RTM my OUQO f CT 'r\:- : d LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. i|np. ©njnpi]$fi Iftt Shelf ..^^4?5" JDg UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. ^^fe^S^&l jMC Itii*- SiwK; { <0^- / Birthday Bouquet CULLED FROM THE SHRINES OF THE SAINTS THE GARDENS OF THE POETS. By ELEANOR C. DONNELLY, author of "Pearls from the Casket of the Sacred Heart." "Out of Sweet Solitude," "Domus Dei," "Legend of the Best-Beloved," " Crowned with Stars," ''Children of the Golden Sheaf," "Hymns of the Sacred Heart," and other Works. New York, Cincinnati, and BENZIGER BROTHERS, PRINTERS TO THE HOLY APOSTOLIC SEE. 1884. ■Dc 55" Philadelphia, April 22, 1884. I hereby approve of the publication of Miss Eleanor C. Donnelly's latest work, viz., " Our Birthday Bouquet culled prom the Shrines of the Saints and the Gardens of the Poets." It is a very instructive and edifying book. MAURICE A. WALSH, A d7ninistrator. Copyright, 18S4, by Benziger Brothers. To SAINT JOSEPH, THE WELL-BELOVED OF JESUS AND MARY, AND THE PATRON OF THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH, to whom it was granted as the shadow of jesus' eternal Father, and the representative of Mary's Eternal Spouse, to taste in person the joys of that DIVINE BIRTHDAY Which hath Ennobled and Sanctified to all Time, the Birthdays of the Children of Men, this OUR BIRTHDAY BOUQUET, IS most humbly and reverentially DEDICATED. I^EFAGE. The compiler of the present work has long desired to present to Catholic readers a Birthday Bouquet sufficiently fair and odoriferous to be worthy their acceptance. Her labor to this end, in fields so vast and prolific, is at last, she is happy to say, conscien- tiously accomplished. To the choicest flowers from the shrines of the servants of God she has united the purest and most fragrant blossoms (exotic and native) from the haunts of the children of song. The golden chain of our Lady's feasts, interlaced with the slender ribbon of a daily Christian Practice, binds the blooming mass together. The culler of these immortelles therefore cherishes the hope that her Bouquet may prove a blessed birthday-gift to many a gentle reader, and may long diffuse over Name-day and Fete-day its mingled odors of sanctity and sweetness. The compiler's grateful acknowledgments are due to Prof. Arthur J. Stace of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, for his sketch of St. Herculanus's life, as well as for his graceful translation, in two cases, of the original verse of our present Holy Father, Leo XIII. The lines for the Feast of St. Francis of Assisi are taken from one of the two beautiful hymns composed 5 by Pope Leo, in honor of St. Constantius, a hoi)' bishop of Perugia (of which See our beloved Pon- tiff was also once bishop), and who suffered mar- tyrdom under the emperor Marcus Aurelius. The local Feast of St. Constantius is commemorated by the Perugians on January 29; but as that day is as- signed by pre-eminence to St. Francis de Sales, and as the scope of the present work does not admit of duplicate saints (if we may use the expression) upon any one festival, except in the case of those who were fellow-martyrs at the same date, we have ven- tured to apply the lines of our illustrious Pontiff to St. Francis d'Assisi, the holy seraph of Umbria. Philadelphia, October 25, 1883. 6 gauttarij. 'Chants the ice-crowned January : ; ' / within my bosom bear Thine Espousals, pttre and fair, Virgin Bride! I hail thee, Mary /" E. C. 7-8 (SANUAI^Y 1. THE CIRCUMCISION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST. '" w\!r> FTER eight days were accomplished that <-^v^y the child should be circumcised: his name URING the violent persecution of the Chris- ^ 'J tians by the Emperor Dacian in the year ^^~> 250, St. Paul of the lower Thebaid fled into the desert, and there in prayer and penance lived until he attained the great age of 113 years. Beside a clear brook, in a grotto shaded by a palm- tree, this first hermit spent his peaceful days; and when the palm no longer availed to furnish him with food, a raven brought him from God his daily por- tion of bread. St. Anthony came at last to hold a spiritual conference with Paul, and the raven brought him then a double allowance of bread, so that his guest might not remain unsupplied. A few days passed, and Paul slept in the Lord; and two lions came and hollowed out a grave, to which St. Anthony consigned the blessed corse. There have been holy men who hid themselves Deep in the woody wilderness, and gave Their lives to thought and prayer, till they outlived The generation born with them, nor seemed Less aged than the hoary trees and rocks Around them. William Cullen Bryant. Favorite Practice. To cultivate an unwavering trust in the providence of God. 23 (^ANUAI^Y 16. ST. HONARATUS, Bishop/ SCION of one of the noblest consular fami- V* lies of Gaul, St. Honaratus, in the fourth century, renounced the empty honors and riches of his position, and retired with his brother, to a solitary retreat far from their own country. His brother having died soon after, Honaratus returned to Gaul, and erected his hermitage on the isle of Lerins, where he soon found himself surrounded by other pious cenobites. He devoted his time to train- ing these disciples and initiating them into the high- est religious virtue; giving special attention to the sanctification of St. Hilary, who was to succeed him. Having been appointed bishop of Aries, St. Honara- tus held the see about two years, and died in 429. Onward he moves to meet his latter end, Angels around befriending - virtue's friend; Sinks to the grave with unperceived decay, While resignation gently slopes the way; And all his prospects, brightening to the last, His heaven commences ere the world is past Oliver Goldsmith. Favorite Practice. A self-sacrificing solicitude for the best interests of ethers. 24 (January 17. ST. ANTHONY, Abbot. |ORN in Coma, in Upper Egypt, in 251, St. JD) Anthony, while still in the flower of his youth, fe 7 "^ distributed his great wealth among the poor of Christ and retired into the desert. There he passed his days in strict poverty and the practice of heroic mortifications, devoting himself to silence, prayer, and manual labor. After a probation of mystical trials, and assaults of the Evil One, his repu- tation for sanctity drew around him thousands of dis- ciples, to whom he gave a monastic rule ; and in the direction of whom he became a very master and pa- triarch of cenobites. He died in the desert in 356, at the age of 105. This is the sanctuary of the soul : Here comes no murmur of the ways of men - I kneel in rapture at the holy goal, And breathe again. John Arthur Henry. Favorite Practice. To devote each day some little time to the considera- tion of the things of Eternity. 