"^ ilTY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES THE GIFT OF MAY TREAT MORRISON IN MEMORY OF ALEXANDER F MORRISON 1. HISTORICAL STUDIES. BY EUGENE LAWRENCE. - • '.• • • • ••• • NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE. 1876. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • « • •• • •» » * ,* • .' * I > > * > > > 1 i i i * i i Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 187G, by Harper & R r o t h t: r s, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at "Washington. ». ♦ * » < I It L i *^ i. I t t <- «. 1 *■ 9 J5A PREFACE. The following historical papers liave appeared at intervals in Harper's New Montlily Magazine. I trust, notwithstand- ing their imperfections, that they may furnish a useful outline of the slow advance of knowledge and the decay of ecclesias- tical tyranny. The chief aim of the Roman Church has been the destruction of the intellect. The chief result of the over- (V g throw of persecution has been the rapid growth of the poj)u- lar mind. It is well, therefore, to review these remarkable 2 mental struggles by the liglit of republican progress. Our O 3 benefactors in the past have been, not kings, poj)es, or jDrinces, § but those memorable men who have lived and died for religion and knowledge. To them it has at last become customary ^ to trace the most valuable results of modern progress. Edu- g cation, intelligence, virtue, religion, have flourished in spite of y^ the intolerance of popes and kings; and the New World, in t. the centennial year of freedom, turns gratefully to the heroes 9 who died, that men might be free. 433740 CONTENTS. The Bishops of Rome Page 9 Hebrew missionaries, 11 ; age of martyrdom, 13 ; iu the Catacombs, 15 ; a defaulting bishop, 17 ; an Arian Pope, 19 ; a haughty priest- hood, 21 ; Pope Silverius, 23 ; Gregory's visions, 25 ; Gregory's mental influence, 27; the worship of relics, 29; the Popes defend image-wor- ship, 31 ; Hildebrand, 33 ; Gregory VII., 35 ; the emperor at Canossa, 37; Gregory delivered by the Normans, 39; death of Gregory VII., 41; Innocent III. and Philip Augustus, 43 ; Philip subdued, 45 ; the Albi- genses, 47 ; death of the troubadours, 49 ; mendicant orders, 51 ; the Borgias, 53 ; the modern Popes, 55. Leo and Luther 56 A conclave, 57 ; the papal electors, 59 ; Giovanni de' Medici, 61 ; Lu- ther's childhood, 63 ; Luther a monk, 65 ; Leo in misfortune, 67 ; Leo X. as Pope, 69 ; the Golden Age of Leo, 71 ; the Pope iu danger, 73 ; the cardinal would poison Leo, 75 ; Leo's extravagance, 77 ; indul- gences, 79 ; an El Dorado, 81 ; Luther's danger, 83 ; Germany unquiet, 85; intellectual tourneys, 87; Luther and Eck, 89; Luther summoned to Worms, 91 ; Luther's hymn, 93 ; the Diet of Worms, 95 ; Luther con- demned, 97. Loyola and the Jesuits 99 Loyola's wounds, 101 ; Loyola a beggar, 103 ; the strength of Jesuit- ism, 105; Luther and Loyola, 107; Loyola's disciples, 109; Paul III., Ill ; the Koman Inquisition, 113 ; the papal massacres, 115 ; the "Spiritual Exercises," 117; the Council of Trent, 119; the Jesuits at Trent, 121 ; great wealth of the Jesuits, 123 ; Xavier iu the East, 125 ; Jesuit literature, 127 ; Jesuit assassins, 129 ; William of Orange, 131 ; Jesuit executions, 133 ; Father Garnet, 135 ; fall of Jesuitism, 137; the Jesuits driven from Spain, 139 ; the order dissolved, 141 ; Loyola's death, 143. 6 CONTENTS. Ecumenical Councils Paore 144 The assembling at Nice, 145; the town -hall at Nice, 147; Constan- tiue's crime, 149 ; various heresies, 151 ; union of the Church, 153 ; the Second Council, 155; Gregory Nazianzcn, 157; a council vituperated, 159 ; Poj)e Damasus, 161 ; Cyril and llypatia, 163 ; the fallen Church, 165; Dioscorus and his robbers, 167; Pope Honorius the Heretic, 169; the monastic rule, 171 ; monkish rule, 173 ; Council of Constance, 175 ; deposition of a Pope, 177; John Huss, 179; Huss at Constance, 181; execution of Huss, 183; reformation, 185; Council of Trent, 187; the Jesuits at Trent, 189; Lainez at Trent, 191; the Council closes, 193; the decrees of Trent, 195 ; the First Council, 197. The Vaudois 198 San Martino, 199 ; the barbes, 201 ; the Popes and the Vaudois, 203 ; the Alpine Church, 205 ; the Jesuits in the valleys, 207; papal perse- cutors, 209; the Vaudois doomed, 211; the Battle of Pra del Tor, 213; Vaudois patience, 215; the "Noble Lesson," 217; omens of dan- ger, 219 ; the flight of the Vaudois, 221 ; Milton would save the Vau- dois, 223 ; the cave of Castelluzo, 225 ; mass celebrated in the valleys, 227; Janavel, 229; "The Glorious Return," 231; the Balsille, 233; winter on the Balsille, 235; the Vaudois fly, 237; a Glorious Eeturn, 239; new persecutions, 241 ; Turin does honor to the Vaudois, 243 ; the moderator triumphs over the Pope, 245. The Huguenots 24Y Eminent Huguenots, 249 ; Palissy the Potter, 251 ; reformers outlaw- ed, 253 ; the Bible, 255 ; Bibles burned, 257 ; the printers and the Popes, 259 ; Philippa de Lunz, 261 ; Catherine de' Medici, 263 ; Cathe- rine's superstition, 265; Jeanne d'Albret, 267 ; the Huguenots rise, 269; death of Jeanne d'Albret, 271 ; Marguerite's wedding, 273 ; Charles IX. irresolute, 275 ; the Louvre, 277 ; the massacre commemorated, 279 ; the Edict of Nantes, 281 ; inhuman orators, 283 ; priests persecute in- dustry, 285; generous Geneva, 287; the Seigneur Bostaquet, 289 ; the galley-slaves, 291 ; the "Church in the Desert," 293; Jean Calas,295; the Revolution, 297; Pius IX. and the Huguenots, 299. The Church of Jerusalem 300 Ancient capitals, 301 ; the Holy City, 303 ; scenes around Jerusalem, 305; the Castle of Antonia, 307; the home of Mary, 309; St. Peter, 311 ; St. John, 313 ; Jewish festivals, 315 ; Roman paganism, 317 ; apostolic charities, 319 ; the martyrs, 321 ; dispersion of the Church, 323; Paul at Damascus, 325; Paul the Persecutor, 327; death of James, 329; the First Council, 331 ; Ephesus, 333; Athens, 335; Paul at Jerusalem, 337; Csesarea, 339 ; Paul in the storm, 341 ; was St. Peter CONTENTS. _ 7 at Rome ? 343 ; martyrdom of James the Just, 345 ; Galilee ravaged, 347; tlie Last Passover, 349; the Holy of Holies, 351; Titus the De- stroyer, 353; Simeon rules the Church, 355; the Pastor of Hermas, 357. Dominic and the Inquisition Page 358 The Inquisition, 359 ; heresy in France, 361 ; the Albigenses, 363 ; Alhi desolated, 365 ; the Spanish Inquisition, 367 ; the Jews persecuted, 369; Torquemada, 371; fate of the Spanish Jews, 373; the Moors in Spain, 375; the Holy Houses, 377; Savonarola, 379; death of Savo- narola, 381 ; an auto-da-fe, 383 ; the procession of Inquisitors, 385 ; Italy Protestant, 387 ; Italy subdued, 389 ; Galileo, 391; Galileo's crime, 393 ; the first aeronaut, 395 ; Italy and Spain decay, 397; England under an Inquisition, 399 ; condition of Spain, 401 ; the Roman Inquisitors, 403 ; Pius IX. revives the Inquisition, 405; sorrows and deliverance of Rome, 407. The Conquest of Ireland 409 Irish scenery, 411 ; Patrick in Ireland, 413; Irish scholars, 415 ; the Irish Church, 417 ; the Pope sells Ireland to its enemies, 419 ; Dermot in England, 421 ; Irish valor, 423 ; Roderic O'Connor, 425 ; Dublin taken, 427; the Normans in Dublin, 429; the Irish unite, 431; Henry II., 433; Ireland subjected to Rome, 435; Henry II. in Ireland, 437; the Pope's bull, 439 ; the death of Roderic, 441 ; Roman jiriests kill the Irish, 443; the Irish victorious, 445; the Jesuits in Ireland, 447; massacre of Ulster, 449 ; the Irish emigrants, 451 ; the University of Armagh, 453. The Greek Church 455 The Seven Churches, 457 ; Constantinople, 459 ; the dome of St. Sophia, 461; St. Sophia, 463; the Oriental shrine, 465; the Arabs and the Greek Church, 467 ; the Popes and the Eastern Church, 469 ; Photius and his age, 471 ; decay of the patriarchates, 473 ; Russian ascetics, 475 ; Rurik, 477; Vladimir converted, 479 ; Ivan the Terrible, 481 ; the Kremlin, 483 ; Boris Godunoff, 485 ; the false Demetrius, 487; Marina, 489; the Romanoiis, 491; Nikon, 493; Nikon's fall, 495; Peter the Great, 497; Solovetsky, 499. INDEX 501 >,° j^" . -> > J ' ' ' ' ' HISTORICAL STUDIES. TRE BISHOPS OF ROME.i^) In her faded magnificence, Rome still possesses the most imposing of earthly empires. She rules over nearly two hun- dred millions of the human race. Her well-ordered army of priests, both regular and secular, arrayed almost with the pre- cision of a Eoman legion, and governed by a single will, car- ry the standard of St. Peter to the farthest bounds of civil- ization, and cover the whole earth with a chain of influences radiating from the central city. The Pope is still powerful in Europe and America, Africa and the East. He disturbs the policy of England, and sometimes governs that of France ; his influence is felt in the revolutions of Mexico and the elec- tions of New York.(') Hemmed in by the Greek Church on the eastward, engaged in a constant struggle with the Protest- antism of the North, and trembling for his ancestral domin- ions in the heart of Italy itself, the Supreme Pontiff still gal- lantly summons around him his countless priestly legions, ^nd thunders from the Vatican the sentiments of the Middle Ages. As if to maintain before the eyes of mankind a semblance of supernatural splendor, the Popes have invented and per- fected at Rome a ritual more magnificent than was ever (■) Gieseler, Ecclesiastical History; Milman, Latin Christianity. O Since this was written (1869) the papal power has fallen. But the Pope is still the most active and dangerous of politicians in every civil- ized land. 10 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. known before. In the Basilica of St. Peter, the largest and most costly, .building ever.ei:ected by man, the annual pomp of the Roiiiish ccye/iiQDiefe lesceeds the powers of description. The gf';rgeous.i>ol>Qs.the plajutiye music, the assembled throng of princes',' erfi'dhral'^ lautl'jiripsts, the various rites designed to paint in living colors the touching memorials of the Sav- iour's life and death, delight or impress the inquisitive and the devout. And when at length the Holy Father, parent of all the faithful, appears upon the balcony of St. Peter's and bestows his blessing upon mankind, few turn away unaffected by the splendid spectacle, untouched by the pecidiar fascina- tion of the magniticent Church of Rome. Very different, however, in character and appearance was that early church which the Popes claim to . represent. The Jewish Christians entered pagan Rome probably about the middle of the first century. That city was then the capital of the Roman Empire and of the world. Its population was more than a million ; its temples, baths, and public buildings were still complete in their magnificence ; its streets were fill- ed with a splendid throng of senators, priests, and nobles ; its palaces were scenes of unexampled luxury ; and literature and the fine arts still flourished, although with diminished lustre. But the moral condition of Rome durincr the reigns of Claudi- us and Nero shocked even the unrefined consciences of Juve- nal and Persius. A cold, dull materialism pervaded all ranks of the peojjle ; the intellect was enchaiTied by spells more gross and foul than the enchantments of Comus ; crime kept pace with luxury, and the palaces of emperors and senators were stained with horrible deeds that terriiied even the hard- ened sentiment of Rome.(') At length Nero became a ra- ging madman. He murdered his mother, his friends, and his kinsmen. Seneca and Lucan, the literary glories of the age, died at his command. To forget his fearful deeds, Nero plunged into wild excesses. He roamed like a bacchanal through the streets of the city ; he sung upon the stage (') Tiicitns, Jnvcnal, and Persius indicate the condition of Rome. Meri- vale and Gibbon may be consulted. HEBREW MISSIONARIES. 11 amidst the applauding throng of mimics and actors, and his horrible revelry was mingled with a cruelty that almost sur- passes belief. The people of Rome were little less corrupt than their em- peror. Honor, integrity, and moral purity wxre mocked at and contemned by the degraded descendants of Cicero and Cato, and the keen satire of Juvenal has thrown a shameful immortality upon the vicious and criminal of his contempora- ries. Gain was the only aim of the Komans. The husband sold his honor, the parent his child, friend betrayed friend, wives denounced their husbands, to win the means of a lux- urious subsistence. The amusements of the people, too, were well fitted to instruct them in degradation and crime. Thousands of wretched gladiators died in the arena to sat- isfy the Roman thirst for blood; gross and frivolous panto- mimes had supplanted on the stage the tragedies of Accius and the comedies of Terence ; the witty but indecorous epi- grams of Martial were beginning to excite the interest of the cultivated ; and even the philosophic Seneca, plunged in the luxury of his palaces and villas, wrote in vain his defense of the matricide of Nero. It was into such a city that the early missionaries from Je- rusalem made their way, about the middle of the first century, bearing to unhappy Rome the earliest tidings of the gospel of peace. Amidst the splendid throng of consulars, knights, and nobles, they wandered obscure and unknown strangers. The first bishop of Rome, clothed in coarse and foreign garb, and mingling with the lowest classes of the people, was scarcely noticed by the frivolous courtiers of Nero, or that literary opposition which was inspired by the vigorous hon- esty of the satirists and poets. Yet Christianity seems to have made swift though silent progress. Within thirty years from the death of its author a church had already been gathered at Rome, and the simple worship of the early Christians was cel- ebrated under the shadow of the Capitol. Their meetings were held in rooms and private houses in obscure portions of the city ; the exhortations of the apostles were heard with eager interest by the lower orders of the Romans ; a new 12 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. hope dawned upon the oppressed and the obscure, and it is said that a large number of the earlier converts were slaves. Little is known of the condition of the Chiu'ch at this period ; yet we may properly infer that its congregations were numer- ous, and that the voice of praise and prayer was heard issuing from many an humble dwelling of the crowded and dissolute city. Amidst the shouts and groans of the blood-stained arena, and the wild revels of the streets and the palaces, the Jewish teachers inculcated to eager assemblies lessons of gen- tleness and love. Suddenly, however, a terrible light is thrown upon the con- dition of the early Church of Rome. Nero began his famous persecution, and the severe pen of the historian Tacitus bears witness to the wide and rapid growth of the obscure faith. " The founder of the sect, Christ," says the pagan writer, " was executed in the reign of Tiberius by the procurator, Pontius Pilate. The pernicious superstition, repressed for a time, burst forth again ; not only through Judea, the birthj)lace of the evil, but at Rome also, where every thing atrocious and base centres and is in repute." Rome had lately been desolated by a great fire, which Nero was believed to have ordered to be kindled in one of his moments of insane merriment ; and, to remove suspicion from himself, the emperor charged the Christians with an attempt to burn the city. Those first ar- rested, says Tacitus, confessed their guilt ; vast numbers were put to death ; some were clad in the skins of wild beasts and were torn to pieces by dogs ; others were affixed to crosses, and, being covered with some inflammable material, were burn- ed at night, in the place of torches, to dispel the darkness. Nero lent his gardens for the hideous spectacle, the populace of Rome crowded to the novel entertainment, and the em- peror, driving his own chariot, rode amidst the throng, clad in the garb of a charioteer. In the last year of the reign of this monster, St. Peter and St. Paul, a doubtful tradition re- lates, suffered martyrdom at Rome, and were buried in the spots now marked by the two noble Basilicas that bear their names. From this period (67) the new and powerful sect became a AGE OF MARTYRDOM. 13 constant object of imperial persecution. The Christians were denounced as the common enemies of mankind. The grossest crimes, the foulest superstitions, were charged against them. The learned Komans looked upon them with contempt as a vulgar throng of deluded enthusiasts. Pliny speaks of them with gentle scorn ; the wise Trajan and the philosophic Aure- lius united in persecuting them ; and Decius and Diocletian sought to extirpate every vestige of the hated creed. Six great persecutions are noticed by the historians, from that of Nero to that of Maximin and Diocletian, during whicli the whole civilized world everywhere witnessed the constancy and resignation of the Christian martyrs. It was the age of martyrdom. An infinite number of nov- el tortures were devised by the infuriated pagans to rack the bodies of their unresisting victims. Some were affixed to crosses and left to starve ; some were suspended by the feet, and hung with their heads downward until they died ; some were crushed beneath heavy weights ; some beaten to death with iron rods ; some were cast into caldrons of blazing oil ; some were thrown, bound, into dungeons to be eaten by mice ; some were pierced with sharp knives ; and thousands died in the arena, contending with wild beasts, to amuse the populace of Rome.C) The mildest punishment awarded to the Chris- tians was to labor in the sand-pits, or to dig in the distant mines of Sardinia and Spain. Men, women, and children, the noble convert or the faithful slave, suffered a common doom, and were exposed to tortures scarcely equaled by the poetic horrors of Dante's terrible Inferno. Yet the honors paid to these early martyrs in a later age were almost as extravagant as their sufferings had been severe. The city which had been consecrated by their tortures deemed itself hallowed by their doom. The sepulchre of eighteen martyrs, sung Prudentius, has made holy the fair city of Saragossa. Splendid churches (') Prudeutins, Migne, Ix., p. 450-'54, sings the sufferings of the martyrs. See Peristeph., hymn x., p. 1069. Conspirat nno foederatus spiritn. Grex Christianus, agmen impcrterritum Matrum, virorum, parvulorum, virginum ; Fixa et statuta est omnibus sententia, etc. 14 THE BISHOPS OF SOME. were built over the graves of obscure victims ; the bones of the martyrs were looked upon as the most precious relics; they were enchased in gold and covered with jewels ; they wrought miracles, healed the sick, and brought prosperity and good fortune ; and the humblest Christian who had been rack- ed with sharp knives or hung with his head downward, in the days of pagan persecution, was now deified, worshiped, and al- most adored. It was during the reign of the early persecution that the bishops and the Church of Rome sought, and perhaps found, a refuge in that singular hiding-place — the Catacombs.(') Be- neath the Campagna, immediately around the city, the earth is penetrated by a great number of galleries or tunnels, run- ning for many miles under the surface, and difficult of access even to those most familiar with them. These narrow pas- sages are now known as the Catacombs, and are usually f om* or six feet wide, and ten feet high. They were formed by the Romans in getting out sand for cement ; and as many of the Christians were laborers or slaves, they were probably well acquainted with the opportunity for concealment offer- ed by these arenarke, or sand-pits, where they had often la- bored at their humble toil. When persecution grew fierce, and the life of every Christian was in danger, the Church of Rome hid itself in the Catacombs. Here, in these dismal passages, may still be seen a thousand traces of the suffer- ings and sorrows of the early Christians. Here are small chapels cut in the sides of the wall of sand, and provided with altars, fonts, and episcopal chairs, while above the chap- el a narrow opening is often excavated to the surface of the earth in order to admit a little light or air to the hidden con- gregation below. Other portions of the Catacombs were used as cemeteries for the burial of the Christian dead. Count- less tombs are seen rudely excavated in the earth, and usual- (') For the Catacombs consult Church of the Catacombs, Maitland, who thinks (p. 17) they were originally sand-pits; and De Rossi. The are- narli, or sand-diggers, were i)robubly slaves who eagerly embraced Chris- tianity. IN THE CATACOMBS. 15 ly distinguished by an inscription indicating the position and character of the deceased. These inscriptions, indeed, form one of the most interesting traits of the Catacombs, and have been eagerly studied and copied by many ardent exj)lorers. They bring into clear light the simplicity and fervor of the ancient faith. Here are no prayers for the dead, no address to the Yirgin or the saints. Upon one tomb is written, " He sleeps in Christ ;" over another, " May she live in the Lord Jesus !" Most of the inscriptions dwell upon the hope of a better life, and are full of resignation and faith. One, how- ever, shows in what gloom and terror the Church maintain- ed its existence. "O, mournful time," it reads, "in whieli prayer and sacred rites, even in caverns, afford no protec- tion !"(') The bishops of Rome, with their terrified followers, were now the tenants of a subterranean home. They lived among tombs, in darkness and confinement, fed upon the scanty food brought them by stealth by faithful slaves or devoted women. Yet, if we may believe the common tradition, but few of the early bishops escaped martyrdom. They were pursued into the Catacombs, and were often murdered in the midst of their congregations. Stephen L, Bishop of Rome, lived many years, it is said, in these dismal retreats. Food was furnish- ed him from above, and wells and springs are found in the Catacombs. At length, however, the pagan soldiers traced him to his chapel, while he was performing service, and, when he had done, threw him back in his episcopal chair, and cut off his head at a blow. The pagan emperors in vain issued decrees forbidding the Christians to take refuge in the Cat- acombs ; and although death was decreed to every one who was found there, these endless labyrinths were always thickly peopled. Ladies of rank hid in the sand-pits, and were fed by their faithful maids ; the rich and the poor found a com- mon safety in the recesses of the earth. When the heathen soldiers approached, the Christians would sometimes block up (') Maitlaud, p. 53: "No worship of the Virgin is found, nor image-wor- ship." 16 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. the passages with sand, and then escape to some distant part of the labyrinths where the persecutors did not venture to follow them. Long afterward, when all necessity for using them had for- ever passed away, the Catacombs were still looked upon with singular veneration by the Roman Christians as the scene of many a martyrdom, and the home of the persecuted Church. Here they would often assemble to celebrate their holiest rites, surrounded by the tombs of bishops and presbyters, and shut out from the world in the gloom of a subterranean darkness. St. Jerome relates that it was his custom, when a young student at Rome, to wander on Sundays to the Cata- combs, accompanied by his pious friends, descend into a deep cavern amidst the cultivated fields near the city, and enter by a path of winding steps the hallowed abode of the martyrs. His pious pilgrimage represents, no doubt, the common prac- tice of the Christians of his time. But as centuries passed away, the ancient usage was neglected, until at length even the very existence of the Catacombs was forgotten. It was only remembered that in the early ages the Christians had hidden in their cemeteries, and that the living had once been forced to seek shelter among the dead. In the year 1578 Rome was startled by the intelligence that an ancient Chris- tian cemetery had been discovered, extending like a subter- ranean city around and beneath the Salarian Way. The Ro- man antiquarians and artists crowded to the spot, explored with earnest devotion the crumbling labyrinth, copied the numerous inscriptions, traced the moldering sculptures or the faded pictures on the walls, and revived the memory of the forgotten Church of the Catacombs. During this period of persecution and contempt the bish- ops of Rome gave little promise of that spiritual and tempo- ral grandeur to which tliey afterward attained. They are nearly lost to history ; a barren list of names is almost all that we possess. Yet the discovery of the writings of Hyp- polytus has lately thrown some new light upon the characters of several of the early bishops, and serves to show that the rulers of the Church were not always selected with discre- A DEFAULTIXG BISHOP. 17 tion.(') Bishop Victor was stern, haughty, and overbearing; his successor, Zephyrinns, feeble, ignorant, avaricious, and ve- nal. But tlie next bishop, who ruled from 219 to 223, was even less reputable than his predecessors. Callistus, in early life, had been a slave in the family of Carpophorus, a wealthy Christian who was employed in the emperor's household. His master established Callistus as a banker in a business quarter of the city, and his bank was soon tilled with the savings of prudent Christians and the property of widows and oi-phans. Callistus made away with the funds intrust- ed to his care, and, being called to account, fled from Eome. He was seized, brought back to the city, and condemned to hard labor in the public work-house. His master, however, obtained his release, forgave his offense, and employed him in collecting moneys which Callistus pretended were due him. Soon after, the defaulting banker was arrested for some new offense, and was condemned to be scourged and transported to the mines of Sardinia. He was again relieved from his sen- tence through the influence of powerful friends, returned to Rome, and became the favorite and counselor of the feeble Bishop Zephyrinus. Wlien the latter died, Callistus succeed- ed him in the episcopal chair; and thus a public defaulter, snatched from the work-house and the mines, became the head of the Roman Church. In the last great persecution under Diocletian, the bishops of Rome probably fled once more to the Catacombs. Their churches were torn down, their property couflscated, their sa- cred writings destroyed, and a vigorous effort was made to ex- tirpate the powerful sect. But the effort Avas vain. Constan- tine soon afterward became emperor, and the Bishop of Rome emerged from the Catacombs to become one of the ruling powers of the world. This sudden change was followed by an almost total loss of the simplicity and purity of the days of persecution. Magnificent churches were erected by the emperor in Rome, adorned with images and pictures, where the bishop sat on a lofty throne, encircled by inferior priests, (') Bunsen, Hippolytus. 2 18 THE BISHOPS OF HOME. and perfoiining rights borrowed from tlie splendid ceremo- nial of the pagan temple. The Bishop of Rome became a prince of the empire, and lived in a style of luxury and pomp that awakened the envy or the just indignation of the hea- then writer, Marcellinus. The Church was now enriched .by the gifts and bequests of the pious and the timid ; the bish- op drew great revenues from his farms in the Campagna and his rich plantations in Sicily ; he rode through the streets of Eome in a stately chariot and clothed in gorgeous attire ; his table was supplied with a profusion more than imperial ; the proudest women of Rome loaded him with lavish donations, and followed him with their flatteries and attentions ; and his haughty bearing and profuse luxury were remarked upon by both pagans and Christians as strangely inconsistent with the humility and simplicity enjoined by the faith which he pro- fessed. The bishopric of Rome now became a splendid prize, for which the ambitious and unprincipled contended by force or fraud. The bishop was elected by the clergy and the popu^ lace of the city, and this was the only elective oflflce at Rome. Long deprived of all the rights of freemen, and obliged to accept the senators and consuls nominated by the emperors, the Romans seemed once more to have regained a new liber- ty in their privilege of choosing their bishops. They exer- cised this right with a violence and a factious spirit that show- ed them to be unworthy of possessing it. On an election-day the streets of Rome were often fllled with bloodshed and riot. The rival factions assailed each other with blows and weap- ons. Churches w' ere garrisoned, stormed, sacked, and burned ; and the opposing candidates, at the head of their respective parties, more than once asserted their spiritual claims by force of arms. About the middle of the fourth century, the famous Trini- tarian controversy swept over the world, and lent new ardor and bitterness to the internal contests of the Church of Rome. The Emperor Constantius was an Arian, and had filled all the Eastern sees with the prelates of his own faith. His adver- sary, the rigorous Athanasius, fled to Rome, and had there AN ASIAN POPE. 19 thrown the spell of his master-mind over Pope and people. But Constantius was resolved to crush the last stronghold of Trinitarianism. Pope Liberius, won by the favors or terri- fied at the threats of the emperor, at first consented to a condemnation of the doctrine of Athanasius. But soon the mental influence of the great Alexandrian proved more pow- erful than the material impulse of Constantius. Liberius re- canted, proclaimed the independence of the Roman See, and launched the anathemas of the Church against all who held Arian opinions, and even against the emperor himself. All Eome rose in revolt in defense of its bishop and its creed; but the unhappy Liberius was seized at night, by the orders of the enraged Constantius, and carried away in exile to the shores of cold and inhospitable Thrace. He refused with con- tempt the money sent him by the emperor to pay the ex- penses of his journey. "Let him keep it," said he to the messengers, " to pay his soldiers. Do you presume to offer me alms as if I were a criminal?" he exclaimed. "Away! first become a Christian !" Two years of exile in barbarous Thrace, and the dread of a worse doom, seem to have shaken the resolution of the Pope. The emperor, too, had taken a still more effectual means of assailing the authority of his rebellious sul^ject. Felix, an anti- pope, had been appointed at Rome, elected by three eunuchs, and Liberius now consented to renounce his communion with Athanasius. His people, and particularly the rich and noble women of Rome, had remained faithful to their exiled bishop ; and as he entered the city a splendid throng came forth to meet him, and welcomed him with a triumphal procession. Felix, the anti-pope, fled before him, but soon afterward returned, and it is said that the streets, the baths, and the churches were the scenes of a fierce struggle between the rival factions. Rome was filled with bloodshed and violence, until at last Li- berius triumphed, and closed his life in peace upon the throne of St. Peter. His death was the signal for new disorders, and two oppos- ing candidates, Damasus and L^rsicinus, contended for the pa- pal chair. The latter having occupied, with his adherents, the 20 THE BISHOPS OF SOME. Julian Basilica, Damasus, at the head of a mob of charioteers, the hackmen of Kome, and a wild throng of the lowest of the people, broke into the sacred edifice, and encouraged a general massacre of its defenders. On another occasion Damasus as- sembled a force composed of gladiators, charioteers, and labor- ers, armed with clubs, swords, and axes, and stormed the Church of S. Maria Maggiore, where a party of the rival faction had intrenched themselves, and massacred one hundred and sixty persons of both sexes. The contest raged for a long time. Another frightful massacre took place in the Church of St. Agnes ; the civil powers in vain interfered to check the vio- lence of the pious factions, and at length the emperor was obliged to appoint a heathen prefect for the city, who, by his severe impartiality, reduced the Christians to concord. Dam- asns, stained with bloodshed and raging with evil passions, was firmly seated on the episcopal throne, and seems to have obtained the admiration and the support of his contemporary, the impetuous St. Jerome. In the mean time the magnificent city was still divided be- tween the pagans and the Christians. A large part of the population still clung to the ancient faith. Many of the wealthiest citizens and most of the old aristocracy still sac- rificed to Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva, and looked with scorn upon the fierce enthusiasts who had filled Rome with violence and disorder. In one street the pagan temple, rising in se- vere majesty, was filled with its pious worshipers, performing rites and ceremonies as ancient as Numa; in the next the Christian Basilica resounded with the praises of the triune God. On one side the white-robed priest led the willing vic- tim to the altar, and inspected the palpitating entrails; on the other the Christian preacher denounced in vigorous ser- mons the follies of the ancient superstition. The contest, however, did not continue long. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, enforced the condemnation of paganism, and the last marks of respect were withdrawn from those tutelar deities who had so long presided over the destinies of Eome. The fourth century brought important changes in the con- dition of the bishops of Eome. It is a singular trait of the A HAUGHTY PRIESTHOOD. ' 21 corrupt Christianity of this period that the chief characteris- tic of the eminent prelates was a tierce and ungovernable pride. Humility had long ceased to be numbered among the Christian virtues. The four great rulers of the Church (the Bishop of Rome and the patriarchs of Constantinople, Antioch, and Alexandria) were engaged in a constant strug- gle for supremacy. (*) Even the inferior bishops assumed a princely state, and surrounded themselves with their sacred courts. The vices of pride and arrogance descended to the lower orders of the clergy ; the emperor himself was declared to be inferior in dignity to the simple presbyter, and in all public entertainments and ceremonious assemblies the proud- est layman was expected to take his place below the haughty churchman. As learning declined and the world sunk into a new barbarism, the clergy elevated themselves into a ruling caste, and were looked upon as half divine by the rude Goths and the degraded Romans. It is even said that the pagan nations of the West transferred to the priest and monk the same awe -struck reverence which they had been accustomed to pay to their Druid teachers. The Pope took the place of their Chief Druid, and was worshiped with idolatrous devo- tion ; the meanest presbyter, however vicious and degraded, seemed, to the ignorant savages, a true messenger from the skies. At Rome, the splendid capital, still untouched by the Goth, the luxury and pride of the princely caste had risen to a kind of madness. Instead of healing the wounded conscience or ministering to the sick and the poor, the fashionable presby- ter or deacon passed his time in visiting wealthy widows, and extracting rich gifts and legacies from his superstitious ad- mirers. A clerical fop of the period of Pope Damasus is thus described by the priestly Juvenal, St. Jerome: "His chief care is to see that his dress is well perfumed, that his sandals fit close to his feet; his hair is crisped with a curl- (') Gieseler, i., p. 374. In 381, the second General Council gave the Bish- op of Constantinople the first rank after the Bishop of Kome : Sid to ilvai avTrjv veav Pojjujji'. The appellation of patriarch might be given to any bishop in the fourth century. 22 • THE BISHOPS OF ROME. ing-pin; his fingers glitter with rings; lie walks on tip -toe through the streets lest he may splash himself with the wet soil, and when you see him abroad you would think him a bridegroom rather than a priest." " Both deacons and pres- byters," exclaims the monastic Jerome, " strive for the favor of women ;" and were, no doubt, in search of wealthy and high-born wives among the greatest families of Rome. The first era of successful Christianity, indeed, was more luxuri- ous and corrupt than had been that of Augustus or Tiberius. The bishop lived in imperial pomp, the lower orders of the clergy imitated his license and his example ; the people were sunk in superstition and vice ; when suddenly a terrible puri- fication — a baptism of fire and blood — came upon the guilty city. This was no less than the total destruction of that costly fabric of civilization, the Roman Empire, which had been erected by the labors and sufferings of so many statesmen, warriors, philosophers, and had seemed destined to control forever the future of Europe and mankind. The northern races now descended upon the southern, and gained an easy victory. Knowledge ceased to be power, the intellectual sunk before the material, and the cultivated Romans showed them- selves to have wholly lost the faculty of self-defense — an ex- ample of national decay so often repeated in history that one can scarcely assert with confidence that any people is to remain exempted from it forever. A few thousand Goths or Huns were now more than a match for countless hosts of Romans ; they swept away the feeble defenders of Greece, Italy, and Gaul with the same ease that has since marked the progress of the British in Hindostan and Pizarro in Peru. The sav- ages blotted great cities from existence, restored vast tracts of cultivated country to its early wildness, and forced the Europe- an intellect to begin anew its slow progress toward supremacy. No part of the civilized world suffered more severely than its capital. Alaric entered Rome lighted by the flames of its finest quarters ; Genserie swept away almost its entire popula- tion. Famine, pestilence, and war fell upon the Eternal City. The numbers of its people decreased from one million to less POPE SILVEEIUS. 