* ESSAYS ON LITURGIOLOGY AND CHURCH HISTORY. BY THE REV. J. M. NEALE, D.D. WARDEN OF SACKVILLE COLLEGE. BY THE REV. GERARD MOULTRIE, M.A. LONDON: SAUNDERS, OTLEY, AND CO. BROOK STREET, HANOVER SQUARE. l86 3 . V TO HIS HOLINESS, P H I L A R E T, METROPOLITAN OF MOSCOW, AND ARCHIMANDRITE OF THE TROITZKO-SERGIEVSKY LAURA, WITH DEEP VENERATION FOR HIS OFFICE AND CHARACTER, AND IN GRATEFUL REMEMBRANCE OF HIS BLESSING BESTOWED ON THE WRITER, " AS ONE OF THOSE WHO STUDY THE LITURGIES OF THE CHURCH, IN ANTICIPATION OF HER FUTURE REUNION," THESE ESSAYS ARE DEDICATED. Orthodoxy Sunday, February 17, 1862. PREFACE. HAVE always felt that there ought to be fome efpecial reafon why papers, which have ferved their turn in a periodical, fhould be collected into a volume. I may remark that the EfTays, which the reader is about to perufe, are, in their nature, (for the moft part,) rather fucceffive chapters of one work, than fcattered papers in a quarterly review. In the latter, they appeared rather by neceffity, than by choice, of order. Perufed, as they were to be, at fuch a diftance of time from each other, an amount of recapitulation was fometimes neceflary, which rendered the DifTertation in which it occurred the heavier reading ; while, after all, it could not be expected that the ftudent, in giving his at- tention to an Eflay of this quarter, mould be able to revert to the fame fubject in a number of the Review which might be two or three years old. In the prefent volume the various papers have been arranged in proper order ; reiterations, no longer necef- vi Preface. fary, have been cut out ; fome miftakes have been recti- fied ; fome criticifms have, I hope, been profited by ; and the refult is now before the reader. I might alfo, in excufe for their republication, plead the urgent requefts which I have received from fcholars, both in England, Germany, and Ruflia, by whom it is an honour to be referred to, that thefe EfTays mould appear in a feparate form : and I may mention that fome of them have been tranflated into French, German, Romaic, and Rufs. This volume confifts, almoft entirely, of papers fur- nimed to the Chriftian Remembrancer. I have to thank the editor not only for his permiflion to republifh them, but alfo for his acceptance of Diflertations which to the majority of his readers muft have been, for the moft part, uninterefting ; and which could only be really accept- able to the fmall clafs of Liturgical ftudents among us. I have alfo to thank my friend, the Rev. Gerard Moul- trie, for his addition to the paper on Liturgical Quota- tions in the New Teftament : where he has moft happily unlefs partiality deceives me worked out with re- gard to the Ifapoftolic Fathers, the idea which had been in my Eflay ftarted with refpect to the writings of the New Teftament. I have endeavoured to adduce additional proof in favour of a theory which I am the more encouraged to confider important on account of the very great kindnefs with which it was received in Germany. In addition to thofe papers which are reprinted from Preface. vii the Chriftian Remembrancer 3 one that on the Bollandifts was a contribution to the Ecclejtaftic : only, when it was originally written, I had not myfelf enjoyed, as I have fince, the privilege of vifiting their houfe of S. Michael, at Bruflels ; and this has occafioned fome addition to the original account. And, finally, the Diflertation on Sequences is reprinted becaufe it is not procurable in England, while it has been quoted as of fome degree of authority in Germany. The firft draught was prefixed as an Introduction to the Collection of Sequences which I printed in 1851. Dr. Daniel, the firft hymnologift of the day, being about to add a fifth volume, by way of appendix, to his former labours a volume dedicated to Profes alone requefted leave to reprint that Introduction. I was unwilling that, after the lapfe of fix or feven years, it mould appear with- out corrections and additions ; and the refult was the Epiftle which the reader has now before him. How utterly unworthy of their fubject thefe Diflerta- tions are, no one can feel more deeply than I do. Yet, at the fame time, they were, I believe, the firft attempt to elucidate Comparative Liturgiology which had ap- peared in the Englifh language, (Mr. Freeman's invalu- able work having not been publifhed when moft of them were written), a fact which may perhaps be allowed to excufe fome of its mortcomings. SACKVILLE COLLEGE, All Saints, 1862. CONTENTS. I . Page HE Breviary Roman and Galilean i 2. The Collefts of the Church 47 3. The Bollandifts 89 4. Kalendars 98 5. The Mozarabic Liturgy 125 6. The Ambrofian Liturgy 171 7. Vernacular Services 198 8. The New " Annales Ecclefiaftici" 227 9. Profpefts of the Oriental Church 256 10. The Law of Primates and Metropolitans 283 11. The Sibyls 311 12. Prefent State of the Gallican Church 332 13. De Sequentiis ad V. Cl. Hermannum Adalbertum Daniel Epiftola Critica 359 14.. Paftoral Poetry of the Middle Ages and the RenahTance . . . 391 15. Liturgical Quotations 411 Appendix to Liturgical Quotations 426 1 6. Studies of the Weftern Church 475 17. Church Feftivals and their Houfehold Words 508 ero C3 P Ao H H BZ MdlXlWWft rMdWTOHaHIH W C^ BAA fOCAOBeHlH hU l) * * Vo M / ^ imgj nMCATi&u.,ft*K!& q^Horw H TWX, Kcmopbif HUior \ A L I H,AP^8A-np^VAHHOH HCTHHHbl,Ka C0^1,HHeN'iC CBATWJfa ' on tturgtolog|> anfc Cfwrcf) I. THE BREVIARY* ROMAN AND GALLIC AN. HE Breviary ! How many perjbns have the words confiantly in their mouths without at- taching a tangible idea to the phraje ! How many have a mijly notion that it contains a monjtrous jumble of incredible legends, invoca- tions of Jaints, mediaeval miracles, fictions, and deceits of all Jbrts ! How many, even a degree further in igno- rance, mix it up in Jbme way with the majs, and expend a vo- cabulary of Protejlant indignation on both in one ! How few realize to themjelves that it is, to the rejl of the Wejlern Church, their office of Morning and Evening Prayer, their Collects, their daily and Sunday Lejjons, and Pjalter ! Nay, that it is the Jburce from which our own Prayers and Collects have been tran- Jcribed. An Englijh Breviary, indeed, would be a very conve- nient book, and we recommend the idea to the conjideration of Jbme of our church publijhers. We beg, at the outjet, that our dejign in this paper may be dijlinftly underjlood. We have not the Jlightejl intention of attempting anything approaching to a hijlory of the Breviary, * Breviarium Romanum, ex decreto SS. Concilii Tridentini reftitutum : S. Pii V. Pontificis maximi juffu editum : dementis VIII. et Urbani VIII. au&oritate recognitum : cum officiis Sanftorum, noviflime per fummos pon- tifices ufque ad hanc diem conceffis. Mechliniae. Typis J. Hanicq. 1846. 2 Various Reforms of the Breviary. Its gradual formation its various branches its different corrup- tions its Jeveral reforms the manner in which Rome has Jlead- fajlly Jet herjelf to have one recognized Breviary throughout the Churches of her obedience to how great an extent Jhe has Juc- ceeded, where Jhe has failed ; all this, though mojl deeply in- terejling, is utterly out of our field at prejent. We may, indeed, at Jbme future time, enter on this Jubjeft, jhould that we have taken in hand prove agreeable to our readers ; and we jhould do it the more readily, becauje the Hi/lory of the Breviary, not only from the time that it came as a book, Jo-called, into ufe, about 1050, but from the very commencement of the gradual procejs of its formation, is a great dejideratum, perhaps the great dejide- ratum in ritualijlic works : the treatije of Grancolas Jupplying but a very Jmall part of what is wanted. But we now propoje to explain what the Breviary is, and how it is ujed ; and we be- lieve that the majority of our readers will be obliged to us if we take nothing for granted as known, and begin from the beginning. It may be as well to Jay aljb, that we propoje to include in our inquiry, bejides the modern Roman, the various French Bre- viaries, thoje of England, in Jbme degree thoje of we/tern Ger- many, and thoje of Jbme of the monajlic orders. With the Breviaries of Germany, (generally Jpeaking,) Poland, Prujfia, Italy, Sweden, Holland, &c. we Jhall not concern ourjelves ; and we aljb propoje to conjider the Breviary as it is intended for the Church, and not for individual recitation. It might Jeem that the crowd of French Breviaries which have had their origin within the lajl hundred and fifty years, mujl be utterly worthlejs for ritual Jludies ; but this is not quite the caje. Jujl as an ecclejiologijl will, in a modernijed church, trace a Jtring here, a capital there, a jamb on thisjide, a pijcina on that, which Jpeaks of older and better work ; Jo, in theje office-books, many an old rite may be noted, if looked for, though perhaps disfigured, perhaps dijlocated. And Juch dijcovery will be the more likely to be made, if the Breviaries in quejlion are Jludied together with the invaluable Voyages Liturgiques of De Moleon, (Le Brun,) who wrote while the old provincial ujes of France were Jlill, in great degree, kept up, and who had that quicknejs of liturgical taft which let nothing noticeable ejcape his objerva- tion. Thoje who are not acquainted with this rare book may form a very tolerable idea of it from Mr. Webb's Continental Ecclefiology, except that Mr. Webb, if inferior to De Moleon as a ritualijt, far JurpaJJcs him as an ecclejiologijl. Although not concerned with the Hijtory of the Breviary, it will be necejfary to fay a few words on Cardinal Quignon's Re- form, both becauje we Jhall frequently have occajlon to refer to The Breviary of Cardinal de Quignon. 3 it in the following pages, and becauje it is very interejling to Englijh Churchmen as a kind of connecting link between their own Prayer-book and the Roman Breviary. From the time that Pope Nicolas III, about 1180, Jubjlituted Franciscan for then Roman ujes, (we need not here dijcufs with what limitations the Jlatement is to be taken,) various proposals were made for a reform, which, as was natural, grew more requijite with each cen- tury. At length Clement VII. entrujled a thorough revijlon to Fernandez de Quiiiones, of a noble family in Leon, a Francijcan, and Cardinal Prejbyter of the title of Holy Crofs. The firjl edi- tion appears to have been published in 1535 ; and by the audacity of its alterations excited great oppojition. It had been approved, however, by Clement VII, and was Jo again by Paul III, Feb. 5, 1535 ; but the Theological Faculty of Paris cenjured it onjuly 27 of the Jame year, as infringing on the ancient order of the Church, by the omijjion of antiphons, by reducing all days to a level in a perpetual monotony of three lejfons, &c. Quignon made Jbme alterations in his Jecond edition, in the preface of which he Jays that he had rather publijhed the former as a feeler, than as a final arrangement. The Breviary, in Jbme rejpecls amended, and with antiphons injerted, became a favourite in France; there are Paris editions of 1536,* 1539, 1542, 1545, 1546 ; and twelve Lyonneje editions between 1538 and 1557. The lajl edition, we believe, is that of Antwerp, 1566. The Brief of Paul III. gives leave to all fecular priejls to recite the new Breviary, on condition that they apply for licence to the Apojlolic See, which licence is to be granted gratis. S. Francis Xavier, writing to S. Ignatius, (Lijbon, Nov. I, 1540,) wijhes to obtain the privilege of himjelf granting this licence to Jix priejls at a time, of his own election, as likely to perjuade Jbme to follow him to India certainly rather a Jlrange reajbn for mijQlonary enterprise. The new Breviary, it is clear, was principally intended for pri- vate recitation ; and we find a Bijhop of Verona, and in Spain of Huejca, protejling againjl its introduction into the choir. The prefaces to the Breviaries of Ilerda and Huejca, printed about that time, bitterly complain of thoje of three leclions. At Sara- gojja, the people, jujlly enraged at the lojs of the Tenebrte office, absolutely roje againjl the Clergy, and the Jecular churches were almojl deferted. At length the Cardinal Peter John CarafFa, * Or rather, we fufpeft, two of 1536. For Arevalus, in his Brevianum Quignonianum, fpeaks of the Paris edition of 1536 as a reprint ofthefecond Roman edition. Now the copy we ufe is clearly a reprint of thefrft, be- caufe it does not contain Antiphons ; but, in (what appears to be) a care- ful copy of the loft title-page, in an old hand, it is dated 1536. 4 The Breviary compared with the Prayer-book. elecled Pope by the title of Paul IV, prohibited (Aug. 8, 1558) the granting any frejh licences ; yet, Juch was the number already ijjued, that four editions were jubjequently called for. Finally, S. Pius V, by his bull, >uod a nobis poftulat, in 1568, absolutely abolijhed the Breviary. We would recommend, as a very curi- ous inquiry, to Jbme juch Jcholar as Dr. Maitland, what traces can be found in the writings of the Reformers of the influence exercijed on the Engli/h Prayer-book by this Breviary ; to which it certainly owes, as we Jhall Jee, a portion of its preface, and probably the firft hint of its table of lejfons. The principle of the French reforms is, as we Jhall Jee, to ad- mit into the Breviary as little as pojjible that is not taken from Scripture ; with the exception of hymns, prayers, and leclions from Homilies, this rule is Jlriclly objerved. There was Jbme countenance to this practice in earlier times. The Council of Braga, 561, forbade all poetical compojitions not taken from Scripture ; and S. Agobard, who was Bijhop of Lyons about 813, wrote againjl the uje of hymns and antiphons on that very ground, and, probably in confequence of his authority, the Church of Lyons did not uje any hymns in her Jervices (except at Com- pline), till, we believe, the Lyonneje Breviary of Archbijhop Mal- vin de Montazet, (1780,) and he, in his preface, makes a kind of apology for the innovation. In proceeding to our Jubjecl, we utterly dijclaim all dijaffec- tion, all lukewarmnejs, to our own Church, becauje we are about to dwell on the riches of the devotional treajury of her Roman Jljler. That we earnejlly long to win back for her much of what Jhe has lojl, we do not deny. That we would fain help, be it only in the humblejl degree, to promote Juch an objecl, is aljb true. But that any one Jhould leave the Church of his Baptijm becauje the offices of her rival have Juperior aejlhetical beauty againjl Juch undutifulnejs and ingratitude we Jhould be the firjl to protejl. And, (putting ajide the very difficult quejlion of a vernacular language,) we feel our advantage Jlrongly in one re- Jpecl. While the beauty of our Prayer-book is but the faint Jhadow of the beauty of the Breviary, it would be much eajler to correct the former by amplification than the latter by diminution. The procejs, on our Jide, involves no laceration of faith. We have no legends that muji be given up. We have no invoca- tions that muji not be infijled on. We have a good foundation, and have only to heighten and give majejly to our building : Rome would have to take down part of the edifice, and to remove a good many of the incongruous ornaments. For, be it remem- bered, there is no injlinftively Catholic truth Jlated in the Bre- viary, (of the Mijjal and Offices we are not now Jpeaking,) which The Breviary : its Contents. 