretrum
-ferventiori
-fervour
-fidei
-fidelium
-flere
-foreshadowings
-formá
-formâ
-fourchette
-fourgon
-frisonnant
-froward
-fulfil
-fulfilment
-fulfils
-fulness
-fundant
-funzioni
-gardes
-gathereth
-genere
-gentem
-gloriam
-goldene
-goldenen
-gospelling
-gras
-gratias
-gregorine
-griefs
-guardia
-gulph
-haereticorum
-hap
-harbour
-hast
-hateth
-haud
-heresiarchs
-hibernian
-hisce
-hoff
-holdeth
-hominem
-honour
-honourable
-honoured
-honouring
-honours
-hosier
-humour
-humoured
-humours
-hyaena
-illum
-imbuta
-imitaverat
-immodesties
-inclinato
-inito
-insignitus
-instructum
-interpositions
-invisendum
-ipsi
-januam
-jocosely
-judico
-jugiter
-kilometres
-knowest
-l'Abbé
-l'Eglise
-l'Europe
-l'Hôtel
-l'Immaculé
-l'Instruction
-l'estatica
-l'Étoile
-laboraverat
-labour
-laboured
-labourer
-labourers
-labouring
-labours
-lagune
-laquais
-laudo
-laus
-leadeth
-les
-levelled
-levelling
-licence
-licences
-lille
-lionised
-literis
-lucifers
-lustre
-maccaroni
-magnam
-maigre
-malades
-maraviglia
-marchant
-mariae
-materfamilias
-maître
-mein
-mementoes
-methodistical
-minutanti
-mio
-misdemeanour
-missae
-mitre
-mitres
-monachism
-monomonia
-monsignores
-morbo
-mortales
-moulding
-mêlée
-nautico
-nazione
-necessarium
-necnon
-neighbour
-neighbourhood
-neighbouring
-neighbours
-nempe
-nobile
-nobili
-nomen
-novercal
-noviciate
-novitiorum
-novum
-nulla
-née
-octodecimo
-odorem
-odour
-omittant
-omne
-omnes
-omnium
-onked
-opitulatus
-oratorium
-ortus
-oscott
-ostensoire
-ostracised
-otium
-outstep
-partibus
-passeth
-passionist
-pastrycook
-paters
-patriae
-patronised
-pauperis
-pensionnaires
-pensionnat
-peracto
-peragravit
-pergens
-perjucundum
-personarum
-petens
-pfarren
-pfeiffe
-phillipps
-piissimis
-pirotecnico
-pleasantest
-populum
-pourtrayed
-practise
-practised
-practises
-practising
-praecesserunt
-praesertim
-prebendary
-preces
-primissario
-primum
-probetur
-proindeque
-promovere
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-
-[Transcriber's Note: End spell check list.]
-
-
-
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-Passionist., by Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto
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-<html>
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-<head>
-<meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type">
-<title>
-Father Ignatius of St. Paul, Passionist.
-</title>
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-
-.center { text-align: center; }
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-.image { text-align: center; }
-
-.right { text-align: right; }
-
-.pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
- /* visibility: hidden; */
- position: absolute;
- left: 92%;
- font-size: smaller;
- text-align: right;
-} /* page numbers */
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-</head>
-
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Father Ignatius of St. Paul,
-Passionist., by Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Life of Father Ignatius of St. Paul, Passionist.
- The Hon. & Rev. George Spencer
-
-Author: Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto
-
-Release Date: March 5, 2016 [EBook #51370]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FATHER IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Don Kostuch
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<p class="cite">
-[Transcriber's notes]<br>
- This text is derived from http://www.archive.org.
-<br><br>
- Although square brackets [] usually designate footnotes or
- transcriber's notes, they do appear in the original text.
-<br><br>
- Lengthy quotation have been indented.<br>
-[End Transcriber's notes]
-</p>
-<br><br>
-<h1>Life of
-Father Ignatius of St. Paul,
-Passionist.</h1>
-
-
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i">{i}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii">{ii}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<p class="image">
-<img alt="" src="images/portrait.jpg" border=1><br>
-Picture and Autograph of Fr. Ignatius<br>
-</p>
-
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii">{iii}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h1>LIFE OF
-<br>
-<i>Father Ignatius of St. Paul,</i>
-<br><br>
-PASSIONIST </h1>
-<p class="center">
-(The Hon. &amp; Rev. George Spencer).
-<br><br>
-<i>Compiled chiefly from his</i>
-<br>
-Autobiography, Journal, & Letters.
-<br>
-BY
-<br>
-The Rev. Father Pius A Sp. Sancto,
-<br>
-Passionist.
-</p>
-
-<br>
-<p class="center">
-DUBLIN:
-<br>
-James Duffy, 15, Wellington Quay; <br>
-And 22, Paternoster Row, London.
-<br><br>
-1866.
-<br><br>
-[The right of translation is reserved.]
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv">{iv}</a></span>
-<p class="center">
-Cox And Wyman,
-</p>
-<p class="center">
-Classical and General Printers,
-Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, W.C.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v">{v}</a></span>
-<p class="center">
-<i>To the Very Reverend</i>
-<br>
-Father Ignatius Of The Infant Jesus,
-<Br>
-Passionist,
-<Br>
-Long The Director Of Father Ignatius Of St. Paul,
-<Br>
-For Nine Years The Faithful Steward Of The Anglo-Hibernian
-<Br>
-Province, Which He Found A Handful And Made A Host,
-<Br>
-This Volume,
-<Br>
-Written By His Order And Published With His Blessing,
-<Br>
-Is Dedicated,
-<Br>
-To Testify The Gratitude All His Subjects Feel, And The Most
-Unworthy Of Them Tries To Express,
-<Br>
-By His Paternity's
-<Br>
-Devoted And Affectionate Child,
-<Br><Br>
-The Author.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi">{vi}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii">{vii}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h1>Preface.</h1>
-<br>
-<p>
-Great servants of God have seldom been
-understood in their lifetime. Persecution
-has assailed them often, from quarters
-where help would be expected in their
-defence. Even holy souls are sometimes mistaken
-about the particular line of virtue which distinguishes
-their contemporaries from themselves. St. John of
-the Cross, St. Joseph Calasanctius, and St. Alphonsus
-Liguori, have had the close of their lives embittered,
-as we might call it, by domestic persecution; and it
-was some time before their splendour, as they vanished
-from the horizon of life, rose again to its zenith, and
-outshone its former glory. If the impartial eye, with
-which we read their actions, fails to find a plea for
-the manner they have been dealt with, let us remember
-that we have no interests at stake&mdash;no false
-colouring of passion to blind us. Death, indeed,
-does not always mow down mistaken notions with
-the life of him about whom they are taken up. We
-must, however, be thankful that it slays so many
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii">{viii}</a></span>
-wrong impressions, and attribute the residue to other
-causes.
-</p>
-<p>
-Justice to the dead is an impulse of nature; and
-those who would qualify praise of the living by the
-mention of unworthy actions or inferior motives, will
-qualify blame of the dead by a contrary proceeding.
-This instinct has its golden mean as well as every
-other. If an ancient Greek ostracised a man because
-he was praised by every one, many moderns will defend
-a man because he is similarly blamed.
-</p>
-<p>
-Whenever there exists a difference of opinion about
-a man during life, it requires some length of time
-after he has departed, for prejudice to settle to the
-bottom, and allow his genuine character to be seen
-through clearly.
-</p>
-<p>
-These facts, and the experience of history, lead us
-to conclude that a man's life cannot be impartially
-written when his memory is yet fresh in people's
-minds. Thousands have had opportunities of judging,
-and bring their impressions to compare them with the
-page that records the actions from which they were
-taken; and if they be different from the idea the
-biographer intends to convey, it is not probable
-that, in every case, their possessors will be content to
-lay them aside. It is supposed, moreover, that a
-biographer owes a kind of vassalage to his subject&mdash;
-that he is obliged to defend him through thick and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix">{ix}</a></span>
-thin&mdash;in good and evil report. He is obliged, according
-to traditionary, though arbitrary laws, to
-suppress whatever will not tell in his favour, to put
-the very best face upon what he is compelled to
-relate, and to make the most of excellencies. His
-opinion, therefore, must be received with caution, for
-it is his duty to be partial, in the most odious sense
-of that word, and it would be a capital sin to deviate
-from this long-established rule.
-</p>
-<p>
-These difficulties do not beset the life that is here
-presented to the public. Father Ignatius had his
-alternations of praise and blame during life; but
-those who thought least of him were forced to admit
-his great sanctity. If this latter quality be conceded,
-apology has no room. An admitted saint does not
-require to be defended; for the <i>aureola</i> of his own
-brow will shed the light through which his actions
-are to be viewed. We see, therefore, no wrong impressions
-that require to be removed&mdash;no calumnies
-that have to be cleared away&mdash;nothing, in fact, to be
-done, except to give a faithful history of his life.
-For this reason, we venture to publish this work
-before the second anniversary of his death; and it
-would have been published sooner, if the materials
-from which it is composed could have been arranged
-and digested.
-</p>
-<p>
-Again, he was heedless of the praise or blame of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x">{x}</a></span>
-men himself, and it would be an injustice to his
-memory to wait for a favourable moment for giving
-his thoughts publicity.
-</p>
-<p>
-Those who expect to find nothing in the lives of
-holy people but goodness and traits of high spirituality,
-will be disappointed when they read this.
-Those who are accustomed to read that some saints
-indeed have lived rather irregularly in their youth,
-but find themselves left in blessed ignorance of what
-those irregularities were, will also be disappointed.
-They shall find here recorded that young Spencer was
-not a saint, and they shall be given data whereon to
-form their own opinion too. They shall see him pass
-through various phases of religious views, and shall
-find themselves left to draw their own conclusions
-about his conduct throughout.
-</p>
-<p>
-And now, perhaps, it is better to give some reasons
-why this course was adopted in writing his life, rather
-than the usual one. Besides that already given, there
-are two others.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the first place, ordinary, well-meaning Christians
-feel disheartened when they find saints ready to be
-canonized from their infancy, and cannot think of the
-Magdalenes when they find the calendar full of Marys,
-and Agneses, and Teresas. Neither will they reflect
-much on an Augustin, when the majority are Sebastians
-and Aloysiuses. Here is an example to help
-these people on; and they are the greater number.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi">{xi}</a></span>
-We have therefore shown Father Ignatius's weak
-points as well as his strong ones; we have brought
-him out in his written life precisely as he was in
-reality.
-</p>
-<p>
-He comes before us with a mind full of worldly
-notions, he traces his own steps away from rectitude,
-he makes his confession to the whole world. How
-many will see in the youth he passed, far away from
-God and grazing the edge of the bottomless precipice,
-a perfect illustration of their own youth. Let them
-then follow him through life. They shall find him a
-prey to the worst passions, anger, pride, and their
-kindred tendencies. They shall see him put his hand
-to the plough, and, according to the measure of his
-grace and light, subduing first one, and then another
-of his inclinations. They can trace his passage through
-life, and see that he has so far overcome his passions
-that an equivocal warmth of temper is a thing to be
-wondered at in him. There is a servant of God that
-gives us courage, we need not despond when he leads
-the way for us. Occasional imperfections are mentioned
-towards the latter part of his life. These only
-show that he was a man and not an angel, and that a
-defect now and again is not at all incompatible with
-great holiness.
-</p>
-<p>
-There was a reality about the man that can never
-leave the minds of those who knew him. He hated
-shams. He would have the brightest consequences of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii">{xii}</a></span>
-faith realized. He would not have the Gospel laws be
-mere matter of sentimental platitudes, but great
-realities pervading life and producing their legitimate
-effects. He went into them, heart and soul; and the
-few points in which he seemed to go this side or that
-of the mean of virtue in their observance, we have recorded,
-that others may see how he observed them.
-Exceptions show the beauty of a rule; and this is the
-second reason why we have written as a historian and
-not as a panegyrist.
-</p>
-<p>
-And now for an account of the materials from which
-the memoir has been compiled. He wrote an account
-of his life about the year 1836. He was then on a
-bed of sickness from which he scarcely expected to
-rise; but we shall give his own reasons for writing
-what he has written. The autobiography begins
-thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "When a man comes before the world as an author,
- there is much danger of his being actuated by motives
- of which he does not like to acknowledge the influence,
- and people are so naturally disposed to suspect the
- motive to be something different from that which
- ought to be the leading one of all our important
- actions, and especially of those which are possessed
- by our religious actions; namely, the honour of God,
- and our own neighbour's good; that the common
- preface to such works is, to guard the author against
- the imputation of vanity or of self-love, in some one
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii">{xiii}</a></span>
- or other of the contemptible forms in which it rules
- so widely in this poor world of ours. Such introductory
- apologies, on the part of an author, will not, I believe,
- meet with full credit with those who know the world.
- Those who are most obviously the slaves of self-will,
- will, generally, be loudest in their protestations of the
- purity and excellence of their motives; so that my
- advice to those who wish to establish in the minds of
- others a good opinion of their sincerity, would generally
- be, to say nothing about it, and let their conduct
- speak for itself. Yet this is not what I intend to do
- in the commencement of my present work. What I
- have undertaken is, <i>to give to the public</i> a history of
- my own mind. I shall make it my study to recollect
- with accuracy and to state with truth the motives, the
- impressions, and the feelings by which I have been
- guided in the important passages of my past life; and
- therefore there seems to be some peculiar reason,
- from the nature of the work itself, why I should commence
- by stating why I have undertaken it. Yet I
- will not venture to say positively what are my motives.
- I rather shall state, in the sight of God and of my
- brethren, what are the motives which I allow myself
- to entertain in deliberately presenting a history of my
- thoughts <i>to the public</i>. My readers are at liberty to
- judge me in their own way, and suppose that I deceive
- myself in the view I take of my own intentions as much
- or as little as to them shall seem probable. Of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi">{xvi}</a></span>
- which, have obliged me to leave my flock to the care of
- others, while my proper business is to be, for a time,
- to recover my health by rest and relaxation. Here
- then is an opportunity for undertaking something in
- the way of writing; and I am about to make what
- I conceive is the most valuable contribution in my
- power to the works already existing for the defence
- of our Holy Faith.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have not the knowledge requisite for producing
- a learned work, nor am I ever likely to acquire it. A
- work of fancy or invention is, perhaps, yet further out of
- my line. I never had any talent for compositions in
- which imagination is required. I hardly ever wrote
- a line of poetry except when obliged to it at school or
- college. But it requires neither learning nor imagination
- to give a simple statement of facts, and there is
- a charm in truth which will give to a composition,
- which bears its stamp, an interest more lively, perhaps,
- than what the beauties of poetry and fiction are employed
- to adorn.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I believe the history of the human mind must
- always be interesting. If the most insignificant of
- men could but be taught to write a correct account
- of what has passed within his soul, in any period of
- his existence, the history would be full of wonders
- and instruction; and if, with God's help, I am able to
- fulfil my present undertaking, and to give a picture of
- my own mind and heart, and recount, with truth and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvii">{xvii}</a></span>
- perspicuity, the revolutions which have taken place
- within me, I have no doubt the narrative will be
- interesting. The minds and hearts of men are wonderfully
- alike one to another. They are also wonderfully
- various. Read the history of my mind and you
- will find it interesting, as you know a book of travels
- is, through countries which you have visited. You
- will see your own heart represented to you, and be,
- perhaps, pleasingly reminded of the feelings, the
- projects, the disappointments, the weaknesses of
- days gone by. But I have a greater object before
- me than your amusement. I desire your instruction.
- I may, perchance, throw on some passage of your
- history, on some points of the great picture which a
- retrospect of your past life presents to you, a more
- correct light. I may show you where your views of
- things might have often been more true than they
- were at the time, when your steps might have been
- more prudently, more happily taken, and by the consideration
- of mistakes and errors which I have afterwards
- acknowledged, though once blind to them, and
- from which I have recovered through the goodness of
- God, you may be assisted to take some steps forwards
- in the path of truth and happiness.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I do not, however, propose to myself the benefit
- of others only in this composition. The noblest and
- the most useful study of mankind is man; but, certainly,
- this study is in no way so important as when it
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xviii">{xviii}</a></span>
- is in the contemplation of ourselves that we follow it
- up. It is a high point of wisdom to know and understand
- other men; but we know nothing that will
- indeed avail us if we know not ourselves. Hence,
- while I am undertaking a history of myself for the
- instruction of others, I purpose, at the same time,
- and in the first place, to gain from my researches
- instruction for myself. In now recollecting and declaring
- the doings of God towards me, and my doings
- towards Him, I most earnestly desire an advancement
- in myself of love and humility; would that it might
- be an advancement in perfection! I began this work
- with fervent prayer that I may be preserved from the
- snares with which it may be accompanied; above all,
- that I may not make it an occasion of vain-glory, and
- so turn what ought to be done for God's service and
- for others' good into an offence of God and my own
- exceeding loss; but that, being delivered from the
- danger, I may find it the occasion of exceeding
- spiritual benefit to myself, if it be not to any
- others."
-</p>
-<p>
-The reader must take what Father Ignatius writes
-of himself with some qualifications. He seems to
-have had an invincible propensity to put his worst side
-out in whatever he wrote about himself. He did not
-see his own perfections, he underrated his knowledge,
-his mind, his virtues. He saw good in every one
-except himself. But it is needless to speak much on
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xix">{xix}</a></span>
-this point, as his candour and simplicity are sure to
-make every reader favourable.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is to be regretted that the autobiography does not
-reach farther into his life than his ordination as a
-minister. How gratifying it would have been if we
-could read his interior conflicts, his exterior difficulties,
-his alternations of joy and sadness, in the sweet, affectionate
-style which tells us his early life. But the
-reason must have been:&mdash;He had little to charge
-himself with; he had no faults serious enough to
-lower him in the esteem of men from that time forward,
-and therefore he did not write.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next source of information is his journal. He
-began to keep a journal in 1818, when he first went
-to Cambridge, and continued it uninterruptedly down
-to 1829, a short time before his conversion. We have
-found nothing in the shape of a diary among his
-papers, from that time until the year 1846, a few
-months before he became a Passionist, except a journal
-of a tour he made on the Continent in 1844, and that
-is given entire in the third book. The journal from
-1846, until a few days before his death, is a mere record
-of dates and places in which he has been and persons
-he spoke to. It is so closely written that it is scarcely
-readable by the naked eye, and he gives in one page
-the incidents of six months. This journal was of great
-use to him. It helped his memory and prevented his
-making mistakes in the multitude of scenes through
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xx">{xx}</a></span>
-which, he passed. It is also a valuable contribution to
-the annals of our Order.
-</p>
-<p>
-Besides these two sources of information regarding
-his life, we have had access to a multitude of letters,
-running over the space of upwards of forty years.
-He preserved a great many of the important letters
-he received; and several of his friends, who preserved
-letters received from him as treasures, kindly lent us
-their stock for the preparation of this volume. His
-Eminence the late Cardinal Wiseman gave us what
-letters he possessed, and promised to contribute some
-recollections of his friend, but was prevented by death
-from fulfilling his promise. Our thanks are due to
-their Lordships, the Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne, the
-Right Rev. Dr. Wareing, the Right Rev. Dr. Turner,
-the Right Rev. Dr. Grant, the Right Rev. Dr. Amherst,
-and to several clergymen and lay persons, for their
-kindness in sending us letters and furnishing us with
-anecdotes and pleasing recollections of Father Ignatius.
-Among the latter we are under special obligations to
-Mr. De Lisle and Mr. Monteith. In truth we have
-found all the friends of Father Ignatius most willing
-to assist us in our undertaking. Nor must we forget
-several religious who have helped us in every possible
-way. The information gathered from the correspondence
-has been the most valuable. His letters were
-written to dear friends to whom he laid the very
-inmost of his soul open,&mdash;fervent souls, who sympathized
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxi">{xxi}</a></span>
-with his zealous exertions and profited by his
-advice in advancing themselves and others in the way
-of virtue.
-</p>
-<p>
-The Dowager Lady Lyttelton has kindly furnished
-us with dates and accurate information about the
-members of the Spencer family, and as she is the
-only survivor of the children of John George, Earl
-Spencer, we hope the memory of her dear brother
-will serve to alleviate the weight of her advancing
-years, and prolong them considerably to her children
-and grandchildren. We beg to express our sincere
-thanks for her ladyship's kindness.
-</p>
-<p>
-A fourth and not a less interesting source of information
-has been our own memory. Father Ignatius was
-most communicative to his brethren; indeed he might
-be said to be transparent. We all knew him so well.
-He related the anecdotes that are given in his memoir
-to us all; and when each Father and Brother gave in
-his contribution, the quantity furnished would have
-made a very entertaining life of itself. Their thanks
-must be the consciousness of having helped to keep
-him yet amongst us as far as was possible.
-</p>
-<p>
-These, then, are the sources from which the following
-pages have been compiled. The facts related may
-therefore be relied upon as perfectly authentic. We
-possess the originals of the matter quoted&mdash;vouchers
-for every opinion advanced, and the anecdotes can be
-corroborated by half a dozen of witnesses.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxii">{xxii}</a></span>
-</p>
-<p>
-Seeing that his life had been so diverse, and that
-the changes of thought which influenced the early
-portion of it were so various, it was thought best to
-divide it into four distinct books. The first book takes
-him to the threshold of the Anglican ministry; the
-second into the fold of the Church; the third into
-the Passionist novitiate; and the fourth follows him
-to the grave.
-</p>
-<p>
-We shall let the details speak for themselves, and
-only remark that there is an identity in the character
-as well as in the countenance of a man which underlies
-all the phases of opinion through which he may have
-passed. It will be seen that, from childhood to old
-age, Father Ignatius was remarkable for earnestness
-and reverence. Whatever he thought to be his duty
-he pursued with indomitable perseverance. He was
-not one to cloak over a weak point, or soothe a doubt
-with a trumped-up answer. He candidly admitted
-every difficulty, and went with unflagging zeal into
-clearing it up. This was the key to his conversion.
-He had, besides, even in his greatest vagaries, a
-reverential spirit with regard to his Creator, which
-formed an atmosphere of duty around him, outside
-which he could not step without being stung by conscience.
-A sting he never deadened. These were
-the centripetal and centrifugal forces that kept his
-life balanced on an axis that remained steady in the
-centre during his every evolution.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiii">{xxiii}</a></span>
-</p>
-<p>
-We have endeavoured to be faithful to his memory.
-We have tried, as far as we could, to let himself tell
-his life; we have only arranged the materials and
-supplied the cement that would keep them together.
-Whether the work has suffered in our hands or not is
-immaterial to us. We have tried to do our best, and
-no one can do more. If any expressions have escaped
-us that may appear offensive, we are ready to make
-the most ample apology, but not at the sacrifice of a
-particle of truth. If, through ignorance or inadvertence,
-errors have been committed, we hold ourselves
-ready to retract them; and retract, beforehand, anything
-that may, in the slightest degree, be injurious,
-not to say contrary, to Catholic doctrine, and submit
-ourselves unreservedly in this point to the judgment
-of ecclesiastical authority.
-</p>
-<br>
-<p>
-
-<i>St. Joseph's Retreat, Highgate, London, N.,
-Feast of the Epiphany, 1866.</i>
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxiv">{xxiv}</a></span>
-</p>
-<br>
-<p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxv">{xxv}</a></span>
-
-<h1>CONTENTS.
-<br><br>
-BOOK I.
-<br>
-<i>Father Ignatius, a Young Noble.</i></h1>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I. <br>
-His Childhood &mdash; Page <a href="#Page_1">1</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II. <br>
-Four First Years At Eton &mdash; <a href="#Page_6">6</a> </h2>
-
-<h2>
-CHAPTER III. <br>
-His Two Last Years At Eton &mdash; <a href="#Page_12">12</a> </h2>
-
-<h2>
-CHAPTER IV. <br>
-Private Tuition Under Mr. Blomfield &mdash; <a href="#Page_18">18</a> </h2>
-
-<h2>
-CHAPTER V. <br>
-He Goes To Cambridge &mdash; <a href="#Page_22">22</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI. <br>
-His First Year In Cambridge &mdash; <a href="#Page_28">28</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII. <br>
-Conclusion Of His First Year In Cambridge &mdash; <a href="#Page_42">42</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII. <br>
-Second Year In Cambridge Takes His Degree &mdash; <a href="#Page_48">48</a> </h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvi">{xxvi}</a></span>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Travels On The Continent &mdash; <a href="#Page_57">57</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X. <br>
-English Life In Naples &mdash; <a href="#Page_65">65</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-Continuation Of His Travels &mdash; <a href="#Page_74">74</a> </h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII. <br>
-An Interval Of Rest And Preparation For Orders &mdash; <a href="#Page_91">91</a> </h2>
-
-<br><br>
-
-<h1>BOOK II.
-<br>
-<i>Father Ignatius, an Anglican Minister. </i></h1>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I. <br>
-He Is Ordained, And Enters On His Clerical Duties &mdash; <a href="#Page_103">103</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II. <br>
-He Mends Some Of His Ways &mdash; <a href="#Page_110">110</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-He Receives Further Orders &mdash; <a href="#Page_117">117</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV. <br>
-Mr. Spencer Becomes Rector Of Brington &mdash; <a href="#Page_122">122</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Changes In His Religious Opinions &mdash; <a href="#Page_127">127</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-Opposition To His Religious Views &mdash; <a href="#Page_134">134</a></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxvii">{xxvii}</a></span>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Progress Of His Religious Views &mdash; <a href="#Page_142">142</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-Some Of The Practical Effects Of His Views &mdash; <a href="#Page_148">148</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Scruples About The Athanasian Creed &mdash; <a href="#Page_155">155</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-Incidents And State Of Mind In 1827-28 &mdash; <a href="#Page_166">166</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-The Maid Of Lille &mdash; <a href="#Page_174">174</a></h2>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-Ambrose Lisle Phillipps &mdash; <a href="#Page_186">186</a></h2>
-
-<br><br>
-
-<h1>BOOK III.
-<br>
-<i>Father Ignatius, a Secular Priest. </i></h1>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
-His First Days In The Church &mdash; <a href="#Page_199">199</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-Mr. Spencer In The English College, Rome &mdash; <a href="#Page_206">206</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-Father Spencer Is Ordained Priest &mdash; <a href="#Page_212">212</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-Father Spencer Begins His Missionary Life &mdash; <a href="#Page_220">220</a></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxviii">{xxviii}</a></span>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Prospects Of Widening His Sphere Of Action &mdash; <a href="#Page_226">226</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-Newspaper Discussions, Etc. &mdash; <a href="#Page_232">232</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Private Life And Crosses Of Father Spencer &mdash; <a href="#Page_240">240</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-Association Of Prayers For The Conversion Of England &mdash; <a href="#Page_248">248</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-His Last Days In West Bromwich &mdash; <a href="#Page_258">258</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-Father Spencer Comes To Oscott &mdash; <a href="#Page_264">264</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-Some Of His Doings In Oscott College &mdash; <a href="#Page_270">270</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-Some Events Of Interest &mdash; <a href="#Page_275">275</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br>
-His Tour On The Continent In 1844 &mdash; <a href="#Page_280">280</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br>
-Close Of His Career In Oscott;
-And His Religious Vocation &mdash; <a href="#Page_343">343</a></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxix">{xxix}</a></span>
-
-<h1>BOOK IV.
-<br>
-<i>Father Ignatius, a Passionist</i></h1>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
-The Noviciate &mdash; <a href="#Page_351">351</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-His First Year As A Passionist &mdash; <a href="#Page_361">361</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-A Peculiar Mission &mdash; <a href="#Page_368">368</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-Death Of Father Dominic &mdash; <a href="#Page_374">374</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Spirit Of Father Ignatius At This Time &mdash; <a href="#Page_380">380</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-His Dealings With Protestants And Prayers For Union &mdash; <a href="#Page_387">387</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Father Ignatius In 1850 &mdash; <a href="#Page_393">393</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-A New Form Of "The Crusade" &mdash; <a href="#Page_400">400</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Visit To Rome And "The Association Of Prayers" &mdash; <a href="#Page_413">413</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-A Tour In Germany &mdash; <a href="#Page_428">428</a></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxx">{xxx}</a></span>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-Father Ignatius Returns To England &mdash; <a href="#Page_436">436</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-A Little Of His Home And Foreign Work &mdash; <a href="#Page_443">443</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br>
-Sanctification Of Ireland &mdash; <a href="#Page_449">449</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br>
-Another Tour On The Continent &mdash; <a href="#Page_453">453</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br>
-Father Ignatius In 1857 &mdash; <a href="#Page_458">458</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br>
-His "Little Missions" &mdash; <a href="#Page_464">464</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.<br>
-Father Ignatius At Home &mdash; <a href="#Page_469">469</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.<br>
-A Few Events &mdash; <a href="#Page_477">477</a></h2>
-<h2>
-CHAPTER XIX.<br>
-Trials And Crosses &mdash; <a href="#Page_483">483</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br>
-Foreshadowings And Death &mdash; <a href="#Page_495">495</a></h2>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br>
-The Obsequies Of Father Ignatius &mdash; <a href="#Page_504">504</a></h2>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxi">{xxxi}</a></span>
-
-<h1>BOOK I.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Young Noble.</i> </h1>
-
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xxxii">{xxxii}</a></span>
-
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">{1}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<p class="image">
-<img alt="" src="images/cross.jpg" border=1><br>
-Image of Cross<br>
-I X P
-</p>
-<br>
-
-
-
-<h1>LIFE OF FATHER IGNATIUS
-OF ST. PAUL, PASSIONIST.</h1>
-<br>
-
-
-<h1>BOOK I.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Young Noble.</i> </h1>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I. <br>
-His Childhood.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Saint Paul gives the general history of
-childhood in one sentence: "When I was a
-child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a
-child, I thought as a child." The thoughts
-and ways of children are wonderfully similar;
-the mind is not sufficiently developed to give direction to
-character, and the peculiar incidents that are sometimes
-recorded to prove "the child the father of the man," seem
-more the result of chance than deliberation. With all this,
-we like to bask our memory in those sunny days: we love
-to look at our cradles, at where we made and spoiled our
-little castles, and we recall the smallest incidents to mind, as
-if to try and fancy we could be children again. This natural
-sentiment makes us anxious to know all about the infancy
-and childhood of those whose life has an interest for us;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">{2}</a></span>
-although knowing that there can be nothing very strange
-about it; and even, if there be, that it cannot have much
-weight in moulding the character of our hero, and less still
-in influencing our own. The childhood of Father Ignatius
-forms an exception to this. It is wonderful; it shaped his
-character for a great part of his life. Its history is written
-by himself, and it is instructive to all who have charge of
-children. Before quoting from his own autobiography, it
-may be well to say something about his family; more,
-because it is customary to do so on occasions like the
-present, than to give information about what is already
-well known.
-</p>
-<p>
-His father was George John, Earl Spencer, K.G., &amp;c., &amp;c.
-He was connected by ties of consanguinity and affinity with
-the Earl of Sunderland and the renowned Duke of Marlborough;
-was successively member of Parliament, one of
-the Lords of the Treasury, and succeeded Lord Chatham as
-First Lord of the Admiralty on the 20th of December,
-1794. This office he retained until 1800, and, during his
-administration, the naval history of England shone with
-the victories of St. Vincent, Camperdown, and the Nile.
-Perhaps his term of office was more glorious to himself from
-the moderation and justice with which he quelled the
-mutiny at the Nore, than from the fact of his having
-published the victories that gave such glory to his country.
-He married, in 1781, Lavinia, the daughter of Sir Charles
-Bingham, afterwards Earl of Lucan. Five sons and three
-daughters were the issue of this marriage. Two of them
-died in infancy. The oldest, John Charles, Lord Althorp,
-succeeded his father in 1834, and died childless in 1845;
-the second, Sarah, is the present Dowager Lady Lyttelton;
-the fifth, Robert Cavendish, died unmarried in 1830; the
-sixth, Georgiana, was married to Lord George Quin, son to
-the Marquis of Headfort, and died in 1823; the seventh,
-Frederick, father of the present earl, succeeded his eldest
-brother in 1845. The youngest, the Honourable George
-Spencer, is the subject of the present biography.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was born on the 21st of December, 1799, at the
-Admiralty in London, and baptized according to the rite of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">{3}</a></span>
-the Church of England, by the Rev. Charles Norris,
-prebendary of Canterbury. Whether he was taken to Althorp,
-the family seat in Northamptonshire, to be nursed, before
-his father retired from office in 1800, we have no means of
-knowing; but, certain it is, that it was there he spent his
-childhood until he went to Eton in 1808. We will let himself
-give us the history of his mind during this portion of
-his existence: the history of his body is that of a nobleman's
-child, tended in all things as became his station:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My recollections of the five or six first years of my life
- are very vague,&mdash;more so by far than in the case of other
- persons; and whether I had any notions of religion before
- my six-year-old birthday, I cannot tell. But it was on that
- day, if I am not mistaken, that I was taken aside, as for a
- serious conversation, by my sister's governess, who was a
- Swiss lady, under whose care I passed the years between
- leaving the nursery and being sent to school, and instructed
- by her, for the first time, concerning the existence of God
- and some other great truths of religion. It seems strange
- now that I should have lived so long without acquiring any
- ideas on the subject: my memory may deceive me, but I
- have a most clear recollection of the very room at Althorp
- where I sat with her while she declared to me, as a new
- piece of instruction, for which till then I had not been
- judged old enough, that there was an Almighty Being,
- dwelling in heaven, who had created me and all things, and
- whom I was bound to fear. Till then, I believe, I had not
- the least apprehension of the existence of anything beyond
- the sensible world around me. This declaration, made to
- me as it was with tender seriousness, was, I believe, accompanied
- with gracious expressions, which have never been, in
- all my errors and wanderings, obliterated. To what but
- the grace of God can I ascribe it, that I firmly believed
- from the first moment this truth, of which I was not capable
- of understanding a proof, and that I never since have entertained
- a doubt of it, nor been led, like so many more, to
- universal scepticism; that my faith in the truth of God
- should have been preserved while for so long a time I lived,
- as I afterwards did, wholly without its influence?
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">{4}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "I continued, with my brother Frederick, who was twenty
- months older than myself, under the instruction of this
- same governess, till we went to Eton School. I do not
- remember the least difficulty in receiving as true whatever
- I was taught of religion at that time. It never occurred
- to me to think that objections might be made to it, though
- I knew that different religious persuasions existed. I
- remember being told by our governess, and being pleased
- in the idea, that the Church of England was peculiarly
- excellent; but I remember no distinct feelings of opposition
- or aversion to the Catholic religion. Of serious impressions
- I was at that time, I believe, very susceptible; but they
- must have been most transient. I remember, more than
- once, distinctly saying my prayers with fervour; though,
- generally, I suppose, I paid but little attention to them. I
- was sometimes impressed with great fear of the Day of
- Judgment, as I remember once in particular, at hearing a
- French sermon read about it; and, perhaps, I did not
- knowingly offend God, but I could not be said to love God,
- nor heartily to embrace religion, if, as I suppose, my
- ordinary feeling must have corresponded with what I
- remember well crossing my mind when I was about seven
- years old,&mdash;great regret at reflecting on the sin of Adam;
- by which I understood that I could not expect to live for
- ever on the earth. Whatever I thought desirable in the
- world,&mdash;abundance of money, high titles, amusements of all
- sorts, fine dress, and the like,&mdash;as soon and as far as I
- understood anything about them, I loved and longed for;
- nor do I see how it could have been otherwise, as the holy,
- severe maxims of the Gospel truth on these matters were
- not impressed upon me. Why is it that the truth on these
- things is so constantly withheld from children; and, instead
- of being taught by constant, repeated, unremitting lessons
- that the world and all that it has is worth nothing; that,
- if they gain all, but lose their souls, they gain nothing; if
- they lose all and gain their souls, they gain all? Why is it
- that they are to be encouraged to do right by promises of
- pleasure, deterred from evil by worldly fear, and so trained
- up, as it seems, to put a false value on all things? How
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
- easily, as it now appears to me, might my affections in
- those days have been weaned from the world, and made to
- value God alone? But let me not complain, but bless God
- for the care,&mdash;the very unusual care, I believe,&mdash;which was
- taken of me, by which I remained, I may say, ignorant of
- what evil was at an age when many, I fear, become proficients.
- This blessing, however, of being wonderfully
- preserved from the knowledge, and consequently from the
- practice, of vice, was more remarkably manifested in the
- four years of my life succeeding those of which I have been
- now writing."
-</p>
-<p>
-The instilling into young minds religious motives for
-their actions was a frequent topic of conversation with
-Father Ignatius in his after-life. He was once speaking
-with some of our young religious on this subject in general;
-one of them remarked how easy it was to act upon holy
-motives practically, and instanced his own childhood, when
-the thought that God would love or hate him kept him
-straight in his actions: this was the simple and perpetually
-repeated lesson of his mother, which he afterwards forgot,
-but which finally stopped him in a career of ambition, and
-made him a religious. The old man's eye glistened as he
-heard this, and he sighed deeply. He then observed that it
-confirmed his opinion, that parents ought to instruct their
-own children, and never commit them to the mercies of a
-public school until they were perfectly grounded in the
-practice of virtue and piety. The next chapter will show
-why he thought thus.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-Four First Years At Eton.
-</h2>
-<br>
-<p class="cite">
- "The 18th of May, 1808, was the important day when
- first I left my father's house. With a noble equipage, my
- father and mother took my brother Frederick and me to the
- house of the Rev. Richard Godley, whom they had chosen
- to be our private tutor at Eton. He lived, with his family,
- at a place called the Wharf, about half a mile from the
- college buildings, which we had to go to for school and
- chapel across the playing-fields. Oh! how interesting are
- my recollections whilst I recall the joys and sorrows of Eton
- days; but I must not expatiate on them, as my own feelings
- would lead me to do with pleasure. What I have to do now
- is to record how the circumstances in which I was then
- placed have contributed to influence my religions principles,
- and formed some links in the chain of events by which I
- have arrived at my present state, so different from all that
- might then have been anticipated. Mr. Godley I consider
- to have been, what I believe my parents likewise
- regarded him, a strictly conscientious and deeply religious
- man; and I must always account it one of the greatest
- blessings for which, under God, I am indebted to their wisdom
- and affection, that I was placed in such hands at so
- critical a time. I do not intend, in all points, to declare
- my approbation of the system which he pursued with us:
- but how can I be too grateful for having been under the
- strict vigilance of one who did, I am convinced, reckon the
- preservation of my innocence, and the salvation of my soul,
- his chief concern with me? I remained with Mr. Godley
- till the Midsummer holidays of 1812. My brother left
- Eton and went to sea in the year 1811.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "Those who know what our public schools are, will
- reckon it, I believe, almost incredible that I should be four
- years at Eton, and remain, as I did, still almost ignorant
- of what the language of wickedness meant. Mr. Godley's
- yoke I certainly thought at the time to be a heavy one.
- Several times each day we were obliged to go across the
- playing-fields to school, to chapel, or to absence (which was
- the term by which Etonians will yet understand the calling
- over the names of the boys at certain times); so that during
- the daytime, when in health, we could never be more than
- three hours together without appearing with the boys of
- the school. Mr. Godley, however, was inexorable in his
- rule that we should invariably come home immediately
- after each of these occasions: by this we were kept from
- much intercourse with other boys. Most grievous then
- appeared my unhappy lot, in the summer months especially,
- when we had to pass through the playing-fields, crowded
- with cricketers, to whom a lower boy, to fag for them and
- stop their balls, was sure to be an important prize, whose
- wrath we incurred if we dared despise their call, and run
- on our way; whilst, if we were but a few minutes late, the
- yet more terrible sight awaited us of Mr. Godley's angry
- countenance. We had not exemption from one of these
- musters, as most boys had who lived at a distance from the
- school, yet none of them were bound like us to a speedy
- return home. It seemed like an Egyptian bondage, from
- which there was no escape; and doubtless the effect was not
- altogether good upon my character. As might be expected,
- the more we were required to observe rules and customs
- different from others, the more did a certain class of big
- bullies in the school seem to count it their business to
- watch over us, as though they might be our evil geniuses.
- A certain set of faces, consequently, I looked upon with a
- kind of mysterious dread; and I was under a constant
- sense of being as though in an enemy's country, obliged to
- guard against dangers on all sides. Shrinking and skulking
- became my occupation beyond the ordinary lot of little
- schoolboys, and my natural disposition to be cowardly and
- spiritless was perhaps increased. I say <i>perhaps</i>, for other
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">{8}</a></span>
- circumstances might have made me worse; for what I was
- in the eyes of the masters of public opinion in the school,
- I really was&mdash;a chicken-hearted creature, what, in Eton
- language, is called a <i>sawney</i>. It may be, that had I been
- from the first in free intercourse among the boys, instead of
- being a good innocent one, I might have been, what I suppose
- must be reckoned one of the worst varieties of public-school
- characters, a mean, dishonourable one. Whatever I
- may have lost from not being trained, from the first of my
- Eton life, in the perfect spirit of the place, could I possibly
- have escaped during that time in any other way the utter
- corruption of my morals, at least the filling of my mind
- with familiar images of all the most foul iniquity? For,
- alas! where is the child from the age of eight till twelve
- who, without one compassionate friend, already strong in
- virtue to countenance and to encourage him, shall maintain
- the profession of modesty and holiness against a persecution
- as inveterate and merciless in its way as that which Lot
- had to bear at Sodom? Was not the angel of God with
- me when He preserved me for so long from all attacks of
- this kind in such a place as Eton was in my time? How
- can I remember Godley but with veneration and gratitude,
- who, though, it may be, not so considerately and wisely as
- might be possible (for who is as wise as he might be?), kept
- me, I might say, almost alone untainted in the midst of so
- much corruption.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Yet, till the last year of my stay with him, I did not
- learn decidedly to love religion. It was still my task and
- not my pleasure. At length, my brother Frederick being
- gone to sea, and two other boys, Mr. Godley's stepsons, who
- were with us under his instructions, being sent to school
- elsewhere, I remained his only pupil, and, I may almost
- say, his chief care and joy. He felt with me and for me in
- the desolation of my little heart, at being parted from my
- first and hitherto inseparable mate, and I became his almost
- constant companion. It is not difficult to gain the confidence
- of a simple child: he spoke almost continually of
- religious subjects, and I learnt to take his view of things.
- I certainly did not begin to lose my pleasure in life. Death
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
- was an idea which still was strange to me; and I did not
- come to an understanding of the great doctrines of Revelation.
- I remember not to have taken much notice of any
- peculiar articles of faith; but still believed implicitly,
- without argument or inquiry, what I was taught. I can
- now hardly give an account of what were the religious ideas
- and impressions which began so greatly to engage my mind,
- except that I took my chief delight in hearing Mr. Godley
- speak about religion, that I had a great abhorrence and
- dread of wickedness, thought with pleasure of my being
- intended to be a clergyman, as I was always told I should
- be, and admired and loved all whom I was taught to look
- upon as religious people. All these simple feelings of piety,
- which were often accompanied with pure delight, were
- greatly increased in a visit of six weeks which I paid, with
- Mr. Godley, to his mother and sisters at Chester. He was
- a Prebendary of that cathedral, and of course had to spend
- some time there every year in residence. Usually, when
- he went from home, from time to time, he was used to get
- one of the other tutors at Eton to hear my brother's and
- my lessons, and to look over our exercises; but in the last
- summer I staid with him, with my father's consent, he took
- me with him. Mr. Godley's sisters, who showed me great
- kindness, like him, I suppose, had no wish concerning me
- than to encourage me in becoming pious and good, and I
- got to read a few pious books which they recommended.
- 'The Pilgrim's Progress,' Doddridge's 'Life of Colonel
- Gardiner,' Alleine's 'Alarm,' were some which I remember
- taking great effect upon me; so that when I returned from
- Chester to Eton, though I cannot recall many particulars of
- my feelings, I know that the chief prevailing one was, an
- ardent desire to keep myself untainted at Eton, and to keep
- from all fellowship with the set of boys whom I knew to be
- particularly profane mockers of piety. I bought a book of
- prayers, and during the three weeks that I yet remained
- with this tutor, after our return from Chester, and when
- first I went home to the summer holidays, I took no delight
- like that of being by myself at prayer. Ah! how grievous
- would be the thought if we could but understand how to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
- lament such a calamity as it deserves, of a pious child's
- tender, pure soul denied, made forgetful of all its good, and
- hardened. O God, grant me wisdom to understand the
- magnitude of such an evil, grant me a heart now at length
- to mourn over the devastation and uprooting which it was,
- at this time, Thy holy will to permit, of all those fair flowers
- of grace which Thy hand had planted in my heart; and
- grant me to mourn my fall, that I may now once at last
- recover that simplicity of childlike piety, the feelings of
- which I now recollect, indeed, though faintly, but never
- have since again enjoyed. Oh! God, if a child's love, pure
- through ignorance of sin, is never to be mine again, oh!
- give me at least that depth of penance for which my fall has
- given me such ample matter.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It occurred not to my mind to consider whether the
- new thoughts which occupied my mind, and the books in
- which I took such pleasure, would be approved of at home.
- I took them with me to the holidays. It was judged, as
- was to be expected, by my parents, that Mr. Godley's views
- of religion were not such as they would wish to be instilled
- into me; and it was determined that I should leave his
- house and be placed with one of the public tutors at Eton.
- It is a difficult thing to classify religious Protestants, and
- so I do not here pronounce Mr. Godley and his sisters to
- have been Evangelical, or Calvinistic, nor give them any
- distinctive title. They did not, as far as I remember,
- inculcate upon me any peculiar notions of religion, but they
- certainly were not in the way which is usually called orthodox
- Church of England religion, though indeed it is difficult
- to define exactly what this is. It was likely, or rather
- morally certain, that while with Mr. Godley, I should
- follow his guidance, and take his views; so I was to be
- placed among the other boys, as I imagine with the idea
- likewise, that I should gain in this way more of the advantages
- supposed to belong to the rough discipline of a public
- school. I do not understand how it was that I received the
- intimation of this change with so little sadness. Distant
- evils, as we all know, lose their sting strangely; and, having
- the holidays before me when this change was declared, I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">{11}</a></span>
- felt no trouble about it then. It is easy to talk a docile
- child into agreement with any plan made for him by those
- whom he is used to confide in; and so I remember no
- difficulty when my books were taken away, and I had no
- more persons by to bring my former thoughts to remembrance,
- in quietly discontinuing my fervent practices."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">{12}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-His Two Last Years At Eton.</h2>
-<br>
-<p class="cite">
- "In the course of September, 1812, I began a new stage of
- my life by entering at the Rev. ***'s, where I was, alas!
- too effectually to be untaught what there might be unsound
- in my religion, by being quickly stripped of it completely.
- The house contained, I think, but about ten or twelve boys
- at the time I went to it, a much smaller number than the
- generality of boarding houses about the school; and, dreadful
- as was its moral condition, it was respectable in comparison
- to others. There is no doubt that it was
- recommended to my parents because its character stood
- high among the rest. The boys were divided into three or
- four messes, as they were called. Each of us had a room to
- himself and a separate little establishment, as the boys had
- allowances to provide breakfast and tea for themselves, and
- we did not meet in common rooms for private study, as in
- some schools. In order to make their means go farther,
- two or three would associate together and make a joint concern;
- and very comfortable some would make themselves.
- But comfort was not what I had now to enjoy.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have adverted already to the system of fagging at our
- public schools. The law is established immemorially at
- Eton that the upper boys, those of the fifth and sixth class,
- have an authority to command those below them. This
- law, though understood and allowed by the masters, is not
- enforced by them. They will interfere to check and punish
- any great abuse of the power of the upper boys; but the
- only power by which the commands of these masters are to
- be enforced is their own hands; so that a boy, though by
- rank in the school a fag, may escape the burdens to be
- imposed if he have but age and strength and spirit to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
- maintain his independence. Each upper boy may impose his
- commands on any number of inferiors he may please at any
- time and in any place, so that an unhappy lower boy is
- never safe. Nothing exempts him from the necessity of
- immediately quitting his own pursuits and waiting on the
- pleasure of an unexpected master, but being under orders
- to attend his tutor, or a certain number of privileged
- excuses in matters about which those potentates condescend
- to consider the feelings of the subalterns, and where public
- opinion would condemn them if they did not&mdash;such as
- being actually fagging for some one else, being engaged to
- play a match at cricket which his absence would spoil. It
- was this sort of out-of-door casual service which alone I had
- to dread as long as I was in Mr. Godley's house. When I
- went to Mr. ***, I had to serve my apprenticeship in
- domestic fagging, which consisted in performing to one or
- more of the fifth or sixth form boys in the house almost all
- the duties of a footman or a waiter at an inn. The burden
- of this kind of servitude of course depended, in the first
- place, on the temper of one's master, and then on the
- comparative number of upper and lower boys in a house.
- During the time I had to fag at Mr. ***'s, but especially
- in the latter part of it, the number of fags was dismally
- small, and sometimes heavy was my yoke.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But it is not this which gives to my recollection of that
- period of my life its peculiar sadness. I might have made
- a merry life in the midst of it, like that of many another
- school-boy, and I was merry sometimes, but I had known
- better things. I had once learnt to hate wickedness, and I
- never could find myself at ease in the midst of it, though I
- had not strength to resist it openly. The first evening that
- I arrived at this new tutor's house, I was cordially received
- to mess with the set of three or four lower boys who were
- there. These were quiet, good-natured boys; but, to be
- one with them, it was soon evident that the sweet practices
- of devotion must be given up, and other rules followed from
- those I knew to be right. I was taken by them on expeditions
- of boyish depredation and pilfering. I had never
- been tempted or invited before to anything like this, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">{14}</a></span>
- it was misery to me, on account of my natural want of
- courage as well as my tender conscience, to join such enterprises.
- Yet I dared not boldly declare my resolution to
- commit no sin, and I made a trial now of that which has
- been so often tried, and what has often led to fatal
- confusion&mdash;to satisfy the world without altogether breaking
- with God. One day we went to pick up walnuts in a park
- near Eton; another day to steal beans or turnips, or the
- like, from fields or gardens; then, more bold, to take ducks
- and chickens from farmyards. It is a common idea that this
- kind of school-boys' theft is not indeed a sin. At Eton it
- certainly was not so considered. A boy who stole money from
- another boy was disgraced, and branded as a wretch almost
- beyond forgiveness, whereas for stealing his school-books, he
- would not be blamed; and for robbing orchards or farmyards
- he would be honoured and extolled, and so much the more if,
- in doing it, one or two or three together had violently
- beaten the farmer's boy, or even himself. But where is the
- reason for this distinction? The Word of God and a simple
- conscience certainly teach no such difference. At any rate,
- I know, to my sorrow, that the beginning of my fall from
- all that was good, was by being led to countenance and
- bear a part, though sorely against my better will, in such
- work as this.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "This was not the worst misery. My ignorance in the
- mysteries of iniquity was soon apparent. However much I
- strove to keep my countenance firm, I could not hear
- immodesties without blushing. I was, on this account, a
- choice object of the fun of some of the boys, who took
- delight in forcing me to hear instructions in iniquity. One
- evening after another, I well remember, the quarters would
- be invaded where I and my companions were established;
- all our little employments would be interrupted, our rooms
- filled with dirt, our beds, perhaps, tossed about, and a noisy
- row kept up for hours, of which sometimes one, and sometimes
- another of our set was the principal butt. I was set
- up as a choice object, of course, on account of my simplicity
- and inexperience in their ways, so that some of the partners
- of these plagues with me would blame me for being so silly
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
- as to pretend ignorance of what their foul expressions
- meant; for they could not believe it possible that I should
- really be so simple as not to understand them. I maintained
- for some time a weak conflict in my soul against all
- this flood of evil. For a little time I found one short space
- of comfort through the day, when at length, after an evening
- thus spent, I got to bed, and in secret wept and prayed
- myself to sleep; but the trial was too strong and too often
- repeated. I had no kind friend to speak to.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Mr. Godley still lived at the Wharf, and though he
- seemed to think it right not to press himself upon me, he
- asked me to come and dine when I pleased. Two or three
- times I went to dine with him, and these were my last
- really happy days, when for an hour or two I could give my
- mind liberty to feel at ease, and recollect my former feelings
- in this kindly company. But I could not, I dared not, tell
- him all I was now exposed to, and so I was left to stand my
- ground alone. Had any one then told me that by myself I
- must not hope to resist temptation, and rightly directed me
- how to call on God for help, I have since thought I might
- have stood it; but I had not yet known the force of temptation,
- nor learnt by experience the power of God to support
- the weak. My weakness I now felt by clear experience,
- and after a short conflict,&mdash;for this battle was soon
- gained by the great enemy who was so strong in the field
- against me,&mdash;I remember well the conclusion striking my
- mind, that the work of resistance was useless, and that I
- must give up. Where were you, O my God, might I now
- exclaim, to leave me thus alone and unprotected on such a
- boisterous sea? Ah! my Lord, I have never found fault
- with thy divine appointments in thus permitting me to fall.
- Only I say, as before, give me grace now fully to recover
- what I lost; and I will ever bless thee for allowing me to
- have known so much evil, if it be but that I may warn
- others,
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It might be, perhaps, ten days after my arrival at
- Mr. ***'s, when I gave up all attempt to pray; and I
- think I did not say one word of prayer for the two years
- and more that I afterwards continued there. I remember
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">{16}</a></span>
- once being by, when one of the most rude and hard of my
- tormentors was dressing himself, and, to my surprise, turned
- to me, and, with his usual civility, said some such word as,
- 'Now hold your jaw;' and then, down on his knees near
- the bed, and his face between his hands, said his prayers. I
- then saw for a moment to what I had fallen, when even this
- fellow had more religion than unhappy I had retained; but
- I had no grain of strength now left to rise. One would
- think that in the holidays my change would have been discovered;
- for I imagine that I never knelt down even at
- home except in the church. But, alas! little did my family
- suspect what a place was Eton; or, at least, if a suspicion
- comes across parents' minds of what their children are
- exposed to in public schools, they generally persuade themselves
- that this must be endured for a necessary good, which
- is, to make them learn to know the world.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "When I had ceased attempting to maintain my pious
- feelings, the best consolation I had was in the company of
- a few boys of a spirit congenial to what mine was now
- become. All the time that I remained at Eton I never
- learnt to take pleasure in the manly, active games for which
- it is so famous. It is not that I was without some natural
- talent for such things. I have since had my time of most
- ardent attachment to cricket, to tennis, shooting, hunting,
- and all active exercises: but my spirit was bent down at
- Eton; and among the boys who led the way in all manly
- pursuits, I was always shy and miserable, which was partly
- a cause and partly an effect of my being looked down upon
- by them. My pleasure there was in being with a few boys,
- like myself, without spirit for these things, retired apart
- from the sight of others, amusing ourselves with making
- arbours, catching little fishes in the streams; and many were
- the hours I wasted in such childish things when I was
- grown far too old for them.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Oh! the happiness of a Catholic child, whose inmost
- soul is known to one whom God has charged with his salvation.
- Supposing I had been a Catholic child in such a
- situation&mdash;if such a supposition be possible&mdash;the pious feelings
- with which God inspired me, would have been under
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
- the guidance of a tender spiritual Father, who would have
- supplied exactly what I needed when about to fall under
- that sense of unassisted weakness which I have described.
- He would have taught me how to be innocent and firm in
- the midst of all my trials, which would then have tended
- to exalt, instead of suppressing, my character. I would
- have kept my character not only clear in the sight of God,
- but honourable among my fellows, who soon would have
- given up their persecution when they found me steadfast;
- and I might have brought with me in the path of peace and
- justice many whom I followed in the dark ways of sin.
- But it is in vain to calculate on what I might have been
- had I been then a Catholic. God be praised, my losses I
- may yet recover, and perhaps even reap advantages from
- them."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-Private Tuition Under Mr. Blomfield.</h2>
-<br>
-
-<p class="cite">
- "Had the public masters of the school been attentive to
- the advancement of the scholars in learning while negligent
- of their morals, and had I been making progress in my
- studies while losing my innocence, I might have continued
- longer in that place; for I did not fall into gross, outward,
- vicious habits, and it is possible that no difference was
- perceived in my behaviour at home. But I suppose my
- father saw a wide difference between the care which
- Mr. Godley bestowed on me and that which boys in the
- public tutors' houses could receive. I know not exactly
- the reasons that led to the change; but, in the Christmas
- holidays at the end of the year 1813, Mr. Blomfield was
- invited to Althorp, and he was pointed out to me as my
- intended future tutor. Many of my readers will know at
- once that he is now [Footnote 1] the Protestant Bishop of London. My
- father had presented him somewhat before this period with
- the rectory of Dunton, in Buckinghamshire, having been
- led to do so by the distinguished character which he heard
- of him from Cambridge for he did not personally know
- him when he offered him this piece of preferment. From
- the time that I made his acquaintance, and received some
- directions from him for private reading at Eton during the
- remaining time of my stay there, I began to take some
- more decided interest than I had yet done in advancing
- myself in literary knowledge.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 1: This was written in 1836. See Preface.
- Dr. Blomfield died in 1857.]
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-
-<p class="cite">
- This, as well as my growing
- older and more independent of other boys, and falling in
- with more sensible companions, gave to my mind a more
- satisfactory turn during my last year at Eton. There was
- no return, though, to religion whilst I remained there, nor
- was there likely to be; and so, most blessed was the change
- for me when, before Christmas 1814, I left Mr. ***'s,
- and, after remaining at home for about three months in
- company with my brother Frederick, returned for the first
- time from sea, I went to Mr. Blomfield's in March, 1815.
- I staid there till near the time of my first going to Cambridge,
- which was in the summer of 1817. Simplicity and
- purity of mind, alas! are not regained with the readiness
- with which they are lost: the falling into bad company
- and consenting to it will utterly ruin all innocence. The
- removal of occasions may prevent the growth of evil habits
- and the farther increase of corruption; but this alone will
- not restore that blessed ignorance of evil which was no
- longer mine. My residence with Blomfield was, however,
- the means to me of great good. Here I was confirmed in
- that love for study and knowledge of which I have already
- noticed the commencement. He had himself, as is well
- known, though still young, gained a reputation for classical
- learning among the scholars of England and the Continent;
- and his example and conversations inspired me with desires
- for the like distinctions, to which he gave all possible
- encouragement. This I reckon to have been a considerable
- advantage to my religious welfare; for, although the motive
- I set before me was merely worldly, and the subjects
- which I studied had little of a good and much of a bad
- tendency, as must needs be the case with pagan literature,
- yet, by gaining a habit for study, I was directed in a line
- widely distinct from the most vicious of the society through
- which I was afterwards to pass; and, by being a reading
- man at Cambridge, I was saved from much perversion."
-</p>
-<p>
-We shall be pardoned for interrupting the course of this
-interesting narrative, by inserting an anecdote, which shows
-how unchanged was his opinion on the merits of pagan
-literature. In a conversation with his religious companions,
-shortly before he died, he happened to say something about
-the discoveries of Cardinal Mai among the Bobbio
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-manuscripts. Some one remarked that it was nothing less than
-Vandalism for the old monks to erase one of the classic
-authors, and write some crude chronicle or other over it.
-"Well," replied Father Ignatius, "I suppose the monks had
-as much respect for Virgil and Ovid as the angels have."
-</p>
-<p>
-To resume.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But what was of the chief importance to me at this
- time was, being in a house and with company, where, if
- subjects of religion were not so much put before me as with
- Mr. Godley, and if I was not constantly exhorted and
- encouraged in simple piety, I and my fellow pupils felt that
- no word of immorality would have been anywise tolerated.
- Prayers were daily read in the family, the service of the
- Church was performed with zeal and regularity, the Sunday
- was strictly observed, and a prominent part of our instruction
- was on matters of religion. It was also to me an
- invaluable benefit, that the companion with whom I was
- principally associated, during the chief part of my time at
- Dunton, was one who, like me, after a careful education at
- home, where he had imbibed religious feelings, had gone
- through the corruptions of another public school, but was
- now, like me, happy to find himself in purer air.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "With him I was confirmed at Easter, 1816, by Dr.
- Howley, then Protestant Bishop of London, now Archbishop
- of Canterbury. It was an incalculable blessing to
- me, slave as I was to false shame, and cowardly as I was
- to resist against bold iniquity, that I now had had a period
- granted me, as it were, to breathe and gain a little vigour
- again, before the second cruel and more ruinous devastation
- which my poor heart was shortly to undergo. I prepared
- seriously for my confirmation, and for receiving the Sacrament
- from time to time, and recovered much of my former
- good practices of private devotion. I remember especially
- to have procured once more a manual of prayers, and during
- the last months of my stay at Dunton I spent a long time
- in self-examination by the table of sins in that book, somewhat
- similar to our Catholic preparation for confession.
- But, alas! I could go no further than the preparation.
- Oh! the great enemy of our souls knew well what he was
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
- doing in abolishing confession. As before, when I first lost
- my innocence and piety at Eton, confession would, I am
- convinced, have preserved me from that fall; so now that I
- was almost recovering from the fall, if I had had the ear
- of a spiritual father to whom I might with confidence have
- discovered the wounds of my poor soul, he would have
- assisted me utterly to extirpate the remains of those evil
- habits of my heart. He would have shown me what I
- knew so imperfectly, the horrible danger of the state in
- which I had been so near eternal damnation; he would
- have made me feel that holy shame for my sins, which
- would have overcome that false earthly shame by which I
- still was ready to be mastered; and he would, in short, have
- poured in that balm and oil which the ministers of God
- possess, to heal, and strengthen, and comfort me for my
- future trials, so that I might have stood firm against my
- enemies. But it pleased Thee, O my God, that once more,
- by such sad experience, I should have occasion to learn the
- value of that holy discipline of penance, the power and
- admirable virtue of the divine sacraments, with the
- dispensation of which Thou hast now entrusted me, that I may
- be a more wise and tender father to Thy little ones whom
- Thou committest to my care."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-He Goes To Cambridge.</h2>
-
-<p>
-Young Spencer went with Mr. Blomfield to Cambridge in
-the spring of 1817, and was entered fellow commoner of
-Trinity. He returned, immediately after being matriculated,
-to his family, and spent the summer in cricketing and
-sea-bathing, in Ryde, Isle of Wight, and hunting or
-shooting at Althorp. On Saturday, October 18th, he came
-to London with his parents. He and his brother Frederick
-went about shopping, to procure their several outfits for
-the University and the sea. On the morning of the 21st
-October, he set out from his father's house to Holborn, to
-catch the seven o'clock fly for Cambridge. This vehicle,
-which has been so long superseded by the Eastern Counties
-Railway, was filled with passengers before the Spencer
-carriage arrived. He then took a post chaise at ten o'clock,
-and arrived in Cambridge a little before six in the evening.
-All that remained of that day, and the greater part of the
-next, was spent in getting his rooms furnished, hiring his
-servant, making a few acquaintances, meeting those he
-knew before, and the other employments of a freshman. His
-tutor in classics was Mr. Evans, who long continued in the
-same capacity at Cambridge, and had the reputation of being
-a most upright man. For mathematics he had a Mr. Peacock,
-who afterwards became Dean of Ely, and restored the cathedral
-there. He fell into good hands, seemingly, as far as his
-studies were concerned. He does not seem to have been
-less fortunate in the choice of his companions. He is very
-slow in making friends; one he does not like for being "too
-much of the fine gentleman;" another invites him, and he
-remarks: "I suppose I must ask him to dinner or something
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
-else; but I should not wish to continue acquaintance with
-him, for though he is good-natured, he is likely to be
-in a bad set." He also goes regularly to visit Mr. Blomfield,
-who resided in Hildersham, and advises with him
-about his proceedings. He also avoids needless waste of time,
-and says in his journal: "They all played whist, in their
-turns, but Bridgman and myself; which I am glad I did
-not, for I like it so well that I should play at it too much if
-I once began." Besides these precautions, and a feeling of
-indignation that bursts out now and again when he has to
-note a misdemeanour in his associates, he reads seven hours
-a day on an average. These conclusions are collected from
-the notes of a journal he wrote at the time; they mark a
-very auspicious beginning; and, being clear facts, will serve
-as a kind of glass through which one may read the following
-from his autobiography.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My intentions were now well directed (on entering
- Cambridge). I began well, and for a time did not give way
- to the detestable fashions of the place, and was not much
- ashamed in the presence of the profligate. I was very happy
- likewise. I found myself now for the first time emerged
- from the condition of a boy. I was treated with respect
- and kindness by the tutors and fellows of the college; my
- company was always sought, and I was made much of by
- what was supposed to be the best&mdash;that is, the most well-bred
- and fashionable, set in the University. I had all the
- health and high spirits of my age, and I now enjoyed manly
- amusements, being set free from the cowardly feeling of
- inferiority which I had to oppress me at Eton. My first
- term at Cambridge&mdash;that is, the two months that passed
- before the first Christmas vacation after my going there&mdash;
- was, as I thought, the happiest time I had yet known. I
- find it difficult, however, now to understand that happiness,
- and still more to understand the religious principle which
- had more or less some influence over me, when I remember
- one circumstance which by itself proves my religion to have
- been absolutely nugatory, and which, I remember well, most
- grievously spoiled my happiness. As to my religion, I do
- not remember that at that time I said any private prayer.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
- I suppose I must have discontinued it when I left Mr.
- Blomfield's, or soon after. Yet I had a sort of principle
- which guarded me from joining in the profane contempt of
- God's worship which prevails generally in the College
- chapels at Cambridge, and for a long time from consenting
- to the practice of open immoralities, or even pretending to
- approve them, though almost all the young men whom I
- knew at Cambridge either notoriously followed or at least
- sanctioned them."
-</p>
-<p>
-He alludes to "one circumstance" in the last extract as
-being a test of his depth in religious matters, which it will
-be interesting to have in his own words. It occurred before
-his entering Cambridge; but as it considerably influenced
-his feelings during his stay there, it may as well find its
-place here.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The circumstance to which I allude was something of
- an affair of honour, as the world blindly calls it, into which
- I got engaged, and which had so important an influence
- upon my religious feelings for about two years that I will
- here particularly relate the circumstances of it. In the last
- summer vacation, before my going to Cambridge, I attended,
- with my father, the Northampton races, in our way from
- the Isle of Wight to visit my brother at his place in
- Nottinghamshire. I had begun, at that time, to be extremely
- fond of dancing, as well as cricket, shooting, and
- the like amusements. At this race ball at Northampton, I
- enjoyed myself to the full; but, unwittingly, laid the
- foundation for sorrow on the next day. Fancying myself a
- sort of leader of the gaiety, in a set which seemed to be the
- most fashionable and smart of the evening, I must needs be
- making up parties for select dances; which proceeding was,
- of course, taken by others as intruding on the liberties of a
- public entertainment; and it happened that, without knowing
- it, I barred out from one quadrille which I helped in
- forming, the sister of a young gentleman of name and fortune
- in the county. I was in the mean time making up
- a party for a match at cricket on the racecourse for the next
- day, and this gentleman was one of my chief helpmates.
- The next day, while busy in collecting our cricketers to go
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">{25}</a></span>
- to the ground, I met him in the street, and he gave me
- the hard cut. I knew not what it meant, and simply
- let it pass; but on the morning after, I was surprised
- at receiving a letter from him to tell me what was my
- offence: it ended with the words (which are deeply enough
- impressed on my memory not yet to be forgotten), 'If
- I did not look upon you as a mere boy, I should call
- you in a more serious manner to account for your rudeness.'
- He then told me where he might be found the following
- day. Without much reflecting on this unpleasant communication,
- I showed it to my father, who was near me,
- with several other gentlemen of the county, when I received
- it. He asked me whether I had meant any rudeness, and
- when I told him I had not, he bid me write an apology, and
- particularly charged me not to notice the concluding taunt.
- He afterwards mentioned it to two others of these gentlemen,
- who both agreed that I had done right in sending such
- an answer. But soon after my mind fell into such a torment
- as I had never yet known. The answer was certainly right
- according to Christian rules, and I suppose the laws of
- honour would not have required more; but, at the time, I
- know not whether it would not be esteemed in his mind
- and that of the friends whom he might consult, to be too
- gentle for a man of courage. A most agonizing dilemma I
- was now in, neither side of which I could endure. On the
- one hand, I could not bear to look on death, and standing
- to be shot at was what nothing but a fit of desperation could
- bring me to. On the other, that awful tyrant, the world,
- now, as it were, put forth his hand and claimed me for his
- own. To lose my character for courage, and be branded as
- a coward, was what I could not anyways endure. I went
- with my father in the carriage to sleep at Loughborough;
- and when, at the inn, I retired from him to my bedroom,
- the tumult of my mind was at its height. I had all but
- determined to set off and go that very night to the place
- assigned me by this gentleman, who by one disdainful
- expression had now mysteriously become, as it appeared, the
- master of my doom; and, renewing the quarrel, take my
- chance of the consequence. But again, I saw this would
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">{26}</a></span>
- not save my honour, if it were already compromised. It
- was clear that a change of mind like that would hardly
- satisfy the world, which does not forgive a breach of its
- awful laws on such easy terms. I finally slept off my
- trouble for the present; but my soul remained oppressed
- with a new load, which almost made me weary of my life. I
- remained convinced that I had not reached the standard of
- courage in this affair; and I felt, therefore, that it depended
- on the good-nature of this gentleman whether my character
- should be exposed or not. He did not reply to my letter of
- explanation. Was he satisfied or not? During my first
- term at Cambridge he was expected there, and I was even
- invited to meet him at a wine party, as one who was known
- to be one of his neighbours and friends. I dared not show
- any reluctance to meet him, lest the whole story should be
- known at Cambridge; and if I did meet him, was he again
- to treat me with disdain? If he did, how should I avoid a
- duel? I knew that having anything to do with a duel was
- expulsion by the laws of the University; but if I, coward
- as I was, had not yet made up my mind, as I had, that I
- must run the chance of his shot, if he chose still to resent
- the affront, no wonder, if the spoiling of my prospects in
- life, by expulsion from Cambridge, was not much regarded.
- The present distress was evaded by his not coming, as was
- expected. After this I desired one person who knew him
- as a friend, and to whom alone I had explained my case, to
- write and ask whether my apology had appeared to him
- sufficient. The answer to this was an assurance that the
- thing had been no more thought of; but it was two years
- before I met him in person, and by his courteous manner
- was finally satisfied that all was right between us. I might
- think it impossible that the great question could be overlooked
- by men, what is to become of them in eternity, if I
- had not had the experience of my own feelings in such an
- occasion as this. In that memorable evening at Loughborough,
- I did not indeed altogether overlook the moral
- question&mdash;Is a duel wrong? I had made the most of what
- I had heard said in palliation of it by some moralists; I
- could not find any ground, however, to think it right before
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">{27}</a></span>
- God; yet the thought of having, perhaps before the next
- day was past, to answer in the presence of God for having
- thrown away my life in it, was not the consideration which
- deterred me from the rash resolution. Now, how stands
- the world in England on this question? It is clear that a
- Catholic, whether ecclesiastic or layman, has no choice.
- He must either utterly renounce his religion or duelling.
- A maintenance of the abominable practice by which duelling
- is justified would deprive him of communion with the
- Church. But how stand Protestants? The clergy are
- exempted from this law by the world. But how many
- Protestant laymen are there of the rank of gentlemen who
- dare to proclaim that they detest duelling, and that they
- would sooner bear the disgrace of refusing a challenge than
- offend God by accepting it, or run the risk of offending
- God? for I suppose the greater part would try an argument
- to prove that it may be excusable. The clergy generally, I
- believe, reckon it decidedly a wicked worldly law, yet they
- receive laymen to communion without insisting on this
- enormous evil being first abjured. I do not, however, here
- propose a further discussion of the question generally. To
- this law of the world, miserably as it tormented me for a
- time, I believe I am indebted spiritually more than can
- well be understood: at least to the misery which it occasioned
- me. I have heard it related of blessed (now Saint)
- Alphonsus Maria di Liguori that he owed his being led to
- bid adieu to the world and choosing God for the portion of
- his inheritance, to making a blunder in pleading a cause as
- an advocate. Having till that time set his happiness on his
- worldly reputation for talent, he then clearly saw how vain,
- were the promises of the world, and once for all he gave it
- up. I knew not, alas! whither nor how to turn for more
- solid consolation, and thus the spoiling of my happiness,
- which had resulted from a mistake in a ball-room, did not
- teach me to be wise; but it contributed materially, and
- most blessedly, to poison my happiness at this time. Yet, in
- a general way, I went on gaily and pleasantly enough, for
- serious reflections, on whatever subject it might be, had no
- long continuance."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-His First Year in Cambridge.
-</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-What strikes a Catholic as the most singular feature in
-Protestant education is the want of special training for the
-clergyman. A dozen young men go to the University for a
-dozen different purposes, and there is the same rule, the
-same studies, the same moral discipline for all. Such, at
-least, was the rule in the days of Mr. Spencer's college
-life. It seems extraordinary to the Catholic student, who
-has to learn Latin and Greek only as subsidiary instruments
-to his higher studies; who has to read two years philosophy
-and four years theology, and pass severe examinations nine
-or ten different times in each, besides a general one in all,
-before he can be qualified to receive the priesthood. The
-clerical training with us is as different from that through
-which young Spencer had to pass as one thing can be from
-another.
-</p>
-<p>
-His life for the first year may be very briefly told. He
-hears from Mr. Blomfield that he is to attend divinity lectures,
-and he forthwith begins. He is advised by a Professor
-Monk, afterwards Protestant Bishop of Gloucester,
-to stand for a scholarship, and he does so after getting
-Blomfield's consent. This makes him study very hard for
-some time, and though he did not succeed, the taste he had
-acquired by the preparation did not leave him till the end
-of the year, when he came out in the first class, having left
-his competitors, with one exception, far behind. He also
-spends some hours every day in athletic exercises, is very
-fond of riding, goes now and again to London and Althorp
-to amuse himself with attending the theatres, dining out,
-shooting partridge, and playing at Pope Joan. He relaxes
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">{29}</a></span>
-in his determination to avoid whist, and indulges so far that
-he puts a note of exclamation in his journal at having
-returned to his chambers one night without having had a
-game. This seems to be the regular course of his life at
-Cambridge, a course edifying indeed, if compared with the
-lives of his companions. He says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have observed before that the example and conversation
- of Mr. Blomfield, while I remained with him, gave an
- impulse to my mind towards the love of literary pursuits.
- I did not think, however, of exerting myself particularly in
- that way till the end of the first term, when I was persuaded
- by Mr. Monk, the Greek professor, now Protestant
- Bishop of Gloucester, to be a candidate for a university
- scholarship. Dr. Monk was four years senior to Mr.
- Blomfield, and I understood from him that he had been of
- great service to him in the same way, when at college,
- encouraging his exertions and studies. I was told that I
- passed this examination creditably, but I did not stand so
- high among the competitors as to make it desirable that I
- should repeat the attempt afterwards, and the only honours
- that I tried for were confined to Trinity College. I was
- thus stimulated during this time to more than common
- exertions; it gave me a disposition to study which continued
- through my time at Cambridge, and was the only good
- disposition which was encouraged in me. I have reason then
- to remember with gratitude those who helped me in this
- way; though it is a lamentable thing that, being there
- professedly as a student for the church, in what is the proper
- seminary for ecclesiastics of the Church of England, I cannot
- call to mind one word of advice given me by anyone
- among my superiors or companions to guard me against the
- terrible dangers with which I was surrounded of being
- entirely corrupted, or to dispose me towards some little care
- of my spiritual concerns.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My studies I followed with great zeal all the time I was
- at Cambridge; but, as is generally the case there with those
- that aim at places in the public examinations, I managed
- them without proper distribution of time. By running
- through the journal I kept at the time I find that, when
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
- first I began to read hard, I have often sat without moving
- from my table and read the clock round, that is, from three
- or four in the afternoon to the same hour the next morning,
- for the sake of doing what was counted an extraordinary
- feat. There is no doubt that reading with regularity a
- smaller number of hours every day would be more available
- for the attainment of learning than these immoderate surfeits
- of study, as one may call them; I only interposed a
- few days of amusement, when hardly any work was done.
- In the long run, such a course as mine could not answer, for
- it was sure to hurt the health and prevent the attainment
- of the real end of all a young man's studies, which is,
- acquiring knowledge to be turned to account in after life.
- Few young men at Oxford or Cambridge, I suppose, have
- wisdom enough to calculate this in advance. The object
- which they aim at is present distinction, and outstripping
- their fellows in the race for college prizes; and, as far as my
- experience goes, a glut of reading, if the health does but
- stand it without breaking down, is the way to make the
- most of one's chance at a public examination.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The time of my being at Cambridge is one so interesting
- to me in the recollection, that I cannot satisfy myself, when
- giving an account of my progress through life, without
- dwelling at some length upon it. My college course was not
- very long. At the time when I was at Cambridge, honorary
- degrees were conferred on the sons of noblemen at the end
- of two years' residence, by which they came to the enjoyment
- of the rank and all the privileges of a Master of Arts,
- which title was not to be attained, in the ordinary course,
- in less than six or seven years. And what shortens the
- college life much more is the extravagant length of the
- vacations; so that what is reckoned one year at Cambridge
- is not more than five months' actual residence in the
- University. Yet this is a most important and critical
- period, and the short two years during which I was an
- undergraduate at Cambridge were of immense importance
- in my destiny. How vast is the good, of which I have
- learned the loss, but which I might have gained, had I then
- known how to direct my views! On the other hand, how
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
- may I bless God for the quantity of evil from which I have
- been preserved, and how wonderful has been my preservation!
- When I remember how destitute I was of religion
- at this time, I must say that I have to wonder rather at my
- being preserved from so much evil, than at my having fallen
- into so much. And how can I bless God for his exceeding
- goodness of which I am now reminded, when I think how,
- against my own perverse will, against my foolish, I must
- say mad wishes, I was prevented by his Providence from
- being at this time irrevocably ruined and lost? What can
- I return to Him for this blessing? One principal intention
- in my present work is to record the sentiments of gratitude,
- however weak and most unworthy, with which I at least
- desire my soul to be inflamed, and which I hope will engage
- all the powers of my soul throughout eternity. Most
- gladly, if it were for His honour and for the edification of
- one soul which by the narrative might reap instruction, I
- would enter before all the world into a more detailed
- explanation of this my wonderful deliverance; but this I
- must not do, for I must not be the means that others,
- hitherto in the simplicity of holy ignorance, should be made
- acquainted with the dark iniquity of which the knowledge
- has once infected my own unhappy understanding. Be this
- enough to say on this point, which I was obliged to touch,
- lest it should seem unreasonable that I should speak of my
- case as one of most marvellous and almost unparalleled mercy,
- when the circumstances which I may now detail, and what
- are generally known among my most intimate companions,
- do not justify such feelings in the review of it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "By the great mercy of God, I had provided for me a
- refuge and, as it were, a breathing time, between Eton and
- Cambridge. At Mr. Blomfield's, my progress in evil was
- checked, and I had time to prepare myself for the University
- with good resolutions, though I knew not what sort of
- trials I should meet with there, nor had I learnt how
- unavailing were my best resolutions to support me, while yet
- I had not wholly put my confidence in God's grace. The
- vacation which came between my leaving Dunton and going
- to Cambridge I spent chiefly in the Isle of Wight, and my
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">{32}</a></span>
- soul was almost wholly occupied that summer about cricket.
- I never became a great cricketer myself; I had lost the best
- time for gaining the art while at Eton; but, this summer,
- what perseverance and diligence could do to make up for
- lost time, I think I did. Oh! that I might have the same
- degree of zeal now in serving the Church of God, and
- collecting and instructing a faithful flock, as I then had in
- seeking out, and encouraging and giving and procuring
- instruction for my troop of cricketers. The occupation of my
- mind on this subject was enough to drive away any ardent
- attention to religion as well as to study. I may say, in
- favour of this passion for cricket, that it was one of the
- pursuits which I took to at the recommendation of my
- mother. I remember generally that when anything in the
- way of amusement or serious occupation was suggested to
- me by her, or anything else but my own fancy, nothing
- more was required to make me have a distaste for it.
- Otherwise, how many useful accomplishments might I have
- gained which would now have been available to the great
- objects I have before me. My dear mother wished me to
- learn fencing when I was at Eton, and a good deal of time
- I spent, and a good deal of money must have been paid by
- my father to Mr. Angelo, the fencing-master who came to
- Eton. It might have been better for me to have gained
- perfection in this exercise, by which it is related that St.
- Francis of Sales acquired in part that elegance of manner
- and nobleness of carriage through which he gained so many
- souls to Christ. While other boys made fencing their
- amusement, I always would have it as a task, and of
- course gained nothing by it. At a later period, when we
- were at Naples, and I had a weakness in my eyes which
- made such an employment suitable, my mother would have
- had me learn music. She gave me a guitar, and would
- have paid for my lessons; but I could not take to it, and
- have thus lost the advantage which, since I have become a
- Catholic, I should have so much valued of understanding
- the science of music, seeing that the trifling knowledge I do
- possess is of so much use. There is the apology, then, for
- my cricket mania; that she proposed my taking to it in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
- summer I speak of. I was surprised to find myself willing
- to acquiesce in the suggestion. What I did take to I generally
- followed excessively, and she did not calculate on the
- violence with which I followed up this. I got into very
- little bad company by means of this pursuit, and perhaps,
- on the whole, I rather gained than lost by it. It was manly
- and healthful, and though, when in the heat of it, I thought
- it almost impossible I should ever give it up, yet when I
- took Orders I did give it up; and if it was in itself of no
- use, I hope that one sacrifice, among the many I was
- obliged to make and, thank God, did willingly make to
- more important objects, it was not without value. Thus
- much for my cricketing; I mention it here as being the
- only distinct cause to which I can attribute my losing before
- I went to Cambridge the habits of serious thought and of
- regular prayer, which I have observed I regained in a good
- degree towards the latter part of my Dunton time.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I nevertheless was full of good purposes. I desired
- and was resolved to keep myself from giving countenance
- to immorality as well as practising it, though after having
- once given way at Eton, I hardly ever dared to say a word
- or even to give a look in disapproval of whatever might be
- said or done before me by bold profligates. I could not
- bear to appear out of the fashion; so that when other boys
- at Eton used to talk of the balls and gay parties which
- they had been to in their holidays, I was quite ashamed,
- when asked what I had done, to say that I had been to no
- balls; for to my mother I am greatly indebted for her wise
- conduct in this respect, that she did not, as was done by
- others, make us men before our time. So, although I detested
- and from my heart condemned the fashionable immoralities
- of the young men with whom I came to be
- associated about the time of my going to Cambridge, I
- hardly dared declare my mind, except sometimes, almost
- in confidence, to one who seemed to be like myself. Oh!
- what good might I have done had I then known the value
- of God's grace, and, despising the world, boldly stood up for
- the cause of virtue, at the same time continuing to be gay
- and cheerful with my companions, and taking a leading part
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
- in all innocent and manly diversions, and in the objects of
- honourable emulation which were set before me and my fellows.
- I know how much I might have done by supporting
- others, weak like myself, by acting at this time as I ought
- to have done, by what I felt myself on one or two occasions
- when such support was given me. I thank God that the memory
- of my brother Robert, who died in 1830, commanding
- the <i>Madagascar</i>, near Alexandria, now rises before me to
- claim my grateful acknowledgment as having twice given me
- such help at a critical time. Never was a man more calculated
- than he to get on, as it is said, in the world. He was brave and
- enterprising, and skilled in all that might make him distinguished
- in his profession; at the same time he was most
- eager in the pursuit of field sports and manly amusements;
- and in society was one of the most agreeable and popular
- men of his day. Once I remember complaining to him
- that I was ashamed of having nothing to say before some
- ladies about balls, when I was about sixteen. 'What a
- wretched false shame is that!' said he to me. From that
- time I became more ashamed of my shame than I had been
- before of my want of fashion. More important yet was
- the service he did me when he was about to go on one of
- his cruises as commander of the <i>Ganymede</i>. I was talking
- with him, the last evening before he left London, about the
- Easter before I went to Cambridge. He knew well what I
- should be exposed to better than I did and charged me
- to take care never to laugh or look pleased when I was
- forced to hear immoral conversation. What rare advice
- was this from the mouth of a gay, gallant young officer;
- and if there were more of his character who were not
- ashamed to give it to their young brothers and friends, how
- many might be saved, who are now lost, because they do not
- see one example to show how a manly, fashionable character
- can be maintained with strict morality and modesty.
- These few words from him were of infinite service to me.
- They made deep impression on me at the time I heard
- them, and the resolution which I then made continued
- with me till after I had been some time at Cambridge,
- when the battle I had to bear against the universal fashion
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">{35}</a></span>
- of iniquity once more, as formerly, at Eton, proved too
- strong for me, and I again gave way. My fall now was
- gradual. I began with the resolution to avoid all expenses
- which would embarrass me with debts, and to keep from
- several fashionable amusements which would engage too
- much time. For awhile, on this account, I would not
- play at cards; but in less than half-a-year this determination
- failed, and I wasted many an evening at whist of my
- short college life. I soon grew careless, too, about my
- expenses, and should have been involved in great embarrassments,
- had it not been for my brother's (Lord Althorp's)
- generosity, who, hearing from me at the end of my first
- year that I was in debt, gave me more than enough to clear
- it all away; and, thus having enabled me to set my affairs
- again in order, was the means of saving me from ever
- afterwards going beyond my means extravagantly. I might,
- however, have given way in some such resolutions as not
- playing at cards; I might have entered into some expenses
- which I shunned at first, without losing my peace of mind,
- and again defiling my conscience, of which the good condition
- was partly restored; but these were not the crying
- evils of the place. In the set with which I was now associated
- in the University, gambling was not at that time
- much practised, and not at all insisted on. There were
- occasional drunken parties, and it was with difficulty that I
- kept out of them; but the system of violently forcing
- people to drink, as well at the Universities as throughout
- genteel society in England, had fallen off before my time.
- There were some sets where drinking was practised at
- Cambridge much more excessively than in what called
- itself the best set of all. I could not help, without
- offending the laws of society, being present at a
- considerable number of dinners and suppers where men
- drank immoderately, but I was permitted to keep myself
- sober without much difficulty; one or two gave me countenance
- thus far, though any intimation of disapproving
- of what others did, on religious or moral grounds, I felt
- would not have been anyways tolerated; and so I ventured
- not. Swearing was among them rather unfashionable than
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
- not. Some undergraduates were notorious for profane and
- impious language; and this was excused, and tolerated, and
- made fun of, but it was not common, and many among us
- made no difficulty of condemning it. I therefore never fell
- into this habit. The crying, universal, and most frightful
- evil of the place was open immorality. There was at
- Cambridge, in my time, a religious set, who were sometimes
- called Simeonites, from Mr. Simeon, one of the great leaders
- and promoters of the Evangelical party in these latter days,
- who was minister of one of the small churches in Cambridge,
- and for many years attracted into his influence a
- certain number of young men. Among these open vice was
- not countenanced; but not so the set to which I principally
- belonged, and these were as distinct as if they had not
- belonged to the same University. I was introduced to
- some few of these, and rather valued myself on having an
- acquaintance with them, as well as with many of the purely
- reading men; and my fashionable friends did not altogether
- object to it, though I was generally a little ashamed at being
- seen with any of them, and avoided any frequent intercourse
- with them. I have wondered since that, if it were only
- from mere curiosity, I should never once have gone to hear
- Simeon preach, but so it was. I understood nothing whatever
- of what is in England called Evangelical religion.
- Indeed, I thought nothing of religion; had I paid any
- attention to it at this time, I could hardly have escaped
- seeing how desperate was the course which I was following,
- and I might perhaps have taken a strong resolution, and
- have joined the serious party at once; but, very likely, I
- should have found the power of fashion at that time too
- great, and, by knowing more of religion, should only have
- made my conscience more guilty; and so I believe it may
- be better that none ever spoke to me on the subject all the
- time. I repeat it, that in our set, whatever other deviation
- from the most established fashion was tolerated, any maintenance
- of chastity or modesty was altogether proscribed.
- It was not long, then, before I found myself beat out of the
- position I endeavoured to maintain. During the first term
- I stood my ground rather better. One reason for this was,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
- that among what were called the freshmen&mdash;that is, those
- who entered with me on my college life, there were several
- who were not initiated in vicious practices. These, remaining
- for a time more or less in their simplicity, gave me some
- countenance in not going at once in the way of the veteran
- professors of evil. But as I saw some of them grow by
- degrees shameless and bold, and soon beginning to join their
- older brethren in upbraiding my weakness and folly for not
- being like the rest, I found all my resolution failing, and,
- alas! many a deliberation did I take whether I should not
- at length enter the same way with them. I was still withheld,
- though it was not the fear of God which restrained
- me. I knew that my entering a course of open profligacy
- would not be tolerated by my parents. I had a character
- for steadiness among the tutors and fellows of the college,
- which I was ashamed to lose; though even before them I
- found it sometimes to answer best not to appear different
- from other young men. Besides, as I had resisted the first
- period of attacks, and established among my companions a
- kind of character of my own, I felt that even they would
- be astonished if I at last declared myself as one of their
- sort. I could not bear the thought of their triumph, and
- the horrid congratulations with which I should be greeted,
- if once I was found going along with them in open feats of
- iniquity. Oh! how grievous is the reflection that by such
- motives as these I was restrained. I was longing often to
- be like them. I could not bear the taunts which were
- sometimes made at me. Here again some of the old
- Etonians perhaps would bring up the remembrance of my
- ancient propensity to blush, and would take pleasure in
- putting me again to confusion. Occasionally, by strange
- interpositions of Divine Providence, I was hindered from
- accomplishing purposes of evil which I had, in a sort of
- desperation, resolved by myself to perpetrate, by way of
- being decided one way or other, like a man on the
- brink of a precipice determining to throw himself down in
- order to escape the uneasy apprehension of his danger. One
- way or another I was restrained, so that it has afterwards
- appeared to me as if I had but barely stopped short of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
- taking the last decisive steps by which I might be irrevocably
- ranked among the reprobate. I never thought at the
- time of this danger, otherwise I could hardly have borne
- my existence; but, as it was, my mind at times was gloomy
- and miserable in the extreme. To make me yet more so,
- at the end of my first year I began to be afflicted with
- bilious attacks, arising, perhaps, from my imprudent management
- in regard to study, to diet, and to hours; and
- these occasioned exceeding depression of spirits, under which
- I used to fancy myself the most unhappy of creatures. I
- had no knowledge of the power of religion to set me free,
- and make me superior to all external sensible causes of
- depression, and I knew no better than to give myself up to
- my low feelings when they came upon me, till some distraction
- removed them, or till the fit passed away of itself.
- Many times at Cambridge, in order to hold up my head in
- a noisy company after dinner, I drank wine to raise my
- spirits, though not to great excess, yet enough to teach me
- by experience how mistaken is the calculation of those who,
- when in sorrow, seek to cheer themselves in that way, or in
- any way but by having recourse to God by prayer and acts
- of resignation. I remember well once being told by a good
- aunt of mine, that it was quite wrong to give way to my
- depression, about which I one day complained to her, and
- that religion would surely cure it; but the time was not
- come for me to understand this truth, and I took no notice
- of her words.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In the meantime I continued zealous about my studies.
- I did not stop to ask <i>cui bono</i> was I working in them. Had
- I seen how utterly vain was a first-class place or a Trinity
- prize-book, which I had set before me as the object of my
- labours, I should have found but little consolation and
- refreshment to my melancholy reflections in these pursuits.
- On the contrary, I should only have pined away with a more
- complete sense of the truth of the Wise man's sentence
- which Almighty God was teaching me in His own way, and
- in His own good time: '<i>Vanity of vanities, and all is vanity</i>'
- but to serve Thee only. I do not mean that if rightly followed,
- such academical honours are worth nothing. I wish
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
- I had followed them more prudently and effectually. They
- were the objects set before me by my superiors at the time,
- and I should say to another in my place that he should do
- his best to gain the highest place in a spirit of obedience,
- and for the honour of God, to whom we owe all the credit
- and influence in the world which, by just and honourable
- exertions, we can gain. In recollecting, therefore, how I
- exerted myself, and succeeded in these attempts, I am
- dwelling on one of the most happy points of view which
- that part of my life suggests to me; for though I did not
- do this <i>as</i> I ought, yet I was doing <i>what</i> I ought, and by
- doing so was preserved from much evil, and God knows
- how far the creditable footing I gained at Cambridge in the
- studies of the place may yet be available for a good end."
-</p>
-<p>
-It is hard to believe young Spencer was so utterly devoid
-of religion as he here describes himself to be; we draw a
-more favourable inference from a journal he kept at the time.
-Noticing the death of the Princess Charlotte, he says: "It
-appears to be the greatest calamity that could have befallen
-us in public, and it is a deplorable event in a private point
-of view. It must be ascribed to the interposition of Providence,
-which must have some end in view beyond our
-comprehension." He speaks of the death of Mrs. Blomfield
-thus&mdash;"It is for her a happy event, after a life so well
-spent as hers has been." A few pages further on he has
-these words about the death of another friend of his. "I
-was extremely shocked to-day at hearing that James Hornby
-died last Friday of apoplexy. It was but a short time past
-that I was corresponding with him about the death of Mrs.
-Blomfield; and little he or I thought that he would be the
-next to go. The last year and a half I stayed at Eton I
-lived in the greatest intimacy with him, which had afterwards
-fallen away a little; but he was very clever and
-promising, and I always was fond of him. It must be
-a wise dispensation of Providence, and may be intended as
-a warning to us, in addition to those we have lately had in
-the deaths of Maitland and Dundas. God grant it may be
-an effectual one!"
-</p>
-<p>
-These are not the spontaneous expressions of one altogether
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-a stranger to piety, though they may very well be
-put down as the transient vibration of chords that had long
-lain still in his heart, and which these rude shocks must
-have touched and made audibly heard once more. This
-conclusion is more in accordance with other remarks found
-scattered here and there in the same journal. He criticises
-sermons and seems to like none; he is regular at chapel and
-puts on his surplice on the days appointed; but he refuses
-to take the sacrament for no conceivable reason but that he
-does not care about it, and hears it is administered unbecomingly.
-He is shrewd and considerate in his remarks
-upon persons and things; yet there is scarcely a line of
-scandal or uncharitableness in the whole closely written
-volume. When he records a drunken fit or a row, he suppresses
-the names of the rioters; and if he says a sharp word
-about a person in one page, he makes ample amends for it in
-many pages afterwards; by showing how mistaken he was at
-first, and how agreeable it was to him to change his opinion
-upon a longer acquaintance. This might not appear very
-high praise; but let us take notice of his age and circumstances,
-and then perhaps it may have its value. He was a
-young man, just turned eighteen; he had been brought up
-in splendour at home, and in a poisonous atmosphere at school.
-That he was not the vilest of the vile is to be wondered
-at more than that he preserved as much goodness as he did.
-Where is the young man, of even excellent training, who
-will be able to contend, unaided and taunted, against a whole
-college of the finest youth of any country? His motives
-may be beneath a Christian's standard, but the fact that
-with this weak armour, the bare shadow of what it might
-be, he made such noble resistance and passed almost
-unscathed through the furnace into which he was cast, only
-shows what he would have done had he been imbued with
-the teachings of a higher order. The very human respect
-and worldly considerations that succeeded in keeping him
-from vice, acquire a respectability and a status in the catalogue
-of preservatives from the fact of their being successful
-in his case. His was a fine mind, and one is moved to
-tears at seeing this noble material for sanctity thus tossed
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-about and buffeted by a herd of capricious companions who
-could not see its beauty. Let us take up any young man's
-journal of his age and read some pages of it, what shall we
-find? Jokes played upon green freshmen, tricks for outdoing
-proctors, records of follies, or perchance pompous
-unreality put on to conceal all these or worse. His diary is
-the generous utterance of a noble mind; it is candid, true,
-conscientious, and puts a failing and a perfection of the
-writer side by side. It is no wonder that he was loved and
-courted, and that his companions had acquired an esteem for
-him in college, which years and toils have not succeeded in
-lessening. His keen grief at the deficiencies of his college
-life only shows to what height of sanctity he had reached,
-when what another might boast of wrung from him these
-lamentations.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Conclusion Of His First Year In Cambridge.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The events recorded in his journal at this time could very
-conveniently be swelled into chapters, if one had a mind to
-be diffuse. To trace the fortunes of the gentlemen he
-comes in contact with&mdash;Denison, Wodehouse, Carlisle,
-Hildyard, Brougham, and a host of others, who afterwards
-shone in different circles, High Church controversies,
-pleadings at the bar, parliamentary debates, and Irish
-Lord-lieutenancies,&mdash;would form some very interesting episodes.
-We should add many titles to the off-handed
-surnames of the collegian's journal, and say a few words
-about how those dignities were procured, earned, and
-worn by the possessors. It might be, perhaps, interesting
-to some readers to know how many gay young noblemen
-were enticed into becoming sons-in-law to some very
-reverend doctors. All this and more Mr. Spencer notes
-down in the journal, but it is not our theme.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have before observed that about my first Christmas
- I was encouraged by Mr. Monk and by Mr. Blomfield, who
- had removed from Dunton and lived then about ten miles
- from Cambridge, to undertake a contest for a University
- prize; but from this I afterwards drew back. I followed
- up then principally the object of getting into the first class
- at the Trinity College examinations, which took place at
- the end of each year, and which is an honour much
- esteemed, on account of that College standing so high in
- the University, though of course it is not on a level with
- the honours gained in examinations where competitors are
- admitted from the whole body of students in the University.
- It was one object of silly ambition at Cambridge to
- do well in the examinations without having appeared to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">{43}</a></span>
- take much trouble about it. During my second term I fell
- into the idea of aiming a little at this, and I went to many
- more parties, and took more time for various amusements,
- particularly cards, than I allowed myself in the first term.
- Had I not been checked for this, I should probably have
- lost much ground in my race. But a check did come to me
- at Easter, when I went to town, and one evening expressed
- to my father and mother something of self-congratulation
- for having united so much amusement with my studies.
- My mother saw the danger I was now falling into, and, as
- it seemed to me, with too great severity, for an hour
- together represented to me the absurdity of my notions, and
- upbraided me with going the way to disappoint all their
- prospects. I had no thought of bringing such a reproof
- upon myself, and went to bed actually crying with mortification.
- However, it had its effect, and I was thankful for
- it afterwards. The next term, which was the last and
- critical one before the examination, I spent in very severe
- and regular study, and cared not how some idle ones
- might derogate from my success, and comfort themselves
- for their inferiority by the thought, that I had read so hard
- as to take away from my merit. At length, on the 18th
- May, 1818, the very day, as I observed, on which, ten
- years before, I had gone to Eton, I went into the examinations
- in which was to be gained the little share of credit
- in this way which was to fall to my lot. They lasted for a
- week; and, a day or two after, I received a note from
- Mr. Amos, now a distinguished ...... in London, who
- was one of the examiners, and a great friend of mine,
- which filled me with exultation: 'I have the greatest
- pleasure in informing you that you are in the first class.
- Ollivant is only eight marks above you, and you and he
- have left all the rest of the class at a long, very long,
- distance.' I afterwards learnt that the highest number of the
- marks was between 1,600 and 1,700, and that while
- Ollivant and I were near together at the head, the next to
- me was at the distance of 291. Lord Graham, now Duke
- of Montrose, was one of the first class, and if he had read as
- much as I did, there is no doubt he would have been before
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">{44}</a></span>
- me. I was told at the same time that I learnt the above-named
- particulars, as I find it in my journal, that 'I was
- best in mathematics, and Grahame next, although Grahame
- was first in algebra;' after which I thus expressed my
- ambition at the time: 'I hope that Grahame will not read
- for next year's examination, and if my eyes last out (for at
- that time I was under some apprehension on that point) I
- may have a chance of being first then, which would be
- delightful.' Such is all earthly ambition, and, as in my
- case, so always its effects&mdash;disappointment and mortification.
- Had I offered all my studies to God, and worked for Him,
- depending on His help, I should have done much more.
- I should have enjoyed my successes more purely, and should
- have been guarded from all disappointment. The second
- year's examination is much more confined to mathematics
- than to classics, and had I been wise and regular and
- well-disciplined in my mind, I might have gained that <i>first</i>
- place which I was aiming at, for Grahame did not read for
- it. As it was, Ollivant, who was some way behind me in
- the first year, got up his ground, and beat me in the second
- year's examination, in which, though I was second again,
- I had no remarkable superiority over the one who came
- next to me."
-</p>
-<p>
-Spencer formed the acquaintance of Sir Thomas Fremantle
-while they were both at Dunton under the charge of Mr.
-Blomfield. Fremantle went to Oxford and he to Cambridge,
-but they continued the intimacy, begun here, to which
-Spencer pays cordial tributes of unfeigned gratitude. Sir
-Thomas was a welcome guest at Althorp; he and George
-used to spur each other on to renewed exertions in the pursuit
-of literary honours. Spencer formed a plan for the long
-vacation, and went, on March 25, to Oxford, to lay the subject
-before Fremantle; it was, that they should go somewhere
-and read together. Spencer got into the coach in
-London, and arrived in Oxford at twelve at night. He
-lionised the place next day, was introduced to different celebrities,
-and dined and "wined" in the most select companies
-his friends, Fremantle and Lord Wilton, could muster for his
-reception. He lived during the time in the rooms of a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">{45}</a></span>
-fellow commoner of Oriel. He did not leave a single
-department unvisited. He played at tennis with a Mr.
-Denison; compared the agreements and disagreements of
-their ways there with those of Cambridge; the only thing
-noteworthy he chose to put down in his diary, as the result
-of his comparison, is, that (when he plays cards in W ***'s
-rooms, where there are four tables) "they play high, and I
-do not like the kind of party so well as those at Cambridge."
-</p>
-<p>
-Spencer continued in Cambridge, and read, or idled,
-as the tone of his mind directed, until the 31st of July,
-1818. This morning he set off, at half-past five, in the
-<i>Rising Sun</i>, for Birmingham; he falls in with a brilliant
-Etonian, who recounts the progress of things at his old
-school; and has to sleep in what he calls "the most uncomfortable
-and uncivil inn I have ever seen." He sets off on
-another coach next morning for Shrewsbury, and finds, to
-his agreeable surprise, that Fremantle travelled by the inside
-of the same vehicle. They both travel together into Wales,
-having first procured a supply of candles, tea, and other
-commodities for housekeeping, which they did not hope to
-find at hand where they were going to. After many long
-stages, up-hill and down-hill, among Welsh mountains, and
-strange fellow-travellers, they arrive at Towyn, at ten o'clock
-at night on the 2nd of August, having been nearly three
-days performing a journey which can now be accomplished
-in a few hours.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towyn is a little town in Merionethshire, situated on the
-sea coast, on a neck of land formed by a graceful little creek,
-into which the River Doluny empties itself, and a kind of
-sloping arm of the channel. Here Spencer and Fremantle
-took up their residence for the long vacation, in a nice little
-house for which they paid ten guineas a month. They had
-the whole premises to themselves, with a waiting-man named
-Davis, and a maid Kitty. Their mode of life was very
-regular. They rose early, bathed in the sea, which rolled its
-waves against their premises, breakfasted, and studied till two
-o'clock. It was customary with them then to go out exploring
-with dog and gun until dinner, dine at five, take another
-stroll, and read again until they thought it time to take tea,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-and chat until bed-time. Each in turn was steward for a
-week; they purchased their own provisions in the little town,
-thus making a regular home there for the term of their stay.
-They read pretty well for the first week or two; afterwards
-they got so fond of brisk air and the adventures they came
-across in their daily walks, that the reading became less
-agreeable, and soon irksome. The first adventure recorded
-in the journal is the following. They were both returning
-home after a two hours' vain pursuit of game, and came
-across a gouty old gentleman, who asked them a number of
-impertinent questions. He then asked them to dine, but
-finding out on inquiry that he was "a notorious blackguard,"
-although great in lands and money, they politely declined
-his invitation. Another time they rode a great way up the
-country and stopped at a pretty place, which they found, to
-their chagrin, not to be a fairy castle exactly, but "a grand
-shop for gossip, kept by two old ladies, assisted by a third,"
-at whose qualifications in point of age the reader is left to
-make guesses. Another day they went out to shoot, and
-met another serious adventure, which is thus noted: "I got
-an immense ducking in a black mud ditch, which came up
-to my middle or higher, and Fremantle got a wetting too,
-but not so serious as mine." Things go on smoothly now
-for about a week; they receive several visits from neighbouring
-gentry, and the way in which the return to some of
-them is described gives us a fair specimen of the flow of
-spirits Spencer enjoyed at the time.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-<span class="quotehead">"Saturday, Aug. 15.&mdash;</span>
-We made ourselves greater bucks than usual to-day, and set
-off at two to call on Mr. Scott, near Aberdovey. He takes
-pupils there. We came home to dinner at half-past five;
-and after dinner (still greater bucks) we went to drink tea
-at Bodalog, with Mr. and Mrs. Jeffreys, and came home at
-half-past ten (14 miles walking)."
-</p>
-<p>
-The next adventure was
-one in which they tried their hands at shooting on the river
-with Mr. Jeffreys' long gun; whether the weight of the instrument,
-or an effort to reach the game that it killed, drew them
-nearer the water than they intended, he tells us that they
-"got quite soused in the water," and figured at the gentleman's
-dinner-table in two complete sets of the apparel of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
-the old man, to the no small amusement of the company.
-Nothing remarkable occurred after this to the two friends,
-except a trip to Aberystwyth, where they lodged a few days,
-met a few old acquaintances, and enjoyed a ball that was
-given to the ladies and gentlemen who were there for the
-season; until the 14th of September. This day they had a
-great battle of words with their landlord, who did not like
-their leaving him so soon: in this, however, they came off
-victorious. They both travel through Wales, visit Snowdon,
-Carnarvon, and meet a body of Cambridge men reading with
-a tutor at Conway.
-</p>
-<p>
-September 29th, he took the mail to London, and thus
-ended his long vacation. He stays at Wimbledon with his
-own family until the time for returning to Cambridge again.
-He relates in the journal that a man comes to teach Lady
-Spencer, his mother, how to bind books. This may be
-thought a strange kind of recreation for a lady of high rank;
-but it will not when we read that "this was the same person
-who set off the fashion of <i>shoemaking</i>!"
-</p>
-<p>
-He concludes his first year in Cambridge thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"This day's journal completes a year from the time I began to
-keep my history. It has indeed been an important year
-in my life the first in which I have been my own master,
-and have, I fear, settled my character with all its faults.
-Several things which I have both done and undone I shall
-never cease regretting. I have only to <i>thank God</i> that there
-is no more reason for regret. With my reading, on the
-whole, I am as well satisfied as I ever expected."
-</p>
-<p>
-Two
-words are underlined in this extract; they were often on
-his lips till the day of his death, and frequently formed the
-subject of his sermons. If his character had its faults settled
-with it in his own estimation, it is pleasing to see the habit
-of resignation existing as a virtue in him even at this age.
-It was one that was confirmed in him afterwards, to an
-eminent degree.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-Second Year In Cambridge&mdash;Takes His Degree.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-During the first term of his second year in Cambridge, his
-average hours of reading decreased; yet he had still a taste
-for study, and had not yet thrown aside what remained of his
-former ambition to distinguish himself. He and the Duke
-of Montrose declaim on the respective merits of Charles V.
-and Francis I.; they tossed up for sides, and Charles V.
-fell to Spencer. This keeps him at hard study for some
-time; meanwhile he hears Ollivant declaim, and thinks he
-will get both prizes. After the declamation, in which he
-comes off more creditably than he expected, he has half a
-hope of a prize, which he says he should be surprised though
-delighted to receive. He did get one, but not so high as he
-expected. Here and there in his journal at this time a few
-expressions of discontent escape from him about Cambridge;
-the cause being partially what has been related in the chapter
-before last. This had also, conjointly with another circumstance,
-the effect of cutting short his University career. He
-writes in the autobiography:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I made some good progress during this year, but I
- should have done much more had I been constantly regular.
- I must have suffered great loss by my interruptions, as I
- find by my journal that for about four weeks at the end of
- the long vacation, when I had come home and was taken up
- with shooting, I did not make one hour's study; and two
- more long intervals of cessation from reading took place in
- the Christmas and Easter vacations, when a little steady
- application, if it were but for three hours a-day, would have
- kept my mind attentive, and given me a great advantage.
- After my first examination, I entertained some thoughts
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
- of waiving my privilege of taking an honorary degree, and
- going through the Senate House examinations with a view
- to University honours; but I lost all wish to remain at
- Cambridge towards the end of the second autumn. I was at
- times quite disgusted with the place, for such reasons as I
- have stated; besides which, my father and mother had made
- a plan, which pleased me greatly, of going for a year on the
- Continent, in which I was to accompany them. My brother
- Frederick, who was come home about this time, was to be
- of the party likewise, and happy was I in the prospect of
- being again some time in his company; but as an opportunity
- occurred for him to go to South America, with Sir
- Thomas Hardy, with the hope of being made Commander,
- this professional advantage was justly preferred."
-</p>
-<p>
-Some of the heads at Cambridge as well as Lady Spencer
-urged him at this time to stand for a fellowship, but he
-gave up the idea, and it ended in his joining a new club they
-had formed&mdash;the Eton club. These clubs at the Universities
-are looked upon with no great favour by proctors and others
-who have charge of the morals of the students. Their dinners
-entail great expenses on the members, and they end as the
-first meeting did in his case: "They all made an enormous
-row, and I too, by the bye." He came to spend the
-Christmas of 1818 at Althorp, and closes the year with a
-succession of parties, Pope Joan, and bookbinding. There
-is one little incident recorded in his journal at this time
-which gives us a perfect insight into his character. One
-might expect that at this age, nineteen, he would be very
-romantic and dreamy, and that we should find many allusions
-to those topics which engross so much of the time of
-novel-reading youths and maidens nowadays. Nothing of the
-sort. There is an affair of the heart, but his conduct in it,
-with his remarks on it, are worthy of a sexagenarian. At a
-party, which took place at his father's, he dances with various
-young ladies, among the rest a certain Miss A., who, he
-says, "was a great flame of mine two years ago; she is not
-so pretty as I thought her then, but she is a delightful
-partner. I was again in love, but not violently to-night."
-Two or three days after this, he is at another party, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-dances with a new set of partners to the extent of three
-quadrilles. Of one of these he thus speaks&mdash;"I was delighted
-with Miss B., who is a pleasant unaffected girl, and
-I am doomed to think of her I suppose for two or three
-days instead of Miss A. I was provoked that she would
-not give me her fan at parting." Was it not cool and
-thoughtful of him to mark out the time such a change of
-sentiment was likely to last? The next page of the journal
-brings the subject before us still more clearly. His mother
-took him for a walk around Althorp, and told him that she
-was planning a house for the parsonage at Brington:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"Which they say is to be mine when I am old enough; it
-might be made a most comfortable and even a pretty place,
-and if I live to come to it I can figure to myself some
-happy years there with a fond partner of my joys, if I can
-meet with a good one. 'Here then, and with thee, my N.' [Footnote 2]
-would have been my language some time ago; but how my
-opinions even of such important things change with my
-increasing years. This thought often occurs to me, and will
-I hope prevent me from ever making any engagements
-which cannot be broken, in case my fancy should be altered
-during the time which must elapse before the completion of
-them."
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 2: A quotation, as the reader may remember,
- from <i>Guy Mannering</i>.]
-</p>
-<p>
-It will be seen, further on in the biography, how
-this affair ended. There is a very good lesson in what he has
-left for young men of his age. If reason were allowed to
-direct the affections, many would be preserved from rash
-steps that embitter their whole lives. It seems amusing to
-a Catholic to find the prospects of a clergyman's happiness so
-very commonplace; but it will be a relief to learn by-and-by
-how very different were his ideas when he became a
-clergyman, and built and dwelt in that identical parsonage
-that now existed only in his own and his mother's mind.
-He gets a commission in the Northamptonshire Yeomanry
-before returning to Cambridge for Hilary term this year.
-</p>
-<p>
-Studies seem to him a necessary evil now, and he writes
-with a kind of a sigh of relief when he notes, a few pages
-on, that he has taken his last compulsory lesson in Latin.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-Balls and parties of all kinds are his rage. George and
-a friend of his had notice of a ball coming off in Northampton
-in a few days, and he heard that his "ladye love"
-would be one of the company, so they determined to be
-there. He writes letters, gets an invitation for his friend,
-and makes all the preparation possible for a week previous.
-The day comes, it is rainy; but, no matter, they pack their
-best suits into trunks, bring the necessary apparatus for
-making a good appearance, they search the town for a conveyance,
-and at length procure a team for a tandem at
-Jordan's. Off they go, eighteen miles the first stage, then
-eight more; they bait their horses and dine; off again for
-full sixteen miles. He has also to run the risk of a
-cross-examination from whatever members of his family he may
-happen to meet at the ball, and to answer the difficult
-question, "What brought you here?" It is raining in torrents,
-it is a cold February day; but all difficulties appear
-trifles to the two young adventurers as they urge their team
-over the hills and plains of Northamptonshire. Even
-Spencer boasts in his journal that he is now a first-rate
-whip. They arrive in high glee, forgetting their hardships
-in the glow of anticipation, and are greeted with the bad
-news, as they jump from their conveyance, that the ball has
-been put off until next month. To make matters worse,
-the bearer of these unfavourable tidings assured them that
-he wrote to them to give this information, and they had an
-additional motive to chagrin in the fact of their having forgotten
-to ask for their letters in the hurry and anxiety to
-come off. He notes in the journal&mdash;"Feb. 10. We set off
-again in our tandem for Cambridge, truly <i>dimissis auribus</i>,
-but with a resolution to try again on the 5th March." On
-the 5th of March they faithfully carried out this resolution.
-The ball took place, but the ladies they were anxious to meet
-did not come, so they only half enjoyed the thing. Spencer
-took a hack and rode off to Althorp to make his appearance
-at his father's. He was very nervous about the prospect of
-a meeting with his parents, and having to give an account
-of himself. Fortunately the Earl was deep in some measure
-for furthering George's happiness, and looked upon his son's
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">{52}</a></span>
-arrival as an auspicious visit. Everything thus passed off
-smoothly, and the youngsters arrived in Cambridge with
-their tandem "without accidents, but with two or three
-narrow escapes." His journal here has few incidents out of
-the ordinary line of his daily life; he learns to wrestle with
-success; so as to bring his antagonist to the ground with a
-dilapidation of the <i>res vestiaria</i>. He practises a good deal at
-jumping, and one day, in clearing a hedge, a bramble caught
-his foot, which brought him with violence to the ground;
-by this mishap his eye was ornamented with a scar which
-gave him some trouble afterwards. He also gets a shying
-horse to ride: this noble charger had a particular dislike to
-carts: he shied at one in the market-place in Cambridge,
-and soon left his rider on the flags. Spencer mounted again,
-but found on his return, after a good ride, that his toe was
-sprained, and it kept him indoors for five or six days. This
-chapter of accidents was amply counterbalanced by the
-agreeable fact that he had just attended his twenty-fifth
-divinity lecture, and had obtained the certificate which was
-to insure him the imposition of his bishop's hands, whenever
-he might think it convenient to put himself to the trouble
-of going through the ceremony. His course is now coming
-to an end; he becomes a freemason, and rises four degrees
-in the craft before the end of June. A bishop visits Trinity
-College, and standing in solemn grandeur, with a staff of
-college officers dressed out in their insignia encircling him,
-his lordship delivers a grave expression of his displeasure at
-the stupidity some twenty students gave evidence of during
-their examination. Spencer comes out in the first class once
-more; his brother Frederick is in Cambridge at the time,
-and as soon as the result is known they take coach for
-London. Here they spend their time agreeably between
-dining at home and abroad, going to Covent Garden, and
-taking sundry lessons from an Italian dancing-master, until
-July 5th, when George returns to Cambridge to take out
-his degree. We will hear himself now giving an account of
-this great event.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My college labours terminated with the end of the
- second year's college examination for the classes, which took
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">{53}</a></span>
- place on the 1st of June, 1819. On the 5th of June the
- result was declared, when, as I have before said, I was in
- the first class again, and second to Ollivant. This was
- rather a disappointment, and gave me some reasonable
- discontent. For the cause of my not being, as I might
- have expected, as far above the others as I had been the
- year before, I saw clearly was a degree of carelessness in my
- reading, especially of one subject that is, the three first
- sections of Newton's Principia, which were appointed for
- the second year's reading, and for which I had not had a
- taste as for other parts of mathematics. However, the time
- was now past to recover my place, and soon the importance
- of this little matter vanished into nothing. I then went to
- London till the beginning of July, when I returned to
- Cambridge to receive my degree as Master of Arts from the
- Duke of Gloucester, who came in person at the commencement
- of this year to confer the degrees as Chancellor of the
- University, and to be entertained with the best that the
- colleges could raise to offer him in the way of feasts and
- gaieties. My Cambridge cares and troubles were now well-nigh
- past, and I enjoyed greatly the position I held at this
- commencement as steward of the ball, and a sort of leader
- of the gaieties in the presence of the Royal personages,
- because I was the first in rank of those who received their
- honorary degrees.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "From this time there has been a complete cessation with
- me of all mathematical studies, and almost of all my classical,
- to which I have hardly ever again referred. For when
- I again returned to regular study, I had nothing in my mind
- but matters of theology. It was at this time, after leaving
- Cambridge, when I remained principally fixed as an inmate
- in my father's house, till I was settled in the country as a
- clergyman, that I was in the character of what is called a
- young man about town. It was with my dear brother
- Frederick, who was at home at the time, as I before
- observed, that I began in earnest to take a share in the
- enjoyment of London life. I have seen the dangers, the
- pleasures, and the miseries of that career, though all in a
- mitigated degree, from the happy circumstance of my not
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
- being left alone to find my way through it, as so many are
- at the age of which I speak. With many, no doubt, the
- life in London is the time for going to the full depth of all
- the evil of which Oxford or Cambridge have given the first
- relish. My father and mother were not like many aged
- veterans in dissipation&mdash;whom in the days when the fashionable
- world was most accounted of by me, I have looked on
- with pity&mdash;who to the last of their strength keep up what
- they can of youth, in pursuing still the round of the gay
- parties of one rising generation after another. They (my
- parents) hardly ever went into society away from home.
- They kept a grand establishment, when in London, at
- Spencer House, as well as at Althorp in the winter, when
- the first society, whether of the political, or the literary and
- scientific, were constantly received. It would, therefore,
- have been unreasonable in me to be fond of going out for
- the sake of society, when, perhaps, none was to be met
- with so interesting as that at home; besides this, my father
- and mother were fond of being surrounded by their family
- circle; and if I or my brothers, when staying with them in
- London, went out from home several times in succession, or
- many times a week, they would generally express some
- disappointment or displeasure; and though I used at the
- time to be sometimes vexed at this kind of restraint, as I
- was at other restraints on what I might have reckoned the
- liberty of a young man, I used generally, even then, to see
- how preferable my condition was. I now most clearly see
- that the feelings of my parents in this matter were most
- reasonable, and that it was a great blessing to me that I
- was situated in such circumstances. They were desirous
- that we should see the world, and when any amusement
- was going on, or party was to take place, which she thought
- really worthy of attention, as not being so frivolous as the
- general run of such things, my mother zealously assisted in
- procuring us invitations, and providing us with needful
- dresses; as, for instance, at this time she gave to my brother
- Frederick and me very handsome full-dress uniforms (his
- being, of course, that of a naval officer, mine of the
- Northamptonshire Yeomanry, in which I then held a commission),
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">{55}</a></span>
- that we might appear at balls and parties where
- full-dress was required, such as foreign ambassadors sometimes
- gave. These were, she thought, really worth going to
- on account of extraordinary or remarkable characters who
- came to them, whether English or foreigners. Thanks to
- their regular domestic habits, and to the strict authority
- which my mother still kept over us all, while being at
- Spencer House, I should have found it almost as difficult as
- in a well-regulated college to go into any extravagant irregularities,
- and so I was hardly tempted to do so. My feeling
- habitually was to try and avoid invitations and engagements
- from home, far from seeking them eagerly."
-</p>
-<p>
-The incidents we are able to add from his journal during
-the interval between leaving Cambridge and going abroad
-are very meagre, yet, since they are characteristic of the
-man's feelings, a few will be inserted. From the journal:
-"Tuesday, July 20. We got up and went to a dreadful
-formal breakfast at 10½. At one we were dressed, and the
-company began to arrive for a public breakfast, to be given
-to-day to the people of the county in honour of the marriage
-of Lord Temple. The collation was in the greenhouse, and
-lasted off and on till about 6!" He goes through the particulars
-of the entertainment, the quadrilles and country
-dances, the partners' perfections, &amp;c., &amp;c.; but when Lady
-Buckingham asked himself and his brother to stay a little
-while longer, much as they liked it, they would not do so,
-because their mother desired them to be home at a certain
-time. One must admire his obedience even at the expense
-of his enjoyment, when he might calculate upon the implicit
-consent of his mother to their acceding to such a request, and
-from such a quarter. Another thing we gather from this is,
-that F. Ignatius, even when a youth, could never bear what
-was formal or ultra-refined; he always liked natural ease and
-unaffected simplicity. "We find him turn away from a blue-stocking,
-and steal three days' thoughts from his "flame"
-to bestow them on one more unaffected and simple. The next
-incident he chooses to record is, that the clergyman of the
-church he used to attend had gone to spend his honeymoon,
-and that a preacher whom he did not admire took his pulpit
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
-in his absence. There are some partings of friends, and a
-great variety of amusements, to fill up the pages for a month
-or so. Father Ignatius used to tell a very remarkable anecdote
-about this period of his life; he used it to illustrate
-the sacrifices that people can willingly make for the law of
-fashion, and how reluctant they are to make even the smallest
-for the love of God. There was a great ball to be given
-somewhere in London; it was to be a most splendid affair,
-full in all particulars of dress and etiquette, and one of those
-that the Countess Spencer thought really worth going to.