23 than fifty thousand ! A few plague-stricken and impoverish- ed citizens wandered amidst its vast and still splendid ruins ; the elegant and licentious priest, the high-born women, the men of letters, the luxurious nobles, and the factious people had been carried away into slavery, or had died of plague or famine ; and the Christian fathers, when they would convey to their auditors a clear conception of the Judgment-day, the final dissolution of all things earthly, would compare it to the fate of Rome. The bishops of Eome, during this eventful period, became the protectors and preservers of the city. Their sacred of- fice was still respected by the Arian Goths and Vandals ; the large revenues of the Church were applied to providing food for the starving people; and it is possible that suffering and humiliation had once more awakened something of the puri- ty of early Christianity in the minds of both priest and laity. The bishops, too, were sometimes the victims of wars or civil convulsions. Pope John, imprisoned as a traitor by the Ostro- gothic King Theodoric, languished and died in confinement. Silverius was deposed, exiled, and perhaps murdered, by that meekest of heroes, Belisarius, to gratify his imperious wife, Antonina. The successor of St. Peter was rudely summoned to the Pincian Palace, the military quarters of Belisarius. In the chamber of the conqueror sat Antonina on the bed, with her patient husband at her feet. "What have we done to you. Pope Silverius," exclaimed the imperious woman, " that you should betray us to the Goths?" In an instant the pall was rent from the shoulders of the unhappy Pope, he was hurried into another room, stripped of his dress and clothed in the garb of a simple monk, and his deposition was pro- claimed to the clergy of Rome. He was afterward given up to the power of his rival and successor, Yigilius, who ban- ished him to the island of Pandataria, and is supposed to have finally procured his death. Stained with crime, a false witness and a murderer, Vigil- ius had obtained his holy oflice through the power of two profligate women who now ruled the Roman world. Theo- dora, the dissolute wife of Justinian, and Antonina, her de- 24 THE BISHOPS OF HOME. voted servant, assumed to determine the faith and the des- tinies of the Christian Church. Vigilius failed to satisfy the exacting demands of his casuistical mistresses ; he even ventured to differ from them upon some obscure points of doctrine. His punishment soon followed, and the Bishop of Rome is said to have been draiifo-ed throuc;!! the streets of Con- stantinople with a rope around his neck, to have been impris- oned in a common dungeon, and fed on bread and water. The papal chair, tilled by such unworthy occupants, must have sunk low in the popular esteem, had not Gregory the Great, toward the close of the sixth century, revived the dignity of the ofhce. Gregory was a Roman, of a wealthy and illustrious fami- ly, the grandson of Pope Felix II. Learned, accomplished, a fine speaker, a sincere Christian, in his youth he eclipsed all his contemporaries, was distinguished in the debates of the Senate, and Unally became the governor of Rome. (') The emperor, when he visited Constantinople, treated him with marked confidence, and honors and emoluments seemed to have been showered upon the young Roman with no stinted hand. He was equally the favorite of the court and of the people, and all that the world could give lay at his command. But suddenly a startling change came over his active intel- lect ; the w^orld grew cold and repulsive ; he stopped in his career of success and became a monk. He expended his wealth in founding monasteries ; he sold his gold and jewels, his silken robes and tasteful furniture, and lavished the pro- ceeds upon the poor. He resigned his high offices, and hav- ing entered a monastery which he had founded at Rome, per- formed the menial duties for his fellow -monks. His body was emaciated by terrible fastings and vigils, his health gave Avay, and his life hung by a single thread. The pra^-ers of a pious companion alone snatched him from an early grave. From this severe discipline Gregory rose up a half-mad- (') Gregory's numerous letters may be found in Migne's collection. See vol. Ixxviii., p. 140, etc. His letter to Bertha of England recommends Augustiu and Laureutius to her care. GREGORY'S VISIONS. 25 dened enthusiast. Angels seemed to float around him wher- ever he moved ; demons fled at his approach. His monastery of St. Andrew, over which he became the abbot, was the scene of perpetual miracles. He cast out devils, and angels cluster- ed around his holy seat. One of the monks who had passed his whole time in singing psalms, when he died was cover- ed with white flowers by invisible hands ; and the fragrance of flowers for many years afterward arose from his tomb. Yet, like many enthusiasts, Gregory was capable of acts of excessive cruelty, and his convent was ruled with unsparing severity. Justus, the monk, who was also a physician, had watched over Gregory during a long sickness with affection- ate tenderness. He was himself seized with a mortal illness, and when he was dying confessed with bitter contrition that, contrary to the rules of the monastery, he had hoarded up three pieces of gold. The money was found, and the guilty monk was punished with singular cruelty. Gregory would suffer no one to approach the bed of the dying man ; no sa- cred rites, no holy consolation, soothed the accursed spirit as it passed away. The body was cast out upon a dunghill, together with the three pieces of gold, while all the monks who had assembled around it cried out, " Thy money perish with thee !" After Justus had lain in torment for thirty days, Gregory relented ; a mass was said for the aftiicted soul, which returned to the earth to inform its companions that it had escaped from its fearful tortures. Such were the fancies of this superstitious age. Gregory was chosen Pope (590) by the united voice of the clergy, the senate, and the people of Rome, and the Emperor Maurice conflrmed the election. But Gregory shrunk from assuming the holy office with real alarm. He even fled in disguise into the forest, but a pillar of fire hovering over his head betrayed him. He was seized and carried by force to the Church of St. Peter, and was there consecrated Supreme Pontiff. He might well have trembled at the thought of being in- trusted with the destiny of Christianity in those dark and hopeless days ; he might well have believed, as he ever did, 26 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. that the end of all things was at hand. The world was full of anarchy and desolation, and a universal horror rested upon the minds of men. From his insecure eminence at Rome, Gregory saw everywhere around him the wreck of nations and the misery of the human race. Germany was overrun by hordes of savages ; France, half - barbarian, groaned be- neath the Merovingian rule; Britain had relapsed into pa- ganism under the Saxons ; Spain was held by the Arian Visi- goths ; Africa was fast becoming a desert ; while the feeble emperor at Constantinople was scarcely known or heard of in the dominions over which he held a nominal rule. Italy had become the prey of the tierce Lombards, and these ruthless savages plundered and desolated the peninsula from the Po to the Straits of Sicily. They massacred or sold into slavery the whole population of great cities, and made them so des- olate that hermits chose their ruins as a fitting abode ; they destroyed convents, monasteries, churches, and spared neither monks nor nuns; the very air was tainted with carnage, and the Lombards seemed never sated with bloodshed. At length, in the earlier period of Gregory's pontificate, the Lombard hordes approached to destroy Rome. In the midst of one of his most effective sermons, the Pope was startled by the news that the enemy were at the gates. He broke off suddenly, ex- claiming, " I am weary of life ;" but he at once gave himself to the defense of the city. The gates were closed, the crum- bling walls were manned by trembling citizens, and the sav- age assailants retreated before the apparent vigor of the monk. Yet the environs and suburbs of the Holy City were involved in a general desolation. The people were swept away into captivity, the villas, the monasteries, and the churches sunk into smoldering ruins, and Gregory wept in vain over the w' oes of his unhappy people. From his ruined city Gregory began now to spread his in- tellectual influence over Europe. Never was there a more busy mind. lie was the finest preacher of his age ; and his sermons, tinged with the fierce gloom of a monastic spirit, awoke the zeal of prelates and monks. His numerous letters, which still exist, show M'ith what keen attention he watched GREGORY'S MENTAL INFLUENCE. 27 and guided the conduct of his contemporaries. He wrote in tones of persuasive gentleness to Bertha, the fair Saxon Queen of Kent ; of bold expostulation to his nominal master, the Emperor Mamice of Constantinople. He corresponded with the bishops and kings of France and the Yisigothic rulers of Spain ; he addressed his laborious but fanciful " Dialogues " to Theodelinda, Queen of the Lombards ; he watched over the decaying churches of Africa and the feeble bishoprics of Greece ; he urged forward the conversion of England, and drove the timid Augustin to his missionary labors among the savage Saxons ; and his wonderful mental activity was finally rewarded by the complete triumph of the Eomish Church. Spain, England, France, and even the wild Lom- bards and Arian Goths, yielded to his vigorous assertion of the authority of the see of St. Peter. Gregory laid the foundation of that splendid ritual which to-day governs the services of Romish chapels and cathedrals from Yienna to Mexico, from Dublin to St. Louis. He knew the advantages of order, and his " Ordo Romanus," his minute array of rites and ceremonies, drew together the Franks and Goths in a unison of religious observances. The world was to Gregory a vast monastery, in which perfect discipline was to be observed, and he everywhere enforced a strict unity of forms and conduct throughout all his great army of presby- ters and monks. But it was chiefly upon the power of music that Gregory relied for softening the cruel natures of Goth and Hun. (') His whole ritual was one of song and melody. He was born a musician, and he impressed upon the services of the Roman Church that high excellence in musical intonation which has ever been its distinguishing trait. His own choristers were renowned for their sweet voices and artistic skill, and tradi- tion represents the austere Pope, the master intellect of his age, as sitting among his singing-boys with a rod in his hand, (') Buruey, Hist. Music, ii., p. 16: "Augustin, at his first interview with the Saxon king, approached him siuging a litany and a Gregorian chant. The French valued themselves upon their chanting, but the flexible voices of the Koman singers surpassed all others in the year 600." 28 THE Bisnors of some. chastising the careless and encouraging the gifted musician. The Gregorian chants indeed proved to have a singular charm for the savage races of the North.(') A band of trained sing- ers accompanied St. Augustin in his missionary labors in En- gland, and sometimes, it is related, proved more attractive than the most eloquent divines ; the Roman singing-masters, carefully instructed in Gregory's antiphonal, became the teach- ers of Europe ; Charlemagne, at a later period, founded sing- ing-schools in Germany upon the Gregorian system, and was himself fond of chanting matins in his husky voice — for nat- ure, so liberal to him in all other respects, had never designed him for a singer; and thus music became everywhere the handmaid ©f religion, and a powerful agent in advancing the Church of Rome. A faint trace of modesty and humility still characterized the Roman bishops, and they expressly disclaimed any right to the supremacy of the Christian world. The Patriarch of Constan- tinople, who seems to have looked with a polished contempt upon his Western brother, the tenant of fallen Rome and the bishop of the barbarians, now declared himself the Universal Bishop and the head of the subject Church. But Gregory re- pelled his usurpation with vigor.(*) " Whoever calls himself Universal Bishop is Antichrist," he exclaimed ; and he com- pares the patriarch to Satan, who in his pride had aspired to be higher than the angels. Yet, reasonable as Gregory was upon many points, his boundless superstition filled the age with terrible fancies. On every side he saw countless demons threatening destruction to the elect. Hell was let loose, and the earth swarmed with its treacherous occupants. But fort- (') Gregory probably imitated and revived the musical services of the pagan temples. See Migue, Ixxviii., p. 865, and the Ordo Eomanus. (°) Gregory I., who must have known his crimes, salntes the savage Phocas with devout joy. To Maurice he wrote indignantly against the usurper or rival, John, who claimed the universal bishopric. — Migne, Ixxv., p. 345, et seq. Migne's editor thinks the Constantinopolitan prel- ates " univorsalem pnefcctnram forsitan in totnm orbera Christianum et in ipsam Koinanam Ecclesiam sibi viudicatiiri, nisi eorum superbite quae semper asceudebat Romani pontifices obstitissent " (p. 347). THE WORSHIP OF BELICS. 29 unately for the Churcli, it possessed a spiritnal annorj which no demon could resist. The rehcs of the saints and the bones of the martyrs were talismans insuring the perfect safety of their possessor; and one of St. Peter's hairs, or a tiling from the chains of St. Paul, was thought a gift worthy of kings and queens. Gregory, too, had conversed with persons who had visited the realm of spirits and had been permitted to return to the earth. A soldier described such an adventure in lan- guage almost Yirgilian. He passed by a bridge over a dark and noisome river, and came to an Elysian plain, filled with happy spirits clothed in white, and dwelling in radiant man- sions. Above all a golden palace towered to the skies. Upon the bridge the visitor recognized one of his friends who had lately died, and who, as he attempted to pass, slipped, and was immediately seized by frightful demons, who strove to drag him beneath the stream ; but at the same moment angelic be- ings caught him in their arms, and a struggle began for the possession of the trembling soul. The result was never told. Gregory the Great died in 604, having established the pow- er of the Koman bishopric, and his successors assumed the ti- tle of pope.(') Under Gregory the Roman See became the ac« knowledged head of the Western Church. The next impor- tant period in its history is the acquisition of its temporal do- minions by an unscrupulous intrigue with the usurping kings of France. Various circumstances had concurred to produce this change. The Roman Church had become the represent- ative and the chief defense of all the corruptions of the an- cient faith. It adopted the worship of the Virgin and the invocation of saints, the doctrine of purgatory, and the wild- est legends and traditions of the monkish writers; it advo- (*) Gregory I. rejected the title of Universal Bishop as hlasphemons. "Sed absit a cordibus Christiaiiis nonien istud blaspheniiae, in quo om- nium sacerdotum honor adiniitur cum ab uno sibi demeuter arrogatur" (Ixxvii., p. 746). With what horror would the timid Pope have heard the title " Vicar of God," or the idea of infallibility, applied to himself. So to John he writes : " Quid ergo, frater carissime, in illo terribili examine ve- nientis judicii dicturus es, qui non solum pater, sed etiam generalis jjater, in mundo vocari appetis ?" (Ixxvii., p. 742). 30 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. cated the celibacy of tlie clergy ; its churches were filled with images and relics, and its superstitious laity surpassed in blind idolatry the follies of their heathen ancestors. In the mean time the followers of Mohammed, issuing from their deserts, had conquered the East, Africa, and Spain, threatened Italy it- self with subjugation, and preached everywhere a single deity and an iconoclastic creed. While Christendom was filled with idolatry, the cultivated Arabs aspired to the purest conception of the Divine nature. The contrast became so startling as to awaken a sense of shame in the breast of Leo, the Isaurian, Emperor of the East. He began in 727-30 the famous icon- oclastic reform ; he ordered the images to be broken to pieces, the walls of the churches to be whitewashed, and prosecuted with honest but imprudent vigor his design of extirpating idolatry. But a fierce dissension at once raged throughout all Christendom, the monks and the people rose in defense of their images and pictures, and the emperor, even in his own capital, was denounced as a heretic and a t^-rant. There was an image of the Saviour, renowned for its miraculous powers, over the gate of the imperial palace, called the Brazen Gate, from the rich tiles of gilt bronze that covered its magnificent vestibule. The emperor ordered the sacred figure to be taken down and broken to pieces. But the people from all parts of the city flew to the defense of their favorite idol, fell upon the oflicers, and put many of them to death. The women were even more violent than the men ; like furies they rushed to the spot, and, finding one of the soldiers engaged in his un- hallowed labor at the top of a ladder, they pulled it down and tore him to pieces as he lay bruised upon the ground. " Thus," exclaims the pious annalist, " did the minister of the emperor's injustice fall at once from the top of a ladder to the bottom of hell." The women next flew to the great church, and finding the iconoclastic patriarch ofticiating at the altar, overwhelmed him with a shower of stones and a thousand opprobrious names. lie escaped, bruised and fainting, from the building. The guards were now called out, and the fe- male insurrection suppressed, but not until several of the women had perished in the fray. THE POPES DEFEND IMAGE-WOESHIP. 31 The Pope, Gregory II., assumed the defense of image-wor- ship. The Italian provinces of the Greek emperor, known as the Exarchate, threw off the imperial authority rather than part with their images ; and it was these provinces that finally be- came the patrimony of St. Peter, and formed the chief part of the papal domain. A long struggle, however, arose for the possessions of the Greeks. The Lombard kings, always hos- tile to the Popes, sought to appropriate the Exarchate, and the acute Popes appealed for aid to the rising power of France. But it was not to tlie feeble Merovintrian kino-s that they addressed themselves, but to Charles Martel and his am- bitious descendants. To gratify their own craving for tem- poral power, the Popes founded the new dynasty of the Car- lovingians. By the sanction and perhaps the suggestion of Pope Zacharias, the last of the phantom kings ceased to reign in France, and Pepin, the founder of the Carlovingians, as- cended the throne of Clovis. The powerful Franks now be- came the protectors of the papacy. Pepin, liberal to his spir- itual benefactor, gave to the Popes the Exarchate and protect- ed them from the Lombards ; and thus France, always Cath- olic and always orthodox, founded the temporal power of Rome. The Lombards, hoM-ever, did not yield without a struggle. On one occasion they threatened Pome itself with destruction ; and the Pope, Stephen III., in an agony of terror, wrote two letters to Pepin claiming his protection. When the Frank neglected his appeals, the Pope ventured upon the most remarkable and the most successful of all the pious frauds. Pepin received a third letter, addressed to him by the Apostle Peter himself, in his own handwriting. St. Pe- ter and the Holy Virgin, in this curious epistle, adjure the Frankish king to save their beloved city from the impious Lombards, and paradise and perpetual victory and prosperity are promised him as his rewards. Pepin obeyed the di\ane summons, entered Italy as the champion of St. Peter, and in 755 bestowed upon the bishops of Pome the authority and the dominions of a temporal prince. The gift was afterward en- larged and confirmed by Charlemagne. This eminent man, who ruled over France, Germany, Italy, and a part of Spain, 32 TEE BISHOPS OF ROME. altogether destroyed the Lomljard kingdom, and placed Leo III. securely on the papal throne. In return the grateful Pope crowned the half -barbarous Karl, Augustus and Emper- or of the West.(') It was on Christmas of the last year of the eighth century. Charles and his magnificent court were assembled at the celebration of the Nativity at Rome ; the Ko- man nobles and clergy looked on in a splendid throng ; the Pope himself chanted mass. At its close he advanced to Charles, placed a golden crown upon his head, and saluted him as Cajsar Augustus. The assembly broke into loud ac- clamations, and Charles, with feigned or real reluctance, con- sented to be anointed by the hands of the Pope. From this time the Poman bishops began to take part in the politics of Europe. They made war or peace, formed leagues and unholy alliances, intrigued, plotted, plundered their neigh- bors, oppressed their subjects, and filled Italy and Europe with bloodshed and crime. The possession of temporal power, that " fatal gift," denounced by Dante and Milton, his translator, corrupted the sources of "Western Christianity until it became the chief aim of the later Popes to enlarge their possessions by force or fraud, and add to those rich territories which they had won from the superstition of Pepin and the policy of Charlemagne. The great emperor died ; Europe fell into the anarchy of feudalism, and the bishops of Rome rose into new grandeur and importance. As the successors of St. Peter, they assert- ed their supremacy over kings and emperors, and claimed the right of disposing of crowns and kingdoms at will. St. Pe- (') Annales Veteres Francorum. Migne, second series, xcviii., pp. 1410- 1430: "Leo papa cura cousilio onmiiini episcoponim sive sacerdotum seu Sonatu Framoruin, necnou et Romanornra, coronam auream capiti ejus imposuit, adjuncto etiam popiilo, acclaiuant, Carolo Augusto a Deo coro- nato magno et pacifico imperator Roniaiiorum vita et victoria." His title ■was Emperor of the Romans. So Odilbert addresses him, " Caroliis Sere- nissimus Augustus a Deo coronatus pacificns imperator Romanorum gu- hernans imperium." — Migne, xcviii., p. 919. And Bryce, Holy German Em- pire, p. 205: "Germany had adopted even the name of the Empire." It ■was Charlemagne's aim to assume the place of Constantiue and Trajan. HILDEBBAND. 33 ter no longer wrote humble letters asking aid from the bar- barous Frank ; he thundered from dismantled Kome in the menacing tone of command. The representative Pope of this new era was the illustrious, or the infamous, Ilildebrand, the Csesar of the papacy. Hildebrand was the son of a carpenter, but he was destined to rule over kings and nobles. Ilis youth was marked by intense austerity, and he was a monk from his boyhood. He early entered upon the monastic life, but his leisure hours were passed in acquiring knowledge, and his bold and vigorous intellect was soon filled with schemes for advancing the power and grandeur of the Church. Small, delicate, and unimposing in appearance, his wonderful eyes often terrified the beholder. He came up to Eome, became the real master of the Church, and was long content to rule in a subordinate position. Pope after Pope died, but Hilde- brand still remained immovable, the guide and oracle of Kome. He revolved in secret his favorite principles, the celibacy of the clergy, the supremacy of the Popes, the purification of the Church. At length, in 1073, on the death of Alexander II,, the clergy with one voice named Hildebrand the successor of St. Peter. He was at once arrayed in the scarlet robe, the tiara placed upon his head, and Gregory VII. was enthroned, weeping and reluctant, in the papal chair. His elevation was the signal for the most wonderful change in the character and purposes of the Church. The Pope as- pired to rule mankind. He claimed an absolute power over the conduct of kings, priests, and nations, and he enforced his decrees by the terrible weapons of anathema and excommuni- cation. He denounced the marriages of the clergy as impi- ous, and at once there arose all over Europe a fearful struggle between the ties of natural affection and the iron will of Greg- ory. Heretofore the secular priests and bishops had married, raised families, and lived blamelessly as liusbands or fathers, in the enjoyment of marital and filial love. But suddenly all this was changed. The married priests were declared pol- luted and degraded, and were branded with ignominy and shame. Wives were torn from their devoted husbands, chil- dren were declared bastards, and the ruthless monk, in the face 3 34 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. of the fiercest opposition, made celibacy the rule of the Church. The most painful consequences followed. The wretched wom- en, thus degraded and accursed, were often driven to suicide in their despair. Some threw themselves into the flames ; others were found dead in their beds, the victims of grief or of their own resolution not to survive their shame, while the monkish chroniclers exult over their misfortunes, and tri- umphantly consign them to eternal woe.(') Thus the clergy under Gregory's guidance became a mo- nastic order, wholly separated from all temporal interests, and bound in a perfect obedience to the Church. He next for- bade all lay investitures or appointments to bishoprics or oth- er clerical ofiices, and declared himself the supreme ruler of the ecclesiastical affairs of nations. No temporal sovereign could fill the great European sees, or claim any dominion over the extensive territories held by eminent churchmen in right of their spiritual power. It was against this claim that the Emperor of Germany, Henry IV., rebelled. The great bishop- rics of his empire, Cologne, Bremen, Treves, and many oth- ers, were liis most important feudatories ; and should he suf- fer the imperious Pope to govern them at will, his O'wn do- minion would be reduced to a shadow. And now began the famous contest between Hildebrand and Henry — between the carpenter's son and the successor of Charlemagne, between the Emperor of Germany and the Head of the Church. It open- ed with an adventure that marks well the wild and lawless nature of the time. On Christmas -eve, 1075, the rain pour- ed down in torrents at Rome, confining the peojDle to their houses, while the Pope, with a few ecclesiastics, was keeping a holy vigil in the distant Church of Santa Maria Maggiore. The wild night and the favorable opportunity were seized upon by Cencius, a Roman baron, to wreak his vengeance upon Gregory for some former offense. His soldiers broke into the church while the Pope was celebrating mass, rushed (') Migne, Greg. Pap. VII. Vita, vol. cxlviii., p. 153. Migne's editor insists tliat Gregory was of noble origin — "nobile genere ortus" — but adds, " Sunt qui dicunt eum infirao ac penes sordido loco natum," etc. But see Voigt, Papst Gregor VII. ; Delecluze, etc. GREGORY VIL 35 to the altar, and seized the sacred person of the pontiff. He was even wounded in the forehead ; and, being stripped of his holy vestments, was dragged away bleeding and faint, but pa- tient and unresisting, and was imprisoned in a strong tower. Two of the worshipers, a noble matron and a faithful friend, followed him to his prison. The man covered him with furs, and warmed his chilled feet in his own bosom ; the woman stanched the blood, bound up the wound, and sat weeping at liis side. But the city was now aroused ; the bells tolled, the trumpets pealed, and the clergy who were officiating in the different churches broke off from their services, and summon- ed the people to the rescue of the Pope. As the morning dawned a great throng of his deliverers assembled around the place of Gregory's imprisonment, uncertain whether he were alive or dead. Engines were brought and planted against the tower; its walls began to tremble ; and the tierce Cencius, now terrified and despairing, threw himself at the Pope's feet, beg- ging his forgiveness. The j)atient Pope consented, and only imposed upon Cencius the penance of a pilgrimage to Jerusa- lem. In the mean time the people broke into the tower, and carried Gregory in triumph to the church from whence he had been taken, where he finished the sacred rites which had been so rudely interrupted. The assassin Cencius and his kindred were driven from the city, and their houses and strong towers were razed to the ground. It was plain to all that no physical danger could shake the iron resolution of Gregory: he next determined to hmnble the seK- willed emperor. Henry, flushed with victory, sur- rounded by faithful bishops and nobles, attended by mighty armies, had refused, with petulant contempt, to obey the de- crees of Eome. Ilildebrand summoned him to appear before his tribunal, and, if he should refuse to come, appointed the day on which sentence of excommunication should be pro- nounced against him. The emperor replied by assembling a council of his German nobles and priests, who proclaimed the deposition of the Pope. All Christendom seemed united to crush the Bishop of Rome ; the married clergy, the Simon- ists, and all who had received their mvestiture from temporal 36 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. sovereigns, joined in a fierce denunciation of his usurpation. But Gregory called together a third council in the Lateran, and a miracle or an omen inspired the superstitious assembly. An egg was produced with much awe and solemnity, on which a serpent was traced in bold relief, recoiling in mortal agony from a shield against which it had vainly struck its fangs. The bishops gazed upon the prodigy with consternation, but Gregory interpreted it with the skill of a Koman augur. The serpent was the dragon of the Apocalypse ; its mortal agony foretold the triumph of the Church. A wild enthusiasm fill- ed the assembly, the anathema of Rome was hurled against Henry, his subjects were absolved from their allegiance, and the king was declared excommunicated. The effect of this spiritual weapon was wonderful : the power of the great em- peror melted away like mist before the wind. His priests shrunk from him as a lost soul, his nobles abandoned him, his people looked upon him with abhorrence, and Henry was left with a few armed followers and a few faithful bishops in a lonely castle on the Rhine. Henry, with abject submission, now resolved to seek the forgiveness of the Pope in Rome. In mid-winter, accompa- nied by his wife, his infant son, and one faithful attendant, having scarcely sufiicient money to pay the expenses of his travel, he set out to cross the Alps and throw himself at Greg- ory's feet.(') Never was there a more miserable journey. The vnnter was unusually severe, and great quantities of snow fill- ed up the Alpine passes. The slippery surface was not hard enough to bear the weight of the travelers, and even the most experienced mountaineers trembled at the dangers of the pas- sage. Yet the imperial party pressed on ; the king must reach Italy, or his crown was lost forever. When, after much toil and suffering, they reached the summit of the pass, the danger was increased. A vast precipice of ice spread before them so slippery and smooth that he who entered upon it could scarce- (') Voigt, p. 467: "Es war furclitbare Winter Kiilte, so dass alle Fliisse, selbst der Rliein, stark gefroren waren. Der Schnee im October des vori- gen Jahres gefalleu bedeckte das Land bis zu Eude des Miirz." Bert. Constantin, an, 1077. THE EMPEROR AT CANOSSA. 37 ly avoid being hurled into the depths below. Yet there was no leisure for hesitation. The queen and her infant son were wrapped in the skins of oxen and drawn down as if in a sled ; the king, creeping on his hands and knees, clung to the shoul- ders of the guides, and thus, half sliding, and sometunes roll- ing down the steeper declivities, they reached the plain un- harmed.Q Gregory, meanwhile, doubtful at first of Henry's real de- sign, had taken refuge in the Castle of Canossa, the mountain stronghold of his unchanging friend and ally, the great Count- ess Matilda. The praises of this eminent woman have been sung by poets and repeated by historians, but the crowning trait of her singular life was her untiring devotion to Greg- ory. For him she labored and lived ; on him her treasures were lavished ; her mountain castles were his refuge in mo- ments of danger ; her armies fought in his defense ; she was never satisfied unless the Pope was at her side ; and she made a will by which at her death all her rich possessions should re- vert to Gregory and the Church. Matilda was the daughter of Boniface, Margrave of Tuscany, and his only heir. A celi- bate although wedded, she had been married against her will to the Duke of Lorraine, and had parted forever from her un- welcome husband on her wedding-day. Hildebrand alone, the low-born and unattractive monk, had won the affections of the high-bred and seK-willed woman ; they were inseparable com- panions in adversity or success, and the Pope owed his life, his safety, and his most important achievements to a member of that sex which he had so bitterly persecuted and contemned. To Canossa came Henry, the fallen emperor, seeking per- mission to cast himself at his enemy's feet-C*) On a bitter winter morning, when the ground was covered deep with (') Voigt, p. 468: "Der Konig langte zu Canossa au, nachdem er vorana selbst noch Italien betreteu hatte, mehrere Gesandte an den Papst ge- sendet" (p. 417). (*) Vita Matbildis, Migne, exlviii. : "Cumque dies starent per tres pro pace loquentes et pax nou esset, rex atque recedere vellet," etc. Said Prince Bismarck, in 1873, "We will not go to Canossa;" and Germany etill remembers its humiliation. 432740 38 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. snow, lie approaclied the eastle gate, and was admitted within tlie first of the three walls that sheltered Gregory and Matil- da. Clothed in a thin white linen dress, the garb of a peni- tent, his feet bare, his head uncovered, the king awaited all day, in the outer court, the opening of the gate which should admit him to the presence of Gregory. But the relentless Pope left him to shiver in the cold. A second and a third day Henry stood as a suppliant before the castle gate, and, hungry, chilled, disheartened, besought admission, but in vain. The spectators who witnessed his humiliation were touched with compassion, and every heart but that of Gregory soften- ed toward the penitent king. At length Henry was admitted to the presence of the compassionate Matilda, fell on his knees before her, and besought her merciful interference. Gregory yielded to her prayers, and the Pope and his rightful lord, whom he had subjugated, met at a remarkable interview. Tall, majestic in figure, his feet bare and still clad in a peni- tential garb, the haughty Henry bowed in terror and contri- tion before the small and feeble gray-haired old man who had made kings the servants of the Church. Henry subscribed to every condition the Pope imposed; obedience to ecclesiastical law, perfect submission to the Pope, even the abandonment of his kingdom, should such be Greg- ory's will. On these terms he was absolved, and with down- cast eyes and broken spirit returned to meet the almost con- temptuous glances of his German or Lombard chiefs. Yet no man at that moment was so bitterly hated by hosts of foes as the triumphant Gregory. Christendom, which had yielded to his severe reforms, abhorred the reformer; Italy shrunk from his monastic rigor ; even Rome was unquiet, and Hilde- brand's only friends were his faithful Countess and the Nor- man conquerors of Naples. No sooner had Henry left Canossa than he seemed sudden- ly to recover from that strange moral and mental prostration into which his adversary's spiritual arts had thrown him. He was once more a king. He inveighed in bitter terms against the harshness and pride of Gregory ; his Lombard chiefs gathered around him and stimulated him to vengeance, while GREGORY DELIVERED BY THE NORMANS. 