Selections from the Prose Writings of John Henry Cardinal Newman
Author: John Henry Newman Genre: LiteratureSelections from the Prose Writings of John Henry Cardinal Newman
ference to Aris
rding to Ari
f the ideal. Bio
dual characters
contrary, gener
ture and life, s
not after an e
tion of the mind
of biography a
y is fiction. "P
, "quam histori?
elineates that
n suggests, an
nt system of Di
oreover, by confi
events and scene
shes off the co
while, by a skil
t brings into si
ect, completes t
another, and ha
he whole. It is
story or biogra
arison, bearing
mathematical for
modified by the
riction. Hence,
by the superhu
ides a solace for
ntments and suf
es, moreover, t
ions of a right
y and a truth w
ot giv
the poetical min
s of beauty and
l of thought, i
ervation; the
t directs its vie
creative, from t
its modes of t
onplace and m
rdinary minds wh
icular and indiv
eels a natural
and splendid in
d selecting suc
mena, incorpora
ubstance of its
in a world of i
dignity, emotion
ecessary medium
the feebleness
as, and in the abs
ion, the adoptioonly poor mean
rs its intense fe
languages, been
ut the outward
armony within.
straint on the
f his sense, and
rate choice. We
ability of our
nts of poetical
it will be right
hich may save
nd objection. L
trarily to limi
considered such
particular wo
than the autho
parage only the
onveyed. There
ry," which is tak
self, and the wr
esult of it. T
real, contradicti
ially poetical;
others; and so
. We only maint
the name of poet
requisitions, b
r forth, and ina
We may grant,
ities of old Ph
nurse of Orestes
es unworthy of
efer them to t
us; and yet ma
n contain much in
luster of the tming whatever
rude ore; still t
etimes, and notintroduction o
essary for the sa
on of recondite
make friends wi
his necessity,
ns in themselves
imes, on the ot
the incidental
and indignant o
ance in which
emark applies st
sitions to wh
his la
with our propos
ce descriptive
te his physics
tory of animal
as an historian
biographer of br
l history or ph
composition. But
er a bare collec
t are painted
rmonious order
ometimes been
minuteness of hi
not the praise
to represent kn
on or medium.
e poetical magi
of a country life
ul, then of a pen
of the descrip
that nature is v
dinary writers
to trees in aut
fading trees di
ral poetry is
ture, and cattle
he rude health o
pe and others, h
oloring too hi
d and ideal forms
ictures of gent
on may be poetr
al poe
] T
hows the woo
and tree, it
in deca
en when age
rence betwee
ive may be illust
ts, generally
mmon in the pres
ught to approve
rpose. The auth
the case many p
c notice, or irre
aking perhaps
ndividual minds:
ted events sepa
place, or a cou
g a multitude of
ation of the tal
f characters by
t and action in
es long controve
nt, and exhibi
(if such be hi
orward the co
t disposition of h
ines, refines, c
acts are no lon
nded on facts is
authors of Pev
tye House, hav
tions of the profl
h accounts are
asons. That of t
ty of history;
eous reality, unin
the poetry of h
sometimes apolo
tales by stating
e strange chanc
ncredible when f
evinces a misco
on, which, being t
ibits the introd
xperience. It
t painters some
, or other sing
. Yet some of Mi
much poetry
perfect in its
tural, without be
asi
ade poetical by a
ws indeed from
arities are laid
iled. If it be s
is often its gr
, that in such cas
al, but consi
ovels and tales wh
in the same deg
g, to be poetica
sentation of an i
ng more rigid,
fined to one po
aw independently
s, occasional fee
d depict the gen
if he were copy
particular sitt
neate with rigid
ture; but the
mper his compositi
liarities and
out diminishing the
acquainting the
t of his art.
the Irish charact
were they inten
ting, because th
try about them,
elves, not in he
only the accur
s poetical in f
eed or incident is
r is led to descr
lorless terms
stance, if the grea
imagination, or t
ests the feelin
umstances are le
selv
aid that our do
uality in the d
s a principal char
r the ideality o
ter shades of di
which give
ife; but merely su
uch improbabiliti
interfere with
nt of the imagin
nts of beauty
ltitude of ordi
ined with consis
ude the introduc
ters. The origin
ty mind may ha
h more so, when
h finally adjust
in the persona
o are subservie
e in some chara
he Clytemnestra
hat the Divine ve
ject of the dra
cbeth, on the c
e deeply learned
uted with the mo
te she deserves.
picture to offe
the imaginati
ood for the term
so are Ophelia
hese cases there
th correct beau
do not say th
sacrificing mo
is a fault. It is
ctorily to connect
ness, when the n
d. Honors paid
me alleviation
doctrine of a fu
Other writers
eroes to tempor
present comfort
oderick, but c
ng to another w
he termination o
of them, at lea
te sorrowful fee
startled to be
lancholy is t
Roderick, it is fr
's previous
eelings, manne
al by the delic
are expressed.
sonnet, and ba
aps, or familiar
poet with pathos
in Gray will serv
ude; again, Lor
ing, "Were my
Lines on his Mot
uneral Hymn i
on's Sonnet on h
on's Dream.