25 <3ANUAI^Y 18. THE CHAIR OF ST. PETER AT ROME. yfcjJ T. PETER, having been appointed by our divine Lord Himself the Head of the Church and His representative on earth, proceeded in the fulfilment of his mission to evangelize Judea, Gali- lee, Samaria, and the neighboring countries; and final- ly, in the year 41 of the vulgar era, established his see at Rome, the capital of the civilized world. There he thenceforth preached; there he wrote his two epis- tles to the churches of Asia; and there he suffered martyrdom on the 29th of June, in the year 44. In the imperishable See of Rome, that which Peter was the Pope still is, and will continue to be — the Pastor of pastors and common Father of the faithful. What though thy hands are fettered as they lift The blessing of the cross ? They still can guide, Like Israel's cloud, thy children scattered wide Still are they warning to lost fiocks adrift On mist-enshrouded slopes; still can they bless Thy faithful ones, who, weeping, peace implore, Who, striving, spread thy realm far countries o'er. Still rulest thou while kings, as shadows, pass; And still the weary, craving love and home, Peace in thy bosom seek, Eternal Rome! Edith Cook. Favorite Practice. To increase devotion to the Holy See. 26 (January m. ST. SULPICIUS, Bishop, ,(^T. SULPICIUS was a priest of Gaul in the seventh century, under Austregisilus, bishop of Bourges. The king, Clothaire II., learning of the zeal and piety which had characterized the life of the servant of God from early youth, appoint- ed Sulpicius the almoner to his own serfs. A miracu- lous cure having afterwards been wrought in the per- son of the monarch through the prayers of his holy almoner, Clothaire had the latter elevated to the see of Bourges. In that responsible position, Sulpicius manifested a wonderful zeal, prudence, and exactitude of discipline. His days were spent in apostolic labors, and his nights devoted to prayer. Full of good works, he died on January 17th, 644. We will as yet, With God's help, Instruct thy mind; That thou the better mayest Discover to the skies The right path. From King Alfred's Metres of Boethitis. Favorite Practice. An active solicitude for the salvation of our neighlor* (SAHUAI^Y 20. ST. SEBASTIAN, Martyr. T(vyTNDER the Emperors Diocletian and Maximi- (xAJ) an, one of the highest officers in the Praeto- ^^ rian guard was the noble St. Sebastian. A Christian and a soldier, he made use of his com- manding position to succor the persecuted of the faith of Christ and uphold them in their trials. Fi- nally denounced to Diocletian, Sebastian boldly pro- fessed himself a Christian, and was condemned by the emperor to perish by the hands of archers. The arrows, however, failing to give him the crown of martyrdom, he was beheaded by the imperial or- ders in the year 288. O faithful Saint Sebastian! The arrows long- ago Have ceased their work of torture, And the crown is on thy brow; Thine eyes are raised as ever, In the fulness of their love, But their pain hath changed to triumph, In the glorious courts above. Ellen Downing. Favorite Practice. To recall daily the fact that by the Sacrament % of Con- firmation yon are made, really and truly, a soldier of Christ. 28 Sanitary 21. ST. AGNES OF ROME, Virgin and Martyr. tOWARDS the close of the third century the beautiful maiden Agnes was born at Rome, of rich and noble parents, and dedicated to God from her very childhood. Being sought in marriage by illustrious suitors in her early girlhood, Agnes declined all the brilliant alliances tendered to her, and declared herself unalterably the spouse of Jesus Christ. Enraged at her Christian firmness, the Roman authorities subjected the virtue and modesty of the holy child to the most terrible ordeals; but the power of her Eternal Spouse protected her miraculously from the diabolical machinations of her enemies; and her fair young life was crowned with martyrdom. She perished by the sword by order of the Roman governor. 44 Tear that white robe from her shoulders !" Tyrant mandates know not pity. She droops, clothed in her own blushes— could there gar- ments be more fair ? Lo ! down-fallen from its fastenings, before all that mighty city, She stands mantled and enshrouded in the glory of her hair. Then swift beneath the sword-flash streams the life-blood hotly gushing : The red current, overflowing, bathes her whiteness in its sea. Maidens, cease your tender weeping, all your anguished sobs be hushing ; Pain is but a dream forever, and the martyr's soul is free ! Mrs. Mannix. Favorite Practice. To guard with extreme care and caution the holy vir- tue of purity. 29 (January 2% ST. VINCENT, Martyr. vv^ T. VINCENT was a deacon of the Church in y^S) Saragossa, Spain, in the fourth century. ^^ When the persecutions of Diocletian and Maximian raged against the Christians, Vincent was brought before the judges in chains. His ardent faith provoking the special anger of his enemies, he was beaten with rods at the pillory, torn with iron hooks, and cast upon burning coals. • Remaining con- stant under all these tortures, the tyrant Valentius sought by healing the martyr's wounds and surround- ing him with luxuries to allure him from the faith, but the brave young hero resisted blandishments and torments alike, and expired from the effects of his wounds in 323, at the early age of twenty-three. But firmly stood the holy youth, By many a guardian bright attended, Unshrinking zeal and spotless truth In holy rapture calmly blended. Gerald Griffin. Favorite Practice. To resist with equal courage the fierce assaults ana* gentle allure?nents of the Enemy. 30 (UANUAI^Y 23. THE ESPOUSALS OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN AND ST. JOSEPH. XJ»T^THEN the Blessed Virgin Mary had attained ^Y^^9 her fourteenth year she was espoused by r ^' the high-priest, in the Temple of Jeru- salem, to St. Joseph, the husband chosen for her by the Divine decree. An ancient tradition avers that St. Joseph was indicated as the chosen spouse of Mary by the miraculous flowering of a rod which he held in his hand, as well as by the apparition of a shining dove which descended at the same time from heaven and rested upon the head of the future Foster-Father of Jesus. " Veni /" she hears it nearer tremble, " Arise, O love, and quit thy cell; Already in the courts assemble The noblest youths of Israel; And princely suitors there await Thine entrance at the inner gate." Dear Mater A dm ira b His ! Ere the high-priest leads thee forth to stand Where Joseph waits 'mid the throng id peace, With the blossoming staff in his aged hand ; — Ah ! turn from thy lilies, thy work, thy book, And gladden thy children with one fond look. From " Crowned with Stars." Favorite Practice. A deep reverence for the sanctity of the marriage- state* 31 <3ANUAI^Y 2$. ST. TIMOTHY, Bishop and Martyr. { T. TIMOTHY was the child of a pagan father; but his mother Eunice and his grandmother Loyda were both devout Jewesses, and trained the boy to virtue from his earliest years. He became, in time, the spiritual and well-beloved son and co-laborer of the apostle St. Paul; and the latter addressed to him two epistles which consti- tute a portion of the inspired Word. Having been made bishop of Ephesus by St. Paul, Timothy, on one occasion, in striving to rescue from the idolaters some poor victims whom they were about to sacrifice to their false gods, became himself the prey of their fury. He was dragged through the streets of the city, and stoned to death, in the year 97. What is the blessed prize ? What crowns the victory ? It is the lily-white of pure Divinity. From the German of Rev. J. Scheffler {Angelus Silesius). Favorite Practice. To sacrifice self to the demands of Christian charity. 