39 Matilda hurried the Pope back again, fearful for his life, to the impregnable walls of Canossa. But the dangerous condi- tion of his German dominions for a while delayed his plans of vengeance. The German and Saxon princes and bishops who had abandoned him in his moment of humiliation, now fearful of his power, met in a solemn diet at Forchheira, deposed Henry, and elected Rudolph of Swabia in his place. A terrible civil war, nourished by the arts of Gregory, desolated all Germany. The Pope once more excommunicated Henry, and declared his rival king ; and he even ventured to prophesy that, unless Henry made his submission by the 29th of June, the festival of St. Peter and St. Paul, he would either be de- posed or dead. The fierce priest, assuming to speak by in- spiration, was willing to be judged by the failure or the suc- cess of his vaticination. But the result was far different from his hopes. Henry met his adversary, Rudolph, on the field of Elster; the Saxons conquered, but Rudolph was slain. His death allowed Henry to turn his arms against his spiritual foe at Rome*. He crossed the Alps into Italy, but not as he had crossed them four years before, a heart-broken and trembling suppliant weighed down by superstitious dread. Excom- munication had lost its terrors ; Gregory had been proved a false prophet and a deceiver, and Matilda's forces, defeated and disheartened, had fled to their strongholds in the Apen- nines. Henry advanced, unchecked, to the walls of Rome, and laid siege to the Holy City.(') Gregory, whom no dangers could move, firm in his spiritual superiority, made a bold de- fense ; his people were united in his cause, the countess sup- plied him with considerable sums of money, and for three years the massive walls repelled the invader, and the Italian saw with natural exultation the host of abhorred Germans and Lombards decimated by malarias, disease, and perpetual fevers. At length, however, the city fell, Gregory retreated (') Matilda was to Hilclebraud another Martha. " Cui servat \\t altera Martha." In his distress, "Arma, voluptatem, fanuilos, gazani, propri- amque excitat, expendit." Migne, cxlviii., p. 1003. Says Voigt : " Ma- thilda zeigte schon in diesen Zeiten " (in early youth) " uubegriiuzte An- hanglichkeit an den romischen Stuhl." 40 THE BISHOPS OF EOME. into the Castle of St. Angelo — a temporary refuge from the vengeance he had invoked — and Henry caused a rival Pope, under the name of Clement III., to be consecrated in St. Pe- ter's, and received from his hands the imperial crown. Gregory's end seemed now drawing near. Famine and the sword must soon drive him from his retreat, and he well knew that he would receive short shrift from his enraged German lord. But at this moment news came that Robert Guiscard, at the head of a powerful force, was advancing from Southern Italy to his rescue. Henry retreated, and the Norman soon became master of Pome. Gregory was released, and respect- fully conducted to the Lateran Palace ; but a fatal event made his return to power the source of incalculable woes to his faithful people. The army that had conquered Pome was composed of half-savage Normans and inlidel Saracens — the peculiar objects of hatred to the Poman populace — and they had marked their entry into the city by a general pillage and Hcense. The Pomans resolved upon revenge. While the Normans were feasting in riotous security, they rose in revolt, and began a terrible carnage of their conquerors. The Nor- mans, surprised, but well disciplined, soon swept the streets with their cavalry, while the citizens fought boldly from their houses, and seemed for a moment to gain the superiority. Guiscard then gave orders to set fire to the houses. The city was soon in flames ; convents, churches, palaces, and private dwellings fed the conflagration ; the people rushed wildly through the streets, no longer thinking of defense, but only of the safety of their wives and children ; while the fierce Nor- mans and Saracens, maddened by their treachery, perpetrated all those horrible deeds that mark the sack of cities. Pome suffered more in this terrible moment tlian in all the invasions of the Goths and Yandals. Thousands of its citizens were sold into slavery or carried prisoners to Calabria, and its mis- erable ruin was only repaii-ed when a new city was gradually built in a different site on the ancient Campus Martius.(') (') Voigt, p. 613 : " In Robert's Schaaren war eine bedeutende Zabl Sara- cenen, die weder Mass nocb Ziel kannten." The horrors of the sack sur- DEATH OF GREGORY VII. 41 Gregory, it is said, looked calmly on the sack of his faithful city. For its destroyers he had no word of reproof. The ferocious Guiscard was still his ally and his protector. He retired, however, to Salerno, being afraid to trust himself in Rome, and from thence issued anew an excommunication against Henry and the usurping pontiff, Clement III. As death approached, no consciousness of the great woes he had occasioned, of the fierce wars he had stirred up, of the ruin he had brought upon Germany, of the desolation he had spread over Italy, of the miserable fate of Rome, seems to have dis- turbed his sublime serenity. At one moment he had believed himself a prophet, at another an infallible guide ; he was al- ways the vicegerent of Heaven ; and just before his death he gave a general absolution to the human race, excepting only Henry and his rival Pope. He died May 25tli, 1085, having bequeathed to his successors the principle that the Bishop of Rome was the supreme power of the earth. This was the conception which Gregory plainly represents. The idea was never lost to his successors. It animated the Popes of the eleventh century in their long struggle against the Emperors of Germany; it stimulated the ardor of the Guelphic faction, whose vigor gave liberty to Italy ; but its full development is chiefly to be traced in the character of In- nocent III.(') Of all the Bishops of Rome, Innocent approach- ed nearest to the completion of Gregory's grand idea. He was the true Universal Bishop, deposing kings, trampling upon nations, crushing out heresy with fire and the sword, relentless to his enemies, terrible to his friends — the incarnation of spirit- ual despotism and pride. In the year 1198, at the age of thir- ty-seven, in the full strength of manhood. Innocent ascended the papal throne. His learning was profound, his morals pure ; he was descended from a noble Italian family ; he had passed all the earlier woes of Rome. So Voigt, p. 613. Says Delecluze, Gr^goire VII. (1844) : "La plume se refuse ^ tracer les borreurs sauglantes qui eurent lieu," etc. Q) Gesta Innocentii PP. III., ab auctore anonymo. Migne, vol. ccxiv. His numerous letters sbow bis imperious disposition, bis wide ambition, and bis active miud. 42 TEE BISHOPS OF ROME. already written a work on " Contempt of the World, and the Misery of Human Life," and his haughty and self-reliant in- tellect was well fitted to subdue that miserable world which he so pitied and contemned. Yet his ruthless policy filled Europe with bloodshed and woe. He interfered in the affairs of Germany, and for ten years, with but short intervals of truce, that unhappy land was rent with civil discord. He de- posed his enemy, the Emperor Otho, and placed Frederick IL, half infidel, half Saracen, the last of the Hohenstaufens, on the German throne. He ruled over Rome and Italy with an iron hand. But it was in France and England that the des- potic power of the Church was felt in its utmost rigor, and both those mighty kingdoms were reduced to abject submis- sion to the will of the astute Italian. France, in the year 1200, was ruled by the firm hand of the licentious, self-willed, but vigorous Philip Augustus. Philip, after the death of his first wife, Isabella of Hainault, had resolved upon a second marriage. He had heard of the rare beauty, the long bright hair, the gentle manners of Ingeburga, sister to the King of Denmark, and he sent to demand her hand. The Dane con- sented, and the fair princess set sail for France, unconscious of the Ions succession of sorrows that awaited her in that south- ern land. The nuptials were celebrated, the queen was crown- ed ; but from that moment Philip shrunk from his bride with shuddering horror. No one could tell the cause, nor did the kino; ever reveal it. Some said that he was under the influ- ence of a demon, some that he was bewitched. Yet certain it is that he turned pale and shuddered at the very sight of the gentle and beautiful Ingeburga, that he hated her with intense vigor, and that he sacrificed the peace of his kingdom, the welfare of his people, and very nearly his crown itself, rather than acknowledge as his wife one who was to him all gentle- ness and love. At all hazards, he resolved to obtain a divorce, and the obsequious clergy of France soon gratified his wishes in this respect, upon the pretense that the ill-assorted pair were within the degree of consanguinity limited by the Church. The marriage was declared dissolved. When the news of her humiliation was brought to the unhappy stranger-queen, she INNOCENT III. AND PHILIP AUGUSTUS. 43 cried out, in her broken language, " Wicked, wicked France ! Eome, Eome !"(') She refused to return to Denmark to be- tray her disgrace to her countrymen, but shut herself up in a convent, where her gentleness and her piety won the sympa- thy of the nation. Philip, having thus relieved himself forever, as he no doubt supposed, of his Danish wife, began to look round for her suc- cessor. Three noble ladies of France, however, refused his offers, distrustful of his fickle affections ; a fourth, Agnes, daughter of the Duke of Meran, was more courageous, and was rewarded by a most unusual constancy. To the fair Ag- nes, Philip gave his heart, his hand, his kingdom. His love for her rose almost to madness. For her he bore the anathe- mas of the Church, the hatred of his people, the murmurs of his nobles, the triumph of his foes. Beautiful, young, intelli- gent, graceful, Agnes seems to have w^ell deserved the devo- tion of the king. Her gentle manners and various accom- plishments won the hearts of the gallant chivalry of France, and even touched and softened her enemies — the austere cler- gy. She bore the king three children, and his affection for her never ceased but with her death. Miserable, however, was the fate of the rival queen, Ingeburga, in her distress, had appealed to Pome ; her brother, the King of Denmark, pressed her claims upon the Pope ; while Philip, enraged at her obstinacy, treated her with singular cnielty. She was dragged from convent to convent, from castle to castle, to in- duce her to abandon her appeal ; her prayers and her entreat- ies were received with cold neglect, and she who was entitled to be Queen of France was the most ill-used woman in the land. She was now at last to find a champion and a protector. Innocent, soon after his accession, resolved to interfere in the affair, and to build up the grandeur of his see upon the misfort- unes of two unhappy wives and the violent king. Ingeburga, however gentle and resigned, had never ceased to assert open- (') Gesta, p. 95 : " Flens et ejulans exclamavit, ilala Francia, mala Fran- da ! et adjecerat, Poma, Roma .'" 44 THE BISROPS OF ROME. ly her marital claims ; she pursued her recreant husband with a persistency only equaled by his own obstinate aversion to her person, and she now joined with Innocent in a last effort to reclaim him.(') The Pope sent a legate into France with a command to Philip to put away the beautiful Agnes, and re- ceive back the hated Dane. If he did not comply with the or- ders of his spiritual father within thirty days, France was to be laid under an interdict, and the sin of the sovereign was to be visited upon his unoffending people. Philip, enraged rath- er than intimidated, treated Innocent's message with contempt ; the thirty days expired, and the fatal sentence was pronounced. For the iirst time in the annals of Rome it ventured to inflict a spiritual censure upon a whole nation ; for the effect of an interdict was to close the gates of heaven to mankind. All over gay and prosperous France rested a sudden gloom.f ) The churches were closed, and the worshipers driven from their doors ; the rites of religion ceased ; marriages were celebrated in the church-yards ; the bodies of the dead were refused bu- rial in consecrated ground, and flung out to perish in the cor- rupted air ; baptism and the last unction were the only services allowed ; the voice of prayer and praise ceased throughout the land; and the French with astonishment found themselves condemned to eternal woe for the sin of Philip and fair Agnes of Meran. The punishment seemed no doubt irrational and extravagant even to the clouded intellect of that half -savage age ; but it was no less effectual. Philip sought to prevent the enforce- ment of the interdict by punishing the clergy who obeyed it; and he swore that he would lose half his kingdom rather than part with Agnes. But Innocent enforced the obedience of the priests, France grew mutinous under its spiritual sufferings, and the king was forced to submit. " I will turn Mohammed- (') Innocent's letter to Philip is excellent, yet he was "willing to sacrifice all France to an imperious church. See Migue, vol. ii. Innocent III., p. 87 : " Sane nee timor Domini nee reverentia sedis apostolicse matris tusB," etc. C) Gesta, p. 99 : " Sicque tota terra regis Francorum arctissimo est inter- dicto conclusa." PHILIP SUBDUED. 45 an," lie cried, in his rage. " Happy Saladin, who has no Pope above him !" Agnes, too, wrote a touciiiug letter to the Pope, in which she said " she cared not for the crown ; it was on the husband that she had set her love. Part me not from him." But Innocent never relented. Agnes was torn from her hus- band and her love, and was confined in a lonely castle in^ISTor- mandy, where she was seen at times wandering upon the bat- tlements with wild gestures and disheveled hair, her face wan and pale, her eyes streaming with tears, and then was seen no more. Nor was Ingeburga more happy. She was conducted, indeed, by a train of Italian priests to the arms of her loathing husband, and, whether witch or woman, Philip was forced to receive her publicly as his wife. France rejoiced, for the in- terdict was removed ; a clang of bells announced the return of spiritual peace ; the curtains were withdrawn from crucifixes and images ; the doors of churches flew open ; and a glad throng of worshipers poured into the holy buildings, from which for seven months they had been rigidly excluded. Yet the change brought little joy to the Queen of France. For the remainder of her life her husband treated her sometimes with harshness, always with neglect and contempt, and her plaintive appeals against his cruelty sometimes reached the ears of Innocent at Rome, who would then remonstrate with Philip upon his unworthy conduct toward the daughter, the sister, and the wife of a king. The Pope next turned his spiritual arais against England, and soon reduced that powerful and independent kingdom to the condition of a vassal of the Poman See. John, the wick- edest and the basest of English kings, now sat on the throne. His life had been stained by almost every form of licentious- ness and crime ; he had murdered his nephew, Arthur, and usurped his crown ; he had shrunk from no enormity, and his subjects looked upon him with horror and disgust ; Philip had torn from him all his continental possessions ; and his coward- ice had been as conspicuous as his vices. Yet John had ever remained the favorite son of the Church, and Innocent would still have continued his ally and his friend had not a sudden quarrel made them, for the moment, the bitterest of foes. It 46 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. would be impossible for us to review the full particulars of this memorable affair. It is sufficient to say that Innocent claimed the right of controlling the election of the Archbish- op of Canterbury, and that John resisted his pretension. The Pope employed the instrument which had been so effective against France ; in 1208 England was laid under an interdict, and for four years beheld its churches closed, its dead cast out into unconsecrated ground, and its whole religious life crushed beneath a fatal malediction. Yet John resisted the clerical as- sailant with more pertinacity than Philip, and even endured the final penalty of excommunication, and it was not until In- nocent had bestowed England upon Philip, and that king had prepared a considerable army to invade his new dominions, that John's courage sunk. Full of hatred for the Pope and for religion, it is said that he had resolved to become a Mo- hammedan, and sent embassadors to the Caliph of Spain and Africa offering to embrace the faith of the Koran in return for material aid ; and it is further related that the cultivated Mo- hammedan rejected with contempt the advances of the Chris- tian renegade. So low, indeed, was sunk the moral dignity of Christianity under the papal rule, so oppressive was that pow- er, that of the three great potentates of Christendom at this period, Frederick II. was suspected of preferring the Koran to the Bible, and both Philip Augustus and John are believed to have entertained the desire of adopting the tenets of the Ara- bian impostor ; and all three were no doubt objects of polish- ed scorn to the cultivated Arabs of Bagdad and Cordova. John was soon reduced to submission, and his conduct was so base and dastardly as to awaken the scorn of his own sub- jects and of Europe.(') He gave up his independent kingdom to be held as a fief of the Eoman See, took the oath of fealty to Innocent, and bound himself and his successors to become the vassals of an Italian lord. But his shame was probably lightened by a sense of the bitter disappointment which he (') Innocent to John. Migne, vol. iii., p. 925, Epist. : " Quod tu, fili charis- sime, prudeuter attendens," etc. Tlie Pope accepts the gift of England, and confers it as a fief upon John and his heirs. THE ALBIGENSES. 47 was thus enabled to inflict upon his enemy, Philip Augustus. The Pope, with his usual indifference to the claims of honor and of faith, now prohibited the King of France from pros- ecuting his designs against England ; and Philip, who at a great expense had assembled all the chivalry of his kingdom, was forced to obey. The barons of England soon after wrest- ed from their dastard king the Magna Charta, and Innocent in vain endeavored to weaken the force of that instrument which laid the foundation of the liberties of England and of America. But it is chiefly as the first of the great persecutors that In- nocent III. has deserved the execration of posterity. lie was the destroyer of the Albigenses and the troubadours, and the first buds and flowers of European literature were crushed by the ruthless hand of the impassive Bishop of Kome. Langue- doc and Provence, the southern provinces of modern France, were at this period the most civilized and cultivated portions of Europe. Amidst their graceful scenery, their rich fields, and magnificent cities, the troubadours had first sung to the lute those plaintive love-songs, borrowed from the intellectual Arabs, which seemed to the rude but impassioned barons of the South almost inspired. The Gay Science found its fitting birthplace along the soft shores of the Mediterranean Sea, the Courts of Love were held of tenest at Montpellier, Toulouse, or Marseilles. The princes and nobles of that southern clime were allowed to be the models of their age in chivalry, good- breeding, and a taste for poetry and song ; and the people of Languedoc and Provence lived in a luxurious ease, rich, hap- py, and secure. Upon this Eden Innocent chanced to turn his eyes and discover that it was infested by a most fatal form of heresy. The troubadours — gay, witty, and indiscreet — had long been accustomed to aim sharp satires at the vices or the superstitions of monks and bishops; the people had learned to look with pity and contempt upon the ignorance of their spir- itual guides ; the authority of the Church was shaken ; the priest was despised, and the "Waldensian and Albigensian doc- trines made rapid progress and found an almost universal ac- ceptance in the sunny lands of the South of France. Pay- 48 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. mond VI., Count of Toulouse, now reigned with an easy sway over this delightful territory. lie was believed to be a here- tic, yet he was evidently no Puritan. Gay, licentious, gener- ous, afEable, the count had three wives living at the same time, and might well have merited, by his easy morals, the confi- dence of the Church of Rome. But, unhappily for Raymond, his humanity surpassed his faith, and drove him to his ruin. Innocent was resolved to extirpate heresy by fire and sword, and Raymond was required to execute the papal commands upon his own people. He was to bring desolation to the fair fields of Languedoc, to banish or destroy the heretics, to lay waste his own happy dominions, depopulate his cities, cut off the wisest and best of his subjects, for the sake of a corrupt and cruel Church, which he must now more than ever have abhorred. Life meanwhile had flowed on for the happy peo- ple of Languedoc in mirth and perpetual joy. They sung, they danced ; the mistress was more honored than the saint, and churches and cathedrals were abandoned for the Courts of Love. In the fair city of Toulouse a perfect tolerance pre- vailed.(') The " good men " of Lyons, the Cathari or Puritans, made converts undisturbed, and even the despised and reject- ed Jews were received with signal favor by the good-humored Proven§als. Nothing was hated but the bigotry and pride of priestcraft ; and when Arnold, Abbot of Citeaux, a severe and stern missionary of Rome, came to preach against heresy and reclaim the erring to the orthodox faith, his most vigorous sermons were received with shouts of ridicule. " The more he preached," says the Provengal chronicler, " the more the peo- ple laughed and held him for a fool." But a terrible doom was now impending over the merry land of song, for Innocent had resolved to call in the aid of the temporal power, and in- volve both Raymond and his subjects in a common ruin. A fatal event urged him to immediate action. The papal legate was assassinated as he was crossing the Rhone, and the Pope charged the crime upon Raymond, who, however, was wholly guiltless. The blood of the martyr called for instant venge- (') See Fauriel, Provenjals, and the Provencal accounts. DEATH OF THE TBOUBADOUBS. 49 ance, and Innocent summoned the king, the nobles, and the bishops of France to a crusade against the devoted land. " Up, most Christian king," he wrote to Philip Augustus ; " up, and aid us in our work of vengeance !" His vengeful cries were answered by a general uprising of the chivalry and the bishops of the North of France, who, led by Simon de Montfort, hastened to the plunder of their brethren of the South. An immense army suddenly invaded Languedoc ; the war was carried on with a barbarity unfamiliar even to that cruel age ; and the Albigenses and the troubadours were almost blotted from existence. No Cjuarter was given, no mercy shown, and the battle-cry of the invading army was, " Slay all. God will know his own." At the capture of Beziers it is es- timated that fifty thousand persons perished in the massacre. Harmless men, wailing women, and even babes at the breast fell equally before the monkish rage of Innocent, and the beautiful city was left a smoldering ruin. At the fall of Minerve, a stronghold in the Cevennes, one hundred and forty women, rather than change their faith, leaped into a blazing pyre and were consumed. When Lavaur, a noted seat of her- esy, was taken, a general massacre was allowed ; and men, women, and children were cut to pieces, until there was noth- ing left to kill, except four hundred of the garrison, \vho were burned in a single pile, which, to the great joy of the victo- rious Catholics, made a wonderful blaze. After a long and brave resistance, the Albigensian armies were destroyed, and the desolate land, once so beautiful, fell wholly into the power of the Catholics. The song of the troubadour was hushed forever, the gay people sunk into melancholy under the monk- ish rale, their very language was proscribed, and a terrible in- quisition was established to crush more perfectly the lingering seeds of heresy. Every priest and every lord was appointed an inquisitor, and whoever harbored a heretic was made a slave. Even the house in which a heretic was found was to be razed to the ground ; no layman was permitted to possess a Bible ; a reward of a mark was set for the head of a heretic ; and all caves and hiding-places where the Albigenses might take ref- uge were to be carefully closed up by the lord of the estate. 4: 50 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. Two agents of rare vigor had suddenly appeared to aid In- nocent in his conquest of mankind ; two men of singular mor- al and mental strength placed themselves at his command. (') St. Dominic and St. Francis of Assisi founded, under his su- pervision, the two great orders of mendicant monks. Dominic was a Spaniard of high hirth, fierce, dark, gloomy, unsparing, the author of the Inquisition. His history is lost in a cloud of miracles, in which it has been enveloped by his devout dis- ciples ; he cast out Satan, who ran from him in the form of a great black cat with glittering eyes ; he raised the dead, heal- ed the sick, and more than equaled the miracles of the Gospel. Yet the real achievements of Dominic are sufficiently wonder- ful. He founded the order of preaching friars, who, living upon alms and bound to a perfect self-denial, knew no master but Dominic and the Pope, and before he died he saw a count- less host of his disciples spread over every part of Europe. Dominic is chiefly known as the persecutor of the heretics. He infused into the Eoman Church that tierce thirst for blood which was exemplified in Philip II. and Alva ; he hovered around the armies that blasted and desolated Languedoc, and his miraculous eloquence was aimed with fatal effect against the polished freethinkers of that unhappy land. His admir- ers unite in ascribing to him tlie founding of the Inquisition. "What glory, splendor, and dignity," exclaims one of them, "belong to the Order of Preachers words can not express! for the Holy Inquisition owes its origin to St. Dominic, and was propagated by his faithful followers." St. Francis of Assisi, a gentler madman, was equally suc- cessful with Dominic in founding a new order of ascetics. Born of a wealthy parentage, Francis passed his youth in song and revel until a violent fever won hira from the world. His mild and generous nature now turned to universal benev- olence ; he threw asid-e his rich dress and joined a troop of beggars ; he clothed himself in rags and gave all that he had to the poor. His bride, he declared, was Poverty, and he would only live by mendicancy ; he resolved to abase himself below (') Miluiau, Lat. Christ.; Gieseler, Eccl. Hist. MEXDICAXT ORDERS. 51 the meanest of his species, and he devoted himself to the care of lepers — the outcasts of mankind ; he tended them with af- fectionate assiduity, washed their feet, and sometimes healed them miraculously with a kiss. This strange and fervent pi- ety, joined to his touching eloquence and poetic fancy, soon won for St. Francis a throng of followers, who imitated his humility and took the vow of perpetual poverty. He now re- solved to convert the world ; but he must first gain the sanc- tion of the Pope. Innocent III. was walking on the terrace of the splendid Lateran when a mendicant of mean appear- ance presented himself, and proposed to convert mankind through poverty and humility. It was St. Francis. The Pope at first dismissed him with contempt ; but a vision warned him not to neglect the pious appeal. The Order of St. Francis was founded, and countless hosts soon took the vow of chastity, poverty, and obedience. The Franciscans were the gentlest of mankind : they lived on alms. If stricken on one cheek, they offered the other ; if robbed of a part of their dress, they gave the whole. Love was to be the binding element of the brotherhood ; and the sweet effluence of universal charity, the poetic dream of the gentle Francis, was to be spread over all mankind. How rapidly the Franciscans and Dominicans declined from the rigid purity of their founders need scarcely be told. In a few years their monasteries grew splendid, their possessions were vast, their vows of poverty and purity were neglected or forgotten, and the two orders, tilled with emulation and spirit- ual pride, contended with each other for the control of Cliris- tendoni. Innocent, meantime, died in 1216, in the full strength of manhood, yet having accomplished every object for whicli his towering spirit had lalxjred so unceasingly. He liad crnsli- ed and mortified the pride of every European monarch, had exalted the Church upon the wreck of nations, had seeming- ly extirpated heresy, and was become that Universal Bishop which, to the modest Gregory the Great, had seemed the sym- bol of Antichrist and the invention of Satanic pride. The next phase in which the papacy exhibits itself is the natural result of the possession of absolute temporal and spir- 52 THE BISHOPS OF ROME. itiial power; the next representative Pope is a Borgia. In no other place than Rome could a Borgia have arisen; in no other position than that of Pope could so frightful a monster have maintained his power. Alexander YI., or Koderic Bor- gia, a Spaniard of noble family and nephew to Pope Calixtus III., was early brought to Eome by his uncle, and made a cardinal in spite of his vices and his love of ease. He became Pope in 1492 by the grossest simony. Alexander's only ob- ject was the gratification of his own desires and the exaltation of his natural children. Of these, whom he called his neph- ews, there were five — one son being Caesar Borgia, and one daughter the infamous Lucrezia.(') Alexander is represented to have been a poisoner, a robber, a hypocrite, a treacherous friend. His children in all these traits of wickedness sur- passed their father. Ceesar Borgia, beautiful in person, and so strong that in a bull-fight he struck off the head of the ani- mal at a single blow — a majestic monster ruled by unbridled passions and stained Mnth blood — now governed Rome and his father by the terror of his crimes. Every night, in the streets of the city, were found the coii^ses of persons whom he had murdered either for their money or for revenge ; yet no one dared to name the assassin. Those whom he could not reach by violence he took off by poison. His first victim was his own elder brother, Francis, Duke of Gandia, whom Alexander loved most of all his children, and whose rapid rise in wealth and station excited the hatred of the fearful Caesar. Francis had just been appointed Duke of Benevento ; and before he set out for Naples there was a family party of the Borgias one evening at the papal palace, where no doubt a strange kind of mirth and hilarity prevailed. The two brothers left together, and parted with a pleasant farewell, Caesar having meantime provided four assassins to waylay his victim that very night. The next morning the duke was missing ; sev- (') Ranke, Popes, p. 30, describes the horrible family. Gregorovius (Lu- crezia Borgia), iu his recent work, -would soften the terrible lineameuts of Lncrezia's historical renown. But even at Ferrara Mr. Symonds (Renais- sance) indicates that she must have lived in an atmosphere of fearful deeds. THE BORGIAS. 53 eral days passed, but he did not return. It was believed that he was murdered ; and Alexander, full of grief, ordered the Tiber to be dragged for the body of his favorite child. An enemy, he thought, had made away with him. He little sus- pected who that enemy was. At length a Sclavonian water- man came to the palace with a startling story. He said that on the night when the prince disappeared, while he was watch- ing some timber on the river, he saw two men approach the bank, and look cautiously around to see if they were observed. Seeing no one, they made a signal to two others, one of whom was on horseback, and who carried a dead body swung care- lessly across his horse. He advanced to the river, flung the corpse far into the water, and then rode away. Upon being asked why he had not mentioned this before, the waterman re- plied that it was a common occurrence, and that he had seen more than a hundred bodies thrown into the Tiber in a simi- lar manner. The search was now renewed, and the body of the ill-fated Francis was found pierced by nine mortal wounds. Alexander buried his son with great pomp, and offered large rewards for the discovery of his murderers. At last the terri- ble secret was revealed to him ; he hid himself in his palace, refused food, and abandoned himself to grief. Here he was visited by the mother of his children, who still lived at Kome. What passed at their interview was never known ; but all in- quiry into the murder ceased, and Alexander was soon again immersed in his pleasures and his ambitious designs. Cgesar Borgia now ruled unrestrained, and preyed upon the Romans like some fabulous monster of Greek mythology. He would suffer no rival to live, and he made no secret of his murderous designs.. His brother-in-law was stabbed by his orders on the steps of the palace. The wounded man was nursed by his wife and his sister, the latter preparing his food lest he might be carried off by poison, while the Pope set a guard around the house to protect his son-in-law from his son. Csesar laughed at these precautions. "What can not be done in the noonday," he said, " may be brought about in the even- ing." He broke into the chamber of his brother-in-law, drove out the wife and sister, and had him strangled by the common 54 THE BISHOPS OF EOME. executioner. He stabbed his father's favorite, Perotto, while he ckiiig to his patron for protection, and the blood of the vic- tim flowed over the face and robes of the Pope. Lucrezia Borgia rivaled, or surpassed, the crimes of her brother ; while Alexander himself performed the holy rites of the Church with singular exactness, and in his leisure moments poisoned wealthy cardinals and seized upon their estates. He is said to have been singularly engaging in his manners, and most agreeable in the society of those whom he had resolved to de- stroy. At length, Alexander jierished by his own arts. He gave a grand entertainment, at which one or more wealthy cardinals were invited for the pm'pose of being poisoned, and Caesar Borgia was to provide the means. He sent several flasks of poisoned wine to the table, with strict orders not to use them except by his directions. Alexander came early to the banquet, heated with exercise, and called for some refresh- ment ; the servants brought him the poisoned wine, supposing it to be of rare excellence ; he drank of it freely, and was soon in the pangs of death. His blackened body was buried Avitli all the pomp of the Eoman ritual. Scarcely is the story of the Borgias to be believed : such a father, such children, have nev^er been known before or since. Yet the accurate historians of Italy, and the careful Ranke, unite in the general outline of their crimes. On no other throne than the temporal empire of Pome has sat such a crim- inal as Alexander ; in no other city than Pome could a Caesar Borgia have pursued his horrible career; in none other was a Lucrezia Borgia ever known. The Pope was the absolute master of the lives and fortunes of his subjects ; he was also the absolute master of their souls ; and the union of these two despotisms produced at Rome a form of human wickedness which romance has never imagined, and which history shud- ders to describe. AVe may pause at this era in our review of the represent- ative bishops of Pome, since the Peformation was soon to throw a softening and refining light upon the progress of the papacy. There were to be no more Borgias, no second Inno- cent ; the fresh blasts from the North were to purify in some THE MODERN POPES. 55 measure the malarious atmospliere of the Holy Citj.