ay name Campbel
a Baillie's Chou
re exalted and
Milton's Hymn
with which every
y the coloring
must all along b
ng instances for
llustrate our gen
licability to t
iversal consent,
oeti
f poetry we are
ider extent tha
will include su
oems as Young's
ilde Harold. T
t, in the judgme
his kind. It is t
eloquence for
sition to the
oet, the talent of
a single idea. "Si
ltis modis ean
adem commoretu
at art of Cicer
gaged in stateme
eases till he has
nd about it, and p
yet without repet
r. This faculty
throwing off h
have a respectab
especially inte
ar poems, com
piousness, and s
is called poe
pbell's Pleasure
ms that the auth
its natural elev
e writer is car
nza with the u
ss of accompli
ng, and heightening
another. His c
al sermon over
laments over Gr
rious engagement
gyrical orations;
describe the cel
f antiquity, he
poetical text, h
it is a work of
e, not of the hig
enal is perhaps
ually substitute
et
hy of mind may
try, as the philos
ault to mistake
r poetical tale
e known bet
hysics to theirand Othello, the
terial of the poet
y are effects
nal character wi
he results of co
to say) a moral
properties. P
e same subservi
abbe's Tales of
author there is
t, at least in th
a highly poetical
f the action and
other and upon
ers of differen
rangers to each
he formation of t
tances, their re
points of mutu
ental position o
trifling pheno
are beautifully d
molded into a co
to single out t
account of th
e younger broth
ght as well as
n our judgment b
would afford u
nce. One striki
he author's prac
cters bearing th
, and placed in
et so contrasted
ences of mental
om the common st
to himself. Th
lworth, of knigh
ts in Old Mortal
earing of chara
ot often found
s intended fo
s by the inconsis
ered by itself. T
be natural or no
hor's word for th
e told, not sho
hing in the plot
liar formatio
ght equally well
the action. Chil
g, is a being pr
and uninfluenc
aw Tityrus's sta
ter of this kind
eration, passes
s other poems.
or elasticity of ge
poetry out of e
n his own way
g as he is allowe
principles of
once put out and
an
ion of Sardanap
l, and in the st
ust been admiri
Sc
ons of Aristotle
ff
eed to a fresh
l first be broa
xplained. How
e poetical tal
racy of a definiti
inality of righ
y perhaps be d
or one's self, a
mind is in action
ived from educat
ansmit as they
se; minds of orig
sity to investig
for themselves, s
hed truths d
cidental change whe
al digestion. E
is stamped with
hen originality i
which more or l
ws itself in par
d eccentricity o
other hand, can
, or taste, as it i
ments. It is orig
beauty; the orig
ent, and good f
that poetry is
perception; tha
le in exercise t
on the whole (o
rtion to the stan
will his compo
lence. This po
ome explan
, we do not mea
cessarily disp
; we are not spea
try, but of its
art is the formal
oetical mind. No
n that every poe
stent and prac
good feeling co
d practice. Burn
; still, it is kn
at bottom. Thus
is in no wise
r doctrine, whi
sts in his compo
rtuous and divi
er than this, o
gh it be shown
poem. As motiv
ions intrinsically
virtuous will p
etry. But even
poetry of a vic
debased; that is,
nd shadows of h
n the other hand,
he mind in the v
h all the rays h
ereas minds o
tion of the whole
n infirmity and t
, Spenser, Cowp
be considered,
approximate to t
added as further
er Scott's center
e exhibits the c
d undisciplined
e and conscience,
ll these poets a
ion of Virgil's po
of his general t
nder's Feast i
has high poetical
there is someth
end to which it
and sensuality.
ver reasoning er
ne is a fallacy,
Byron's Manfr
; yet the delicate
spirit which here
e basis on whi
perusal of it
above theory, tha
in the poet's m
istent character
y of his life w
connection bet
le and want of po
tances of Hume
poetical minds.
is an exception
had great poetic
at his miserabl
lt of a bewilde
upt he
the above the
e especially poet
ts disclosures h
the intellect, t
ral nature. It pr
of excellence in
and with whic
ociated. It bri
f overpowering
and the tendere
eculiar grace o
is as striking a
the hearts of
spirit. At pre
practical, but the
th. With Christ
s a duty-we are
of faith, to se
and a superhum
und are investe
nger imperfect m
ne favor, stamp
for future hap
virtues peculiar
etical-meekne
ntment, modesty,
virtues; wherea
eelings are the
justly than of
ation, martial sp
enden
e of the Divi
f God, though in
ce,-for from o
ss and patience
notions of the
atient, and of all
-yet, for the v
te, transcend o
elt upon, when t
y be received by
t, in this very r
ch He has create
so ordinary and
, what so simpl
ce and operatio
es, and how the
r us, when they
he invisible air,
urs! we breathe
e without it; it
nd us, and we
hile it obedientl
nd obsequiously
let it come in i
t fluid, which
ecessity or capr
h the invisible
rth into the regi
eadlong upon the
nd draw thence a
your pitcher,
a ready servant,
e quantity or in
o purify you from
ld. But go from
ill see that sam
ore your eyes.
escension, but
t at its vast expan
who shall hear
mighty billows
terror feel it h
d mounting up,
sport and mocker
and thither, at
was just now h
? Or, again, app
d it enlightens
esume not, or it
y element which
lliant in its char
o soft and lambe
n its essence t
it tortures, it con
hich it was jus
he life. So it is
wledge of them
hey give us ligh
ce and succor;
ount and let the
and in the deser
and the fire, an
l is but a whirl
g of the imag
e feelings, remind
men and He is G
Nature draws fo
or to be pronoun
er lights and de
d by Revel
thren, that the
this season, whe
ficing, self-c
Saviour has visite
I dwell on them;
e mysterious, s
more subduing i
. I own it, my
as the Only-be
fulness of His s
Eternal Person.