5 is not as plainly Jet forth in our own Prayer-book, with the one exception of Prayers for the Dead. Regeneration, the propi- tiatory virtue of Alms and Fajling, the Power of the Keys, England Jlates them as clearly as Rome ; and our weak point, the obfcurity in which our offices involve the doSrine, that the Holy Eucharijl is truly and properly a propitiatory Sacrifice, is one not particularly included in the Jubjecl of our prejent con- Jideration. We proceed to our tajk : and while, as we Jaid, we propoje to be as elementary as pojjible, the faft that Jome eighty Bre- viaries, Jeveral of excejjive rarity, are at our Jide as we write, may enable us, in Jbme degree, to gratify thoje who are rather further advanced in ritual Jludies. The Breviary, then, is ujually contained in four volumes, one for each quarter of the year. It is Jbmetimes, indeed, comprised in one volume, and is then technically called a Totum. One of the neatejl of Hanicq's reprints, the Francijcan Breviary, is Jo ; it forms a goodly oSavo of jbme 1200 pages, in double columns, and in type a Jize Jmaller than the notes to the prejent article. Among early totums are thoje of the Cardinal Quignon, 1536, and of the Fratres Humillati^ 1540. Each of the volumes of the Breviary conjljls of Jix parts. i. The Calendar, Rubrics, and Tables. 2. The PJalms, Ver- Jicles, and Rejponfes of the week-day hours, or ferial office. 3. The Proprium de tempore : the collects and leclions for the Sundays and weeks in that part of the year which the volume contains. 4. The Proprium de Santtis : the Jame for the fejli- vals of Saints which occur in that period. 5. The Commune Sanfiorum : the leclions, collects, hymns, &c. common to all thoje Saints for whom no particular office is appointed. And to all theje we may add 6. The offices for the Anniverjary of a Dedication, for a Departing Soul, of the Dead, the Little Office of S. Mary, &c ; Jo that much of the ijl, and all the 2d, fth, and 6th of theje divijions are necejjarily repeated in every volume of the Breviary. We do not here propoje to Jpeak of the Calendar, nor of thoje admirable Tables, whereby all the confujion and perplexity con- cerning concurrences is avoided, which, in our own Church, is Jo painful, and all the prolixity and difficulty, which, in the Eajlern Church, is Jo cumberjbme ; rcjerving that Jubjeft for another time. We need hardly Jlay to remind our readers of the my/li- cal commemoration of our LORD'S Jufferings made by the Seven Canonical Hours. The old verjes give them well ; we quote the verfion from the notes of the late tranjlation of Du- randus. 6 Matins: their Commencement. At Matins bound, at Prime reviled, condemned to death at Tierce, Nailed to the Crofs at Sexts, at Nones His Bleffed Side they pierce : They take Him down at Vefper-tide, in grave at Compline lay, Who thenceforth bids His Church obferve her fevenfold hours alway. And the fame idea was expanded in many a mediaeval poem, of which, perhaps, one of the mojl beautiful is that which begins Patris Sapientia, bonitas divina, Deus Homo captus eft hora MATUTINA, &c. We will proceed to the hours themfelves, after noticing the golden verfes which in jbme of the older Breviaries preceded them. Mens vaga, difcurfus, et fyncopa, fermoque mixtus, Tollunt canonicas meritum dicentibus horas. Although, correctly /peaking, Vefpers are the firjl office of the day, and although the Breviaries ufually commence with Prime, from which the Pfalms alfo begin their courfe, we will take Ma- tins firjl. The Qjficium Notturnum^ Vigilics, Ad Matutinum, or Matutines^ confijls of one, two, or three Nofturns, as the cafe may be, and is immediately followed by Lauds. Matins are preceded by the Pater Nojler, the Ave Maria, and the Credo ; as are all the other hours except Compline with the Pater Nojler and Ave Maria. This ufe, however beautiful, is known not to be very ancient ; it was not received with any authority into the Roman Church till the Breviary of Cardinal Quignon ; which, however, added alfo the Conjiteor of the Mafs. No doubt, however, the practice was widely in ufe as early as the eleventh and twelfth centuries : and in the Sarum, York, and Hereford Mijfals, the Pater Nojler is ordered to be faid fecretly before the commencement of the office, jujl as now in the Roman Church. In the Paris Breviary of 1557, and that of Senlis of the fame date, no allufion is made to the ufe. In that of the Freres Humilies no notice is taken of the Ave Maria and the Creed, but the Pater Nojler is prefcribed. The proper com- mencement of Matins, therefore, is with the Verficles and Re- fponfes, " O LORD, open Thou our lips. And our mouth Jhall Jhow forth Thy praife. O GOD, make fpeed to fave us. O LORD, make hajle to help us ;" the Gloria, and the Laus till Domine^ Rex eeternce gloria^ in Septuagefima, or Alleluia at other times. We would here make one remark on the Gloria^ with refpeft to the cujlom of turning to the Eajl, and bowing when it is faid. It was the univerfal cujlom for the children of the choir to do this in all French Cathedrals ; but in the beginning of the lajl cen- tury, it was remarked as a fingularity, that the Canons of Notre Matins : the Invitatory. 7 Dame at Rouen, and the Canon-Counts of S. John at Lyons, Jlill retained the practice. The Cluniac rule orders turning to the altar at the Gloria, as well as at the Deus in adjutorium. The extravagant inclinations pra<3ifed by jbme of our brethren during both verjes Jhow more zeal than knowledge ; in facl, at the Sicut erat it was the practice of many churches to turn to the we/1. The ninety-fifth Pjalm is preceded by the Invitatory, the greatejl of the minor lojjes which the Englijh Church has Juf- tained. It pitches the key-note to the whole office : it directs the worfhippers in what light they are at that particular time called on to regard GOD ; and jlamps its own meaning on the whole Jeries of PJalms. No one, we imagine, but mujl have felt the lamentable want of this in our own Matins. On Chrijl- mas-Day, for example, and Good-Friday, the office is absolutely the Jame through Jentences, exhortations, confejflion, absolution, verjicles, and Venite ; in Jhort, down to the PJalms. And on days which have no proper PJalms the caje is even worje. For injlance, on Maundy Thurfday and Lady-Day, the difference between the Te Deum and the Benedicite, (and that is Jeldom practically objerved,) would be the firjl intimation that the days were of different natures. The Invitatory is divided into two claujes : both are Jaid be- fore the Pjalm, and at the end of the Jecond, Jeventh, and lajl verjes ; the Jecond claufe only at the end of the fourth and ninth verjes. The Gloria is followed, fir/I, by the Jecond, and then by both claujes. The Breviary of Cardinal Quignon rejlrifted the Invitatory to the beginning and end of the PJalms. Deinde fequitur invitatorium tempori feu fefto convenient; Pfalmus^ Venite exultemus ; in cujusfine duntaxat invitatorium repetitur^ non autem in media. The ordinary Sunday Invitatory in the Roman Breviary is : " Let us worjhip the LORD * our Maker." In the four firjl Sundays of Lent : " Let it not be in vain to you to rije early before the light, * for the LORD hath promijed the crown to them that watch." On Eajler-day : "The LORD is rijen in- deed, * Alleluia." On the commemoration of Apojtles : " The LORD, the King of Apojlles, * O come let us worjhip." So in the commemoration of other faints : " The LORD, the King of Martyrs," or " the King of ConfeJJors," or " the King of Virgins, * O come let us worjhip." In the office of the Dead : " The King, to Whom all things live, * O come let us worjhip." Quignon's Reform, while it retained the proper invitatories for the commemoration of Saints, made great innovations in thoje for Sundays. For example, in thoje of Advent : " LORD, we wait for Thine Advent * that Thou mayejl quickly come, and 8 Ma fins: Invitatories and Venlte. dijjolve the yoke of our captivity." How unfavourable a con- trajl with the Roman : "The King, the LORD That is to come, * O come let us worjhip !" But Quignon, true to his Jcriptural principle, continually inserted texts in this pojition which were not in the leajl calculated for it. The Englijh Breviaries agree pretty clojely in their invita- tories with the modern Roman. The York, however, in the commemoration of Saints, has great and not happy variations. Thus, for one Martyr : " The jujl jhall flourijh, planted in the houje of the LORD ; * let us rejoice and be glad in this Jacred jblemnity " Of one Confejjbr : " One GOD in Trinity let us faithfully worjhip, * by faith in Whom the Holy Prelate N. beheld GOD." Of the invitatories of the older French Breviaries there is little to be Jaid ; but a few words mujt be given to thoje of the Paris Reform, by way of jhowing how much the attempt to jcripturalije them has lowered their tone. For example, in the commemoration of Martyrs, injlead of the glorious " The LORD, the King of Martyrs, * O come let us worjhip," which at once raijes our thoughts to Him Who is the Martyr of Martyrs and the Saint of Saints, ajjuming His myjlical union with His people in this as in every other aclion, we have mere common matter-of-faS jlatements, that direcl our attention to the grace of GOD rather than to the GOD of grace. Thus the new Paris, followed by a multitude of others : " The GOD of patience and conjblation, * O come let us worjhip." Laon, S. Quentin, Le Mans, Limoges, Rouen, Amiens, Cahors : " CHRIST, Who giveth to the conqueror hidden manna, * O come let us worjhip. " Bourges, Chalons-Jur-Saone, Nevers : " GOD, Who giveth the crown of life to him that is faithful unto death, * O come let us worjhip." Dijon, with completely the old fpirit, " The LORD, mighty in battle, * O come let us worjhip." It will be worth while, as a curious Jpecimen of this diverjity, to take the invitatories for an ordinary Sunday. Paris : " The LORD Who made us, * O come let us worjhip. " Laon, Rheims, Cahors, Le Mans : * GOD, Who hath made us and regenerated us *." It would be difficult to ajjign any reajbn for the omifllon of redemption. Versailles, Chalons-fur-Marne : " It is a Jblemn feajl unto the LORD *." Bourges, Beauvais : mojl inappro- priately : " The LORD Who rejled on the Jeventh day and janftified it *." Dijon, Liege: "O come * let usjing unto the LORD." S. Quentin, Amiens: "The LORD our GOD, * O come let us worjhip." Bazas, Lombes, Toulouje, VI- enne : " GOD, Who hath made us and raifed us together with CHRIST *." Nevers : " Him that jitteth upon the throne, and liveth for ever and ever *." Meaux : " CHRIST JESUS, Matins : the Hymns. 9 Whom it behoved in all things to be like unto His brethren, that He might be merciful *." The lajl is an invitatory clearly at variance with the Jpirit of the fejlival : appropriate enough to a Friday, but Jadly out of place on a Sunday. The Venite exultemus is Jaid, not from the Vulgate, but in the Old Italic verjion. This Quignon abrogated for that of S. Je- rome. When the PJalm occurs in the middle of the office, how- ever, then it is Jaid from the Vulgate. A few words on theje two Tranjlations of the PJalms may not be out of place. The Old Italic, jlightly corrected by S. Jerome, was called the Roman uje : the new verjion of S. Jerome was introduced by S. Gregory of Tours into Gaul, and thence called the Gallican uje. From Gaul it had pajjed into Germany, be- fore the time of Walafrid Strabo. In Spain, the Old Italic was retained till the partial abrogation of the Mozarabic Rite by S. Gregory VII. S. Francis, in his Rule, orders the Roman Office, except the P falter. By the time of Sixtus IV. the Gallican uje had prevailed everywhere, except in Rome itjelf, and the churches within a circle of forty miles. Finally, the Gallican edition was made the uje of the Latin Church by the Council of Trent. But the Clergy of the Lateran, in Jpite of the Council, retained the Italic verjion, and Jlill do Jo. The Jecond volume of the col- lected works of the Cardinal Thomajlus contains a comparijbn of the two verjions, arranged in parallel columns. We have Jaid that the Venite exultemus follows the rejponjes with which Matins open. But the rule of S. Benedict prefixes to it the third PJalm. This is retained in the modern Bene- dicline and Cluniac Breviaries, as aljb in the Carthujian. The Venite is followed by the hymn, either for the day of the week, or proper to the fejlival, as the caje may be. Of the hymnology of the Breviary* we do not now intend to Jpeak, and Jhall therefore pajs on to the PJalms. * We will, however, for the fake of thofe who may travel in thofe French diocefes which ftill have proper Breviaries, (though the ultramontane views at prefent prevailing in France are introducing, or reintroducing, the Roman Breviary everywhere,) give the explanations of the initials attached to the French hymns. B. The Abbe Befnault, Prieft of S. Maurice, Sens, 1726. Br. or fometimes B. The Abbe J. B. Le Brun Defmarets, author of the Breviaries of Orleans and Nevers, died 1791. C. Charles Coffin, Reftor of the Univerfity of Paris, who died in 1749: the fecond in point of excellence. Commir. Jean Commire, of the Society of Jefus, died 1702. D. J. D. Danicourt, of Noyon, died after 1786. G. or Guiet. Charles Guiet, of the Society of Jefus, died 1684. G. ep S. Guillaume du Pleflis de Gefte, Bimop of Saintes, died 1702. H. Ifaac Habert, Do&or of the Sorbonne, 1668. i o Arrangement of Nofturns. At the conclusion of the hymn the firjl noclurn begins. We may, for greater clearness, divide the arrangement of noclurns into two great families, which we may call the monajlic and the fecular. We will begin with the latter firjl, and take the Roman as the example. On ordinary days, one noclurn only is faid. This conjljls of twelve Pfalms, recited two and two together under one antiphon, and three lejjbns from Holy Scripture ; or, if it be a fimple fejli- val, the jecond, or the fecond and third lejfons, are of the Saint. On femi-double and double Fejlivals* there are three noclurns. The firjl conjljls of three Pjalms, each under its own antiphon, and three lejjbns from Scripture ; the Jecond aljb conjljls of three Pjalms, and three lejjbns from Jbme Jermon, generally /peaking, on the pajjage of Scripture which has preceded ; the third of three Pjalms, the beginning of the Gofpel for the day, and three lejjfons from a homily upon it ; and then, under rejlriclions which we Jhall afterwards fee, the Te Deum. But on Sundays, the firjl noclurn conjljls of twelve Pjalms, Jaid four and four under one antiphon ; while on the Fejlivals of Eajler and Pentecojl one noclurn only is /aid. The general arrangement of the Parifian Breviary is the fame, with the exception that the firjl noclurn on Sundays is of the fame length with that on ordinary days ; that femi-doubles have L. F. L. Liflbir, Premonftratenfian Abbat of Val-Dieu, died after 1786. R. Urban Robinet, Vicar-General of Paris, died 1758. S. y. Jean Baptifte Santeuil, the Prince of French Hymnographers, better known by his name of Santolius Viftorinus, died 1697. His hymns met with the almoft unanimous admiration of contemporary French critics; one of the beft editions was publifhed at Paris in 1698. The greater part of the French Breviaries have adopted them ; among the firft that did fo were thofe of Orleans, 1693; Lifieux, 1704; Narbonne, 1709; Meaux, 1713. Bourdaloue even wiflied that they might be received into the Roman Breviary. The criticifms of Commire were thofe of a rival ; but the remarks of De la Monnaye, (Menagiana, Ed. 1713, torn. iii. p. 402,) give a much jufter idea of their merits. For anything like the fervour and fternnefs of the older hymns we muft not look ; but they were the truly elegant productions of a Chriftian fcholar of the age of Louis XIV. We believe that they are, from their very faults, more popular among Englifh Churchmen, generally (peak- ing, than thofe of the Roman Breviary. Santeuil has been accufed ofjan- fenifm ; it would feem caufeleflly ; at leaft, the verfe which has been thought to imply it is innocent enough, " Infcripta faxo lex vetus Praecepta, non vires dabat ; Infcripta cordi lex nova Quicquid jubet, dat exequi." There are, however, fome very offenfive paffages; e.g. of our fuftering LORD: " Clamore magno dum Patrem Sibi reliaus invocat, Cum morte luftantem Deum Non audit Ille, vix Pater :" a contradiction, almoft in terms, of the Apoftle's declaration, that " He iuas heard in that He feared." S. M. Santolius Maglorianus, or Claude Santeuil, brother of the above. [On the different clafles of Feftivals, fee a fubfequent paper on "The Calendar! of the Church."] the Bemdittine Pfalms. 