(') Yet I trust tliis brief series of pictures of the early bishops will not hav^e been without interest to the candid reader, and he will observe that it was only as the Koman Church aban- doned the primeval laws of gentleness, humility, and humani- ty that it ceased to be the benefactor of the barbarous races it had subdued. As the splendid panorama passes before us, and we survey the meek and holy Stephen perishing a sainted martyr in the Catacombs ; the modest Gregory, the first sing- ing-master of Europe, soothing the savage world to obedience and order by the sweet influence of his holy songs ; the cun- ning Zacharias winning a temporal crown from the grateful Frank; Hildebrand rising in haughty intellectual pre-emi- nence above kings and princes ; Innocent III. trampling upon the rights of nations, and lifting over Europe his persecuting arm, red with the guiltless blood of the troubadours and the Albigenses ; or a Borgia, the incarnation of sin — we shall have little difficulty in discovering why it is that the bishops of Rome have faded into a magnificent pageant before the rise of a purer knowledge, and why it is that the Pope of to-day, surrounded by the most splendid of earthly rituals, and pro- nouncing from the Vatican the anathemas of the Middle Ages, is heard with mingled pity and derision by the vigor- ous intellect of the nations over which his predecessors once held an undisputed sway. (') Yet the inventors of the Eoman Inquisition may possibly not deserve even this doubtful praise. From 1540 to 1700, the popes were possibly more dangerous to mankind than many Borgias. LEO AND LUTHER. Theke was joy at Home in tlie year 1513, for Pope Julius II. was dead. It was no unusual thing, indeed, for the Eo- mans to rejoice at the death of a Pope. If there was any one the i)eople of the Holy City contemned and hated more than all other men, it ras usually their spiritual father, whose bless- ings they so devoutly received ; and next to him his countless officials, who preyed upon their fellow-citizens as tax-gather- ers, notaries, and a long gradation of dignities. But upon Ju- lius, the withered and palsied old man, the rage of the people had turned with unprecedented vigor.(') He had been a light- ing Pope. His feeble frame had been torn by unsated and in- satiable passions that would have become a Csesar or an Alex- ander, but which seemed almost demoniac in this terrible old man. His ambition had been the cui'se of Eome, of Italy, of Europe ; he had set nations at enmity in the hope of enlarging his temporal power ; he had made insincere leagues and trea- ties in order to escape the punishment of his crimes ; his plight- ed faith was held a mockery in all the European courts ; his fits of rage and impotent malice made him the laughing-stock of kings and princes; and the cost of his feeble wars and faithless alliances had left Rome the pauper city of Europe. And now Julius M-as dead. The certainty that his fierce •spirit was fled forever had been tested by all the suspicious forms of the Roman Church. The Cardinal Camerlengo stood before the door of the Pope's chamber, struck it with a gilt mallet, and called Julius by name. Receiving no answer, (*) He was in the habit of using his pastoral staflf to punish dull bishops — probably its original design. De La Chatre, Hist, des Papes: "Desrjne Jules II. cut terniiuc sou execrable vie." Eoscoe and Raukc are more fa- vorable to Julius. A CONCLAVE. 57 he entered tlie room, tapped tlie corpse on tlie head with a mallet of silver, and then, falling npon his knees before the lifeless body, proclaimed the death of the Pope.(') Next the tolling of the great bell in the Capitol, which was sounded upon these solemn occasions alone, announced to Rome and to the Church that the Holy Father was no more. Its heavy note was the signal for a reign of universal license and mis- rule. Ten days are always allowed to pass between the death of a Pope and the meeting of the conclave of cardinals for the election of his successor ; and during that period it was long an established custom that Kome should be abandoned to riot, bloodshed, pillage, and every species of crime. The very chamber of the dead Pope was entered and sacked. The city wore the appearance of a civil war. The papal soldiery, ill paid and half fed, roamed through the streets robbing, mur- dering, and committing a thousand outrages unrestrained. Palaces were plundered, houses sacked, quiet citizens were robbed, murdered, and their bodies left in the streets or thrown into the Tiber. " Not a day passed," wrote Gigli, an observer of one of these dreadful saturnalia, " without brawls, murders, and waylayings." At length the nobles fortified and garri- soned their palaces, barricades were drawn across the principal streets, and only the miserable shop-keepers and tradesmen were left exposed to the outrages of the papal banditti. (*) Meantime the holy conclave of cardinals was sunnnoned to meet for the election of a successor to St. Peter. The whole of the first-floor of the Vatican, an immense range of apart- ments, now no longer used for electoral purposes, was pre- pared for the important occasion. Within its ample limits a booth or cell was provided for each cardinal, where he lived during the sitting of the assembly separate from his fellows. The booths were distributed by a raffle. A certain number of attendants, called conclavists, were allowed to the cardi- es ) I have assumed that all tlie usual ceremonies were emploj-cd at the death of Julius. (^) Coriueuin, Hist. Popes, Leo X. See North British lievieic, December, 1866, art. Conclaves. 58 LEO AND LUTHER. nals, wlio remained shut up with them during the election, and whose privilege it was to plunder the cell of the newly chosen Pope the moment the choice was announced.(') Before the final closing of the assembly to the world the Vatican presented a gay and splendid scene. All the great and noble of Rome came to visit the cardinals in their cells. Princes and magnates, foreign embassadors and political en- voys from the various Catholic powers, aspiring confessors and diplomatic priests, hurried from cell to cell on that impor- tant afternoon, whispering bribes, flatteries, or threats into each sacred ear ; electioneering with all the ardor of a village politician for their favorite candidate, or the choice of their mighty courts at home ; or indicating in distinct menace those persons whom Austria, France, and Spain would never snfier to w^ear the triple crown. At three hours after sunset a bell was heard ringing loudly, and the master of ceremonies com- ing forward called out, JS'd'tpa omnes. The vast and busy throng was slowly and reluctantly dispersed. The last per- suasion was ofliered, the last bribe promised, the last threat of haughty Bourbons or Ilapsburgs whispered, and the gorgeous assembly of electioneering princes and embassadors melted away along the dusky streets of Rome. Tlie cardinals were now shut up in close confinement.^) All the windows and doors of the lower floors of the Yatican had been walled up except the door at the head of the prin- cipal staircase, which was secured by bolts and bars. By the side of this entrance were placed turning-boxes like those used in convents or nunneries, through which alone the imprisoned cardinals were allowed to hold any intercourse with the outer world ; while whatever passed through these was carefully in- spected by officers both within and without. Guards of sol- diers were posted around the palace to insure the isolation of the holy prisoners, and the anathema of the Church was de- nounced against any cardinal or conclavist who should reveal the secrets of the inspired assembly. To insure a speedy de- (■) The physician of the Cardiual de' Medici Tvas admitted to atteud him. (-) Mosbeim, ii., p. 347. THE PAPAL ELECTORS. 69 cision, liowever, a soniewliat carnal device had been lighted upon. It was ordered that if after three days the cardinals should have made no choice, they should each be coniined to a single dish at every meal ; if they remained obstinate for five days longer, they must be restricted in their diet to bread, wine, and water alone as long as the session continued. All the cumbrous forms employed at a papal election have been gradually introduced by tlie Popes themselves, and were designed to strengthen and complete the supremacy of the Chief Pontiff .(') In the early ages of the Church, the Popes were elected by the assembled clergy and people of Rome, and the sacred privilege was cherished by the turbulent Ro- mans as their most valued possession. But the pontiffs, as they advanced in earthly power and grandeur, began to dis- dain or dread the tumultuous throng from whence they de- rived their holy office ; and Nicholas II., in 1059, under the guidance of the haughty Ilildebrand, snatched the election of the Popes from the people, and placed it in the hands of the cardinals alone. None but the college of cardinals from that time have had any vote in the choice. But France, Austria, and Spain are each allowed to veto the election of some single cardinal. Custom, too, has sanctioned that none but a cardi- nal shall be chosen, and the bull of iS icholas II. promises or suggests that the successful candidate shall come from the bosom of the Roman prelacy.Q Pope Alexander III. added the provision that a vote of two-thirds of the college should be necessary to a choice ; while Gregory X., elected in 1271, called together a General Council at Lyons (1274), where many abuses of the past were reformed, and the ceremonial of election arranged nearly in the form in which it now exists. Each cardinal has a single vote, and his right of suffrage can scarcely be taken from him even by tlie Pope himself. It is looked upon as a privilege almost immutable. Cardinals cov- ered with crimes and shut up in St. Angelo have been taken (') See Stendhal, Promeuades dans Rome, for a late conclave, pp. 176, 177. C) Baiouins, Ann. Ecc, ii., p. 314: "De ipsius Ecclesise gremio." The language is very cautious. 60 LEO AND LUTHER. from tlieir j)rison to the sacred college, and then, when thej had voted, were sent back to their dungeon. Cardinals con- victed of poisoning or attempts to murder have regained, on the death of a Pope, their official privilege of aiding in the election of a successor to St. Peter. But Cardinal Eohan was deofraded from all his offices for his share in the affair of the Diamond Necklace; and during the French Revolution two cardinals renounced their sacred dignity, and were held to have lost even their right of voting. Yet the cardinals, the princes of the Roman Clim-ch, form an immutable hierarchy, independent, in some respects, of the Chief Pontiff himself. From their body the new Pope must be chosen ; to them, on the death of a Pope, falls the selection of his successor ; and their elevated position as the creators of the vicegerent of Heaven would seem naturally to require that they should dis- play in the highest degree the purest traits of Christian virtue. In the sacred college that assembled on the death of Julius n. were gathered a band of men corrupted by power, avari- cious, venal, unscrupulous, and capable of every crime. One had been engaged in the plot for the assassination of Lorenzo de' Medici. One was a poisoner and a murderer of old stand- ing. Most of them had been educated in the horrible school of the Borgias.(') Scarcely one that was not a shame and hor- ror to the eyes of pious men ; scarcely one that was not ready with the dagger and the bowl. Ambitious of power, eager for the plunder of the Church, the conclave resolved to choose a Pope who would give them little trouble, whom they could mold and intimidate, and from whom they could extract at will the largest revenues and the richest benefices.(") Such a man seemed the Cardinal de' Medici, the second son of Lo- renzo the Magnificent, of Florence. Lie was the most polish- ed and elegant prelate of his time. His disposition was mild and even, his person graceful and imposing, his generosity unbounded, and his love for letters and his familiarity with (') Most of them were afterward eugaged in a plot to poison Leo. X. (^) It was said iu the conclave that the Cardinal de' Medici could not live a mouth. GIOVANNI DE' MEDICI. 61 literary men had thrown around him an intellectual charm which was felt even by the coarsest of his contemporaries. But, above all, it was believed in the sacred college that his nature was so soft and complying that he would readily yield up the government of the Church to the bolder spirits around him. Yet the contest within the walls of the Vatican lasted for seven days,(') during all which time the bland Cardinal de' Medici, with the usual policy of his race, was engaged in secretly or openly promoting his own election. He softened and subdued his enemies by flatteries and promises ; he was seen talking in a friendly and confidential way with Cardinal San Giorgio, the assassin of his uncle ; he won Soderini, the persecutor of his race, by ample expectations ; all the cardinals connected with royal families were especially favorable to the descendant of a line of princely money-lenders ; the holy col- lege yielded to the claim of the graceful Medici, and a major- ity of ballots inscribed with his name were found in the sacred chalice. Then a window in the Vatican was broken open, and Leo X. proclaimed Pope to the assembled people of Rome. He was placed in the pontifical chair and borne to St. Peter's, followed by the rejoicing populace, the excited clergy, the holy conclave; and as the procession passed on its way can- non were discharged, the populace applauded, and the long train of ecclesiastics, transported by a sudden fervor, broke out into a solemn strain of praise and glory to the Most High. Giovanni de' Medici was the descendant of that great mer- cantile family at Florence which had astonished Europe by its commercial grandeur and elegant taste, and whose founders had learned complaisance and democracy in the tranquil pur- suits of trade.(°) Their fortunes had been built upon indus- try, probity, politeness, and a careful attention to business. They had long practiced the virtues of honor and good faith when their feudal neio-hbors had been distinguished onlv bv utter insincerity. The Medici had increased their wealth from father to son until they became the richest bankers in (') The votes were taken twice a clay, aud the ballots hurued. Stend- hal, p. 177. O Vita Leouis Decimi, a Paulo Jovio, i. Roscoe, Leo X. 62 LEO AND LUTHER. Europe, and saw tlie miglitiest kings, and a throng of princes, priests, and warriors, suppliants at their counters for loans and benefits, which sometimes they never intended to repay. At lenffth Lorenzo, the father of Leo X., retired from business to give himself to schemes of ambition, and to guide the affairs of Italy. His immense wealth, pleasing manners, prudence, and ffood sense made him the most eminent of all the Ital- ians : nnhappily Lorenzo sunk from the dignity of an honest trader to share in the ambitious diplomacy of his age, and lost his virtue in his effort to become great. Giovanni was his fa- vorite son — the only one that had any ability ; and Lorenzo had resolved, almost from his birth, that he should wear the triple crown. At seven years of age Giovanni was made an abbot. His childish head was shaven with the monkish tonsure. He was addressed as Messire, was saluted with reverence as one of the eminent dignitaries of the Church, and was supposed to con- trol the spiritual concerns of various rich benefices. The child-abbot soon showed an excellent intellect, and, under the care of Politian, became learned in the rising literature of the day. All that the immense wealth and influence of his father could give him lay at his command. He was educated in the magnilicent palace of the Medici which Cosmo had complain- ed was too laro;e for so small a familv, shared in those lavish entertainments of which Lorenzo was so fond, was familiar with the wits, the poets, the painters of that gifted age, and learned the graceful skepticism that was fashionable at his father's court. When Giovanni was thirteen, (') Lorenzo re- solved to raise him to the highest dignity in the Church be- low that of the Supreme Pontiff. He begged the Pope, with prayers that seem now strangely humiliating, to make his son a cardinal. He enlisted in his favor all whom he could influ- ence at the papal court. " It will raise me from death to life," lie cried, when the Pope seemed to hesitate. The boon was at last obtained, and the boy of fourteen, the child of wealth and luxurious ease, with no effort of his own, became one of (') " Vix turn tertiumdecimum excedentem annum." P. Jovius, p. 15. LUTHER'S CHILDHOOD. 63 tlie chief priests of Christendom. The Pope, however, with some show of propriety, required that the investiture should not take j)lace in three years, during wliich time the young Medici was to give his attention to study, Pohtian still di- rected his studies. Giovanni was grave, graceful, formal, am- bitious; and at seventeen, in the year 1492, so fatal to the glory of his family, he took his place in the sacred college at Home, and was received in the Holy City with a general re- spect that seemed not unworthy of its future master. Meanwhile, far away in a little hamlet of Germany, a beg- . gar-child was singing mendicant songs from door to door, and living upon the insufficient alms which he won from the com- passion of the charitable. It was a delicate and feeble boy, to whom childhood offered no joys, whose youth was a perpetual woe. Luther was a peasant's son, and all his ancestors had been peasants.(') His father was a miner in the heart of the Thuringian forest. The manners of the peasants were harsh and cruel : Luther's parents' drove him out to beg ; his moth- er sometimes scourged him till the blood came for a trivial offense ; his father punished him so severely and so often that the child fled from his presence in terror ; and his little voice, as he chanted his mendicant hymns, must often have been drowned in tears. Yet so sweet and tender was the heart of the great reformer that he ever retained the most sincere love and reverence for the parents whom poverty and their own sufferings had made so severe. He was ever a fond and duti- ful son. He wept bitterly, like Mohammed, over his mother's grave. He was proud to relate that his father won a hard and scanty living in the mines of Mansfeld, and tliat his mother carried wood from the forest on her back to t]ieir peasant home; and when he came to stand before Europe the adversary of the elegant Leo, and the companion of kings and princes, he M^as never weary of modestly boasting that he was a peasant's son.Q (') Tischreden, p. 581. Eauke, Reformation in Germany, i., p. 136. (^) Michelet, M^moires cle Luther, i. The best account of Luther is that of Walch, Nachricht von D. Martin Luther, vol. xxiv., Siiunntlicho Werke. 64 LEO AND LVTHER. Luther was eia'lit vears youno-er than the Cardinal de' Me- dici. lie beirsed liis education at Eisenach, a small German town, until he was thirteen, and was then maintained by a charitable relative. Afterward his father, who had thriven by industry and toil, was enabled to send his son to the uni- versity at Erfurth, and hoped to make him a lawyer.(') But now that mighty intellect, which was destined to spread its banyan -like branches over Europe and mankind, began to flourish with native vigor. Luthers rare versatility embraced every form of mental accomplishment. He loved music with intense devotion ; his sensitive frame responded to the slight- est touch of instrumental sounds; he believed that demons fled at the sound of his flute ; and when he had fallen into one of his peculiar trances in his cell, his fellow-monks knew that music was the surest medicament to bring him back to consciousness and activity. f) He was a poet, and his relig- ious impulses often expressed themselves in sacred songs — rude, bold, and powerful — that have formed the germ and model of those of many lands. His love for pure literature was in no degree inferior to that of his elegant rival, Leo X. ; he studied day and night the few works of classic or mediae- val writers that were then accessible to the humble scholar or the penniless monk ; and his craving mind was never sated in its ceaseless appetite for knowledge. Yet his disposition was never saturnine or desponding ; as a student he was often gay, joyous, and fond of cheerful company ; his tuneful voice was no doubt often heard at convivial meetings at Erfurth ; his broad and ready wit must have kept many a table in a roar; and his loving heart seems to have gathered around him many friends. So varied were his tastes, so vigorous his powers, that, in whatever path his intellect had been directed, he must have risen high above his fellow-men. He might have shone as a lawyer and a famous statesman; he might have been the Homer of Germany, or the autlior of a new Nibelungenlied ; his classic taste miglit easily have been (') Andin, Histoire de Martiu Luther, i. Eanke, Keforiuatiou, i., p. 318. (') Raiike,i.,p. 321. LUTHER A MONK. 65 turned to the revival of letters ; his musical powers have pro- duced an earlier Mozart ; or his rare and boundless originality have been expended in satiric or tragic pictures of that world around him of whose folly and dullness he had so clear a con- ception. One day Luther was walking through the fields with one of his young companions from his father's home in the forest to Erfurth.(') It was July, and suddenly a fierce storm gather- ed over the bright sky ; the mountains around were hidden in gloom ; the lightning leaped from cloud to cloud ; all nature trembled ; when a sharp bolt from heaven struck Luther's companion dead at his side, and left him for a time senseless beside him. He wandered home on his solitary way, oppress- ed with an intolerable dread ; he believed that he had heard the voice of Heaven calling him to repent ; he vowed that he would give his whole future life to asceticism and monastic gloom. The next evening, with the impulsive inconstancy of youth, he passed with his young companions in the pleasures of music, wine, and song, anxious perhaps to try if he could drown in the joys of the world the pains of a wounded spirit. But the next day he hastened to the convent of the Augus- tines at Erfurth, and took the irrevocable vow.(°) He re- solved by the practice of the severest austerity to escape the pains of purgatory. He was the most faithful of ascetics. All his great powers, all the joyousness of his youthful spir- it, all the abundant growth of his fertile intellect, were shut up in a narrow cell and wasted in the closest observance of monkish rites. And the result was sufficiently appalling. He was weighed down by an ever-increasing consciousness of sin. Despair and death seemed his only portion. His life was agony, and sometimes he would sink down in his cell in a deep swoon, from which he could only be aroused by the gen- tle touch of a stringed instrument.(^) (') Ranke, i., p. 318, somewhat varies the comniou story. Sec Michelet, i., p. 5. (") Ranke, i., p. 319. Walch, xxiv., p. 76, gives the various accounts of Luther's couversion. C) Ranke, i., p. 321. Michelet, i., p. 10. 5 66 LEO AND LUTHEB. AVTiIle Lutlier was thus passing through the rude ordeal of his painful youth, his companion spirit, the elegant Cardinal de' Medici, had glided gracefully onward in a career of unsul- lied prosperity.(') His sins had never given liini any trouble. His conscience was soothed and satislied by the united ap- plause of all his associates. The learned Politian, a polished pagan, wrote in the most graceful periods of his piety and de- corum. His father, Lorenzo, had never been weary of spread- ing the report of his early fitness for the highest station in the Church. He was looked upon as an especial ornament to the sacred college of cardinals ; and the cardinal himself seems never to have doubted his own piety, or to have shrunk from the responsibility of holding in his well-trained hands the des- tiny of the Christian world. For him purgatory had no ter- rors ; the future world was a fair and faint mirage over which he aspired to spread his sceptre in order to rebuild St. Peter's or to immortalize his reign ; but beyond that he seems scarce- ly to have looked within its veil. That future upon which Luther gazed with wild, inquiring eyes, for Leo seemed scarce- ly to exist. He was more anxious to know, with Cicero, what men would be saying of him six hundred years from now ; or more engaged in speculating upon his own prospect of filling with grace and dignity the chair of St. Peter. At eighteen the young cardinal seems almost to have at- tained the maturity of his physical and mental powers. He was tall, handsome, graceful, intellectual. His complexion was fair and florid, his countenance cheerful and benignant. He was famed for the magnificence of his entertainments, his love of disphw, his unbounded extravagance, his open gener- osity. He wasted his father's wealth, as afterward his own, in feasts, processions, and deeds of real benevolence. He was the. spendthrift son of an opulent parent ; he became the wasteful master of the resources of the Church. Like Luther, he was passionately fond of music. He played and sung him- self ; he studied his art with care ; and his leisure hours were seldom without musical employment. Like Luther, too, he (') P. Jovius, p. 15. LEO IN MISFORTUNE. 67 loved letters witli a strange and surpassing regard. Heading was his chief pleasure, and he seldom sat down to table with- out having some poem or history before him, or without lengthening his repast by reading aloud fine passages to his literary friends. He had some imperfect sense of the real power of the intellect, and the man of letters was always to Leo a kind of deity whom he was glad to worship or to ap- proach. But his own productions are never above medioc- rity, and the real genius that glowed in the breast of Luther was an inscrutable mystery to the ambitious Pope. Calamity in a magnificent form at length came even to the prosperous cardinal. In 1492 his father Lorenzo died, and two years afterward the Medici were driven out of Florence. Savonarola,(') the Luther of Italy, the gifted monk whose fierce eloquence had transformed the skeptical Florentines from pagan indifference to puritanic austerity,(°) who had preached freedom and democracy, who had inveighed against the vices of the clergy and the despotism of Rome, and whose fatal and unmerited doom must have been ever before the mind of his German successor, became for a time the master of his country. Florence was once more a republic, the cen- tre of religious reform. The theatres were closed, the spec- tacles deserted, and the churches were filled with immense throngs of citizens who were never weary of listening to the stern rebukes of the inspired monk. But in 1494 Savonaro- la fell before the intrifijues of his enemv, Alexander YL, the Borgia ; he was hanged, his body burned, and his ashes cast into the Arno.(') The Church triumphed in the destruction of its saintly victim; but the Medici were exiles from their native city for eighteen years, and were only restored in 1512, by the favor of Julius II. and the arms of the Spaniards. During this long period of disaster the cardinal lived in great magnificence, and wasted much of his fortune. Pover- ty even threatened him who had never known any thing but (') Jovius admits the eloquence of Savonarola. {^) "Ut nihil sine ejus viri consilio recte geii jiosse videretnr." P. Jo- vius, p. 21. (') " lu area curite foedissinio snpplicio concreuiatus." P. Jovins, p. 24. 68 LEO AND LUTHER. boundless \vealtli. In the fearfnl reign at Rome of Alexan- der VI. and Caesar Borgia, he Avandered over Europe, visited Maximilian in Germany, and his son Philip in the Low Conn- tries ; passed over France, paused a while at Marseilles, and then returned to Ital}'.(') Here, at the town of Savona, met at table three exiles, each of whom was destined to wear the papal crown ; Rovere, afterward Julius II. ; the Cardinal de' Medici, Leo X. ; and Giuliano de' Medici, afterward Clement VII. When Julius was made Pope, the Cardinal de' Medici returned to Rome, and became the chosen adviser of that pontiff. He shared in the various unsuccessful attempts of his family to regain their control over Florence, was often in command of the papal armies, and shone in the camp as well as the court ; saw in 1512 the restoration of the Medici to Florence; and the next year, on the death of his friend Julius II., was enthroned as Pope at Rome — the magnilicent Leo X. In the close of the reign of Julius, Luther visited Rome. The poor monk, worn with penances and mental toil, was sent upon some business connected with his convent to the papal court.(°) He crossed the Alps full of faith and stirred by a strong excitement. He was about to enter that classic land with whose poets and historians he had long been familiar: he was to tread the sacred soil of Virgil, Cicero, and Livy. But, more than this, he saw before him, rising in dim majesty, the Holy City of that Church from whose faith he had never yet ventured to depart, whose supreme head was still to him almost the representative of Deity, and whose princes and dignitaries he had ever invested with an apostolic purity and grace. Rome, hallowed by the sufferings of the martyrs, till- ed with relics, and redolent with the piety of ages, the untu- tored monk still supposed a scene of heavenly rest. " Hail, holy Rome !" he exclaimed, as its distant towers first met his eyes. His poetic dream was soon dispelled. Scarcely had he entered Italy when he M'as shocked and terrified by the luxu- ry and license of the convents, and the open depravity of the (') P. Jovius, p. 27. (") Walch, xxiv., \^. 102 et seq. LEO X. AS POPE. 69 priesthood. He fell sick with sorrow and shame. He com- plained that the very air of Italy seemed deadly and pestilen- tial. But he wandered on, feeble and sad, nntil he reached the Holy City, and there, amidst the mockery of his fellow- monks and the blasphemies of the impious clergy, perfonned with honest superstition the minute ceremonial of the Church. Of all the pilgrims to that desecrated shrine none was so de- vout as Luther. He was determined, he said, to escape the pains of purgatory, and win a plenary indulgence : he dragged his frail form on his knees up the painful ascent of the Holy Stairs, while ever in his ears resounded the cry, " The just shall live by faith." He heard with horror that the head of the Church was a monster stained with vice; that the cardinals were worse than their master; the priests, mock- ing unbelievers ; and fled, heart-broken, back to his German cell. On the 11th of April, 1513, Leo X. opened his splendid reign by the usual procession to the Lateran, but the magnifi- cence of his pageant was such as had never been seen at Home since the fall of the Western Empire. It was the most im- posing and the last of the triumphs of the undivided Church. The Supreme Pontiff, clothed in rich robes glittering with rubies and diamonds, crowned with a tiara of precious stones of priceless value, and dazzling all eyes by the lustre of his decorations, rode on an Arab steed at the head of an assem- bled throng of cardinals, embassadors, and princes. The cler- gy, the people of Rome, and a long array of soldiers in shin- ing armor, followed in his train. Before him, far away, the streets were spread with rich tapestry, spanned by numerous triumphal arches of rare beauty, and adorned on every side by countless statues and works of art. Young girls and chil- dren, clothed in white, cast flowers or palms before him as he passed. A general joy seemed to fill the Holy City ; the sa- cred rites were performed at the Lateran with a just deco- rum ; and in the evening of the auspicious day Leo entertain- ed his friends at a banquet in the Vatican, whose luxury and extravagance are said to have rivaled the pagan splendors of Apicius or LucuUus. 70 LEO AND LVTEEE. And now began the Golden Age of Leo X.(') The descend- ant of the Medici ruled over an undivided Christendom. But lately his spiritual empire had been enlarged by the discov- eries of Columbus and Gama, and the conquests of the Span- iards and Portuguese. India and America lay at the feet of the new Pope. In Europe his authority was greater than that of any of his predecessors. The Emperor of Germany, the kings of England, France, and Portugal, became at length his obedient vassals. Henry, Charles, and Francis looked to the accomplished Leo for counsel and example, and paid sin- cere deference to the court of Pome. He was the master spirit of the politics of his age ; and the three brilliant young monarchs, whose talents seemed only directed to the ruin of Europe and of mankind, were held in check by the careful policy of the acute Italian. With the clergy Leo was still more successful. He was the idol of the priests and bishops of the Continent and of England. In Germany, his name stood high as a man of probity and dignity ; Luther avowed his respect for the pontiff's character ; in England, "Wolsey led the Church to his support. A common delusion seems to have prevailed that Leo was either sincerely pious or singu- larly discreet. The people, too, so far as they were familiar with the pontiff's name, repeated it with respect. Compared with the passionate, licentious Julius, or the monster Alexan- der, he seemed of saintly purity ; while the scholars of every land united in spreading the fame of that benevolent poten- tate whose bounty had been felt by the humblest of their or- der, as well as the most renowned. The age of Leo X. was golden with the glories of art.Q He was the most bountiful and unwearied friend of intellect the world has ever seen. His most sincere impulse was the homage he paid to every form of genius. Ambitious stu- dents and impoverished scholars hastened to Pome with their imperfect poems and half-finished treatises, submitted them to the kindly critic, were received with praise and just congratu- (*) Jovius: "Anream setatem post multa stecula coudidisse." 0) Jovius, p. 109. THE GOLDEN AGE OF LEO. 71 lation, and never failed to win a rich benefice or a high posi- tion at the papal court. Leo read with fond and friendly at- tention the first volume of Jovius's history, pronounced him a new Livy, and covered him with honors and emoluments. He made the elegant style of Bembo the source of his w^ealth and greatness. He made the learned Sadoleto a bishop ; he cultivated the genius of the graceful Yida. For Greek and Latin scholars his kindness was unwearied; he aided Aldus by a liberal patent, and sought eagerly for rare manuscripts of the Greek and Latin classics. His hours of leisure were often passed in hearing some new poem or correcting some unpublished manuscript ; his happiest days were those he was sometimes enabled to spend amidst a throng of his friendly authors. For science he was no less zealous, and mathema- ticians, astronomers, geograpliers, and discoverers were all equally sure of a favorable reception at Rome. Leo was al- ways eager to hear of the strange adventures of the Spanish and Portuguese in the unknown lands, to converse with the brave Tristan Cunha, or to listen to Pigafetta's unpolished narrative of Magellan's wonderful voyage. Thus for eight years Pome echoed to the strains of count- less rival or friendly bards who sung to the ever-kindly ear of the attentive pontiff ; and a vast number of poems in Latin or Italian rose to renown, were quoted, admired, praised as not unworthy of Virgil or Catullus, and then sunk forever into neglect. Of all the poets of this fertile age, scarcely one sur- vives.(') The historians have been more fortunate. Machia- velli, Guicciardini, perhaps Jovius, are still remembered among the masters of the art. Castiglione is yet spoken of as a purer Chesterfield ; the chaste and gifted Yittoria Colonna still lives as one of the jewels of her sex. But it is to its painters rather than its poets tliat this illustrious epoch owes its immortality. It is to Paftaello that Leo X. is indebted for many a lovely reminiscence that aids in rescuing his glory from oblivion. The traveler who wanders to Pome is chiefly reminded of Leo by the graceful flattery with which the first (') Roscoe, Leo X. 72 LEO AND LUTHER. of painters has interwoven the life of his friend and master with his own finest works. lie sees the portrait and exact features of Leo X. in the famous picture of Attila ; discovers an allusion to his life in the Liberation of St. Peter ; or re- members that it was to the taste and profuse liberality of the pontiff that we owe most of those rare frescoes in the Vatican with which Raffaello crowned his art. All through the brief period of scarcely seven years, so wonderful and varied were the labors of Raffaello, so constant the demands of the friendly but injudicious Pope, that we might well suppose the two friends to have been incessantly occupied in their effort to revive and recreate the ancient glory of Rome. To Raffaello these years were spent in fatal toil. His fancy, his genius, were never suffered to rest.(') Gentle, loving, easily touched, and fired by artistic ambition, soft and luxurious in his manners, unrestrained by moral laws, the great painter yielded to every wish of the eager Pope with an almost affectionate confidence, reflected all Leo's high ambition and longing after fame, toiled to complete St. Peter's, to adorn the Vatican, to perfect tapestries, paint portraits, to discover and protect the ancient works of art, to rebuild Rome; until at last, in the spring of 1520, his genius faded away, leaving its immortal fruits behind it. Other painters of unusual excellence took liis place, but an illimitable dis- tance separates them all from Raffaello. Two great names are wanting to the splendid circle of Leo's court, and neither Ariosto nor Michael Angelo can be said to have belonged to his Golden Age. They seem to have shrunk from him almost with aversion. Ariosto was the only true genius among the poets of his time.