-A celebrated <i>coiffeur</i> was imported direct from Paris, and
-he had a peculiar style of hair-dressing that none of that
-craft in London could hope to imitate with success. All the
-<i>belles</i>, marchionesses of high degree, who intended figuring
-at the ball, hired the French <i>coiffeur</i>. He accepted all the
-engagements, but found they were so many that it would
-take twenty-four hours' hard work, without a moment's
-repose, to satisfy all. He had to begin at three o'clock in
-the afternoon of the day preceding the ball, and Father
-Ignatius knew one lady who was high upon his list. She had
-her hair dressed about four, and, lest it might be disarranged,
-slept in her arm-chair, with her neck in stocks, for the night.
-This lady, be it remembered, was no foolish young <i>belle</i>, but
-a matron who might have conveniently introduced her
-granddaughter to the circle she attended. "These people,"
-he used to say, "laugh at the folly of St. Peter of Alcantara
-and other mortified saints; and we, who aspire to be saints,
-will undergo with difficulty what worldlings cheerfully
-endure for vanity and folly." He often laughed at this,
-and often laughed others into seriousness at his comments
-on it.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Travels On The Continent.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Spencer's thoughts now seemed perpetually fluttering around
-the expectation of going abroad and seeing wonders. This
-idea comes out at most unexpected times in the journal, it
-forms a parenthesis in everything he considers bearing seriously
-upon his welfare. At one time he is disappointed in
-not having his brother for companion, at another he hopes
-his parents will not consider this trip travelling enough for
-him; he expects, too, that the parental reins will be slackened
-somewhat; and even it crosses his mind, as a kind of
-remote probability, that he may perchance be allowed to
-take a tour by himself. All that was hopeful in these day-dreams
-was gratified, and some of them to an extent that he
-was very far from imagining at the time. The great day
-did arrive at last; the evening before, the different branches
-of the family came to dine at Wimbledon, where the Earl
-was then staying. They were very serious, as they were
-going "on a formidable expedition next morning." In the
-morning, the different articles of luggage were sent before
-them on a van; and, after parting with Lords Althorp,
-Lyttelton, and their families, the party started for the
-Continent. It consisted of Lord and Lady Spencer in one carriage,
-George and the physician in another, and the servants
-in a third. They had a courier employed, Luigi Cavani,
-whose office it was to ride ahead of the cavalcade, and provide
-horses and other necessaries at the next stage. They
-set sail at Dover at six o'clock on the evening of the 14th
-September, and, after what was called a favourable passage,
-arrived in Calais the next morning at half-past seven o'clock.
-One can leave London Bridge nowadays at the time they
-left Dover Harbour, and be in Paris before they landed.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">{58}</a></span>
-He says in the autobiography:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It was on the 15th of
- September, 1819, that we landed at Calais a day most
- interesting to me, as I then considered, because the first of
- my setting foot in a foreign land, but much more, I now
- must reckon, as being the first on which I trod Catholic
- ground and entered a Catholic church." In the journal he
- says: "Dr. Wilson and I walked about a little (in Calais)
- to the market-place and the church, both which were extraordinary
- to the greatest degree in my eyes. Sept. 16. We
- breakfasted at eight, and then started on our journey. 1st
- went my father and mother in their carriage with 4 horses;
- 2ndly. Dr. Wilson and I in a hired <i>calèche</i> with two horses.
- 3rd. Drewe and the maids, in one with three horses; and
- last, the <i>fourgon</i>, with 3. This was the order of march. I
- was amused extremely by the difference of this and our
- English posting. The appearance of the postilions is so new
- to me, as they crack their long whips over their heads, and
- the little horses with their rope harness look so mean.
- Luigi rode post to order horses and manage everything for
- us, and was always found waiting at every relay."
-</p>
-<p>
-We quote this in full to give an idea of how noblemen
-travelled in the not very olden time. If George was much
-surprised at the church in Calais, his wonder knew no
-bounds when he entered the Cathedral in Amiens, and saw
-"Mass performed by separate Priests at different Altars,
-and people at each." This is a mystery to Protestants who
-see Catholic rites for the first time. They are taught to
-look upon true worship as consisting in the meaning of some
-well-written sentences, pronounced with emphatic unction,
-and responded to with some degree of fervour. The service,
-the fine old psalms, anthems, and collects of the Prayer-Book,
-issuing forth in melodious accents from the lips of a
-God-fearing man, is about the highest kind of public worship
-they can have any notion of. The sermon is first with
-some, second with others; but whatever place the peculiar
-excellence of the preacher, and the effects of it on a given
-occasion, may gain in the heart of an individual, it may be
-taken for granted that the service comes before the sermon
-in the abstract. But service and sermon must be heard, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">{59}</a></span>
-listened to, and understood. With this idea in their minds,
-and accustomed to see the minister assume a manner and
-mien calculated to produce prayerful thoughts in his congregation,
-they are surprised, if not shocked, at the Catholic
-Mass. They find the Priest hurrying off through Latin
-prayers, and producing breathless attention by his own
-silence; they see him arrayed in unintelligible attire, moving
-one way and another, bowing, genuflecting, standing still,
-or blessing. They scarcely understand a word or gesture,
-and feel perfectly sure that the old woman who beats her
-breast and counts her beads by the side of their staring
-effrontery is as much in the dark as themselves, if not more.
-They have seen one evidence more of the humbug of
-Popery, and bless God that Cranmer procured them another
-ritual. It is not our object to explain Catholic mysteries,
-but it may be as well to hint that if a stranger to Jerusalem
-happened to wander to Calvary on the great day of the
-Crucifixion, and believed in the divinity of the Victim who
-hung upon the Cross, he would find more devotion in
-kneeling in silence at His feet, than in listening to the
-most eloquent declamation he could hear about it. Such is
-the case with the Catholic now as then; he knows the same
-Victim is offered up still, and when the great moment arrives
-in the middle of the Mass, he would have everything
-to be hushed and silent, except the little bell that gives him
-notice of the awful moment. A reason why there should be
-people at the different altars lies in this: that there is the
-same Sacrifice on each, and one may happen to come into
-the church at a time when it would be more convenient to
-hear Mass at some one place than at another. The course
-of their journey lay through Paris, which they entered from
-St. Denis by Montmartre. They remained some days there
-to see Notre Dame, and Paris from its summit, admire
-the length of the Louvre, and visit Fontainebleau. In the
-course they took by Auxerre, Maison Neuve, Dijon, Poligny,
-and Morey, in order to cross Mount Jura and to see Mont
-Blanc on their way to Switzerland, they have to endure
-many privations. The inns are bad, the cooking is inferior,
-and they have to undergo discomforts while sleeping in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
-the <i>châlets</i> of mountaineers, who were not accustomed to
-have their quiet invaded by such state visits every day.
-All this they bore manfully until they arrived in Geneva,
-which they find "crammed with English." It strikes
-George as extraordinary that the Genevese should have
-their shops in the top story of their houses. He
-misses the morning service in the Calvinist Church on
-Sunday; thinks their afternoon function very like the
-Scotch, and sensible. He gives vent to his indignation
-at finding "a number of blackguard fellows playing cards
-and smoking, publicly, at a cafe, whilst there were only
-twenty at church." He is disappointed, therefore, at not
-finding Geneva the devout, religious place he imagined it to
-be. He sees a few of the sights with Dr. Wilson, and they
-cross the Lago Maggiore in a boat, whilst the rest of the
-company go round it by land. They all meet together in
-Milan; there they find Lord Lucan. He goes to see the
-<i>Duomo, Brera,</i> theatres; and admires the fine streets, shops,
-&amp;c., and says the Cathedral is unique. He had the pleasure
-of meeting the famous Angelo, afterwards Cardinal, Mai at
-the Ambrosian Library. He went to the Cathedral on
-Saturday to see <i>Mass performed</i>, and was disappointed at
-not hearing the organ. He had, however, quite enough of
-the rite on Sunday, October 17th:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"At 10½ I went to the
-<i>Duomo</i>, and got into a little gallery over the choir, from
-whence I saw the ceremonies for the anniversary of the
-consecration of the church. There was a procession all round
-the building, with incense burning, and with the Priests
-singing anthems all the time, and a quantity of <i>other mummery</i>,
-the sight of which might well have driven Calvin to
-the extremities which he went to in the contrary way. The
-whole service is always in Latin, so that the people may not
-reap even the smallest benefit from it."
-</p>
-<p>
-We shall give
-another extract from the journal, as it shows the state of
-his mind at the time:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "This day completes the second
- year of my journal. How quick are they flown! those two
- years which are supposed to be the happiest in life. I think
- any time in life is happy if one knows the secret of making
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
- it so. I have not learnt it yet, and have had a great deal
- of unhappiness since going to College. But for what?
- Nothing but my own imagination and weaknesses, for
- everything which generally gives happiness I have enjoyed.
- I have made several friends, been successful enough in my
- College studies, and have never wanted anything; but I
- have a morbid constitution which makes me raise phantoms
- of unhappiness where there is none, and clouds the fairest
- scenes with a veil of melancholy. This must be conquered,
- somehow or other, or I shall be a creature useless to others
- and tormenting to myself."
-</p>
-<p>
-He feels much distaste at what he terms the dirty style
-in which an Italian gentleman chooses to live, because
-that gentleman finds himself quite comfortable without
-such furniture and appliances as are deemed essential in
-England. He happened to be a man fond of books, and
-spent his spare time in libraries and academies.
-</p>
-<p>
-The travellers leave Milan after a fortnight's stay, and
-proceed through Placentia, Parma, Modena, and Bologna.
-Here the celebrated Cardinal Mezzofanti called upon them,
-and Spencer remarks that the only thing worth seeing, as
-far as he has gone, in Italy, are churches and their ornaments.
-He singled out one of those latter for special
-remark, as we find by the following passage:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Oct. 30.</span> At nine o'clock Dr. Wilson's friend, a
- lawyer, took him and me up to a church on the mountain,
- near the town, famous for a picture&mdash;done, as they say, by
- St. Luke! There is a fine arcade to it for 2½ miles, and
- pilgrims go by this to adore this nonsense!"
-</p>
-<p>
-Their next stay is at Florence, where he had the ill-luck
-of not providing against mosquitoes, who took the
-liberty of biting him heartily the first night he slept there.
-News reaches him next day that a great friend of his at
-Cambridge, a Mr. Gambler, has obtained a fellowship in
-Trinity. This makes him merry all the evening. They
-halt again for some rest at Perugia. All he says about this
-classic town is, "Before breakfast the Doctor and I saw a
-gallery of frightful old pictures, and other <i>maraviglia</i> of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">{62}</a></span>
-Perugia, and then set off, still through mountainous
-country, to Spoleto. They start for Rome next day, they
-see it fifteen miles off, but he does not seem to have had a
-single spark of enthusiasm as he looks upon the great mistress
-of the world for the first time. Of course Rome, as
-the capital of Christendom, was not likely to stir up his
-best feelings, when we remember the then frame of his
-religious mind. At all events, cold and listless as it
-might be, he entered Rome on Wednesday, the 10th November,
-1819. The first thing he and his father with the
-Doctor did on arriving, was to pay a visit to St. Peter's.
-"We saw it inside and out. It was most glorious: but its
-size from some reason or other disappoints me, as it does all
-strangers; it improves upon acquaintance, I fancy." How
-like Byron's opinion. "Childe Harold:" Canto iv. 65:&mdash;
-</p>
-<pre>
- "Enter: its grandeur overwhelms thee not;
- And why? it is not lessened: but thy mind,
- Expanded by the Genius of the spot,
- Has grown colossal, and can only find
- A fit abode wherein appear enshrined
- Thy hopes of immortality; and thou
- Shalt one day, if found worthy, so defined,
- See thy God face to face, as thou dost now
- His Holy of Holies, nor be blasted by His brow."
-</pre>
-<p>
-He visits next the Capitoline, the ancient Forum, and
-the Coliseum; he remarks: "this last is quite stupendous,
-and quite answers my expectations. I could not yet understand
-the plan of the staircases and seats. <i>The Pope has
-stuck it all over with little chapels</i>." He meets Tom Moore,
-and spends a day with him and other merry companions in
-Tivoli.
-</p>
-<p>
-He stayed in Rome this time only a week: for on the
-17th November they all started for Naples. In passing
-through Terracina he meets what Catholics will recognize
-as a <i>svegliarino</i>. It is customary, when a mission is being
-given in some parts of Italy, for one of the missioners to
-go out, accompanied by a bell, and such companions, lay
-and clerical, as wish to take part in the ceremony, go
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">{63}</a></span>
-around the village, and preach from a table in three or
-four different places. This has a remarkable effect&mdash;the
-listless loungers who prefer basking in the sun, or swallowing
-maccaroni, to going to the church for the sermons, are
-thus roused so far as to put their heads out of the window
-or door and ask what's the matter. By-and-bye the crowd
-thickens, one looks inquisitively at the other, and when
-their curiosity has been worked upon sufficiently, the
-missioner gets up, and in a fiery zealous discourse puts the
-fear of God into his hearers. Thousands are brought to
-repentance by these means every year. The sermon, of
-course, is not a polished oration, with points of rhetoric to
-suit the laws of criticism. It is rather broken and inflamed,
-short and telling sentences, and delivered with all that
-unction and impetuosity for which Italians are remarkable;
-and which is anything but intelligible to an Englishman,
-who is accustomed to the measured discourses of a London
-Churchman. Accordingly we find this proceeding thus
-dotted down in the journal:&mdash;"At Terracina we were very
-much <i>amused</i> by a procession of penitents with the Bishop
-of Terracina, and an extravagant sermon preached by a
-priest from a table before the inn." At that time, how
-little could he foresee that he should afterwards give such a
-mission in Italy himself, and further, to the utmost of his
-power, with equal zeal, though with more sedateness, even
-such an <i>extravaganza</i>, as it now appeared to him. His
-style of preaching, however, as we shall hereafter see, was
-never such as to qualify him for an emphatic <i>svegliarino</i>.
-</p>
-<p>
-On November 21 they arrive in Naples, not very pleasantly,
-as Lady Spencer had suffered from the roughness
-of the road, and was obliged to rest a night in Capua, and
-George was suffering from a soreness in his eye. These
-inconveniences were forgotten for a moment on meeting
-Lord George Quin and his lady, daughter to Lord Spencer.
-Young Spencer was delighted with the children, though
-they could only speak French or Italian. The soreness of
-his eye keeps him at home next day, which he enjoys as he
-has full opportunity of chatting with his sister, whom he
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">{64}</a></span>
-seems to have loved very much. He has already alluded to
-the plan his mother formed for his learning to play on the
-guitar; so we shall not quote any of the handsome greetings
-which the guitar-master receives as he comes to inflict the
-penance of making his pupil tune the strings of this
-romantic instrument.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-English Life In Naples.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The English who wintered in Naples at the same time
-with the Spencer family seemed to have formed, as they
-generally do, a special caste. They dined together, drove
-out together, they laughed at the churches, and crowded
-the opera. Their conduct in the latter place did not
-seem to be very edifying to the Neapolitans, who, perhaps,
-may have thought it was an English custom to see a
-nobleman "tumbling tipsy one night into Earl Spencer's
-box," to the no small disedification of the whole family,
-who were models of sobriety and decorum. The English,
-by forming their own circles in this exclusive manner,
-and by their external deportment on various occasions,
-keep away the higher and more pious grades of
-society in Catholic cities. The scoffers at monachism and
-priestly rule are freely admitted within the English pale,
-and pay for their hospitality, by catering to the worst
-prejudices of their entertainers, and maligning their neighbours.
-It is very often a repetition of the fable of the sour
-grapes. For this we have ample testimony in the writings
-of our contemporaries, which we will strengthen by quoting
-Father Ignatius's own words a little later. The better
-Italians sometimes laugh at all this, so that John Bull is
-become a by-word among them for exclusiveness and arrogant,
-selfish pride. The blame lies with the English.
-</p>
-<p>
-They sometimes found disagreeable incidents from the
-clashing of tastes and customs. On the 8th of December
-they made the round of the churches, but were sorely
-piqued that the Neapolitans had too much respect for our
-Blessed Lady to open the operas and theatres on the evening
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
-of the Feast of her Immaculate Conception, so they had to
-content themselves with whist, and discordant notes from
-George's guitar. Another of these crosses occurred a few
-days after. George made a lame excursion to Vesuvius,
-and when groaning from toothache on his return, heard
-that the father of his bosom friend, Sir Thomas Fremantle,
-senior, was dead. To make matters worse, the remains could
-not be interred in a cemetery, and the <i>Inglesi</i> had to pay
-the last sad rites to their friend in a private garden. On
-Christmas Day they had service at the Consul's, and then
-they walked about, and had their whist for the rest of the
-day. The old year was danced out at a grand quadrille
-party, of which more hereafter; and George tells us very
-carefully that "a set of us drank in the new year in
-<i>diavolone</i>." How remarkable, at every turn, and even by
-such chance and off-hand expressions, to note the contrast
-between the George Spencer of that day and the subject of
-divine grace he afterwards became!
-</p>
-<p>
-It is a relief to begin the new year 1820 with recording
-an exception made to the general custom above. George
-was presented by his father to King Ferdinand, and all the
-<i>nobili Inglesi</i> were invited to join in the festivities with
-which it was customary to usher in the new year. For
-the rest, the evenings and early part of the mornings are
-spent in a continual whirl of amusement, and it would
-require a page to number up the balls and dances he figured
-in. He visits also the Carthusian and Camaldolese monasteries,
-but makes no comments. He goes two or three times
-to see Vesuvius and the crater and the lava, of which he
-gives a very nice description; after this he is allowed, by
-special favour, to be at the Royal chase: this puts him in
-great humour, for, besides the sport it afforded in the
-way of getting shots at such choice game as wild boars, it
-gave him an opportunity of seeing the "King and all his
-court, to which nothing can be similar."
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the end of January, Lord and Lady Spencer
-determined on returning to England, and offered to leave
-George to travel through the sights of Southern Italy. He
-perceives, in a few days, the tokens of an inclination in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-parents to have his company, and goes straightway to the
-Honourable Augustus Barrington, who was to be his fellow-traveller,
-and breaks off the plan they had formed. It was
-only after very pressing instances from his father and mother
-that he could be persuaded to take up the first plan anew.
-A portion of his autobiography will throw some light upon
-many things we have only just touched upon, and, therefore,
-it is better to quote it here, though it might come in more
-opportunely at the conclusion of his first tour abroad.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is extraordinary, indeed, that I should have remained
- a whole year on the Continent and never once have seriously
- taken into consideration the subject of the Catholic religion.
- Such was the case; and I returned to England, as far as I
- can remember, without one doubt having crossed my mind
- whether this was the true religion or not. ...
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- And now for a little recollection of the state of my mind
- during this period of travelling, and its moral effects
- upon me. During all this time I continued, thank God,
- wholly convinced that a course of iniquity would not
- answer; and had I met with any among the young men,
- my associates, who would have dared to speak out fully in
- favour of morality, I should, I believe, have been ready to
- agree with him. But where were such to be found? I had
- now grown so far more independent of the world, that I had
- not open assaults to bear continually against for not running
- with the rest. Many of the young men who maintained
- their character as free licentious livers, yet professed some
- degree of moderation and restraint in their indulgences.
- Some I remember, who professed to keep clear of immoral
- practices, and no doubt their sincerity in this might be
- depended on; for where no credit but dishonour would be
- the reward of steady conduct, there was no temptation to
- pretend to it falsely. But I remember now but one who
- dared to allude in my hearing&mdash;and that was but once, I
- think, in private&mdash;to the consequence of this sin in another
- world, and to maintain that it was better to avoid it for
- fear of punishment hereafter. While, then, I still knew
- that the way of evil was all wrong, and would have been
- most happy if the fashion of wickedness could have been at
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">{68}</a></span>
- an end; and though I never once, as far as I know, was the
- first to introduce immodest conversation, and hardly ever
- heard it introduced by others without inward repugnance,
- and seldom joined in it; yet I never dared declare how
- much I hated it, and was still in the most awful and desperate
- state of wishing I had been like the worst, sooner
- than be thus subject to the torment of being put to shame
- before bold profligates. While with my parents, I have
- before said, I was under good surveillance, and could not
- think of being detected by them in any evil. How shall I
- ever be thankful enough for all this? My father's character
- was such that though many who were often in his company
- were men whom I have known, when out of it, to delight
- in most abominable things, I knew of none who ever dared
- in his sight to do more than covertly allude to them. I was
- therefore happy in this respect whenever he was near;
- but when once more left to myself, I again returned to
- those fearful deliberations of which I have before spoken
- of, as it were, selling myself, for a time at least, to work
- wickedness without restraint. It may be well conceived
- how miserably fallen and corrupt must have been my heart
- when such purposes were entertained within it; and if, partly
- through some remains of the holy impressions of my childhood,
- which still operated on my poor, degraded heart as a
- kind of habit not yet quite worn off; partly by a sense of
- the shame and misery I should have before my family and
- some more whom I knew in the world, who would be themselves
- most afflicted if they heard of my fall from the good
- dispositions which they had known in me; partly from a fear of
- ridicule, even from the profligate, if, after all, I was to fell;
- partly by the wonderful providence of God, which (I acknowledge)
- most wisely and most tenderly, yet strongly interposed
- at times to baffle the madness of my designs when about to
- be accomplished&mdash;if, I say, thus I have been in a degree
- preserved, God knows I have no credit due to me: God
- knows that from my heart I take only shame and confusion
- of face to myself in the remembrance, of my very preservation.
- Towards the latter part of my stay abroad, I began
- to be in some way weary of this uncertain state of mind. I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
- was always expecting to take Orders when I should reach
- the age; and as I knew that then I should not be expected
- by the world to join in its fashionable vices, and should even
- suffer in public estimation if I did, my thoughts began to
- be rather better directed, and I took pains from time to
- time to overcome some of the evil that was in me."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is wonderful that any good disposition should have
- lived within me, when every remembrance of religion seems
- to have been put out of my mind. I now could hardly
- understand how this should have indeed been the case, if I
- had not a clear remembrance of certain circumstances which
- plainly show what was the state of my mind. On the 27th
- January, 1820, I went up Mount Vesuvius with Dr. Wilson,
- when, as we were looking into the crater of the volcano, a
- discharge of red-hot stones took place. I heard them whistle
- by me as they ascended, and though it was of no use to
- attempt to get out of the way, I hurried back a few steps by a
- natural impulse, and immediately saw a lump of red-hot stuff
- twice the size of one's head fall on the spot where I had been
- standing just before. We immediately ran down the side
- of the mountain, and reached a place about a quarter of a
- mile distant from the mouth of the crater, from whence we
- could see the upper cone of the mountain. Just then a
- grand explosion took place, which shook the whole mountain,
- and a vast quantity of these masses of fiery red stuff
- was spouted out from the crater, which in its return appeared
- entirely to cover the whole space over which we had been
- running five minutes before. Here was an evident escape
- which, in a mind possessed with any religion at all, could
- not fail of awakening some serious reflections. Alas! I
- never thought of the abyss into which I must have fallen
- had not the good angel, who watched and guided me through
- so many perils which I thought not of, then preserved me.
- When I came down in the evening to Naples, the only effect
- was that I was pleased and vain at having a good adventure
- to relate, and showing off a spirit of bravery and indifference,
- when some blamed me for my rashness.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Another circumstance I may record to show how free
- from all religious fear my mind was. I have before noticed
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">{70}</a></span>
- the fits of melancholy which became habitual to me during
- the last part of my Cambridge life. These came, I think,
- to their greatest height in the last half of the time I spent
- at Naples. The interesting excitement of our journey, the
- company of my sister when I first came to Naples, and the
- gaieties of which I had my fill there, and which at first had
- all the charm of novelty, kept me from much thought of
- any kind, and I enjoyed the balls, the concerts, the grand
- operas, the enchanting rides of Naples, for a month or six
- weeks, almost without a cloud. At least I used always to
- count that my brightest period in the way of enjoyments.
- Unhappy those who have health and spirits and talents to
- enable them to please and be pleased long together in such
- a round of vanity! To my great vexation I found myself
- again attacked with my old enemy, melancholy; do what I
- would, I could not drive away those fits of gloom. They
- were caused partly by the effect on my health of too much
- good living, and bad hours; but the chief cause was the
- intrinsic worthlessness of all such pleasure, which will discover
- itself sooner or later to every one even of its most
- devoted lovers, and which happily showed itself to me sooner
- than others. Oh! what frivolous causes did my happiness
- then seem to depend on! Not dancing to my satisfaction
- in one quadrille, fancying that some of my favourite partners
- were tired of my conversation, and that the nonsense of
- some other silly youth pleased her better, was enough to
- turn what I flattered myself was about to be a bright and
- pleasant evening into gloom and sadness. Sometimes, without
- an assignable cause, my spirits failed, as at others an
- equally frivolous reason would remove my clouds and make
- me bright again; but gradually the gloomy moods gained
- ground, and grew more dark and tedious. I remember comparing
- notes with another young man, who was like me a
- victim of the dumps, and finding some satisfaction in the
- sympathy of a fellow-sufferer, who, with a smile at the
- absurdity of such feelings, of which he was well sensible
- while he avowed them, exactly described to me my state of
- mind when he said that under them he fancied himself the
- most unfortunate of mankind, and would willingly have
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">{71}</a></span>
- changed places with the most despicable and wretched of
- men, not to say with any animal almost. Poor blind fools
- that we were! We could not between us suggest the way
- to be happy which is open to all.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I remember well coming home one night from a ball,
- which, by my journal, I find to be on the 25th January,
- when, as I wrote at that time, I was more miserable than
- ever I was in that way. I went to bed, and heard a noise
- like a creak in the ceiling of my room. I felt a wish that it
- would break through and crush me. How I used to wish at
- that time I had the sort of bold, firm heart which appeared
- through some of the young manly faces which I used daily
- to meet&mdash;to whom low spirits was a thing unknown. I
- knew not that I was quarrelling with the most choice of
- God's mercies to me, without which I should probably have
- been irrevocably lost. I still, to this day, am used to the
- visits of my feelings of dejection, but, thank God, I know
- better how to receive them; and, far from wishing them
- away, I rather fear their departure, and desire they may
- never leave me. For if I have within me one bright, heavenly
- desire, I owe it to these feelings, which first poisoned
- my pleasure in the world, and drew me at length to seek for
- it elsewhere, and now I wish never to have peace within my
- breast while one desire lives there for anything but God.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Yet that thought of wishing even to be crushed, that I
- might escape from my miserable feelings, shows how far
- I was at that time from knowing how great a cause for
- sorrow I really had in the state of my soul&mdash;which, if I had
- known it, must have driven away all imaginary griefs&mdash;nor
- from what quarter I should seek for happiness; and it is a
- wonder that it took so long a time, and so many repetitions
- of the same lesson, before I began to correspond with the
- gracious purpose of my Heavenly Teacher; of Him who
- was thus correcting me, that I might at length love Him,
- and love Him willingly. How was it that I could have
- lived so long without being awakened to one sentiment of
- religious fear? ...
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But now we must return to the Catholic Faith. The
- main object of this memoir being to trace the steps of my
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
- progress towards Catholicity, it would be expected that the
- period of my residence for a whole year in Catholic countries
- must be most interesting. Indeed it is wonderful that
- this year of my life should have been, as it appears to me to
- have been, quite neutral in its effects. I certainly made no
- progress towards my present faith. This would not be
- extraordinary; for how many Protestants by their travels
- abroad not only make no progress towards Catholicity, but
- are made its violent enemies. But, undoubtedly, this was
- the effect produced on me. It seems that at this time I was
- under the influence of altogether other objects and notions
- from any connected with religion. What I sought was,
- first, my own pleasure&mdash;next, only general information;
- what I was chiefly controlled by was human respect.
- Having no care at all about religion in any form, the
- question of which was the right form never troubled me, and
- so the observations which I could not help making on the
- Catholic religious practices which I saw, were very superficial.
- It might be interesting to transcribe a few passages
- from my journal which show what was my mind.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is remarkable how easily one's mind takes in and
- rests contented in the belief of false and prejudicial
- representations of things. I never had had much pains taken
- with me to set me against the Catholic religion; but though
- I knew nothing of what it was, I rested in the conviction
- that it was full of superstition, and, in fact, as good as no
- religion at all. I never opened my mind all the time I was
- abroad to the admission of any idea but this; and so I
- looked on all the Catholic ceremonies which I saw, in this
- perverted light. I did not fall in the way of anyone to set
- me right; for I was contented to go on in the stream of the
- English society with which almost all the towns in Italy
- were filled, and if any really zealous exemplary Catholics
- are sometimes mingled with them, they do not find it available
- or prudent to introduce the mention of religion; while
- there will be always some who have no objection to seek to
- please them by encouraging their prejudices, which they do
- effectually by telling stories&mdash;some true, perhaps, some
- obviously false&mdash;of the Priests and Religious. Such a person,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
- who bore the title of Abbate, and therefore must have been
- professedly a true Catholic, we fell in with at Milan; he
- assisted my father in his search after curious books. I
- remember some of his conversations, and I find notice in my
- journal of his dining with us, and being 'very amusing in
- some stories about the Catholic processions.' The impression
- on my mind was that the whole system of religion
- which we saw was mere formality, people being taught to
- content themselves with fulfilling some external rules, and
- the clergy making it their business to keep them in the
- dark. I took little notice of religious matters till we entered
- Italy. There Milan was the first town we stopped at.
- On the Sunday after our arrival was the anniversary of the
- consecration of the church. I saw the ceremonies in the
- Cathedral, the very place where St. Augustine's heart was
- moved and his conversion begun, by hearing the strains of
- holy music, perhaps the same which I then heard. But
- very different was the effect on me; here are the wise remarks
- inserted in my journal."[Footnote 3]
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 3: The passage is given in page 60.]
-</p>
-<p>
-The autobiography breaks off abruptly here; but in order
-to fit the remarks to the events which they concern, we
-have kept one or two paragraphs in reserve for another
-place.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">{74}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br>
-Continuation Of His Travels.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-After staying about three months in Naples, Spencer sets
-out with Barrington, to travel through Sicily, on the 27th
-February. The voyage was very smooth until they came
-to Stromboli, and passed near the cave of AEolus, who
-"puffed at them accordingly," and delayed their landing at
-Messina until March 2. He goes to a ceremony in the
-cathedral there, and says, "the priests seem nourishing and
-very numerous here." On his way to Mount Etna he remarks,
-with a kind of incredulous air, that he went to see
-the lions of the five chestnuts and the bridge, which has the
-same legend attached to its origin as the Devil's Bridge in
-Wales, "dogs being, in both cases, sent over first to pay the
-forfeit for having built it." [Footnote 4]
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 4:
- The most circumstantial legend bearing upon the remark in the
- text is that about the Bridge of Rimini. Here there was a fearful
- rapid, without a stone within the distance of 70 miles that was
- available for building purposes. The bridge-builder of the town
- may or may not have had the contract; but, at all events, he set
- down in a confused state of mind as to how it might be done. The
- devil appeared to him and contracted for the building of the bridge
- on these easy terms&mdash;getting the first that crossed it for his own.
- The bargain was struck, and in the twinkling of an eye some
- thousands of infernal imps were scampering down the mountains
- with a gigantic stone on the shoulder of each. One-third of them
- were quite sufficient, and the arch-fiend who presided over the
- building cried out, that no more were wanted: when each devil
- threw down his load where he happened to be when the master's
- yell reached his ears. This is said to account for the rocks one
- sees strewn about near this bridge. The bridge itself is a circle,
- and was built in one night, and indeed some kind of infernal
- machine would seem necessary to remove the blocks of stone of
- which it is composed. Now came the trial. The Christian builder of
- bridges had no fancy for going to hell, and he was too charitable to
- send anyone else there. He bethought him of an expedient, and
- calling out his dog he took a small loaf, and threw it across the
- bridge with all his might. The dog, of course, ran after it. Whereupon
- the devil seized him, and in a rage flung him up to somewhere
- near the moon, and the dog falling from this height upon the
- bridge, made a hole in its only arch which cannot be filled up to this
- day. The legend embodies at least a specimen of the Catholic
- instinct: viz., the anxiety of the devil for our destruction, and how
- all hell thinks it cheap to turn out for a day's hard labour in the
- hopes of gaining one single soul.]
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">{75}</a></span>
-<p>
-He chiefly lodges in convents
-during his rambles through Sicily, the inns being so very
-bad that they drive travellers away. He and his companion
-sleep in different convents, and are very well treated; but
-that scarcely evokes a word of thanks. Poor monks! they
-have a bad name in Protestant nations, and what would be
-praiseworthy in others is only an equivocal quality in them.
-This is very sad; that men who have bid farewell to the
-world should, on that very account, be considered hardly
-entitled to the bare rights of human beings. Yet go on, poor
-souls, in your vocation; your Master before you received the
-same treatment from the world, and you are not greater than
-He. Spencer meets one or two monks whom he likes pretty
-well&mdash;one was the superior of the Carmelites at Grirgenti.
-The rest he calls "stupid friars," "lazy monks," and so forth,
-according to the tone of mind he happens to be in. In one
-monastery they shut the door of the room allowed them in
-the face of one of the brethren, because, forsooth, they were
-"bored by visits from the monks." His journey does not
-always lie through convents, and he meets others who are
-not monks; one of these was a wine-merchant at Marsala, a
-native of England. It seems the pair of tourists were received
-as handsomely by their countryman as they had been
-by the "stupid friars," for he is thus described in the
-journal: "He seems to think himself commissioned to keep
-up the English character in a strange land, for he is a John
-Bull in caricature in his manner." We are also told, a little
-lower down, that he is very hospitable to all English who
-pass by that way. They had the novelty of seeing an
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">{76}</a></span>
-Italian Good Friday in Marsala; the impression is thus
-noted:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Friday, Mar. 31.&mdash;</span>
- This was Good Friday. The
- first, and I hope the last, I shall spend without going to
- church; not that I should not like to be abroad another
- year. We were reminded of the day by quantities of groups
- representing the Passion and Crucifixion, almost as large as
- life, carried about on men's shoulders, which, absurd as they
- are, seemed to make an impression on the populace. Men
- dressed in black accompanied them, with crowns of thorns
- and crosses. It strikes me as direct idolatry, nearly. The
- gentry were all in mourning, and the sentinels had their
- muskets with the muzzles inverted. We all three (Sir H.
- Willoughby accompanied Barrington and Spencer) took a
- walk up to the top of Monte di Trapani, the ancient Eryx,
- where is a town of the same name. We examined what
- was to be seen there, and came down again to dinner. We
- dined at 6½, and had <i>some meat</i>, which we have not been
- able to get for some days, it being Passion Week." He
- spent Easter Sunday in Palermo, and here are his comments
- on its observance:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Sunday, April 2, Easter-day.&mdash;</span>
- We set off from Ahamo about 7¼. I walked on for an hour, and
- then rode forward all the way to Monreale, where I stopped
- an hour till the others came up. We then proceeded together
- to Palermo. In the villages we passed, the people
- were all out in their best clothes, which was a very pretty
- sight. Bells were clattering everywhere, and <i>feux de joie</i>
- were fired in several villages as we passed, with a row of
- little tubes loaded with gunpowder, in the market-places,
- and processions went about of people in fancy dresses with
- flags and drums. This religion is most extraordinary. It
- strikes me as impious; but I suppose it takes possession of
- the common people sooner than a sensible one."
-</p>
-<p>
-He completed
-the tour of the island by arriving in Messina, after a
-most successful attempt to see Mount Etna, on the 14th of
-April. They left Sicily for Reggio in a boat, and arrived
-there "with a good ducking." They both went to visit
-Scylla, which was guarded as a citadel by armed peasants.
-The sturdy yeomen refused to admit them, whereupon
-George, with true English curiosity, climbed up the wall to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
-get a peep at the sea, and perhaps inside. Scarcely had he
-got half-way up when he was taken prisoner by the sentinel.
-He was accordingly invited to visit the interior of the castle,
-and had to gaze at the bleak walls of its keep for an hour,
-until Willoughby procured his release from the commandant.
-They travelled on, and George does not seem to be satisfied
-with the people of Salerno, whom he designates as "surly
-and gothic." He heard his companions had to get an escort
-of gendarmes, to save them from robbers, all along here.
-Returns to Naples, April 26, delighted at being safe in life
-and limb; he goes to the old lodgings to a party, and reflects
-thus on his return: "I came home about one, rather sad
-with seeing the representation of what I had enjoyed in the
-winter&mdash;but all the people changed. <i>Gaiety after all does
-not pay</i>." This last sentence is not underlined by Spencer
-himself. It is done to point a moral that may be necessary
-for a certain class of persons. It is often supposed that
-monks, and the like people, paint the world blacker than it
-is in reality, and that it is a kind of morose sourness of
-disposition that makes recluses cry down the enjoyments of
-those outside convent-walls. This line will perhaps defend
-F. Ignatius from such an imputation. He wrote that after
-the pure natural enjoyment of scenery had been compared
-with the excitement of a ball-room; if he thought, in his
-wildness, that gaiety did not pay, no wonder that his
-opinion was confirmed in the quiet tameness of his after-life.
-A passage from the autobiography, omitted above, comes in
-here opportunely. He was speaking of the absence of the
-fear of God from his miserable mind:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "This was almost true concerning the entire period.
- One occasion I will mention when I was impressed with
- some shame at my wretched state. While I was making
- the tour of Sicily, my father and mother left Naples in the
- <i>Revolutionnaire</i>, a fine frigate which had been placed at their
- disposal, and by which they went to Marseilles, to shorten
- their land journey homewards. When I returned to Naples
- I found a long letter from my father, full of kindness and
- affection for me, in which he explained to me his wishes as
- to the course of my journey home. This letter I believe I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
- have not kept, but I remember in it a passage nearly as
- follows: 'As to your conduct, my dear George, I need not
- tell you how important it is for your future happiness and
- character that you should keep yourself from all evil;
- especially considering the sacred profession for which you are
- intended. But, on this subject, I have no wish concerning
- you but to hear that you continue to be what you have
- hitherto been.' 'Ah!' thought I to myself, 'how horrible
- is the difference between what I am and what this sentence
- represents me.' But worldly shame was yet more powerful
- in me than godly shame, and this salutary impression did
- not produce one good resolution."
-</p>
-<p>
-On May 3rd, 1820, he came to Rome a second time. His
-first visit this time also was to St. Peter's, which, he says,
-"looked more superb to me than ever." He attended
-Cardinal Litta's funeral from curiosity, and has no remark
-about it worth extracting. There are two passages in the
-journal relating to the ceremonies of Ascension Thursday
-and Corpus Christi, which may be interesting as being
-indicative of his notions of Catholic ritual:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Thursday, May 11.&mdash;</span>
- Got up early, and wrote till breakfast.
- At 9½ went off with Barrington and Ford to St. John
- of Lateran, where there were great ceremonies to take place
- for the Ascension Day. The old Pope was there, and was
- carried round the church blessing, with other mummeries.
- It was a fine sight when he knelt down and prayed (or was
- supposed to do so) in the middle of the church, with all the
- Cardinals behind him. Now this goes for nothing in comparison
- to what it must have been when the Pope was really
- considered infallible (<i>sic</i>). We then all went out of the church
- to receive the blessing, from the principal window in the
- façade. The Pope came to this in his chair, and performed
- the spreading of his hands very becomingly. The whole
- thing was too protracted, perhaps, to be as striking as it
- should; but I was not as disappointed as I expected to be.
- The cannonry of St. Angelo and the band certainly gave
- effect; and the crowd of people on the space before the church
- was a scene to look at."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Thursday, June 1.&mdash;</span>
- To-day is the feast of Corpus
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">{79}</a></span>
- Domini, one of the greatest in the Catholic Church; so at
- eight we went, having breakfasted [a fact, by the bye, he
- seldom omits to mention], to St. Peter's, to see the <i>funzioni</i>,
- which are very grand on this occasion. There was a great
- procession round the <i>cortile</i>&mdash;first of the religious orders,
- about 450 monks only; and the boys of St. Michael's Hospital,
- of the Collegio Romano, &amp;c. Then came curates, and
- priests temporal and secular, prelates, and monsignores, the
- ensigns or canopies of the seven basilicas with their chapters,
- and the priests belonging to them following; next came
- bishops, then cardinals, and then the Pope, carried on four
- men's shoulders. He was packed up on the top of the stand
- with his head out alone. He seemed more dead than alive,
- and worse than on May 11 at S. Giovanni's. The group of
- people about him, with their robes and splendid mitres, made
- a very brilliant sight. The former part of the procession
- rather showed the decadence of the Church from a great
- height, than its present glory. After the Pope came the
- <i>guardia nobile</i>, and other soldiers, in splendid uniforms.
- After the procession there were functions in the Church,
- and a benediction from the Altar, and which I did not see
- so well. St. Peter's never showed so well as with a crowd
- of people in it, when one may estimate its dimensions from
- the comparison of their littleness."
-</p>
-<p>
-This is a fair specimen of how a candid, prejudiced Protestant
-stares at Catholic services. He puts down as undisputed
-that all is absurd before he goes, and if the Man of
-Sin himself, the poor Pope, is in the middle of it, it rises to
-the very highest pitch of abomination. A man who could
-consider holiday attire and exultation impious on Easter
-Sunday, and the mourning and fasting and processions of
-Good Friday something worse, cannot be very well qualified
-to comprehend the Ascension and Corpus Christi in Rome.
-Catholics <i>do</i> believe in the authority of the Pope and the
-power of the Keys, and also in the Real Presence; will it
-not follow, as a natural conclusion, that the four quarters of
-the globe should get its spiritual Father's blessing one day
-in the year, and that we should try to find out the best way
-of honouring our Incarnate God in the Blessed Sacrament?
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
-But consistency is not a gift one finds among Protestants,
-especially when they give their opinion on what they think
-too absurd to try to understand. They must admit the
-Catholic ceremonial is imposing; but then it is only to
-quarrel with it for being so. They can understand pageantry
-and pomp in honouring an earthly monarch; but does it
-occur to them that every best gift is from above, and that
-the King of kings should be honoured with every circumstance
-of splendour and oblation a creature can offer?
-</p>
-<p>
-One or two of the salient points of his character come
-out in a few extracts we shall produce from the journal
-now. He says, on leaving Rome&mdash;"How delightful, and
-yet how melancholy, was my walk about those dear rooms
-at the Vatican; after next Thursday I believe I am never
-to see them again, so farewell to them now." This illustrates
-his better nature; he was very affectionate, and could love
-whatever was really worth loving; he was not very demonstrative
-of this feeling, but when it came to leave-taking, he
-had to give vent to it. A peculiar caste of his mind was
-to listen to every proposition, and weigh the reasons adduced
-to support it. If they were unanswerable, he at once
-admitted it, and, if possible, tested it by experience. This
-was the great key to his conversion and subsequent life. In
-conversation, perhaps, with a medical friend, he was told
-that it was far the best way, whilst on the move in travelling,
-neither to eat nor drink. This was supported by reasons
-drawn from the digestive principles, and so forth. He
-thought it was well proved, and could find no valid objection
-against it, so he determined to try it, and travelled from
-Rome to Sienna without tasting a morsel for forty-two
-hours, and says in his journal&mdash;"It is much the best way
-in travelling." In Florence we have other tokens of the
-regret with which he parts from his friends; and in the
-same page a very different feeling on parting with some
-Franciscans. These "entertained him uncommonly well
-for mendicants," and showed him all their treasures of art
-and piety with the greatest kindness; yet it did not prevent
-him calling them "lazy old monks" when they let him away
-at three o'clock in the morning.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-<p>
-He walks about the country a good deal, and finds it
-pleasant, "as the common people here are much more conversable
-than ours." This striking difference between a
-Catholic and a Protestant peasantry is patent to the most
-superficial observer. The poor Irish, French, or Italian
-labourer, who can neither read nor write, is quite at his
-ease with the merchant or the noble. He will have his joke
-and his laugh, very often at the expense of his superior,
-and never outstep the bounds of due respect. He is light-hearted
-and gay everywhere, and the exact opposite of the
-English navvy.
-</p>
-<p>
-The real cause of the difference is the want of religion
-in the poor Briton. The Catholic religion inculcates
-humility on the great. It brings the Lord of the Manor
-and his servant to the same confessional and the same
-altar: they may be as far asunder as pole from pole outside
-the church, but inside it they are both on a level. The
-works of mercy are insisted on, and high-born ladies are
-most frequently the ministering angels of the poor man's
-sick-bed, and the instructors of his children, and nurses of
-his orphans. "Blessed are the poor" is not a dead letter
-in Catholic theology, and until it be, and that poverty
-becomes felony, the same ease and happiness will pervade
-the peasantry of Catholic countries, which now gives them
-such grace and beauty. The doctrine of self-worship and
-money-adoration can never fuse races; there is a wide wide
-chasm between the upper and the lower orders in Protestant
-countries, which no amount of mechanics' lectures, and
-patronizing condescension, can bridge over, as long as the
-germs of the worldly system remain rooted in the education
-and manners of the people. Of course, these remarks do
-not apply to the general state of things, for there is oppression
-in Catholic countries as well as elsewhere; they
-simply concern the working of a Christian principle, if it get
-fair play.
-</p>
-<p>
-He visits Pisa, Lucca, Carrara, Sestri, and stops at
-Genoa. A bit of the Protestant breaks out here. "We
-went to see that foolish <i>sacro catino</i> at the Cathedral, which
-I have no doubt is glass instead of emerald." He says
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">{82}</a></span>
-again: "It makes me rather onked to be alone now, though
-sometimes I wish to be so. But the only solitude that is
-disagreeable is among numbers in a large town. The solitude
-of the Apennines, and such places as last night's habitation,
-is a pleasure to me." Now one <i>vetturino</i> hands him
-over "to another more blackguard than himself" on his way
-to Bologna, where he has a very satisfactory meeting with
-Mezzofanti once more. Off he starts through Ferrara,
-Rovigo, and Padua, for Venice; he visits the Piazza S.
-Marco, and is told complacently by a French doctor, who
-proved to be a terrible bore by-and-by, that it is nothing to
-the Palais Royal. He visits Mantua on a pilgrimage to
-Virgil's birthplace, and says of a sight he saw by accident:
-"I was amused by a figure of S. Zeno, just like a smiling
-Otaheitan idol of the largest dimensions, which is the great
-protector of the town." It is not hard to tell which way
-his devotion lay. Spencer and a Mr. Lefevre, who was now
-his travelling companion, go to a <i>villegiatura</i> here, and are
-splendidly entertained for a couple of days. They travel
-on for Germany through the Tyrol; from Verona to Riva
-they chiefly travel by the Lago di Garda, and the only incidents
-he chooses to record, until they come to "dem goldenen
-Adler" (the golden Eagle) at Brixen, are the cicerone's
-opinions of Catullus, whom that well-informed individual
-thought to have been a brigand chief. They had to bring
-the bill of fare before the police in Riva, but were not successful
-in getting a single charge diminished; he enjoyed a
-good deal of idyllic life along here, and did not seem to
-think much <i>pro</i> or <i>con</i> of the little town of Trent,
-though one should fancy he would say something, if it were
-only a few angry words about the Great Council.
-</p>
-<p>
-He considers the Germans more honest than the Italians,
-and was inclined to admire their solidity and steadiness; but
-his driver fell asleep on their way to Innspruck, and let the
-reins fall on the horse's neck when descending a steep, and he
-veers round to the opinion that if they were a little livelier,
-it would be much better. On his way through Bavaria to
-Munich he thinks the country very like England&mdash;well
-cultivated and flourishing. "The costumes extraordinary,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
-but not so pretty as the Tyrolese. The people themselves,
-both men and women, are the ugliest race I ever saw."
-They had letters of introduction to Prince Loewenstein and
-Count Peppenheim, two aides-de-camp of the King of
-Bavaria; they were invited to a royal <i>chasse</i>. Perhaps it is
-as well to give the whole account from the Journal, as it
-conveys an idea of German sports too fine to be overlooked.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Monday, Aug. 21.&mdash;</span>
- At 4½ this morning we started for
- the <i>chasse</i> in the mountains about three leagues off. At
- the end of two leagues we were stopped and obliged to
- walk, as the road became too narrow for the King to pass
- us, in case we had been in the way when he came up. So we
- walked the rest till we came to the toils where Loewenstein
- received us. The <i>chasse</i> was in a deep valley, shut in on
- the sides by precipitous rocks: into this they had tracked
- about 80 or 90 head of deer, and shut them in by toils at
- both ends; then little green enclosures were made for the
- guns to be posted in. We had one of these guns given us
- in conjunction with other spectators, the shooter who was to
- have been there not having arrived. Before the line was a
- broad course of a torrent, and beyond that was a wood into
- which they had forced the game, and from which they drove
- it again with dogs, and even into the way of the guns. This
- went on for 4 or 5 hours, during which they cannonaded
- very quick, but with little effect, for I never saw a much
- greater proportion of misses. The result was about 70 head
- of deer. We were much surprised in the middle of the
- time at seeing Devon walk up. He came from Salzburg
- for the purpose of this <i>chasse</i>, and stayed with us through
- it. After it we were standing near the place where the King
- was counting out the game, when Peppenheim presented us
- to him, and he asked us to dine at Berchtesgaden. As our
- carriage was so far off, we were obliged to be carried as
- we could, and I was taken in by Loewenstein, who is,
- by the bye, about the fattest man in Bavaria. We dressed
- directly, both ourselves and Devon, who had nothing here;
- and even so we were late for dinner. However, the King
- was so gracious and good-humoured that it all went off
- capitally. It was an interesting dinner for the faces that
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
- we saw. Eugene Beauharnais, Prince Schwartzenberg,
- Reichenbach, engineer, Maréehal Wrede, and about 16
- more, were there. We stayed till about 6, and then came
- home.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Tuesday, Aug. 22.&mdash;</span>
- To-day we again followed the
- motions of the Court. Devon came over with horses from
- Hallein, where he had returned last night; and so we went
- about comfortably. Schwartzenberg took us to a famous
- machine of Mr. Reichenbach's, without the King. This
- machine is employed to raise the salt water, which is brought
- from the mines here, and convey it over the mountains to
- Reichenhall, about 3 leagues distant, where is a manufactory
- for extracting the salt. The reason of this is, that there
- is not enough wood for consumption here. It is a vast
- forcing-pump, which is worked by fresh water from a height
- of 400 feet, and raises the salt water 1,200. This water is
- in the proportion of 53 to 44 heavier than fresh water. I
- did not understand the whole explanation, being in German,
- but I admired the machine, which works in a room so
- quietly as actually not to be perceptible from the noise,
- except a little splashing. After this we came to a miserable
- dinner at the inn, which was too full to attend to us. At
- 1½, about, we started again to a romantic lake, König See,
- where another scene of this royal drama was to be enacted.
- The King came, with his whole party, an hour after us, and
- we were invited by Loewenstein into his royal boat, which
- was rowed by 11 men and one pretty damsel. "We went all
- down the lake, with several other boats full following, one
- of which had 4 small cannons, which they constantly
- discharged for the echo. The thing we came though for was,
- two artificial cascades from the top of the mountains, one in
- the course of a small torrent, which had been stopped above
- and made into a lake, full of large pieces of timber, which
- were precipitated all at once with surprising effect. The
- other was a dry cascade, down which two heaps of timber
- were discharged, like the launching of a ship from an
- inclined plane, the smallest of which, as I could judge from
- below, was twice the height of a man, and four times the
- length at least. The finest part of this was the prodigious
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">{85}</a></span>
- splashing at the bottom, which resembled, in appearance and
- sound, a line of cannonading. By way of sport, this is the
- most superb child-amusement one could conceive. We rowed
- back in the same boat, and disembarked about sunset. We
- proceeded directly to a salt-mine, without the King, where
- was to be an illumination. We all were decked out in
- miners' habits, and embarked, in little carts drawn by two
- men, down a shaft 1,800 feet long, lighted by candles all the
- way, ourselves having one each, like white penitents. At
- the end of this we were surprised by entering a large
- chamber, perhaps 200 yards round, with a gallery at the
- top; the whole was surrounded by festoons of lamps, and
- below it was a rich star of fire, which showed the depth of
- the mine off to great advantage. A band of music was
- playing, and mines were exploded at the bottom with really
- tremendous noise. Altogether, this scene pleased me more
- than any I have seen here, or perhaps anywhere.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Wednesday, August 23.&mdash;</span>
- At 5 we started in the carriage,
- with Devon's servant, for the second <i>chasse</i> (of
- chamois); we found ourselves among a long train of other
- carriages also going there. We passed through the <i>chasse</i>
- of Monday, and went about 3 miles further on foot. We
- found that of 60 chamois which had been collected in
- the toils, 40 had escaped; so the <i>chasse</i> was but of about
- an hour's duration before they were all killed. The stands
- of shooters were confined, so we were made to climb up a
- little mountain, or rather a large rock, from which we had
- an excellent view of everything. The scenery was superb
- and wild. Before, behind, and everywhere, were immense
- mountains of solid and shagged rock, 9,000 feet high above
- the sea, with nothing like vegetation but patches of stunted
- firs, which did not, even so, reach halfway up their height,
- and looked like moss. It made a contrast with the tameness
- of the <i>chasse</i>, where about 16 chamois were driven
- about and killed out of little boxes, in an enclosure of a few
- acres. It was not so fine in that respect as the deer <i>chasse</i>.
- The King asked us again to dinner, near a small house in
- the valley of the deer <i>chasse</i> (Wimbach). The table was
- put on a platform under a sycamore-tree in a glorious situation.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
- I was unexpectedly called upon to sit next to Prince
- Schwartzenberg, and always called <i>milord</i>, which probably
- was the original mistake. The whole business went off
- very satisfactorily. The King's manners are most affable,
- and made everything comfortable about him."
-</p>
-<p>
-After this grand performance, our tourists took a ride
-through a salt-mine, astride of a plank, with a man before
-and behind running as fast as could be; they come finally
-to daylight, and shortly afterwards to Salzburg. They travelled
-the country to Lintz, and sailed down the Danube to
-Vienna, where they found the police "ridiculously strict
-about passports." A few days after their arrival in Vienna
-they took a drive through the <i>Prater</i>, and "during the
-drive we conversed on the subject of family calamities, and
-on one's means of bearing them. Soon after we came home,
-Lord Stewart's <i>attaché</i>, Mr. Aston, called with a letter for
-me from Mr. Allen, which told me of the horrible news of
-my brother Bob's death in America, killed in an affray with
-his first lieutenant! How strangely fulfilled were our
-yesterday's prognostics. This is a sort of thing that is too
-great and deep an accident to feel in the common way. I
-hardly understand it at this distance: I shall though
-before long. I went with Lefevre after dinner to Lord
-Stewart's, where I found a German courier was to start
-soon for England. I shall accompany him." This is from
-the Journal; we shall now give an extract from the
-Autobiography:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My first tour abroad was suddenly terminated at Vienna
- by a letter which I received to recall me home, from the
- Rev. J. Allen, now Bishop of Ely. This letter gave me notice
- of the supposed death of my brother Robert, in South
- America, who, it was reported, had been killed in an affray
- with his first lieutenant. This most strange story, for
- which there was not the slightest foundation in truth, was
- conveyed to our family in England in such a way as gained
- it entire belief, and all had been for two or three weeks in
- deep mourning and under the greatest affliction, when the
- falsehood of the report was discovered. This affliction was
- considered a sufficient cause for gathering together all the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
- members of the family who were at liberty to come home;
- and so I was desired to return immediately. I bought a
- carriage at Vienna, and, travelled for some nights and days
- without ceasing, during which I thought to try an experiment
- on how little nourishment I could subsist; and from
- a sort of curiosity to amuse myself, for I can hardly
- attribute it to a better motive, I accomplished a fast which it
- would appear a dreadful hardship to be reduced to by necessity,
- and a very small approach to which, in these times,
- would be by most persons looked on as a most unreasonable
- austerity. I passed those successive intervals of 38, 50, and
- 53 hours, as I find in my journal, without touching the
- least particle of food to eat or drink; and what I took
- between the intervals was only a little tea and bread and
- butter. This matter is not worth noticing, except to show
- that, as I went through this, while travelling, which is
- rather an exhausting employment, without the least detriment
- to my health, and without a feeling of hunger almost
- all the time, it is a sad delusion for people in good health to
- fancy they need so many indulgences and relaxations to go
- through the fasts appointed by the Church.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It was when I got to Calais that I went to the English
- news-room to see further accounts in the newspapers of my
- brother's death, the report of which, though at first I had
- some suspicions it might be false, I afterwards had made up
- my mind entirely to believe. My joy was exceeding great
- at finding an explicit contradiction to it in one of the latest
- papers. I remember going on my knees to thank God, in
- the news-room, when I found myself alone, which I believe
- was the first occasion for a long, long time I had made a
- prayer of any sort, or gone on my knees, except in church-service
- time. This I never gave up entirely, and during
- this time I never gave up receiving the Sacrament explicitly,
- though I do not find that I received it all the time
- I was abroad. I did not intend to commit acts of hypocrisy,
- but must have gone on from custom and a certain
- sense of propriety, without considering that I was mocking
- God."
-</p>
-<p>
-On his arrival at Althorp he found the family all in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-most joyous mood possible. A little passage of his Journal
-gives an idea of the character of the noble family in their
-relations with the tenantry:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Friday, Sept. 22.</span> Bread
- and meat given to the poor of Brington, Brampton, and
- Harleston, as a rejoicing for Bob's recovery. Three oxen
- were killed, and the effect seemed very good. They gave
- some lively cheers as they departed."
-</p>
-<p>
-He goes to London,
-and hears Henry Brougham's speech on Queen Caroline's
-trial; and immediately after, he starts for Switzerland to
-see his sister, Lady Georgiana Quin. We shall relate this
-in his own words in the Autobiography:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I became so fond of the business of travelling that, as I
- was returning homewards, my mind was occupied constantly
- with plans for further excursions. I intended to have gone
- with Lefevre from Vienna to Dresden and Berlin on our
- way home, but I could not think of regarding this as my
- last journey. I was longing to see Greece. I had had thoughts
- of Spain, Russia, Egypt, and various indeed have been the
- fancies and inclinations which have passed through my mind.
- The regular travelling mania had its turn about this time,
- and I wonder not, by my feelings then, at so many of our
- countrymen, whom I have known myself, who have left
- England for a short excursion, and not having professional
- engagements, nor wise parents and relations, as I had, to
- control them, have become regular wanderers, and have
- spent, in travelling about, the years on the good employment
- of which, at home, depended mainly their success in after-life.
- It may be judged how truly I was possessed with this
- spirit of wandering, at the time of which I speak, by my
- remaining but one fortnight at Althorp with my family
- before I was again on wing. My sister, Lady Georgiana
- Quin&mdash;whose society had made to me one of the chief charms
- of the winter at Naples, and whose being at Naples with
- Lord George, her husband, and her children, had been the
- main inducement for my father and mother to make an
- undertaking, at their age, and with their habits, so
- extraordinary as this long journey&mdash;had left Naples during my tour
- in Sicily, and was settled at a country-house called the
- Château de Bethusy, near Lausanne. I proposed going to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
- see her, and to give her the full account of all that concerned
- the strange report about my brother Robert. I wonder at
- my having had my parents' consent to make another departure
- so soon, and with apparently so insufficient an object.
- I suppose they thought it reasonable to give me this liberty,
- by way of compensation for the sudden cutting-off of my
- first grand tour. This time I passed by Dieppe to Paris,
- thence by Lyons to Bethusy, where, having stayed a
- fortnight&mdash;the pleasantest, and, alas! almost the last days I had
- in my sister's company&mdash;I returned by Nancy to Paris, and
- thence through Calais to England. I reached Althorp on
- the 19th of November, 1820. And so the fancy for travelling
- soon died away, as my prospects for fresh journeys met
- with no encouragement at home; and here is an end of all
- my travellings for mere travelling's sake. When next I left
- England, it was, thank God, with thoughts and views far
- other than before."
-</p>
-<p>
-An extract from the Journal of this time may not be
-without interest:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">October 17, 1820.&mdash;</span>
- With this day's journal ends the
- third year that I have kept it. This year has been the most
- interesting and varied I have ever passed, and probably ever
- shall, for my travelling will not last long. I certainly have
- reaped advantages in some respects, and great ones. I have
- had experience in the world, and have learnt to shift for
- myself better than I could have done by any other means.
- I have, I hope, increased the confidence of my family in me;
- and, above all, I have nearly expelled that melancholy
- disposition I gained at college; but most active I feel I must
- be to prevent its return when I again remain quiet in
- England. I have still a damper to my prospects that occasionally
- overwhelms me, but I must, I trust, get over that
- too; as I have now persuaded myself on sober reflection,
- though I am sadly slow in beginning to act on the principle,
- that one quality alone is within all our reach, and that one
- object alone is worth trying for. God grant this thought
- may often occur to me. I have this year enjoyed the
- pleasures and diversions most enlivening, and which I
- always most desired; but even they are insufficient to make
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
- one happy alone, though nearer to it than any others. Let us
- then look to what certainly can."
-</p>
-<p>
-This train of thought seemed to have occupied his mind
-between his leaving Paris, and returning to it again during
-the last visit to his sister. There is one paragraph in the
-Autobiography which refers to both; here it is, and it is the
-last morsel of that interesting document that remains
-unwritten in his life:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The most remarkable impression of religion which I
- remember in all this period, was in a place where it might
- have been least expected. No other than the Italian Opera
- at Paris. I passed through that city, as I have said before,
- in my last journey to Lausanne, and on my return a month
- later. Both times I went to see the opera of <i>Don Giovanni</i>,
- which was the piece then in course of representation. I
- conceived that after this journey I should give up all
- thoughts of worldly vices. I was likely to be fixed at home
- till the time of my ordination, and should assume something
- of the character of a candidate for holy orders. In short, I
- felt as if it was almost my last occasion, and I was
- entertaining, alas! some wicked devices in my mind when I
- went to this most dangerous and fascinating opera, which is
- in itself, by the subjects it represents, one of the most
- calculated to beguile a weak soul to its destruction. But
- the last scene of it represents Don Giovanni, the hero of
- the piece, seized in the midst of his licentious career by a
- troop of devils, and hurried down to hell. As I saw this
- scene, I was terrified at my own state. I knew that God,
- who knew what was within me, must look on me as one in
- the same class with such as Don Giovanni, and for once this
- holy fear of God's judgment saved me: and this holy
- warning I was to find in an opera-house at Paris."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-An Interval Of Rest And Preparation For Orders.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-This chapter begins with his twenty-first birthday. He
-comes before us, a fine young man nearly six feet high,
-graceful and handsome, of independent mien, winning manners,
-and all the other attributes of gentlemanly perfection
-that are calculated to make him an object of attraction.
-His journal, even then, tends to show his worst side; we
-find self-accusations in every page, and the round of enjoyments
-broken in upon by serious correctives. For the great
-problem which moralists solve so easily, and those whom
-the solution concerns keep away from consideration, we will
-find in his life a golden key. It is too soon yet to speak
-about the special workings of Divine Grace in his soul; but,
-even so far off, we can find glimmerings of the glorious sun
-of his after-life. Let us look into the world, we find thousands
-that really enjoy and luxuriate in gay parties, balls,
-pastimes, and pleasures, without a pang of remorse, and
-others with sensibilities as keen, if not keener, for the relish
-of these luxuries, plunging into them with a kind of intoxicating
-gusto, and coming out fagged and disgusted, when
-they were perhaps thought the very soul and life of the
-company. We are told of a patient dying of melancholy
-who called in a doctor to prescribe for him; the prescription
-of the medical man was, that he should go and hear Mr. N.,
-a celebrated comic actor, for a number of nights successively,
-and the remedy was guaranteed to prove infallible, for no
-one could listen to him and not laugh himself to hysterics.
-"Ah, my dear friend," answered the patient, "I am the
-veritable Mr. N. myself." It is sometimes argued that
-small minds of a feminine caste, composed of the ingredients
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-which the "Spectator" wittily discovers in the dissection of a
-beau's head, can be content with frivolities, whilst a grand
-intellect is only made indignant by them. We could quote
-examples to bear us out in a conclusion the direct contrary
-of this. How, then, can we solve the problem? Why can
-some live and die in a whirl of dissipation with apparent
-relish, whilst others get clogged by a few balls, and fling
-worldly enjoyment to the winds on account of the very
-nausea it creates? It may be considered as "going into the
-sacristy" to say that those whom God chooses for great
-things, He weans from pleasure by a salutary dissatisfaction?
-so the point will not be insisted on. The only ordinary way
-in which it can be accounted for is, that the lovers of pleasure
-deafen the voice of conscience, whereas the others give
-this good monitor room to speak, and occasionally lend an
-ear. Whichever way we please to look upon F. Ignatius
-at this period of his life, we shall find ample material for
-theorizing on the unreality of worldly joys. He concludes
-the first volume of his Journal with the following
-considerations:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"Dec. 31.&mdash;</span>
- I have ended this year, as the last, with a
- very pleasant evening, as far as noise and fun can make it.
- But a more reasonable way would be (as I am now in my
- room, with my watch in my hand, nearly on the stroke
- of twelve) to end it in making good resolutions for the year
- to come,&mdash;which may, I hope, pass as prosperously, and
- more usefully, than the last. The new year is now commenced,
- and I recommend myself to the protection and
- guidance of Almighty Providence to bring me safely and
- well to the end of it. I now bid farewell to this journal-book,
- which is but a record of my follies, and absurdities,
- and weaknesses, to myself, who know the motive of the
- actions which are here commemorated, and of many more
- which I have done well to omit. There is no fear of my
- forgetting them, nor do I wish it. The less other men
- know about my inward thoughts, the better for me in their
- estimation."
-</p>
-<p>
-Many of the readers of this book will feel disposed to
-disagree with the last sentence. We have had his interior
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">{93}</a></span>
-before us, as clearly perhaps as any other man's we can
-possibly call to mind, and yet there is scarcely one that must
-not admire and love him as well, for the sacrifice he made
-for their benefit in exposing his interior, as for the beautiful
-sight that very disclosure gives them of his noble heart. It
-is not very easy to write an interesting chapter about this
-portion of his life; the Autobiography is run out, and the
-Journal gives no incident of any great importance till we
-come to the subject-matter of the next volume. Let us
-string together a few of the leading events, especially such
-as may be calculated to give us some idea of his mind and
-occupations.
-</p>
-<p>
-He begins the volume by writing down that he got up
-rather earlier than usual, played at battledore and shuttle-cock
-with Lady Georgiana Bingham, and kept up to 2,120
-hits. He is disappointed then in a day's sport, and gives
-this account of his evening: "I was rather bilious and
-nervous to-night, and consequently would have preferred
-being out of the way, but from a wrong principle, I fear,
-viz., because I thought I should seem rather dull and ill-humoured.
-But what if I did, to the gay people that do
-not, nor wish to, know? And what if I did, to those who
-do know how far it is real, my ill-humour?" It was customary,
-as he told us some chapters back, for the Spencer
-family to spend Christmas at Althorp, and collect many of
-their immediate relatives about them during the time.
-The place is beautifully disposed for every kind of enjoyment;
-there are landscapes and pictures for the ladies to
-draw from, fine grounds for the gentlemen to shoot over,
-everything that generosity and princely goodness could
-procure to make the evenings as lively and entertaining as
-possible. Balls and dances were, of course, a <i>sine qua non</i>.
-Let us not, however, imagine it was all dissipation at
-Althorp. Lords Althorp and Lyttelton used, every Sunday
-and often on week days, to read a sermon to the assembled
-guests from some of the Anglican divines, and sometimes,
-too, from the French, as we may see in a remark in
-the first chapter. The party at Althorp this Christmas did
-not go beyond three-and-twenty. George, notwithstanding
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-the sour extract quoted above, went into the sports with
-heartfelt glee occasionally, and, as a proof of this, it is
-enough to say that he danced, in one night, in seven
-country dances and eight sets of quadrilles. He says in one
-place: "Lyttelton, Sarah (Lady Lyttelton), and I, breakfasted
-together, talking of a wise resolve of Nannette's, to
-pull down a house she had just finished at Richmond,
-because it was not pretty enough for the inhabitants to
-look at."
-</p>
-<p>
-He goes to London as soon as the Christmas party is
-broken up, where he dines chiefly at home, but is about
-occasionally, seeing his old friends, and different things that
-pleased his whim or his taste. One of these was "seeing the
-King going in state, and the nobility as contented as if they
-never said a word against him on the Queen's trial;"
-another was hearing Bishop Van Mildert preach. He has
-the good fortune of meeting Sir Walter Scott at his father's,
-and says "We all stayed the evening listening to him
-telling Scotch stories." His next evening would be, perhaps,
-in the House of Lords or Commons, and all the family
-seemed in a great stir to be present at the debates on the
-"Catholic Question." What opinions they held about it
-do not appear from the Journal; but there is nothing said
-there against Catholics since he left Italy.
-</p>
-<p>
-He begins to clear away the mist that lay between him
-and the parsonage. He puts himself a little in the way of
-learning something of what a clergyman could not be
-respectable without. His first essays in this direction were,
-to hire a "dirty Jew master" to teach him Hebrew, and to
-go occasionally to Mr. Blomfield's, who was rector of
-Whitechapel, to dine and talk with clerical company. The
-first time he tried this is told as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-"I took up Fremantle, and we went together to Blomfield's
-to dine. We met Dr. Lloyd, Mr. Rennel, Mr. and
-Mrs. Lyall, Mr. Watkinson, Mr. Mawman, Mr. Tavel, and
-one more clergyman&mdash;a proper High Church set, with
-language of intolerance. I was much amused though by
-observing them." So much for his first lesson in church
-polity. That he was not extravagant at this time is evidenced
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">{95}</a></span>
-by a little incident. He found himself the possessor
-of a good sum, and had been, for some time, putting part
-of his allowance aside until he finds himself able to pay his
-brother, Lord Althorp, what he lent him to pay off his debts
-in Cambridge, as early as the 7th of April. "This was a
-very busy day. I first went to Althorp to offer him payment
-of a large debt I owe him, but he refused it very
-generously, and made me rich in a moment by so doing."
-</p>
-<p>
-He pays off the Jew on the 25th of April, having had
-his lectures from the 8th of March previous. This apparent
-falling away from the spirit of his vocation, was redeemed in
-a few days, by his falling half in love with some very high
-lady. He crosses himself immediately for the absurdity,
-and wishes she were a clergyman's daughter. This fit wears
-out completely in ten days' time. Lord John Russell and
-Sydney Smith dine at his father's, and he says of the latter:
-"Sydney Smith is a new person on my list, and very entertaining
-he is." The author of "Peter Plimley's Letters"
-must certainly have been an agreeable guest. On the
-15th of June he gives the following note:&mdash;"My father
-and I went to see the marriage of Mr. Neville and Lady
-Georgiana Bingham, in the Portuguese Catholic Chapel, in
-South Street, close to Vernon's house. Dr. Poynter, the
-Catholic bishop of London, performed it, and gave us a long-prosy
-dissertation on the sacrament of marriage." The
-scene changes now to Ryde, Isle of Wight, where the family
-go to spend the summer. George occupies his time there in
-riding, fishing (with no success), boating, cricketing, and
-doing the tutor to a young ward of his father. He also
-learnt perspective from a Mr. Vorley, and his opinion of
-him is, that "he talks more nonsense than any one I know
-in a given time." He remained his pupil until he "picked
-his brains," which did not require much time or application
-seemingly. He hears of Napoleon's death, and comments
-thereon thus:&mdash;"We heard this morning of Bonaparte being
-dead in St. Helena. It does not make so much noise as one
-would have thought his death must eight years ago. For
-one thing, it will save us £150,000 a year."
-</p>
-<p>
-St. Swithin's Day, July 15. "It rained all morning,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-which is ominous. "This kept them indoors, and it was well,
-for they were all in a bustle preparing for the coronation of
-William IV. The countess and her maids were busy at the
-laces and the freshening of faded colours, until the earl's state
-robes were got ready; when he was called upon to fit them
-on, that the keen glance of ladies' eyes might see if there
-was a flaw or a speck to be removed. George was present at
-the time, and says: "My father put on his robes, and was
-looked at by a room full of ladies and gentlemen." George
-himself, by the way, makes some bold efforts at grandeur,
-and succeeds in getting into the Peers' quarter of Westminster
-Abbey, at the coronation, "dressed in red coat,
-with ruffs." After the coronation, they return to the Isle
-of Wight, and George resumes his sports, with a little variation
-namely, that he hears a "twaddle preacher," and receives
-the Sacrament without much preparation, a proceeding
-he thus defends:&mdash;"I never can be satisfied by any
-motives that occur for refusing on account of short notice,
-and I think that when the Office is performed with devotion
-and sincerity, to the best of one's ability, it is always
-profitable."
-</p>
-<p>
-It may be objected that we do not give more numerous
-extracts from the Journal; but we think it would tire the
-patience of readers to be told, gravely and solemnly, such
-grand events as, "George Lyttelton, Lord Lyttelton's eldest
-child, got into breeches to-day." Matters kindred to this,
-with the hours of dining, and names of the guests, form the
-bulk of the diary.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the end of this year, 1821, he finds himself alone
-in Althorp, waiting for the collecting of the Christmas
-party there, and muses thus:&mdash;"I wish I might go on
-living as I now do, without any company and nonsense. I
-have daily amusement, and, withal, get through a good deal
-of reading." This last clause will make many expect that
-Tillotson or Jeremy Taylor is in his hands for a great part
-of the day. It may be so, but we are told in the same
-page:&mdash;"In the evening I read 'Guy Mannering;' for a
-novel, when once begun, enslaves me." He was very fond
-of the Waverly Novels, and seems to have read them as
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-they came out. He misses a hunt, through mistake, and
-says; "I was annoyed to-day at the hoy I made in my
-manoeuvres; but I am ashamed of being so, for it all came
-from my odious vanity, and sensibility to the opinion of all
-the fools I met with." On his twenty-second birthday he
-makes these reflections:&mdash;"This anniversary becomes uninteresting
-after passing 21. But it should be a useful annual
-admonition to make the best of our short, fleeting life.
-What are called the best and happiest years of life are already
-past with me. God grant that I make those that remain
-more profitable to others, and consequently to myself. As
-to happiness, I think my temper and dispositions have prevented
-my having my share to the full of youthful pleasures;
-so I may look forward to the future for better circumstances:
-if I can but tutor my mind into contentment
-at my situation, and an engrossing wish to make my duty
-the leading guide of my actions. Indolence and irresolution
-are my stumbling blocks."
-</p>
-<p>
-The new year of 1822 was danced into Althorp by a
-grand ball. Three days after he had a narrow escape with
-his life; he went out partridge-shooting with Lord Bingham,
-and this gentleman's powder-flask took fire, and burst
-in his hand. George and the attendants were nearly blown
-up, and Lord Bingham was severely scorched. This he
-considered the greatest danger he was ever in, and thanks
-God for his escape. The impression, however, did not last
-long; for he tells us, as the result of a game of cards, on the
-same night:&mdash;"I did not get to sleep for a long time for
-thinking over a trick at cards which E&mdash;&mdash; did. I succeeded
-in discovering it." When the Christmas party is
-dissolved, George's comments are: "I am sorry they are all
-going, though the young damsels have caught nothing of my
-heart."
-</p>
-<p>
-There is an event now to be recorded. He becomes a
-magistrate, and his first essay in court makes him think the
-business very amusing. He shouts huzza! on hearing that
-his brother Robert is about to come home. True, however,
-to his character, of never undertaking anything unless he
-knew its obligations sufficiently to be able to acquit himself
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
-in them to the satisfaction of his conscience, he goes to
-London, and studies "Blackstone's Commentaries," to
-qualify him for a proper discharge of his duties as a magistrate.
-He dines, dances, goes to balls and theatres,
-pays visits and bills during his stay in London, notwithstanding.
-</p>
-<p>
-Now he begins to prepare seriously for his future profession.
-Full nine months before he is to receive Orders, on
-March the 12th he begins to write a sermon. That is the
-point; let a man give a sermon, and he may become a
-minister any day, provided he has an earl or a viscount at
-his back, and a bishop who sits <i>tête â tête</i> with either in the
-House of Lords, and has two or three sons whom he wishes
-to put into posts of honour. The sermon is everything.
-Any one can read the Service, provided he has a good voice
-and distinct utterance; but the sermon&mdash;that requires
-brains, views, style, and paper. How these things can be
-done without we shall see further on. For the present,
-poor George did not discover the secret. He could bowl
-to a wicket, play cribbage, read Walter Scott, and shoot
-partridges, but where was his theology? The twenty-five
-lectures were buried long ago under some stone between
-Cambridge and Althorp. Well, the fact of it was, he must
-do something. He goes to hear the "crack" preachers of
-London, and even the "twaddle" ditto. He catches up
-some idea from them, borrows the book Lord Althorp reads
-from on Sunday afternoons, and gets an idea of what a sermon
-is like. He sets to, therefore, to write one himself,
-and in six months that sermon is finished.
-</p>
-<p>
-One could not expect him to be a bookworm just now.
-Lord Palmerston is at a stag-hunt, and patronized the young
-candidate. Washington Irving dines at his father's, and
-George has to take notes of his "Yankee twang, sallow
-complexion, and nasal sounds." He used to say to us
-that one who saw Irving, and heard him speak, could
-never believe he was the author of "The Traveller"
-or "Bracebridge Hall," and much less of "Knickerbocker's
-History of New York." Irving himself alludes to this,
-when he says, somewhere, that the London people
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">{99}</a></span>
-"wondered that he held a quill in his hand, instead of wearing it
-in his scalp-lock." He gets over all this after the Ryde
-recreation, and the hunting at Wiseton, when, towards the
-end of September this year, he bids farewell to his military
-life as a cornet in the Yeomanry of Northampton. This is
-as a preparation for his Orders; but they come upon him still
-unexpectedly when he receives a letter from the Bishop of
-Peterborough, on the 5th of October, to signify that he would
-have Ordination on the 22nd of December following. He
-writes to the Diocesan Examiner to ask what books he is to
-read, and how he is to prepare, and that gentleman graciously
-tells him that he need not trouble himself; that he
-knows, from the respectability of his family, he must be already
-quite prepared. [Footnote 5] George is contented for the present,
-but he has an eye to the future; he borrows, therefore, some
-twelve of the Wimbledon clergyman's best sermons, and
-says "that will set me up for a start." He then goes on
-retreat about the 16th of December, and his day is divided
-into four principal parts, making allowances for dinner and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-sleep, consisting of shooting, cribbage, whist, and sermon
-writing or copying, as the case might be. On the 18th, two
-days before, he adds one more spiritual exercise to his usual
-ones; he reads a novel. The next day he goes off to Peterborough,
-and dines with the Dean and his wife, "who are
-to feed him" whilst he is there. His examination is gone
-through&mdash;one of the Thirty-nine Articles to be translated
-into Latin, and he has an <i>exposé</i>, with illustrations, on the
-nature of mesmerism, for the rest of the terrible ordeal.
-This passed successfully, he comes home to the Dean's house,
-bids good night to the <i>materfamilias</i>, and collects his spirits
-for the great occasion. He is wrapt in sublime ecstacy, and
-bursts forth into the following exclamation in his Journal:
-"I am 22 years old, and not yet engaged to be married!"
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
-[Footnote 5:
-Here is a copy of the letter with which he was favoured from
-that dignitary:<br>
- "Yarmouth, Norfolk, October 12.
-<br><br>
- "My Dear Sir,<br>
- "I am sorry my absence from Cambridge may have made me
- appear neglectful in answering your letter, but I have some
- consolation in thinking that you will not have suffered by the delay. As
- far as I am concerned, in my character of examiner, it is impossible
- that I could ever entertain any idea of subjecting a gentleman with
- whose talents and good qualities I am so well acquainted as I am
- with yours, to any examination except one as a matter of form, for
- which a verse in the Greek Testament, and an Article of the Church
- of England returned into Latin will be amply sufficient. With
- regard to the doctrinal part of the examination, that is taken by the
- Bishop himself, but it is confined entirely to the prepared questions,
- which are a test of opinions, not of scholarship. This information,
- then, will, I trust, be satisfactorily, and will leave you at liberty to
- pursue your theological studies in that course which you yourself
- prefer, and which I am confident will be a good one. I really am
- unable to say whether the Bishop of Peterbro' requires a certificate
- of the Divinity Lectures or not, but I know that he does not in all
- cases make it a <i>sine qua non</i>; at any rate, I think you had better
- send for it, as it will give the professor but very little trouble to
- forward it under cover to your father.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- "If I can be of the least service in answering any other queries,
- or in any other way whatever, I beg you will, at any time, give me a
- line; and believe me, my dear Sir,
-<br><br>
- "Yours very sincerely,<br>
- "T. S. Hughes.<br>
- "I shall not be in Camb. till the beginning of next month."]
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h1>BOOK II.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, an Anglican Minister.</i></h1>
-
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">{103}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h1>BOOK II.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, an Anglican Minister. </i></h1>
-<br>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
-He Is Ordained, And Enters On His Clerical Duties.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The Establishment retains in her written formularies
-a great deal of what looks very like
-Catholic. She has an attempt at a profession
-of faith; a kind of a sacramental rite, as a
-substitute for the Mass; a mode of visiting the
-sick, a marriage service, baptismal service, burial service,
-and an ordinal; even something like the Sacrament of
-Penance can be gleaned from two or three clauses in the
-Book of Common Prayer. How much of sacramental
-power there may be in those several ordinances is very
-easily determined; we admit none whatever in any except
-baptism&mdash;the judicial voice of the Establishment leaves
-its efficacy an open question&mdash;and matrimony. Of late,
-some amongst them have felt their want of sacramental
-wealth so keenly, that they would fain persuade themselves
-the shells of Catholic rites, which the Reformers retained,
-were filled with sacramental substance. To give this theory
-some show of plausibility, they claimed valid orders. Pamphlets
-and books have been written on two sides of this
-question until there seems scarcely any more to be said
-upon it, so we just mention what is the Catholic opinion on
-the validity of Anglican orders.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
-<p>
-With what Protestants think of them we have no immediate
-concern; nor would it be an easy matter to extract
-anything definite from the multitude and contrariety of
-opinions on this one point.
-</p>
-<p>
-We hold them to be simply <i>null</i>; they do not even come
-up to doubt; for if the Archbishop of Canterbury became a
-Catholic to-morrow, and wished to exercise any ministry, he
-would be obliged to receive all the orders from the first
-tonsure upwards, absolutely, and without even an implied
-condition. This has always been the practice: and, the
-Church's acting thus, at the period which is now involved
-in obscurity, is the best <i>de facto</i> argument that the orders
-of the Establishment were then, as they are now, a human
-designation, and nothing more. There is nothing sacramental
-in Anglican orders, and there never was, since
-England broke away from the Church, and, consistently
-enough, orders were expunged from the Protestant catalogue
-of sacraments in the very infancy of the Reformation.
-They still keep up a semblance of orders: they have what
-they call the diaconate, the priesthood, and the consecration
-of bishops. A deacon is ordained much in the same way
-as our own deacons, and he can perform all the duties of
-the parish, with the exception of the Communion Service.
-</p>
-<p>
-We see a man marked out by an Anglican bishop for
-ecclesiastical duties, without any sacramental grace, spiritual
-character, or jurisdiction, for no less a work than the care
-of immortal souls. Let us see now what instruments he has
-wherewith to accomplish this.
-</p>
-<p>
-He had once two Sacraments&mdash;the Lord's Supper and
-Baptism; the former, Catholics know to be an empty ceremony,
-and perhaps it would nearly be a Protestant heresy
-to say it was much more. Baptism they had as Turks have,
-and as every lay man and woman in the world, who performs
-the rite properly, has. Now their judicial decisions do not
-consider it worth the having; so, as far as in themselves
-lies, they have tried to deprive themselves of it. The practical
-means of sanctification a minister has to use are
-chiefly four: prayer, preaching, visiting, and reading. The
-reading part may evidently be performed as well, if not
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">{105}</a></span>
-better sometimes, by a layman. The visiting is often better
-done by the clergyman's wife or daughter than by himself,
-for, in attention to sickness and sweet words of consolation,
-the female gifts seem the more effectual. All that remains
-to him, peculiarly for his own, is the preaching, and the
-respectability of character his own conduct and regard for
-his position may give him. His power is altogether personal,
-and if he be an indifferent preacher or a careless
-liver, he loses all.
-</p>
-<p>
-Whether candidates for orders, or even the ordained of
-the Anglican Establishment, take this view of their position,
-one cannot be sure; but, from the acts and words of Mr.
-Spencer, we can form a tolerable conjecture of what he
-thought and intended when he took deacon's orders from
-Dr. Marsh, Protestant Bishop of Peterborough, on the
-22nd December, 1822. He makes no preparation whatever,
-nor does he seem to fancy that it is an action that
-requires any. He gives an account of the ordination,
-which he was pleased to call, "talking of business," when
-making his arrangements for it, a few pages back in the
-Journal, and, as a piece of business, it is gone through by
-him. We transcribe his own words:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Sunday, Dec. 22.</span>
- I breakfasted with Mr. Gibbs and Mr.
- Gregory at the inn (Peterborough) at 8. At 9, two others
- of the candidates, Mr. Pearson and Mr. Witherall, joined
- us, and we went to the palace, from whence the bishop led
- us into the church, when we were ordained. The service
- took an hour, including the Sacrament which he gave us.
- I commenced my church-reading then by reading the
- gospel in the service. I went (a clergyman) to the deanery.
- At 11 we went all together from the palace to church,
- when Mr. Parsons preached a good long sermon&mdash;at us
- very palpably. We then went to a cold collation at the
- palace till evening church, which we attended. After that
- we received our letters of orders and licences, and paid our
- fees."
-</p>
-<p>
-It may be said that this is a very nice little account
-squeezed into a journal, and one could not expect enthusiastic
-bursts about the gift of the spirit and the power of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">{106}</a></span>
-the Church, in a book allotted to the bare recording of
-events. So be it. But there are enthusiastic exclamations
-about less important things in that same little book, and if
-ordination looked anything to Mr. Spencer than a condition
-<i>sine qua</i> of his getting fixed in his future position, he would
-have noted it. The absence of deep religious feeling at this
-period of his life may account in a great measure for this
-coolness; but perhaps the not believing there was anything
-sacramental in the rite itself may give a more satisfactory
-explanation. To wind up the matter in a few words&mdash;he
-said grace for the family at dinner that evening, and then
-read his <i>novel</i> quietly in his room, because the day was not
-favourable for any field sport.
-</p>
-<p>
-These few explanations were deemed necessary for appreciating
-the tenor of his life from this moment forward. It
-will run counter to all anticipated results in the direction
-of excellence, and will even go far beyond what its first
-evidences would warrant one to expect. He looked his
-position in the face at the very outset: he saw that he had
-souls to look after, and he knew that he could not do that
-without a course of consistent conduct beseeming his character.
-For the first few days things went on much as of
-old. The family were still spending the winter in Althorp,
-and he joined in all the pastimes by which they whiled
-away the short days and cheered the long nights. It was
-requisite, however, that the cousins and nearer relations,
-should see and hear George in his new position, if it were
-only to have something to talk about when they came to
-London. Accordingly, he assisted in the Communion Service
-on Christmas Day by administering "the cup," first
-to his father, and then to others. He did not "think the
-thing so formidable," and it wore off the apprehension he
-had of appearing in public sufficient for him to give his first
-sermon on Sunday, Dec. 29. It was on the Birth of Christ,
-and he says, "Althorp and Duncannon were my audience;"
-whether they were a whole or a part of the audience, it is
-not easy at this distance to discover.
-</p>
-<p>
-He might be now considered fairly launched into his new
-element. The rector of Great Brington, a Mr. Vigoreux,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">{107}</a></span>
-was away on the continent, and the parish was left to the
-care of the young curate. He had three or four villages,
-numbering about 800, in his parish, some distance apart,
-and he lived in Althorp himself. On the 1st of January,
-1823, he sets vigorously to work, and, regardless of wind or
-weather, walks out from breakfast until about six o'clock
-every day, visiting the people. After the first few days he
-gets quite interested in the work, and is cheered on by his
-success in making up differences, consoling the dying, and
-assisting the poor. Two notes from the Journal will illustrate
-how he felt with regard to this visiting:&mdash;"Feb. 10.
-Went to Little Brington, where I paid 20 visits among the
-poor. Feb. 11. Visited 15 or 20 houses; this work is
-very amusing to me now. I hope I shall never get tired of
-it, or be disgusted by bad success to my lectures."
-</p>
-<p>
-The principal work he tries to accomplish by his visits is,
-the supplying those deficiencies he finds in the people with
-regard to what he conceived to be sacraments. His very
-first round through the parish showed him how few were
-up to the mark of good Christians. Many Dissenters chose
-to dispute his right to lecture them, and were not slow to
-produce clauses of protection for themselves; and his having
-"a discussion with one roaring Methodist," did not lessen
-the difficulty of making them tractable sheep. Discussions
-proved to be a means of widening the breach, and simple
-kindness left things where they stood. Something positive
-he must mark out as a duty to his flock, and then exhort
-them to it. Instinct led him to the sacraments. He found
-great numbers unbaptized, believing in a spiritual regeneration,
-and scoffing at the idea of heavenly virtue being in
-a drop of water; he found more still, and these among the
-baptized, who had as little love for the Lord's Supper as he
-had himself once. Now these could very easily be managed
-by exhorting them to read the Bible, lending them a copy
-if they had not one, recommending family prayers, and
-kindness and justice towards all men. Mr. Spencer thought
-otherwise. He began with baptism, and within the first
-fortnight of his clerical life he baptized the nine children of
-a blacksmith. This was a good beginning, and encouraged
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">{108}</a></span>
-him to persevere, but he did not find many so malleable as
-the offspring of this son of Tubal Cain.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the next sacramental duty he did not see his way so
-clearly as in the first. In the Church of England, the
-<i>Sacrament</i>, as it is emphatically called, must be administered
-three times a year, may be once a month, and cannot be
-unless there be a number of communicants. Giving the
-<i>Sacrament</i> once a week is considered very High Church,
-and to give it every morning is going a little too far.
-Superstitious reverence and indifference keep the majority
-away from this rite, and few come, except they get a monomonia
-for manifesting their godliness in that special direction.
-This fact will account for Mr. Spencer's hesitation,
-when he took to Christianizing his flock by making them
-approach the Sacrament. He makes many promise to come,
-and gets a neighbouring clergyman to administer it in their
-own houses to some decrepid old people, who could not
-come to church. He preaches on this, and "hopes he has
-not been wrong;" he discusses the propriety of his proceedings
-with his older brethren in the ministry. The result
-seems to confirm him in his ideas, and he preaches a second
-time, and gives appendices to his sermon in every visit,
-about going to the Lord's Supper. He still "hopes he is
-not wrong." He works very hard at this point, however,
-and on the first Easter Sunday of his ministry, he gives
-God thanks and prays against pride, at having 130 communicants.
-There was another little incident on the same
-day as a set off to his success in beating up the parish;
-when he opens the sermon-cover from which he used to
-read his MS., he finds he had put the wrong sermon there,
-and had to preach extempore the sermon he intended to
-have read: of course, it was not to his satisfaction, though
-the people scarcely knew the difference.
-</p>
-<p>
-One sad event cast a cloud over the beginning of his
-clerical life: the sister he loved so much, and whose company
-and conversation he thought more than an equivalent
-for the gayest party, Lady Georgiana Quin, died in London.
-He was very much afflicted by it, and even in after-life he
-would be deeply moved when speaking of this sister. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">{109}</a></span>
-did not delay long in London, but came home in a day or
-two after the funeral.
-</p>
-<p>
-Excepting this short interval, his time was spent at
-home in the most ardent fulfilment of the duties his fervour
-imposed upon him. Not only did he go about from house
-to house, but he would spare a day or two, in each week,
-when he went into Northampton for the sessions, and
-visit the neighbouring clergy. It was his custom to discuss
-points of duty with them; to invite them to Althorp,
-and spend evenings in clerical conversation. He accompanied
-them on their visits to the sick and other parochial
-employments, to learn, by a comparison of the different
-ways of each, which would probably be best for himself.
-He reads such books as the "Clergyman's Instructor," and
-other books of divinity and sermons; he never fails to
-write a sermon every week, to catechise the children on a
-Sunday, visit the schools, and try to make every one as
-faithful in the discharge of their duties as he was in his
-own. About Easter some members of his family came to
-Althorp, and he relaxes a little for their sakes, and freely
-joins them in all his former amusements; not, however,
-omitting any of his visits, especially to the sick and dying.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-He Mends Some Of His Ways.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-About the middle of April he came to London for three
-weeks' holidays. He calls it "a smoky odious place,"
-and says that entering it makes him "miserable." He is
-soon immersed in the customs of his society in the metropolis,
-and his feeling of uneasiness wears off. His little
-experience in parish work brings a great many things to
-his knowledge, of which he had not the slightest idea before.
-He is at a great loss, also, how to meet the difficulties he
-encounters, and doubts whether his proceedings in what he
-considered his duty have been quite right. Dr. Blomfield
-had always been a kind of spiritual director to Mr. Spencer:
-to him he goes now for a thorough investigation of his
-principles and even doctrines. Extempore praying was a
-thing Dr. Blomfield never liked, and its adoption by Mr.
-Spencer shows a leaning to Evangelical if not Methodistic
-spirituality. Whether it was this point, or another of the
-many things upon which clergymen of the Establishment
-agree to differ, that they discussed, we cannot say; but the
-result was far from consoling to either. He says: "I
-want some setting to rights in point of orthodoxy I find.
-I only hope that my decision in regard to my conduct may
-not be influenced by ambition or worldliness on the one
-hand, nor by spiritual pride on the other." Here may be
-seen that real sincerity and disinterestedness which guided
-his every step through life. If we analyze the sentence, it
-looks as if the arguments of his adviser are taken in part
-from the sources which Mr. Spencer hopes will not influence
-his decision; and this conclusion is borne out by a
-letter which will be given further on, when his confidence
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
-in the Church of England became thoroughly shaken. It
-must not be supposed from this that Dr. Blomfield was
-guided himself by these motives, though hints to that effect
-were often rife in his lifetime; but it is natural enough that
-the doctor should propose family considerations among his
-other arguments, especially if he thought those not quite
-persuasive.
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. Spencer goes to the theatre, and it was the last time
-in his life. His account of how that change was wrought
-in him, gives us one of those peculiar instances in which
-ridicule proved to be more powerful than logic or decorum.
-He attended Drury Lane Theatre with one or two friends,
-and in some part of the performance a parson was fearfully
-caricatured, and drew bursts of laughter and applause from
-the audience. This touched him sorely; eyes were pointed
-towards him; his friends laughed the more, in proportion to
-the efforts considerations for him made them use, in suppressing
-their feelings. He went forth from the theatre
-thoroughly vexed, and vowed he would never go to a
-theatre again. The Journal does not give a solitary instance
-in which this resolve was deviated from afterwards.
-This incident had also the effect of making him consider the
-propriety of several other unclerical pursuits, which he
-followed, as much since his ordination as he did before. It
-was not, however, till towards the end of this year that he
-began to retrench them, and a little of the same power of
-ridicule came to his assistance then also.
-</p>
-<p>
-His great concern was the union of all the sects in his
-parish. He knew very well that our Lord gave but one
-system of Christianity, and that <i>yea</i> and <i>no</i> upon any
-important point could not proceed from His lips or be parts of
-His doctrine. He thought conciliatory measures the best
-to effect his purpose, and he even adopted some of the
-ways of Dissenters in order to be all to all towards them.
-On this he seems to have been lectured by Dr. Blomfield
-with some profit, for, on his return home, he says: "Whit-Sunday.
-I gave a strong sermon against the Dissenters,
-founded on Whit-Sunday," In a few days he pays "an
-unsatisfactory visit" to one family, and says: "They are
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
-the hardest schismatics I've got; children unbaptized, &amp;c."
-This seems High Church language, and his feeling of opposition
-to Evangelicals, which finds expression in a few places,
-now makes one suppose he was "a proper High Church
-man." He labours hard for several weeks to prepare
-children for confirmation. He has 80 of them ready, and
-was so pleased with the whole affair, that he moved the
-printing of the bishop's charge, as he proposed his lordship's
-health in a speech after the dinner. The Sunday
-after he goes round to every house, and gives final admonitions
-to those on whom the bishop imposed hands a few
-days before.
-</p>
-<p>
-To help him in his incipient dislike of Methodism he has
-a very curious conversation with a great "professor" of
-that persuasion. This was an old woman whom he was in
-the habit of visiting whenever he made his rounds where
-she lived. On his entrance, they both knelt down and
-prayed alternately for some time, each, out loud and
-extempore, for the edification of the other. When this
-rubric was carried out, they talked at full length and
-breadth on the unconverted and the elect, with sundries
-other kindred subjects, and this he used to style "comfortable
-conversation." Sometimes the tone of conversation
-would vary, and once it ran upon the line of self-accusation.
-The old lady very humbly accused herself of a great many
-faults in general, and signified to Mr. Spencer that she
-would be very much obliged to any one who would point
-out her particular faults, and help her in correcting them.
-Emboldened by this, he ventured, after a long preamble, to
-suggest that there was one thing he would like to see corrected
-in her, as it seemed to be the only speck on the
-lustre of her godliness. "What is that?" asked she,
-rather curiously and impatiently. "Well, it is that you
-are rather fond of contradicting people." "No, I am not,"
-was the reply. "You have just contradicted me now."
-"No, I haven't." "Well, you have repeated the same
-fault." "I've done no such thing," was the petulant
-rejoinder. Of course, he saw it was useless to proceed
-further, and his visits became fewer for some time. This
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">{113}</a></span>
-anecdote he used to relate with peculiar tact and a most
-graphic imitation of the old lady's manner.
-</p>
-<p>
-Before giving his own account of the rise and fall of his
-High Church notions, it may be well to mention another
-incident that occurred about this time, towards the end of
-1823. He determines to give up shooting and dancing.
-He told an anecdote about how the first of these sports fell
-into disfavour with him. There was a shooting party in
-Althorp on a certain day, and George was in the very thick
-of it. So anxious was he to distinguish himself in bringing
-down game, that he would run to take position for a shot
-with his double-barrel gun loaded, and a cartridge stuck in
-either corner of his mouth, ready for action, so as not to
-lose a minute in charging. He did great execution that
-day, and bagged probably more braces than any other.
-In the evening one of the company showed great anxiety to
-get possession of something, and eventually succeeded;
-whereupon, one present said, with a waggish look at George,
-"You've made a parson's shot at it." This struck him very
-forcibly, and suggested the resolution, which he finally
-came to and kept, of giving up shooting. There is no particular
-anecdote about his abstinence from dancing, we only
-know that at this time he refuses to go to a ball, makes his
-pastoral visits instead, and declares that he feels far more
-comfortable after this than when he has been "pleasuring."
-</p>
-<p>
-The following is taken from a letter published by Father
-Ignatius in the <i>Catholic Standard</i> in December, 1853:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- ... "When I was ordained deacon in the Church of
- England at Christmas, 1822, I had, I may say, all my
- religious ideas and principles to form. I do not so well
- know how far this is a common case now. I have reason
- to think it was a very common one then. My mind was
- possessed with a decided intention of doing good, and I was
- delighted with the calling and life of a clergyman; but
- my ideas were very vague indeed as to what a clergyman
- was meant for or had to do. Very naturally, however, on
- becoming acquainted with my parishioners, among whom
- the Wesleyan Methodists, the Baptists, and the Independents
- had been gaining ground for some time previously, I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">{114}</a></span>
- concluded that I had to oppose their progress, and to draw
- back those who had joined them. This disposition in me
- was highly gratifying to some of the elder clergy in my
- neighbourhood, who came to make acquaintance with me as
- a new neighbour, especially to one old man, an ardent lover
- of High Church principles, who, to confirm me in them, gave
- me a book to read entitled 'Daubeny's Guide to the Church,'
- in which the divine authority of the Church, the importance
- of Apostolical succession, of episcopal government, the
- evil and sin of schism, and other ecclesiastical principles,
- were most lucidly and learnedly demonstrated. So I
- thought then; and, as far as my recollection goes, I should
- say now that I thought rightly. I was exceedingly captivated
- by these principles, which were to me quite new, and
- I found myself now ready to carry on my arguments with
- dissenters as a warrior armed; whereas in the beginning I
- had nothing but zeal in my cause to help me. I did not
- gain upon them; but this new light was so bright in my
- own mind, that I had no doubt of prevailing in time. But
- there was one weak point in the system I was defending
- which I had overlooked. It was after a time pointed out
- to me, and my fabric of High Churchism fell flat at once,
- like a child's castle of cards.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was at this time living at Althorp, my father's principal
- residence in the country, serving as a curate to the
- parish to which it was attached, though the park itself is
- extra-parochial. Among the visitors who resorted there,
- was one of the most distinguished scholars of the day, to
- whom, as to many more of the Anglican Church, I owe a
- debt of gratitude for the interest which he took in me, and
- to the help I actually received from him in the course of
- inquiry, which has happily terminated in the haven of the
- true Church. I should like to make a grateful and honourable
- mention of his name, but as this has been found
- fault with, I forbear. I was one day explaining to him
- with earnestness the line of argument which I was pursuing
- with dissenters, and my hopes from it; I suppose I expected
- encouragement, such as I had received from many
- others. But he simply and candidly said, 'These would be
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
- very convenient doctrines, if we could make use of them,
- but they are available only for Roman Catholics; they will
- not serve us.' I saw in a moment the truth of his remark,
- and his character and position gave it additional weight.
- I did not answer him; but as a soldier who has received
- what he feels to be a mortal wound, will suddenly stand
- still, and then quietly retire out of the <i>mêlée</i>, and seek a
- quiet spot to die in, so I went away with my High Churchism
- mortally wounded in the very prime of its vigour and
- youth, to die for ever to the character of an Anglican High
- Churchman. Why did not this open my eyes, you will say,
- to the truth of Catholicity? I answer, simply because my
- early prejudices were too strong. The unanswerable
- remark of my friend was like a <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> of
- all High Church ideas. If they were true, the Catholic
- would be so: <i>which is absurd</i>, as I remember Euclid would
- say. 'Therefore,' &amp;c. The grand support of the High
- Church system, church authority, having been thus overthrown,
- it was an easy though gradual work to get out of
- my mind all its minor details and accompaniments, one
- after another; such as regard for holy places, for holy days,
- for consecrated persons, for ecclesiastical writers; finally,
- almost all definite dogmatic notions. It would seem that
- all was slipping away, when, coming to the conviction of
- the truth of Catholicity some years after, it was with extraordinary
- delight I found myself picking up again the shattered
- dispersed pieces of the beautiful fabric, and placing
- them now in better order on the right foundation, solid and
- firm, no longer exposed to such a catastrophe as had upset
- my card-castle of Anglican churchmanship. This little
- passage in my ancient religious history is so sweetly interesting
- to me in the remembrance, that I have looked into
- an old diary which I used to keep at the time, to make out
- the dates, and I find by this that the duration of my High
- Church ideas was shorter than I should have imagined; but
- it was a period crowded with new, bright ideas, and naturally
- seems longer than it is. I will, to please myself,
- perhaps, more than my readers, give the dates. I note
- that, Dec. 24, 1823, the great scholar of whom I have
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
- spoken came to Althorp; Jan. 23, 1824, he goes away.
- This was his last visit, for he died the summer following, as
- I find it was on the 28th of June, 1824, that, in passing by
- Oxford with my eldest brother, we called at the Hall of
- which he was superior, to inquire how he was. He was
- sick&mdash;then on his death-bed." [Footnote 6]
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 6: The name of the gentleman referred to
- above was Dr. Elmesly.]
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">{117}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-He Receives Further Orders.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The complete levelling of his church principles left him at a
-loss which way to turn. The divided state of his parish,
-and the number of sects, seemed to be perpetually harassing
-his mind. He set about converting them by other ways
-than exhibiting his "card-castle;" he tried to open the
-doors of the Establishment as wide as he could, so as to
-admit if possible all classes of religionists to her communion.
-Of a conversation upon this point with Lord Lyttelton, he
-says, "In the evening I had a walk with Lyttelton, and
-was filled with scruples about the Athanasian Creed by him
-unintentionally. I had a great war with my conscience in
-the evening, at bed-time." These scruples slept for some time
-on account of a soporific which Dr. Blomfield administered
-to him; but they arose again, and were not settled till he
-became a Catholic. Various discussions procure him "lights
-about the Methodist practice," and "distressing thoughts;"
-so he gives up that field of working now for another.
-</p>
-<p>
-This other field was showing good example of the different
-works of mercy, and he even tries Catholic ascetism. He
-takes such an interest in the poor of his parish that he goes
-to the hospitals, attends dissecting-rooms, and assists at a
-dispensary until he learns enough about medicine to enable
-him to make prescriptions for the sick poor. He spends
-evenings in making pills, and one day when a poor man
-broke his thigh, Mr. Spencer went and set it for him, and it
-was so well done that they did not change it when he was
-brought to the infirmary. The exertion this cost him nearly
-made him faint.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next thing he notes is, "I read a most persuasive
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">{118}</a></span>
-sermon of Beveridge's about fasting; I examined the question
-in other books, and by God's grace I am resolved no
-longer to disregard that duty." He applied for advice about
-fasting, as was his invariable practice when he took up any
-idea out of the ordinary line. He went to a neighbouring
-clergyman, whom he considered well versed in the matter,
-and, though this gentleman discourages the practice, Mr.
-Spencer adopts it notwithstanding, since his arguments are
-too weak. These are the principal events out of his ordinary
-work, except his giving up card-playing, from the beginning
-of the year 1824 until the 12th of June, when we find
-him again in Peterborough, on the eve of receiving priest's
-orders.
-</p>
-<p>
-The demolition of his High Church notions, as well as the
-tone of mind in which he received the former orders, might
-lead one to anticipate that he received these second orders
-somewhat after the fashion of a new step in the army. But
-it was quite the contrary. His notions of orders were
-higher; he looked upon this step as an important one, and
-he tells us, some days before, "I walked to-day in The
-Wilderness at Althorp, ruminating on my approaching ordination."
-He also read the Ordination Service over and over, a
-good many times. On the evening before the ordination,
-whilst the Bishop and various clergymen, and their ladies,
-with whom he dines, candidates included, amuse themselves
-with a game of whist, Mr. Spencer refuses to play. We can
-contrast his reflections now with those used on a similar
-occasion a year and a half ago:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-<span class="quotehead">"Trinity Sunday, June 13.&mdash;</span>
-A beautiful day. I was awake from six, and thought a
-great deal of my intended step to-day. At 11 we all attended
-the Bishop to church, and the prayers, ordination, and sacrament
-were performed all moat satisfactorily to me. I am
-now bound by the awful tie of priesthood; and most solemnly,
-at the time, did I devote myself to the service of my Master.
-May the impression never fade away!"
-</p>
-<p>
-Shortly before this he heard of Dr. Blomfield's promotion
-to the see of Chester, who, in answer to his letter of
-congratulation, offered him the office of chaplain. He accepted
-it, in a long letter to his old tutor, immediately he returned
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">{119}</a></span>
-from Peterborough. Up to this time Mr. Spencer had been
-reading the Anglican divines,&mdash;Tomline, Jeremy Taylor,
-Wheatley, Bull, Hooker, &amp;c.; now he begins to read the
-Fathers of the Church. The first he takes up is St. John
-Chrysostom <i>On the Priesthood</i>. His opinion upon some of
-the doctrines he met with there is nicely told in the letter
-to the <i>Catholic Standard</i>, from which the passage in the last
-chapter has been quoted.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I had to make a long journey with my brother, in his
- carriage, on that long day, June 28, from Althorp, near
- Northampton, to Southampton. It was before the epoch of
- railroads; and I see we started at half-past three. I was
- seeking a book to occupy me during this long journey (N.B.
- no Breviary to recite in those days), and, in the library at
- Althorp, I hit upon a copy, in Greek, of St. John Chrysostom
- on the Priesthood. Nothing better. I had heard this
- work highly praised, and I hoped to find some animating
- matter for the exercise of my calling as a clergyman. I was
- not disappointed in this hope; but when I came to what
- the saint says about the holy Eucharist, as, of course, the
- grand circumstance which exalts the Christian priest, I was
- overcome with surprise. I read, and read it again. Is it
- possible! I thought to myself. Why, this is manifest
- popery. He certainly must have believed in the Real
- Presence. I had no idea that popish errors had commenced
- so soon; yes, and gained deep root, too; for I saw that he
- wrote as of a doctrine about which he expected no contradiction.
- What was my conclusion here? you will ask.
- Why, simply this&mdash;<i>the Saint has erred</i>; otherwise this
- capital tenet of popery is true&mdash;<i>which is absurd</i>. I brought
- in my Euclid here, as on the previous 31st of December. I
- see that on the following day I was in the cabin of the
- vessel in which we crossed to the Isle of Wight, reading
- <i>Jeremy Taylor's Worthy Communicant</i>. St. John Chrysostom,
- I have no doubt, had been thrown overboard, not into
- the sea&mdash;which was making me then rather sick&mdash;as the
- volume was not my own to dispose of thus; but he had
- been thrown overboard with a whole multitude of Saints
- and Fathers besides, convicted with him, and condemned for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">{120}</a></span>
- popish errors, into the black gulph of the dark ages; or
- rather, I had, by an act of my judgment, extended the borders
- of that gulph several centuries back, as the Regent's
- Canal Company are doing with their reservoir near our
- house, by Act of Parliament, over some of our land, so as to
- flood him and his contemporaries, and, of course, all after
- them till Luther rose to set up a dyke and save on dry land
- those who had courage to step out on the land of Gospel
- light which he first had re-discovered. I soon came to look
- on our English Reformers of the Church of England as the
- greatest and most enlightened men since the time of the
- Apostles."
-</p>
-<p>
-He does not give up his asceticism, though he feels the
-pain of it; and well he might, for he would sometimes eat
-nothing until six o'clock in the evening, and be all the day
-going through his parish, or writing sermons if the day were
-wet. He says in the journal of one of those days: "A fasting
-day till dinner made me very miserable, and makes me
-doubt the excellency of this means .... dinner did
-me good." He improves upon the fasting, however, by
-adding another day every week, when he finds that it really
-helps him to eradicate his passions and raise up his mind to
-heaven. The bodily pain consequent on want of food was
-not the only thing Mr. Spencer had to endure from his fasting.
-It was a practice that had a popish air about it; his
-friends and members of his family grew indignant that he
-should be making himself peculiar. He had to bear the
-brunt of all their remarks; he did so willingly, and would
-sit down to the family breakfast to feed on their rebukes
-and send his portion down untasted, whilst the rest took
-their meal. He also reads Thomas-a-Kempis's "Imitation of
-Christ," and we see evidences of that remarkable spirit for
-which he was afterwards distinguished&mdash;thanking God for
-everything. He becomes a secretary to the Society for
-Promoting Christian Knowledge: that institution was a
-favourite of Dr. Blomfield's, and he may have induced Mr.
-Spencer to patronize it. When Mr. Spencer saw how well
-it worked in its department, he thought of a scheme for
-improvising something of his own. He does not give particulars
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">{121}</a></span>
-of what it was; but he submitted it to his Bishop, who
-"threw cold water on it," and Mr. Spencer simply thanks God
-for being thwarted. He is completely wrapped up in his
-clerical duties, so much so that he does not give the full
-time to his summer vacation in Ryde; he is always impatient
-to get back to his parish when some pressing business
-requires him to leave it; and even, while away, he is perpetually
-visiting clergymen, and talking upon matters
-belonging to his office. He seems though, ever since the
-destruction of his High Church principles, to be getting
-every day more Evangelical in his words and actions.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-Mr. Spencer Becomes Rector Of Brington.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Mr. Vigoreux, Rector of Brington, sent in his resignation
-of the living to the Bishop towards the close of the
-year 1824. The letters which are found among Father
-Ignatius's papers show this transaction to have been very
-creditable to the Spencer family. The old rector was on
-the continent,&mdash;he seems to have been very much in debt
-to Lord Spencer, and upon his resigning his living, Lord
-Spencer not only cancelled the debt, but made him so far
-independent for life, that the old clergyman, in sheer gratitude,
-ordered £7. 10s. to be distributed every year among
-the poor of the parish, whilst he lived. George was transported
-with delight at the news, which was given him by a
-lawyer in Northampton, on the 8th November in this year,
-that Mr. Vigoreux had resigned. Mr. Spencer is full of
-his secret, and he and a brother clergyman have a very
-pleasant evening in telling "secrets" to each other&mdash;George
-about the rectorship, his friend about his intended marriage.
-Things go on quietly now until the usual Christmas assemblage
-of the family at Althorp, and George's reflection on
-his birthday is this: "That my life past, in the main, has
-been mis-spent, wasted, and worse than wasted. Last year
-I have become confirmed in the first of all professions, and
-I truly desire that I may grow riper and stronger in my
-office." For a while he resists the temptation to join in the
-sports of the young gentlemen at Althorp; at length he
-gives in; he plays a few rubbers at whist in compliment to
-his father, and thanks God that he plays worse and worse
-every day. He also takes a few shots; but finding his old
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-eagerness returning, he throws up the gun at once, and goes
-to visit the sick and the poor.
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 12th January he is presented by his father with
-the living of Brington, is instituted by the Bishop two days
-after, and inducted by a neighbouring clergyman on the
-20th of the same month. He is now in possession of a good
-income, can afford to pay a curate to do his drudgery, and
-might follow the example of non-residence which was then
-so common; but he does nothing of the kind. A fat parsonage
-does not come to him with an arm-chair or a sofa,
-and invite him to sit down and take his rest. He considers
-now that the weight of the charge obliges him to redouble
-his labours; he continues to write his sermons twice over,
-and never misses to have one for every Sunday. It was his
-custom to give, what he called a lecture, on Sunday evenings,
-&mdash;he now gives a full sermon; he also increases the days of
-attendance in church as far as he can, for we find him beating
-up for an attendance on Ash-Wednesday; and this he
-calls an innovation. He gets a little keener in the spirit of
-asceticism just now, for he tries to conceal his austerities;
-and on a day he fasted till six he says: "I wish I could
-root out that devil of ambition and vain-glory." Probably
-it was about this time that the incident happened he used
-often to relate to his religious brethren in after-life. One
-day he thought to conceal his fast; but the housekeeper
-brought up the toast for breakfast, and if he sent it down
-untouched she would have discovered his abstinence; he
-put it in the cupboard and locked it up; by-and-by the
-odour it emitted perfumed the whole place, to the no small
-astonishment of the housemaid. The end of it was, that
-every one discovered what he tried to conceal even from
-one.
-</p>
-<p>
-We find a thorough absorption of his energies in the work
-of his ministry apparent in every page of his journal, as also
-from the testimony of those who knew him at that period.
-One little remark will throw light upon his interior:&mdash;"My
-dear Lyttelton,&mdash;Sal and the children went away at 6½. I
-heard the sad departing wheels out of bed. Thank God I
-have heretofore found happiness in my solitude, and shall do
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-so again, I trust. His word, and the way of His Commandments,
-they are my joy. May I grow in the knowledge
-and practice of them, and I desire no more for this world."
-Another instance of his devotion to his ministry may be
-seen in the following:&mdash;"Tuesday, March 22.&mdash;Rose (a
-neighbouring clergyman) and I began talking about 8½, and
-hardly ceased till 12 at night. Our subject was religion
-and the Church, chiefly."
-</p>
-<p>
-What beautiful material was there in this excellent clergyman!
-and had he been where his spirit would be understood,
-or where one knew how to direct him, what might he
-not become? He found himself in a Church where spirituality
-and asceticism are exotics, and cannot thrive, notwithstanding
-that the Scriptures are so emphatic in exhorting
-us to practise them. Then, if he took them up, he knew
-not how far to go, or at what point to restrain himself. He
-had no manuals, no guides; but vague attempts at fulsome
-piety written for fellow-workmen, who differed with him
-on the very first principles of faith. He was, therefore,
-utterly left to his own views and fancies, and what he considered
-grace and inspiration. He was getting too unworldly
-for his position, too single-minded, and too earnest
-for the easy-going clerical gentlemen who formed the bulk
-of his acquaintances. Not that the majority did not do their
-duty. To be sure they did; but what was it? To read a
-sermon from a desk on a Sunday; to pay visits, and read a
-chapter of the Bible to a dying sinner. The Evangelical
-counsels, without which, in some degree or other, Christian
-<i>perfection</i> is unattainable, are exploded anachronisms in the
-Established of souls, as the outcry against those
-within its pale, who try to revive them, but too clearly
-proves. Ecclesiastical virtue, with them, does not differ
-from secular virtue, any more than the virtue of a Member
-of Parliament differs from that of a Town Councillor.
-They are both expected to be gentlemen, and to keep the
-rules of propriety the public thinks proper to expect from
-their position. That is all. "Oh!" as poor Father Ignatius
-used to say, "shall these dry bones live?" Thou knowest,
-Lord, whether they shall or not; they don't; and in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-time they were farther from it than they are now. We
-must therefore expect, from the nature of the case, what is
-to follow in the next chapter. He goes perfectly astray, in
-his pursuit after what the "Church of his baptism" could
-not give him. It was fortunate that he strayed in the end
-from a wrong path into the right one, by the way of too far
-East being West.
-</p>
-<p>
-Easter Sunday in this year he counts the happiest day he
-spent up to this, though he had only fifty-eight communicants,
-a decrease since his first Easter. His point of bringing
-all to the sacrament was not carried. He had even
-bishops opposing him in this, as in everything else that was
-not half world, half God.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next thing he notices is, that an archdeacon gave a
-good charge, "though against the Catholics,&mdash;a questionable
-topic." Mr. Spencer had no special love for Catholics; on
-the contrary, he thought themselves absurd, their doctrines
-abominable, and their ceremonies mummery. He was of
-the Spencer family though, and in them there was an inbred
-love of justice and fair-play. Lord Spencer and his son,
-Lord Althorp, both favoured and spoke for emancipation.
-They thought the Catholics aggrieved, and if they were
-Turks, they did not see why they should cease to be men
-and subjects of the English crown. That was plain common
-sense; besides, Mr. Spencer had not got so high in Church
-views as some of his friends, who favoured Catholics before
-their elevation and opposed them after it, to please a king.
-The Spencers were generously liberal in all their dealings,
-and even when the subject of this biography, the delight of
-the family, thought fit to become a Catholic, their conduct
-towards him was worthy of their name. We shall have to
-refer to this afterwards; the allusion is made now only to
-show that the tenour of their opinions was not the creature
-of a whim or an ephemeral fancy, but a grave, steady, and
-well-disciplined feeling. Praise be to them for it. Would
-that their imitators were more numerous.
-</p>
-<p>
-He has also another project on hand at this time, besides
-the evangelizing of his flock. He begins to build a new
-rectory. He gets an architect from London; has
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
-suggestions from the family about the length and breadth of the
-apartments; others, more poetical, survey the site to give
-their sentiments about the view from the parlour window;
-the older portion have their say about the comfort of the
-different rooms, with regard to size, position, and plastering.
-Some few even make presents of articles of furniture, and a
-near relation gives him a beautiful bed, which commodity
-has many paragraphs of the journal dedicated to its praises
-and suitableness. The building is at last begun, and we
-must say something of the progress of his interior castle
-whilst we let the bricklayers obey the orders of the builder
-and architect.
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Changes In His Religious Opinions.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-For some time we are getting glimpses of his ways of
-thought, or rather of his ways of expressing his thoughts.
-We read, "godly dispositions," "mature unto repentance,"
-"ripe for glory," "comfortable conversations," "springs in
-barren soil," and the "<i>seeing</i> of spiritual <i>blindness</i>." All
-these indicate the leaning of his mind, and recall the language
-of Cromwellian "Saints," and Bunyan's dreams. The
-strangest part of his proceedings now was the way in which
-he became "justified." It is hardly necessary to mention
-that in Calvinistic theology, which forms the basis, if not
-the superstructure, of the principal part of Evangelical
-postulates, the body of believers are divided into <i>elect</i> and
-<i>reprobate</i>, or <i>justified</i> and <i>unconverted</i>. The election or
-justification is a sentiment coming from what is supposed to
-be the assurance of an interior spirit that one is to be saved.