s God, which gi
what is to me a
or scourged, or
artyrs, and the
re I see One dro
thong, and str
God. It is no t
ng here; it is t
great Creator
ther, who dwelt
le from all eter
adiance and grac
traces I see in
earth, this glo
at me so piteousl
s. He seems t
am omnipotent,
had it in mind
creatures, more
th a face more ra
a form as ro
their equal yet
ce, to receive t
any, and to prep
I destined them;
se into effect,
itance; and so I
t brightness in
ning stars and to
, but in deform
s, with blood upo
aid bare and re
you will, for I
whether in cont
I wait, upon
he time of grace
e end of the w
he conversion of
he just; here I
gh I am so grea
y expecting My fu
time is at leng
y passion and t
o all e
upon th
l of the marvels
eth speech, and n
wledge." Th
l around us, in th
of man; in the
the dispensatio
I may say, is the
ll things out
ts before they oc
ut compelling t
ous attribute,
passage I have re
-the emblem o
nts of the impo
is impossible
d. He who could
triumphantly u
, unstable,
llows of human wil
e bark of Peter
, and made no
king upon them;
ering it He sust
mself to it, b
He did not mere
ade Himself the
nd cause of a su
other gospel sa
whither the
wer of the Son
manifested by
orld, when He
it has ever sin
the history of
med to float upon
He told His cho
the salvation
how to construct
ght, its cabins
s it gazed upon
se. It pronounce
cientific rules o
still prophesies
hy; that it was
float; that it w
why it does not
Lord is in it?
ework, put to
o, should have l
ion, even to t
gone; ever fail
xplore new se
t He, who once sa
ot afraid," an
ll in His own a
and to prosper
ethren, when th
savage tribe,
the limits of th
brought them t
ts there or politi
tless people, a
es or by desire
and passing thro
on the frontie
etting out on a j
t. Generation a
d still this fi
rward. On, on
them not; the
no truth, or peac
; they could not f
ith them their
their gods of
ifices, their law
their kind, an
At length they b
orests of Ger
indolent repose
; they were stil
the primeval wor
f the chase, the
their idolatrou
y crossed over t
rs of this islan
so that, wherea
in, the southern
, obtained the
ad proceeded f
ld go, unless t
he great ocean,
world which lie
to happen to thi
t for happiness
had not found i
e, and dwindle
its own heart, w
as it to become
enjoy the only
s only true di
Master's yoke?
d thing in it, o
e, profit might c
s name? He look
there to claim
merit any relax
ts lawlessness
s a proud race,
nor man-a ra
nate, and hard of
even the eterna
o so. I say, th
e to reverse the
crees have assig
d despise Him.
looked once aga
orn, and ruined
ing filled with g
ot what merited
ately respond to
necessary ins
t would illustrat
took pity on it.
ess, a simplicit
e of truth, a ze
rong, an admirat
aw, a keen appr
majesty of order
d an affectiona
would become
is high will whe
supernatural g
ase Him, could rai
of the very sto
termined in thi
ite what was bea
diant in grace;
s had been too f
rescue them fro
e devil's doom
of His holiness
is r
ry and a familia
need not tell you
he word of tru
s island and sub
w the grace of
ulsion, as the hi
came Christian;
, and hopeless,
f glory came wa
e sea. Then sud
a change came
arter of the coun
st preached to
sed influence w
the whole land,
people, were con
the work was don
the mummeries of
not, and the p
of the Cross we
form of Christia
like a beautiful
it was majestic,
as beautiful and
griefs, it was
t was at once a
a dogma, a mys
hierarchical form
s, with miter
alked forth and
le. The cruci
mple monks were th
chants resounded
s heard, and bo
censers, and t
was sung, and
after day, and in
y hills and in th
sun and moon an
gular and solemn
services on ear
cession, and soo
d the familiar e
who recollecte
k it all unreal
conclude he did
was heaven let
were chased away
o their pr
econd
c. ii.
amica mea, col
enim hiems trans
s apparuerunt i
e, my love, my d
the winter is now
e flowers have ap
r experience of
rpetual renovatio
rounds us. Frai
of it, restless
never ceasing as a
It is bound tog
s set up in unit
it is ever comi
but give birth
d one death is t
Each hour, as
w fleeting, yet
great whole. It
which is ever t
ver flow. Ch
ange cries out to
phim, in prais
. The sun sink
llowed up in t
n out of it, as
quenched. Spr
rough summer a
more surely, by
ph over that gra
astened from it
blossoms of May
but we know, wi
its revenge up
f that solemn ci
ches us in our
and in our depth
to d
s this comes h
orcible is the co
aterial world,
d all its changes
e, so downward,
pirations. That
endures; that
oints and is n
ven from first to
, the everlast
s; but where is
he hero, the la
ereign race, whi
o, and is great
do they descant
er, this innate
to fall: he tend
he begins to b
ildren, he lives
n his own person.
ions of his na
breaks, and as
He was young,
in. This is the
erse and in prose
. The greatest
sun, he, in all
being, is bor
e first begins
ng law, though it
We look at th
yet with pity
t it is, with pit
its excellence an
deformed and dis
its living on.
llapse, till at l
out of which it
ke
th our moral bein
ion of our natur
life, it ends w
ss of life, with
s the human hea
eaves, and opens
Fair as may be
s green foliage a
ue. It blooms i
, so delicate, s
ity and lightness
confiding spirit,
eerfulness, th
the noble aspira
antic pursuit, t
t,-are not thes
ressed up and
r best shapes, in
prospect of goo
t it is to fade!