(°) His varied fancy, his brilliant colors, are the traits of the true artist. He had early been the friend of Leo before he becanie Pope ; he went up to Rome to congratulate the pontiff on his accession ; but some sudden coldness sprung up between the poet and the Pope which led to their complete estrangement. Ariosto was never seen at the banquets and splendid pageants of the Holy City ; (') Eoscoe, Leo X., ii., p. 110. C) Id., p. 122. THE POPE IN DANGER. Y3 his claims were neglected, his genius overlooked ; and the au- thor of '' Orlando Furioso " lived and died in poverty, while Accolti and Aretino glittered in the prosperity of the papal court. Michael Angelo, too, stood aloof from the pontiff. His clear eye saw through the jewels and gold with which Leo had decked himself to the corruption of his inner life. Luxurious, licentious Kaffaello might consent to obey the imperious will of the graceful actor, but his rival and master lived in a stern isolation. He preferred the conversation and the correspondence of the dignified Vittoria Colonna to the luxurious revelry of Leo and his satyr train. But Leo cared little for the absence of those whose deeper sensibilities might have disturbed the progress of his splendid visions. It was enough for him that he was the Sovereign Pontiff ; that he wore the tiara to w^hich he had been destined from his birth. His life was to himself a complete success. It was passed in revelries and pageants, in the society of the rarest wits and the greatest of painters, in the government of nations and the defense of Italy. He was almost always cheerful, hopeful, busy, full of expedients. He lived seem- ingly unconcerned amidst a band of poisoners who were al- ways plotting his death, and a circle of subject princes who might at any moment overthrow his power. He smiled while the glittering sword hung over his liead, and snatched the pleasures of life on the brink of a fearful abyss. To carry out his favorite plan, the elevation of his family to the regal rank, he had done many evil deeds. He robbed a Duke of Urbino of his patrimony through war and bloodshed; had driven the Petrucci from Siena ; was the relentless despoiler of the small states around him. Italy mourned that the Me- dici might become great. Yet so shrunken in numbers was the famous mercantile family, that of the direct legitimate descendants of Cosmo, Leo and his worthless nephew Lorenzo were all that were left. Lorenzo, a drunkard and a monster of vice, was the ruler of Florence, and for him Leo despoiled the Duke of Urbino ; to advance Lorenzo was the cliief aim of his politics. He married him, at length, to Madeline of Tours ; he incurred a vast expense to make him great ; but, 74 LEO AND LVIHEB. happily for Florence, Lorenzo not long after died, leaving a daughter, the infamous Catherine de' Medici, the persecutor and the murderess ; and thus a descendant of Cosmo de' Me- dici became the mother of three kings of France. In the eyes of Europe, Leo seemed the most fortunate of men, the most accomplished of rulers, a model Pope. The manners and the gayeties of Rome and Florence were imi- tated in the less civilized courts of England, France, and Ger- many. The respect which Leo ever paid to artists, scholars, and men of letters led Francis, Charles, and Henrv YIII. to become their patrons and their friends. Literature became the fashion. The polished student Erasmus wandered from court to court, and was everywhere received as the compan- ion of kings and princes. Henry YIII. aspired to the fame of authorship, and wrote bad Latin. Francis cherished poets and painters. Even the cold Charles V. caught the literary flame. Yet the manners of the court of Eome can scarcely be called refined. Leo was fond of coarse buffoonery and rude practical jokes. lie invited notorious gluttons to his ta- ble, and was amused at the eagerness with which they devour- ed the costly viands, the peacock sausages, or the rare confec- tions.(') He was highly entertained by the sad drollery of idiots and dwarfs. A story is told of Baraballo, a silly old man of a noble family, who wrote bad verses and thought himself another Petrarch. Leo resolved to have him crowned like Petrarch in the Capitol. A day was appointed for the spectacle, costly preparations were made, and the silly Bara- ballo, decked with purple and gold, and mounted upon an ele- phant, the present of the King of Portugal, was led in tri- umph through the streets of Rome, amidst the shouts of the populace and the clamor of drums and trumpets.(°) At the Bridge of St. Angelo, the elephant, more sensible than his rider, refused to go any farther ; Baraballo was forced to dis- mount ; all Rome was filled with laughter ; and Leo commem- orated his unfeeling joke by a piece of sculpture in wood, which is said to be still in existence. Leo was also passion- C) Jovius, p. 99. (=) Id., p. 97. THE CARDINALS WOULD POISON LEO. 75 ately fond of liimting. No. calls of business, no inclemency of the weather, could keep him from his favorite sport. lie was never so happy as when shooting- partridges and pheas- ants in the forests of Yiterbo, or chasing wild boars on the Tuscan plains. To the tine ceremonial of his Church he is said to have been unusually attentive. He fasted often, in- toned with grace, and his love for music led him to gather from all parts of Europe the sweetest singers and the most skillful instrumental performers to adorn the Roman churches. Thus Leo glided gracefully onward, an accomplished actor, always conscious that the eye of Europe was upon him, and always elegant, polite, composed. Yet there must often have been moments when his gracious smile covered an inward ag- ony or a secret terror. His handsome, stately form was al- ways internally diseased; he suffered tierce pangs of pain which he told to few ; and often, as he presided at the gay banquet or some stormy meeting of his holy college, he must have mastered with iron energy the terrible agony inflicted by a hidden disease. But far worse even than actual suffering was the constant dread in which he must have always lived. He was surrounded by poisoners Avho sought his life. His daily associates were those most likely to present to him the deadly draught. It was the holy college that had resolved upon his destruction. The cardinals formed a plot to poison the Pope.(') He had disaj)pointed them in living when they had looked for his speedy death, and he had never been able to gratify the bound- less claims they had made upon the sacred treasury. They were the most resolute and unwearied of beggars. "■ You had better at once take my tiara," said the weary pontiff when he was once sun*ounded by the holy mendicants ; and he ever after was hated by most of his cardinals. Among them, too, were several who had some private reason for seeking Leo's death. The author of the plot, Alfonso Petrucci, had lost his revenues at Siena by the fall of his family in that city, and had vowed revenge. He was a young man, fierce, dissolute, (') Jovius,pp.88,89. 76 LEO AND LVTHEB. gay, feeble. He was accustomed to proclaim openly among his wild companions his hatred for Leo and his plans of venge- ance. Often he came to the meetings of the sacred college with a dagger hidden in his breast, and was only withheld from plunging it in Leo's heart by the fear of seizure. At length he concerted with a famous physician the plan of poison. The most eminent man in the college of cardinals was Riario, Cardinal San Giorgio. He was the wealthiest of his order. He had been a cardinal for forty years. In his yoath he had shared in the plot to murder Lorenzo de' Medici, and now in his old age he aided Petrucci in his design against Leo. He hoped, on the Pope's death, to become his successor. Another conspirator was the Cardinal de' Sauli, who had furnished Pe- trucci with money. Another, Soderinus, the enemy of the Medici, from Florence. The last was the silly Adrian of Corneto. This foolish old man had been assured by a female prophet that the successor to Leo would be named Adrian, and felt sure that no one but himself could be meant. It was observed that the soothsayer spoke truly, and that the next Pope was Adrian ; but not the poisoner. How many others of the college M'ere engaged in the plot is not told. Happily Leo had been watching Petrucci for some time, and intercept- ed a letter that revealed the whole design. Petrucci was ab- sent from Rome, and Leo, in order to get him into his power, sent him a safe-conduct, and even assured the Spanish embas- sador that he would observe it. The conspirator came laughing boastfully to the city. He was at once seized and shut up in the Castle of St. Angelo with his friend De' Sauli ; and Leo excused his own bad faith by alleging the enormity of the crime. Pale, agitated, trembling, the Pope now met his cardinals in the consistory. There was scarcely one to whom he could trust his life. He was surromided by secret or open assassins, and he might well fear lest a dagger was hidden beneath each sacred robe.(') He addressed them, however, with his usual dignity ; he complained that he, who had always been so kind (') Jovius, p. 89. Guicciard., xiii. LEO'S EXTRAVAGANCE. 77 and liberal to them, should thus be threatened by their con- spiracies. Kiario, the head of the college, was already under arrest ; Petrucci and De' Sauli were confined in horrible dun- geons. The Cardinal Soderini fell down at Leo's feet, con- fessing his guilt, and the foolish Adrian was equally penitent. In his punishment of the offenders Leo showed all the severi- ty of his nature. Petrucci was strangled in prison, De' Sauli was released on paying a heavy fine, but died the next year, it was believed of poison. Riario, the venerable assassin, was also fined heavily and forgiven. Poor Adrian fled from Rome, with the loss of his estate, and was never heard of more. Thus Leo broke forever the power of his enemies, the sacred college, and at the same time replenished his treasury by the confisca- tion of their estates. Soon after, by a vigorous stroke of pol- icy, he created thirty-one new cardinals. In many cases the ofiice was sold to the highest bidder, and thus Leo was once more rich and happy.(') He was now (1517) at the height of his power. The Church was omnipotent, and Leo was the Church. His cardinals never afterward gave him any trou- ble ; every heretic had been suppressed or burned ; the city of Rome was the centre of civilization as well as of religion; money flowed in upon it from all the world ; and the lavish pontiff wasted the treasures of the Church in every kind of magnificent extravagance. It was because Leo was a splendid spendthrift that we have the Reformation through Luther. The Pope was soon again impoverished and in debt. He never thought of the cost of any thing ; he was lavish without reflection. His wars, in- trigues, his artists and architects, his friends, but above all the miserable Lorenzo, exhausted his fine revenues ; and his treas- ury must again be supplied. When he was in want, Leo was never scrupulous as to the means by which he retrieved his affairs ; he robbed, he defrauded, he begged ; he drew contri- butions from all Europe for a Turkish war, which all Europe knew had been spent upon Lorenzo ; he collected large sums for rebuilding St. Peter's, which were all expended in the same (') Jovius,p.90. 78 LEO AND LUTHER. way ; in fine, Leo early exhausted all his spiritual arts as well as his treasury .(') Suddenly there opened before liis hopeless mind an El Do- rado richer than ever Spanish ad^■enturer had discovered, more limitless than the treasures of the East and West. It was purgatory. Over that shadowy realm the Pope held un- disputed sway. The severest casuist of the age would admit that the spiritual power of the Church was in that direction limitless. It was nearly a hundred years since Tauler, the German reformer, had suffered martyrdom for denying that the Pope could condemn an innocent man to eternal woe or raise the guiltiest to the habitations of the blest ; and from that hour the authority of the pontiff had been constantly in- creasing, until now he was looked upon as nothing less than Deity upon earth. lie held in his polluted hands the key of immortality. But even had a doubt arisen as to the etficacy of the keys, the pious Aquinas had shown by the clearest ar- gument that the Church possessed a boundless supply of the merits of the saints, and even of its Divine Head^ which might be applied to the succor of any soul that seemed to re- quire external aid. Leo seized upon the notion of the school- men, and extended it to an extreme which they perhaps had never anticipated. He pressed the sale of his indulgences. He offered full absolution to every criminal who would pay him a certain sum of money, joined with contrition ; without contrition, and for a similar payment, he offered to diminish the term for which any person Avas condemned to purgatory, or to set free from the pains of purgatory the dej)arted spirit whose friends Avould pay a proper remuneration.^ Over the shadowy land in Avliose existence he can scarcely have be- lieved, the pontiff presumed to extend his earthly sceptre — to divide it into periods of years, to map it out in distinct grada- tions, and to sell to the highest bidder the longest exemption or a swift release. It was a dreadful impiety, a horrible mockery ; it was selling immortal bliss for money. (') Joviiis, p. 92-96. (■) Eauke, Ecf., i., p. 335, Robertson, Charles Y., book ii. IND ULGENCES. 79 The indulgence was first used by Urban II., in the period of the first crusade, to reward those who took up arms for the relief of the Holy Land. It was then granted to any one who hired soldiers for the war; and was next extended to those who gave money to the Pope for some pious purpose. Julius 11. had employed it to raise money to rebuild St. Peter's, and Leo X. sold his indulgences upon the same pre- text.(') But Leo's indulgence, as set forth by his agents in Germany, far excelled those of his predecessors in its daring assumption. It pardoned all sins however gross, restored its purchaser to that state of innocence which he had possessed at baptism, and at his death opened at once to him the gates of paradise. From the moment that he had obtained this valua- ble paper he became one of the elect. lie could never fall.f ) Whatever his future crimes, his salvation was assured. The honor of the Pope and the Church was pledged to secure him against any punishment he might merit in a future world, and to raise him at last to the society of the blessed. But proba- bly the most attractive and merchantable part of the indul- gence was that which set free departed spirits from purgato- rial pains. This ingenious device played upon the tenderest and most powerful instincts of nature. What parent could refuse to purchase the salvation of a dead child ? What son but would sell his all to redeem parents and relatives from purgatory ? It was upon such themes that the strolling vend- ers of indulgences constantly enlarged. They gathered around them a gaping throng of wondering rustics; they stood by the village church-yard and pointed to the humble graves. " Will you allow your father to suffer," Tetzel cried out to a credulous son, " when twelve pence will redeem him from tor- inent ? If you had but one coat, you should strip it off, sell it, and purchase my wares." " Hear you not," he would say to another, " the groans of your lost child in yonder church- yard? Come and buy his immediate salvation. No sooner shall your money tinkle in my box than his soul will ascend to (') Sarpi, Con. Tri., p. 4 et seq. Paluviciui, Hist. Con. Tiideut. C) Seckeudorf, Com., i., p. 14. 80 LEO AXD LUTHER. heaven." Thus Leo made a traffic of immortal bliss. There is something almost sublime in his presumption. From his gorgeous throne in the Eternal City he stood before mankind claiming a divine authority over the world and all that it con- tained. Kings, emperors, princes, were his infenors and his spiritual sei-fs. He divided the globe between the Spaniards and Portuguese. His simple legate was to take the prece- dence of princes. It was the fashion of the churchmen of the day to magnify their office, to claim for it an immutable supe- riority, as if the office sanctified the possessor.(') Conscious of their own impurity and hypocrisy, they sought, as is so often the case with immoral priests, to raise themselves above pub- lic scrutiny, and to create for themselves a position amidst the clouds of imputed sanctity, where, like their prototypes, the heathen gods, they might sin unchallenged. They looked down with contempt upon the too curious worshiper, who was unfit to touch their garments ; they veiled themselves in the dignity of the office they degraded. But the earthly state assumed by the haughty priests was as nothing compared to their spiritual claims. The Popes professed to concentrate in themselves all the power and virtue of the Church. They were its despots.('') The evil Alexander and the fierce Julius had condemned to eternal woe whoever should appeal to a council. Leo spoke to the world as its divine ruler. He was the possessor of all the merits of the saints and martyrs, and of the boundless sufficiency of Calvary. He ruled over the future world as well as the present ;Q he could unfold the gates of paradise, and snatch the guilty from the jaws of hell ; his power extended over countless subjects in the shadowy world, whose destiny depended on his pleasure, and who were the slaves of his caprice. The indulgences at first sold well. But their sale was chiefly confined to Gennany.(') Spain, under the control of (') See Eccius, De Priniatu Petri, 1520. {^) Eccius argues that the Church must be a monarchy, ii., p. 81. (^) The control of demons is still asserted. See Propagatiou de la Foi, 1867, pp. 39, 439. At least Chinese demons. (*) Ranke, Ref., i., p. 332-335. ^.V EL DORADO. 81 Ximenes, liad long before refused to permit its wealtli to be drained into the treasury of Rome. France was liostile to the Pope. England yielded only a small return. But over the dull peasants of Germany the acute Italians had succeeded in weaving their glittering web of superstition, until that unhap- py land had become the El Dorado of the Church. Every year immense sums of money had flowed from Germany to Kome for annats, palliums, and various other ecclesiastical de- vices ; and now the whole country was divided into three great departments under the care of three commissions for the sale of indulgences.(') Itinerant traders in the sacred commodity passed from town to town and fair to fair, extolling the value of their letters of absolution and pressing them upon the pop- ular attention. They were followed wherever they went by great throngs of people ; and their loud voices, coarse jokes, and shameless eloquence seem to have been attended with extraordinary success. They are represented as having been usually persons of worthless characters and licentious morals, who passed their nights in drinking and revelry at taverns, and their days in making a mockery of religion ; who proved the value of the plenary indulgence by the daring immorality of their lives. They were secure in the shelter of Rome, and had a safe-conduct to celestial bliss. The Elector Frederick of Saxony was now the most power- ful of the German princes. His dominions were extensive and wealthy ; he was sagacious, Arm, and honest ; and he had always opposed with success the various eiforts of the Popes to draw contributions from his priest-ridden subjects.(^) Fred- erick was already irritated against the Elector of Mentz, who had in charge the sale of indulgences ; and he openly declared that Albert should not pay his private debts " out of the pock- ets of the Saxons." He saw with indignation that his people were beginning to resort in great numbers to the sellers of the pious frauds. But the resistance of Frederick to the religious excitement of the day would have proved ineffectual had he not been aided by an humble instrument whose future omnip- (') Rauke, Eef., i., p. 333. C) Id., p. 341. • 6 82 LEO AND LUTHER. otence lie could scarcely liave foreseen. It was to a poor monk that Saxony and Germany were to owe their deliverance from Italian priestcraft. Five years had passed since Martin Lu- ther had returned from his pilgrimage to Rome, with his hon- est conscience stricken and horrilied by the pagan atmosphere of the Holy City. During that period the poor scholar had risen to eminence and renown.(') He had become professor in the university at Wittenberg, wdiich the Elector Frederick had founded ; his eloquence and learning, his purity and his vigor, had given him a strong control over the students and the people of the small scholastic city. Already he had wrought a lesser reformation in the manners and the lives of the throngs who listened to his animated preaching ; already he had even planned a general reform of the German Church. But as yet Luther had entertained no doubts of the papal su- premacy. He still practiced all the austerity of penance, and still clung to all the formulas of his faith. The Pope was still to him a deity upon earth ; Eome, the city of St. Peter and the martyrs ; the Fathers, an indisputable authority ; and although he had learned to study the Scriptures with earnest attention, he yet interpreted them by the light of other con- sciences than his own. His honest intellect still slumbered under that terrible weight of superstition beneath which the cunning Italians had imprisoned the mind of the Middle Ages. A shock aroused Luther from his slumber ; a shock startled all Germany into revolt. The loud voice of the shameless Tetzel was heard in Saxony extolling his impious wares, and claiming to be the dispenser of immortal bliss. His life had been one of gross immorality ; he was an ignorant and coarse Dominican ; his rude jokes and brutal demeanor, his reveh-ies and his licentious tongue, filled pious men with affright. He ventured to approach Wittenberg, and some of Luthers i)a- rishioners wandered away to the neighboring towns of Jiiter- bock to join with the multitude who were buying absolution (') Luther's Briefweclasel, by Burkliardt, 16GG. lie soou begius to corre- spoud with the highest officials. LUTHER'S DANGER. 83 from the dissolute friar.(') It was the decisive moment of modern history. The mightiest intellect of the age was roused into sudden action ; the intellect whose giant strength was to shiver to atoms the magnificent fabric of papal super- stition, and give freedom to thought and liberty to man. Lu- ther rose up inspired. He wrote out in fair characters his ninety -five propositions on the doctrine of indulgences, and nailed them (1517) to the gates of liis j)arochial church at Wittenberg. lie proclaimed to mankind that the Pope had no power to forgive sin ; that the just must live by faith. Swift as the electric flash which had won him from the world his bold thoughts rushed over Germany, and startled the cor- rupt atmosphere of Rome. It is related that just after his daring act the Elector Frederick, as he slept in his castle of Schweinitz, on the night of All-Saints, dreamed that he saw the monk writing on the chapel at "Wittenberg in characters so large that they could be read at Schweinitz ; longer and longer grew Luther's pen, till at last it reached Rome, struck the Pope's triple crown, and made it tremble on his head. Frederick stretched forth his arm to catch the tiara as it fell, but just then awoke. All Germany dreamed a similar dream ; it awoke to find it a reality.(*) Germany was then no safe place for reformers or heretics. It was in a state of miserable anarchy and barbarism. The great cities, grown rich by commerce and honest industry, were engaged in constant hostilities with the robber knights whose powerful castles studded the romantic banks of the Rhine and filled the fastnesses of the interior. (') Often the long trains of wealthy traders on their way to Nuremberg or the fair at Leipsic were set upon by the lordly robbers, who sprung upon them from some castled crag, their rare goods were ravished away, their hard-earned gains torn from them, and the prisoners condemned to torture and dismal dungeons until they had paid an excessive ransom. Often rich burgh- ers came back to their native cities from some unfortunate trading expedition impoverished, with one hand lopj)ed off, (•) Ranke, Eef., i., p. 343. C) Id, i., p. 343. C) Id., l, p. 223. 84 LEO AXD LUTHER. and sliowiiig their bleeding arms to tlicir enraged fellow-citi- zens. Even poor scholars were often seized, tortured, and the miserable sums they had won by begging torn from them by the brutal nobles. The knights, like Gotz von Berlichingen, boasted that they were the wolves, and the rich traders the sheep upon whom they preyed. But terrible was the revenge which the citizens were accustomed to take upon their de- spoilers. When their mounted train-bands issued forth from the gates of Nuremberg the tenants of every castle trembled and grew pale. The brave Nurembergers swept the country far and wide. They scaled the lofty crags, swarmed over the tottering walls, and burned or massacred the robbers in their dens. Noble birth was then of no avail; knightly prowess awoke no pity ; the castle was made the smoldering grave of its owners. Yet the knights would soon again renew their strongholds, and once more revive this perpetual civil war. Every part of Germany was desolated by the ruthless strife. Above the knights were the princes and electors, who prey- ed upon the people by taxes and heavy contributions. At the head of all stood the Emperor Maximilian, who seized upon whatever he could get by force or fraud. Yet the influence most fatal to the prosperity of Germany was that of the Ital- ian Church. Eome raled over Germany with a remorseless sway. Heresy was punished by the fierce Dominicans with torture and the stake. The Church, it is estimated, held near- ly one-half of all the land, and would pay no taxes. Every church was an asylum in which murderers and malefactors found a safe refuge, and the Church establishments in the rich cities were looked upon by the prosperous citizens as fatal to the public peace. They were dens of thieves and assassins. The characters of the German priests and monks, too, were often vile beyond description, and the classic satire of Eras- mus and the skillful pencil of Holbein have portrayed only an outline of their crimes. In such a land Luther must have felt that he could scarcely hope for safety. He must have foreseen, as he took his ir- revocable step, that he exposed himself to the Incpiisition and the stake. He was at once encountered by a host of enemies. GEEMANY UXQUIET. 85 Tetzel declaimed against him in coarse invectives as a heretic worthy of death.(') Priests and professors, the universities and the pulpit, united in his condemnation. He was already marked out by his enemies as the victim whose blood was to seal the supremacy of the Pope. Yet his wonderful intellect in this moment of danger began now to display its rare fer- tility. He wrote incessantly in defense of his opinions ; his treatises spread over Germany ; and very «soon the reform tracts, multiplied by the printing-press, were sold and distrib- uted in great numbers through all the fairs and cities of the land. The German intellect awoke with the controversy, and all true Geraians began to look with admiration and sjm- pathy upon the brave monk who had ventured to defy the power of the papal court. At Pome, meantime, nothing was less thought of than a schism in the Church. Leo was at the height of his prosperity. He had just dissolved the Lateran Council, which had yielded him a ready obedience ; his cardi- nals were submissive ; he was the most powerful and fortunate of Popes. From dull and priest-ridden Germany he looked for no trouble, and when he first heard of the controversy be- tween Luther and the Dominicans he spoke of it as a wrangle of barbarous monks. The fierce storm that was gathering in the North was scarcely noticed amidst the gay banquets and tasteful revelries of Pome. But this could not continue long. It was soon seen by the papal courtiers that if Luther was permitted to write and live, a large part of their revenues would be cut off ; and Leo himself felt that if he allowed his dominion over purgatory to be called in question, he must soon cease to adorn the Vatican or subsidize Lorenzo. If he lost his shadowy El Dorado, where could he turn for money ? The remedy was easy ; he must silence or destroy the monk. He issued a summons (July, 15IS) for Luther to appear at Pome within sixty days, to answer for his heresies before his Inquisitor-General. Soon after, as he learned the extent of his danger, he sent orders to his legate in Germany to have the monk seized and brought to the Holy City. C) Rauke, Ref., i., p. 347. 86 LEO AND LVTEEE. If this arrogant decree had been executed, there can be little doubt as to what must have been Luther's fate. He must have pined away in some Iloman dungeon, have perished under torture, or have sunk, Hke the offending cardinals, beneath the slow effect of secret poison. The insignificant monk would have proved an easy victim to the experts of Rome, But, fortunately for the reformer, all Germany was now become his friend. In a few brief months he had become a hero. Never was there so sudden a rise to influence and renown. His name was already famous from the Baltic to the Alps ; scholars and princes wrote to him words of encouragement ; the common people followed him as their leader; and the great Elector of Saxony, the most potent of the German princes, was the open patron of the eloquent monk. Ger- many was resolved that its honest thinker should not be ex- posed to the evil arts of liome ; and Leo, obliged to employ milder expedients to enforce his authority, consented that his chief adversary should be permitted to defend his opinions before Cardinal Cajetan at Augsburg. It was Luther's first great victory. Still, however, he was in imminent danger. If Germany was on his side, yet all the Italian Germans were more than ever eager for his destruction. The corrupt priests, the dis- solute monks, the fierce Dominicans, the Pope, the Church, even the Emperor Maximilian, were arrayed against the true- hearted monk. He lived in the constant presence of death. Yet his spiritual agonies were, no doubt, to Luther more intol- erable than any physical danger ; for he was still only a search- er after truth. Ilis nights and days were passed in an eager study of the Scriptures ; he moved slowly onward through an infinite course of mental improvement ; he was forced to snatch the jewels of faith from the dim caverns of supersti- tion; he groped his way painfully toward the light. Yet so admirable was the disposition of this renowned reformer that through all his dangers he was always hopeful, often joyous and gay. Sickness, pain, mental or physical terrors, could nev- er deprive his gallant nature of its hidden stores of joy and peace. His clear voice often rose high in song or hymn ; he INTELLECTUAL TOUEXEYS. 87 was the gay and cheerful companion, always the tender friend ; his lute often sounded cheerfully in still nights at Wittenberg or Wartburg; and his love for poetry and letters soothed many an hour he was enabled to win from his weary labors. Compared with his persecutor, Leo, Luther's was by far the happier life. His joys were pure, his impulses noble, his con- science stainless; while Leo strove to find his joy in coarse buffoonery and guilty revels, in outward magnificence and idle glitter. There now began a series of wonderful intellectual tourna- ments, the successors of the brutal encounters of chivalry and the Middle Ages, in which the true knight, Luther, beat down his pagan assailants with the iron mace of truth.(') It had be- come the custom in Germany for scholars to dispute before splendid audiences abstruse questions of philosophy and learn- ing; but the questions which Luther discussed were such as had never been ventured upon before. Was the Pope infalli- ble ? Could he save a guilty soul ? Could not even councils err ? Was not Huss a true martyr ? Knights, princes, emper- ors, gathered round the pale, sad monk as he discussed these daring themes, heard with a strange awe his eloquent argu- ment which they scarcely understood, and were still in doubt whether to accept him as a leader or to bind him to the stake. The first of these noted encounters occurred (1518) at Augs- burg, where the graceful Cardinal Cajetan, fresh from the At- tic atmosphere of Rome, came to subdue the barbarous Ger- man by force or fraud. Luther came to the hostile city full of fears of the subtlety of his polished opponent-C") He felt that it was by no means incredible that the cardinal was com- missioned to seize him and carry him to a Roman prison ; he knew that Maximilian, who was still Emperor of Germany, was not unwilling to gratify the Pope by his surrender. Yet so poor and humble was this object of the enmity of prelates and rulers that Luther was obliged to beg his way to Augs- burg. Sick, faint, dressed in a borrowed cowl, his frame gaunt and thin, his wild eyes glittering with supernatural C) Walch, xxiv., p. 434. C) Rauke, Ref., i., p. 427. 88 LEO AND LUTHER. lire, the monk entered the city. Tlie people crowded to see him pass; he was protected by a safe conduct from Maximil- ian and the patronage of Elector Frederick ; and he met the cardinal boldly. Yet it was hardly an equal encounter ; for Lnther was sick, faint, poor, and in peril of his life, while Cajetan, in the glow of wealth and power, was the legate and representative of infallible Rome. At first, in several inter- views, the cardinal consented to argue, but when Luther com- pletely confused and overthrew him, the enraged combatant, with a false and meaning smile, commanded the monk to sub- mit to the judgment of the Church. Luther soon after fled from Augsburg, conscious that he was no longer safe in the hands of his enemies. Leo, in November, issued his bull de- claring his right to grant indulgences, and the monk replied, with bold menaces, by an appeal from the Pope to the decis- ion of a council of the Church. Maximilian died, and an interregnum followed, during which the Elector of Saxony became the ruler of Germany. Safe in his protection, the monk continued to write, to preach, to advance in religious knowledge ; and a wild excitement arose throughout the land. Melanchtlion joined Luther at "Wittenberg, a young man of twenty, the best Greek scholar of his time, and the two friends pursued their studies and their war against the Pope together. But a second grand in- tellectual tournament soon summoned the knight-errant of re- ligious liberty to buckle on his armor. It was at Leipsic, a city devoted to the papacy, that Luther was to defend the E,eformation.(') His chief opponent w^as Eck or Eccius, a German priest, learned, eloquent, ambitious, corrupt, and eager to win the favor of his master at Rome. He had assailed the opinions of Carlstadt, one of Luther's associates at Witten- berg, and now the reformer was to appear in defense of his friend. The Leipsic university M-as bitterly hostile to Wit- tenberg and reform, and Eck rejoiced to have an opportunity to display his eloquence and learning in the midst of the most Catholic city of Germany. It was whispered that Eck was (') W;ilcb, xxiv., p. 434. LVTHEB AND ECK. 89 too fond of Bavarian beer, and tliat his morals were far from purity ; yet he was welcomed by the students and professors of Leipsic with joy and proud congratulations as the invincible champion of the Church. Soon the Wittenbergers appeared, riding in low, open wag- ons, to the hostile city, in the pleasant month of June. Carl- stadt came first, then Luther and Melanchthon, then the young Duke of Pomerania, a student and rector of Wittenberg, and then a throng of other students, most of them on foot and armed with halberds, battle-axes, and spears, to defend them- selves or their professors in case of attack ; and it was noticed as a mark of unusual discourtesy that none of the Leipsic col- leg-ians or teachers came out to meet their literarv rivals. Yet every necessary preparation had been made by the good-nat- nred Duke George for the mental combat. A spacious hall in the castle, hung with tapestry and provided with two pul- pits for the speakers and seats for a large audience, was ar- ranged for the occasion ; and the proceedings opened with a solemn mass. A noble and splendid audience filled the room.(') The interest was intense ; the champions, the most renowned theologians in Germany ; their subject, the origin and authority of the papal power at Eome.