-With them, happy the man or woman who possesses this
-testimony, and miserable the wretch to whom it is not
-given. There is for these latter only an everlasting groping
-in the dark, and a seeking for light, while the <i>insured</i> can
-go through this vale of tears in exultation and gladness of
-spirit. Mr. Spencer was not well versed in this particular
-doctrine, and a poor woman, whom he met one day in
-Northampton, undertook to bring him to the "true Gospel
-light" by the "pure milk of the Word." She put together
-a few of those passages from the New Testament, which are
-generally misquoted in support of this outlandish theory,
-and her interpretation convinced Mr. Spencer, so that he
-felt justified, all at once. This good woman proved to be a
-great trouble to him afterwards; she would harangue him,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-once a week, on his unconverted state, even after the <i>assurance</i>.
-Her letters came regularly, four large pages, badly
-and closely written; and when she had done canting on
-spirituality, she would fill up what remained with the scandals
-of the unconverted among whom she lived, and complaints
-at the cold treatment she received from many. She
-became a kind of apostle among the Dissenters, and it was
-only when she had been living on Mr. Spencer's charity for
-a few years that he discovered where the strength of her
-spirit lay. He had reasons for not trusting to the genuineness
-of her piety, though she kept continually writing from
-North Shields, where she lived, sometimes in good and sometimes
-in bad circumstances, since the regeneration of Mr.
-Spencer. When she received one letter in which her sanctity
-was made little of, she laid the blame on slanderous
-tongues, and talked about suicide. Mr. Spencer then
-dropped the correspondence, and gave her a sum of money
-to purchase a like favour on her side.
-</p>
-<p>
-He used to amuse us much by relating the system of
-self-laudation and encouragement that kept the Evangelicals
-interested in each other. One day he was describing how
-a clerical friend of his became justified. He had travelled
-a good distance, and was pretty tired; the family he thought
-proper to honour with his holy presence in a certain town,
-prepared him a most excellent breakfast. He ate with the
-appetite of a very hungry man, and when a more secular
-guest would have said, <i>O jam satis</i>, he jumped up from the
-table and shouted with ecstatic delight, "I am justified."
-He never doubted of his election to glory after that, as far
-as Father Ignatius knew. The most extraordinary feature
-in their modes was, that a kind of telegraphic communication
-was kept up with each other, all over the country, for
-the purpose of making the elect aware of the latest addition
-to their numbers. On finding his brethren were disposed
-to laugh at the extravagant madness of this kind of religion,
-he grew quite serious, and said: "They are really in
-earnest, poor things, and we ought not to laugh at them,
-only to pray that their earnestness might be properly
-directed." One will say: Could any man or woman with a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">{129}</a></span>
-grain of common sense, go on thinking and talking this kind
-of unreality, which we commonly call <i>cant?</i> As a fact,
-they do, and we have proof positive of it in Mr. Spencer
-himself. It is astonishing to see a man of his position, good
-sense, and education, talk and write in the strange way he
-does, whilst this mood of mind lasted. Not only does he
-write so; he holds conversations with every one whom he
-meets about the state of their soul, and those which he calls
-<i>interesting</i>, others considered very probably the reverse.
-He also takes soundings of people's spiritual depth, and is
-seldom consoled at the result. He is satisfied with no one,
-except two or three of his immediate neighbours who were
-fed mostly on his bounty or served in his house or garden.
-He goes at this time (September, 1825) to attend Dr. Blomfield
-as chaplain through the visitation of the diocese of
-Chester. He is very zealous throughout, and converses on
-spiritual subjects with Dissenters of all kinds as well as
-Churchmen; he does not even leave behind the followers of
-Joanna Southcote. Some were supposing once, in his
-presence, that it was impossible for followers of Joanna
-Southcote, and the like, not to be fully aware that they were
-being deluded. Father Ignatius said it was not so, and
-related a peculiar case that he witnessed himself. He happened
-to be passing through Birmingham (perhaps it was
-after he became a Catholic), and had occasion to enter a
-shop there to order something. The shopkeeper asked him
-if he had heard of the great light that had arisen in these
-modern times. He said no. "Well then," repeated the
-shopman, "here, sir, is something to enlighten you," handing
-him a neatly got up pamphlet. He had not time to
-glance at the title when his friend behind the counter ran
-on at a great rate in a speech something to the following
-effect. That the four Gospels were all figures and myths,
-that the Epistles were only faint foreshadowings of the real
-sun of justice that was now at length arisen. The Messias
-was come in the person of a Mr. Ward, and he would see
-the truth demonstrated beyond the possibility of a doubt
-by looking at the Gospel he held in his hand. Whilst the
-shopman was expressing hopes of converting him, he took
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">{130}</a></span>
-the opportunity of looking at the pamphlet, and found that
-all this new theory of religion was built upon a particular
-way of printing the text, <i>Glory be to God on high, and on
-earth peace to</i>-WARD'S <i>men</i>. On turning away in disgust
-from his fruitless remonstrances with this specimen of
-WARD'S <i>men</i>, he found some of WARD'S <i>women</i> also in the
-same place; and overheard them exclaiming, "Oh! little
-England knows what a treasure they have in &mdash;&mdash; jail."
-The pretended Messias happened to be in prison for felony
-at the time. He assured us that these poor creatures were
-perfectly sincere and earnest in the faith they had in this
-malefactor.
-</p>
-<p>
-The characteristic features of the Low Church school, or
-whatever name the religious bias of Mr. Spencer's mind at
-this time may be called, are, a certain self-sufficiency and
-rank spiritual pride. It begins with self and ends with self.
-From self springs the assurance of salvation, for self's sake,
-too, and every one must feel him<i>self</i> in this mood before he
-can rely on himself. When this fancy gets possession of a
-person's mind, they forthwith turn apostles, borrow the language
-of inspiration even for table-talk, and no person is in
-the way of salvation at all who does not completely fall in
-with the stream of the new flood of ideas this notion brings
-into the "<i>regenerated</i>" mind. No matter how worthy or
-great any person may seem to the reprobate world, and did
-seem to the newly-made "saint" before the assurance, they
-are now dark, lost, but hopeful if they listen patiently to
-one half-hour's discourse upon the movements of the Spirit.
-The vagaries of each mind are in proportion to the imagination,
-and the facilities for expanding them by giving them
-expression. But far or near as they may go, self, proud
-self, is the beginning and end of them all.
-</p>
-<p>
-The woman who was instrumental in "regenerating"
-Mr. Spencer writes in one letter to say that she has "no
-pride," and that no one ever could accuse her of being
-infected with this passion. At the same time, ay, in the
-very next sentence, we have wrath and indignation at some
-of the unregenerate who do not think proper to pay court
-to her. The sweeping condemnations hurled against two or
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-three worthy clergymen, which opened Mr. Spencer's eyes
-to the imposition practised upon him, are further evidences
-of the same spirit. Mr. Spencer's own ways of acting will
-be a fair sample of this kind of thing. During his visit to
-Chester in 1825, he lectures the Bishop on several different
-occasions, and considers himself quite qualified to do so by
-virtue of the new spirit he has imbibed. One of the conversations
-he describes thus:&mdash;"After dinner we had an
-animated discussion, in which I took a lead against the field
-almost. Before going to bed, I had half an hour's private
-conversation with the Bishop, most interesting <i>on his account</i>.
-I humbly thank God who has heard my prayers, and made
-me a lowly instrument in His hands for the good of this
-already admirable man." In the next sentence he tells us
-that, in travelling home to Althorp, "I did not read much,
-but thank God was enabled to keep my mind in godly
-meditation almost all the way. God knows how blind and
-perplexed I am still." We have taken the liberty to mark
-some words in italics in the first quotation, as they show
-what is confirmed by other passages, too numerous to be
-quoted, how high he had risen in his own estimation when
-he considered a bishop benefited by half an hour's conversation
-with him. He is very hopeful, though, of bringing
-all the world to his ideas, and says of his family: "God
-grant me the continuance of that kindness which lies
-between me and all my family till such time as their hearts
-may be truly opened to my word." Another reason why
-we are rather sparing in extracts is a respect for a passage
-which occurs here in the journal. "I have put down many
-circumstances in this journal relating to private discussions
-with persons in religion. Should they fall into strange
-hands, be they bound in conscience to use them discreetly."
-We simply quote what is necessary to give a correct notion
-of the state of his mind. He carried his zeal a little too
-far betimes, "he went so far as to consider it the duty of a
-clergyman to call on and rebuke any brother clergyman,
-whom he might consider negligent in his ministerial office."
-</p>
-<p>
-Thus a fellow-clergyman writes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- He got into some difficulties at this time in consequence
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
- of reporting to his bishop a clergyman who would not listen
- to his remonstrances; but mutual explanations succeeded in
- making everything right. The clergyman in question lived
- away from his cure, and thought proper to enjoy unclerical,
- but otherwise harmless, sports. Mr. Spencer, of course,
- was against this, but did not succeed in imbuing the other
- with his sentiments. Notwithstanding these notions of
- self-righteousness,
- he was far from incurring much censure for
- officiousness. His character and mode of life gained him so
- much respect that he could administer even reproof without
- provoking anger, except where it was too richly deserved.
- A letter of Dr. Blomfield's to him after this visit, bears out
- this remark. The Bishop says: ... "I hope you will
- look back on your visit to Chester with pleasure. You
- may have the satisfaction of believing that you have done
- good to many <i>young</i> clergymen, who had an opportunity of
- conversing with you, if not to many <i>old</i> ones. I was very
- glad to set before them the example of a young man of rank
- and good prospects devoted in singleness of heart to the
- duties of his holy calling."
-</p>
-<p>
-That his single-mindedness and piety should have thus led
-him astray is not to be wondered at; for, besides the want
-of a state where such virtues could be properly cultivated,
-he had to breathe a religion whose first principles tend
-directly that way. The exercise of private judgment in
-what primarily concerns salvation must always lead one
-astray, because articles of faith are not creatures of human
-intelligence, neither are they within its compass to understand.
-He had, of course, a private judgment shackled by
-contradictions, as every subscriber of the Thirty-nine
-Articles has. He had an authority to obey which gave a dubious
-sound, and he was told plainly by the same voice that itself
-was defectible; the only tie to obedience was the condition
-on which he discharged his clerical functions; it was natural
-that he should see through this, from his very single-mindedness,
-and overlook the conditions while trying to unravel
-the knots with which they bound him. His birthday
-reflections this year, 1825, show that he did not begin to
-retrace his steps. They are as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Dec. 21. ...</span>
- This day sees me 26 years old, and blessed be my Almighty
- Protector, the last year has greatly advanced me in hope
- and knowledge of salvation. A reference to my observations
- last birthday shows me a great alteration in my views.
- What admirable methods does He employ in bringing sinners
- to himself? During the last half-year I reckon I must
- fix the time when by the most unlikely means God has
- brought me to faith and knowledge of His grace. I solemnly
- devote the next year and every day and hour and minute of
- my future life to coming nearer to Him, to learning His
- ways and word, and to leading others to the same knowledge,
- in which He has caused me to exult with a joy formerly
- unknown."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">{134}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-Opposition To His Religious Views.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Mr. Spencer was so taken with his new birth that he tried
-to have all his friends and acquaintances born again after
-his own fashion. He made no secret, therefore, of his religious
-leaning; by letter and word of mouth he tried to
-bring all to his side. We find, from his correspondence at
-this time, a shower of letters from every point of the clerical
-compass where there was authority or influence enough to
-muster a cloud for their discharge. In looking over such of
-the letters as he has thought well to preserve, one is struck
-at once with the diversity of opinion. It is better not to
-give names, perhaps; but a few sentences from each may
-not be out of place.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Rev. Mr. A.&mdash;</span>
- "I have read your letter through with
- great care, and I can say with truth, that it has produced
- much the same effect upon the eye of my mind which the
- full blaze of the meridian sun sometimes produces upon the
- natural eye. It has been almost too much for me." The
- letter goes on encouraging him in his spirit, fortifying him
- against all carnal opposition. This gentleman is of the same
- mind as Mr. Spencer, but more glowing in his zeal for the
- great cause of Gospel freedom.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Rev. Mr. B.&mdash;</span>
- "I address myself to one who, from that
- love of Christ which passeth knowledge, has evinced an
- anxiety for me, who am less than the least of all saints, and
- an unprofitable minister of the Gospel of God." This gentleman's
- language is of the right stamp; but he does not agree
- so perfectly, and arranges for a meeting, where they are to
- have a mutual adjustment of ideas.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Rev. Mr. C.&mdash;</span>
- "This is very well at the commencement.
- I trust the Lord will add more, in the best sense of that
- expression."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Rev. Mr. D.&mdash;</span>
- ".... To this I will never consent
- [renewing left off discussions], being satisfied (as I have
- before stated to you) that every man who is able and willing
- and sincerely endeavouring to learn and practise his duty,
- ought to be left in the quiet and undisturbed possession of
- his own conscience, and not forced from it against his will
- by others who happen to form a different judgment. In
- our former conversations, you told me, as plainly as language
- could well do, though perhaps not entirely at one interview,
- that you considered me to be an unconverted sinner, as
- destitute of the truth as any heathen could be, and in a
- state of perdition; and you seemed to think that I could be
- recovered from that fearful condition by that horrid system
- of indiscriminate condemnation and terror which prevails (I
- find) at Northampton in its most odious form, and which I
- believe to be essentially opposed to the principles of the
- Christian religion, as it is repugnant to those natural feelings
- of kindness and benevolence which God has implanted
- in the human breast."
-</p>
-<p>
-It might be fairer to transcribe his
-entire letter; but then the other letters have the same claim,
-and that would make a new volume, for some of the letters
-extend over fifteen pages of foolscap paper, closely written.
-The sum of the remaining part is this, that he is twenty-one
-years in holy orders, and that God could not have allowed
-him to be in error all that time. He says that, "I never
-can for one moment admit that any one is more anxious
-for my happiness than I am myself, nor that any person has
-a greater right to decide than I have by what means that
-happiness shall be sought. A man's own conscientious
-judgment is the proper guide in such cases." He then refers
-Mr. Spencer to others more learned than he for the discussion
-of those matters, and mentions the Bishop of Chester
-and John Rose, "whose qualifications for the task are
-incomparably superior to mine." This gentleman seems to
-hesitate between Mr. Spencer's opinions and his own, and is
-rather uneasy lest he might be wrong, yet does not see
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-the use of troubling himself, as it is all the same in the
-end, when one tries to do what his conscience tells him is
-right.
-</p>
-<p>
-Rev. Mr. E. is a doctor, so let us listen to him. After a
-rhetorical preface, in which he would make excuses but
-would not, because they were such friends and did not want
-them, for handling his friend so summarily, he thus launches
-forth:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Although there can be but <i>one</i> line of duty marked
- out in the situation of <i>every</i> clergyman, and although, before
- God, the humblest and the loftiest in that profession are
- equally bounden to <i>pursue</i> the same line of duty, and are,
- moreover, equally frail and 'found wanting,'&mdash;yet I cannot
- bring myself to consider yours as by any means an <i>ordinary</i>
- case."
-</p>
-<p>
-After thus magnifying the importance of his
-subject, he neither agrees nor disagrees, but discountenances
-Mr. Spencer's practices on prudential motives. He
-staves off the whole matter of doctrine, and talks about
-discipline.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next quotation will be from a bishop. He very
-wisely and keenly observes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Amidst a great deal that is
- excellent and of right spirit in your observations, there is
- a presumption and self-confident tone, which is altogether
- new in <i>you</i>, and in my opinion not very consistent with real
- humility. In fact, I almost wonder that this symptom, if
- you have ever recalled to mind your conversations, or read
- over your letters when written, has not made you doubt the
- reality of what you call your conversion; for I remember
- perfectly well your having observed to me, that the extreme
- confidence of those who hold Calvinistic opinions as to their
- own case, and their extreme uncharitableness towards, or
- rather <i>concerning</i> others, were strong indications of some
- radical error in their notions, and so they will ever be
- considered by those who take the same view with St.
- Paul of Christian charity."
-</p>
-<p>
-The Bishop then states the
-case very clearly at issue between them, and points how
-far they agree and disagree upon the point of <i>assurance</i>
-and reliance on the merits of Christ, and proves his side
-of the question by Scripture, Anglican divines, and common
-sense.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-<p>
-It is a very singular thing that this bishop, when he first
-heard of the manifestations of Mr. Spencers Calvinistic
-spirit, concludes a short letter to him thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I recommend
- to your perusal a most interesting tract, which Blanco
- White has just published, 'The Poor Man's Preservative
- against Popery.'
-<br><br>
- "Ever yours affectionately,
- *****"
-</p>
-<p>
-These specimens are picked at random from a heap of
-letters. It looks incomprehensible to a Catholic how such a
-state of things could be possible in a system calling itself a
-Church. Not one of these, who were the clergy working
-with him in the same field and in the same way, dared to
-say, or knew how to say, "You have uttered a heresy."
-Some agreed with him, some applauded him, some wanted
-to be left alone in their old doctrines, and some begged leave
-very politely to differ from him, and gave their reasons for
-so doing. The Bishop argued warmly against him, but Mr.
-Spencer took up his lordship, and argued quite as warmly
-for the other side of the question. If he did not put them
-among the reprobate, they should very likely have let him
-alone. Such was the state of <i>dogma</i> in the Establishment
-in the beginning of 1826; it is scarcely improved, except in
-its own way, in 1865. No definite teaching, nothing positive,
-nothing precise, all mist, doubt, uncertainty, except
-that Popery is anti-Christian and subversive of human
-liberty.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is very hard to imagine, much less to realize, how these
-lukewarm expressions of assent and dissent turned, in a few
-months, into a tempest of opposition. Perhaps the following
-guess would nearly account for it. We may conclude
-from the letter of Lady Spencer to Dr. Blomfield (given in
-his life, page 70), on his being appointed to the see of
-Chester, that she and Lord Spencer knew something about
-the making of bishops and the mode of their <i>translation</i>.
-If she took such an interest in a stranger, but a friend, it is
-not wonderful that she should take a similar, if not a greater,
-interest in seeing a mitre on the head of her own son. Lord
-Liverpool had not yet retired from the head of the ministry,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">{138}</a></span>
-and if his politics and Lord Spencer's were sufficiently of
-accord to promote the man whom the Earl patronized, they
-would be able to do a like service to the Earl's own son in
-due course. Extreme Low Church views would never do
-for the Episcopal Bench in those days, though many were
-raised to that dignity with little High Church views. Whether
-Mr. Spencer's opinions clouded this bright future, or
-that the noble family would feel it a disgrace to have a son
-so methodistical, or whether real anxiety for his spiritual
-welfare, or an endeavour to prevent a future that the Bishop's
-ken seemed to have forecasted, troubled his parents, it is
-difficult to say. At all events, Mr. Spencer's religious
-notions caused a great commotion in the family, whilst those
-who abetted and encouraged him went on preaching their
-sermons and reading their services in their position, with
-one exception, and nobody seemed to mind them.
-</p>
-<p>
-Lady Spencer took her son to London, in the beginning
-of the year 1826, to have his new notions rectified by Dr.
-Blomfield. This good doctor immediately prescribed for
-his patient, for he did not need much feeling of his spiritual
-pulse after their correspondence. The interview is thus
-described:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Jan. 24.&mdash;</span>My mother allowed me her carriage
- after breakfast, to go and see the Bishop of Chester.
- I did not find him at home, and so came directly back again.
- He was so good as to call on me afterwards, and sat talking
- with me a considerable time. His conversation was most
- pleasing to me, though I could see that we did not fully
- agree in our view of Christian doctrine (<i>sic</i>). He desired
- me to read Sumner's 'Apostolical Preaching,' which I sent
- out for and began doing before dinner."
-</p>
-<p>
-His obedience to directors of all kinds was remarkable;
-but the results were invariably contrary to their expectations.
-He began this book at once, and be it remembered,
-he had read it twice before. Next day he read on, and
-"marked many passages which he thought decidedly wrong."
-He goes out a little, sees an old friend, and delights in reading
-Cowper's "Task," exclaiming, "It is a great thing to be a
-true Christian." He visits the Bishop in a day or two; they
-hold a discussion, but part in charity; and the result was,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">{139}</a></span>
-that Mr. Spencer wrote him "the memorable letter" which
-scarcely left his lordship a hope of salvation if he did not at
-once get assured of his election.
-</p>
-<p>
-A correspondence ensues now, which terminates in a
-promise given and accepted of a longer stay in London,
-where matters may be settled in conversation to their
-mutual satisfaction. In the mean time, Mr. Spencer returns
-to his parish, and begins reading the New Testament in
-Greek (another of Dr. Blomfield's prescriptions). As he lays
-down the volume one day he exclaims, "How do I want the
-milk of God's word!"
-</p>
-<p>
-An old lady whom he visits, in illness, dozes into a stupor,
-and awakens unto Gospel faith. One evening he says:&mdash;"I
-spent this evening with a mixture of scrupulosities and comforts,
-but trust soon to find out what is the true Gospel
-freedom." There seem still some relics of the old asceticism
-left in him, for on having to go to Peterborough on some
-business, he says:&mdash;"I started in a chaise for Peterborough.
-I had scruples about the heavy expense of this mode instead
-of coaches; but I was consoled by the opportunity I had on
-the way of calling at Titchmarsh, and having half an hour's
-conversation with Lyttelton Powys. I got to Peterborough
-at 4½, dined with the dean and his lady at 6, and spent the
-evening in hearing extracts from his intended life of Bentley.
-I found myself in a land, alas! of spiritual barrenness; but
-water-springs may rise in dry ground."
-</p>
-<p>
-It was about this time, March, 1826, that he seems to
-have given up reading anything in the way of theology,
-except the Bible. He gives an odd dip into Cowper's
-poems, by way of recreation. He came across a book called
-"The Convent," but immediately "discovered it to be anti-Christian."
-This apparent quiet is, however, disturbed by
-the play of the clerical artillery around him. The tone of
-one or two extracts from the letters he received now will
-give an idea of the vantage-ground these good champions of
-orthodoxy thought proper to take. One writes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I know you did think it un-Christian-like to converse or
- employ the mind much on any subject but religion. To this
- almost entire exclusion of all other topics I decidedly object,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
- on the ground of its having a strong tendency to engender a
- pharisaical spirit, and of its being inconsistent with the
- common duties and occupations of life marked out for us by
- Providence, and contrary to the true interests of genuine
- Christianity. And my opinion in this respect has the sanction
- of some of the most excellent characters I have ever
- known&mdash;persons eminent alike for sound wisdom and discretion,
- and for a quiet and unostentatious, but sincere and
- fervent piety.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I cannot conclude this letter without remarking, that
- all your conversations with me, since you adopted your
- present views, have convinced me more and more that my
- own religious opinions are sound and yours erroneous; and
- that every day's experience confirms and strengthens me in
- the conviction, that the religious system which your friends
- at Northampton are pursuing (whatever charm it may have
- for enthusiastic minds) <i>is not the religion of the Bible</i>."
-</p>
-<p>
-This is from the grumbler quoted above, as may be seen by the
-style and sentiment.
-</p>
-<p>
-Our friend the doctor calls him to task in this manner:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- ".... You are endeavouring to make up for past
- deficiencies, or to atone for past errors, by renewed activity
- or rather extraordinary efforts. This you do in perfect
- sincerity; and, I believe, heartily. In consequence, instead
- of <i>one</i> sermon on a Sunday there are <i>two</i>; instead of a
- <i>quarterly</i> there is a <i>monthly</i> sacrament; and, in addition,
- an evening lecture, with prayers, is pronounced every Wednesday
- evening. Now, supposing you had not taken this
- unfavourable opinion of your past feelings and views, would
- you have adopted such regulations? I think you would
- <i>not</i>; and yet, be it observed, the necessity for them was and
- is a matter totally irrelevant to your own private feelings."
-</p>
-<p>
-The rest of this letter, the doctor's second, is to sober down
-Mr. Spencer's fervour, and make him go on quietly, hoping
-thus to slacken his enthusiasm and bring him to his former
-frame of mind.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is sad to see a clergyman called to task for not being
-more worldly and less zealous. He is, in fact, too much
-like a Catholic Saint to be endured in the Establishment.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-He must eventually abandon it, or be stoned to death with
-hard words in it. We see the chink now through which
-the first alternative gleamed on the Bishop; and we see the
-disposition of Providence in moving him to confine himself
-to the Bible, when some plausible Anglican work might
-have burnished up what he had of Catholic instinct, and
-made it seem gold.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">{142}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Progress Of His Religious Views.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-It must not be supposed that Mr. Spencer broke away from
-the Establishment by the religious notions he took up at
-this time; on the contrary, his great hope is that he shall
-unite all the sects to her, and he fancies they are being
-realized now among the Methodists in his own parish. His
-cardinal point of opinion at this time was, that the articles
-and formularies of the Anglican Church required some kind
-of soul to put life into them and make them touch the heart;
-that this life had been allowed to eke out of the Church in the
-days bygone, and that it was high time to bring it back; the
-wording of the Church's text-books gave room for his interpretation,
-and his whole line of procedure was but acting
-upon it. Others interpreted differently, some did not interpret
-at all; with both classes of opponents he maintained an
-opposition so satisfactory to himself that his notions only
-gained a stronger hold of his mind every day. We shall
-give some specimens of the arguments urged against him by
-the second class of opponents, who were chiefly influential
-members of his own family. One writes,&mdash;his father:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I will commission Appleyard to get the Hebrew grammar
- you mention and send it down, and I am very glad to hear
- that you intend to revive that study, which must be so
- useful to a clergyman, and which will I hope be an advantage
- to your mind by varying the objects to which you
- apply it, and by that means tend to relieve it from the
- effects of too intense an application to the more difficult
- and abstruse points of religious study; which, if not under
- the corrective guidance of greater learning and experience
- than it is possible for you yet to have, might lead into the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">{143}</a></span>
- wildness of enthusiasm, instead of the sensible and sound
- doctrine which it becomes an orthodox minister of an
- Established Church to hold for himself and to preach to
- others."
-</p>
-<p>
-Another,&mdash;his mother:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Infinite peril attends the setting
- our duties and religious notions in too austere a point of
- view, and seeming mystic and obscure modes of speech when
- describing religious sentiments; and disparaging every effort
- to do right except it tallies exactly with some indescribable
- rule of faith which cannot be comprehended by simple-minded
- and quiet-tempered piety, is of all things the most
- dangerous, since the risk is dreadful either of disgusting, or
- repelling, or alarming into despair. Nothing proves the
- perfect ignorance of human character and the art of persuasion
- than this process. It never can do to terrify into
- doing right,&mdash;stubbornness and hopelessness must ever be
- the consequence of such ill-judged zeal; and to the preacher
- uncharitableness and spiritual pride. Milton's beautiful
- meditation of our Saviour, in 'Paradise Regained,' has two
- lines which exactly fill my idea of what ought to be the
- mode of doing good by precept:&mdash;
-</p>
-<pre>
- "By winning words to conquer willing hearts,
- And make persuasion do the work of fear."
-</pre>
-<p class="cite">
- .... Do not permit yourself to judge uncharitably
- of the motives of others because their religious sentiments
- are not always floating on the surface of their words and
- actions."
-</p>
-<p>
-The remonstrances descend in a graduated scale from these
-elegant remarks, through letters from old schoolfellows in
-an off-hand style; frisky young matrons twit him in a very
-airy kind of argument, and all seems to wind up in a flourish
-from a young officer, "How dy'e do, my dear old parson;
-ever in the dumps, eh?"
-</p>
-<p>
-The long visit to London is at length brought about. He
-writes in the journal:&mdash;"April 13, 1826. At 9 set off
-for London. I leave Althorp for a longer period than I have
-since taking orders. May God make it a profitable excursion!"
-This visit was planned by the family and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-Dr. Blomfield, when they saw letters were unavailing, in order
-that Spencer might be brought, by conversing with his old
-master, into tamer notions on religion.
-</p>
-<p>
-He accordingly dines and speaks with the Bishop and
-some clerical friends, but the result was this note in the
-journal:&mdash;"I feel myself in this great town like St. Paul in
-Athens. Not one like-minded man can I now think of to
-whom I can resort. But God shall raise me some." The
-next Sunday after his arrival in London he is asked by Dr.
-Blomfield to preach in St. Botolph's Church, Bishopsgate
-street. This sermon was to be a kind of profession of his
-faith. His own commentaries on it are thus: "I had the
-wonderful glory of preaching a full and free gospel discourse
-in the afternoon to a London congregation, and God gave
-me perfect composure and boldness; and although he liked
-not the doctrine, the Bishop was perfectly kind to me afterwards."
-The Rev. Mr. Harvey, Rector of Hornsey, says,
-in a letter he had the kindness to write to one of our
-fathers: "My first acquaintance with Mr. Spencer was
-about 1824 or 1825, when I was curate of St. Botolph's,
-Bishopsgate, of which Archdeacon Blomfield, afterwards
-Bishop of London, was rector. Mr. Spencer had been a
-pupil of the Bishop's, and was always regarded by him with
-great interest. He generally came to him to stay for a few
-days in the spring, and used then to come and see me, and
-accompany me in my pastoral visits. He was a person of a
-most tender and loving spirit, very distrustful of himself,
-and very anxious to arrive at truth. On one occasion I
-remember his preaching on a Sunday afternoon at St.
-Botolph's, when Dr. Blomfield, then Bishop of Chester, read
-prayers. To the surprise of every one he took the opportunity
-of explaining his particular views of religion, which
-were then decidedly evangelical, intimating to the congregation
-that they were not accustomed generally to
-have the Gospel fully and faithfully preached. The Bishop
-of course was pained, but merely said, 'George, how
-could you preach such a sermon as that? In future
-I must look over your sermon before you go into the
-pulpit.' I do not vouch for the details, but this is what
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">{145}</a></span>
-I recollect as far as my memory helps me at this distance
-of time."
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. Spencer went to hear others preach, and forms his
-opinions of each according to his way of thinking. Here
-are some specimens:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Bishop of Bristol preached in the morning for the
- schools, a sermon worthy of Plato rather than St. Paul."
- Another day: "Went with all speed to Craven Chapel,
- where I heard Irving, the Scotch minister, preach nearly
- two hours. I was greatly delighted at his eloquence and
- stout Christian doctrine, though his manner is most blameably
- extravagant." Another day: "I went with Mr. A&mdash;&mdash;
- and Miss B&mdash;&mdash; to hear Mrs. Fry perform, and was delighted
- with her <i>expounding</i> to the prisoners in Newgate."
-</p>
-<p>
-He seems to advance more and more in his own religious
-views; and he says his father was wretched about them.
-He gets an opportunity of preaching in the West End of
-London, and writes thereupon: "O my God, I have testified
-thy truth to east and west in this horrid Babylon." He
-soon after returns home, and is so far improved that he
-determines to preach extempore for the future; in this he
-succeeds very well. What led him to this resolve was the
-facility with which he could maintain a conversation on
-religious topics for any length of time, and the rational
-supposition that he might do the same, as well in the pulpit
-as in the parlour.
-</p>
-<p>
-A letter to the Rev. Mr. Harvey, which is the only one
-that we have come across of those written by him at this
-time, gives a fair idea of the state of his mind: it was written
-on his return to Althorp after this London visit.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<i>August 3, 1826.</i>
-<br><br>
- "My Dear Harvey,&mdash;Bishop Heber's sermon I think
- beautiful. I am also pleased with all that has come of late
- from Bishop Sumner. His apostolic preaching does not
- fully satisfy me, and I have little doubt, from his writings,
- that he would not consider it as exactly representing his
- present views. .... It must be admitted that St.
- Paul's sins before his conversion are not so heinous as
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">{146}</a></span>
- those of many who have not ignorance and unbelief to plead
- in their favour. .... With regard to the question
- whether we be under guilt and eternal wrath, or in the
- favour of God and on the way of life, it seems to me highly
- dangerous to look to any distinction but this plain one,
- 'He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the
- Son of God hath not life.' .... Having thus ventured
- an opinion to you, I will go on to say that I wish I
- could have some conversation with you at large on these
- matters. I do not wish to introduce discussions on these
- points with my brethren, except when I am led to it by
- circumstances, and therefore I never entered on the subject
- with you during my stay in London. I have sometimes
- blamed myself for it, because you seemed to me to be so
- candid and unprejudiced that I might have done so without
- any risk of displeasure. I now tell you that I was much
- pleased always with the spirit of your sermons and with all
- your feelings, as far as I could judge of them from conversation;
- but I could plainly perceive that your views of fundamental
- doctrines were not what, I am convinced, are the
- right ones according to the Word of God and the Articles
- of our Church. The Bishop would have told you, I suppose,
- that he and I were at variance on these points, though in
- mutual regard and attachment I humbly trust we never
- before were so nearly united. Indeed, I never had an argument
- with him which did not leave me in admiration of
- his genuine meekness and charity. .... I reckon
- him very nearly right, and I am sure that he has real
- humility and an inquiring spirit; and so I firmly trust that,
- by God's blessing, he will be led to acknowledge the whole
- truth, and that very shortly. .... All that I venture
- to say is that he has not, to my mind, yet taken the
- right view of the plan of Redemption. But I am so convinced
- of his being on the right way to it, that I could
- almost engage to acknowledge my own views wrong (though
- I have not a single doubt of them now), if, before his departure,
- which God send may be distant, he does not declare
- his assent to them. I believe that you are just of the same
- mind on these things, as I was myself a year or two ago.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
- You probably know that my present views are of comparatively
- recent date with me. They are, in fact, what I have
- at last settled into, after two or three years of extreme
- doubts and oscillations and scrupulosities. I thank God that
- from all these He has delivered me, except the trouble and
- annoyance of my own evil heart, from which, however, I do
- not expect complete freedom, while in this tabernacle. As
- to writers on the subject, I have none, besides the formularies
- of our Church, whose doctrines and principles I like
- better than Thomas Scott's. There are some points of discipline,
- however, in which I do not go along with him.
- But I now attach myself most exclusively to the Word of
- God and prayer, as the method of increasing in knowledge,
- and feel delighted in the freedom which I have gained from
- the variety of opinions of learned men, which used to
- perplex me so grievously."
-</p>
-<p>
-This is what he looked upon as being in the Gospel
-freedom, that he was free from doctors; and it is a freedom.
-If Anglican doctors were, like our theologians, all of a mind
-in doctrine, with a certain margin for diversity of opinion
-in things of minor consequence, or in the way of clearing
-up a difficulty, it might be borne; but when one has theologians
-for guides who agree about as much as one living
-clergyman agrees with another, it is surely a freedom to be
-delivered from a yoke that presses on so many sides, and
-forces so many ways at once.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-Some Of The Practical Effects Of His Views.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-It is high time that we should turn from the abstract consideration
-of Mr. Spencer's views, and test their efficiency by
-the great standard of good and evil&mdash;facts. The facts, bearing
-upon our subject, which the Journal gives up to this period
-of his life, the close of 1826, and beginning of the next year,
-may be summed up in few words. One old woman was the
-only one of whom he could say, "she seems fully established
-in religion;" and it is remarkable that this very person,
-Mrs. Wykes, became a Catholic later on. All the rest were
-in different stages of fermentation; some "hopeful," some
-"promising," some "ripening unto light," and so forth:
-they ripen more and more according to the number of his
-visits; but if it should happen that they did not need material
-help from him, they very soon got back to their old
-way again, and poor Mr. Spencer used to return, after his
-day's apostleship, much humiliated at his want of success.
-In fact, his missionary work was a perfect representation of
-Protestant missions to the heathen. He distributed Bibles
-and blankets, prayer-books and porridge, and three of his
-best and most hopeful proselytes went mad, and were sent
-to the county lunatic asylum. Of himself, he tells us that
-he used to spend from two to three hours daily in godly
-contemplation. Of this he began to get tired after some
-time, and gives the following extraordinary notions of his
-interior state:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Sep. 2.</span> I was employed chiefly in reading
- Gr. Testament; but I find myself very far yet from that
- state of real activity of mind which I ought to gain. I
- wish for such experience in Christ as not to need spiritual
- exercises as constantly as I now do to keep up communion
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">{149}</a></span>
- with God, and so have more time for active labour."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Sep. 12.</span> I went to Nobottle at 12 and returned at 3.
- I called in every house except Chapman's, and, alas! I
- found <i>not one soul</i> over whom I could rejoice as a true child
- of God. Yet there are signs of hope in a few. What an
- awful scene it would be if I had eyes to see it, or how great
- is my deliverance, who, though not less deserving perdition
- than any, am yet planted in the House of God, and rejoice
- through Christ in the hope of His glory."
-</p>
-<p>
-He begins the new year, 1827, with the following:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have found my
- mind so far from settled that I never saw myself more in
- need of God's grace. But I shall find it."
-</p>
-<p>
-Strange prophecy;
-he was determined never to rest content until he
-could feel right with regard to God and his salvation, and
-it is needless to say that he was far from this,
-notwithstanding his great Calvinistic assurance.
-</p>
-<p>
-Every new Dissenting minister that comes into his
-parish, he makes it his business to call upon and see if they
-could not unite their respective flocks, even by compromising
-differences. He sometimes comes home flushed with
-hope, and then, when he tries to persuade his fellow-clergymen
-of the Establishment to make advances to Methodists
-or Baptists, their coldness brings his hopes to nought.
-Nothing disheartened, he comes to the charge again, and is
-buoyed up, the whole time, by the hope of one day or other
-seeing his beloved people in one fold, under the care of one
-shepherd.
-</p>
-<p>
-He removes in the middle of this year to the house he
-built for himself at Great Brington, and he learns the
-pleasures of housekeeping in a few weeks by the difficulties
-he encounters in the management of servants. The rest of
-the year, until towards October, goes on rather calmly; no
-incident of importance occurs except the preaching of his
-Visitation Sermon. The Bishop of Peterborough, Dr.
-Marsh, comes to make his diocesan visitation in Northampton,
-and the Honble. and Rev. Mr. Spencer is asked to
-preach before him. He does so very nervously, and
-although he introduces one passage into that sermon indicative
-of his peculiar views, the Bishop was so pleased with it,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">{150}</a></span>
-that he ordered him to print it. It was printed accordingly,
-and Mr. Spencer sent copies to all the friends he
-could remember; he even sent some across the Atlantic to
-old schoolfellows. Between thanks for the reception of
-this favour, and mutual acknowledgments of esteem and
-regard, with compliments and returns of the same, an
-interval is given him to prepare for another storm on the
-score of his opinions.
-</p>
-<p>
-The second volume of his diary concludes with some distressing
-discussions and family animadversions on his ways
-of thinking. It sounds rather strange in Catholic ears that
-lay people should deem themselves qualified to lecture a
-clergyman on what he ought to believe and teach; it ought
-not, if he remembers that we are speaking of a land of private
-judgment, where every one is qualified to think and
-dictate to his neighbour. The friends take their arguments
-now from a different point. Mr. Spencer had built his
-new rectory and gone to live there; the architect had done
-his part so well, that he would sometimes come off the
-coach, when passing near Brington, so that he might have
-another look at this specimen of material comfort. It was
-furnished, too, in a befitting style, for George went even to
-London, and took counsel with his mother and others on
-what things were proper and best suited for a parsonage.
-The best upholsterers were made to contribute from their
-stock of cupboards, beds, mattresses, chairs, and tables, and
-when the van arrived at Brington, there were several connoisseur
-female relatives invited to give their opinions on
-the colouring and papering of the rooms, the hanging and
-folds of the window curtains, and the patterns of the carpets.
-All was finally arranged to the satisfaction of all parties,
-and only one thing was wanting,&mdash;"the partner of his joys,"
-or troubles, as they would be now, poor man.
-</p>
-<p>
-Bright ideas struck his friends about this time. It was
-thought, in very high and intellectual circles, that if the
-young rector of Brington were married, he would settle
-down quietly in the snug parsonage, and make metaphysical
-ideas give way to the realities of life. This they concluded
-was the short road to his settlement, and he himself used
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-often to tell how long arguments on religious views often
-ended with, "Well, George, get yourself a wife, and
-settle down like your neighbours, and all these dreams will
-vanish." To their surprise, however, they found the young
-rector as difficult of persuasion in this point as in his other
-notions; but experience gave them the advantage over him
-here, and they were determined not to be foiled. The want
-of a house to bring the bride to, was thought to be the sole
-objection heretofore, and perhaps it was; that was now
-removed. Suggestions to that effect reach him in letters
-from his friends about this time. The following is a
-specimen:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is probable that I shall return to Brington for
- the winter. If N *** or N *** succeeds in a matrimonial
- alliance on your account, I hope you will speedily
- let me know; perhaps an insinuating advertisement in the
- <i>Morning Post</i> might be useful to you. Joking apart, I
- shall be most happy when the time comes for wishing you
- joy."
-</p>
-<p>
-Insinuations and arguments did not avail, so they
-had recourse to stratagem. One would not like to suspect
-that the Bishop of Chester was let into the secret, though
-he ought to be a capital hand at such things, as he had the
-hymeneal knot twice tied upon himself. However that may
-be, the plot was laid, hatched, and the eggs broken as
-follows:&mdash;Towards the end of October, 1827, he accompanied
-Dr. Blomfield on a visitation through the diocese of Chester.
-He was taken a little out of his way in order to preach in
-a church near Warrington. The rector of this place asked
-him specially;&mdash;what was his surprise to find his "old
-flame," Miss A ***, as mentioned in a former chapter,
-there ready prepared to be one of his listeners. He walked
-with her to church, and was delighted with her company;
-he used to say he never preached, whilst a minister, with
-greater satisfaction than on that day. Coming home from
-church he had to hear out compliments about his preaching,
-and he spent the evening with a clerical party&mdash;one was a
-clergyman who was about being married to the sister of
-Mr. Spencer's favourite. It was thought everything would
-come round then, and that some kind of arrangement would
-be made for the future; but Mr. Spencer, though pleased,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-was not anywise romantic, nor apt to put his head into a
-halter from which it would not be so easy to draw it back.
-It was well, however, that he was pleased, and he evinces
-as much himself in his Journal, when he says:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Sunday, Oct. 21.</span>
- I begin this volume with one of the most interesting
- Sundays I have ever spent. After breakfast with
- Mr. ***'s family, we went to church about half a mile
- from the house, where I preached the first sermon which it
- has been given me to preach in this diocese; and I am
- pleased that it should be in this church and before N ***
- N *** among other hearers, with whom I now converse
- as pleasingly as in former times, but on higher subjects.
- With her and her sister I walked home, and again to evening
- service, where I read prayers and Mr. *** preached."
-</p>
-<p>
-But this argument met the fate of all that had been spent
-on him for the last three years. It seemed all settled as
-far as he was concerned; for there was no doubt on the
-other side. He got into his carriage to drive up to Althorp,
-and ask his father's consent. When near the door, he
-called to the driver to stop, and turn to the rectory. He had
-just formed the resolution <i>never to marry</i>. It was not that
-he did not like the intended partner, it was an affair of long
-standing; but he remembered the words of St. Paul: "He that
-is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord,
-how he may please the Lord: But he that is married careth
-for the things that are of the world, how he may please his
-wife" (1 Cor. vii. 32, 33, Prot. version). No one was ever
-able to shake this resolution, and the repeated attempts of
-others to do so only strengthened it the more. He often
-related this incident to us, and when asked, if he then
-thought of the Catholic priests, "Oh, I might, but I thought
-it was some superstitious motive that made them live single;
-I thought I made a new discovery myself;" he would
-reply.
-</p>
-<p>
-A change takes places now in his finances. He was
-Always extremely charitable, and his housekeeper tells of
-his equipment, when going out to make his parish rounds,
-of a morning. He would carry a bottle of wine in his coat
-pocket, and as much money as he could possibly spare.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-These he distributed among the sick and the poor. He
-used also to buy them medicines, and procure them clothes.
-Of course it was found soon that a very large income would
-not suffice for the liberality of the son, so Lord Spencer
-came to an arrangement with him. He allowed him a
-liberal yearly income; but George feels it rather hard, and
-complains of his straitened means in two or three places of
-his Journal. However, he set to make the best of it, and
-began by retrenchment from his own table. "By way of
-retrenchment, I have left off wine and puddings or tarts,
-and I have reduced my quantity of clean linen to wear."
-Ever himself, what he spared from his own table he brought
-to the poor. "We shall transcribe the simple account of this
-period of his life given us by Mrs. Wykes, who knew him
-from a child.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "His great charity to the poor and wandering
- beggars was unbounded. At times he gave them all
- the money he had, and stripped himself of his clothes to
- give them to the distressed; and when he had nothing to
- give, he would thank God he had only His holy truth to
- impart, and would speak of the love of God so fervently,
- that he would call forth tears from the poor objects of misery
- who came many miles to beg money or clothes of him.
- Many impostors presented themselves with the rest, but
- even those he thanked God for, and thought nothing of
- relieving them, as he said he lost nothing by them, but got
- a lesson of humility. Some poor afflicted mendicants would
- present themselves with loathsome sores, and these he would
- assist in dressing and try to cure. His house was always
- open for the distressed, and he often longed to make an hospital
- of it for the poor. He was all for gaining souls to
- God; he would often walk to Northampton to visit the
- lodging-houses, and most infamous dens of the dissolute, to
- speak to them of God's holy law and mercy to sinners.
- Indeed his whole time was devoted to doing good. He did
- not often allow himself the privilege of riding, but would
- walk to Northampton or further, carrying his clothes in a
- knapsack strapped over his shoulders, and would smile at
- the jeers and laughs against him, glorying in following out
- the practice of the Apostles. He fasted as well as he knew
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
- how, much stricter than when he became a Catholic. In
- fact he allowed nothing to himself but plain living, and
- willingly granted better to others. He gave no trouble, but
- was always ready to wait upon others, and make them
- happy and comfortable. He was always ready to hear complaints,
- and turn everything into the goodness of God. He
- was indeed the father of the poor, and a peace-maker, though
- meeting with many contradictions, particularly among the
- Dissenters. He bore all with patience and cheerfulness,
- and went on hoping all would end well in due time."
-</p>
-<p>
-The last <i>effect</i> we shall record in this chapter is another
-passage from his Journal:&mdash;"<span class="quotehead">Saturday, Nov. 17.</span> To-day I
-called on Mr. Griffiths, Independent minister at Long
-Buckley, with whom I had one or two hours' conversation
-of a very interesting kind. I see clearly that all is not
-right with the Church." He means the Church of England,
-of course.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">{155}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Scruples About The Athanasian Creed.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-In the December of 1827 the old scruples, that came into
-his head some two years before, about the Athanasian Creed
-revived. Perhaps it is better to give the words of the
-Journal before going into particulars on this point. He
-says&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Dec. 4.&mdash;</span>.... Thursby came to
- dine and sleep here. We conversed till nearly 12, almost
- incessantly, about his concerns first, then about mine. I
- let him know my thoughts of resigning my preferment on
- account of the Athanasian Creed. He was at first very
- much displeased at them, but seemed better satisfied as I
- explained myself."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Wed., Dec. 5.&mdash;</span>I came down after a
- wakeful night, and much confirmed in my resolution to take
- decided steps about declaring against the Athanasian Creed.
- Thursby seemed to coincide much more nearly with my
- views. We talked on this and other topics until 11 or 12,
- when he went away. I went out in Great Brington till 2;
- dined; then ran to Althorp .... came back and
- wrote long letters to my father and the Bishop of Chester,
- about my intended declaration, and probable resignation of
- my living. I here solemnly affirm that before last week I
- had no sort of idea of taking this step. I am now writing
- on Friday, fully determined upon it. The circumstances
- which led me to this decision are:&mdash;1st. My many conversations
- of late, and correspondence with, dissenting ministers,
- by whose words I have been led to doubt the perfectness of
- our Establishment. 2ndly. My discussions and reflections
- about retrenchments, leading me to consider the probability
- of more preferment, and how I could accept it. 3rdly. The
- quantity of Church preferment which has been of late
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
- changing hands, by which I have been led to think how I
- should answer an offer myself. And, 4thly. My thoughts
- about signing Baily's boy's testimonial, which has led me to
- reckon more highly on the value of my signature."
-</p>
-<p>
-From the letters of those who undertook the setting of
-Mr. Spencer's troubles at rest, it appears that his difficulties
-about the Athanasian Creed did not arise from the doctrines
-there put forth about the Blessed Trinity and Incarnation;
-but that he objected to the terminology as un-Scriptural,
-and to the condemning clauses in the beginning and end of
-the Creed. Dr. Blomfield is the first to reason with him;
-his answer to the letter above-mentioned is couched in the
-following terms:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The letter which I have just received
- from you astonishes and confounds me; not that I ought to
- be surprised at anything strange which you may do, after
- what I have lately witnessed and heard; but I must say,
- in plain terms, that your letter is the letter of an insane
- person. You profess to be willing to ask advice and hear
- reasoning, and yet you take the most decided steps to wound
- the feelings of your friends and injure the cause of the Church,
- without giving those whom you pretend to consult an opportunity
- of satisfying your doubts. You suffer your father to
- be with you two days without giving him a hint that you
- were meditating a step incomparably the most important of
- your life, and most involving his happiness; and then, in the
- midst of his security, write him a letter, not to tell him that
- you are doubtful on certain points and wish to be advised, but
- that your mind is made up and you are determined to act.
- Surely common sense and filial duty ought to have suggested
- the propriety of waiting till you had communicated with me,
- although even to me you do not state what your doubts and
- difficulties are with sufficient precision to enable me to
- discuss them; but you write a long panegyric upon your own
- sincerity and humility, of which I entertained no doubt, and
- thus, after repeated conferences with Dissenting ministers
- and Roman Catholic priests, far more astute and subtle
- reasoners than yourself, you are worked up into an utter
- disapprobation of one of the articles of our Church, having
- all along concealed your doubts from your nearest and dearest
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
- friends, and from me, who had an especial claim to be made
- acquainted with them. Is this sincere and judicious conduct?"
-</p>
-<p>
-He proceeds to some lengths in this style, then tells him
-that it is one thing to doubt of the truth of a doctrine, and
-another thing to believe it to be false, and that one should
-take no step of importance until he thought in the latter
-way. He tells him to be quiet for some time, and give him
-the objections one by one. This Mr. Spencer does, and the
-answer is partly, that given in Dr. Blomfield's life, page
-85, and partly, another letter he wrote to him within a
-fortnight's time. The argument of this good ecclesiastic
-shapes itself thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The general proposition of excluding
- all from salvation who do not believe the doctrine of the
- Trinity and Incarnation, as set forth in the Athanasian
- Creed, is laid down with certain limitations. The Protestant
- Church does lay it down thus, as is evident from
- certain quotations from the Articles. Besides, she never
- intends to pronounce a condemnation on any, like the
- Church of Rome. The meaning, therefore, of these clauses
- is an assertion of the truth of the doctrine simply; and for
- this he quotes the opinion of some commissioned interpreters
- and the admission of "the most scrupulous and captious
- Baxter that such exposition may be received."
-</p>
-<p>
-This is the sum of Dr. Blomfield's argument; he gives
-several other authorities for his opinion. We need not be
-surprised that the argument was not convincing; and Mr.
-Spencer says, in his Journal:&mdash;"I had a letter from the
-Bishop of Chester this morning, which was weak in argument
-and flippant; I hope good may result from it." The
-weakness of the Bishop's argument arises from the dilemma
-in which he was placed. If he said the Anglican Church
-does really condemn all who hold not her doctrines, then she
-would arrogate to herself the claim of infallibility which she
-takes good care to disclaim, and even makes an article to
-that effect. If she does not condemn, what is the meaning
-of allowing the clauses to remain in her formularies, and
-require her ministers to subscribe, read, and preach them?
-His only line of argument, considering his position, was to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">{158}</a></span>
-steer a middle course, and this he endeavoured to do, and
-succeeded pretty well. But shifting difficulties by trying to
-reconcile contradictions, is a process that may calm an easy-going
-mind, previously disposed to indifference, but never
-can satisfy a clear, earnest one, that seeks the truth in all
-its terrible reality and straightforward meaning. A Church
-composed of a mass of heterogeneous elements in doctrine and
-practice, must be very hard set indeed when driven to give
-an account of herself. The wonder is, that she cannot see
-the absence of a Divine guidance, even in the admissions
-she is forced to make, if not in the very nature of her own
-human constitution. Only a Catholic can account for a
-creed, and if there was not a body of living teachers with
-the promise of Divine direction in their formal decisions and
-utterances, the Church that Christ established would not
-exist; and only Catholics can claim and prove this very
-hinge of their system, which pseudo-bishops have their hits
-at when they writhe under the pressure of difficulties they
-cannot answer.
-</p>
-<p>
-The letter of this Bishop did not settle Mr. Spencer's
-mind&mdash;it unsettled him the more. Two or three clergymen
-were invited to talk him back to the old way, but with
-similar success. Lord Spencer then gets one of the London
-clergy to undertake the task which foiled so many. We
-give the father's letter of introduction, as it is so characteristic
-of his paternal affection and concern, and at the same
-time his due consideration for his son's conscientious difficulties.
-The Earl was staying in Althorp for a few days,
-and left this letter for George on his departure:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Your mother writes me word that Mr. Allen, of Battersea,
- will come and dine with her to-morrow, and remain
- here nearly the whole week. I am very happy at this, because,
- if you are sincere (and I do not now mean to question
- your sincerity) in wishing for information, instruction,
- and advice, I know of no man&mdash;either high or low, clerical
- or secular&mdash;more able to afford them to you, more correct in
- his doctrines and character, or more affectionately disposed
- to be of all the service he can to every one connected with
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
- us, and to you in particular. But, my dear George, in order
- to enable yourself to derive all the benefit that may unquestionably
- be derived from serious and confidential communications
- on a most important subject, with such a man, you
- must be more explicit, more open, and more confidential
- with him than, I am grieved to think, you have yet been,
- either with your excellent friend the Bishop of Chester, or
- even with me, though I allow that in the conversations we
- have had together <i>in this visit</i> to you here, I saw rather
- more disposition to frankness on your part than I had before
- experienced.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I should not thus argue with you, my dear George, if I
- did not from my heart, as God is my judge, firmly believe
- that your welfare, both temporal and eternal, as well as the
- health both of your body and mind, depended upon your
- taking every possible means to follow a better course of
- thinking, and of study, and of occupation, than you have
- hitherto done since you have entered the profession for
- which, as I fondly hoped, and you seemed fitted by inclination,
- you would have been in due time, if well directed and
- well advised, formed to become as much an ornament to
- it as your brothers are, God Almighty be thanked for it, to
- those they have entered into.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I still venture to hope, though not without trembling,
- but I do hope and will encourage myself in the humble
- hope, which shall be daily expressed to the Almighty in my
- prayers, that I may be permitted, before I go hence, to
- witness better things of you; and I even extend my wish
- that when I return hither on Friday, I may have the satisfaction
- of learning that your interviews with Mr. Allen,
- who I have no doubt will be well prepared to hear and to
- discuss all you have to say, have had a salutary effect; and
- that our private domestic circle here may be relieved from
- the gloom which, for some time past, you must have perceived
- to overhang it when you made part of it, and afford
- us those blessings of home so comfortable and almost
- necessary to our advancing age. I write all this, because,
- perhaps, if I had had the opportunity, my spirits, which are
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
- always very sensitive, might prevent me from speaking it.
- God bless you, my dear George.<br>
- "Your ever affectionate father,<br>
- "Spencer."
-</p>
-<p>
-The conferences he held with this Mr. Allen are faithfully
-noted in the Journal, and many and long they were. To-day
-conversing, to-morrow reading Hay and Waterland together,
-on the Athanasian Creed. He became no better,
-but a good deal worse, and the <i>finale</i> was that he wrote to
-his own Bishop, Dr. Marsh, of Peterborough, to resign his
-living or have his doubts settled. This was early in the
-year 1828.
-</p>
-<p>
-This Bishop answers him thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In reference to the
- doubts which you expressed in a former letter, you say:
- 'All that I was anxious about was to avoid any just imputation
- of dishonesty, by keeping an office and emoluments
- in the Established Church, while I felt that I could not
- heartily assent to her formularies.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "If this difficulty had occurred to you when you were a
- candidate for Holy Orders, it would certainly have been your
- duty, either to wait till your doubts had been removed, or,
- if they <i>could not</i> be removed, to choose some other profession
- or employment. Whoever is persuaded that our Liturgy
- and Articles are not founded on Holy Scripture cannot
- conscientiously subscribe to the latter, or declare his assent
- to the former. To enter, therefore, on a profession which
- requires such subscription and assent, with the <i>previous
- belief</i> that such assent is not warranted by Scripture, is
- undoubtedly a sacrifice of principle made in the expectation
- of future advantage. But you did <i>not</i> make such a sacrifice
- of principle. ... Whatever doubts you <i>now</i> entertain,
- they have been imbibed since you became Rector of Brington;
- and you are apprehensive that it may be considered as
- a mark of dishonesty, if, oppressed with these difficulties,
- you retain your preferment.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I know not at present the kind or the extent of these
- difficulties, and therefore can only reply in general terms.
- I have already stated my opinion on the impropriety of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">{161}</a></span>
- entering the Church with the previous belief that our
- Liturgy and Articles are not founded on Scripture. But if a
- clergyman who believed that they were so at the time of his
- ordination, and continued that belief till after he had obtained
- preferment in the Church, begins at some future
- period to entertain doubts about certain parts either of the
- Liturgy or the Articles, we have a case which presents a
- very different question from that which was considered in
- the former paragraph. In the former case there was a choice
- of professions, in the latter case there is not. By the laws
- of this country a clergyman cannot divest himself of the
- character acquired by the admission to Holy Orders. He
- can hold no office in the State which is inconsistent with the
- character of a clergyman. To relinquish preferment, therefore,
- without being able to relinquish the character by which
- that preferment was acquired, is quite a different question
- from that which relates to the original assumption of that
- character: Nor must it be forgotten that a clergyman may
- have a numerous family altogether dependent on the income
- of his benefice, whom he would bring therefore to utter ruin
- if he resigned it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "On the other hand, I do not think that even a clergyman
- so situated is at liberty to substitute his <i>own</i> doctrine for
- that to which he objects. By so doing he would directly
- impugn the Articles of our Church, he would make himself
- liable to deprivation, and would justly deserve it. For
- he would violate a solemn contract, and destroy the very
- tenure by which he holds his preferment.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But is there no medium between an open attack on our
- Liturgy and Articles and the entertaining of doubts on
- certain points, which a clergyman may communicate in confidence
- to a friend, in the hope of having them removed?
- If, in the mean time, he is unwilling to inculcate in the
- pulpit doctrines to which his doubts apply, he will at the
- same time conscientiously abstain from inculcating doctrines
- of an opposite tendency. Now, if I mistake not, this is
- precisely your case. And happy shall I be if I can be
- instrumental to the removal of the doubts which oppress you.
- I am now at leisure; the engagements which I had at Cambridge
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
- respecting my lectures are finished; you may now
- fully and freely unburden your mind, and I will give to all
- your difficulties the best consideration in my power.<br>
- "I am, my dear Sir,<br>
- "Very truly yours,<br>
- "Herbert Peterborough."
-</p>
-<p>
-This letter evoked a statement of the precise points, and
-the following was the answer:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- ".... I now venture to approach the difficulties under
- which you labour, and I will take them from the words you
- yourself have used in your letter of April 30. In that
- letter, speaking of the Church, you say, 'I cannot at this
- time state any paragraph in her formularies and ordinances
- with which I cannot conscientiously comply, except the
- Athanasian Creed.' You then proceed in the following
- words: 'and now I must go on to state wherein I differ
- from this Creed: not in the parts which may be called
- doctrinal; that is, where the doctrine itself is stated and
- explained.' And you conclude by saying, 'the parts of the
- Creed to which I object are the condemning clauses.' And
- you object to the clauses on the grounds that they are not
- warranted by the declaration of our Saviour recorded in
- Mark xvi. 16, on which passage those clauses are generally
- supposed to have been founded. Whether they are so warranted
- or not depends on the extent of their application in
- this Creed, which begins with the following words:&mdash;'Whosoever
- will be saved, before all things, it is necessary that
- he hold the Catholic faith, which faith, except every one do
- keep whole and undefiled (entire and unviolated, Cath. trans.),
- without doubt he shall perish everlastingly. Now the Catholic
- faith is this, that we worship one God in Trinity, and
- Trinity in Unity.' So far, then, it is evident that they only
- are declared to be excluded from salvation who do not hold
- the Catholic faith, that is, as the term is there explicitly
- defined, who do not hold the doctrine of the Trinity in
- Unity. Now this doctrine has been maintained, with very
- few exceptions, by Christians in general from the earliest to
- the present age. It was the doctrine of the Greek Church
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
- ...... and all the Reformed churches. To exclude from
- salvation, therefore, only those who reject a doctrine which
- is received by Christians in general, is a very different thing
- from the denial of salvation to every one who does not
- believe in all the tenets of a particular Church. The doctrine,
- <i>nulla salus nisi credas in Trinitatem</i>, bears no resemblance
- to the sweeping declaration <i>nulla salus extra Ecclesiam
- Romonam</i>. Surely, then, we may appeal to Mark xvi.
- 16, combined with Matthew xxviii. 19, in order to prove
- that a belief in the Trinity is necessary to salvation, and
- consequently to prove that those two passages warrant the
- deduction, that they who reject the doctrine of the Trinity
- will not be saved. The two passages must be taken together,
- in order to learn the whole of our Saviour's last command
- to his Apostles. If, then, our Saviour himself commanded
- his Apostles to baptize 'in the name of the Father, and of
- the Son, and of the Holy Ghost,' and then added, 'he that
- believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth
- not shall be damned;' it really does appear that our
- Saviour himself has warranted the opinion that a belief in
- the doctrine of the Trinity is such a fundamental article
- of the Christian faith that they who reject it do so at their
- own peril.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But you think that the anathema of our Saviour in
- Mark xvi. 16, had a different application from the corresponding
- anathema in the Athanasian Creed. Our Saviour
- spoke of those to whom the Gospel had been preached, as
- appears from Mark xvi. 15. And if the anathema in the
- Athanasian Creed had a more extensive application, or if it
- were meant to include not only those who wilfully rejected
- the doctrine of the Trinity when it had been duly explained
- to them, but those also to whom the doctrine had never
- been preached, and whose want of belief arose merely from
- a want of knowledge, I should likewise admit that the
- anathema of the Athanasian Creed derived no authority
- from Mark xvi. 16. But I see no reason whatever for the
- opinion that the anathema of the Athanasian Creed includes
- those who have never heard of the doctrine. Neither
- the Creed itself, nor the circumstances under which it was
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
- composed, warrant such an opinion. Whoever was the
- author of it, the Creed was framed during the controversy
- which then distracted the whole of the Christian Church.
- It applied, therefore, immediately and exclusively to those
- who were partakers in or acquainted with the controversy.
- It could not have been originally intended to apply to those
- who had never heard of the controversy or the doctrine
- controverted. It would be, therefore, quite uncritical to apply
- it at present in a way which was not originally intended.
- Nor does the language of the Creed itself warrant any other
- application. When it is declared necessary to <i>hold</i> the
- Catholic faith, and to <i>keep</i> the Catholic faith, that necessity
- can apply only to those to whom the Catholic faith has
- been <i>presented</i>. Unless a man is previously put in possession
- of a thing, he cannot be said either to <i>hold</i> it or to
- <i>keep</i> it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Surely the most conscientious clergyman who believes in
- our Saviour's declaration, recorded in Mark xvi. 16, may
- read without scruple the similar declaration in the Athanasian
- Creed. And if, on the authority of our Saviour, he
- may read the anathema in the beginning of the Creed, he
- may, without scruple, read the less strongly expressed
- anathema in the end.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In the hope that, after reading this letter, your mind
- will become at ease, I subscribe myself, dear Sir,<br>
- "Very truly yours,<br>
- "Herbert Peterborough."
-</p>
-<p>
-This letter is a tolerable specimen of the Bishop's power
-of reasoning, and very sharp it is too; but it does not
-exactly meet Mr. Spencer's difficulties. He might object:&mdash;
-"What passage of Scripture warrants our uniting together
-the two passages from St. Mark and St. Matthew?" And
-"being <i>presented with</i> a thing is not exactly the same as
-<i>being in possession of</i> a thing." "We should have the
-same warrant for the remaining clauses of the Creed as for
-the first three, otherwise, according to the Articles, we are
-not bound to receive them; then why not erase them?'
-The Bishop would have no resource here, except to fall back
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">{165}</a></span>
-upon the Church, and that was not the point at issue; so
-perhaps he did well not to try. He uses tradition, and Dr.
-Blomfield authority; but these could have no weight against
-a Bible Christian, as Mr. Spencer was then.
-</p>
-<p>
-A Catholic could very easily solve the difficulty. The
-Church has used these terms to express her doctrine, and
-she says this is the revealed doctrine; therefore it must be.
-No one can be saved who does not believe the Trinity and
-Incarnation, implicitly or explicitly; those to whom it
-has never been properly proposed, implicitly, and those to
-whom it has, explicitly. Some theologians will have explicit
-credence required of both classes, and say that God would
-even send an angel to a savage, if he placed no obstacle, and
-reveal this mystery to him rather than that he should die
-without it. And now it will seem very strange to say
-that this doctrine is less terrible than the Protestant open-arm
-theory. Yet, so it is, for we allow many Socinians and
-ignorant Protestants and others to be in good faith, and
-perhaps never have had this doctrine properly proposed to
-them. We suspend our judgments with regard to them,
-and say if they live well they may be saved. That is more
-than the Bishop of Peterborough could allow, according to
-his principles.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-Incidents And State Of Mind In 1827-28.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-His life, though perpetually floating on religious discussions
-and doctrinal scruples, found other matters to check its course
-and employ it otherwise for a few days more. The family
-were all in a great glow of delight towards the close of the
-year 1827, in consequence of the Honourable Frederick
-Spencer, who was commander of the <i>Talbot</i> man-of-war,
-having distinguished himself at the battle of Navarino.
-George, of course, was overjoyed; here was his brother, who
-pored over the same lesson, played at the same games, and
-contended about the same trifles as himself, crowned with
-laurels and in the flush of victory. George loved him
-dearly, and these well-earned honours imparted a season of
-sunshine to the clergyman, which all his gospel fervour had
-failed to do up to this. Lord Spencer alludes to it in the
-touching letter given in a former chapter; but like everything
-human, this rose had its thorns. After the letters
-announcing the startling determination which called forth
-the efforts of ecclesiastical learning quoted in the last
-chapter, a great dulness fell over the family circle. Mr.
-Allen did not clear the atmosphere, and Mr. Spencer tells
-us feelingly in his Journal that his mother did not exchange
-one cordial sentence with him during the whole term of her
-Christmas stay at Althorp. This he felt, but bore in the
-spirit of a martyr; it was inflicted upon him for what he
-thought right before God, and he tried to make the best of
-it, wishing, but unable, to change the aspect of things. The
-Bishop of Peterborough's letter had the effect of quieting
-him for some time, in so far as he did not feel himself called
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-upon to preach against what he did not assent to, but was
-content with letting it remain in abeyance.
-</p>
-<p>
-The old way of settling him is again revived. During
-the last week of February, 1828, he notices three or four
-long conversations about matrimony; he takes the subject
-into consideration, and reads the Epistles to St. Timothy
-for light: but he is not convinced, and continues in his
-determination. He might foresee the settlement of ideas
-that would result from this step, if he considered the trouble
-of setting his money affairs in order, which forced itself
-upon him now. He says: "I was employed almost all day
-till three o'clock in putting my papers to rights. I feel that
-I have been careless in all matters of business, and this is
-wrong; for it leads me to be chargeable and dependent on
-others, and that a minister especially must guard himself
-against. It greatly shortens my powers of liberality, and
-it makes men despise me. On all these accounts I trust I
-shall overcome the evil, and be a good man of business."
-He is as good as his word. He sends a full and clear account
-of his affairs to his father, and his lordship makes an
-arrangement that places his son in independence, whilst he
-is able at the same time to get clear of all difficulties and
-debts incurred by his building.
-</p>
-<p>
-To turn to his spiritual progress. He is not a whit
-nearer Catholic faith now than he was when he returned
-from Italy, except that the time is shorter. On June 29 he
-says: "It was St. Peter's day, and I preached on the pretensions
-of the Pope." He also holdeth a tea-party in the
-true Evangelical style, and says: "To-day the candle of the
-Lord burnt brightly within me." He buys a mare about
-this time, which does not seem to be as amenable as her
-master would wish, and he says thereupon: "This mare
-disappoints me rather, and puts to shame my boasting of
-God's blessing in buying her. Yet I shall not be ashamed
-of my faith some day or other." It was usual with him at
-this time, when he had a servant to choose, a journey to take,
-or anything special to get through, "to seek the Lord in
-prayer therefor," and proceed according to the inspirations
-he might get at the moment. Bishop Blomfield scolds him
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
-heartily about this, and shows him the folly of using one
-faculty for a thing which God has given him another for,
-and proceeding in his ordinary actions without the ordinary
-means placed in his way. This was, of course, a delusion of
-his; but two or three disappointments convinced him of its
-being akin to tempting God.
-</p>
-<p>
-He accompanies Dr. Blomfield in his visitation this year
-also, and he gets very severely handled by him on the score
-of his religious views, in the presence also of two other
-clergymen. The lecture turned chiefly upon the inculcation
-of humility, and the subduing of that spiritual pride which
-the Bishop noticed in a former communication. A few days
-after this lecture, which sank deeply into Mr. Spencer's
-mind, as a whole company were seated at dinner with the
-Bishop, a letter arrived from the Duke of Wellington,
-announcing the translation of Dr. Blomfield from Chester to
-London. This was July 25, 1828. His reflections upon
-this news are: "God be praised;" and the next day he
-says: "I wrote a sermon for to-morrow, and spent much
-time in prayer for a quiet mind and superiority to the snares
-of ambition. It was a most boisterous day, almost continual
-thunder and pouring rain. I found fault with a
-good deal said by the Bishop in regard to his promotion, but
-I pray that I may judge myself and not others."
-</p>
-<p>
-He now relaxes a little in his Puritanism; he gives
-dinners, invites guests, and notes that he has to pray against
-being too particular with regard to his guests. A pretty
-large company dine at the rectory. This is an essay in
-parties, and ladies are invited for the first time since he
-commenced housekeeping. He had the ominous number of
-thirteen at table, and it could not pass off without some
-mishap or other. Contrary to old wives' rules, the servant
-was the unfortunate one. We will let himself tell the story.
-"Mrs. Nicholls was in great misery about breaking the
-dish, which made her send up the haunch of venison upside
-down. I have cause to be thankful for this, as the means
-by which God will humble her. The evening passed off
-well, and thank God I was not careful or shy."
-</p>
-<p>
-He comes across a Baptist minister, who so far outdid
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-him in the Methodistic way of talking, that he writes: "I
-consider him a very bad specimen of cant." After this, his
-outlandish gospelling comments upon trifles and iotas begin
-to disappear. He becomes more rational, gets into the ways
-of the world, reads newspapers, and is a very sensible kind
-of man altogether. He notes in his Journal, here and there,
-that he carries his own bundle, and works a part of the day
-at manual labour in his garden. He also remarks that, the
-coldest day he ever remembered, he went out without gloves
-or great-coat, and was unable from numbness to write his
-sermon when he came home. He goes on the coach next
-day in the same trim, and says he wants "to give an
-example to the poor," and that "God preserved him from
-catching cold." Very likely he had given the great-coat to
-some poor man the day before. After a few complaints of
-quarrels among the clergy, and the manner in which he has
-been treated by his family for the last three years on account
-of his religious scruples, he concludes the year 1828 with
-the following reflection:&mdash;"I now look back to this time a
-year ago, and observe what I felt and wrote then, that God
-only knows where I should be at present. Wondrously
-am I now placed still where I was, and in all respects more
-firmly settled. Yet only confirmed in my disagreement
-with the powers of the Church; but they have not been
-willing to attend to me, and so when my thoughts become
-known, they will be more sound and influential. What I
-now pray is, that I may be led to a state of heart above the
-world, and may live the rest of my time always longing for
-the presence of Christ, which I shall one day see. While
-I abide in the flesh, may it be to no purpose but the good
-of God's flock, and may I be led to suffer and to do many
-and great things for His sake."
-</p>
-<p>
-At this time he extends his correspondence to Mr. Irving,
-the founder of the Irvingites, and is so struck by what that
-gentleman says on the second coming of our Lord, that he
-begins to prepare himself for it. He never let us know how
-far he went on in this preparation.
-</p>
-<p>
-So far is he now, February 1829, from Catholicity in his
-opinions, that his father thinks it necessary to rebuke him
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">{170}</a></span>
-for the violence of a sermon he preached on the Catholic
-question; against them, of course, for his father was always
-a stanch advocate of Emancipation. Little he knew that
-on that day twelve months he would be a Catholic himself.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is recorded in the Journal here, that thieves broke into
-the parsonage one night. Mr. Spencer heard them; he arose,
-called a servant or two, pursued the delinquents, and captured
-them. This feat tells rather in favour of his bravery,
-and might qualify the opinion he had of himself on this
-point.
-</p>
-<p>
-We shall give the result of the Creed question in his own
-words, as given in the account of his conversion:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My scruples [about the Athanasian Creed] returned after
- a sermon which I preached on Trinity Sunday, 1827, in
- defence of that very Creed. I observed that the arguments
- by which I defended the doctrine of the Trinity itself were
- indeed founded on Scripture, but in attempting to prove to
- my hearers that a belief of this doctrine was absolutely
- necessary for man's salvation, I had recourse to arguments
- independent of Scripture, and that no passage in Scripture
- could be found which declares that whosoever will be saved
- must hold the orthodox faith on the Trinity. I had this
- difficulty on my mind for eight or nine months, after which,
- finding that I could not satisfy myself upon it, I gave notice
- to my superiors that I could not conscientiously declare my
- full assent to the Thirty-nine Articles. They attempted at
- first to satisfy me by arguments; but the more I discussed
- the subject the more convinced I became that the Article in
- question was not defensible, and after fifteen months' further
- pause, I made up my mind to leave off reading the Creed in
- the service of my Church, and informed my Bishop of my
- final resolution. Of course, he might have taken measures
- to oblige me to resign my benefice, but he thought it more
- prudent to take no notice of my letter; and thus I remained
- in possession of my place till I embraced the
- Catholic faith.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The point on which I thus found myself opposed to the
- Church of England appears a trifling one; but here was
- enough to hinder all my prospects of advancement, and to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
- put it in the power of the Bishop, if at any time he had
- chosen to do so, to call on me to give up my benefice. It is
- easy to conceive that under these circumstances my mind
- was set free, beyond what could be imagined in any other
- way, to follow without prejudice my researches after truth.
- I lost no opportunity of discoursing with ministers of all
- persuasions. I called upon them all to join with me in the
- inquiry where was the truth, which could be but one, and
- therefore could not be in any two contrary systems of religion,
- much less in all the variety of sects into which Christians
- are divided in England. I found little encouragement
- in any quarter to this way of proceeding, at least among
- Protestants. Those sectarians of a contrary persuasion to
- myself, to whom I proposed an inquiry with me after truth,
- I found generally ready to speak with me; but they did
- not even pretend to have any disposition to examine the
- grounds of their own principles, which they were determined
- to abide by without further hesitation. My brethren of the
- Established Church equally declined joining me in my discussions
- with persons of other persuasions, and disapproved
- of my pursuit, saying that I should never convert them to
- our side, and that I only ran the risk of being shaken
- myself. Their objections only incited me to greater diligence.
- I considered that if what I held were truth, charity
- required that I should never give over my attempts to bring
- others into the same way, though I were to labour all my
- life in vain. If, on the contrary, I was in any degree of
- error, the sooner I was shaken the better. I was convinced,
- by the numberless exhortations of St. Paul to his disciples,
- that they should be of one mind and have no divisions; that
- the object which I had before me, that is, the reunion of the
- differing bodies of Christians, was pleasing to God; and I
- had full confidence that I was in no danger of being led into
- error, or suffering any harm in following it up, as long as I
- studied nothing but to do the will of God in it, and trusted
- to His Holy Spirit to direct me.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The result of all these discussions with different sects of
- Protestants was a conviction that no one of us had a correct
- view of Christianity. We all appeared right thus far, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">{172}</a></span>
- acknowledging Christ as the Son of God, whose doctrines
- and commandments we were to follow as the way to happiness
- both in time and eternity; but it seemed as if the form of
- doctrine and discipline established by the Apostles had been
- lost sight of all through the Church. I wished, therefore,
- to see Christians in general united in the resolution to find
- the way of truth and peace, convinced that God would not
- fail to point it out to them. Whether or not others would
- seek His blessing with me, I had great confidence that,
- before long, God would clear up my doubts, and therefore
- my mind was not made uneasy by them. I must here
- notice a conversation I had with a Protestant minister about
- a year before I was a Catholic, by which my views of the use
- of the Scriptures were much enlightened, and by which, as it
- will be clearly seen, I was yet farther prepared to come to a
- right understanding of the true rule of Christian faith proposed
- by the Catholic Church. This gentleman was a
- zealous defender of the authority of the Church of England
- against the various sects of Protestant Dissenters, who have
- of late years gained so much advantage against her. He
- perceived that while men were allowed to claim a right of
- interpreting the Scriptures according to their own judgment
- there never could be an end of schism; and, therefore, he
- zealously insisted on the duty of our submitting to ecclesiastical
- authority in controversies of faith, maintaining that the
- Spirit of God spoke to us through the voice of the Church,
- as well as in the written word. Had I been convinced by
- this part of his argument, it would have led me to submit to
- the Catholic Church, and not to the Church of England;
- and, indeed, I am acquainted with one young man, who
- actually became a Catholic through the preaching of this
- gentleman&mdash;following these true principles, as he was bound
- to do, to their legitimate consequences. But I did not, at
- this time, perceive the truth of the position; I yet had no
- idea of the existence of Divine, unwritten Tradition in the
- Church. I could imagine no way for the discovery of the
- truth but persevering study of the Scriptures, which, as
- they were the only Divine rule of faith with which I was
- acquainted, I thought must of course be sufficient for our
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">{173}</a></span>
- guidance, if used with an humble and tractable spirit; but
- the discourse of this clergyman led me at least to make an
- observation which had never struck my mind before as being
- of any importance,&mdash;namely, that the system of religion
- which Christ taught the Apostles, and which they delivered
- to the Church, was something distinct from our volume of
- Scriptures. The New Testament I perceived to be a collection
- of accidental writings, which, as coming from the pens
- of inspired men, I was assured must, in every point, be
- agreeable to the true faith; but they neither were, nor anywhere
- professed to be, a complete and systematic account of
- Christian faith and practice. I was, therefore, in want of
- some further guidance on which I could depend. I knew
- not that it was in the Catholic Church that I was at length
- to find what I was in search of; but every Catholic will see,
- if I have sufficiently explained my case, how well I was
- prepared to accept with joy the direction of the Catholic
- Church, when once I should be convinced that she still
- preserved unchanged and inviolate the very form of faith
- taught by the Apostles, the knowledge of which is, as it
- were, the key to the right and sure interpretation of the
- written word."
-</p>
-<p>
-It was in April, 1829, that he wrote the letter to the
-Bishop which was not taken notice of. He next withdrew
-his name from some societies&mdash;such as the Society for Promoting
-Christian Knowledge, &amp;c. This act so displeased
-Dr. Blomfield, that he writes to say Mr. Spencer is no longer
-his chaplain. At the suggestion of some member of his
-family, he wrote an apology, and was restored again to favour
-and to his office. On May 22, 1829, the Journal suddenly
-breaks off, and he did not resume it again until the 1st of
-May, 1846. The events of the seventeen years intervening
-can be gathered from his correspondence, though, perhaps,
-not with the precision that would be desirable.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">{174}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-The Maid Of Lille.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Incidents overlapped each other so thickly, and were of
-such different tendencies during the last two years of Mr.
-Spencer's life as a minister, that we have judged it better to
-give them singly, even at the expense of a little sacrifice of
-the order of time. One of these, and an important one, is
-selected for the subject of this chapter. On the 23rd of
-November, 1827, just before his Athanasian scruples had
-risen to their height, as he returned from his pastoral
-visitation, he found a letter, purporting to be from a gentleman
-in Lille, "who was grievously troubled about the arguments
-for Popery." This letter contains little more than a
-statement of tendencies towards Catholicity in the writer,
-with extracts from Papin, <i>De la Tolérance des Protestants</i>,
-to account for them. The extracts draw a parallel between
-the Church and a well-regulated kingdom, in many of her
-doctrines and chief points of her discipline. It was anonymous,
-and reasons were assigned for withholding the writer's
-name. Mr. Spencer, ever anxious to counsel the doubtful,
-lost no time in answering, and sent off a long letter to his
-unknown friend by that evening's post. It was shortly
-after this that he wrote the letters to his father and Dr.
-Blomfield about the resignation of his preferment, and
-whether the Lille letter had anything to do with increasing
-his doubts, or not, is a question. It had, however, one effect:
-it made him anxious to find out what kind of people
-Catholics were; and an incident that occurred about the
-same time aided this curiosity. There were some soldiers
-quartered in Northampton, and, as Mr. Spencer was talking
-to some of the officers in the court-yard of the barracks, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
-Catholic priest entered, to look after such of the soldiers as
-might require his spiritual care. He saw the priest, and
-spoke to him; and, finding out the object of his mission,
-kindly introduced him to one of the officers, who, in
-consideration of Mr. Spencer, got all due attention paid to the
-priest; and the good parson was assured that he succeeded
-to his satisfaction before he left the place. A few days
-afterwards he met the priest, who thanked him for his
-charity, and said it was Providence sent him there at such
-a time, and arranged that his duty could be discharged
-among the soldiers with ease and honour, which had often-times
-to be done amid insults, or at least coldness on the
-part of the military authorities. Mr. Spencer began to
-think, "Really these Papists believe in Providence!" This
-wonderful discovery made him think they believed a little
-more also, and that they were not quite such idolaters as he
-had been taught to suppose. Another letter from the Lille
-correspondent confirmed him in this, and shook him in many
-of his older notions. He dines, in a few days after this despatch,
-with the celebrated Dr. Fletcher and a Miss Armytage, at
-Lady Throckmorton's. He has a long conversation with the
-last of the Douay controversialists after dinner; but the
-only effect produced is this: "I am thankful for the kindness
-of both those Papists. The Lord reward them by
-showing them His truth." He invites Dr. Fletcher to dinner
-at Brington&mdash;a favour the Doctor avails himself of on the
-27th March, 1828. Another letter from his friend at Lille
-makes him acknowledge that he has not had proper notions
-of Catholicity; in his own words: "I expected easily to
-convince him that the Catholic Church was full of errors;
-but he answered my arguments. .... I discovered
-by means of this correspondence that I had never duly
-considered the principles of our Reformation; that my objections
-to the Catholic Church were prejudices adopted from
-the sayings of others, not the result of my own observation.
-Instead of gaming the advantage in this controversy, I saw,
-and I owned to my correspondent, that a great change had
-been produced in myself. I no longer desired to persuade
-him to keep in the communion of the Protestant Church,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-but rather determined and promised to follow up the same
-inquiries with him, if he would make his name known to
-me, and only pause awhile before he joined the Catholics.
-But I heard no more of him till after my conversion and
-arrival at Rome, when I discovered that my correspondent
-was a lady, who had herself been converted a short
-time before she wrote to me. I never heard her name before, [Footnote 7]
-nor am I aware that she had ever seen my person; but
-God moved her to desire and pray for my salvation, which
-she also undertook to bring about in the way I have related.
-I cannot say that I entirely approve of the stratagem to
-which she had recourse, but her motive was good, and God
-gave success to her attempt: for it was this which first
-directed my attention particularly to inquire about the
-Catholic religion, though she lived not to know the accomplishment
-of her wishes and prayers. She died at Paris, a year
-before my conversion, when about to take the veil as a nun of
-the Sacred Heart; and I trust I have in her an intercessor
-in Heaven, as she prayed for me so fervently on earth."
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 7: The lady's name was Miss Dolling.]
-</p>
-<p>
-This was the last of F. Ignatius's romances, and a beautiful
-one it was. As it may be interesting to see what was in those
-famous letters, we think it well to give a few extracts:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- The line of the lady's argument is this. That Scripture
- without Tradition is quite insufficient for salvation. We
- cannot know anything about the Scriptures themselves,
- their composition, inspiration, interpretation, without
- Tradition. Besides the New Testament was not the text-book
- of the Apostles&mdash;it is a collection of some things they
- were inspired to write for the edification of the first
- Christians and others who had not seen our Lord; and the
- Epistles are a number of letters from inspired men bound
- up together in one volume. The body of doctrine, with its
- bearings, symmetry, extent, and obligation, was delivered
- orally by the Apostles, and the Epistles must be consonant
- to that system as well as explanatory of portions of it.
- Only by the unbroken succession of pastors from the
- Apostles to the present time, can we have any safeguard as
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
- to what we are to believe, and how we are to believe. The
- Apostles and their successors were "to teach all nations,"
- and Christ promised them and them alone the unerring
- guidance of the Holy Spirit. She then assigns to tradition
- the office of bearing testimony to what the doctrines of the
- Church have been, and are at present. The definitions of
- Councils are simple declarations that such and such is the
- belief then and from the beginning of the Catholic Church.
- They state what is, not invent what is to be. Now history,
- or written tradition, as contra-distinguished from Scripture,
- testifies to every single tenet of the Catholic Church&mdash;her
- creeds, liturgy, sacraments, jurisdiction. It testifies unerringly,
- too, even from the objections of heretics, to the fact
- that this Church has been always believed divine in her
- origin, divine in her teaching, infallible and unerring in her
- solemn pronouncements. This is fact, and who can gainsay
- it?
-</p>
-<p>
-This peculiar way of arguing, by making tradition or history
-bear witness to the existence of the Church, as well as
-to what she always declared to be her doctrine, is a very
-felicitous shape to cast her arguments into. It draws the
-line between faith and the evidence of faith. Evidence,
-human evidence of the first grade of moral certainty, says:
-The Church believed this, and that, and the other, at such
-and such times, and not as a new, but as an old doctrine, that
-came down from age to age since the Apostles. The same
-evidence says: that she believed them as revealed by God,
-and that she could not be mistaken on account of His promise.
-That she never swerved, and never will swerve, from
-one single article which she has once believed. If this Church
-be not <i>The Church</i> of Christ, I ask you where is it to be
-found?
-</p>
-<p>
-In the second letter she says:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "After much reflection I must confess to you their
- system appears reasonable, natural, and convincing. With
- us, they consider the Holy Scriptures as the most respectable
- testimony of our faith, and they profess a strict adherence
- to them; they have for them the greatest respect;
- and the Catholic priests support from the Bible what they
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">{178}</a></span>
- teach the people, and I am certain that they study and
- understand the Scriptures as much as our ministers. The
- principal difference I remark is, that they do not undertake
- to interpret them according to their own opinions: they
- say that the inspired writings are replete with mysteries,
- which the eye of man cannot penetrate; and that He alone
- who gave them is able to comprehend their sublimity;
- consequently, to follow the impulse of reason in explaining
- them, would be incurring the danger of falling into error,
- and leading others into the same path. For this cause the
- Catholic minister will not suffer the Holy Scriptures to be
- separated from the instruction of their predecessors up to
- the Apostles; not that they by any means give the word
- of man precedence to the Word of God, since they believe
- that man alone cannot explain it, for 'who,' they ask,
- 'assisted at the council of the Almighty?' But they
- believe that those who heard the Apostles preach, understood
- the true meaning of their words; and that their immediate
- successors, <i>especially</i>, educated by them, and who
- taught the Gospel during the life of their instructors, necessarily
- understood the meaning of their writings, the doctrine
- of which was undoubtedly conformable to what they
- taught verbally. ...."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "St. Paul, in his Epistles to the Colossians, informs us
- that the Gospel was preached to all the world. This being
- the case, I see no possibility of introducing any new doctrine.
- The Apostles threatened with eternal punishment
- those who did not believe what they taught in the name of
- Jesus Christ. And whoever would have the temerity to
- add to the primitive doctrine they visited with a like
- anathema. Tell me, now, how could the Church have
- introduced such a doctrine as that of the Real Presence,
- after a priest has pronounced the words, "This is my
- body"? How is it possible that the faithful could reconcile
- themselves to the idea of acknowledging and adoring Jesus
- Christ present on the altar, as He was in the manger at
- Bethlehem, and as He is in Heaven at the right hand of His
- Father, if this doctrine had not always been received and
- believed as it is at present by the Roman Catholic Church?
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">{179}</a></span>
- Christians who knew the value of salvation could not so
- easily be deceived; several among them would have remonstrated
- against this superstition and idolatry. Do we find
- that they have done so?"
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I imagine myself in idea at the period of the Reformation,
- and consider the belief and customs of that time. All
- Europe, the provinces of Asia and Africa which had not
- embraced Mahomedanism, admitted and believed the contrary
- to what Calvin taught, especially concerning the
- Lord's Supper. I should be glad to hear your impartial
- opinion on this subject. Where did Calvin find this doctrine?
- As I observe, he did not learn it in the schools,
- nor in any book, nor in his own family, nor in the temple
- of God; the innovation was universally opposed; a million
- voices remonstrated against his impiety. What right had
- he to be believed? He proposed only the interpretation
- which <i>he</i> gave to the words of Jesus Christ, <i>This is my
- body</i>. He supported his opinion in no other way, he proved
- it by no miracles, and therefore did not deserve belief,
- since he gave no proofs of a divine mission. He was but a
- man, and, what is more, one of whom historians do not
- speak as being virtuous. Tell me, then, how can I acknowledge
- that he possessed the Holy Spirit, knew the meaning
- of Scripture. .... listen to and follow a young man
- in his opinion and oppose the rest of the world. Could
- that be wisdom?
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But supposing, my dear sir, the Church to be in error,
- or even liable to err, how can we possibly profess to believe
- any mystery? For to have faith, it is impossible to doubt
- or hesitate. And if I believe not, I am lost. I am already
- condemned. 'He that believeth not is already judged.'
- If the Church be liable to error, may I not reply to our
- ministers:&mdash;'I doubt the truth of what you preach: I am
- not obliged to believe you'? You tell me I am not obliged
- to believe what <i>you</i> so charitably wrote to me, and many
- passages of which letter have sensibly affected me: to
- whom, then, must I have recourse? You give me reason
- to conclude that you are not certain of the assistance of the
- Holy Ghost, as you do not oblige me to believe what you
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
- say, but you desire me to compare your words with the
- Scriptures, and to reject them if I don't find them conformable
- to the Word of God. How can I imagine myself more
- certain than you that I rightly interpret them, or that I
- have the assistance of Heaven? I must continue to doubt
- during the rest of my life, and remain an unbeliever.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "You say, 'if a man will do His will, he shall know
- of the doctrine whether it be of God.' To do the will of
- God is certainly to listen to those God has sent to teach
- us. ....
-</p>
-<p>
-She quotes several authorities bearing witness in their
-day that the supremacy of the Pope was then believed to be
-of divine right, and closes the list with Sir Thomas More.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "By the grace of God I have always professed the Catholic
- religion. Having, however, often heard the power of the
- Pope was of human institution, I resolved to weigh the
- matter without, at the same time, injuring my faith. For
- seven years I followed up this study: I drank at the fountain
- head: I went to the origin of things. At length I found
- that the pontifical power is not only useful and necessary&mdash;
- but, strictly lawful and of divine appointment. ..."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I cannot admit the system of <i>particular</i> inspiration,
- since I see many, pretending to be inspired, fall into manifest
- contradictions, and consequently into error. ....
- I admit with you that divine authority must fix the faith of
- men. Where am I to find it? It must exist somewhere. ...."
-</p>
-<p>
-The third letter is partly a continuation of the second,
-and partly on a new plan; so a few extracts from it must
-be welcome, especially as it really did such work upon poor
-Mr. Spencer's mind.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- .... "It is certain that Jesus Christ founded a
- Church upon earth for the salvation of man; where, then,
- is it? This is certainly the whole question among the
- different sects opposed to each other. .... I must
- necessarily enter the true Church, for I cannot be saved in
- that which is false. ....
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- .... "I am persuaded the Catholics do not found
- their belief on the opinions and interpretations of men;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
- their authority is Jesus Christ, God Himself; certainly that
- must be infallible, and the reason of man ought to bend to
- it. They believe in such and such doctrines because Jesus
- Christ and His Apostles taught them; this is the simple and
- reasonable motive of their faith. The doctrine of Jesus'
- and His Apostles is not an opinion, but a fact, which I see
- so completely proved by an assemblage of facts and circumstances
- so striking, that, not to be convinced of its truth,
- would be to renounce all common sense. .... The
- fact that the Catholic Church is in possession of the true
- doctrine is a fact proved like all other historical facts; it is
- proved by a weight of testimony given by persons who saw
- and heard themselves. Observe, it is not the opinions or
- interpretations given by those persons which are advanced
- as proofs, as you suppose in your letter; but all these holy
- persons have shed their blood to support and defend the
- truth, not of their opinions, but of what they have seen or
- heard. I can understand that fanaticism would induce a
- man to sacrifice his life to support a favourite opinion, but
- it has never yet been seen that any one would lose his life
- to prove that he had seen or heard things which he, in fact,
- had not. Tradition is not, therefore, as you suppose, the
- opinions and interpretations of the Fathers, but their testimony
- to what they saw, heard, taught, and practised. In
- the same way, the general Councils have fixed the sense of
- Scripture only by declaring the fact that such has been the
- universal doctrine since the Apostles. It is the assemblage
- of these proofs that brings conviction to the soul; they must
- all be seen united and compared, and this is undoubtedly a
- laborious study.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Catholics believe that their Church is in possession
- of the doctrine taught by Christ, and listen to it as they
- would to Him. Judge from this how strong and lively must
- be the faith of a Catholic, how firm and immovable, since
- the voice of their Church is the voice of their Saviour, and
- the interval of eighteen hundred years disappears as they
- every day hear the voice of Jesus. There cannot be any
- division in this Church. It being an historical fact that the
- same doctrine has been taught from the beginning by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
- infallible mouth of Jesus Christ and His Apostles, it follows
- that <i>all</i> must yield to that authority, and that the rash
- individual who would dispute, disputes as it were with
- Jesus Christ, and consequently ought to be driven from the
- flock. ....
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Catholics say:&mdash;<i>without the Scriptures we should
- not hear the Saviour speak, but without tradition we should
- not know what He says</i>. ....
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Why are not <i>our</i> eyes opened&mdash;having every day proof
- that private interpretation is at fault?&mdash;let us try. Take
- your Bible, and read whatever passage you please; I also
- will read it. Let us both, then, invoke the assistance of
- God, and do you candidly think our inspirations would
- agree as to the sense of the passage? I think not. However,
- should we differ, who is to decide which is in error?
-<br><br>
- ....
-<br><br>
- "I see by your letters you have not always had the same
- opinion on all points that you have at this time. ...
- What warrant have you that you are better inspired now
- than before? Inspiration does not cause change of opinion.
-<br><br>
- ....
-<br><br>
- "We have in our country written laws of ancient date.
- Suppose some persons, even of great learning, were to give
- them a different interpretation to that hitherto received,
- would not they be confounded by showing them, by means
- of history or tradition, that the King himself who made
- these laws, his ministers and successors, have always understood
- and executed them in a different sense. That is the
- way Catholics avoid all difficulty. ....
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "You are in error as to the Pope if you suppose that
- formerly, or now, Catholics give him their faith, as Calvinists
- do to Calvin, &amp;c. I thought the same. The Pope is
- simply the chief administrator; the doctrines he has the
- stewardship of do not come from him or any other Pope, as
- that of Calvinism from Calvin; it comes from Jesus Christ,
- from His Apostles, and from their churches throughout the
- world. An administrator is not the master of the doctrines
- with which he is entrusted. The Pope and Bishops
- are charged to preserve the doctrine, to propagate it and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">{183}</a></span>
- defend it against all attacks of the enemies of Jesus Christ.
-<br><br>
- ....
-<br><br>
- "You interpret the text, 'lo! I am with you <i>always</i>,'
- that God promised His Holy Spirit to every individual;
- but that I am inclined by no means to admit. The whole
- of the passage must be considered. It was not to every one
- He addressed these words; it was only to His Apostles that
- He said, 'Go and teach all nations .... behold, I am
- with you.' From this it is clearly to the Apostles and their
- successors that He promised the Holy Spirit. I see in these
- words that they received from God himself the formal order
- or mission to go and preach, not what they found written,
- but what He had taught. .... I see also by these words
- that sovereigns of this world have not received the power
- of sending ministers to teach the Gospel, and certainly by
- so doing they usurp the power given to the Apostles and
- their successors. What we have to find is, to whom God
- has said, 'Go and teach.' It is physically impossible that
- it should concern our ministers, since they are established
- by temporal authority."
-</p>
-<p>
-About the Reformers she says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Can man reform the work of his Creator?"
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "You say you will never claim any name but that of
- Christian, but still it is not with you a matter of indifference
- what communion you belong to; therefore, this being
- the case, it is not sufficient to bear the name of Christian,
- and say we trust in Jesus; we must be sure that the doctrines
- we adopt are really his. For it is not being a
- Christian to embrace doctrines contrary to those given by
- our Saviour; it is assuming the name of Christian without
- being certain we are so; we must find if we are in communion
- with His Church. Without faith there is no salvation;
- this cannot mean a faith of our own choosing, but what
- God has been pleased to command we should believe. ....
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Many of our ministers are ignorant or wicked enough
- to accuse Catholics of idolatry. It is Jesus Christ they
- adore really present though invisible in the Eucharist.
- They very loudly exclaim among us against images, &amp;c. All
- this is nothing; on all sides that Church presents images to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
- render their faith more lively, and to induce them thereby
- to adore God the more truly in spirit and in truth."
-</p>
-<p>
-These are arguments of no little strength, to say the least
-of them. It would be a pleasure to transcribe the letters <i>in
-extenso</i>, but the three cover thirty-two pages of
-closely-written letter-paper, and would consequently take up too
-much room in a biography. Some sceptically-inclined person
-will probably say,&mdash;"she had some Jesuit or other
-astute Romish priest at her elbow when she wrote these
-letters." The writer can only tell his reader that he verily
-suspects as much himself. But before any of us jump at a
-conclusion, it might be well to consider this sentence which
-occurs towards the end of the third letter.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Do not think
- I am under the influence of some priests who have induced
- me to undertake this examination. It was a lawyer first
- awakened my curiosity, telling me you may read in vain
- and argue&mdash;you will not, you cannot find the truth unless
- you pray for it as the free gift of God; and to obtain this
- you must be humble, your conscience must be as pure as
- you can make it: God alone can be your help; pray to Him
- unceasingly."
-</p>
-<p>
-However we may think about their real author, the
-matter itself is very good, and their consequence to Mr.
-Spencer was of vital importance. There are no rough
-copies of his answers to the unknown to be found among his
-papers, or it would be very interesting to place them side by
-side with what we have quoted. The result of these letters
-we have in his account of his conversion:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "After this period I entertained the opinion that the
- Reformers had done wrong in separating from the original
- body of the Church; at any rate, I was convinced that
- Protestants who succeeded them were bound to make a reunion
- with it. I still conceived that many errors and corruptions
- had been introduced among Catholics, and I did
- not imagine that I could ever conform to their faith, or join
- in their practices, without some alterations on their part;
- but I trusted that the time might not be distant when God
- would inspire all Christians with a spirit of peace and concord,
- which would make Protestants anxiously seek to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
- re-united to their brethren, and Catholics willing to listen
- to reason, and to correct those abuses in faith, and discipline
- which kept their brethren from joining them. To the procuring
- such a happy termination to the miserable schisms
- which had rent the Church, I determined to devote my
- life. I now lost no opportunity of conversations with Protestants
- and Catholics. My object with both was to awaken
- them to a desire of unity with each other; to satisfy myself
- the more clearly where was the exact path of truth in
- which it was desirable that we should all walk together;
- and then to persuade all to correct their respective errors
- in conformity with the perfect rule, which I had no doubt
- the Lord would in due time point out to me, and to all who
- were ready to follow His will disinterestedly. I thought
- that when Catholics were at length willing to enter with
- me on these discussions with candour, they would at once
- begin to see the errors which to me appeared so palpable in
- their system: but I was greatly surprised to find them all
- so fixed in their principles, that they gave me no prospect
- of re-union except on condition of others submitting unreservedly
- to them; and, at the same time, I could see in their
- ordinary conduct and manner of disputing with me nothing
- to make one suspect them of insincerity, or of want of
- sufficient information of the grounds of their belief. These
- repeated conversations increased more and more my desire
- to discover the true road, which I saw that I, at least for
- one, was ignorant of: but I still imagined that I could see
- such plain marks of difference between the Catholic Church
- of the present day and the Church of the primitive ages as
- described in Scripture, that I repeatedly put aside the
- impression which the arguments of Catholics, and, yet more,
- my observation of their character, made upon me, and I
- still held up my head in the controversy."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-Ambrose Lisle Phillipps.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The close and warm friendship between Father Ignatius
-and Mr. Phillipps has scarcely a parallel in ancient or
-modern history. They became acquainted in 1829; and
-until death suspended their mutual communication for
-awhile, they ever wrote, spoke, and thought, with more than
-a brotherly&mdash;ay, more than any human or natural affection.
-The Christian patriotism of each, which prayed and laboured
-to bring their countrymen to the blessings they themselves
-had received, may have fostered this beautiful love; and
-even the different spheres in, as well as means by, which they
-felt themselves called to prosecute the work of their predilection
-may have helped to keep it ever warm and new;
-but there was a something in it which reminds one of David
-and Jonathan, that spread over it a grace and splendour far
-above what it is given us now and then to behold. This
-chapter will show the rise of their mutual affection, and
-show where lay the basis of the edifice gratitude and charity
-helped to fashion.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius says, in the account of his conversion:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Near the end of the year 1829 I was introduced to
- young Mr. Phillipps, eldest son of a rich gentleman in
- Leicestershire, whom I had often heard spoken of as a convert
- to the Catholic religion. I had for a long time been
- curious to see him, that I might observe the mode of reasoning
- by which he had been persuaded into what I still
- thought so great an error. We spent five hours together
- in the house of the Rev. Mr. Foley, Catholic Missionary in
- my neighbourhood, with whom I had already had much
- intercourse. I was interested by the ardent zeal of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
- young man in the cause of his faith. I had previously
- imagined that he must have been ignorant on the subject of
- religion, and that he had suffered himself to be led blindly
- by others; but he answered all my objections about his own
- conversion with readiness and intelligence. I could not but
- see that it had been in him the result of his own diligent
- investigations. I was delighted with what I could observe
- of his character. I was more than ever inflamed with a
- desire to be united in communion with persons in whom I saw
- such clear signs of the Spirit of God; but yet my time was
- not fully come. I fancied, by his conversation, that he had
- principles and ideas inconsistent with what I had learned
- from Scripture; and in a few days I again put aside the
- uneasiness which this meeting had occasioned, and continued
- to follow my former purpose, only with increased resolution
- to come at satisfaction. He was, in the meanwhile, much
- interested in my case. He recommended me to the prayers of
- some religious communities, and soon after invited me to his
- father's house that we might continue our discourses. I
- was happy at the prospect of this meeting, and full of hopes
- that it would prove satisfactory to me; but I left home
- without any idea of the conclusion to which it pleased God
- to bring me so soon."
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. Phillipps wrote to him:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My Dear Sir,&mdash;We expect the Bishop of Lichfield
- here on the 25th January, and I have ventured to hope
- that I might be able to induce you to come here at that
- time, to meet him and stay the week. I hope so the more,
- as I think your conversation might induce him, as well as
- my father, to think more seriously on that awful subject on
- which we conversed when I had the great happiness of being
- introduced to you at Northampton. I assure you, a day
- has not passed without my offering up my unworthy prayers
- to Almighty God in your behalf; and I cannot refrain from
- again saying, that I hope one day we shall be united in the
- same faith of the One Holy and Apostolic Church of Jesus
- Christ. How great is the consolation to belong to that
- holy Church which alone Jesus Christ has founded, which
- alone He has illustrated with a never-failing succession of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">{188}</a></span>
- pastors and of miracles, from which all others have separated,
- and out of which I find in the Holy Scriptures no covenanted
- promise of salvation! The Catholic Church alone has converted
- those nations which have been brought to the faith of
- Christ; and as, on the one hand, no man could at this
- moment be a Protestant had not Luther and the other
- Reformers existed, so, on the other, neither Luther nor any
- succeeding Protestant could derive any knowledge of Christianity
- but from the Catholic Church. How sublime are
- the promises of Christ, 'Upon this Rock I will build My
- Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.'
- .... 'Going, therefore, teach ye all nations.' ....
- 'And lo! I am with you all days, even unto the end of the
- world.' Now to what Church was this promise made (a
- promise which involves infallibility; for it would be blasphemy
- to say that the God of Truth could commission a
- Church to teach the world, if that Church could possibly teach
- error)? Certainly not to Churches (sects, I should say) which
- separated from the parent Church fifteen hundred years after
- the promise was given, and therefore came into existence
- fifteen hundred years too late to be the Church of Christ.
- And to what do the sects have recourse? To groundless
- accusations of the Church of God, involving the charge of
- idolatry; but this very charge condemns them, '<i>ex ore tuo
- judico te</i>.' for, by saying that the Church fell into idolatry,
- and that that justifies their separation, they admit that
- there was a time when the Church was not guilty of idolatry.
- Now how are the promises of Christ verified, if His
- Church could ever become idolatrous? I find in no part of
- Scripture any prediction that the Church of Christ should
- ever become idolatrous, and that then it should be lawful to
- separate from her. Christ said simply, 'I am with you all
- days,' and 'he that believeth and is baptised shall be saved,
- and he that believeth not shall be condemned.' It is in
- vain to urge that St. Paul speaks of the 'man of sin,' and
- of 'a falling away,'&mdash;he speaks not of the Church; and the
- very expression 'a falling away' shows that it is not the
- Church, but sects, to which he alludes&mdash;for the Church
- never fell away from any previous Church,&mdash;this is matter of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">{189}</a></span>
- history; but all the sects, all schismatics, all heretics, fell
- away from the Catholic Church of Christ,&mdash;this is equally
- matter of history. No. St. Paul, the ever-glorious apostle
- and doctor of the Gentiles, spoke of Arius, Luther, Calvin,
- Knox, and Henry VIII., and all other heresiarchs, all of
- whom did apostatize and 'fall away,' and have by their
- schisms and endless divisions, and the spirit of infidelity
- resulting from them, paved the way for the Man of Sin, the
- great Antichrist, who may perhaps shortly appear, the last
- development of Heresy and Liberalism. But how shall
- sectaries take refuge in the mysterious predictions of the
- Apocalypse? As well might that atrocious assassin who
- killed Henry IV. find some excuse in the hidden words
- of that volume. But I might pursue the question still
- further. What right have sects to the Bible? Jesus
- Christ gave it to us, and these men have stolen our book. If
- they say He did not give it to us, I reply, then they ought
- to cease to believe that Jesus Christ ever existed, for that is
- no more a matter of history, nor a more certain fact, than
- His commission to His Church to teach all nations all truth.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But I must conclude. I have not written all this without
- some fear; but, my dear Mr. Spencer, I know it is a
- subject which is deeply interesting to you, and, therefore,
- however ill I may have said it, I have said it with the less
- hesitation. Will you write me a line to say if you can
- come here? I do hope you will. My father says he had
- the pleasure once of meeting you at Mr. Thornton's.<br>
- "Believe me, my dear Mr. Spencer,<br>
- "Most sincerely yours,<br>
- "Ambrose Lisle Phillipps.<br>
-<br>
- "Clarendon Park, Loughbro',<br>
- <i>"Dec.</i> 30."
-</p>
-<p>
-The letter in which Father Ignatius signified his acceptance
-of this invitation is still extant, and was lent by Mr.
-Phillipps to the Passionists for this "Life." It is interesting,
-as the last vibration of the needle to the pole of Catholic
-truth, as well as for the idea it gives of his state of mind at
-that time. We give it, therefore, in full. He wrote it from
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
-Althorp, where the family were assembled, as usual, for the
-Christmas holidays.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Althorp, <i>Jan</i>. 4, 1830.
-<br><br>
- "My Dear Sir,&mdash;I received your kind invitation to
- Garendon on Saturday; but I thought it best to postpone
- answering it for a day or two, that I might consider what I
- had better do. If the visit which you propose to me had
- been an ordinary one, I suppose I should have declined it
- for the present, as I believe my father and mother will be
- at Althorp till about the 25th January, and I seldom go
- out when they are here. But as you invite me in the hope,
- and with a desire, that good may be done by my going, I
- believe I should be sorry afterwards if I refused. I therefore
- have told my father of my intention, and, if nothing
- happens to prevent me, I will be with you on Monday the
- 25th. As to the hour of my arrival, I cannot just now tell
- how the coaches run between Northampton and Loughborough;
- but I conclude I shall be with you in good time.
- And now that I have determined to go, I am really thankful
- that another opportunity of conversing with you is given
- me so soon; and I trust that our intercourse will be blessed
- for our own good and that of others. And if the step you
- have taken in becoming a Roman Catholic is correct, according
- to the will of Christ, I have no doubt that my conversation
- with you will be of use in drawing me nearer to the
- right point. If, as I still am convinced, there is some error
- in your views, let us agree in hoping that our intercourse
- may be likewise profitable to you. I have been confirmed,
- by every conversation which I have had with Roman Catholics,
- in the persuasion that there is something materially
- wrong in what we may call the Protestant system; and I
- have spoken my mind to this effect as often as occasion has
- been given me. But if our union with the Roman Catholic
- Church involves a declaration of my belief of all that she
- teaches, and a submission to all her authority, as their subjects
- are set forth in Bossuet's Exposition and Catechism, I
- am not as yet one of the body; and I am reduced to the
- conviction that somewhere or other there is an error among
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
- you. One thing I have learnt in the course of these inquiries
- is that the Scriptures of the New Testament are not,
- as I formerly used to regard them through want of consideration,
- the formal canon of the Christian faith. It is as
- clear to me as I suppose you could wish it to be, that the
- oral tradition of Christ to Peter and the other Apostles, and
- that of the Apostles to the Churches, is the rule of Christian
- doctrine, and with all my heart I seek for the knowledge of
- what they taught, and have been frequently struck with the
- desirableness of a clear and definite authority to which we
- might refer, when I have observed the mischief into which
- Christians have fallen by following each his own judgment.
- I do not see how I should be stopped from at once becoming
- Catholic, under this impression, if it was not that on comparing
- the state of the doctrine and discipline of the Roman
- Church with what the Scriptures plainly teach me of the state
- of the Apostolic Church, and the method of their doctrine, I
- see such an obvious and plain difference, and I cannot be convinced
- but that, between their time and that of the Council of
- Trent, improper use has been made of the Church's authority.
- I am waiting to learn what is the right way, which
- God knows and He alone; and I can only hope for His
- guidance of me into the right way by standing ready for conviction
- when the means of it are offered to me. I declare
- myself to be in doubt. But that doubt gives me no uneasiness,
- for my hope of salvation is simply founded on Jesus
- Christ crucified; whom I expect to meet, as one of His
- redeemed ones, when He returns. It is not any works of
- righteousness which I can do, nor any outward profession of
- doctrine which I can make, that can justify me. I am
- justified freely by the grace of God through faith in Jesus
- Christ, to whom I give myself, to learn of Him and follow
- Him whithersoever He leadeth. You will find me as open
- to instruction and conviction as you seemed to think me at
- Mr. Foley's; and I will weigh what you say, though you
- should decline to meet me on the same terms, and declare
- yourself determined to give your mind no more to inquiry.
- Yet, for your own sake and the sake of others, who will of
- course be more disposed to attend to you if they see you
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">{192}</a></span>
- candid and still humble and doubtful of your own judgment,
- I wish you to resolve that you will meet me as I come to
- you, determined that we will, with the blessing of God,
- come to one mind, at the cost of all our respective prejudices.
- We should not meet as polemics determined on
- victory, but in the spirit of meekness and mutual forbearance.
- Then God, who sees the heart, if he sees us truly
- thus disposed, will know how to make his truth shine
- clearly to us both. Above all, let us pray for each other,
- and for all, but especially those who most nearly belong to
- us, and be encouraged by the promise, 'If any two of you
- shall agree as touching anything that ye shall ask, on earth
- it shall be done for them of My Father, who is in heaven.'
- Pray give my respectful compliments to your father, whom
- I remember well meeting once at Brock Hall, and of whom I
- have often heard the Thorntons speak with great regard;
- and to carry to him my best thanks for his kind permission
- to you to receive me in his house. Perhaps I shall write to
- the Bishop of Lichfield, to tell him that I expect to meet
- him there. I hope nothing will prevent his coming. And
- if we are allowed to have freedom of conversation with him
- on these things, which I pray to God may be given us, I
- must particularly interest you to hear and consider what he
- says with meekness and humility, though you may have the
- clearest conviction that he is in error. Surely his age and
- rank, and the work to which he has sincerely devoted himself,
- and his relation to you, make this a double duty; and,
- by acting so, you will not be hurt, for though you may be
- perplexed for awhile, God will not suffer you to lose one
- point of what is really good, but will finally establish you
- the more firmly for acting in this humble spirit.<br>
- "Believe me, dear Sir,<br>
- "Yours most sincerely,<br>
- "George Spencer."
-</p>
-<p>
-He relates, in the <i>Account of his Conversion</i>, the effects
-of this visit:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "On Sunday, 24th January, 1830, I preached in my
- church, and in the evening took leave of my family for the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
- week, intending to return on the Saturday following to my
- ordinary duties at home. But our Lord ordered better for
- me. During the week I spent on this visit I passed many
- hours daily in conversation with Phillipps, and was satisfied
- beyond all my expectations with the answers he gave to the
- different questions I proposed, about the principal tenets and
- practices of Catholics. During the week we were in company
- with several other Protestants, and among them some
- distinguished clergymen of the Church of England, who
- occasionally joined in our discussions. I was struck with
- observing how the advantage always appeared on his side
- in the arguments which took place between them, notwithstanding
- their superior age and experience; [Footnote 8]
- and I saw how
- weak was the cause in behalf of which I had hitherto been
- engaged; I felt ashamed of arguing any longer against what
- I began to see clearly could not be fairly disproved. I now
- openly declared myself completely shaken, and, though I
- determined to take no decided step until I was entirely
- convinced, I determined to give myself no rest till I was
- satisfied, and had little doubt now of what the result would
- be. But yet I thought not how soon God would make the
- truth clear to me. I was to return home, as I have said,
- on Saturday. Phillipps agreed to accompany me on the day
- previous to Leicester, where we might have further conversation
- with Father Caestryck, the Catholic missionary established
- in that place. I imagined that I might take some
- weeks longer for consideration, but Mr. Caestryck's conversation
- that afternoon overcame all my opposition. He
- explained to me, and made me see, that the way to come at
- the knowledge of the true religion is not to contend, as men
- are disposed to do, about each individual point, but to submit
- implicitly to the authority of Christ, and of those to
- whom He has committed the charge of His flock. He set
- before me the undeniable but wonderful fact of the agreement
- of the Catholic Church all over the world, in one faith,
- under one head; he showed me the assertions of Protestants,
- that the Catholic Church had altered her doctrines, were
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
- not supported by evidence; he pointed out the wonderful,
- unbroken chain of the Roman Pontiffs; he observed to me
- how in all ages the Church, under their guidance, had
- exercised an authority, undisputed by her children, of cutting
- off from her communion all who opposed her faith and
- disobeyed her discipline. I saw that her assumption of this
- power was consistent with Christ's commission to His
- Apostles to teach all men to the end of the world; and His
- declaration that those who would not hear the pastors of
- His Church rejected Him. What right, then, thought I,
- had Luther and his companions to set themselves against
- the united voice of the Church? I saw that he rebelled
- against the authority of God when he set himself up as an
- independent guide. He was bound to obey the Catholic
- Church&mdash;how then should I not be equally bound to return
- to it? And need I fear that I should be led into error by
- trusting to those guides to whom Christ himself thus directed
- me? No! I thought this impossible. Full of these impressions,
- I left Mr. Caestryck's house to go to my inn,
- whence I was to return home next morning. Phillipps
- accompanied me, and took this last occasion to impress on
- me the awful importance of the decision which I was called
- upon to make. At length I answered:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 8: Phillipps was then about 17 years of age.]
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'I am overcome. There is no doubt of the truth.
- One more Sunday I will preach to my congregation, and
- then put myself into Mr. Foley's hands, and conclude this
- business.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It may be thought with what joyful ardour he embraced
- this declaration, and warned me to declare my sentiments
- faithfully in these my last discourses. The next minute led
- me to the reflection,&mdash;Have I any right to stand in that
- pulpit, being once convinced that the Church is heretical to
- which it belongs? Am I safe in exposing myself to the
- danger which may attend one day's travelling, while I turn
- my back on the Church of God, which now calls me to unite
- myself to her for ever? I said to Phillipps: 'If this step is
- right for me to take next week, it is my duty to take it now.
- My resolution is made; to-morrow I will be received into
- the Church.' We lost no time in despatching a messenger to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
- my father, to inform him of this unexpected event. As I
- was forming my last resolution, the thought of him came
- across me; will it not be said that I endanger his very life
- by so sudden and severe a shock? The words of our Lord
- rose before me, and answered all my doubts: 'He that
- hateth not father and mother, and brothers and sisters, and
- houses and lands, and his own life too, cannot be my disciple.'
- To the Lord, then, I trusted for the support and
- comfort of my dear father under the trial which, in obedience
- to His call, I was about to inflict upon him. I had no
- further anxiety to disturb me. God alone knows the peace
- and joy with which I laid me down that night to rest. The
- next day, at nine o'clock, the Church received me for her
- child."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h1>BOOK III<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Secular Priest</i>.
-</h1>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">{199}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-<h1>BOOK III.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Secular Priest</i>.</h1>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
-His First Days In The Church.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Conversions to Catholicism were not such
-every-day occurrences, some thirty years ago,
-as they are now. The disabilities under which
-Catholics laboured politically, before 1829, made
-them hide their heads, except when forced into
-public notice by efforts to break their shackles. The religion
-that civilized England, and consecrated every remarkable
-spot in it to the service of God, had become a thing of the
-past, and the relics of Catholic piety that studded the land
-were looked upon as the gravestones of its corse, or the
-trophies of vanquishing Protestantism. Not only was
-Catholicity supposed to be dead in England, but its memory
-was in execration; nurses frightened the children with
-phantoms of monks, and mountebank preachers took their
-inspiration from the prejudices they had imbibed in childhood.
-The agitation about the <i>Veto</i>, and the Debates on the
-Catholic question, which filled the public mind about the
-year 1830, and for some ten years before, showed that
-Catholicity had not died, but only slept. The Catholics
-emerged from their dens and caverns; they bought and sold,
-spoke and listened, like their neighbours; and the King was
-not afraid of a Catholic ball when he took his next airing
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-in Hyde Park. The Catholic Church had been barely given
-leave to eke out its declining days, with something like the
-indulgence allowed a condemned criminal, when, to the
-astonishment of all, it sprung up with new vigour, and
-waxed and throve in numbers and in position. It was considered
-worth a hearing now, and faith came by hearing to
-many, who would have been horrified before at opening by
-chance such an antichristian thing as a Catholic book. A
-conversion, then, rather stunned than embittered the relatives
-of the convert. The full tide of Tractarianism had
-not yet set in, and the systematic pitchforks of private
-persecution and stately rebuke, that were afterwards invented
-to stop it, were not so much as thought of. The conversion
-of the Honourable George Spencer happened in those peculiar
-times. His family were partially prepared for it, for
-fluctuating between so many religious opinions as he had
-been for so long, and earnest, too, in pushing arguments to
-their furthest length, it was often half suspected that he
-would go to Popery at last. There he was now, a child of
-the Catholic Church, shrived and baptized according to her
-ritual. His die was cast. He was fixed for ever. His
-wandering was at an end. With the exception of his house-keeper,
-who laid her down to die for sheer affliction at the
-news, we are not aware that many others were much moved
-by what they considered his defection. Doubtless, his father
-and the immediate family circle felt it deeply; his Protestant
-vagaries had caused them sleepless nights and silent afternoons,
-and the Church of which he became a member was
-not likely to seem less absurd to them than it once seemed
-to himself. But then he was incorrigible; there was no
-use talking to him; he would have his own way, and there
-was what it led to.