1 1 only one noSurn ; and that this nofturn, as well in them as in Jimple feajls and ferial days, has nine and not twelve PJalms. In the Benedicline Breviary, on Jemi-double and all Juperior fejlivals, three noclurns are Jaid : the firjl conjljls of Jix PJalms, Jaid two and two under one antiphon, if Sunday ; each with its own antiphon, if any other fejlival ; and four lejjbns from Scrip- ture : the Jecond, of Jix PJalms in like manner, and four lejjbns from a homily : the third, of three Canticles from the Old Tejla- ment, the beginning of the Go/pel for the day, with four leclions by way of commentary on it. But on feriae and Jimple feajls, as aljb on oclave days, though Jemi-doubles, two noclurns are Jaid. The firjl eonjijls of Jlx PJalms, under three antiphons; and in the feriae of winter, Jimple fejlivals, and oclave days, three leciions; but in the feriae of Jum- mer, a Jhort "chapter" only. The Jecond nofturn conjljls of Jlx Pfalms in like manner, and a Jhort chapter. The old order, as we learn from Durandus, was that monks never Jaid nine lejjons, except in Matins for the Dead, and, as being of the Jame kind, on the three lajl days of Holy Week ; but this rule was afterwards departed from. The breviary of the Freres Humilies (1548) has only nine leSions; and a great many of the modern reforms, e.g. the Carmelite (1755), the Au- gujlinian (1849), t ^ ie Francifcan (1848), the Gallican congrega- tion of Augujlinians (1778), and that of S. Maur, have all the Jame arrangement. The unreformed Benediclines, however, the Cijlercians, and (to the lajl) the Cluniacs, retained the twelve lections. The two noclurns are not Jo eajlly explained. Du- randus does not mention them ; and the rule of S. Benedict only does Jo by implication. Cardinal Quignon's Reform gives one noclurn of three pjalms and three leclions all the year round. In proceeding to the PJalms, we may remark that the rule of S. Benedict, the great normal guide of monajlic Breviaries, after giving a particular arrangement, concludes thus : * " Admonijh- " ing this before all things, that if by chance the aforejaid dij"- " tribution of the Pjalms Jhould dijpleaje any, let him arrange " them in Jbme other way, as it Jhall jeem good to him ; objerv- " ing, however, this mojl carefully, that, in every week, the " whole PJalter, to the number of CL. PJalms, be Jung, and be ** commenced anew in the vigils (Matins) of the Sunday." * This is S. Benedift's rule ; but he makes, with great naivete, an excep- tion, " Unlefs by chance, which GOD forbid, the brethren arife too late, and fomething has to be fhortened in the refponfes or leHons, all care, how- ever, fhould be taken that this fall not out fo, but if it /hall fo happen, he by whofe negleft it fell out fliall worthily fatisfy GOD in the oratory." 1 2 The Benedittinej and Parifian y Pfalms. The BenediSine arrangement, then, Is this : Matins. Lauds. Sunday . . 21. 22. 23. 24. 2S. 26. 27. 28. 29. JO. 31. 32.* 67. 51. 118. 63. Benedicite. 148. 149. 150. Monday . . Tuefday . . 33- 34- 35- 37- 3 8 - 59.40.41.42.44.45. 46. 47. 48. 49- S- S- 53- 54- 55- 56. 58- 59- 51. 5. 35. Song of Ifaiah. 148. 149. 150. 51. 47. 57. S. of Hezekiah. 148. 149. 150. Wednefday Thurfday . Friday . . . Saturday. . 60.61.62.66.68. 69.70.71.72.7}. 74- 75- 77- 78- 79- 8o - 8l - 8z - 8 3- 8 4- 8 5- 86. 87. 89. 93. 94. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105. 106. 107. 108. 109. 51. 64. 65. S. of Hannah. 148. 149. 150. 50. 88. 90. Song of Mofes. 148. 149. 150. 50. 76. 92. S. of Habaccuc. 148. 149. 150. 50. 153. Song of Mofes. 148. 149. 150. Prime. fierce. Sexts. Nones. Offers. Comfline. Sunday . . 119. v. I 32. 119. u. 3256 119. -v. 57 80. 119 v. 80 IOJ. no. in. ii2. no. Monday . . I. 2. 6. 119 v. 105 128 H9.V.I29 153. 119. v. 153 end 114.115.116.117.129 Tuefday . . 7. 8. 9. 130. 131. 132. 133. Wednefday 10. II. 12. 135. 136. 137. 138. Thurfday . 13- 14- 15- 139. 140. 141. ^4.90.134. Friday . . . ( 16. 17. 18. ) I v. 125. j j 120. 121. 122. 123. 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 142.144.145. V.I IO Saturday . . (18.^.2551.) I 19.20. j J 8145. v. 10 end ) 146. 147. j Now, this arrangement is manifejlly imperfecl, becaufe there can be no reajbn why Monday Jhould be dijlinguijhed above the other days of the week by proper Tierce, Sexts, and Nones. Yet it is retained in the later BenediSine Reforms ; as, for ex- ample, in the Cluniac revifion, 1696. The Roman Breviary removes the inconjijlency by making the Pfalms of the little hours always the Jame : and a beautiful myflery is discovered in this by the ecclejiajlical commentators, that whereas in the night of this world change and chance prevail, in the immutable day of heaven the Jervice of GOD will ever be one and the Jame. We will now give the Paris arrangement. Sunday . . Matins. Lauds. Prime. Tierce. Sexts. Nones. Offers. Comfline. 1.2.3. 18. z8. 30. 66. 63. 70. loo. 148. 118. 119. v. 132. II 9 . v. 32 80. 119. v . 80 128. 119. T>. 128176. no. in. 112. 113. 114. (115.) 4.91.134. Monday . . 104. 105. 106. 9*. 136. '35- 8.77. 25.96. 47.98-99- sj-73- 115. 121. 124. 126. 137- 6. 7 . Tuefday . . .5.19.72. 101. 107. 24. 85. 97. 150. 35- 26. 50. 37- 109. 120. 122. 133. 141. 142. 13.32.79. Wednefday 9- (=9- '<>) 7 8. 5. 36. 65. 147 pan. 3i- 42. 43- 21. IO3. 82. 94. 123. 125. 127. 130. IJI. ii. 14. 16. Thurfday . *-33- 68. 89. 81. 108. 147 part. 67.90. 27.84- 23- 34. 80. 92. 126. 138. I 45 . ,2.39. Friday . . . ,1.55.59. 61.69. 54.7I. 146. 44. 40. 58. 102. 22. I2 9 . 139. I4O. 38. 56. Saturday . 41.49.62. 64. 75. 76. 83- I 7 J7- 117. 88. 14}. *9- 4J- '49- 46.47.87. 60.74. 128. 132. 144. 51. 86. The Parifian PJalms. 13 It is to be underjlood that thofe Pjalms which in the preceding table are in larger characters, arejuch as are Jaid in two or more divifions ; Jo that the principle of nine at Matins, four, bejides the canticle, at Lauds, five at Vejpers, and three at all the other hours, may be conjlantly obferved. It mujl be confejfed that the divifion of Jbme of theje PJalms Jeems rather arbitrary. Thus, while the 5ijl and 88th, each conjijting of nearly twenty verjes, are undivided, the Igth, which has only fifteen, is divided. Thus aljb the firjl divijion of the logth has only four verjes. The Paris, and, following it, many of the French Breviaries, take, Jb to Jpeak, a theme for the PJalms of each Feria. Thus, Monday is occupied with the goodnejs of GOD, as displayed in the works of Creation : Tuejday, Wednefday, Thurfday, by Charity, Hope, and Faith : Friday, by our LORD'S Pajfion : Saturday, by the future glory of the Saints. Now, theoretically, nothing could be more excellent than the weekly recitation of the PJalms. But, practically, it came to pajs that, from the faff of all, even Jemi-double fejlivals, having proper PJalms, a few of them were repeated over and over again, and the rejl left utterly unjaid. The prefaces to the modern Breviaries are full of complaints of this abuje. So Paul RabuJJbn, or who- ever wrote the preface to the Cluniac Reform : " Porro ea PJalmo- " rumjervatadijlributio ejl,utjingulis hebdomadibusomnes percur- " rantur, in quo et veteris Ecclejiae mos retentus, et S. Benedicli "Jententiae obtemperatum" . . . "In hujus operis ordine illud " primum intendimus, lit juxta antiquam Ecclejlae confuetudinem " plurimorumque Conciliorum decreta, Davidicum PJalterium per " jingulas Hebdomades recitatum foret," Jays Bijhop De Roche- chouart, in his preface to the Evreux Breviary. " Ut quidam " PJalmi," complains Bijhop Dejhos, " per magnam anni par- " tern vix Jemel atque iterum recitarentur : nos rem gratam fac- " turos exijlimavimus, Ji eorum Jequeremur exempla qui PJalmos " ita dijlribuerunt," &c. And for this reajbn, amongjl others, Gregory XIII. in his bull, Paftoralis OJpcii (1573), forbade " ne Jcilicet oflficium majoris partis Feriarum anni omitteretur, et Breviarii ordo Jubverteretur." But the mojl remarkable com- plaint is that of Cardinal Quignon, in the Preface to his Reform, if we put it in juxta-pojition with the preface to our own Prayer- book, evidently derived from his ; although both lead us a little way from our immediate purpoje, inajmuch as they touch on the LeSions as well as on the PJalms. * The Benediftine ufe here, as always in the third Nofhirn, gives three Canticles from the Old Teftament writers under one Antiphon. The Preface of Quignon. CARDINAL QUIGNON. Et profe&o, ll quis modum precan- di olim a majoribus inftitutum dili- genter confiderat, horum omnium ab ipfis habitam rationem manifefto de- prehendet. Sed fa6lum eft nefcio quo pa6lo hominum negligentia, ut paullatim a fan&iflimis illis veterum Patrum in- ftitutis difcederetur. Nam primum libri Sacrx Scripture, qui ftatis anni temporibus erant perlegendi, vixdum incepti a precantibuspraetermittuntur. Ut exemplo efle poflunt (fie) liber Genefis, qui incipitur in Septuagefima et liber Ifaiaequi in Adventu, quorum vix fingula capita perlegimus, ac eodem modo cetera Veteris Tefta- menti volumina deguftamus magis quam legimus : nee fecus accidit in Evangelia et reliquam fcripturam Novi Teftamenti, quorum in locum fucceflerunt alia, nee utilitate cum his, nee gravitate, comparanda. ENGLISH PRAYER-BOOK. Thefirft origin and ground where- of, if a man would fearch out by the ancient Fathers, he mall find that the fame was not ordained but of a good purpofe, and for a great advancement of godlinefs. That commonly when any book of the Bible was begun, after three or four chapters were read out, all the reft were unread. And in this fort the book of Ifaiah was begun in Ad- vent, and the book of Genefis in Sep- tuagefima ; but they were only begun, and never read through : after like fort were other books of holy Scrip- ture ufed. Accedit tam perplexus ordo, tam- que difficilis precandi ratio, ut inter- dum paullo minor opera in invenien- do ponatur, quam, cum inveneris, in legendo. This godly and decent order of the Fathers hath been fo altered and neglefted, by planting in uncertain ftories and Legends. . . . Moreover, the number and hard- nefs of the rules called the Pie, and the manifold changings of the fer- vice, was the caufe, that to turn the book only was fo hard and intricate a matter, that many times there was more bufinefs to find out what ftiould be read, than to read it when it was found out. There is feme truth in the above remarks : but the Reform was carried too far in Quignon' s Breviary, and to fuch an extent in our own as almojl to dejtroy the beauty and appropriateness of our Pfalms. There is furely a wide difference between fcarcely ever having the ferial office, as in the ante-Tridentine books, and only having fix exceptions from it, as in our own Church. No ritual fcholar but mujl feel the glaring impropriety of carrying the week-day Pfalms into Maundy Thurfday, Eajler Eve, the Epiphany, &c. of having, in ajeafon of deep humiliation, a PJalm of praife and jubilee ; of a penitential Pfalm on a high fejlival. We Jhall have more to fay on this matter when we come to the Leffions. While on the fubjecl of the Pfalms, we may give the follow- ing verfes as to the tones, which are equally ingenious and con- Matins : the Antiphons. \ 5 venient. They occur in many old Breviaries : we copy from that of S. Remy of Rheims (1557). Verfus tonos declar antes. Pri. re, la : Se. re, fa : Ter. mi, fa : Quart, quoque mi, la : Quint, fa, fa : Sext. fa, la : Sept. ut, fol : Oft. tenet ut, fa. Pfalmorum mediationes. La, la, la dat Primus, Sextufque :* fa, fol, fa Secundus, Tertius, Ofta Epijlle to the Hebrews, which is continued in that week. On Septuagejima Sunday they commence Genejis, which is read pretty nearly in courje till Shrove Tuejday, which has part of the fourteenth chapter.* On the week-days of Lent,f go/pels are read, with commen- taries from the Fathers ; the Gojpels are principally from S. Matthew, till the beginning of the fourth week ; then principally from S. John (though alfo from S. Luke), till Palm Sunday. As for the Sundays, the firjl has its leclions from 2 Cor. vi. and vii. , on repentance and its fruits ; the Jecond, from Gen. xxvii. , J EJau's finding no place for repentance ; the third, Gen. xxxvii., the Jlory of Jojeph's mijjion to his brethren. Why this is Jelec- ted, prejently ; Durandus's reajbn is not very jatisfaclory : " This is the Jixth Sunday from Septuagejima, and our Lord was " crucified on the jixth day of the week, wherefore mention is made " of the PaJJion of the Lord, which is Jignified by Jojeph." On the fourth Sunday, Mojes' mijjion to Jave the IJraelites, the lec- tions being from Exod. iii. On Pajfion Sunday, the mijjion of Jeremiah (Jer. i.) : the reference of all theje le&ions clearly being to Him Whoje mijjion to Jave lojl man the Church is immediately about to celebrate. We now come to Holy Week. The lec- tions on Palm Sunday are from Jeremiah, as aljb on the Monday, Tuejday, and Wednejday. On the Thurfday, when the double office begins (though but three lejjbns in each Noclurn), the three firjl are from Lamentations ; the three next from S. Augujline's Commentary)) on the Fifty-fifth Pjalm ; the three lajl, the injlitution of the Blejjed Eucharijl, from the Epijlle to * The Paris here, as always, partly by the fuperior length of its leflbns, partly by its principle of abltrafting the whole, rather than giving at con- tinuous length part, of a book, has advanced much further, namely, to the twenty-fifth chapter. f In the week-days of Lent, till PaJJion Sunday, the two firft leftions of the Paris Breviary are from the reft of Genefis ; a few chapters from the other books of Mofes j from Joftiua ; Judges, and Ruth ; in Paflion Week, from Jeremiah. J This and the following Sundays, till Paffion Sunday, have, in the Paris Breviary, their le&ions merely in the due courfe of the ferial reading. On thefe three days, in the Paris Breviary, as all through Lent, the third leftion is from a Commentary on the Gofpel. || Paris, from S. Chryfoftom's Sermon on the Betrayal. 