32 (^ANUAI^Y 2S. THE CONVERSION OF ST. PAUL THE APOSTLE. \\$\>ft ND it came to pass as he went on his jour- ,A"*\^ ney, that he drew near to Damascus; and ^~ suddenly a light from heaven shined round about him. And falling on the ground, he heard a voice saying to him, Saul, Saul, why dost thou persecute me ? And he said, Who art thou, Lord? And He: I am Jesus whom thou dost perse- cute: it is hard for thee to kick against the goad. And he trembling and astonished said, Lord, what wilt thou have me to do ?" — Acts ix. 3-7. Lead, kindly light, amid the encircling gloom, Oh ! lead me on ! The night is dark, and I am far from home, Lead Thou me on ! Keep Thou my feet: I do not ask to see The distant scene: one step enough for me. Cardinal Newman. Favorite Practice. Prompt co7'respondence to the inspirations of God, 33 ^ANUAI^Y 2-6. ST. PAULA, Widow. 1 T. PAULA was a wealthy widow of Rome in ^25 tne f° ur th century. The learned St. Jerome trained and directed her and her gifted daughter Eustochia in the practice of heroic vir- tue. After expending her income in works of char- ity, Paula retired from Rome to the Holy Land, and passed- the remainder of her life in Palestine, devoting herself (and with her Eustochia) to prayer and meditation, and labors for the poor, in the very spots made sacred by the presence of her Lord and Saviour, St. Paula ended her saintly career in 404. And, following her beloved Lord, In decent poverty, She makes her life one sweet record And deed of charity. Henry W. Longfellow. Favorite Practice. The Stations 0?' Holy Way of the Cross. 34 JANUARY 27. ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, Bishop and Doctor. URXAMED Chrysostom, or the Golden- mouthed, because of his heavenly eloquence, St. John was raised by unanimous acclaim to the see of Constantinople in 397. The age in which he lived was rife with scandals. The empress Eudoxia was ruling her court, intoxicated with ambi- tion and sinful excesses. The heresies of the Arians, the Eunomians, and the Montanists were prevailing on every side. Pagan games and spectacles were the order of the day; and even the clergy of the dio- cese were relaxed from the austerity of their discipline by the corrupting influence of the times. Having opposed all these disorders with the strong weapon of his courageous eloquence. Chrysostom was calumniated and persecuted. He was twice banished from his bishopric, and finally died in exile in Sep- tember, 407. ♦ "Tis not the thought of glory won, Of hoarded gold or pleasures gone, But one bright course from earliest youths Of changeless faith, unbroken truth, This turns to gold the vapors dun That close on life's descending sun. Gerald Griffin. Favorite Practice. To calmly and boldly oppose the spirit of /ti< ?>:.:>: respect. 35 ^ANUAI^Y 28. ST. CYRIL, Patriarch of Alexandria. tT was to St. Cyril, the great and zealous pa- triarch of Alexandria, that Pope Celestine I., in the fifth century, intrusted the important work of refuting the impious Xestorius. That un- happy man was striving to spread false doctrine throughout the Christian world, in infamously assert- ing that the Blessed Virgin, although the Mother of Christ, was not the Mother of God. A council at Rome in 430, and another at Ephesus in 431, con- firmed the doctrine which St. Cyril taught, in opposi- tion to the false Xestorius; and the fathers of the council were borne aloft in triumph at Ephesus, the people crying aloud, " Blessed be ye who have restored to us our Mother!" St. Cyril peacefully expired at Alexandria in 444. And this we know: let all the world be dark. Dear Mary watches o'er our troubled sea; And this we know: though unknown danger lurks In all our land, her pure heart is an ark In which we shelter, childlike, trustingly. — O heart unstained! the greatest of God's works. Maurice F. Egax. Favorite Practice. Frequently repeat, ' ' Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death. Amen." 36 ^ANUAI^Y 29. ST. FRANCIS DE SALES, Bishop and Doctor. ^ T. FRANCIS DE SALES was devoted to God ^ from his infancy. He was of high birth and eminent talents; but he consecrated all to the service of religion, and, laboring indefatigably among the Calvinists of the Chablais, was instru- mental, as a missionary, in leading back seventy- two thousand of those heretics to the true fold in the short space of three years. He was made bishop of Geneva in 1602, and by his sweet sanctity, his meek and affable bearing, proved himself a faithful imita- tor of the gentle Lamb of God. He wrote numerous and valuable works of piety, founded the Order of the Visitation nuns, and died at Lyons in December, 1622. Pure in all things as an angel, Fond and simple as a child ; With himself severe and watchful, With the poor and fallen, mild: He proclaimed that passion leads us O'er a dark and thorny road, And that men are happy only When they love and serve their God. Rev. Dr. Cummings. Favorite Practice. Often to ponder these words : " My spirit is sweeter than honey and the honey comb. " (January 30. . ST. BATHOLDA, Widow. ^T. BATHOLDA was originally a slave and in ^ her early youth belonged to a Frank gentle- man attached to the court of Clovis II. By her noble virtues she attracted the notice of that king, who made her his wife. The young queen exerted her royal power for the most exalted ends, and passed her time in good works. When left a widow, and invested with the regency, she (who had once known the miseries of slavery) gave all the slaves in her kingdom their freedom. She founded the abbeys of Chelles and Corbie; and as soon as her son, Clo- thaire III., was old enough to ascend the throne she retired into the convent of Chelles, and closed her life, in the faithful practice of every monastic virtue, towards the year 685. My crown is in my heart, not on my head; Not decked with diamonds and Indian stones, Not to be seen; my crown is called Content: A crown it is that seldom kings enjoy. Shakespeare. Favorite Practice. To be convinced with Queen BalJwIda that to serve is to reign. 38 gJANUAI^Y 31. ST. PETER NOLASCO, Confessor. JTTN the thirteenth century a vast number of Chris- tians, captured by the infidels, were groaning ^^ in bondage, far from their native land. In order to rescue these afflicted souls, exposed to the risk of losing their faith, Peter Nolasco, a French gentleman and courtier of the king of Arragon, felt inspired by God to establish an association for that sublime object. He was joined by thirteen pious companions, and the Order was founded on August 10, 1218. An immense number of captives were ransomed by the instrumentality of St. Peter and his followers. He was favored with a vision of the Blessed Virgin, as well as with the sensible support of the angels. He died in 1280. Joy and gladness fill the heaven, When Night's curtains are withdrawn: Virgin! thou those smiles hast given — Thou, earth's brightest, fairest dawn! From theSpanish ^/Fra Alvaro de Hinojosa y Carbajal,OSB. Favorite Practice. By teaching the Christian doctrine, to free captive minds from the chains of ignorance, 39 ffetottswg. Moans the shiv'ring February : " Candlemas •, amid the snow, Bids the blessed tapers