-</p>
-<p>
-Lord Spencer was always favourable to Catholics, but it
-was in the spirit of generosity to a fallen, or justice to an
-injured people. He never dreamt his own son would be one
-of the first to reap the benefit of the measures he advocated
-in Parliament. The letter he received from Leicester in
-January, 1830, must have been a shock indeed. Besides, a
-member of this aristocratic house descending to such a level
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">{201}</a></span>
-must be considered a family disgrace&mdash;an event to be wept
-over as long as there was one to glory in the name of
-Spencer, or feel for its <i>prestige</i>. Taking all these things
-into account, and many other minor considerations, it would
-be no wonder if Mr. Spencer was treated with harshness,
-and banished Althorp for ever. Nothing of the kind. His
-father was very considerate; and liberal, too, in making
-a provision for his son's future maintenance. George himself
-was received on friendly terms by every branch of the
-family, and, so far from avoiding him or mortifying him,
-they seemed all to have respected his sincerity. He wrote
-to Dr. Walsh, the Vicar Apostolic of the central district,
-immediately after his reception into the Church, placing
-himself as a subject at his lordship's disposition. Mr.
-Spencer's idea was to be ordained as soon as possible, and
-come back to his own parish to preach, like St. Paul, against
-his former teaching. This intention was checked by the
-Bishop's writing word for him to put off his first Communion
-a little longer, and to come and meet his Lordship in
-Wolverhampton towards the middle of February. This
-letter he received in F. Caestryck's, in Leicester, three days
-after his reception. He thinks the arrangement excellent.
-He spent a fortnight in the priest's house at Leicester, and
-he used often to say that this good priest's way of settling
-difficulties, though it might look unsatisfactory, was the very
-best thing that ever occurred to him. He made Mr. Spencer
-fully aware of the great dogma of the Church's infallibility
-before he received him. F. Caestryck was one of those good
-emigre priests who were well up in the Church's positive and
-moral theology, but cared very little for polemics. Whenever
-Mr. Spencer asked him "Why was anything such a
-way in Catholic teaching?" the old man simply replied:
-"The Church says so." This was very wise at such a time;
-the period for reasoning and discussion was passed, and the
-neophyte had to be taught to exercise the faith he had
-adopted now. He learnt the lesson very well, and was
-saved from the danger of arguing himself out of the Church
-again, as some do who do not leave their private judgment
-outside the Church-door, at their conversion.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">{202}</a></span>
-<p>
-Scarcely anything is so remarkable as the readiness with
-which, on his reception, he laid down all notions of his
-being a minister of God. One short extract from a letter to
-his housekeeper, enclosing money from Leicester, to pay bills,
-will illustrate this: "If you have an opportunity, tell those
-who choose to attend, that I have acknowledged the authority
-of the Catholic Church, and therefore resigned my
-ministry for the present. If they care for my advice, tell
-them to send for Mr. Foley (the priest at Northampton), and
-hear him as the minister of God." This letter was written
-before he was a week a Catholic, and it promises well for
-his future that he does not arrogate to himself the office of
-teacher before he is commissioned, much less before he is
-sufficiently instructed. Many, in their first fervour, make
-false steps in the way he avoided which it is often difficult to
-retrace. The glow of happiness at finding one's self in <i>the
-Church</i> ought to be allowed to subside, and to allow the newborn
-judgment to be capable of discretion, before beginning
-to dabble in theology.
-</p>
-<p>
-He pays a visit to Brington in a few days, in company
-with F. Caestryck, and writes beforehand to his housekeeper
-to collect a few of his faithful listeners, that he may get
-them a few words of advice from a real live priest. It seems,
-from hints thrown out here and there in his letters, that
-Bishop Walsh was for his going to Rome to prepare himself
-for Orders. This was a drawback to his own plan, but
-events will show how wisely the Bishop arranged. Mr.
-Spencer's anxiety to be ordained at once and sent out to
-preach is an evidence of the strength of his faith. He
-imagined the Sacrament of Orders would have infused all
-ecclesiastical knowledge into his soul, and it was only when
-he had to work hard at the study of theology that he perceived
-the wisdom of blind submission to the judgment of
-his superiors. He goes to London to consult Dr. Bramston
-as to what he had better do, and he gives the result in
-a letter to Mr. Phillipps.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "London, <i>Feb</i>. 18, 1830.
-<br><br>
- "My Dear Ambrose,&mdash;I write from Bishop Bramston's
- study; he has left me there, and is gone to transact a little
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
- business in another room. I have passed through my interview
- with my father, and thank God for it. His kindness
- was very great, joined with great depth of feeling. I
- will tell you more of it soon, when we meet. I shall leave
- London on Saturday for Northampton, where I am to be at
- Lady Throckmorton's till Monday. I shall then proceed to
- Birmingham by a coach which passes through Northampton
- from Cambridge, at one or two o'clock. On the next day, Tuesday,
- I will go to Wolverhampton, where I hope to meet you,
- my dear brother. I shall have plenty more to tell you
- then. Now, let it suffice to say that all my family and
- Bishop Bramston are decidedly for the Roman plan. I
- suppose the Lord so intends it. His will be done and His
- glory advanced; I will be as wax in His hand. My father
- has made me quite comfortable for money, and in the most
- prudent way. Farewell, my brother, and believe me,<br>
- "Your affectionate<br>
- "George Spencer."
-</p>
-<p>
-He expressed his gratitude, again and again, for the
-manner in which his family received him, especially as he
-knew that his late step was looked upon by them as "an
-unmixed evil." They were even willing to receive him as
-a guest wherever they might be staying except at Althorp;
-and, at Dr. Bramston's suggestion, he agreed to these terms,
-as well as made up his mind not to go to Brington again, in
-compliance with his father's wishes. These matters he
-arranged in a few days; he pensioned off one or two of his
-servants, he made his will about his stock of sermons, and
-it was, "Give them to the new incumbent, and let him do
-what he likes with them."
-</p>
-<p>
-He had some difficulty in obeying his Bishop with regard
-to "the Roman plan," as he calls it. It was the first test
-of his obedience. He thought it was because the Bishop
-was weak enough to yield to the wishes of his family that
-he was sent. These wishes appeared to him to proceed from
-principles to which the Church's policy should not suit
-itself. There would be a noise made in the papers about
-his conversion, and his friends would have to answer
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">{204}</a></span>
-questions about him in inquisitive circles. His father did not
-wish him to go to Brington, and he himself was most
-anxious to use the influence he possessed over his dependants
-in order to their conversion. To avoid these inconveniences
-and clashing of motives they desired he might be
-absent from England for some time. Some of his friends
-also thought going to Rome would make him Protestant
-again; for, he says in a letter written a few days after his
-arrival in Rome, "You see now that coming to Rome does
-not open my eyes and make me wish myself a Protestant
-again. You may tell all Protestants that I am under no
-charm, and if anything occurs to make me see that ours is
-an apostate Church, I shall not, I trust, perversely suffer my
-fate to be bound up with hers, and consent to die in her
-plagues." The public parade of Catholic ceremonial had
-not formerly produced the best of effects upon him, and
-perhaps it was expected the old feelings would be revived
-by seeing the same things once more.
-</p>
-<p>
-The very reasons his friends had for detaining him might
-urge the Bishop to hasten his departure. His anxiety to
-go and preach Catholicity in Brington was not quite according
-to prudence, for though he might know the principal
-dogmas of faith and believe them firmly, he still needed that
-Catholic instinct and mode of thought which can nowhere
-be imbibed so quickly or so surely as in Rome. There are
-many traits of Protestant <i>viewiness</i> to be seen in his letters
-at this period, but,
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Quo semel imbuta est recens servabit odorem,
- Testa din."
-</p>
-<p>
-It would not have been so easy to bring these properly
-into subjection whilst he had the thousand-and-one forms of
-Protestant errors seething around him, and would be forced
-by his zeal to seek out ways of making Catholic truth approach
-them. Where everything was Catholic to the very
-core, in might and majesty, was the best school for tutoring
-him into Catholic feelings and ideas. It was well also
-to let him see the force of prejudice, by making him
-experience in himself how differently things seem according
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-to the state of one's mind. If he was shocked at Rome as
-a Protestant, it was well to let him know that it was because
-he was unable to understand as a Protestant what gave him
-so much joy and edification, when he could see with Catholic
-eyes.
-</p>
-<p>
-A courier was leaving London for Ancona, and as he did
-not see any reason for delay, he took a seat with him, and
-started for Rome on the 1st March, and arrived on the
-12th, the feast of St. Gregory. He contrived to make the
-acquaintance of Mr. Digby in Paris, and hear mass three
-times during his journey, which was considered a very
-quickly made one in those days. He also had a very
-pleasing interview with Cardinal Mezzofanti in passing
-through Bologna.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-Mr. Spencer In The English College, Rome.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-On the evening of his arrival in Rome he went to the
-English College and presented himself to Dr. Wiseman, the
-late Cardinal, who was the rector. Dr. Wiseman had heard
-of his conversion, but did not expect to see him so soon,
-and while they were conversing and giving and receiving
-explanations, two letters arrived by post from Bishops
-Bramston and Walsh, which put everything in its proper
-place. Here then we have this distinguished convert lodged
-in a student's cell to prepare for receiving real Orders in
-due time. He gives his impressions of the college in a letter
-to Mr. Phillipps, written about a week after his arrival, as
-follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have felt most completely comfortable and
- happy ever since I have been here. The life of the college
- is of course regular and strict. I could not have believed in
- the existence of a society for education such as this, half a
- year ago. Such discipline and obedience, united with
- perfect freedom and cordiality, is the fruit of the Catholic
- religion alone, in which we learn really to look on men as
- bearing rule in God's name, so that they need not keep up
- their influence by affectation of superiority and mysterious
- reserve. I do not know all the members of the college by
- name even yet, but, as far as I do, I can speak only in one
- language of them all. I have kept company principally
- with the rector and vice-rector, as I am not put on the
- footing of the ordinary students, being a <i>convictor</i>, that is,
- paying my own way, and also brought here under such
- peculiarity of circumstances as warrants some distinction,
- though I desire to make that as little as possible. I do not
- go with the others to the public schools, but am to study at
- home under Dr. Wiseman and Dr. Errington. The rules
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">{207}</a></span>
- of the house I observe, and indeed so do the rectors as the
- rest."
-</p>
-<p>
-The peace of sober college life could not long remain
-unalloyed, if it were to be lasting. Whilst Mr. Spencer was
-studying his Moral or Dogma by the little lamp, and unmoved
-except by the anxiety to read faster, in order to be
-sooner in the field to work for God, the world outside was
-not disposed to forget him. Various rumours were set
-afloat about Northampton concerning him; one would account
-for his sudden disappearance, another for his resignation
-of his living, a third would set about unravelling the
-popish plots of which he must have been a dupe. These
-were trifling pastimes, which could be ungrudgingly permitted
-for the better savouring of devout tea-parties: but
-surmise will not be content with all this. There was his
-housekeeper, who became ill immediately, and was near
-dying. What did that mean? Slanderous reports were set
-on foot, and the answer to them is the most complete refutation
-that could possibly be given, while it is at the same
-time a proof of his virtue. On May 17th, 1830, he thus
-writes from the English college to the housekeeper, who
-had mentioned the matter in a letter to him:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- .... "I see that it has pleased God that you should
- suffer under calumny; thank God, most undeserved. It is
- evident that this slander affects my character as much as
- yours, and there is hardly a state of life to be conceived
- where such imputations are more injurious than a priest's;
- yet if all men should believe it, and I should live and die
- under this evil report, God forbid I should willingly repine.
- It would be no trial to suffer calumny, if it was not at first
- a painful thing; and therefore I do not wonder, nor find
- fault with you, at your being greatly afflicted when you
- were so insulted and abused as you describe; but, my dear
- girl, you should not have <i>allowed</i> this to weigh upon your
- mind. You have more reason to grieve for this proof of
- how weak your faith and love to God is, than for the slander.
- I think it was a mistake that you did not tell me of this at
- Northampton. I trust I should then and shall always
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
- rejoice, when I am counted worthy to suffer reproach for the
- sake of Christ; and I thank God that such is this reproach.
- I deserve reproach enough, it is true; and both you and I,
- if we look through our past lives, shall see that we deserve
- this and much more for our sins. Let us then learn to
- accept the bitter words of unfeeling men, as David did the
- curses of Semei, as ordered by God for our chastening, that
- we may be purified by them, and He will then turn their
- calumnies into greater honour one day or other. Though
- you had better have told me, as I might have helped you at
- once to overcome your annoyance, yet it may have been
- better for you to suffer it thus long, that you may learn how
- much you do care for character, and may henceforth give
- that up as well as everything besides that you love on earth.
- If you are so afflicted at a false reproach against you, what
- would your feelings have been if the Lord had seen fit to
- prove you, by suffering you indeed to fall; and where is
- your strength or mine, that we should be innocent in anything
- for a day, except through His grace? Just think over
- the matter with yourself, and let this word of advice be
- sufficient, and let me have the happiness of knowing that
- you are again what I remember you, patient, and meek, and
- cheerful, and allowing nothing to concern you but to please
- God more and more, and work out your salvation. I see
- by your letter, which I look at again, that you certainly
- would have told me of this at Northampton, had you judged
- for yourself, and perhaps it was right that you should act in
- it as you were advised. Therefore, do not take what I say
- now as if I had anything but the sincerest love and respect
- for you; I only speak to warn you of your spiritual wants,
- in which I partake with you. A woman's feelings are more
- tender, of course, under such cruel insults. When my feelings
- are hurt I find the same proof that I do not love God
- as I ought to do, and surely we never can have too much of
- that love. How infinitely blessed are you that you are
- singled out from the herd of those who prosper in the world,
- and have all men speaking well of them, and are permitted
- to walk in the way by which alone we can attain to the
- kingdom set before us. Remember the most blessed and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">{209}</a></span>
- glorious Virgin, Mary, of all creatures the most beloved and
- most worthy to be loved of God, who was saluted by an
- angel as full of grace, and is now in heaven, Queen of
- Angels, and Prophets, and Apostles, and Martyrs. How
- was her infinite honour of being mother of God made the
- occasion of most cruel suspicions against her heavenly purity.
- If she was content to bear this with perfect meekness and
- humility for God's sake, surely you may say with her, 'be
- it done unto me according to thy word,' whether He shall
- order you to bear this or any other trouble. If occasion is
- put before you to prove yourself undeserving of such imputations,
- do not neglect to use it, for God's honour, which
- suffers by our being supposed guilty, and for the good of
- your slanderers, who may be brought to repentance by a due
- reproof; but take no pains about it, except in prayer to God,
- and in examining throughout all your past ways, what may
- be the cause of the affliction as ordered by Him. I am sure
- I can hardly find anything to accuse you of. I used to
- delight in your conversation, and you did in mine; but,
- thank God, great as my sins have been, I never, I believe,
- said a word to wound your delicacy, and you never transgressed
- the bounds of respect which a servant ought to show
- towards a master. But those who, for their own sorrow,
- will not learn what the joys of spiritual friendship are, cannot
- understand any intimacy but that which is sensual and
- gross. As, therefore, I left home so suddenly, and they
- could not again understand the possibility that my faith
- should be so suddenly established, and that, for the sake of
- it, I was willing to give up my home, and as you showed
- such emotion at learning that I was to leave you, these
- people had no way to account for the whole matter but
- imputing to us shameful guilt."
-</p>
-<p>
-From Mr. Spencer's charity before he became a Catholic
-we may conclude what it must have been now. It would
-seem that, in temporals, he had not those difficulties in the
-way of his conversion that beset many Protestant clergymen
-who depend solely on their livings. But, the sacrifices
-he willingly made, prove that the prospect of sheer want
-even would not have deterred him from following God's
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-call. A few days after his conversion he went to see the
-Dominican Fathers at Hinckley, and said, in conversation,
-"I suppose it is not lawful for me to receive the fruits of my
-benefice, now that I have ceased to be a minister of the
-Establishment." One of them said, "Certainly not." Whereupon
-he asked for a sheet of paper, wrote a letter to the
-Protestant bishop in a few minutes, resigning his cure, and
-simply said, as he impressed the seal, "There goes £3,000 a
-year." He was then wholly dependent on his father's
-bounty, and if unworthy motives had had any force with
-Earl Spencer, his son might have found himself penniless.
-From the allowance granted him he received monthly whilst
-in Rome much more than was sufficient to pay his way in
-the college. It was remarked, however, that the day after
-he got his money he had not a farthing in his possession,
-and on inquiry it was found that what remained from the
-college pension he distributed regularly among the poor.
-Dr. Wiseman turned the channel of his charity to a more
-profitable object, knowing how much he would be imposed
-on by the Roman beggars, and several monuments still look
-fresh in the chapel of the English College, which were repaired
-by what remained over and above what was absolutely
-necessary of his income. It seems as if he never could bear
-to be the possessor of money; he would scruple having it
-about him. He was known, even when a minister, to draw
-money out of the bank in Northampton, and give the last
-sixpence of it to the poor before he got to Brington.
-</p>
-<p>
-Before August, 1830, he received minor orders, and
-immediately after hears the news that Mary Wykes, his
-housekeeper, has become a Catholic. It is a singular fact
-that she took his conversion so to heart that she nearly died,
-and was yet the first to follow his example. She was delicate
-in health, of a respectable family in his parish, and Mr.
-Spencer acknowledges that he is under many obligations to
-her father. He settles an annuity of £25 or £30 a year
-upon her for life, and writes to her from the English College
-thus: "Pray to God to give you a tender devotion to her
-whom He loves above all creatures, and who of all creatures
-is the most pure, amiable, and exalted. I dare say you will
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-have found difficulty, as I have done, in overcoming the
-prejudices in which we have been brought up against devotion
-to the Saints of God; but let this very thing make you the
-more diligent in asking of God to give you that devotion
-to them which He delights in seeing us cultivate."
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 13th of March, <i>Sabbato Sitientis</i>, 1831, he received
-the Subdiaconate, This is the great step, as Catholics know,
-in the life of one destined for the priesthood. The Subdiaconate
-imposes perpetual celibacy, with the obligation of
-daily reciting the divine office, and it is then the young
-cleric is first styled Reverend. It is said that a few days
-after his receiving this sacred order, a message was sent him
-by his family not to become a priest, as it was feared his
-brother would have no issue, and George was looked to as
-the only source whence an heir presumptive could arise for
-the earldom. He simply answered, "You spoke too late,"
-an answer he would have given whether or no, as he had
-long ago determined never to marry. It was at this time
-also he wrote, at the request of the Bishop of Oppido, the
-<i>Account of my Conversion</i>,&mdash;a work well known to English
-readers.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-F. Spencer Is Ordained Priest.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Spencer, ever since he first turned completely to
-the service of God, was determined to do whatever he knew
-to be more perfect. He did not understand serving God by
-halves; he thought He deserved to be loved with "all our
-strength, all our mind, and above all things." This he knew
-to be a precept, a strict command given by our divine Lord.
-How it was to be observed was his difficulty. He was
-groping in the dark hitherto, and though not making many
-false steps, still far from clearly seeing his way to perfection.
-The exactness of Catholic theology, which sifts every question
-to the last atom, made him meet this one face to face.
-</p>
-<p>
-The first difficulty he had to master was the received
-axiom that <i>the religious state is more perfect than the secular</i>.
-He could not see how a vow, which apparently takes away a
-man's liberty, could increase the merit of actions done under
-it. As the vow of obedience is the principal one in religion,
-so much so that in some orders subjects are professed
-by promising obedience according to the rule, its explanation
-would remove the difficulty. Two things principally
-constitute the superiority of <i>vowed actions</i>. One, that they
-must be of a better good; the second, that the will is
-confirmed in the doing of them. A vow must be of a good
-better than another good&mdash;such as celibacy better than
-marriage, poverty better than riches, obedience to proper
-authority better than absolute liberty. The state of religion
-which takes these three walks of life as essential to its
-constitution is insomuch better than any other state. But the
-question comes, why not observe poverty, chastity, and
-obedience, without vowing them? "Would it not be better that
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
-the practice of these virtues should be spontaneous, than
-that a person should put himself under the moral necessity
-of not deviating from it? No; because it is a weak will
-which reserves to itself the right of refusing to persevere in
-a sacrifice. If a man intends to observe chastity, but reserves
-to himself the right to marry whenever he pleases,
-he signifies by his state of mind that he may some day
-repent of his choice, and makes provision for that defalcation.
-That is a want of generosity, it is a safety valve by
-which trusting to God's grace escapes, and perfection can
-never be attained while one has the least notion of the
-possibility of doing less for God than he does. "He that
-puts his hand to the plough and turns back is not worthy."
-By a vow, a person not only resolves to do for the present
-what is perfect, but to continue doing it for life, and as the
-person knows right well that his natural strength will not
-carry him through, he trusts the issue to God's goodness.
-This fixing of the will, and narrowing, as far as possible,
-the range of our liberty, is an assimilation of the present
-state to the state of the blessed. They do the will of God
-and cannot help doing it, they have no liberty of sinning,
-and the vow of obedience by which a man binds himself to
-do God's will, manifested to him through his superiors or
-his rule, takes away from him the least rational inclination
-for liberty to sin. Not only that, but he makes it a sin to
-recede from God one step, and he sacrifices to his Creator a
-portion of the liberty that is granted to us all. It is a sin
-for a man who has a vow of chastity to marry, though
-naturally he was perfectly free to do so. He sacrificed that
-freedom to God, and lest he might be inclined to backslide
-at any future day he put the barrier of this moral obligation
-behind him. The person under vow is God's peculiar
-property; all his actions are in a certain sense sacred, and
-of double merit in His sight. Be it remembered that
-a religious makes this sacrifice freely, and it is in this free
-dedication to God's service perpetually of body, soul, and
-possessions, without reserving the right to claim back anything
-for self, that the special excellence of the religious
-state consists.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">{214}</a></span>
-<p>
-There are several other less cogent arguments in favour
-of the religious state, as that without it we should not
-have the Evangelical virtues practised which form the principal
-part of the note of holiness in the Church. That it is
-easier to practice great virtue in a monastery than in the
-world, and that more religious have been canonized than
-seculars since the time of the martyrs.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Spencer came to understand that the religious
-state is more perfect than the secular, though he knew
-that many seculars are far more perfect than some religious,
-but one point he could never get over, and that was since
-vows undoubtedly do raise the merit of one's actions, why
-cannot people take and observe vows without shutting
-themselves up within the walls of a convent? He consulted
-many grave theologians, doctors, and even cardinals, for the
-solution of this problem. He was told, to be sure, that it
-was quite possible in the abstract to have a people observing
-vows, but that in practice it proved to be chimerical and
-Utopian. <i>What is possible can be done</i>, was his maxim, and
-he resolved to begin with himself. He was told by Dr.
-Wiseman and Cardinal Weld that he seemed to have a
-religious vocation. He wrote accordingly to his diocesan,
-Dr. Walsh, who dissuaded him from becoming a religious by
-saying that, though it was a better state, a secular priest
-could be more useful in England. Others differed from this
-opinion, but F. Spencer heard in it the voice of his
-Superior, and resolved to obey it for the present. This
-settled matters for the time, but his <i>view</i> could never be got
-out of his head. He gets thoroughly engrossed now with
-his approaching ordination. It grieves him to see souls lost
-in heresy and sin in a way that few grieve; for, the concern
-he felt for the spiritual destitution of his country began to
-tell upon his health. It is feared he will die; he begins to
-spit blood, and several consumptive symptoms alarm his
-physicians. He is removed to Fiumicino, and writes a long
-letter from his sick bed there to Mr. Phillipps. In this letter
-he hopes his friend may be caught into the Church like his
-patron, St. Ambrose. Here we have the first evidence of
-his getting thoroughly into a Catholic way of thinking.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-Nothing strikes a cold, careful, Catholic, who has been
-brought up in a Protestant atmosphere, so much as the
-wonderful familiarity of Spanish and Italian boys with the
-lives of the Saints. They quote a Saint for everything, and
-they can tell you directly how St. Peter of Alcantara would
-season his dinner, or how St. Rose of Lima would make
-use of ornaments. Father Spencer has paragraphs in every
-letter at this time full of hints taken from Saints' lives,
-showing that he evidently gave a great portion of his time
-to learn ascetic theology in these remarkable volumes. He
-is wishing also that Mr. Digby should become a priest, but
-in both cases he was doomed to be disappointed so far, though
-both his friends graced, by their virtues, the state of
-life in which they remained. He was ordained Deacon on
-the 17th December, Quater tense, 1831; and on the 26th of
-May, 1832, two years and four months after his reception
-into the Church, he was ordained Priest by Cardinal Zurla.
-He thus writes to Mr. Phillipps on the event: "I made my
-arrangements directly (on being called off suddenly to England)
-for ordination to the priesthood on St. Philip Neri's
-Day, and saying my first mass on the day following, which
-was Sunday. How will you sympathise with my joy when,
-in the middle of my retreat, Dr. Wiseman told me, what
-none of us had observed at first, that the 26th May was not
-only St. Philip's feast at Rome, but in England that of St.
-Augustine, our Apostle, and that he should ask Cardinal
-Zurla to ordain me in St. Gregory's Church, which his
-Eminence did. It was at St. Gregory's only that we learned
-from the monks that the next day was the deposition of
-Venerable Bede."
-</p>
-<p>
-The coincidences are really remarkable with regard to his
-destination for the English mission. He was born on the
-feast of the Apostle St. Thomas; he arrived in Rome, as a
-Catholic, on the feast of St. Gregory; he was ordained on the
-feast of St. Augustine of Canterbury; he said his first mass
-of St. Bede, by special leave from the Pope, on that Saint's
-day. He was ordained by a Cardinal of the Camaldolese
-branch of the Benedictine Order, to which St. Augustine
-belonged; and he got the blessing and commission of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-Pope Gregory XVI., a member of the same order; and
-under all these auspices set out directly for England.
-</p>
-<p>
-During his stay in Rome he made the acquaintance of our
-Father Dominic. This was a great happiness to him. Father
-Dominic was on fire for the conversion of England, and
-Father Spencer echoed back, with additions, every sentiment
-of his zealous soul. They spoke together, they wrote to
-each other, they got devout people to pray, and prayed
-themselves every day, for the conversion of England. We
-cannot know how far prayers go, we only know that the
-continual prayer of the just man availeth much; and therefore,
-it might not seem safe reasoning, to attribute effects that
-can be traced to other causes to the prayers of some devout
-servants of God. Without attempting to assign causes, we
-cannot help remarking the fact that these two holy souls
-began to pray, and enlist others in praying, for England's
-conversion in 1832, and that the first number of the "Tracts
-for the Times" appeared before the end of 1833. Neither
-of them had anything to do with the Tracts, if we except a
-few letters from Father Dominic in a Belgian newspaper, as
-writers or suggestors of matter; but both took a deep
-interest in them, and fed their hopes, as each appeared more
-Catholic than the one before. He spends a week with
-Father Dominic in Lucca, on his way to England, and in
-Geneva happened one of those interesting events with which
-his life was chequered. He thus tells it in a letter to the
-<i>Catholic Standard</i> in 1853:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I went one day, at Genoa
- (see Chap. IX., Bk. i.), in 1820, to see the great relics in the
- treasury of the Cathedral. Relics, indeed, were little to
- me; but to get at these, three keys from various first-rate
- dignitaries, ecclesiastical and civil, were necessary. This
- was enough to make a young English sight-seer determined
- to get at them. A young priest, the sacristan of the Cathedral,
- received me and the party I had made up to accompany
- me, and showed us the precious treasures. I did nothing
- but despise; and yet why should I, or other Protestants,
- look on it as a kind of impossibility that any relic can be
- genuine? However, so I did; and I let the sacristan
- plainly know it. Yet he was not vexed. Nay, he treated
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
- me with great affection, and said, among other things, 'The
- English are a worthy, good people, <i>brava nazione</i>; if only
- it had not been for that moment, that unhappy moment!'
- 'What moment do you mean?' said I. 'Ah! surely,' he
- replied, 'when Henry VIII. resolved on revolting against
- the Church.' I did not answer, but I thought within
- myself, 'Poor man, what ignorance! what infatuation!
- And what were my thoughts of that moment of which he
- spoke? My thoughts on this head had been formed in my
- young days, and, oh! how deep are first young thoughts
- allowed to take firm root undisturbed! When I was a
- child"&mdash;&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-Here he relates the discourse of his sisters'
-governess about the English Reformation, given in a former
-chapter. "When, accordingly, the Genoese priest thus spoke
-I thought, Poor, blind man! little he knows what England
-gained at that same moment for which he pities it. ...
-I cannot but add to this last circumstance, that twelve years
-later I was returning from Rome&mdash;a priest! I came by sea.
-Stopping one day in the harbour of Genoa, I went on shore
-to say mass at the Cathedral, and found the same priest still
-at the head of the sacristy&mdash;the same benign features I saw,
-but somewhat marked with age. I asked him did he remember
-and recognise the young English disputer?
-<i>O altitudo</i>! .... And is it I whom they would expect
-to give up my poor countrymen for hopeless? No! leave
-this to others, who have not tasted like me the fruits of the
-tender mercies of God."
-</p>
-<p>
-As soon as he arrived in England, he went to see his
-family, who were in Ryde for the summer, according to
-their custom. He was cordially welcomed; but it must
-seem a cold thing for a newly-ordained priest to come to a
-home where not a brother or sister would kneel to get his
-blessing, nor father nor mother be in ecstacy of joy at hearing
-him say mass for the first time. This was in July, 1832.
-Early in August he met several priests at Sir Edward
-Doughty's, Upton House, Dorsetshire; and Lady Doughty
-says:&mdash;"Mr. Spencer greatly edified all who then met him
-by his humility, fervour, and earnest desire for the
-conversion of England. On the 11th of August he left Upton,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-accompanied by Dr. Logan, for Prior Park. On that morning,
-as the coach from Poole passed at an early hour, Mr.
-Spencer engaged one of the men servants to serve his mass
-at five o'clock. The servant went to call him soon after four,
-but finding the room apparently undisturbed, he proceeded to
-the little domestic chapel, and there he found Mr. Spencer
-prostrate before the altar in fervent prayer, and he then rose
-and said mass; the servant's conviction being, that he had
-been there in prayer all night."
-</p>
-<p>
-An incident occurred, as Father Spencer was passing
-through Bordeaux on his way to England, which deserves
-especial mention, if only to recall the droll pleasure he used
-to experience himself, and create in others, while relating it.
-He met there a great, big, fat convert, who had just made
-his abjuration and been baptised. Father Spencer questioned
-him about his first communion, and the trouble of
-preparing himself "in his then state of body" seemed an
-awful exertion. However, after a great deal of what the
-gentleman termed "painful goading," Father Spencer succeeded
-in bringing him to the altar. The fat gentleman sat
-him down afterwards to melt in the shade of a midsummer
-June day in Bordeaux, grumbling yet delighted at the exertion
-he had made. The Bishop of Bordeaux was giving
-confirmation in some of the churches in the town, and
-Father Spencer thought he should not lose the opportunity
-of getting his fat friend to the sacrament. He knew how
-hateful exertion of any kind was to the neophyte, who,
-though he believed all the Catholic doctrines in a kind of a
-heap, was not over-inclined for works of supererogation.
-He resolved to do what he could. He went to him, and
-boldly told him that he ought to prepare himself for
-confirmation. "What!" exclaimed the gentleman, making an
-effort to yawn, "have I not done yet? Is there more to be
-got through before I am a perfect Catholic? Oh, dear!"
-And he moved himself. He was brought through, however,
-to the no small inconvenience of himself and others, and
-many was the moral Father Ignatius pointed afterwards
-with this first essay of his in missionary work.
-</p>
-<p>
-At Prior Park, Father Spencer met Dr. Walsh, and he
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">{219}</a></span>
-was appointed to begin a new mission in West Bromwich;
-he sets about it immediately, and gets an altar for it from
-Lord Dormer in Walsall. He met Dr. Wiseman, who came
-to England about this time, and they are both invited by
-Earl Spencer to spend a day at Althorp. The Earl was
-charmed with Dr. Wiseman, and Father Spencer exclaims,
-in a letter, "What a grand point was this! A Catholic
-priest, and a D.D., rector of a Catholic college, received
-with distinction at a Protestant nobleman's!" He met
-some of his old parishioners, and was welcomed by them
-with love and kind remembrances. His church in West
-Bromwich was opened on the 21st November, 1832, and
-he was settled down as a Catholic pastor near where he
-hunted as a Protestant layman, and preached heresy as a
-Protestant minister.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-F. Spencer Begins His Missionary Life.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Far different is the position on which Mr. Spencer enters
-towards the close of 1832, from that which he was promoted
-to in 1825. Then he took the cure of souls with vague notions
-of his precise duty; now he took the cure of souls as
-a clearly defined duty, for the fulfilment of which he knew
-he should render a severe account. Then he received a
-large income from the bare fact of his being put in possession
-of his post; now he has to expend even what he has
-in trying to provide a place of worship for his flock. Then,
-there were eight hundred souls under his charge, most of
-them wealthy and comfortable, and all looking up to him
-with respect for being his father's son; now he could scarcely
-count half that number as his own, scattered among hovels
-and garrets; amid their more opulent neighbours, who mocked
-him for being a priest. He then dwelt with pleasure on his
-rich benefice, and on the rising walls of his handsome
-rectory; now he prayed the bishop to put him into the
-poorest mission in the diocese, and delighted in being housed
-like the poor. The life he led as a priest in West Bromwich
-is worthy of the ancient solitaries. He began by
-placing all his property in the bishop's hands, and his lordship
-appointed an <i>Econome</i>, who gave him now and again
-such sums as he needed to keep himself alive, give something
-to the poor, and supply his church with necessaries.
-He keeps an account of every farthing he spends, and shows
-it to the Bishop at the end of the quarter, to see if his
-lordship approves, or wishes anything to be retrenched for the
-future. His ordinary course of life was&mdash;rise at six,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-Meditation Office and Mass, hear some confessions, and, after
-breakfast, at ten, go out through the parish until six, when he
-came home to dinner, and spent the time that was left till
-supper in instructing catechumens, reading, praying, or
-writing. He had no luxuries, no comforts, he scarcely
-allowed himself any recreation, except in doing pastoral
-work. He leaves two rooms of his little house unfurnished,
-and says he has something else to do with the money that
-might be thus spent. Much as he loved Mr. Phillipps, he
-did not go to see him after his marriage, because he thought
-it was not necessary to spend money in that way which could
-alleviate the poverty of a parishioner; and because he did
-not like to be a day absent from his parish work as long as
-God gave him strength. During the first year of his residence
-at West Bromwich he opens three schools; one of
-them had been a pork-shop, and was bought for him by a
-Catholic tradesman. Here he used to come and lecture once
-or twice a week, and is surprised and pleased to find a
-well-ordered assembly ready to listen to him. He says in a letter
-at this time: "I go to bed weary every night, and enjoy my
-sleep more than great people do theirs; for it is the sleep of
-the labourer." He is rather sanguine in his hopes of
-converting Protestants; but, although he receives a good many
-into the Church, he finds error more difficult to root out
-than he imagined. He bears up, however, and a letter to
-Mr. Phillipps will tell us what he thought; he says: "Keep
-England's conversion always next your heart. It is no small
-matter to overturn a dynasty so settled and rooted as that of
-error in this country; and how are we possibly to expect
-that we shall be made instruments to effect this, unless we
-become in some measure conformable to the characters of the
-Saints who have done such things before us? Yet let us not
-give up the undertaking, for as, on the one hand, no one has
-succeeded without wonderful labour and patience, so, on the
-other, none ever has failed when duly followed up. Let
-us not be discouraged by opposition, but work the more
-earnestly: and as we see people about some hard bodily
-exertion begin with their clothes on, but, when they find
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-the difficulty of their job, strip first the coat, then the
-waistcoat, then turn up their sleeves, and so on, we must do
-the same. God does not give success at once, because He
-wishes us better than to remain as we are, fettered and
-attached to the world. If we succeeded before all this encumbrance
-is stripped off, we should certainly not get rid of it
-afterwards." He did "turn up his sleeves," and toil, no
-doubt, at converting his neighbours; he opened a new mission
-in Dudley towards the Christmas of 1833; he first
-began in an old warehouse, which he fitted up with a chapel
-and seats, and turned one or two little houses adjoining into
-a sacristy and sitting-room for the priest who might come
-there to officiate.
-</p>
-<p>
-He goes on in this even course for the whole of the two
-first years of his life in West Bromwich, without any striking
-event to bring one part more prominently forward than
-another. His every day work was not, however, all plain
-sailing; in proportion as his holiness of life increased the
-reverence Catholics began to conceive for him, it provoked
-the persecution and contempt of the Protestants. He was
-pensive generally, and yet had a keen relish for wit and
-humour. He was one day speaking with a brother priest in
-his sacristy, with sad earnestness, about the spiritual
-destitution of the poor people around him, who neither knew
-God, nor would listen to those who were willing to teach
-them. A poor woman knocked at the sacristy door, and was
-ordered to come in; she fell on her knees very reverently,
-to get Father Spencer's blessing, as soon as she approached
-him. His companion observed that this poor woman reminded
-him of the mother of the sons of Zebedee, who came
-to Our Saviour <i>adorans</i>. "Yes," replied Father Spencer, with
-a very arch smile, "and not only <i>adorans</i>, but <i>petens aliquid
-ah eo</i>" Such was his usual way; he would season his discourse
-on the most important subject&mdash;even go a little out
-of his way for that purpose&mdash;with a pointed anecdote, or
-witty remark.
-</p>
-<p>
-All did not feel inclined to follow the old woman's example
-in the first part of the above scene, though many were led
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">{223}</a></span>
-to do so through their love and practice of the second. A
-person sent us the following letter, who still lives on the spot
-that was blessed by this holy priest's labours, and as it bears
-evidence to some of the statements we have made from other
-sources, it may be well to give it insertion:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was one of his first converts at West Bromwich, and
- a fearful battle I had; but his sublime instructions taught
- me how to pray for the grace of God to guide me to his true
- Church. He was ever persecuted, and nobly overcame his
- enemies. I remember one morning when he was going his
- accustomed rounds to visit the poor and sick, he had to pass
- a boys' school, at Hill Top; they used to hoot after him low
- names, but, seeing he did not take any notice, they came
- into the road and threw mud and stones at him; he took no
- notice. Then they took hold of his coat, and ripped it up
- the back. He did not mind, but went on all day, as usual,
- through Oldbury, Tipton Oudley, and Hill Top, visiting his
- poor people. He used to leave home every morning, and
- fill his pockets with wine and food for the poor sick, and
- return home about six in the evening, without taking any
- refreshment all day, though he might have walked twenty miles
- in the heat of summer. One winter's day he gave all his
- clothes away to the poor, except those that were on him.
- He used to say two Masses on Sunday, in West Bromwich,
- and preach. I never saw him use a conveyance of any kind
- in his visits through his parish."
-</p>
-<p>
-It could not be expected that the newspapers would keep
-silence about him. He gets a little in that way, which he
-writes about, as follow:&mdash;"Eliot (an apostate) has been
-writing in divers quarters that I know of, and I dare say in
-many others (for he was very fond of letter-writing), the most
-violent abuse of the Catholic Church, and of all her priests,
-excepting me, whom he pities as a wretched victim of priest-craft.
-I still hope there is some strange infatuation about
-him which may dissipate, and let him return; but if not,
-the Church has ramparts enough to stand his battering, and
-I am not afraid of my little castle being shaken by him. I
-feel desirous rather than not that he should publish the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
-worst he can about me and mine in the Protestant papers.
-It will help to correct us of some faults, and bring to light,
-perhaps, at the same time, something creditable to our
-cause."
-</p>
-<p>
-He must have felt the extraordinary change in his state
-of mind and duty now to what he experienced some four or
-five years before. There are no doubts about doctrines, nor
-difficulties about Dissenters; his way is plain and clear,
-without mist or equivocal clause; there is but one way for
-Catholics of being united with heretics&mdash;their unconditional
-submission to the Church. There is no going half-way to
-meet them, or sacrificing of principles to soothe their
-scruples; either all or none&mdash;the last definition of the
-Council of Trent, as well as the first article of the Apostles'
-Creed. If he has difficulties about any matter, he will not
-find Bishops giving him shifting answers, and seemingly
-ignorant themselves of what is the received interpretation
-of a point of faith. He will be told at once by the next
-priest what is the doctrine of the Church, and if he refuses
-to assent to it he ceases to be a Catholic. This looks an
-iron rule in the Church of God, and those outside her
-cannot understand how its very unbending firmness consoles the
-doubtful, cheers the desponding, strengthens the will and
-expands and nourishes the intellect.
-</p>
-<p>
-A priest has many consolations in his little country parish
-that few can understand or appreciate. It is not the number
-and efficiency of his schools, the round of his visits, or the
-frequency of his instructions. No; it is the offering of the
-Victim of Salvation every morning for his own and his
-people's sins, and it is the conveying the precious blood
-of his Saviour to their souls, through the Sacraments he
-administers. Only a priest can understand what it is to feel
-that a creature kneels before him, steeped in vice and sin,
-and, after a good confession, rises from his knees, restored to
-God's grace and friendship. All his labours have this one
-object&mdash;the putting of his people into the grace of God, and
-keeping them in it until they reach to their reward. There
-is a reality in all this which faith alone can give that makes
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">{225}</a></span>
-him taste and feel the good he is doing. A reality that will
-make him fly without hesitation to the pestilential deathbed,
-and glory in inhaling a poison that may end his own days, in
-the discharge of his duty. He must be ever ready to give
-his life for his sheep, not in fancy or in words, but in very
-deed, and thus seal by his martyrdom both the truth which
-he professes, and his love for the Master whom he has been
-chosen to serve.
-</p>
-<p>
-The number of priests who die every year, and the average
-of a missionary priest's life, prove but too clearly how
-often the sacrifice is accepted.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Prospects Of Widening His Sphere Of Action.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Towards the close of the year 1834, Earl Spencer died.
-George, of course, felt it deeply; he loved his father with,
-if possible, more than filial affection, for he could look up
-since his childhood to his paternal example; and all the
-virtue he was able to practise during his younger days,
-despite the occasions into which he was cast, he attributed
-chiefly to the influence of his father's authority. The
-country lost a statesman, and the Catholics an advocate in
-the noble earl; his death was therefore regretted by more
-than his immediate family; but there was one great reason
-why his son felt so deeply&mdash;his father had not died a Catholic.
-There were many things to make up for his exclusion from
-the <i>mementoes</i> of his son in the mass, as not being one of
-those <i>qui nos praecesserunt cum signo fidei</i>; such as, his real
-natural goodness, his acting up to his lights, and his kind
-treatment of his son; but they were, of course, poor, weak
-assuagements to the stern fact that he could not pray publicly
-for the repose of his soul, and only, by the merest conditional
-permission, even privately. Father Spencer goes shortly
-after to Althorp. The new earl thinks proper to prohibit
-his brother speaking to any except those of his own rank
-while visiting there. He had, of course, his reasons, but it
-was a sore trial to Father Spencer, who ever loved the poor,
-and never felt so happy as when exercising his patience in
-listening to the detailed account of their sufferings, or in
-trying to relieve them by words or alms. He put up with
-it, and a <i>thank God</i> soon made him at home amid lords and
-ladies for the time of his short stay.
-</p>
-<p>
-It may strike some person as a very strange thing that
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-this illustrious convert and great saint, as he really was and
-appeared to be, should be shut up in a poor hamlet whose
-name does not appear even on railway maps, and not located
-in some resort of pride and fashion. But the Honourable
-and Reverend George Spencer had seen enough of fashion
-and gentility to be thoroughly disgusted with both the one
-and the other. He understood no way of going to heaven
-except that which Our Lord pointed out to us and went
-Himself first for us to follow, the way of the cross in poverty
-and humility. Hence he applied to Bishop Walsh for the
-poorest and worst mission in the diocese. If one will not
-be inclined to give this good Bishop credit for forwarding
-the apostolical intentions of his young priest, let him know
-that there might be also a more inferior motive why he
-should accede to his request. Priests with private incomes
-can better subsist in poor missions than those who depend
-on the charity of their flocks; and we find at present that
-many, who have property of their own, are appointed,
-notwithstanding the honourable and creditable prefixes to their
-names, to missions which are not able to support a priest
-from their internal resources. These two reasons put
-together will account for the placing of the Hon. and Rev.
-George Spencer in the mission of West Bromwich.
-</p>
-<p>
-St. Thomas defines zeal, "an intense love by which one is
-moved against and repels whatever is detrimental to the
-good of his friend, and does his best to prevent whatever is
-against the honour or the will of God." Alphonsus Rodrigues
-says: "It is the love of God on fire, and a vehement
-desire that He should be loved, honoured, and adored by
-all; and so intense is it, that he who burns therewith tries
-to communicate its heat to every one." This effect of zeal
-is the special gleam by which the shining of great saints can
-be distinguished from ordinary servants of God. They are
-filled with the love of God, they overflow with it, and dash
-off floods that sweep down vice and sin by their impetuosity.
-When obstacles occur to show that the time is not opportune,
-or that the sluices should not yet be drawn, the saints
-are far from languishing into ordinary ways. No; the
-springs are open afresh, their hearts are filling the more
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">{228}</a></span>
-they are pent up, and seek avenues on every side and
-in every way in which they may possibly allow some
-heavenly water to escape. Such was the zeal of St. Chrysostom,
-who would be blind if his audience could but see.
-Such was the love of St. Francis Xavier, who went through
-unknown and almost inaccessible regions to convert the
-heathen. Such was the love of St. Teresa, who sighed that
-she was not a man, because her sex and state forbade her to
-be an apostle. Such was the Psalmist, when he said, "The
-zeal of Thy house has eaten me up."
-</p>
-<p>
-The difference between heavenly zeal and fanaticism is,
-that one is willing to be directed, the other breaks the bonds
-of authority. One acts sweetly and consistently, the other
-intemperately and rashly. One distrusts self, the other
-begins and ends with self.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Spencer was full of zeal. It was, in fact, his zeal
-that brought him into the Church. Now that he found
-himself commissioned to propagate God's kingdom, his zeal
-arose to that of the saints, and began to burst forth and
-devise means by which that kingdom could be speedily and
-perfectly spread. He devised plans for the sanctification of
-the clergy by introducing a kind of religious life amongst
-them; he formed plans for the perfection of the laity, after
-an old but abandoned model, which will be described; he
-had conceived plans of founding a religious institute, of
-which a devout soul he knew was to be first rev. mother;
-he had plans of preaching, away at some place or places
-which he does not tell us about; he had plans for finding
-out the secret by which the Jesuits became such successful
-missionaries; he had plans of going to Cambridge for an
-installation, and bearding the lion of heresy and error in
-his very den;&mdash;and all these he proposed from time to time
-to his director and diocesan superior, but all met the one
-fate of being drowned by the cold water thrown upon them.
-He complains a little, in a letter he wrote at this time, of
-"the slowness of Catholic prelates with regard to schemes;"
-but after being told to lay them aside, he resigns himself with
-perfect submission. He finds out, in a short time, that the
-Catholic prelates were right, and he drops his wings completely,
-by saying: "I am resolved to give up forming plans
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-for the future, and I shall try to gain more love of God and
-devotion to the Blessed Virgin. This again He must give me,
-and Mary must gain it for me; or rather, I must charge her
-to persevere in making this request for me, whether I forget
-it occasionally or not." Besides the crossing of his plans, he
-has another cross to endure; he loves to visit Hagley, where
-Lady Lyttelton, his sister, generally lived, and he is received
-only on condition that he will not speak of religion. This he
-feels hard, as he loved this sister very much, and thought he
-could not show a greater proof of his affection than that of
-communicating to her, if possible, what he prized more than
-his life&mdash;his faith.
-</p>
-<p>
-One plan he forms, however, which does not meet with
-the disapproval of his superiors, and that was, to go to
-London and beg among his aristocratic friends for funds for
-a new church he intended building at Dudley. He seems
-to have succeeded pretty well, as there is a nice gothic
-church there at present, which was built by him. We have
-only one peculiar incident of his first begging tour.
-</p>
-<p>
-He took it into his head to go and ask a subscription of
-the Duchess of Kent, mother to our Queen. He was received
-kindly by the Duchess, and the Princess Victoria was
-allowed to be present at the conversation. Father Spencer
-spoke for some time about the lamentable state of England,
-on account of its religious divisions; he gave a short account
-of his own conversion, and wound up by putting forward
-the claims of the Catholic Church to the obedience of all
-Christians, as there ought to be but one fold under one
-shepherd. It may be said that he formed a very favourable
-opinion of the Princess from this meeting; he said once,
-when relating the story: "I considered the Princess very
-sensible and thoughtful. She listened with great attention
-to everything I said, and maintained a respectful silence,
-because she sat beside her mother. I had great hopes of her
-then, and so far they have not been disappointed. I hope
-ye will all pray for her, and we may one day have the pleasure
-of seeing her a Catholic." This he said in 1863, and
-then he was firmly convinced that the Duchess herself had
-died a Catholic.
-</p>
-<p>
-He returned soon to his mission in West Bromwich, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
-writes, in a letter to Mr. Phillipps: "I had a project in my
-head when I returned, more extensive than any that filled
-it of late. That is, going to Dublin to see if there I might
-find some unknown mine out of which I could draw what I
-want for Dudley. This soon grew into the thought of a
-tour round Ireland, and the subject of collecting alms for
-Dudley soon began to look trivial and secondary. I could
-hardly contain myself at the thoughts of preaching all over
-Ireland the conversion of England, and exhorting them all
-to forget their earthly miseries in the view of our spiritual
-ones, and to begin to retaliate the evils they have endured
-in the way of the true Christian, not by violent opposition,
-but by rendering good a thousandfold, or rather beyond
-reckoning." This scheme was put off for some time, by
-the advice of the Rev. Mr. Martyn, who seems to have been
-his director.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the beginning of August, 1835, Father Spencer got a
-severe attack of illness: it proceeded principally from over-exertion.
-He began to spit blood, and as soon as his friends
-heard of it, his sister, Lady Lyttelton, and his brother-in-law,
-Lord George Quin, came for him and took him to
-Hagley, where he might be carefully nursed until he should
-recover. They set him down to say mass in Stourbridge,
-and allowed him all the spiritual aid he wished for, even
-going so far as to invite a priest to come and stay with him,
-and make Hagley his home for the time. This was in keeping
-with their usual kindness, and Father Spencer never
-forgot it; nay, he would treasure up the least act of kindness
-done him by any one, much more so when received from
-those who differed from him in religious matters. He
-writes now, apparently under the shadow of death: one
-thing looks strange to him when he thinks of dying, that
-he cannot see why God gives him such a strong desire for
-an apostolic life if it be not sometime carried into effect.
-"It may be that He will give me the merit of the desires
-without their accomplishment, but this seems less probable.
-His will be done. I only mention this to prevent your
-being discouraged on my account. What is an illness in His
-sight? It is easier to restore me my vigour than at first to
-give it to me. Let us only wait prepared for quick
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-obedience to His call, whether for this world or the next." In
-another letter, written about the same time, he says:
-"What I am further to do must be decided by my present
-<i>bodily</i> director, Dr. Johnstone, to whom for my correction
-and humiliation the Bishop has committed me."
-</p>
-<p>
-It seems most likely that he wrote the autobiography
-during this illness; it has the marks and tokens of his then
-state of mind upon the first part of it at least.
-</p>
-<p>
-After his recovery there is talk of his being made a
-bishop, and some of his friends are doing their best, by
-writing and so forth, to help his promotion to the mitre. No
-better idea can be given of the way he felt with regard to
-this matter, than by introducing a letter he wrote at the
-time to one of his friends:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"I know you are as eager about
-everything that concerns me as about your own matters;
-and that you are now boiling to come and be busy about
-this most interesting affair. Yet it will prove better to go
-on quietly. To be sure I should exult if it please God
-of His own will to enlarge my powers and faculties of
-advancing His kingdom, trusting to Him to furnish me with
-graces sufficient; but the call must be clear, and His will
-manifest, or, I thank God, I have made up my mind to
-answer, I stir not. And how can I know this but by the
-rule of obedience? Many reasons strike me <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>.
-immediately; but these I had better not meditate upon. I
-shall leave it to Dr. Walsh to decide whether I accept or do
-not. I cannot be right any other way. If he chooses to
-hear me plead the cause for myself, stating what I think
-are the motives <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>.,
-I will do it when he likes; if
-not, it is certainly better not to go against him. I was at
-Prior Park three years ago, when Dr. Baines knows that I
-refused the offer of an Irish clergyman to propose me for
-an Irish bishopric, on Dr. Walsh's judgment, and he approved
-of that decision. No doubt he will of this."
-</p>
-<p>
-We hear nothing further of this, so it is likely Dr.
-Walsh judged it proper for him to refuse the contemplated
-honour.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-Newspaper Discussions, Etc.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-From the end of the year 1835 to the middle of 1836,
-Father Spencer was more or less engaged in newspaper
-controversy with some ministers. The first champion of Protestantism,
-or rather assailant of Catholicism, he condescended
-to argue with was a Mr. Gideon Ouseley. This gentleman
-is described in a letter written at the time as a "Low
-Church parson, or Methodist, of Armagh." There may be
-some distinction between the two characters, but it is only
-fair to say that we freely grant him the benefit of the
-doubt. They had a paper fight about the usual topics of
-controversy, beginning with mis-statements of doctrine from
-Mr. Ouseley and explanations from Mr. Spencer, and continuing
-through a very brisk parrying of logical thrusts to
-a conclusion which ended by the newspaper refusing to
-insert any more letters. Some good effects may have been
-produced by the controversy, which seldom happens, and
-also some breaches of charity; but there is one circumstance
-worthy to be mentioned, though perhaps it cannot
-well be traced back to <i>The Watchman</i> newspaper, that this
-same Rev. Gideon Ouseley is, at the time these pages are
-writing, the officiating chaplain of the <i>soi-disant</i> monks of
-Norwich, Br. Ignatius and his companions.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next adversary was a Mr. Dalton. Father Spencer
-expends some very good arguments on him, among others,
-the following in the first letter: "You and other Protestants
-may say that they consider this doctrine (transubstantiation)
-unscriptural; but the arguments by which you endeavour to
-impugn it never are scriptural. I once used to argue against
-it myself, and the best arguments I could find were from
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">{233}</a></span>
-reason." There may be fault found with this argument,
-because a thing could be unscriptural, though its denial or
-refutation were not; but F. Spencer establishes the positive
-side of the question afterwards. And the argument was
-good thus far that its denial is an Article of the 39, which
-should be proved by "sure warranty of Scripture." He
-does so in a passage which begins thus: "If Scripture be
-appealed to simply, I know not how any one can deny that
-it speaks altogether in our favour, whenever the Eucharist
-is mentioned or alluded to. When we are asked for proofs
-of our doctrine we invariably begin by an appeal to the
-simple words of Christ given in Scripture. 'This is my body,'
-'This is my blood,' which, taken as they stand, can agree
-with no doctrine but the Catholic."
-</p>
-<p>
-F. Spencer thought he had a gentleman to deal with in
-his adversary, but found that he had overrated the attributes
-his charity supposed him to possess. He pointed an argument
-upon the unity of our teachers as contradistinguished from
-sectarian ones, by bringing in Mr. Dalton and his brother
-us an example. At this Dalton took offence, and F. Spencer
-made a most ample and beautiful apology. This evoked all
-the bile of his opponent in a flourish of trumpets, by which
-he boasted of a post relinquished in the argument, which
-really argued gain in F. Spencer as a Christian antagonist.
-He flung out then in glorious confusion&mdash;imperfect councils,
-bad popes, Spanish inquisitions, just as they came to hand.
-When Spencer saw this, he thought of answering him according
-to his folly, and instead of analyzing his "concentrated
-lozenge," wrote something in the style of cudgelling
-him for the fun of the thing next time. Here is an extract
-from his next letter, which is produced more as a specimen
-of his humour than of his logic:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p>
-A sentence of Mr. Dalton's letter ran thus:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But let
- me first remind you what our view of private judgment is.
- Do we mean that every man may set up as an interpreter
- of Scripture, that every shoemaker and ploughman (as
- Catholics say) may become a preacher? By no means; we
- recognise authority when it is scriptural, and believe that an
- authorized ministry is God's mode of extending the Bible."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">{234}</a></span>
-<p>
-Father Spencer replies:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Now this sentence suggests
- so many reflections to me that I hardly know which way to
- begin with it. I will first try what a little paraphrase will
- do, and explain what I think might perchance have been in
- your mind when you wrote it, and you may tell me whether
- I am near the mark before I make further comments on it.
- I would figure you to myself as reasoning thus with your
- self:&mdash;The right of private judgment must be maintained
- in some form, or else even we ministers shall not be able to
- stand our ground against the Romanists. If we allow of
- any reasonable notion of Church authority when we talk to
- them, they will hook us up again, and we shall not be able
- to assert even our own liberty to interpret as we like. But,
- on the other hand, if we put away talking of Church authority
- when we mount our pulpits, and impart the word to
- our hitherto obedient poor followers, they will begin to ask
- themselves, what need, then, is there of our reverend
- guides? Why should we pay any more tithes, and seat
- rents, and church rates, and Easter offerings, and the like?
- Yea! then would be sad danger that our craft would come
- to be set at nought, and the Temple of Great Diana (the
- Church of Great Elizabeth) would be reputed for nothing,
- and therefore we must teach people that there is such a
- thing as ministerial authority at least, if we cannot make
- much of an attempt to prove ecclesiastical authority; we
- must take care to maintain that to be capable of being a
- minister, a man must be able to read the New Testament in
- Greek, and the Old in Hebrew, at least, have a smattering
- of Hebrew, or else we shall have shoemakers and plough-men
- setting up opposition without being able to put them
- down; for they will be able to match us in what we must
- hold forth as the grand proof of the ministry, viz., that a
- man should be able to quote texts at pleasure, and talk
- about them so rapidly and unintelligibly as to make a
- congregation think him mighty wise and deeply spiritual.
- Such are the men who must be proclaimed worthy of great
- honour and admiration, but, above all, of ample revenues.
- Never mind how many contradictory systems enter into
- their respective reverend heads, we must persuade the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
- people, as long as they will swallow it, that they all speak
- by the Holy Ghost. It would, indeed, be more according
- to Scripture and reason, if all who professed to be led by
- the Spirit taught one doctrine; but this we can never bring
- about, unless we all get back to popery: and, indeed, it is
- not needful, nor even expedient, for the purpose we have
- before us, which is not to speak sound words which cannot
- be reproved, but such words as will keep together our congregation,
- and suit their tastes. Now as the tastes of men
- are so various, it is absolutely necessary that the doctrines
- we give them should vary too, and, therefore, as we know
- that Bible truth is but one, and the Bible, nevertheless, is
- the book out of which we must all pretend to teach, we
- cannot sufficiently praise the cleverness of those gifted
- individuals, who, by organizing a sort of skirmishing ministry,
- to take the place of the old uniform heavy phalanx of the
- Romanists, one fit <i>to extend the truth of the Bible</i>, so as to
- suit the tastes of all sorts of men, have enabled so many of
- us to extract from the pockets of all a genteel maintenance
- for our wives and families. I have in this paraphrase
- found myself obliged to pass over one word when you speak
- of <i>God's</i> mode of <i>extending</i> the truth of the Bible. This
- operation, I think, God had never anything to do with. I
- believe that 1,800 years ago, God did, by his only Son,
- institute a ministry as his mode of <i>preserving</i> the truth of
- the Bible, but <i>extending</i> the truth of the Bible is a very
- different sort of affair. These words, though rather obscure,
- yet seem to convey very felicitiously the idea of what the
- Gospel ministers of the present day have accomplished, that
- is, making the Bible truth so extensive as to embrace all
- the various contradictory systems&mdash;Church of England,
- High, Low, Evangelical, <i>et hoc genus omne</i>. But the time
- would fail me to tell a tenth part of the glorious variety
- which the spiritual bill of fare of the nineteenth century
- presents to the dainty taste of our countrymen. This plan
- of truth extension is a wonder which was reserved for the
- wisdom of our preachers to contrive and to develope, under
- the guidance of a wiser spirit than that of man, and yet
- certainly not the spirit of God. The ancient saints had no
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
- more idea of it than Archimedes had of a hydraulic press.
- I have taken the liberty of playing upon your exposition of
- authority, to show how vain it is to attempt to uphold anything
- like a legitimate authority, and the right of private
- judgment together. I do not wonder that you got rather
- into a perplexity in trying to explain how they may be
- reconciled. The Church of England has tried to explain
- this matter in her 20th Article, but finds it too hard. She
- just says, 'the Church hath authority in controversies of
- faith,' but leaves it to her children to guess whether this
- authority be divine or human, infallible or fallible, granted
- her by the King of Heaven or the king of England. She
- intimates, indeed, that it is not quite to be depended on, by
- the next words, in which it is said, 'it is not lawful for the
- Church to ordain anything contrary to God's word written:'
- but again we are left to divine who the judge is, who is to
- keep the Church in order: is it the king, or every licensed
- preacher, or every single Christian? ..... Ah! these
- Articles are troublesome things. I have known what it is
- to be under those shackles, and what it is to be set free
- from them."
-</p>
-<p>
-In the next letter, his opponent complains that Father
-Spencer has <i>hurt his feelings</i>, and made his <i>heart sicken</i>,
-which complaint the <i>wily priest</i>, as he was termed, began to
-answer thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have heard of certain ladies who have
- recourse to a method something like this to escape being
- kept in order by their husbands, and who silence everything
- that is said against their humours by falling into hysterics.
- A tender husband will once or twice perhaps be melted by
- the alarming spectacle; he will run and fetch the smelling-bottle,
- ring for the servants, beg pardon, and say pretty
- things to compose his dear partner's mind again. But when
- he finds that as soon as she has gained her point she gets
- well directly, and is more saucy and wilful than before&mdash;if
- he wishes to be happy, or to make her so&mdash;he will be what
- she calls cruel next time, and let her get well by herself till
- she is tired of fainting fits. Now, sir, I have once been
- tender-hearted over you .... I apologized ....
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
- In the next letter you took advantage of this to make an
- impertinent remark. This discovered to me that your feelings
- need not be so tenderly dealt with, and I proceeded
- with my disagreeable questions, and shall still do so at the
- risk of your telling me in the next letter that I have not
- only sickened you, but made you quite faint away."
-</p>
-<p>
-After thus sickening his delicate friend, he sums up in the last
-letter and answers the difficulties objected to him very well
-indeed. We forbear introducing purely controversial matter,
-except in as far as it bears upon the peculiar gifts or manner
-of Father Spencer. There is nothing but what any ordinary
-priest of fair acquirements could have said in defence of our
-doctrines in the remainder, except that the answer to the
-hackneyed objection about some councils being of doubtful
-authority is very clearly and forcibly given.
-</p>
-<p>
-A third champion entered the lists before these had been
-"conquered" enough to think themselves qualified "to argue
-still." This was a Rev. W. Riland Bedford. Indeed, he
-was so impatient of distinguishing himself by the honour of
-having once engaged with so respectable a foe, that he could
-not wait until Mr. Dalton was ousted. Besides, it is very
-likely he thought Mr. Dalton was missing fine opportunities
-of giving clever strokes, by spending too much time in
-quarrelling with the ungenerous hits of his adversary or,
-perhaps, he thought he did not take the proper instruments
-of warfare. However, he made a grand stroke, and aimed
-also at what he believed to be the most vulnerable, as well
-as the most defenceless, spot in the person of F. Spencer's
-system. Here we might be corrected by the <i>Maid of Lille</i>,
-who said, very pertly, to Mr. Spencer once: "Catholics have
-no systems." They have doctrines. At all events, Mr.
-Riland Bedford did attack F. Spencer, and lest he might
-lose by being single-handed, a brace of them&mdash;Revs. Messrs.
-M'Ghee and himself&mdash;made an onslaught on Revs. Messrs.
-M'Donnel and Spencer, thereby intending, of course, to make
-a grand breach in Popery. The subject of their letters was
-the treating of certain sins by our moral theologians.
-F. Spencer made use of the usual line of defence here, but
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
-he added also an <i>argumentum ad hominem</i>. "St. Paul, in
-the chapter above referred to (Rom. i.), tells us that there
-were no sins more prevalent in his day, and none more destructive,
-than that grievous class of sins to which these
-questions relate. The afflicting experience of the pastors
-of the Church leads them to fear that no less awfully in
-these times and in this country, do habits of the like
-crimes make ruin of thousands of souls; and <i>your own recollection
-of the University, where, I suppose, you were educated
-for holy orders, must convince you that our fears are
-not unfounded. For what must be expected in the body of
-the people, when, among those who are preparing to be their
-pastors, at the most critical time of their life, there are so few
-who dare openly to withstand the prevailing fashion of
-iniquity, and so many who profess to despise morality and
-chastity as a thing to be ashamed of.</i>" F. Spencer was
-tripped up in some allusions he made to a Protestant
-attempt at a prayer-book, of which there were two or three
-editions; but, since he happened not to be correct as to
-one edition, and to miss something about another, still,
-though his argument was not thereby weakened, but Rev.
-Mr. Riland Bedford thought it was, and so, or nearly so,
-the matter ended.
-</p>
-<p>
-F. Spencer was induced to begin this paper controversy
-by the hope of conveying some information about Catholic
-dogmas to those who would not read Catholic books, but
-would, and did, read newspapers. Shortly after, he learnt,
-by one instance, what little good generally comes of this
-kind of contention. He paid a visit to Hagley, and, in a
-conversation with Lord Lyttelton, asked him if he had seen
-the <i>Birmingham Gazette</i> lately. "Yes," replied the other,
-"but delicacy forbade me to allude to your share in that
-concern." The sum of it was that his lordship thought
-George under a perfect delusion, and wondered he was not
-confounded at such powerful refutations as his adversary's
-were. All F. Spencer wrote looked to him perfectly trifling;
-so much so, that he had made up his mind to take George
-in hand himself, and convert him back again, and was then
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-actually getting up some little theology to aid him in doing
-so more summarily. This George took in very good
-humour, and hoped good from, especially as Lord Lyttelton
-appeared to be the leader in the family in point of
-religion. He was doomed to a sad disappointment; for
-Lord Lyttelton died shortly after this conversation, and, as
-far as documentary evidence goes, without having had
-another conversation with Father Spencer.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">{240}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Private Life And Crosses Of F. Spencer.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-It could scarcely be supposed that the self-denying, laborious
-life of F. Spencer in West Bromwich, which has been already
-alluded to, could be one of those effervescent fits that pass
-away with the newness of change, when one remembers his
-life as a Protestant minister. He did not abate one iota of
-his mortifications or labours, but he became systematized
-with them, and managed, under the advice of his director,
-to keep from extremes. He no longer scrupled paying for
-a conveyance, if he thought the object of his journey was
-worth more than the coach-fare. For letters, he followed
-the same rule, though, as he was in a position to obtain
-franks very frequently, he had not so much difficulty to put
-up with in the matter of paying heavy postage. To bear
-these remarks out, we have some of his own letters, but the
-letter of a lady, who made his acquaintance some time about
-1835, and had frequent opportunities of observing him up
-to the time of his becoming a Passionist, will be more
-satisfactory than snatches of sentences here and there, which
-accidentally tell what he was doing.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In the year 1835 I first became acquainted with the
- Catholic religion, and, in consequence, with the Hon. and
- Rev. George Spencer, who instructed and afterwards received
- me into the Church. From that time till the present
- I never for a moment doubted of his extraordinary sanctity.
- He never in all his discourses with me, which were numerous,
- spoke of anything but with an aim to the glory of God. I
- knew his housekeeper at West Bromwich, a very good
- woman, who has been dead many years. She told me that
- she many times found him, very early in the morning,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">{241}</a></span>
- cleaning his own shoes, and she dare not let him see her for
- fear of confusion. She often remarked that he spent a very
- long time in the exercise of prayer and meditation. He was
- so zealous for the salvation of souls that whenever he saw
- any new comer in his chapel he would find them out, go to
- their houses and speak with them; he thus brought many into
- the Church. Although he was insulted in all kinds of ways,
- on his walks, he rejoiced and thanked God for all. When
- he opened his mission in Dudley, rather than go to a public
- inn he slept, wrapped up in a large rough cloak, on the bare
- floor of what served as for sacristy, and continued to do so
- for some time until he had a proper place prepared. Many
- nights at his own home he used to disturb the bed a little,
- but it was found that he had not lain in it at all for the
- whole night. When he was instructing me in the year
- 1836, he broke a blood-vessel, and though the blood literally
- flowed from his head into a dish, he continued on the
- instructions. He visited the sick constantly. On one occasion
- he went to see a poor woman, who had not one to
- attend her; she became very restless whilst he was there,
- and wanted to go downstairs; he wrapped her up in a
- blanket and carried her down. She was no sooner down
- than she wanted to be brought up again; he brought her up,
- too; she got quiet then, listened to him, and after a short
- time expired before he left the room.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "At one house where he visited, a child was suffering from
- a bad mouth, so that it was quite distressing to look at it.
- Father Spencer laid his finger on the child's tongue, and
- said, 'It will be well;' in a half-an-hour afterwards it was
- quite well. Once my grandmother was at the point of
- death; he came and blessed her, and in a day or two she
- was quite well." Miraculous cures are wrought very frequently
- by priests' blessings. "Whatever thou blessest shall
- be blessed," is not pronounced in vain at their ordination;
- and "we must," as Father Ignatius would say pointedly to
- those who reflected little on them, "remember that our
- Lord's words do deserve some little attention." Faith can
- remove mountains, and it is only proper and just that faith
- could do something less. Since the faith of the person
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
- "made whole" is often as powerful as the faith of the
- servant of God, each side escapes the vanity of having
- wrought wonders, by attributing the effect to the other.
- "He generally went to the kitchen himself, or other places, to
- get what he wanted, and would often do without a thing,
- rather than trouble his housekeeper or a servant, if he knew
- them to be engaged. He wished to be not only his own
- servant, but the servant of everybody as far as he could.
- He used to beg of my father and me to pray that he might
- become poorer than the poorest man we ever knew. He
- even once asked my father to pray that he might become so
- poor as to be compelled to <i>lie down and die in a ditch</i>. I
- never saw him out of heart or in the least discouraged,
- however difficult a case he might come across: he would
- generally say, 'We must go on, rejoice and thank God; it
- will all come right in the end.' One of his former high-up
- friends and he were walking by a lunatic asylum once, and
- his friend remarked that he should soon be fit for admission
- there. This he used to relate with as great glee as if he
- had received a first-rate compliment, perhaps greater. When
- he visited our house in the country once, he struck his head
- against a beam somewhere, and I was astonished at hearing
- him exclaim, 'Served me right.'"
-</p>
-<p>
-Several dear friends die about this time, and the conflict
-between affection and religious detachment is beautifully
-pourtrayed in the yielding of the former to the latter by
-several remarks of his own and others, which we subjoin.
-</p>
-<p>
-He hears of the death of Cardinal Weld about the beginning
-of the year 1837, and thus writes to Mr. Phillipps
-about it: "You have heard, of course, of Cardinal Weld's
-death. I have felt that it is to me like the loss of a father
-almost; for he treated me as a child, as no doubt he did a
-great many more. But we must not give way to sorrows,
-for we have enough to do with our feelings in the battle
-against present evils, without wasting them on evils which
-are irremediable." The next death he heard of was that of
-the Honourable George Quin, a nephew of his, and he wrote
-to Mr. Phillipps: "That is another warning to us to pray
-better for the remainder, when one of our four families is
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-carried off before the fruit of our prayers appears." Somewhere
-about this time Lord Lyttelton dies also, without
-having succeeded in the project he formed last year, nor did
-poor Father Spencer succeed much in bringing him over to
-his side. He always respected this good brother-in-law, and
-the feeling was returned. He felt greatly for his loss, as
-well as for the bereavement of his sister. To add to his
-trials, a change comes over the relations between him and
-his family. Hitherto it was stipulated that Father Spencer
-was to be always received as a welcome guest provided he
-never spoke on religious subjects. The Bishop thinks it, as
-of course it was, unfair to place restrictions upon him, and
-not leave the matter to his own discretion. It was not quite
-becoming for a priest to pay visits, and keep his lips closed
-by contract on everything that was proper to his sacred
-character. On the other hand, the family did not like to
-have their agreeable parties disturbed by controversy, which
-was likely to draw out hotter words than was suitable to the
-state of things. Both sides had some kind of reason to
-show, and Father Spencer was placed between them. He
-communicated the decision of his bishop to the more influential
-members of the Spencer family, but he found they
-would not bend. He cheerfully gives up visiting, and even
-consoles some of his friends who manifest their concern that
-he should be debarred a pleasure so innocent and apparently
-so justifiable. How much he felt this, notwithstanding his
-cheerful resignation, may be seen from the following testimony,
-of one who knew him well, to the affection he had for
-Lady Lyttelton, his sister, who still survives:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In the year 1837 Mr. Mackey (Mrs. Mackey writes the
- letter) was engaged painting a picture for Father Ignatius,
- for his chapel at West Bromwich, and we saw a great deal
- of him. He was devotedly attached to his sister, Lady
- Lyttelton, and he often used to speak of her loving care of him
- when a boy; and once, when I quoted those lines of Gray:&mdash;
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">{244}</a></span>
-<pre>
- "'See the wretch that long was toss'd
- On the stormy bed of pain,
- At once regain his vigour lost,
- And breathe and walk again.
-
- The meanest note that swells the gale,
- The simplest flower that scents the dale,
- The common sun, the air, the skies,
- To him are opening Paradise&mdash;'
-</pre>
-<p class="cite">
- he was much affected, and said he had not heard them since
- his sister, Lady Lyttelton, repeated them to him after
- recovering from an illness when he was young. There was,
- also, a song he sang occasionally at our house, because she
- liked it, and had taught it to him. He sang it with such
- feeling that it always moved me to tears, and as soon as I
- heard of his death I began to sing it, and it kept recurring
- to me all day. I seemed to rejoice for him in the song.
- These are the words: they are Moore's:&mdash;
-</p>
-<pre>
- "'The bird, let loose in Eastern skies,
- When hastening fondly home,
- Ne'er stoops to earth her wing, nor flies
- Where idle warblers roam.
-
- But high she shoots through air and light,
- Above all low delay:
- Where nothing earthly bounds her flight,
- Nor shadow dims her way.
-
- So grant me, Lord, from ev'ry care,
- And stain of passion free,
- Aloft through virtue's nobler air,
- To wing my course to thee.
-
- No sin to cloud, no lure to stay,
- My soul as home she springs,
- Thy sunshine on her joyful way,
- Thy freedom on her wings.'
-</pre>
-<p class="cite">
- He was always very much moved when speaking of Lady
- Lyttelton."
-</p>
-<p>
-It was no small sacrifice to submit with cheerfulness to
-the circumstances which prevented him visiting this sister,
-now that she had become a widow and had need of a consoler
-to help herself and children to bear their affliction.
-He simply says: "I find all my crosses and vexations to be
-blessings; and directly I made the sacrifice of feeling to duty,
-God sent me the best set of catechumens I have had yet.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">{245}</a></span>
-Among others, a man and wife who have been <i>male</i> and
-<i>female</i> preachers, among the Primitive Methodists, or
-Ranters."
-</p>
-<p>
-His great friend and director, the Rev. Mr. Martyn, was
-the next of whose death he heard. This good and virtuous
-priest was more than a friend to Father Spencer. He served
-his novitiate to the work of the English mission, under his
-direction in Walsall, for three months before he came to
-West Bromwich. He had been his confessor and guide in
-all his practices of piety until now. He managed his affairs
-with as much interest as if they were his own; he was ever
-ready with his counsel and assistance, and seems to have
-taken the Dudley mission as soon as Father Spencer had
-built the church there. Father Spencer preached his
-funeral oration, and paid the last tribute of respect to his
-mortal remains in the very spot where he so often profited
-by his counsels. Here there was no cause of regret, except
-for the good priest's widowed flock, for his saintly life gave
-strong hopes of a blessed eternity.
-</p>
-<p>
-It was said, in a former chapter, that he gave all his
-money to the Bishop, and had sums given him now and
-again, of which he returned an account at stated times, to
-see if the way in which he spent them would be approved
-of. It may be interesting to know how he kept these
-accounts. Fortunately a few leaves of the book in which
-they were noted have been found among his papers, and
-from them we make the following extract:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">{246}</a></span>
-
-
-<table style="width:96%">
-<tbody class="bold70" style="border:0px; padding:4px;">
-<tr>
- <td style="width:10%;">1838.</td>
- <td style="width:5%;"><br></td>
- <td style="width:70%;"><br></td>
- <td style="width:5%;" class="right">£</td>
- <td style="width:5%;" class="right">s</td>
- <td style="width:5%;" class="right">d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Dec.</td>
-<td>1.</td>
-<td>Mrs. Nicholl's rent paid up to Nov. 12</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td> Advanced to Mr. Elves</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">10</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Mr. Davis, for a walk to Walsall</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>2.</td>
-<td>Letter to Paris</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>3.</td>
-<td>Omnibus to and from Birmingham</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br>
-</td>
-<td><br>
-</td>
-<td>Given to Bridget Cullinge</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Shoe-string</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Mrs. Cooper.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Housekeeping</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Washing</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Postage</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">9½</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Watchman</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Mr. Elves</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Betsy Hawkins, quarter's wages</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">15</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Mrs. Cooper, towards wages</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Advanced to Mr. Elves</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td></tr>
-<tr><td><br></td>
-<td>4.</td>
-<td>Mrs. Whelan</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">10</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>John and Barney White, for a message</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Elizabeth Morley</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>5.</td>
-<td>Armytage, 6d.; Mrs. Brown, 1s.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Coals, paid Mr. Pearse</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>6.</td>
-<td>P. O'Brien, 2s.; Peggy, 1s.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Boy who brought horse</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Gordon, butcher's bill</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">19</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Sealing-wax</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Letter to Dr. Wiseman</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>7.</td>
-<td>Mrs. Cottril, 1s. 6d.; Mrs. Gale, 1s.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Turnpike, 8d.; Chs. Gordon, 6d.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>8.</td>
-<td>Gig-whip, 2s. 6d.; turnpike, 8d.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Morris, for Mrs. Callaghan's rent</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">15</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Shenton, for holding the mare</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Clothes-brush</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>9.</td>
-<td>Conway, 7s.6d.; school-window mended, 6d</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">8</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>10.</td>
-<td>Turnpike, 4d.; horse at Dudley, 6s.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-<td class="right">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Hat at Domely's</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Mrs. Brown, tailor's</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Gloves</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Armytage, 6d.; lucifers, 2d.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>11.</td>
-<td>Stuff to make a collar, &amp;c.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-<td class="right">9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Two dozen Douay Catechisms</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">4</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Carriage of parcel to Dr. Fletcher</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>12.</td>
-<td>John Collinge, 1s.; P. O'Brien, 2s.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Adv. to Mr. Elves</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">1</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>13.</td>
-<td>Adv. to Mrs. Cooper, for wages</td>
-<td class="right">6</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Housekeeping</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">17</td>
-<td class="right">10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td><br></td><td><br></td>
-<td>Ribbon for stole</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Parcel, 8s. 2d.; postage, 3s. 8d.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">11</td>
-<td class="right">10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td><br></td>
-<td><br></td>
-<td>Washing, 4s. 9d.; Mr. Elves, 8d.</td>
-<td class="right">0</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-<td class="right">5</td>
-</tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p>
-To this may be added, that on the credit side he puts his
-instalments from the Bishop, and every single penny he gets
-in the shape of offerings, seat-rents, alms, &amp;c., &amp;c. There
-have also remained, between some of the leaves of this
-account-book, a few little slips of paper, on which he
-pencilled whatever he paid or received when away from home,
-so as to be able to note it down when he came back. It
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">{247}</a></span>
-may be well to remark that the extract given above cannot
-be taken as an average of his expenditure, as December is a
-month when bills come in thicker than in other months of
-the year.
-</p>
-<p>
-It will be remembered that this mode of managing his
-household affairs, was the result of the trial Father Spencer
-made of the vows of religion in his secular state, which has
-been alluded to in a former chapter.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-Association Of Prayers For The Conversion Of England.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-It was in the year 1838 that he began the great work to
-which his life and energies were afterwards devoted&mdash;the
-moving of the Catholics everywhere to pray conjointly for
-the conversion of England. Before this time he and a few of
-his friends prayed privately, said or heard masses for this
-intention, and encouraged one another by letters and conversations
-to perseverance in so holy a practice. Now he went
-to work on a larger scale. How this change in the working
-of his zeal was brought about will be best seen from a letter
-he wrote to Dr. Briggs in November, 1838. Before, however,
-quoting it, it may be well to remark that the cause of
-his going to France with Mr. Phillipps was that he was
-breaking down in health, hard-worked by two laborious
-missions, for which he had no assistant since Mr. Martyn's
-death, and that his doctor advised change of air and rest.
-Here is the letter:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "London, <i>Nov</i>. 5, 1838.<br><br>
-
- "My Dear Lord,&mdash;I hope I shall be doing right to
- explain to your lordship the real circumstances of the
- transaction which, you may perhaps have been told, has
- been adverted to in <i>The Times</i> newspaper of Nov. 3, and
- some other paper since; which states, from the <i>Gazette de
- France,</i> that I have been at Paris, with Mr. Ambrose
- Phillipps, busy in establishing an association of prayers for
- the conversion of England to the Roman faith. I am
- certainly ready to plead guilty on this charge; but I do not
- find cause to repent of it. However, a good thing may be
- done so out of place and out of time as to make it not worth
- much, and it may be necessary, therefore, that I should
- explain myself before I am approved of in what I have been
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">{249}</a></span>
- doing in Paris. In the first visit which I paid to the Archbishop
- on my arrival at Paris, I was saying, what I say
- continually, that what we want above all in England is
- good prayers; and that it would be a great benefit if the
- French would undertake to unite in prayer for us. I did
- not think of making any proposal for an actual arrangement
- of the kind till the Archbishop himself (then Monseigneur
- Quelin) encouraged, and almost obliged, me to do all I could
- by the zealous manner in which he took up the idea. He
- appointed that I should meet him after two days at St.
- Sulpice, where seventy or eighty of the clergy of Paris were
- to be assembled to offer him an address of thanks for a
- retreat which he had given them. After the business was
- concluded, he introduced me to them, and having explained
- how I came to be there, he proposed that they should undertake
- to pray for the conversion of England on every Thursday.
- The proposal was most favourably received, and I
- heard of its being acted upon by many offering their mass
- on the first Thursday. This encouraged me to go on. I
- obtained a circular letter of introduction to the superiors of
- religious houses, and visited about twenty of the principal.
- All of them undertook to offer their prayers as I asked
- them, and to write to their sister houses through France.
- The General of the Lazarists, and the Provincial of the
- Jesuits, undertook to recommend it to their brethren; but
- what I thought more satisfactory yet was, that all the Archbishops
- and bishops whom I could meet with in Paris
- promised to recommend the prayers in their dioceses and
- provinces; so that it appeared to me that there was reason
- to say that all France would soon be united in this prayer,
- and I trust other countries of Europe will follow their
- example. I remember, at the time when your lordship
- received me with much kindness at Halford House, on
- our speaking of the importance of prayers being regularly
- said for the conversion of England, and you told me of what
- had been done at Ushaw under your direction. I forget
- whether I said to you that I had then lately adopted the
- practice of offering my mass every Thursday regularly for
- that intention. I took this from the nuns of Mount
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">{250}</a></span>
- Pavilion, with whom I had become acquainted the summer
- before, but especially what they do on Thursday, when
- there is high mass and exposition all the day, and a solemn
- act of reparation for the outrages committed against the
- Divine Eucharist. It seemed to me that this was a devotion
- peculiarly suited to the object of obtaining from
- Almighty God graces for England, one of whose most crying
- sins is; <i>the blasphemy of the Blessed Sacrament authorized by
- law for three centuries</i>.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I had only proposed the idea, however, to a few priests
- of my acquaintance, to unite in saying mass for England on
- that day, and was rather waiting for some plan to be suggested
- for a general union of prayers in England by some
- one of authority. But, as nothing had been done, and when
- I found myself engaged in this pursuit at Paris, it was
- necessary to propose something definite, I have nothing
- better than to request prayers from all the faithful for
- England, all days and at all times, but especially to offer
- mass on Thursday, if they be priests and at liberty, or communion,
- or assistance at mass, or visits to the Blessed Sacrament,
- or, in short, whatever they did for God, particularly
- on that day, for England's conversion.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The manner in which this request was accepted by all
- the good people whom I saw was most consoling to me;
- and it appears to me that I am bound to make it known in
- England, to those whose judgment is most important, and
- whose approval would most powerfully recommend the
- Catholics in England to correspond with the zealous spirit
- exhibited in behalf of our country by France.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is not for me to suggest to your lordship what might
- be done. I only venture to hope that you may think this
- matter perhaps worthy of your attention, and will perhaps
- mention it to the clergy as occasion may present itself. I
- would add, that in France the superiors of several seminaries
- were most ready to undertake to recommend it to the
- students, and it pleased me particularly to interest those
- communities in behalf of England, because the devotion
- might so well spread in that way through all classes. Would
- your lordship think fit to mention the subject at Ushaw?
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
- I have nowhere asked for any particular prayers to be said
- as that might be burdensome; but simply that this intention
- might be thought of at least, if nothing more was done
- in reference to it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I beg again to be excused for my boldness in thus
- addressing you, and am your lordship's<br>
- "Obedient humble servant,<br>
- "George Spencer."
-</p>
-<p>
-The passage he alludes to in <i>The Times</i> was as follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Hon. and Rev. George Spencer, brother to the present
- Earl, who was converted from Protestantism to the Catholic
- faith some years ago, has lately been passing some time at
- Paris, with Mr. Ambrose Phillipps, a gentleman of distinction
- of Leicestershire, eldest son of the late member for the
- northern division of the county. They have been busily
- occupied there in establishing an association of prayers for
- the conversion of this country to the Roman faith. They
- have had several interviews with the Archbishop of Paris
- on this subject, who has ordered all the clergy to say special
- prayers for this object in the <i>memento</i>. A number of the
- religious communities in France have already begun to
- follow the same practice."
-</p>
-<p>
-This paragraph was taken up,
-of course, and commented upon by the second-rate papers.
-To be sure, the whole thing was magnified into nothing less
-than a grand stir for a Papal aggression, which, if it did
-not make the English shore glitter some day with French
-bayonets, was certain to cram every workshop and church
-with Jesuits in disguise.
-</p>
-<p>
-The Bishops were all favourable to Father Spencer's zealous
-ideas; they gave him leave to speak on the subject with all
-the priests; they mentioned it in their pastorals: but they did
-not wish him to go too publicly to work, as they rather feared
-the spirit of the times, and did not know when another Gordon
-riot might arise and overthrow what they had been building
-up since the Emancipation. In the meantime, the work was
-progressing rapidly. A Dutch journal reached him which let
-him know that all the seminaries and convents in Holland
-had given their Thursday devotions for England. A good
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">{252}</a></span>
-priest wrote from Geneva to say that the programme should
-be widened, and that all heretics and separatists ought to be
-included as well as England. To this Father Spencer consented
-after some deliberation, and in the space of about six
-months all the Continent were sending up prayers for England's
-conversion. He makes speeches at formal dinners
-and public meetings, and always introduces this topic;
-whereupon the reporters conceive a terrible rage, and puff
-the matter into all the taverns and offices of London, Liverpool,
-and Manchester. Of course, all this is accompanied
-with gross misrepresentations and personal abuse. Of the
-former point he thus speaks in a letter:&mdash;"The misrepresentations,
-as far as I have seen them in the public papers,
-by which they have endeavoured to obstruct the proposed
-good, are so glaring that I think all thinking persons must
-be benefited by reading them." "My notion was to ignore
-the English public altogether, and go on with my work as
-if it did not exist." "The opposite papers have certainly
-helped me and well, in making the matter as public as
-I could wish, without a farthing's cost to me, and in a
-way in which I cannot be accused of being the immediate
-agent of its publicity, as it was put about as though to
-annoy me, but they are pleasing me without intending it."
-This was the good-humoured way in which he took all that
-was personal in the journalistic tirades. It gives one an
-idea both of his great zeal and the great virtue with which
-he accompanied it.
-</p>
-<p>
-He now writes to the Irish Archbishops, and receives
-very encouraging answers. So much did they enter into
-his sentiments that, in a meeting of the Irish episcopate in
-Dublin, they gave his proposals a good share of their attention,
-and approved of them.
-</p>
-<p>
-This he accounted great gain. It was the prayer of the
-martyr for his persecutor, of Stephen for Saul, and of Our
-Lord for the Jews. Poor Ireland had groaned and writhed
-in Saxon bondage for centuries. She saw her children scattered
-to the winds, or ground by famine and injustice
-beneath the feet of the destroyer; and, at the voice of a
-Saxon priest, she turned round, wiped the tear from her eye,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-pitied the blindness of her oppressor, and offered up her sufferings
-to Heaven to plead for mercy for her persecutor. The cry
-was a solemn universal prayer, framed by her spiritual leaders,
-and carried to every fireside where the voice of the Church
-could drown the utterings of complaint. F. Spencer thought
-more of the prayers of the Irish than of all the Continent put
-together; these were good, but those were heroic. He began
-to love Ireland thenceforward with an ever-increasing love,
-and trusted chiefly to the faith and sanctity of her children
-for the fulfilment of his zealous intentions.
-</p>
-<p>
-He pushed his exertions to Rome also, by writing to Dr.
-Wiseman, and asking him to see the devotion carried out in
-the Eternal City and the provinces. It met the same success
-as in France, Belgium, Holland, and Ireland. There
-is a letter extant which Dr. Wiseman wrote to F. Spencer
-about this time (it is dated Ash Wednesday, 1839), and it
-must be interesting, both for its intrinsic merit as well as
-the giving an evidence of the harmony of feeling and sentiment
-that bound the great cardinal and the zealous priest
-together since their first acquaintance until they both went,
-within a few months of each other, to enjoy the eternal reward
-of their labours in England and elsewhere, for God's
-glory:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Rome, <i>Ash Wednesday</i>, 1839.<br><br>
-
- "My Dear Friend,&mdash;I must not delay any longer
- answering your kind and interesting letter. Its subject
- is one which has long occupied my thoughts, though I never
- contemplated the possibility of enlisting foreign Churches
- in prayer for it, but turned my attention more to exciting a
- spirit of prayer among ourselves. I will enter on the matter
- in hand with the most insignificant part of it, that is, my
- own feelings and endeavours, because I think they may encourage
- you and suggest some thoughts upon the subject.
- In our conference this time last year, I spoke very strongly
- to the students upon the wants of England, and the necessity
- of a new system in many things. One of the points on
- which I insisted was the want of systematic prayer for the
- conversion of England, and, at the same time, of <i>reparation</i>
- for her defection. I observed that it is the only country
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
- which has <i>persisted in</i> and <i>renewed</i>, in every generation,
- <i>formal acts of apostacy</i>, exacting from every sovereign, in
- the name of the nation, and from all that aspired to office
- or dignity, specific declarations of their holding Catholic
- truths to be superstitious and idolatrous. This, therefore,
- assumes the form of a national sin of blasphemy and heresy&mdash;not habitual, but actual; it is a bar to the Divine blessing,
- an obstacle of a positive nature to God's grace. It calls for
- contrary <i>acts</i>, as explicit and as formal, to remove its bad
- effects. Now what are the points on which this blasphemous
- repetition of national apostacy has fastened? They are chiefly
- two: Transubstantiation and the worship of the Blessed Virgin.
- These, consequently, are the points towards which the reparation
- and, for it, the devotion of Catholics should be directed
- in England. I therefore proposed, and have continued to
- inculcate this two-fold devotion, to our students on every
- occasion. I have for a year made it my daily prayer that I
- might be instrumental in bringing back devotion to the
- Blessed Eucharist, its daily celebration, frequent Communion,
- and <i>public</i> worship in England; and, at the same time,
- devotion to the Blessed Virgin, chiefly <i>through the propagation
- of the Rosary</i>. (My reasons for the choice of the Rosary
- I shall, perhaps, not be able to explain in this letter.) Allow
- me to mention, as I write to you, quite confidentially, that
- the idea struck me one afternoon that I happened to be
- alone in the Church of St. Eustachio, observing that the
- altar of the Blessed Sacrament was that of the Madonna;
- this led me to earnestly praying on the subject of uniting
- those two objects in a common devotion in England, and
- offering myself to promote it. Several things led me to feel
- strongly on the subject which, being trifles to others if not
- to myself, I omit. First, as to the Blessed Eucharist, my
- plan was different from yours in one respect, that, instead of
- fixing on one day, I proposed to engage priests to say mass
- for the conversion of England on different days, so that
- every day twenty or thirty masses might be said for its conversion,
- and in expiation to the Blessed Sacrament. At
- such a distance from the field of action, I could do but little;
- I therefore made the few priests who have left since last
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
- year at this time put down their names for two days a month,
- for mass for these purposes, intending to fill up my list as I
- could. One of them, Mr. Abraham, writes that he observes
- his engagement most punctually. With all deference, I submit
- to you whether, while Thursday remains the day for
- general prayer, every priest (for I should think none would
- refuse) would choose a couple of days a month, or a day each
- week, for these purposes. In a sermon in the Gesù e Maria,
- last spring, I alluded to a hope I fondly cherished, that
- public reparation would before long be made in England to
- the Blessed Sacrament, and this brought me a letter from a
- devout lady, earnestly begging I would try to have something
- done in that way, and naming persons in England
- most anxious to cooperate in anything of the sort. My idea
- was borrowed from my excellent friend, Charles Weld, and
- consisted in <i>Quarant' Ore</i>, not confined to one town, but
- making the circuit of all England, so that by day and night
- the Adorable Sacrament might be worshipped through the
- year. I have proposed it to Lord Shrewsbury, for I think
- it should commence with the colleges, convents, gentlemen's
- chapels, and large towns, in which I trust each chapel would
- consent. As the Exposition at each place lasts two days, it
- would require 182 changes in the year, or, if each would
- take it twice a year, 91. There are about twenty-five
- religious communities and colleges; the chapels in large towns
- could afford to make up other twenty-five. I think that
- many pious people would like to have the <i>Exposition</i>, and
- gladly contribute the expense, and the <i>giro</i> might be published
- for the year in each directory. I must say I should
- set myself against the common practice of keeping the
- Blessed Sacrament in a <i>cupboard</i> in the vestry, without a
- light even, and never having an act of adoration paid to it,
- except at mass. Security from sacrilege must be purchased,
- but not by a sort of sacrilege which it always looked to me;
- the faithful should be encouraged to visit the Blessed Sacrament
- during the day. Secondly, as to the devotion to the
- Blessed Virgin, I proposed the forming of Confraternities
- of the Rosary, and, while Saturday should be the general
- day for the devotion, I would have different congregations
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">{256}</a></span>
- fix on different days, so that each day the powerful intercession
- of the Blessed Virgin might be invoked upon us and
- upon our labours, and reparation be made to her for the outrages
- committed against her. I offered Mr. Oxley and Mr.
- Procter to write a little treatise on the Rosary, if they
- would disseminate it. <i>One</i> of my reasons for preferring the
- Rosary, both for myself and English Catholics, is what ordinarily
- forms an objection to it. Pride, when we come to
- pray, is our most dangerous enemy, and I think no better
- security can be given against it than to pray as the poor and
- ignorant do. Do we then <i>wish</i> that God should judge us by
- the standard of the wise who <i>know</i> their duty, or by that of
- the poor little ones? If by the latter, why spurn the
- prayers instituted for them, and say, 'We will not use them,
- but the prayers better suited to the learned.' The 'Our
- Father' was appointed and drawn up for men who said
- 'Lord, teach us how to pray.' It is a prayer for the ignorant,
- as is the Rosary. But more of this another time. It was
- my intention to have begun daily prayers for England last
- St. George's Day; I was prevented from drawing them up,
- but hope to begin this year. In the meantime, I took out
- of our archives a printed paper, of which I enclose a copy,
- showing that prayers for the conversion of England, &amp;c.,
- have in former times occupied the attention of our college,
- which blessed beads, &amp;c., for the purpose of encouraging
- them, and that the Holy See conferred ample spiritual privileges
- upon the practice. You will see how the Rosary is
- particularly privileged. This paper, through Giustiniani, I
- laid before the Congregation of Indulgences to get them renewed
- for prayers for England, and was told that it would
- be better to draw up something new, suited to present times,
- when Indulgences would be granted. So far as to my views
- and ideas before your better ones reached me, and I willingly
- resign all my views and intentions in favour of yours. Now,
- as to what is doing here. On the Feast of St. Thomas we
- distributed to all the cardinals that came, a copy of your
- sermon received that morning, with a beautiful lithograph
- of St. Thomas, Cant., executed in the house at some
- of the students' expense, to propagate devotion to him.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
- Cardinal Orioli declared that he had for years made a
- <i>memento</i> for England in his mass, and Cardinal Giustiniani
- told me the other day that every Thursday he offers up mass
- for its conversion. There is a little religious weekly journal
- published here for distribution among the poor, and it has
- lately been in almost every number soliciting prayers for
- the same purpose. Its principal editor, an ex-Jesuit, Padre
- Basiaco, called on me the other evening, and told me, as a
- singular coincidence, that since he was in his noviciate he
- has made it a practice to pray on Thursday for that object.
- To show you to what an extent the pious custom is spreading,
- the Austrian Ambassador the other evening told me that his
- little boys (about seven and eight years old) prayed every
- Thursday morning for the conversion of England; and that
- having been asked by their mother on that day if he had
- prayed for it, one of the little fellows replied, 'No, mamma;
- it is not Thursday.' Surely God must intend to grant a
- mercy when He stirs up so many to pray for it, and that,
- too, persons having no connection with the object, except by
- zeal or charity. I am going, in a day or two, to concert
- with Pallotta the best means of propagating this devotion,
- both in communities and among the people. I perfectly
- approve of enlarging your original plan so as to embrace all
- that are in error. I am in favour of giving expansion to
- charities in any way, and <i>Catholicising</i> our feelings as much
- as our faith. We are too insular in England in religion as
- in social ideas. This was one of my reasons for wishing to
- have the <i>oeuvre</i> unconnected with domestic purposes, which
- would, however, be benefited by the greater energy which
- the spirit of charity would receive by being extended. I
- am endeavouring to excite in the students as much as I can
- the missionary spirit; all the meditations are directed to
- this. By the missionary spirit I do not mean merely a
- parochial, but an apostolic spirit, where each one, besides
- his own especial flock, takes an interest in, and exerts himself
- for the benefit of the entire country, according to the
- gifts he has received. Remember me in your prayers, and
- believe me your sincere and affectionate friend,
-<br><br>
- "N. Wiseman."
-</p>
-
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">{258}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-His Last Days In West Bromwich.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The account given of Father Spencer's zealous labours for
-the conversion of England would be incomplete if something
-were not added to show how he succeeded in bringing
-persons into the Church in the locality of which he had the
-spiritual charge. There is no record of the number he received,
-and only from stray notes, from various sources,
-can some instances of his way of working be given. He
-was not a great preacher, as all knew; but there was a peculiar
-spirit in what he said which seemed to impress his discourse
-upon the hearer as if it came not from himself. This
-want of human eloquence was a drawback to him inasmuch
-as it was not likely to bring crowds to hear him. An anecdote
-or two will illustrate this. Once he was asked to preach
-in Manchester, and many Catholics who heard of it went, of
-course, to hear the convert who was talked and written
-about so much. Among the rest, one young man who had
-beforehand built castles in his own mind about the glowing
-eloquence he should hear. To his disappointment, the
-preacher was cold, dry, and tame. He was not too pleased,
-but some way or another every word took effect upon him,
-and he could not quit thinking of the sermon, and the peculiar
-way in which many things were said. The end of it
-was, that he became, some time after, a Passionist, and was
-one of those in whom Father Ignatius found great consolation,
-on account of the zeal he showed and continues still to
-show, in the pursuit of the darling objects of Father Ignatius's
-life. A lady was more pointed in her remarks. She
-went to hear him on some other great occasion, and she
-said:&mdash;"I saw him go into the pulpit; I heard him address
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-the people, and I was waiting all the time thinking when will
-he have done talking and begin to preach, until, to my surprise,
-I found what purported to be a sermon coming to a
-conclusion, yet I can remember to this day almost everything
-he said."
-</p>
-<p>
-From the little weight Father Spencer laid upon human
-learning in the work of conversion, one would be tempted
-to suppose he undervalued what he did not possess. No
-greater mistake could be made. He was a Cambridge first-class
-man, and must therefore be a good mathematical and
-classical scholar. He spoke Italian and French almost
-without a grammatical fault, and conversed very well in
-German. He was well read in the English Protestant
-divines, and knew Catholic theology with accuracy, and to
-an extent which his academical course would not lead us to
-expect. It may be said that his youth and manhood were
-spent over the pages of the best English writers, and in the
-company often of the best living authors. Althorp and
-Spencer House were famous for their literary coteries, and
-the son of an earl who patronized men of talent, and gave
-unmistakable proofs of great talent himself, was not one to
-let such opportunities pass without profit.
-</p>
-<p>
-He trusted little, however, to the sway of intellect, and
-put his hope in fervent petitions for divine grace. He told
-Dr. Wiseman that he should apply his mind to something
-more practical than Syriac manuscripts, or treatises on
-geology, and that he would rather see him taken up with
-what suited a priest on the English mission as it then was.
-The rector, of course, took the rebuke as humility dictated;
-but we should certainly be sorry that he had not written his
-<i>Connexion between Science and Revealed Religion</i>, and his
-<i>Lectures on the Eucharist</i>. Spencer, to be sure, was mistaken
-in this; but the idea gave a bent to his mind, which he
-could hardly be expected to change when hampered with
-the work of a parish.
-</p>
-<p>
-They who knew him well can give testimony to his high
-attainments, and all who ever heard him speak of himself
-can bear a more ample testimony still to the very low opinion
-he had of his own acquirements. It is no wonder that he
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">{260}</a></span>
-wrote no books; the little he did publish in the way of
-newspaper letters and sermons during his last years in West
-Bromwich, did not produce much apparent effect. It is
-not our province to review these here, but it is well to say
-that the sermons rank far above his spoken ones in point of
-style and matter, especially the French sermon he preached
-in Dieppe in 1838.
-</p>
-<p>
-The prayers, to which he chiefly trusted for the conversion
-of his countrymen, did not bring much evident gain. Others
-reaped what he sowed in this way, and he tells us in the
-Dieppe sermon that during a confirmation Dr. Walsh gave
-in that year he had 600 new converts to impose hands
-upon.
-</p>
-<p>
-His field at this time was confined mostly to his conversation
-and example; to both of which his name and reputation
-added something in the eyes of the world. These gave
-him leave to speak at least, and procured him listeners where
-other priests would not obtain a hearing. And he had no
-small power in word and example, as all who knew him are
-aware, and a few incidents may serve to illustrate.
-</p>
-<p>
-As to his conversation, its peculiar charm consisted in the
-importance of its drift, and the nice sweet humour by which
-he rendered it agreeable. Besides, it may be safely said,
-that there scarcely ever was a man so happy in his illustrations,
-or in the homely way in which he put an argument,
-or answered an objection. This last property can be seen
-from the following passage, which is quoted from one of his
-letters to a newspaper:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was once attacked by a stanch
- Church of England man, who had been an old sailor, and
- had lost an arm in the service, for what he thought was unworthy
- of my character and family, leaving my colours and
- changing sides. I answered him thus: Suppose you, my
- friend, had entered a ship bearing the King of England's
- flag and pennant, and gone out and fought many a battle
- against French cruisers, but then found out by chance that
- the captain of the ship was an outlawed pirate, who had no
- right to the colours which he wore, and was making you
- fight for himself, not for your king, would you let me call
- you a deserter if the next time you came within hail of a
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">{261}</a></span>
- true king's ship you jumped overboard and swam to her?
- The good sailor seemed to understand me, and said no more
- about leaving my colours."
-</p>
-<p>
-It was remarked that very few ever went to speak with
-him in earnest about their soul with any kind of docility,
-whom he did not succeed in bringing into the Church. Then
-his example was a continual sermon. He preferred the poor,
-not as poor wretches on whom he thought it was heroic to
-spend a few kind words of mawkish pity, but, in order to
-make them feel as if they were his brothers and sisters. He
-would come into their hovels, sit down with them, and even
-take a cup of tea there, which he might have refused at a
-richer place. They represented to him the person of Jesus
-Christ, who said, "The poor you have always with you," as
-a substitute for Himself.
-</p>
-<p>
-His patience was no less wonderful. One day he was
-walking with a sort of bag on his shoulder, when an insolent
-fellow came out before him and spat in his face. His
-housekeeper was with him, helping to carry some articles,
-for he was then going to say mass in one of the little places
-he had opened near Bromwich. She of course fired with
-indignation at once, and said: "You wicked man! how dare
-you spit in the face of Lord Spencer's son, and he such a
-good gentleman? "Mr. Spencer took out his handkerchief,
-wiped his face, and only said to the housekeeper: "And
-how dare you be angry? I am proud of being treated as
-my dear Lord was;" and went on his way as if nothing had
-happened. He did not even allude to it again.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was also very abstemious, and never took wine or
-spirits for a number of years; indeed, he may be said to
-have tasted none except as medicine since he became a
-Catholic, and for sometime before. His bishop told a very
-curious anecdote about this. Father Spencer took very
-little sleep, and in fact he so shortened his time of rest that
-often, when returning home from a sick call, he would be
-nodding asleep up the street, and walk like a man who had
-taken "a little more than was good for him." He was reported
-to the bishop as being seen in this state. The bishop
-was amused first, and then surprised; but when he found
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-out the cause, notwithstanding that he was edified, he made
-the good priest sleep a little longer every night. This only
-shows how captious were the people he had to deal with,
-and how easily they might have been scandalized. Yet he
-was venerated by all Catholics as a saint, and Protestants
-began to respect him after some time as a really good man,
-and a server of the Lord according to his conscience. The
-opinion of his sanctity was not merely superficial hearsay;
-his brother priests, who knew him most intimately, and
-were not the persons to take the appearance of holiness for
-the reality, are all of one opinion, that his life was the life
-of a great saint. A student writes to Father Spencer's
-assistant, Rev. Mr. Elves, in 1838, from Rome, in the following
-terms:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It must be a very great source of edification
- to you to be the companion of Mr. Spencer, and I well
- know he has got in you a friend willing and ready to imitate
- his holy example. I am sorry that illness obliges him to
- retire from you for the present, but it will be a consolation
- for you to think that he has gone to gather more strength
- for the contest. Many a time I have dwelt with delight on
- the idea of being at some future period his fellow missioner,
- for I feel it would be a source of zeal and fervour to me to
- live with such a person, and I hope and pray God my
- wishes may be fulfilled, and that I may have such a companion,
- or rather such a director, during the first years of
- my missionary career."
-</p>
-<p>
-This letter must have been an
-answer to the account the priest sent his young friend of the
-holiness of his companion.
-</p>
-<p>
-Again, Father Spencer never heeded what we call the
-public, as he said himself he wished to ignore its existence;
-and strange enough by that very means he gained its
-esteem. This is best illustrated by what happened on his
-return from France, in '38. He saw the clergy there of
-course go about in their soutanes and full ecclesiastical
-costume; and he did not see why he might not do the same.
-He ignored the public, put on his cassock, and went in full
-priestly costume everywhere. He went to towns, into trains
-and omnibuses, walks the streets, and he gives the result in
-a letter to a friend thus: "This has not procured me one
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-disrespectful word, which is worthy of remark here, for I do
-not think I ever passed two or three weeks in this place
-without being hooted after by boys or men somewhere."
-</p>
-<p>
-Thus we have the servant following his Master, drinking
-in insults as sweet draughts in silence and humility; and
-when he was supposed to be ground to the very earth by
-ignominy, gaining a respect, a love, and a reputation that is
-as fresh to-day in his old parish among not only those who
-knew him but their children who heard of him. Yes, this
-day, more than 25 years in distance of time, he is, if possible,
-more venerated and more regretted than the day he resigned
-the pastoral charge of West Bromwich.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-Father Spencer Comes To Oscott.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The Bishop, Dr. Walsh, calls Mr. Spencer to Oscott College
-towards the end of April or perhaps in the beginning
-of May, 1839. The object of this change was, to give him
-the spiritual care of the students, in order that he might
-shape their characters, and infuse into them that apostolic
-spirit of which he had already given such proofs. Here is
-one other instance of the true way to real distinction in
-greatness in the Catholic Church, lying through the road
-humility and its concomitant virtues points out. Father
-Spencer sought to be unknown; he petitioned for the
-poorest and the most unprovided mission. In his little
-parish he found his earthly paradise, and the toils and
-troubles he went through, to make his practice keep pace
-with his fervour, formed the links of his happiness. He
-prayed, he lectured, he heard confessions; he sought the
-stragglers in their haunts of idleness; he had no idea of
-extending his sphere of action beyond the limits of his
-mission, and, he even made the half of that over to
-another, that his working could be the more effectual as its
-space was narrowed. Every plan he devised for doing good
-on a large scale was fated to become abortive. His natural
-means of influence he had cast aside; he gave up writing in
-newspapers, and let dogs bark at him without stooping to
-notice them; his high connections were virtually sundered
-when he gave up paying visits to his family; his property he
-divested himself of altogether, and grieved that the steward
-who was appointed to look after him took too much care of
-him, and did not let him feel what it was to be poor indeed.
-Here then is the young nobleman transformed into the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">{265}</a></span>
-priest, and stripped of everything, which priests who were
-not noble often pursue as necessary for their position; ay,
-thoroughly shorn to the bare condition of a priest. He
-was a priest and nothing more, and that is saying a great
-deal. If priests were always mere priests they would
-always be great saints. But when a priest dips his sacred
-character into worldly pursuits, riches, human aims and
-ways; when that sublime dignity he has received is trampled
-upon by his own self, and is saturated in the deep dye of
-worldliness, he ceases to be great, inasmuch as he ceases to
-be a priest in sentiment and action. It is often supposed
-that a priest has to do many things in consideration of "his
-cloth." Many actions that humility dictates are considered
-<i>infra dig</i>. It would be so, for instance, to carry one's own
-bundle, polish one's shoes, allow a navvy to spit in one's face,
-or a ragamuffin to tear one's coat, without handing him
-over to the police. St. Francis Xavier did not think it
-<i>infra dig</i> to wash his own shirt, and Father Spencer was
-very much of that saint's way of thinking on this and
-kindred points.
-</p>
-<p>
-When, however, he had arrived at the lowest depth of
-humiliation he could possibly reach, like his Divine Master,
-he began to shine forth and to move the whole world. We
-have traced above how this change came about. He used to
-speak to every one, merely as agreeable matter of hopeful
-conversation, about the conversion of England, and get
-them also to pray for it. His crusade was quite accidental
-as far as his own preconceived notions were concerned. He
-went to France with Mr. Phillipps, much against his will,
-and found himself all of a sudden launched into the great
-work of his life, by the encouraging words of French
-prelates. He was not the man to lose an opportunity of
-doing good through lack of energy or fear of opposition.
-He could brave everything for God's glory. If there was
-anything that helped him best in his work, it was the opposition
-he encountered. He knew that, and therefore every
-new stroke levelled against him from friends or foes was a
-fresh impetus to new exertions. Hence he is now the correspondent
-of the heads of the Catholic Church at home
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-and on the continent; all the religious orders have heard of
-him and his zeal for England; seculars have heard; priests,
-nuns, monks, all chime in with his notions; many because
-they were glad to have the opportunity, many because they
-did not wish to be behind their neighbours, and all because
-it was a good, holy, and laudable thing to pray for the
-conversion of heretics.
-</p>
-<p>
-He says little about his property or what is being done
-with it in any of the letters that remain after him; but a
-bishop in whose diocese he lived has told us something. Mr.
-Spencer had from his father's will and testament £3,600 in
-some funds, besides an annuity of £300 for life, to which
-£300 were added <i>ad beneplacitum dantis</i>. His moderate
-way of living took very little from this sum every year, so
-all the remainder, with the interest of some years, was at
-the bishop's disposal. Two missions, Dudley and West
-Bromwich, were founded by him with this property, at least
-for the greater part; and the ground upon which the present
-college of Oscott stands was bought chiefly with what
-Father Spencer gave the bishop. He gave a pension to his
-old housekeeper, which she still receives, and whilst his
-property was thus doing good for others and the Church, he
-would not travel in a first-class carriage on the railway, and
-often walked from Oscott to Birmingham, in order to be
-able to give the fare for his journey to some persons along
-the way.
-</p>
-<p>
-He had done more than this: he was in close correspondence
-with Dr. Gentili and Father Dominic. He paved
-their way, and worked upon the opinions of many whose
-influence was required for their introduction into England.
-Dr. Gentili was a personal friend of his, and so was Father
-Dominic; but Father Spencer thought the claims of the
-former somewhat stronger for reasons which can only be
-surmised. Mrs. Gaming, his cousin, to whose letters we
-owe a great deal of the information we are able to glean
-concerning their transactions, was the great advocate of the
-Passsionists. She so pressed the matter upon him that he
-gets rather impatient, and tells her to mind her prayers and
-leave these things to others. Our Fathers agreed in General
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-Chapter, in 1839, to send a colony to England; but as there
-was no provision made nor opening offered, for some years
-more this decision, was not carried into effect. The
-Passionists refer their coming to England, under God, to
-Cardinal Wiseman, acknowledging at the same time that
-Father Spencer did something towards the work. He also
-had a good deal to do with the coming of the Trappists to
-Loughborough, near Mr. Phillipps's. In all these three
-events he works in his own quiet way, beneath the surface,
-writing and advising, and doing what lay in his power
-consistent with other duties.
-</p>
-<p>
-He keeps up correspondence by letter with some of his
-old friends at college, and with one or two of the Tractarians,
-Mr. Palmer, the author of the "Church of Christ," among
-the number. An old friend of his writes to him from among
-the Irvingites, and Father Spencer writes to another in
-these terms:&mdash;"The supposed miraculous voice, to which
-that party (the Irvingites) attend, has named 12 men as
-Apostles, who expect shortly to be endued with miraculous
-powers to enable them to restore the Church in its perfect
-beauty. Drummond the banker is one. Spencer Percival,
-and my great friend Henry Bridgman, Lord Bradford's
-brother, others." It is not a little strange that this Mr.
-Bridgman comes into the journal of Father Ignatius's Cambridge
-life very frequently, and mostly in the character of a
-Mentor.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius never gained much from correspondence,
-sought on his part, with leading men in the great religious
-movements of the period. But whenever others sought his
-advice, they generally became Catholics. They were disposed
-for truth, and he could remove objections, tell them of
-books, and pray for them. He broke off this kind of unasked-for
-correspondence at this time, but he resumed it
-again on a different footing, as shall be related in its place.
-</p>
-<p>
-He had another means of doing good now, which could
-not come into his line while simple pastor of a country
-district. The college of Oscott was a place worth seeing, if
-not as a specimen of architecture, at least as being the
-stronghold of Catholicism, and the centre of a great deal of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">{268}</a></span>
-intellectual and moral training. Many of his great friends,
-who could not hitherto devise any plausible plea for visiting
-him in his retirement, could find one immediately now, from
-the place he dwelt in as well as the position he there held.
-His name was also noised abroad, and persons would feel
-some curiosity for the acquaintance of one who was moving
-heaven and earth for their conversion. Accordingly, we find
-that he entertains his two brothers, the then earl and his
-successor, on one day; Lord Lyttelton and Mr. Gladstone
-on another day, and so forth. Thus, that particular power
-he possessed in his conversation had a field upon which it
-could be brought into requisition, in a manner which former
-arrangements had debarred to him.
-</p>
-<p>
-Several of the sermons he preached were published and
-distributed. There was no faculty of his, natural or supernatural,
-no good deed he was capable of doing, that did not
-come into play far better by his late transfer to Oscott. He
-was also practised in the drudgery of a missionary priest&mdash;
-that sphere of action which fills up a priest's ordinary life;
-and he was able from experience to teach others, not only
-how to prepare themselves, but how to succeed with profit
-to themselves and others in this work. He had also peculiar
-advantages here; he could give the young ecclesiastics
-not only the abstract rules for missionary labour, but a taste
-and relish for it, for very seldom can one succeed well if his
-tastes run counter to his duties. He did this by continuing
-in Oscott his old parish work; he visited the sick, brought
-them the sacraments; he gave a portion of every day to his
-favourite work, and by the incidents he came across, and the
-results of his labours, he raised up the young gentlemen's
-notions to the looking upon that as the poetic side of their
-ministry which is generally supposed to be the most prosaic.
-This is a great secret in the training of young men; to tell
-them best is best, and prove it to them, will convince them
-of course; but it will not lead them; there must be some
-grace, some romantic aspect put upon the thing, and then it
-entices them of itself. This was Father Spencer's secret,
-and, indeed, it might be said that it was his rule. He writes
-in a letter now, that he condemns asperity in controversy,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">{269}</a></span>
-and that civility and good breeding, with pity and love, is
-the way to confound opponents; and that he would rather
-see a clever argument unanswered than met with pungency
-and acrimony. This might be quarrelled with, for in war
-all things are lawful; but the real state of opinion to which
-he came on these matters was, that opponents were surer to
-be conquered by being enticed than driven. Let the Catholic
-religion but be seen in its native beauty, and thousands
-will be led to examine it.
-</p>
-<br>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">{270}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-Some Of His Doings In Oscott College.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Spencer's way of training young men has been
-already hinted at. He carried it out while he remained in
-his new office; he would go heartily into all their sports,
-make up their matches for cricket, and even give the
-younger ones instructions in the art. They had all a high
-opinion of his sanctity, and therefore the keeping of their
-juvenile spirits in order was not always a difficult matter.
-Oscott contained at the time 140 students, 30 only of whom
-were ecclesiastics. Among the lay students, who are mostly
-younger than the others, and have a notion too that because
-they do not intend to be priests they are not obliged to be
-so guarded as the rest, there were several who were not very
-manageable. One day a class he had in hand were rather
-uproarious; he quietly advised them to come to better sentiments;
-his words were, however, lost, and the noise was not
-abated. He remonstrated again, but all to no purpose. At
-length he got a hearing, and said: "Since I cannot correct
-you, and do not wish to chastise you, I shall pray to God
-to chastise you Himself." This, said in his sad mood, had
-such an effect upon the boys that it was never forgotten,
-and he never had the least difficulty with his class again.
-</p>
-<p>
-On another occasion he did something in execution of his
-duty, which gave great offence to one of the young men.
-This young man grossly insulted him, in words that shocked
-all who were within hearing, and particularly reflected on
-the Father's character as a gentleman and a man of honour.
-The insult must have been the more galling as the person
-who was guilty of it was by birth and education in the
-position of a gentleman. One calm and placid look was the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">{271}</a></span>
-only answer from Father Spencer, which reminded many
-present of our Lord's look at Peter after his denial. For
-this anecdote and the next we are indebted to the Right
-Rev. Dr. Amherst.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "When he (Father Spencer) was a superior at Oscott, I
- had the good fortune to be under him. He frequently
- visited me and several of my companions in our rooms,
- where he would talk with greatest earnestness of the conversion
- of England, of the sanctification of the priesthood, and
- of the entire devotedness which should characterize a priest.
- Sometimes his visits took place late at night after we were
- gone to bed, when, if we were not asleep, he would sit upon
- a chair, a table, or the edge of the bed, and speak of his
- favourite themes for an hour. Once I remember awaking
- in the morning, after one of these visits, and expecting to
- find the father still seated on my bed, not perceiving that
- the night had passed. He had, no doubt, found that I had
- gone asleep, and went away quietly."
-</p>
-<p>
-Another time one of the students, a young man about
-17, who is now a zealous priest in the English Mission,
-happened to be out shooting somewhere. He took a shot at
-a blackbird, and some poor old woman was within range,
-and received a shot just over the eye. She cried out that
-she was shot, and one may imagine the embarrassment of
-the young student. She recovered, however; but in a year
-or two after the occurrence, a quack doctor applied some
-remedies to a new swelling in the eye, and swelling and
-remedies resulted in her death. There was an inquest held
-in Birmingham, to which the student was summoned.
-Whilst awaiting the day, the poor fellow was in very low
-spirits, as might be expected. Father Spencer went to his
-room to console him, and said that he had no reason to be
-cast down, that it was quite accidental, and permitted by
-God as a trial, with a great deal more. It was of little use,
-the poor student said, "but they might transport me."
-"Beautiful, beautiful," exclaimed the good Father; "fine
-field for the exercise of apostolic zeal among the poor convicts."
-"But then they might even hang me," rejoined the
-student. "Glorious sacrifice," said Father Spencer; "you
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
-can offer your life, though innocent in this case, in satisfaction
-for your other sins." Well, the student, though he
-thought the sentiments very high for his grade of spirituality,
-did not fail to profit by them, and tells the story to
-this day with a great deal of interest. Thus did Father
-Spencer work among the students, a model in all virtues,
-and so sweet and holy in his manner that his words went
-to the very heart with effect.
-</p>
-<p>
-This was how he went on in the ordinary routine of the
-work allotted to him; but his zeal could not be bounded by
-such a sphere, he had tried what expansion could do, and
-he sought by grand schemes to get other ways of doing
-good. His great notion was "perfection for all." "Be ye
-perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect," was ever ringing
-in <i>his</i> ears, and he desired to see that great counsel of
-our Divine Lord acted upon with more earnestness. He
-would do his share; he had long been living like a religious,
-and practising the three evangelical counsels with success.