(^) Carlstadt com- menced the argument, but in a few days he was completely discomfited by his practiced opponent. The Wittenbergers were covered with confusion. Eck's loud voice, tall, muscular figure, violent gestures, quick retort, and ready learning seem- ed to carry him over the field invincible. But on the 4th of July, a day memorable for another reform, the interest was re- doubled as Martin Luther rose. He was of middle size, and so thin as to seem almost fleshless. His voice was weak com- pared to that of his opponent ; his bearing mild and modest. But he was now in his thirty-sixth year ; his intellect, worn by many toils and ceaseless labor, was in its full vigor ; and his eager search after truth had given him a strength and novelty of thought that no scholar of the age could equal. He as- cended the platform with joy, and it w^as noticed that the fond (') Walch, sxiv., p. 434-437. (=) It led to this. to LEO AND LUTHER. lover of nature carried a nosegay in his hand. Luther, at once neglecting all minor topics, assailed the authority of the Pope. With perfect self-command he ruled his audience at will, and princes and professors listened with awe and almost terror as tliey heard the daring novelty of his argument. From deny- ing the authority of the Pope he advanced to the denial of the supremacy of a council ; he unfolded with eloquent candor the long train of progressive thought through which his own. mind had just passed ; to the horror of all true Catholics, he suggested tliat IIuss might have been a martyr. The audience was appalled ; Duke George, startled, uttered a loud impreca- tion. The discomfited Eccius exclaimed, " Then, reverend fa- ther, you are to me as a heathen and a publican." The Wittenbergers retm'ned in safety and triumph to their college. But the corrupt nature of Eck, exasperated by Lu- ther's bold defiance, led him to resolve on the destruction of his opponent. Nothing would satisfy him but that the brave monk should meet the fate of John Huss or Jerome of Prague. Eck, like Luther, was a German peasant's son ;(') his persistent malignity now decided the destiny of the Church. He has- tened to Rome, and aroused the passions of Leo by his fierce declamations against Luther ; the prudent pontiff seems to have been forced into extreme measures by the violence of the cor- rupt German; and Eck returned to Germany armed with a papal bull condemning Luther's writings to the flames,Q and commanding him to recant his heresies within sixty days, or to be expelled from the Church. But Luther had already re- solved to abandon the Church of Rome forever. He pro- claimed his decision by a remarkable act. On the 10th of De- cember, 1520, in the presence of an immense throng of stu- dents, magistrates, and persons of every rank, the bold monk cast into a blazing fire, without the walls of Wittenberg, the Pope's bull and a copy of the papal decrees. Erom their smoldering ashes sjDrung up the Church of the Reformation. Leo, enraged beyond endurance, now issued the bull of ex- communication, the most terrible of the anathemas of the (') Rauke, Ref., i., p. 444. C) Dated Juue 15tb, 1520. LUTHEB SUMMONED TO WORMS. 91 Churcli. Luther was declared accursed of God and man. Tliere had been a time when such a sentence would have ap- palled the greatest monarch in Christendom ; when the ex- communicate had been looked upon by all men with horror and dread ; when he was cut off from the society of his fel- lows, and was held as an outlaw deserving of instant death. But to Luther no such fatal consequences followed. Ilis friends gathered around him more firmly than ever; men of intellect in every land acknowledged his greatness, and Ger- many rejoiced in the fame of its hero. Yet nothing is more remarkable in the history of this wonderful man than that he escaped death by poison or assassination ; that in the midst of a land of anarchy and crime, surrounded by powerful en- emies, cut oif from the Church, accursed by the Pope, he should yet have been permitted to pursue, unmolested, his career of reform, to succeed in all his designs, to baffle all his foes, and finally to die in peace, sm-rounded by his loving family, in the very town where he was born. Another mighty foe had now suddenly started up as if to complete Luther's ruin. Charles Y. had become Emperor of Germany. He was a young man of twenty, cold, grave, sickly, unscrupulous ; he had been educated in the remorseless school of the Domin- icans, and was the most devoted servant of the Church. To Charles Leo now appealed for aid against the arch-heretic, and the young monarch summoned Luther before him at the fa- mous Diet of Worms."(') Far and wide over Germany spread the news that the re- former had been cited to appear before the Emperor, and all men believed that the crisis of his fate was at hand. Every eye was turned upon the humble monk. The peasant's son was about to stand before princes, and every true German heart warmed with love and pity for him, who seemed certain to fall before his mighty foes. Luther's friends strove to prevent him from venturing within the hostile city. " You will be another Huss!" they exclaimed.(') They suggested (*) Walch, xxiv., p. 459. Audiu, ii., p. 101, and Miclielet, cbiefly follow Walcb. 92 LEO AND LUTHER. the subtle cruelty of the Italians and the implacable enmity of the priests. But Luther seemed urged on by an irresistible impulse to go to Worms and plead his cause before the em- peror, the princes, Europe, and all coming ages. " I would go," he cried, " though my enemies had raised a wall of tire between Eisenach and Worms reaching to the skies !" " I will be there," he said again, " though as many demons surround me as there are tiles on the roofs of the houses !" In his rapt, half -in spired state he believed that Satan and his angels had encompassed him on every side, and that their chief object was to prevent his reaching the city. It is certain that all the evil passions, every corrupt desire, every immoral impulse of the age, hung like raging demons over the path of the re- former.(^) Never was there a more memorable journey than that of Luther over the heart of Germany, from Wittenberg to Worms. It was Daniel going to the lions' den ; it was a hero traveling to his doom ; it was the successful champion of many an intellectual tournament couching his gallant lance against the citadel of his foes. It was spring, and the early leaves and flowers were clustering around the pleasant paths of Germany. Sturm, the emperor's herald, appeared at Wittenberg, and said, " Master Luther, are you ready ?" The monk assented cheerfully, and at once set out. He traveled in a very different way from that in which he had entered Augsburg two years before, begging his subsistence from town to town. Now he was the renowned champion of a new Germany ; the harbinger of a brighter era. The herald, clothed in gay attire, rode before him. Luther followed in a low wagon or chariot, accompanied by several friends. By his side was the learned doctor of laws, Schurf, his legal adviser, and several theologians. As he passed the popula- tion of the cities came out to meet him ; princes and nobles greeted liim on every hand, and pressed money upon him to (') Walch, xxiv., p. 4G0: "Seine gute Freunde riethen ibm vou der Ersclieinnug ab uud stellen ilim Hussens Exempel vor." (') Walcb,xxiv., p. 462. LUTHEE'S HYMX. 93 pay Ms extraordinary expenses ; even hostile Leipsie offered him as a pledge of hospitality a draught of rare wine ; at "Weimar the good duke forced gold upon him; at various places he was forced to preach before immense congregations. Yet in every city he saw posted in the public streets the bull condemning his writings to the flames. He paused a while at Erfurth, and wept as he revisited his little cell, with its solitary table and small garden, and remembered the wild July morning when the angry lightning-flash had won him from the world. (') He passed through Eisenach, was taken very ill there, and had nearly died in the town where, a beggar- child, thirty years before, he sung his mournful melodies from door to door. He saw his relatives from Mansfeld, his peas- ant family, and parted in tears from the well-known scenes. And thus, as if to prepare him for his doom, or to arm him for the fight, in this memorable journey, Luther's vivid mind must have pictured to itself a perfect outline of his by-gone life. On the 16th of April Luther saw in the distance the towers of Worms. The fiery furnace lay before him.(^) He firmly believed that he was going to his death, but his only fear was that his cause might perish with him. Tradition relates that, as he saw the city afar off, Luther rose up in his chariot and sung, in a resonant voice, a noble hymn which he had com- posed on the way, " God, our strong tower and defense, our help in every need." It is a poetical thought ; it stirs the fancy as we narrate it. The venerable city of "Worms was now thronged with all the great and powerful of Germany : the emperor, the bishops, the papal legate, the princes, and a host of armed men, citizens, and priests. As the monk ap- proached in his wagon, he was met by a wild enthusiasm greater than ever princes or bishops liad awakened. He was surrounded by throngs of people ; the roofs of the houses were covered with eager spectators ; his pale, worn counte- nance must have been brightened by a sentiment of gratitude (') Audin, ii., p. 101-105. He " railed at monks and priests on his way," says Audin. (") WalcL, xxiv., p. 463. 94 LEO AND LUTHEE. and triumph as lie felt that the people were his frieiicls.(') lie was taken to the lodgings prepared for him by the careful Elector Frederick ; but even there he could have found little repose from the constant throng of visitors of high rank who pressed in to see him and cheer him with encouraging words. The next day, toward evening, the setting sun flashed his last rays through the great hall at Worms over an assemblage of the Emperor and princes of Germany. On a throne of state, clothed in regal robes, a collar of pearls around his neck, the insignia of the Golden Fleece glittering on his breast, sat the youthful and impassive Charles. Every eye in the splen- did assembly had been turned with eager interest to his grave, young face, for to his narrow intellect was committed the de- cision of a cause that involved the destiny of ages. On his right sat a dignified array of the electoral bishops of the em- pire.(^) Each was a lesser pope, a spiritual and temporal lord, the firm opponent of heresy, the persecutor of the just. The bishops in gorgeous attire, their red and blue robes bordered with ermine, with all the imposing decorations of their order, assumed the highest places next to their imperial lord. On the left hand of the emperor the temporal electors, mighty warriors, and imperious rulers had their seat. They, too, wore robes bordered with ermine, and glittered with diamonds and rubies ; but the lustre of their almost regal power and ancient state was more imposing than any external pomp. Among them was seen the calm, firm countenance of Frederick, Elect- or of Saxony. On lower seats were gathered six hundred princes, lords, and prelates. There were fierce Dominicans from Spain, with dark, menacing eyes, the sworn extii-pators of heresy.(') There were brave German knights, renowned for valiant or cruel deeds, seamed with the scars of battle. There were jurisconsults in black ; monks with cowl and C) Walch, xxiv., p. 463 ; xv., p. 2192. Luther's own account of his jour- ney. C) See list of persons at the Diet. Walch, xv., p. 2227. (') The Spaniards always boasted that there was no heretic in all Spain. See Muerte de Diaz, Reformistas Antiq. Esp., vol. xx. "WTieu Alfonso Diaz assassinated his heretic brother, his countrymen approved the act. THE DIET OF WORMS. 95 shaven heads ; abbots, orators, and priests. There a vast as- sembly of all whom Germany had been accnstomed to fear and to obey awaited in stern expectation the approach of an excommunicated monk. But the spectacle without was far more imposing; it was a triumph of the mind. Every roof, tower, or convenient place was covered with people waiting to see Luther pass. A great multitude had gathered to devour with eager eyes the form and features of one whose humble brow and shaven head were made illustrious by the coronal of genius. So dense was the throng that Luther was obliged to go through gardens and private ways in order to reach the Diet. As he entered the magnificent assembly, he heard friendly voices on all sides bidding him godspeed. He pA'essed through the crowd ; he stood in the presence of the emperor. Every eye was turned away from Charles and fixed upon the humble monk ; he seemed confused by the scrutiny of the princely multitude, and his voice, when the proceedings began, was faint and low. Little was done at the first meeting; Luther was required to admit that he was the author of the writings published under his name, and to recant his heresies. By the advice of his counsel, Schurf, he asked for time to re- ply to the demand. The assembly broke up, to meet again the next day ; and the emperor, deceived by Luther's modest bearing, said to his attendants, " That man will never make me a heretic." In his old age, Charles V. was suspected of having adopted the opinions of the reformer whom in his youth he had despised. That evening Luther's room was again filled with princes and nobles, who came to press his hand and congratulate him upon his courageous bearing. He passed the night in prayer, and sometimes was heard playing upon a lute. But the next afternoon, about six o'clock, when torches had been lighted in the great hall and flashed upon the glittering jewels and stern countenances of the assembled diet, Lutlier arose, in the conscious pride of commanding elo- quence and a just cause, to defend the Eeformation. He was assailed and interrupted by the constant assaults of his oppo- nent ; he replied to every charge with vigor and acuteuess ; he spoke with a full flow of language, whether in German or Lat- 96 LEO AND LUTHER. in.(') "Martin Luther," said the imperial counselor, "yester- day you acknowledged the authorship of these books. Do you now retract or disown them ?" Luther fixed his inspired eyes upon the emperor and the long array of dignitaries around him, and replied :(°) " Most serene emperor, illustrious princes, most clement lords, I claim your benevolence. If in my re- ply I do not use the just ceremonial of a court, pardon me, for I am not familiar with its usages. I am but a poor monk, a child of the cell, and I have labored only for the glory of God." For two hours he spoke upon conscience and its priv- ileges, of its superiority to the claims of popes or councils, of the right of private judgment, of the supremacy of the Script- ures. The assembly listened with eager interest to his won- derful voice as it rose and fell in natural cadences, reflecting the varied novelty of his thoughts. The honest German princes heard with pride and joy an eloquence which they could scarcely understand. Erick of Brunswick sent him a tankard of wine through the press of the crowd.(') " How well did our Doctor Luther speak to-day !" said the calm Elect- or Frederick, in a moment of unusual enthusiasm. But to the emperor and his papal followers Luther had spoken in vain. They said the monk was imbecile ; they did not know what he meant when he appealed to conscience and the right of private judgment. Meantime the torches were burning low in the great hall, and night gathered around the assembly. Luther's enemies pressed upon him w^ith new violence ; they commanded him to retract his heresies in the name of the Pope and the Church ; they threatened him with the punish- ment of the heretic. Then the reformer, once more confront- ing tlie hostile emperor, the persecuting bishops, the frowning Spaniards, and the papal priests, said, in a bold and resonant voice : " Unless, your majesty, I am convinced by the plain words of the Scriptures, I can retract nothing. God be my help. Here I take my stand."(^) C) Walch, XV., p. 2231. (") Id. C) Audin, ii., p. 129. Ranke, Ref., i., p. 538. C) Ranke, Ref., i., p. 536. I trauslate the mcauiiig ratlier than the exact words. LUTHER COXDEMXED. 97 It "U'as the voice of awakening reason ; the bugle - note of modern reform. Never since the days of the martyrs and the apostles had that noble somid been heard. Never had the right of private judgment been so generously asserted; never had the apostolic doctrine of conscience been so dis- tinctly proclaimed. Luther's bold vrords have since that time been ever on the lips of good, great men. Latimer and Cran- mer repeated them in the midst of the flames. Hampden and Sidney followed in his path. The freemen of Holland and America caught the brave idea. The countless victims of the Inquisition, the martyred foes of tyranny, the men who died for human liberty at Gettysburg or Bmiker Hill, a War- ren or a Lincoln, have said in their hearts as they resolved on their path of duty, " God be my help. Here I take my stand." Luther left the assembly, resolved never to enter it again. He was now in great danger of his life. The Spaniards had hissed him as he left the diet ; he heard that the papal agents were urging the emperor to violate his safe -conduct and try him for his heresy. Nor would Charles have hesitated a mo- ment to destroy the reformer and gratify the Pope, had he not been held in check by the menacing array of German princes and knights. They, at least, felt that it was Germany, not Luther, that had been on trial at the Diet of Worms. They declared that if the reformer were burned, all the German princes must be burned with him. (') The knights and the peasants fonned a secret league to defend Luther; and the emperor and his courtiers trembled in the midst of the ex- cited throng. He was suffered to leave the city unharmed. A sentence of condemnation, however, was forced through the assembly ; he was placed under the ban of the empire, togeth- er with all his friends and adlierents ; his works ordered to be burned ; and a severe censorship of the press was estab- lished, to prevent the publication in future of any heretical writings. But Luther was now hidden in his Patmos, con- cealed from friends and ioes.{') As he was traveling cheer- C) Ranke, Kef., i., p. 538. C) Walcb, xv., p. 2327. 98 LEO AND LUTHER. fully toward Wittenberg, defiant of both emperor and Pope, in a thick wood near Eisenach, he was set upon by a band of armed men with visors down, who carried him away to the grim castle of "Wartburg, where he remained in a friendly im- prisonment until the danger was over. It was a prudent de- vice of the sagacious Elector Frederick. Once more, in December, 1521, Rome rejoiced over the death of a Pope ; once more the Cardinal Camerlengo had risen from his bended knees to proclaim the certainty of the event. Again the great bell on the Capitol tolled heavily, and riot and disorder reigned in the sacred city. Leo was dead. An inscrutable mystery hangs over the last days of his life, and it is still in doubt whether the poisonous draught which his cardinals had prepared for him in the opening of liis reign did not hnally reach his lips. His people, impover- ished by his excesses, exulted in his death. " Oh, Leo," they cried, " you came in like a fox ; you ruled like a lion ; you died hke a dog !" Posterity has been more favorable to his memory, and men of intellect have ever looked with sympa- thy upon that graceful pontiff who was the friend of Erasmus and Eaffaello, and who, if he had lived in a less corrupt at- mosphere, might have yielded to the reforms of Luther. But the Golden Age of Leo X. is chiefly memorable as the peri- od when the magnificent Church of the Middle Ages began swiftly to wane before the rising vigor of the Chm'ch of the Reformation. LOYOLA AND TEE JESUTTS. A Spanish cavalier, who was gallantly defending Pampeliina against the French, fell wounded in both legs by a cannon- shot. In one he was struck by the ball, in the other by a splinter of stone, and his agonizing wounds were destined to be felt, in their consequences, like the concussions of an earth- quake shock, in every part of the earth.(') They were the cause of many an auto-da-fe in Italy, and of a persecution worse than that of Diocletian in Spain. They aided in rousing the Netherlands to revolt, and in awakening the patient Hol- landers to heroic deeds. They made Holland free. They created the wonderful Dutch navy that swept the Spaniards from the seas, and made the East India trade retreat from Lisbon to Amsterdam. They led to the massacre of St. Bar- tholomew, the death of Mary Queen of Scots, the Spanish Armada, the Gunpowder Plot. They disturbed the jSTew World, gave rise to many deeds of self-denial and piety, and many horrible crimes and woes. They were felt in distant Russia. They aroused the Poles against the Russians, and ex- cited a fierce war in which Poland inflicted injuries upon its feeble neighbors that have scarcely yet been expiated in seas of blood. They spread their fatal influence over China, and stirred that vast empire with a violent impulse. They were felt in Ethiopia and Hindostan, in Canada and Brazil ; they gave rise, in fact, to the company of the Jesuits. The wounded cavalier was Ignatius Loyola. He was a brave Spanish nobleman, descended from a house of the high- est rank, and his youth had been passed at the court of Ferdi- nand the Catholic, in the society of the proudest grandees of (') Maffreus, Ignati Vita, i., p. 2. Rauke, Hist. Popes, i., p. 56. Cr^ti- ueau-Joly, Hist, Comp. de J6sus, i., p. 14. 100 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. Spam.(') His literary education seems to have been neglect- ed. At thirty-three he could do little more than read and write. But he vras no doubt familiar with all courtly exer- cises. He was a graceful page, a gallant cavalier. His dress was splendid, his armor rich with gems and gold ; and al- though he was the youngest of thirteen childi-en, he seems to have possessed sufficient wealth to live in elegance and ease. ' At his ancestral castle of Loyola, not far from the Pyrenees, or at the court of the Catholic King, the young noble had been trained in the school of St. Dominic, and in the most rigid rides of loyalty and faith. He had a becoming horror of her- esy and freedom. He seems, however, to have been a dutiful son, an affectionate brother ; and although his youth may have been marked by some trace of the gay license of the age, yet he lived in comparative purity. As became a grandee of Spain, he was a soldier. He entered the army of Charles Y. and fought bravely in defense of his native land, and the un- cultivated but ardent noble was always in the front of danger. If the literary element was wanting to his nature, Loyola still possessed a vigorous and fertile fancy. He was never weary of reading "Amadis de Gaul," or the massive ro- mances that fed the imagination of his chivalrous age. His mind was full of the impossible feats of knighthood, of con- quests in pagan lands, and the triumphs of the crusaders and of the Cross. His strong ambition had been fired by the fa- bled deeds of chivalry ; he longed, no doubt, to become as fa- mous as Amadis, and to crush the hated infidel like the pala- dins of Charlemagne. He had already chosen as his mistress a fair princess, whose colors, with true chivalric devotion, he was pledged to uphold in tilt or tom'nament ; and although his suit does not seem to have prospered, for he was a bach- elor of thirty-one, yet he was full of love as well as of ambi- tion. In person he was of middle stature, strong, and well- formed ; his complexion was a deep olive ; his nose aquiline, his eyes dark and flashing ;{^) and his imperious will had been (') Mafffens, i., p. 1. Daurignac, i., p. 40, who abridges Cr6tineau-Joly. O Maffoeus, iii., p. 14 : " Statura fuit modica." He was born 1491. LOYOLA'S WOUXDS. 101 fostered in the labors of a military life. He was no doubt a strict disciplinarian, and had learned to drill his native sol- diery with the same precision with ^hlcli h6 afterwar*^' organ- ized his priestly legions. And thus,, glowing with those chiv- alric fancies which Cervantes -^gg not 'long "aftfer -to dissipate with inextinguishable ridicule, the brave soldier threw himself into Pampeluna (1521), and made a hopeless resistance to the French invaders. The fortress fell, the wounded Loyola was taken prisoner ; but his conqueror, Andre de Foix, treated him with almost fraternal care, set him free, and had him carried tenderly to his home, which was not far from Pampeluna. Here, surrounded by his family and attended by skillful surgeons, he slowly recovered from his wounds. Yet his suf- ferings must have been terrible. He underwent a severe sur- gical operation with singular resolution. A piece of bone projecting from his knee was sawed ofi without calling forth a groan. He became almost a cripple ; he saw, perhaps with a mental agony deeper than the physical, that he could no longer hope to shine in the tournament or the courtly revel, or awaken by his grace and dexterity the admiration of his be- loved princess. As he grew better, his love for romances re- turned. He asked his brothers to bring him some of his fa- vorite authors. They brought him instead, as more appropri- ate, perhaps, to his condition, a " Life of Christ," and some lives of the saints. Pain, suffering, and disappointment had subdued Loyola's proud spirit ; the world had grown cold and dark ; but his ardent fancy now found a new field of enjoy- ment and consolation. The tales of I'eligious heroism, of boimdless humility, of divine labor in the cause of faith, led him away from the dreams of chivalry to an object still no- bler and more entrancing. Alwaj's an ardent entliusiast, ea- ger to emulate the examples of eminent men, a fond follower of renown, he now began to believe himself destined to a life of holy warfare. " Why can not I do what St. Dominic did ?" he exclaimed. "Why can not I be as St. Francis was?"(') The uncultivated but chivalrous soldier, shut up in his sick- ed) MaffiEU8,i.,p.2. 102 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. room, or slowly creeping along the sunny paths of Biscay, meditated with characteri&tic ardor on his project of a spirit- ual life • He would abandon the world and all its allurements, would fly from riches, powb?', and pride ; instead of his fair princess', ife' would have for his mistress a heavenly queen ; in- stead of an earthly tournament, he would shine in a spiritual warfare.(') His bride, like that of St. Francis, should be pov- erty. His enemies, like those of St. Dominie, heretics and devils. He would become a beggar and an outcast, the com- panion of lepers; he would clothe himself in rags, and go forth, like St. Francis and St. Dominic, to do battle for the Queen of Heaven. It had ever been the custom for the true knight- errant, as we read in " Don Quixote " and the books of chivalry, to de- vote himself by a solemn vigil before some holy shrine to his appointed work. In May, 1522, a richly dressed cavalier, clad in shining armor, appeared before the Benedictine monastery of Mont Serrat in Catalonia, and asked hospitality from the holy monks.('') He was taken to a cell, and when they in- quired his name, said he would be called " The Unknown Pil- grim." Three days he passed in making a general confes- sion of all his sins. Thus purified, he left the monastery un- observed ; and having called to him a beggar from the high- way, gave him his rich dress, and in exchange clothed himself in the beggar's rags.(') He then gave away all his money to the poor. He put on a long, gray robe, bound by a thick cord around the waist, to which he attached his glittering sword and jeweled dagger, and thus attired fell down before the altar of the Holy Virgin, to keep his solemn vigil. He left his sword and poniard suspended at the shrine, and vowed thenceforth to wear alone the spiritual arms of poverty and devotion. Thus did the fanciful, impassioned Loyola fulfill the rites of chival- ry and faith. He was next seen wandering through the streets of Man- reza, a little village near Mont Serrat, so sordid in his dress, (') Ranke, Hist. Popes, i., p. 67. C) Maffeus, i., pp. 3, 4. (') Pannoso cuidam ex iuftma plebe. LOYOLA A BEGGAB. 103 SO wild and haggard in appearance, that children mocked him, and men shrunk from him as from a madman. His compan- ions were beggars and outcasts. He wasted his manly strength in fearful penances and fasting, that brought him near to death. He courted contumely and shame. His chief emploj^nent was waiting upon the diseased poor, and performing for tliem the most repulsive offices. Like St. Francis, whom he evidently followed as a guide, he sought to abase himself to the lowest pitch of human degradation.(') He lived upon alms; he sold all his possessions, and made himself a penniless beggar. His home was a dark and noisome cave ; and here he composed his " Spiritual Exercises," which are related to liave had a won- derful effect in converting his disciples and founding his or- der. His mind was now oppressed with terrible fancies ; he believed himself forever doomed ; (') he was surrounded by demons who meditated his eternal ruin ; and often the half- maddened spirit longed for death, and was eager to find rest in suicide. Yet this fearful penance and this condition of wild hallucination have had their place in false religions as well as the true. The self-inflicted tortures of Ignatius and Francis of Assisi have often been far outdone by the Brah- man fanatics or Mohammedan dervishes. The Brahman im- pales himself on sharp iron hooks or flings himself beneath the car of Juggernaut to expiate imaginary guilt ; the der- vish often lives in squalid poverty, more hideous than that of Ignatius, throughout a whole life - time ; and the follow- ers of Boodh have invented penances that excel the wild- est extravagances of the modern saint. As he advanced in knowledge, Loyola probably grew ashamed of his early ex- cesses, and discovered that squalor, fllth, and endless fasting were no true badges of a religious life. He learned that re- ligion was designed to refine and purify rather than to debase human nature. In his cave at Manreza it is said that Loyola first conceived (') Maffjens. i.,p. 5. (*) Maffieus, i., p. 6. His hair he left " impexum et squalidum ;" his nails grew long ; he was filthy. Satan came and tempted him. 104 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. the design of founding liis spiritnal army. He saw in the heavens a vision of Babylon lighting against Jerusalem, of the demons of pride, wealth, and worldly corruption mar- shaling their hosts to assail the sacred city of humility ; and he resolved to place himself at the head of a saintly brother- hood and fly to the relief of the Cross. At this period his ideas were few, his knowledge limited. His education had been wholly military, and it is curious to observe how the tac- tics of the camp and the siege blended almost of necessity with the speculations of the uncultivated visionary .(') St. Francis and St. Dominic, who had been bred in civil life, were content with repeating in their institutions the monas- tic rules of Benedict and the East. They strove to reform mankind by silent asceticism, physical tortures, or touching appeals ; by the eloquence of the pulpit or of a meek and holy carriage. But Loyola, who was a soldier, accustomed to command, and conscious of the necessity of subordination, mtroduced into his society the strict discipline of the camp. As his plans were finally unfolded, the Jesuits became a com- pany ; their chief was called their general ; a perfect military obedience was enforced ; the inferior was held to be a mere instrument in the hands of his superior ; the common soldier of the great spiritual army had no will, hardly a conscience, but that of his general at Home. And thus, when the dim vision of the cave of Manreza was presented to the world, its chief novelty was the military rule of obedience. All other virtues were held to be M'ithout value unless joined to perfect submission to the will of another. Like a well-train- ed soldier, the Jesuit must lirst learn to obey. If he failed in this quality, the novice was rejected, the professed degraded, the lesser offenders scourged, sometimes to death. Thus, of the few ideas that Loyola possessed at Manreza he made practical use chiefly of those that were military ; he at least taught his followers obedience.^) And from this princi- (') Constitutiones Societatis Jesu, p. 53. C) See Ravignan, De I'Existeuco et do I'lustitut des Jesuites, i., p. 91. The defense is feeble, but houest. TRE STRENGTH OF JESUITISM. 105 j)le have sprung the power and the weakness, the mingled good and evil, of the order of the Jesuits. In obedience to the or- ders of an irresponsible head, the devoted and often sincerely pious priests have flung themselves boldly into savage lands ; have endured pain, misery, and want with heroic zeal ; have died in hosts in the jungles of India and hostile Ethiopian wilds ; have won the hearts of the savages of Brazil by their tender patience, and died with songs of holy joy amidst horri- ble torments in Cliina and Japan. Yet, if we compare all the heroic sufferings of the Jesuits in the cause of obedience with those of the countless martyrs who have died for religious lib- erty in the dungeons of the Holy OfSce, on the battle-iields of Holland, or in the endless cruelties of Romish intolerance, they seem faint and insignificant ; and where obedience has pro- duced one martyr, a thousand have fallen to attest their belief in Christianity. But if we turn to the dangerous side of obe- dience to an irresponsible and often corrupt head, we see how fatal was that weapon which the imprudent Loyola placed in the hands of unscrupulous churchmen. The unhappy Jesuits, bound by their oath of obedience, were soon made the instru- ments of enormous crimes. Their activity and blind devotion, their intelligence and secrecy, were qualities that peculiarly fit- ted them to become the emissaries and executioners of kings like Philip II. or popes like Caraffa. It is believed that the Jesuits were chiefly instrumental in producing the worst per- secutions in the Netherlands. A Jesuit plotted with Mary of Scotland the assassination of Elizabeth. Another strove to blow up James I. and the English Parliament with gunpow- der. The Jesuits were charged with being constantly on the watch to assassinate William of Orange and Henry of Na- varre. Anthony Possevin, a Jesuit, is stated by Mouravieff, the Church historian of Russia, to have taught the Polish Cath- olics to persecute the Greek Christians, and to have plunged Russia and Poland in an inexpiable war.(') Jesuits were con- stantly gliding over Europe from court to court, engaged in performing the mandates of popes and kings ; and, if we may C) Mouravieff, Hist. Russian Church, p. 122, traus. 106 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. trust the records of history, the fatal vow of obedience was often employed by their superiors to crush the instincts of hu- manity and the voice of conscience. From his cave at Manreza Loyola now set out to assail her- esy and corruption. He was sincere, ardent, and resolute ; but the champion of the mediaeval faith soon found that he want- ed an important part of his mental armor. Amidst his visions and his spiritual exercises he had already discovered, in a mo- ment of natural good sense, that he could do nothing without knowledge. The age was learned and progressive. The re- formers of Germany and Switzerland were men of profound acquirements and intense application, while their Spanish op- ponent had heretofore done little more than dream. We next, tlierefore, find Loyola at Barcelona, when he was about thir- ty-three years of age, painfully endeavoring to acquire the el- ements of knowledge, in order to fit himself for the priesthood. He was forced to enter the lower classes of the college, and was condemned by his superiors to at least four years of pa- tient study. But he was already widely known as a saint and an enthusiast. He had already wandered to Eome and to Je- rusalem. The stately Spanish clergy, the Dominican or Fran- ciscan, looked with suspicion and dislike upon tlie wild and haggard visionary who consorted only with the miserable poor, and whose intense penances and self-chosen penury seemed a reproach to their o^vn luxury and indifference. Loyola fell under the suspicion of the Inquisition, and was even accused of heresy ; he was persecuted and derided ; and, almost alone, a faithful and tender-hearted woman, Isabella Eosello, watched over his necessities and saved him from starving. She seems to have been his earliest disciple. She, at least, believed him in- spired from above, and saw, in moments of enthusiasm, rays of celestial glory playing around his wan brow.('} And long aft- erward, when Loyola guided the affairs of the Roman Church, he was embarrassed and somewhat annoyed by the persistent devotion of Isabella, who wished to found a company of female Jesuits under the supervision of the great chief himself. (') Maffaeus, ii., p. 17. LUTHER AND LOYOLA. 