y, as decrepitu
are failure, and
e issue of this
lowed to it to
e who are cut
xcellence, and th
hey have lived li
them live on, l
t the bright sou
of the world's
corruptions and
insufficiency of n
ss to persevere
ng its own pro
me age; and no
re which we ha
eature spoke of h
rge portrait pain
when his limbs
ow furrowed, an
moral grace of
d repulsive aspec
s lived to the
misanthropy, and
y winter of
his own nature,
rks. The nobles
ests he has made,
d, the nations h
s created, they
im by many cen
, and that end
rld, sovereignti
come to nought
e Roman conque
or in the destru
d too truly an a
ength, with the w
, the crimes and
enturies, the Im
ll his works a
have no power
my Fathers, my B
happened in Eng
g strange is p
y surprise, by t
s. Were we not
o be able to say
inhabitants of s
more perfect me
scovered for
another globe,-a
ds England just a
rested by a pol
any which the
hysical field o
e of a national
, more violent t
ies-at least in
of men, if not
it down, that
1850, a storm a
ious as to de
o rouse in us an i
uld observe it
spreading from
n, almost withou
perhaps it threa
no sure prospect o
the body politi
m the Queen up
e ones in the inf
nds of the con
estant sects, the
es and associatio
ergy in town and
l profession, n
circles, ever
fireside, gives
This would be our
tance, and we s
at is it all abo
what wonder ha
gious, what prete
the burden of s
rightly in our
ke this; it mus
. It is an innov
he course of hu
volves year by ye
olitical order o
s not return; it
is no retrogre
d by men of th
idolized as ano
never returns-i
ape existing ill
he past is out o
may the dead li
it us, as the pas
e of this nationa
ich encompasses
ad lives. Throne
stored; States l
only for history
e, and Egypt,
great again. Th
nglish Church
h is once aga
a cry. It is the
it is a restora
that which year
phys
ago, and the C
on of God's power
place. It had t
s upon it; it w
s up and down t
the will of a
ough ten thousan
nce; and it was
and Martyrs. Th
ed and rejoiced
cessors, who we
ir grateful ho
erhaps some sixt
. Dunstan and S
St. Thomas down
Paulinus, St. J
m; London, its
Cuthbert; Wint
n there were
d St. Hugh of L
field, and S
St. Oswald and
St. Osmund of S
Dorchester, and
then, too, its r
tablishments, i
ions all over
e temporal state,
its popular ho
whole of Chri
rchy? Mixed up
h kings and noble
illage and in ev
d to stand, so
utlast, it migh
atn
high decree of
presence shoul
story, my F
it well. I need no
iple of truth,
e of the Redeem
its day beca
ul change!); and
r which once i
d which once it
st; and there w
n its priests w
were sacrileges
re profaned or
by covetous nobl
ers of a new fa
ism was at
disowned,-its pow
a matter of hi
It took a long
uch time, muc
ense; but at la
e day, centuries
artyrdom to li
of Truth, mora
al, and every
burned in the f
last the work w
, and shoveled
ilence, a sort
tate of things
is wear
Brothers, you
e of us on anothe
r witness to the
hich Catholicis
e were born. Yo
I can know it; b
by one or two tok
ncil, I bear wi
t you can witne
thin. No long
country; nay,
ic community;
e Old Religion,
about, as memo
man Catholics
nterest, as m
ever small, represe
n abroad,-but
who might be c
ritus of the gr
erely happened t
indeed, was the
set of poor Iri
time, or a colo
quarter of the
an elderly pers
rave and solitary
bearing, and s
a "Roman C
se of gloomy appe
with an iron ga
hing to it that
who they were, or
eant by calli
ne could tell-t
ound, and to
then, perhaps, as
oy's curious eye
might come to
, or Quaker's m
chapel of the "
to be gathered
lights burning t
winging censers;
ly be learned
ories and Sermo
of the "Roman
deposed that they
abused it. And
casion hear it
man, as the res
and as a reco
h few knew, that
en the Roman Cat
Catholics of I
ps, and the form
als, called Vi
he sort of knowl
by the heathen
adherents from
called them a
ned the light o
and, found in cor
the housetops, or
cut off from t
nd dimly seen,
ht, as ghosts fli
estants, the lor
le did they becom
hat contempt ga
nerous of their
to bestow on t
that their opin
to spread again,
ere they but
d soon unlearn a
, out of mere
ify our doctrines
ur very idiotcy
ht be our pl
an awful contr
hurch of St. A
poor remnant o
of the nineteen
I might say, to
r; but there was
re. No one could
ll less would any
s rise again.
ter all it was in t
to naught: its
rt of wonder, for
who can hope f
as this? Has th
o show? I must s
o my knowledge,
it. Augustine,
to which the e
y; but they cam
he Arian Goths
eir heresy in St
hurch; but they
The inspired wo
ssibility of su
hose who have c
and trodden unde
could have dar
gious a nation as
formed again unt
show that it was
g the nations
fifty years ag
e seemed prepos
ere was one of
urity of his po
ame is the proper
, too venerable,
confined to any
r a household wo
t would have been
e man, the champ
could he have l
ost presumptuo
o draw pictures
nd his friends,
t; yet am I wron
as this, in whic
im a dream, or,
arers nothing bu
rapt in spirit,
ure, and that his
hat lowly chape
or centuries in
e neighboring he
And let him sa
ak mount, looking
gainst that hug
olicism is of so
und marked ou
and plantations
circling in t
that high spot
t in the very cen
or rather pile of
, and courts, an
nd story upon st
the invocation o
me which has be
n in the Valle
t building, and I
style of art whi
had seemed to
the earth, or to
or to be imitate
hear the sound
newing the old
Ethelbert in the
trand. It com
t winds along the
heologians from
Cathedral, walk
comes a vision
eads; and last I
the royal dye o
edge to us from
e, a token th
n Apostolic faith
he Saints is th
ing to us by th
and counting ov
e has prayed, a
oo, is St. Domini
h can impair, n
rd be not there,
y make him be
patriarch, St.