-He wanted now to extend the same rule to others. Of
-course, he did not find many to adopt his notions, but lest
-priests might be considered to assume too much in condemning
-his plans, he was advised to put his ideas on paper, and
-send them to Rome. He did so, and the answer of the
-Roman Censor was unfavourable. This was a heavy blow,
-but he submitted at once, and thanked God he had superiors
-who could find out his faults, and knew how to correct him
-without human respect. We have reason to suppose this
-censor was no other than Dr. Wiseman, for he and Father
-Spencer differed a little about the introduction of religious
-orders into England. Father Spencer said his hope was
-not in religious orders, but in secular priests living the lives
-of religious. This was why he took no leading part in
-bringing Passionists or others into his country; he had a
-great opinion of their holiness, and wished to see them
-working for the conversion of England, but rather at a
-distance than in the field.
-</p>
-<p>
-To add to his crosses, Dr. Baines published a pastoral
-towards the end of the year 1839, in which he gave no
-hopes of the conversion of England, and prohibited public
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-prayers being made for that end. This was a terrible blow
-to poor Father Spencer; he wrote as if he did not well
-understand what he had to say, and the thing looked to
-him so uncalled-for and so uncharitable, that he was unable
-to explain himself. He was, however, pleased to find out
-afterwards that this very opposition gave new strength to
-the cause.
-</p>
-<p>
-In a sermon which Father Spencer preached in Manchester,
-in May, 1839, he used some expressions that gave
-offence to Catholic principles. The drift of the discourse is
-that Catholics and Protestants should sacrifice everything
-except truth itself for peace sake. In bringing this principle
-into application, he says the Catholics should offer
-themselves open to conviction, and be ready to lay down
-their belief, if it could be proved not true. He uses the
-following words:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The truth of my faith as a Christian
- and a Catholic is, to my mind, a certainty, because I have
- evidence that it was taught by God, who cannot deceive
- nor be deceived. Will that evidence be weakened by fresh
- examination and discussion? and do I anyways make an
- unholy or a perilous concession, when I declare myself
- ready to renounce my belief, if it were sufficiently shown to
- me that the evidences on which I believe it to be divine
- are wrong? I embraced and hold it now, because the
- evidence of its truth, was, and is to my mind unanswerable.
- I show no doubting of its truth, but, on the contrary, I
- declare how little doubt I have of its truth, when I profess
- myself with all my heart willing to renounce it if proved
- not true, and to embrace any form of doctrine which shall
- be presented in its place on sufficient grounds of credibility.
- This is the spirit in which I wish all Catholics would offer
- themselves to discussion with our Protestant brethren."
-</p>
-<p>
-If he meant this as a bold assertion of the certainty with
-which he held the Catholic faith, and would offer these
-terms because convinced of the utter impossibility of proving
-him to be wrong, it might be barely tolerated. It is a
-form of speech that has sometimes been used by controversialists&mdash;
-Maguire, for instance&mdash;but it has none the less been
-always considered rash. That this was the sense in which
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
-Father Spencer used it, is abundantly evident from other parts
-of the sermon. However, the proposition that a Catholic
-and a Protestant may meet on equal terms to discuss their
-tenets, each open to conviction by the other's arguments, is
-simply erroneous and scandalous, to say nothing more. We
-cannot do such a thing without denying the very basis of
-our faith. Our faith is not opinion, nor is it certainty
-simply. It is something more. It is a divine virtue infused
-into our souls, whereby we believe certain things.
-We must use reason to come to the evidence of faith, but
-faith once obtained must never be left at the mercy of the
-fickleness and weakness of any individual's understanding
-or power of argument.
-</p>
-<p>
-To lay down the proposition we animadvert on, would be
-equivalent to denying the objectivity of faith altogether.
-Whether a Catholic reasons well or ill, answers arguments
-or is confounded, his faith is the same; it is not his faith
-simply, but the faith of the Catholic Church, the faith
-given by God, which no man can add to or take from. Nay,
-the very putting of oneself in the position here mentioned
-is a real tempting God, if not undermining faith itself, by
-laying it open to the possibility of doubt. There is no use
-in deceiving Protestants, therefore, by apparent concessions
-like the rash offer which we said might be tolerated. It is
-impossible; our terms are fixed, and we are fixed in them,
-so that it is merely an exaggeration, in its mildest form.
-When, therefore, Father Spencer lays it down thus, and
-says that it is the spirit in which he would wish all Catholics
-to discuss, he may be fairly taxed with the second
-interpretation. Whether or no, it was wrong to preach it to
-all Catholics. Fancy a poor woman, who could scarcely read,
-entering into a discussion with an educated Protestant on
-these terms. He was of course called to order for this
-sermon, but his Catholic spirit was his safeguard. He first
-wondered how he had been wrong, but even laymen point
-out his mistake to him, and a word from the Bishop is
-enough to make him retract. Thus he soon found out the
-keenness of Catholic instinct to anything coming from a
-priest that even grazes the brink of error.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">{275}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-Some Events Of Interest.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-In the year 1840 Father Spencer had the happiness of hearing
-that his great friend, Dr. Wiseman, was consecrated
-bishop, and was coming from Rome to be coadjutor to Dr.
-Walsh, and take up his residence in the very College of
-Oscott where he himself was. Another event occurred, of
-no less interest. One of his brother priests, Dr. Wareing,
-was consecrated Bishop of Ariopolis, and Vicar-Apostolic
-of a new district, the Eastern district in England. Father
-Spencer preached the consecration sermon; and these two
-additional bishops in England raised his hopes of the spread
-of the Catholic faith. It may not be out of place to insert
-a sentence or two from a letter this venerable bishop, who
-has retired from his pastoral duties in consequence of ill
-health for some time past, has written to one of our fathers.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "On many occasions, while at Oscott College, the Superior,
- and myself among the rest, often thought his zeal too unbounded
- and rather imprudent, and could not sanction some
- of his projects and undertakings. Though it cost him much,
- he always obeyed, and used to pray that Heaven would direct
- his superiors, whose direction he never refused to obey. I
- believe he never wished for anything but the will of God,
- and waited patiently for its accomplishment. I remember
- also on one occasion hearing him say, 'How <i>beautiful</i> it
- would be <i>to die in a ditch, unseen and unknown</i>.'
- [Footnote 9] These
- were his very words; and I was forcibly struck when I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
- heard of the exact circumstances of his holy death, to see
- how his wish and prayer were granted to him."
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 9:
- This was his continual aspiration. He wished to die like his
- Lord, deprived of human aid and sympathy.]
-</p>
-<p>
-He receives news in the beginning of the year 1841 of
-six nuns having bound themselves by vow to pray for the
-conversion of England. But a more beautiful and consolatory
-piece of information still was, that a French missioner
-had formed an association in Persia of prayers for the same
-object. He goes to London and preaches in several churches,
-among others, in Lincoln's-Inn Fields, of course about the
-conversion of England, for he scarcely ever preached a
-sermon in which he did not introduce this topic; nay, he
-never held a half-hour's conversation without introducing
-it.
-</p>
-<p>
-It was about this time, too, that he came across Mr.
-Pugin the elder. His first meeting was rather characteristic
-of both. Father Spencer had preached a sermon somewhere
-on the conversion of England, and he gave benediction after
-it. Pugin came into the sacristy. The famous Goth saw
-Father Spencer in a Roman cope, and he comes up to him
-in a kind of nettlesome mood, saying, "What! convert
-England with such a cope as that?" Father Spencer says
-in a letter written at this time, "I am not possessed with
-the enthusiastic zeal for correct forms (Gothic) which some
-are. It is not my special calling .... Mr. Pugin
-is the authority to which I would defer in these matters."
-The only other opinion of Pugin's he records in his letters,
-is that he said to Father Spencer one time, "It is absurd to
-expect to get anything for one's works from booksellers or
-publishers."
-</p>
-<p>
-Another event that gave him joy, and afterwards a good
-deal of sorrow, was the conversion of a well-known, clergyman.
-This remarkable convert lived some time in Oscott
-after his conversion. Father Spencer took him with him
-sometimes on his parish duties, and had great hopes of him.
-These were all disappointed when, in a couple of years, he
-went back again after being ordained priest and having said
-mass. Father Ignatius often spoke of him, often visited
-him, and asked others to pray for him. He used to tell us
-one curious anecdote about him. Shortly after his apostasy,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
-he was invited to a tea-party where Evangelical ladies
-assembled to congratulate themselves, and sip their tea with
-new relish by having it sugared with some telling remarks of
-the lately-rescued slave from Popery. He was put several
-questions, such as "What do you think of Transubstantiation?"
-He answered, "Oh, that's as plain as possible in
-the Bible," and so forth. They were, of course, egregiously
-disappointed. Father Ignatius used to lament with peculiar
-anguish over this sad case. He always hoped for his return
-to the Catholic faith, and, strange enough, one of the first
-pieces of news in the way of conversion which we heard
-after Father Ignatius's death, was his return to the faith he
-had deserted.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the middle of the year 1842, he visits Ireland for the
-first time; he preaches in several places, in Dublin; especially
-for the Jesuits, in Gardiner Street; the Franciscans,
-Merchant's Quay. All, of course, about the conversion of
-England. He says: "My argument was, that the Irish
-having been specially victims of oppression under England,
-if I could gain the Irish to pray for England, prayers springing
-from such charity would be irresistible." He made a
-kind of a tour through Ireland, and got as far as Tuam.
-He feared the Archbishop of Tuam, knowing his opposition
-to England, and his detestation of English rule. For that
-very reason Father Spencer was the more anxious to convert
-him, or make him return good for evil. What was his
-surprise when he found the Archbishop not only kind and
-Irish in his hospitality, but really favourable to his projects.
-His grace got Father Spencer to preach, and promised him
-that he would give the substance of the same sermon to his
-people in their own sweet ancient tongue on the next Sunday.
-He was so enchanted at this, that he wrote off almost to
-every friend he had in the world about it. Though he often
-felt afterwards the powerful blows Dr. McHale delivered at
-England's doings, he never could forget his kind reception
-of himself, and always mentioned his grace's name with
-gratitude and reverence, only wishing that he would not be
-so hard on England.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next event he writes about was the arrival in England
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
-of Father Dominic of the Mother of God (Passionist), and
-his staying at Oscott for some time in order to learn English
-and wait for an opening in Aston to begin the first retreat
-of the English province. Before we quote his account of
-Father Dominic, it may be well to give a rather characteristic
-remark of his which occurs in the letter to Mrs.
-Canning, who was a great promoter, in the letter-writing
-way, of Father Dominic's coming. He says, "Your accounts
-of yourself are always interesting, as they must be in all
-cases where a person knows how to delineate accurately his
-own interior; for, in seeing the picture of another well
-drawn, we always may discern little touches of our own
-portraiture which had before perhaps escaped us, and that
-gives all the pleasure of sympathy, which is one of the
-realest pleasures."
-</p>
-<p>
-Further on in the same letter he writes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Padre Domenico has had his cross to bear with us, all
- this time; it is not like what usually makes crosses for
- people. He mourns over having plenty to eat, having
- windows which keep the weather out, having chairs to sit
- <i>on</i>, and tables to sit at, and longs to be in his house, which
- I suppose will not have much of all this to trouble him. I
- have to try to console him now and then, which I do by
- telling him that I never hear of anything brought about in
- our ecclesiastical arrangements without long delay, and yet
- all comes right at last, with patience. I tell him also that
- he must have known enough of the deliberativeness with
- which things of the kind are settled by the known slowness
- of all things at Rome. However, why should you have to
- bear this burden with us? You will, I hope, be consoled
- before long by hearing that they are settled, and going on,
- and have first a chair, then a table, then a kettle, and likely
- to have a smoke-jack, toasting-fork, and such like in due
- course, and, what will be not less interesting in its way,
- having good novices, and plenty of converts."
-</p>
-<p>
-The next thing he speaks about is not one event, but a
-series, though all only items in a great result for which he
-continually prayed and laboured&mdash;the conversions, which
-multiplied every day. In 1843 he says that converts are
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279">{279}</a></span>
-received in Birmingham at the rate of one a day, and many
-more elsewhere. He also mentions with great satisfaction
-that within the last year, 1842, three Anglican clergymen,
-four Oxford students, two countesses, and two earls' daughters
-had become converts. Although Father Spencer mentions
-these particularly, it is not to undervalue conversions from
-an humbler grade of life he does it. The soul of the beggar
-is as precious in the eyes of God, <i>apud quern non est acceptatio
-personarum</i>, as the soul of the king. Father Spencer
-did not undervalue the conversions of the middle and lower
-classes on the contrary, he worked hard to get as many as
-possible from them. He had always notions of a great move
-towards Catholicity, and he thought that if the higher ranks
-took the lead in this, the others would follow.
-</p>
-<p>
-In 1844, he mentions his going to Nottingham with a
-large party, among whom is Mr. Ward, "one of the most
-advanced Oxford clergy. Oh! that he would come a little
-further, but at present he seems to have no thoughts of it.
-God knows whether he may not soon get a little help onwards.
-Make a good prayer for this." Mr. Ward did get
-certainly onwards. Here and there we find sighs escape
-him about his beloved people of Northampton and Brington.
-He did assuredly love his native place intensely, and it must
-have been a trial to his feelings that he could do nothing
-externally towards alleviating its spiritual destitution.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br>
-His Tour On The Continent In 1844.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-In 1844 he became so nervous and weak that he was forbidden
-exertion of any kind; his ailment is manifest in his
-tremulous handwriting. On medical advice, he takes a tour
-on the Continent with Mr. and Mrs. Phillipps and their
-children. His account of this tour is preserved in a
-Journal, and we think it well to give it entire, without any
-compression.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- On <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, July 3rd, 1844,</span>
- I set off from Grace
- Dieu Manor for a tour on the Continent with my dear
- friend, Ambrose Phillipps, his wife, his two eldest boys,
- Ambrose and Edward, and John Squires, his servant. He
- took his carriage, in which he and his family sat on the
- railway from Loughborough to London, while I went in a
- second-class carriage. We arrived at the Burlington Hotel,
- and dined about 7 o'clock. Afterwards we went out different
- ways. I called at Dr. Griffiths, but he was not at home.
- I had tea with Dr. Maguire, whom I found at home; we
- had an hour's talk, about the Oxford men principally. Got
- home about 10.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, July 4.&mdash;</span>Went with the Phillippses to Father
- Lythgoe's, in Bolton Street, where I said mass, and breakfasted
- at 10. I went to see Dr. Chambers, in Brook Street,
- being ordered by Dr. Wiseman to consult him as to the
- propriety of taking a long tour, as is proposed by Phillipps.
- Dr. Chambers recognized me at once, as I used in 1824 or
- 1825 to follow his visits to the patients in St. George's
- Hospital, with a view to learn medicine. He judged it
- quite necessary that I should have at least three months'
- absence from work, and approved of my travelling with
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281">{281}</a></span>
- moderate exertion. So I am fixed at last to set off. God
- knows how I shall go through. The present plan is to go
- through Belgium, to Munich, the Tyrol, Venice, Milan,
- Turin, Lyons, Paris, and home; and my purpose is to get
- prayers for England's conversion, and to see men rather than
- places and things. After Dr. Chambers, I went to the
- Bank, to get my letter of credit, then to Buckingham
- Palace, to see my sister. After I had waited a half-hour
- she returned from her drive, and took me to her nursery
- apartments at the top of the house. I had my first glance
- at Prince Albert, going out to ride with Colonel Bouverie.
- From Sarah, I went to Lyttelton's house, 39, Grosvenor
- Place, where I found Caroline Lyttelton was expected home
- in an hour, and so I went on to call on Sisk, who was
- out, and I came back and saw Lyttelton, with whom I went
- in his carriage towards the House of Lords, and was set
- down in St. James's Street. On the table in Grosvenor
- Place I saw what I was 21 years ago, in a miniature
- painted by Ross&mdash;a blooming rosy youth. I did not believe
- it till Caroline told me. I came to dine with Sarah at 8,
- and staid till 10. Our conversation was most interesting,
- about the Queen and the children, and the great people
- from abroad, &amp;c., whom she saw; above all, the Czar and
- the Duke of Wellington. She set me down at our hotel at
- 10½, after calling at Neville Grenville's, where I saw Lady
- Charlotte and a large family.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, July 5th.&mdash;</span>
- Mass and breakfast as yesterday.
- About 11 started for Dover, in the same order as from
- Loughborough; arrived at 5. I went to call on Mr. Savage,
- the priest, my old companion at Rome. He does not seem
- a movement man. He came to tea with us.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, July 6th.&mdash;</span>
- As the packet was to start at 7, I
- missed saying mass. As it happened, we had to wait on
- board till 9 for the mail. We had intended to cross to
- Ostend, but Phillipps, getting afraid of the long crossing for
- sickness, so we all agreed to prefer the shorter-by-half
- passage to Calais. We had a good passage, but we all were
- miserable; the two boys were very sick. However, as the
- French boatmen assured us, the tread of the dry land of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
- France worked wonders to cure us all. We went to Dessin's
- Hotel. I was full well reminded of September, 1819, my
- first landing in France, and of divers other epochs, Sept.
- 1820, Nov. 1820, and Feb. 1830. Before dinner we went
- to the church to give thanks, and commend our future to
- God. I asked <i>le Suisse de l'Eglise</i> (the verger) to pray for
- England. Nothing else done at Calais. We started in the
- afternoon for S. Omer, which we reached late. The country
- we passed was very fertile; for the first time I have seen
- cultivation which struck me as superior to English; the
- state of the people is manifestly more happy and prosperous.
- After tea I went to the Grand Vicaire, M. Dumez, to ask
- leave for mass, &amp;c. I had forgotten to get credentials from
- Dr. Wiseman, and so he hesitated, but gave the <i>celebret</i>. I
- went on, though tired, to M. Durier, Curé de Notre Dame,
- who received me most cordially, and on my stating my
- errand, pressed me to preach at the high mass on the
- morrow. I hesitated, but he came with me to our hotel,
- and Phillipps joined in pressing it, and so I wrote a quarter
- of an hour's worth before going to bed, hoping I was not
- out of rule, but doubting.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, July 7.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at Notre Dame, a fine Gothic
- church; went home to breakfast, and back to high mass at
- 9½. After the Gospel, M. Durier first read the <i>annonces</i>,
- the Epistle, and the Gospel, and introduced my object to
- the people. Then I went into the pulpit, and made my
- address without any difficulty. He then rose opposite to
- me, and pledged himself and his flock to pray for England.
- After mass, I went a round of the convents of the town
- with an old man sent from one of them with me. The
- convents which promised their prayers were the following:
-</p>
-<p class="cite2">
- Les Ursulines, 37 nuns; 300 scholars.
-<br><br>
- Les Soeurs Hospitalières de S. Louis.
-<br><br>
- L'Hospice de S. Jean, served by nuns.
-<br><br>
- L'Hôpital Général des enfants trouvés, &amp;c.
-<br><br>
- Les Religieuses de la Sainte famille.
-<br><br>
- Le Couvent du Saint Sacrement,<br>
- where are only 3 nuns,
- the Superioress an Englishwoman, who observed that
- in her profession, when prostrate&mdash;a time when it is said
- the chosen prayer is sure to be granted&mdash;the first thing
- she asked was England's conversion.
-<br><br>
- Les Frères des Écoles Chrétiennes.<br>
- The Superior promised
- to recommend the prayers to his brethren of 30 houses
- in this district, who meet in August for a retreat.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "We proceeded at 3 to Lille, stopping at the exit from
- St. Omer to see the ruined Abbaye de St. Bertin. We
- stopped at Cussel, a place on the top of a mountain commanding
- a grand prospect over a vast plain richly wooded
- and cultivated. The maître d'hôtel wanted us sadly to stay,
- but we went on, after a walk to the top of the mount, and
- to the church. We came late to Lille, and not finding room
- at l'Hôtel de l'Europe, we put up at l'Hôtel de Gand, not
- a very nice one, in the Grande Place.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, July 8.&mdash;</span>
- I first went to the Church of St.
- Catherine, to see Abbe Bernard, my friend, introduced
- by Mrs. Canning. He was gone, yesterday, to Paris. I
- then went to Rue Royale, No. 61, memorable for ever as
- the direction to which my letters from Brington to Miss
- Dolling were addressed. M. Friot Chombard, who lives
- there, was also absent from Lille. I then went to the
- Church of St. Étienne, where the Grand Doyen lived; and,
- having seen him, I said mass. I then called on him in his
- house, and obtained his promise to advocate the cause of
- England. After breakfast, I went to the Church of St.
- Maurice, which is called the Cathedral. It is the first I
- have seen with four aisles. I saw nothing more in Lille;
- we left it about 12, and reached Tournay about 2. I
- went at once to the Évéché, where I found the Bishop's
- Secretary, who took me to a great convent of nuns, which
- the Bishop has founded, and is building this house for. It
- is to contain sixty nuns, and a great number of <i>pensionnaires</i>.
- I was presented to his lordship in the garden, and obtained
- a full promise of his patronage of the cause of England. I
- came back to dine at the Hotel (du Singe d'Or); to my surprise
- and pleasure, Talbot came in with Phillipps, who had
- met him in the Cathedral. After dinner, he and I took a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
- carriage and went to see the Passionists au Château d'Ere,
- about three miles off. Le Père Pierre, Superior of the
- house, received us with all kindness. He has three companions
- priests, and three brothers. They were building a
- church of good size, and seem to prosper; but he complains
- that no postulants come; they have received not one cleric
- yet. He thinks they fear the bare feet. He came back
- with us to Tournay, to see Phillipps. Soon after, we started
- on our way to Brussels; still by post horses, as all the way
- from Calais. We stopped at Alte to sleep. The hotel was
- one of the most agreeable and cheapest, though small.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, July 9.&mdash;</span>
- There are two churches at Alte. I
- went to St. Julien's, and said mass. Afterwards I introduced
- Phillipps and Madame to the Doyen, M. Picquart,
- who was most pleasing and full of knowledge, and promised
- all for England. We here had a contest with John, which
- threatened his being sent home, but he came round before
- the day was out. We started at 10 for Brussels. The
- country not equal to France. We came to the Hôtel de
- Belle Vue, in the Place Royale. Having engaged a suite of
- rooms, we sat down at once at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. After it, I
- went to seek for the Abbé Donnet, to whom I had a note
- from Seager. He was out. I then went to Ste. Gudule, the
- cathedral, and saw the Vicaire, a Dutch priest, with whom
- I settled to say mass to-morrow. Then I took a <i>vigilante</i>
- (i.e. a cab) to the College de St. Michel, of the Jesuits, where
- I saw the Second Superior. Then to the Redemptorists,
- where the Superior took up the cause warmly. Home to tea.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, July 10.&mdash;</span>
- Went at 7 to Abbé Donnet;
- then to mass at Ste. Gudule. At 9, Abbé (Chanoine)
- Donnet called, and, after an hour's talk about Oxford, took
- us to Monsignor Pacci, the Pope's Nuncio, Archbishop of
- Damietta. He is a most holy-looking man; conversed with
- us most kindly; knew much about the Oxford people;
- promised his help. I then let the Phillippses go their way,
- intending to make a day of canvassing convents. But M.
- Donnet took me only to three, and then had to go his way at
- 12. The three were:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite2">
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, Rue de l'Étoile, 14 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Pauvres Claires, Rue de Manige, Maison Mère a Bruges, 13 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Couvent de Bellaymont. Chanoinesses Régulières de St.
- Augustin. Unique Maison.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285">{285}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- After this, I went to Ste. Gudule, and met Phillipps, with
- whom I went to the Jardin Botanique, and to the hospital
- for old men. It is a grand establishment, by private charity.
- It contains 700 old men, of whom 100 pay for themselves;
- the rest are kept free, and with wonderful regard to their
- comforts. I called on a curé close by, thinking to get the
- prayers of these <i>vielliards</i>; but he took me for a begging
- priest, and turned me out of doors. <i>Deo gratias</i>. Thence
- to the Musée, a collection of pictures, which hardly paid the
- trouble of looking at. After dinner at the <i>table d'hôte</i>, we
- took a carriage to go to Jette St. Pierre, to meet the Cardinal
- Archbishop of Malines, at the Convent of the Sacré Coeur
- there. On the way we saw an interesting church; outside was
- a tomb of Madame Malibren. At Jette, Madame de Wall,
- my friend of 1832 at Bordeaux, introduced us to the Cardinal.
- This was a consolation indeed. He undertook to
- recommend England to all the Bishops of Belgium, invited
- me to their meeting on the 29th July, and promised that all
- their priests and convents should engage in the cause. This
- is a noble convent. Madame de Wall said they prayed for
- England every half-hour in the day.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, July 11.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at St. Jacques, in the
- Place Royale. Went to Malines by the <i>chemin du fer</i>,
- Phillipps in the carriage on a truck, I in a <i>char-à-banc</i>.
- Arrived at l'Hôtel de la Grue just in time for the <i>table
- d'hôte</i>, on which I only remark the immense length of time
- taken to dine. After it, we went to the Petit Séminaire,
- where we were warmly greeted by the Abbé Bonquéan, our
- friend of Oscott and Grace Dieu. He took us about to a
- few places; and at 5 to the Salut, at the Cathedral; after
- which he introduced Miss Young, the convert, sister
- to Isabella. She went with us to Hanicq's, the printer's,
- and to a fine old church, &amp;c. I visited no convents,
- reserving this for my return. Opposite our hotel, the grand
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286">{286}</a></span>
- Theatre des Lapons forced itself to be noticed till late at
- night.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, July 12.&mdash;</span>
- After mass and breakfast, we went to
- visit the Cardinal Archbishop, who graciously gave me a
- paper of testimonial, which will, I hope, save some trouble.
- His countenance and manner are highly prepossessing. At
- 12 we started for Antwerp, by railway, leaving the carriage
- at the station at Malines. We arrived at the Hôtel
- St. Antoine, just in time for the <i>table d'hôte</i> at 2. There
- I met Mr. Blore, with his daughter, now grown a fine young
- woman. After dinner, to the Cathedral. I need not speak
- of the glorious tower, 466 feet high. What attracted our
- attention most was the wonderfully beautiful restoration of
- the stalls in oak carved work; 40,000 francs have been
- spent in this already, and not half the stalls are finished, and
- this actually in process of work is more pleasing to see than
- the most beautiful morsels of ancient work, for the promise
- it gives of better days. The pulpit is a mass of exquisite
- carving, in a style seemingly favourite in this part of Belgium.
- The most beautiful we saw was at Brussels, Ste. Gudule,
- where, below the preacher, are seen Adam and Eve banished
- from Paradise; and above, the head of the serpent, who
- winds round the pulpit, crushed by Mary. The same style
- of carving is around the pulpit at Marines, Louvain, &amp;c.,
- but is seen no more at Liége. After seeing the cathedral,
- we went to the Musée, containing first-rate specimens of
- Rubens, citizen of Antwerp; as also of Van Dyke and
- Quintin Matsys, of whom there is an excellent picture of
- the Descent from the Cross. Finding myself near the College
- of the Jesuits, I went in and saw the Rector, who took
- up our cause zealously. He walked home with me to
- see Phillipps, and they soon got intimate.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, July 13.&mdash;</span>
- After mass in the cathedral, we
- went, by last night's appointment, to visit the Superior of
- the Jesuits, who showed us his house. Then, Phillipps
- going to see some churches, &amp;c., I went with a lay brother,
- given me for guide by the Superior, to visit convents.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- We called at the following:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite2">
- Coletines, près la Porte Rouge, 28 nuns
-<br><br>
- Dames de l'Instruction Chrétienne, 17 nuns
-<br><br>
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, 20 nuns
-<br><br>
- Soeurs Grises, 34 nuns
-<br><br>
- Soeurs Noires, 49 nuns
-<br><br>
- Apostolines, in two houses, 67 nuns
-<br><br>
- Soeurs de Charité, 12 nuns
-<br><br>
- Béguinage (that is, a collection of
- houses, in which Sisters live under
- a Superioress, not bound by vows for life) 54 nuns
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Except the latter, where I was referred to the Director, who
- was not so attentive, all received the proposal warmly. The
- brother was my interpreter with many, who did not know
- French. At 1 we got home, and I took the Phillippses to the
- curé of the cathedral, who introduced to us M. Durlet, the
- young architect, who, with a partner at Louvain, is doing
- the beautiful work in the choir. We went into the cathedral
- again, and I was prevented going to two remaining
- convents, but the curé promised to do it for me. M. Durlet
- came to dine with us at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. I just called at
- l'Hôtel du Park, to see Miss Dalton, who is ill there. Mr.
- Turpin and Mr. Crowe, two Lancashire priests, are with her.
- The former accosted me in the cathedral. We set off then
- to Malines by the railway; there met Abbé Bonquéan; had
- tea, and went on to Louvain. We got in late, in heavy rain;
- Phillipps had to walk from the railway a mile in the rain.
- I went first to the Hôtel de Suide, where I found Dr.
- Ullathorne and Mr. Hansom, his architect.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">7th Sunday af. Pent. July 14.&mdash;</span>
- I had my palpitation
- worse than ever to-day. I wish to attribute it to my two
- days' abstinence, and not to my walking after convents. It
- went off after breakfast. I said mass at the Cathedral St.
- Pierre. High mass at 10. It was one of extreme opposition
- to plain chant, with drums and orchestra. In this
- church remember the beautiful tabernacle, a stone pinnacle,
- on the Gospel side of the altar. There was no <i>prône</i>, and a
- second high mass immediately after. The Hôtel de Ville is
- a famous piece of Gothic, not so admirable to my view as
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288">{288}</a></span>
- that at Brussels, which is much larger, not so highly wrought,
- and has a beautiful spire. After dinner, at 1, with Dr.
- Ullathorne, and at the <i>table-d'hôte</i>, we went to see M. and
- Madame de Coux. We got into interesting talk with him
- on matters religions, ecclesiastical, and political. He is a
- professor of political economy, a Frenchman, brought up
- in England under old Dr. Woods. We went on till after
- 5, and so missed the <i>salut</i>, sermon, and procession at the
- church. He took us to the University, where we saw Abbé
- Malou, who claimed me as an old acquaintance, one of the
- three at the Collegio Nobile whom I knew at Rome. He
- is Professor of Dogmatic Theology, most learned, high bred,
- and amiable. M. Bonquéan came kindly to meet us from
- Malines, and was with us till 6. After having spent nearly
- an hour with M. Malou, who showed us the library (10,000
- vols.) of which he is keeper, we went to tea with M. de Coux,
- and came home at 9½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, July 15. St. Swithin.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at St. Pierre, for
- the Feast <i>de Divisione Apostolorum</i>. After breakfast I went
- again to M. de Coux, who took me to see a M. Mühler, whom
- he recommended as tutor to John Beaumont. At 12, railway
- to Liege. Dined at 5, at l'Hôtel de France. At 6, <i>salut</i> at
- St. Denys. Before dinner I went to the Redemptorists,
- but found Père Van Held and Deschamps out of town.
- The Bishop also away. We went at 7 a walk to a bookseller's,
- from which I went in quest of the Grand Vicaire.
- I met an old priest in the street, Abbé Marsomme, who took
- me to M. Jacquenot, the second Grand Vicaire, and then
- walked home and took tea with us. These two promised to
- spread prayer for England through Liege. I wrote to Mrs.
- Beaumont before bed.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, July 16.&mdash;</span>
- Our Lady of Mount Carmel.&mdash;Mass
- at St. Denys, where is a beautiful piece of old oak carving.
- Phillippses received communion. After breakfast, at 9, we
- went to high mass at the cathedral. It was solemn plain
- chant. The church has many stained-glass windows, like
- those of Ste. Gudule, Brussels, of 1550, much gone off from
- the older time. The pulpit is new carved oak, with a beautiful
- tower with pinnacles above, a great improvement on
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
- the carved pulpit above named, though not so costly perhaps.
- The church is much debased, as usual, in other parts. We
- met Chanoine Erroye, who took us to the other great church,
- St. Jacques, which rivals or surpasses the cathedral. The
- ceiling coloured, though like the cathedral. They are doing
- a great deal to restore this church. The Doyen was there
- overlooking the work. The stained glass was much better
- than at Brussels, but not the best (date 1527); not so far
- down hill. The Chanoine then took us to the Abbé Marsomme,
- who is Director of an hospice with 19 nuns, taking
- care of 180 old women, beautifully kept. The Quarant'
- Ore was being celebrated in this church. It is kept up in
- Liége all the year round, and comes four times to each church.
- We then went with the Chanoine Erroye to the Grand Séminaire.
- The library is beautiful. There are here 120 students;
- and at the Petit Séminaire, 360. They go through nine courses
- at the Petit, and three at the Grand, so that 40 are sent on the
- mission every year, and 40 more come on below. Came home to
- <i>table d'hôte</i> at 1. After it we made an attempt to go to Angleur,
- 3 miles off, where Mrs. Ambrose's father, Hon. Thomas
- Clifford, who died at Liége in 1817, is buried. We were
- stopped by mud and rain, and came back, seeing the church
- of Ste. Croix, which was not very remarkable (<i>Mem</i>. a dog
- carrying the keys as porter), and St. Martin, a fine church
- of second rate, but famous as the place where, at one of the
- side altars, the feast of Corpus Christi was celebrated for the
- first time, owing to the inspirations received by a nun called
- Soeur Julienne. The 6th Centenary will be held in 1846.
- We met a young, amiable-looking priest in the church. He
- promised to think of England at the altar, in the special
- mass of the Blessed Sacrament, which is celebrated at it
- every Thursday, whatever feast may interpose. It was
- heavy rain, and we came home to <i>salut</i> at St. Denys, and
- thence to the hotel. I wrote up a good deal of this journal.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, July 17. St. Osmond.&mdash;</span>
- We took a stouter
- equipage, and got to Angleur early. I said mass, and the
- Phillippses communicated over the place of her father's repose.
- The boys served the mass. The Curé, Matthias Jn. Convardy,
- who remembered Mr. Clifford while himself quite
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
- young, gave us breakfast after, very kindly. All these
- priests were warm for England. We returned to Liége,
- and I went to the banker; then home to dinner at 1. Then
- went off by railway to Aix-la-Chapelle. It passes through
- beautiful romantic scenery. There is no railway with so
- many tunnels in the distance. I got into conversation with
- a party of Oxonians going to spend the long vacation at
- Baden. One of them, Mr. G. F. Brown, of Trinity, was
- full of information, and quite moving on, a great friend of
- W. Palmer, of Magdalen. He promised to visit Oscott.
- We came to the Hôtel Nuelleus, a very grand one. I went
- to the Chief Canon, the Grand Vicaire being gone to Cologne,
- and got leave for mass to-morrow. We are now in Prussia,
- and all on a sudden all German&mdash;hardly a word of French
- spoken. We had tea, and I finished my Journal up, in my
- room, after saying matins.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, July 18.&mdash;</span>
- I went to the cathedral, and after
- mass, saw the wonderful relics which are preserved in the
- sacristy of the cathedral. This cathedral consists of a round
- Byzantine building, which was built by Charlemagne as the
- chapel to his palace; and a high Gothic choir, which was
- added to it after the palace had been burnt down. A young
- priest showed the relics; he is always in waiting for the
- purpose, except for the time of high mass and office. The
- great relics&mdash;viz., the dress of the Blessed Virgin, the clothes
- which our Lord had on Him on the cross, and the cloth into
- which John Baptist's head fell&mdash;are kept in a magnificent
- chest, which is shown, but is only opened every seven
- years, and when a crowned head comes. The next
- time is July 10, 1846. Above this chest is one containing
- the bones of Charlemagne, whose skull and spine-bone,
- and even hunting-horn, are shown in separate reliquaries.
- His crown and sword are at Vienna. Here is
- shown also the girdle of our Lord, of leather, with Constantine's
- seal upon it; the rope with which he was tied to the
- pillar; the girdle of Our Lady; and many other glorious
- relics less important. The interior of the doors enfolding
- these treasures is lined most beautifully with paintings of
- Albert Durer, and many admirable Byzantine paintings.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291">{291}</a></span>
- These relics were principally given to Charlemagne by the
- Caliph, Haroun Alraschid. The cases were gifts of several
- emperors, &amp;c., as Lothaire, Charles V., Philip II. They
- were preserved in the French Revolution by a priest, who
- conveyed them to Paderborn and hid them. After breakfast
- I returned to the cathedral with Phillipps for high mass,
- which was in solemn plain chant, and then saw the relics
- again at 11½, after going to the Palais de Justice. At 12 I
- got a little dinner, and went by the railway to Grand, parting
- from the Phillippses, please God, for a fortnight only.
- I went to bed at the Hôtel de Flandre, leaving no
- luggage&mdash;all left at Malines.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, July 19.&mdash;</span>
- Went to the cathedral to say mass.
- My morning was taken up with going to the railway about
- my poor luggage, which at last I saw, and visiting the Provincial
- of the Jesuits, to see about my retreat. I dined at
- the hotel. The cathedral is a most beautiful specimen of
- the Greek fittings in a Gothic church. I did not stop to
- have the finest pictures uncovered, for I had my business to
- see after. Two other beautiful churches, St. Nicholas and
- St. Michael. No signs here of Gothic restorations. At 3 I
- went with the Provincial to Franchismes, where they have
- bought an ancient Prémontré Abbey, which does not preserve
- much of the abbey still, except some corridors, once,
- as it seems, cloisters. It is, however, a beautiful establishment
- for its end. I saw and spoke to two English and one
- Irish novice, of course about England. I went back to
- Gand; and there Père Coultins, by desire of the Provincial,
- went with me to the Recollets, a reform of the Franciscans;
- their chief house is at St. Froud. Then to the Pauvres
- Claires; and then to one of the two Béguinages. Here are
- establishments, in one of which 800, and in the other 300,
- <i>quasi</i> nuns live in a cluster of separate houses.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Their origin is immemorial. They are bound by vows of
- obedience and chastity, not poverty, for the time that they
- remain. Hardly ever does one return to the world. The
- Père Coultins promised to visit for me the other convents of
- the town. This is what I could do for Ghent. At 6, I
- started by railway to Louvain, where I was received as an
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
- old acquaintance at the Hôtel de Suide. The Provincial
- sends me here for my retreat. In the train to Malines, I
- had Mr. Maude and Mr. Perry. Finished Journal, and to
- bed at near 12.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, July 20.&mdash;</span>
- After mass at the cathedral, and
- breakfast, I went to the Seminary of the Jesuits, with a
- letter from the Provincial to Père Rosa, the rector. He
- introduced me to Père Vanderghote, who is to direct my
- retreat, and left me with him. We went to walk about
- the town, called on M. Malou, who undertook to translate
- a prayer from Dr. Wiseman's prayers for England, into
- French. I called on Mr. De Coux, and at I dined with
- these two fathers, and we went into the garden. I then
- wrote to Dr. Wiseman, Phillipps, and M. Bonquéan, and
- at ¼ to 5 began my retreat for eight days please God, till
- the end of which my present journal intermits. <i>Orate pro
- me omnes qui diligitis Deum</i>.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, July 29.&mdash;</span>
- I rose this morning out of my retreat,
- hoping that by the help of Almighty God I may preserve
- some of its fruit durably. I said mass once more at 7½
- in the private chapel, then after a conversation with my
- kind Father Vanderghote, I went to the College du Saint
- Esprit, where I saw M. Malou, and then went into the
- hall, where theses were defended by a young priest called
- Bacten, and then degrees conferred, and a discourse in
- Latin pronounced by Abbé Malou. The Nuncio and the
- Bishop of Amiens were there, with many others. At 2 I
- dined with M. Malou. The chief guests were the Grand
- Vicaire de Bruges, a monseigneur, and Abbé Marais, of
- the Sorbonne; much conversation was on England, and
- some good interest excited. I went again to see Père Rosa,
- and Vanderghote, and at 6½ was on the railway to Malines
- with a multitude of priests. I went to the Petit Séminaire,
- and supped, and M. Bonquéan walked with me to
- the Grue.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, July 30.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the cathedral, and
- then at 8 went to the Archbishop's palace, where, with
- much trouble, I got at the Chanoine's private secretary, who
- introduced me to the Cardinal and his five suffragan Belgian
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
- Bishops of Bruges, Tournay, Gand, Namur, and Liege,
- sitting after breakfast. I sat down, and in a short conversation
- a great deal seemed to be done for the cause. I was
- desired to draw up documents with M. Bonquéan to-day,
- and to dine with the prelates at 1 to-morrow, to hear their
- conclusion. <i>Laus Deo semper</i>. At 10½ I went to M.
- Bonquéan, where I found two young Oxford men, whom I
- afterwards found were Christie of Oriel and his brother.
- They went with M. Bonquéan and me on all our rounds
- to the convents of the town to-day. At 12 I dined at the
- Petit Séminaire, then, with M. Bonquéan and M. Vandervelde,
- who was very zealous for England, I began to
- prepare for to-morrow; at 4½ the Christies came, and we
- walked till 7. The convents which we went to, and which
- all promised, and (except one which was cold) all with
- great warmth, were:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite2">
- Les Soeurs Hospitalières de Ste. Elisabeth, 21 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Les Marie Colae 17 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Soeurs de Charité, not St. Vincent's, but a
- house under the direction of the Grand Séminaire, 23 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Soeurs de Notre Dame, Abbé Bonquéan is
- Director here; we saw an interesting English
- novice, and stayed some time, 30 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Les Soeurs Apostolines, 24 nuns.
-<br><br>
- Les Pauvres Claires, not so zealous, 25 nuns.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Lastly, we visited a new house and institute called Frères
- de la Miséricorde, lately founded by a canon of the cathedral,
- by name Scheppers. There are now 27 brothers, of
- whom 25 are on their mission, which is to enter, several
- together, the prisons of the country, and devote themselves
- to the spiritual and bodily care and cure of the prisoners.
- The Government favours them remarkably; it seems a most
- notable institution, and the founder was a most interesting
- man. He promised warmly to engage all his brethren. At
- 7½ I went to the station, and met Elwes, on his way home
- from Kissengen. I brought him up, and we had supper at
- the Grue. I went to bed after a good bit of work to be
- got up, office, Journal, account, &amp;c.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, July 31. St. Ignatius.&mdash;</span>
- Elwes and I said
- mass at the cathedral. From 10 till near 1 he and I were
- both at work copying an address for the Bishops, of which
- I thought to give each a copy. At one I went to dine at
- the Cardinal's. There were there six Bishops and the
- Nuncio, and many of the chief clergy. I sat next to
- Mgr. de Namur; afterwards I took an hour's walk in the
- garden, and at 4 attended the meeting of the Bishops, who
- came to a happy resolution of granting an indulgence of
- 40 days for every mass, every communion, even hearing
- mass, or saying it with a memento for England, and reciting
- a prayer which they determined on. The Cardinal was full
- of noble kindness. This grant was more than I had proposed
- in my paper, and so my morning's work and Elwes's
- was useless in a very agreeable way. I went to the Grue
- and found M. Bonquéan and the Christies with Elwes.
- In packing up I found my passport was lost, and went off,
- therefore, uncertain whether I could pass the frontier without
- writing for one to Brussels. The Christies travelled
- with me. I had some interesting conversation with each
- about their position in the Church of England. They took
- it with great gentleness, and answered well. They seem
- not to have thought of coming over, and yet to be in
- good disposition to do what they shall see right. We met
- very agreeably with the very priest of whom we have heard
- so much, who learnt English to instruct a lady in his
- parish near Bruges, whose daughter was already a convert,
- and writes letters to Dr. Wiseman for publication in England
- (Miss Heron). We became great friends, and he, with
- another young priest, his neighbour, who are taking a little
- tour together, came with us to the Aigle Noir, nearer the
- Redemptorists than l'Hôtel de France. We were very
- nearly upset in the omnibus, as we came up from the
- station; it was overloaded with luggage, and struck the
- wheels on the right in the sand, having got off the paving.
- We got out, unhurt, into another omnibus passing by;
- supper, and to bed.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, August 1.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the Redemptorists. Le
- Père Van Held invited us all to breakfast, i.e., the Christies
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295">{295}</a></span>
- and the priests, our new friends. I met there the Bishop's
- secretary, who gave me a letter to the Governor of Liege,
- Baron Van der Stein, who, happily, was come this morning
- into town, and gave me my passport. I then went on with
- my <i>vigilante</i> to see the Miss Nicholls, who have been living
- two years at the Benedictine convent, Quai d'Avroy. I
- met them last at Boulogne, in 1838. They promised to be
- busy in getting prayers. I then visited the Jesuits' College,
- and Abbé Marsomme. Dined at 1 at the <i>table d'hôte</i> with
- the Christies, whom Père Van Held had sent about sight-seeing
- with one of his priests. At 2.45 we took the convoy
- to Cologne, which we reached duly at 9¼, and went to the
- Hôtel du Douane, Gasthof zum Kölner Dom, close to the
- cathedral; we took a walk round the cathedral by moonlight
- after supper.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, August 2.&mdash;</span>
- I went to say mass in the cathedral,
- which we then looked round. It gives a melancholy spectacle
- of what miserable times have been gone through while
- it remained thus unfinished so long; but it is a consolation
- to see the glorious restoration now going on. The most
- beautiful points of the decoration of the choir are the fresco
- paintings above the pillars, and the rich gilded diapering on
- the lower part of them round the choir, in which one column
- alone is finished; and beautiful figures under canopies on
- each column, half-way to the top. The building is surrounded
- with great masses of stones for the completing of it. It is
- expected that it will be finished, fit for consecration, in four
- years, but not quite complete till twenty years hence, please
- God, if we have peace. After breakfast we went to call on
- Professor Michel, at the Seminary. He could not come
- with us. We saw the Jesuits' church, and returned to assist
- at part of a requiem mass at the cathedral, the anniversary
- of the Archbishop Ferdinand. I spoke to the Vicar-General
- about England, then went home, wrote to M. Malou, dined
- alone; and at 1 set off by a steamboat on the Rhine for
- Koenigswinter, parting from the Christies in the boat. I
- had nothing very remarkable in the passage; reached
- Koenigswinter at 5. I took up my lodgings at the Hôtel
- de Berlin, where the Phillippses had been for twelve days.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296">{296}</a></span>
- They came in from a ride in the mountains about 6, and we
- went to tea with Count and Countess Kurtzrock. He is
- Mrs. Ambrose's second cousin. Their daughter Marie and
- her governess gave us music.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, August 3.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the little church at Sta.
- Maria. The altar with altar-cloth only over the altar stone.
- The rest of the altar was brown wood. We breakfasted
- with Mrs. P.'s aunt, La Baronne de Veich, whom they are
- visiting. She lives in a small house with two nieces, Antoinette
- and Fanny Lutzou. At 10 we went across the Rhine
- to Gothsburg, a watering-place, where Mrs. Amherst and
- daughter have been staying; but they are gone to Italy. We
- walked up to a castle battered into ruin in the Thirty Years'
- war, overhanging the town. The little church half-way up
- the hill is a bad specimen of taste enough inside. We came
- back to dinner at the Baroness's at 2. I went home for
- two hours, then walked with Phillipps and Tony, as they call
- Antoinette, to see a house which she is undertaking to form
- into an asylum for old poor women; back to tea, and home
- to the hotel at 9.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, August 4. 10th after Pentecost, here marked 9th.&mdash;</span>
- I heard mass at 7 with the famous Kirchen Gesang,
- of whom I heard from Dr. Sweers while translating Overbury's
- Life. All the people sang German hymns through the whole
- mass with wonderful unison. After it I said mass. At 10
- was the high mass, i.e., another mass with Kirchen Gesang,
- rather more solemn; and a sermon. I came home then and
- wrote a letter to the Vicar-General at Cologne. I received
- from M. Bonquéan my book of papers pro Anglia, which I
- had left at Malines. At 1, dinner. Professor Schutz, of
- the University of Bonn, came to dine. We saw him off at
- 3, and then found that some one must go to Bonn to get
- money from the bank; so I took the charge, that I might
- see Bonn. I crossed the Rhine in a boat, and met an
- omnibus which took me on the road I travelled in 1820.
- The cathedral at Bonn, called the Münster, is of a style
- older than Gothic, but not quite Byzantine, something like
- our Saxon churches. The choir is elevated high above the
- nave, which sinks below the level outside, or the outside
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297">{297}</a></span>
- must have risen. Some arches are Gothic. The University
- is a large building, what would be called Grecian. In front
- of it is a handsome promenade or park. At 7½ I called a
- second time at Professor Schutz's house, and found him with
- M. Marais, of the Sorbonne. He gave me coffee, &amp;c. His
- rooms are full of curiosities from Palestine and Egypt. In
- 1819, 1820, and 1821, he was travelling, commissioned by
- Government, a literary journey through Egypt, Abyssinia, &amp;c.
- He is Professor of Scripture, a great Orientalist, a friend of
- Dr. Wiseman's. We spoke about Humanarianism and Overbury,
- and the Paris University, &amp;c. I went out and met
- my omnibus at a ¼ to 9, crossed the Rhine, and got home
- at 10.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, August 5. Sta. Maria ad Nives.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at 7½;
- at 9 we went to a high mass de requiem. They always
- sing one for every person who dies; and when the family
- can afford it, bread is given to the poor, as was done to-day.
- I stayed at home nearly, till one, then dinner at la Baronne's.
- Mr. Ambrose was not there, having had a fall
- yesterday, and taking rest for precaution. After dinner,
- looked over the Life of Napoleon in German; came home
- till I went to tea. The Count and Countess Kurtzrock and
- daughters came. The Countess promised to be an associate
- for England, and to spread it at Hamburg, where they live.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, August 6th.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at 6. I started at 7.30 by a
- steamer for Mayence. We passed Coblentz (lat. <i>confluentia</i>),
- at the confluence of the Moselle and the Rhine, at 1, and
- then dined (<i>table d'hôte</i>) on deck. We made agreeable
- acquaintance with two priests, M. Bandry, Chanoine of
- Cologne, and M. Steigmeier, a P.P. in the Black Forest. The
- first went off at Coblentz, the second spoke only Latin;
- both were highly interested for England. I was busy a good
- deal with reading German, with a dictionary. The weather
- was beautiful till about 6, when suddenly a terrible squall
- of wind, and thunder and lightning came on. The steamer
- was driven aground on a sand-bank, and seemed likely to
- capsize with the wind and waves. Terrible fright and
- crying among ladies and children. We seemed to think
- little of the rain and lightning which gleamed on every side
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
- of us. It was very frightful; at least, it appeared so, and I
- saw what a warning was given here to be ready at a moment.
- No great preparation, I found, would be likely to be
- made in a time like that. It brought on me a palpitation
- which lasted till morning. We got off after ten minutes,
- as the storm blew over, and got to the Hôtel du Rhine
- at Mayence (Mainz) about 9. My greatest alarm since
- Messina.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Aug. 7. San. Gaetano. Remembered Affi,
- 1820.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the cathedral. This is a venerable old
- church, St. Boniface's see. It is something like our Norman
- style of architecture; at the west end is a remarkable
- baptistery, with a high vaulted roof now opening to the
- church. There are many fine monuments, and many more
- of the worst style; fauns and dragons supporting archbishops,
- &amp;c. They showed us a holy-water stoup, where
- Gustavus Adolphus, having ridden into the church, made
- his horse drink! Near the church is a statue of Guttenburg,
- the first printer, claimed as a citizen of Mainz; bas-reliefs by
- Thorwaldsen. We had not time to see more. I was not
- disposed, with my palpitation just subsiding, to go after the
- Archbishop or others. We started past for Manheim; on
- the way we looked at the torn-down cathedral of Worms,
- in a later style than Mayence, and very venerable. This
- place was famous in the contests between Charles V. and
- Luther. We dined at Manheim, then took the railway to
- Heidelberg, where we put up at the Badische Hof. We
- saw nothing at Manheim but the appearance of the town,
- which is very handsome. A French gentleman whom I met
- in the town, Girardon, of Lyons, said the ducal palace was
- very grand.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, Aug. 8.&mdash;</span>
- I went out at 9½, having had rather
- a bad night, and said mass at the Jesuits' old church, which
- is now the only exclusively Catholic church in Heidelberg.
- The curé lives in an old college; the church was dreary and
- empty, and things seem to be at a low point. We went
- after breakfast in a carriage to the ruins of the castle, which
- are fine in their way, but not of the right style. Luther
- was fostered here by the Elector Palatine. It was burnt by
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
- lightning in 1764. In the altar we saw the great tun,
- which is no wonder to my mind. At 11 we took the
- railway to Baden, through Carlsruhe. There we took a
- walk before dinner, saw the gaming-table, which is a famous
- occupation here; I never saw one before in a public saloon.
- I met Mr. Woollett. a Catholic of London, and his two
- daughters. He wants confession to an English priest, and
- I went with him to the convent of the Sepulchrines to see
- about it. They promised prayers for England. 12 nuns;
- the same order as New Hall; dinner at 5. Then we took a
- carriage to the ruins of the old castle, much grander than at
- Heidelberg. I did not venture to go up the castle, as I felt
- myself not fit. We came back to tea with Mrs. Craven,
- née La Ferronaye, wife of the English <i>Chargé d'affaires</i>,
- who is a convert. We met l'Abbé Martin de Nerlieu,
- curé de S. Jaques à Paris, and his vicaire, and Miss Jane
- Young. Home at 9½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, August 9.&mdash;</span>
- I had to take a carriage and go at 6
- o'clock to Lichtenthal, a mile or two from Baden, where the
- Herr Landherr is curé, and has power to give leave to hear
- confessions. There is a convent there of 18 nuns, Bernardines,
- who promised to pray for England. I returned and
- said mass at the convent in Baden, having first heard the
- confessions of Mr. Woollett and Miss Young's maid. I
- thought that night, as I lay in bed with my heart beating,
- that I must see a doctor to-day, and consult about the propriety
- of travelling; but the Phillippses both reasoned
- against this, and I saw it differently by daylight. We
- dined at the <i>table d'hôte</i> at 1, and then set off on our way
- towards Munich. We travelled to-day through the grand
- scenery of the Black Forest, and arrived at 9 at Neuenburg,
- where there was a very civil host, and a nice inn, though a
- second rate.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, August 10. St. Lawrence.&mdash;</span>
- The first, I think,
- (no, except 1835), on which I have lost mass since my
- priesthood; but there was no Catholic church. We made a
- slow day's journey; we began badly by going the first stage
- to Wildbad, from which we returned nearly to Neuenburg,
- as it seemed on our road right. The reason was, as we
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
- thought, that they directed us wrong yesterday, and sent us
- a longer road, whereas we should have got straight to Wildbad,
- without going to Neuenburg. We should have had a
- chapel at Wildbad, where a priest came during the season
- only. We got to Stuttgard at 5, and had a splendid dinner
- at the hotel. We met an old courier of Mr. Phillipps's,
- afterwards clerk at the Foreign Office, who lives here on
- a pension from England. He knew Cavani. He lives now
- at this hotel. Stuttgard seems an uninteresting place for a
- capital; has 4,000 inhabitants only. It is well to have seen
- it. We went on again in the evening to get to Göppingen,
- where we we were told there was a Catholic church, and we
- did not get to bed till 2; I fasting for to-morrow, and fearing
- a bad night.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Hôtel de la Poste, Sunday, Aug. 11.&mdash;</span>
- I slept well, after
- all. I got up at 8, and we started directly in heavy rain for
- Gross Eplingen, two miles on our way, where the nearest
- Catholic church was. There was none in Göppingen. We
- arrived at the middle of the parochial mass. The Kirchen
- Gesangen are very impressive. After it I said mass, and after
- visiting the pastor, we went on to Ulm, which we reached
- at 5 about. Radhoff (Wheat) Hotel. Before dinner we
- went and spent a long time in the old cathedral, now a
- Lutheran church, and for that reason, however strangely,
- preserved wonderfully from spoiling. It was most magnificent;
- the aisles divided by most elegant pillars, a most
- glorious tabernacle, still standing, far surpassing Louvain.
- The old triptic, with a beautiful group in wood-carving,
- still over the altar; a beautiful pulpit in the style of the
- tabernacle; the screen was gone; and the stained glass preserved
- only in the choir and one or two more places; but so
- far, I thought it the richest I knew. It was wonderful how
- much better was the appearance of the church than if
- it had been in Catholic hands. After dinner was busy upstairs
- till 10½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, Aug. 12.&mdash;</span>
- Got up at 5½; we were taken to the
- Catholic church, a poor thing, compared with the ancient
- one. I said mass there at 8; at 9½ we started for Augsburg.
- There was nothing remarkable on the way but the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301">{301}</a></span>
- excessive slowness of the Bavarian post-boys; they are remarkable,
- I believe, among the Germans. We dined about
- 5, at a small town called Tusmarchausan, a neat, clean,
- country town. Talked French with an old Italian who
- attends at the inn, and Latin with a Dominican priest, in a
- blue great-coat and Hessian boots. We set off again at 7,
- and reached Augsburg at 9½ or 10. Put up at the Three
- Moors,&mdash;Drei Mohren.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Aug. 13.&mdash;</span>
- Went to say mass at the Church of
- St. Ulrick, at the altar of St. Afra, whose body was shown
- in a glass case over it, as it is within the octave of her feast.
- She was martyred at Augsburg, under Domitian. After
- breakfast, I went to the bank, then to the cathedral,
- where there was a high mass <i>de requiem</i>; then I went to
- seek the Chanoine Stadler, a great friend of the English. I
- first saw another canon, and the Dean, at the consistorium;
- spoke about England. I found Canon Stadler at a convent
- called <i>of the English nuns</i>, because founded by English 200
- years ago; an examination of the girls under education was
- going on. The Regierung's President and other personages
- were there. I sat near the canon at this for half an hour;
- then went home to dinner. There came to dine a Scotch
- Kirk minister, who was at the convent which I visited,
- Mr. &mdash;&mdash; He is almost a Catholic in doctrine, but is
- connected with the Apostolics in England, and so has, I
- think, no disposition to turn now. Canon Stadler came late
- to dinner, and persuaded me to put off our journey to Munich
- from the three to the seven o'clock train. He took us to the
- Church of the Holy Cross, to see the miraculous Host,
- which, in 1194, was stolen by a woman of Augsburg, taken
- home, and wrapped in wax. After five years, she confessed
- it, and brought it back. On opening the wax, the priest
- found the appearance changed into that of flesh and blood.
- It has been preserved ever since, and has been the means of
- many miracles. We saw it in an <i>ostensoire</i>, quite bright-red.
- The choir of the church is surrounded with pictures
- on the subject. We then went to the convent again, from,
- whence the Scotch gentleman took me to the bishop, whom
- we found near the cathedral. He talked no French, and I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302">{302}</a></span>
- recommended England as I could in Latin. We went to
- the Canon Stadler's house, where the Phillippses were
- waiting; we parted from him, and came and had tea at
- the Hof, and then took railway to Munich. We reached
- the Bayerische Hof, Hôtel de Bavière, at 9 3/4. This is one
- of the largest hotels in Europe, they say.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Aug. 14. Vigil of the Assumption.&mdash;</span>
- I said
- mass in the cathedral, which is near our hotel. It is a high,
- large building, but very much disfigured. We all stayed
- at home till 12; then Phillipps and I went to call on
- Dr. Döllinger, who was out. I had to dine alone, as it is
- reckoned wrong for a priest to <i>manger gras</i> on a fasting day
- in public. After dinner, we all went to see the new Church
- of St. Louis, decorated splendidly by the King. Then the
- Church of St. Blaise in the faubourg, also decorated by him,
- both built by the town. We thought them very beautiful,
- but decidedly falling short of the right mark in point of
- style. In Ludwig Church is a <i>chef d'oeuvre</i> of Cornelius,
- "The Last Judgment." It is not to our taste, nor to the
- king's; for Cornelius went away to Berlin, disgusted with
- the king's not admiring it. Among other defects, there are
- no real altars, only portable stones to be let into scagliola
- altars, which in Ludwig Kirche are all exactly one like the
- other. At 7, I went to the Franciscan convent, to confess
- to Père Constantius. He introduced me to the Provincial
- and community at supper. I spoke of England in
- lame Latin. At supper, in the hotel, we were joined by
- Mr. Wake, son of the Rev. Mr. Wake, of Courtene Hall,
- who recognised me, after about seventeen years. He alarmed
- us with his idea that a war will break out between France
- and England about Pritchard. What a war would this be!
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, Aug. 15. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.&mdash;</span>
- I had some difficulty in getting leave to hear the
- Phillippses' confessions, but I succeeded, and said mass at
- nine, during the high mass, with drums and all sort of music.
- We went again to mass at 11; then Phillipps and I went
- and found Döllinger, who came back and dined with us at
- the <i>table d'hôte</i>. Then we walked with him to see Mr. and
- Mrs. Phillipps. He is a Professor of law, son of an Englishman
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
- in Prussia. Then we went to see old Mr. Gorres, one of
- the first minds in Germany. At 8, we went to tea with
- Mr. and Mrs. Rio, the sister to Jones of Llanarth. We
- found there Mr. Dugdale, a northern English priest, and
- others. The conversation was very agreeable. Mrs. Rio
- is very infirm with sciatica, or settled pains like it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Aug. 16.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at the cathedral at 11. We
- went with Mr. Dugdale to the Pinacotheke, a grand building
- of this king, containing the vast collection of pictures
- which I saw with Lefevre at Schlussheim in 1820. What
- struck me most was the gallery on one side of the building,
- ornamented like Raphael's, in the Vatican. We dined at
- two; then went to see the new palace, which is opened at
- times regularly to all visitors. We went among a party of
- all sorts. I was recognised by Lady Lowther&mdash;that was, at
- least. This was from Lowther Castle, 1816. In the palace,
- the floors are beautiful wood-work, inlaid. Some rooms
- have fine pictures of the former German history, of Charlemagne,
- Barbarossa, Rodolph of Hapsburg, &amp;c. The hall
- of audience is surrounded with striking colossal statues of
- ancient dukes of Bavaria. We cannot say much for the
- two rooms of Bavarian beauties; the king's fondness for
- them is not edifying, they say. From the palace we went
- to the studios; at half-past 7 went to tea at Dr. Döllinger's,
- and met almost all whom we visited yesterday,
- and, besides, Mr. Windischmann, canon of the cathedral.
- I got a long conversation with him in English. He became
- very zealous for promoting the prayers for England. There
- was there Mr. Raby, of Leicester, who was at Munich with
- his mother; his sister is become a nun at Nymphenburg.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, Aug. 17.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the cathedral at 8½.
- After breakfast, I visited Mr. and Mrs. Farrell and their
- family, who are in this hotel. He is uncle to John Farrell. She
- said she had seen me at Leamington with Mr. Martyn. Then
- Count de Senufft Pilsach, Austrian ambassador, to whom
- Mr. Phillipps brought a note from Father Lythgoe, called. We
- then walked to the palace, and saw the rich chapel, in which
- many relics are kept in cases of gold and silver, with pearls
- and jewels, some carved by Benvenuto Cellini; the right hand
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
- of St. John Baptist and St. Chrysostom among them, and
- some earth stained with the blood of Our Lord. A little
- triptic used on the scaffold by Mary Queen of Scots. We
- then went to the palace of the Duc de Leuchtenberg, son of
- Eugene Beauharnais. One room full of modern paintings,
- and another much larger, with a very choice collection of
- the Italian and Flemish schools, struck me. Dr. Döllinger
- dined with us, and then took us to the Public Library, a
- magnificent building, calculated for 1,000,000 volumes, and
- containing now 500,000, lately built by Ludwig I. We
- stayed a long time looking about it, and then went on to the
- University, another new building, very splendid. Dr.
- Döllinger is rector this next year. The library here is of
- 200,000 vols.; he is the chief librarian of it. We returned
- at 8, looking in, <i>en passant</i>, to the Ludwig Kirche. A
- beautiful sunset.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, August 18.&mdash;</span>
- I went by invitation to say mass at
- the Auer Kirche, <i>i.e.</i>, the new Gothic church in the suburb
- Au. Trusting to the fine sunset of last night, I took no
- umbrella, and very nearly got a wetting before I got home.
- At 9, Mr. Schlager called on me. He is studying the law,
- and looks so smart that I did not of myself recognize him.
- We went to high mass at the Theatine church. At 12, I
- went with Mr. Windischmann, to be presented to the Nuncio,
- Mgr. Vichi, to plead for England. I could not do much, as
- other visitors came in. After dinner, we went to seek
- vespers unsuccessfully at the Theatine church. At 5, we
- took a carriage, and went to the Sisters of Charity, where we
- got on badly for want of German, and saw nothing but the
- church, where service was going on. We then went to the
- public cemetery, near it. It is in the style of Père la Chaise,
- but inferior. What is remarkable is the place where the
- bodies newly dead are exposed for three days before burial.
- We saw several behind glass windows, dressed out and
- adorned with flowers. After coming home, I went at 7½ to
- Professor Görres's. He has open house for the circle of his
- friends every Sunday evening. Dr. Döllinger wished us all
- to go, but Phillipps thought it hardly proper without an
- invitation. There were twelve at supper; among them Dr.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305">{305}</a></span>
- Döllinger, Phillipps, Moy. The party was very agreeable,
- though I knew nothing of the German conversation, except
- what Dr. Döllinger translated to me. I came home at
- half-past 10.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, August 19.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass at the cathedral. Mrs.
- Dugdale came after breakfast, and went with us to the
- Glyptotheke, where are some fine pieces of ancient sculpture.
- I suppose the AEgina marbles are among the most valued.
- They are of an earlier style than the perfect models of Greek
- sculpture, finely designed but stiff. The whole thing is too
- heathenish and so immodest. It is a mystery to me how all
- these sights are consistent with Catholic principle, especially
- the Venuses and Adonises by Christian masters, like
- Canova. The building is very noble. We went thence
- to what was far more satisfactory, the Basilica, built on the
- plan of the old church of St. Paul, at Rome, 300 feet long,
- with two ranges of glorious holy pictures, one range being
- the whole history of our English St. Boniface. I hope this
- is there as a memorial of what Germany owes to England,
- and as an excitement to pray for us. I came back to receive
- Mr. Schlager to dine with me at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. Phillipps
- dined at Mr. Rio's, where I joined them at 3, having first
- gone with Mr. Schlager to his lodgings. Rio talked
- splendidly about England, and Dr. Döllinger promised to
- write articles to call to prayer for it. I came home at 5,
- said office in the cathedral, and at 7½ we went to supper
- with Dr. and Mrs. Phillipps, where we met all the circle,
- the Görreses, Windischman, Döllinger, Rios, Mrs. Raby,
- Mrs. Dugdale, &amp;c.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, August 20. St. Bernard.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at the cathedral
- at 10. I took a carriage and went with Mrs. Dugdale
- and Mrs. Raby to Nymphenburg, where is the principal
- convent of the English nuns, of which I saw a house at
- Augsburg. There are ten houses in Bavaria; Mrs. Raby's
- daughter is a novice there. We stopped a good while, and
- I hope a good step was taken in my work. Mr. Dugdale
- promises to follow up ardently the begging prayers. I came
- home before 2, and stayed at home till 5, when we went with
- the two boys to a grand dinner with le Comte de Zeuft,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306">{306}</a></span>
- the Austrian ambassador. There were twenty at table:
- the Nuncio, Mr. Aebel, minister of the interior, the chief
- Catholic physician, a Polish Countess Kitzka, and all our
- friends the Professors were there. I sat between Dr.
- Phillipps and Windischman. We stayed till near 10. The
- Comte de Zeuft promised great help for England. It is my
- first opening in Austria. Mrs. Aebel assured me that the
- Government would be well pleased with whatever was done
- in this way, which is a great point secured. I also had an
- interesting talk on the subject with the Countess Kitzka,
- who proposed prayer for Poland also on Saturdays. This
- was, in short, a productive evening.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, August 21.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at the cathedral. I
- walked with Mr. Dugdale to the convent of Sisters of Providence
- joining the great hospital we failed in entering on
- Sunday. We got one nun who spoke a little French to show
- us over the hospital, but we made little of gaining prayers.
- I found palpitations coming from the walk, and so I came
- home and stayed till I went with Phillipps to dine at 4 with
- the Nuncio. The chief guests were Comte de Zeuft and
- Baron Frujberg, <i>conseilleur d'état</i>, and twelve or fourteen
- more. The Nuncio took charge of the little prayer for
- England adopted by the Belgian bishops, and promised to
- get ample indulgences at Rome for the masses, communions,
- and prayers for England. We came home and took Mrs.
- Phillipps to tea at Dr. Döllinger's, Baron Frujberg, Rio,
- Hüffler, the historian of the German popes of the 11th
- century.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, August 22.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at 8. I stayed at home
- writing to Dr. Wiseman from 11 to 12; then went with Dr.
- Döllinger to be presented to Madame di Frujberg, and her
- sister Amelia de Mongeras. Talked about England and
- prayers. At home I found Comte de Zeuft and the Nuncio
- paying a visit. Then dinner at 2½. Mr. Windischman
- took me to see the Archbishop, 84 years old. He has his
- intellect quite sound, and was favourable to the prayers, but
- not very zealous. I came home and stayed till 7, writing
- to Mrs. Beaumont and Mrs. Canning, saying office, &amp;c.
- At 7 Mr. and Mrs. Rio and two children, Dr. Phillipps,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307">{307}</a></span>
- Döllinger, and Windischman came to tea and supper, so a parting
- visit. Little Miss Rio got sick with the smoke in the salon.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, August 23.&mdash;</span>
- Mass at 7½ in the cathedral for the
- last time. After breakfast a visit from Mr. Dugdale and
- old Görres, and a talk with Mr. Woodwich, a very nice
- young Anglican, whom Phillipps met at Cologne, and came
- yesterday to Munich. The horses came for our departure
- at 11, but we did not start till ¼ to 1. I sat in the carriage
- saying office. We had a pretty journey, approaching a line
- of fine mountains. We reached a town called Tegern See,
- and we put up at Le Troitteur Hof. When we came to
- dine, we found ourselves worse off than we have yet been.
- No bread without aniseed, and hardly enough to eat for all
- but me, who took meat. However, this is an interesting
- spot. Out of my window I have a sweet view of the lake
- and mountains opposite, with a bright moon upon them.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, August 24.&mdash;</span>
- I went before 7 to find the old
- priest to say mass. The church is a handsome one attached
- to a large building which once was a Benedictine convent,
- but was turned by the old king, my former acquaintance,
- into a country palace. Prince Charles lives here now. The
- old priest was one of the monks. There are four now alive
- out of forty-three. We started at 9, and went through
- beautiful mountain scenery, especially that part of the road
- which lies along the bank of Achensee, a beautiful blue lake.
- We dined at about 2, at Achenthal, just before coming to the
- lake. We were delayed by a spring breaking, and only
- reached Schwartz, a town of 4,500 people. The inn La Poète
- is kept by Anthony Reiner, one of a family of three men and
- a sister, who about 1830 were 2½ years in England, singing
- Tyrolese songs, and made £4,000. Mrs. Ambrose heard
- them at Sir Thomas Acland's. We had tea in the billiard-room,
- and saw some beautiful play.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Aug. 25.&mdash;</span>
- I said mass at 6½, at the Franciscan
- church. In the convent are twenty-one priests and twenty-five
- students, besides lay brothers. I recommended England
- and was kindly heard. After breakfast we went together
- to the parish church; at 8 a sermon begins&mdash;we heard the
- end of it, preached by a Franciscan. Mass follows the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
- sermon. The style of music, both here and in the Franciscan
- church, where I heard part of the high mass, is high
- figured. We set off for Innspruck after. It was raining all
- the way. We arrived at 2 at the Golden Sun (die goldene
- Sonne), in a fine wide street. We had dinner, during which
- we were surprised and pleased by a visit from Mrs. Amherst
- and Mary. She has a house in this street, and saw us pass
- by. Three daughters are with her. Soon after we went to
- see the Franciscan church, in which is the famous monument
- of Maximilian, and round it bronze figures of illustrious
- personages, and on the side a marble monument of
- Hoffa. They are not all saints, and it is thought to be an
- unbecoming ornament to a church. They certainly cause
- distractions by the number of people who come to see the
- sculpture, which makes this small church almost like a
- Glyptotheke. After this, Mrs. Amherst took me to the
- Redemptorists, where Father Prost talks English, and received
- me most cordially, and presented me to the Rector.
- I then went to the Franciscan convent, where, as at
- Munich, I saw the fathers at supper, and recommended
- England to the Provincial, who promised to convey my
- wishes to the 300 subjects of the 10 houses of his province.
- In this little house there are eight priests. He sent a man
- to take me to the Decanus, living near the parish church, to
- ask for leave to hear confessions to-morrow. He was a most
- amiable, kind old man, and promised to speak for me to all
- the clergy. I went to meet our party at tea with the
- Amhersts at 7, and had a very pleasant evening. Home
- at 9¼.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, Aug. 26th.&mdash;</span>
- Father Prost gave himself to me
- all to-day. I went to say mass at the Redemptorist church;
- breakfasted there; then went out with him to the hospital
- of the Sisters of Charity, where there are 15 nuns, and it is
- the mother house of about eight houses in all. They are
- under the direction of the Redemptorists. Then to the
- Jesuits' college, where we saw the Rector; then to dine
- with the Redemptorists at 12. They are about ten in
- number. The Rector is most zealous for my cause. At 2
- we walked out of the town to a fine Premonstratensian
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
- abbey to which belong 42 monks; but about half are
- employed as coadjutors to parish priests. The Abbot
- received us very kindly, and showed us all over his house,
- which has a great suite of fine rooms, full of pictures of
- great personages. We came back to settle for my departure
- to-morrow; and lastly visited the Servites. They have a
- fine large house in the great street. Their number is only
- fifteen. Lastly, we called on a lady who can talk English,
- having learned it, where Father Prost did, in America. I
- went at 6½ to tea with the Amhersts, among whom I also
- found William just come. I went home to stay at the
- Redemptorists, in order to be able to say mass to-morrow.
- The Rector and Father Prost sat some time with me.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Aug. 27th.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at 3½; at 4½, Father
- Prost saw me in the still-wagen, or omnibus, for Brixen. I
- forgot to say that Phillipps agreed with me to meet at
- Caldaron on Thursday. They went off yesterday by Landeck,
- Marenn, &amp;c., for finer scenery. I took my way to see
- the Bishop of Brixen. My principal companions were four
- students at the Inspruck University, going out for their
- vacations. They were two couples of brothers, one called
- Ehrhart, the other Benz, all of Inspruck. The weather was
- become beautiful, and we went through splendid scenery.
- We went over the Brenner mountain, and were going till
- 8 o'clock at night. We stopped three times for refreshment:
- at Matraey, Strarzing, and Mittewald. We came to the
- Kreutz Hof&mdash;the Cross Inn&mdash;at Brixen, where I took my
- bed. First, I went to see a pleasing old priest, by name
- Graffanara, who is Domscholasticus here, and whom I saw
- by chance at Inspruck. He told of the Bishop being gone
- to Botzen, and introduced me to the Decanus and Parish
- Priest, to settle for mass to-morrow.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Aug. 28th.
- Great St. Augustine's.&mdash;</span>I was
- up soon after 3, and went to the Pffarr-Kirche, where I said
- mass at 4. The Pffarr treated me with extraordinary respect
- and kindness, and came back with me to my inn,
- where I started again, with the same company, to Botzen,
- in another still-wagen, at 5. We followed the downward
- course of a beautiful torrent, through rocks and mountains
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
- all the way, till we reached Botzen, at 12. I went to the
- Kaiser's Krone, and dined at the <i>table d'hôte</i> at 12½, next to
- an English gentleman, by name Harley, who was chiefly
- taken up with attacks on cookery out of England. He was
- a man of much information, and gave gloomy accounts of
- the prospect of war with France. His father was an admiral.
- I stayed at home till 4½, then went out to the
- Capuchins and then to the Capellani&mdash;the Paroco being out.
- The chief Capellano came back with me to the hotel, and
- waited till the Bishop of Brixen came in. He had been
- out in the country. I was admitted to see him, but quite
- disappointed in my hopes of finding help from him. He
- gave me no signs of zeal, and hardly spoke of England.
- Perhaps it may be for the better some way. No doubt
- disappointments are good for me, and so thank God for this
- one. I afterwards went to the Franciscans, where I found
- real sympathy in one of the fathers, with whom I walked in
- the garden. This was a refreshment after the Bishop. In
- the evening I had a visit from the young Baron Giovanelli,
- whose father has some authority about sending people to see
- Maria Mörl. He could hardly speak Italian, and though
- very civil, did not help me much.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, 29th.&mdash;</span>
- The good Bishop sent me to-day a present
- of a large number of religious prints, with German
- instructions, and showed thus his good will to me; and I
- hope it may be well for my cause. At 7½ I said mass in
- the cathedral. At 10 I went in a one-horse carriage to
- Calddaron, or more rightly Caltern. I went directly to see
- Father Capistrano, confessor to Maria Mörl, at a Franciscan
- convent, and then dined at the White Horse inn. At 4½,
- according to his direction, I went to the convent of the
- Tertiariae, where Maria Mörl has been for ten years, being
- removed from her father's house by the Bishop, at her own
- request, to avoid being seen by so many people. I waited
- in the convent church till Father Capistrano, who is a tall
- and venerable monk, I suppose of forty-five years old, came
- to call me, with eight or nine other persons, to see the
- <i>estatica</i>. (N.B. Father Capistrano told me that the Bishop
- of Brixen is very deaf, and probably understood nothing of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
- what I talked about, which explains all my disappointment.)
- We went into a small room within her convent, rather
- darkened, where the first sight of Maria on her knees upon
- her bed was most striking. She kneels with her head and
- eyes fixed upwards, her hands joined before her breast, just
- below the chin, and her body leaning forwards in a position
- out of the centre of gravity, in which, ordinarily, no one
- could continue without support. It is most moving to see
- her thus&mdash;I think more so than in any of the other positions
- which she assumed. This was the time when on every
- Thursday she goes through the contemplation of the Agony
- of Our Lord; and so, soon after we came in, she being quite
- unconscious of what goes on around her, began to make
- signs in her throat of earnest emotion, and then, clenching
- her hands together, she dropped her head over them, her
- long, flowing hair being thrown forward over her face, as it
- were accompanying our Lord in the commencement of His
- prayer in the garden; after about five minutes thus, she suddenly
- bends down, placing her face between her knees, as
- when our Lord was prostrate in His agony. After another
- five minutes, she rises, her face again fixed with expression
- of intense earnestness on heaven, and her arms extended
- back downwards, as expressing perfect resignation. After
- five or ten minutes thus, she returns calmly to her original
- attitude of prayer, and thus remained till Father Capistrano
- spoke to her by name, saying a few words almost indistinctly,
- and she instantly returned to herself, reclined back on her
- bed, and, without exertion of moving her limbs, appeared
- simply recumbent, with the bed-cover over her whole body.
- I did not see her rise again, but this is done instantly
- without effort, in the same way. The moment that she was
- thus awakened from the ecstasy, she looked round on us all
- with great good-humour, and smiled; and, being forbidden
- to speak, she made many signs, asking questions of some
- whom she knew before. One priest, il Conte Passi, offered
- her some cotton perfumed from the body of Sta. Maria
- Maddalena di Pazzi; but she would not have it, nor smell it,
- refusing it in a truly pleasant way. I spoke of praying for
- England, and she nodded graciously, but did not take much
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312">{312}</a></span>
- apparent notice. I suppose she does it about nothing but
- what comes by obedience. If the conversation had a pause,
- she immediately became again absorbed in God till Father
- Capistrano recalled her again. After a proper time, he gave
- us signs to retire; on which she earnestly made signs for a
- cartoon-box full of holy prints to be brought, and she began
- with great earnestness to turn them over, seeming to recollect
- herself very intently. She then gave me two, and afterwards
- another. I was struck when I saw the first was a
- figure of St. George, as she had not heard my name I knew.
- Afterwards, I supposed she might allude only to England,
- as she knew I was English. Soon after, she fell back into
- ecstasy as she lay, and we went away. I walked down to
- the inn with Conte Passi and a priest of the place, who
- visits her nearly every day. I began a letter, when, about 6,
- I was agreeably surprised by seeing Phillipps and his
- party drive up. He and I went to the Franciscan convent,
- but could not see Father Capistrano. Conte Passi and I
- slept in the same room, and into a third bed tumbled some
- one else, I thought, like the ostler, after we were in bed. I
- slept none the worse, and why should I?
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Aug. 30.&mdash;</span>
- Said mass in the parish church at
- eight. Phillipps after breakfast went and had a long conversation
- with Father Capistrano, who received to-day a
- letter from the Bishop of Trent, to give leave for all of us
- to see the <i>estatica</i>. Phillipps came back with wonderful
- accounts of Father Capistrano's views of the future in the
- Church. He has no bright anticipations. I wrote all the
- morning, letters to Dr. Döllinger, Signor Giovanelli, and
- Mr. LeSage Ten Broek. We dined at 1. At 2½ we all went
- to the convent church, where, as yesterday, P. Capistrano
- came to take us to la Mörl. Three o'clock, being the time
- of Our Lord's death, this is the subject of her contemplation
- at that time every Friday. Soon after we came in,
- from the attitude of prayer in which we found her as yesterday;
- she again clasped her hands, and, looking up with an
- expression of suffering, she continued for some time to make
- a sort of sobbing noise, and stertation, as I have seen people
- dying of apoplexy; this grew more painful till, exactly at
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
- three, she dropped her head forward, and her hands yet
- clasped hung down before her and so she remained quite
- motionless, still leaning forward beyond the perpendicular,
- "<i>inclinato capite emisit spiritum</i>." This continued till, at
- one of those almost inaudible suggestions of the confessor,
- she fell back on the bed, as yesterday, but still in ecstasy,
- and extended her hands in the form of a crucifix. The
- fingers were guttered over the palm of the hands, but yet
- we saw plainly in the palm the sacred stigma. I saw it
- yesterday outside both her hands, quite plainly, as she was
- distributing the prints. The marks are not as of an open
- wound, but red cicatrices like those represented in pictures
- of Our Saviour when risen from the dead. Father Capistrano
- said that she eats a little bread and fruit occasionally,
- not every day; she communicates three or four times
- a week; she sleeps generally in the night, I understood,
- but her spirit still continues in a less degree of contemplation.
- She had a younger sister with her in the convent, to
- wait on her. The Emperor allows her 400 florins a year.
- On more solemn feasts, the ecstasy is more intense, and she
- then appears for a time raised above the bed, touching it
- only with the tips of her feet. The priest whom I saw
- yesterday says that he has himself passed his hand at those
- times under her knees without touching them. It is a rule
- that no money is given by visitors either to her or the convent.
- We went away, and prepared for our departure
- about 4. I engaged a small one-horse carriage to go to
- <i>Egna</i> in Italian, in German <i>Neumarkt</i>, intending to see
- the <i>Addolorata</i>, and to meet the Phillippses again at Venice.
- I began to have a distaste to the rude-looking driver, at the
- first sight, still more, when I found that the carriage belonged
- to a priest who had come from Egna this morning. I made
- it straight for time by taking him with me. A second nuisance
- was, finding, when I set off, that Phillipps had to go
- to the same place, as his first stage towards Trent. In a
- narrow road down the hill, out of Caldaro, we met an
- immense number of carts, loaded with hay, and drawn by
- oxen, from eighty to a hundred, which was a good delay, and
- Phillipps's carriage got terribly scratched in passing one. At
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
- Egna, I put up at the Krono. I went out to see a priest,
- who took me to the Franciscans about saying mass tomorrow.
- I preached England.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, Aug. 31.&mdash;</span>
- I fell into the hands of the sulky
- driver of yesterday, who undertook to find me a mule to go
- over the mountains at once to Capriana, but he came last
- night to say none was to be found; I heard before that
- there was danger of this in harvest time. I therefore first
- said mass at the Franciscans', at 3 o'clock, doubtful whether
- it was not uncanonically early, and at 4 went with my friend
- driving me, with one horse on the left of the pole, to Cavallesi,
- a small town in the mountains, which we reached at 8
- o'clock. There I saw the physician of Dominica Lazzari,
- whom Count Passi told me to go to. He was very civil,
- and recommended me a pleasant guide, who at 9 set off,
- walking by the pony which I rode to Cavallesi. The day
- was beautiful, and not too hot for me, though it was for him
- on foot. It was a most interesting, picturesque ride of 2¼
- hours, reminding me of my Sicilian and other rides long
- since, and I was surprised how this seemed to agree with me
- now. Capriana is a little very poor village, occupying a
- spot on an open space, high among the mountains. The very
- first cottage in the body of the town, and one of the
- poorest, is where this wonderful being spends her suffering
- days. The Medico Yoris had written me a note to the
- primissario, or second priest to the curate, who is Dominica's
- confessor, who might have helped me about seeing her;
- but he was not at home, so we went to the house at once.
- The door of the little place, a part of a building, where
- Dominica lives with her sister, was locked. The sister was
- out. I heard her groaning slightly at every breath. She
- made something of an answer when my guide knocked.
- He went to seek her sister, and came back saying that she
- begged us to delay a little, as others had been with her, and
- she was much fatigued. So we went to the Osteria, and got
- the best they could give, which was a <i>brodo d'acqua</i>, in English,
- I fancy, tea-kettle broth. This shows that the place is
- not chosen for its riches to be honoured by God with His
- wonders. After this pause we returned to the little house,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
- which has a Tyrolese roof overhanging, and a little gallery
- outside her door. The sister, who is married and has her
- children about her, took us in, and in an inner room we saw
- the Addolorata in her bed. Her appearance naturally will
- not have been interesting, like that of Maria Mörl, but
- rather of an ordinary young countrywoman, of low stature,
- like her sister. She has ordinarily the appearance of great
- pain and suffering; but when I spoke to her about England,
- she lifted her eyes and moved her hands in a way
- more earnest than <i>l'estatica</i>, and showed great feeling at
- the thought of its conversion. Now for her appearance:
- her face was almost all covered with clotted blood, which
- flowed, I suppose, yesterday morning, for so it does every
- Friday, from the punctures as of thorns on her brow. These
- were not, as I expected, irregularly placed as by a crown of
- thorns made at hazard, but they formed a line close together
- on the forehead, and do not go round the head to the back
- part. Her legs were gathered up as if the sinews were contracted;
- her body, the doctor told me, is all covered with sores,
- which, the more that is done to cure, the worse they grow.
- She keeps her hands clenched before her heart, and groans
- slightly with every breath. On her hands were seen stigmata,
- much more marked than Maria Mörl, like fresh
- wounds by a nail passing through and sinking into the flesh.
- Her sister said the same was the case with her side and feet.
- I only spoke to her a little about England, and was delighted
- at her manner then, which shows how superior she is to her
- pains. It seems to distress her to be too near her, and as I
- have learned since it does. She is always hot; her sister
- was fanning her all the time, and in the depth of winter
- it is the same thing, when snow drives into her room. She
- also gives her prints; she made her sister show her prints
- out of a little case, and when she has chosen them she kisses
- them and gives them to each with great kindness. There
- were a young man and woman there, who offered money for
- them to her sister, but she will take nothing. The sight of
- her is not at first so striking and pleasing as of la Mörl, but
- the remembrance is more impressive. It seems a state more
- meritorious, more humble. It is more poor, and patient.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
- Having been delayed so long, I could not get to Cavallesi till
- 3; the sulky face of the driver betokened no good for my
- return; the horse, too, he said was ill, and in fine, he
- brought me to Egna just too late for the still-wagen to
- Lavorno, and I was not so patient as I ought to have been
- after seeing that example, but I was helped by it a little. I
- had to take a carriage for myself and the same miserable
- driver, who was going to sleep all the way, and grunted at
- me once when I awoke him. I got to a nice inn at Lavorno,
- the white house again.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Sept. 1.&mdash;</span>
- I started at 5 by a still-wagen for
- Trent, all alone in it. I came to the Rose Inn, and waited
- to say mass at the Church di S. Maria Maggiora, where
- the Council of Trent was held, and prayed, as usual
- on Sundays, for the gift of Faith, which was appropriate
- here. The church is quite uninteresting in appearance.
- I breakfasted at a cafe, and went about my
- way of travelling; then at ¼ to 11 went and heard the end
- of a high mass. I thought to be in time for all. After it I
- was very happy in getting myself introduced to the Bishop,
- who was extremely agreeable, and said he prayed daily for
- England, and promised to recommend it to Maria la Mörl,
- and to all the clergy. I left, as if I need take no more
- trouble about Trent. I went to the Rosa, and stayed there
- quiet till dinner at 12½, and then till 4, writing my long
- days of late in the Journal. At 4, I got into a carriage
- carrying four inside to Roveredo, where I got to the Corona,
- and went to bed at 8½ or 9.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, Sept. 2.&mdash;</span>I
- set off soon after 3½ with an old
- <i>vetturino</i>, who rather displeased me last night in making
- his bargain, by his flattering way; but I found him a nice
- old man, and very civil. We got to Bosketto, on the banks
- of the Adige (which indeed we followed all day), at 7¼. I
- said mass and breakfasted. Then we went on to dine at a
- single house, called Ospitaletto. We stayed from 12 to 2; I
- wrote two letters. We then started and got to Verona at
- 4, to the Hotel di Londra. I took a <i>laquais de place</i>, and
- walked to Count Persico's house. I was sorry to find him
- in the country. Then to the Jesuit Noviciate, where I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
- thought I might possibly find Connolly. The Superior
- showed me Padre Odescalchi's room, where he passed his
- noviciate. I recommended myself to his prayers. I had
- been reading on the road his memoirs, given me at Louvain.
- The Superior promised to recommend England. I went
- then to the cathedral, and the Bishop being out, I saw the
- Vicario, who kindly promised to speak for me to the
- Bishop. I then went into the cathedral, where there was a
- brilliant illumination, and a most solemn benediction, and
- then a litany before the altar of the Blessed Virgin, which
- reminded me of the holy litanies of Rome. I have seen
- nothing like this on the Continent, nor have I seen a town
- so full of respectable clergy in every part. Came home and
- to bed at 8½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Sept. 3rd.&mdash;</span>Started
- at 4 with my new <i>vetturino</i>,
- who cheated me as usual, but was civil. It rained almost
- all day. I said mass at a place called Montebello, and got
- to Vicenza to dine at 11½. Then started for Padua with a
- new <i>vetturino</i>, and had for company an old and a young
- Roman priest. The old one was Bighi, a well-known professor,
- who taught Dr. Wiseman and S. Sharples, &amp;c., and
- was full of kindness to me. I talked myself almost hoarse
- with him. They stopped at Padua. I went on railroad to
- Venice. I sat by a priest of Illyricum of the <i>scuole pie</i> of
- St. Joseph Calasanctius; but what was wonderful was my
- being in the midst of Mrs. Neville and her family, whom
- Mrs. Rio desired me to see, coming back from a visit to
- Vicenza. We kept together all across the Sayburne, and
- made a great acquaintance. I got into a gondola, and had
- to go a great round to put down another young man, who
- had already engaged it. I had a great battle about my
- fare, and for a wonder I conquered. I waited a little,
- having my chocolate, when Phillipps and all came in, and
- we made a happy meeting, giving an account of our respective
- travels.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Sept. 4th.&mdash;</span>I
- went at 7 to say mass at San
- Marco, but was obliged to wait till 8, as they are very
- strict here not to allow a priest to mass without leave from
- the Patriarch, except the first day, when, as to me, leave
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318">{318}</a></span>
- is given. I breakfasted at a cafe, then went with Phillipps
- to St. Georgio dei Greci, and heard a high mass of the
- schismatic Greeks, of whom there is a colony at Venice;
- the occasion was the octave of the Assumption, old style.
- The mass was all celebrated behind a close screen; which is
- open part of the time, but not during the most solemn part.
- After the consecration, the host and chalice are carried outside
- this screen in procession, and presented for adoration;
- one man before us was making his prostrations all the
- time. The priests had chasubles, hanging evenly all
- round to near the ankles; they lifted them to use their
- hands; there is no musical instrument, but singing all the
- time. I then went to the Cancellaria to get my licence to
- say mass, and then to Mrs. Neville at the Corte dell' Albero.
- She soon after took me to the Armenian College, where the
- examinations were just finished. There are eighteen scholars,
- with two priests over them, in an old grand palace of
- a ruined family of Pesaro. The <i>vicario</i> and several others
- from the island were there. We talked much about England.
- I came to dinner at the Tavola, returned at 4,
- Then we went to the Island of St. Lazzaro, to see Padre
- Pasquale and the Archbishop Sutrio Somal (as the name
- sounds), great friends of Phillipps at Rome in 1831, and of
- mine, too. When we came back. I went in a gondola to
- Mrs. Neville, and back to tea.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Sept. 5.&mdash;</span>This
- being the feast of St. Lorenzo
- Giustiniani, I went out at 6¾ to find the church where
- his body is laid. He died in the very hotel where we are.
- The church I went to in a gondola in rain to St. Pietro
- at Castello&mdash;the ancient patriarchal church&mdash;and said mass
- at the high altar, where he lies. I walked back in rain,
- without umbrella, as I lost mine yesterday. I bought
- another. At 12, Padre Raffaelle, an Armenian priest, Mrs.
- Neville's confessor, to whom she introduced me yesterday,
- called and took me to the patriarch, Cardinal Monico, who
- received most graciously my propositions for England. I
- am to call again with the Phillippses on Saturday, and get
- something more exactly settled about the prayers; we then
- went across the Great Canal to the Del Redentore, where
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
- is a convent of eighty Capuchins. The church is reckoned
- a <i>chef d'oeuvre</i> of Palladio, built <i>ex voto</i> by the Republic, after
- a plague. We saw the guardian, who is also provincial; he
- learned our want, and promised for his own house and ten
- others of the province. I came back to dinner. A Greek
- priest whom Phillipps got acquainted with the other day,
- came to dine with us, and sat till 9. His conversation was
- very interesting as showing the ideas of the Greeks about
- the Roman Church, and their doctrines on many points
- varying from ours. What a terrible evil is that of separation
- of nearly half of Christendom! The greater reasons to
- hasten the reunion of England, that we may draw the
- others.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Sept. 6.&mdash;</span>The
- two Neville boys came with me to
- St. Marco, and served my mass, as their mother had desired.
- After breakfast, I called on Mrs. Neville, who was not up,
- then went to Palazzo Pasaro, to Padre Raffaelle. He came
- with me first to the Franciscans; the guardian promised for
- his house of fifty, and for three or four at some distance
- from him. Then to the Dominicans, who are fifteen, a new
- establishment a year old. Then to the Jesuits, who are
- eight in number, only this summer returned to their old
- church, which is one of the most remarkable for its ornaments
- in Venice, white marble inlaid with black. I
- remembered it well from twenty-six years ago. The superior,
- Padre Ferrario, is going to Rome to-morrow, and promised
- to see about my matters there with Cardinal Acton
- and the general of the Jesuits. I came home in haste, and
- found Phillipps, and Mrs. Neville and her friends with her,
- gone to St. Marco, where we followed them to see the
- treasury&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the inestimably rich treasures brought by
- Doge Dandolo from Constantinople, just before it was taken
- by the Turks. The chief thing is an antependium and a
- reredos of massive gold, with splendid pearls and enamels.
- Mrs. Neville took us to the Convent of the Visitation,
- where is preserved the heart of St. Francis of Sales, which
- was brought from France when the Revolution drove off all
- religious. They could not show this relic; but promised
- prayers, and to write to other houses. There were there
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320">{320}</a></span>
- forty nuns. Back to dinner at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. After
- dinner we went all together to see the only large Gothic
- church in Venice, called St. &mdash;&mdash; di Frari, which is the
- Venetian for Frati; it used to be the Franciscan church,
- and their house is turned into a public Archivium.
- Phillipps said they deserved it for having such a palace.
- The church is a fine one, and has some good morsels;
- but what is most startling, or rather glaring, is the immense
- marble monument to Canova&mdash;a pyramid, with a heathen
- procession into it. His heart is here. His right hand in
- an urn at the Arcadinia. We tried at St. Sitorstro (Silvestro)
- to assist at the 40 <i>ore</i>, but all was over. We came
- back by a fine star light, and went to St. Marco, where we
- had ices at Floriano's <i>café</i>, and heard military music.
- Canonico Pio Bighi, and his young companion Don Giovanni
- Moneti, joined us, <i>ad cor. sat.</i> We came home at 9.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sept. 7th.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at St. Marco, on the altar where the
- miraculous picture of Our Lady is, by St. Luke. The Greek
- priest told us there existed seventy-five of them. I went at
- 8½ to the Jesuits, to give a letter for Cardinal Acton, about
- indulgences for prayers for England, to Padre Ferrarrio, the
- Superior, who sets off to-day for Rome. I found Mrs.
- Neville and Father Raffaelle talking to him. The latter
- kindly went around with me to-day again. We went first
- to the Institute of St. Dorothea, founded lately by Conte
- Passi and his brother, which we desired to see. The Superioress
- was out, but another made excellent promises.&mdash;15
- nuns. Then to St. Lucia, to the Sisters of Charity, and
- another house dependent on them. In the latter was an
- Armenian lady who spoke English, having been six years at
- Hammersmith Convent. The Superioress of the chief house
- spoke of Gentili with great respect; she knew him when she
- was at the house at Verona. She promised me for thirteen
- houses under her authority. Then we went past the Jesuits
- to a house of Reformed Franciscans (Zoccolanti). St. Michele
- di Marano. Promised for three houses as large as this,
- about twenty-six, and many more smaller. This is where
- Gregory XVI. was educated, made his novitiate, and was
- Superior. We saw the outside of his room; the key could
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321">{321}</a></span>
- not be got. We got back at 12½. I went with Phillipps
- to the Cardinal Patriarch, as appointed before. I gave him
- the prayer for England which I gave to Padre Ferrario,
- and he promised to speak with him also. Thence to the
- Accademia, where for two hours we looked at the pictures
- and statues. It did not greatly answer me. Thence left our
- cards on the Duc de Levis, who, with his master the Due de
- Bordeaux, is at the Albergo Reale. Then dined. Another
- <i>maigre</i>. After I did not go out with them, as I had office
- to say. At 7½ we had a party to tea&mdash;the Greek priest,
- with Mrs. Neville and three children. They stayed till
- past 11.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, Sept. 8. Nativity of Blessed Virgin.&mdash;</span>I said
- mass at S. Marco. We went to the high Armenian mass
- at S. Lazzaro at 10. We were a little late. After it we
- stayed there with our friends the fathers till vespers and
- benediction, at 3. And after that, dinner at 4. Mrs.
- Neville and family were there too. It was an interesting
- day for seeing and conversing. I saw, in the visitors' book,
- my name under Lefevre's, written by him July, 1820. We
- sat in the cloister, with the old Archbishop, &amp;c., till twilight.
- He made us presents of many handsome books
- printed there. We came back to S. Marco, and sat to
- hear the band, &amp;c. On coming home, at 7½, we were in
- great demand with cards and notes, left by the Duc de
- Levis, to invite us to the Duc de Bordeaux's (Comte de
- Chombard) salon at 7. We were all thrown back by
- Phillipps having no dresses to go in. So we had to keep
- easy at home.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Sept. 9.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at the cathedral (S. Marco).
- P. Raffaele and the Greek priest came to breakfast. At
- 10 I had a visit from the Superioress of the Institute of Sta.
- Dorothea and a companion. At 10½ we went to visit the
- Duc de Bordeaux, who gave us a quarter of an hour's most
- affable conversation, spoke with great kindness of his reception
- in England, and asked after Dr. Wiseman, &amp;c. His
- confessor, the Abbé Trélouquet, was introduced to us, and
- came in our gondola to Mrs. Neville, of whom we took
- leave. Mr. Trélouquet promised to engage the French royal
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
- family in prayers for England. He said, the Duc de Bordeaux
- had spoken of my asking him at Oscott. We went
- then to S. Tommaso, where I left the Phillippses and went
- to the banker, Holme, who is Armenian consul. Then
- back to S. Tommaso, where I found them looking at an
- extraordinary collection of relics made by a priest, who
- devoted himself to the work when all things were in confusion
- in the revolution. He gave the collection to the church,
- on condition of their being open to the public for veneration.
- The chief relic is some of the blood of Our Lord, in a beautiful
- gold or gilt reliquary. I found there Monsignor Arfi,
- the Pope's Caudatario, and invited for England. I then
- went to Padre Raffaele, at the college, and went with him
- to see the two brothers, priests Cavanis, founders of an
- excellent institute of <i>Scuole di Carità</i>. They are in a poor
- house, with a few companions; one of them complained
- that no one helped them; but they are like their patron
- S. Joseph Calasanctius, losing ground in old age, but with
- hope of better things. P. Raffaele, who has indeed been an
- angel to me in Venice, came with me to the inn where
- they were at dinner. At 4 we left Venice, with pleasant
- remembrances. We crossed the lagune in a procession of
- boats, and got into the railway carriage, which took us to
- Padua about 7. At the Stella d'Oro I went out to try to
- find the Bishop; but he was not in town.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Sept, 10.&mdash;</span>I
- went to St. Antony's church at
- 7½ to say mass. Before going I met Dr. Roskell, of Manchester,
- just come with a Manchester party on a rapid tour.
- I could not have the altar of St. Antony, which seems
- always occupied. I spoke to the Superior of the house of
- Conventual Franciscans attached to the church, 50 in
- number, who promised to recommend my cause. I came
- back in a little carriage with Phillipps. We started at 9
- for Verona, dined at Vicenza; then I took a carriage and
- called on the Bishop, Monsignor Capellari, a good old man,
- who received me graciously. We stopped in going out of
- Vicenza to see Palladio's Olympic Theatre, built to act the
- OEdipus Tyrannus in 1585. This pretends to nothing but
- paganism. We reached Verona at 7. I went out to see
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323">{323}</a></span>
- the Bishop, who was quite gracious; he begins his retreat
- with his clergy to-morrow, and promised to begin then and
- recommend England. I then called at Conte Persico's, who
- is in town, but was just gone to the theatre. Home, and to
- bed at 9½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Sept. 11.&mdash;</span>Up
- soon after 5, and at 7 said
- mass in St. Anastasius, a large church close to the hotel.
- Soon after Conte Persico came to return my visit, and sat
- a good while with me, then with the Phillippses, to whom
- I introduced him. He is grown very old, being now 67.
- He said he was married two years after I had seen him before,
- and was now by accident in town with his wife. I
- thought him very like his old father. At 10 we went in a
- carriage to see the tombs of the Scaligeri, formerly tyrants
- of Verona, fine Gothic structure; then the Amphitheatre,
- and the church of St. Zenone, where I saw the image of the
- saint again which I before laughed at, as a thing so to be
- treated, in 1820. I then called at Conte Persico's, and saw
- his lady. At 12½ we set off for Dezenzano, a beautiful spot
- at the town end of the Lake di Garda. We arrived at 6,
- and had a pleasant evening in a little room of the Albergo
- Imperiale, looking over the lake. I wrote to Mrs. Neville
- and Abbé de Baudry.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, Sept. 12.&mdash;</span>There
- was rain in the night, leaving
- us a fine day without dust. I said mass at 6½ in the parish
- church. We went to dine at the Duc Torri, at Brescia. I
- went to see the Bishop, who received me very courteously.
- There I met a Philippine lay-brother, who introduced me to
- the church of his order, Sta. Maria della Pace, then to five
- or six of the fathers sitting together. I had a fine opportunity
- of recommending England. They are the only religious
- house in Brescia (of men at least). After dinner at 3 we
- set off for Bergamo, when we came to Albergo Reale at 9
- o'clock. I got up to my knees in a stream near the road at
- the wet stage, but hope no harm from it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Sept. 13.&mdash;</span>Anniversary
- of my first coming
- abroad, 1819. I got up soon after 5, said mass in a church
- opposite the inn, breakfasted at a café, then walked up the
- beautiful road to the high town called the <i>Città</i>, where our
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
- inn was is the borga. Between them there are about
- 36,000. In the <i>Città</i> I met a priest, by name Giuseppe
- Caffi, belonging to the collegiate church, who, when I asked
- him for Count Papi, volunteered to be my guide altogether.
- He showed me the cathedral, his own church, Sta. Maria,
- and a little convent church, Church of the Benedictine
- Nuns, beautifully gilt. He also went with me to the Bishop,
- who gave me one of the best receptions. By the same good
- hap as at Verona, the priests were in retreat. He introduced
- me to the Abbate Vittadini, conductor of the retreat,
- who promised to speak of England to the clergy. He was
- already full of zeal for it; he knew a good deal of the
- state of things with us. When I wrote my name, he knew
- it well, and it had a good effect. I went with Abbé Caffi to
- the palace of Count Papi; all were away. He came with
- us to the hotel, and soon we started for Milan. We arrived
- at 3, and found rooms in the best hotel (de la Ville). <i>Tables
- d'hôte</i> at 5. I said office, and just got time to look in the
- cathedral before dinner, and again after we all went. It
- was beyond my recollections of old. I admired the ceiling,
- which seemed all beautiful openwork; I did not remember
- this. It seemed to be only painted so. How I remember
- Lord Kinnaird taking my mother to it. We tried two
- other churches to find Benediction in vain. Then I went
- with Phillipps to a bookseller's.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, Sept. 14.&mdash;</span>Up
- at 5½. I went to say mass at
- the cathedral, and finding that the Roman rite is not
- allowed in the church alone, I was in the happy necessity of
- celebrating in the chapel of St. Charles, in the crypt, which
- is almost reserved for strangers. I waited over two masses.
- After breakfast we had a visit from Count Mellerio,
- Rosinini's great friend. Phillipps and I went with him to
- his palace, and saw Abbate Polidori, who lives there. Mrs.
- Ambrose came with the carriage to pick us up, and I went
- to the Church of St. Celso, and to the great hospital fitted up
- for 3,000 patients; then to vespers at the Duomo, and at 3½
- to dine with Count Mellerio. I sat near Polidori. Before
- we parted he and Signer Mercati seemed gained for England.
- At 6½ we went to a Benediction at the Duomo, only of relics
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325">{325}</a></span>
- of the Passion, and not very solemn. This was by occasion
- of the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross to-day. I then
- went to the Archbishop's palace to find the Grand Vicar, to
- get leave for confessions to-morrow, and without expecting
- it saw the Cardinal himself instead. As Count Mellerio was
- to prepare my way to-morrow, I did not speak of England.
- When I got home I found Mellerio at the inn, bringing a
- permission from the Grand Vicar. To bed after 10. I have
- got unwell to-day in the inside,&mdash;between yesterday's <i>maigre</i>
- and the fruit, I suppose.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Sept. 15.&mdash;</span>We
- went together this morning to
- the old basilica of St. Ambrose, where I said mass at the
- saint's tomb, in the crypt. The Phillippses received communion.
- Then we saw the splendid covering of the altar
- above, in the church. It is exposed only on three days at
- mass&mdash;St. Ambrose, SS. Gervase and Protase, and Corpus
- Christi. SS. Gervase and Protase's relics are there, with St.
- Ambrose's. This altar cost to a bishop who gave it, 80,000
- sequins of gold, about the year 1000. I spoke to the
- Directeur du Séminaire de Chamberry, who was there, and
- he promised to speak of England. We went home to
- breakfast at 10½. Assisted at high mass in the Duomo
- again; not so solemn as yesterday. The procession of the
- Blessed Sacrament before it did not please me much. After
- high mass I went to call on the Cardinal again. I was not
- so much disappointed as in the case of the Bishop of <i>Brixen</i>,
- for I had heard nothing promising about this interview as
- in the other cases; but I felt as one defeated when I went
- away. I went to the Piazza del Castello to see the Contessa
- del Verme and her sister, English people, converts to whom
- Abbate Vittadini, at Bergamo, recommended me. Her
- sister, Miss Mary Webster, is just about entering the order
- of the Visitation here. The Count came in just when I was
- gone out, and followed me to S. Alessandro, of the Barnabites,
- which he had heard me ask for as I left his house. I
- brought him to see Phillipps. We dined at 3½, and at 4½
- went to the Arena, or Amphitheatre, where there was a grand
- <i>spettacolo nautico e pirotecnico.</i> The arena was full of
- water, and we had five races of boats, three of men, one of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
- women, and one of boys rowing; then a procession of two
- great illuminated galleys filled with musicians; then what
- struck me most, as most new to me, the ascent of fifty
- fine balloons; then of one very large one; then a splendid
- display of fireworks, ending as often with an illuminated
- palace, with an inscription <i>alle scienze, alle letters, alle arti</i>,
- as the spectacle was in honour of the Sixth Italian Scientific
- Congress, now being held here. We got home at ¼ to 9; I
- almost well again.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, September 16.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at St. Fidele, formerly
- one of the three Jesuit churches. At 8 we set off
- in a carriage to see the Certosa of Pavia. We got to it at
- 10½, and were two hours examining its beautiful details.
- Women are now forbidden entrance into the choir, and so
- Mrs. Ambrose had to stay in the body of the church, while
- we, with other people who had come to see it, saw the rich
- high altar and many of the finest things. There are not many
- precious stones, like rubies, emeralds, &amp;c., but a profusion of
- altar-fronts of Pietra-dura, beautiful <i>alto relievos</i> in marble,
- and many fine pictures. The convent is but lately reinhabited.
- Count Mellerio was the means of replacing monks
- there. They are all French. We saw the Prior, who knew
- Michael MacMahon. He promised to recommend England
- not only here, but by letter in other houses. We dined at
- an inn half a mile from the church, called Albergo della
- Certosa, and came back to Milan by 5. I got off near the
- Contrada S. Maria Falconeria, to call at a convent of Sisters
- of Charity of the same order as those of Sta. Lucia, at Venice.
- I saw the Superioress. Then I went to the Count del Verme's
- palace. La Contessa was confined this morning. I saw
- Miss Webster, who spoke about two English girls whom they
- are instructing, wishing me to receive the confession of one
- who cannot speak Italian. I went out with the priest who
- instructs them, Don Gaetano Fumagalli, to see them. We
- first went to the convent of the Salesiani, 54 nuns (visitation),
- into which Miss Webster is about to enter, and though the
- time was past, we saw the mistress of novices through the
- grate, who was very gracious about England. Then we
- went to a high story in a house where these girls lodge, paid
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327">{327}</a></span>
- for by the Cardinal. After coming home I went, on an invitation
- obtained by the Conte del Verme, to a grand
- assembly and concert at the Accademia, or the <i>Nobil Società</i>.
- The gayest rooms I have seen a long time. I came home
- soon after ten, for I knew nobody there, and was almost the
- only priest I saw; certainly the only one in a cassock.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, September 17.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at St. Fidele. At 8
- Count Mellerio came, and we started for his villa at Gernetto,
- beyond Monza. He took Mrs. A. and Amb., and I and
- a boy went in our carriage, with four vetturino horses.
- We stopped at Monza to see the glorious relic of the Iron
- Crown given by the Empress Helena to Constantine, in
- which is inserted, as a ring of iron within a larger ring of
- gold, one of the nails of Our Lord's crucifixion beat out into
- that form. It has crowned from thirty to forty kings of
- Italy. Among them, Napoleon last but one. Other grand
- relics of the Passion are with it, two thorns, and a piece of
- the sponge. Other relics are in the sacristy. This is kept
- over an altar within rich doors. The Canonico, who was
- with us in the church, promised to recommend England.
- We went on to the palace of the Archduke, surrounded by
- a park fifteen miles round, dressed like an English park, a
- noble palace. Then on to Gernetto, where we were for two
- or three hours before dinner walking gaily with the Count
- round his beautiful grounds. The villa is very handsome.
- Two priests of the neighbourhood dined with us at 3. One
- told me that Count Mellerio is one of the richest, or rather
- the richest nobleman in Milan,&mdash;about £15,000 a year of our
- money. He is alone, having lost his wife and four children.
- He came back with us to our hotel, where I found Count
- del Verme to tell me that the confession of the girls was
- put off. They have been left here by their mother. Their
- parents, &mdash;&mdash; and Ann Carraway, live at Newcastle-under-Lyne.
- Their grandfather and mother, James and Mary
- Freakley, at Cheapside, Handley. I went with the Count
- to the assembly of the learned men who are now met in
- Milan,&mdash;not so smart as yesterday, but very numerous. Then
- to a café, to read news about the effects of O'Connell's
- liberation.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, September 18.&mdash;</span>I
- went with Phillippses to
- the Duomo to say mass for them at St. Charles's tomb, but
- I found it occupied, and so I went to San Fidele again,
- came back to breakfast, and saw Conte Mellerio, who had
- called. Then went with them to the Brera, where I went
- quickly through the gallery, and left them, taking the carriage
- to go to the hospital of the Fate-bene Fratelli, which
- is a fine establishment for 100 sick. The Vicario, whom I
- saw, promised to recommend England to the Provincial, who
- is here, and through him to the thirty brothers here, and
- five houses in Lombardy&mdash;<i>vento</i>. Then I went to the bank.
- Dined at 1, and at 2 we started with a Swiss <i>voiturier</i>,
- whom we had engaged to take us to Geneva. We passed
- the beautiful triumphal arch, L'Arco della Pace, reckoned
- the finest in the world, ancient and modern. We got to
- sleep at a nice inn, in a place called Casiua buon Jesu. I
- wrote a letter to Dr. Wiseman.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, September 19. San Januarius.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass
- at the little oratory of the village. There is mass here only
- on Sundays generally, but the bell rung three times for my
- mass, and we had a full chapel. This chapel not very neat;
- it seemed used for a school-room. We started at ½ past 7,
- and reached Avona at 12 to dine. How I was struck with
- the remembrance of the last time in this place with my
- father and mother, after coming in a boat with Dr. Wilson
- from Bavino. The inn is a fine new house since then. We
- saw a steamboat pass, which plies daily the whole length of
- the lake. I missed going to St. Charles's statue and the
- seminary near it, belonging to the diocese of Novara, where
- I should have liked to go to preach England. After dinner
- we started and went round to Strass, where we stopped and
- went up the mountain's side to see Rosmini's Novitiate,
- which overlooks the village. It is a large house, without
- beauty or character, unhappily. We knew we should not
- find Rosinini, who is at Roveredo. We saw Segnini and
- two other priests, Paoli and Gagliardi. They have thirty
- novices. The situation is beautiful. The ground belonged
- before to Madame Bolognaro, who has a large house in the
- town, where, while we were at the convent, the Bishop of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
- Novara came. I would not have failed to ask an audience
- had I been alone, but I made the priests promise to speak
- to him of England. We took a boat to go to the Isola
- Bella, to see the palace and gardens on our way to Bavino,
- the carriage going on there by itself. It was almost dark
- when we got there, and we could only see the suite of grand
- rooms and pictures, and the chapel with the old family
- tombs brought from Milan, by candlelight. <i>Mem</i>. A room
- of rockwork underneath the chief suite, where Bonaparte
- dined, and the bedroom he slept in. The whole of this
- grandeur is made worse than worthless by the indecent
- statues and pictures which are all about the place. We got
- to Bavino at 8; a nice new inn.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Sept. 20.&mdash;</span>Ember
- Day, but no fast for me!
- I got to say mass at 4½, and we started at 6 to ascend the
- Simplon. The day was beautiful. We got to Domodossola
- at 11. We went up the beautiful road to the Monte
- Calvario, of which Gentili has made me think so much,
- first having taken a look at their college in the town, where
- there are 19 boarders and more than 200 out-students. At
- the Calvary two priests received us kindly. Along the
- road to it are chapels with the stations represented in groups
- of figures as large as life, well executed; only two or three
- are complete. The situation here again is admirable. The
- house and church not remarkable. I was well received for
- England. Coming down, which I did after the rest, I
- visited a pretty Capuchin convent, half-way up, of fifteen
- friars, and had a good reception (promise to write to the
- other houses). After dinner at 2 we set off for Simplon,
- which we reached after 8. The <i>voiturier</i> (coachman), to spare
- his horses, put us on post-horses at his own expense. The
- road on the Piedmontese side is sadly dilapidated. It was
- broken down (by water, as it seems) six years ago, and the
- King of Sardinia will not have his part repaired, to make
- people go by Mount Cenis and Turin. Put up at the
- Simplon Inn.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, Sept. 21. St. Matthew.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at 7,
- spoke to the curé after, who promised for England. We
- started at 8; we still had two hours going up the hill.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330">{330}</a></span>
- About the summit is the Hospice de St. Bernard, begun by
- Bonaparte. I remember it in an unfinished state. It now
- contains four or five priests, and some brothers. We stopped
- and saw the Prior, M. Barras, who promised kindly to
- recommend England to the mother house. Phillipps bought
- a puppy of the famous breed, three months old, who was
- added to our company in the carriage. We reached Brigy
- between 12 and 1. I went out before dinner, and saw the
- Superior of the Jesuits' College here, who is a nice old man,
- and received us very kindly. I hurried away quickly,
- thinking to return again after dinner, but the dinner was
- long after time, and we had at once to set off for Turtinan,
- which we reached at 6½. We went out before tea to see a
- waterfall: it was a dark, wet walk, for rain was beginning.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Sept. 22.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at 5. Soon after 6 we
- set off for Sion. Arrived at 10, and found a grand military
- pontifical high mass begun in the cathedral. I never heard
- drums and cannon and the word of command in a mass
- before. The music was not military, but noisy figured. The
- occasion of the solemn mass was the feast of St. Maurice,
- patron of the Valais. After mass the Bishop walked with
- a great procession about the town, with a feretrum, with
- relics of St. Maurice. The chief part are at the town of the
- name, which we are to pass to-morrow. The procession had
- an excellent effect. I went then to the Jesuits' College, and
- spoke to the Rector, who told me the first I had heard of the
- attempt at revolution in the month of May here, which was
- defeated in a gallant style by the inhabitants of the Valais
- arming to the number of 10,000, from a population of
- 70,000, under an old French officer, <i>i.e.</i>, a Swiss, trained in
- the French army, who repelled the party of the Jeune
- Suisse, who otherwise would have overturned religious
- order, and perhaps, as he said, have massacred all the religious.
- Young Bodenham was in their house when the
- danger threatened. The Rector was very kind, but did not
- promise much. I went then to dine at a <i>table d'hôte</i>, but
- soon got off, and went to the Bishop lately consecrated, who
- came from table to speak with me. He was educated at the
- Collegio Germanico; knew Baldacconi and Father Daniel.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331">{331}</a></span>
- He promised his help. I then went to a Capuchin convent
- outside the town. The guardian, a young man, was rather
- cold, but said meanwhile that he always prayed for England,
- as ordered in the Confrérie de l'Immaculé Coeur. Then
- to a convent of Ursulines, close to the Bishop's; eleven nuns
- (well received); then in a hurry to an hospital outside the
- town on the other side, with eight nuns. The director gave
- me one of my most favourable receptions, and promised that
- the nuns should change their day of communion from Friday
- to Thursday to meet my wishes. We set off at 2 for Martigny,
- which we reached at 5½. It has a different look from
- 1819, the year after the inundation. I called on the curé,
- who is one of the monks of Grand St. Bernard, with the white
- linen scapular to represent the surplice, which they always
- wear as canons regular of St. Augustine, to which they
- belong. He was very good about England. From thence, I
- went to an hospital kept by six French nuns, to receive poor
- travellers, female St. Bernardites. The Superioress was very
- agreeable and zealous. They are going directly to France to
- make their retreat with 600 other nuns, assembled under
- the Bishop of Belley. She promised to get him to recommend
- it to them all. I came back to tea after a happy,
- successful day (Hôtel de la Cigne). Alpine strawberries
- at tea.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, September 23.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at 6. Came away,
- fearing it would be too late, without saying farewell to the
- Prior, which was mortifying, as there was time enough. We
- went to dine at St. Gingolph, beautifully placed on the bank
- of the Lake of Geneva. On the way we stopped at St.
- Maurice, where we saw in the church the rich shrine of St.
- Maurice, containing his body, and several others; two of the
- sons of Sigismund, King of Burgundy, who did penance
- here, after putting them to death. In the abbey, which is
- of the Canons Regular of St. Augustine, I saw the superior,
- who is a bishop <i>in partibus</i>; he spoke very kindly about
- England. I also met a nun there of a convent of Sisters of
- Charity, who promised for Thursdays at St. Gingolph. I
- went to the curé, where the Vicar introduced me to several
- priests dining with him, who became greatly interested, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
- promised to speak to the Bishop of Annecy, and to their
- <i>confrères</i> at Thonon, where we came to sleep. I called on
- the curé, who promised, but I could not quite satisfy myself
- about him; but was quite satisfied with the brothers of the
- Christian Doctrine; there are eight. The Superior promised
- well, and sent two brothers home with me to the inn. The
- names of the priests at St. Gingolph were:&mdash;M. Veuillet,
- Curé de Désingy; M. Maitre, Curé de Novel; M. La Croix,
- Vicaire de Chilly; and M. Pollien, Vicaire de St. Gingolph.
- The first most interesting: the last extremely tall.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Sept. 24. B.M.V. di Mercede.&mdash;</span>At
- 5½ I went
- to the Convent of the Visitation, where there are thirty-four
- nuns, who have recovered their house after the Revolution.