glow, Bids them burn for thee, Mary T E. C. D. FBBI^UAI^Y 1. ST. IGNATIUS, Bishop and Martyr. V Q^ T. IGNATIUS was the third bishop of Antiocru ^J In the reign of the emperor Trajan he was ^^ condemned to be devoured by wild beasts, and was despatched to Rome in order that he might suffer for the faith in the public amphi- theatre. He was inflamed with the most ardent de- sires to enjoy the vision of Christ Jesus, and was only fearful lest some unforeseen obstacle would post- pone or prevent the tortures which were to admit him to that celestial delight. When he heard the roar of the lions in the arena, he cried out. " I am the wheat of Christ that is to be ground under the tooth of the beasts." This martyrdom took place in the year 107, Not with the hope of gaining aught, Not seeking a reward, But as Thyself hast loved me, O ever-loving Lord ! E'en so I love Thee and' will love, And in Thy praise will sing, Solely because Thou art my God, And my eternal King. Missat. Favorite Practice. A cheerful acceptance of petty trials, exclaiming with St. Ignatius, in the midst of suffering, "Now, indeed y do I begin to be the disciple of Jesus Christ!" 43 FBB^UA^Y 2. THE PURIFICATION OF THE BLESSED VIR- GIN MARY. ( ND after the days of her purification, accord- ing to the law of Moses, were accom- plished, they carried him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord. . . . And to offer a sacri- fice, according as it is written in the law of the Lord, a pair of turtle doves or two young pigeons." — St. Luke ii. 22-24. The doves in their basket of osiers complain, And flutter their wings; but the Dove all Divine Lies mute in the arms of the Saint, gives no sign Of emotion or pain; Save to turn on the Prophet those wonderful Eyes r Those fathomless wells of perpetual light; The sun, and the moon, and the stars of the night, Were dark to those Eyes. And flushed with the glow of Eternity's dawn, From Simeon's lip bursts the anthem of faith, — The song of the saint is the sweetest in death, Like the song of the swan. Eleanor C. Donnelly. Favorite Practice. A patient waiting for the fulfilment of God's prom~ ises. 44 FEBI^UAI^Y 3. ST. BLAIZE, Bishop and Martyr. I -A U RING the reign of the emperor Diocletian, ~^y St. Blaize was bishop of Sebaste in Armenia, ^S 2 ^ and manifested a holy zeal for the purity of the faith and the sanctification of his flock. He was endowed with the gift of working miracles, and the sick had frequent recourse to him to be healed of their infirmities. In the persecution of Licinius St. Blaize suffered martyrdom, first being torn with iron hooks, and finally beheaded, in the year 316. This blessed martyr is specially invoked in diseases of the throat, having once, it is said, wrought a wonder- ful miracle upon the throat of a child who was brought to him in such a state of suffering as to threaten speedy death. . . . At his control, Despair and anguish fled the struggling- soul; Comfort came down the trembling wretch to raise. And his last faltering accents whispered praise. Oliver Goldsmith. Favorite Practice. To sectire the blessing of the throat, given annually tJiron^h the intercession of St. Blaize upon his festival. Fbb^ua^y & ST. ANDREW CORSINI, Bishop. jfl.N Florence, in the year 1302, St. Andrew was j|f born of the illustrious family of the Corsini. ^^ His youth was spent in the wildest dissipa- tion; but, through the prayers and tears of his pious mother (who had offered her son to God before his birth), the grace of God, and the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, wrought a sudden conversion in the young man's heart, and he became a Carmel- ite monk, and afterwards bishop of Fiesole. Both as a religious and as a prelate he led a most austere and saintly life. In his diocese he exercised a heavenly ministry of conciliation and peace, thus re- alizing a vision which his mother is said to have had prior to his birth, when it appeared to her that she had brought forth a wolf which was afterwards changed into a lamb. He entered into rest on Jan- uary 6, 1373, dying at Fiesole, beloved and lamented by all. . . . That I might scatter wide and far My Maker's praise from star to star. And joyous sing how He had smiled Forgiveness on His erring child. Gerald Griffin. Favorite Practice. To pray for the conversion of sinners, invoking to that end the intercession of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. 46 Fbbi^uai^y S. SAINT AGATHA, Virgin and Martyr. r I ^ H E youthful Agatha being very beautiful, rich, »v^K\ and of a noble house in the town of Catania, vL^ the pagan governor. Quintin, became en- amored of her, and wished to marry her. Bat Agatha had already secretly espoused herself to Jesus Christ, and repulsed the governor's addresses. ' En- raged at this, Quintin, on pretext of her being a Christian, delivered the tender virgin to the tortu- rers. She was forthwith scourged, torn with iron hooks, and her breasts and sides lacerated and scorched with fiery metal. After all these torments being cast into a dungeon, St. Peter the Apostle ap- peared to her and healed her wounds. She was brought before Quintin a second time, but remained inflexibly constant to her faith and sacred vow. St. Agatha was then ordered to be dragged over burning coals and afterwards over potsherds. An earthquake took place at the time of this second torture, and Quintin fled from the town in terror. St. Agatha died in prison the next night, a.d. 251. Flower of the lily ! on thee Heaven's dews drop down ; Treasure the sweetness of the Hidden Life ; Thy Nazareth is Mary's Paradise. Jesus is thine ; thy Spouse, thy virgin-crown. Joseph W. S. Norris. Favorite Practice. An unyielding constancy in good resolutions, "With purpose of heart to co?ttinue in the Lord" 47 FBBI^UAI^Y 6. ST. DOROTHY, Virgin and Martyr. T. DOROTHY was a noble virgin of the city S^) °f Cesarea, in Cappadocia, of exceeding grace and beauty, and devoted to a life of prayer and almsgiving. She was apprehended for the faith, and on her trial expressed her joyful will- ingness to die for Christ, declaring that in the gar- den of her Eternal Spouse grew celestial fruits, and flowers which never fade. She was condemned to be cruelly tortured and then beheaded. As she was led forth to death, a young lawyer of the city mocked her, and asked her to send him some flowers and fruits from the wonderful Garden of her Bridegroom. Dorothy gently smiled and assented. And when Theophilus, the lawyer, sat, later, making merry with his friends, an angel appeared to him with a basket of roses and apples, saying, " Dorothea sends thee this." The result of this miracle was the in- stantaneous conversion of Theophilus, who was after- wards martyred for the faith. St. Dorothy suffered in 303. — -♦ . . . They remind me, too, Of martyred Dorothea, Who from celestial gardens sent Flowers as her witnesses To him who scoffed and doubted. Henry W. Longfellow. Favorite Practice. To consider that our spiritual garden must produce not only beautiful flowers but substa?itial fruits of piety. 