modern world, with
h his writhing f
on that train.
juniors in histo
tars, or soon sh
ord's arm has no
failed,-they,
thrones on high
h company moves
re, with augus
urates the great
t is that act? i
ierarchy; it is
he C
my Brothers, h
n then, who tha
aid that he spok
hose few scatte
olics, to form
led back? Shall
s live again to
ng their poor flo
multitude of t
heir Lord has
y? Yes; for g
The world gro
oung. She can, i
"inherit the Gent
ies." "Arise, Je
nd the glory of
old, darkness
the people; but
and His glory s
hine eyes round
athered togethe
shall come fr
rise up at thy s
love, my dove,
he winter is no
gone. The flowe
the fig tree h
vines in flower
y love, my beau
time for thy Vi
th in thy streng
once was thin
land which knows
d with thy thrill
bor with child,
f grace leaps w
y, with thy bri
his strength, O
, till our year is
weet eyes, from
stic brow, le
in down, not
persuade, to win o
O Mother undefile
of this Spring.
ins of the old.
nd York is gone
hester is gone
We clung to the
would not belie
the Church in E
lives again.
verley and Hex
if the world las
l to the ear, a
lories we have
of them, if G
in shall give th
ll to penance an
begin
s and Brothers
ll, not Saints a
chers only, sh
all re-consecrat
is before us, e
aged in a great
on to God's gra
They have wel
is prey. Perh
time with our ap
y be irritated
gain in England
in a corner. We
such a boon wou
ross. It is not G
hould descend wit
ufferings. If th
de extent among
ow can we hope,
accompany its go
y, if it may b
commence our wor
We have no slig
Can we religiou
martyrs, three ce
er receive its r
and regular, di
er, for an end
he long impriso
ry suspense, the
tence, the savage
t, the knife, t
es of those holy
ve no reward?
er Thine altar
s guilty people,
ey lose life,
he children of th
Thy way, O my
t according to
if I may dare ta
ot Thou Thysel
e cross, and co
rtyr win Thy gre
y his loving pr
desolation for
erced through
the crucifixi
ot every tear t
ood that was she
when they who so
o reap
fering of the M
so, perchance
thing, for what
, to complete t
d forbid it, for
could we be surp
, if the winter
te over? Have
, if, in this E
e Church should t
an uncertain, an
and suffering,-
s, yet withal, o
rs, and su
I know,-that a
ll be our stren
the more the en
more will the
e more fearful a
ore present to u
nd our good Pa
ore malicious ar
he louder cry of
e bosom of the
hall not be left
us the strength
Church and to
my Brothers in
my heart when
there is no one a
f God so wille
for His sake.
do not say that
that that cha
peak of what you
rs; but in the
he Spirit, in the
ions and peace
the Apostles Pet
Christ, you wou
e intercession o
enances and go
eople of God on
ne up as upon t
carried on out
ace, whether natur
an violently, o
mly, gracefully,
up and ride fort
f Angels' wings,
and gained the p
er up the Imma
ld in your hand
visible token
who again and
eat Victim; who i
to startle you
stop you, whe
whether to lay
ars, or to put t
jubila
Brothers, one
I were going
g you; but I h
extenuation. W
as set up by the
the beginning of
ies were trai
d martyrdom here
r Saxon youths
ets of the grea
vete flores mart
for each in tu
to go forth to th
themselves bef
ssing which migh
went for a Sain
calm old man,
ept in penance;
r Christ, what t
the way to the
if a sentinel in
nd down for fif
brethren were in
t heart, too gr
tormented him to
e Church was
ose bright-haired
for the scene o
l and love pent u
d a vent, and fl
home, upon those
herefore one by
hful soldiers ca
they persevered
palm,-all but
t go, for the salu
y Brothers, t
ip. Bear with m
n too seriously
it. As he was
n Rome, when ou
is rising, it is
ave even set out
, as if remem
you at home, an
formed with you,
a name among y
d perchance to d
your o
Character
aul ad Cor.,
loriabor in infir
in me virt
will I glory in m
Christ may
from the begin
ble each other in
natural, their deed
inary and preva
erns of the the
ssed with a rare
and Lord; they
n they leave thi
torment, which
llotted, between
nal glory. But
f their belongin
mily, they may st
nal aspect, in
, on the one ha
Divine life, tha
in the flesh, t
an nature; but
views, affecti
al. If they love
they love God,
ther of His comp
ejoice, it is in
st, it is in wha
almost with the vo
rink, it is almo
recorded in thei
ave fed on nothi
which is the pr
h we may suppose
St. Mary Magd
desert; such
lives belong t
al the
d, there are tho
sanctity too, a
m the supernatu
of superseding
t, ennobling it
cause they are s
eir natural end
ry of the Giver
ut through the
the brightness
igure them. The
e; they are bu
nderstand the h
selves into th
s in consequence
ucation. While
the blessedness
follow in imag
ations of prid
rld is to them
or its own sake,
hich intere
by the reason of th
hey study it a
glory of God a
hey have the tho
, attractions,
ther men, so far
y have these pro
sanctified, and
re eloquent, mor
tellectual, by re
y. In this lat
resumption place
rysostom, St. G
and above all, t
t. Paul the
ppy circumstanc
as it is, under
of St. Peter a
ys of these two
the 29th of Jun
as regards St. P
f our assembling
unday. And no
God's protectin
hese two days,
like to forego th
isgivings as to
u, my brethren
wonderful work
y presented to
s great Apostle.