22 I'he Courfe of the Leftions the Corinthians. On Good Friday and Eajler Eve the three firjl lejjbns are from the Lamentations ; the three next from S. Augujline's Commentary* on the Sixty-third PJalm ; the three lajl from the Epijlle to the Hebrews. In the Odave of Eajler, Pajchal gojpelst are read, with commentaries. On the week- days, from Low Sunday till AJcenfion, there is merely a brief lection (Hos. vi. I, 2) repeated daily. J In the Jecond Sunday after Eajler, the leclion is from the firjl (thirteenth in the Roman) chapter of the Acls of the Apojlles ; on the third, from the be- ginning of the Revelations ; on the fourth, from the beginning of S. James's Epijlle; on the fifth, from the beginning of the Firjl Epijlle of S. Peter. AJcenjion Day and its oclave have Gojpels and their commentaries proper for the Jeajbn ; the Sun- day, however, has its leclions from the Firjl Epijlle of S. John ; the octave day, from Ephes. iv. " Wherefore he jaith, when He ajcended up on high," &c. ; and the Friday after the oclave, from the Second and Third Epijlles of S. Johnand S. Jude ; the Roman has the Third Epijlle of S. John only, and entire. Pen- tecojl, and its oclave, have, of courje, proper lejjbns for the jblemnity. Trinity Sunday has its four firjl leclions from IJaiah's vifion, with reference to the Trijagion of the Angels ; (in the Paris the leclions of the firjl Noclurn are from I Sam. i., the old lejjbn for the firjl Sunday after Pentecojl ; ) the four next from the Treatije of S. Fulgentius to Peter, on Faith ; the ninth, tenth, and eleventh, from a Homily of S. Gregory Nazianzen, read by way of Commentary on the commijjion of our LORD to His Dijciples to baptize in the name of the FATHER, of the SON, and of the HOLY GHOST; while the twelfth is the Gof- pel for the old firjl Sunday after Pentecojl, before the injlitution of the fejlival of the TRINITY, "Be ye therefore merciful," &c., with the Commentary of S. Augujline thereon. After Trinity, till the beginning of November, with the ex- ception of the oclave of Corpus Chrijli, there are no proper IcJJbns for the ferial office, || but merely a jhort chapter at the * Paris, as before, from S. Chryfoftom. f In the Paris Breviary, during the Oclave of Eafter, the three leftions are i, from the Acls ; z, a paflage from the Fathers,- 3, a Pafchal Gofpel, with its homily. J In the Roman Breviary, in the weeks that follow the firft and Second Sundays after Eafter, the A6b are read j in that fucceeding the third Sunday, the Revelation is continued 5 in thofe following the fourth and fifth Sundays, the Epiftles of S. James and one of S. Peter relpeftively. $ " Sumus," fays Durandus, " in via veniendi ad patriam. Sed quia hoftcs habemus prius quam illic perveniamus, fc. carnem, mundum, et dia- bolum, ideolegiturde LibrisRegum, in quibusagiturde bellis et de vi&oriis." || In the Roman Breviary the le&ions of the week are continued from thofe of the Sundays, clfc the arrangement is nearly the fame. During the Church's Tear. 23 end of the firjl Noclurn, which varies with the day of the week. After the Sunday in the Oftave of Corpus Chrijli, the Sun- days are thus arranged :* there maybe eleven Sundays between Pentecojl and the Sunday nearejl to the firjl of Augujt ; for theje, eleven jets of ledions are provided, from the books of Samuel and Kings. From the firjl Sunday in Augujl (/'. e. the Sunday nearejl to the firjl day of Augujl) the eight firjl lejjbns are given from the Sunday in the month, while the lajlfour, namely, the Gojpel and its commentary, are, as ufual, for the Sunday, de Tempore. An example will make this plainer. The eleventh of Augujl is this prejent year on a Sunday ; for the firjl eight lejjbns, then, take thoje of the Jecond Sunday in Augujl ; thoje of the firjl Noclurn, from Ecclejiajles ; thoje of the Jecond, from the Sermon of S. Chryjbjlom againjl concubinage ; for the four lajl lejjbns, we turn to thoje of the eleventh Sunday after Pentecojl, the Gojpel of the deaf and dumb man, and S. Gregory's remarks thereon in his Commentary on Ezekiel. In Augujl, September, and October, five Sundays are given rejpeclively. In that time we have lections from Proverbs, Ecclejiajles, Wijdom, Ecclejiajlicus, Job, Tobiah, Judith, Ejlher, Maccabees. With November, the ferial lejjons are rejumed ; the intention of this being, according to S. Benedict's rule, that the increajing length of the winter nights gives the greater time for Noclurns. In the three firjl weeks of November, Ezekiel and Daniel are read ; in the two lajl the Minor Prophets ; and thus we again come to Advent. A remark here may not be out of place. By the winter and Jummer arrangement of S. Benedict, we Jee clearly how great a point he made of the hours being jaid at the canonical time, and not by anticipation. It was his intention that Lauds jhould always begin at break of day ; and we have before Jeen that, if the convent were late in beginning Matins, they were rather to omit lejjbns and refponjes than violate this rule. Now, it need hardly be Jaid, Matins are oftener than not recited on the pre- ceding afternoon. The French Breviaries give the following table ; (the hours Jlightly differ :) Dec. I, Matins may be begun at 2 P.M. ; Nov. I, Jan, 12, 2-15; O<3. 20, Feb. 4, 2-30 ; Oft. 3, Feb. 22. 2 -45; Sept. 1 6, March 10, 3; Aug. 30, March 27, 3.15; Aug. 1 2, April 1 3, 3 -30; July 2 1, May i, 3 -45; May 22, 4. * In the Paris Breviary there is no diftinHon between the Sundays of the month and the Sundays after Pentecoft ; but the whole feries runs on, as in our own Prayer-book. The books of Samuel and of Kings are read up to the ninth Sunday after Pentecoft, and then Proverbs are commenced. 24 Quignon's New Arrangement. From the mojl abjlruje, we come to the eajiejl of the arrange- ments of leSions, that of Quignon. The weeks from Advent follow each other in regular courje ; the firjl lejjbn being invariably from the Old Tejlament, the jecond, from the New; the third, where there is a fejlival with proper lemons, is of that ; where there is not, it is taken from a calendar given at the beginning of the Breviary, of which we print a Jpecimen, as undoubtedly the germ of our own : APRILIS HABET DIES XXX. Fefta et alia tertla Lefiiones. Pol. g Calendis. i . Ex Epift. ad Ephes. Paulus Apoft. ... 90 a iiij Non. 2. Ex Epift. ad Ephes. Et vos cum ... 91 b iij Non. 3. Ex Epift. ad Ephes. Hujus rei eodem. c Prid. Non. 4. IJidorus Epifcopus Confe/or 346 d Non. 5. Ex Epift. ad Ephes. Obfecro itaque .... 92 e viij Id. 6. Xyjlus Papa Martyr 346 f vij Id. 7. Ex Epift. ad Ephes. Renovamini .... 91 The reference to the folio points to the place where the portion pf Scripture in quejlion, here to be read as the third lejjbn, is eljewhere to be found as the Jecond. The Ads and Epijlles are read entirely through twice in the year ; the Gojpels once ; and a considerable part of the Old Tejlament once. How clearly our arrangement was taken from this, it is needlejs to remark. Before we proceed, we will make a few obfervations on the general principle of LeJJons, as enunciated in the various Bre- viaries which we have been conjidering, and in our own Prayer- book. And, to begin : No one doubts that our people hear a great deal more of Holy Scripture in the courje of the year than thofe of the Roman Church; but Jbme grave conjiderations will arije for the dijcujjion of the future National Council of the Englijh Church. I. It is abjblutely certain that no uneducated, and not many educated, perfons, can under/land half of the Old Tejlament Icjjons of our Church. Take, for example, the prophets from Jeremiah, which occupy from the I7th of July to the 2yth of September, how many chapters are, and mujl be, an utter myjlery to an ordinary congregation ! How many to how many priejls ! So again of the Epijlles ; where not only is the obfcurity Jo great, but where there is conjlderablc danger lejl they that are unlearned and unjlable Jhould vvrejl them to their own dejlruclion. Do we therefore Jay that Juch Icftions need be unprofitable to the hearers ? GOD forbid ! But we Jay that they can only be profitable by virtue of a kind of opus operatum. The hearer LeJJbns of the Prayer-book. 25 comes in faith, believing that it will do him good to hear a cer- tain amount of Scripture ; and no doubt GOD will have rejpecl to the faith, and increaje that man's goodnejs in proportion to it; but not by any inherent virtue of the portion read. Mr. Monro, in his Parochial Work, Jpeaks of the cottager fitting down on a Sunday afternoon to " read his Bible," and pitching, very likely, on the genealogies of the Chronicles, or the vijlons of the Apo- calypje. We think he hardly does juftice to the good which the poor man is likely to obtain in Juch a way; but, if he does not obtain any good, it certainly follows that many of our lejjbns are wholly ufelejs. And it is inconjijlent enough, on the one hand, to condemn whole/ale the uje of one tongue " not under/landed of the people," and, on the other, to make Juch a large portion of the Jervice conjijl of a language (namely, that of Scripture pro- phecy and argument) almojl equally unintelligible to them. For, 2, the Englijh Church has deprived herjelf of the helps which Rome gives to an intelligent reading of Scripture hijlory, by rejecting all comments. Does it not Jtand to reajbn that a few verjes, rightly underjlood by means of a plain explanation, would be more likely to affeff the heart than chapter after chapter, which (like the " thorough-paced do&rine " which had nearly got Dr. Yalden into trouble) go in at one ear and out at the other ? And, 3, in order to make room for this vajl poriton of obfcure pajjages, how do we treat thoje which are mojl likely to do good thoje which are all in all thoje on which our Jalvation hangs? How do we treat the words and actions, the miracles and para- bles, of our LORD ? We heap a Jeries of them together, giving the mind no time to dwell on any ; presenting them in a confujed majs, at unnecejjary length, and in dijlracled variety. Yetjbme who praije the triple repetition of the New Te/tament in the courje of the year, would be the firjl to Jheer at the remark of S. Dominic the CuiraJJier, who on one occajion obferved to a friend, that he never before remembered to have Jpent Jo pro- fitable a day he had eight times recited the PJalter, whereas never before could he get through it Jo many. We cannot fee jb much difference between the two principles. 4. Again ; the dijlocation of fenfe, by adopting the capitular divifion, mujl painfully jar on the feelings of religious people. What can be well worje, for example, than to leave off in the middle of our LORD'S PaJflTion, go to Jbmething quite different the prayers for the Parliament, for injlance and then begin it again ? 5. The length as mere length of the lejjbns, is not un- frequently objectionable ; even the Jhorter portions of other Breviaries are broken up by the beautiful rejponjes, of which more prejently. 26 'Their Faults. In one particular, however, Cardinal Quignon's leclions are inferior to our own ; it is, that the greatejl fejlivals of Jaints have no commemoration in the way of leclions, except the third lejfon, which the minor fejtivals Jhare equally with them. For example, in the prefent year : the firjl lejjbn for S. John Baptijl (falling, as it does, on the Monday following the fourth Sunday after Trinity) is Deut. xix. 14 to xx. IO ; the Jecond, A&s xxi. I 19. The Jcriptural hijtory, in Juch cajes, is mingled together and abbreviated in the oddejl manner pojjible. We do not, however, mean for a moment to deny the great necejjity there was for a reform in the leff ions for the fejlivals of Jaints. Here, in the modern Roman Breviary, as we have Jeen, thoje of the Jecond Noclurn only contain the legend (if we except the cajes of a double commemoration, where the ninth leclion aljb embraces it) ; but, in the Englifh Breviaries, where there were nine lections on a Jaint's fejlival, all of them were filled with the legend of the Jaint. We have heard Englijh Roman Catholics lament the ultramontane tendency which has deprived them of their own ujes, and impojed a foreign Breviary upon them. And we entirely Jympathije with them ; only, if ever they can re-obtain the Salijbury Breviary, they may rejl well ajjured that its leclions will need, what the Roman have received, a Jcrutinizing reform. And the cafe was the Jame, more or lejs, with all the unreformed Breviaries. In the Bre- viarium fecundum ufum percelebris archiccenobii divi Remigii Re- inenfis nunc prhnum typis excuffum (Jic) Part/its, 1549, (where there are twelve leclions,) eight of them are of the Saint, four of the Gojpel and Homily. In the Paris Breviary (1557), all nine are of the Saint ; and examples might be eajlly multiplied. The Breviary of the Fratres Humiliati (Rome, 1548) agrees with the arrangement of that of Rheims. But now, all the reforms, both Jecular and religious (Jo far as we are aware), have adopted, more or lejs clofely, the arrangement of the Roman. The divifion of the Meaux Breviary is almojl unique. Here there is no Proprium de Tempore, except for Sundays; but the days, whether fejtivals or not, follow each other regularly all through the year, except during Septuagejima. Thus, for example : Oft. 19. SS. Saviniani, Potentiani, et Sociorum, MM. Duplex minus. Left. i. Zephan. i. i 9 (in ferial courfe). Left. 2, 3. The Legend of the SS. Oft. 10. De Feria. Left. i. Zeph. i. 10 to end. Left, a, cap. ii. 8 n. Left. 8, cap. iii. J 7. Oft. ai. S. Hilarionis Abbat. Simplex. Left, i, Hag. i. i8. Left.i, cap. i. 14. Left. 3. The Legend. Oft. 22. S. Celinia, V. and Patronefs of Meaux. Solemnc Minus, i Noft. Left. i.Zach. i. i 16. Left. a. Zvch. ii. 5. Left. 3. Zech. vi. n. 2 Noft. Left. i. The Legend. Left. 2. From S. Cyprian de habitu Vlrginum. Left. 3. From Pieudo- Refponfes and Reclamations. 27 Chryfoftom on S. Thecla. 