107 Luther and Loyola were contemporaries, and the latter the younger by eight years. Both were enthusiastic, ardent men, resolute and severe. Both had gone through religious expe- riences not altogether dissimilar; had struggled with doubt and terror, with remorse and shame. In their religious trials they fancied that they saw demons and spirits, and had held frequent contests with their great adversary. Both had labor ed for purity of life, and had attained it. Both lived as far as possible above the allurements of the present. But their differences were still more striking than their resemblances. Luther was learned, accomplished, creative, poetical. He had been a profound student of the Scrijjtures ; he had marked ev- ery line, interpreted every thought ; he labored night and day to free his mind from the vain shadows of tradition, and to hear and attend alone to the voice of inspiration. For the teaching of man he cared nothing ; he heard only the apos- tles and the Divine Preceptor ; and hence Luther had imbibed much of the benevolence and charity of the earlier Church. But Loyola was ever wrapped up in visions of the Middle Ages. Unlearned and dogmatic, he saw only the towering grandeur of Kome. He preferred tradition to the Scriptures, the teaching of the Pope to that of the Bible. One article of faith seemed to him alone important — the primacy of St. Peter. One text alone seemed to him the key of revelation ; one doubtful passage the only source of Christian life. To the primacy, therefore, Loyola vowed obedience rather than to the Scriptures ; to the enemies of the papacy he could assign only endless destruction. Hence, while Luther's doctrines tended to benevolence and humanity, those of his assailant must lead to persecution and war : the one was the herald of a gentler era, the other strove to recall the harsh traits of the days of Innocent and Ilildebrand. Driven from his native land by the persecutions of the rival clergy, Loyola, in the year 1528, fled to Paris, and entered its famous university. His enthusiasm was somewhat sobered by time or knowledge ; but he still lived upon alms and with strict austerity. He was probably a diligent if not a very suc- cessful student. He was never learned, and his reading was 108 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. not of a kind likelj to improve or enlarge his faculties. Com- pared with his eminent Protestant opponents, his knowledge was narrow, his mental powers obtuse, and the chief source of his final success was his skill in organizing his followers and the controlling influence of his imperious will. But at Paris he no doubt became more than ever convinced of the power of knowledge. Thrown amidst a busy throng of students, priests, professors, many of whom were Lutherans, or who shared in the advancing spirit of the age, he must have seen that learning was chiefly on the side of the new opinions, and that many of the disasters of the papal hierarchy were due to their own ignorance or indolence. He resolved, with his usual vigor, to create a new race of scholars, whose minds should be filled with the rarest stores of classic letters, but whose faith should be as firm and unswerving as his own. The dull soldier(') was to give rise to an infinite number of schools, colleges, and literary institutions whose teachers were to shine among the literary glories of the time, but who in matters of faith were to be chained and imprisoned by the fa- tal vow of obedience. His free schools were to be the chief agent in reviving tlie decaying vigor of the papacy. The chil- dren of every land who could be allured to tlie Jesuit schools were to be molded into active soldiers in his spiritual army. Every Jesuit was to obtain freely that education which Loy- ola so prized. By the free school he would defeat and beat back Protestantism. In Paris Loyola grew more rational. His spiritual agonies departed forever. Satan, he believed, was conquered, and he no longer meditated suicide. He was strong in the faith and in the certainty of success.(°) His penances were still excess- ive, and he was surrounded by visions and prodigies, but they were all of a more hopeful aspect. But what was equally en- couraging, he now began to gather around him converts who were to form the germ of his spiritual army. His strong will and ardent convictions linked to him like a fascinating spell a (') Crdtineau-Joly, i., p. 18, tbiuks be read raeu better tban books. (') Maflfajus, i., p. 21. He already persecuted Lutberans. LOYOLA'S DISCIPLES. 109 band of gifted young men who acknowledged him as their master. The first was Peter Lefevre, the son of a Savoyard goat-herd, inteUigent and confiding. With him came finally his friend, Francis Xavier, a brilliant scholar, who at first had shrunk almost with aversion from the squalid Loyola, but who became at length the most devoted of his followers. Xavier was rich,Q nobly born, famous, a favorite at the French court, learned, and full of worldly ambition ; but after three years of sturdy resistance he fell captive to the eloquent example of the bold enthusiast. Several Spaniards, also, joined Loyola — James Laynez, Bobadilla, Eodriguez, and others ; and at last, in August, 153-i, the young men met together in a subter- ranean chapel in Paris, and with solemn rites and holy vows pledged themselves to a religious life. Their design was to go to Jerusalem, and there devote themselves to the spiritual welfare of Christian pilgrims. Loyola's vision of Jerusalem, a reminiscence of chivalry, seems not yet to have faded from his mind, and his fancy still brooded over the woes of the Holy City. But the young band of enthusiasts were never destined to reach that goal. We next find them stopped at Venice, and here their missionary work began. The gay, rich city, luxuri- ous, licentious, and half heretic, was suddenly startled by the appearance of a wild and haggard band of reformers, emaciated with penances, ragged, and consorting with the wretched poor, who preached in the highways to wondering throngs, and whose imperfect pronunciation and broken language were often met with shouts of derision. Yet the Spanish mission- aries soon won attention by their fierce sincerity. Q They taught perfect obedience to Home, and astonished the half -her- etic Italians by the ardor of their faith. They proclaimed themselves the soldiers of a new army that was rising to de- stroy the enemies of the Church. They declared pei^petual war against Lutheranism and ever}' form of doubt : Catholic Spain was once more m arms to save the medifeval Church. In 1538, Loyola, with Laynez and Lefevre, went on foot to Q) Maffteus, i., p. 22. (^) Id. Palmamque martyrii studiose captareut. 110 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. Home to procure the assent of the Pope to his new order. On his way he entered a chapel near the Holy City and saw a vision. He was alone. His followers stood without. The Saviour descended ; the Holy A^irgin came to smile upon the impassioned Loyola ; a glory rested upon him ; and when he came from the little chapel his followers knew by his shining countenance that Heaven had chosen him as its champion. There are moments in the history of mankind when all seems doubt and indecision ; when men stand around amazed and not knowing what to do ; when the decision of a single powerful will affects the destiny of ages. Such a moment was the present. Paul III. sat upon the papal throne. He was a man of mild disposition, elegant, refined. He had been in his youth the friend of Leo X., and had imbibed the grace- ful tastes, the genial culture, of his accomplished predecessor. His manners were pleasing, his life somewhat licentious, but thus far cruelty and austerity had formed no part of his relig- ious policy. Under his pacific sway reform had made rapid progress, and already Italy and Rome itself were swiftly yield- ing to the purer teachings of the Protestflnt divines.(') Augus- tinian monks preached in the very heart of the papal dominions doctrines that differed little from those of Luther and Zuin- glius. In Parma or Faenza the reformers taught as openly and as successfully as in Wittenberg or in London. Italy was filled with heretics to the papal rule; the splendid city of Venice was very nearly won over to the new principles ; per- secution for opinion's sake was scarcely known, and a hap- py tranquillity prevailed throughout the peninsula that gave liberty to thought and the promise of unexampled progress.(") Paul III. was addicted to astrology, and Ijelieved more firm- ly in the decisions of the stars than in those of the Church. Gentle and not naturally cruel, had he possessed prudent counselors he might now have placed himself at the head of the reformers of Christendom, or at least have merited their (') Father Paul, Con. Trent, i., p. 101 ; Cr^tineau-Joly, i., p. 31. (^) Cr(^tiuean-Joly, i., p. 35: "La crise ) Daurignac, i., p. 51. (^) Butler, xii., p. 58; Cr^tiueaii-Joly, i., p.474. O Cr(Stiueau-Joly, i., p. 494. 126 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. ism, made their way into the dark places of the earth. They founded a flourishing settlement in Brazil that seemed for a long time full of delightful promise.(') They half converted the Japanese ; they ruled at Pekin, and made the Chinese ac- quainted with Western science ; they penetrated to Ethiopia ; they softened the savages of Canada and Illinois; and they proved their sincerity and heroism by a thousand arduous ex- ploits. Yet a similar ill fortune seemed to attend all their enterprises, and China, Japan, America, Ethiopia once more repelled with bitter hatred the oppressive sway of Rome. A multitude of pious and earnest Jesuits, whose pure and holy lives have been sacrificed in vain, have labored and died in savage wildernesses, in heathen cities, in malarious jungles, and in icy solitudes ; but the intrigues and vices of their Ital- ian masters have uniformly destroyed the fruits of their mar- tyrdom and self-devotion. With their home missions the Jesuits were more successful. Here, too, they strove to unite arms with letters, and to plant their free schools in the hei'etical North by diplomacy and the sword. They steeled the heart of Charles V. — if indeed he ever possessed one — against his Protestant subjects; and he was soon induced to commence a bitter war against the heret- ical league. At the Battle of Miihlberg, where the Germans were routed and overthrown, Bobadilla appeared in the front ranks of the Catholic forces, mounted upon a spirited steed, waving his crucifix on high, and promising victory to the im- perial cause.(°) The Protestants fled, and soon in all their ter- rified cities flourishing Jesuit colleges sprung up, as if by mag- ic, and thousands of children were instructed and confimied in the visions of Loyola and the decrees of the Council of Trent. The Jesuits made admirable teachers. Loyola was resolved to make his colleges splendid with erudition and genius. At Rome he gathered around him the most accom- plished professors, the most abundant learning ; and he lav- (') Daurignac, i., p. 55. C') Stoiiimetz, i., p. 201; Ci<5tiueau-Joly, i., p. 283: "He was wounded (fiapp^ a tete), but recovered." JESUIT LITERATURE. 127 ished money in profusion to provide fine buildings, libraries, and all the apparatus of letters. The most intelligent scholars were noted, rewarded, encouraged ; every promising genius was snatched from the world and devoted to the cultivation of inferior minds ; a severe and perfect discipline prevailed in all his schools ; and it is chiefly as teachers that the Jesuits won their lasting triumphs in the German cities. Their free schools educated the rising generation ; and the Protestants, who had heretofore possessed all the literature of the age, soon found themselves met and often overthrown by the keen cas- uistry of the Jesuit scholars. A reaction took place, and Ger- many seemed swiftly returning to the ancient faith. Yet the new literature of the Jesuits, confined by the op- pressive restrictions of their discipline, contained within itself a principle of decay. Genius could scarcely flourish under a system of mental serfdom ; learning oppressed grew dwarfed and imbecile. The Jesuit scholars were often laborious, ac- curate, methodical; but they produced no brilliant Scaliger nor daring Wolf. No poet, philosopher, nor original thinker could possibly arise in their schools; there was no Jesuit Goethe, no Schiller, no Shakspeare ; their mental labors were various and valuable, but never great ; they produced chiefly an immense, curious, and often worse than worthless kind of literature called casuistry.(') Of this they were fertile beyond example. Their intellect, pressed out of its natural growth, spread in matted vegetation along the ground, or clung in wild festoons around ancient oaks, like the gray mosses of a Southern forest. The countless works of casuistry produced by Jesuit scholars in the seventeenth century are usually ef- forts to show how far they are restricted in morals by the rules of their faith ; what acts are lawful, what expedient ; and their diligent effort to reconcile virtue with the supreme law of obedience led them to a strange condition of mental corruption. Mariana defended regicide, poisoning, and as- sassination ; Father Garnet confessed that he did not liesitate (*) The le.arued Tiraboschi and the ingenious Boscovicli flourished during the suppression of the order. 128 LOYOLA AND TEE JESUITS. to tell falsehoods for the good of his Church; and there is scarcely a crime in the hst of human guilt that the diseased intellect of the Jesuit fathers did not palliate or excuse. But it was chieflj as politicians that the Jesuits have won, and probably deserved, an infamous renown in history. The order was aggressive and ardent — full of grand schemes for the extirpation of heretics and the subjugation of England and the hardy North. Every member of the mighty league had sworn to give his life, if necessary, for the advancement of the faith ; was ready to fly at a sudden notice to the far- thest lands at the bidding of his superior or the Pope ; and perhaps might merit some frightful punishment at home did he not obey his commander to the uttermost. The irrevocable vow and the long practice in abject submission made the Jes- uits the most admirable instruments of crime.(') In the hands of wicked popes like Gregory XIIL, or cruel tyrants like Phil- ip II,, they were never suffered to rest.(^) Their exploits are among the most wonderful and daring in history. They are more romantic than the boldest pictures of the novelist ; more varied and interesting than the best-laid plots of the most inventive masters. No Arabian narrator nor Scottish wizard could have imagined them ; no Shakspeare could have foreseen the strange mental and political conditions that led the enthu- siasts on in their deeds of heroism and crime. Jesuits pene- trated, disguised, into England when death was their punish- ment if discovered ; hovered in strange forms around the per- son of Elizabeth, whose assassination was the favorite aim of Philip II. and the Pope ; reeled through the streets of Lon- don as pretended drunkards ; hid in dark closets and were fed through quills ; and often, when discovered, died in horrible tortures with silent joy. The very name of the new and act- ive society was a terror to all the Protestant courts. A single Jesuit was believed to be more dangerous than a whole mon- astery of Black-friars. A Campion, Parsons, or Garnet filled all England with alarm. And in all that long struggle M'liich followed between the North and the South, in which the fierce (') Steinmetz, i., p. 452. C) Cr^tiueau-Jolj-, ii., p. 296. JESUIT ASSASSINS. 129 Spaniards and Italians made a desperate assault upon the re- bellious region, strove to dethrone or destroy its kings, to crush the rising intellect of its people, or to extirpate the hated ele- ments of reform, the historians uniformly point to the Jesuits as the active agents in every rebellion, and the tried and un- flinching instruments of unsparing Eome.(') A Jesuit pene- trated in strange attire to Mary Queen of Scots, and lured her to her ruin. Another sought to convert or dethrone a king of Sweden. One conveyed the intelligence to Catherine and Charles IX. that produced a horrible massacre of the reform- ers. One traveled into distant Muscovy to sow the seeds of endless war. Mariana, an eminent Jesuit, published a work defending regicide which was faintly condemned by the or- der, and soon Henry III. fell by the assassin's blow ; William of Orange, pursued by the endless attempts of assassins, at last received the fatal wound; Elizabeth was hunted down, but escaped ; Henry lY., after many a dangerous assault, died, it was said, by the arts of the Jesuits ; James I. and his family escaped by a miracle from the plot of Fawkes and Garnet ; while many inferior characters of this troubled age disappear- ed suddenly from human sight, or were found stabbed and bleeding in their homes. All these frightful acts the men of that period attributed to the fatal vow of obedience. The Jesuit was the terror of his times. Catholics abhorred and shrunk from him with almost as much real aversion as Prot- estants. The universities and the clergy feared and hated the unscrupulous order. The Jesuit was renowned for his pitiless cruelty.(') The mild Franciscans and Benedictines, and even the Spanish Dominicans, could not be relied upon by the popes and kings, and were cast contemptuously aside ; while their swift and ready rivals sprung forward at the slightest intimation of their superior, and, with a devotion to their chief at Rome not surpassed by that of the assassins of the Old Man of the Mountain, flung themselves in the face of death. One of the early victims of the fatal vow of obedience was (') Motley, Netherlands, iii., p. 444. C) Id. 9 130 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. William, Prince of Orange.(') He was the bulwark of Prot- estantism, the founder of a great nation. Philip II. of Spain had long pursued him with secret assassins and open plots : a ban had been pronounced against him, and a large reward was offered to any one who would destroy him ; and no name was so hated by the Catholics of every land as that of the grave and silent prince. Yet William had heretofore baffled all the efforts of his foe. He had made Holland free, had secured the independence of the Protestant faith, and still maintained the good cause against the arts and arms of the treacherous Philip by his singular energy and wisdom. He had escaped a thou- sand dangers, and seemed to glide through the midst of Phil- ip's assassins with a charmed life. Yet every violent Catholic was longing to send a dagger to the heart of the triumphant heretic, and hoped that with the death of William the Neth- erlands would once more fall into the power of the papal In- quisitors. Balthazar Gerard was one of the most bigoted of his party. He was the son of respectable parents in Burgundy. He was small in stature, insignificant in appearance ; but his whole nature was moved by a fierce desire to assassinate the Prince of Orange. When he was yet a youth, he had already formed the design of murdering the prince, whom he called a rebel against the Catholic King and a distm-ber of the Apostolic Church. At twenty, Balthazar had struck his dagger with all his strength into a door, exclaiming, " Would it had been the heart of Orange !" For seven years he meditated upon his de- sign ; but when Philip offered his reward for William's death, Gerard became more eager than ever before to execute his pur- pose. Fame, honors, wealth, the favor of his king, awaited the successful assassin, and he no longer hesitated. He first, how- ever, confessed his design to the regent of the Jesuit college at Luxemburg, and received his warm commendation. A second Jesuit, to whom he mentioned his plan, dissuaded him from it, not because he disapproved of it, but from its difficulty. He next presented himseK to Alexander, Prince of Parma, the (') Motley, Dutch Rep., iii., p. 596 et seq. WILLIAM OF ORANGE. 131 most brilliant soldier of tlie age. Parma had long been look- ing for some one to murder William, but Balthazar's insignifi- cant stature and" feeble appearance seemed to him ill-suited to the task. The young assassin's fierce resolution, however, soon induced the prince to encourage him ; and he promised Bal- thazar that if he fell in the attempt the expected reward should be given to his parents. His plan was to disguise himself as a Calvinist, the son of one who had died for his faith, and, hav- ing claimed aid from William, to gain access to his presence and shoot him down with a pistol. (') The prince was now living in a quiet retirement at the lit- tle town of Delft. His house was plain, although large, and stood on Delft Street, a pleasant canal that ran through the city, and which was shaded by rows of lime-trees that in sum- mer filled the air with the perfume of their blossoms. The house was of brick, two stories high, with a roof covered with red tiles. In front a considerable court-yard opened toward the canal. And here, in the quiet little Dutch town, surround- ed by his affectionate family and followed by the love of his countrymen, William lived in a calm tranquillity, careless of the plottings of his foes. Balthazar, meantime, reached Delft in July, 1584, as a special messenger to William of Orange. He appeared as a modest, pious youth, always carrying a Bible under his arm ; and, to his great surprise, he was at once ad- mitted to the prince's chamber. He stood before his victim. Yet he had no arms to carry out his design, and Parma had been so penurious as to leave him without money. William, hearing of his poverty, sent him some small gift, which Bal- thazar laid out in buying a pair of pistols from a soldier. The latter killed himself the next day when he learned to what use his pistols had been applied. At half-past twelve o'clock, on the 10th of July, the prince, with his wife, and the ladies and gentlemen of his family, passed into the dining-room of the plain Dutch house, and sat down to dinner. On their way they were accosted by Gerard, who, with pale and agitated countenance, asked for a passport. (') Motley, Dutch Rep., iii., p. 59G et seq. 132 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. The princess, wlio noticed liim, said in a low tone that she had never seen so villainous an expression. The cheerful din- ner was over by two o'clock. The company rose from the ta- ble and passed out, the prince leading the way. As he as- cended a staircase to go to the upper floor, Gerard came out from an archway and shot him to the heart. He died ex- claiming, " My God, have mercy on this poor people !" The murderer meantime fled swiftly from the house, and had near- ly escaped over the city walls when he stumbled and was seized by the guards. He was executed with horrible tort- ures, and in his confession related how he had been confirmed in his design by the Jesuit father at Luxemburg. Philip II. and the violent Catholics looked upon his act as highly meri- torious. The king ennobled and enriched his parents, and as the price of blood his family took their place among the no- bility of the land. In the Netherlands the Jesuits were the last persecutors. They clung to the use of brutal violence in religious mat- ters when the practice had almost died out. " Send us more Jesuits," was always the demand of the Spanish commanders when they would complete the subjection of some conquered city,(*) and Jesuit colleges were founded at once amidst the ruins of Antwerp and Haarlem, The opinions of Loyola and the decrees of the Council of Trent were enforced in the Netherlands by the massacre of helpless thousands; and it was chiefly upon the poor that the persecutors executed their worst outrages. A poor serving-woman, Anna Yan der Hove, was the last and most remarkable of their ^actims. Two maiden ladies lived on the north rampart of Antwerp, who had formerly professed the Protestant faith, and had been thrown into prison ; but they had prudently renounced their errors, and now went devoutly to mass. Not so, however, did their maid-servant, Anna, who was about forty years of age, and M^as firm in the faith in which she had been born and ed- ucated. The Jesuits, enraged at her obstinate honesty, re- solved to make the poor serving-woman an example to all her (') Motley, Netherlands, iii., p. 444^ JESUIT EXECUTIONS. 133 class. They denounced her to the aiithorities, claiming her execution under an old law so cruel that every one believed it had long been laid aside. Anna was condemned to be buried ahve, the legal punishment of heretics ; but the Jesuits told her she might escape her doom if she would recant and be rec- onciled to the Catholic Church. The honest woman refused. She said she had read her Bible and had found there nothing said of popes, purgatory, or the invocation of saints. How could she ever hope to merit a future bliss if she professed to beheve what she knew to be false ? Far rather would she die than lose that heavenly crown which she saw shining resplen- dently even for her humble head above. She would do noth- ing against her conscience. She desired to interfere with no other person's belief ; but for herself, she said, she preferred death to the unpardonable sin of dishonesty. On a fair midsummer morning she was led out of the city of Brussels, where her trial had taken place, to a hay-field near at hand. A Jesuit father walked on either side, followed by several monks called love - brothers, who taunted Anna with her certain doom in another world, calling her harsh and cruel names. But she did not hear them. All her thoughts were now fixed on heaven. There she saw the golden gates wide open, and angels stooping down to snatch her from the power of Satan. They put her in a pit already prepared, and, when she was half covered with earth, once more tempted her to recant and save her life. Again she refused ; the earth was thrown in, and the executioners trod it down upon her sacred head. Such was the last religious murder in the ]^etherlands.(') Meantime the Jesuits had long been engaged in a series of vigorous efforts to conquer rebellious England. The whole intellect and energy of the company was dii'ected to this dar- ing but almost hopeless attempt. Popes and priests had ex- ulted in a momentary triumph when Mary gave her hand and heart to Philip II., and when Cranmer, Ridley, Rogers, and a host of martyrs had died to consecrate the fatal nuptials.^) (') Motley, Netherlands, iii., p. 446. C*) Cr^tineau-Joly defends Mary on various grounds, ii., p. 336. 134 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. But the accession of Elizabeth had once more filled Rome and Spain with inexpressible rage. The heretical queen became the object of an endless number of plots and projects of as- sassination, Jesuits hid themselves in London or wandered from house to house through the Catholic districts, exciting the zeal of the faithful, and vainly striving to arouse all Cath- olic England to revolt in favor of Mary Queen of Scots. Elizabeth was in imminent danger. The Jesuit, Parsons, de- nounced her as a murderess and a bastard. Philip sent his Armada against her loaded with priests. But the great ma- jority of her Catholic subjects remained true to their native queen, and the Jesuits found but little sympathy even among those whom they looked upon as their natural allies. Father Garnet is one of the most noted of these imprudent Jesuits. He was the provincial of the English company. The Jesuits, on the death of Elizabeth, had formed a wild scheme to prevent the accession of James, and the king renewed and enforced the severe laws against his Catholic subjects. Ruin hung over them, and the imprudent conduct of the aggressive Jesuits had only brought destruction to their friends and to their cause.(') In this extremity it is charged that they enter- ed upon a still more desperate scheme — the Gunpowder Plot. Father Garnet, as he was called, the Jesuit provincial, was now in England, with several others of his company, and a plan was formed by the zealous Catholics to blow up the Houses of Parliament and King James with gunpowder. The plot was discovered, and Guy Fawkes was seized in the cellars of the Parliament House just as he was about to set fire to the bar- rels of powder. Fawkes is represented by the Jesuits as hav- ing been a man of great piety, amiable, clieerful, of unblem- ished lionor, and strict in all religious observances. All of the conspirators belonged to the Jesuit faction, and it is believed that none of the English Catholics were engaged in the plot. A search was at once made for concealed Jesuits. Several es- caped to the continent ; but Garnet lay hidden at a house in Hendlip, near Worcester. He was concealed, with another C) Steinmetz, ii., p. 200. FATHER GARNET. 135 Jesuit and two servants, in one of those secret chambers which were common at that period in the houses of wealthy Catho- lics. Here the unhappy fugitives were imprisoned for seven days and nights.Q Their retreat was so small that they were obhged to remain constantly sitting with their knees bent un- der them. They were fed upon marmalade and sweetmeats, or soups and broths, that were conveyed through reeds that passed through a chimney into the next apartment. They were traced by their pursuers to Hendlip, and a magistrate came with his officers to search the house. He was received by the lady of the house, her husband being absent, with an air of cheerfulness, and the pursuers were told that their prey had escaped. For three days they searched the house in vain. Every apartment was carefully examined ; every closet open- ed ; but nothing was found. On the fourth day, however, hunger drove the prisoners to venture imprudently from their retreat ; they were seen by the guards, and the hiding-place discovered. Pale with fasting and confinement. Garnet and his companions were dragged away to trial and death. Garnet's trial was a sad and repulsive picture.^) That he was guilty of sharing in the plot can scarcely be doubted. He professed, indeed, that he had sought to dissuade the conspira- tors from their design ; but he was more than once convicted of falsehood during his trial, and defended his want of truth- fulness on the ground that it was necessary to his safety. He was condemned and executed. The Jesuits looked upon him as a martyr, and a famous miracle was held to have attested his innocence. Garnet's straw became renowned throughout Europe, and all the Catholic courts celebrated in ballads and treatises this wonderful exculpation of the saint.(^) The mi- raculous straw was a beard of wheat on which a Jesuit student who stood by at Garnet's execution saw a drop of his blood fall ; as he stooped to look upon it he discovered inscribed upon the straw the glorified coimtenance of the martyr, crown- ed) Steinmetz, ii., p. 207. (■) Cr6tineau-Joly, Hi., p. 112, defeuds hmi feebly. (^) Steiumetz, ii., p. 244. 136 LOYOLA AND THE JESUITS. ed and bearing a cross npon its brow. Thousands came to see the wonderful vision ; nobles, the Spanish embassador, the Catholic laity, saw and believed. The miracle was told throii3 was chosen as a convenient place for the meeting of the Third Council, and in June, 431, the rival factions began to gather in the magnificent city of Diana, now destined to become renowned for the triumph of the holier Yirgin.(') Yet to the sincere Christians of this un- happy age the conduct and character of the members of the Third Council could have brought only disappointment and shame. In vain the gentle Tlieodosius implored his patri- archs and bishops to exercise the common virtues of forbear- ance and self-respect ; in vain he placed over them a guard of soldiers to insure an outward peace. The streets of the mag- nificent city were filled with riot and bloodshed ; the rival factions fought for the honor of Mary or the supremacy of the hostile sees. Cyril, violent and resolute to rule, had come from Alexandria, followed by a throng of bishops, priests, and a host of fanatics ; Nestorius relied for his safety on the pro- tection of the imperial guard ; but to neither could the Chris- tian world attribute any one of the virtues enjoined by its holy faith.C') The Patriarch of Alexandria refused to wait for the coming of the Oriental bishops, and at once assembled a synod of his own adherents, and proceeded to try and con- demn his rival. Kestorius protested; the emperor's legate, Candidian, who asked for a delay of four days, was driven with insult from the hostile assembly. The bishops delivered their opinions ; Cyril presided ; and at the close of a single day Nestorius was degraded, a convicted heretic ; and the city (*) Concil., v., p. 7. Baronius, v., p. 682, raises the luiinber of bishops to over two hundred. C) Milman, Hist. Lat. Chris., i., p. 133-140. For a full accouut of the couucil see Hefele, Zwoiter Band, p. 162 d 8eq. THE FALLEN CHURCH. 165 of Ephesus resounded with songs of triumph over the fall of the enemy of Mary.(') It is painful, indeed, to contemplate the angry strife that rent the corrupt Church of this early period, yet it is not dif- ficult to discover its cause. The Church, in its exterior form, had long been the instrument of the State ; the bishops and patriarchs were the representatives of the vices and the in- trigues of the imperial court. They had become earthly princes, instead of messengers from heaven. Their pomp and luxury shocked and alienated the true believer, and they had long abandoned every one of tlie principles of charity and be- nevolence inculcated by the faith they professed. The unity of the Church had been lost in the contentions of its chiefs, and even in Constantinople itself three rival bishops ruled over their separate adherents. The Cathari, or Novatians, the Protestants of this corrupt period, departing from the estab- lished church, had retained their organization ever since the age of Constantino ;(^) the pure and spotless lives of their bishops, Agelius, Chrysanthus, and Paul, formed a pleasing contrast to the vices of Xectarius or Xestorius ; and the mod- est virtues of this persecuted sect awakened the envy and the hatred of the orthodox bishops of Rome and Constantinople. The Kovatians rejected the authority of the imperial patri- arch, but they observed the Nicene Creed. They lived holy lives in the midst of persecution or temptation. Chrysan- thus,Q the Kovatian bishop of Constantinople, distributed his private fortune among the poor, and his only salary was two loaves of bread on each Lord's day from the contributions of the faithful. The ISTovatian Ablabius was one of the most elegant and vigorous preachers of the day;(*) the pious Paul was the friend of the prisoners and of the poor.(^) An Arian bishop also presided at Constantinople, and in their sufferings his followers learned virtue and self-restraint. It was against (') Hefele, ii., p. 173: "Die Sitzung hatte von Morgans friih bis in die Nacht hinein gedauert." Nestorius was called a new Judas. C) Socrates, H. E., v., p. 12-21. See Sozomen, 1., p. 22, for the boldness of a Novatiau. C) Socrates, H. E., vii., p. 12. C) Id. C) hi, p. 17. 166 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. these rival sects that Nestorius had first turned his persecuting rage. He envied the spotless fame, the general love that fol- lowed the gentle Novatian hishop, Paul, as he passed through the city to intercede for the prisoner or to relieve the sick ; he destroyed the Arian churches ; and lie deserved, by his cruel intolerance, the fatal doom which Cyril had prepared for him at Ejihesus. But Cyril's triumphs at the council seemed about to be turned into a defeat by the arrival of John, Bishop of Antioch, and the Oriental bishops, who at once denied the validity of the condemnation of Nestorius. Two rival councils sat at the same time in the City of the Yirgin,(') and the streets were again filled with riot and bloodshed by the contending fac- tions. Churches were stormed and defended; the imperial guards fled before an angry mob ; and for three months Cyril and Nestorius opposed each other with an almost equal pros- pect of success, and with all the weapons of corruption, vio- lence, and fraud.f ) The Em23eror Theodosius, the gentlest of rulers, was at length enraged at the vindictive fury of the holy council. He sent the disorderly prelates to their homes, and recommended them to amend by their private virtues the injury and scandal they had inflicted on the Church. But the malevolence of Cyril was insatiable. His intrigues and his bribes won over the courtiers of Constantinople ; and Nesto- rius, the haughtiest of patriarchs except his rival, was sent into exile, and died a convicted heretic. His name and his doctrine still survive in a sect of Oriental Christians, who are perhaps the natural fruit of the persecuting spirit of Cyril and the intolerant rule of the famous Council of Ephesus, The heresy of Nestorius gave rise to the fourth General Council, at Chalcedon, by exciting a speculation directly op- posed to his own.Q Eutyches, an aged monk, the chief or abbot of the ascetic throng of Constantinople, and a faithful (') Baronius, v., p. 687-719, looks upon Nestorius as a ragiug mouster — a dragon or a fiend. C) I^vagrius, Hist. Ecc., i., pp. 4, 5. (') Milman, Hist. Latin Christianity, i., p. 204 ; Gibbou, iv., p. 476. DIOSCORUS AND HIS BOB BEES. 167 follower of Cyril, proposed, in opposition to the two natures of Christ asserted by the Nestorians, a theory of the perfect union of the spiritual nature with the human. He was shock- ed to find himself denounced as a heretic, yet he boldly main- tained his opinion.