s the best that I
not duly exhibi
e on an occasi
out of devotion
, will, I trust,
t be, and be a ple
who say it, an
is and our Lo
ave begun by c
hn, and by imply
fe more simply
seem to you, m
Paul's dispara
sk me whether i
rth to have a m
he Divine Majest
You may remin
now not I, but
ow live in the fl
on of God, who
f for me." And y
shing ecstasies
t even to the t
rds, which it "
You may say,
in his awful init
e kingdom of he
; nor am I ima
ou. We indeed
gree with you,
equal, in our app
e granted to St
nd, neither was
e tokens of Divi
some of those v
ess degree, belon
said when I b
w is, not what a
grees with all o
inguished mark,
what there is s
characteristic i
the fullness of
roy what is huma
perfect it. Acc
other subject, bu
rinciple on which
d,-"We wo
says, but "cloth
e swallowed up
re, his human
possessed and gl
fe; they remain
t, and in his h
mity. He was n
thed with grace
ore he glories in
ject on which I
t has said, H
num puto. "I am
out interest
n widely and dese
ullness of meani
erstand, is,
f this great Apo
his own words, "h
d "according t
that is, huma
the whole race
m, with an energ
odily fullness,
d of Divine grac
l freedom and p
n. And the conse
re of man so st
nter into human
, with a gift pecu
rtling instance
is life prior t
en so conscienti
does not hesit
e outcast heath
of them. St. Phi
, used to say,
t I am good for
nfession he use
good action." H
o a penitent he
a man like my
ell, I mean, tha
t all his neighbo
to be existing
e possessed of a
ossessing a na
ing into all th
vices, of purpo
d actually run i
tude of men; and
ns of all men,
m, and spoke of
say, a strict
f), blameless ac
ing with all goo
ng God from his f
he nevertheless
profligate heath
d called him. H
irth made him, in
th," but he clas
conversing in th
illing the will o
le, he speaks of
as if "carnal,
n dwelling in hi
e flesh the law
s an Apostle co
er he speaks of
ll because he viv
his which grace
its tendencies
ed of
ount for St. P
or what we now
arkable. He, the
arned in Greek l
the Jews, his
wisdom of the E
up that learn
st." I do not
ng so, since he goes
e passages fr
eathen Athenians;
Corinth; and a
exhortation to h
s the more rema
whom he quote
es, which had no
rality which th
count for this?
was licentious
ing of a guardi
e rebellious be
at him and we
he had a sympat
be it reverently
true lover of
re with a passi
e of the Gree
d he hung over
for its regenerati
I account fo
heathen poets. So
r that the Gree
ation of Provid
hough not direct
as. Now St. Pau
e of this feeling
heathen are in
he power of the
ey are beyond the
contrary, he s
ir times and the
hat is, going
tory and the migra
should seek Him,
Him and find
s not far from e
the Lycaonia
e at once places
s himself among
speaks of God'
they were. "Ye
e things? We al
you;" and he a
gh suffering all
, "nevertheless l
ony, doing goo
fruitful seasons,
ladness." You s
our," as if he
dwells in a kin
nd the gladness
heathen were gr
Apostle who espe
from one fath
thinking that
d hath made,"
"as in Adam all
de alive." I wi
om the great Ap
which he tenderl
nd the anguish,
ance of poor hu
he creature," he
"waiteth for t
od. For the crea
y, not willingly
t subject, in h
vered from th
e liberty of the g
know that eve
ravaileth in p
imens of the t
heart of the Apo
ns of Adam: but
read over the ea
wn nation! O w
d sweet, of genero
f piercing, over
of the race of I
t of nations an
whose glories w
nd in his aff
ad the birthrigh
ad of making u
hem away! Alas
been a partner in
ved from his in
er of God! O d
miserably falle
his tone in spea
as and a David;
for them, and
d resigned d
words: "I spe
ys; "I lie not
s in the Holy Gho
d continual sorr
ons and ecstasie
n, in spite of hi
cares of his Apo
all the churche
enough otherwis
dden him-but n
mains ever befor
ean, the state
re in mad enmi
, who had for ce
forward for the
for it, heralde
d protected it,
ost the fruit of t
ites," he says,
r past glories, "wh
the adoption
the testament,
service of God,
thers, and of wh
flesh, who is ove
foreve
ng it was for h
d for them, w
ord and himself.
mself had also
why not try them
d, "they know
t in every syna
ee. And, when
tness, was shed
kept the garmen
see, his old fr
tions under whi
er distinctly bef
s if they were
ss," he says, "
t not according
he seems to sa
h of good in the
igious purpose
h resolve like Jos
keep the whole
Prophets, but
atal sin! And wh
one occasion, des
ebellious people
ss," he said, "o
f the book." An
course of promu
committing the s
desired the
s, speaking of
h, "I wished
hrist, for my b
ding to the fles
in vain, when
high decree of God
t of very affect
ow after all
orted himself with
the exceptions
h God cast awa
rbid. For I also
braham, of the t
elites that are o
is confident ant
e to come. "The
to the Romans,
e gained by thei
r the sake of th
calling of God
lindness in par
e fullness of th
o all Israel s
I have now
at I meant when I
ristic gift, as
human nature a
iarity with it
plation and affe
ry full, instead
ed with it, whil
le he sanctifie
gh he had never
no longer a Je
ility, as I may
f the past. His
throw himself i
h all those ten
human nature
eveloped into sin
d him to reca
as of a Jew, whi
culous conver
thus, while he wa
mphatically still
ehension sti
so, do you not
d he was for t
r, and an Apostl
the Gentiles?