3 Noft. Left. 7, 8. From S. Auguftine's Ser- mon on the Ten Virgins. Left. 9. S. Matt xix. 12, and S. Chryfoftom thereon. This Breviary, and this only, therefore, agrees with the Englijh Prayer-book, in appointing Scripture lejjbns according to the days of the year (as Quignon's did the third lejjbns on feriae). Each leclion is clofed by But Thou, O Lord, have mercy upon us, from the reader ; and Thanks be to God, as the refponfe. But, on the three lajl days of Holy Week, the three firjl lec- tions (which are, as we have Jeen, from Jeremiah) are terminated by, 'Jerufalem.) yerufalem, return to the Lord thy God, without refponfe. In the Paris Breviary, during Advent, the three firjl lejjbns (from Ifaiah) are followed by, Thus faith the Lord God : Return unto me, and ye Jhall be faved. We have now arrived at one of the mojl beautiful parts of the Breviary the refponfes that follow each lejjbn. The refponfe is divided into two parts the beginning, and the reclamation ; which are feparated from each other by an a/terijk, and of which the reclamation is repeated after the verfe : e. g. after the fifth leftion on the Fejlival of the name of Jefus: R. Let them give thanks unto Thy name. # For it is great, wonderful, and terrible. V, Some put their truft in chariots, and fome in horfes : but we will remember the name of the LORD our GOD. For it is great, wonder- ful and terrible. But, at the lajl leclion of each Noclurn, the Gloria is added on this wife : e. g. after the fixth leclion in the Commemoration of the Virgin : R. The virgins that be her fellows mail be brought unto the king. * With joy and gladnefs (hall they be brought. V. According to thy beauty and renown : good luck have thou with thine honour. With joy and gladnefs (hall they be brought. Glory be. With joy and gladnefs (hall they be brought. It is, perhaps, fuperfluous to obferve that, for brevity's fake, the refponfes are written thus : e. g. in the Commemoration of Apojlles : R. Without fin were they before GOD, and from each other they were not divided. * The cup of the Lord they drank, and became the friends of GOD. V. They delivered their bodies to torments for GOD'S fake: where- fore they are crowned, and receive the palm. The cup. Glory. The cup. But occafionally, and efpecially in inferior Breviaries, the initium of the refponfe is repeated, inflead of the reclamation after the verfe. And fometimes, in the lajl: refponfe of a Noc- turn, there are two reclamations faid thus ; e. g. the third refponfe on S. Stephen's Day, in the Paris Breviary: 28 Good Friday : Rejponje s in the R. He that foweth in bieffings fhall reap alfo in bleflings, as it is writ- ten. * He hath difperfed abroad, he hath given to the poor, f His righteoufnefs remaineth for ever. V. All the Church of the Saints mall tell of his loving-kindnefs. * He hath. Glory, f His righteoufnefs. In the Paris, and many other French Breviaries, when Te Deum is not Jaid, the whole third (or ninth) rejponje is repeated. It is a peculiarity, and not, we think, an enviable one, of the Roman Breviary, that, when Te Deum is Jaid (of which more prefently) there is no ninth rejponje, the eighth being treated as if it were the ninth. It is, however, an ancient uje, for Duran- dus mentions it as the cujlom of feme Churches. We have Jaid enough to acquit ourjelves of any undue par- tiality for the Paris Breviary ; but in the rejponjes it exceeds, in our judgment, any other with which we are acquainted. The manner in which the Old and New Tejlament are made to ex- plain each other a manner Jo much more really Scriptural than long unconnected lejjbns will be bejl underjlood by an example, which we will take from Good Friday, and place by their Jide thoje from the Roman Breviary. Leflion i. From the Lamentation of Jeremiah the Prophet.f I am the man that hath feen affliftion by the rod of his wrath. He hath led me and brought me into darknefs, but not into light. Surely againft me is he turned ; he turneth his hand againft me all the day. My flefh and my (kin hath he made old $ he hath broken my bones. He hath builded againft me, and comparted me with gall and travel. He hath fet me in dark places, as they that be dead of old. He hath hedged me about, that I can- not get out : he hath made my chain heavy. Alfo when I cry and fhout, he fhutteth out my prayer. He hath inclofed my ways with hewn ftone, he hath made my paths crooked. He was unto me as a bear lying in wait, and as a lion in fecret places. Jerufalem, Jerufalem, return unto the LORD thy GOD. PARIS. ROMAN. R. They fought falfe witnefs All my friends have fled from againft JESUS, to put Him to death : Me : and they that laid fnares for Me and found it not: * for many bare have prevailed againft Me : He whom falfe witnefs againft Him, but their I loved hath betrayed Me : * and witnefs agreed not together. V. with terrible eyes they fmote Me with Falfe witnefles alfo did rife up : they a cruel ftroke, and gave Me vinegar laid to my charge things that I knew to drink. V. They caft Me out among not. For many. (S. Mark xiv. 55, the wicked, and fpared not My foul. 565 Ps. xxxv. ii.) And. Leftion z. He hath turned afide my ways, and pulled me in pieces : he hath made me defolate. He hath bent his bow, and fet me as a mark for the arrow. f The Roman are not precifely the fame as the Paris leftions from the Lamentations, being, the firft, Lam. ii. 8 1 1 ; the fecond, Lam. ii. 12 15 ; the third, the fame as the firft Paris. But this makes no difference in what we are now comparing. Roman and Parifian Breviaries. 29 He hath caufed the arrows of his quiver to enter into my reins. I was a de- rifion to all my people ; and their fong all the day. He hath filled me with bitternefs, he hath made me drunkenwith wormwood. He hathalfo broken my teeth with gravel (tones, He hath covered me with afhes. And Thou haft removed my foul far off from peace : I forgat profperity. And I faid, My ftrength and my hope is perifhed from the LORD : remembering mine affliclion and my mii'eiy, the wormwood and the gall. My foul hath them ftill in remembrance, and is humbled in me. This I recall to my mind, there- fore have I hope. Jerufalem, Jerufalem, return unto the LORD thy GOD. PARIS. ROMAN. R. The High Prieft faith : I ad- R. The veil of the temple was jure Thee by the Living GOD, that rent in twain, * and the earth did Thou tell us whether Thou be the quake; the thief cried from the crofs, CHRIST, the Son of GOD. JESUS faying, LORD, remember me when faith unto him : Thou haft faid. Thou comeft in Thy kingdom. V. They fay: * , He is guilty of death. The rocks were rent, and the graves V. Then fpake the priefts, faying, were opened : and many bodies of the This man is worthy to die : for he faints which flept arofe. And the hath prophefied, as ye have heard earth, with your ears. He. (S. Matt. xxvi. 63. 66. Jer. xxvi. n.) LeSiion 3. Mine enemies chafed me fore, like a bird, without caufe. They have cut off my life in the dungeon, and caft a ftone upon me. Waters flowed over mine head ; then I faid, I am cut off. I called upon thy Name, O LORD, out of the low dungeon. Thou haft heard my voice : hide not thine ear at my breathing, at my cry. Thou dreweft near in the day that I called upon thee : thou faidft, Fear not. O LORD, thou haft pleaded the caufes of my foul; thou haft redeemed my life. O LORD, thou haft feen my wrong : judge thou my caufe. Thou haft feen all their vengeance and all their ima- ginations againft me. Thou haft heard their reproach, O LORD, and all their imaginations againft me ; the lips of thofe that rofe up againft me, and their device againft me all the day. Behold their fitting down, and their rifing up ; I am their mufick. Render unto them a recompenfe, O LORD, according to the work of their hands. Jerufalem, Jerufalem, return unto the LORD thy GOD. PARIS. ROMAN. R. They fpat in the face of R. My cleft Vine, I planted JESUS,* and buffeted, faying : Pro- thee: * how art thou turned into phefy unto us, Thou CHRIST : who bitternefs, that thou mouldeft crucify is he that fmote Thee ? 7. They Me, and let Barabbas go ? V. I have gaped upon me with their hedged thee, and gathered the ftones mouth : they have fmitten me upon out of thee, and built a tower in thee. the cheek reproachfully. And buf- How art thou. My eleft Vine.f feted. (S. Matt. xxvi. 67. Job xvi. 10. )f f The Gloria is omitted, as being Holy Week. For the laft half of the refponfe the Paris fubftitutes nothing ; the Roman, the whole. The regular ending of courfe would be, " How art thou. Glory. How art thou." 30 Good Friday : Refponfes in the NOCTURN II. A Sermon of S. John Chryfoftom.f Leflion 4. To-day CHRIST our Paffover was facrificed for us. And where was He facrificed ? On a lofty Crofs. The Altar for this Sacrifice was new : becaufe the Sacrifice itfelf was new and marvellous. For the fame is both Sacrifice and Prieft : Sacrifice according to the Flefh, Prieft according to the Spirit. The fame both offered, and according to the Flefh was offered. And the Crofs was the Altar. And why, fayeft thou, was not the Sacrifice offered in the Temple, but without the city and the walls ? That the faying might be fulfilled, He was reckoned among the tranfgreflbrs. And why is He put to death on a lofty Crofs, and not under a roof? That the LAMB, immolated on high, might purge the nature of the air. The earth alfo was purged : for blood flowed from His Side upon it. Therefore not under a roof, therefore not in the Jewifh Temple, that the Jews might not claim the Sacrifice to themfelves : that ye might not imagine this Viftim to have been offered for that nation alone. Therefore without the city and the walls, that ye may learn that the Sacrifice is univerfal : becaufe the Oblation was for the univerfal world ; and that this purification was common to all, and not peculiar, as that among the Jews. PARIS. ROMAN. R. They faid unto Peter : Surely R. Are ye come out as againft thou art one of them. * He began a thief, with fwords and with ftaves to curfe and to fwear, I know not for to take Me ? # I was daily with this Man of Whom ye fpeak. f '. you teaching in the Temple, and ye They that dwell in my houfe count laid no hold upon Me : and behold me for a ftranger : I am an alien in ye have fcourged Me, and lead Me their fight. He began. (S. Mark away to crucify Me. V. And when xiv. 70, 71. Job xix. 15.) they had laid hands on JESUS, and had taken Him, He faid unto them. I was. Leflion 5. Would you learn His illuftrious work ? To-day He opened to us Paradife : till then clofed. For on this day, at this very hour, GOD intro- duced the thief thither. To-day He reftored to us our ancient countiy ; to- day He brought us back to the City of our Land . for, To-day, faith He, thou fhalt be with Me in Paradife. What ! crucified and nailed, and pro- mife Paradife ! Even fo, faith He : that on the Crofs thou mayeft learn My power. Becaufe it was a fpeftacle of grief, that thou mighteft look, not at the nature of the Crofs, but at the pains of the Crucified, He works this miracle on the Crofs, which, beyond any other, manifefts His power. For, not when He raifed the dead, not when He rebuked the winds and the fea, not when He put demons to flight, but when He was crucified, pierced with nails, loaded with fpitting, contumely, reproach, rebuke, did He will to change the heart of the thief, that thou mayeft fee His power on all fides. He agitated the whole of Creation : He cleft the rocks : but the heart of the thief, harder than the rock, He drew to Himfelf. t The Roman le&ion is from S. Auguftine's Commentary on the 64th Pfalm. Roman and Part/tan Breviaries. ROMAN. R. And there was darknefs when the Jews had crucified JESUS : and about the ninth hour, JESUS cried with a loud voice, My GOD, My GOD, why haft Thou rorfaken Me ? And He bowed His Head and gave up the ghoft. V. And JESUS cried with 9. loud voice, Father, into Thine Hands I commend My Spirit. And He bowed. R. Whom will ye that I releafe unto you ? Barabbas, or JESUS, which is called CHRIST ? They faid, Barabbas. What then mail I do with JESUS? They all faid: Let Him be crucified. V. We befeech thee, let this man be put to death ; for this man feeketh not the welfare of this people, but the hurt. Let Him be crucified. (S. Matt, xxvii. 17. 22. Jer. xxxviii. 4.) Lettion 6. But what fo great thing, will ye fay, did the thief, that after death he mould gain Paradife ? Shall I briefly tell you what he did ? When Peter was denying below, he was confeffing above. The Difciple endured not the threats of a worthlefs maid-fervant : the thief, beholding the multitude thronging around, crying out, cafting forth blafphemies and reproaches, attended not them ; caft not in his mind the prefent vilenefs of Him That was crucified ; but, paffing them all by with the eye of faith, and making nothing of thefe hindrances, acknowledged the LORD of Heaven j and proftrating himfelf in mind before Him, LORD, remember me, laid he, when Thou comeft in Thy Kingdom. Seeft thou of what good things the Crofs was the caufe ? Tell me : thou fpeakeft of a Kingdom. What doft thou behold of that fort ? What thou feeft is the Crofs and the Nails. But that veiy Crofs, faith he, is the Symbol of a Kingdom. It is for this reafon that I call Him a King, becaufe I fee Him crucified. For it is the part of a king to die for His fubjefts. Himfelf laid, The Good Shepherd giveth His life for the fheep. Therefore the Good King alfo giveth His life for His fubjefts. Since, then, He hath given His Life, I call Him King : LORD, remember me when Thou comeft in Thy Kingdom. PARIS. R. And when the foldiers had fcourged JESUS, they put on Him a purple robe, and a crown of thorns, and began to falute Him, Hail, King of the Jews : and * they fmote Him on the Head with a reed, and did fpit upon Him. V. I gave My back to the fmiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off the hair. I hid not My face from fhame and fpitting. They fmote Him. (S. Mark xv. 1 6, &c. Ifaiah 1. 6.) ROMAN. R. I have delivered My beloved into the hands of the wicked : Mine heritage is unto Me as a lion in the wood : the adverfary hath roared againft Me, faying, Gather ye toge- ther, and make hafte to devour Him : they have laid Me in a wil- dernefs, and all the earth mourneth for My fake : * For there is none found to acknowledge Me, and to do Me good. V. Men without pity have rifen up againft Me, and have not fpared My Soul. For there. NOCTURN III. Lefiion 7. From the Epiftle of Blefied Paul to the Hebrews.f Seeing then that we have a great High Prieft, that is pafled into the heavens, JESUS the SON of GOD, let us hold faft our profeflion. For we have not an f The Roman leclion commences a little further back. 3 2 Good Friday : Roman and Parifian Breviaries. high prieft which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities ; but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without fin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need. For every high prieft taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to GOD, that he may offer both gifts and facrifices for fins : who can have companion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way; for that he himfelf alfo is compaffed with in- firmity. And by reafon hereof he ought, as for the people, fo alfo for himfelf, to offer for fins. PARIS. ROMAN. /?. They took JESUS, and led Him R. They delivered Me up into away. * And JESUS, bearing His the hands of the wicked, and caft Crofs, went forth unto a place which Me out among the tranfgreflbrs, and is called the place of a (kull. V. And fpared not My foul. The mighty Abraham took the wood of the burnt men gathered together againft Me : * offering, and laid it upon Ifaac his and like giants they ftood againft fon. And JESUS. (S. John xix. 16, Me. 7. Strangers have rifen againft 17. Gen. xxii. 6.) Me, and mighty men fought after my foul. And like giants. Leftion 8. And no man taketh this honour unto himfelf, but he that is called of GOD, as was Aaron. So alfo CHRIST glorified not himfelf to be made an high prieft ; but he that faid unto him, Thou art my SON, to day have I begotten thee. As he faith alfo in another place, Thou art a prieft for ever after the order of Melchifedec. Who in the days of his flefh, when he had offered up prayers and fupplications with ftrong crying and tears unto him that was able to fave him from death, and was heard in that he feared; though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he fuf- fered ; and being made perfect, he became the author of eternal falvation unto all them that obey him ; called of GOD an high prieft after the order of Melchifedec. PARIS. ROMAN. R. They crucified JESUS, and the R. The traitor delivered JESUS thieves, fhe one on the right hand, to the chief priefts and elders of the and the other on the left. Then people. And Peter followed afar faid JESUS : Father, forgive them ; off, that he might fee the end. V. And for they know not what they do. they brought Him to Caiaphas, the V. He was numbered with the tranf- Chief-Prieft, where the Scribes and greflbrs, and He bare the fins of Pharifees were gathered together, many, and made interceflion for And Peter, the tranfgrelTors. Father, forgive them. (S. Luke xxiii. 