48 Fbbi^uai^y I. ST. ROMUALD, Abbot. \ T Ravenna, about the year 956, St. Romuald was born, and bred without true Christian training. His early years were wild and disorderly; but, having acted as second in a duel in which his own father fought and killed a rel- ative, Romuald was so deeply impressed with the fatal result that he retired into a neighboring mon- astery, and there, touched by divine grace, made a spiritual retreat and became a monk. His father was enraged at this step, but the young convert, by his prayers and good example, finally induced his guilty parent to also renounce the world and become a religious. St. Romuald ultimately founded a new Order, known as the Monks of Camaldoli, and died the death of the just in the year 1027. Like Abraham ascending up the hill To sacrifice, his servants left below, That he might act the great Commander's will Without impeach to his obedient blow ; • Even so, the soul, remote from earthly things, Should mount Salvation's shelter — Mercy's wings. Father Robert Southwell, SJ. Favorite Practice. To prize the moment of grace, and to correspond promptly to it. 49 REBI^UAI^Y 8. ST. JOHN OF MATHA, Confessor. T. JOHN DE MATHA was born in Provence, of devout parents, about the middle of the twelfth century, and was carefully trained in piety. He studied at Aix. and subsequently at Paris, devoting all his leisure time to works of mercy to the poor and afflicted. He was finally or- dained priest, and on the day of his first Mass he conceived the project of founding a religious Order devoted to the redemption of captives. The Chris- tians captured by pirates, and in bondage among the Mussulmans in Spain and Africa were subjected to outrageous abuse, and in danger of losing their faith. The new Order was called the Trinitarians, and St. John de Matha led himself the first expedition for the ransoming of the Christian slaves. Worn out with his great labors in the sublime cause, he died in 1213. O brave young Christian herald ! from afar Comes thy bright story as a guiding- star ; Neglectful centuries could not hide thy fame Nor dim the lustre of thy glorious name. Rev. Patrick Cronin. Favorite Practice. To visit and console poor prisoners. 50 Febi^uai^y a ST. APOLLONIA, Virgin and Martyr. tHERE dwelt in the city of Alexandria, in the third century, a wealthy magistrate and his wife, who were heathens and had no children. Once, this magistrate's wife out of charity entertained and gave alms to three Christian pilgrims, who in return, preached to her the faith of Christ and the efficacy of devotion to the Blessed Virgin. As the woman was eagerly desirous of offspring, she (heathen as she was) besought the Mother of God to obtain for her a child. Her prayer was heard, and a daughter was born to her, who was called Apollonia. She grew up fair and beautiful, and was baptized a Christian, and was then directed by an angel to go preach the faith in Alexandria. Many were converted by her wonderful eloquence, but her own heathen father de- livered her up to martyrdom. She was bound to a column, and all her beautiful teeth pulled out one by one; and finally a fire was kindled and she was flung into it, and thus went to God in the year 250. St. Apollonia is invoked in diseases of the teeth. ♦ O fair ! O fortunate ! O rich ! O dear ' O happy and thrice happy she, Dear silver-breasted dove, Whoe'er she be, Whose early love, With winged vows, Makes haste to meet her morning Spouse! Richard Crashaw. Favorite Practice. Almsgiving with a supernatural intention, seeing God alone hi the persons of His poor. 51 FEBI^UAI^Y 10. ST. SCHOLASTICA, Virgin. -. r O T. SCHOLASTICA was the sister of the great ^^^ St. Benedict, and her soul was his particular ^^^ charge from early youth. When her holy brother founded the monastery of Monte Cassino, Scholastica took up her abode close by, and thus was ab:e. at intervals, to receive the instructions and direction of St. Benedict. At their last inter- view. Scholastica felt a premonition of her approach- ing death, and besought her brother to extend his visit beyond its usual limits. This, through a spirit of mortification, he declined to do. St. Scholastica had recourse to : nd a sudden storm arose, whose violence compelled St. Benedict to remain where he was. Three days afterward, on the ioth ::' February, 543, Benedict beheld his sister's soul ascending to heaven in the form _:' a white iove . . . It is enough To catch one glimpse of heaven's blue, For us to know the beauty of the sky. It is enough to tell a little part Of her most holy life, that you may knew The bidden grace and splendor of the whole. Father Ryan. Favorite Practice. To submit ones spiritual life to the guidance of a wist :. nd ~ director. 52 Febi^uai^y 11. ST. SEVERINUS, Abbot. j BBOT of the monastery of St. Maurice in ~/""V the Valais, St. Severinus was remarkable in the fifth century for his eminent charity and for the many miraculous cures he effected in the sick. Clovis I. of France, in the year 507. being ill of an obstinate fever which baffled the skill of his physicians, sent for the holy abbot of St. Mau- rice; and no sooner had Severinus laid upon the king the hem of his monastic robe and besought Heaven for his cure, than the monarch was healed of his malady. In gratitude to the saint. King Clovis gave him permission to draw from the royal coffers abundant alms for the poor, and to set at liberty all such prisoners as he might deem fit. On his way back to his monastery, Severinus happily expired. There beside the failing lamp Of the lowly and the stricken He hath stood to cheer and quicken. Dr. R. D. Joyce. Favorite Practice. Frequent visits to the sick, and particularly to those who are poor and desolate. 53 FEBI^UAI^Y 12. ST. EULALIA, Virgin and Martyr. YOUNG Spanish virgin, a native of Barce- lona, St. Eulalia, in the persecution of the > ST. SIMEON, Bishop and Martyr. ^ T. SIMEON, the son of Cleophas, was (accord- ^ ing to the flesh) a kinsman of our Lord Jesus f^- 7 Christ. He succeeded St. James the Less in the see of Jerusalem; and after having governed that diocese for a long time through a very tur- bulent period, he was denounced as a Christian, subjected to prolonged torments, and finally died on the cross at the great age of 120 years. The learned Abbe Lecanu compares St. Simeon to the brave old man Eleazar who, in the time of the persecution of Antiochus, "gave to the youth of his day a splendid example of holy courage by encounter- ing death rather than renounce, or even seem to waver in his belief." O faithful cross ! O noblest tree ! In all our woods there's none like thee: No earthly groves, no shady bowers, Produce such leaves, such fruit, such flowers. Sweet are the nails, and sweet the wood, That bears a weight so sweet and good ! Crux jidelis. Favorite Practice. To U7tite each daily cross to the cross of our Divine Lord. 60 RBBI^UAI^Y 19. ST. BARBATUS, Bishop. , N eloquent young priest of the diocese of Benevento, St. Barbatus was noted for his grave, pious, and studious life, and was chosen by his bishop to fill an important parochial charge. He was severely tried by the apparently fruitless results of his missionary labors. He was scorned and calumniated; but remaining faithful to duty, he was in the end chosen bishop of Benevento, and long governed that see with admirable wisdom and ability. He had the happiness of converting the Lombard