by miracle, bu
truments by meth
s souls to Him,
s He select t
r natural powers.
whose book was th
hose special ph
orum," he was n
he Nations. St.
the Creed, the Ar
the faithful, he
k. To him specia
e world, who kn
rt, who underst
that was his me
onateness which wa
mpire. "I becam
"that I might g
nder the Law, a
might gain the
e that were with
thout the Law,
without the L
that I might
gs to all men,
."{
ethren, my tim
gun my subject
have entered
have not yet t
ions, and his be
As yet I have c
y with human n
e; not of that
owed itself in
deemer. But per
east of his Conve
t which the day
ill be permitted
mpt, if it be no
of him
this glorious A
ired writers, th
teachers, may
ave ever felt a
y this great Sa
ious sympathies, o
ind thought for
to our respecti
man thoughts a
one above; and
d Eternal Essen
t troublous, restl
of impulses and
lures, which is
e. Let us beg h
ajesty on high, t
n of that tender
, love of brothe
vision, in which
ially, as we are
erend Prelat
e live, and whose f
name of Paul
th and fount of
and in the d
O
A
e third volume of Parochial and Plain Sermons. These discourses were
muel the prophet eighteen years, and alone, twenty-two years. Samuel had been judge of Is
ering in the desert of Sin, after their exodus from Egyp
el, 1447 B.C. The author of the Pentateuch is probably the gre
demons, wrought there by our Lord. The inhabitants i
ng famous as the royal psalmist.
ng for his father's asses, was
en tribes probably descended from Lot. They dwelt
rist in its waters; is called the river of judgment. An air line from the Sea of Galilee to
ea, frequently at war with the Hebrews. Samson, Saul, and Davi
as king. Before Saul the Jewish governmen
e temple; became exalted with pride; was punished for his sins: died probably u
onsistently built. A conviction of the intellect and hence distinguished
lver coin worth abou
acrilegious in Saul, as the right wa
nacle; divinely ordained for the Mosaic worship; co
Seek ye therefore first the kingdom of God and His justice a
f Moses and leader of the
ebrew people. Circumcision, a figure of baptism, was the si
YEARS
ance, composed chiefly by David. Humanly speaking, they form the most exquisite lyric poetry ext
Mesopotamia, 1500 B.C. Sent for by the
h. (a) The fourth son of Jac
at the kingship, like the priesthood, is
ring grace to the troubled spirit of Saul. Browning's Saul paints strik
nt, Sin; also of Lucifer, overcome by the
, who recounts to the Hebrew
f Jacob; governor of
nction between the theocratic an
married his daughter Michol to David "that
h. Note the consistent
quisite choice of words, the perfect finish of sentence, a
AND
rical Sketches, Vol. III. They were written to illustrate the tone and
or subtle, beautiful, luxurious Athens. They walked their straight and loving road to God, with the simplicit
e combated the evils of the eleventh century, within and without the Church, and effected
ty of God.
an, noted for zeal in spreading th
30. Pontus. Part of Cappadocia in Asia
tion. See Acts of
ed. Similar to that
welt on Carmel, as did St. John th
on the coast of Palestine
E AND TH
boldly denied the Divinity of Jesus Christ. The heresy was condemned by the Co
made to St. John at Patmos concerning the
thern Germany, who in the fifth century rava
y that believed in Montanus as a prophet, and i
st king of Israel after the separation of the tribes; a man p
tury, and the cogent argument against it of Tertullian, a celebrated writer of the second century, show how circumstances, above all, Divine ins
d, brutalized, and deadened; the other confused, wild, and hungering after what is to them indefinable, yet alone sa
est women of all times; a model of
nity, affect to doubt or deny altogether the supernatural. These reduce the Gospels to a code of ethics, and regard Christ as mere
YSO
ive nature of Cardinal Newman. He was a man not only of intense and powerful intellect, but of delicat
" from his eloquence. He is counte
"a monster of iniquity." He was put to death, 1 B.C. 90: 22. F
of crime and oppression, and banished. (b) A celebrated Roman poet, author
ngenious analogy is regarded as one
ness. The reason, probably, why he has so great a
asus, east of the Black
hwest Asia Minor. Troad
of his temper under suffering, and the unselfishness of his lofty soul appea
TAR AND
erpool, 1853. Special interest attached to them at the time, as England was about to undertake the d
estless tribes originally inha
) Leader of the Huns, who overran S
m Rome by Pope Leo the Great. (b) Zenghis Khan, a powerful Mongol chie
nder of a Mongol empire in Central Asia;
nth century; noted for his rescue of the true Cro
ahometans. It is a mixture of Judaism, Nestoria
in one God, but denial of the Redemption o
by a dignitary in British Indi
AND THE
crossed into Turkey, Northern Afriast of the river Oxus; in
ving near the Oxus; called white from
ic Turkey; thought to be th
of Bagdad; contemporaneous with C
ken at Lepanto, 1571, has continued to decline, so that were it not for t
. North central p
owerful dynasty in Central Asia. (b) Third successor of Mahomet; caliph in 644;
r. Romanus Diogenes,
PRESENT OF
economy, belonging to the nineteenth century. (b) A distinguished Fren
mes the inhabitants of all North
Rome. The schism was begun by the crafty, ambitious Photius in
at Christianity must be and is the religion of civ
A UNIV
to other institutions, and its general history. The illustrations of his idea of a University first appeared in the Dublin University Gazette; later, in one volume, Office and Work of Universities. In the present form the author has exchanged the title to Hi
an is unconsciously painting h
cond century. He was a Greek by birth, a pupil of
f great men; and these cherish their Alma with unlimited devotion. Read Gra
ITY LIF
Pir?us. (a) The Gulf of ?gina.