(') Cyril was dead ; his successor, Diosco- rus, Patriarch of Alexandria, defended the theory of Eutyches. He was even more unscrupulous than his predecessor. His vices, his cruelty, and his ambition filled the Christian world with tumult. A synod met at Ephesus to decide the contro- versy. Dioscorus was present with a horde of monks, robbers, and assassins ; the trembling bishops were forced by the vio- lence of the Egyptians to adopt the opmion of Eutyches, and the " Robber Synod," as it was called, from the savage natures of its members, seemed to have fixed the rule of orthodoxy. But Leo the Great was now Bishop of Kome, and the oppo- nent of Attila did not fear the wild anchorets of Eg}^t. A general council was summoned at his request, to meet in Oc- tober, 451, at Chalcedon. Senators and nobles were mingled with the priestly throng to restrain their tumultuous im- pulses ;(') in the magnificent church of St. Euphemia, on the shores of the Thracian Bosphorus, five hundred bishops at- tended; the haughty Dioscorus was tried by his peers, and convicted of innumerable vices and crimes ; he was deposed from his sacred ofiice, and the aspiring Bishop of Rome re- joiced in the fall of his powerful rival. For the first time, perhaps, the Nicene Creed was chanted as we have it to-day; the Eutychian heresy was condemned in the person of its chief defender ; and various canons were passed that served to de- fine the usages of the Church. Yet Leo's triumph was mar- red by a memorable incident. Among the regulations in- troduced by the council was one that raised the see of Con- stantinople to an equality, in some particulars at least, with that of Rome ; it asserted that the dignity of the city deter- (') Concil. Chaleedonse, Labbei, viii., p. 4: " Incredibile est, quanta auimi acerbitate ac rabio exarsit Eutyches." Hefele, ii., p. 361. (-) ConciL, Labbei, iv., p. 766: "Turbas comprioiereut." See Evagrius, ii., p. 3. 168 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. mined that of its patriarch, and openly expressed what had been implied at the Second Council.(*) Leo rejected the can- ons with disdain ; he asserted with rage and violence the primacy of Peter ; but the incident is important as showing what was the opinion of this superstitious age as to the ori- gin of the papal claims.(') Another result of the Council of Chalcedon was the creation of a sect, the Monophjsites, who still retain the dogma condemned by the synod, and whose faith still lingers among the Copts and the Abyssinians. So powerless are councils to produce a general unity of belief ! A Bishop of Rome, Vigilius, lent his sanction to the fifth Ecumenical Council, and its general character may be inferred from the life and conduct of its head. Vigilius was the creat- ure and the victim of the corrupt women who ruled over the court of the feeble Justinian. He was accused of having caused the death of his predecessor, the gentle Silverius; of having killed his own nephew by incessant scourging ; of be- ing a notorious murderer, stained by countless crimes. He fled from Rome, pursued by the maledictions of its people. They threw volleys of stones after him as he left the city, and cried, " Evil thou hast done to us — evil attend thee wherever thou goest !"(') At Constantinople he met with still worse treatment. His vacillation or his insincerity displeased his corrupt patrons; he was dragged through the streets with a rope around his neck ; was shut up in the common jail, and fed on bread and water ; and, at length, the unlucky pontiff, having in vain sacrificed his conscience to the tyranny of Justinian, died a miserable outcast at Syracuse.(*) The papal dignity had evidently sunk low in this degenerate age ; and one can not avoid contrasting the humble slave, Vigilius, with (') Coucil., Labbei, iv., p. 7(57. The Jesuit editors say "second" to Kome ; but why, then, Leo's indignatiou ? (^) It is said that this cauon was passed by a few bishops, and not by the whole council (Milnian, Hist. Lat. Christ., i., p. 211); but it still in- dicates that the papal theory was not yet established. (') Milman, i., p. 340 et seq. C) Hefele, ii., p. 824 et 8cq., gives a full account of the council. Vigilius was forced to confirm the acts of the council. POPE HONORIUS THE HERETIC. 169 the haughty Gregories and Innocents who ruled over nion- archs and nations, and who so barbarously avenged his fate. Justinian ruled alone at the Fifth Council (553), and Pope and bishops were the servile instruments of the vicious court. The last, the sixth General Council, assembled in 680, at Constan- tinople. The emperor or Pope Agatho presided ; a throng of bishops attended ; a band of soldiers enforced good order ; and a fierce anchorite of the Monothelite faith attempted to perform a miracle as a proof of the sanctity of his creed. But the dead refused to come to life under his illusive spells ; the Monothelite doctrine was condemned by the united council ; and the faith in the infallibility of the papacy was forever shattered by the conviction of Pope Ilonorius as a heretic.(^) If a Pope can be a heretic, how can he be infallible ? If his inspiration can once fail, when can we be ever sure of his per- fect truth ? Or if Pope Ilonorius erred in becoming the pa- tron of the Monothelite creed, may we not conclude that Pope Pius IX. is wrong in opposing free schools and a free press? The sixth General Council offers a happy precedent for a general synod of the nineteenth century.(^) There now occurs in the course of history that solemn and instructive spectacle, the decline and death of the European intellect. Knowledge ceased to be powerful ; the ignorant races subdued the intellectual ; a brutal reign of violence fol- lowed ; and truth, honor, probity, industry, genius, seemed to have fled forever from the nations of Europe, to find their home with the Saracen or the Turk, From the seventh to the twelfth century the Arabs were the only progressive race. In Europe, by a strange perversion of common reason, to labor was held dishonorable ; to rob the laborer was held the priv- ilege of noble birth.(') The feudal system was a not unskill- ful device to maintain a warrior caste at the cost of the labor- (') Mosheim, i., p. 536, aud note ; Milman, Lat. Christianity, ii., p. 137. (') For the authorities on the coudemuatiou of Honoriiis see Hefele, Con., iii., p. 264-284. The support of heresy, Honorius was vigorously anathematized. (^) The Middle-age chroniclers seem to have hated the working-class in- tensely. See Commines, v., j). 5 j Monstrelet. ITO ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. ing class ; and the merchant, the scholar, the mechanic, and the inventor became serfs or villeins, whose scanty earnings were freely snatched from them to sustain the indolent license of their warrior lords.(') Industry died out, and with it fell its natural offspring — the intellect. The warrior caste could nei- ther read nor w^ite ; the miserable serfs had no leisure for mental improvement ; while priests, monks, and bishops aban- doned the study of classic literature, and, when they could read, employed their idle hours in conning their breviaries or in spelling out miraculous legends of the saints. In this dark period grew up the monastic system, the worship of images and relics, the adoration of Mary, the supremacy of Eome. Heresies, indeed, had ceased to exist, except the greatest of them all, the papal assumption ; and general councils were no lono-er held. A chain of circumstances had tended to make Eome the master of the intellect and the conscience of Eu- rope. Its ancient rivals, the Patriarchs of Alexandria, Anti- och, and Jerusalem, had sunk into feeble subjects of the fol- lowers of Mohammed. No Cyril any longer thundered his anathemas from amidst his swarming hosts of Egyptian monks and bishops ; no vigorous opponents of the papal assumptions arose among the persecuted Christians of Syria and the East. A feeble patriarch reigned at Constantinople, who faintly de- fied his Italian brother, and chanted an uninterpolated creed ;Q but the whole Western world obeyed implicitly the spiritual tyrant at Eome, and the pure faith and morality of the age were lost to sight, and were hidden, perhaps, in the cottages of the Vaudois and amidst the glens and defiles of the Pyrenees. The monastic system had now assumed a strange and over- whelming importance. Eome ruled by its monasteries, and over every part of Europe a countless throng of these clerical fortresses had arisen, engrossing the richest lands, drawing in the young and ardent, cultivating the grossest superstition, and (') The Normau knigbts gave away carpenters and blacksmiths as pres- ents. See Ingulphns, p. 174. The Norman kings sometimes presented their courtiers with a wealthy merchant. (^) The Latins now added the /Ziojite. THE MONASTIC RULE. 171 forming, from Monte Casino to Croyland or Melrose, the iirm- est defense of the papal rule. In the third centmy a Paul and an Anthony, the famous solitaries of Egypt, had begun the system by their example of a perfect seclusion from the world, and often the gentle hermits were the purest, if not the most useful, of their race.(') A pale, slight, sickly, but impassioned and gifted missionary of the new practice, the austere, the bit- ter Jerome, had defended and propagated monasticism by his vigorous pen and his holy life.(°) But Jerome at least taught his followers to labor with their hands, to dress plainly but neatly, to read, perhaps to think.Q A Benedict and Pope Gregory the Great helped to spread the system over the West. Its rules of austerity, seclusion, celibacy, and ignorance grew rigid and immovable, and the monastery became the model of the Roman Church. Celibacy, which had been condemned by the gentle ascetic Paphnutius at the Council of Nice, who proclaimed marriage honorable, was now enforced upon every priest.Q The iron Hildebrand tore wives from their hus- bands, destroyed the happiness of countless families, and de- nounced the married clergy in every land : the priest was con- verted into a monk. The Roman Church denianded a perfect submission from its servants. But the monastic system, which had seemed so harmless or so meritorious in its earlier adher- ents, began now to show its more dangerous aspect. Monas- teries and nunneries filled the cities and the open country of Europe. They possessed half the arable land of England, and drew in the wealth of Germany and France. They grew rich by bequests and charities, lawsuits, forgeries, and fraud.Q The monks were noted for their avarice, indolence, license, O The monks cultivated at first the useful arts. Sozomeu, Hist. Ecc, i.,p.l2. (°) See A. Thierry's Saint Jerome, i., p. 145. Au excellent portrait. (') See Jerome, Regula Monachorum, cap. xiv. : " Si mouachus esse vis, non videri," etc. They were to dress plainly, cai). xvii., to plant, to sow, to labor. {*) Sozomen, i., p. 23. (^) The forged charters and perpetual lawsnits of Croyland show how the acute abbots enlarged their wealth. Ingulphus, Chrou., lutroduct. 172 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. and encroacliing pride. They crushed literature, discouraged industry, despised the claims of labor ; and no burden pressed more heavily upon the working-men of the Middle Ages than the general prevalence of the monastic system. A sellish and useless isolation made tlie monks the prey of idle fancies and superstitious dreams. They sustained the worship of images against the common-sense of Leo and Charlemagne, asserted the claims of the Virgin, and defended the tyranny of the Pope. A monk invented the Spanish Inquisition ; another founded that of Rome ; one produced the massacre of St. Bar- tholomew ; a Jesuit drove the Huguenots from France ; and scarcely one of those horrible persecutions and bloody wars that have made the name of Rome odious among nations but may be traced to the bitter and blind superstition engendered by the monkish rule. A still darker infamy surrounded the convent and the nun- ner3\(') Within their gloomy walls the abbot or superior reigned supreme ; no person was permitted to hold intercourse with the monks and nuns; their nearest relatives were ex- cluded forever from their sight ; a severe discipline made them the slaves of the abbot or the confessor, and deeds of violence and crime, faintly whispered in the public ear, in- creased the unpopularity of the monastic system. At length, in the sixteenth century, the mighty voice of Luther awak- ened attention to the growing enormity ; nation after nation threw oil the terrible superstition, broke up its monasteries, and drove their swarming population to useful labor. Italy has just expelled its monks, to turn the monasteries into alms- houses and public schools ; Spain follows in its path ; and it is possible that these dangerous prisons of the young and the fair may be permitted to exist in all their mediaeval enormity only on the free soil of America or on the streets of Cracow. It seems, indeed, unsafe that they should be suffered to multi- ply anywhere, unless placed under the constant supervision of the State. (') For the gay license of Port Eoyal see Sainte-Beuve, Port Eoyal, i. For a darker i)icture of an early period, Harduiu, Con., i., p. 1398. MONKISH RULE. 173 From the seventli to the sixteenth century the monks ruled the world. The haughtiest and most hated of the Popes, a Hildebrand or an Innocent III., were monks, and every as- sembly of the papal bishops was controlled in its deliberations by the monkish rule. In a Seventh Council (746), whose ecumenicity might well be admitted, image - worship was con- demned, and images declared the instruments of Satan.(') The monks rebelled ; the Pope led them against the emperor and the Church ; a new council was assembled at Nice ; and the indispensable idols were restored and defended in language that was adopted in the Council of Trent. Charlemagne dic- tated, he could not write, four books against the popular su- perstition, and the bishops of the East and the West seem to have sustained the imperial faith ; yet the monks and the Popes were successful, after a conflict of a century. (^) AYe have no space to notice the various papal councils of this dark period; the warrior caste of the Middle Ages submitted de- voutly to the monkish rule ; and a war of extermination was incessantly waged against that large body of enlightened and humble Christians who, under the name of Yaudois, Lollards, or Cathari, seem in every age to have preserved the pure traits of the Gospel faith. At length, however, a council was held whose important results deserve a momentary attention. Pope Urban II., in 1095, assembled at Clermont and Placen- tia an immense host of priests, knights, nobles, and princes, and preached in glowing eloquence the duty of snatching the Holy Places from the control of the iconoclastic Saracens. Europe caught his superstitious ardor, and for more than two centuries continued to pour forth its wealth of manly and martial vigor in a wasteful frenzy on the plains of Syria. The Curtian gulf was never tilled. The energy of nations, which, if directed to honest labor and practical improvement, might have civilized and cultivated the world, was squander- ed in obedience to the cruel suggestions of a monkish dream- er. The Cathari or dissenters wi'ote, spoke, or preached against the wild delusion ; they asserted that the Christian (') Milman, Hist. Lat. Christ., ii., p. 171. C) Id., ii., p. 184. 174: ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. had no right to kill even a Saracen, and that the true way of spreading the Gospel in the East was by the gentle persuasion of a holy life. Their remonstrances were answered by the rude denunciations of the papal preachers, by the whip, the torture, and the stake. War and bloodshed became the chief employment of the Papal Church and its martial adherents, and for two centuries the Popes maintained their place at the head of Christendom by exciting general massacres of the Protestants of Provence or Piedmont, and by driving the young generations of Europe to the charnel-house of the East. One of the most startling effects of this monkish delusion was the Crusade of the little children. A band of fifty thou- sand children from Germany and France set out in 1212 to redeem the Holy Sepulchre. A peasant child of Yendorae first assumed the cross in France, and soon an increasing throng of boys and girls gathered around him as he passed from Paris to the South, and with a touching simplicity de- clared that they meant to go to Jerusalem to deliver the sep- ulchre of the Saviour.(') Their parents and relations in vain endeavored to dissuade them ; they escaped from their homes ; they wandered away without money or means of subsistence ; and they believed that a mii'acle would dry up the Mediter- ranean Sea and enable them to pass safely to the shores of Syria. At length a body of seven thousand of the French children reached Marseilles, and here they met with a strange and unlooked-for doom. At Marseilles were slave-traders who were accustomed to purchase or steal children in order to sell them to the Saracens. Two of these monsters, Ferrers and Porcus, engaged to take the young Crusaders to the Holy Land without charge, and they set sail in seven sliips for the East.(°) Two of the vessels were sunk on the passage with all their passengers ; tlie others arrived safely, and the unhappy chil- dren were sold by their betrayers in the slave-markets of Al- (') This strange event is well attested. See Gescliichte der Krenzziige, Wilkeii, vi., p. 7: "So wunderljar diese Erscbeinung war, so ist sie docb durch die Zeugnisse glaubwiirdiger Gescbicbtscbreiber so fest begriindet," etc. And Micbaud, ii., p. 202. (=) Wilken,vi.,pp.81,82. COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE. 175 exandria or Cairo. Other large bodies of children came from Germany across the Alps. Many perished from hunger, heat, disease ; a few were enabled to die on the sacred soil of Syria ; and it is estimated that fifty thousand of the flower of Eu- ropean youth were lost in this most remarkable of the Cru- sades.Q Constance, the scene of the next important council, stands on the shore of that lovely lake that feeds the romantic Ehine. It has long sunk into decay. In the last century the grass was growing in its principal street.(^) Its air of desolation and de- cline formed a striking contrast to the busy Swiss towns on the neighboring lakes, and. it still slumbers under the fatal in- fluence of a Catholic rule. The only noted spots in Constance are a dark dungeon, a few feet square, in which John IIuss was confined, the rude Gothic hall where he was tried, the min- ster where he was condemned, the place where he was burned, the swift -flowing river into which his ashes were cast, and which his persecutors hoped would bear away all that remain- ed of their illustrious victim into endless oblivion. Yain hope ! Warriors and princes, priests, abbots, monks, cons]3ired to blot from existence a single faint and feeble being, a child of poverty and toil. They burned his books ; they cast his ashes into the Rhine. And to-day all Bohemia assembles to do honor to the names of IIuss and his disciple Jerome, and to carry into execution the principles of freedom and progress they advocated four centuries ago. The Council of Constance met in 1414. Three rival Popes were then contesting each other's claim to the papacy.(^) Each Pope had his adherents, and for nearly forty years priests, rulers, and laity had lived in doubt as to the true successor of St. Peter. It was plain that there could not be three infalli- ble potentates on the same throne ; yet each pretender assert- ed his claim with equal vigor, Gregory, Benedict, and John C) Micbaud, iii., p. 441. (') Coxe, Travels in Switzerland, Letter iii. The dungeon is eight feet long, six broad. (^) Concilium Constantiensis, Labbe, xvi., p. 4 et seq. The Council of Pisa had attempted iu vain to remove the schisui, 1410. See Leufaut, Pise. 176 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. launched aiiatlieraas against each other; and a generation lived and died uncertain whether it had not adored and obey- ed an heretical Pope.(') John XXIIL, in the opinion of his age one of the most abandoned of men, was persuaded or en- trapped by the cardinals and the emperor into summoning a general council ; and Constance, on the borders of Switzerland and Germany, was selected as the place of meeting. The council met at a period of singular interest in history,(") Not only was the papacy divided between three Popes, but that strong and wide opposition to the papal and the monkish rule which seems to have existed in every age was now showing itself in unusual strength. England was half converted to the doctrines of AVycliffe ; Bohemia and its king shared the free opinions of Huss ; the new literature of Italy was skeptical or indifferent ; France and Germany were already shocked at the vices of the monks ; while industry and commerce were rapidly introducing ideas of human equality that must finally destroy the supremacy of the feudal lords. The warrior caste as well as the priestly was threatened by the religious reform- ers, and both united vigorously at the Council of Constance to crush the progress of revolution. (') They strove to rebuild and reanimate the established Churcli, to intimidate the re- formers, and to destroy forever the rising hopes of the people. For the moment they succeeded. The Council of Con- stance was the most splendid gathering of priests and princes Europe had ever seen. The Emperor Sigismund attended its sittings, with all the German chiefs and prelates. The Pope, John XXIIL, came, followed by a throng of Italian cardinals and bishops, hoping to control its proceedings. Almost every European sovereign was represented by an embassador.^ The little city of Constance shone with the pomp of royal and noble retinues, with the red robes of cardinals, and the ermine and jewels of ecclesiastical princes ; riot and license filled its (') Labbe, Con., xvi., p. 4. (°) Lenfaut, Histoirc tin Coiicilc do Coustauce, Preface. (') Lenfant notices the influence of the laity on the council. (^) Lenfaut, Preface, p. 21. There were 150 bishops, 100 abbots, 30 car- dinals, 3 patriarchs. DEPOSITION OF A POPE. 177 streets ; and the Council of Constance was noted for the cor- rupt morals of its members, and the shameless conduct of the prelates of the established Church. Its sittings began No- vember, 1414, and continued until April, 1418. Its proceed- ings were marked by a singular boldness. It deposed John XXIII. for his notorious vices and his alleged contumacy ; re- moved Gregory and Benedict ; and elected a new Pope, Mar- tin Y., who was finally acknowledged by all Europe as the successor of St. Peter. It declared that the council was supe- rior to the Pope,(') and heard with attention the eloquent ser- mon of Gerson, Chancellor of the University of Paris, in which he defended the privileges of a united Christendom against the claims of the Bishop of Rome. It provided that a general council should be summoned every five or seven years ; and it strove to limit the rapacity of Rome by relieving the clergy from its exactions. In order to prevent the undue influence of the Italians, the council divided all its members into four nations or classes ; each nation had a single vote, and a major- ity determined the result. These revolutionaiy movements have made the Council of Constance odious to the succeedino; Popes. Its canons have been disregarded, its authority de- nied ; and no devout Roman Catholic would now venture to assert what was plainly the opinion of the Roman Church in the dawn of the fifteenth century, that the Pope is inferior to the council. Having ended the schism in the Papal Church, the Council of Constance next proceeded to crush heresy and reform. To the corrupt monks and priests of that barbarous age the chief of heretics was the pure and gentle Huss. A child of pover- ty, educated among the people, John Huss had come, a poor scholar, to the famous University of Prague.(^) His mother brought him from his native village to be matriculated, and on the road fell on her knees and recommended him to Heav- en. Maintained by charity, he studied with ardor ; his mind (*) Leiiftxnt,!., p. 22, Preface; Labbe, Con., xvi., p. 8. Gregory aud Ben- edict do not admit itiS claims. (^) Leiifaiit, i., p. 24. 12 178 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. was fed with scholastic learning ; he became a preacher, vig- orous and original ; and in the Chapel of Jjethlehem crowded congregations listened to the inspired lessons of the ardent priest. IIuss had early formed a clear conception of a living Antichrist, a creature made up of blasphemy and hypocrisy, of corruption and crime ; and of a pure and lovely form, the Church of the early age.(') To the one he gave all his love and conhdence, to the other an undying hate. The Antichrist was Rome. The vices and stupid ignorance of the monks, the shameless license of the clergy, the insolent pride of the bish- ops, the rivalry of the contending Popes, convinced the ardent reformer that the established Church had long ceased to be Christian. He inveighed in vigorous sermons and treatises against every form of corruption. He denounced the monks and the Popes, indulgences. Crusades, and a thousand enormi- ties. Jerome of Prague, who had lived at Oxford, brought him over the writings of Wycliffe, and the two friends studied and profited by the clear sense of the English reformer. At length the poor charity scholar became the most emi- nent man of his time. His native land acknowledged his merit, and all Bohemia adopted the opinions of its gifted son. The king and queen were his warm friends, and the nobility and the commons caught the ardor of reform.Q Huss was made rector of that great university, at that time the rival of those of Paris and Oxford, where he had won his education ; and Prague became the centre of a strong impulse toward progress that was felt in every part of Europe. The doctrines and the Bible of "Wycliffe M'ere expounded at the only great seat of learnino; in Germanv ; England and Bohemia, united by friendly ties, seemed about to throw off the papal rule ; the vigor of IIuss, the genius of Jerome, had nearly antici- pated the era of Luther. But it was too soon. The priestly caste and its ignorant instrument, the warrior caste, united to destroy the first elements of reformation, and the monks and (^) See Hnss, Opuscula, p. 14-23, where be paiuts the face and form of Antichrist, its month, neck, arms, tail. (^) Leufaiit, i., p. 34. JOHN MUSS. 179 bishops pursued Hiiss and his followers with their bitterest malignity. The Archbishop of Prague denounced him as a heretic, the Pope excommunicated him ; but Huss might still have escaped, supported by his sovereign, Wenceslaus, and the admiration of his countrymen, had he not been betrayed into the power of his foes. The Council of Constance met and summoned the reformer before its hostile tribunal. The chief vice of this infamous assembly was its shameless duplicity. The sentiment of honor, which we are sometimes told was the distinguishing mark of this age of chivalry, was plainly un- known to every one of the princes, knights, or priests who made up the splendid council. They deceived the Popes; they corrupted the feeble honesty of the Emperor Sigismund ; they openly adopted the rule that no faith was to be kept with heretics ;(') they pledged the Roman Church to a system of perpetual falsehood and deceit. Huss was now in the full splendor of his renown. His name was illustrious throughout Europe, and his eminent tal- ents and spotless life had made him the pride and oracle of Bohemia.^) He was nearly forty years of age. His appear- ance was fine, his countenance mild and engaging. His prom- inent features, his clear and well-cut profile, have in them an Oriental air. He wore his hair and beard carefully trimmed, and dressed in neat scholastic attire. In the society of fair women, kings, and princes his manners had become polished, his carriage singularly attractive ; and his natural gentleness and piety threw around him an irresistible charm. As Rector of the University of Prague he held a position in the eyes of the world not inferior to that of many princes and nobles; but in all his prosperity he had ever been noted for his humil- ity and his kindly grace. He lived above the world, and knew none of its inferior impulses. Yet had he not been able to avoid making many enemies. He had offended bitterly the (*) "Nee aliqna sibi fides aut promissio fie jure uaturali, divino, et bu- raano fuerit in prejudicium Catholicse fidei observauda." See Hallani, Mid. Ages, p. 398. O Tbe Jesuit editors, Labbe, Cou., xvi., p. 4, insinuate simulatione sancti- iatis, etc. 180 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. German students and professors at Prague, and tliey had with- drawn, in number about five thousand, to found the rival col- lege at Leipsie. lie was the chief of the metaphysical faction of the Realists; the Germans and the French were chiefly Nominalists ; and in the tierce quarrels that raged between the two scholastic parties a hatred even to death often grew up be- tween the opposing chiefs. The rectors of the University of Paris (Gerson) and of Leipsie (John Hoffman) looked on their opponent at Pi-ague as abominable and accursed ; and the Nominalists afterward boasted that the death of Huss was due to them alone. So brutal was the age that men killed each other for some shadowy difference in metaphysics ! Gerson was the chief theologian of the time, the new found- er of the liberties of the Galilean Church. Yet he took part in all the frauds of the Council of Constance, saw his illustri- ous fellow-rector pine in a horrible dungeon and die at the stake, and aided in his destruction. The Rector of the Uni- versity of Leipsie also shared in the worst acts of the council. The crimes of nobles and priests were instigated by the most eminent Catholic scholars, and the principles of elevated churchmen were no more humane than had been those of their Gothic ancestors, or the barbarians of a Feejee island. To such men the mild purity of Huss and Jerome was a per« petual reproach. They could not endure their existence upon the same earth. They strove to extirpate them forever, and cast their ashes into the rapid Rhine. Fearless of their enmity, and strong in his consciousness of innocence, sustained by the friendship of his king and his country, and, above all, provided with a safe-conduct from the Emperor Sigismund, IIuss set out from Prague in October to obey the summons of the council. (') As he passed through Germany he was met and welcomed by immense throngs of the people. He was received everywhere as the champion of human rights. Men came to gaze on him as on a benefactor. Even the German ecclesiastics, it is said, saluted respectfully the arch -heretic. He passed safely through Nuremberg, at- (') Lcufant, Constance, i., p. 39. EUSS AT COXSTAXCE. 181 tended by a guard of lioiior, and entered Constance almost in triumph,(') He evidently feared no danger. He even im- prudently defended the doctrines of Wycliffe in the midst of angry monks and priests, and courted their malignity. The Pope, however, John XXHI., had sworn to protect him, the Emperor Sigismund was bound for his safety, and all Bohe- mia watched over the life of Huss. But the rule had been adopted that no faith was to be kept with heretics. Within a few days after his arrival Huss was seized, cast into the hor- rible dungeon of the Dominican convent, and fastened by a chain to the floor. (') He was now in the toils of Antichrist, and was to feel all the extreme malice of the fearful being he had so often im- agined or described. Its falsehood, its baseness, its savage and unsparing cruelty, he was now to realize, if never be- fore. The Emperor Sigismund came to Constance soon after Huss's imprisonment, and remonstrated feebly against the vio- lation of his safe-conduct ; but the chiefs of the council soon convinced him that the Church would spare no heretic, and Huss was left to languish in his dungeon.(^) Articles of ac- cusation were drawn up against him ; false witnesses were brought to convict him of crimes he had never committed ; he w^as persecuted with incessant questions; and for more than six months the great orator and scholar pined in a dread- ful confinement. At length, on the 6th of July, 1415, he was dragged from his dungeon and led out to condemnation and death. The council assembled in that sombre and massive minster whose gloomy pile still frowns over the silent streets of Con- stance.(') The Emperor Sigismund presided, surrounded by his temporal and spiritual peers. A throng of cardinals, bish- ops, and priests assembled to take part in the proceedings, and to exult over the doom of one whose holy life seemed a per- petual reproach to their notorious profligacy and corruption. C) Lenfant, i., pp. 39, 40. C) Id., i., p. 60 ; Coxe, Travels iu S\Yitzerlancl, Let. C) Lenfant, i., p. 76. (') Id., i., p. 401. 182 ECUMENICAL COUNCILS. The clmrcli was filled in every part with eager spectators. It had been carefully arranged for that singular ceremonial with which the holy fathers intended to degrade their victim from his priesthood before they delivered him over to the secular power. In the midst rose a platform, on which were placed the robes and ornaments of a priest, and where IIuss was to be robed and disrobed in presence of all the people. A sol- emn mass was performed, and while emperor and priest bowed in adoration, their victim was kept waiting at the door under a guard of soldiers, lest his presence might desecrate the sacred rite.(') He was then led in, pale, faint, and worn with a terri- ble imprisonment, and ascended the platform. Here he knelt in audible prayer, while tl^e Bishop of Lodi delivered a ser- mon on the enormity of heresy ; and as the prelate finished his vmdictive denunciation, he pointed to the feeble victim ; he turned to the powerful emperor and cried out, " Destroy this obstinate heretic !" . A perfect silence reigned throughout the immense assem- bly. . Various proceedings followed. The chai-ges against Huss were read, but he was scarcely permitted to reply to them. He listened on hie knees, his hairdo raised to hca\ ■ n. Once he mentioned aloud his safe-conduct that had been so shamefully violated, and turned his sad eyes upon the em- peror. A deep blush spread over Sigismund's face ; he was strongly moved. It is said that long after, when, at the Diet of AVorms, Charles Y. was urged to violate Luther's safe-con- duct, he replied, " I do not wish to blush like my predecessor Sigismund." Yet the anecdote can hardly be authentic, for Charles was never known to blush for any one of his dishon- orable deeds. Sentence of degradation was next pronounced against IIuss. The priests appointed for that duty at once ap- proached him, put on him the priestly robes, and then took them otf. They then placed on his head a paper crown, on which were painted three demons of frightful aspect, and on it was inscribed, " Chief of the Heretics." Huss said to them, " It is less painful than a crown of thorns." They mocked (')Leufuut, i., p. 401. EXECUTIOX OF HUSS. 183 liim with bitter raillery, and then led him away to execu- tion.(') He went from the church to the place of execution guard- ed by the officers of justice. Behind him came, in a long procession, the emperor, the prince palatine, their courtiers, and eight hundred soldiers. A vast throng of people follow- ed, who would not be turned back. As Huss passed the epis- copal palace he saw that they were already burning his books, and smiled at the malice of his enemies. He was bound to the stake, and the wood piled up around him. Before the pile was lighted the elector palatine advanced and asked him to recant and save his life. He refused. He prayed, and all the multitude praj^ed with him. The lire was lighted ; he raised his arms and eyes toward heaven, and as the flames ascended he was heard joyfully singing a hymn of praise. Higher, higher rose his dying chant, until his voice mingled with the songs of angels above.('^) The ashes of John Huss, his clothes, and even his simple furniture, were cast into the Rhine, lest his followers, might preserve them as relics of the martyr. But the Bohemians afterward gathered the earth on which he suffered, Lnd carried it away. His friend, Jerome of Prague, was burned the next year, by order of the Council of Constance. A scholar, a man of classic refinement and feeling, the learned Poggio, heard his eloquent defense before the council, witnessed his happy martyrdom, and declared that Jerome had revived in his gen- ius and his philosophy the highest excellence of Greece and Pome : the modern pagan did not perceive how he had sur- passed it. Bohemia has never ceased to lament and honor her gifted sons, and the world is just becoming deeply con- scious of what it owes to Huss and Jerome of Prague, the forerunners of Luther. In July, 1431, a council assembled at Basle still more revo- lutionary in its character than that of Constance.(') The Pope, (') Leufaut, i., p. 408. (') 7