nation to the faith, and of winning the friendship of their ruler, Pertharitus. Full of good works, Barbatus died at a green old age in the year 682. Heavenly image, — earthly mould, — Beautiful as bright to view: Oh, what charms its leaves unfold Drenched with Suffering's sparkling dew! From the Spanish o/Yrk Alvaro Hinojosa y Carbajal,O.S.B. Favorite Practice. Patience under calumny, knowing that one must be proved by trial in order to be acceptable to God. 61 FBBI^UAI^Y 20. ST. EUCHERIUS, Bishop and Confessorv 1 T. EUCHERIUS was a scion of an illustrious family of Orleans; and Savarms, the bishop of that town, was his uncle. On the death of the latter, in 771, Eucherius was forced to quit the abbey of Jumieges (where he was living in religious retirement), and became bishop of Orleans in his uncle's stead. He discharged the duties of his high position with saintly fervor and fidelity. Having re- fused to bestow upon Charles Martel and his soldiers the property of the Church, which the holy bishop con- sidered the patrimony of the poor, he was driven into exile, and persecuted fiercely for six years by the minions of Charles. Worn out with fatigue and suf- fering, St. Eucherius died in 793, having worn the mitre for twenty-two years. O pure and blessed soul That, from thy clay's control Escaped, hast sought and found thy native sphere, And from thy crystal throne Look'st down, with smiles alone. On this vain scene of mortal hope and fear. From the Italian of Jacopo Sannazzaro. Favorite Practice. To meekly endure persecution for justice' sake. PBBI^UAI^Y 21. ST. SEVERINUS, Bishop and Martyr. *T. SEVERINUS. in the fifth century of the Christian era, had the heroic courage to stand forth in defence of the faith against the heresy of Eutychius. which the Council of Chalcedon had already condemned. It was long before peace was restored to the Church. The heresy had corrupted some of the religious of Palestine; and the patriarch Juvenal of Jerusalem was driven from his see by a monastic usurper who persecuted the faithful. Seve- rinus was the bishop of Scytopolis, and as he cour- ageously opposed the usurper, Theodosius, the generosity of his zeal enkindled against him all the fury of the heretics. He was seized by the soldiery, dragged out of the town, and put to a vio- lent death in 453. ... I know the name. Many martyrs bear the same. And they stand in glittering- ring Round their warrior God and King, Who before and for them bled, — With their robes of ruby red And their swords of cherub-flame. Cardinal Newman. Favorite Practice. To beseech St. Severinus to obtain for us a share in his holy zeal to combat heresy. 63 PBBI^UAI^Y 22. ST. PETER'S CHAIR AT ANTIOCH. ' V ^HE Church at Antioch was founded by the glo- -ij^ rious apostle St. Peter; and it was at Antioch vJ^ that (according to the Acts of the Apostles) the disciples of Jesus Christ first received the name of Christians. For it is written: " And Barnabas went to Tarsus to seek Paul: whom when he had found he brought to Antioch. And they conversed there in the church a whole year: and they taught a great multitude, so that at Antioch the disciples were first named Christians." To be a Christian, there- fore, is to be the disciple of Christ, and, conse- quently, to be one of the faithful imitators of a cruci- fied Lord. . . . Raise your thoughts to that bright realm above Where Christian Faith and Hope are lost in all-absorbing Love, And blend the serpent's prudence with the sweetness of the dove; And faithful to our land and creed, in their bright footsteps move. Who fought and bled and conquered all those centuries ago ! Father Thomas Burke, O.P. Favorite Practice. A practical rez'ere7ice for the name and obligations of a true Christian. 64 REBI^UAI^Y 23. >& ST. SERENUS, Marty*-. rj T. SERENUS was a Greek gardener, who (an ^ exile from his native place) devoted his time ^^ to prayer and labor. A certain woman be- came enamored of the young Greek, as he wrought in the retirement of his garden at Sirmium, in Pan- nonia, and tried to allure him from virtue; but Serenus, like another Joseph, repulsed the temp- tress. Infuriated, she laid a complaint before her husband, who was serving in the body-guard of the emperor Maximian, and falsely accused Serenus of having insulted her. The saint, being arrested on this charge, by the mere force of his serene truth and his candor established his innocence before his judges; but the purity of his defence having caused him, then and there, to be recognized as a Christian, he was sentenced to the block, and martyred in the year 307. ... I cannot give The counsel to do this and live; But rather firmly to deny The tempter, though his power is strong; And inaccessible to wrong - , Still like a martyr live and die! Henry W. Longfellow. Favorite Practice. A scrupulous vigilance against the assaults of sensu- ality. 65 FEBI^UAI^Y 2$. ST. MATTHIAS, Apostle. FTER the awful suicide of the arch-traitor Judas, the Apostles, wished to fill the place in the Sacred College left vacant by that tragic death. But they did not dare to arrogate to themselves the right of creating an apostle. To God alone belonged this high prerogative, and therefore on the Day of Pentecost they selected from among the disciples the two most eligible to the office, and after prayer drew lots to ascertain the choice of the Most High. The lot fell upon Matthias. He became one of the Apostles of Christ, and is believed to have preached the faith in Cappadocia, and on the coasts of the Caspian Sea, residing chiefly near the port Issus. He was remarkable for his austere life, and must have undergone great hardships among the sav- age people he evangelized. According to tradition, he received the crown of martvrdom in Colchis. With Fear we must begin, Then next to Knowledge tend, But only Love of God Is Wisdom's perfect end. From the German of Rev. Father Scheffler. Favorite Practice. To often reflect that if we abuse the grace of God as Judas did, His favors may be withdrawn from us and bestowed upon the souls of others. 66 FEBI^UAI^Y 2®. ST. TARAISIUS, Bishop. [ T. TARAISIUS was patriarch of Constantino- ^^ pie about the middle of the eighth century. He had been reared in great luxury, but his chief care was to inculcate among his clergy and flock, by his own simplicity of life and devotion to the humblest functions of the ministry, a sincere and practical contempt for worldly pomps and gratifica- tions. By his religious veneration for sacred images, he remedied the outrages of the Iconoclasts, and at the same time he firmiy advocated the denunciation of the emperor Constantine V., who had divorced his lawful wife in order to marry a concubine. Taraisius, after a long and arduous episcopate, died in 806. Blessed are they who die for God And earn the martyr's crown of light; Yet he who lives for God may be A greater conqueror in His sight. Adelaide A. Procter. Favorite Practice. Simplicity of taste in all those personal matters which tojicern dress and social station. 