- The Superioress received me most kindly, and
- promised all. I then went to the Sisters of Charity, who
- have two houses&mdash;a <i>pensionnat</i> and an hospital. The Superioress
- was not up. I left my card with a lay sister. I
- then went and said mass at the parish church. The
- Phillippses went to communion. It was at the altar of St.
- Francis of Sales, in this, the first church which he (or any
- other one) regained from the Calvinists&mdash;St. Hippolyte. I
- offered the mass for the recovery of our dear cathedrals.
- The curé spoke to me again, and much more zealously promised
- all for Thonon, M. De la Millière. We ought to
- have gone to the Château d'Allinges, where St. Francis
- lodged when he began the holy work. The chapel has been
- wonderfully preserved, and lately reopened, Sept. 14, 1836.
- On our way to Geneva, where we arrived at 12½, we read
- some of the account of his mission. We came to the Hotel
- de Bergues, a new grand house in a new part of the town,
- built out on the lake about 1834. I took a carriage to
- Plainpalais, and brought back my good friend l'Abbé de
- Baudry. I dined after at the <i>table d'hôte</i>. He is a tall,
- venerable old man, dressed in his cassock, as all the priests are.
- His account of things here was better than I thought. We
- set off at 3½, and could not get farther than Nyon, where
- Phillipps and I went to see the curé and his church, all new.
- There was no mission here till 1831. We interested him
- for England, I hope. The hotel is de la Couronne. In
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
- every room, as at Geneva, is a New Testament of the Geneva
- Bible Society.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Sept. 25.&mdash;</span>I
- went at 5 to say mass at the
- new church; the curé, M. Rossiaud, got up to serve it, and
- came with me to see us off. We went up the Jura; but
- the grand view of Mont Blanc was clouded, so we have but
- once seen it dimly. Yesterday evening we had a troublesome
- sorting of all our baggage at Les Rousses. We dined
- at St. Laurent. I went to the curé, M. Gottez, who spoke
- painfully of the state of France (I think too much so), but
- brightened up when we were about England. We went on
- to Champagnole, at the Hôtel de la Poste, a nice little inn.
- Phillipps and I went to the church; and I called and saw
- the curé, like Dr. Rock in looks. He accepted my appeal
- agreeably.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, Sept. 26.&mdash;</span>I
- got to say mass at the parish
- church, at 5. The curé, M. Patit, and the vicaire, M.
- Bouvet, were both up, and the latter walked back with me
- to the inn, la Poste. We started at 6½; dined at 1 at
- l'Hôtel de France, at Dole: we got there at 12. I went
- out and saw a father at the Jesuits', who received me very
- agreeably; and then a nun at the Visitation Convent. The
- Jesuit promised for all the convents himself. The Prince
- and Princess Doria were come to the inn, on their way to
- Italy. When we came back, I went to see them after
- our dinner. We went on through Auxonne, where Phillipps
- and I went to see the church,&mdash;<i>diligence</i> to Dijon. Arrived
- at the Hôtel de la Cloche at 7½. I went out to see the
- Bishop, but he was out. I called at the Séminaire, and saw
- the Superior and others, who were very kind, and spoke of
- Brother Luke asking them; then back to supper; after
- which I went again to the évêché, and waited in the porter's
- lodge, talking to a nice old man of eighty about the Revolution,
- &amp;c., till the Bishop came in. He, Monseigneur
- Rivet, promised his help very graciously. I got home at 10,
- having also tried in vain to get at the sacristan for mass
- tomorrow.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Sept. 27.&mdash;</span>I
- went out at ten minutes to 4, to try
- once more the sacristan's bell, but no answer, and so I had
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
- to come back and give up mass, as we were to start at 5.
- We took provisions in the carriage, and we had no mind to
- stop all day, till at 7½ we reached St. Florentin, a town of
- 2,400 people, in the diocese of Sens. The weather was
- beautiful, and we admired the high cultivation and seeming
- prosperity of the country. We passed a fine château at
- Aucy le Franc, of the Duce or Marquis de Clermont-Tonnerre.
- At St. Florentin I went out and saw the curé and
- the sacristan, to provide better for mass to-morrow than today.
- Hôtel de la Poste.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- S<span class="quotehead">aturday, Sept. 28.&mdash;</span>Got
- up about 3. At a quarter to
- 4 I went to the sacristan, and with him to the church, and
- said mass; a pretty little Gothic church. We set off at a
- quarter to 5, with provisions again, for Paris, which we
- entered about 11 at night. We stopped at Sens to see the
- cathedral. I first went to the archévêché, and was most
- graciously received by the Archbishop, Monseigneur Mellon
- Jolly, a young man translated here from Séez last March.
- He said he had introduced prayers for England at Séez, and
- would begin again now. He took me into the cathedral,
- and left me to see the trésor, where the Phillippses already
- were. The most precious relic was of the true cross, as the
- sacristan said, the largest in the world; but he could not
- know of Rome and Jerusalem. It was given by Charlemagne.
- There are two pieces, placed in a cross under
- crystal; I should say the upright piece of nine or ten inches,
- the transverse of four or five, well polished. What was
- perhaps most interesting to us was the case containing St.
- Thomas of Canterbury's chasuble, alb with apparel, stole,
- &amp;c., from which the late Archbishop separated what he gave
- to Dr. Wiseman. There is also an arm of St. Lupus, a case
- of St. Gregory's relics, from which some have been begged
- for Rome. We stopped again at Fontainebleau, and took a
- rapid view of the palace. The servant who led said it was
- the finest in the world. I think he must be partial, as the
- sacristan this morning about the relic of the cross. Louis-Philippe
- has done a good deal here; spent 800,000 fr. in
- ornamenting one room. I was much pleased with the
- gallery with pictures of the history of France. This is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
- finest matter for a palace. There was much very indecent.
- After this it began to rain till we got to Paris. We got
- rooms at the Hôtel de l'Europe, just opposite the gardens of
- the Tuileries. Nothing could be better.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, Sept. 29.&mdash;</span>I
- went at 7½ to say mass at the
- Madeleine, that glorious church for its style. Then home
- to breakfast, and then, with the rest, to high mass at Notre-Dame;
- one of the grandest plain chant masses I ever was
- at. There I met Mr. Moore, of Birmingham; and I went
- with him after, in his hackney-coach, on a few errands, and
- at last to the English convent, from whence he takes one of
- the Misses Bingham to the convent at Handsworth. Then
- I went again to Notre-Dame, and very much to my loss:
- I came too late for vespers. After, I went to St. Jacques,
- but did not find the Curé de Noirlieu, nor his vicaire. I
- came back by the omnibus to dine at the <i>restaurant</i>, and
- directly we went to Notre-Dame des Victoires, where we
- assisted at the service, from 7 to 20 minutes to 10. It was
- wonderful to see the attention of the people all this time.
- The old curé, after the sermon by another priest, gave the
- <i>annonces</i> in an interesting way. We heard him recommend
- England. I went in to ask him.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, Sept. 30.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at the Madeleine. After
- breakfast, I went to Mr. Blount, the banker, who told me
- that Heneage was to be in Paris on Thursday, the very day
- we go away. Then to the post, and find no letters; then
- by omnibus to St. Sulpice (where the retreat of the clergy
- begins to-day), to see the Archbishop. I was introduced to
- him in a room, where he was among several priests. I got
- on but poorly. He was gracious, but made little of the
- affair. The secretary of Mgr. Quelin was there. He testified
- to his recommending the thing before, but no effect
- followed. This was damping enough, though I knew something
- to the contrary. The Archbishop sent me to M.
- Vollemaux (Mr. Hand's friend), who conducts the retreat,
- and he promised to recommend England this evening. So
- the point is gained; though, judging from the tone in which
- he spoke of England, it is not so promising a prospect as
- some. But among 600 priests some will be inspired, let
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336">{336}</a></span>
- him speak as he may. I then went to the rue de Chaillot,
- to seek Captain Cooke, to know about John Beaumont. Had
- to come back empty, and stopped at home, not very well,
- till 5½, when Phillippses came in from St. Denis to dinner.
- After dinner Mr. Gordon, of the <i>Univers</i>, came to tea, and
- stopped till 10 nearly.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Oct. 1.&mdash;</span>I
- went to say mass at Notre-Dame des
- Victoires, in les Petits Pères, at 8½. I breakfasted near
- them, and had a talk with Abbé Desgenettes. Then went
- to breakfast <i>à la fourchette</i>, at 11, with M. Noirlieu, Curé
- of St. Jacques, and his vicaire, Bourjéant. The latter forced
- me, against my will, to have some papers with an image
- and a prayer for England printed. It is the like case with
- Belgium. I hope it may be well, as it certainly was not
- my will, and so the denial of my will may be a blessing.
- We then went to call on the nuncio, Mgr. Fornari; and then
- to the engravers for this said work. Mgr. Fornari is grown
- very stout and unwieldy, but was very kind and pleasing;
- he encouraged my pursuit and this printing. We went
- home again to St. Jacques to <i>rédiger</i> the prayers, when again
- my friend would have his way against my mind in a point
- or two. I came thence to the Bank, M. Blount's, then
- home, and dined alone; then went to call on Captain Cooke,
- to ask about John Beaumont, who, it seems, does not come to
- Paris at all; then home, where I found the Phillippses going
- out to a spectacle, and so I had to go off and try to stop at
- l'Abbé Desgenettes', who was to come to see him, but he
- was already from home, and so I came back and received his
- visit, when I pressed him for England, and he took it well.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Oct. 2.&mdash;</span>By
- desire of M. Gallard, Vicaire of
- the Madeleine, expressed by M. Bourgoiner, I said mass
- there. After breakfast, I called on Mrs. Heneage and her
- daughter, 17, rue St. Florentin; then took omnibus to St.
- Denis, where I looked through the church below ground and
- above. It is greatly altered since 1838&mdash;wonderful work of
- painting and stained glass, yet a very little is done of what
- has to be done. I came back by omnibus to Porte St.
- Martin; then walked home at 6. I dined with Captain
- Cooke&mdash;a family dinner, purely English, as he is himself.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
- I liked his conversation much, blunt and plain as it is. He
- talked of his twenty years' service&mdash;Egypt&mdash;America. I
- came home at 8 to meet MM. Noirlieu and Bourgoigne and
- Gordon, who came to tea and made interesting company till
- 11, I think.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, Oct. 3.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at St. Roch; after, I went
- to the Jesuits, Rue des Postes, and saw the Provincial, M.
- Boulanger; then to the Sisters of Charity, Rue de Bac;
- the Sacré Coeur, where Mad. de Gramont gave me a most
- amiable reception; the Lazarists, Rue de Sevres; then I
- tried to see one of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul, and
- went with a zealous young clerk from their office, 37, Rue
- de Seine, St. Germain, to seek an <i>avocat</i> at the Palais de
- Justice. I was handing about the engravings, which were
- ordered on Tuesday, and which are well received. The sister,
- deputed to see me at the Sisters of Charity, alone, was cold.
- She was the same as six years ago, when she was very
- gracious. I came home to dine at 1 alone; at 2 I went to
- see Heneage, just arrived at his father and mother's from
- Dieppe. I sat an hour very happily with him, and came
- home at the time appointed to go away, but it was deferred
- till to-morrow. So I went to the chief house of the Ecoles
- Chrétiennes, about 126, Rue du Faubourg St. Martin. The
- Superior-General was very favourable, and promised to recommend
- England to his community of 300, and to the 400
- houses of his order. I then took omnibus to the Rue de
- Bac, and had an interesting conversation with Abbé Dubois,
- now eighty years old. Ever since 1838, he prays for England
- every day in the mass. He is in retreat. He receives
- a pension of £100 a year from England. I went again and
- had tea with him, and so finished the day happily.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, Oct. 4.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at St. Roch. We started for
- Boulogne at 9½. We stopped on the way to see the Church
- of St. Vincent de Paul, building in most splendid style, in
- form of a basilica inside, but with a portico without. Then
- I stopped at St. Denis, and walked round it again; saw in
- addition the winter choir most richly adorned. <i>Mem.</i>&mdash;The
- twelve Apostles holding the consecration crosses round the
- walls. We went on to dine at Beauvais. We went, when
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
- it was growing dark, to take a look at the cathedral. The
- choir alone complete&mdash;the finest in the world. We said that
- the French, with their present zeal and prosperity, would
- finish this cathedral if the peace lasts ten more years. I
- left them in the church, and went to see the Bishop. He
- was at dinner, but came out and introduced me to the party,
- namely, the directors of the Seminary (among them my
- acquaintance, M. Bareau), and some Jesuits. He was most
- kind and favourable, and promised before them all that he
- would say mass for England once a week for a year. The
- others all sympathised. After this beautiful incident, I came
- home, and we dined at the Écu de France. We afterwards drove
- on to Grandvilliers; arrived at 11. The King of the French
- dined there yesterday; the landlady was in raptures at it;
- there was the Queen, and in all twenty-six, at table.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, Oct. 5.&mdash;</span>As
- they failed to awake me, I missed
- saying mass. We set off at 6½, and went, almost without a
- stop, dining in the carriage (135 kilometres, about 85 miles),
- to Boulogne, where we stopped at the Hôtel des Bains. I
- went directly to see the Grand Doyen, who was very kind.
- Returning, I found Mr. Digby with them. Louis-Philippe's
- birthday&mdash;71 years old.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, October 6.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at 8½; got back to
- breakfast, and then we went together to the high mass, sung
- by Dr. Walsh, Bishop of Halifax. He had no mitre. After
- this, Mrs. Canning met me in the sacristy, and we went to
- her house, No. 5, Rue de Doyen. At 2 we walked to the
- Haute Ville, where we visited the Visitation Nuns in their
- grand new house, twenty-seven in number, and the Ursulines,
- fifty-two in number; then to M. Haffreingue. At 6
- I went to dine with the Digbys; saw Mrs. Digby for the
- first time. The Phillippses were there, and four or five
- more. I walked back with the Doyen in heavy rain at 10,
- and entered my lodgings with L'Abbé Daniel, 73, Grande
- Rue.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, October 7.&mdash;</span>I
- went with Mrs. Canning to the
- Visitation Convent, and said the community mass at 9.
- After it we breakfasted in the parlour at 11. M. Haffreingue
- came in with the Phillippses, who had breakfasted
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
- with him, and the Superioress, an English lady of the name
- of Muller, and other nuns, showed us round the house, which
- is most stately and beautiful, though it would have been
- wonderfully better had the money been spent on Gothic
- work. Mrs. Canning and I left at 12½, and called on Mr.
- Errington. We came down to dine at 2. The Doyen and
- M. Daniel came. The Bishop also came to luncheon at 8.
- I went up to the Haute Ville, and first called on M. Gillies,
- a Scotch gentleman, converted last year; then went to
- Digby's for the evening. Besides Phillippses, &amp;c., I saw
- Nicholas Ball. Came back at 10½.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, October 8.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at 7½; then went to
- breakfast with Mrs. Canning. About 11 we set off for the
- Haute Ville, and went once more to the Visitation Convent,
- where we were allowed to see the whole community through
- their grate for three quarters of an hour, that I might do my
- best to recommend England, which I tried to do. Then I
- visited M. Gillies, and got down to dinner at 2¼. M. Le
- Cointe, M. Le Roy, and M. Daniel, dined with us. After
- dinner we went out and visited, first, the Soeurs Grises, an
- austere convent of poor nuns, who teach school. They
- have 900 girls under care. The Superioress promised for all;
- if she fulfils it, it is a fine gain. Then to the Ecoles
- Chrétiennes. They are seventeen brothers, teaching 1,100 boys
- in different schools. They were very encouraging; promised
- for themselves and the boys. After an hour's office and tea,
- I went to the Haute Ville to see Phillipps and his party at
- Digby's for the last time, as they go to-morrow. Met Mr.
- W. Jones and wife, and others. Then at 9 I went to visit
- Judge Ball at the Hôtel de Londres. The Bishop and others
- were there. The family was Mr. Ball, Nicholas, and
- Alexander, and a daughter.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, October 9.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at the Ursulines at
- 7½, first addressing them on England for a quarter of an
- hour. Then breakfasted, during which six English nuns
- were in attendance, and Miss Swift. Then my cousin and
- I walked to the Annonciades, when we could not see the
- Superioress; then to the Dames de Notre-Dame du bon Secours
- (<i>gardes malades</i>, seventeen nuns). Then in the Basse Ville
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340">{340}</a></span>
- to the Hospitalieres (thirteen nuns); these promised well.
- Then I went home to office till dinner at 2. Mrs. Canning
- and M. Tallier, Curé de Nemfchatel, who takes care of them,
- came over to meet me. At 4 M. Thillay came. These two
- promised to do all they could. At 5 Mrs. C. and I walked
- to the steamboat office, post-office, &amp;c. Came back to office
- and tea. Then I went up to change my quarters, and pass
- some days at the college with M. Haffreingue. I first called
- and saw Mrs. Gillies. I sat some time with M. Haffreingue,
- and to bed at 10.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, October 10.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at ¼ to 8. At 10 Dr.
- Walsh came up and sung mass <i>de Spiritu Sancto</i>, for the
- opening of studies. The boys came back yesterday. I
- assisted him as Assistant Deacon. At 1½ we dined. The
- Bishop, M. O'Reilly, and a M. Cardham, a London convert,
- were all the strangers. The rest were the professors of the
- house. After dinner we had toasts, cheers, and speeches, on
- England, Mr. O'Reilly leading it. At 10, I went and saw
- Abbate Melia at Mrs. Errington's. He is going to replace
- Baldacconi in London. Then to Mrs. Canning's to tea.
- Returned for night prayers at 7½. Supper comes after. I
- talked to M. Haffreingue about architecture.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, October 11.&mdash;</span>I
- said mass at 7½ in the chapel of
- Notre-Dame de Boulogne; breakfasted with M. Haffreingue.
- At 10 I called on Digby, then Mrs. Canning, and Mrs.
- Gillies. I dined in the Infirmary, to eat meat with M.
- Grettan, the English teacher, and little Rosamel, grandson
- of a great admiral. M. Haffreingue and I took a walk, and
- went through the crypt of the cathedral. Night prayers
- and supper in the refectory at 7½. After it, M. Haffreingue
- and I went to call on Mrs. Muller and Digby.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Saturday, October 12.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass in the Chapelle de
- Notre-Dame. Miss Muller breakfasted with us. She is
- the great support of M. Haffreingue's great work of building
- the cathedral, having begged for it for years past. I asked
- her to have prayers made for England, as M. Haffreingue
- announces the cathedral to be undertaken mainly for that
- enterprise. She promised to interest the poor. I thought
- of my sermon, and did other things till near 12. When I
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341">{341}</a></span>
- went out, called on Mr. Stewart, a Scotch pastrycook, lately
- converted and received by Sisk. At 1, I dined (<i>gras</i>) with Mrs.
- Canning. After, called on Lady Burke and her two daughters,
- near the Porte. Came back after; walked an hour in the
- Grande Salle with Haffreingue, talking over projects for
- England and France.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Sunday, October 13.&mdash;</span>Got
- up after 7, and sung high mass
- in the chapel at 9. After it I went to Mrs. Canning's till
- dinner time, when I returned and dined in the refectory.
- The afternoon was mostly preparing my sermon, which I
- preached on the conversion of England at the <i>salut</i> at 7. The
- boys clapped their hands to my surprise when I entered the
- refectory to supper; in token of acceptance, I hope. I got
- on better than I could have thought, and was not a bit tired.
- After supper I went with M. Haffreingue and M. Le Roy; a
- farewell visit to Digby. It blows hard, and I fear it will be
- a bad passage to-morrow, or none at all.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Monday, October 14.&mdash;</span>The
- Abbate Melia, Dr. Baldacconi's
- intended successor, came to sing songs, and breakfast
- at the college, and went down with me to the port. Mr.
- Bodenham came with us, too. We waited from 9 till 10.20
- before they set off. They seemed to fear the wind. When
- we got out it was a most stormy passage to Folkestone, of
- three hours. I stood up all the way, holding on, talking
- with M. Crawley, of the Hotel, Albemarle Street, except we
- were nearly sick. We swung through the narrow walk of
- Folkestone Harbour, and were at once smooth, and soon on
- England's soil. It was a long work passing the Custom
- House, but we got off by a train at 3.49. I set Mr. Melia
- down at Pagliano's, where we found Dr. Walsh (of Halifax),
- and had tea. Sisk and Mgr. Eyre came in by good fortune,
- and I went with them home to their quarters at the Chelsea
- chapel-house.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, October 15.&mdash;</span>Said
- mass at 8½. Then went to
- try Dr. Chambers, who is out of town. Then to Spence
- House, and saw Appleyard. By his advice, I determined to
- go to Windsor to-day, the Queen being just now away. I
- called on Father Lithgoe, and attended a meeting of ladies
- at Sisk's, then off by the Great Western Railway to Slough,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342">{342}</a></span>
- and so to Windsor. I saw Caroline at Lady Grant's, where
- she lodges, close to the Castle, where I dined at 8, first having
- seen Sarah at the Castle, and the Prince of Wales, with
- whom she was playing. He is a weakly-looking child of
- four, but noble and clever looking. He behaved prettily to
- us all in going off to bed.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Wednesday, October 16.&mdash;</span>After
- sleeping at the Castle
- Inn, I walked to the Catholic chapel at Chrom, attended
- last Sunday by Louis-Philippe, who charmed them all. I
- said mass, and then Mr. Wilson took me in a gig a mile on
- to call on Mr. Riley, at Forest Hill. He was out. I thence
- called to Windsor, and was with Sarah from 12 to 1½, while
- the children were asleep. Then went down to Eton, called
- on Mr. Coleridge, then walked about the well-known places,
- the chapel, the cloisters, where I left a card on Wilder, now
- a fellow. I went and mused over the place which once was
- Godley's, but all is levelled. I stood by the oak-tree there,
- saw the boys assembling for 3 o'clock school, and talked to
- some. I brought back many a scene thirty years and more
- ago. At 3, started back and dined with Sisk. After dinner
- we went to see Mrs. Bagshawe and Mrs. Jauch back in an
- omnibus.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Thursday, October 17.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at 8½. Went to see Dr. Watson,
- whom I found to be my former friend, fellow of St. John's.
- It was a good account of me, thank God. Then to Mr.
- Nerincx, at Somers Town. Then to Mr. Morel, at Hampstead,
- and Mrs. Sankey, near him; then called at the Sardinian
- Chapel, and home to dine, and sit the evening with
- Sisk.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Friday, October 18.</span>
-<br><br>
-(<i>This journal breaks off here, and is not resumed.</i>)
-</p>
-<br>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br>
-Close Of His Career In Oscott; And His Religious
-Vocation.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-During the year 1845 his attention was greatly occupied
-with the converts that were coming daily into the Church
-through the Oxford movement. As Father Spencer was
-not a mover in it, and as its history has been written over
-and over by different members of it, it would be superfluous
-to give anything like a sketch of it in such a work as this.
-Father Spencer seemed to have great interest in Dr.
-Newman, as also Dr. Ward, Canon Oakeley, and Father
-Faber. Many of them go to Oscott, some to be received,
-and some to make their studies for the Church; and in the
-beginning of the year 1846 he writes that he had twelve
-who were Anglican clergymen assisting at his mass one day
-in Oscott, and that there were three more who might have
-been, but were unable to come.
-</p>
-<p>
-He takes advantage of the Feast of St. Pius V. to preach
-his famous sermon on Ezekiel's vision of the dry bones. In
-a few days he assists at the ordination of the present Bishop
-of Northampton, the Right Rev. Dr. Amherst. A number
-of converts received orders at the same time, and Father
-Spencer had the pleasure of assisting at the ceremony. He
-resumes his Journal in May, 1846, and we find these two
-entries in it:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Tuesday, June 9.&mdash;</span>
- We had news to-day of
- the death of Pope Gregory XVI. on the 1st of June, after
- fifteen years and four months' pontificate. God grant a holy
- successor, full of fortitude and love, especially for England."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">June 22.</span>
- News of Cardinal Feretti being Pope (Pius IX.).
- The brave Bishop of Imola, who stopped the progress of the
- insurgents in 1831. I am perfectly satisfied."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344">{344}</a></span>
-<p>
-He went into retreat at Hodder under the direction of
-Father Clarke, S.J., and the result of that retreat was that
-he became a Passionist. We shall give a letter he wrote to
-Mr. Phillipps at the time, in which he gives a full account
-of how this was brought about.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">"St. Benedict's Priory, Feast of St. John Cantius,<br>
- "Oct. 22, 1846.</span><br>
-<br>
- "My Dear Ambrose,&mdash;Yesterday, for the first time this
- long time, I heard where you were, and that you were
- within reach again of a Queen's head. This was from Mrs.
- Henry Whitgrave, next to whom I sat at dinner yesterday,
- at the Clifford Arms, Great Heywood, after the opening
- high mass of the new chapel there, which she and her
- husband came from Rugeley to attend. I determined not to
- lose another day in writing to you, lest you should hear
- from others, which I should not be pleased with, the news I
- have to give about myself. Perhaps you have already heard
- of it; but it is not my fault that you have not had the news
- from me. The news in question is that I am going to become
- a Passionist. You have frequently told me your persuasion,
- that what would be for my happiness would be to
- join a religious institute, and therefore I am confident you
- will rejoice with me at my prejudices being overcome, my
- fond schemes of other plans of my own set aside, and this
- good step at length determined on; though I can imagine that
- you will perhaps regret that the body which I join is not
- that with which you are most connected yourself, the Institute
- of Charity. Surprised I dare say you will not be much.
- Many others have received the declaration of this intention
- without any surprise, and only told me that they had been
- used to wonder how I did not long ago take such a step.
- You will only be surprised and wonder how I have come to
- this mind, after such decided purposes, as I have always expressed
- the contrary way. I can only say, Glory be to God,
- to our Blessed Lady, and St. Ignatius. It was entirely
- owing to the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius, which I
- have gone through twice, and only twice, in private and
- alone in the effective way. Once was at Louvain, where
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345">{345}</a></span>
- you parted from me two years ago to go to Königswinter,
- and the other time was this summer, when I went for a
- retreat at Hodder Place, under your friend Father Thomas
- Clarke, who is Master of Novices there. For two or three
- days in the course of the former of these retreats, I was
- brought (for the first time) to doubt whether I ought not to
- give up my own ideas, and take to the regular established
- course of entering religion; and the old Jesuit who directed
- me in that retreat, when I expressed these new ideas,
- seemed at first to think they would lead to this conclusion.
- But I suppose I was not ripe for it, or God's time was not
- come. It ended by his telling me to put aside all those
- thoughts, and go on as I was. So I did, and was without
- any idea of the kind till the middle of this second retreat,
- which I entered with no view but to get on better where I
- was for another year. The same meditations raised up
- again the same battle within me as at Louvain, and I saw
- no way but to go into the matter, and make my election
- according to the rules given by St. Ignatius; which, if they
- were applied more often to questions of importance which
- people have to settle, ah! we should have many resolutions
- come to different to what are come to in the world. I soon
- came to determine for a change of state; then came the
- question which body to choose, and for a whole day nearly
- this was working my thoughts up and down. I could see
- no prospect of deciding between the two which came before
- me at first and for which I found my feelings and my
- judgment alternately inclining me&mdash;these were the Jesuits
- and the Institute of Charity. I saw no prospect of making
- up my mind that day, though Father Clarke told me now
- was the time for such a choice, and not when I had gone
- out again into the world, and I knew that God whom I had
- sought in solitude would give me light. At last, when I
- had just finished my last meditation of that portion of the
- retreat, and still could not settle, I thought I must have
- recourse after the retreat was over to Father Dominic, as a
- neutral judge, to help me to choose between the other two;
- when, in a minute, as in the fable of the two men who
- found the oyster and called in the third to judge between
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
- them, I saw that Father Dominic himself was to have me,
- such as I was, and all my doubts vanished. Father Clarke
- came soon afterwards to pay me his daily visit, and confirmed
- my choice with a manner and tone as unhesitating
- as the choice itself had been, and would not let me afterwards
- give way to the fear of any difficulties, saying, once
- for all, when I was questioning how I could get over some
- of them, 'Well, if you do not get over them, God has been
- deceiving you.' How I extol now and praise the practice
- of spiritual exercises, and St. Ignatius, the great founder of
- the system of them, and the Jesuits in their conduct of
- them, as exemplified in Father Clarke, whose way with
- me so completely gave the lie to what people are disposed to
- think, that the Jesuits must bring everything and everybody
- to themselves when they get them into their hands. I
- intend to express my sense of obligation to them and St.
- Ignatius, by taking his name as my future designation, after
- I am admitted to the religious habit. So I hope in time I
- may come to be known no more by my own name, but by
- that of <i>Ignatius of St. Paul</i>. And as God gives me this
- <i>nomen novum</i> may he add the <i>manna absconditum</i>, and
- make me in spirit as different from what I have been as in
- name. It is a great satisfaction that all this was settled
- without Father Dominic or any Passionist having a hint of
- it, till I went up to London three days after the retreat, to
- tell him of the determination I had made. The next day I
- came back to Oscott, and told Dr. Wiseman. He was, of
- course, surprised at the news, and at first seemed to think I
- could not be really in earnest, but ever since has acted in
- the most considerate and kind manner towards me. My
- move, I am sorry to think, must entail on him and dear
- Bishop Walsh serious inconveniences, not so much for the
- loss of my services where they had placed me, for I hope if
- I live I may serve them better as I shall be circumstanced
- hereafter, as I was doing little at Oscott, but from the withdrawal
- of my funds, which I fear may take place perhaps
- even to their entire amount, but certainly in great part.
- Not that any part goes to the congregation (of the Passion);
- thank God, I am received there <i>in formá pauperis</i> and all
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
- which remains to me would be left to the Bishop; but my
- dear brother seems quite determined to make my vow of
- poverty as much one in earnest as it can be; and so, bitter
- as that part of the trial is, God bless him for it! I think I
- must have told you how my income came to me. My father
- left me a certain capital quite independently, which went
- long ago to building churches, and £300 a year to be paid
- to me as long as I did not put it out of my own power, in
- which case it was to be in the power of my brother, now
- living, and other trustees, to be employed to my advantage.
- My late brother gave me as much more of his own free will,
- and this brother has hitherto continued this, but now says
- that he cannot give it to support Catholicity; and as he will
- not use it himself, it is to go for my lifetime to religious
- and charitable purposes such as he thinks fit. So half of my
- money is clean gone, and the other half depends upon what
- interpretation the law puts on the terms of my father's will.
- Bishop Wiseman takes this so beautifully and disinterestedly,
- that I trust the loss he thus bears for God's sake will be
- more than amply compensated to him. My sister, Lady
- Lyttelton, takes my change beautifully."
-</p>
-<p>
-The pecuniary losses his ecclesiastical superiors would
-sustain prevented them giving him the opposition they
-otherwise would. It would not look well to try to keep
-him out of religion, under the circumstances; and besides,
-Cardinal Wiseman was not the person to prevent his priests
-becoming religious, if he were only convinced they had a
-vocation.
-</p>
-<p>
-When Father Spencer was on his way to London to consult
-with Father Dominic about his reception, a musket
-went off by accident in the carriage he was in, and the ball
-passed through the skylight. This gave him rather a start,
-and made him think a little about the shortness of life. He
-appears to have found Father Dominic giving a retreat to
-the nuns of the Sacré Coeur, who are now at Roehampton.
-The saintly Passionist was delighted with the news, and
-Father Ignatius used to say that he seemed to be more delighted
-still at the fact that he was not bringing a penny to
-the order. On his return to Oscott, the first thing we heard
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-was that a Quaker had been converted by a sermon he
-preached in Birkenhead, which sermon he thought himself
-was about the worst he ever delivered. He meets a little
-opposition, however; they wish him to stay until his
-thoughts get settled into their original state after the retreat.
-He fears this to be a stratagem of the enemy, and,
-lest it might make him lose his vocation, he makes a vow of
-entering religion at or before Christmas. When this became
-known, nobody could in conscience oppose him, for only the
-Pope could dispense him from entering now.
-</p>
-<p>
-At length everything is settled. His £300 income remains
-to the Bishop and his brother promises to provide for
-his pensioners. All things being thus arranged, he visits
-all the poor people about Oscott and West Bromwich, to
-give them a parting advice and blessing, spiritual and temporal.
-He writes to all his friends, packs up his books and
-other smaller movables, receives two converts&mdash;Laing and
-Walker&mdash;gets Dr. Wiseman's blessing, and has his carriage
-to the train, takes third class to Stafford, and on his birthday,
-21st December, 1846, at 8 o'clock in the evening,
-arrives at Aston Hall, to enter the Passionists' noviciate.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-<br><br>
-
-<h1>BOOK IV.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Passionist.</i></h1>
-<br>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
-<br>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351">{351}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h1>BOOK IV.<br>
-<i>F. Ignatius, a Passionist.</i></h1>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.<br>
-The Noviciate.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Religious orders in the Church may be compared
-to a vast army, composed of different
-regiments, with different uniforms, different
-tactics, and different posts in the kingdom of
-God, offensive and defensive, against the
-kingdom of Satan. The Pope is the head of all, and
-various generals bear rule, in his name, over the forces
-who have chosen them for their leaders.
-</p>
-<p>
-Some religious orders fill chairs in universities; others
-are charged with the instruction of youth. Some watch by
-the sickbed; others ransom captive slaves, or bring consolation
-to the miserable in prisons and asylums. Some, again,
-work at the rooting out of sin and disorders at home, whilst
-others carry the light of the Gospel to the heathen. Some
-pitch their tents in deserts or mountain fastnesses, whilst a
-more numerous body take up their abode in the abandoned
-purlieus of crowded cities.
-</p>
-<p>
-Every religious order has some one characteristic spirit, a
-mark by which it may be distinguished from the others.
-This may be called the genius of the order. It is mostly
-the spirit that animated the founder when he gathered his
-first companions around him, and drew up the code by which
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
-their lives were to be regulated. This spirit may be suited
-to one age and not to another; it may be local or universal;
-on its scope depends the existence and spread of the order;
-its decay or unsuitableness will portend the extinction of the
-body it animated.
-</p>
-<p>
-This spirit may take in the whole battle-field of religion,
-and then we see members of that order in every post in
-which an advantage may be gained, or a blow dealt upon
-the enemy. It may take in some parts and leave the rest
-to the different battalions that are already in charge, prepared
-to render assistance in any department as soon as its
-services may be needed.
-</p>
-<p>
-The religious order known as the Congregation of the
-Passion has a peculiar spirit and a special work. It was
-founded by Blessed Paul of the Cross in the middle of the
-last century, and approved by Benedict XIV., Clement XIV.,
-and Pius VI. Its object is to work in whatever portion of
-the Church it may have a house established, for the uprooting
-of sin, and the planting of virtue in the hearts of
-the faithful. The means it brings to this, in addition to the
-usual ones of preaching and hearing confessions, is a spreading
-among Christians a devotion to and a grateful, lively
-remembrance of the Passion of our Lord. The Passionists carry
-out this work by missions and retreats, as well as parish
-work in their own houses. If circumstances need it, they
-take charge of a parish; if not, they do the work of missioners
-in their own churches. They teach none except
-their own younger members, and they go on foreign missions
-when sent by His Holiness or the Propaganda.
-</p>
-<p>
-To keep the members of an order always ready for their
-out-door work, there are certain rules for their interior life
-which may be likened to the drill or parade of soldiers in
-their quarters. This discipline varies according to the spirit
-of each order.
-</p>
-<p>
-The idea of a Passionist's work will lead us to expect what
-his discipline must be. The spirit of a Passionist is a spirit
-of atonement; he says, with St. Paul: "I rejoice in my
-sufferings, and fill up those things that are wanting of the
-sufferings of Christ, in my flesh for His body, which is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353">{353}</a></span>
-Church." Coloss. i. 24. For this cause, the interior life of a
-Passionist is rather austere. He has to rise shortly after
-midnight, from a bed of straw, to chaunt matins and lauds,
-and spend some time in meditation. He has two hours
-more meditation during the day, and altogether about five
-hours of choir-work in the twenty-four. He fasts and
-abstains from flesh meat three days in the week, all the year
-round, besides Lent and Advent. He is clad in a coarse
-black garment; wears sandals instead of shoes; and practises
-other acts of penance of minor importance.
-</p>
-<p>
-This seems rather a hard life; but an ordinary constitution
-does not find the least difficulty in complying with the
-letter of the rule. It is withal a happy, cheerful life; for it
-seems the nature of penance to make the heart of the penitent
-light and gladsome, "rejoicing in suffering." Two
-facts are proved by experience. First, that scarcely one
-ever left the order on account of the corporal austerities,
-though they are used as a plea to justify the step by those
-who lose the religious spirit. Secondly, longevity is more
-common amongst us than any other order, except perhaps
-the Cistercians, whose rule is far more severe than ours. A
-Passionist is bound by this rule only within the retreat, as
-houses of the order are called; outside, he follows the Gospel
-ordinance of partaking of what is set before him, and suiting
-himself to the circumstances in which he is placed. The
-Superior, moreover, has a discretionary power of granting
-exemptions, in favour of those who require some indulgence
-in consequence of illness or extra labour.
-</p>
-<p>
-It will be seen, from this sketch, that Passionists have to
-lay up a stock of virtue, by a monastic life at home, in order
-that their ministrations for their neighbour may be attended
-with more abundant fruit. They unite the active and contemplative
-spirit, that both may help to the saving of their
-own souls by qualifying them better for aiding in the salvation
-of others.
-</p>
-<p>
-This was the kind of life Father Spencer began to lead on
-his forty-seventh birthday. For a man of his age, with
-habits formed, with health subject to occasional shocks, it
-was certainly a formidable undertaking. There was little of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354">{354}</a></span>
-human glory to eclipse those difficulties in the community
-he entered. Four foreign fathers, living in a wretched
-house, as yet unable to speak passable English, without a
-church, without friends, without funds, without influence,
-formed the principal portion of the community of Aston
-Hall. These were, Father Dominic, Father Gaudentius,
-Father Constantine, and Father Vincent. None of these
-four fathers are in the province at present. Fathers Dominic
-and Constantine are dead. Father Gaudentius is a
-member of the American province; and Father Vincent,
-after many years of zealous missionary work in these
-countries, was called to Rome, where he now holds the
-office of Procurator-General. They had one student, two
-lay brothers, and Father Spencer was to be the second
-of two novices. The Passionists had already been four
-years in England, and, through trials and difficulties,
-from poverty and misunderstandings, had worked their way
-up to the precarious position in which he found them. He
-was, therefore, a great acquisition to the struggling community.
-True, he brought no earthly riches; but he brought
-what was more valued, an unearthly spirit&mdash;he brought
-humility, docility, and burning zeal.
-</p>
-<p>
-The fathers knew him for a long time, and scarcely required
-proofs to convince them of his having a religious
-vocation, since he had practised the vows before then in a
-very perfect way, considering his state. He gave clear
-proofs of his spirit on the eve of his coming to Aston. He
-came, as he glories in telling Mr. Phillipps, <i>in formâ pauperis</i>.
-Some of his friends wished to give him the price of
-his habit by way of alms; he would not accept of it. He
-then reflected on the poverty of the Passionists, and thought
-it would be well if he brought even so much, whereupon he
-proposed to beg the money. The largest alms he intended
-to receive was half-a-crown. He was forbidden to do this
-by his director, and obeyed at once: thus giving a proof of
-his spirit of poverty and obedience.
-</p>
-<p>
-Notwithstanding all this, the fathers were determined
-to judge for themselves, and try by experiment if any
-aristocratic <i>hauteur</i> might yet lurk in the corners of his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355">{355}</a></span>
-disposition. Our rule, moreover, requires that postulants be
-tried by humiliations before being admitted to the habit;
-and many and various are the tests applied, depending, as
-they do, on the judgment of the master of novices. One
-clause of the rule was especially applicable to Father Spencer:
-"<i>Qui nobili ortus est genere, accuratiore et diuturniore
-experimento probetur</i>; "and the strict Father Constantine, who
-was then the master, resolved that not a word of it should
-be unfulfilled. A day or two after his arrival, he was
-ordered to wash down an old, rusty flight of stairs. He
-tucked up his sleeves and fell to, using his brush, tub, and
-soapsuds with as much zest and good will as if he had been
-just hired as a maid-of-all-work. Of course, he was no great
-adept at this kind of employment, and probably his want of
-skill drew down some sharp rebukes from his overseer.
-Some tender-hearted religious never could forget the sight of
-this venerable ecclesiastic trying to scour the crevices and
-crannies to the satisfaction of his new master. He got
-through it well, and took the corrections so beautifully, that
-in a few days he was voted to the habit.
-</p>
-<p>
-On the afternoon of the 5th January, 1847, vespers are
-just concluded, and the bell is rung for another function.
-People are hurrying up to the little chapel, and whispering
-to each other about the scene they are going to witness.
-The altar is prepared as for a feast. The thurifers and
-acolytes head the procession from the sacristy; next follow
-the religious; then Father Dominic arrayed in surplice and
-cope. After him follows Father Spencer, in the costume of
-a secular priest. He kneels on the altar step; he has laid
-aside long before all that the world could give him; he has
-thrown its greatness and its folly away as vanities to be
-despised, and now asks for the penitential garb of the sons
-of the Passion, with all its concomitant hardships. He had
-not yet experienced the happiness it brings: he had only
-begun to earn it by broken rest, fasts, and humiliations.
-Father Dominic blesses the habit, mantle, and cincture; he
-addresses a few touching words to the postulant, and prepares
-to vest him. In the presence of all he takes off the
-cassock, the habit is put on and bound with a leathern
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356">{356}</a></span>
-girdle, a cross is placed upon his shoulder, a crown of thorns
-on his head, benedictions are invoked upon him according
-to the ritual, the religious intone the <i>Ecce quam bonum</i>,
-Our Lord gives His blessing from the Monstrance, and the
-Honourable and Reverend-George Spencer is greeted as a
-brother and companion by Father Dominic, under the new
-name of Father Ignatius of St. Paul. Thus ended the
-function of that day, and the benisons of the rite were not
-pronounced in vain.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is the custom with us to drop the family name on our
-reception, to signify the cutting away of all carnal ties,
-except inasmuch as they may help to benefit souls. A
-religious should be dead to nature, and his relationship
-henceforth is with the saints. This is why, among many
-religious orders of men, and nearly all of women, some
-saint or some mystery of religion to which the novice is
-specially devoted is substituted instead of the family name.
-In most cases, also, the Christian name is changed; this,
-following the example of our Lord, who changed the names
-of some of the Apostles, is useful in many ways, as well to
-typify newness of life as to help in distinguishing one from
-another when the aid of family names is taken away.
-Father Ignatius gave his reasons above for preferring this
-name, and events, both before and after, make us applaud
-the fitness of the choice.
-</p>
-<p>
-A novice's life is a very eventless one; it has little in it
-of importance to others, though it is of so much consequence
-to himself. The coming of a postulant, the going away of a
-newly-made brother, the mistakes of a tyro at bell-ringing,
-chanting, or ceremonies, are of interest enough to occupy
-several recreations. The absence of soul-stirring news from
-without gives these trifles room to swell into importance.
-When the little incidents are invested with ludicrous or
-peculiar circumstances, they often have a sheet of the chronicles
-dedicated to their history by the most witty or least
-busy of the novices.
-</p>
-<p>
-A postulant ran away the day after Father Ignatius was
-clothed; he heard the religious take the discipline, and no
-amount of explanations or coaxing could induce him to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357">{357}</a></span>
-accustom his ear to the noise, much less his body to the
-stripes, of this function. The senior novice left at the same
-time; he was a priest, and died on the London mission the
-very same year as Father Ignatius. In a few days more
-Father Dominic caught a novice dressing his hair and giving
-himself airs before a looking-glass. His habit was stripped
-off, and he was sent to the outer world, where, perhaps, the
-adorning of his good looks was of more service to him than
-it was at Aston Hall.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is a received tradition in the religious life that vocations
-which are not tried by difficulties seldom prove sea-worthy,
-so to speak. Before or after the novice enters, he
-must be opposed and disappointed in some way; he has to
-pay dear for the favour of serving God in this state of life,
-if he be destined to act any important part in the Church as
-a religious. Father Ignatius had his trials. He found it
-difficult to pick up all the <i>minutiae</i> of novice discipline: he
-suffered a little from homesickness, and these, joined to
-chilled feet, a hard bed, and meagre food, did not allow him
-to enjoy to any great extent the delightful sensation known
-as <i>fervor novitiorum</i>. He got over all this, as we see from
-a letter he wrote to a friend in March:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"I am here in a
-state in which not a shadow of trouble seems to come, but
-what I cause for myself. With a little humility there is
-peace enough. I suppose I shall have some more troubles
-hereafter if I live. I have not been so well for several
-years. Some would have thought a Lent without a bit of
-meat would not have done for me; but I have seen now
-since Shrove Tuesday, and, in Lent or out of it, I never
-have been better. So in that respect, viz., my health, I
-suppose my trial here is satisfactory."
-</p>
-<p>
-A rude shock was in store for his health which he little
-anticipated when he wrote those lines. This was the terrible
-year of famine in Ireland, that year which will be
-remembered for ever by those who lived in the midst of the
-harrowing scenes that overspread that unhappy country.
-Poor famishing creatures, who had laid their fathers or
-mothers, and perhaps their children, in coffinless graves,
-begged their way to England, and began that tide of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358">{358}</a></span>
-emigration which has since peopled Liverpool, Manchester,
-Birmingham, and London, with such crowds of Catholics.
-Every ship brought its cargo of misery, and the hapless
-victims were forced by their poverty to seek for lodgings in
-dens of vice, or employment where virtue was not paramount.
-They thus imbibed a poison to their morals which
-has not yet been completely purged out of the thousands
-who have had to follow the footsteps of their famine-stricken
-predecessors. Numbers of the poor Irish gathered around
-Stone and Aston; fever broke out amongst them, and the
-wards of the workhouse infirmaries were unable to contain
-even a moiety of the sufferers. Every hovel and barn had
-their burning occupants, and even charity itself seemed
-frightened from giving assistance. The priest was, of
-course, busy; and, fortunately for Aston, more than one
-priest could be had to attend the dying.
-</p>
-<p>
-All our fathers were at the bed of death many times in
-the day. Father Gaudentius was struck down with fever,
-Father Vincent followed next. The duties now devolved
-upon Father Dominic and Father Ignatius. The poor
-novice was prostrated by the pestilence, after administering
-the last rites of the Church to many. He gets a very
-malignant attack, and in a few days is at the point of death.
-He prepared for his last passage with the most beautiful
-dispositions. He thanked God for the privilege of his
-state, and was particularly delighted at the prospect of
-dying a martyr to his charity. He receives the Viaticum
-and Extreme Unction, makes his profession as on death-bed,
-becomes insensible, and is given an hour to live by the
-doctors. The religious commence a novena, in which they
-are joined by the people, for his recovery. God preserved
-him to his brethren and their flock, for he began immediately
-to mend. We may form an idea of this poor community,
-all the active members, except Father Dominic,
-dying, or in feeble convalescence; their resources, perhaps,
-run out; and all the energy they had left taxed to its
-utmost to answer the calls of duty. Few as they were,
-they had not the least idea of sparing themselves. They
-still hoped to increase and multiply; but, after the example
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359">{359}</a></span>
-of Him who increased by dying, and likened the progress
-of His Church to the dying of the grain of corn in the soil
-of its growth.
-</p>
-<p>
-Charitable friends came to their assistance, and amongst
-the rest, Earl Spencer sent a handsome sum to pay doctors'
-expenses for his brother. This was considerate, indeed,
-and as soon as Father Ignatius could manage a pen, he
-wrote to thank him for his charity. Numbers were deeply
-concerned for our novice, and two or three Catholic nobles
-invited him to come and stay with them during his convalescence.
-Father Dominic did not think him sufficiently ill
-to warrant his sleeping out of the house, so their kind offers
-were thankfully declined.
-</p>
-<p>
-This illness was a double blow to Father Ignatius: he had
-just received orders from his Superior to prepare for the
-missions when it came on. An end was put to his preparation
-for the time, but he resumed the task as soon as the
-doctors allowed him.
-</p>
-<p>
-During his noviciate he had two kinds of trials to endure,
-besides those mentioned already. Father Constantine was
-remarkable for his meekness and charity; but he put on
-extra severity for Father Ignatius. His companions tried
-to show him some marks of distinction, and would offer to
-relieve him from works that were humiliating, or likely to
-be galling to one of his standing. The latter trial he complained
-of, and he was troubled at the other because some of
-of the religious complained of the novice-master's severity
-towards him. He had some more mortifications of the kind
-he playfully told us a few chapters back, as affecting Father
-Dominic in Oscott. He was troubled with chilblains, and
-was obliged, in consequence, to wear shoes and stockings for
-a great part of his noviciate. This he looked upon as a
-great grievance, inasmuch as he could not live like the
-others. When at last the chilblains got well, and he was
-allowed to put on the sandals, he felt overjoyed, and even
-writes a letter to congratulate himself on his happiness.
-</p>
-<p>
-He writes two or three letters, in which he notes his
-astonishment at the Irish being so negligent in England,
-who had been so regular at home. He says, they all send
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360">{360}</a></span>
-for the priest, and show great signs of repentance when
-dying; but, out of a number he attended, only one returned
-to the Church after recovery. "Still," he says, "it would
-be long till one of them would answer as the English
-pensioner is reported to have done on his death-bed. The
-minister talked much about Heaven and its happiness, but
-the patient coolly replied, 'It's all very well, sir; but old
-England and King George for me!'"
-</p>
-<p>
-His noviciate glides quietly on to its end; and except his
-ordinary work of attending to a mission in Stone besides his
-home duties, nothing occurs to break the monotony.
-</p>
-<p>
-At length, on the 6th of January, 1848, Father Ignatius
-and Father Dominic remain up after matins. We are told
-in the Journal, that the novice made his confession and had
-a long conference with his director, in preparation for the
-great event of his profession. Father Dominic was going
-off that day, but the conveyance disappointed him, he was
-obliged to wait till the next. That evening Father Ignatius
-is once more in the midst of a moving ceremony: on his
-knees, with his hands placed in Father Dominic's he pronounces
-his irrevocable consecration by the vows of his
-religious profession.[Footnote 10]
-The badges are affixed to his breast,
-the sacrifice is completed&mdash;and well and worthily was it
-carried out. It is easier to imagine than to describe the joy
-of the two holy friends, so long united in the bonds of heavenly
-charity, as they spoke that day about their first
-acquaintance, and wondered at the dispositions of Providence,
-which now made them more than brothers.
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 10:
- The profession on death-bed is conditional, so that if a novice
- recovers, after thus pronouncing his vows, he has to go on as if they
- had not been made.]
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361">{361}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II.<br>
-His First Year As A Passionist.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Shortly after his profession, Father Ignatius was sent out
-on missions. The first mission he gave, with Father Gaudentius,
-was to his old parishioners of West Bromwich.
-Crowds came to hear him; some to have another affectionate
-look, and hear once more the well-known voice of their old
-pastor; others from curiosity to see what he had been transformed
-into by the monks. This mission was very successful,
-for, besides the usual work of the reconciliation of sinners,
-and the helping on of the fervent, there were fifteen Protestants
-received into the Church before its close. He gives
-another mission somewhere in the Borough, London, with
-the same companion. During this mission he hears that his
-style of preaching is not liked much by the Irish; he feels
-a little sad at this, as he fears the work may fail of success
-through his deficiency.
-</p>
-<p>
-The preaching of Father Ignatius was peculiar to himself;
-he cannot be said to possess the gifts of human eloquence
-in the highest degree, but there was a something like inspiration
-in his most commonplace discourse. He put the
-point of his sermon clearly before his audience, and he proved
-it most admirably. His acquaintance with the Scriptures
-was something marvellous; not only could he quote texts
-in support of doctrines, but he applied the facts of the sacred
-volume in such a happy way, with such a flood of new ideas,
-that one would imagine he lived in the midst of them, or
-had been told by the sacred writers what they were intended
-for. Besides this, he brought a fund of illustrations to carry
-conviction through and through the mind. His illustrations
-were taken from every phase of life, and every kind of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362">{362}</a></span>
-employment; persons listening to him always found the practical
-gist of his discourse carried into their very homestead; nay,
-the objections they themselves were prepared to advance
-against it, were answered before they could have been thought
-out. To add to this, there was an earnestness in his manner
-that made you see his whole soul, as it were, bent upon your
-spiritual good. His holiness of life, which report published
-before him, and one look was enough to convince you of its
-being true, compelled you to set a value on what he said, far
-above the <i>dicta</i> of ordinary priests.
-</p>
-<p>
-His style was formed on the Gospel. He loved the parables
-and the similes of Our Lord, and rightly judged that the
-style of his Divine Master was the most worthy of imitation.
-So far as the matter of his discourses were concerned, he
-was inimitable; his manner was peculiar to himself, deeply
-earnest and touching. He abstained from the rousing,
-thundering style, and his attempts that way to suit the taste
-and thus work upon the convictions of certain congregations,
-showed him that his fort did not lie there. The consequence
-was, that when the words of what he jocosely termed a
-"crack" preacher would die with the sound of his own voice,
-or the exclamations of the multitude, Father Ignatius's
-words lived with their lives, and helped them to bear trials
-that came thirty years after they had heard him.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the end of his life, he became rather tiresome to
-those who knew not his spirit; but it was the tiresomeness
-of St. John the Evangelist. We are told that "the disciple
-whom Jesus loved" used to be carried in his old age before
-the people, and that his only sermon was "My little children,
-love one another." He preached no more, and no less, but
-kept perpetually repeating these few words. Father Ignatius,
-in like manner, was continually repeating "the conversion
-of England." No matter what the subject of his sermon
-was, he brought this in. He told us often that it became a
-second nature to him; that he could not quit thinking or
-speaking of it, even if he tried, and believed he could speak
-for ten days consecutively on the conversion of England,
-without having to repeat an idea.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>
-<p>
-He got on very well in the missions: he took all the different
-parts as they were assigned him; but he was more
-successful in the lectures than in the great sermons of the
-evening. His confessional was always besieged with penitents,
-and he never spared himself.
-</p>
-<p>
-The late Cardinal, who was the chief mover in bringing
-the Passionists to England, wished to have a house of the
-order in the diocese of Westminster (then the London
-District), to which he had been recently translated. Father
-Dominic entered heartily into the project, and Father Ignatius
-with him. After a few weeks' negotiation, they took possession
-of Poplar House, in the west end of Hampstead, towards
-the end of June, 1848. A new foundation was, in those days,
-as it is still, a formidable undertaking. The ground has
-generally to be bought; a church and house built upon it;
-the necessary machinery to set it going to be provided, and
-all this from nothing but the Providence of God, and the
-charity of benefactors. Under a more than ordinary
-pressure of their difficulties, the house was opened, and after
-many changes and removals, it has finally fixed itself on the
-brow of Highgate Hill, under the name of St. Joseph's
-Retreat.
-</p>
-<p>
-He notes in his Journal that the place in Hampstead
-brought some sad thoughts into his mind, as it was within
-sight of where his sister, Lady Georgiana Quin, died in
-1823. He tells us also that he was benighted somewhere in
-London, and had to beg for a bed for the first time in his
-life. On a fine summer's day he sauntered leisurely through
-the grounds of Eton, ruminating over the scenes of forty
-years before, when he first became a child of what proved to
-him a novercal institution.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was not destined to labour much, this time, for the
-London house. Father Dominic took the charge of it, and
-appointed Father Ignatius Rector of St. Michael's, Aston
-Hall, a post that became vacant by the death of Father
-Constantine. Father Ignatius thus mentions the matter in
-one of his letters:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It was just such a death as one might
- expect of him (Father Constantine). I was thinking and
- saying to some one before, he would be attending to his
- duties and giving directions in the house to the last. In his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364">{364}</a></span>
- agony, he heard the clock strike, and, mistaking the hour for
- another when some bell has to ring, he asked why the bell
- did not ring for such a duty. It is recorded that what was
- most remarkable in him was his gentleness and patience;
- and that indeed was very striking. He must have suffered
- heavily to die in a lingering way by a cancer, but he never
- was disturbed, and went on saying mass, and doing all
- that was to be done, as long as he could stand to it. His
- loss makes, as you have heard, a great change in my position.
- I never dreamt of being a Superior for years to come, and
- thought I had come to an end, almost for life, of keeping
- accounts and ruling household affairs. But God's will be
- done. It is a great comfort, as I find, to be in the rule
- of good religious, to what it would be to have people
- under one who seek their own gain and pleasure."
-</p>
-<p>
-Ruling, even thus, did not turn out so easy a matter; for it is
-recorded in the Journal, that Father Dominic gave him "a
-long lecture about the proper way of ruling," which he seems
-to have drawn down upon himself by some mistakes.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the beginning of September, this year, he gave his
-first retreat. It was to the students of Carlow College.
-This event gave him a fresh start in his great work. Since
-1844, when he made the tour on the Continent, procuring
-prayers for England, his zeal in the cause seems to have
-slumbered somewhat. Not that he was the less anxious for
-the return of his countrymen to the faith of their fathers,
-but he did not, perhaps, see any opportunity open for moving
-others in a general way to help the work by their prayers.
-It is rather a wonderful disposition of Providence that his
-energies should be renewed in Ireland, and that, too, in '48.
-Extracts from a few letters will show how it happened. In
-a letter to Mrs. Canning, he says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My last journey to Ireland was, in the first place, to
- preach a retreat in Carlow College, which was the first and
- only retreat I have been on alone; secondly, to beg in
- Dublin for our church and house; thirdly, I got full into
- the pursuit of prayers for England again. I had hardly expected
- anything could be done in this last way under the
- excited state of feelings in Ireland against England. I began,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365">{365}</a></span>
- however, speaking in a convent in Carlow, and so warm and
- beautiful was the way in which these nuns took it up, that
- I lost no occasion after of saying mass in some convents
- every morning, and preaching to them upon it; and the zeal
- which they showed has given me a new spring to push it on
- in England. Accordingly, I have been preaching many
- times on it since I have been this time in Lancashire. I
- only ask now <i>one Hail Mary</i> a day to be said by every
- Catholic for the conversion of England. Here is a great
- field to work upon. You want to be doing something for
- England, I know; why not take up this object, and in every
- letter you write abroad or at home make people promise to
- do this, and make every man, woman, and child do it too.
- If millions would do as much as this, we should have thousands
- who would offer themselves up as victims to be immolated
- for the object, and we should have grand results.
- Above all, let it be done in schools at home; so that all the
- young may be trained to pant for this object, as young
- Hannibal for the destruction of Rome; and a foundation
- will be laid for the work to go on after we are all dead, if no
- fruit appears before."
-</p>
-<p>
-In a letter to Father Vincent, he writes almost in the same
-strain:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My journey to Ireland was satisfactory in several
- respects to a certain degree. It answered well for begging
- purposes. With all their poverty, they are so generous that
- I made one of my best week's begging in Dublin. I hope
- for a great deal more in November, when I am going again
- to preach in Dublin, and will stay as long as I can. I picked
- up also one novice, not a cleric, but, I hope, a very promising
- lay brother. I think there will be many good subjects for
- us in Ireland, when we are better known there.' (In this
- his expectations were most signally realized.) "I also got
- into the pursuit of prayers for England again. I said mass,
- and preached after mass ten times in convents on the subject,
- and the zeal and charity with which it was taken up by the
- good religious quite gave me a new spring in that cause. I
- have begun preaching in England for prayers. Will you
- help me in this? I have been writing, with Father
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366">{366}</a></span>
- Dominic's approval, to our General, to obtain some indulgences
- for those who will join in those prayers."
-</p>
-<p>
-In this year, Father Ignatius lost two great friends by
-death, Dr. Gentili and the Rev. Wm. Richmond. He had
-several conversations with the former, who was then giving
-his last mission in Dublin, and assisted on his return to
-England, at the death-bed of Mr. Richmond. He used to relate
-how this worthy man became a Catholic, as an instance
-of the ways of God in conversion. When Richmond was a
-boy, he went to see an uncle of his, who was a priest. One
-day he saw candles lit in the church in clear daylight. On
-entering, to satisfy himself that nothing was wrong, he saw
-his uncle issuing from the sacristy, in the most fantastic garb
-he ever beheld. He ran out of the church in a fright, and
-scarcely came near his uncle for three days. He did sum up
-courage enough to approach at length, and the end was that
-he became a priest himself, and outshone his uncle.
-</p>
-<p>
-During the visit Father Ignatius paid to Ireland, according
-to promise, in the November of this year, he preached in
-several places on the conversion of England. He went to
-Maynooth, and addressed the junior students at night prayer
-and the seniors at morning prayer, on the same subject. He
-remains nearly a month in Ireland this time. He meets a
-few secular people who are not so kind and generous in
-listening to him as nuns and students. One day he begged
-of a gentleman, who immediately began to grope in his
-pocket for a coin which he should consider worthy of offering.
-Whilst the search was going on, Father Ignatius ventured
-to ask prayers for the conversion of England. "England!"
-said the gentleman; "I pray for England! Not I." And
-he turned off with a refusal, and left his petitioner to find
-another benefactor.
-</p>
-<p>
-When he returned to England, he preached everywhere,
-to priests, nuns, and people; he wrote and spoke continually
-for prayers for England. The only change in his system
-since the former crusade was, that the prayer he asked for
-was defined. It was only <i>one Hail Mary</i> daily. This
-prayer he was especially fond of using; he said it for every
-person and everything. The antiphon of the Church,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367">{367}</a></span>
-"Rejoice, Virgin Mary, thou alone hast destroyed all
-heresies throughout the world," was continually in his heart.
-The devotion of the people of Ireland to our Blessed Lady
-brought this out; and it was remarked by himself and
-others, that when once he had put the great object of his
-endeavours under the protection of Mary, he never cooled
-or slackened, but always progressed with blessings.
-</p>
-<p>
-The last day of this year was spent as all such days of his
-life, since he turned thoroughly to God's service, in being
-awake and in prayer at midnight.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368">{368}</a></span>
-<br>
-<h2>CHAPTER III.<br>
-A Peculiar Mission.
-</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius had an idea in his mind for a number of
-years, and saw no practical way in which it might be
-realized. He looked forward, with a pleasing anticipation,
-to the prospect of going about from parish to parish on a
-kind of itinerary mission. The thing was unusual in our
-day, and he saw no plea by which it could be justified to
-others, or he should have gone on it long before. He proposed
-it at last to his Superiors, and the circumstances of his
-position wonderfully favoured its prosecution.
-</p>
-<p>
-Voluntary poverty was raised to a virtue by the example
-and teaching of our Divine Lord, and poverty must always
-have a counterpart. To be poor is to be dependent, and
-want is ordained for the sanctification of plenty. When
-our Divine Master said that it was difficult for the rich man
-to be saved, He subjoined that with God all things are possible.
-The miseries of the poor are the channels through
-which riches can flow into Heaven, and make friends to
-their possessors of the mammon of iniquity.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the dispensation of Providence, the Church watches
-over the interests of all her children, and whilst she proclaims
-the severity of the Gospel maxims, she provides for
-their observance. She must preach poverty of spirit, from
-the text of the sermon on the Mount, and she manages to
-make kings who are richer than David live after God's own
-heart. The beautiful harmony between rank and lowliness,
-authority and submission, prosperity and adversity, has long
-ago been arranged by the practice of the ages of faith, and
-by the Pontifical constitutions which impress the seal of the
-Fisherman upon the usages of Catholicity.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369">{369}</a></span>
-<p>
-In no department of Catholic polity is this superior
-wisdom so well exemplified as in the rules of mendicant
-orders. The Church takes the noble from his seat of power,
-she makes him cast his coronet at the feet of Peter, and
-stretch out his hand to his former vassal for the paltry
-morsel that is to sustain his future existence. She forbids
-him to accumulate; she makes him give back a thousand-fold
-what he receives. By thus bringing down the pride
-of power and making it pay court to the discontented
-child of penury, she reconciles man with Providence and
-suffuses reverence through the crowd, who might grumble
-at greatness, by making their lord according to the world
-their servant according to the Gospel.
-</p>
-<p>
-The constitutions of the Congregation of the Passion are
-framed upon the spirit of the Church. If a man of property
-joins our poor institute, he cannot bring his possessions with
-him to enrich the community he enters; for Blessed Paul
-has not allowed them to have any fixed revenue. He may,
-indeed, give a donation towards the building of their church,
-the furnishing of their poor schools, or the paying off the
-debts they were obliged to contract to secure the ground
-upon which their monastery is built; but that is left to his
-own charity. He is supposed by our rule to hand over his
-property to a relative or a charitable institution, and reserve
-to himself the right to take it back, in case he may not persevere
-in his vocation, or abandon the life he has embraced.
-</p>
-<p>
-Thus deprived of stable funds, we are to rely upon the
-Providence of God; and we can give Him glory by confessing
-that we never yet found His word to fail, "Seek ye first
-the kingdom of God and his justice, and all these things
-shall be added unto you." Betimes we may have to send a
-brother to ask for some assistance from kind benefactors;
-but, as a rule, God inspires many to befriend us without
-our asking. The duties of missions and retreats, and the
-preparation for them, prevent us from digging a livelihood
-out of the earth; but the sweat of our brow that is thus
-spent earns our bread by procuring us friends. People
-crowd to our churches, and leave thank-offerings there to
-prove the reality of their devotion; and, as an ancient
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370">{370}</a></span>
-father of ours once said, "our support comes in through the
-choir-windows."
-</p>
-<p>
-When we have to build a church or a house, we must
-follow the custom of surrounding priests; but, as our working
-is not purely local, we send a father or brother to distant
-countries, and try not to be too burthensome to our neighbours.
-Charity endureth all things; but the branch of
-charity which is exercised in the giving of alms is not
-always content to be too much importuned, or called upon
-too often. Charity therefore requires that those who plead
-for the exercise of one arm do not strain the other, and it
-makes provision against provoking anger or ill-feeling from
-the weaknesses it tries to cure by stirring to activity.
-</p>
-<p>
-In the year 1848 the fathers at Aston Hall stood in sore
-need of a church. Hitherto they had turned a room upstairs
-into a temporary chapel; and, inconvenient as it might be
-to have people going so far into a religious house, they
-would have borne up longer, had not a builder told them
-that anything like a crowd would bring the whole place
-down about their ears. Father Ignatius mentions this in a
-letter he wrote to Mrs. Canning. "It will," he says, "be a
-great addition to us to have a respectable church, instead of
-our chapel up-stairs; but we should not have had a plea for
-asking for it, if this chapel had not been so good as to give
-us notice to quit, by becoming cracky a little."
-</p>
-<p>
-Here, then, was an opportunity. Some one should go out
-and beg. Father Ignatius was commissioned to write letters,
-but though the first was answered by a cheque for £100,
-with a promise of more, there was not enough forthcoming
-to enable them to build. Could he not do two things at
-once? Could he not ask for prayers as well as alms? Did
-not the very plea of begging give him a right to go to different
-places, even from parish to parish, and speak publicly
-and privately? It did. And he was forthwith sent out to
-carry into execution the dreams of half a life, which he
-scarcely ever expected to realize. He first began this peculiar
-mission of his by going through the towns with a guide,
-like ordinary questers: in a few years the plan developed
-itself into the "little missions."
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371">{371}</a></span>
-<p>
-His first begging tour was through Birmingham, Derby,
-Nottingham, Oscott, Leamington, and Wolverhampton. In
-a few months he sallies forth again, and Liverpool is the
-theatre of his labours. Many and rude were the trials he
-had to endure in this humiliating work. He thus playfully
-alludes to some of them:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
-"I am on a begging mission here
-at Liverpool, in which I find rough and smooth, ups and
-downs, every day. The general result is very fair. I have
-been here since Monday, the 8th of May" (he writes on the
-20th), "and have got more than £100, but with hard walking.
-I am, however, quite well, and the inflammation of
-my eye quite gone&mdash;nothing left but a little haziness. It
-lasted five weeks without relenting at all. If it had gone
-on, I must have stayed at home; but it just began to improve
-before I started, and has got well, <i>tout en marchant</i>.
-My present life is very pleasant when money comes kindly;
-but when I get refused, or walk a long way and find every
-one out, it is a bit mortifying. That is best gain for me, I
-suppose, though not what I am travelling for. ....
-I should not have had the time this morning to write to
-you, had it not been for a disappointment in meeting a
-young man, who was to have been my begging-guide for
-part of the day; and so I had to come home, and stay till it
-is time to go and try my fortune in the enormous market-house,
-where there are innumerable stalls with poultry, eggs,
-fruit, meat, &amp;c., kept in great part by Irish men and women,
-on whom I have to-day, presently, to go and dance attendance,
-as this is the great market-day. I feel, when going
-out for a job like this, as a poor child going in a bathing
-machine to be dipped in the sea, <i>frisonnant</i>; but the Irish
-are so good-natured and generous that they generally make
-the work among them full of pleasure, when once I am in
-it."
-</p>
-<p>
-One sees a vast difference between begging of the rich and
-of the poor. If the latter have nothing to give, they will at
-least show a kind face, and will not presume to question the
-priest about his business; whereas some of the former,
-because they have something which they will not give,
-either absent themselves or treat the priest unkindly for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372">{372}</a></span>
-asking. For what? Because he begs. It is not for himself:
-he even retrenches necessaries from his own table in
-order to spare something for the house of God. And what,
-after all, does he ask? The price of an hour's recreation, or
-an extra ornament, that may be very well spared. That is
-all. The priest wants people to look after their own interests,
-to send their money before them to heaven, instead of wasting
-it on vanity or sin. And because he does this, and
-humbles himself for the sake of his God, he must be made to
-feel it. Father Ignatius was keenly alive to this, and the
-way he felt for those who forgot themselves by sending him
-away empty was far more afflictive than the personal humiliation.
-He could thank God for the latter, but he could
-not do so for the former.
-</p>
-<p>
-Once he was fiercely abused, when begging, and as the
-reviler had come to a full stop in his froward speech, Father
-Ignatius quietly retorted: "Well, as you have been so
-generous to myself personally, perhaps you would be so kind
-as to give me something now for my community." This had
-a remarkable effect. It procured him a handsome offering
-then, as well as many others ever since.
-</p>
-<p>
-Another day he knocked at a door, and was admitted by a
-very sumptuously attired footman. Father Ignatius told
-the servant the object of his visit, his religious name, and
-asked if he could see the lady or gentleman of the house.
-The servant strode off to see, and in a few seconds returned
-to say that the gentleman was out, and the lady was engaged
-and could not see him, neither could she afford to help him.
-He then remarked that perhaps she was not aware that he
-was the Honourable Mr. Spencer. The servant looked at
-him, bowed politely and retired. In a minute or two Father
-Ignatius hears a rustling of silks and a tripping of quick
-steps on the stairs. In came my lady, and what with blushings
-and bowings, and excuses and apologies, she scarcely
-knew where she was until she found herself and him tête-à-tête.
-She really did not know it was he, and there were so
-many impostors. "But what will you take, my dear sir?"
-and before he could say yea or nay she rung for his friend
-the footman. Father Ignatius coolly said, that he did not
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373">{373}</a></span>
-then stand in need of anything to eat, and that he never
-took wine; but that he did stand in need of money for a
-good purpose, and if she could give him anything in that
-way he should be very glad to accept it. She handed him a
-five-pound note at once, expressing many regrets that something
-or other prevented its being more. Father Ignatius
-took the note, folded it carefully, made sure of its being
-safely lodged in his pocket, and then made thanksgiving in
-something like the following words: "Now, I am very sorry
-to have to tell you that the alms you have given me will do
-you very little good. If I had not been born of a noble
-family, you would have turned me away with coldness and
-contempt. I take the money, because it will be as useful to
-me as if it were given with a good motive; but I would advise
-you, for the future, if you have any regard for your soul, to
-let the love of God, and not human respect, prompt your
-alms-giving." So saying, he took his hat and bid his benefactress
-a good morning.
-</p>
-<p>
-Many were the anecdotes he told us about his begging
-adventures; but it is next to impossible to remember them.
-In every case, however, we could see the saint through the
-veil his humility tried to cast over himself. Whether he
-was received well or ill, he always tried to turn his reception
-to the spiritual benefit of those who received him. He
-made more friends than any person living, perhaps, and
-never was known to make an enemy; his very simplicity
-and holiness disarmed malice. He says, in a letter, upon
-getting his first commission to go and quest: "I am to be a
-great beggar!" His prognostication began to be verified.
-Strange fact, the Honourable George Spencer a beggar!
-And happier, under all the trials and crosses incident to
-such a life, than if he had lived in the luxury of Althorp.
-Religion is carrying out to-day what its Founder began
-eighteen hundred years ago. He left the kingdom of heaven
-to live on the charity of His own creatures.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374">{374}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br>
-Death Of Father Dominic.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-We group the incidents of this chapter around this sad
-event: some of them were the last these two bosom friends
-did together, and the others were occasioned by their
-separation.
-</p>
-<p>
-Early in January, 1849, Father Ignatius went, at the
-invitation of Mr. John Smith, of Button, to see a spot of
-ground upon which that worthy man intended building a
-church and house for a community of Passionists. Father
-Ignatius did not like the situation; but as soon as he spoke
-to Father Dominic about it, they both came to St. Helen's
-Junction to see if two heads might not be wiser than one.
-Father Dominic landed on the platform a little before
-Father Ignatius, who had been delayed somewhere on the
-way. He went immediately to look for the great benefactor.
-A fine-looking, open, plain man saluted him, and he
-thought this must be a Catholic, and likely he knows the
-person I am looking for. "Do you know where lives a
-certain Mr. Smith?" asked Father Dominic. "I should
-think I did," answered his new friend, and after a few
-minutes' conversation the father was satisfied, for he was
-no other than Mr. Smith himself. They both walked over
-a considerable extent of ground, within which Mr. Smith
-told the good father to make his choice of a site. He had
-selected that whereon St. Anne's Retreat now stands, when
-Father Ignatius arrived. Father Ignatius hesitated a
-little before giving his consent, and it was only when Father
-Dominic said emphatically, "The house that is to be built
-here will yet be the largest and best we shall have in England,"
-that he fully agreed. That prophecy is noted in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375">{375}</a></span>
-journal Father Ignatius kept at the time, and he wondered
-afterwards how the church and monastery that arose on
-that dreary spot verified it to the letter. It is the best and
-largest we have in England at the present moment, and
-Father Dominic never saw a stone of its foundations laid.
-</p>
-<p>
-Fathers Dominic, Ignatius, and Vincent, give a mission
-in Romney Terrace, Westminster, in March. Shortly
-after they give another in High Street, Dublin. At this
-mission they introduced the Italian ceremonies, such as
-peacemakers (persons appointed to reconcile those at
-variance), special sermons for different classes of people,
-bell for the five <i>paters</i>, and public asking of pardon by the
-missionaries. It fell to Father Ignatius to be spokesman
-in this latter ceremony, and sore straitened was he to find
-out in what particular the fathers had offended, that he
-might therefrom draw the apology for their act. He
-searched and searched, and at last remembered his own
-proneness to nod asleep when too long in the confessional.
-This was the plea he made, and we must say it was a very
-poor one: it gives, however, a good idea of his candour,
-and want of unreality. These demonstrations were found
-to be unsuited to the genius of the people, and have been
-suffered to fall into desuetude ever since.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius goes next on a begging tour through
-Manchester, Sheffield, and the north of England. He called
-at Carstairs House, on his way to Glasgow and Edinburgh,
-to visit his friend Mr. Monteith. Mr. Monteith was received
-into the Church by Dr. Wiseman, when Father
-Ignatius lived in Oscott. Father Ignatius was his god-father.
-A friendship then began between them which
-never cooled; they kept up a correspondence from which
-many important hints have been borrowed for this book,
-and it was from Mr. Monteith's place the soul of Father
-Ignatius took its departure for a better world. Mr. Monteith
-extended the friendship he had for Father Ignatius to
-his other religious brethren, and time after time has he
-given them substantial proofs of its depth and generosity.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius and he had been for some time in
-correspondence about founding a house of Passionists
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376">{376}</a></span>
-somewhere near Lanark or Carstairs; but circumstances over
-which they had no control prevented them coming to a
-conclusion. The Vincentians have well and worthily taken
-the place, and the first house of our order founded in Scotland
-was St. Mungo's, Glasgow, a few months after Father
-Ignatius's death. It was he who opened Mr. Monteith's
-domestic chapel, and said the first mass in it. And it was
-in the same chapel the first mass was said for his own soul
-in presence of the body.
-</p>
-<p>
-He says in the Journal:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Aug. 14.&mdash;</span> Went to
- London with Father Dominic. We had a fine talk with
- Dr. Wiseman. We dined at 12½ in King William Street
- with Faber and the Oratorians.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Wednesday, Aug. 15.&mdash;</span> Sung mass at 10 and preached,
- Prepared in a hurry for my journey. Went off at 3½ for
- the Continent."
-</p>
-<p>
-He never saw Father Dominic in the flesh again.
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 27th of August, 1849, Father Dominic and a
-brother priest were travelling by railway to Aston. In the
-morning, before leaving London, the companion asked
-Father Dominic to bring him with him; he had just
-arrived from Australia, and wished to see some of his old
-companions at Aston Hall. Father Dominic thought this
-was not reason enough for incurring the expense of the
-journey; he demurred, but at length assented. It was fortunate
-he did. When they came as far as Reading, Father
-Dominic became suddenly ill. He was taken out on the
-platform, and as the people were afraid of an epidemic, no
-one would admit the patient into his house. There lay the
-worn-out missionary, who had prayed and toiled so long for
-the conversion of England, on that bleak desolate-looking
-platform, abandoned by all for whose salvation he thirsted,
-with only a companion kneeling by his side to prepare him
-for eternity. But the coldness and want of hospitality of
-the people gave him no concern: other thoughts engrossed
-him. A few minutes he suffered, and in those few he made
-his preparation. He made arrangements for the government
-of our houses, he gave his last instructions to his companion,
-he invoked a blessing upon England, and then placidly
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377">{377}</a></span>
-closed his eyes for ever upon this wicked world, to open
-them in a brighter one. He died abandoned, and almost
-alone, but he died in the poverty he had practised, and the
-solitude he loved.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius was in Holland at the time. On his
-arrival at our house in Tournay he heard a rumour of Father
-Dominic's death. He gave no credit to it at first; a letter
-written to him about it went astray; and it was not until
-about a fortnight after it happened that he saw a paragraph
-in a newspaper, giving the full particulars. He hastened
-home at once to England, and the first thing he heard from
-Dr. Wiseman was that Father Dominic had nominated him
-his successor.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius, when his provisional appointment had
-been confirmed in Rome, could only look forward to trials
-and difficulties such as he had never to get through before.
-We had then three houses of the order in England, and one
-in Belgium, which were united under one Superior, acting
-as Provincial. The houses were not yet constituted into a
-canonical province. The fewness of the members, and their
-ignorance of the customs and ways of a strange country,
-increased the difficulties. That year, indeed, four excellent
-priests, who have since worked hard on the English mission,
-came from Rome; but they could as yet only say mass, on
-account of their imperfect acquaintance with the English
-language.
-</p>
-<p>
-Then, the existence of each house was so precarious that
-the smallest gust of opposition seemed sufficient to unpeople
-them. Aston Hall was struggling to build a church, in
-which undertaking that mission was destined to exhaust all
-the life it had; for it eked out but a dying existence from
-the time the church was opened, until it was given up in a
-few years. The retreat at Woodchester seemed to have
-lacked any spirit of vitality from the absence of the cross
-in its foundation. The generosity of a convert made everything
-smooth and convenient in the beginning, but the
-difficulties that led at length to our leaving it were already
-threatening to rise. The house in London was doomed to
-be transplanted to the wilderness of The Hyde, even before
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378">{378}</a></span>
-the death of Father Dominic, and St. Anne's, Sutton, was
-not yet begun.
-</p>
-<p>
-This was the material position of the Passionists when
-Father Ignatius became Superior, or <i>quasi</i> Provincial. To
-add to this, the fathers were not first-rate men of business.
-They could pray well, preach and hear confessions, but they
-gave people of the world credit for being better than they
-were. Some of their worldly affairs became, therefore,
-complicated, and Father Ignatius, unfortunately, was not
-the man to rectify matters and put them straight. He was
-a sage in spirituals, but the very reverse in temporals.
-</p>
-<p>
-Many of the religious became disheartened at the prospect.
-Some lost their vocations. Many fought manfully with
-contending difficulties, weathered all the storms, and, tempered
-and taught by those days of trouble, look with smiling
-placidity on what we should think serious crosses in these
-days. Such is the beginning of every religious institute; it
-grows and thrives by contradiction and persecution. Human
-foresight prophesied our destruction then, and could
-not believe that in sixteen years we should have seven
-houses in this province, with an average of about twenty
-religious for each. The ways of God are wonderful.
-</p>
-<p>
-This kind of confession was necessary, in order that readers
-might have an idea of Father Ignatius's position after the
-death of Father Dominic.
-</p>
-<p>
-He set to work at once, first carrying out Father Dominic's
-intentions, and then trying some special work of his own.
-The new church at Woodchester was consecrated by Dr.
-Hendren and Dr. Ullathorne, and Dr. Wiseman preached
-at the opening. The new church of St. Michael's, Aston
-Hall, was opened in the same year. On the 7th of November
-the community of Poplar House, two priests and a lay
-brother, move to The Hyde.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius, with Fathers Vincent and Gaudentius,
-give a mission in Westminster, and they venture out in
-their habits through the streets of London. This mission
-brought out some of Father Ignatius's peculiarities. In the
-instruction upon the sanctification of holy days, which it was
-his duty to give, he proposed that the Irish should make
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379">{379}</a></span>
-"a general strike, not for wages, but for mass on festivals." He
-went to visit Father Faber, who was ill at the time; they
-became engrossed in conversation, when Father Ignatius
-looked at his watch and said he should get away to prepare
-his sermon or instruction. Father Faber said this was a
-very human proceeding, and was of opinion that missionaries
-should be able to preach like the Apostles, without preparation.
-Father Ignatius turned the matter over in his
-mind, reasoned it out with himself, and thenceforward never
-delivered what might be called an elaborate discourse.
-</p>
-<p>
-It may be remarked, before closing the chapter, that
-Father Dominic, at Father Ignatius's suggestion, ordered, in
-the beginning of 1849, three Hail Marys to be said by us
-after Complin for the conversion of England. The practice
-is still continued, and has been extended to our houses on
-the Continent and in America.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380">{380}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V.<br>
-Spirit Of Father Ignatius At This Time.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-So much has to be said about the exterior actions of Father
-Ignatius, that one is apt, in reading them, to forget the spirit
-in which they were done. It is true that it is by the nature
-of the actions themselves a judgment can be formed of what
-that spirit must have been, but then they are liable to a
-false construction.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was chiefly remarkable for his spirit of poverty. It
-was not alone that he loved poverty, and tried to observe his
-vow, but he refined this observance to an exquisite degree,
-by trying to treat himself and get others to treat him like a
-mean beggar. He wished to feel poverty, and sought hardships
-in things that were easy enough, for that end. When
-he went by train he always took a third-class ticket, and
-was most ingenious in his defence of this proceeding. If
-some one objected to him that the third-class carriages generally
-contained rough, low, ill-bred, and coarsely-spoken
-fellows, he gently answered: "Yes; you may find a thick
-sprinkling of blackguards there." "Whether or no," he
-would say again, "the third class is the poor man's class,
-and it ought to be mine." One time he was expected to
-preach a grand sermon in some town or other; the lord of
-the manor, a Catholic, ordered his carriage, with livery servants,
-and came himself to bring him in state to the priest's
-house. He waited for the good father on the platform,
-looking at the doors of the different first-class carriages, and
-condescending to give a glance or two towards the second.
-What was his surprise when Father Ignatius, habit and
-sandals and a', got out of a third. "My dear Father Ignatius,"
-he half indignantly exclaimed, "why do <i>you</i> travel by
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381">{381}</a></span>
-third class?" "Well," replied Father Ignatius, "because
-there isn't a fourth."
-</p>
-<p>
-This idea that he was a poor man and ought to live like
-one he carried out in everything. He might be generally
-seen with a large blue bag. This bag was not of a respectable
-make or durable material; no, it was made of some kind
-of drogget, like an ordinary sack, and had a thick clumsy
-tape that gathered in the mouth of it, and closed it with a
-big knot. When he had a long journey before him he
-brought a pair of these, and tying them together put the
-knot upon his shoulder, and would trudge off six or seven
-miles with one dangling in front and another behind. If
-somebody offered him a seat in a car or wagon, he gladly
-accepted it; if not, he did without it. On this same principle
-he seldom refused a meal when out; and if he wanted
-something to eat, he generally went and begged for it at the
-first house he came to. At home he usually washed and
-mended his underclothing and stockings (the stockings, by
-the way, would have blistered the hardest foot after his
-mending), and whilst he was Superior he would never allow
-anyone to do a menial service for him. He had a great
-dread of the slightest attempt at over-nicety in a priest's
-dress; it was anguish to him to see a priest, especially a
-religious, with kid gloves, neat shoes, or a fashionable hat.
-His own appearance might be put down as one degree short
-of slovenliness. Be it remembered that this was not his
-natural bent. We are told by those who knew him when a
-young man, that he would walk a dozen streets in London,
-and enter every hosier's shop, to find articles that would suit
-his taste in style and fitting; it had been almost impossible
-to please him in this respect; whereas, when a religious, he
-would as soon wear a cast-off tartan as anything else, if it
-did not tend to bring a kind of disrespect upon his order.
-He wore for several years an old mantle belonging to a
-religious who died, and would never leave it off as long as
-there was room for another patch upon it, unless the Provincial
-gave him strict orders to do so.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was scrupulously exact in fulfilling the rules and
-regulations of the Congregation, so much so that even in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382">{382}</a></span>
-those cases in which others would consider themselves
-dispensed, he would go through everything. It is our rule to
-chant the entire of the Divine Office in choir; the rector is
-supposed to give a homily or two, called <i>examens</i>, every week
-to the religious. When there is not a sufficient number to
-chant, of course no law human or divine would require us
-to do so; and if there be not a congregation, one is not
-expected, in the ordinary course of things, to preach to empty
-benches. Father Ignatius was as keenly aware of the
-common-sense drift of this kind of reasoning as any one
-could be, but he so overcame the promptings of human
-considerations, that a literal observance, in the face of
-such plain exceptions, seemed his ordinary way of acting.
-There are two instances in point that occurred about the
-year 1849. The two priests who formed the choir of the
-community at The Hyde remained in bed one night, either
-from illness or late attendance at sick-calls, and Father
-Ignatius was the only priest present. He chanted the whole
-of matins and lauds by himself, and went through it as
-formally as if there were twenty religious in choir.
-Another day the priests were out, and he and two lay brothers
-only remained at home; he preached them the <i>examen</i> just
-the same as if the choir was full. Another time the alarum
-that used to go off at one o'clock, at that time for matins,
-missed. Father Ignatius awoke at three o'clock, and he
-immediately sprung the rattle and assembled the religious
-for matins. At half-past four the night work in choir was
-over: half-past five was then the hour of rising for prime.
-Father Ignatius kept them all in choir until the time, and
-had the bells rung, and everything else in due order. This
-does not argue a kind of unreasoning observance in him,
-out of time and out of place. On the contrary, he well
-knew that it was inconvenient, but he thought God would
-be more glorified by it than by an exemption from what
-was prescribed. One anecdote he used to relate to us convinced
-us of that. He often related with particular tact
-how once in Aston Hall, Father Dominic did not hear the
-bell for matins. He awoke at half-past two; everything
-was still. He went and sounded the rattle with a vengeance,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383">{383}</a></span>
-as if every sound was meant to say, "I'll give a good
-penance to the brother that forgot to put up the alarum."
-When he had done sounding he dropped the instrument at
-the choir door, and went in with a taper to light the lamps.
-What was his mortification to find all the religious just
-concluding their meditation with a smothered laugh at their
-Superior.
-</p>
-<p>
-Two other tokens of his spirit at this time must be illustrated
-together. He was a very cool reasoner; it might
-almost be said that he scarcely ever grew hot in dispute,
-and always gave his adversary's arguments due consideration.
-At the same time he was far from being of a sceptical cast
-of mind. If an argument approved itself to him, no matter
-how trifling it might be intrinsically, he felt bound to admit
-it, and adopt it, if practical, unless he could refute it
-completely. Again, he had a thorough disregard of human
-respect. "What will people say?" or "How will it look?"
-never entered into the motives of his actions; and if it did,
-he would consider himself bound to go straight and defy
-them. What did he care about the opinion of the world?
-It was, he knew, seldom led by sound reason, and therefore
-beneath his consideration.
-</p>
-<p>
-He found that the Oratorians began to go about in their
-<i>soutanes</i>; he had a talk with Father Faber about it, and
-forthwith resolved to go about in his habit. Cardinal Wiseman
-approved of it, if done with prudence, and Father
-Ignatius began at once. In a letter to Mr. Monteith he
-says:&mdash;"I court the honour of following the Oratorians
-close in this" (confining ourselves to the work of our vocation),
-as I have done likewise in beginning to wear the habit."
-He used to relate an amusing adventure he once had in a
-train with his habit on. At a certain station a middle-aged
-gentleman, with his little daughter, were getting into the
-carriage which Father Ignatius had to himself, as every one
-shunned his monkish company. The little girl got afraid, and
-would not enter. The gentleman bravely ventured in, to
-set an example to his child, but all to no avail,&mdash;the girl was
-still afraid. At last the man said out loud, "Come on,
-child; the gentleman won't bite!" meaning Father Ignatius.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384">{384}</a></span>
-The child summed up courage when she heard the paternal
-assurance of safety to her skin, and got to a seat. She
-bundled herself up in the corner diagonally opposite the
-monk, tried to appear as near the invisible as she could, and
-stared wildly on the strange spectacle for a long time. Her
-father got into conversation with Father Ignatius, began
-deciphering the badge by means of all the Greek and Latin
-he could bring to his assistance, and became quite interested
-in the genial conversation of the good priest. When the
-child heard her father laugh, she began to edge up near the
-stranger, and, before they separated, father and child were
-convinced that monks were not such frightful things as they
-appeared at first sight. We shall have other adventures to
-relate about his habit further on.
-</p>
-<p>
-Another peculiar characteristic of his spirit was his great
-devotion to the Blessed Virgin. He set more value on a Hail
-Mary than any conceivable form of prayer. He went so
-far in this, that he had to be reasoned out of its excess
-afterwards by one of his companions. He did everything
-by Hail Marys; he would convert England by Hail Marys;
-and in the year 1850 he obtained a plenary indulgence for
-the three Hail Marys for the conversion of England. When
-any one asked him to pray for them, he promised a Hail
-Mary. This was very praiseworthy in him, as we know how
-hard it is even for some to go heart and soul into the Catholic
-instinct of devotion to the Mother of God. They must have
-their qualifications, and their terms, and their conditions,
-as if, forsooth, she ought to be obliged to them for acknowledging
-her privileges at all. The worst of it is, that
-Catholics often tone down their books of devotion and
-expressions to suit the morbid tastes of ultra-Protestants, or
-the fastidiousness of some whitewashed Puseyite. It may be
-thought prudent to do so; but it is disgraceful, mean, and
-dishonourable, to say the least of it.
-</p>
-<p>
-These are the most prominent outlines in Father Ignatius's
-spirit at the time we are writing about, and if we add to
-them a great devotion to the sacrifice of the mass, we shall
-have his soul in a fair way before us. He never missed
-celebrating, if he possibly could; and often he arrived at
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385">{385}</a></span>
-11 o'clock in the day at one of our houses, after travelling
-all night, and would eat nothing until he had first said mass.
-A month before he died he travelled all night from Glasgow
-to London, and said mass in Highgate at 11 o'clock. He
-was jaded, weak in health, but he would not lose one sacrifice:
-it was of too great a value, and he had received too
-many favours through it, to omit it on light grounds. This
-was a life-long devotion of his, and it is the essential one
-for a priest of God.
-</p>
-<p>
-From what has been said, we can form a fair estimate of
-his character as a Passionist. One is so obvious that it
-requires no mention at all, and that was his zeal for the
-conversion and sanctification of souls. So far did this go, that
-he seemed led by it blindly and wholly. This was his weak,
-or, perhaps more properly, his strong point. Go with him
-in that, and you covered a multitude of sins.
-</p>
-<p>
-Another essential was his "thanking God for everything."
-This he carried so far that he became perfectly insensible to
-insults, mockeries, and injuries, and yet he felt them keenly.
-At one time he used to pass late at night by a lonesome lane
-that led to our last house at The Hyde. He heard rumours
-of some evil-disposed wretches having intended to shoot
-him. One night he heard a rustling in the hedge as he was
-walking on, and the thought struck him that perhaps an
-assassin was lying in ambush for him. The religious asked
-him what were his thoughts. "Well," said he, "I hoped
-that when the bullet struck me I would have time to say,
-<i>'thank God for that'</i> before I died."
-</p>
-<p>
-From this rough sketch of his spirit it will be seen that
-he had too little of the serpent, in the Gospel sense, to make
-a good Superior. He was too simple and confiding for that;
-he did not know how to suspect, and any one that knew how
-to get into his views could do what he pleased. At the
-same time, all reverenced him as a saint, and every day of
-his religious life increased the estimation in which he was
-held by his own brethren. This is the more valuable as it
-is the private life of most men which lowers them in the
-eyes of those who have the opportunity of observing them.
-Father Ignatius tried always to make the subject-matter of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386">{386}</a></span>
-his conversation as edifying as possible; it was withal so
-beautifully interspersed with amusing anecdotes, that it
-could not fail to interest all. He had a peculiar tact for relating
-stories, and a wonderful memory; he was unrivalled
-in his power of mimicry, and he enjoyed fun with the
-greatest relish. It was the opinion of every one who knew
-him intimately, that nothing came under his notice which
-he could not turn to pointing the argument of a sermon or
-furthering the glory of God. He christianized everything;
-and did so with such grace, that the love of what he
-remodelled was increased for its new aspect.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387">{387}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br>
-His Dealings With Protestants And Prayers For Union.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The kindly feelings Father Ignatius always showed for
-Protestants laid him open to the charge of a want of appreciation
-for the blessings of faith, or of not hating heresy as
-saints have hated it. Although his whole life and actions
-amply refute either conclusion, some of the incidents of this
-period of his life bring out his conduct in this respect in its
-real character.
-</p>
-<p>
-He tried to extend the benefit or plea of invincible
-ignorance as widely as possible. He laboured and reasoned,
-with a warmth unusual to him, to remove the notion some
-Catholics have, that the majority of Protestants know they
-are wrong, but from some unworthy motive will not give
-up their errors. His proofs of the position he chose to
-take here were not certainly the most convincing, for his
-stock argument was to quote himself. It did of course
-occur to him that its point could be retorted by the fact of
-his becoming a Catholic for his <i>bona fides</i>; but he took up
-the argument then by saying we were therefore to hope for
-the conversion of England. His idea of England's apostasy
-was mainly this: that the body of the people had been
-swindled out of their religion by the machinations of a few
-crafty, unprincipled statesmen, at the time of the Reformation.
-A system of misrepresentation and false colouring
-of Catholic doctrines and practices was invented and
-handed down from generation to generation, which impregnated
-the minds of children with the notion that Catholicity
-and absurdity were one and the same thing. From this
-point of view did he look at the millions who groped in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388">{388}</a></span>
-darkness of error, blaspheming the doctrines of Jesus Christ,
-and imagining they were thereby doing Him a service. He
-took then the side of pity, which always inclines one to the
-lessening of faults.
-</p>
-<p>
-He lamented nothing more than the loss of faith in England,
-and he thought that a harsh, iron way of dealing with
-Englishmen would close their hearts against grace altogether.
-This led him to use the mildest terms he could find,&mdash;nay, the
-most respectful,&mdash;in speaking of Protestants. He would
-never call them "heretics," nor their ministers "parsons."
-"Separated from the Church," "Church of England people,"
-"Dissenters," "Clergymen," were his usual terms, and
-he would often also speak of them as "our separated
-brethren."
-</p>
-<p>
-This twofold aspect of his bearing towards Protestants
-certainly proceeded alike from charity and zeal. It was a
-common remark with him, that we ought not to suppose
-people bad and evil-disposed unless we are certain of it,
-neither should we hurt their feelings by opprobrious epithets.
-And if we intend to do them any good we should be the
-more cautious still as to our thoughts and words. He used
-to sigh when he had done speaking of the state of religion
-in England, but he would immediately start up as if from a
-reverie and say, "Shall we not do something to save our
-poor countrymen?" So far was he from sympathizing with
-the mildest form of error, that even in scholastic questions
-he would always take the safer side. In his love for the
-heretic, therefore, no one could ever find the least sympathy
-with the heresy; or if he called the error a polite name, it
-was only to gain admission to the heart it was corroding, in
-order to be allowed to pluck it out. If we take into account
-his great love for souls, it will seem wonderful that he did
-not burst out at times into indignation against what destroyed
-so many; but we must remember that such a thing
-as fierce outbursts of any kind were most unsuitable to his
-spirit. His love would make him try to eliminate from
-those who had died external to the Church, all the formal
-heresy he possibly could; and he felt special delight in the
-fact that the Catholic Church forbids us to judge the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389">{389}</a></span>
-damnation of any particular individual as certain. But then
-let us think for a moment of what he did to uproot heresy.
-He spoke, he wrote, he preached, he toiled for thirty years
-incessantly almost for this single object. Any one that
-weighs this well will be far from judging that he had the
-least sympathy with error. His kindliness, therefore, for
-Protestants, and his belief that the vast majority of them
-were in good faith, so far from making him sit down at ease
-and enjoy his own faith, and not bestir himself unless
-Protestants thrust themselves upon him to claim admission
-into the fold, produced directly the opposite effect. Their
-not being so bad as was generally imagined, buoyed his hope
-in their speedy recovery; their being so near the truth, as
-he charitably supposed, made him strain every nerve to
-compel them to come across the barrier that separated them
-from him.
-</p>
-<p>
-One of the means he adopted for reuniting Protestants to
-the Catholic Church laid him open to another serious charge,
-which was, if possible, more groundless than the last. In
-January, 1850, he began to go about and call upon Protestants
-of every description&mdash;ministers of church and state
-nobles and plebeians. His object was to get them all to
-pray for unity. To state plainly his way of action, it was
-this:&mdash;He intended to ask all Protestants "to pray for
-unity in the truth, wherever God knows it to be." This, he
-said, was of course to pray for conversion to Catholicism
-unknown to themselves; it was taking the enemy by stratagem
-in his own camp. Objections were made in different
-quarters against the proposition. Some said it was not
-acting fairly and candidly; he then used to qualify it by
-telling them that he knew very well the truth lay in the
-Catholic Church alone, and so did every Catholic, and that
-if any Protestant asked him he would plainly tell him so.
-Others then said, Protestants would be all praying for
-proselytes to their own persuasions, for they were all in
-good faith, and thought themselves in the truth. These and
-sundry other objections were made to this mode of proceeding;
-it was looked upon with suspicion, as savouring too
-much of communication with heretics, and he never got a
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390">{390}</a></span>
-superior to approve of it, neither was it condemned. So it
-remained to the last an agitated question, which none of us
-would enter into, and which himself adopted with a kind of
-tentative adhesion. There was nothing wrong, certainly, in
-getting Protestants to pray for unity; but then, "unity in
-the truth, where God knew it to exist," was a very indefinite
-thing to propose to them. Questions might be raised which
-could only be answered in one way. What kind of unity?
-External or internal, or both? "Where does God know the
-truth to exist? Must we all put ourselves in a Cartesian
-doubt for a starting-point? And so on. The only answer
-could be&mdash;The Catholic Church. And might he not as well
-ask them to pray for that at once? Father Ignatius was
-not at all obstinate in sticking to this proposal as a theory
-he might reduce to practice, it came up at times in his
-conversation, and was dropped as easily.
-</p>
-<p>
-The mistake it led to was, however, rather serious: it was
-supposed that Father Ignatius looked favourably on, if he
-did not entirely coincide with, a society called "The Association
-for Promoting the Unity of Christendom," designated
-by the letters A.P.U.C. With this society Father Ignatius
-never had anything to do; he detested its principles, although
-he hoped it would do good in its way. He wished it to be
-confined to Protestants. One leading principle of the
-A.P.U.C. was certainly somewhat akin to some of Father
-Ignatius's dreams&mdash;conversions <i>en masse</i>; but his notions
-and those of the Association were widely different. They
-were for coming over in a great, respectable body, whose
-size and standing would deserve to receive great concessions
-in the way of discipline, as the condition of their surrender.
-Father Ignatius was for an unconditional submission of each
-individual, and could not allow any one to wait at the door
-of the Church for a companion to enter with him. The <i>en
-masse</i> of Father Ignatius was no more nor less, then, than
-this: that the people of England should throw off their
-prejudices and begin in a body to examine candidly the grounds
-of the Catholic faith. He was glad that the Association
-existed, because it carried out so much of his wishes; but it
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391">{391}</a></span>
-went too far for him, and in a prohibited line, when it asked
-for Catholic prayers and sacrifices, and for Catholic members.
-He never, therefore, gave his name to it, though often and
-repeatedly solicited to do so. His greatest friend was publicly
-known to be a member of the Association, and much
-as he loved and honoured him, Father Ignatius had no
-hesitation in saying of him, <i>in hoc non laudo</i>. Even so late
-as the year '63 or '64, he received a bundle of their official
-papers, with a private letter from the secretary and a number
-of the <i>Union Review</i>; he was seen to scan them over,
-and then throw them into the fire. About the year '50 or
-'51, when he was always going about asking for prayers for
-unity, after the new idea that struck him, an incident
-occurred to bear out what is here said. He happened to be
-speaking with a roomful of Protestant clergymen on this
-very subject. They listened to him very attentively, raised
-objections, had them answered, and finally agreed to the
-justness of his proposals. They agreed, moreover, to kneel
-down then and pray together for unity, and asked Father
-Ignatius to join them. He refused at once. They pressed
-him on every side, and said, among other things, that he
-ought to set them this example. He jumped up with
-indignation, and said, in a manner quite unusual to him, "I'd
-rather be torn in pieces by forty thousand mad dogs than
-say a prayer with you." He hereupon left the room, and
-became more cautious for the future as to how and when he
-asked them to pray for unity. The reason of this abrupt
-proceeding was the law that forbids all Catholics to communicate
-with heretics in divine things. Joint prayer, of course,
-is against this law.
-</p>
-<p>
-It is singular that, though he has left behind his thoughts
-drawn out in full upon all the ideas he took up from time
-to time about the conversion of heretics and the sanctification
-of Catholics, there is nothing left among his papers
-upon this project. We may conclude from this, as well as
-what has been said above, that while he looked upon the
-Unionists with kindness, he never adopted their principles;
-and such of his notions as seemed congenial to theirs will be
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392">{392}</a></span>
-found, on examination, to be totally different. This it was
-necessary to remark, as many very well informed Catholics
-thought poor Father Ignatius came under the censure of the
-Inquisition, <i>in re</i> A.P.U.C. It was quite a mistake, and
-he should have endorsed that censure himself, if he lived,
-and freely as he avoided what drew it down before he
-died.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393">{393}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br>
-Father Ignatius In 1850.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-This year was so full of events interesting to Father Ignatius,
-that there is no leading one round which others may
-be grouped to head the chapter. He expected to be called
-to Rome towards Easter; he had even written to the General,
-and had received letters to that effect. The object of this
-visit will be best understood from the following extract
-from a letter written at this time, dated from 13, Garnault
-Place, Clerkenwell, London:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I am here on a mission with
- Father Gaudentius, and as we have not yet great press of
- work, I will write to tell you of an important feature in
- my prospects for the present year. It is, that I am going
- to Rome about Easter. About the time I saw you last I
- wrote to the General, saying that I thought this would be a
- good step. After that I thought no more about it till the
- other day a letter came from him, in which he approved the
- proposal; and so, after a mission which we are to give at
- St. George's from the first to the fourth Sunday in Lent, I
- propose starting. I shall be, I expect, about four months
- absent. I propose begging my way there, through France
- or Germany, which will make the journey last a month or
- six weeks; then, after stopping six weeks or two months in
- Italy, to make acquaintance with our Senior Fathers, and
- inform myself, as much as possible, of all the ways and
- spirit of our congregation (of which, of course, now I am
- very ignorant), I hope to bring back the General with me
- to make a visitation of his flock."
-</p>
-<p>
-Before giving the mission in St. George's, he wrote to his
-sister, Lady Lyttelton, to tell her of his intended journey to
-Rome, and of a visit he would pay her before starting. Her
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394">{394}</a></span>
-ladyship was then in Windsor Castle, and we shall give her
-reply, as it shows the genial affection that always existed
-between them, and at the same time accounts for his not
-having gone to Windsor in his habit, as was often supposed.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<i>Windsor Castle, Jan. 28th.</i>
-<br><br>
- "My Dear Brother,&mdash;I am very much obliged to you
- for your kindly telling me your plans, and giving me a hope
- of seeing you before you go to Rome. The period you
- mention as the probable one for your mission at St. George's,
- will most likely be the very best for me to see you, as we
- shall probably remove to London about the middle of February,
- and remain till after Easter; so I shall look forward with
- much pleasure to an occasional visit. I am much obliged to
- you for telling me of the intended change in your dress.
- I should never have guessed its probability, having erroneously
- believed it simply illegal; but I find that was a
- mistake. You will, I hope, not wonder or blame me, if I
- beg you to visit me at my own little home, No. 38, St.
- James's Place, and not at the Palace, when you are looking
- so remarkable. I don't want to figure in a paragraph, and
- so novel a sight in the Palace might lead to some such
- catastrophe. A day's notice of your visit will always enable
- me to meet you, and Caroline and Kitty, and probably
- others of those that remain to me of my ancient belongings,
- may thereby sometimes get a glimpse of you, though we should
- be always able to have our <i>coze</i> in a separate room. I almost
- wish you would take me under your cowl to Rome. How
- I should like once more to see the Colosseum (and to learn
- to spell its name), and the Vatican! but hardly at the cost
- of a long journey, either.
-<br><br>
- "Fritz and Bessy [Footnote11] are coming here next Thursday on a
- two days' visit to the Queen, and when I have seen them I
- will tell you of their plans. I suppose they will be at
- Althorp till after Easter. Believe me, my dear brother,<br>
- "Very affectionately yours,<br>
- "S. Lyttelton."
-</p>
-<p class="footnote">
- [Footnote 11: Lord and Lady Spencer.]
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395">{395}</a></span>
-<p>
-When Father Ignatius went to St. James's Place to pay
-the visit arranged for in this letter, he experienced some
-difficulty in getting as far as his sister. The porter who
-opened the gate did not know him, and was, of course,
-astonished to see such a strange figure demanding an interview
-with his mistress. He would not let him in until he got
-special orders from Lady Lyttelton herself. Father Ignatius
-used to contrast this servant's mode of acting with that of
-another who admitted him once to Althorp. This last servant
-did not know him either; but seeing he looked tired,
-he took him into his lodge, got him some bread and cheese
-and a glass of ale for refreshment. By-and-by the Earl
-passed, and was highly amused at seeing George regale himself
-with such satisfaction on the servant's fare. The servant
-made some apologies, but they were quite unnecessary, for
-Father Ignatius never forgot his kindness, and used to say
-that he enjoyed the porter's pittance far more than the viands
-of the "Big House," as he used to call it.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius was seldom at home up to June, when
-he went to visit our religious in Belgium, who were subject
-to his jurisdiction; he had given a mission in Garnault
-Street, a retreat to our religious in Aston Hall, a mission in
-St. George's, Southwark, a retreat to nuns in Winchester, a
-retreat to people in Blackbrook, and a retreat in Sedgley Park.
-On his return from Belgium he remained in London, and
-preached in different churches, besides giving a retreat to
-the people in Winchester, and visiting several Protestant
-ministers, until the mission in Maze Pond. This was so
-badly attended that he used to preach in the courts, beating
-up for an audience. In giving an account sometimes of the
-visits above mentioned, he used to tell about an old minister
-he and another of our fathers once called upon. This gentleman
-suffered from gout, and was consequently rather
-testy; he had a lay friend staying with him at the time of
-the two Passionists' visit. He called the fathers idolaters,
-and insisted, right or wrong, that our Lord used the word
-"represent" when he instituted the Blessed Sacrament at
-the Last Supper. It was in vain that all three tried to
-convince him of his mistake. When, at last, the passage
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396">{396}</a></span>
-was pointed out to him, and that he had assured himself, by
-inspecting title-page and royal arms, that the Bible was a
-genuine authorized version, he was so far from giving in
-that, like the wolf in the fable, he immediately indicted
-them on another plea. This incident Father Ignatius used
-to recount to show how far ignorance hindered the removal
-of prejudice.
-</p>
-<p>
-His Roman plan fell to the ground in the beginning of
-July, when he received a letter to announce the coming
-of Father Eugene as Visitor-General to England. Father
-Ignatius went to meet him to Tournay, and escorted him
-to England, where his passing visit became a fixed residence
-to the present day. This happened towards the end of July.
-Father Ignatius then gave retreats to the priests in Ushaw
-College, to the nuns in Sunderland, and came to London to
-arrange about our taking St. Wilfrid's from the Oratorians.
-He went through all this before the end of August, and was
-in Carlow on the 4th of September, to give two retreats at
-the same time to the students of the College and the
-Presentation nuns.
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 8th of September he went to Thurles. The Irish
-bishops were assembled there for the most important synod
-held since Henry VIII.'s proposals were rejected. The
-synod was held to make canons of discipline, and laws for the
-new <i>status</i> the Church had gained in Ireland. The rough-and-ready
-ceremonial that had to be used in times of persecution
-was laid aside, after it had done good work in its day,
-and one more systematic was decreed for the administration
-of the sacraments. Here the Irish prelates were assembled,
-and Father Ignatius thought it a great opportunity for opening
-his mind and stating his views to Ireland by letting
-them known to her hierarchy. His account of the visit
-to Thurles is thus recorded in his journal:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<span class="quotehead">Sept. 8.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at 5. Railway to Thurles at 6½. Put up at the
- Christian schools. Dined there at 4. Saw the Primate, &amp;c.,
- at the College. Begged of the bishops, &amp;c.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Tuesday, Sept. 9.&mdash;</span>Mass
- at 6, at the Monk's Altar. Begged on from
- the bishops. At 10, the great ceremony of concluding the
- synod, till 2. The Primate preached. Dr. Slattery sang
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397">{397}</a></span>
- mass. I walked in the procession. At 5, dined with the
- bishops, &amp;c., at the College. Made a speech after dinner
- on the Crusade."
-</p>
-<p>
-After his visit to Thurles, he came back to Carlow and
-gave a retreat to the lay students in their own oratory.
-He then went off on a begging tour through Kildare, Carlow,
-and Kilkenny. Whilst in Kilkenny he went to look
-at the old cathedral (now in Protestant hands); his <i>cicerone</i>
-was a very talkative old woman, who gave him a history, in
-her own style, of the crumbling worthies whose names he
-deciphered on the different monuments. One account she
-told with especial gusto: the last moments of an old lady
-"of the Butlers." This old lady, according to the
-<i>cicerone's</i>
-account, had once been a Catholic, and on her death-bed
-wished to receive the rites of the Church. She was told
-that if she died a Catholic, those to whom her property was
-willed would be disinherited, and that the property would
-pass over to others. She hesitated some time on hearing
-this announcement, and after a few minutes' reflection
-expressed her decision as follows, "Oh, well; it is better that
-one old woman should burn in hell than that the family of
-the Butlers should lose their estate." She died shortly after
-&mdash;a Protestant. Father Ignatius used to say that he never
-was more surprised than at the manner of his guide as she
-concluded the climax of her narrative. She seemed to think
-old Granny Butler's resolution showed the highest grade of
-heroic virtue and self-sacrifice.
-</p>
-<p>
-In Carrick-on-Suir he says: "Made the best day's begging
-in my life up to this, £50." He then went to Tipperary,
-Cork, visited all the convents and priests, came to Birr,
-spent an afternoon with Lord Ross and his telescope; begs
-in Limerick, Drogheda, Newry, Dundalk, Ardee, Castle-blaney,
-Carrickmacross, Londonderry, Strabane, Omagh.
-When he was in Omagh there was a tenant-right meeting,
-and he went to hear Gavan Duffy. He begs through Dungannon,
-Lurgan, Enniskillen, Ballyshannon, Clogher. He
-then came to Dublin, from which he paid flying visits to a
-few convents, and to the colleges of Maynooth and All-hallows.
-He returned to England on the 17th of November;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398">{398}</a></span>
-and, during his two months' tour in Ireland, he had
-preached seventy-nine sermons, on the conversion of
-England chiefly.
-</p>
-<p>
-He heard of the re-establishment of the hierarchy in
-England while travelling in Ireland, and one of his first acts,
-on returning to London, was to pay his respects to his old
-friend, the new Cardinal. This year we were put in possession
-of St. Saviour's Retreat, Broadway, which has been
-the noviciate of the order since. St. Anne's, Sutton, was
-also colonized about the same time. Father Ignatius gave a
-mission in Glasgow during this Advent, and brought two
-young priests with him to train into the work of the
-missions. One of them was Father Bernard, and he gives
-wonderful accounts of Father Ignatius's labours. He slept
-but about four hours in the twenty-four, and was all the
-rest of the time busy either in the confessional or on the
-platform, with the exception of the time he took to eat a
-hurried meal or two.
-</p>
-<p>
-In going through Liverpool on his return from Glasgow,
-in his habit, a crowd gathered round him to hoot and insult
-him. In his journal he says: "I got two blows on the
-head," for which he took good care to thank God. The year
-is concluded by preaching in Dublin, and giving the <i>renewal</i>
-retreat to the Sisters of Mercy in Birr.
-</p>
-<p>
-Any one that will glance over this year of his life, and
-see him perpetually moving from place to place, will certainly
-think he had little time to himself. It was about
-this time that he made the resolution of never being a moment
-idle, a resolve he carried out to the last. During this
-year and the preceding he was occupied in translating into
-English Da Bergamo's <i>Pensieri ed Affetti</i>. The greater part
-of this book, which was published by Richardson, under the
-name of <i>Thoughts and Affections on the Passion</i>, was
-translated by Father Ignatius, on railway stations, while waiting
-for trains, in every place, before or after dinner, in intervals
-between confessions, in all kinds of out-of-the way places;
-and so careful was he to fill up every moment of time that
-we see noted in his journal his having done some of Da
-Bergamo in the fore cabin of the steamer that took him
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399">{399}</a></span>
-from Holyhead to Kingstown. He wrote it mostly in
-pencilling, on the backs of envelopes, scraps of paper of all
-sizes, shapes, and quality; so that it was nearly as difficult
-to put those sibylline leaves in order and copy from them as
-it was to translate, if not more so. Besides this he wrote a
-number of letters; and his letters were no small notes with
-broken sentences, but long lectures on difficulties of
-conscience, written with a care and consideration that is
-perfectly surprising when one reflects upon his opportunities.
-He used to say that no one should ever excuse his not
-answering a letter for want of time: "If the letter is
-worth answering we ought to get time for it, for it becomes
-a kind of duty." He certainly had no time to spare or
-throw away, but he had always enough for any purpose in
-which charity or obedience could claim him. His days were
-indeed full days, and he scarcely ever went to bed until
-he had shaken himself out of nodding asleep over his table
-three or four times. No one ever heard him say that he
-was tired and required rest; rest he never had, except on
-his hard bed or in his quiet grave. If any man ever ate his
-bread in the sweat of his brow, it was Father Ignatius of
-St. Paul, the ever-toiling Passionist.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400">{400}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br>
-A New Form of <br>
-"The Crusade."</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-We find Father Ignatius, at the beginning of the year 1851,
-begging in Ireland. It was not his custom to go regularly
-from house to house; he preferred collecting people together,
-and addressing them, and, if this were not practicable, getting
-permission from the priests to speak to their flocks on
-Sundays and festivals. He wanted prayers more than money,
-and he was delighted that the plea of begging justified his
-moving about, and gave him a kind of faculty to preach on
-his favourite topic, "the conversion of England." Oftentimes
-the spiritual interfered with his temporal interests, as
-when an Irishman, who was about to give him an alms,
-refused it as soon as he spoke about England. Strange
-enough, Father Ignatius thought England-hating Irishmen
-the very best subjects to practise his art of persuasion on.
-He thought them true souls, sensitive of their wrongs, and
-valued them far more than those who lauded England
-through lack of patriotism.
-</p>
-<p>
-He met many adventures during this begging tour in Ireland.
-In one parish, the priest promised to allow him to
-preach to his congregation on the Sunday, and collect from
-them. The priest did not seem to possess indifference to
-earthly things, or generosity either, in a very high degree;
-for, when Father Ignatius came to his place on Saturday,
-his reverence told him that he intended to claim the collection
-in the church, whilst Father Ignatius might stand at
-the door and beg for himself as the people were going out.
-Father Ignatius thanked God, and was content, only remarking
-that, with the priest's permission, he would prefer
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401">{401}</a></span>
-to hold his hat under a large tree that grew near the
-church-door, instead of at the door itself.
-</p>
-<p>
-He preached at the last mass, and never said a word about
-where or when he was to receive the people's offerings; the
-collection was made by the priest, and a most miserable one
-it proved to be. Father Ignatius held his hat under the
-tree, and, since the day in Carrick-on-Suir, never had such
-a collection. It was a marvel to him; he could not account
-for it, and he was the more surprised when he compared
-notes with the parish priest after all was over. He found
-out the solution of the mystery that same evening. It
-seems that, on Saturday, he told a respectable lady in the
-neighbourhood of the priest's decision. She, without telling
-him a word of what she intended doing, went home, sent
-her servant through the village, and collected twelve stalwart
-active young men; she harangued them on what the
-priest was about to do, and sent them all off to different
-parts of the parish to tell the people of it, and also of the
-spot where Father Ignatius would receive their offerings.
-The people had reason to think their pastor was a little fond
-of money, and their indignation at his proceeding helped to
-increase their liberality.
-</p>
-<p>
-He begged at this time in Borris O'Kane, Limerick, Ennis,
-Gort, Galway, Loughren, Ballinasloe, Mullingar, and preached
-101 sermons since the previous 5th September. His begging
-tour ends in Dublin, about March, where he begins a new
-campaign of what he terms "his crusade."
-</p>
-<p>
-He preached some controversial lectures in Dublin, dined
-and talked with Dissenting ministers, wrote a little newspaper
-controversy, and had a meeting in the Rotundo. This very
-active kind of work did not seem to suit his taste or spirit,
-and he changed very soon to another and a more congenial
-one&mdash;the conversational mode of advancing the Catholic
-cause.
-</p>
-<p>
-He visited the leading men both in the Establishment
-and in the offices of State, and the conferences he held with
-them are so interesting that we shall relate a few of them
-in his own words. The extracts are taken from letters
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402">{402}</a></span>
-published by him in 1853, in the <i>Catholic Standard</i>, now
-<i>The Weekly Register</i>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <i>Interview with Lord John Russell.</i>
-<br><br>
- One day early in February, 1850, I had been on an expedition
- down to Westminster. I look back on all my walks
- during a certain period, that is, while I was constantly
- wearing my Passionist habit, as <i>expeditions</i>. Indeed they
- were eventful ones in their way. I was returning through
- Parliament Street; and having an hour to dispose of, as I
- passed by Downing Street, I thought I would now try,
- what I had long thought of, to have a conversation with the
- Premier. I asked, "Is Lord John Russell at home?"
- The messenger [query?] who came to the door looked at my
- figure with some surprise, then said, "Yes, sir, but he is
- engaged at present?" I said, "Will you be so good as to
- say to him that Lord Spencer's brother would wish to
- speak with him?" "Walk in, sir," he answered; and to
- my surprise, I must say, I found myself at once in a waiting-room,
- and five minutes later was introduced to Lord John.