hree cents. Paid by spirits to Charon for f
. Secret rites of the goddess
which Antony defeated the con
enia, famous for his gigantic stature as well as for a
ance to the Dardanelles. It was the first
ens, ornamented by groups of statuary immortal in beauty. (b
of Pallas, protectress of Athens; it
aneous with Phidias. His work is in statuesque
litical market place, located near th
if not of all times. He learned philosophy of Plato, ora
pupil of Socrates and the master of Aristotle; he founded the Academy, or the Platonic School of Philoso
School, i.e. of scholasticism. Aristotle undoubtedly possessed the most comprehensive, keen, and logical intellect of antiquity, and his influen
henian art, letters, civil and military prestige;
an said, "indulge the passions," the Stoic, "crush them," the Peripatetic,-like the Christian of later times,-"control them." Imperi
DEMAND: T
the zenith of excellence in the thirteenth century,
accustomed to regard the Renaissance as the fountain whence have issued all streams of art, literature, and science. It is only necessar
WEAKNESS OF UNI
t, but brilliant and fascinating rationalist. He triumphed over William
anists being, according to their doctrine, "Pneumatics," the Catholics, "Psychics," i.e. men of heaven, men of
lizing and of display, and barbarity of terminology, caused its decline after the thirteenth century. Political and religious strife also accelerated decadence, until the Council of Trent restored philosophy to its true position as queen of human sciences a
rammar, Logic, Rhetoric; Music, Arithmetic, Astronomy,
of the twelfth century. In disfavor with Henry I
St. James
St. Jam
nd of spiritual strength-strength forfeited b
as, I have wasted my life
CORDING T
led Critical and Historical Essays. Cardinal Newman's own gifts and tastes for
ry. A profound and beautiful definiti
f Troy by Homer. (b) A tragedy by ?schylus, so named fro
ssionate; proclaimed himself a god; plunged into the crater of M
Satan, a majestic spirit, punished beyond his due, and therefore worthy our
istinguished truth, which explains why much rhetor
the sources of true poetry and the actual practices of the poet. Com
E OF THE DIVI
. This and other
Discourses to Mix
ied style suited to the subject-matter, which, however
r, fire, and water were believed
t, which commemorates the
on like music of indefinable tenderness and beauty. What wonder if men "who came to scoff remained to pray," when t
UPON TH
d at Birmingham, on occasion of the installation of Dr. Ullathorne as first
to day." See P
lities, that is, those things whose elements. See St. Matth
, called the ark because prefigured by
with you all days, even to the consummati
y. 226 to 228. It was a proud race ... hierarchical form. A passage of inimitable grace and simplicity. Note th
e Angles in Rome, Pope Gregory exclaimed, "Th
und form wedded to sense in a more surpassingly beautiful way? Neither music, no
e The Second Spring, The Tree beside the Waters,
ECOND
of the Catholic hierarchy to England. It furnishes an excellent specimen of the simpli
whom St. John in vision heard crying, "Holy, H
the weakness of human nature left to itself. "With
o Africanus, victor of the Cart
, restored by Mary I, and officially re-destroyed by Elizabeth, who attempted, through Matthew Pa
n fig tree) cumber the ground?" Newman's writings,
Saxons, 597 A.D. (b) Martyred at Canterbury by the nobles of Henry II because of his fearless defense of the right
d and occupied Italy; from the fifth to the eighth century their power w
Cathedral of Westminster
seman, clad in purple as bishop; in red, as cardinal.
f its progress in early centuries to the zeal and intelligence of the Benedic
pherds. They who
Christ's birt
.. Quotations from Isaias a
it her cousin Elisabeth. At the presence of Mary, the unborn child of Elisabe
to observe a religious rule, as the Dominicans; the second are those
whose death won the conversion of St.
will not leave you or
. Reference to the augu
ad of the Faith; his work was continued by Gregory XV in the Propaganda; but it was
nverted millions to Christ in India and Japan; he died on hi
. Ignatius of Loyola, who established the Society of Jesus. St. Philip N
whole man listening; he not only rivets the intelligence, but stirs the will and move
CHARACTER
asions. Paul-that godlike man who longed to be anathema from Christ if thereby he could serve the brethren-was Ne
ul, they may well finish with a sketch of t
hope, and charity; so-called because
which came down from heaven." St. John vi. 51. "And the bread that
of St. Paul. Comm
hropy in these latter times,-even to altruism,-but le
er of the Oratorians, a congregation devoted to preaching and
f south central part of Asia
an martyr; stoned to death by the J
in defense of Juda during the bloody persecutions of Antiochus. He appointed Judas Machabeus, the most famous of his five sons, to succeed him in the struggle, (c) "The Hammer." Judas gained glorious victories over
tory of the final struggles of the Jew
octor. A teacher of
te rhythm of structure, the simple grace, the direct force-above all, the unconsciousness, almost disda
Paul Cardinal Cullen, pr
ich have been amended. For example, ascendency is now ascendan
In the Notes, the first figure represents the page number and the sec
ering in the desert of Sin, after their exodus from Egyp
umber and the 7 refers to t
made to the nearest line number,