33, 34. Ifaiah liii. n.) Leflion 9. And they truly were many priefts, becaufe they were not fuffered to con- tinue by reafon or death : but this man, becaufe he continueth ever, hath an unchangeable priefthood. Wherefore he is able alfo to fave them to the uttermoft that come unto GOD by him, feeing he ever liveth to make inter- ceflion for them. For fuch an high prieft became us, who is holy, harmlefs, undefiled, feparate from finners, and made higher than the heavens; who Good-Friday Refponfes. 33 needeth not daily, as thofe high priefts, to offer up facrifice, firft for his own fins, and then for the people's : for this he did once, when he offered up himfelf. PARIS. ROMAN. R. He was wounded for our R. Mine eyes are darkened with tranfgreffions, He was bruifed for weeping : for My comforters are far our iniquities ; * The chaftilement from Me. Behold, all people, * if of our peace was upon Him, and there be any forrow like unto My with His ftripes we are healed. V. He forrow. V. O all ye that pafs by, His own Self bare our fins in His behold and fee. If there. Mine own Body on the Tree, that we, eyes, being dead unto fin, might live unto righteoufnefs. The chaftifement. He was wounded .... healed. (Ifaiah liii 5. i Pet. ii. 24..) The beauty of theje rejponjes, and especially of thofe from the Paris Breviary, is evident. Even in this in/lance, however, it may be doubted whether the latter are not too much didaclic, and too little which is the very ejjence of all Church ritual dramatic. The rule which makes them always taken from Scripture is frequently fatal to effect. The truth of this remark is more eajlly feen on the fejlivals of martyrs or other faints, where their words, or the circumjlances of their pajjion, are, in other Breviaries, worked into the rejponjes. A Jlriking injlance of the beauty of this occurs in the Fejlival of S. Agnes : we quote from the Benedictine Breviary, as the fullejt. After the/r/? leftion : R. Celebrate we the feaft of the holy Virgin ; how blefled Agnes fuf- fered, let us recall to memory : in the thirteenth year of her age me loft death and found life : # becaufe (he loved the alone Author of Life. V. Reckoned by years, hers was infancy : but the old age of her mind was venerable. * Becaufe. II. [reciting the words of S. Agnes] R. He hath rounded my neck and my arms with precious ftones. He hath given to my ears inefti- mable pearls : * and He hath endued me with bright and fparkling gems. V. He hath fet a fign on my face, that I mould own no lover but Himfelf. And he hath. III. R. CHRIST I love, into Whofe bridal-chamber I (hall enter : Whofe Mother is a Virgin, Whofe Father knows not woman, the melody of Whofe notes already refounds in my ear. * Whom, when I mall have loved, I am chafte: when I (hall have touched, I am pure: when I mall have received, I am a virgin. 7. With the ring of His faith He hath plighted me to Himfelf : and hath adorned me with pricelefs jewels. * Whom, when. IV. R. Come, Bride of CHRIST, receive the Crown which the LORD hath prepared for thee for ever : for Whofe Love thou haft poured forth thy blood : * and thou haft entered with Angels into Paradife. V. Come, My eleft, and I will fet thee upon My Throne, becaufe the King hath defired thy beauty. * And thou haft. Glory. And thou haft. Another ufe of theje rejponjes is, that where the lejjbns are ferial or from the Common they may be diverted, Jo to Jpeak, into the channel proper for the day. A thoujand beauties will D 34 Sunday Refponfes. thus exhibit themfelves in the ordinary leclions, varying almojl prifmatically according to the light thrown upon them from the refponfes. Thoje for ordinary Sundays are for the mojl part taken from that portion of Scripture into which they are interwoven. Thus, in the Roman Breviary, the three firjl leclions for the fourth Sunday after Pentecojl, relate the fight of David with Goliath. The refponfes are : I. R. Prepare your hearts unto the LORD, and ferve Him only : and He will deliver you out of the hands of your enemies. V. Turn unto Him with all your hearts, and put away the ftrange gods from the midft of you. # And He. II. R. GOD, Who heareth all, fent His Angel, and took me from my father's meep : * and anointed me with the oil of His Mercy. V. The LORD, Which delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear: * anointed. III. R. The LORD, Which delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of the bear : # He (hall deliver me from the hands of mine enemies. V. GOD hath fent forth His mercy and truth : and hath delivered my foul from the midft of the lion's whelps. * He (hall. Glory. He mail. The manner in which the ferial rejponjes are, in the Roman Breviary, taken from thoje of the Sunday, though Jet forth at length in the Rubrics, is too elaborate for explanation here. The Paris rule is Jlmpler : " In the Ferial Office (Pafchal-tide " excepted) the rejponjes are taken from the preceding Sunday " (unlefs it be otherwife ordered, or there be proper rejponjes " ajjigned for the feria in quejlion). They are taken alternately " from the ijl and 2nd nofturn, in this order : Monday, Wed- " nefday, and Friday, from the firjl ; TueJHay, Thursday, and " Saturday, from the Jecond noclurn." The ground-work of the Roman rule is the fame. The rejponjes of the Salijbury Breviary are, for the mojl part, where they are peculiar, of a very inferior description. Very frequently they are in verfe: thus, on the Martyrdom of S. Thomas of Canterbury : R. I. Stnpens livor Thomae fupplicio Thomae genus damnat exilio. * Omnis fimul exit cognatio. V. Ordo, fexus, aetas, conditio, Nullus gaudet hie privilegio. Omnis. R. II. Thomas manum mittit ad fortia, Spernit damna, fpernit opprobria. * Nulla Thomam trangit injuria. y. Clamat cunclis Thomae conftantia Omne folum eft forti patria. Nulla. The fame remark may be made of the York Breviary. Take, for injlance, the refponfes on S. Cuthbert's day : /?. I. Cuthbertus puer bonne indolis pervigil nofturnis infiftens hymnis * Aydani Epifcopi animam in coelum ferri videt ab angelis. V. Cum pafto- TV Deum : when Jaid. 35 ribus ovium pofitus paftor animarum Deo praseleftus mente et vultu fupernis intentus * Aydani. R. II. In fanftis crefcens virtutibus almus vir Cuth- bertus, defpe&is hujus caduci faeculi rebus, venerabilis ac per cunfta digne laudabilis faftus eft monachus. 7, Corpore, mente, habitu, faftifque probabilibus, caftris Dominicis aflbciatus. Faftus. Both thefe examples are aljb injlances of that kind of refponfo- ries which we may call the hijlorical : /'. e. where the life of the faint whofe fejlival it is, is related in them, as well as in the lec- tions, of which, indeed, they form a kind of refume. The lajl refponfe of the leftions completed, or, in the Roman ufe, as we have feen, the lajl leclion, follows, if it is to be faid, Te Deum. The Roman rule is this : it is faid on all Sundays of the year, except in Septuagejima and Lent ; from Eajler to Afcenjion, daily (except on Rogation Monday), and on all fejli- vals, whether of three or nine leclions, except that of the Holy Innocents. Its omiflion on that day arifes from the fame feeling which prompts, in Jbme village churches, the ringing of a muffled peal on that day : e. g. in S. Giles, Leigh-upon-Mendip, Somer- fetjhire. And this Jign of Jbrrow on a fejlive occajlon may pro- fitably be compared with the very Jingular cujlom, now, or very lately, obferved on Chrijlmas Eve, at All Saints, Dewjbury, Yorkshire : towards evening, one of the bells is tolled after the manner of a pajjing bell ; it is called the DeviTs knell y and myjli- cally reprefents that Satan's power was dejlroyed by the Birth of our LORD. There are, however, great varieties of ufe with rejpecl to the Te Deum. In the Benedictine order it is jaid on all Sundays both of Advent and Lent ; at Lyons the cafe was the fame, although it was altered at leajl as long ago as 1780 ; while at S. Martin of Tours it was faid on the Holy Innocents till 1635 ; as, we believe, it Jlill is at Paris, Lyons, Vienne, Quimper, Chartres, Laon, and other places. At the verfe, We therefore pray Thee, down to and lift them up for ever y it is a very ufual practice to kneel. Te Deum is immediately followed, in the Roman Breviary, by Lauds (except on Chrijlmas Day). In the Paris, and mojl other modern Breviaries, it is fucceeded by the Sacerdotal Verfe, e. g. on S.John Baptijl : " 7. My mouth Jhall tell of Thy Praije. R. And of Thy Salvation all the day long." On Trinity Sun- day : " V. GOD, even our own GOD, Jhall blefs us. R. And all the ends of the world Jhall fear Him." And this was the ufe, as we learn from Durandus, of fecular Breviaries generally. The Benedictine concludes differently. We have already feen that, on fejlivals of nine (or twelve) leclions, the firjl of the third noc- turn conjijls of the beginning of the Gofpel for the day, followed 36 Ceremonies conneRed with Te Deum. by a homily on it. Te Deum finifhed, the Benedi&ine order takes up the Gojpel from the beginning, reads it through and, after the rejponje, Amen, the jhort hymn, " Thee befits praife, Thee befits a hymn, to Thee be glory, GOD the Father, SON, and HOLY GHOST, world without end, Amen,'' is Jung. The colleft for the day concludes the office of Matins. An approxi- mation to the Benedictine ufe is found in the Paris Breviary, where, in churches " where it is the cujlom," the genealogy of our LORD, according to S. Matthew, was Jung before the Te Deum on Chrijlmas Day ; and that according to S. Luke on Epiphany. The Benedicline Breviary does the former, though, contrary to its ufual rite, after Te Deum. Mojl of the French Breviaries follow the Paris ; Jbme, as Dijon and Laon, make the rite imperative on all churches. At S. Maurice of Vienne, during the ninth rejponje, the Archdeacon was robed with pecu- liar magnificence in the Jacrijly ; and, preceded by two jubdea- cons in albs, bearing tapers, and two in tunics, one bearing the cenfer, the other the Gojpel he went into the jube, and there Jang the Genealogy. In an ancient ritual of Jargeau, near Orleans, injpe&ed by Le Brun, it is Jimply called the Generation and in the Salijbury and York Breviaries, the ceremonial of the Generatio, both at Chrijlmas and Epiphany, was much the Jame as at Vienne. It was a favourite quejlion among old ritualifls, whether Lauds, the Orthron of the Greek, the Outreniia of the Slavonic, Church, were a Jeparate office or not, from Matins. However that may be, it is certain that now the two offices are almojl always joined in one. Lauds commence with the O God, make fpeed to fave me, with the Gloria and the Alleluia, as Matins. We may objerve here, what we might equally well have remarked there, that Alleluia, according to Roman uje, is not Jaid in Septuagejima, though, according to Jbme Gallican rituals Juch was that of Lyons it was Jaid up to the firjl Sunday in Lent inclujive. This was a nearer approach to the Mozarabic Ritual, which carries it on all through Lent ; and that of the Eajlern Church, which even multiplies it then. The ujual Sunday office in the Roman Breviary, which is that of all mediaeval Lauds, is this: PJalms 93 and 100 are Jaid; PJalms 63 and 67 under one Gloria : Benedicite, the three lajl PJalms, under one antiphon and one Gloria ; the Jhort chapter, the hymn, the verjicle and rejponje, Benediclus, and the collect for the day. The PJalms, which may thus be conjidered either as five or Jcven, have, of courfe, given rijc to variety of myjli- cal explanations. The reajbn, certainly anything but Jelf-evi- Lauds: Arrangement of the Pfalms. 37 dent, why the 63rd and 6yth PJalms are Jaid under one Gloria, is explained to be, that the firjl Jignrfies love of GOD (" My Jbul is athirfl for GOD, even for the Living GOD"), the Jecond, love of our neighbour (" Let the people praije Thee,O GOD "), and that theje two are in reality one. Or again, becauje the firjl PJalm reprejents the mijeries of this prejent world (" My Jbul is athirjl"}, in which we cannot praije GOD as we would ; we mujl therefore wait until that Life in which He jhall, indeed, " have mercy upon us and blejs us," and " jhow the light of His coun- tenance upon us" in the Beatific Vijlon. The 63rd and 6yth PJalms, and the I48th, I49th, and i5Oth, never vary at Lauds, becauje, Jay the interpreters, there never was a time in which the fouls of the righteous did not "thirfl for the Living GOD," or in which the " LORD of Heaven" was not "praijed in the heights ;" and there never will be. For the firjl PJalm at Lauds, the 93rd, is on week-days Jaid the 5 ijl, according to the ancient and the modern Roman rule. Injlead of the Jecond PJalm, namely the 100th, they recite the 5th on Monday, the 42nd on Tuejday, the &4th on Wednej~day, the goth on Thurfday, the I43rd on Friday, the Q2nd (" A PJalm for the Sabbath Day ") on Saturday. On all theje days follow, as we have feen, the 63rd and 6yth as one ; and then, injlead of the Benedicite, on Monday, the Song of IJaiah, (chap, xii.) ; on Tuejday, of Hezekiah ; on Wednesday, of Hannah; on Thurjday, of Mojes (Exod. xv.); on Friday, of Habakkuk ; and on Saturday, of Mojes (Deut. xxxii.) ; Bene- diclus and the three lajl PJalms are always Jaid. The rule of S. Benedict for Lauds, or, as he calls them, Matins, on Sunday is this ; " At Matins on the LORD'S Day, let there firjl be Jaid the 6yth PJalm without an antiphon ; after which the 5IJI with Alleluia ; after that the 1 1 8th and 63rd ; then the Benedictions and the Lauds ( /'. e. the Benedicite and the three lajl PJalms) ; the leflion from the Apocalyp/e, by heart, the Refponjbry, the Ambrojian, (/. e. the hymn Mterne rerum ConditorJ) the Verje, the Evangelical Canticle, and it is over." The Evangelical Canticle is, of courje, the Benediffus. The modern Benedictines (judging from the Augjburg edition of 1758,) have Jo far receded from this rule, as to Jubjlitute for the 5ijl and n8th PJalms the 93rd and icoth, on all Fejlivals of Saints, and through oclaves, and in all Pajchal-tide. The Cluniac Reform, however, of 1686, which, whatever be its other faults, (and we are not dijpojed to controvert the remarks of Father J. B. Thiers, in his Obferuations fur le Breviaire de Cluni,) keeps cloje to all points ruled by S. Benedict, reverts to the original rule of the order. 