- He rose to me, and kindly pointed to a chair. I said, "Do
- you remember me, my Lord?" "Oh, yes," he answered. I
- then proceeded: "I hardly know whether what I am now
- doing is wise or not; but I will explain my reason for asking
- to see your lordship and you will judge. You are aware,
- probably, that it is now some twenty years since I became a
- Catholic. Ever since that time, my whole mind has been
- bent on leading others to the same faith, and, in short, on
- the conversion of this country to Catholicity. For this end
- I have endeavoured, as far as it was possible, to move all
- Catholics throughout the world to pray for the conversion of
- England. I have also spoken with as many as I could of
- the leading men among the clergy of the Church of England
- and among Dissenting ministers, to move them also to pray
- that God would bring this country to unity in the truth
- wherever he sees it to be. I am almost always received
- agreeably on these occasions; for all seem to agree in what
- I think cannot be denied, that if there is anything which
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403">{403}</a></span>
- threatens ruin to the power and prosperity of this country
- it is our religious divisions." His lordship here, without
- speaking, intimated, as I understood, his assent to this last
- sentence; but interrupted me by asking more particularly:
- "What do you propose to Dissenters?" "The same," I
- said, "as to Anglicans; I conceive this prayer is proper for
- them all alike." ... I proceeded: "Among Catholics
- I find myself constantly met by the objection, that if they
- came forward openly, as I wish them to do, it would offend
- those in power in England. I answer them, I am convinced
- it would not; but in order to satisfy others rather than
- myself, I have at last thought it well to come to the first
- authority and ask. I will remark to your lordship why I
- say this. Among all Catholics, I am particularly intent on
- moving the Catholics of Ireland to undertake this cause. I
- first went to Ireland for the purpose in 1842. Now I look
- upon it as certain, that if the Irish had then undertaken, as
- I wished them, to pray for the conversion of England, and
- had persevered in that work out of charity, they would not,
- in 1848, have thought of making pikes against England;
- and this would have saved our Government some millions of
- pounds, perhaps. Pikes are well enough in their place, but
- I consider that charity would not have prompted the making
- of them on this occasion. Again, I will say that my favourite
- individual object in Ireland is to enlist in my cause your
- lordship's illustrious correspondent, Dr. M'Hale; and it is
- my opinion that it would improve the style of his letters if
- there were introduced into them some expressions of charity
- towards England." Lord John slightly smiled, and then
- proceeded with his answer, as follows: "In answering you,
- I beg to be understood that I do not speak as a minister;
- but I will tell what I think as an individual. The entire
- liberty which exists in this country for every one to think
- as he pleases, and to speak what he thinks, makes it appear
- to me difficult to conceive how a reunion of all the different
- religious opinions could be effected. That is at least a distant
- prospect. But anything which would tend to a diminution
- of the spirit of acrimony, and of the disposition of people of
- opposite opinions to misrepresent one another's views, must
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404">{404}</a></span>
- do good." Then he added, in a very pleasing tone: "And I
- will tell you, that I consider the body to which you belong
- is the one which suffers the most from such misrepresentations."
- I said then: "After hearing your lordship's answer,
- given with such kindness, I am quite happy at having come;
- and I think I may infer from what you have said, that you
- perfectly approve of my proceedings, for the tendency of
- them entirely is to remove the misapprehensions which
- exist, on both sides, of the others principles. I am convinced
- that Catholics generally have a mistaken idea of
- what respectable Protestants are; and there is no doubt
- Protestants are very widely wrong in their opinions of
- Catholics. I am working to counteract this error on both
- sides."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- To this he did not reply; and as I had gained all that I
- desired, I rose to take my leave, and said: "I frequently
- say to persons with whom I have had conversations like this,
- what I will now say to your lordship, that I do not promise
- secrecy concerning them; but I request, as a favour, that if
- they should ever hear of my making what they consider an
- improper use of anything that they have said, they would
- call me to account for it." On this sentence, likewise, he
- made no remark, but added again: "I repeat once more that
- I have not spoken as a minister, as I do not think this is a
- matter with which I have any concern in that character."
- I replied: "I understand you, my Lord; yet I will say that
- it appears to me, that I have reasons to have addressed your
- lordship in your public character." His lordship smiled,
- slightly bowed, and I withdrew.
-</p>
-<br>
-<p class="cite">
- <i>Interview with Lord Clarendon.</i>
-<br><br>
- I am very happy at finding myself with my pen in hand,
- to give an account of my interviews with another distinguished
- member of our Government; at least, as far as what
- passed bears on the subject of these letters, the enterprise
- of England's conversion:&mdash;I mean Lord Clarendon, while
- he was Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. His lordship and I
- were formerly fellow-collegians and friends at Cambridge;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405">{405}</a></span>
- but from the year 1819, when I left Trinity College, we
- never saw each other till November 13, 1850, when I had
- an audience from him at the Viceregal Lodge in the Phoenix
- Park, at Dublin. When I had been in Ireland in 1848,
- the thought had crossed my mind that I should be pleased
- to have a conversation with him, but I put it away as a
- strange idea, not worth entertaining. In 1850, I returned
- to Ireland, and starting from the Synod of Thurles, at the
- beginning of September, I had what I would call my grand
- campaign among the Irish people. From the beginning of
- September to the end of April, I preached 170 sermons to
- them on the enterprise of the conversion of England, which
- at that time I used to call the <i>Crusade for England</i>; besides
- a number, past reckoning, of addresses to convents and
- schools, and private conversations to the same intent. This
- career was interrupted in the middle of November, when I
- came for six weeks to England. As I was approaching
- Dublin to cross the water, my strange idea revived, but its
- aspect was more inviting. The result of my visit to Lord
- John Russell had been so encouraging, that I wrote to Lord
- Clarendon, and asked permission to pay him my respects, as
- I passed through Dublin. He sent me a very kind answer
- to the place which I had pointed out, naming an hour on the
- day named above&mdash;half-past one, November 13&mdash;at which
- time I was introduced into his private room at the Lodge.
- One of his first remarks was that circumstances were greatly
- changed with us both since our last meeting. Indeed, they
- were, as any one would have said who had seen him as
- George Villiers, of St. John's, and me as George Spencer,
- of Trinity, walking together in our college gowns, at Cambridge,
- and now should see him in his grand Viceregal
- Palace, and me before him in my poor Passionist's habit; and
- is it not something to be looked upon with satisfaction, that
- we should now have a conversation for an hour and a half, of
- which, though the matter was something far more weighty than
- what would very probably have occupied us then, the tone
- which he gave to it was such, that one might have supposed
- our familiar acquaintance had never been interrupted?
- The conversation was throughout very interesting to me;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406">{406}</a></span>
- but this does not seem to me the time nor the place to relate
- what passed, excepting those passages which bore directly
- upon my present subject.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- I do not remember how, in the course of it, Lord Clarendon
- was led to say: "I see in the papers that you have
- been preaching in several places." I answered: "Yes, I
- have; and the principal object of my asking for this interview
- with your lordship, was to tell you the subject of my
- preaching, and to ask what you think of it. I am preaching
- to the Irish people a crusade for the conquest of England."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- I am not clear whether it was before saying these words,
- or after, that I related to him the conversation I had had
- with Lord John Russell in the same way in which it was
- given in my last letter. However this might be, I perfectly
- remember the way in which he replied. He appeared at
- the first moment to be surprised; then fixed upon me one
- rather searching look; and then deliberately said: "Taking
- the view of things which you do, I think you are right."
-<br><br>
- * * * *
-<br><br>
- Lord Clarendon, knowing that I was next day to start for
- England, concluded by most kindly expressing a wish to see
- me again, when I should be passing at some future time
- through Dublin.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- After six weeks I returned to renew my circuit in Ireland,
- and returning to Dublin about the middle of January,
- though I had no reason particularly for wishing to speak
- again with Lord Clarendon, I considered that it was in some
- way a duty of propriety to ask for an interview, as he had
- been pleased to request it at the close of the first visit.
- Accordingly, after some time for reflection, I wrote him a
- letter to this effect, and he appointed me half-past eleven on
- Saturday, February 8, 1852. This time it was in Dublin
- Castle that I saw him, being ushered into his private room
- through the muskets, bayonets, and other arms&mdash;not ancient
- pieces, for curiosity, as at Alton Towers, but arms of the
- most modern style, ready for use&mdash;with which the hall and
- great staircase seemed to me as though wainscoted throughout.
- I apologised soon after entering at taking up so much
- of his time; and again somewhat later I offered to
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_407">{407}</a></span>
- withdraw, however interesting was the conversation to myself.
- He answered, "Oh, no! I am very glad to see you. They
- will soon tell me of Sir Thomas Reddington being come for
- business: till then I am free." I will now relate only one
- or two passages of this conversation, as being, I conceive, of
- peculiar consequence to my present purpose. I was saying
- something of my continued endeavours to move the Irish to
- pray for England, and I suppose remarking that this must
- have a salutary effect on the feelings of the people. He
- said with an incredulous smile: "And do you think the Irish
- pray for England?" "I have no doubt whatever," I answered,
- "that a great many do, but it is as yet nothing to
- what I desire to bring them to." With a still more incredulous
- look, he added: "Do you think they pray for
- England at Maynooth?" "Well, my Lord,' I only know
- that whenever I visit Maynooth the superiors appoint me a
- time for addressing the students assembled (he looked
- evidently pleased at hearing this); and will you listen," I
- continued, "to a sentence of one of my half-hour's addresses
- to them? I began it without well knowing what I was
- going to say; but when I had finished I said to myself, I
- have said one good thing at least which I shall one day turn
- to account. It was soon after the publication of Lord John
- Russell's Durham letter. I said to them, 'Will you allow
- me to offer you one word of advice? You will just now be
- tempted most probably to say some violent things; especially
- some violent things of Lord John Russell. Now I would
- ask you, Do you know Lord John Russell? I suppose one
- and all would tell me <i>no</i>. The advice I was going to offer
- is that you should not speak evil of what you do not know.'"
- Lord Clarendon said: "Did you say that?" I said: "Yes,
- my lord." He added emphatically: "That <i>was</i> good." After
- I had risen to leave him, I said: "My Lord, I have been
- often citing your Excellency, since our first conversation, as
- one of those who entirely approve of my proceedings."
- "What do you mean?" he quickly answered. "Did I not
- tell you I would shed the last drop of my blood to stop the
- progress of your religion?" "I perfectly remember that,"
- I said; "what I mean is that you approved of my way of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_408">{408}</a></span>
- acting, considering what I am." "Oh," he replied, "I
- understand you. If every one acted as you do, we should
- have nothing to complain of." This conversation lasted from
- three-quarters of an hour to an hour.
-</p>
-<br>
-<p class="cite">
- <i>Interview with Lord Palmerston</i>.
-<br><br>
- I am sometimes reminded of a story I heard of a groom,
- who had to show off one of his master's horses, which he
- wished to sell. Among all the other good qualities for which
- he had praised the animal, as he stood behind him in the
- stable, being asked by the intended purchaser, "What do
- you say of his temper?" he had just answered, "Oh, he is
- as quiet as a lamb," when the horse kicked out, struck the
- poor groom full in the pit of the stomach, and drove the
- breath out of him. But he must stand to his text, and with
- wondrous promptness he was just able to utter, "Ach&mdash;
- playful toad!" So I will have our poor people hoped for,
- prayed for, borne with and loved, with all their effigy burnings,
- with all their meetings to hear Dr. Cumming or Mr.
- Stowell, with all their awful Popery sermons, and, moreover,
- with the two or three thumps on the head, and other
- pieces of genteel treatment which I met with myself, while
- I walked about in my habit, before the Derby proclamation
- gave me some time to breathe again.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- After this preface as an apology, if it is one, for my last
- sentences of last week, and for standing to <i>my</i> text, in spite
- of all that can be urged, I proceed to another of my narratives,
- which, if not the most interesting and important in
- my eyes, is not the least so; and, after which, in reply to
- such as might mention some of the English rudenesses to
- us, and say to me, "What do you say to that?" I would
- just say, "What do <i>you</i> say to this?"&mdash;I mean my interview
- with Lord Palmerston.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Through the month of May of the year 1851, I was
- engaged to preach evening lectures in one of the London
- chapels, and I had my days to devote in a great measure
- to the pursuit, so inconceivably interesting to me, of
- conversations with leading people on my great topic. I was at
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_409">{409}</a></span>
- that time greatly debilitated, and could walk but very little,
- and to relieve me, therefore, as well as to enable me to make
- the most of my time, a generous friend, who was interested
- in my proceedings, furnished me with means to go from
- house to house in a cab. One of these bright forenoons, I
- turned into Carlton Gardens, and asked to see Lord
- Palmerston. I was not an entire stranger to him, any
- more than to the other two noble persons of whom I have
- already written. It will not be foreign to my purpose to
- relate how my acquaintance with his lordship had been
- formed. May I venture to call it a friendship? It was at
- the close of a long run with Lord Derby's stag-hounds; I
- mean the grandfather of the present earl, I think in 1821;
- we finished, I think, twenty-four miles from London, and I
- was making up my mind for a long, tedious ride home on
- my tired horse (for I was not up to having second horses
- and grooms in my suite on those occasions), when Lord
- Palmerston, who was likewise in at, not the death, but the
- taking (I forget the proper sporting term) of the stag,
- understanding my case, and knowing me by sight, though I think
- till then we had never spoken, gave my horse in charge to
- his groom, and took me home with himself in a post-chaise.
- For the short remaining time of my being known as a young
- man about town, as we met at one party or another, Lord
- Palmerston continued to accost me with a kind word, to
- which I had good reason, it will be allowed, to respond in
- the best manner I knew how. At the close of the London
- season of 1822 I made my bow, and withdrew from that
- stage to prepare for taking orders, and, except an interview
- of a few minutes in 1834, we had never met till I appeared
- before the now far-famed and, by many, dreaded Foreign
- Secretary, with my Passionist habit and sandalled feet
- for a private audience. Like what Lord Clarendon said in
- the Park Lodge, Dublin, I might have said here, "Great
- changes, my lord, since we first spoke together!" On this
- occasion, however, no time was spent in mere conversation.
- I had called, as I have said, in the forenoon. His lordship
- had sent me a message as being busy, requesting me to call
- again at two o'clock. On entering his private room, I found
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_410">{410}</a></span>
- him engaged in looking over what seemed official papers,
- which he had upon his knee, while we spoke, though without
- the least sign of impatience or wish to get rid of me; but I
- saw that what became me was to enter on business at once
- without waste of time or words. I do not remember all the
- words which I used in this interview so well as what I said
- to Lord John Russell and Lord Clarendon. The position
- was not now so new and striking to me. I think I began
- without any kind of apology; for his lordship's looks gave
- me no feeling that any was needful or expected.
- I said, "that in coming to speak to his lordship on this
- subject, I had not so much in view to ascertain more and
- more that there was no danger of what I proposed causing
- offence to our Government, as I thought what I had heard
- from others was sufficient proof of this; but I wished to
- put as many of our public men as I could meet with in possession
- of all my intentions and proceedings, in order that if,
- at last, I succeeded, as I hoped, in moving the Catholics to
- be interested about them, and these matters came before the
- public, they might know from myself in person what I really
- intended, and might be enabled, if they thought well, to do
- me justice." This was the substance of what I said to him.
- Having thus concluded, I awaited his answer, which was
- about as follows:&mdash;"As you wish to know what I think of
- your doings, I must say I do not by any means agree with
- you in considering it a desirable result that this country
- should again be brought under subjection to Rome. I do not
- profess to take my view from the elevated and sublime
- ground on which you place yourself; I mean, I speak not
- with reference to religious interests, but to political; and as
- a politician, when we consider the way in which the Pope's
- government is opposed to the progress of liberty, and liberal
- institutions, I cannot say that I wish to see England again
- under such influence." Thus far, I do not mean to say, that
- what I heard was anything agreeable to me. Neither the
- matter nor the tone were agreeable to me. There was something
- sarcastic in his tone. And does that suit my purpose?
- it may be asked. I answer, "It does very well." Could it
- be expected that he would speak very agreeably and favourably
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_411">{411}</a></span>
- of the end I told him I was aiming at? If he had,
- that would, I conceive, have just thrown a doubt on the
- sincerity of what he said immediately after, in a tone simply
- and perfectly agreeable, on the effect likely to result immediately
- from what I was doing: and this was: "But as to
- what you are doing, as it must tend to conciliate Catholic
- powers towards England, what have I to say, but that it is
- excellent?" or some such word expressing full and cordial
- approbation. After this, he went on with some remarks on
- the establishment of the Hierarchy, which, of course, were
- in accordance with what he had, I think, been saying a few
- days previously in Parliament, complaining of it as offensive
- and injurious; but on this part of the conversation I need
- not dwell, as it had no bearing on the subject which I had
- proposed to him. With regard to that, my impression on
- leaving him was this: that he had listened with attention to
- what I had said, had at once perfectly understood me, had
- answered me so as to make me perfectly understand him on
- the subject simply and openly, and that what he had said
- was entirely satisfactory to me. I could wish for nothing
- more; except, of course, what St. Paul wished for in the
- presence of Festus and Agrippa. I then rose: so did he;
- then shook hands with me, and most kindly thanked me for
- having renewed our old acquaintance. To the account of
- this conversation with Lord Palmerston, I will add, that I
- asked, in the same bright month of May, for an interview
- with Lord Derby. He requested I would rather explain
- myself in writing: which I did; and received in answer
- from him a most condescending and kind letter, in which,
- while he asserted his own steadfast adherence to the Church
- of England, he declared his opinion that no one could reasonably
- find fault with me for exerting myself as I did to
- advance what
- I believed to be the truth.
-</p>
-<p>
-Besides these interviews just recorded in his own words,
-he had several others with minor celebrities. He met some
-Protestant bishops; among the rest, Dr. Blomfield, whom
-he tried to move to praying for unity. Dr. Blomfield
-promised. Some of the bishops refuse to see him, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_412">{412}</a></span>
-others are "out" when he calls. He had an interview with
-Dr. Cumming, and the doctor's account of it did not eventually
-serve to raise that gentleman in the estimation of
-honourable or sensible people. He records in his journal
-being sent away ignominiously by Baptist and Methodist
-ministers, and, after one of these rebuffs, on May 24, 1851,
-he got so fearful a mobbing, when coming along the Charter
-House in London, that he was nearly killed. Had not some
-good shopkeeper opened his door for him, and helped him to
-a cab by a back passage, he believed he would certainly have
-fallen a victim to the fury of the crowd.
-</p>
-<p>
-The day after this adventure, he assisted in Warwick-street
-at the ordination of his Grace the present Archbishop
-of Westminster, as sub-deacon.
-</p>
-<p>
-He is a few months on the Continent again in this year.
-He preaches in French through Lille, Liège, Maestricht,
-Aix-la-Chapelle, always upon "the crusade." Before
-arriving in Cologne he had his address translated into German,
-in order to be able to speak to the Prussian children
-and people upon his favourite theme. As he was walking
-through Cologne one day, he accidentally met his brother,
-Lord Spencer. Lord Spencer wondered at the figure
-approaching him, and thought he recognized the features. At
-length he exclaimed, "Hilloa, George, what are you doing
-here?" "Begging," replied Father Ignatius. Those who
-knew them were much gratified at seeing the earl and the
-monk having a little friendly chat about old schoolboy days.
-Both seemed a little embarrassed and surprised at first, but
-after a minute or two they were quite at home with each
-other.
-</p>
-<p>
-He prepared a petition for the King of Prussia, who was
-visiting Cologne, requesting an audience; but, after waiting
-patiently a few days, he writes in the journal: "The King
-is come and gone, but no notice of me. I must be content
-with <i>Rex regum</i>." He received a letter from Father
-Eugene a day or two before this, summoning him home to
-England for our Provincial Chapter, and his tour terminates
-on the 21st August.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_413">{413}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br>
-Visit To Home And "The Association Of Prayers."</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-At the Provincial Chapter, Father Ignatius was chosen
-Rector of St. Joseph's Retreat, The Hyde. It was also
-arranged that before proceeding further with his projects
-and schemes for prayers and unity, he should submit them
-to the Roman <i>Curia</i>. He accordingly starts for Rome on
-September 4, and arrives at the Retreat of SS. John and
-Paul on the 13th. We shall let himself relate the events
-and success of this expedition.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I went on then, taking occasions as they were offered me
- to move Catholics to interest themselves in it till September,
- 1851, when I went to Rome. I had other reasons for
- going; but it might well be expected that what mainly
- interested me was to recommend the cause of England's conversion
- in the centre of Catholicity, and to obtain from the
- Holy See sanction and authority for pursuing this end as I
- had been doing before, or in whatever way would be deemed
- preferable. I was four months and a half at Rome, with
- the interruption of a fortnight, during which I was engaged
- on a mission in the country with some of our Fathers. My
- affair had to be transacted, as may be supposed, chiefly at
- the Propaganda, where the affairs of all Catholic missions
- are managed and directed, much in the way that our Board
- of Admiralty directs all the naval operations of this country,
- but under entire dependence on his Holiness and obedience
- to him&mdash;the secretary of the Propaganda, Monsignor
- Barnabò, having regularly once a week, that is, every Sunday
- evening, an audience of the Pope, to make him reports,
- and to receive his orders. For the first six weeks or two
- months I felt my footing at the Propaganda more or less
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_414">{414}</a></span>
- doubtful and precarious. I did not gain much attention.
- This was mortifying; but I see, and I saw it then, to be
- right. The Propaganda is a place where all Catholic
- schemers and projectors in matters of religion try to get a
- hearing&mdash;as our Admiralty is besieged, I suppose, by all who
- think they have an important proposal to make for naval
- enterprise or improvement. They must be kept at arm's
- length for a time, till it is judged whether their ideas are worth
- attending to. It was on the 1st of November that it happened
- that I dined at the College of Propaganda, and sat
- next to Monsignor Barnabò, who made me a remark about
- in these words: 'Surely if you can convert England, we
- should gain half the world&mdash;or all the world,' I forget
- which. I answered, 'Well, Monsignor, and why not try?'
- Nothing more was said then; but it seemed to me as if this
- was the turning-point of my fortunes at Rome. Certain it
- is, that from that time Monsignor Barnabò, in the midst of
- all his pressing affairs, was invariably ready to listen to me
- at the office or at his own house, read through all my long
- memorials, spoke for me to the Pope whenever I asked him,
- and gained me what I asked on this matter, had my papers
- printed free of cost at the press of the Propaganda, &amp;c. It
- had been told me previously by one of the minutanti (under
- secretaries) of the Propaganda, Monsignor Vespasiani, that
- my proposals would be looked upon more favourably, if England
- were not mentioned as the only object of interest. He
- adverted especially with great feeling to the case of the
- Greeks, of whom he spoke as possessing genius and capacity
- for such great things, if they were only reunited to the
- Church. At his suggestion I drew up, in concert with one
- of our Fathers, a paper of proposals for an Association for
- the Conversion of all separated from the Church, giving
- reasons, however, as I do in the little paper of admission to
- our Association, why we should direct our immediate aim
- at the recovery of those nations which have been separated
- from the Church by heresy or schism, and why, among these,
- England should still be regarded as the most important and
- leading object. This document was read by Mgr. Barnabò,
- who ordered 5,000 copies to be printed by the press of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_415">{415}</a></span>
- Propaganda&mdash;rather, he told me, to order as many as I
- wished, as well as of another shorter paper containing an
- invitation to prayer and good works for the conversion of
- all separated from the Church, but especially of England.
- This shorter one was prepared at the express desire of the
- Cardinal-Vicar of Rome, and distributed by his order through
- all the religious houses of the city. To pass over other details,
- it was on the 26th of November that I received a letter of
- recommendation, addressed by the Cardinal-Prefect of Propaganda
- to all Bishops, Vicars-Apostolic, and Superiors of
- Missions in the world, desiring them to receive me favourably
- and to assist me in my designs to the utmost of their
- power. The words in Latin at this part of the letter are the
- following:&mdash;'... Proindeque illum sacrae congregationis
- testimonialibus hisce literis instructum esse volumus, ut
- omnes Episcopi, Vicarii Apostolici, et Missionum Superiores
- benigne illum excipere, ac pro viribus piissimis ejusdem votis
- favere haud omittant.' As I have not this letter at hand
- while writing, I quote this part from memory. The former
- part, of which I have not the words by heart, expresses why
- this recommendation was to be given me; namely, because
- my zeal for promoting the Catholic faith, especially among
- my people of England, was highly to be commended. Now,
- if the Propaganda should have ever heard anything true about
- how I carried on my ordinary duties in England, they could
- only have heard that I had not incurred suspension, though
- I might have deserved it; and that, in comparison with my
- brother priests in our great towns, for instance, what I had
- done for religion must be put down as next to nothing.
- The only thing on which they could ever have heard me
- spoken about as remarkable must have been my exertions,
- which, against my wishes, I must certainly concede to have
- been <i>singularly</i> active and persevering in calling people's
- attention to the object of the <i>conversion of England</i> and to
- prayers for it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was surprised at receiving this letter; but I was not
- satisfied with it: it sharpened my appetite to get more. I
- returned to the Palace of the Propaganda to give thanks
- for it, and then asked for a special letter to the Prelates of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_416">{416}</a></span>
- Ireland. I do not here enter into details about this: I
- intend, if permitted, explaining all which regards this subject
- in some letters addressed especially to the Irish people,
- in the <i>Tablet</i>. I mention it here only to quote from this
- second letter the words in which is explained more particularly
- the idea which was formed at the Propaganda of the
- object which they were recommending. They call it 'Opus
- quod Reverendus Pater Ignatius promovere satagit, ut nempe
- Catholici pro Acatholicorum, praesertim Angliae, conversione
- veluti agmine facto, ferventiori jugiter ratione preces
- fundant ....' which I thus translate: 'The object
- which the Rev. Father Ignatius is engaged in promoting,
- namely, that Catholics should, as it were, form themselves
- into an army set in array, and with continually increasing
- fervour pour forth prayers for the conversion of non-Catholics,
- but especially of England." Now, I do not know how
- these documents may strike others; but it seems to me that
- if, after having taken a journey to Rome on purpose to plead
- my cause there, and after having received letters like these
- in answer to my appeals, I was just now to relax in my zeal
- to promote prayers and good works for the conversion of
- Protestants, but especially of England, this would be not
- falling into the views of the Holy See, as some seem to
- think it would, but rather showing indifference and almost
- contempt for them, and repaying with ingratitude the great
- favours which I have received. I must reserve to another
- letter some account of my interviews with his Holiness in
- person.
-<br><br>
- "I am, Sir, your faithful servant in Jesus Christ,<br>
- "Ignatius Of St. Paul, Passionist."
-</p>
-<p>
-Here is the account of the audiences he had with the
-Pope on the subject of prayers for the conversion of England.
-It is taken from his letters to the <i>Catholic
-Standard</i>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- <span class="quotehead">Audiences With Pope Pius IX.</span>
-<br><br>
- I beg to give an account of what passed upon the subject
- of the conversion of England in the audiences I was allowed
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_417">{417}</a></span>
- by the Holy Father. They were three. The first was on
- September 16, 1851, three days after my arrival in Rome;
- the second, December 23; the third, January 30, 1852, the
- day before I left Rome. It was on my return home in the
- evening after that last audience that I met Mgr. Vespasiani,
- the prelate whom I have before named as one of the Minutanti
- of the Propaganda, the first person in office at Rome
- who gave full and attentive consideration to my proposals.
- This was on the 14th of October, 1851. Full of satisfaction
- as I was, I expressed to him anew my gratitude for that
- favour, adding that now I was leaving Rome, I felt as if I
- had nothing more to ask. All was gained. Such, indeed,
- were my feelings then. He kindly accepted my acknowledgments,
- and seemed to sympathize in my satisfaction, but
- looked incredulous as to my having nothing more to ask, and
- with a smile, said something to this effect, "You will want
- plenty more; and, when you desire, you will command our
- services." I suppose he was right. My feeling was then,
- and I conceive it was well grounded, that, as far as regarded
- the mind of his Holiness, I had gained all, on the subject
- which most engaged me, and which I am now pursuing;
- and I felt as if in having reached this point all was done.
- So, I trust, it will prove in time; but I see plainly enough
- there is work to be done before the mind of the Holy Father
- will be carried out; others must be moved to correspond with
- it. I must explain myself by stating facts. In my first
- two audiences, I think I may say that the principle was
- approved by his Holiness, that Catholics might be moved
- all through the world to engage in the enterprise of converting
- England; but that he must not be represented as caring
- for England exclusively, as he was father to all. There was
- no objection here expressed to my being specially interested
- for my own country. On the contrary, the Pope agreed to,
- and approved of, my continuing to urge the Roman people
- to join in this cause, as well as pursuing the same object in
- Austria, whither I told him I was going, and elsewhere. In
- my second audience I said to him: "Holy Father, may I
- repeat truly here what I am saying outside? I am openly
- stirring the people of Rome to a third conquest of England.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_418">{418}</a></span>
- Rome conquered England once, under Julius Caesar, by the
- material sword. Rome conquered England a second time,
- more gloriously, under St. Gregory I., by the Word of God.
- I am calling on Rome to undertake this conquest again,
- under Pius IX., when it will be a vastly more important
- one than heretofore, and by means more glorious and more
- divine, because referring more purely the glory to God, being
- chiefly holy prayer." The Pope did not speak in answer to
- this appeal; but, if I rightly judged, his manner and looks
- expressed his acceptance and approval of the idea better
- than words could have done. However, though I might
- say I had succeeded as well as I could have expected in
- these first two audiences, the second of which I looked upon
- as final, as in it I had taken my leave of his Holiness,
- there was yet something wanting. I was preparing to
- leave Rome not quite satisfied, though I knew not how to
- better my position. I will relate how the happy conclusion
- was brought round. My departure was unexpectedly
- delayed in order that I might assist at a mission to be
- given by our fathers, in the town of Marino, on the Alban
- mountains, which was in the diocese of the Cardinal-Vicar,
- at whose request the mission was given. I went
- to the mission, not so much to work, as to see, and hear,
- and learn for myself; but the crowd of penitents was
- such, that during the last week of it I gave myself entirely
- to the confessions; and having no part in the preaching,
- I never did such a week's work at confessions as
- that. I returned to Rome alone on January 18, to prepare
- for my departure, leaving the other Fathers to begin
- a second mission at Albano; and it struck me my week's
- work for the Cardinal-Vicar need not be altogether its own
- reward. I visited him the next day, as to make a report of
- the mission, which was highly satisfactory. I then said, "I
- have done a heavy week's work for your Eminence, and I
- come to claim <i>il mio stipendio</i> (my pay)." "And what," said
- he, "is that?" "A few minutes' patience," I replied, "to
- hear me again on the cause of England. I want Rome to
- be effectually moved." "But," said he again, "what can
- we do? I have distributed your papers. I will recommend
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_419">{419}</a></span>
- it again; what more do you want? Perhaps the Pope could
- suggest something; go to him again." I answered, "I have
- had my final audience, and received his last blessing. Can
- I go again?" "Oh, yes. Go; you may use my name." I
- went straight to the Vatican, and Monsignor Talbot placed
- me, according to custom, in a saloon, through which the
- Pope was to pass at three o'clock, to take his daily drive. I
- told his Holiness what had brought me again before him. I
- had received recommendations to all the world, but I was
- particularly intent on moving Rome. "Surely," he said,
- "that is the most important place. Write me a memorial,
- and we will consult over it." I lost no time in doing so.
- In it I dwelt on two objects; first, I entreated the Holy
- Father to take such measures as he might in his wisdom
- think fit, to move all Christendom to undertake the recovery
- of the nations which had been lost to the Church, and
- specially England. And with regard to Rome, I stated the
- case thus. I had received from the congregations through
- which his Holiness intimates his pleasure to the whole
- Church, an earnest recommendation to all Bishops to support
- me to the utmost of their power in my enterprise. Was it
- to be conceived, I asked, that the Bishop of the first See was
- alone excluded from this recommendation? Surely not;
- and therefore in the name of his Holiness, as head of the
- Universal Church, I appealed to his Holiness as Bishop of
- Rome, and entreated that he would give an example to all
- other Bishops, how a mandate of the Holy See ought to be
- obeyed. It was not for me to offer directions how this
- should be done; but if I were to make a suggestion, I would
- ask that a Prelate should be named, with an authority to
- engage the help of other zealous ecclesiastics, and with them
- to instruct the people of Rome in the importance and beauty
- of the work, and to engage them in it with persevering zeal.
- I took this memorial to the Cardinal-Vicar, who read
- through the latter part with me, and said, with an air of
- satisfaction, "<i>That will do; that will do very well</i>"&mdash;promising
- to present it to the Pope. I begged him to say
- besides, that the Prelate I had in my mind was Monsignor
- Talbot. This was on January 23. On the 26th, Monsignor
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_420">{420}</a></span>
- Barnabò told me that all had been favourably received. I
- thought I had nothing to do but to arrange with Monsignor
- Talbot what he might do, and for this purpose I went on
- the 30th of January to see him, accompanied by one of our
- Fathers. I had bid him farewell, when my companion said,
- "May we see the Pope?" I was rather annoyed at this:
- the sight of the Pope intended was merely to be once more
- placed in his way as he would pass one of the saloons: and
- I felt it would be unreasonable and intrusive for me to
- be seen there again; but I thought it would be selfish to
- disappoint my companion, who had sacrificed so much of his
- time to gratify me, and I said nothing. We were, therefore,
- taken into the saloon, as it was just the time for the Pope's
- drive. There, however, we waited one quarter, two quarters,
- three quarters of an hour. I concluded, what was the case,
- that the Pope was not going out, and expected presently to
- be told to go away. Instead of this Monsignor Talbot came
- and beckoned us into the Pope's private room, where he was
- sitting in the window recess perfectly at his ease, and
- received us with these words addressed to me:&mdash;"Well,
- Father Ignatius, we have done something now." "Indeed,
- Holy Father," said I, "this is true. I see this work now
- in the way to become the most favoured of all, entrusted,
- as it is, to a Prelate who has his time so disposed that one
- week he is free to work, and the other he returns to attendance
- on your Holiness to make his reports, and receive
- new instructions." "Not only so," replied the Pope, "there
- are four of them. He has but one week entirely engaged
- with me; besides the one out of four wholly free, he has
- but two or three hours every day on duty in the other two.
- But remember, I will not have England alone thought of."
- "Holy Father," I said, "this alteration has been made.
- The undertaking is for all separated nations; England being
- proposed only as the most important point of attack, on
- several accounts. I beg, however, to ask that the term
- heretics may not be used as the general designation of those
- we pray for. I do not confess to wilful heresy before my
- conversion. I do not confess for this sin for my countrymen
- at large." "Ah! what say you?" answered the Pope; then
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_421">{421}</a></span>
- he reflected for a moment and graciously bowed. In accordance
- with this request, in my letter from the Propaganda
- the term is not <i>haereticorum</i>, but <i>acatholicorum praesertim
- Angliae</i>. I went on: "Holy Father, I ask one more favour.
- Cardinal Fornari has agreed, if he is named by your Holiness,
- to accept the charge of Protector to this work." "What
- need of this?" answered the Pope; "I have desired the
- Cardinal-Vicar to recommend the work to Rome, and Cardinal
- Fornari is a Roman. Is that not enough?" "Holy
- Father," I replied, "what is requested is, that he should be
- empowered to act in it as Cardinal." After another pause
- his Holiness again graciously bowed and said: "Well, be
- it so." Thus the discourse on this subject terminated: and,
- if I have intelligibly explained myself, will it not be allowed
- that I had reason to go home satisfied, in the reflection that
- the work of the conversion of Protestants, but chiefly England,
- was now erected&mdash;as far as regarded the part which
- the holy Father had to take in it&mdash;into what may be almost
- called a congregation in the Holy City, to be composed of
- prelates and ecclesiastics, of whom the first active member
- was among his Holiness's domestic attendants; and the
- Cardinal Protector was one of the most distinguished of the
- Sacred College, who in his first conversation with me declared
- his most lively interest in England, as having himself,
- as Professor in the Roman Seminary, directed the studies in
- Theology of Cardinal Wiseman, and four others, now
- Bishops in England, besides two deceased. I must close
- this long letter with one more fact, which came to my
- knowledge, bringing home to me the consoling conviction,
- how deeply the heart of our Holy Father is interested in
- the great work. When I was in Paris, this cause of England
- was ardently taken up by a gentleman noted for his
- Catholic zeal, a distinguished merchant in Havre. On my
- leaving Paris he begged me to give him a letter of credentials,
- that, in his mercantile travels, he might in my name
- interest Bishops and other leading personages in our favour.
- In November last he enclosed me a letter he had received
- from the Vicar-General of Nantes, to whom he had applied
- to recommend this object to his Bishop. It was in these
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_422">{422}</a></span>
- terms: "I will gladly perform your commission, and I have
- no doubt his Lordship will comply with your wish; the
- more so that, returning from Rome a few days back, I have
- brought to him a message to the same effect from his Holiness.
- In my first audience the Pope said to me: 'Tell the
- Bishop of Nantes, from me, that I desire he will pray, and
- cause others to pray, a great deal for England. The position
- of the Church in that kingdom interests me deeply; I am
- always thinking of it.' In my second audience the Holy
- Father repeated to me the same words, and in a tone of
- feeling such as I can never forget. I am convinced this
- subject occupies his mind continually." Is it, now, to be
- supposed that the Holy Father is averse to English and
- Irish Catholics praying especially for England, and praying
- much for it? Is it not, on the contrary, to be inferred from
- these statements, and those of my last two letters, that it
- would console his heart to see them devotedly engaged in
- the work? I think this is the conclusion to which we shall
- all arrive, and that this happy result may in due time&mdash;and
- why not soon?&mdash;be abundantly realized.
-</p>
-<p>
-He says in another letter:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I begin with repeating
- again the words of St. Jerome to Pope Damasus: 'He who
- gathereth not with thee scattereth,' and I renew my declaration
- that if I thought that by exerting myself to move the
- Catholics of England and Ireland, and, in general, of all
- the world, to the enterprise of gaining England, my country,
- back to the faith of our fathers, I was not working in accordance
- with the mind of his Holiness, I should not dare to
- proceed. Will my dear Catholic brethren meet me with the
- assurance that if it appears by facts that this enterprise is
- according to his mind, they will heartily devote themselves
- to the cause and help us?
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It seems to me still, as it always did, impossible to conceive
- how these efforts, carried on as they are proposed to
- be, in perfect accordance with devoted loyalty to the State,
- and in a spirit of ardent charity towards our fellow-countrymen,
- should not be gratifying to the Church of God and to
- its Head. Many times have I repeated in sermons to the
- Irish people during the days of the troubles of his Holiness:
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_423">{423}</a></span>
- 'You have joined with noble generosity in assisting the Holy
- Father by subscriptions of money, you have entered fervently
- into prayer for him, will you not do one thing more to console
- him? Let him hear that you are determined that my
- country, with its great resources and power, shall once more
- be his.' This was, I think, a reasonable natural suggestion.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It was, accordingly, a surprise to me, and at the same
- time a pain, when I was told by one, about the beginning
- of the year 1851, that his Holiness was become almost
- averse to our efforts in behalf of England; as on being
- applied to for some new indulgence for certain prayers for
- England, he would not grant the petition unless Italy was
- comprehended in the intention of the prayers. Another
- said positively that the Pope would give no more indulgences
- for prayers for England. These things were said, as
- so many more things have been said, apparently in a half-joking
- tone, to mortify me in what is known to be a tender
- point. "Well, everything may turn to account for good, if
- we pay attention. These remarks helped to stimulate me
- to ascertain perfectly what the truth of the case is, and they
- now give me occasion to explain publicly some of the facts
- on which the matter has to be judged.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In May, 1850, a student of the English College at Rome,
- just ordained, went to receive the Pope's blessing before his
- return to England. He presented a crucifix to his Holiness,
- and begged for an indulgence of 300 days for whoever kissed
- this crucifix, and said a Hail Mary for the conversion of
- England. The Pope sat down and wrote with his own hand
- at the foot of the petition, that he granted 300 days' indulgence
- for those who should offer a devout prayer, as for
- instance a Hail Mary, for the conversion of England. When
- this was reported to me, as there appeared some kind of
- ambiguity in one expression of the Pope's writing, I wrote
- to Monsignor Talbot, begging that he would ascertain from
- his Holiness whether we were right in interpreting the
- sentence as granting the indulgence generally without any
- reference to the crucifix. The answer was, 'Yes.' Evidently
- then, at this time, the Pope was disposed to grant
- more in favour of England than he was asked. How are
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_424">{424}</a></span>
- we to account for the seeming alteration in his dispositions?
- One way is to suppose that the Pope had ceased to wish
- prayers to be made for England. Monsignor Talbot, when
- I saw him at Rome in September, 1851, gave me another
- reason. 'The Pope,' said he, 'is determined he will give
- no more indulgences for England. People seem not to care
- for them. No account is made of them. Let them first
- show they value what they have.' No authority, on such a
- point, could be preferable to that of Monsignor Talbot, who
- spends his life in personal attendance on his Holiness; and
- according to him, the Pope did, in a tone of some displeasure,
- refuse one or two such requests, the displeasure was not
- because people prayed too much for England, but because
- they did not pray enough, and on this account, did not deserve
- any more encouragement. This view I maintain with
- the more confidence, inasmuch as after that displeasure had
- been expressed, a petition was made on March 9, 1851, by
- some English ladies in Rome for a plenary indulgence to
- be gained once a month by those who should daily pray for
- the conversion of England: it was granted as stated in our
- admission papers. I infer from this, that if only the Holy
- Father perceived that the Catholics of England were really
- in earnest in the cause, there would be no bounds to the
- liberality with which he would encourage them; but no one
- likes to go on giving favours to persons who seem not to
- value them; and he who has the dispensing of the favours
- of Almighty God from the treasuries of the Church, must
- not consent to their being undervalued.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But now, it will be asked, what encouragement did I
- myself receive from his Holiness during the four months
- and a half that I spent in Rome, as a kind of representative
- of this cause of the conversion of England? I need not
- say that, in going to Rome, I was desirous to move all hearts
- there to an enthusiastic devotion to this enterprise, as I had
- endeavoured to do in Ireland, in France, in Belgium, and
- Germany. I fain would not have lost an occasion of preaching
- in churches, addressing religious communities, the children
- of schools, wherever I could find them assembled. I did not
- expect, however, to be able at once to run such a career in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_425">{425}</a></span>
- Rome, as in ordinary towns, and I was greatly satisfied with
- what was allowed me. Whatever difficulty or check I might
- have met with, it came not from his Holiness. The proper
- authority to apply to in this case was the Cardinal-Vicar;
- that is, he who administers the very diocese of Rome as the
- Pope's Vicar-General. He at once agreed to my visiting
- convents and schools, and exhorting them to the great work;
- but for preaching in churches, there must be, he said, express
- sanction from the Pope. The Holy Father was consequently
- consulted by Monsignor Talbot, and answered that he had
- no objection, but left it to me to make arrangements with
- the rectors of the churches. The number of monasteries
- and schools in which I made my allocutions on the conversion
- of England, is past my remembrance. Almost day by
- day, for about two months of my time, this was my leading
- pursuit. I wish it to be clearly understood that all this time I
- spoke all that was in my mind with as complete freedom from
- reserve as I am known to exercise here. To the authorities in
- Rome, who are not wanting in vigilance, all must have been
- known; and one word from them of objection to the subject,
- or to my manner of treating it, spoken to my superiors, would
- have at once stopped me. The number of churches in which
- I spoke was not so great. I used generally to ask leave
- myself to address convents and schools. I saw that it would
- not be becoming to offer myself thus to speak in churches at
- Rome; but among others I may mention particularly, that
- I preached by invitation, in English, in French, and in
- Italian, in those of the large and frequented churches
- S. Andrea della Valle, S. Luigi de' Francesi, and S. Andrea
- della Fratte; and the Pope himself spoke to me of this last
- discourse in a tone of satisfaction. He would not have been
- opposed, as far as could be observed, if, instead of three
- churches, I could have made up a list of three hundred.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Another means I took for moving the Roman people
- was, by the papers printed for me by the Propaganda, of
- which I spoke in my last letter. The first of these was
- thus headed:&mdash;'Association of Prayers and Good Works for
- the Conversion of those who are separated from the Holy
- Catholic Church, but especially of England.' Before this
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_426">{426}</a></span>
- writing was printed, I gave a copy of it to Monsignor
- Talbot, to lay before the Pope. He returned it to me, with
- this addition in his own hand:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'His Holiness has deigned to grant to this pious work
- his special benediction.<br>
- "'George Talbot, Cameriere Segreto.<br>
- "'<i>Nov</i>. 15, 1851.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "To this is appended the petition presented for me by
- Monsignor Barnabò, for the extension of indulgences, as
- follows:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'Most Blessed Father,&mdash;Ignatius of St. Paul (Spencer),
- Passionist, Provincial Consultor in England, prostrate at
- the feet of your Holiness, states that, being desirous of
- extending the Association of Prayers already existing for
- England, in favour of all those who are separated from the
- Holy Church, and being sensible that a fresh spiritual
- attraction is necessary in order to move all the faithful to
- enter on this holy enterprise, most humbly implores your
- Holiness, that you would be pleased to extend the three
- hundred days' indulgence already granted by your Holiness
- to whoever prays for the conversion of England, to this new
- work, and moreover grant one hundred days for whatever
- good work may be done in favour of this Association.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Monsignor Barnabò reported, that though the Pope adverted
- to his former declaration, that he would give no more
- indulgences on this account, he granted this petition in the
- most gracious manner. The date of this grant is Nov. 16,
- 1851.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is evidently intimated here, that while granting his
- sanction to the extension of the enterprise, he renewed his
- sanction to it in its original form. I must here conclude,
- and defer again to another letter what I promised before,
- that is, some account of what passed in the audiences to
- which I myself was admitted by his Holiness."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- An incident happened towards the end of Father Ignatius's
- audiences with the Holy Father, highly characteristic.
- Father Ignatius had made arrangements for a begging tour
- in Germany, and intended to inaugurate it by trying what
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_427">{427}</a></span>
- he could do in that line in Rome itself. Our General forbade
- him to beg of his Holiness, and Father Ignatius had
- made up his mind before to do so. After the prohibition
- he began to doubt whether it was binding, as the Pope was
- a higher superior than the General. He consulted an astute
- Roman theologian on his doubt, and the answer given was,
- "Lay the doubt itself before the Pope."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Father Ignatius had an audience in store for him for a
- different matter, and when it was over, he said, in the
- greatest simplicity, "Holy Father, I have a scruple on my
- mind, which I would wish to speak about, if I might be
- permitted." "Well, and what is it?" He here told the
- Pope just as he was advised. The Pope smiled, handed
- him ten <i>gregorine</i> (about £25), and told him not to mind
- the scruple.
-</p>
-<br>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_428">{428}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X.<br>
-A Tour In Germany.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius left Rome with the Holy Fathers blessing
-on both his spiritual and temporal projects. On his
-way to Germany, whither he was bound for a twofold
-begging tour, he preached everywhere to religious, priests,
-nuns, people, and children, upon the conversion of England.
-He went further than mere exhortation, he tried to get
-the Bishops and religious to take up his ideas, now stamped
-with the approbation of Rome, and propagate them among
-those under their jurisdiction. He met with kindness and
-encouragement in every town and hamlet until he came to
-Laibach. Here the police seized him and sent him away.
-At Gratz he met with a better reception. Throughout, the
-priests and religious receive him with a something approaching
-to honour, and so do the nobility, but government officials
-and the like treat him rudely enough.
-</p>
-<p>
-When he arrived in Vienna, he found a way of conciliating
-these officers of justice and their subalterns. Graf
-(Count) O'Donnel took him to the Secretary of Police, and
-procured him a safe-conduct, whereby this kind of annoyance
-was put an end to for the future. Great personages
-patronize him&mdash;among the chief were Prince Esterhazy,
-Counts O'Donnel and Litchenstein. Through their kindness
-and his own repute, he is favoured with interviews from
-the members of the royal family. A few of these in his
-own words must be interesting:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "While at Rome, I heard one day the wonderful account
- of the <i>coup d'état</i> of the now Emperor of the French. I
- thought with myself that moment, here is a man for me&mdash;
- perhaps <i>the</i> man. If he survive the assaults of his enemies,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_429">{429}</a></span>
- and become established in power over France, he is the
- man evidently for great designs; the people whom he rules
- are the people to follow him in them; and he has a mind,
- so I conceived, to understand how utterly insignificant are
- all enterprises, in comparison with those which have the
- glory of God and the salvation of souls for their end. But
- will he, can he, be moved to take up the great cause? I
- got an introduction to the French ambassador at Rome, in
- order to open my way to an interview with his chief. This
- may be in reserve for me some future day; but I was first
- to see another great man&mdash;the young Emperor of Austria.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I think an account of this audience, and some accompanying
- circumstances, will be interesting in more points of view
- than one. After leaving Rome at the beginning of February,
- I went to Vienna, and stopped there three weeks before
- coming home. The Emperor had just left Vienna for Venice
- when I arrived, and did not return till a fortnight after. In
- consequence of this, I sought for, and had audience of all
- the other members of the royal family then in the town.
- Many may not be aware of the circumstances under which
- the present Emperor was raised to the throne. Everything
- connected with this young man is to me full of a kind of
- poetic interest. He is the eldest son of the Archduke
- Francis Charles and the Archduchess Sophia, a princess of
- Bavaria. His father is brother to the ex-Emperor Ferdinand.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is said that in 1848, at the time when the insurgents
- had gained possession of Vienna, and the court was in
- flight, some one asked the Empress Mary Ann, a Sardinian
- princess, 'Madam, have you ever thought of an abdication?'
- 'I have, indeed,' answered she; 'but what is to
- follow?' The Emperor had no children, and his next heir
- was his brother the Archduke. Both of them have been
- always highly respected as most amiable and religious men,
- but are not of abilities or character to bear the charge of an
- empire under such circumstances. The abdication, then, of
- the reigning Emperor would not have been a remedy to
- existing evils, unless his brother joined in the sacrifice of his
- claims, and made way for the succession of his son. This
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_430">{430}</a></span>
- arrangement, however, was effected; and, if what I gathered
- from conversations and observation is correct, it is to the two
- ladies whom I have mentioned, that the empire is indebted
- for it. Do not they deserve the admiration of the present
- and future generations, and to have their place among the
- <i>valiant women</i>, for renouncing the honours of an imperial
- crown, for the public good? Be this as it may, the announcement
- was made to the young prince, then eighteen years of
- age, that the crown was his. It is said that he burst into
- tears at hearing it, and begged two days for reflection, during
- which he went to confession and communion, to obtain light
- from God, and concluded with giving his consent. His
- career has been conformable with this beginning. Among
- other things, I may mention that one of his first acts was, of
- his own mind, to repeal the oppressive laws of Joseph II.,
- and to restore liberty to the Church. Could I do otherwise
- than long to interest such a soul as this in the great cause I
- was supporting? Shall I succeed in the end? I had an
- audience of the Archduchess Sophia, the Emperor's mother,
- before his return from Venice. It is under her care and
- guidance, as I was assured, that his character has been
- formed; and it was touching to hear her make me a kind of
- apology for what might, perhaps, be taken as a defect in his
- manner. I told her I was desirous of an audience of his
- Majesty. She said, 'You will certainly obtain it;' and
- she added, "You will perhaps think him cold, but he is not
- so.' This corresponds with what she said to a friend of
- mine, a German literary character, who was likewise about
- to have his first audience from the Emperor. The Archduchess
- said to him, 'His manner is not winning, like that
- of Carl [meaning her third son, the Archduke Charles], but
- he has greater depth of character; from his childhood upwards
- I never knew him say a word merely to please; every
- word is from his heart.' These few words of his mother are
- to me a most precious comment on what passed between the
- Emperor and me when I had my audience. I was introduced
- into a large saloon on one of the days of public reception.
- The Emperor stood alone in the middle of it; behind him,
- to the left, was a small table, on which was a pile of
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_431">{431}</a></span>
- memorials which he had already received. He was in military
- uniform. I should be glad to convey the impression which
- his appearance, and the few words he spoke, made on me.
- A young emperor, I suppose, has great advantage in gaining
- upon one's feelings, if he will in any degree do himself
- justice. In this case, I say, that I never was more satisfied,
- not to say captivated, with my observations on any person.
- His figure is not in itself commanding; but there was in his
- air and manner and tone a union of grace and affability,
- dignity, wisdom, and modesty, which I do not remember to
- have seen equalled. I was greatly struck, on my entrance,
- with what appeared to me such a contrast between what I
- witnessed and the receptions usually given by great personages
- who wish to be gracious. Ordinarily, my impression
- is that they overwhelm one with many words, which often
- mean nothing. The Emperor was perfectly silent. I had
- time to think with myself, after I had approached him, 'Am
- I then to speak first? So it was. I have a very clear
- recollection of what was said.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'I have requested this audience,' I said, 'to represent
- to your Majesty the object for which I am travelling. It
- is to move Catholics throughout the world to interest themselves
- in obtaining the return of my country to the Catholic
- faith. On this, I am deeply convinced, depends entirely
- the happiness of my country; and, I conceive, nothing would
- more contribute to the happiness of other nations of the
- world.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Emperor seemed to intimate assent to this, and
- said with great grace: 'I am happy to hear that things go
- on better in England in regard to religion than they have
- done.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'There is much,' I said, 'to encourage hopes; but we
- want great help. I am come to ask the help of Austria. I
- do not take on me to prescribe what your Majesty in person
- might do in this cause. As the principal means to be employed
- is prayer, I am aware that it belongs rather to Bishops
- to direct such movements; but I ask help and sympathy
- from all. I thought it could not be anything but right to
- ask your Majesty's.'
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_432">{432}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "He answered: 'I will interest myself as much at possible.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I added: 'I have said, I did not intend to propose any
- line of action to your Majesty; but I may explain myself
- further. It is to the Bishops that I make my principal
- appeal to interest the people in this object. Now, I am
- aware that they would and must be averse to any public
- measures which might seem to involve political inconvenience:
- I would, therefore, ask of your Majesty, that if the
- bishops are pleased to act, the Government should not object
- to it, as I conceive there would be no reason.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Emperor said something to the effect, as I thought,
- that he saw no reason to object to what I said.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was aware that my audience could not be a long one,
- and I now put my hand to the breast of my habit to take
- out a memorial, which I had been directed to present on
- this occasion, for permission to collect subscriptions in the
- empire.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "He thought I was about to offer him papers on the
- subject on which I had been speaking, and said: 'You probably
- have some papers which will explain your wishes.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I said: 'I have; but they are not in a becoming form
- to present to your Majesty.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I had, in fact, two little addresses printed on poor
- paper, in German, for distribution; and I brought them
- forward.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "He immediately put out his hand to take them, and
- said, with a smile and manner of truly high-bred courtesy:
- 'Oh! I will read them; 'and he laid them on the table by
- him.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I then presented my written memorial, and then, on his
- slightly bowing to me, I withdrew."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Another letter says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In my last letter I repeated the words in which that
- wise and excellent Princess, the Archduchess Sophia,
- described the character of two of her sons: 'The Emperor
- seems cold, but he is not so. He is not winning and amiable
- like Carl, but he has more solidity and depth.' I remarked
- that to me these words were a most interesting commentary
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_433">{433}</a></span>
- on what passed in the short audience I had from the young
- Emperor; and if I succeeded in my description of it, I am
- sure others will think with me. I will now give some
- account of my audience with the third brother, the young
- Archduke Charles. The second brother, whose name I do
- not now remember, was not in Vienna at the time. He is a
- seaman, and I suppose it is intended that under his auspices
- the Austrian navy should be advanced to greater vigour and
- efficiency, while the Emperor and Charles attend mainly to
- the army. The empire possesses two splendid ports&mdash;Trieste
- and Venice; and past history proves what may be done with
- the latter alone.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I made acquaintance with a Swiss ecclesiastic in Vienna
- (Mgr. Mislin), who bore a part in the education of all three
- of these princes. I had told him what were my desires
- concerning them; that is, to inspire them with ardent zeal
- for the great work of the reunion of Christendom, but especially
- the reconquest of England for the Church. One day
- the Abbé called to see me, at the palace of the Pope's
- Nuncio, where I was staying; and as I was out, he left
- word that he wished to see me without delay. He had to
- tell me, as I found, that the Archduke Charles, with whom
- he regularly goes to dine every Friday, had said to him on
- the last of these occasions, 'Do you know Father Ignatius?'
- 'Yes,' he answered, 'very well.' 'Do you think,' added the
- Prince, 'I could see him? I wish it very much.' 'Oh,'
- replied the Abbé, 'there will be no difficulty; 'and at once
- an hour was fixed&mdash;two o'clock on the 11th of March. It
- happened, however, that notice was received that at this
- very time the Emperor was to arrive from Trieste, and the
- Archduke had to go to the railway terminus to meet him.
- My audience was deferred till half-past three; and I went
- with the Abbé to the private entrance of the imperial
- palace to see them arrive. They were driven up from the
- station in a light open carriage; and it was thus, side by
- side, that I first saw them both. I may be mistaken, but in
- my poetic recollections and visions of Vienna, if I, who am
- no poet, may so speak, these two brothers are charmingly
- conjoined in my mind. At half-past three, then, I went to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_434">{434}</a></span>
- the Archduke's apartments in the Burg, as it is called&mdash;a
- great mass of building, which includes the Emperor's town
- residence, apartments for all the royal family, several public
- offices, extensive quarters for troops, &amp;c.&mdash;and was immediately
- introduced to him in a large drawing-room, where he
- kept me a good half-hour in lively conversation. My impression
- of him was, of a bright, buoyant youth, full of
- shining prospects of his future career; in which, though,
- perhaps, somewhat unconsciously to himself, he is both qualified
- by circumstances and character, and nobly disposed to
- exert himself for everything great and good. All this, however,
- is yet to be developed and consolidated by age, reflection,
- and experience. I should say, not so much that he
- himself is eagerly grasping at facts with which to store his
- mind, to be in due time digested, matured, and acted upon,
- as that Providence is turning to account his natural youthful
- eagerness, and shall we say, curiosity, to do this for him.
- May it prove that I am not forming over bright and groundless
- visions!
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The Archduke was dressed in a plain cavalry uniform.
- He was then about 19 years old, and very young-looking for
- his age. My object was to impress him with the grand importance
- of the enterprise which I was proposing as proper
- to form the dearest and constant aim of his brother's reign;
- that is, the restoring union to Christendom, having peculiarly
- in view the reconciling England to the Church. 'I have no
- wish,' I said, 'to see him, the Emperor, less devoted to his
- army: let him watch with constant care over all the interests
- of his Imperial dignity; but let him be devoted, above all
- and in everything, to the glory of God, and the repairing
- the losses of the Holy Church; and if it pleases God he
- should live, he will have a career more glorious, and leave a
- name greater than Charlemagne.' He said, 'Surely what
- you propose is most important. It is a matter to be deeply
- deplored that so many German states are cut off from the
- Church.' ..... I do not remember clearly much
- more of what passed in this conversation, and in truth it is
- not of so much consequence; for his words are not all
- weighed, solid, and worth recording, like those of his more
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_435">{435}</a></span>
- sage brother. All have not the same gifts, natural or spiritual;
- and it is not well they should. Of course, it is not
- well, because God has ordered it thus. But I could see in
- the diversity of these young men what might be wonderfully
- combined for doing great things. Charles would not be the
- one to govern and control, and he has not this to do. The
- Emperor has; and he is cut out for it. But then perhaps
- he is not one to win and conciliate those who do not know
- how to value all superior qualities like his; yet this is
- necessary in such times, especially when sound, old-fashioned
- loyalty is not much known. But let the two brothers work
- together; let their hearts be one, and let that one purpose
- be directed to noble ends, and it will be well for them, for
- the empire, and for Europe. Charles will supply what the
- other wants. I asked Monsignor Mislin one day, with an
- anxious feeling, whether they were really affectionate, loving
- brothers, and the answer was satisfactory."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_436">{436}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.<br>
-Father Ignatius Returns To England.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-He lands at Dover on the 1st April, 1852, comes home,
-sets his house in order at the Hyde, and goes, after Holy
-Week, to see Father Eugene, the Provincial, at St. Wilfrid's,
-to give an account of himself. His name was about this
-time in every one's mouth, his doings were canvassed by
-friends and foes, and many and various were the opinions
-held about him. In the meantime he went on with his
-ordinary duties. He gives the retreat in Sedgeley Park again,
-and one to the congregation at Havant. It was whilst
-here, in the house of Mr. Scholfield, that he read Lord
-Derby's proclamation against appearing abroad in the religious
-habit.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius had to return to London next day, and
-did not wish to violate this prohibition. He was sadly at
-a loss; he had brought no secular clothes with him, and the
-gentleman with whom he was staying was short and stout,
-so that it was hopeless to think of getting anything suitable
-from his wardrobe. The butler was taxed for a contribution;
-all who had an article to spare gave heartily, and the Monk
-was, after some ingenuity, equipped in the following fashion:
-A pair of very light shoes, fitting badly and pinching sorely,
-a pair of short coloured pantaloons, a great pilot overcoat, a
-Scotch cap, cut so as to make it fit his head, formed the
-<i>cap-à-pie</i> of Father Ignatius. He took refuge in Spanish
-Place until the darkness of night might save him from
-his juvenile friends along the Edgware
-Road, who, if they
-recognised him in his new fashion, would treat him to a
-more than ordinary share of ridicule. He took off the shoes
-when outside London, and one may imagine the surprise of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_437">{437}</a></span>
-the religious when he entered the choir thus arrayed, in the
-middle of matins, to get Father Provincial's permission to
-<i>change!</i>
-</p>
-<p>
-Our Fathers shortly after were convoked by the Provincial
-to a kind of chapter. Among other matters submitted
-to their consideration, came the doings of Father
-Ignatius. There were cavils on all sides, from within and
-without, and many thought that it was his imprudence that
-drew forth the proclamation. The nature of the charges
-against him will be seen from an apologetic letter of his
-to the <i>Standard</i>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- To The Editor Of The "Catholic Standard."<br>
- Jesu Christi Passio.
-<br><br>
- Sir,&mdash;I remarked in my last, not as a complaint, but quite
- the contrary, that I have often heard that good Catholics
- have suspected me to be not right in my head, because of
- my strange devotion to the conversion of England and of
- the many strange things which this fancy, as it seems to
- them, has led me to do. So far, indeed, am I from being
- surprised at or vexed by them, that I fairly declare that
- something like a suspicion of this kind sometimes flashes
- across my own mind. Suppose, for instance, I might hear
- of any one becoming deranged or being in danger of it, I
- have felt at times something like a sympathetic chord struck
- in my own mind, which seems to say, "Are people right,
- perhaps, after all? Am I not really mad on this point?'
- And it may take me a moment's thought to keep my fair
- even balance. How do I keep it?&mdash;Not as I might have
- done, some thirty years ago, by recollecting, what when
- young I used to hear said by my relations, with self-congratulation,
- "Well, thank God, there is no taint of madness
- in our family!&mdash;"No; I get my satisfaction independently
- of this, from a twofold consciousness, to one branch of which
- I could not have referred then&mdash;that is, from the consciousness,
- first, of a yet unimpaired memory concerning what I
- have seen and said and heard within reasonable limits of
- time; and secondly, from the consciousness, glory be to God for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_438">{438}</a></span>
- it, of (may I say it without rashness?) a perfect Catholic,
- Apostolic, Roman faith. I <i>remember</i>&mdash;I cannot be mistaken
- in this&mdash;that, not two years ago, I spent four months in
- Rome, and spoke out there all my thoughts on this subject,
- as far as I had opportunity given, without a shadow of reserve,
- to the first authorities of the Church; and that it
- ended by my receiving and having in my possession documents
- fully approving of what I had been doing and purposed
- to do, from the first authorities of the Church, to
- which I may add the mention of testimonials signed by the
- Generals of the Dominicans, of the Conventual Franciscans,
- of the Franciscans <i>Strictioris Observantiae</i>, and of the
- Capuchins, recommending me to all local superiors of their
- respective orders, to the end that they should receive me to
- hospitality in all their houses, allow the use of their churches
- to preach in, and assist me in every possible way in my
- purposes. I have then said to myself, "It would indeed
- be no ordinary sort of madness breaking out for the first
- time in a family, which should have the marvellous power
- of communicating itself, infecting and dragging after it
- such a number of certainly very respectable heads; to which
- I may add, that the foundation, as it were, of all these
- testimonials, was a letter from his Eminence the Archbishop of
- Westminster, given me when I went into Germany in the
- summer of 1851, renewed with a fresh signature in 1852,
- after all my vagaries (?) at Vienna had taken place. In this
- letter, written in French by the hand of his Eminence
- himself&mdash;of whom I never heard any one express the idea
- that he was touched in the brain&mdash;he states that "having
- perfectly known me from the time of my conversion [I feel
- an intimate conviction in myself no one knows me better]
- he does not hesitate to recommend me to all the Catholics of
- the Continent, particularly to all bishops and ecclesiastics,
- secular and regular, as worthy of all their consideration
- and of their support, in the matters about which I should
- be engaged." No; I say, that on divine principles, almost
- as well as human, it is too much to imagine that I have
- been mad, thus far; whatever may be the case hereafter.
- Protestants, at least some of them, might say so, and might
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_439">{439}</a></span>
- think it too. No wonder. But will this remonstrance
- suffice to put an end to such insinuations from good Catholics?
- Mind, I am not displeased at them; nay, I relish
- these insinuations beyond what I can express. I have solid
- reasons for this; but I desire for the future to forego this
- personal consolation, for the sake of the souls of my poor
- countrymen, and of hundreds of millions more throughout
- the world, which I have the conviction might be saved, if
- the Catholics of England and Ireland would at length have
- done with their objections, and undertake with all their
- heart the gaining of this kingdom to God and His Church&mdash;
- and a reputed madman is not likely to move them to
- it. I cannot but think that the authorities under whose
- sanction I have acted might be considered a sufficient
- defence against objections to the movement which I call for
- so pertinaciously. I will, however, proceed to answer
- one by one the remarks which I supposed in my last
- letter might be passed on my narrative of proceedings
- at Vienna. First, I supposed some would smile at
- my ignorance of the world, in expecting that in our
- days young princes like the Emperor of Austria and his
- brother should have any dispositions to enter into ideas like
- mine. But why not? Are they not good ideas? at least, I
- think them so; and am I to think a person incapable of
- great and good designs because he is an emperor&mdash;a prince?
- There is no doubt that because he is a prince, he is
- immensely more responsible for the objects which he pursues;
- and that the glory of God would be incomparably more
- advanced by his devoting himself to heavenly pursuits than
- if he were an ordinary person; and are we tamely to surrender
- to the service of the world, and of the Prince of this
- world, all who have power to influence the world, and be
- content on God's behalf to have none but the poor and weak
- on the other side? I know it is in the Word of God that
- not many wise, not many noble, &amp;c., are called. God has
- chosen the poor in this world; but yet there has been a St.
- Henry, an emperor; a St. Stephen, King of Hungary; a
- St. Louis of France; a St. Edward the Confessor, and so
- many more; and what magnificent instruments have such
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_440">{440}</a></span>
- men been for exalting the Church, converting nations, and
- saving souls! If they have been few in comparison with
- kings and emperors whose views have been all temporal, is
- that a reason against trying to add one or two more to their
- number? I think it is a reason why we <i>should</i> try; and if
- we are to try, let us do it in the spirit of hope, or we shall
- do it very languidly. If after all we fail, what have we lost
- by trying and by hoping? You may answer, we shall suffer
- disappointment. Ah! who says that? No! no disappointment
- for those who hope in God and work for Him legitimately.
- It would make my heart bleed, if I had a heart fit
- for it, to think of the noble, truly princely youths in question,
- sinking down to the wretched level of worldly, selfish,
- immoral, useless men of power, of whom the world has
- borne so many; and for a time, if but for a time, I have
- indulged bright visions about them; not mere dreamy visions,
- for their education, the circumstances of their elevation, the
- young Emperor's career hitherto, his late wonderful deliverance
- from assassination, in which he behaved, as report says,
- in away to encourage all such thoughts as mine&mdash;all these
- are reasons on my side; but suppose I am disappointed there;
- suppose no one sympathizes in my thoughts; suppose the
- Emperor has forgotten all about my appeal, and I never
- travel more, or never more to Vienna, and no one else will
- take any trouble about it&mdash;is God's arm shortened? Are
- there no other emperors, or kings, or queens for Him to
- choose among, if emperors He has need of for the work?
- My friends, fear not. I do not intend to be disappointed,
- and, what is more, I shall not be, nor will any of those be
- who work for the saving of souls, even on the very largest
- scale, unless we are so foolish as to turn back and grow
- slack. But is it not an error, it will be asked, a mistake to
- wish kings and emperors to interfere in such things? I
- know many persons of great consideration have this thought;
- but the mistake seems to me to lie in not making a distinction
- between such interference as that of Constantius,
- Valens, Julian, in old times; Henry IV. and Joseph II. of
- Austria, Henry VIII. of England, and that of such princes
- as I have named above, whom the Church has canonized for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_441">{441}</a></span>
- what they did for her. This is my opinion, others have
- theirs; how shall we decide? Can we here again know the
- mind of Rome; and will not that have some weight in
- settling the question? I will just relate what took place
- there relative to this matter. When preparing to leave
- Rome for Vienna, I desired to obtain from the Austrian
- Ambassador there a letter, which might facilitate my access
- to the Emperor, on which I had set my heart. But I
- understood the Ambassador himself was not easily accessible,
- and that I had better obtain a note of introduction to him,
- and from no one would it be so desirable as from Cardinal
- Antonelli, the Pope's Secretary of State. I obtained an
- audience from him and made my request. He answered:
- "We have a nuncio at Vienna; it will do better for you to
- have a letter from me to him." Of course I accepted this
- spontaneous offer most thankfully. The Cardinal desired
- me to tell him what I wished at Vienna, I said: "An audience
- of the Emperor: and as I am asking the favour of your
- Eminence to assist me in obtaining it, it seems right you
- should know for what end I desire it. It is to propose to
- the Emperor to take to heart my great object of the conversion
- of England, and of Protestants in general, and to move
- his subjects to it." The Cardinal explained to me some
- circumstances in the position of the Emperor, which made it
- unlikely that he would be led to take any open steps of this
- kind; but he gave me the letter without a word of objection
- to my wish, on principle; and it was on my presenting
- it to the Nuncio, that he most graciously desired that I
- should lodge in his palace all the time that I was in Vienna.
- As I have been led to mention this audience with Cardinal
- Antonelli, I think others may share with me in the feelings
- of satisfaction and admiration with which the remainder of
- what passed impressed me. I took occasion from finding
- myself in company with the Pope's Secretary of State, to
- make an additional effort towards moving Rome in the great
- cause; and as, by his office, he had to regard the political
- effect of a decided movement such as I was begging, I urged
- my conviction that no political ill consequences need be
- feared from the Holy Father calling on all Christendom to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_442">{442}</a></span>
- move in this spiritual enterprise. He interrupted me with
- saying: "The Holy Father fears no man and nothing in the
- world." He adverted to the position in which he had seen
- him at Gaèta, and said: "The political power of the Holy
- See depends on its weakness." I do not remember the
- exact words; but they amounted to a noble adoption by the
- Apostolic See of the famous Apostolic sentiment: "When
- I am weak, then am I strong," in relation not only to the
- wielding of its own inalienable spiritual sovereignty, but to
- its accidental temporal power, in the exercise of which we
- perhaps should not expect always to see the Divine principle
- so prominent. This discourse gave me the consoling assurance
- that when the mind of his Holiness should be guided
- by the light which is in him, to judge that the time is come
- for a powerful call on Christendom to move forward in the
- great enterprise, no human considerations will check his
- steps. The Holy Father knows no fear of man.
- </p>
- <p class="cite2">
- I am, your obedient servant,<br>
- Ignatius Of St. Paul, Passionist.
-</p>
-<p>
-The joyous way in which he received crosses and mortifications
-may be seen from this letter. It seemed as if
-nothing could ruffle his temper. He remarks on the Proclamation,
-in a letter he wrote to make arrangements for
-saying mass in a private chapel: "There ought to be something
-in the way of a cassock too, as the Queen and Lord
-Derby have been pleased to make the country too hot for
-me to keep on my wearing of the habit for the present. At
-least so it seems."
-</p>
-<p>
-When he attended the meeting of our Fathers, alluded to
-above, he travelled by train, with his habit slung over his
-shoulder, and the sign conspicuous, saying, "Since they won't
-let me wear my habit like a religious, I shall carry it like a
-slave."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_443">{443}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.<br>
-A Little Of His Home And Foreign Work.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius gives a retreat to the nuns of Lingdale
-House, and comes immediately after to Oscott, where the
-first Provincial Synod of the English Hierarchy was being
-held. He presents a petition to the Synodal Fathers, and
-receives encouragement to prosecute his work of moving all
-whom he can to pray for the conversion of England. His
-next mission was to make the visitation of our Belgian
-houses for the Provincial; when he found himself again
-abroad, he took advantage of the opportunity. He goes to
-different places, and finds many Belgian and French bishops
-who preach upon his <i>oeuvre</i>, and recommend it by circulars
-to their clergy. These journeys he paid for by begging
-wherever he went, and the object he begged for is seen
-from a letter of his to Mr. Monteith, dated Lille, Aug. 24,
-1852:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My dear Mr. Monteith,&mdash;Here I am, writing to you
- again, and you will soon see that what brings me to this is,
- as usual, want of money&mdash;<i>auri fames</i>. The case stands
- thus: I am on travel again, with commission of finding
- means to build our house near London, of which I am
- rector, or rather I am rector of a little place which stands
- on the ground, and erecter rather than rector <i>ex officio</i> of
- the house that is to be there. I have my ideas how we
- might get means for this expense, and for all other expenses;
- and, moreover, how means could be got for all the houses in
- England and Scotland too. I am following the end as well
- as I can, all alone, by the way which seems to me the best
- and only one; but my being alone makes the progress slow.
- Hitherto, my ideas are to others like dreams&mdash;empty dreams,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_444">{444}</a></span>
- though I have a pocket-book full of recommendations from
- Rome to support them, which encourage me to think I am
- not mad, when, by the manner in which I see people sometimes
- look at me, I should almost think I was. I allude
- chiefly to the way in which, in a company of English
- Catholics, the mention from me of the idea, <i>conversion of
- England</i>, immediately silences a company in the most animated
- conversation, as if I had said, 'Next week I am
- going to be crowned King of France!' ... Though I speak
- as I do, I am not without encouragement and fine prospects;
- but I want to hasten things, as souls by thousands and millions
- perish by delays; and this I will not, if I can help it,
- have to answer for. An Englishman's regular, natural way
- to get his matters attended to, is a steady, persevering
- grumble. He grumbles over one step, then grumbles over
- the next, however comfortable and happy he may be over
- what he has gained.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Last week I was at Cambrai, where there was a most
- remarkable centenary feast, in honour of Notre Dame de
- Grâce. There is there an old picture of Our Lady, brought
- from Rome 400 years ago, and installed in the cathedral in
- 1452, which has been a centre of devotion ever since. This
- was the year for the grand solemnity; pilgrimages coming
- all the week from the diocese and farther. The most remarkable
- of the pilgrims unquestionably was Cardinal Wiseman,
- who came to preside over the procession and solemnities of
- the last day. He sung mass, and preached his first sermon
- in France, which was one of the most eloquent I ever heard
- from him, or any one, notwithstanding his imperfect diction.
- It was all to the point of moving the French Episcopate
- and nation to prayers for the conversion of England. So,
- if I live, I have little or no doubt of succeeding in time,
- but, meanwhile, I must poke here and poke there for money,
- till it begins to come freely of itself. As to what the Continent
- could do if their heart was once moved, I am convinced
- by the history of the Crusades. If the Catholic nations
- were now engaged in a material war, there would be armies
- on foot, and fleets at sea, the cost of which, for one week,
- would be enough to build cathedrals for all our bishops.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_445">{445}</a></span>
- Why not the same money drawn to effect the spiritual conquest?
- Because they do not care about it. Then, let us
- make them; and how? The first step, of course, must be
- to care for it ourselves. '<i>Si vis me flere, dolendum est primum
- ipsi tibi.</i>' And what can we do to bring our English and
- Scotch to this?&mdash;Grumble at them, I suppose."
-</p>
-<p>
-On his return from France in September, himself and
-Father Eugene came to the determination to move away
-from The Hyde, if a more convenient site could be procured.
-The reason of this was chiefly the unsuitableness of
-the place to the working of our vocation. It was too solitary
-for missionaries, and there was no local work for a
-number of priests. Some of the fathers disguise themselves
-in secular suits, less unseemly than that in which they once
-beheld Father Ignatius, and go in search of a place, but
-without success. Father Ignatius gave a mission at this
-time in Kentish Town, and he little thought, as he took his
-walk along the tarred paling in Maiden Lane, that inside
-lay the grounds of the future St. Joseph's Retreat.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the end of the year 1852, Father Ignatius
-accompanies as far as London Bridge a colony of Passionists,
-whom Dr. O'Connor, the Bishop of Pittsburg, was bringing
-out to the United States. These Passionists have grown
-in <i>gentem magnam</i>, and the worthy Bishop, like another
-Odescalchi, resigned his crosier, and became a Jesuit.
-</p>
-<p>
-He concludes this year and begins the next giving
-retreats. The scenes of his labours in this department were
-Somers Town, Blandford Square (London), our own house,
-Dudley, and Douay. He also assisted at a mission in
-Commercial Road, London, E.
-</p>
-<p>
-The heaviest part of his work, as a member of The Hyde
-community, was attending to the parish, which, with the
-Barnet Mission, then under our charge, was equal in area
-to many a diocese in Catholic countries. Father Ignatius
-often walked thirty miles in one day on parochial duty.
-To give an idea of how he went through this work, one
-instance will suffice. On one day to went to Colney Hatch
-Lunatic Asylum, and from all the unhappy inmates he was
-able to get one confession. Next day he walked to give
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_446">{446}</a></span>
-the Holy Communion to this single penitent, and walked
-afterwards to Barnet before he broke his fast. This must
-be a distance of at least fifteen miles.
-</p>
-<p>
-In May, 1853, he gives a retreat to his old parishioners
-of West Bromwich, another in Winchester in July, to the
-nuns in Wolverhampton in August, and to the people in
-Oxburgh in October, and in Southport, Lancashire, in
-Advent.
-</p>
-<p>
-The 16th of November this year was a great day for our
-congregation. It was the first feast of Blessed Paul of the
-Cross, our holy founder. There was a great re-union of the
-chief fathers of the order in St. Wilfrid's&mdash;the Bishops of
-Birmingham and Southwark, and Dr. Ullathorne and Dr.
-Grant assisted at the solemnity. Father Ignatius was
-there, of course. Father Paul was beatified on the 28th
-September, 1852. Our religious had prayed and worked
-for the great event, and had now the happiness of seeing
-him raised to the altar.
-</p>
-<p>
-He stays at home a great deal now, as a rector ought to
-do, except in intervals of missions and retreats; and the
-lion's share of parish work falls to him. He sends one of
-the priests of his community to France to beg for the house;
-but he had, in a very short time, to send him money for
-his expenses home. He then concludes that he should
-himself be considered beggar-in-chief, and accordingly goes
-out for a few days to collect alms in London. With his
-alms, he collects into the Church a young Puseyite minister,
-who is now a zealous priest on the London mission.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius visits the neighbouring ministers, but not
-as formerly; he simply goes to see his old acquaintances, and
-if the conversation could be transferred from compliments
-and common-place remarks to matters of higher interest, he
-was not the man to let the opportunity pass by. Among
-his old friends in the Anglican ministry there seemed to have
-been few for whom he always cherished so kindly a regard
-as the Rev. Mr. Harvey, Rector of Hornsey. That excellent
-clergyman used to visit Father Ignatius, and receive visits
-from him on the most friendly terms to the end.
-</p>
-<p>
-Thus did he spend his time, until Father Pius, the brother
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_447">{447}</a></span>
-of our present General, who died in Rome in 1864, came
-to visit the province, or branch of the order in England, in
-1854. This visit made a change in Father Ignatius's
-position.
-</p>
-<p>
-A number of houses of a religious order are placed under
-the direction of one superior, who is styled a Provincial.
-With us the Provincial has two assistants, who are called
-Consultors. The superior of each house is called a Rector,
-and it is his duty to see after the spiritual and temporal
-concerns of his own community. A rector, therefore, has
-more home work, by virtue of his office, than any other
-superior. A consultor may live in any house of the province,
-has no special duty <i>ex officio</i> except to give his advice
-to the Provincial when asked, and may be easily spared for
-any external employment. This office Father Ignatius used
-to term as <i>otium cum dignitate</i>, though the <i>otium</i> he never
-enjoyed, and felt rather awkward in the <i>dignitas</i>.
-</p>
-<p>
-In 1854, he was made first Consultor, and relieved from
-the drudgery of housekeeping for his brethren. Before
-leaving The Hyde for a new field of labour, he went to see
-his nephew in Harrow, which was only a few miles from
-our retreat; but was not admitted. He took another priest
-with him, and both were hooted by the boys. It seems
-pardonable in a set of wild young schoolboys to make game
-of such unfashionable beings as Catholic priests; but it shows
-a great want of good breeding in schoolboys who are afterwards
-to hold such a high position in English society. This
-remark is forced upon us by the fact that none of us ever
-passed through Harrow without meeting a somewhat similar
-reception. A school of inferior rank might set Harrow an
-example in this point. We have passed Roger Cholmley's
-school in Highgate, time after time, often in a large body,
-and have met the boys in threes and fours, and all together,
-and never yet heard a single insult. What makes the
-difference?
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 8th of September, 1854, Father Ignatius left The
-Hyde for Ireland. He begs this time through the principal
-towns in Munster, and says he was very kindly received by
-all. He preached sermons during this journey, all on the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_448">{448}</a></span>
-conversion of England. He gained more prayers this time
-than on a former occasion, because his work came to the
-people with blessings and indulgences from the Father of
-the Faithful. He used to tell an amusing anecdote in
-reference to this mission. Somewhere he had preached on the
-conversion of England, and recommended the prayers by
-the spiritual profit to be derived from them. An old
-woman accosted him as he was passing by, and he had just
-time to hear, "Father, I say the three Hail Marys every
-day for England." Father Ignatius was much pleased, and
-made inquiries after the old lady, doubtless intending to
-constitute her a kind of apostle in the place. She was
-brought to see him; he expressed his thanks and pleasure
-that she had entered so thoroughly into his views, and asked
-her would she try to persuade others to follow her example?
-"Me get people to pray for England!" she answered; "I
-pray myself three times for the sake of the indulgence, but
-I curse them 300 times a day for it, lest they might get any
-good of my prayers!" He reasoned with her, to be sure,
-but did not tell us if the success of his second discourse was
-equal to the first.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_449">{449}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.<br>
-Sanctification Of Ireland.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-In a letter written by Father Ignatius in December, 1854,
-is found the first glimpse of a new idea: the Sanctification
-of Ireland. This idea was suggested to him by the faith of
-the Irish people, and by their readiness to adopt whatever was
-for their spiritual profit. His intending the Sanctification
-of Ireland as a step towards the Conversion of England,
-laid the scheme open to severe criticism. It was said that
-England was his final object; that Ireland was to be used
-as an instrument for England's benefit; that if his patriotism
-were less strong, his sanctity would be greater. If these
-objections were satisfactorily answered, they might be given
-up with a hint that, "it was a very Irish way to convert
-England, by preaching in the bogs of Connaught." The
-best refutation of these ungenerous remarks will be, perhaps,
-a simple statement of what his ideas were upon the subject.
-His great desire was that all the world should be perfect.
-He used to say Our Lord had not yet had His triumph in
-this world, and that it was too bad the devil should still
-have the majority. "This must not be," he would say;
-"I shall never rest as long as there is a single soul on earth
-who does not serve God perfectly." The practical way of
-arriving at this end was to begin at home. England had
-not faith as a nation, so there was no foundation to build
-sanctity upon there. England, however, had great influence
-as a nation all over the world; she showed great zeal also
-in her abortive attempts to convert the heathen. If her
-energies could be turned in the right direction, what grand
-results might we not anticipate? Another reflection was,
-England has had every means of conversion tried upon her;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_450">{450}</a></span>
-let us now see what virtue there is in good example. To
-set this example, and to sow the seed of the great universal
-harvest, he would find out the best Catholic nation in the
-world, and bring it perfectly up to the maxims of the Gospel.
-This nation was Ireland, of course, and it was near enough
-to England to let its light shine before her. What he wished
-for was, to have every man, woman, and child in Ireland,
-take up the idea that they were to be saints. He would
-have this caught up with a kind of national move. The
-practical working of the idea he embodied in a little book
-which he wrote some time afterwards, and preached it
-wherever he addressed an Irish congregation. The banishing
-of three great vices&mdash;cursing, company-keeping, and
-intemperance&mdash;and the practice of daily meditation, with a
-frequent approach to the sacraments, were the means. If
-Ireland, so he argued, took up this at home, it would spread
-to England, the colonies, and to wherever there was an
-Irishman all over the world. All these would be shining
-lights, and if their neighbours did not choose at once to
-follow their example, we could at least point it out as the
-best proof of our exhortations. This is a short sketch of
-the work he now began, and it was a work his superiors
-always encouraged, and which he spent his life in
-endeavouring to realise.
-</p>
-<p>
-One objection made against this scheme touched him on
-a tender point&mdash;his love of country. Many Catholics, especially
-English converts, thought the words of Ecclesiasticus
-applicable to England: "Injuries and wrongs will waste
-riches: and the house that is very rich shall be brought to
-nothing by pride: so the substance of the proud shall be
-rooted out."&mdash;Eccl. xxi. 5. These were of opinion that
-England must be humbled as a nation, and deeply too, before
-she could be fit for conversion. This Father Ignatius could
-not stand. He writes, in a letter to Mr. Monteith: "As
-my <i>unicum necessarium</i> for myself is the salvation and
-sanctification of my own soul, so my wishes and designs
-about England, which, according to the order of charity, I
-consider (in opposition to many English Catholics, especially
-converts), I ought to love first of all people, are, singly and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_451">{451}</a></span>
-only, that she may be brought to God, and in such a way
-and under such circumstances, as may enable her to be the
-greatest possible blessing to the whole world. I have heard
-plenty, and much more than plenty, from English and Irish
-Catholics (very seldom, comparatively, from those of the
-Continent), about the impossibility of this, except by the
-thorough crushing of the power of England. I say to all
-this, <i>No, no, no!</i> God can convert our country with her
-power and her influence unimpaired, and I insist on people
-praying for it without imposing conditions on Almighty
-God, on whom, if I did impose conditions, it would be in
-favour of His showing more, and not less abundant, mercy
-to a fallen people. Yet, though I have often said I will not
-allow Miss This, or Mr. That, to pronounce sentence on
-England, still less to wish evil to her (particularly if it be
-an English Mr. or Miss who talks), I have always said
-that if God sees it fit that the conversion should be through
-outward humiliations and scourges, I will welcome the rod,
-and thank Him for it, in behalf of my country, as I would
-in my own person, in whatever way He might think fit to
-chastise and humble me."
-</p>
-<p>
-He returned to London in the beginning of 1855, to give
-the retreat to our religious. His next work was a mission,
-given with Father Gaudentius in Stockport. After that, he
-gave a mission with Father Vincent in Hull; in returning
-from Hull, he stopped at Lincoln to visit Mr. Sibthorpe.
-He spends a week in our London house, and then gives a
-retreat by himself in Trelawny. His next mission was in
-Dungannon, Ireland, and as soon as he came to England for
-another retreat he had to give in Levenshulme to nuns, he
-takes advantage of his week's rest to visit Grace Dieu, and
-have what he calls "a famous talk" with Count de Montalembert,
-who was Mr. Phillipps's guest at the time.
-</p>
-<p>
-The scene of his labours is again transferred. We find
-him in July giving a mission at Borris O'Kane, with Father
-Vincent and Father Bernard and another immediately after,
-at Lorrha. At one of these missions, the crowd about Father
-Ignatius's confession-chair was very great, and the people
-were crushing in close to the confessor's knees. One woman,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_452">{452}</a></span>
-especially, of more than ordinary muscular strength, elbowed
-back many of those who had taken their places before she
-came; she succeeded in getting to the inner circle of penitents,
-but so near the person confessing that the good father
-gently remonstrated with her. All to no purpose. He
-spoke again, but she only came nearer. At length he seized
-her shawl, rolled it up in a ball, and flung it over the heads
-of the crowd; the poor woman had to relinquish her position,
-and go for her shawl, and left Father Ignatius to shrive
-her less pushing companions. His fellow missioners were
-highly amused, and this incident tells wonderfully for his
-virtue, for it is almost the only instance we could ever find
-of his having done anything like losing his temper during
-his life as a Passionist. He gives a retreat in Birr, in
-Grantham Abbey, a mission in Newcastle, and another in
-St. Augustine's, Liverpool, before the end of the year.
-</p>
-<p>
-It was his custom, since his first turning seriously to God's
-service, to be awake at midnight on New Year's Day, and
-begin by prayer for passing the coming year perfectly. He
-is in St. Anne's, Sutton, Lancashire, this year. He begins
-the new year, 1856, by giving a mission with Father
-Leonard in our church at Sutton, with a few sermons at a
-place called Peasly Cross, an offshoot of the mission we have
-there.
-</p>
-<p>
-We close this chapter by a notion of Father Ignatius's
-politics. He was neither a Whig, a Tory, nor a Radical.
-He stood aloof from all parties, and seldom troubled himself
-about any. He says in a letter to a friend who was a well-read
-politician:&mdash;"How many minds we have speaking in
-England!&mdash;Gladstone, Palmerston, Bright, Phillipps, yourself,
-and, perhaps, I should add myself, and how many more
-who knows? all with minds following tracks which make
-them travel apart from each other. I want to set a road
-open, in which all may walk together if they please&mdash;at least
-with one foot, if they must have their own particular plank
-for the other."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_453">{453}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.<br>
-Another Tour On The Continent.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The Provincial once more sent Father Ignatius to beg on
-the Continent. He tried to do a double work, as he did not
-like to be "used up" for begging alone, and the plea of
-begging would find him access to those he intended to consult.
-This second work was a form into which he cast his
-ideas for the sanctification of the world. The way of carrying
-out these ideas, which has been detailed, was what he
-settled down to after long discussion and many corrections
-from authority. The pamphlet which he now wrote had been
-translated into German by a lady in Münster. In it he proposes
-a bringing back of Catholics to the infancy of the Church,
-when the faithful laid the price of their possessions at the
-feet of the Apostles. He proposed a kind of Theocracy,
-and the scheme creates about the same sensation as Utopia,
-when one reads it. Like Sir Thomas More, Father Ignatius
-gives us what he should consider a perfect state of Christian
-society; he goes into all the details of its working, and
-meets the objections that might arise as it proceeds. The
-pamphlet is entitled <i>Reflectiones Propositionesque pro fidelium
-Sanctificatione</i>."
-</p>
-<p>
-On February 14, 1856, he leaves London, and halts in
-Paris only for a few hours, on his way to Marseilles. There
-he sees the Archbishop, and begs in the town; he returns
-then to Lyons, where he has several long conferences with
-Cardinal de Bonald. We find him in Paris in a few days,
-writing circulars to the French bishops, of whom the Bishop
-of Nancy seems to have been his greatest patron. He writes
-a letter to the Empress, and receives an answer that the
-Emperor would admit him to an audience. In a day or two
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_454">{454}</a></span>
-Father Ignatius stands in the presence of Napoleon III.,
-and it is a loss that he has not left us the particulars of the
-conference in writing, because he often reverted to it in
-conversation with a great deal of interest. He found at his
-lodgings, on returning from a <i>quête</i> a few days after, l,000f.
-sent to him as a donation by the Emperor.
-</p>
-<p>
-His good success in the Tuileries gave him a hope of doing
-great things among the <i>élite</i> of Parisian society. He is,
-however, sadly disappointed, and the next day sets off to
-Belgium.
-</p>
-<p>
-Arrived in Tournai, he sends a copy of the French circular
-to the Belgian bishops. This does not seem to be a
-petition for alms, as we find him the same evening travelling
-in a third-class carriage to Cologne, without waiting for
-their Lordships' answers.
-</p>
-<p>
-During his begging in Cologne, he says mass every morning
-in St. Colomba's (Columb-Kille's) Church; perhaps the
-spirit of hospitality was bequeathed to the clergy of this
-Church by their Irish patron, for he appears to have
-experienced some coldness from the <i>pfarren</i> of Cologne.
-</p>
-<p>
-In Münster he is very well received. The Bishop is
-particularly kind to him, and looks favourably on his <i>Reflectiones</i>;
-besides that, his lordship deputes a priest to be his
-guide in begging. Father Ignatius notes in his journal that
-he preached extempore in German to the Jesuit novices, and
-that one of the fathers revises and corrects the German
-translation of the <i>Reflectiones</i>. The priest deputed for guide
-by the Bishop of Münster was called away on business of
-importance, and Father Ignatius finds another. This Kaplan
-"lost his time smoking," and our good father gave up, and
-went off by Köln to Coblentz.
-</p>
-<p>
-He finds the bishop here very kind, but is allowed to beg
-only of the clergy; the Jesuits give him hospitality. A
-cold reception in Mantz, and a lukewarm one in Augsburg,
-hurry him off to Munich. He submits the <i>Reflectiones</i>
-to Dr. Döllinger, who corrects them and gives them his
-approbation.
-</p>
-<p>
-From Munich he proceeds to Vienna. A part of this
-journey, as far as Lintz, had to be performed by an <i>eilwayen</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_455">{455}</a></span>
-or post car. The driver of this vehicle was a tremendous
-smoker, and Father Ignatius did not at all enjoy the fumes
-of tobacco. He perceived that the driver forgot the pipe,
-which he laid down at a <i>hoff</i> on the way, while slaking his
-thirst, and never told him of it. He was exulting in the
-hope of being able to travel to the next shop for pipes without
-inhaling tobacco smoke, when, to his mortification, the
-driver perceived his loss, and shouted out like a man in despair,
-<i>Mein pfeiffe! Mein pfeiffe!</i>&mdash;My pipe! My pipe! To
-increase his passenger's disappointment, he actually turned
-back a full German league, and then smoked with a vengeance
-until he came to the next stage.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius sends a copy of the <i>Reflectiones</i> to Rome,
-on his arrival in Vienna, and presents it with an address at
-an assembly of Bishops that was then being held.
-</p>
-<p>
-He has audiences with the Emperor and Archduke Maximilian,
-now Emperor of Mexico, as well as with the Nunzio,
-and all the notabilities, clerical and secular, in the city.
-</p>
-<p>
-Immediately after, somehow, he gets notice to quit from
-the Superior of a religious community, where he had been
-staying, and all the other religious houses refuse to take him
-in. He was about to leave Vienna in consequence, as he did
-not like putting up in an hotel, when some Italian priests
-gave him hospitality, and welcomed him to stop with them as
-long as he pleased. As a set-off to his disappointment, the
-Bishop of Transylvania is very kind to him, and Cardinal
-Schwartzenberg even begs for him. He met the Most
-Rev. Father Jandel, General of the Dominicans, in the
-Cardinal's Palace, and showed him the <i>Reflectiones</i>. The
-good disciple of St. Thomas examined the document closely,
-and Father Ignatius records his opinion, "he gave my paper
-a kick." Notwithstanding this sentence, he went on distributing
-copies every where; but his tract-distribution was
-stopped in a few days by a letter he received from our
-General.
-</p>
-<p>
-When he sent the little pamphlet to Rome it was handed
-for criticism to the Lector (or Professor) of Theology in our
-retreat, who was then Father Ignatius Paoli, the present
-Provincial in England. The critique was very long and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_456">{456}</a></span>
-quite unfavourable; it reached him, backed by a letter from
-the General, which forbade to speak about the counsels for
-the present. He records this sentence in his journal in these
-words:&mdash;"June 17. A letter from Padre Ignazio, by the
-General&mdash;Order to stop speaking of the counsels, &amp;c. <i>Stop
-her, back her. Deo gratias!"</i> This was a favourite expression
-with him whenever a Superior thwarted any of his projects:
-it was borrowed from the steamboats that ply on the Thames,
-and Father Ignatius considered himself as in the position of
-the little boy who echoes the orders of the master to the
-engineers below. He used to say, "What a catastrophe
-might one expect if the boy undertook to give an order of
-his own!"
-</p>
-<p>
-Whilst in Vienna he received a letter from Father Vincent,
-telling him of our having established a house of the
-order near Harold's Cross, Dublin. Father Ignatius
-accompanied Father Vincent when they were both in Dublin,
-before the German tour began, in his search for a position,
-and Rathmines was selected. The excellent parish priest,
-Monsignor Meagher, had just opened his new church, and
-laboured hard to have a religious community in his district.
-He therefore seconded the intentions of our people, and in a
-short time a house was taken in his parish, and every day
-cements the connexion between us and this venerable ecclesiastic.
-A splendid edifice has since been built during the
-Rectorship of Father Osmond, and chiefly through his
-exertions.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius went to two or three towns, where the
-police would not allow him to beg unless patronised by a
-native priest, and not being able to fulfil these conditions he
-was obliged to desist.
-</p>
-<p>
-This was Father Ignatius's last visit to Germany; he had
-been there five times during his life. The first was a tour
-of pleasure, all the rest were for higher objects. He seems
-to have had a great regard for the Germans; he considered
-them related by blood to the English, and although he himself
-was of Norman descent, he appears to have a special
-liking for the Saxon element in character. He preferred to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_457">{457}</a></span>
-see it blended certainly, and would consider a vein of Celtic
-or Norman blood an improvement on the Teutonic.
-</p>
-<p>
-There were other reasons. St. Boniface, the Apostle of
-Germany, was an Englishman; St. Columbanus and St.
-Gall might be said to have laboured more in Germany than
-in their native Ireland. The Germans owed something to
-England, and he wished to have them make a return. Besides,
-the Reformation began in Germany, and he would
-have the countrymen of Luther and of Cranmer work
-together to repair the injuries they had suffered from each
-other. This twofold plea was forced upon him by a German
-periodical, which advocated the cause of the "Crusade"
-even so far back as 1838. Father Ignatius also knew how
-German scholarship was tinging the intellect of England,
-and he thought a spread of devotion would be the best
-antidote to Rationalism. The reasons for working in France,
-which he styled "that generous Catholic nation," were somewhat
-different, but they have been detailed by himself in
-those portions of the correspondence respecting his crusade.
-</p>
-<p>
-He visits Raal, Resburg, Baden, Ratisbonne, and Munich;
-hence he starts for London. Here he arrives on the 4th
-of October. He did not delay, but went straight to Dublin,
-and stayed for the first time in Blessed Paul's Retreat,
-Harold's Cross. This house became his head-quarters for
-some time, for we find him returning thither after a mission
-in Kenilworth, and one in Liverpool, as well as a retreat
-for nuns, which closes his labours for the year 1856.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_458">{458}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.<br>
-Father Ignatius In 1857.
-</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Seven years, according to physiologists, make a total change
-in the human frame, such is the extent of the renewal; and
-although the laws of spirit do not follow those of matter, it
-may be a pleasing problem to find out how far there is an
-analogy. The chapter of 1850 was headed like this; let us
-see if the events of both tell differently upon Father
-Ignatius.
-</p>
-<p>
-The first event he records in the Journal for this year is
-the reception of Mrs. O'Neill into the Church. This good
-lady had then one son a Passionist; she was what might be
-called a very strict and devoted Protestant, although all her
-children were brought up Catholics by her husband. She
-loved the son who first joined our order very tenderly, and
-felt his becoming a monk so much that she would never read
-one of his letters. The son was ordained priest in Monte-Argentaro,
-and the first news he heard after he had for the
-first time offered up the Holy Sacrifice, was that his mother
-had been received in our retreat in Dublin by Father Ignatius.
-She was induced by another son, who lived in Dublin,
-to attend benediction, and our Lord gave her the grace of
-conversion with His blessing. She is now a fervent Catholic,
-and another son and a daughter have since followed the
-example of their brother. The mother finds her greatest
-happiness in what once seemed her greatest affliction. Such
-is the power of grace, always leading to joy through the
-bitterness of the cross.
-</p>
-<p>
-The next event is the death of Father Paul Mary of St.
-Michael. This saintly Passionist was the Honourable Charles
-Reginald Packenham, son of the Earl of Longford. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_459">{459}</a></span>
-became a convert when captain in the Guards, and shortly
-after joined our Institute. He was the first rector of Blessed
-Paul's Retreat, and having edified his brethren by his
-humility and religious virtues for nearly six years, the term
-of his life as a Passionist, died in the odour of sanctity. He
-had been ailing for some time, but still able to do a little
-in the way of preaching and confessions. It was advertised
-that he would preach in Gardiner Street, Dublin, on Sunday,
-March 1. He died that day at one o'clock A.M., and Father
-Ignatius went to preach in his stead; it created a sensation
-when the good father began by asking prayers for the repose
-of the soul of him whose place he came to fill.
-</p>
-<p>
-In a letter Father Ignatius wrote at this time we have his
-opinion of Father Paul Mary: ".... As to the Passionists,
-I do not think those who managed our coming here (to
-Dublin) which was all done during my absence in Germany,
-had any idea of serving England. I believe the prime instigator
-of the move was Father Paul Mary, who was born in
-Dublin, and was through and through an Irishman in his
-affections, though trained in England. He, to the last, had
-all the anti-English feelings, which prevail so much through
-Ireland, and never would give me the least hope of his
-being interested for England. I fall in, notwithstanding
-that, with all the notions of his great virtue and holiness
-which others have; and I think, moreover, that the best
-Catholics in Ireland are to be found among those who have
-been the most bitterly prejudiced against England. But I
-think there is in reserve for them another great step in
-advance when they lay down this aversion and turn it into
-divine charity in a heroic degree."
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius always felt keenly Father Paul Mary's
-not taking up his ideas about England with more warmth.
-When he was on his death-bed, Father Ignatius spent
-many hours sitting by him. In one of their last conversations,
-Father Ignatius urged his pleas for England as
-strongly as he could; when he had done, and was waiting
-for the effect, Father Paul said, in a dry, cold manner: "I
-don't think Ireland has got anything to thank England for."
-These words were perpetually ringing in the ears of Father
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_460">{460}</a></span>
-Ignatius; they were the last Father Paul ever said on the
-subject, and the other used to say: "Oh, I used to enjoy
-his beautiful conversation so much, but I never could hear
-one single kind word for England."
-</p>
-<p>
-This year a general chapter of our Congregation was held
-in Rome. This is an important event, and only occurs
-every six years. It is here the head superiors are elected,
-points of rule explained, and regulations enacted for the
-better ordering of the different houses all over the world,
-according to circumstances of time and place. The Provincial
-and the two Consultors of each Province are obliged
-to attend. Father Ignatius was therefore called to travel
-abroad once more. When in Rome, he employed all the
-time that was left from capitular duties in holding conferences
-with our students, and trying to get some papers he brought
-with him approved. Among others, he brought the paper
-that was "kicked" by Father Jaudel, and condemned by
-one of our theologians. The only one in Rome who approved
-of it was the Abbate Passaglia. Cardinal Barnabò listened
-to all Father Ignatius had to urge in its favour; but did
-not approve of it. He had to return without gaining
-anything this time; except that the Roman Lector was
-become his Provincial. In a few years afterwards, when
-we read of Passaglia's fall, Father Ignatius was heard to
-say: "Passaglia and Döllinger were the only theologians
-who approved of my paper. I suppose I need not flatter
-myself much upon their <i>imprimatur</i>."
-</p>
-<p>
-He was remarked to be often abstracted when he had
-many crosses to bear. One day he was going through Rome
-with one of our Religious, and passed by a fountain. He
-went over and put his hand so far into one of the jets, that
-he squirted the water over a number of poor persons who
-were basking in the sun a few steps beneath him. They
-made a stir, and uttered a few oaths as the water kept dashing
-down on them. The companion awoke Father Ignatius
-out of his reverie, and so unconscious did he seem of the
-disturbance he had unwittingly created, that he passed on
-without alluding to it.
-</p>
-<p>
-On his return home now, as Second Consultor, he is sent
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_461">{461}</a></span>
-to beg again in Ireland. He makes the circuit of Connaught
-this time. He took, in his journey, Roscommon,
-Castlerea, visits the O'Connor Don, Boyle, Sligo. Here he
-was received very kindly by the Bishop and clergy. He
-had for guide in Sligo, a Johnny Doogan, who seems to have
-amused him very much. This good man was chief respondent
-at the Rosary, which used to be said every evening in
-the church. One night the priest began, "Incline unto my
-aid, O Lord." No answer. "Where are you, Johnny
-Doogan?" asked the priest. Johnny, who was a little more
-than distracted in some corner of the church, replied, as if
-suddenly awoke: "Here I am, your Reverence, and 'my
-tongue shall announce thy praise.'" He next passes along
-through Easky and Cullinamore to Ballina. He gives a
-retreat to the Sisters of Mercy here, and during it, makes an
-excursion to Enniscrone. He went next to Ballycastle,
-Killala, Castlebar. Here he went to visit his cousin, Lord
-Lucan, and is very kindly received. During the course of
-conversation, he asked Lord Lucan if he had not heard of
-his conversion? "Oh yes," he replied, "I heard you were
-wavering some thirty years ago." "But I have not wavered
-since," replied Father Ignatius. He then went to Ballinrobe,
-Westport, Tuam, Athenry, and back to Dublin, by
-Mullingar. This tour took nearly two months. He gives
-a retreat in the beginning of September to the nuns of
-Gorey, and after it, begs through Wexford, and the southwest
-portion of Leinster. The only thing remarkable about
-these excursions is, that he notes once, "I am ashamed to
-think that I have not begged of any poor people to-day."
-</p>
-<p>
-In December, 1857, his brother Frederick, Lord Spencer,
-died. This brother was Father Ignatius's companion at
-school, and it is remarkable that he was the only one of the
-family who used any kind of severity towards him. He
-says, in a letter written at this time, "I am twelve years an
-exile from Althorp." Shortly before the Earl died, he
-relented, and invited Father Ignatius to stay at the family
-seat a few days. The letter joyfully accepting the invitation
-was read by the brother on his bed of death. It is only
-right to observe that the present Earl has been the kindest
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_462">{462}</a></span>
-of all, and treated his uncle with distinguished kindness for
-the few years he was left to him. He even gave him back
-the portion of his income which his father diverted to other
-uses.
-</p>
-<p>
-Another letter he wrote in December, gives an idea of his
-spirit of resignation. It seems a Rev. Mother wrote to him
-in a state of alarm that some of the sisters were inclined to
-go away. Here is a part of his answer: "I will see what
-I can do with the sisters who are in the mood to kick, bite,
-or run away. If they take to running, never mind how
-many go, let them all go, with <i>God bless them, and thank God
-they are gone</i>, and we will hope their room will be worth as
-much as their company."
-</p>
-<p>
-Lest the allusion to his exile from Althorp might be taken
-in a wrong sense, it is well to give a passage from a letter
-Father Ignatius wrote after the death of his brother. "I
-dare say you have not heard that just before my brother's
-death I had written to him about a case of distress, which
-he had before been acquainted with, telling him, at the same
-time, of what I was about, and among other things, that I
-was going to London to open a mission in Bermondsey on
-the 10th of January. He sent me £3 for the person I
-wrote about, and invited me to stop at Althorp a couple of
-nights on my way, not demanding any positive promise
-about religion as beforetime, but only saying that he thought
-I might come as a private friend without seeing it necessary
-to hold spiritual communications with the people in the
-neighbourhood. I answered that I would come with pleasure
-on these terms, and that even if he had said nothing, prudence
-would dictate to me to act as he wished. This was a
-most interesting prospect to me, after my twelve years' exile
-from that home, and I intended to come on the 7th of
-January. It was only a day or two before my leaving
-Dublin for this journey, that I was shown a notice in the
-paper of his death, and the next day had a letter about it
-from my sister. He must have received my letter on the
-very day that he was taken ill. These are remarkable
-circumstances. What will Providence bring out of them?"
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_463">{463}</a></span>
-He felt the death of this brother very much, and was known
-to shed tears in abundance when relating the sad news to
-some of his friends. He said very sadly, "I gave myself up
-to three days' sorrowing for my dear brother Frederick, but
-I took care to thank God for the affliction."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_464">{464}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br>
-His "Little Missions."</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-On the 21st of June, 1858, Father Ignatius began to give
-short retreats, which he designated "little missions." This
-was his work the remaining six years of his life; anything
-else we find him doing was like an exception.
-</p>
-<p>
-The work proposed in these missions was what has been
-already described in the chapter on the sanctification of the
-Irish people. He wanted to abolish all their vices, which he
-reduced to three capital sins, and sow the seeds of perfect
-virtue upon the ground of their deep and fertile faith. Since
-he took up the notion that Ireland was called to keep among
-the nations the title of <i>Island of Saints</i>, which had once
-been hers, he could never rest until he saw it effected. He
-seems to have been considering for a number of years the
-means by which this should be brought about, and he hit
-upon a happy thought in 1858.
-</p>
-<p>
-This thought was the way of impregnating the minds of
-all the Irish people with his ideas. He found that missions
-were most powerful means of moving people in a body to
-reconciliation with God, and an amendment of life. He
-perceived that the words of the missionaries were treasured
-up, and that the advices they gave were followed with a
-scrupulous exactness. Missions were the moving power, but
-how were they to enter into all the corners of a kingdom?
-Missions could only be given in large parishes, and all priests
-did not set so high a value upon their importance as those
-who asked for them. If he could concentrate the missionary
-power into something less solemn, but of like efficacy, and
-succeed in carrying that out, he thought it would be just
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_465">{465}</a></span>
-the thing. This train of deliberation resulted in the "little
-missions."
-</p>
-<p>
-A "little mission" is a new mode of renewing fervour;
-Father Ignatius was the originator and only worker in it of
-whom we have any record. It was half a week of missionary
-work in every parish&mdash;that is, three days and a half
-of preaching and hearing confessions. Two sermons in the
-day were as much as ever Father Ignatius gave, and the
-hours in the confessional were as many as he could endure.
-</p>
-<p>
-This kind of work had its difficulties. The whole course
-of subjects proper to a mission could not be got through,
-neither could all the penitents be heard. Father Ignatius
-met these objections. "The eternal truths," as such, he
-did not introduce. He confined himself to seven lectures,
-in which the crying evils, with their antidotes, were introduced.
-As far as the confessions were concerned, he followed
-the rule of moral theologians that a confessor is
-responsible only for the penitent kneeling before him, and
-not for those whose confession he has not begun. He heard
-all he could.
-</p>
-<p>
-His routine of daily work on these little missions was to
-get up at five, and hear confessions all day until midnight,
-except whilst saying mass and office, giving his lecture and
-taking his meals. He took no recreation whatever, and if he
-chatted any time after dinner with the priest, the conversation
-might be considered a continuation of his sermon.
-At a very moderate calculation he must have spent at least
-twelve hours a day in the confessional. Some of these
-apostolic visits he prolonged to a week when circumstances
-required. He gave 245 of these missions from June, 1858,
-to September, 1864; he was on his way to the 246th when
-he died. A rough calculation will show us that he must
-have spent about twenty-two weeks every year in this
-employment. Let us just think of forty journeys, in cold
-and heat, from parish to parish, sometimes on foot, sometimes
-on conveyances, which chance put in his way. Let
-us follow him when he has strapped his bags upon his
-shoulder, after his mass, walking off nine or ten miles, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_466">{466}</a></span>
-order to be in time to begin in another parish that evening.
-Let us see the poor man trying to prevent his feeling pain
-from his sore feet by walking a little faster, struggling, with
-umbrella broken, against rain and wind, dust, a bad road,
-and a way unknown to add to his difficulties. He arrives,
-he lays down his burden, puts on his habit, takes some
-dinner, finishes his office, preaches his first discourse, and
-sits in the confessional until half-past eleven o'clock. Let
-us try to realize what this work must have been, and we
-shall have an idea of the six last years of Father Ignatius
-Spencer's life.
-</p>
-<p>
-We give a few extracts from his letters, as they will convey
-an idea of how he felt and wrought in this great work.
-</p>
-<p>
-On the 10th of August, 1858, he writes from the convent
-in Kells, where he was helping the nuns through
-their retreat:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I have an hour and a half before my next
- sermon at 7; all the nuns' confessions are finished, and all
- my office said; I have therefore time for a letter. I have
- not had such an afternoon as this for many months. The
- people of this town seem to think the convent an impregnable
- fortress, and do not make an assault upon me in it.
- If I was just to show myself in the church I should be
- quickly surrounded. The reflections which come upon me
- this quiet afternoon are not so bright and joyous as you
- might expect, perhaps, from the tone of my letter to
- M &mdash;&mdash;, but rather of a heavy afflicting character; but
- all the better, all the better. This is wholesome, and
- another stage in my thoughts brings me to very great satisfaction
- out of this heaviness. I do not know whether I
- shall explain myself to you. I see myself here so alone,
- though the people come upon me so eagerly, so warmly,
- and, I may say, so lovingly; yet I have not one on whom
- I can think as sympathising with me. I see the necessity
- of a complete radical change in the spirit of the people, the
- necessity, I mean, in order to have some prospect of giving
- the cause of truth its victory in England, and making this
- Irish people permanently virtuous and happy. This is
- what I am preaching from place to place, and aiming at
- instilling into the people's minds in the confessional, at
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_467">{467}</a></span>
- dinner-tables, in cars on the road, as well as in preaching;
- and, while I aim at it, the work is bright enough."
-</p>
-<p>
-Oct. 11, 1860, he writes:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I can hardly understand how
- I can go on for any long time more as I am doing, and not
- find some capable and willing to enter into them. Here I
- am through the 112th parish, with the same proposals which
- no one objects to, but no one enters into nor seems to
- understand."
-</p>
-<p>
-May 6, 1861.&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It seems my lot to be moving about
- as long as I can move. I am very happy in the work I am
- about when I am at it, but I have always to go through
- regret and sorrow before moving, particularly when leaving
- my home. ... I have now gone through 132 parishes.
- No movement yet, such as I am aiming at. It always goes
- on in the form of most interesting missionary work, and is
- a most agreeable way of doing my begging work. I have
- been through 123 of these parishes without asking a penny
- from any one, but they bring me on an average more than
- £21 a parish in <i>Ireland</i>. I have worked through eleven
- parishes in the diocese of Salford (England) out of that
- number, and these do not yield half the fruit of the Irish
- missions in point of money, but are otherwise very
- satisfactory.''
-</p>
-<p>
-In a letter written in December of the same year:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I am preparing for another year's work like the last, going
- from parish to parish through Ireland, collecting for our
- Order, and at the same time stirring the people to devote
- themselves to their sanctification. They give their money
- very generously, they listen kindly to my sermons, and I
- never have a minute idle in hearing confessions; but hitherto
- there is no attention such as I wish paid to my proposals.
- I have made these little missions now in 160 parishes in
- Ireland, and to eleven Irish congregations in England. I
- am, thank God, in as good plight as ever I was in my life
- for this kind of work, and this seems to give a hope that I
- may at length see the effect of it as I wish, or the fruit may
- spring up when I am dead and buried. If death comes
- upon me in this way, I will at least rejoice for myself that
- I am dying more like our Lord than if I finished my course
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_468">{468}</a></span>
- crowned with the most brilliant successes; for when He
- died people would say He had utterly failed, but He was just
- then achieving His victory. Whatever way things take we
- cannot be disappointed if we keep faithful to God."
-</p>
-<p>
-The lovingness described as subsisting between himself and
-his dear Irish people gave rise to many incidents, amongst
-which the following is rather peculiar. At one place, where
-he had just concluded a little mission, the people gathered
-round him when he was about to go away. He heard many
-say, "What will we do when he is gone?" and several
-other exclamations betokening their affliction at having to
-part from him. He turned round and asked all he saw to
-accompany him to the railway station. When they arrived
-there he addressed them again in something like these
-words: "Now, stand here until you see the train start, and
-when it is out of sight, I want you all to say, '<i>Thank God,
-he is gone</i>.'"
-</p>
-<p>
-He met a great many refusals and cold receptions on these
-missionary tours, but in general he was very well received.
-The exceptions were dear to him, as they were profitable to
-himself, and he seldom spoke of them unless there was some
-special lesson they were calculated to convey.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_469">{469}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.<br>
-Father Ignatius At Home.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The work of the little missions kept Father Ignatius very
-much away from the community. His visits at home were
-like meteor flashes, bright and beautiful, and always made
-us regret we could not enjoy his edifying company for a
-longer time. Those who are much away on the external
-duties of the Order find the rule a little severe when they
-return; to Father Ignatius it seemed a small heaven of
-refreshing satisfaction. His coming home was usually
-announced to the community a day or two before, and all were
-promising themselves rare treats from his presence amongst
-them. It was cheering to see the porter run in, beaming
-with joy, as he announced the glad tidings, "Father Ignatius
-is come." The exuberance of his own delight as he greeted,
-first one, and then another of his companions, added to our
-own joy. In fact, the day Father Ignatius came home
-almost became a holiday by custom. Those days were; and
-we feel inclined to tire our readers by expatiating on them,
-as if writing brought them back.
-</p>
-<p>
-Whenever he arrived at one of our houses, and had a day
-or two to stay, it was usual for the younger religious, such
-as novices and students, to go to him, one by one, for
-conference. He liked this very much, and would write to higher
-Superiors for permission to turn off to Broadway, for
-instance, on his way to London, in order to make acquaintance
-with the young religious. His counsels had often a lasting
-effect; many who were inclined to leave the life they had
-chosen remained steadfast, after a conference with him. He
-did not give common-place solutions to difficulties, but he
-had some peculiar phrase, some quaint axiom, some droll
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_470">{470}</a></span>
-piece of spirituality, to apply to every little trouble that
-came before him. He was specially happy in his fund
-of anecdote, and could tell one, it was believed, on any subject
-that came before him. This extraordinary gift of
-conversational power made the <i>Conferences</i> delightful. The
-novices, when they assembled in recreation, and gave their
-opinions on Father Ignatius, whom many had spoken to for
-the first time in their life, nearly all would conclude, "If
-there ever was a saint, he's one."
-</p>
-<p>
-It was amusing to observe how they prepared themselves
-for forming their opinion. They all heard of his being a
-great saint, and some fancied he would eat nothing at all for
-one day, and might attempt a little vegetables on the next.
-One novice, in particular, had made up his mind to this, and,
-to his great surprise, he saw Father Ignatius eat an extra
-good breakfast; and, when about to settle into a rash judgment,
-he saw the old man preparing to walk seven miles to
-a railway station on the strength of his meal. Another
-novice thought such a saint would never laugh nor make
-anybody else laugh; to his agreeable disappointment, he
-found that Father Ignatius brought more cheerfulness into
-the recreation than had been there for some time.
-</p>
-<p>
-In one thing Father Ignatius did not go against anticipation;
-he was most exact in the observance of our rules. He
-would be always the first in for the midnight office. Many
-a time the younger portion of the community used to make
-arrangements overnight to be in before him, but it was no
-use. Once, indeed, a student arrived in choir before him,
-and Father Ignatius appeared so crestfallen at being beaten
-that the student would never be in before him again, and
-might delay on the way if he thought Father Ignatius had
-not yet passed. He seemed particularly happy when he
-could light the lamps or gas for matins. He was childlike
-in his obedience. He would not transgress the most trifling
-regulation. It was usual with him to say, "I cannot understand
-persons who say, 'Oh, I am all right if I get to Purgatory.'
-We should be more generous with Almighty God.
-I don't intend to go to Purgatory, and if I do, I must know
-what for." "But, Father Ignatius," a father would say,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_471">{471}</a></span>
-"we fall into so many imperfections that it seems presumption
-to attempt to escape scot free." "Well," he would
-reply, "nothing can send us to Purgatory but a wilful
-venial sin, and may the Lord preserve us from such a thing
-as that; a religious ought to die before being guilty of the
-least wilful fault." We saw from this that he could scarcely
-imagine how a religious could do so, or, at least, that he was
-very far from the like himself.
-</p>
-<p>
-One time we were speaking about the Italian way of
-pronouncing Latin, which we have adopted; he noticed some
-imperfections, and one of the Italian Fathers present
-remarked a few points in which Father Ignatius himself failed.
-One of them was, that he did not pronounce the letter <i>r</i>
-strong enough; and another, that he did not give a its full
-sound when it came in the middle of a word. For some time
-it was observed that he made a most burring sound when he
-pronounced an <i>r</i>, and went so far in correcting himself in
-the other particular as to sin against prosody. Sometimes
-he would forget little rubrics, but if any one told him of a
-mistake, he was scarcely ever seen to commit it again.
-</p>
-<p>
-Whenever he had half an hour to spare he wrote letters.
-We may form an idea of his achievements in this point,
-when he tells us in the Journal that on two days which
-remained free to him once he wrote seventy-eight. A great
-number of his letters are preserved. They are very entertaining
-and instructive; a nice vein of humour runs through
-all those he wrote to his familiar friends.
-</p>
-<p>
-These two letters may be looked upon as the extremes of
-the sober and humorous style in his letter-writing:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "When I used to call on you, you seemed to be tottering,
- as one might say, on your last legs. Here you are, after so
- many years, without having ever seen health or prosperity,
- and with about as much life in you as then, to all appearance.