67 FEBI^UAI^Y 26. ST. PORPHYRIUS, Bishop |ORN at Thessalonica, of a wealthy family, St. Porphyrius retired in early manhood to the ttt Egyptian monastery of Scete, where he lived till the age of thirty, in the constant and most edify- ing practice of monastic discipline. He then went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and fixed his abode in a cave on the banks of the Jordan, desiring nevermore to quit the place made sacred by the pres- ence of his Lord and Master. Here his austerities so enfeebled him that he was scarcely able 10 walk; but being supported to Mount Calvary, he was mi- raculously cured of his infirmities on that hallowed spot He was afterwards made bishop of Gaza, and, having been instrumental in spreading Christianity among the unbelievers there, until nearly the whole city was converted to the faith, he died happily in his see, a.d. 420. Like pilgrims to the appointed place we tend: The world's an inn, and death, the journey's end. John Dryden. Favorite Practice. To consider it a happy privilege to joy fully spend and be spent for Christ, 6& PBBI^UAI^Y 27. ST. JULIAN, Martyr. ^aT^T^HILE the persecution of the emperor Decius ^YpM? W as afflicting the Church in Alexandria, c <^ > and causing the faith of many weak Chris- tians to waver or fail, a venerable man named Julian, who was paralyzed by age, was borne before the judges in a litter. As he was a staunch and uncompromis- ing believer, neither his years nor his infirmities could interfere with his torments. He was bound to a camel, driven through the town, scourged, insulted, and at last thrown alive into a fire that had been kindled for him. His courage and constancy, however, were invincible, and not only inspired one of his own servants to undergo martyrdom, but also converted one of the pagan soldiers, who was put to death with St. Julian. And tell how, trampled, derided, hated, And worn by weakness, disease, and wrong, He fled for shelter to God. James Clarence Mangan. Favorite Practice. To win others to virtue by the holy force of an edi- fying example. FEBI^UAI^Y 28. ST. PROTERIUS, Martyr. v^D T. PROTERIUS was patriarch of Alexandria v^^ in 452, his predecessor, Dioscorus (a partisan ^^-^ of the arch-heretic Eutychius), having been deposed by the Council of Chalcedon. Great confu- sion and trouble prevailed in the divided city. Pro- terius, in his turn, was expelled violently from his see by the heretical Eutychians, but only to be restored again to his dignity by the civil power. The heretics, knowing the firmness of the rightful patriarch, and infuriated at their failure in deposing him, pursued him on Good Friday, in the year 457, to the church of St. Quirinus. There in the baptistry they bound Proterius with cords, trampled on him, and dragged his body thence through the city streets. Finally, tearing the martyr limb from limb, they burnt his •remains, and scattered his ashes to the winds. Aromatic plants bestow No spicy fragrance while they grow ; But, crushed or trodden to the ground, Diffuse their balmy sweets around. Oliver Goldsmith. Favorite Practice. To be firm in the cause of truth and right. 7 C REBI^UAI^Y 29. ST. OSWALD, Confessor. tHE nephew of Odo, archbishop of Canterbury. St. Oswald was originally a monk in the abbey of St. Bennet-on-the-Loire. He was recalled to England to succeed St. Dunstan in the see of Wor- cester, and later to hold that of York. He founded numerous monasteries, being ever partial to the clois- tered life, and by his apostolic labors he extended the sway of learning and piety throughout his dioceses. Every day, twelve poor persons were admitted to his table, and (after having washed and kissed their feet) he served them humbly with his own hands. When he had administered the episcopal charge for thirty- three years he began to feel that his end was near. He therefore retired among his beloved monks, and joyfully expired on the 29th of February, 992, pro- nouncing with his dying lips, " Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost !" . . . Time has laid his hand Upon my heart gently, not smiting it, But as a harper lays his open palm Upon his harp to deaden its vibrations. Henry W. Longfellow. Favorite Practice. To reverence and serve our Lord in the persons of His poor, V- 2Havcfe. Cries the boisterous March: "/see Early snow-drops in the way, — Sweet Annunciation Day Blooms, sinless Maid ! for thee .'"' E. C. D. 73 fflAI^GH 1. ST. HERCULANUS, Bishop of Perugia, and Martyr. A 7k BOUT the middle of the sixth century, when V* Totila was establishing the second Gothic kingdom of Italy, and most of the Italian cities were submitting to him, Perugia held out for a long period — seven years, it is said — against his arms. This obstinate resistance was due to the intrepidity of St. Herculanus, then bishop of the city, who rallied the drooping spirits of the towns- people and animated them to defend their liberty and their faith. Perugia being finally taken by fraud when force had proved of no avail, St. Hercu- lanus was beheaded by order of the tyrant. His head, however, was miraculously reunited to his body, and his relics are preserved entire at Perugia. We append a translation of the nth verse of our present, illustrious Pontiff's hymn in honor of this saint. Now reigning- in the heavenly hall, Thine intercession must prevail ; On Thee in confidence we call, O Pastor, Patron, Parent, hail ! Trans, by Prof. A. J. Stace. Favorite Practice. To animate the faith of others by our own heroic ex-- ample. 75 CQai^gh % ST. SIMPLICIUS, Pope and Confessor. >v£^ T. SIMPLICIUS, already made famous by his v^) piety and learning, during the pontificate of r^s St. Leo and St. Hilary, ascended the papal chair in 467. The Arian and Macedonian heresies were then being boldly supported by the imperial authori- ties of the age, and the seamless robe of Christendom was torn by violence and schism. But St. Simplicius did not despair. By his fervent prayers, by the pru- dence and firmness of his policy, he met and mas- tered the difficulties which threatened the cause of Christ; and after twelve laborious years of ecclesi- astical administration he died in 483, leaving the Church in perfect peace. Well has the name of Pontifex been given Unto the Church's head, as the chief builder And architect of the invisible bridge That leads from earth to heaven. Hknry W. Longfellow. Favorite Practice. To convince yourself that prayer and perseverance conquer all things. 76 GQAI^GH 3. ST. CUNEGUNDA, Queen. r J-^HE wife of the emperor Henry II., St. Cune- •v^K gunda during the lifetime of her royal hus- band exercised her power continually in the cause of the poor and oppressed. She founded num- erous monasteries, churches, and bishoprics; and on the death of Henry II., she called together the pre- lates of the empire, and in their presence cast her imperial robes and insignia at the foot of the cruci- fix. Then, having received the religious veil and habit, she withdrew to a convent, and lived there the life of an humble, obedient, and laborious nun, until her death in the year 1040. I from my memory have effaced All former joys, all kindred, friends ; All honors that my station graced I hold but snares that fortune sends : Hence ! joys by Christ at distance cast, That we may be His own at last ! From the French of Queen Margaret of Navarre. Favorite Practice. To detach one's self, at least in spirit, from the hono7's and riches of the ivorld. 