38 Laudal Pfalms in Paris Breviary : On week-days, the 67th and 5 ijl P/alms were to be jaid ; modern Benedi&ines have dropped the firjl of theje, but the Cluniac Reform retains it. The two next PJalms were, on Mon- day, 6, 36 ; Tuefday, 43, 57 ; Wednesday, 64, 65 ; Thursday, 88, 90; Friday, 76, 92; Saturday, the I43rd only, becauje the Song of Deuteronomy is divided into two parts, each with its Gloria. S. Benedict exprejsly Jpecifies that the Canticles are to be Jaid on the other days, "according to the Roman ufe." According to S. Benedict's rule Lauds (and Vejpers,) were to conclude with the LORD'S Prayer, jaid aloud, (injtead of Jecretly ; or Jecretly with the " V. And lead us not into temptation :" " R. But deliver us from evil ;") in order that twice a day the clauje " Forgive us our trejpajfes" might compel an open ex- prejjion of forgivenejs of others. S. Benedict only orders the Abbat to recite the prayers aloud ; but Durandus Jeems to imply that all the monks recited it. He hints that Juch perfeci for- givenejs could not be expected of them at the little Hours, and remarks that it Jufficed if the Jun did not Jet on their wrath. The Salijbury and York Breviaries agree pretty clojely with the Roman, except that after the Benediftus on Sundays they add the 1 23rd PJalm; and all the older Breviaries, of whatever nature, Jeem to have a very cloje rejemblance in Lauds to the mediaeval type, which the Roman Church has exactly retained. The Paris has very widely departed from it. The beautiful rite of introducing into the Lauds of every day thoje true Lauds, the three lajl PJalms, is gone ; the reajbn clearly being that, as the PJalms were to be jaid through every week, the repeating any of them more than once in that time was merely an ad- ditional lengthening of the office. The Paris arrangement of Laudal Pfalms is this : Sunday, Pfalms 63, 70, 100, Benedicite, 148. Monday, Pfalms 92, 136, in two, Song of Mofes, (Exod. xv.) [inftead of which, on Feftivals, Ecclefiafticus 39, 15 10,] 135. Tucfday, Pfalms 24, 85, 97, Song of Hezekiah, [inftead of which, on Feftivals, Ecclefiafticus 36, i 14,] 150. Wednefday, Pfalms 5, 36, 65, Songs of Ifaiah, (xii.) [inftead of which, on Feftivals, the Song of Tobiah, (xiii. i 7,)] 147 (i n). Thurfday, Pfalms 80, 108, in two, Song of Hannah, [inftead of which, on Feftivals, i Chron. xxix. 10 13,] 147. (n end). Friday, Pfalms 51, 74, in two, Song of Habakkuk, [inftead of which, on Feftivals, Ifaiah xxvi. i iz,] 146. Saturday, Pfalms 17, in two, 57, Song of Deuteronomy, [inftead of which on Feftivals, Song of Judith,] 117. The rejl of the Office is the fame in arrangement as the Loman. The French Breviaries follow the general arrangement of the In other Breviaries. 39 Paris Lauds, though the particular Pfalms often vary. In jbme Breviaries, as that of Limoges, the Fejlal Canticles are not given ferially, but as proper in the feveral days when they are faid in that of Sens, one of the three lajl Pfalms is always faid, as the Pfalmus Laudum : thus, on Sundays, Wednefdays, and Saturdays, the i5Oth; Mondays and Thursdays, the I48th ; Tuesdays and Fridays, the 1 49th. The Cologne, a very me- diaeval Breviary, retains the ancient type. Cardinal Quignon's Reform Jlmply gives two Pfalms and a Canticle, with Benediclus. We will here Jlop to remark how very improper it is in our own Office to Jubjlitute the Jubilate for the Benediclus, except where compelled by the unfortunate rubric preceding the latter. For exchanging the evenjbng Evangelical Canticles for their fub- jlitutes there can never be any excufe. The Chapter for Laudson Sundays from the fecond Sunday after Epiphany to Septuagejima, and from the third Sunday after Pentecojl till Advent, is in the Roman Breviary, that verfe in the Apocalypfe, " BleJJing, and glory, and wifdom, and thank J"- giving, and honour, and power, and might, be unto our GOD for ever and ever, Amen." At other times it varies with thefeafon. The Ferial Chapter during the fame time is, " The night is far " fpent, the day is at hand, let us therefore cajl away the works of " darknefs, and let us put on us the armour of light. Let us walk " honejlly, as in the day." This, in the Benedicline, and jbme few other Breviaries, is followed by a brief refponfe on this fort. " R. Heal my foul * For I have finned againjl Thee. Heal " my foul. V. I faid, LORD, be merciful unto me. For I have " Jlnned againjl Thee. Heal my foul." Of the Hymn which follows the Chapter, we do not intend, as we faid before, to fpeak. Nor is there anything in the verfe and refponfe that follow, nor in the Antiphon of the Benediclus which need detain us. On Chrijlmas Day, according to the Paris Breviary, injlead of Benediclus, the Song of Ifaiah, (chap, xxv.) is fung, in which it is followed by one or two of the French offices : e, g. Chalons- fur-Saone ; the Breviary of Mirepoix fubjlitutes the Song of Micah. In mojl of the Breviaries the Collect for the day follows, and one of the antiphons of S. Mary concludes the office, unlefs Prime immediately fucceeds. The Prayers^ which follow on fome occafions, we fhall better confider under Prime. In mentioning the Collect, we cannot help relating a piece of Protejlant bigotry to which we were once witnefs. A gentle- man took up a Breviary, and read a Colled, which ended, as 4 *kat eaf th which has been redeemed by the blood of Thy " SON JESUS CHRIST, our LORD; that we who are buried " together into His death, may enter with Him into infinite glad- " ne/s." The Fifth Sunday after Eajler. " Being," as the CommiJ"- Jloners add, " Rogation Sunday." Our Colled is a mere tranj"- lation of the Sarum. We cannot help obferving how remarkably the Canon on the previous Saturday is chojen in the French Breviaries. It was one of thoje of the Council of Cologne, in 1536 ; a Council which endeavoured to meet the innovation of Luther, by a true and holy reform, and which has always been held in bad odour by Ultramontanes. " Let not preachers dwell " too much on the hijiories of the Jaints ; but let the principal " part of their dijcourje be employed in the explanation of the " Go/pel and Epijlle. If the legend of the Jaint appears fabu- " lous, they Jhould not even allude to it ; if only probable, they " may jujl touch upon it, gathering from it the points prin- " cipally worthy of imitation. Let them take care, aljb, not to " injijl too much on uncertain miracles ; but only on thoje which " are related in Holy Scripture, or by authors of eminent repu- " tation." Is it wonderful that, when a great German Council could /peak of found ledions in the Breviary as allowedly and confej(fedly falje, Quignon, and other enthujiajlic reformers, Jhould cut down the beauties, in order to vindicate the exad truth, of the Ecclejlajlical Office ? There can be no doubt that the compilers of the Prayer-book had intended to give to the Rogation Days their own Collects, Epijlles, and Gojpels, but that the general hurry of the compila- tion caujed this intention not to be carried out. The Roman Colled for the Monday is, " Grant, we bejeech Thee, Almighty " GOD, that we, who in our affliction do put our trujl in Thy " mercy, may ever be defended by Thy protection againjl all " adverjities." In that Mijfal we have no proper Colled for the Tuesday ; but in the PariJIan it is as follows : " Stir up, O " LORD, the wills of Thy faithful people, that, intent on Thy " holy dodrine, they may understand that for which they pray, " and by perjeverance in ajking, may obtain the Jame." The Commijjioners rejeded Colled, Epijlle, and Go/pel, for Roga- tion Sunday, jubjlituting in their place an Office with reference to the fruits of the earth, and one which might be Juitable enough for Rogation Monday. The Epijlle was Deut. xxviii. I 9 ; 68 Oral tones ad Diver/a. the Go/pel, S. Matt. vi. 25, to the end. Convocation might Jurely, without much difficulty, recommend certain Collects for theje three days, and might enjoin that the Litany Jhould always be Jaid on the Monday and Tuesday. Our Prayer-book amplifies a little, and certainly improves, the Collecl for AJcenjion-day, the Jame in all Breviaries. The Commijfioners tried their hands at a new Colled, but Jeem to have been difpleajed with their own work, and reverted to the original one. We will not dwell on the Collects which remain, further than to remark, that the magnificent one for the Sunday after AJcen- jlon is merely the Antiphon to Magnificat for AJcenfion-day, very far Juperior to the original Collecl : " Almighty, everlaJHng ** GOD, grant that we may always devoutly Jerve Thee with " our will, and may worjhip Thy Majejly with a Jincere heart." We have thus gone through the Collects of half the year : which, as Jpecimens of vernacular tranjlation from originals, the very pithinejs of which renders any verjion of them ex- tremely difficult, can never be JurpaJ^ed. We can but wi/h that the number were double what it is ; and, above all things, that the Orationes ad diverfa, or many of them, had found a place in our Prayer-book. Take a few examples. For Rain : (and compare that with the clumjy prayer on the Jame fubjecl in our Book :) " O GOD, in Whom we live, and move, and have , " our being, give us, we pray Thee, a Jufficient rain ; that our " temporal necejjities being Jupplied, we may with the more " confidence dejlre Thy eternal promises." Or, again : For the Murrain among Animals : " O GOD, Who hajl appointed that " even the brute beajls Jhould ajjljl in the labours of men, we " bejeech Thee that they, without whom our wants cannot be " Jupplied, may not by perijhing be lojl to our Jervice." One more : For beloved Friends : " O GOD, Who by the grace of " the HOLY GHOST didjl pour the gifts of love into the hearts " of Thy faithful people, bejlow upon Thy Jervants, and on Thy " handmaidens, for whom we dejire to pray, health, both of body " and mind ; that they may both love Thee with their whole " Jlrength, and may with all love do fuch things as are agree- " able to Thee." Again ; for which of the following Jubjefts Jhould we not be thankful to have a form of prayer ? For our enemies : for thoje that travel : that are on a voyage : for the Jick : for one in prifon : forthofe that are tempted : againjl evil thoughts : for love : for patience : for the gift of tears : for con- tinence : in any tribulation. Collects on thefe Jubjefts, with permijjlon at any time to ufe them in the Communion Office, would indeed be a great benefit to the Englijh Church. Collects in Time of Plague. 69 Let us turn from Collets, properly Jo called, to thoje longer Prayers in which the Eajlern Church delights, but which have never found much favour in the Wejl. We Jaid, at the begin- ning, that a Colledl might be defined as conjijling of the follow- ing members : !Who, as at this time forafmuch as Who art always ( to us Thy fervants Grant, we befeech Thee, < (, that we And to the end that Give us Through And that this is the fullejl norm of any ; more frequently Jbme one or more of thefe claujes being omitted. Thus the longejl of thefe compojltions never occupies more than a few lines, ejchews all manner of epithets and common-places, and gives in the pithiejl and mojl comprejjed manner what modern devotion would Jpin out into pages. The Eajlern Church has nothing whatever of this kind. Take, as a very good contrajl of the two, the prayers in time of plague. The Roman Mijfal : Grant to us, LORD, to receive the effefts of our fupplications j and turn away from us, of Thy goodnefs, peftilence and famine, that the hearts of men may acknowledge that fuch chaftifements arife from Thy anger, and ceafe through Thy loving-kindnefs. The Eajlern Church prays as follows: Let us make our fupplications to the LORD. Almighty LORD, of long- fuffering, of great mercy, eahly to be propitiated, Lover of men, All-good, exceeding kind, All-powerful, CHRIST, our GOD : Thou, through the fuperabundance of Thy goodnefs alone, didft bring our nature into being from non-exiftence. Thou didft breathe into us a rational foul and wifdom, and didft honour us with Thine image, and didft vouchfafe to us the delights of Paradife, and divine education, and companionfhip with the Divinity. Thou, when we had fet at nought Thy commandment, and had been brought under the deceit and guile of the devil, and had fallen away from Thy glory, and had changed life for death, and the kingdom for bitter flavery, didft not overlook us, through the ineffablenefs of Thy long-fuffering and goodnefs, but didft in divers manners, by the Fathers and the Prophets, vifit us. Thou didft fet over us angels, as guides and guards, teaching us, and leading us by the hand, as if to the difcovery of the better ftate. But when we had fhown that all thefe things were empty and vain by our meafurelefs bias to iniquity, Thou Thyfelf didft in the latter times of the world ineffably devife the fecond workmanfliip and re-creation of our nature, and didft in a fearful manner unite our whole man to Thy whole Divinity, and didft conlecrate flefti by flem, and foul by foul, and didft by death and fufferings free us from yo Eaftern Orationes ad Diverfa. the death and fufferings which were contrary to our original nature, anddidl vouchfafe to us eternal life through the keeping of Thy commandments. But we, again tranfgreffing Thy commandments, and yielding ourfelves to our own defires and wills, eagerly purfue all fin in each luft, (lander, blaf- phemy, malice, perjury, fallehood, impure words, guile, ftrife, envy, and every lawlefs and bafe deed, both prompted by nature, and contrary to nature, and which we could not even find in irrational animals ; our days are pafled in vanity : we are (tripped of Thy help, we are made a derifion and a laughing-ftock to all thofe that are round about us, we have caufed that Thy mod holy and adorable Name (hould through us be blafphemed among the heathen, &c. The above, which is not quite a quarter of the whole prayer, is a very fair example of thefe lengthened compojltions, cer- tainly not without their beauty, but, to Wejlern tajle at leajl, very lengthy, and open to the charge of tautology. They would appear for the mojl part to have been compofed between the year 600 and IOOO ; or, to fpeak more generally, between the Patriarchate of Thomas I. and that of Michael Cerularius : though Jbme are even later than the lajl-named prelate. The length of thefe prayers Jbmetimes begets a minutenefs which is fcarcely without pofitive abfurdity. Thus, the " Prayer of the holy Martyr Tryphon, which is faid over gardens, vineyards, and plantations," begins in this way : " When I was in the " village of Lampfacus, and tending and feeding my geefe, the " wrath of GOD came down, not on that place only, but aljb on " all the villages round about." It proceeds : " GOD, Who " hears them that put their trujl in Him, Himfelf fends His " Angel out of His prepared dwelling-place, that He may dejlroy " every tribe and race of animals that injure the vines, the olives, " and the gardens of the fervant of GOD : and knowing clearly *' the names of theje animals, I will thence tell them : Cater- ** pillar ; Worm ; Worm-Caterpillar ; Scantharus ; Winglefs- " Locujl ; Locujl ; Apple-Caterpillar ; Caligaris ; Longlegs ; " Ant $ Loufc ; Woodloufe ; Flea ; Burning- Worm ; Mildew ; " Cockleworm ; Razor- Worm ; and if there be any other thing " which dejlroys the fruit or the vine, or of other herbs," &c. Indeed, the titles of the Prayers themfelves feem intended to provide for all pojjible dijajlers. Thus, we have a prayer, " If it happens that any filthy thing falls into a jar of wine or honey :" " For a polluted vejjel : " " For polluted corn or barley : " " For the foundation of a houfe : " ** On entering a new houje :" " For a houje haunted by evil fpirits : " " Over the Jbwing : " " Over fait : " " For thofe that bring the firjl-fruits of autumn : " " For the threjhing-floor : " " Over round cakes : " " Over the young vines:" "Over the ripe grape:" "For blejjlng wine:" "At the change of the grape on the 6th of Augujl : " " Over a plan- Alia Oratio. 