- All has been, all is, and all will be, exactly as it pleases
- God. This is the truth, the grand truth, I would almost
- say the whole and only truth. There may be, and are,
- plenty of things besides, which may be truly affirmed, yet
- this is the whole of what it concerns us each to know. For
- if this is once well understood, of course it follows that we
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_472">{472}</a></span>
- have but one affair to attend to, that is, to please God;
- because then, to a certainty, all the past, present, and future
- will be found to be perfectly and absolutely ordered for our
- own greatest good. If this one point be well studied, I
- think we can steer people easily enough out of all low spirits
- and melancholy. Many people can see the hand of God
- over them in wonderful mercy in their past history, and so
- be brought to a knowledge that their anxieties, and afflictions,
- and groans, in those bygone days were unreasonable
- then. "Why do they not learn to leave off groaning over
- the present troubles? Because they do not trust God to
- manage anything right till they have examined His work,
- and understood all about it. But He, will be more honoured
- if we agree with Him, and approve of what He does before
- we see what the good is which is to come of it. In your
- case, if we go back to the days when I first saw you at &mdash;&mdash;,
- when your father was in a good way of work, and you were
- in health, there was the prospect then, I suppose, before you
- of getting well settled in the world; and if all had continued
- smooth and prosperous, you might now be a rich merchant's
- wife in Birmingham, London, or New York, reckoned the
- ornament of a large circle of wealthy friends, &amp;c. But
- might there not, perhaps, have been written over you as
- your motto? <i>Wo to you rich, for you have received your
- consolation. Wo to you that laugh now for you shall mourn
- and weep</i>. You may be disposed to answer, you do not
- think you would have been spoiled by prosperity. But if you
- are more or less troubled or anxious at being in poverty,
- sickness, or adversity, it shows that you would be, just in
- the same measure, unable to bear prosperity and health
- unhurt. Wealth and prosperity are dangerous to those only
- who love them and trust in them. If, when you are in
- adversity, you are sorry for it, and wish for prosperity, it
- shows love for this world's goods, more or less. And if a
- person loves them when he has them not, is it likely he would
- despise them if he had them? God saves multitudes by
- poverty and afflictions in spite of themselves. The same
- poverty and afflictions, if the persons corresponded with
- God's providence and rejoiced in them, would make them
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_473">{473}</a></span>
- first-rate saints. The same may be said, with as great truth,
- of interior afflictions, scruples, temptations, darkness,
- dryness, and the rest of the catalogue of such miseries. A
- person who is disquieted and anxious on account of these,
- either does not understand that God's gifts are not God, or
- if they do understand it, they love the gifts of God
- independently of the giver. And so I add that such a one, if
- he enjoyed uninterrupted peace and serenity of soul, would
- stop very short indeed of the perfection of love to which
- God intends to lead him if he will be docile. Now, as to
- your case, if you are still alive and still serving God, and
- desiring to do so better and better, it is clear that your
- afflictions, exterior and interior, have not spoiled or ruined
- you. And as God loves our peace and happiness, we may
- conclude that he would not have kept you down and low, if
- it had not been necessary for your good. What have you
- to do at last? Begin again to thank, praise, bless, adore,
- and glorify God for all the tribulations, past and future, and
- he may yet strengthen and preserve you to do abundance of
- good, and lay up a great treasure in heaven."
-</p>
-<p>
-The next letter is to a nun about a book which was
-supposed to be lost:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "The second perpetual calendar has been found. I had
- no thought it would; but took my chance to ask, and somebody
- had seen it, and it was looked for again and found. It
- has been a clumsy bit of business on our part; but it ends
- right. It gives another example of the wisdom of a certain
- young shepherdess celebrated in the nursery in my early
- days&mdash;
-</p>
-<pre>
- "'Little Bopeep
- Has lost her sheep,
- And doesn't know where to find them.
- Let them alone,
- And they'll come home,
- And bring their tails behind them.'
-</pre>
-<p class="cite">
- "There is great philosophy in the advice given to the
- heroine of these lines.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It seems by what you said the other day, that you
- <span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_474">{474}</a></span>
- expected a long tail to this sheep, but I don't think the tail
- ever grew. Any way, it never brought a tail so far as this
- house. However, if there does exist a tail to it, I recommend
- to you the calm philosophy of little Bo-peep, and it
- will, I dare say, follow in time."
-</p>
-<p>
-The little rhyme given above was a favourite with Father
-Ignatius. When he saw any one looking for a thing with
-anxiety he generally rhymed it out with peculiar emphasis.
-It might be safely said that he never wrote a letter, preached
-a sermon, or held a conversation without introducing
-resignation to the will of God, the desire of perfection, or the
-conversion of England.
-</p>
-<p>
-As he was always a Superior, the religious could come to
-him and speak whenever they pleased. He was ever ready
-to receive them, he laid down his pen, or whatever else he
-might be at, directly he saw a brother or father wished
-to speak to him, and he listened and spoke as if this
-conversation was the only duty he had to discharge.
-</p>
-<p>
-In recreation he was a treasure. We gathered round him
-by a kind of instinct, and so entertaining was he that one felt
-it a mortification to be called away from the recreation-room
-while Father Ignatius was in it. He used to recount with
-peculiar grace and fascinating wit, scenes he went through
-in his life. There is scarcely an incident in this volume that
-we have not heard him relate. He was most ingenuous.
-Ask him what question you pleased, he would answer it,
-if he knew it. In relating an anecdote he often spoke in five
-or six different tones of voice; he imitated the manner and
-action of those he knew to such perfection, that laughter
-had to pass into admiration. He seldom laughed outright,
-and even when he did, he would very soon stop. If he came
-across a number of <i>Punch</i>, he ran over some of the sketches
-at once and then he would be observed to stop, laugh, and
-lay it down directly, as if to deny himself further enjoyment.
-It is needless to say there was nothing rollicking, or
-off-handed in his wit&mdash;never; it was subdued, sweet, delicate,
-and lively. He would introduce very often amusing puzzles,
-such as passing the poker around, or the game of "He can
-do little who cannot do that, that, that." Then to see his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_475">{475}</a></span>
-glee when some one thought he had found out the secret by
-his keenness of observation, and was far from it; and how
-he laughed at the <i>denouement</i> of the mystery, when all
-was over, was really delightful. He often made us try
-"Theophilus Thistlethwick," and "Peter Piper," and used
-to enjoy the blunders immensely. In fact, a recreation,
-presided over by Father Ignatius, was the most innocent
-and gladsome one could imagine.
-</p>
-<p>
-He had a few seasons of illness in the closing years of his
-life; in 1861 he was laid up for several days with a sore
-foot, in Highgate. When one of us is ill, it is customary
-for the members of the house to take turn about in staying
-with him, and we are allowed to go at all times to visit an
-invalid. Whenever Father Ignatius was asked how his foot
-was, he would say it was "very well," because it brought
-him some pain, and that was a valuable thing if we only
-knew how to turn it to good account. He felt very grateful
-for the smallest service done him in sickness. It is supposed
-that he wrote more letters during his illness, and held
-more "profitable" conversations than in any other equal
-period of his life. No one ever found him idle. He read,
-or he wrote, or he talked, or he prayed, or he slept. Lying
-awake and listless in bed, even when suffering from acute
-pain, seemed an imperfection to him. Complaint was like
-a language he had forgotten, or knew not, except as one
-knows sin by the contrary virtue.
-</p>
-<p>
-He suffered greatly from drowsiness. When he went to
-meditation he would nod asleep, and the exertions he made
-to keep himself awake made us pity him. He would stand
-up, even sometimes on one foot, extend his arms in the form
-of a cross, and do everything he could possibly think of in
-order to keep awake. During his rectorship in Button, after
-returning from a sick call on a cold winter's evening, he
-was obliged to walk about saying his office. He dared not
-sit down, or he would go off asleep, and had to avoid going
-near a fire, or no effort could keep him awake. Notwithstanding
-this, he was the first to matins, and seldom went
-to bed again before prime. When others were ill, Father
-Ignatius was all charity; he would make sure first that
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_476">{476}</a></span>
-they took their sickness in a right spirit, and thanked God
-for it, then he would see that all kinds of attention were
-paid to them. As for sick calls, no matter at what hour of
-the day or night they came, he would be the first to go out
-and attend them. He liked assisting at death-beds; he
-felt particular pleasure in helping people to heaven.
-</p>
-<p>
-He received all kinds of visitors. He went immediately
-to see any one that wanted to speak to him, and never kept
-them a moment waiting if he could possibly help it. When
-distinguished visitors were coming he did not make the
-least preparation, but just treated them like any one else.
-His sister promised to visit him in Highgate in December,
-1859. Neither she nor any member of his family had ever
-been in one of our monasteries; he therefore looked upon
-this as a kind of event. Father Ignatius had a wretched
-old mantle, and one of the students went to him to offer him
-his, which was quite new, for the day. He would not at all
-accept of it, and lectured the other upon human respect for
-his pains.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was very fond of conducting the walk the students
-take every week. He brought the London students often
-through the City, and wonderful was his knowledge and
-reminiscences of the different places they passed by. He
-took them once to the Zoological Gardens. They went about
-looking at the different beasts, and he had his comments to
-make on each. He drew a moral reflection from the voraciousness
-of the lion, the fierceness of the hyaena, the vanity of the
-seal, and the stupor of the sloth. When he saw the flamingo,
-he stayed full ten minutes wondering what might be the use
-of its long, thin legs. The hippopotamus amused him beyond
-all. "Look at his big mouth," he would say; "what in the
-world does he want it for? Couldn't he eat enough with a
-smaller one?" During their walks, a lord, perhaps, would
-turn up, and address him as, "Ho, Spencer! is this you?
-How d'ye do? It is some years since I saw you?" After
-a few words they would part, and then he'd tell his
-companions about their college days, or field sports.
-</p>
-<br>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_477">{477}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.<br>
-A Few Events.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-In 1858 we procured the place in Highgate, known now as
-St. Joseph's Retreat. The Hyde was never satisfactory; it
-was suited neither to our spirit nor its working. At last
-Providence guided us to a most suitable position. Our rule
-prescribes that the houses of the Order should be outside the
-town, and near enough to be of service to it. Highgate is
-wonderfully adapted to all the requisitions of our rule and
-constitutions. Situated on the brow of a hill, it is far enough
-from the din and noise of London to be comparatively free
-from its turmoil, and sufficiently near for citizens to come to
-our church. The grounds are enclosed by trees; a hospital
-at one end and two roads meeting at the other, promise a
-freedom from intrusion and a continuance of the solitude we
-now enjoy. Father Ignatius concludes the year 1858 in
-Highgate; it was his first visit to the new house.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the end of the next year we find him once more
-in France with our Provincial. They went on business
-interesting to the Order, and were nearly three weeks away.
-Father Ignatius ends another year in Highgate. It was
-then he translated the small "Life of Blessed Paul" from
-the Italian, a work he accomplished in about one month
-with the assistance of an <i>amanuensis</i>.
-</p>
-<p>
-He gave a mission with three of the fathers in Westland
-Row, Dublin, in the beginning of the year 1860, and started
-off immediately after for his circuit of little missions. Our
-Provincial Chapter was held this year, but all were
-re-elected; so Father Ignatius remained as he was, second
-Consultor. It was this year he visited Althorp, after an absence
-of eighteen years from the home of his childhood. This visit
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_478">{478}</a></span>
-he looked back to with a great deal of satisfaction, and his joy
-was increased when Lord and Lady Sarah Spencer returned
-his visit in Highgate, when he happened to be there, the
-next year. The friendly relations between him and his
-family seemed, if possible, to become closer and more
-cordial towards the end of his life.
-</p>
-<p>
-He told us one day in recreation, when some one asked
-what became of the lady he was disposed to be married to,
-once in his life: "I passed by her house a few days ago. I
-believe her husband is a very excellent man, and that she is
-happy."
-</p>
-<p>
-In 1862 he visited Althorp again. We saw him looking
-for a lock for one of his bags before he left Highgate for
-this visit, and some one asked him why he was so particular
-just then. "Oh," he said, "don't you know the servant in
-the big house will open it, in order to put my shaving tackle,
-brush, and so forth in their proper places, and I should not
-like to have a general stare at my habit, beads, and sandals."
-There was, however, a more general stare at them than he
-expected. During the visit, the volunteer corps were entertained
-by Lord Spencer. Father Ignatius was invited to the
-grand dinner; he sat next the Earl, and nothing would do for
-the latter but that his uncle should make a speech. Father
-Ignatius stood up in <i>his</i> regimentals, habit, sandals, &amp;c., and
-made, it seems, a very patriotic one.
-</p>
-<p>
-This visit to Althorp Father Ignatius loved to recall to
-mind. It was a kind of thing that he could not enjoy at
-the time, so far did it go beyond his expectations. He went
-merely for a friendly visit, and found a great many old
-friends invited to increase his pleasure. When the ladies
-and gentlemen went off to dress for dinner, it is said that
-Father Ignatius told Lady Spencer that he supposed his full
-dress would not be quite in place at the table; he was told
-it would, and that all would be much delighted to see a
-specimen of the fashions he had learnt since his days of
-whist and repartee in the same hall. At the appointed time
-he presented himself in the dining-room in full Passionist
-costume. Lord Spencer was quite proud of his uncle, and
-the speech, and the cheer with which it was greeted at the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_479">{479}</a></span>
-Volunteers' dinner only enhanced the mutual joy of uncle
-and nephew.
-</p>
-<p>
-As usual, this joy was tempered, and the alloy was
-administered by a clergyman, who evidently intended to get
-himself a name by putting himself into print in one of the
-local papers. This was a Mr. Watkins. He wrote a letter
-to the <i>Northampton Herald</i>, containing a great deal of
-shallow criticism and ignorant remarks on Father Ignatius,
-and a sermon he preached at the opening of the cathedral.
-A smart paper warfare was carried on for some time between
-the two, which earned the Rev. Mr. Watkins the disapproval,
-if not the disgust, of his Protestant clerical and lay
-neighbours. This was rather a surprise, as all the old
-acquaintances of the <i>quondam</i> Mr. Spencer had the highest
-regard for him; but this writer seems to have been one who
-never had the opportunity of forming a just opinion of his
-abilities or character. Ignorance may excuse his blunders,
-but the longest stretch of charity can scarcely overlook his
-manner of committing them.
-</p>
-<p>
-After the visit to Althorp, Father Ignatius went to see
-Mr. De Lisle at Grace Dieu, and was present at the blessing
-of the present Abbot of Mount St. Bernard's. The secretary
-of the A. P. U. C. sent him another letter after this visit,
-which met the fate of similar communications on former
-occasions.
-</p>
-<p>
-We find him in the beginning of the year 1863 in Liverpool,
-engaged in a mission at St. Augustine's.
-</p>
-<p>
-After this mission he came to Highgate, on his way to
-Rome for our general chapter, and the few days he had on
-his hands before his departure were spent in visiting Lord
-Palmerston, Mr. Gladstone, and other notabilities, as well
-as receiving a visit from his nephew.
-</p>
-<p>
-He arrived in Rome for the last time on the 22nd April,
-1863. How strangely do his different visits to this city
-combine to give an idea of the stages of opinion through
-which his chequered life was fated to pass. In 1821, he
-entered it, promising himself a feast of absurdities, determined
-to sneer at what he did not understand, and repel by
-his thick shield of prejudice whatever might force itself
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_480">{480}</a></span>
-upon him as praiseworthy. He found something in his next
-visit in the pagan remains to please his Protestant taste, and
-left it for Germany with a kind of regret. In less than ten
-years he is there to despise the glory of the Caesars, and
-thinks more of a chapel which Peter's successor has endowed
-or adorned, than the platforms on which the fangs of the
-leopard tore the flower of our martyrs. His other visits
-were mostly official. He came glowing with the fervour of
-new projects, and left with only their embers generating a
-new step in his spiritual progress. Rome was always Rome,
-but he was not always the same. Any one who takes the
-trouble to compare his different visits with each other cannot
-fail to learn a lesson that will be more telling on his
-mind, than what comments upon them by another's pen
-could produce.
-</p>
-<p>
-The General Chapter Father Ignatius was called to attend
-in 1863 had to deal with subjects that deeply concerned
-the interests of our Order. In this Chapter, our American
-province was canonically erected in the United States. A
-colony of ten Passionists was sent to California, and the
-Hospice of St. Nicholas, in Paris, established. Father
-Ignatius had, as usual, some papers to submit to the Roman
-Curia. The work to which his "little missions" were devoted
-had not yet received the seal of the Fisherman, and,
-until it was so blessed, its excellence could be a subject of
-doubt. He did receive the pontifical benediction for this,
-and for the institution of a new congregation of nuns, and
-began to enjoy the riches of this twofold blessing before he
-took his departure from the Eternal City.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius, ever himself, did not lose sight of lesser
-claims on his gratitude in the greater ones his zeal proposed
-to him. There was a family whom he had received into the
-Church during the course of his labours on the secular
-mission. The father, and four daughters, and a son, were
-all baptized by him. They were his great joy. He first
-received one girl, then the father, then another (who dreaded
-to speak to him), a third, and a fourth yielded to his charity
-and meekness in following the workings of grace. For them
-he always entertained a special regard, he would stay with
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_481">{481}</a></span>
-them when missionary work called him to a town in which
-they dwelled, and delighted to caress their children, edify
-themselves, and make himself at home in their dwellings
-during his stay. He obtained a rescript granting them a
-"plenary indulgence," signed by the Holy Father himself,
-which is still treasured up as a beautiful heirloom in their
-families. These favoured objects of his predilection were
-Mrs. Macky, of Birmingham; Mrs. Richardson and Mrs.
-Marshall, of Levenshulme, Manchester.
-</p>
-<p>
-Before leaving Rome in 1863 he preached to nuns and
-schools, upon the conversion of England, with the same
-zeal as he did in 1850, if not with greater. That leading
-star lived with him; it is to be hoped it has not died with
-him. If the nineteenth century were an age of faith, and
-that the belief in God's miraculous interposition would
-move any to make experiments of holy wonders, we should
-expect to find engraved on his heart after death: "The
-Conversion of England!"
-</p>
-<p>
-On June 21, after exactly two months' stay, he left the
-terrestrial Rome, or city of God, for ever. He arrives in
-London on the 3rd August, visits convents for his "crusade,"
-now doubly dear to him; communicates his glad tidings to
-the infant congregations of nuns of Sutton, and holds himself
-in readiness for the approaching provincial chapter.
-The nuns here mentioned are a society established, a few
-years before, by our Father Gaudentius. Their primary
-object is the care and instruction of factory girls, their
-subsidiary one, the plain instruction of poor children.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius loved this institute. One of his common
-sayings was, "I do not understand how a girl with a wooden
-leg, no means and great docility, cannot make the evangelical
-vows," and he found himself at home with a sisterhood where
-his problem would be solved in part at least. He brought
-their rules to Rome, at this time, and received all the
-Pontifical sanctions he could possibly expect under the
-circumstances.
-</p>
-<p>
-On August 21 of this year, our Provincial Chapter was
-held at Broadway. Here Father Ignatius was elected
-Rector of St. Anne's Retreat, Sutton. He entered on the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_482">{482}</a></span>
-office with a great deal of zeal and courage. In his first
-exhortation to the religious, he remarked that "new brooms
-sweep clean," but as he was a broom a little the worse for
-wear, which had been trimmed up for action after having so
-long lain by, the aphorism could not apply so well to him.
-It was nine years since he had filled the office of rector
-before, and the interval taught him many things regarding
-religious discipline which he now brought into action.
-</p>
-<p>
-His rule might be called <i>maternal</i> rather than paternal,
-for it was characterized by the fondness of holy old age for
-youth. One change remarked in him, since his former
-rectorship, was, his spicing his gentle admonitions with a
-good deal of severity when occasion required it. He spoke
-to the community, after the evening recreation, once upon the
-conversion of England, and the bright look the horizon of
-religious opinion wore now in comparison to the time he first
-began his crusade. He hoped great things for England.
-At this part of his lecture, some ludicrous occurrence, which
-he did not observe, made one of the younger religious laugh.
-Father Ignatius turned upon him, and spoke with such
-vehemence that all seemed as if struck by a thunderbolt.
-They never heard him speak in that way before, and it was
-thought by many that the meek father could not "foam with
-indignation," even if he tried.
-</p>
-<p>
-Towards the close of 1863 he professed several of the
-nuns of the Holy Family, for whom he had procured the
-indulgences at Rome, and he assisted at the deathbed of their
-first rev. mother early in 1864.
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_483">{483}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.<br>
-Trials And Crosses.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The days of the religious life of Father Ignatius might be
-numbered by his trials and crosses. It was not that a goodly
-share fell to him, as became his great holiness; but he
-happened to be so very keenly tried, that what generally
-assuages the bitterness of ordinary trials served, by a special
-disposition of Providence, to make his the more galling.
-His trials were multiplied in their infliction; the friends to
-whom he might unburthen himself were often their unconscious
-cause; and the remedies proposed for his comfort
-would be generally an aggravation of his sufferings. He
-had an abiding notion of his being alone and abandoned,
-which followed him like a shadow, even unto the grave.
-This feeling arose from his spirit of zeal. He burned to be
-doing more and more for God's glory every day, and sought
-to communicate to others some sparks of the flames that
-consumed himself. His projects for carrying out his ideas
-seldom met the cordial approval of superiors, and when he
-received such sanction, it was only after his schemes had
-been considerably toned down. This restraint he had always
-to bear.
-</p>
-<p>
-When his plans were tolerated, or even approved, he
-could not find one to take them up as warmly as he wished.
-In fact, he found no second. Catholics have an instinctive
-aversion to anything that wears the appearance of novelty
-in their devotions. Father Ignatius's plans for the sanctification
-of Ireland, the conversion of England, and the perfection
-all should tend to, were very good things. No one
-could have the least objection to them; but, somehow, every
-one could not see his way to working them out. When
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_484">{484}</a></span>
-Father Ignatius proposed the means he intended to adopt,
-the old Catholic shrugged his shoulders as if he had heard a
-temerarious proposition. It was new; the good old bishop
-that gave his life for his flock, or the saintly priest he had
-listened to from childhood, never proposed such a thing.
-He never read it in his books of piety, and though it seemed
-very good, it "did not go down with him." He listened to
-the holy Passionist, because he reverenced him; but he
-never encouraged his zeal with more than a cold assent.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius found this want of correspondence to his
-suggestions in every person even his own brethren in religion
-failed to be of accord with him. He was perpetually
-speaking upon his favourite topics, and never seemed satisfied
-with the work of his fellow-labourers if they did not
-take up his ideas. He often drew down upon himself severe
-animadversions on account of this state of mind. When
-fathers returned to the retreat, tired and wearied after a
-number of missions, they felt it rather hard to be told that
-they had done very little, because they had not set about
-their work in his way. He would be told very sharply that
-they should wish to see what he had done himself; that his
-chimerical notions looked well on paper, or sounded nicely
-in talk; that there was a surer way of guiding people to
-heaven than talking them into fancies beyond their comprehension.
-These remarks only served to bring out the virtue
-and humility of the saintly man. He became silent at once,
-or turned the conversation into another channel.
-</p>
-<p>
-He had a still severer trial in this point. He very
-frequently attributed the caution of his superiors to want of
-zeal, and used to lecture them without human respect on
-what he thought to be their duty. On one occasion he went
-so far as to complain of this to Cardinal Wiseman; but the
-explanation was so satisfactory that he gave expression to
-different sentiments for the future. Whenever they spoke
-positively, he immediately acquiesced, and was most exact
-in carrying out their injunctions. His zeal was unbounded,
-and one of his superiors always said: "Father Ignatius will
-become a saint by the very thwarting of his plans." If he
-had not the virtue of submitting his judgment, it is hard to
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_485">{485}</a></span>
-say into what extravagances he might rush. This one trial
-was the staple of his religious life for more than thirty
-years.
-</p>
-<p>
-We shall now give a few instances from his letters, and
-from anecdotes recorded of him, to show the spirit with
-which he bore this and kindred trials and crosses.
-</p>
-<p>
-In 1853 he received a very severe letter from one of our
-Belgian fathers, who is in high repute for learning and
-virtue. He forwarded the letter to Father Eugene, who
-was then Provincial, accompanied by these remarks:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I thought of answering the enclosed letter from Father
- &mdash;&mdash; at once, before sending it to your Paternity; but, on
- looking it over again, I have changed my mind. The rule
- which I make for myself is, to mind what my superiors say
- on this matter and the conversion of England, and to charge
- them to stop my proceedings if they disapprove of them. I
- shall take what they say as coming from God, who has a
- right to dispose of all souls, and who may judge that the
- time for grace in England is not come, or never has to
- come. Besides, they are the proper judges whether my
- proceedings are correct <i>in toto</i> or in part. Your Paternity
- has lately expressed your mind upon the matter, and I have
- no scruple on the subject; but it is well you should know
- what others feel. I beg you to take this letter from Father
- &mdash;&mdash; as kindly meant, and, with me, to be thankful for it."
-</p>
-<p>
-Another to his Provincial:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "With regard to the principal topic of your Paternity's
- letter, I will first thank you, and thank God that I am
- thought worthy to be spoken and written to, without
- dissimulation or reserve, of what people think of me. If I
- make use with diligence of their remarks, I shall be able to
- gain ground in the esteem of God, and, perhaps, also in
- men's esteem; but that is not of consequence. Now, I suppose
- it would be best not to have said so much in explanation
- of my intentions in time past; and certainly I have
- said things which were vexing in the course of these explanations.
- It is no justification of this to allege that your
- Paternity's style of writing admonitions and reproofs is more
- severe than that of some persons, because I ought to receive
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_486">{486}</a></span>
- all with joy. But the cutting tone of some of your letters
- excites me to answer more or less in a cutting tone on my
- side, and I have given way to this temptation. It appears
- to me, it would be better if with me and others your tone
- was not so cutting. But God so appoints it for us, and so I
- had better prefer his judgment to my own, and persevere
- correcting myself, till I can answer cutting letters with the
- same gentle, affectionate language as I might the mildest
- ones. In this way I shall be the greatest gainer. So I will
- conclude with leaving it to your Paternity to decide in what
- tone you will correct me&mdash;only begging that you will not
- omit the correction when you see me in the wrong, and that
- you will inflict it, for charity's sake, at the risk even of
- suffering pain from my hasty and improper answers, which I
- cannot expect to correct at once, though I will try to do it.
- Will you let me meet you at the station when you pass
- through London, and accompany you to the station for the
- Dover Railway?"
-</p>
-<p>
-In another letter, he writes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I am frequently assailed with black doubts about the
- prudence of all my proceedings; but these pass by, and I
- go on again with brighter spirits than ever, and, in the end,
- I am astonished how Providence has carried me clear of
- danger and perplexities when they have threatened me the
- most. I trust it will be so now.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I beg your Paternity will write to me again what you
- decide about St. Wilfrid's functions, and tell me what I can
- do by writing letters or otherwise. I feel better qualified
- to do what I am told, than to give advice what others
- should do."
-</p>
-<p>
-As may be seen from some of the letters introduced
-above, Father Ignatius had to endure trials from the want
-of sympathy with his ways, in many of the English converts.
-One celebrated convert went so far as to prohibit
-his speaking of the conversion of England to any of the
-members of a community of which he was Superior.
-Another used to tell him that "England was already
-damned," and that it was no use praying for it. A third
-treated him to some sharp cuts about the work of his little
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_487">{487}</a></span>
-missions, when answering an application of Father Ignatius
-to give one in his parish. These and many other crosses of
-the like nature, he used to complain of with deep feeling
-among his fellow religious. It is remarkable that those
-who crossed him had great respect for his holiness, and,
-very likely, their opposition proceeded from not giving him
-credit for much prudence.
-</p>
-<p>
-An incident that happened to him in one of his journeys
-in Ireland will give an idea of how he bore humiliations.
-He was walking to one of the principal towns in Tipperary,
-and a vehicle overtook him on the road. The man in the
-car took compassion on the poor old priest, and asked him
-to "take a lift." Father Ignatius took his seat at once;
-before they had proceeded far together, his companion perceived
-that he spoke in an "English accent," and began to
-doubt his being a priest. There had been some ugly rows
-in the town, lately, on account of a gang of "soupers" that
-infested it, and it struck the good townsman that his waggon
-was carrying a veritable "souper. "What," thought he, "if
-the neighbours should see me carrying such a precious cargo?"
-And, without asking or waiting for an explanation, he
-unceremoniously told Father Ignatius "to get down, for he
-suspected he wasn't of the right sort." Father Ignatius
-complied at once, without the least murmur. When the
-man was about a mile ahead of his late fellow-traveller, and
-could not stifle the remorse occasioned by his hasty leave-taking,
-he resolved to turn back and catechise him. The
-result satisfied him, and the good father was invited to take
-a seat a second time. To atone for his almost unpardonable
-crime, as he thought it, the man invited him to stay at his
-house for the night, as it was then late. Father Ignatius
-said he was due at the priest's house, but in case he found
-nobody up there, he should be happy to avail himself of his
-friend's hospitality. They parted company in the town;
-Father Ignatius went to the priest's, and the other to his
-home. They were all in bed in the presbytery, and no
-answer was returned to the repeated knocks and rings of the
-benighted traveller. He went to the friend's house, but
-found <i>they</i>, too, were gone to bed. No word was left about
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_488">{488}</a></span>
-Father Ignatius, and his strange accent made the housewife
-refuse him admittance. He went off without saying a
-word in explanation. The man bethought himself shortly
-after, and sent messengers to seek him, who overtook him
-outside the town, walking off to the next, which he
-expected to reach before morning.
-</p>
-<p>
-Another time he undertook the foundation of a convent
-in Staffordshire. With his usual indifference in matters
-temporal, he made no material provision whatever for the
-reception of the sisters, except a bleak, unfurnished house.
-The reverend mother came, with three or four sisters, and
-was rather disconcerted at what she found before them.
-Father Ignatius was expected in a day or two, and as the
-time of his arrival approached, the reverend mother went
-into the reception-room, and there sate&mdash;
-</p>
-<pre>
- "A sullen dame,
- "Nursing her wrath to keep it warm."
-</pre>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius got a very hot reception. The lady scolded
-him heartily for his carelessness, and descanted most
-eloquently on the wants and grievances she had to endure since
-her arrival. He replied calmly that it was not his fault,
-that that department of the proceedings devolved on the
-parish priest. This only fired her the more&mdash;"Why didn't
-he tell the parish priest?" He then waited, quietly standing
-until she had exhausted her stock of abuse; whereupon
-he asked if she had done, and on receiving a nod in
-the affirmative, he said: "Oh, well, I know how I must
-approach your ladyship in future, I must make three bows
-in the Turkish fashion." So saying, he bowed nearly to
-the ground, retreated a step and bowed again, a third step
-backwards brought him to the door of the apartment, and
-when he had bowed still deeper than before, he stood up
-straight, took out a purse with some sovereigns in it, and
-spun it to the corner of the room in which the good nun
-sat petrified with astonishment:&mdash;"Take that now, and it
-may calm you a bit," was the good morning he bid her, as
-he closed the door after him, and went his way.
-</p>
-<p>
-The tongue of slander assailed him again the last year of
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_489">{489}</a></span>
-his life. We will give the occurrence in the words of the
-only one to whom the reverend mother told it in confidence.
-Father Ignatius himself never spoke of it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "As our dear Lord loved him much, he wished to try
- him as he had tried the dearest and best-beloved of his
- servants. Therefore he permitted that his character should be
- assailed in the most vile manner by one who, through mistaken
- zeal, gave out the most injurious insinuations regarding
- our dear father and the late reverend mother. When
- Father Ignatius heard of it, he sent for the reverend mother
- to exhort her to bear the calumny with love and resignation.
- In speaking to her he said that God had asked all
- of him, and he had freely given all but his good name, and
- that he was ready now to offer as it had pleased God to ask
- for it; for all belonged to Him and he thanked Him for
- leaving him nothing. 'Will you not.' he continued, 'do
- the same? Do you not see that God is asking you for the
- dearest thing you can give? Give it, then, freely, and
- thank Him for taking it, for don't you see that by this you
- are resembling Him more closely? Besides, He has permitted
- this to happen, and if we do not give up our good
- name, which already belongs to Him, cheerfully and willingly,
- He will take it, in spite of us, and we shall lose the
- merit of our offering. How foolish, therefore, is it to go
- against God! Let us resign ourselves unreservedly into his
- hands. However, to remove any scandal that might follow,
- and to show this good priest that I have no ill-feeling
- against him, I will go and visit him on friendly terms.'
- And so he did."
-</p>
-<p>
-Besides casual attacks of illness brought on by his want
-of care or great labours, he suffered during the latter part
-of his life from chronic ailments. His heart often troubled
-him, and medical men told him that he would very likely
-die of disease of the heart. He had an ulcer in one of his
-ancles for a number of years, and was often obliged to keep
-his bed on account of it. No one ever heard him complain,
-and yet his sufferings must have been very acute. We
-never remarked him rejoice so much over this painful sore,
-than when one of the fathers, who respected him much, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_490">{490}</a></span>
-wanted to test his mortification, became a Job's comforter.
-He said: "You deserve to be lame, Father Ignatius, you
-made such use of your feet in the days of your dancing and
-sporting, that Almighty God is punishing you now, and the
-instruments of your pleasure are aptly turned into instruments
-of pain." He said it was quite true, and that he
-believed so himself, and that his only wish was that he
-might not lose a particle of the merit it would bring him,
-by any kind of complaint on his part. He got a rupture in
-1863, and he simply remarked, "I have made another step
-down the hill to-day."
-</p>
-<p>
-Whilst labouring under a complication of sufferings he
-never abated one jot of his round of duties, though requested
-to do so by his subjects. He was Superior, and exercised
-his privilege by doing more than any other instead of
-sparing himself. He did not take more rest nor divide his
-labours with his companions. During the time of his
-rectorship in Sutton, he used to preach and sing mass after
-hearing confessions all morning; attend sick calls, preach in
-some distant chapel in the evening, return at eleven o'clock,
-perhaps, and say his office, and be the first up to matins at
-two o'clock again. The only thing that seemed to pain
-him was a kind of holy envy. He used to say to the young
-priests: "Oh, how well it is for you that are young and
-buoyant, I am now stiff and old, and must have but a short
-time to labour for Almighty God; still I hope to be able to
-work to the last." This was his ordinary discourse the
-very year he died, and the young fathers were much struck
-by the coincidence between his wishes and their completion.
-</p>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius Paoli, the Provincial, gave the cook
-orders to take special care of the indefatigable worn-out
-Rector. He was not to heed the fasts of the Rule, or at
-least to give the Superior the full supply of meagre diet.
-Father Ignatius took the indulgence thankfully for two or
-three days after returning from a mission; but when he
-saw a better portion served up for himself oftener than was
-customary for the other missionaries, he remonstrated with
-the brother cook. Next day he was served in the same
-manner, he then gave a prohibition, and at last scolded him.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_491">{491}</a></span>
-The good brother then told him that he was only carrying
-out the Provincial's orders. Father Ignatius was silent,
-but, after dinner, posted off to the doctor, and made him
-give a certificate of good health and ability to fast, which he
-forwarded to the Provincial. Father Provincial did not
-wish to deny him the opportunity of acquiring greater
-merit, and, at the same time, he would prolong so valuable
-a life. To save both ends he placed him under the obedience,
-as far as regarded his health, of one of the priests of
-his community, whom he strictly obeyed in this matter
-thenceforward.
-</p>
-<p>
-Once he went on a sick-call in very wet weather, and
-either a cramp or an accident made him fall into a dirty
-slough, where he was wetted through and covered with mud.
-He came home in this state, and finding a friend of his at
-the house, who more or less fell into his way of thinking,
-he began to converse with him. The good father began to
-speak of the conversion of England, and sat in his wet
-clothes for a couple of hours, and likely would have stayed
-longer, so thoroughly was he engrossed with his favourite
-topic, if one of the religious had not come in, and frightened
-him off to change garments by his surprise and apprehension.
-</p>
-<p>
-He seemed indifferent to cold; he would sit in his cell,
-the coldest day, and write until his fingers became numbed,
-and then he would warm them by rubbing his hands together
-rather than allow himself the luxury of a fire. He
-went to give a retreat somewhere in midwinter, and the
-room he had to lodge in was so exposed that the snow came
-in under the door. Here he slept, without bed or fire, for
-the first night of his stay. It was the thoughtlessness of
-his entertainers that left him in these cold quarters. In
-the morning some one remarked that very probably Father
-Ignatius slept in the dreary apartment alluded to. A person
-ran down to see, and there was the old saint amusing
-himself by gathering up the snow that came into his room,
-and making little balls of it for a kitten to run after. The
-kitten and himself seem to have become friends by having
-slept together in his rug the night before, and both were
-disappointed by the intrusion of the wondering visitor.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_492">{492}</a></span>
-<p>
-His humility was as remarkable to any one who knew
-him as was his zeal; and on this point also he was well
-tried. It is not generally known that in the beginning of
-his Passionist life he adopted the custom of praying before
-his sermons that God's glory would be promoted by them
-and himself be humiliated. At the opening of Sutton
-Church in 1852, he was sent for from London to preach a
-grand sermon in the evening. A little before the sermon
-he was walking up and down the corridor; the Provincial
-met him and asked more in joke than otherwise: "Well,
-Father Ignatius, what are you thinking of now?" "I am
-praying," he replied, "that if it be for the glory of God my
-sermon may be a complete failure as far as human eloquence
-is concerned." We may imagine the surprise of his Superior
-at hearing this extraordinary answer; it is believed
-that this was his general practice to the end. Contrary to
-the common notion that prevails among religious orders, he
-wished that the Order would receive humiliations as well as
-himself. He wished it to come to glory by its humiliations.
-On one occasion, he expected that the newspapers would
-make a noise about something that might be interpreted as
-humiliating to the community of which he was Superior.
-Father Ignatius addressed the community nearly in these
-words: We shall have something to thank God for tomorrow;
-the Protestants will make a great noise in the
-papers about this affair, and we must be prepared for a full
-feast of misrepresentations. Let us thank God now in
-anticipation." He was disappointed, however, as the papers
-were content with a bare notice of the matter.
-</p>
-<p>
-Many persons did not give him credit for great humility;
-they thought his continual quoting of himself, and his
-readiness to speak about his doings, was, if not egotism, at
-least inconsistent with profound humility. We cannot
-answer this imputation better than by giving Father Faber's
-description of simplicity, which every one knows to be the
-very character of genuine humility:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But let us cast an eye at the action of simplicity in the
- spiritual life. Simplicity lives always in a composed
- consciousness of its own demerit and unworthiness. It is
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_493">{493}</a></span>
- possessed with a constant sense of what the soul is in the
- sight of God. It knows that we are worth no more than
- we are worth in His sight, and while it never takes its eye
- off that view of self, so it does not in any way seek to hide
- it from others. In fact it desires to be this, and no more
- than this, in the eyes of others; and it is pained when it is
- more. Every neighbour is, as it were, one of God's eyes,
- multiplying His presence; and simplicity acts as if every
- one saw us, knew us, and judged us as God does, and it has
- no wounded feeling that it is so. Thus, almost without
- direct effort, the soul of self-love is so narrowed that it has
- comparatively little room for action; although it never can
- be destroyed, nor its annoyance ever cease, except in the
- silence of the grave. The chains of human respect, which
- in the earlier stages of the spiritual life galled us so
- intolerably, now fall off from us, because simplicity has drawn us
- into the unclouded and unsetting light of the eye of God.
- There is no longer any hypocrisy. There is no good opinion
- to lose, because we know we deserve none, and doubt if we
- possess it. We believe we are loved in spite of our faults,
- and respected because of the grace which is in us, and which
- is not our own and no praise to us. All diplomacy is gone,
- for there is no one to circumvent and nothing to appropriate.
- There is no odious laying ourselves out for edification, but
- an inevitable and scarcely conscious letting of our light
- shine before men in such an obviously innocent and unintentional
- manner that it is on that account they glorify our
- Father who is in Heaven."&mdash;<i>Blessed Sacrament</i>, Book II.,
- c. vii.
-</p>
-<p>
-The secret by which Father Ignatius arrived at this
-perfect way of receiving trials was his <i>thanking God</i> for
-everything. When some one objected to him that we could
-not thank God for a trial when we did not feel grateful,
-"Never mind," he would say, "you take a hammer to break
-a big stone; the first stroke has no effect, the second seemingly
-no effect, and the third, and so on; but somewhere
-about the twentieth or hundredth the stone is broken, and
-no one stroke was heavier than the other. In the same way,
-begin to thank God, no matter about the feeling, continue,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_494">{494}</a></span>
-and you will soon break the hardest difficulties." His
-maxims and sayings on resignation would fill a good-sized
-volume were they collected together. We shall conclude
-this chapter with one picked by chance from his letters:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "In trials and crosses we are like a sick child, when its
- mother wants it to take some disagreeable medicine. The
- child kicks and screams and sprawls, and spits the medicine
- in its mother's face. That is just what we do when God
- sends us crosses and trials. But, like the mother, who will
- persevere in giving the medicine until the child has taken
- enough of it, God will send us crosses and trials until we
- have sufficient of them for the health of our souls."
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_495">{495}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.<br>
-Foreshadowings And Death.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-Father Ignatius, for some months before his death, had a
-kind of sensation that his dissolution was near. He paid
-many <i>last</i> visits to his old friends, and, in arranging by letter
-for the greater number of flying visits, he used generally to
-say, "I suppose I shall not be able to pay many more."
-Writing to Mrs. Hutchinson in Edinburgh from St. Anne's
-Retreat, Button, in March, 1864, he says: "When I wrote
-to you some months ago in answer to your kind letter, I
-think I expressed a hope that I might again have the
-pleasure of conversation with you before the closing of our
-earthly pilgrimage. It was a distant and uncertain prospect
-then. Now it is become a near and likely one, and I write
-to express my satisfaction at it." He was heard to say by
-many that the volume of his journal he was writing would
-last him till the end of his life, and it is a curious circumstance
-that the last page of it is just half-written, and comes
-up to September 18, less than a fortnight before his death.
-</p>
-<p>
-Our Father-General came from Rome to make the visitation
-of this province in May, 1864, and Father Ignatius
-acted as interpreter throughout the greater part of the visit.
-He was as young as ever in his plans for the conversion of
-England, sanctification of Ireland, and advancing all to
-perfection; and the approbation of the General to the main
-drift of his projects inflamed him with fresh ardour. A
-characteristic incident occurred during this visit. The
-Father-General was inspecting the books Father Ignatius
-was obliged to keep, as Rector of Sutton, and he found
-them rather irregular. The entries were neither clear nor
-orderly, and it was next to an impossibility to obtain any
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_496">{496}</a></span>
-exact notion of the income and expenditure of the house.
-The General called the Rector to his room, in order to
-rebuke him for his carelessness. He began to lecture, and
-when he had said something rather warm looked at Father
-Ignatius, to see what effect it might produce, when, to his
-surprise, he found that he had nodded off asleep. He awoke
-up in an instant, and complimented the Father-General on
-his patience. Such was the indifference he had reached to
-by the many and cutting rebukes he had borne through life.
-</p>
-<p>
-In August, 1864, Father Ignatius wrote a long letter to
-Father Ignatius Paoli, our Provincial, about his doings, and
-he seemed as fresh in them as if he had but just commenced
-his crusade. We shall give one extract from this letter:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I could hardly have the spirit to keep up this work (the
- sanctification of Ireland) if it was not for aiming at a result
- so greatly for the glory of God, and working with a resolution
- to conquer. How exceedingly would it add to my
- spirit if I knew that our body was penetrated with the same
- thought, and we thus were supporting each other!"
-</p>
-<p>
-So late as September 8 he had prepared a paper embodying his
-intentions, which he intended to submit to Roman authority.
-Ever himself to the last.
-</p>
-<p>
-Before leaving the retreat for his "<i>raid</i>" as he called it,
-in Scotland, he called all the members of the community,
-one by one, to conference; he did the same with a convent of
-nuns, of which he had spiritual charge. He gave them all
-special advices, which are not forgotten, and his last sermon
-to his brethren, a day or two before he left, on the conversion
-of England through their own sanctification, was
-singularly impressive. It moved many to tears; and, those
-who heard him, say it was the most thrilling ever heard from
-him on the subject. In talking over some matter of future
-importance with his Vicar, before he left for Scotland, he
-suddenly stopped short, saying, "Others will see after this,"
-or some such words. All those who spoke with him confidentially
-recall some dubious half-meaning expressions that
-seemed to come from an inward consciousness of his
-approaching end.
-</p>
-<p>
-He was remarked to be very sombre and reflective in his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_497">{497}</a></span>
-last missions, but now and then his usual pleasant mood
-would show itself. The Rev. M. Conden, the priest at
-Cartsdyke, Greenock, in whose church he gave a little mission
-from September 14th to the 18th, writes as follows about
-his stay with him:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "He preached morning and evening, heard confessions
- daily, pledged 200 young teetotallers, and received about £14
- in voluntary offerings, for which he seemed most grateful.
- This mission, he said, was his 242nd of the kind; and the
- number of his teetotallers, since he himself took the pledge
- from Father Mathew in 1842, was 60,000.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Every moment of his time here (refection hours alone
- excepted), from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m., was employed either in
- the mission exercises, or at his office, or in prayer, or in
- writing letters to arrange his future movements. He never
- rested. He seemed to have vowed all his time to some duty
- or other.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Wood Cottage (late the Free Church Manse, but now
- the priest's house in Cartsdyke) rests on an eminence overlooking
- the town, harbour, and bay of Greenock, and is at a
- distance of from five to ten minutes' walk from St. Laurence's
- chapel. I noticed that the zigzag uphill walk fatigued
- him, and I offered to provide a conveyance; but he would
- not permit me, 'as he could not read his office so well in the
- carriage as when walking.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "As he passed twice or thrice daily to and from my house
- and the chapel, his massive form and mild mien, his habit
- half concealed by his cloak, his broad-brimmed hat, and his
- breviary in hand, attracted the attention of the old and the
- curiosity of the young. One day, some of the latter followed
- him and eyed him closely, through the lattice-work in front of
- the cottage, until he had finished his office in the garden. He
- then turned towards the youngsters, and riveted his looks
- on them with intense interest and thoughtfulness. You
- might have imagined that they never had seen his like before,
- and that he had seen children for the first time in his long
- life. At length one of the lads broke the spell by observing
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_498">{498}</a></span>
- to the others in a subdued and doubting tone, 'A big
- Hie-lander!' 'A Highlander,' said Father Ignatius, turning to
- me; 'they take my habit for an elongated kilt.'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "At dinner he was always very happy and communicative,
- that day in particular.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'My religious habit,' said he, 'subjected me to many
- humorous remarks before the Ecclesiastical Titles Bill, and
- to annoyances after it. One time a boy would cry out at
- me, "There's the Great Mogul;" another, "There goes
- Robinson Crusoe." "That's Napoleon," a third would
- shout; whilst a fourth, in a strange, clear, wild, musical
- tone, would sing out: "No, that's the devil himself." But,
- he continued, 'nothing half so sharp was ever said of me as
- of a very tall, lath-like Oratorian, who stood leaning, one
- day, against a wall, musing on something or nothing. Some
- London wags watched him attentively for some time,
- and, being divided in their opinions about him, one of
- them at length ended the dispute by observing, in a dry
- and droll way, "Why, that fellow must have grown by
- contract!"'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "Even after his frugal refection, Father Ignatius would
- never rest. Then, too, he must either read his breviary, or
- say his rosary, or write letters. On the day he finished his
- mission (Sunday, September 18), I besought him, as he had
- allowed himself little or no sleep since he began it, before
- proceeding to Port-Glasgow, to commence a new mission
- there that same evening, to recline on the sofa, even for
- half an hour. 'Oh no!' said he; 'I shall try to have my
- nap in the carriage, on my way.' The distance from Cartsdyke
- to Port Glasgow being no more than two or three
- miles, and there being a toll-bar about midway, he could
- have very little of his nap.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "During his mission here, he remarked repeatedly, both
- publicly and in private, that his health was never better, and
- his mind never clearer. He promised himself yet twenty
- years to work for the conversion of England, the sanctification
- of Ireland, and the unity of all in the faith. Might
- he not live to see this realized? Twenty years might
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_499">{499}</a></span>
- do it, and were not his physical and mental powers fresh
- enough?
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But, with all this hope of heart and soul, I could, now
- and then, notice a shade of apprehension passing over his
- countenance, and hear, not without tears, his humble, but
- earnest self-reproaches at his inability to 'brighten up.'
- The manner in which he did this showed me plainly that
- he had a strong presentiment of his approaching end.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "My cottage being at some distance from my chapel, the
- bishop had allowed me to fit up in my house a little oratory,
- where I might keep the Blessed Sacrament, and say mass
- occasionally. By the time that Father Ignatius had concluded
- his mission, I had completed my oratory, and asked
- him to bless it. 'Under what title?' he asked. 'Under
- that of "Our Lady of the Seven Dolors," this (Sunday,
- September 18) being that festival of hers,' I replied. Father
- Ignatius became silent and absorbed for a considerable time
- and then said:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'Beautiful title! and appropriate! Here are the stations
- of the Cross! And this is the Feast of the Seven Dolors!
- Beautiful title!'
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'This,' he continued, 'reminds me of what I once read
- of St. Thomas of Canterbury. When passing for the <i>last</i>
- time through France to England, he was asked, by a gentleman
- who entertained him, to bless a little oratory which
- might be a memorial of his visit. "Under what title?"
- asked the Archbishop. "I shall leave the selection to your
- grace," said the host. "Well then," rejoined the Archbishop,
- "let it be to the <i>first English martyr</i>." He was <i>himself</i> the
- first martyr.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "'Our Lady of Dolors!' Beautiful Title! I am a Passionist.
- Here are the stations of the Cross; and this is the
- Feast of the Seven Dolors,' repeated Father Ignatius; and
- again he became absorbed and silent, so long that I thought
- he wanted never to bless my little oratory. He blessed it,
- however; and now is it by mere accident that on this,
- the eve of St. John of the Cross, Father Ignatius's disciple
- and friend, Father Alban, comes to bless the oratory cross,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_500">{500}</a></span>
- and set up the little memorial tablet which I have prepared
- with the following inscription?&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="center">
- ORATE PRO ANIMA<br>
-<br>
- REV SSMI. PATRIS IGNATII (SPENCER)<br>
- QUI DIE OCTODECIMO SEPTEMBRIS, A.D. 1864.<br>
-<br>
- HOC ORATORIUM<br>
-<br>
- SUB TITULO 'B. V. MARIAE DE SEPTEM DOLORIBUS,'<br>
-<br>
- BENEDIXIT.<br>
-<br>
- R.I.P."
-</p>
-<br>
-<p>
-In a letter to Father Joseph about this time, Father
-Ignatius says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I proceed to say that I have two more moves fixed: for
- Sunday the 18th, to Port Glasgow; Thursday the 22nd, to
- Catholic Church, East Shaw Street, Greenock. <i>During the
- week following I shall suspend missionary work, and make
- my visit to Mr. Monteith, and re-commence on Sunday
- morning, October 2nd. I have got two places to go to in
- Scotland, Leith and Portobello, and I wish to get one more
- to go to first.</i>"
-</p>
-<p>
-This sentence we put in italics, as it seems to signify a
-clear foreknowledge of his death. This one other place he
-did get, and it was Coatbridge, his last mission. His letters,
-after this, are more confused about his future; it would
-seem his clear vision failed him. At all events, this much
-may be gathered from his words, that he <i>knew</i> for certain
-his dissolution was near, and <i>very probably</i> knew even the
-day. There is nothing whatever in his plans for the future
-to militate against this conclusion. The most definite is the
-following, which we quote from his last letter to Father
-Provincial, dated from Coatbridge, Sept. 28: "I <i>am going</i>
-on Saturday to Leith; on Thursday, Oct. 6, to Portobello;
-on Monday, Oct. 10, to Carstairs (Mr. Monteith's), for a
-visit and <i>repose</i>." Did he know that repose was to be
-eternal? He kept to his first arrangement about the visit;
-but we must hear something about his last little mission.
-</p>
-<p>
-We subjoin two accounts of this mission. The first was
-sent us by a gentleman, Mr. M'Auley of Airdrie, who
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_501">{501}</a></span>
-attended the mission, and the next by the Rev. Mr. O'Keefe,
-the priest.
-</p>
-<p>
-Mr. M'Auley writes:
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I was witness to his missionary
- labours for the last five days of his life in this world. On
- Sunday, the 25th September, Rev. Michael O'Keefe, St.
- Patrick's Catholic Chapel, Coatbridge (a large village two
- miles from Airdrie, and eight from Glasgow), announced to
- his flock that Father Ignatius would open a mission there
- on the following Tuesday evening at eight o'clock, and close
- it on Saturday morning, 1st October. Accordingly, the
- beautiful little church was crowded on Tuesday at eight,
- when the saintly father made his appearance and addressed
- the people for upwards of an hour. He gave them a brief
- outline of his conversion, his different visits to Ireland and
- the Continent, the grand objects he had in view&mdash;namely,
- the conversion of his country to the Catholic faith, the faith
- of their fathers; as also, the conversion of Scotland and the
- sanctification of Ireland. He then showed the power of
- prayer, and said that the conversion of Great Britain could
- only be attained by prayer. He said the sanctification of
- Ireland should begin by rooting out the vices and disorders
- which prevail. These, he remarked, were drunkenness,
- cursing, and company-keeping, and that they would form
- the subjects of his discourses for the three following evenings.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "He then showed the utility of missions, and mentioned
- that this was his 245th; and closed, as he did on the subsequent
- evenings, by saying three <i>Hail Marys</i> for the
- conversion of England, one for the conversion of Scotland, and
- one for the sanctification of Ireland. Each of the first three
- was followed by, <i>Help of Christians, pray for us;</i> that for
- Scotland by, <i>St. Margaret, pray for us;</i> and that for Ireland
- by, <i>St. Patrick, pray for us</i>. He also mentioned that he
- had received from his Holiness, Pope Pius IX., an indulgence
- of 300 days for each Hail Mary said for the conversion
- of England. On the following four days he said mass
- every morning at seven o'clock, and, on the three first,
- heard confessions from six o'clock in the morning until
- eleven at night, with the exception of the time required for
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_502">{502}</a></span>
- his devotions and meals. On Saturday morning he heard
- two confessions before mass. I was the last he heard, and
- I trust the fatherly advice he then gave me shall never be
- eradicated from my memory."
-</p>
-<p>
-Father O'Keefe writes:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I am just in receipt of your letter, and beg to inform
- you that I have not words to express the sorrow I feel for
- the sudden death of the good and holy Father Ignatius.
- <i>Deo gratias</i>, there is one more added to the Church
- triumphant. He reached my house about five o'clock on
- the 27th ult., and left this on Saturday morning at a
- quarter-past nine o'clock, during which time he enjoyed excellent
- health. He told me that he was going direct to Leith, to
- open his little mission there on Saturday night; and thence
- to Portobello for the same purpose, after he had done at
- Leith. He also told me that, after finishing his mission at
- Portobello, he would return home to St. Anne's Retreat.
- He intended to pay a visit to Mr. Monteith this week. On
- Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights he had supper
- at half-past ten o'clock, and then returned to the confessional
- until about a quarter-past eleven. On Friday night he told
- me to defer supper till eleven; yet, late though it was, he
- returned after supper to the confessional, and remained
- there until a quarter-past twelve. When he came in, I
- said: 'I am afraid, Father Ignatius, you are over-exerting
- yourself, and that you must feel tired and fatigued.' He
- said, with a smile: 'No, no; I am not fatigued. There is
- no use in saying I am tired, for, you know, I must be at
- the same work to-night in Leith.' He retired to his room
- at half-past twelve o'clock, and was in the confessional again
- at six o'clock in the morning. He said mass at seven;
- breakfasted at half-past eight; and, as I have already said,
- left this at a quarter-past nine for the train. On seeing him,
- after breakfast, in his secular dress, I remarked that he
- looked much better and younger than in his religious habit.
- The remark caused him to laugh very heartily. It was the
- only time I saw him laugh. He said: 'I wish to tell you
- what Father Thomas Doyle said when he saw me in my
- secular dress: "Father Ignatius, you look like a
-{503 }
- broken-down old gentleman." And he enjoyed the remark very
- much.'"
-</p>
-<p>
-The remainder of his life is easily told. He arrived at
-Carstairs Junction at 10.35 a.m.; came out of the train,
-and gave his luggage in charge of the station master. He
-then went towards Carstairs House, the residence of Mr.
-Monteith. There is a long avenue through the demesne for
-about half a mile from the station, crossed then at right
-angles by another, which leads to the grand entrance; this
-avenue Father Ignatius went by. He had just passed the
-"rectangle," and was coming straight to the grand entrance,
-when he turned off on a bye path. He perceived that he
-had lost his way, and asked a child which was the right
-one. He never spoke to mortal again.
-</p>
-<p>
-On a little corner in the avenue, just within sight of the
-house, and about a hundred paces from the door, he fell
-suddenly and yielded up his spirit into the hands of his
-Creator. May we all die doing God's work, and as well
-prepared as Father Ignatius of St. Paul!
-</p>
-<br>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_504">{504}</a></span>
-<br>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.<br>
-The Obsequies Of Father Ignatius.</h2>
-<br>
-<p>
-The divine attribute of Providence to which he was so
-fondly devoted during life guided him in his last moments.
-He did not intend to visit Carstairs before the 10th of
-October, but our Lord, who disposes all things sweetly,
-had ordained otherwise, by the circumstances. The train
-he came by was due at the junction at 10.35, and the train
-for Edinburgh would not start before 11.50. He had more
-than an hour to wait, and he thought perhaps he might as
-well spend part of that time at Mr. Monteith's as at the
-Railway Station; besides he could get a fast train to Edinburgh
-at 3.0, which would bring him to Leith a few
-minutes after six, and this would be time enough, as his
-mission was to commence on the next day, Sunday. Such
-seems to have been the simple combination of circumstances
-that directed his steps to Carstairs House, as far as
-human eye can see. We cannot but admire the dispositions
-of Providence; had he taken any other train, he
-might have died in the railway carriage, or at a station.
-How convenient that he died within the boundaries of the
-demesne of a friend by whom he was venerated, and to
-whose house he was always welcome!
-</p>
-<p>
-And then how remarkable was that other circumstance
-of his being alone. Servants and workmen were passing
-up and down the place the whole morning, but at the
-moment God chose to call his servant, no human eye saw
-him, and no hand was ready to assist him. On measuring
-the respective distances from where he had turned off the
-avenue, to where his body was found, and to the house, it
-was seen that, had he gone on straight, he would have
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_505">{505}</a></span>
-fallen just on the threshold. It was God's will that angels
-instead of men should surround his lonely bed of death.
-</p>
-<p>
-He must have arrived at the spot where his body was
-discovered about 11 o'clock. A few minutes after, one of
-the retainers was passing by, and ran at once to the house
-to give the alarm that a priest lay dead at such a part of
-the avenue. Mr. Monteith, and Mr. Edmund Waterton,
-who was on a visit there at the time, were going out to
-shoot. They laid down their guns, and went in haste to
-the spot. Monteith did not recognize the features; they
-were drawn together by the death-stroke. They searched
-for something to identify him. What was the good man's
-surprise when he found among the papers of the deceased a
-letter he had written himself to Father Ignatius a few days
-before. The truth then flashed across him. It was no
-other than his own godfather, his constant friend and counsellor,
-the man whom he venerated so much, Father Ignatius
-the Passionist. Immediately, a doctor was sent for, the
-body, which all now recognized, was brought to the nearest
-shelter, and every available means tried to restore consciousness,
-but to no effect. Medical examination showed that he
-died of disease of the heart, and in an instant. The spot
-whereon he lay bore the impress of his knee, and the brim
-of his hat was broken by his sudden fall on the left side.
-As soon as they were certain of life being extinct, the body
-was brought into the house, the luggage was sent for, a
-coffin was provided, the secular dress was taken off, and the
-corpse robed in the religious habit. The sacristy was draped
-in black, and two flickering tapers showed the mortal remains
-of a pure and saintly soul, as they lay there in a kind of
-religious state for the greater part of three days.
-</p>
-<p>
-Telegrams were sent immediately to our principal houses,
-and to members of the Spencer family by Mr. Monteith. The
-shock was great, and not knowing the manner of his death
-did not serve to make it the less felt. Fathers of the Order
-went from the different retreats to Carstairs, and arrived
-there, some on Sunday, and some on Monday morning.
-Those who went were struck by the appearance of the
-corpse; the marble countenance never looked so noble as in
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_506">{506}</a></span>
-death, and we looked with silent wonder on all that now
-remained of one whom the world was not worthy of possessing
-longer.
-</p>
-<p>
-About 10 o'clock a sad cortége was formed, and the coffin
-was carried by the most worthy persons present to the train
-that conveyed it to Button. Every one on hearing of his
-death appeared to have lost a special friend; no one could
-lament, for they felt that he was happy; few could pray for
-him, because they were more inclined to ask his intercession.
-The greatest respect and attention were shown by the railway
-officials all along the route, and special ordinances were
-made in deference to the respected burthen that was carried.
-</p>
-<p>
-Letters were sent to the relatives of Father Ignatius by
-our Father Provincial, and they were told when the funeral
-would take place. No one came, and those who were sure
-to come were unavoidably prevented. Lord Lucan had not
-time to come from West Connaught, and Lord Spencer was
-just then in Copenhagen. His regard for his revered uncle,
-and his kindly spirit, will be seen from the following letter,
-which was published in the newspapers at the time, and is
-the most graceful tribute paid to the memory of Father
-Ignatius by any member of his noble family.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "<i>Denmark, Oct</i>. 16, 1864.
-<br><br>
- "Rev. Sir,&mdash;I was much shocked to hear of the death of
- my excellent uncle George. I received the sad intelligence
- last Sunday, and subsequently received the letter which you
- had the goodness to write to me. My absence from England
- prevented my doing what I should have much wished to
- have done, to have attended to the grave the remains of my
- uncle, if it had been so permitted by your Order.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I assure you that, much as I may have differed from
- my uncle on points of doctrine, no one could have admired
- more than I did the beautiful simplicity, earnest religion,
- and faith of my uncle. For his God he renounced all the
- pleasures of the world; his death, sad as it is to us, was, as
- his life, apart from the world, but with God.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "His family will respect his memory as much as I am
- sure you and the brethren of his Order do.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_507">{507}</a></span>
-<p class="cite">
- "I should be much obliged to you if you let me know
- the particulars of the last days of his life, and also where
- he is buried, as I should like to place them among family
- records at Althorp.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "I venture to trouble you with these questions, as I suppose
- you will be able to furnish them better than any one else.
-<br><br>
- "Yours faithfully,<br>
- "SPENCER."
-</p>
-<p>
-The evening before the funeral the coffin was opened, and
-the body was found to have already commenced to decompose.
-The tossing of the long journey from Scotland and
-the suddenness of the death caused this change to come on
-sooner than might be expected. A privileged few were
-allowed to take a last lingering look at the venerable remains,
-many touched the body with objects of devotion, and
-others cut off a few relics which their piety valued in
-proportion to their conception of his sanctity.
-</p>
-<p>
-At 11 o'clock on Thursday, October 5th, the Office of the
-Dead commenced. A requiem mass was celebrated, and the
-funeral oration preached by the Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne,
-Lord Bishop of Birmingham, and particular friend of the
-deceased. We give the following extracts from an account
-of the funeral as given by the <i>Northern Press</i>; the Bishop's
-sermon is taken from the <i>Weekly Register</i>.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- At eleven o'clock the solemn ceremonies commenced. The
- church, which was crowded, was draped in black, and the
- coffin (on which were the stole and cap of the deceased
- nobleman) reclined on a raised catafalque immediately outside
- the sanctuary rails. On each side of the coffin were
- three wax-lights, and around were ranged seats for the
- clergy in attendance. Solemn Office for the Dead was first
- chanted, and amongst the assembled clerics were the following:
- The Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne (Lord Bishop of
- Birmingham); Benedictines: Right Rev. Dr. Burchall (Lord
- Abbot of Westminster), Very Rev. R. B. Vaughan (Prior
- of St. Michael's, Hereford), Very Rev. T. Cuthbert Smith
- (Prior of St. George's, Downside), Very Rev. P. P. Anderson
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_508">{508}</a></span>
- (Prior of St. Laurence's, Ampleforth); the Revds. P. A.
- Glassbrooke, R. A. Guy, J. P. Hall, and Bradshaw
- (Redemptorists); the Very Rev. Canon Wallwork, the Rev.
- Fathers Walmsley, Grimstone, Costello, Kernane (Rainhill),
- M. Duggan, M.R. (St. Joseph's, Liverpool), S. Walsh (of
- the new mission of St. John the Evangelist, Bootle); Father
- Dougall; Father Fisher, of Appleton; Father O'Flynn, of
- Blackbrook, near St. Helen's; and the priests and religious
- of the Order of Passionists, who were represented by members
- of the order from France, Ireland, and England. A
- number of nuns of the convent of the Holy Cross, Sutton,
- occupied seats beside the altar of the Blessed Virgin, and
- with them were about twenty young girls apparelled in
- white dresses and veils, with black bands round the head,
- and wearing also black scarfs. When the Office for the
- Dead had concluded, a solemn Requiem Mass was begun.
- His Lordship the Bishop of Birmingham occupied a seat on
- a raised dais at the Gospel side of the altar; and the priests
- who celebrated the Sacred Mysteries were:&mdash;Celebrant&mdash;
- the Very Rev. Father Ignatius (Paoli), Provincial of the
- Order of Passionists in England and Ireland; Deacon&mdash;
- the Very Rev. Father Eugene, First Provincial Consulter;
- Sub-deacon&mdash;the Very Rev. Father Bernard, Second Provincial
- Consulter; Master of the Ceremonies&mdash;the Very
- Rev. Father Salvian, rector of St. Saviour's Retreat,
- Broadway, Worcestershire. The mass sung was the Gregorian
- Requiem, and the choir was under the direction of the Rev.
- Father Bernardine (of Harold's Cross Retreat, Dublin, and
- formerly of Sutton). Immediately after the conclusion of
- the Holy Sacrifice, the Right Rev. Dr. Ullathorne ascended
- the pulpit (which was hung in black) and preached the
- funeral sermon.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- His Lordship, who was deeply affected, said:&mdash;
- The wailings of the chant have gone into silence, the
- cry of prayer is hushed into secret aspiration, and stillness
- reigns, whilst I lift my solitary voice, feeling, nevertheless,
- that it would be better for me to weep over my own soul
- than to essay to speak the character of him who is gone
- from the midst of us. A certain oppression weighs upon
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_509">{509}</a></span>
- my heart, and yet there rises through it a spring of consolation
- when I think upon that strength of holiness which has
- borne him to his end; who, if I am a Religious, was my
- brother; if a Priest, he was of the Holy Order of Priesthood;
- but he was also, what I am not, a mortified member
- of an institute devoted to the Passion of our Lord, who bore
- conspicuously upon him the character of the meekness and
- the sufferings of his Divine Master.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- My text lies beneath that pall. For there is all that
- Death will ever claim of victory from him. The silver cord
- is broken, and the bowl of life is in fragments; and yet this
- death is but the rending of the mortal frame that through
- the open door the soul may go forth to its eternity; upon
- the brink of which we stand, gazing after with our faith,
- and trembling for ourselves whilst we gain a glimpse of the
- Throne of Majesty, on which sits the God of infinite purity,
- whose insufferable light searches our frailty through.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- I will not venture to recount a life which would ask days
- of speech or volumes of writing, but I will endeavour at
- least to point to some of those principles which animated
- that life, and were its stay as well as guidance. For principles
- are like the luminaries of Heaven, or like the eyes that
- cover the wings of the Cherubs that sustain the Chariot of
- God in the vision of Ezechiel. They are luminous points
- planted in the midst of our life, which enable us to see
- whatever we look upon in a new light, and to enhance the
- scene of our existence. Listen, then, dearly beloved, and
- hang your attention on my voice, whilst I speak of him
- who was once called in the world the Honourable and Rev.
- George Spencer, a scion of one of the noblest houses of the
- nobility of this land, but who himself preferred to be called
- Father Ignatius of St. Paul, of the Congregation of Regular
- Clerics of our most Holy Redeemer's Passion, a name by
- which he was loved by tens of thousands of the poor of
- these countries, and known to the Catholics of all lands.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Father Ignatius was born in the last month of the last
- year of the last century; at the time when his father was
- First Lord of the Admiralty. Brought up in the lap of
- luxury, and encircled with those social splendours that belong
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_510">{510}</a></span>
- to our great families, he was educated as most of our noble
- youths are; sent early to Eton, and thence to Cambridge.
- I will not stay to trace his early life. In his twenty-second
- year he received Anglican orders, and was inducted into the
- living that adjoined the mansion of his fathers, where, for
- seven years, he toiled to disseminate to those around him
- what light of truth had entered his own mind. He himself
- has recorded that he had about 800 souls committed to his
- care. And here we begin to see the opening of that genuine
- purity and earnestness in his character which he developed
- with time to such perfection. His simplicity of
- soul and passionate love of truth enabled him to see some
- of the leading characteristics of truth in its objective nature.
- He saw that truth was one, and that the Church, which is
- the depository and the voice of truth, must of necessity be
- one. He found his parish divided by the presence of the
- sects of Unitarians, Anabaptists, and Wesleyans. These he
- sought out, conversed with them, and discussed with them
- the unity of truth and the authority of the Church. But
- the more he urged them with his arguments the more he
- found that they threw him back upon himself, forcing him
- to see, by the aid of his own sincerity and love of truth,
- that he stood upon something like the self-same grounds
- which he assailed in them. The very sincerity with which
- he read the Gospel; the sincerity with which he prayed; the
- sincerity with which he strove to penetrate into those duties
- and responsibilities which then appeared to him to be laid
- upon his conscience; and his sincere love of souls, drew
- his own soul gradually and gently towards the one broad
- horizon of truth and the one authority. He had already,
- from reading the Gospel, determined on leading a life of
- celibacy as the most pure and perfect, and to keep himself
- from the world for the service of his Divine Master. And
- what effect that resolve had in humbling his heart and
- bringing down the light and grace of God into his spirit, he
- himself has told us in that narrative of his conversion which
- he drew up at the request of a venerable Italian bishop,
- soon after his conversion. The results, I say, he has told
- us; he presumes not to point to any cause as in himself.
-</p>
-
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_511">{511}</a></span>
-
-<p class="cite">
- But whilst yet perplexed between the new light he was
- receiving, and the resistance of the old opinion which he had
- inherited, he received a letter from an unknown hand, inviting
- him to examine the foundations of his faith; this led
- to correspondence, and so to contact with members of the
- Church, and the errors which had encompassed him from his
- birth dispersed by degrees, until at last the daylight dawned
- upon him, and grew on even to mid-day, and he hesitated not,
- even for one week, but closed his ministry, and entered into
- the Church of God and the fulness of peace. Then it was
- he found that the correspondent who had awakened him to
- inquire was a lady, who, converted before himself, was then
- dying in a convent in Paris which she had but recently
- entered; and he hoped, as he said, to have an intercessor
- in heaven in one who had so fervently prayed for him on
- earth.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- No sooner had Father Ignatius entered the Church than
- he put himself with all simplicity and obedience under the
- guidance of the venerable prelate, my predecessor, Bishop
- Walsh, who sent him to Rome, there to enter on a course
- of ecclesiastical studies. In 1830, there we find him in the
- holy city, imbibing that Apostolic light, and bending himself
- over the written laws of that truth which was to fit him,
- not only for the priesthood, but also for a singular call and
- an unprecedented vocation. Father Ignatius was marked
- out by the Providence of God for a special apostleship, and
- he had something about him of the spirit of the prophet and
- of the eye of the seer. He pierced in advance into the work
- to which God called him, and there were holy souls who
- instinctively looked to him as an instrument for the fulfilling
- of their own anticipations. There was in Italy a Passionist
- Father, who from his youth had had written in his heart the
- work of England's conversion. It had been the object of
- all his thoughts, and prayers, and hopes. Father Dominic
- had moved all the souls he could with kindred ardour for
- this work. And before they had ever beheld each other, the
- hearts of those two men were sweetly drawn together. Let
- us hear what Father Dominic writes to an English gentleman,
- himself a convert, ardent for the conversion of his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_512">{512}</a></span>
- country, on the day of Mr. Spencer's first sermon in Rome,
- after being ordained deacon:&mdash;"On this day," he writes,
- "on this day, the feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus,
- Mr. Spencer begins in Rome his apostolic ministry; to-day,
- he makes his first sermon to the Roman people in the church
- of the English. Oh what a fortunate commencement!
- Certainly that ought to be salutary which commences in the
- name of the Saviour. Oh, how great are my expectations!
- God, without doubt, has not shed so many graces on that
- soul to serve for his own profit alone. I rather believe He
- has done it in order that he might carry the Holy Name of
- Jesus before kings, and nations, and the sons of Israel. Most
- sweet Name of Jesus, be thou in his mouth as oil poured
- out, which may softly and efficaciously penetrate the hardest
- marble."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- This was written by a man who had never stepped on
- English soil, about one whom he had never seen in the flesh,
- but whom he felt to have one common object in one common
- spirit with himself. But it was written by a man in whose
- heart God had written in grace the words&mdash;<i>England's Conversion</i>.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- It was whilst yet a Deacon, that Father Ignatius was
- visited at the Roman College by a Bishop who had come to
- Rome from the farthest corner of Italy, who on his soul had
- also the impression that great conversions were in store for
- England, and who asked that his eyes might be blessed
- with so rare a spectacle as that of a converted Anglican
- minister; and it was at the request of the Bishop of
- Oppido, for the edification of his flock, to whom the news
- had reached, that Father Ignatius wrote the narrative of
- his conversion; the translation of which brings us in view
- of another of those remarkable men who were then preparing
- themselves for entering on the work of the English
- mission, for that translation was done in Rome by Dr.
- Gentili.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- It was under the direction of Cardinal Wiseman, then
- President of the English College, that Father Ignatius was
- pursuing his studies, when, at the end of two years, he
- broke a blood-vessel, and was summoned, in consequence,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_513">{513}</a></span>
- by Bishop Walsh, to hasten his ordination and return to
- England. Cardinal Wiseman arranged that he should receive
- the order of priesthood from the Cardinal Vicar in
- that very Church of St. Gregory, from which the Apostles
- of England had been sent to our shores, and that he should
- say his first mass on the Feast of that Venerable Bede,
- whose name is so intimately entwined with the literature,
- the religion, and the history of England. How Father
- Ignatius himself viewed these signs and his approaching
- ordination, he himself expressed in a letter to Father
- Dominic, in these terms: "Ten days ago I received orders
- from my Bishop, Dr. Walsh, to proceed to England without
- delay. You know the value and security of obedience, and
- will agree with me that I ought not to doubt of anything.
- The first festival day that presented itself for ordination was
- that of St. Philip Neri. Judge, then, what was my joy
- when, after that day had been fixed upon, I discovered that
- it was also the Feast of St. Augustine, the first Apostle of
- England, sent by St. Gregory. It seems to me that Providence
- wishes to give me some good omens. It is enough, if
- I have faith and humility."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Of the grace of humility, that virtue of the heroic virtues
- which had already taken possession of his heart, I cannot
- give you better proof than his own communing with the
- heart of Father Dominic, who had hinted rumours of his
- rising to ecclesiastical dignities. He writes in reply: "I
- can assure you it would give me the greatest displeasure.
- My prayer is that God would grant me a life like that of
- His Son and the Apostles, in poverty and tribulations for
- the Gospel. I must submit, if it be His will to raise me to
- any high worldly dignity; but it would be to me the same
- as to say that I am unworthy of the heavenly state, which I
- long for upon earth. Jesus Christ sent the Apostles in
- poverty. St. Francis Xavier, St. Dominic, and so many
- other great missionaries, preached in poverty, and I wish to
- do the same, if it be the will of God."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- Here you behold the heart of this ecclesiastic, so young
- as yet in the Church, yet so mature in spiritual sense. On
- his return home, he meets his dear friend Father Dominic
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_514">{514}</a></span>
- face to face for the first time, in the diocese of Lucca, and
- the latter writes to his friend in England:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "How willingly would I go to England along with dear
- Mr. Spencer; but the time destined by the Divine mercy
- for this has not yet arrived. I hope, however, that it will
- arrive. I hope one day to see with my own eyes that kingdom,
- which for so many years I have borne engraven on my
- heart. May God be merciful to us both, that so we may
- meet together in the company of all our dear Englishmen
- above in heaven, to praise and bless the Divine Majesty
- throughout all ages."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- I have lingered upon the first communing together of
- these two men, because it is so instructive to see how it
- was not merely in the schools, even where religion was
- studied under the shadow of the successor of St. Peter, but
- still more by drawing fire from the hearts of saintly men,
- that Father Ignatius was prepared for his future work.
- Returned to England, he has left it on record how affectionately
- he was received by his venerable father and his noble
- brother, Lord Althorp, then in the midst of his official
- career as a chief leader of the destinies of his country. Who
- that remembers those days does not recall the amenities of a
- character of humanity so gentle and true, that even in the
- midst of the most intense political strife he embittered no
- one, and drew on him no personal attack. By his noble
- relatives, Father Ignatius was received with the old affection,
- and their entire conduct towards him was an exception
- indeed to the treatment which so many members of other
- families have experienced in reward for their fidelity to
- God and to their conscience. For fifteen years Father
- Ignatius toiled in the work of the mission in the diocese of
- Birmingham, generously expending both himself and the
- private funds allowed him by his family in the service of
- souls. He founded the mission of Westbromwich, and the
- mission of Dudley; he raised there churches and schools,
- and preached and conversed with the poor unceasingly. He
- was called to Oscott, and a new office was created for him,
- that of Spiritual Dean, that he might inspire those young
- men who were preparing for the ministry with his own
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_515">{515}</a></span>
- missionary ardours. The office began with him, and ended
- when he left the establishment, although unquestionably
- one of the greatest functions which could be exerted in our
- colleges would be the office of enkindling in youthful hearts
- that fire of charity for souls which is the true creator of
- the missioner. But the time was coming when he was to
- pass from the ordinary life of a missioner, led in an
- extraordinary manner, and to pass into that religious
- congregation where he was to carry out his special mission, his
- Apostleship of prayer. During those fifteen past years he
- had not lost sight of Father Dominic. In 1840, that holy
- man, with the name of England written on his heart,
- reached Boulogne with a community of his brethren. In
- the same year he visited Oscott, where those two men of
- God embraced each other anew; and in the following year
- the desire and prayer of so many years was realized. The
- Passionist Fathers were established at Aston, in Staffordshire,
- with Father Dominic as their head and founder; and
- whoever will look over the correspondence, so deeply interesting
- at this moment, which is printed as an appendix to
- the life of the Blessed Paul of the Cross, will see how great
- a part the Rev. George Spencer had in the work of bringing
- the Passionists into England.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- It was in the year 1846, that, making a retreat under the
- Fathers of the Society of Jesus, God revealed to his heart
- his vocation to join the Passionists, and become the companion
- and fellow worker with Father Dominic. He cast
- himself at the feet of that holy man, and petitioned for the
- singular grace of being admitted to the Order. Their joint
- aspirations for England had brought them together, and
- their love of the Cross made them of one mind, and after
- the first ironic rebuff with which the spirit of the petitioner
- was tested, I can imagine the smile with which that man of
- God, so austere to himself whilst so loving to his neighbour,
- recalled the time, long past, when they wondered if ever
- they should meet in the flesh face to face. There before
- him was the man drawn by his prayers into his very bosom,
- of whom he had predicted, sixteen years ago, that he would
- carry the name of Jesus for the conversion of England
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_516">{516}</a></span>
- before the kings and nations of the earth. In the Order he
- was distinguished by his simplicity, his humility, his
- self-mortification, his patience in suffering, and his obedience.
- I would gladly dwell on the traits of those virtues which
- formed his personal character, but time urges me to proceed.
- He filled successively the office of Consultor, of Novice-master,
- and of Rector, and it was to him that Father
- Dominic provisionally consigned his authority at his death.
- But his great and singular work was his Apostleship of
- prayer for England. Many had been the questionings in
- many hearts, as to whether this country would ever in any
- serious numbers return to the faith or not. And many had
- been the speculations as to how this could be accomplished;
- some dreamt it must come by missions; others, by learned
- writings; others, by the preaching of the Gospel; some had
- one scheme, some another, but in each there was something
- defective, something not altogether divine; something that
- was human, and resting more or less on the will of man.
- But Father Ignatius consulted the light and grace of his
- own soul, he penetrated to the true principle, he recalled his
- own history, he saw that conversion is the work of God,
- that the work itself is the work of grace, and that all that
- man can do, is to invoke God to put forth His power. Prayer
- that is pure, sincere, earnest, and of many souls, God always
- hears and inclines to grant. There are many ways of
- approaching to God, but there is one which He loves for its
- tender alliance with the Divine Humanity, for its humility
- and its beautiful faith, and that is the approach through her
- who is at once the Virgin Mother of God and ours. Let
- us plead to God through the Mother of God, and let her
- plead for her sons on earth to her Son in Heaven, and behold
- our prayer is tripled in its strength. So Ignatius looked to
- God through the eyes of Mary, prayed to God through the
- heart of Mary, and appealed through the purity of Mary,
- for a people who had forgotten her. And he went forth on
- his Apostleship of prayer over Italy and France, and Hungary
- and Austria, and the rest of Germany; and over
- Belgium and England, and Ireland and Scotland, and he
- corresponded with the other kingdoms of Christendom. He
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_517">{517}</a></span>
- went before emperors and kings, and before ministers of
- state, and asked them to pray for the conversion of his
- country. He sought the Bishops in their dioceses, and the
- priests in their parishes, and holy religious in their convents,
- and devout lay persons in their houses, and prayed them to
- pray to God, and to set other souls to pray for the conversion
- of England. His faith was strong that from her conversion
- a great radiation of truth would spread forth in the
- world, and that all that was needed was the general prayer
- of believing souls, that God might grant so great a grace to
- the world. And so the name of Father Ignatius grew
- familiar on the lips of Christendom. Prayer arose in many
- countries; the Bishops issued pastorals, a day in the week
- was appointed for prayer for England. Prelates spoke of it
- in synods, and the clergy discussed it in their conferences.
- And all pious souls added on new prayers to their habitual
- devotions for the conversion of England. And as for the
- apostle of this prayer, he went on nourishing the flame
- which he had enkindled, and stirring the zeal of his brethren
- until, to use his own words, often repeated to his superior,
- this prayer, and the preaching of this prayer to God through
- Mary, had become a part of his nature, an element inseparable
- from his existence. He had but recently recommenced
- the work of this mission in a somewhat altered form, basing
- the conversion of the English upon the sanctification of the
- Irish people, but still his cry was&mdash;Pray for England. There
- can be no doubt, as sundry facts point out, but that he had
- a strong impression of late that his end was drawing near.
- And not long before his death he called the brethren individually
- to his room, and exhorted each with solemn earnestness
- to be instant in the mission of prayer for England.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- And what has been the result of this Apostleship? That
- result Father Ignatius himself summed up but a few days
- before his death. On the 8th of September, he addressed a
- letter to an Italian periodical, from which I translate the
- following passage as the fit conclusion of this subject. He
- says:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is more than thirty-four years since a worthy Bishop
- of a Neapolitan diocese came to seek me in the English
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_518">{518}</a></span>
- College at Rome, wishing to look with his own eyes upon a
- converted Anglican clergyman; a sight so grateful to a
- noble Catholic heart, and in those days so rare. On what
- proof he spoke, I know not, but he assured me that the
- first Carmelite Scapular ever given, and given by that English
- Saint, Simon Stock, was secretly kept in England, and
- that he looked on this as a pledge that our country would
- one day come back to the faith. Be this assertion well or
- ill founded, the memory of him who made it is dear to me
- as is the memory of the presence of every one who bespeaks
- hope and peace for England.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "What have we seen in our days? Conversions to the
- faith so numerous and so important that the whole world
- speaks of them. And this movement towards Catholicism
- is of a character so remarkable, that the history of the
- Church presents nothing like it.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "It is true that other nations have been converted,
- whilst England has stood to her Protestantism; but a first
- step has been made in this country, which, as far as I know,
- has no parallel. In other cases, it was the sovereign who
- made the first movement, having had no learned opposition
- or persecution from his subjects; and, as in the instance of
- St. Stephen, of Hungary, the conversions which followed
- came easily, and as it were naturally; or conversion began
- with the poor, who, though it cost them persecution and
- privation, had yet but little to lose. But this has not been
- the case in England. Here the work of conversion grew
- conspicuous among the ministers of the Protestant Church,
- of whom hundreds of the most esteemed and learned have
- been received into the bosom of the Church, and also among
- the noble and the gentle families of the kingdom; so that it
- may be said that scarcely is there a family that is not
- touched by conversion, in some near or more distant member
- of it. I say that this order of conversion is new, this
- operation of grace is most singular. Great numbers of
- those clergymen had prospects before them by remaining in
- Protestantism, flattering enough, of earthly felicity, wealth,
- and honour; and by their conversion they fell upon poverty,
- distress, and contempt, especially those men who, by reason
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_519">{519}</a></span>
- of their families, could not embrace the clerical state.
- The sacrifices of the lay gentry have not always been so
- great; but even here how many have closed against themselves
- the path of honours and distinctions; how many have
- been discarded by their kindred and friends; how many of
- the gentle sex have abandoned the prospect of a settlement
- in life befitting their rank and station; while all have
- turned from the world to obey the voice of God; and that,
- in a country like this, where the world holds out allurements
- so specious and so attractive in every kind.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "But these great results can neither be attributed to
- the force, the eloquence, or the industry of man. Man has
- positively had no part in the work, except by prayer, and
- this praying has been professedly offered to God through
- Mary; through whom all the heresies of the world are
- destroyed."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- I have no time to dwell upon this summary of results so
- beautifully told and so remarkably timed. But it is impossible
- not to notice that the great tide of conversion that
- has flowed so unusually, has passed through the two classes
- to which Father Ignatius himself belonged, that of the clergy
- and that of the gentry. It is a wonderful result following
- a most unprecedented combination of the voices of Catholic
- souls of many nations in prayer, set in motion by the very
- man who is summing up the result of the work, before he
- goes to his reward; nor do I believe, although his tongue is
- silent, and his features settled into cold obstruction, as we
- looked on them last night, that the prayer of his soul has
- ceased; no, his work goes on, his Apostleship is not dead.
- Purged by the sacrifice, I seem to see his spirit all this time.
- For you know that when a holy man quits this life, and has
- not loved it as he has loved God, he goes away no further
- than God, and God is very near to us. Have you never lost
- a dear parent or a child, and have you not found that when
- freed from the body the spirit of that one had more power
- over you; seemed to be freer to be with you at all solemn
- times, and to impress you with its purely spiritual qualities
- and virtues, all gross things having ceased though the purification
- of death and the final grace? and so I conceive his
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_520">{520}</a></span>
- spirit standing by my side and saying still, at each interval
- of my voice,&mdash;"Pray for England: pray for her conversion."
- To you, fathers of the rude frieze, brethren of his Order,
- with the name of Christ on your breast, and the love of His
- passion in your heart, he says&mdash;"Pray for England: pray
- for her conversion." Superiors of the Benedictine Order,
- whom a special circumstance has brought here to-day, Father
- President-General, representative of St. Benedict, as of St.
- Augustine, and monastic successor of that first Apostle of
- England, to you, and to you, Priors of the Order, he says&mdash;
- "Fail not from the work of your forefathers, pray for England:
- pray for her conversion." To you, brethren of the
- priesthood, men consecrated to this mission, who know his
- voice familiarly, to you he says with the burning desire of
- his heart,&mdash;"Pray for England: pray for her conversion."
- Daughters of the virginal veil, who are his children, whilst
- in the inferior soul you suffer the grief of loss, in your
- superior soul you rejoice that he is with God; to you
- also he says:&mdash;"Pray for England: pray for her conversion."
- Dearly beloved brethren, how often in his missions
- and his ministries has he written those words upon your
- hearts. Let them not die out. Let them live on with
- something of his flame of charity. Be you as his missioners;
- carry these words to your children and your brethren. He
- prays yet, and will ever pray until the work be finished.
- Even in the presence of his God, neither the awe nor the
- majesty of that unspeakable presence can I conceive as
- interrupting the prayer which has become a portion of his
- nature&mdash;"God, have mercy on England. Turn, O Jesus,
- Thy meek eyes upon that people. Let pity drop from Thy
- glorious wounds, and mercy from Thy heart. In what she
- is blind, in what she sins, forgive her, for she knows not
- what she does. Have mercy on England." When joined
- to his beloved Dominic, and with blessed Paul, and meeting
- Gregory, and Augustine, and Bede, I conceive him urging
- them to join yet more earnestly with the prayers he left
- ascending from the earth, following his mission still in the
- heavens; nay, even pressing to be heard in the circles of
- the angels, whose meekness and purity he loved so well, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_521">{521}</a></span>
- still his cry is: "Pray for England: pray for her conversion."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- It remains for us to turn one last look upon his mortal
- remains, to consider our own mortality, and to prepare us
- for our approaching end. How beautiful, how sublime was
- his departure. Father Ignatius had often wished and prayed
- that, like his Divine Lord, like St. Francis Xavier, and like
- his dear friend and master in the spiritual life, Father
- Dominic, he might die at his post, yet deserted and alone.
- God granted him that prayer. He had just closed one mission
- and was proceeding to another; he turned aside for an hour
- on his way to converse with a dear friend and godson; he
- was seen ten minutes before conversing with children. Was
- he only inquiring his way, or did he utter the last words of
- his earthly mission to those young hearts? And here alone,
- unseen but of God and His angels, he fell down, and that
- heart which had beaten so long for the love and conversion
- of England stopped in his bosom. Crucified was he in his
- death as in his life to this world, that he might live to God.
-</p>
-<p>
-When his lordship, the Bishop, descended from the pulpit,
-the procession to the place of burial was formed, and issued
-from the church in the following order, the choir singing
-the <i>Miserere</i>:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- The Children of the Schools of the Convent of the Holy Child.
-<br><br>
- The Rev. Father Bernard (Superior of the Order of
- Passionists, Paris), carrying a Cross, and having on each side
- an Acolyte, bearing a lighted candle.
-<br><br>
- The Thurifer.
-<br><br>
- Boys two abreast.
-<br><br>
- The Regular Clergy.
-<br><br>
- The Secular Clergy.
-<br><br>
- THE COFFIN.
-<br><br>
- The Lord Bishop of Birmingham.
-<br><br>
- The Laity.
-</p>
-<p>
-As the melancholy <i>cortége</i> moved along, the clergy chanted
-the <i>Miserere</i>, and when the procession arrived at the vault,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_522">{522}</a></span>
-the coffin (which was of deal) was placed inside a leaden
-one, which was again enclosed in an outer shell of oak.
-Upon this was a black plate, bearing the following inscription:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="center">
- FATHER IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL
-<br><br>
- (THE HON. AND REV. GEORGE SPENCER)
-<br><br>
- DIED OCT. 1, 1864, AGED 65 YEARS.
-<br><br>
- <i>R. I. P.</i>
-</p>
-<p>
-Placed inside the coffin was a leaden tablet, on which the
-following was engraved:&mdash;
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- "MORTALES EXUVIAE
-<br><br>
- "Patris Ignatii a S. Paulo, Congregationis Passionis, de
- Comitibus Spencer. Minister Anglicanus primum; dein,
- ad Ecclesiam Catholicam conversus, sacerdotio Romae
- insignitus est anno 1832. Mirum, qua animi constantia per
- triginta et amplius annos pro conversione patriae laboraverat.
- Inter alumnos Passionis anno 1847 adscriptus, omnium virtutum
- exemplar confratribus semper extitit. Angliam,
- Hiberniam, Scotiam, necnon Italiam, Germaniam, et Galliam
- peragravit, populum exhortans ad propriam sanctificationem,
- et ut, veluti sacro agmine inito, preces fundant pro
- conversione Anglise. Dum perjucundum opus in Scotia
- prosequeretur, calendis Octobris anni 1864, sacrificio missae
- peracto, ad invisendum antiquae consuetudinis amicum
- (Dom. Robertum Monteith) pergens, ante januam amici
- repentino morbo correptus, a Deo cujus gloriam semper quesierat
- et ab angelis quorum puritatem imitaverat, opitulatus,
- supremam diem clausit, aetatis suae anno 65to. Requiescat
- in pace."
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- TRANSLATION.
-</p>
-<p class="cite">
- The mortal remains of Father Ignatius of St. Paul, belonging
- to the Congregation of the Passion, and of the noble
- family of Spencer. He was at first an Anglican minister;
- then, having been converted to the Catholic Church, was
- ordained into the priesthood at Rome in the year 1832. It
- is wonderful with what constancy of mind for more than
- thirty years he laboured for the conversion of his country.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_523">{523}</a></span>
- He was numbered among the sons of the Passion in the
- year 1847, and always presented an example of all virtues
- to his brethren. He travelled through England, Ireland,
- Scotland, and even Italy, Germany, and France, exhorting
- the people to their own sanctification, and forming themselves,
- as it were, into a sacred army, to pour forth prayers
- for the conversion of England. While he was prosecuting
- his pleasing work in Scotland, on the 1st of October, 1864,
- and, having offered up the sacrifice of the mass, he was going
- on a visit to a friend he had long been acquainted with (Mr.
- Robert Monteith), when he was carried off by sudden death
- in front of his friend's door, being assisted by God, whose
- glory he had ever sought, and by the angels whose purity he
- had imitated. He closed his life in the 65th year of his
- age. May he rest in peace."
-</p>
-<p>
-When all the arrangements were completed, the coffin was
-placed upon the tier appropriated for its reception, and the
-bishop and clergy retired.
-</p>
-<p>
-Thus has ended the life of one who for fifteen years pursued
-his missionary work, as a priest of the Order of the
-Passion, with an ardour that has seldom been surpassed.
-Truly may it be said of him, "Dying, he lives."
-</p>
-<p>
-Favours are said to have been obtained from heaven
-through his intercession, since his death; and it is even
-recorded that miracles have been performed by his relics.
-These facts have not been, as yet, sufficiently authenticated
-for publication; and, therefore, it is judged better not to
-insert them. We confidently hope that a few years will see
-him enrolled in the catalogue of saints, as the first English
-Confessor since the Reformation.
-</p>
-<p>
-Every step we make, as we recede from this last scene,
-brings us nearer to the moment when the requiescat ought
-to be heard over ourselves. For
-</p>
-<pre>
- "The pride of luxury, the pomp of power,
- And all that beauty, all that wealth e'er gave,
- Await alike the inevitable hour;&mdash;
- The paths of glory lead but to the grave."
-</pre>
-<p>
-How vain is a life spent in pursuit of riches! when the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_524">{524}</a></span>
-shroud that envelops our bones will have to be given us.
-How vain are the appliances of comfort and pleasure which
-wealth can spread around us! when the body we pamper is
-to be the food of worms. How vain, is power and extent of
-territory! when the snapping of the thread of our existence
-will leave us completely in the hands of others, and confine
-us to less than seven feet of earth.
-</p>
-<p>
-Let the example of the holy Passionist, whose life we
-studied, make us recognise this truth, before it is too late&mdash;
-that all is vanity but the service of God. He tasted the
-sweets of this world until he found out their bitterness;
-let his example deter others from plunging into the whirl of
-dissipation, from which few can come out uninjured. He
-laid down his honours, his titles, his property, at the foot
-of the cross, and he joyfully placed <i>its</i> transverse beams
-upon his shoulder. There was nothing this world could
-give him which he did not sacrifice unhesitatingly. He
-never took back from the altar a single particle of the
-offerings he placed upon it. Since the moment he understood
-that the end of his existence was the happiness of the
-blessed, he went straight to his eternal goal, and turned not
-to the right hand nor to the left. God was always in his
-mind; God was on his lips; God was in his works. We
-cannot admire his sacrifices, for it would be a mistake to
-suppose his mind was not noble enough to feel that all he
-could give was only a barter of earth for heaven.
-</p>
-<p>
-Let the world applaud its heroes, and raise expensive
-monuments to remind others of their renown. Father
-Ignatius sought not the praise of the world; its frowns
-were all he desired. He looked not for its sympathy, he
-crossed its ways, he gave the lie to its maxims, he trampled
-it under his feet. But the servants of God will not forget
-him. They will turn off the high road to come as pilgrims
-to the spot where his pure soul left its earthly tenement.
-To mark out the place, Mr. Monteith has erected a cross
-upon the corner of the avenue where the saintly father fell.
-Subjoined is an engraving of the monument, and it fitly
-closes up this history, as it perpetually points to his example.
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_525">{525}</a></span>
-<br>
-<p class="center">
-ON THIS SPOT THE HONBLE. AND REV. GEORGE SPENCER, IN RELIGION, FATHER<br>
-IGNATIUS OF ST. PAUL, PASSIONIST, WHILE IN THE MIDST OF HIS LABOURS<br>
-FOR THE SALVATION OF SOULS, AND THE RESTORATION OF HIS<br>
-COUNTRYMEN TO THE UNITY OF THE FAITH, WAS SUDDENLY<br>
-CALLED BY HIS HEAVENLY MASTER TO HIS<br>
-ETERNAL HOME. OCTOBER 1ST, 1864.<br>
- <i>R.I.P.</i>
-</p>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_526">{526}</a></span>
-<br>
-<br>
-<p class="center">
-Cox And Wyman,<Br>
-Classical And General Printers,<Br>
-Great Queen Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields.
-</p>
-
-<pre>
-[Transcriber's Note: The following list contains
-the words and names flagged by the spell check,
-and verified by inspection.]
-
-AEgina
-AEolus
-Abbate
-Abbaye
-Abbé
-Aberdovey
-Aberystwyth
-Acatholicorum
-Accademia
-Achensee
-Achenthal
-Acland
-Addolorata
-Adige
-Adolphus
-Adonises
-Aebel
-Affetti
-Affi
-Afra
-Agneses
-Agrippa
-Ahamo
-Aigle
-Airdrie
-Aix
-Alban
-Albano
-Albemarle
-Albergo
-Albero
-Alcantara
-Alessandro
-Alleine
-Aloysiuses
-Alphonsus
-Alraschid
-Alte
-Althorp
-Ambrosian
-Amelia
-Amhersts
-Amiens
-Amphitheatre
-Ampleforth
-Anastasius
-Ancona
-Angleur
-Angliae
-Angliam
-Anglicanus
-Anglise
-Annecy
-Annonciades
-Antonelli
-Apostolical
-Apostolici
-Apostolics
-Apostolines
-Apostolorum
-Appleyard
-Arcadinia
-Archimedes
-Archivium
-Ardee
-Arfi
-Argentaro
-Ariopolis
-Arius
-Armagh
-Armytage
-Athenry
-Aucy
-Auer
-Augsburg
-Augustin
-Augustine
-Augustus
-Auxerre
-Auxonne
-Avona
-Bac
-Bacten
-Badische
-Bagshawe
-Baily
-Baines
-Bains
-Baldacconi
-Ballina
-Ballinasloe
-Ballinrobe
-Ballycastle
-Ballyshannon
-Bandry
-Barbarossa
-Bareau
-Barnabites
-Barnabò
-Barnet
-Baronne
-Barras
-Barrington
-Basiaco
-Basse
-Battersea
-Baudry
-Bavino
-Bavière
-Bayerische
-Beauharnais
-Beauvais
-Bede
-Bella
-Bellaymont
-Belley
-Benvenuto
-Berchtesgaden
-Bergamo
-Bergues
-Bermondsey
-Bernardine
-Bernardines
-Bernardites
-Bertin
-Bessy
-Bethusy
-Beveridge
-Bighi
-Bingham
-Birkenhead
-Birr
-Bishopsgate
-Blackbrook
-Blackstone
-Blaise
-Blanc
-Blanco
-Blandford
-Blore
-Blount
-Bobbio
-Bodalog
-Bodenham
-Bolognaro
-Bolton
-Bonald
-Boniface
-Bonquéan
-Bootle
-Bopeep
-Borris
-Bosketto
-Bossuet
-Botanique
-Botolph
-Botzen
-Boulanger
-Boulogne
-Bourgoigne
-Bourgoiner
-Bourjéant
-Bouverie
-Bouvet
-Bracebridge
-Bradshaw
-Brampton
-Bramston
-Brenner
-Brera
-Brescia
-Bridget
-Bridgman
-Brigy
-Brixen
-Brock
-Broek
-Buckinghamshire
-Bunyan
-Burchall
-Béguinage
-Béguinages
-Caesars
-Caestryck
-Caffi
-Calasanctius
-Caldaro
-Caldaron
-Calddaron
-Callaghan
-Caltern
-Calvario
-Camaldolese
-Cambrai
-Cameriere
-Camperdown
-Cancellaria
-Canonico
-Canova
-Cantius
-Capellani
-Capellano
-Capellari
-Capistrano
-Capitoline
-Capriana
-Capua
-Cardham
-Carità
-Carlow
-Carlsruhe
-Carlton
-Carnarvon
-Carrara
-Carraway
-Carrick
-Carrickmacross
-Carstairs
-Carthusian
-Cartsdyke
-Casiua
-Castello
-Castlebar
-Castlerea
-Catholicam
-Catholici
-Catholicising
-Catullus
-Caudatario
-Cavallesi
-Cavani
-Cavanis
-Cavendish
-Cellini
-Celso
-Cenis
-Certosa
-Chaillot
-Chamberry
-Chanoine
-Chanoinesses
-Chapelle
-Chargé
-Charité
-Charnpagnole
-Cheapside
-Childe
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-Chombard
-Christies
-Chrom
-Chrysostom
-Chrétienne
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-Churchism
-Cigne
-Città
-Claires
-Clarendon
-Clerkenwell
-Clermont
-Clogher
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-Cointe
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-Coleridge
-Coletines
-Collegio
-Collinge
-Colney
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-Columb
-Columbanus
-Comitibus
-Complin
-Comte
-Conden
-Confrérie
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-Constantius
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-Conventual
-Cooke
-Cornelius
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-Costello
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-Councillor
-Couronne
-Courtene
-Couvent
-Coux
-Covent
-Cowper
-Cranmer
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-Croix
-Cromwellian
-Crowe
-Crusoe
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-Cumming
-Cussel
-Cuthbert
-Damasus
-Damietta
-Dandolo
-Daubeny
-Decanus
-Denison
-Denys
-Deo
-Deschamps
-Desgenettes
-Dessin
-Deum
-Devon
-Dezenzano
-Dieu
-Digby
-Digbys
-Directeur
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-Doddridge
-Doge
-Dolors
-Doluny
-Domely
-Domenico
-Domini
-Domitian
-Domodossola
-Domscholasticus
-Donnel
-Donnet
-Doogan
-Doria
-Dorsetshire
-Douane
-Douay
-Dougall
-Drei
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-Drummond
-Drury
-Dubois
-Duc
-Dudley
-Dugdale
-Duggan
-Dumez
-Duncannon
-Dundalk
-Dundas
-Dungannon
-Dunton
-Duomo
-Durer
-Durier
-Durlet
-Désingy
-Döllinger
-EXUVIAE
-Easky
-Ecclesiam
-Ecclesiasticus
-Ecoles
-Econome
-Edgware
-Egna
-Ehrhart
-Elmesly
-Elwes
-Ely
-Ennis
-Enniscrone
-Enniskillen
-Episcopi
-Eplingen
-Errington
-Erroye
-Eryx
-Esterhazy
-Etonians
-Eustachio
-Eyre
-Ezechiel
-Falconeria
-Ferdinand
-Feretti
-Ferrara
-Ferrario
-Ferrarrio
-Ferronaye
-Festus
-Fidele
-Fiumicino
-Flandre
-Florentin
-Floriano
-Folkestone
-Fontainebleau
-Fornari
-Francesi
-Franchismes
-Frari
-Fratelli
-Frati
-Fratte
-Freakley
-Fremantle
-Friot
-Froud
-Frujberg
-Frères
-Fumagalli
-Gaetano
-Gagliardi
-Gallard
-Galliam
-Galway
-Gand
-Ganymede
-Garda
-Gardiner
-Garendon
-Garnault
-Gasthof
-Gaudentius
-Gavan
-Gaèta
-Genevese
-Genoese
-Gentili
-Georgiana
-Georgio
-Germain
-Germaniam
-Germanico
-Gernetto
-Gervase
-Gesang
-Gesangen
-Gesù
-Ghent
-Gibbs
-Gideon
-Gillies
-Gingolph
-Giovanelli
-Girardon
-Giuseppe
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-Glassbrooke
-Gloucester
-Glyptotheke
-Godley
-Gorey
-Gorres
-Gort
-Gothsburg
-Gottez
-Graf
-Graffanara
-Grahame
-Gramont
-Grandvilliers
-Grantham
-Gratz
-Greci
-Greenock
-Grenville
-Grettan
-Griffiths
-Grimstone
-Grirgenti
-Grises
-Grosvenor
-Grue
-Grâce
-Gudule
-Gustavus
-Guttenburg
-Général
-Göppingen
-Görres
-Görreses
-Haffreingue
-Hagley
-Halford
-Hallein
-Hampstead
-Handley
-Handsworth
-Hanicq
-Hapsburg
-Harleston
-Haroun
-Havant
-Havre
-Headfort
-Heber
-Hendren
-Heneage
-Heywood
-Hiberniam
-Highgate
-Hilary
-Hildersham
-Hildyard
-Hilloa
-Hinckley
-Hippolyte
-Hodder
-Hoffa
-Holborn
-Holme
-Holyhead
-Hornby
-Hornsey
-Hospitalieres
-Hospitalières
-Howley
-Humanarianism
-Hyde
-Hôtel
-Hüffler
-Ignatii
-Ignatius
-Ignazio
-Illyricum
-Imola
-Imperiale
-Inglesi
-Innspruck
-Inspruck
-Irvingites
-Isabella
-Isola
-Italiam
-Jacquenot
-Jandel
-Januarius
-Jaques
-Jardin
-Jauch
-Jaudel
-Jeffreys
-Jesu
-Jette
-Jeune
-Johnstone
-Julien
-Jura
-Kells
-Kempis
-Kenilworth
-Kentish
-Kernane
-Kildare
-Kilkenny
-Killala
-Kille
-Kinnaird
-Kirche
-Kirchen
-Kissengen
-Kitzka
-Knickerbocker
-Koenigswinter
-Kreutz
-Krone
-Krono
-Kurtzrock
-Köln
-Kölner
-König
-Königswinter
-L'Arco
-L'Hospice
-L'Hôpital
-Lago
-Laibach
-Laing
-Lanark
-Lancashire
-Landeck
-Landherr
-Lapons
-Lateran
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-Lazarists
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-LeSage
-Leamington
-Lefevre
-Leicestershire
-Leinster
-Leith
-Leuchtenberg
-Levenshulme
-Lichfield
-Lichtenthal
-Liguori
-Lingdale
-Lintz
-Litchenstein
-Lithgoe
-Liège
-Liége
-Llanarth
-Loewenstein
-Londonderry
-Londra
-Londres
-Longford
-Lorenzo
-Lorrha
-Lothaire
-Loughborough
-Loughren
-Louvain
-Lowther
-Lucan
-Lucca
-Luigi
-Lurgan
-Lutzou
-Lyall
-Lyne
-Lythgoe
-Lyttelton
-M'Auley
-M'Donnel
-M'Ghee
-M'Hale
-MacMahon
-Mackey
-Macky
-Maddalena
-Madeleine
-Maestricht
-Maggiora
-Maggiore
-Maguire
-Mahomedanism
-Mai
-Maison
-Maitland
-Malibren
-Malines
-Malou
-Manheim
-Manige
-Mannering
-Mantua
-Mantz
-Marais
-Marano
-Marenn
-Marlborough
-Marsomme
-Martigny
-Martyn
-Marys
-Maréehal
-Matraey
-Matsys
-Matthias
-Maude
-Mawman
-Maximilian
-Mayence
-Maynooth
-McHale
-Meagher
-Melia
-Mellerio
-Mellon
-Mercati
-Mercede
-Merionethshire
-Messias
-Methodistic
-Mezzofanti
-Mgr
-Mildert
-Millière
-Mirum
-Miserere
-Mislin
-Missionum
-Miséricorde
-Mittewald
-Modena
-Mohren
-Moneti
-Mongeras
-Monico
-Monreale
-Mont
-Montalembert
-Montebello
-Monteith
-Montmartre
-Montrose
-Monza
-Morey
-Morley
-Moselle
-Moy
-Mullingar
-Mungo
-Musée
-Mère
-Mörl
-Mühler
-Münster
-Namur
-Nannette
-Nantes
-Navarino
-Neill
-Nemfchatel
-Neri
-Nerincx
-Nerlieu
-Neuenburg
-Neumarkt
-Neuve
-Newgate
-Newry
-Nicholl
-Nicholls
-Nives
-Nobil
-Nobottle
-Noires
-Noirlieu
-Nore
-Northampton
-Northamptonshire
-Nottinghamshire
-Novara
-Nuelleus
-Nunzio
-Nymphenburg
-Nyon
-O'Connell
-O'Donnel
-O'Flynn
-O'Kane
-O'Keefe
-O'Reilly
-OEdipus
-Oakeley
-Observantiae
-Octobris
-Odescalchi
-Oldbury
-Ollivant
-Omagh
-Omer
-Oppido
-Oratorian
-Oratorians
-Orioli
-Osmond
-Ospitaletto
-Ostend
-Osteria
-Otaheitan
-Oudley
-Ouseley
-Overbury
-Ovid
-Oxburgh
-Oxley
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-Pacci
-Packenham
-Paderborn
-Padua
-Pagliano
-Palais
-Palladio
-Pallotta
-Palmerston
-Paoli
-Papi
-Papin
-Paroco
-Pasaro
-Pasquale
-Passaglia
-Passi
-Passio
-Passionis
-Passionists
-Passsionists
-Patit
-Patris
-Pauvres
-Pavia
-Pazzi
-Pearse
-Peasly
-Pensieri
-Peppenheim
-Percival
-Persico
-Perugia
-Pesaro
-Peterborough
-Peterbro
-Petits
-Pffarr
-Phillippses
-Picquart
-Piedmontese
-Pietra
-Pietro
-Pilsach
-Pinacotheke
-Pio
-Pittsburg
-Placentia
-Plainpalais
-Polidori
-Poligny
-Pollien
-Poole
-Porte
-Portobello
-Poste
-Postes
-Powys
-Poynter
-Poète
-Premonstratensian
-Pritchard
-Protase
-Prémontré
-Pugin
-Puseyite
-Père
-Pères
-Quarant
-Quater
-Quelin
-Quin
-Quintin
-Raal
-Raby
-Radhoff
-Raffaele
-Raffaelle
-Rainhill
-Rathmines
-Ratisbonne
-Reale
-Recollets
-Reddington
-Redemptorist
-Redemptorists
-Redentore
-Reggio
-Regierung
-Reichenbach
-Reichenhall
-Reiner
-Religieuses
-Rennel
-Resburg
-Reverendus
-Revolutionnaire
-Riland
-Rimini
-Rios
-Riva
-Robertum
-Roch
-Rodolph
-Rodrigues
-Roehampton
-Romae
-Romney
-Romonam
-Rosamel
-Roscommon
-Rosinini
-Roskell
-Rosmini
-Rossiaud
-Rotundo
-Rousses
-Roveredo
-Rovigo
-Royale
-Rugeley
-Ryde
-Régulières
-Sabbato
-Sacrement
-Sacré
-Sainte
-Salesiani
-Salford
-Salle
-Salut
-Salvian
-Sancto
-Sankey
-Saul
-Sayburne
-Scaligeri
-Scheppers
-Schlager
-Schlussheim
-Scholfield
-Schutz
-Schwartzenberg
-Scotiam
-Scylla
-Seager
-Sebastians
-Secours
-Sedgeley
-Sedgley
-Segnini
-Segreto
-Semei
-Sens
-Senufft
-Sepulchrines
-Servites
-Sestri
-Sevres
-Sharples
-Shenton
-Shrewsbury
-Sibthorpe
-Sigismund
-Silvestro
-Simeon
-Simeonites
-Simplon
-Sion
-Sisk
-Sitientis
-Sitorstro
-Slattery
-Sligo
-Snowdon
-Società
-Socinians
-Soeur
-Soeurs
-Somal
-Somers
-Sonne
-Sophia
-Southcote
-Southport
-Southwark
-Spence
-Spencers
-Spiritu
-Spoleto
-Sta
-Stadler
-Stafford
-Staffordshire
-Ste
-Steigmeier
-Stockport
-Stourbridge
-Stowell
-Strabane
-Strarzing
-Strass
-Strictioris
-Stromboli
-Stuttgard
-Subdiaconate
-Suide
-Suir
-Suisse
-Sulpice
-Sumner
-Sunderland
-Superiores
-Superioress
-Sutrio
-Sweers
-Swithin
-Syriac
-Séez
-Séminaire
-Tallier
-Tavel
-Tavola
-Tegern
-Teresas
-Terracina
-Tertiariae
-Theatine
-Theophilus
-Thillay
-Thistlethwick
-Thonon
-Thornton
-Thorntons
-Thorwaldsen
-Throckmorton
-Thurles
-Thursby
-Tillotson
-Tipperary
-Tipton
-Titchmarsh
-Tivoli
-Tolérance
-Tomline
-Tommaso
-Tonnerre
-Torri
-Tournai
-Tournay
-Towyn
-Tractarianism
-Tractarians
-Trapani
-Trappists
-Trelawny
-Trieste
-Trinitatem
-Troitteur
-Trélouquet
-Tuam
-Tubal
-Tuileries
-Turpin
-Turtinan
-Tusmarchausan
-Tyrannus
-Tyrolese
-Ullathorne
-Ulm
-Ulrick
-Univers
-Upton
-Ursulines
-Ushaw
-Valais
-Valens
-Valle
-Vanderghote
-Vandervelde
-Veich
-Venuses
-Verme
-Vespasiani
-Veuillet
-Vicaire
-Vicarii
-Vicario
-Viceregal
-Vichi
-Victoires
-Vigoreux
-Ville
-Villiers
-Vincentians
-Vittadini
-Vollemaux
-Wallwork
-Walmsley
-Walsall
-Wareing
-Warrington
-Warwick
-Waterland
-Waterton
-Watkinson
-Waverly
-Wesleyans
-Westbromwich
-Westland
-Westport
-Wexford
-Wheatley
-Whelan
-Whitechapel
-Whitgrave
-Wildbad
-Wilfrid
-Willoughby
-Wilton
-Wimbach
-Wimbledon
-Windischman
-Windischmann
-Wiseman
-Wiseton
-Witherall
-Wodehouse
-Wolverhampton
-Woodchester
-Woodwich
-Woollett
-Wrede
-Wykes
-Wyman
-Yarmouth
-Yoris
-Zebedee
-Zeno
-Zenone
-Zeuft
-Zoccolanti
-Zurla
-absconditum
-acatholicorum
-acceptatio
-accuratiore
-adorans
-adscriptus
-advices
-aetatis
-agmine
-alb
-aliquid
-alle
-altitudo
-alumnos
-amici
-amicum
-amplius
-ancles
-angelis
-animi
-anni
-anno
-annonces
-annos
-antependium
-antichristian
-antiquae
-anyways
-apologised
-apostacy
-apostleship
-apostolical
-apud
-arbours
-archévêché
-ardour
-ardours
-argumentum
-armour
-arti
-ascetism
-athanasian
-attaché
-auri
-availeth
-avocat
-banc
-baptised
-beforetime
-behaviour
-believeth
-bene
-benedixit
-beneplacitum
-benigne
-blameably
-blaney
-blessest
-blomfield
-blushings
-bono
-bonum
-borga
-bowings
-brava
-brington
-brodo
-bromwich
-buon
-burnings
-burthen
-burthensome
-café
-calendis
-candour
-capite
-capitular
-careth
-catechise
-catino
-celebret
-centre
-chasse
-chemin
-cheque
-chequered
-châlets
-château
-clausit
-coffinless
-coloured
-colouring
-colours
-committest
-confluentia
-confratribus
-confrères
-congregationis
-connexion
-conseilleur
-consistorium
-constantia
-consuetudinis
-contradistinguished
-controverted
-conversable
-conversione
-conversus
-convictor
-correptus
-corruptions
-corse
-cortile
-cortége
-counsellor
-coze
-cracky
-credas
-criticises
-cudgelling
-cui
-cujus
-curé
-d'Allinges
-d'Avroy
-d'Ere
-d'Oro
-d'acqua
-d'affaires
-d'hôte
-d'hôtel
-d'état
-dantis
-decrepid
-defectible
-defence
-dei
-dein
-del
-della
-des
-despatch
-despatching
-develope
-diaconate
-dignitas
-dignitate
-diligitis
-disant
-disedification
-disfavour
-dishonour
-dishonourable
-diuturniore
-dolendum
-doloribus
-dost
-drogget
-duelling
-dum
-dura
-ecce
-ecstacy
-eilwayen
-ejusdem
-emisit
-employments
-endeavour
-endeavoured
-endeavouring
-endeavours
-endureth
-enfants
-engraven
-equalled
-erecter
-esse
-est
-estatica
-eventless
-examen
-examens
-excipere
-exhortans
-experimento
-exposé
-extenso
-extitit
-fames
-famille
-fastnesses
-faubourg
-favere
-favour
-favourable
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-favourite
-favours
-façade
-felicitiously
-fer
-feretrum
-ferventiori
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-fidei
-fidelium
-flere
-foreshadowings
-formá
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-fourchette
-fourgon
-frisonnant
-froward
-fulfil
-fulfilment
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-fulness
-fundant
-funzioni
-gardes
-gathereth
-genere
-gentem
-gloriam
-goldene
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-gospelling
-gras
-gratias
-gregorine
-griefs
-guardia
-gulph
-haereticorum
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-hast
-hateth
-haud
-heresiarchs
-hibernian
-hisce
-hoff
-holdeth
-hominem
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-hosier
-humour
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-hyaena
-illum
-imbuta
-imitaverat
-immodesties
-inclinato
-inito
-insignitus
-instructum
-interpositions
-invisendum
-ipsi
-januam
-jocosely
-judico
-jugiter
-kilometres
-knowest
-l'Abbé
-l'Eglise
-l'Europe
-l'Hôtel
-l'Immaculé
-l'Instruction
-l'estatica
-l'Étoile
-laboraverat
-labour
-laboured
-labourer
-labourers
-labouring
-labours
-lagune
-laquais
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-les
-levelled
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-lille
-lionised
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-lucifers
-lustre
-maccaroni
-magnam
-maigre
-malades
-maraviglia
-marchant
-mariae
-materfamilias
-maître
-mein
-mementoes
-methodistical
-minutanti
-mio
-misdemeanour
-missae
-mitre
-mitres
-monachism
-monomonia
-monsignores
-morbo
-mortales
-moulding
-mêlée
-nautico
-nazione
-necessarium
-necnon
-neighbour
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-neighbouring
-neighbours
-nempe
-nobile
-nobili
-nomen
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-noviciate
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-novum
-nulla
-née
-octodecimo
-odorem
-odour
-omittant
-omne
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-omnium
-onked
-opitulatus
-oratorium
-ortus
-oscott
-ostensoire
-ostracised
-otium
-outstep
-partibus
-passeth
-passionist
-pastrycook
-paters
-patriae
-patronised
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-peracto
-peragravit
-pergens
-perjucundum
-personarum
-petens
-pfarren
-pfeiffe
-phillipps
-piissimis
-pirotecnico
-pleasantest
-populum
-pourtrayed
-practise
-practised
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-practising
-praecesserunt
-praesertim
-prebendary
-preces
-primissario
-primum
-probetur
-proindeque
-promovere
-promptings
-propositionesque
-propriam
-prosequeretur
-prostrations
-près
-prône
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-quam
-quesierat
-quod
-quête
-ratione
-realise
-recens
-recognise
-recognised
-reconquest
-reductio
-reflectiones
-regum
-reinhabited
-relaxations
-reliefs
-relievos
-remodelled
-repentino
-rudenesses
-rumour
-rumours
-rédiger
-sacerdotio
-sacrae
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-sacro
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-sandalled
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-satis
-savouring
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-scagliola
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-sceptically
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-schismatics
-scienze
-scrupulosities
-scuole
-semel
-semper
-septem
-septembris
-servabit
-shopman
-signo
-souper
-soupers
-soutanes
-spettacolo
-spiritum
-splendour
-splendours
-stertation
-stipendio
-suae
-suggestors
-supremam
-svegliarino
-sympathise
-sympathised
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-temporals
-tenour
-testa
-testimonialibus
-thurifer
-thurifers
-tibi
-tinging
-titulo
-travellings
-triginta
-triptic
-trouvés
-trésor
-tuo
-tête
-unbaptized
-unburthen
-uncanonically
-unclerical
-unfavourable
-unicum
-unravelling
-unsetting
-unviolated
-ut
-utterings
-veluti
-vento
-vestiaria
-vetturino
-vicaire
-vicario
-vielliards
-viewiness
-vigour
-villegiatura
-viribus
-virtutum
-vis
-voiturier
-volumus
-votis
-voto
-wagen
-waggon
-wailings
-whithersoever
-wilful
-wilfully
-wrapt
-zum
-Écoles
-Écu
-Étienne
-Évéché
-élite
-évêché
-
-[Transcriber's Note: End spell check list.]
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
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