11 GQai^gh a. ST. CASIMIR, Confessor. vC~r ^ • CASIMIR was born at Cracow in 1453. ^^2) an( l was a younger son of Casimir III., ~ king of Polaiid. He was highly gifted in mind and heart; but the treasures of his gentle soul so far excelled those of nature, that his chief solicitude amid the dangers of his father's court was to faithfully preserve his baptismal innocence. He was zealous in works of piety, and manifested a lively devotion to the Blessed Virgin. He died at the early age of twenty- five, and miracles were wrought at his tomb. A century after his death, his body was exhumed and discovered to be in- corrupt — a token of the spotless innocence of his life.. Alas! my spirit dreads a stain contracted from the ground: How shall it guard the robe of white that is its heavenly- dower ; Here where we walk in mire and clay, and dust is flying round, Which clings to everything it meets, yes, even to the flower ! Eugenie de Gu£rin. Favorite Practice. To inculcate in children a great solicitude to pre- serve their baptismal innocence. 78 GQai^gh g. SS. PERPETUA and FELICITAS, Martyrs. * A ^ MONG the Christian catechumens in the reign ./•^ of the emperor Severus (a.d. 203 or 204) <^_^- there were two married women, named Per- petua and Felicitas. During the violent persecu- tion of that period they were both loaded with chains and cast into prison at Carthage. There they were baptized by the other expectant martyrs. Per- petua had a babe still at the breast, and Felicitas brought forth a child amid the cruel discomforts of her dungeon. But both resisted alike the threats of tyrants or the pleading tears of pagan relatives; and having been tossed in the arena on the horns of a furious heifer, they were despatched at last by the sword of the gladiator. On Thee we fling our burdening woe, O Love Divine, forever dear, Content to suffer, while we know, Living and dying, Thou art near ! Oliver Wendell Holmes. Favorite Practice. To be faithful to duty in spite of the pleadings of nature. fflAI^GH 6. ST. COLLETTA, Virgin. Y^^ T. COLLETTA was born at Corbie in 1380, and y^) after a long novitiate of suffering and pen- ^^ ance, inspired by a vision from heaven, and furnished with full powers by Pope Benedict XI II., she began the reform of the third Order of St. Clara. Her zeal was tried by the most painful perse- cutions. She was foully abused and calumniated by her enemies, but endured all their insults with holy gentleness. She reformed many houses, and founded others, before her happy death, which took place at Ghent in 1447. Sow; and look onward, upward, Where the starry light appears — Where, in spite of the coward's doubting Or your own heart's trembling fears, You shall reap in joy the harvest You have sown to-day in tears. Adelaide A. Procter. Favorite Practice. To exercise yourself in practical piety if you would seek successfully to influence others. (QAI^GH 7. ST. THOMAS AQUINAS, Confessor and Doctor. Jul ^HE Angelic Doctor," as St. Thomas Aquinas v^\ is appropriately called, was born of the vl^ noble family of the Counts of Acqui in the kingdom of Naples. His relatives placed him in early childhood at the monastery of Monte Cassino, and designed him to become in time the abbot of that rich house; but seeing later that the eminent talents of the young nobleman would be apt to raise him to a brilliant position in the world, they used every means to dissuade him from consecrating himself to God in holy religion. St. Thomas, enlightened by divine grace, fled away from their evil and corrupt snares, and entered the Order of St. Dominic. He became the ornament and light not only of that Order but of the whole Church, and died in 1274. * Thomas, of Me well hast thou written; What shall thy work reward ?" Swift was the answer fondly given, " Naught but Thyself, O Lord !" Ellen Downing. Favorite Practice. To assure ourselves that if we choose the better pa?'t, it shall not be taken away from us. (Qai^gh a ST. JOHN OF GOD, Confessor. JIT N Portugal, in 1495, was born a poor boy named j]| John, whose early youth was passed in sinful ^^ dissipation. He became a soldier, and was still living a disorderly life, when he was converted to God by a manifest proof of the power of the Blessed Virgin Mary, whom he had invoked in a moment of extreme peril. He began at once to do penance for the past, and even travelled into Africa in the hope of being martyred. But not attaining his desire, he returned to Spain and devoted his days to the care of the sick. He established an hospital, and later a religious community, known as the Order of Charitv. After herculean and heroic labors in the cause of the sick and suffering. St. John of God died in 1550. Thy grace can send its breathings o'er The spirit dark and lost before, And fresh'ning all its depths, prepare For Truth divine to enter there. Thomas Moore. Favorite Practice. To recognize our Lord in the persons of the sick and afflicted. (Qai^gh 9. ST. FRANCES OF ROME, Widow. ^Tp^HE beautiful daughter of a wealthy and illus- v^Jn trious family of Rome, St. Frances was born in 13S4; and while still very young was mar- ried to Lawrence de Pontians, with whom she lived in most happy and harmonious union for forty years. Her beauty was surpassed only by her loveliness of character. She fulfilled with holy fervor her duties as a wife and mother; dressed with great simplicity; and preferred prayer and good works to worldly en- tertainments and spectacles. Her charming example induced many noble houses to model their rule of life on hers. When Lawrence de Pontians died, she re- tired to the religious congregation of the Oblates, which she had founded, and died there in 1440. Life is only bright when it proceedeth Towards a truer, deeper Life above: Human love is sweetest when it leadeth To a more divine and perfect Love. Adelaide A. Procter, Favorite Practice. A sweet and affable fulfilment of little every-day thities. fflAI^GH 10. THE FORTY MARTYRS OF SEBASTE, *TTi, N the year 220, whilst the cruel Licinius was ex jf hausting his fury against the followers of Christ, ^^ forty soldiers of the garrison at Sebaste re- fused to join their pagan comrades in offering sacri- fice to the idols. They were tortured, therefore, by fire and sword, and at last, remaining steadfast, were stripped naked and thrown into an icy pool, within sight of a bath of warm water. While the pagan keeper kept guard over the sufferers he saw angels hovering in the air above them, bearing, however, only thirty-nine crowns. The man wondered at the vision, but one of the intended martyrs, driven to apostasy by his torments, rushed out of the icy water into the warm bath close at hand, and expired, poor wretch, on the instant. The keeper immediately took the place of the apostate; and all persevering during that awful night, the next day were condemned to perish at the stake. " Christ, my God! I believe!" he said, " Let vie suffer in his stead!" Then the long cold hours passed; . . . But when morning mastered night, Forty martyrs of Sebaste Wore in heaven their crowns of light. Eleanor C. Donnelly. Favorite Practice. To ' ' hold fast that which thou hast, * that no man take thy crown." 84 GQai^gh 11. ST. EULOGIUS, Priest and Martyr. v