71 tation or vineyard which is hurt by caterpillars : " " ForbleJJIng a flock : " " For blejjing eatables on Eajt.er Day : " " For blej- ing cheefe and eggs:" "For blejfllng nets:" "For digging a well." It is needlejs to dwell any longer on this kind of prayer. Modern prayer-writers thoje who compofe a courfe of Family Prayers for four weeks, Family Altars, Steps to Family Devo- tion, the Altar and the Tent, &c. &c. may plead jbme kind of palliation for their length, in the forms of prayer to which we have been alluding. But, be this remembered ; the Greek Prayers, however to Wejlern ideas Jpun out and lengthy, are, nevertheless, not without their beauty, are full of matter, and are at all events of one texture : not like the compositions of our modern authors, a number of Collects jlrung together with or with- out connexion. In more lengthened prayers we cannot do better than follow the ujual Wejlern practice : a jeries of Collects, without any termination by way of Doxology ; that conclusion being rejerved till the termination of the lajl. We are bound, however, to acknowledge the very great beauty of Jbme of theje longer prayers in the Ambrojian and Mozarabic Offices. Take the following as an example : By what tears, O LORD JESUS CHRIST, can we reply to Thy Crofs ? By what lamentations, to the fhedding forth of Thy Blood ? What re- wards, what vows can we offer unto Thee ? Behold, Thou art now taken from us to be crucified, with pangs which Thou didft not merit. Thou art taken to be fpit upon ; Thou art fpit upon to be fcourged ; Thou art fcourged to be crucified ; Thou art crucified to be derided ; Thou art de- rided to have vinegar given Thee to drink ; Thou haft vinegar given Thee to drink to accomplifli all things ; Thou accomplifheft all things to rife again marvelloufly. Spare us, O CHRIST, our LORD. Spare us, we be- feech Thee, by the admirable virtue of Thy holy Paflion and Refurreftion. And, as Thou didft render the Thief a citizen of Paradile, thus by the Victory of the Crofs, free the world from all evil ; and redeem all the crea- tion of man. That us, whom the darknefs of our confcience has covered with grief, the brightnefs of Thy Refurre&ion may raife to glory. Hundreds of juch examples lie buried in the recejjes of theje MiJJals and Breviaries. We wifh God-Jpeed to the man who, for the benefit of the Englijh Church, will endeavour to dig out and to offer to her theje more than Californian treajures. Take one more example the Alia Oratio for Eajler-day : Blefs the LORD, O my foul; and let all CHRIST'S faithful people rejoice and congratulate each other. Ancient defpair hath loft his rebuke, death his fting ; the prifoner is fet free from the dungeon, the condemned hath efcaped from the chain. Let not our rebel flefh arife againft us to injure us ; let not parricidal concupifcence arrogate to itfelf, by right of its crime, the do- mination over us. Man it was who loft ; GOD was made man, and He J2 The Litanies. redeemed. Our calamity, O LORD, hath obtained from Thee greater mercy than the unbridled licence of our lirft-formed parents had loft. Then it was faid that they mould be fervants ; now it is ftipulated that they (hall be fons. Then immortality was promifed to the obedient $ now, in addition to immortality, glory. Then a portion was to be poflefled in a region of de- light j now communion is to be enjoyed with the angels. Then they were to live with the creature; now we are to reign with the Creator. Then the devil was to be avoided ; now we know that he is to be fubdued. Then there was an admonition for the obfervance of the commandments ; now there is an exhortation concerning the terrors of the judgment. Then fear was pro- fed, as the fafeguard of the law ; now the will is touched and influenced, hen paradife was loft through fin ; now we may hope for heaven through grace. Better, therefore, far better is the condition which we have obtained after our ruin. Wherefore, moft humbly and unceafingly, we befeech that, until Thou (halt have accomplimed Thy cure in us, Thou wouldeft not withdraw Thy medicine from our wounds. Amen. We will now proceed to Litanies. There is, as every one knows, but one, authorized for public jervice, authorized, we mean, in the fullejl Jenje of the word, by the Roman Church that on the Feajl of S. Mark, on the Rogation Days, and on one or two other occajlons. But of thoje which are partially authorized, the number is almojl countlejs, and the beauty is frequently exquifite. Mojl of our readers are probably acquainted with a number of theje in the Paradifus Aninue. Others of nearly equal beauty are given in the Golden Manual. Firjl among them is the Litany of the NAME of JESUS, whether the compojltion of S. Bernard or not. The Litanies of the HOLY GHOST, of the Holy Infancy, of the PaJJion, (which well dejerves to be called the Silver Litany,) are remarkably touching. Few things are more Jtriking than to hear a verna- cular Litany recited by a poor congregation in a Continental church. We remember, one Jlormy June morning, hearing the fijhwives at Eu, chanting one, if it could be called chanting for their hufbands, with the patois rejponfe Piez pour nous. Some ten or a dozen Juch jcenes we have, hung up in the piclure gallery of our ecclefiological recollection. One in a village church in Champagne, on the afternoon of AJcenfion-day ; the girls and boys who had that day made their Firjl Communion, kneeling on the oppofite Jides of a venerable Romanejque nave, and reciting the Litany of the Infancy : another, five or fix Si/lers, the poor remains of a once flourijhing Spanijh convent, filling the dark dim aijle of a church in Palencia with the Litany of the HOLY GHOST and their plaintive Ruega por nos-otros. Another : a Jchool, coming in procejjlon with their rude banners and crojjes up a narrow, rocky lane to a little Cajtilian church, the wejlern jun jujl gilding the devices and images, as it /hot out frpm under a heavy Jlorm-cloud, that jwept away into the Litany, Eftene, Preces. 73 vajl and dijlant Paramos of Cajlile ; the Litany of the Blejfed Sacrament. Oh, how many beautiful little pictures of this kind may they Jee in a foreign tour, who have eyes to objerve them ! But to return to our jubjecl. Our Litany has tolerably well preferved the norm of all Juch compositions. Beginning with the Kyrie Eleijbn, the quadruple invocation of the Trinity, they proceed to that of the Saints with the Ora pro nobis, the depre- cations with the Liber a nos, the Petitions with the Te rogamus audi nos ; the triple Agnus Dei, the Pater No/ler, the Pfalm, if one be Jaid, the Verjlcles, and the Collects. That in our Prayer- book recedes from the original pattern by the greater length of its Juffrages, by the omifjion of any PJalm and of one Agnus Dei, by the inferior importance and length both of the Rejponjes and Collects. But if we look at the Litanies of the Universal Church, we Jhall find that they may be conveniently divided into three families : 1. The Roman Litany, as described above. 2. The Greek Eclene which jeems generally known to Englijh Jcholars (but ought not to be) under its Slavonic form of EcJinia. 3. And the Ambrojian and Mozarabic Preces ; which, though the name employed by thoje rituals, mujl not be ujed by us : the word Preces, according to all Englijh uje, applying to the Jeries of Verjes and Rejponjes faid at the end of Prime and other Jervices. The norm of the Greek Eclene is as follows : it may Jafely be attributed to the fourth century : In peace let us make our lupplications to the LORD. R. LORD, have mercy. (And fo at the end of every fuffrage.) For the peace that is from above, and the falvation of our fouls, let us make our fupplications to the LORD. For the peace of the whole world, the (lability of the holy Churches of GOD, and the union of all, let For this holy habitation, and for them that with peace, piety and fear of GOD enter into it, let For our Archbimop, N., the venerable Preibytery, the Diaconate in CHRIST, all the Clergy and Laity, let For this holy dwelling, for all the city, and country, and thofe that dwell in them in faith, let For good temperature of the air, abundance of the fruits of the earth, and peaceful times, let For them that fail, that travel, that are fick, that are in heavinefs, that are in bondage, and their falvation, let That we may be delivered from all tribulation, anger, danger, and ftraits, let Affift, preferve, pity and protect us, O GOD, by Thy grace. Commemorating the all-holy, fpotlefs, excellently laudable and glorious lady, the Mother of GOD, and ever-Virgin Mary, with All Saints, let us com- 74 Eajlern Eft ems. mend ourfelves and each other and all our life to CHRIST our GOD. R. To Thee, O LORD. For all glory, worfhip, and honour befits Thee, FATHER, SON, and HOLY GHOST, now and ever, and to ages of ages. This, we Jay, is the general norm of the Eajlern Eclene : the proper reciter of which is the Deacon, and not the Priejl, who merely gives the final claufe. Notice, that the expreJJIon " CHRIST our GOD," Jo conjlantly occurring in the Eajl, is almojl unknown in the Wejl, except in the Mozarabic rite, an indelible Jlamp of the more tremendous Jiruggle which Arianijm there carried on with the Catholic Faith. Every Eclene com- mences in the fame fajhion, and then breaks off to its own pecu- liar jubjeft : as, for example, that of the Bridal Coronation : For the fervants of GOD, M. and N., now joined together in community of marriage, let For a blefling on this marriage as on that of Cana in Galilee, let That the gift of modefty may be beftowed on them, and the fruit of the womb, as may be expedient for them, let That they may be made glad by the fight of their fons and daughters, let. And Jb in all the Offices and rites of the Greek Church, a cor- rejponding Eclene finds its place. That, in a Jbmewhat different form, which occurs in S. James's Liturgy, is well known to all who are acquainted with Bijhop Andrewes's Private Devotions. The Mozarabic Litanies, again, not only differ from thoje of the Roman and Eajlern Churches, but have a much greater variety among themjelves. They will be referred to in the next ejjay. Here is a Spanijh compo/ition which Jeems to hold a midway place between a Litany and a " Farce : " (our readers may re- member that, in a previous page, we entered at Jbme length into the Jubjecl of Farces) : V. Be mindful of us, O CHRIST, in Thy kingdom, and make us worthy of Thy refurreftion. R. With defire I have defired to eat this Paflbver with you before I fuffer. V. Go and prepare the Paflbver for us, that we may eat. R. Before I fuffer P. Behold, as ye enter into the city, there (hall meet you a man bearing a pitcher of water : him follow into the houfe whereinto ye (hall enter ; and fay ye to the good man of the houfe, R. With defire I have defired. v. The Mafter faith, My time is at hand : where is the gueft-chamber, that I may keep the Paflbver with my dii'ciples ? R. Before I fuffer. V. And he mall (how you a large upper-room, furnifhed : there make ready. R. Before I fuffer. V. And the difciples went into the city, and found as JESUS had told them, and they made ready the Paflbver. R. With defire I have defired. Roman Prefaces. 75 V. And when even was come, JESUS fat down and the twelve with Him, and He faith unto them : R. With defire I have defined. V. For I fay unto you, that I will not eat it henceforth, until it be ful- filled in the kingdom of GOD. R. With defire I have defired. And Jo this curious Prayer, Litany, Recitative, or whatever elje it may be called, goes through the Lajl Supper to its conclusion. We now come to another branch of our Jubjeft, namely, Illa- tions ; or, as they have been varioujly called, Prefaces, ConteJ"- tations, or Prayers of the Triumphal Hymn. It would Jeem that the Roman Church, at the commencement, pojjejjed a rich Jlorehouje of theje. Two hundred and forty, at leajt, have been preserved ; eleven only are now ujed. The Mozarabic has one for every Sunday and principal fejlival ; the Ambrojian additionally for every day of the week. Our own Prefaces, as every one knows, have been reduced to five. And, Jiirely, one of the firjl improvements that Jhould be made in our Prayer-book would be the addition of others for the more marked Jeajbns, Juch as Epiphany, Lent, Pajfion-tide, the FeJ~- tivals of Martyrs, &c. On the other Jide, widely differing from, and, in this point, far inferior to, Wejtern ritual, the Eajtern Liturgies have, without an exception, only one Preface, let the time of the year be what it may. The norm of all the Wejlern Prefaces is precisely the fame. Commencing from the " It is very meet, right," &c., glancing at the various events of our LORD'S Life and Pajfion, and dwelling on the Saint or Jubjecl of the day, they cloje by Jpiritual union with Angels and Archangels in the Triumphal Hymn, " Holy, Holy, Holy!" Let us now take Jbme examples of theje, commencing from the Eajt, and ending with the Gallican and Spanijh Churches. We would hope that with thoje magnificent and ecjtatic forms of devotion, the Illations of the great primitive Liturgies, the reader is acquainted. Nothing can be more grand, nothing more truly worthy of an Apojtle^ than thoje of S. James, S. Clement, and S. Mark. But even in later times, and among heretical Churches, the Jame Jpirit remains : and in thoje Liturgies of the wonderful mediaeval ages of Central AJia, thoje ages which we can Jo little realize, when from China to the Perjian Gulf, from Cape Comorin to Siberia, the great Sacrifice was offered with primitive and apojlolic rites, the Illations were not unworthy of the Myjleries which they accompanied. Let us take an ex- ample or two which are not Jo likely to be known to the reader. Here is that of John of Bajjbra, perhaps of the eleventh or twelfth century : It is verily meet and right, and due from every creature, to glorify 7 6 Eaftern Prayer of the 'Triumphal Hymn. Thee, to blefs Thee, to perfevere in perpetual thankfgiving to Thee, as do thofe intellectual powers and incorporeal natures which exceed earthly beauty : thofe fpirits void of matter, who from the antiquity of their ex- iftence poflefs their dignity, and perpetually, at every hour, ftand before the infinite throne of Thy glory. Their only food is to glorify Thee, to honour Thee, to praife Thee and to magnify Thee in hymns, which cannot be exprefled by the tongue, nor comprehended by the underftanding. But we, children of the earth, are made rich by the miniftry of the Sacraments : but that this material figment, this creature endued with fenfe, might not be deprived of the fame fpiritual fplendour, as if it had nothing in common with it, and would after a fhort time perifh, Thou haft made me a rational being, confifting of an intelligent foul and a material body, mortal and immortal, one undivided nature out of two contraries ; to the end that by the fpiritual relationship of the intellectual nature with that heavenly beauty, a path might be opened, even to thofe celeftial habitations, for this figment of clay. Wherefore, hearing in the ears of our heart the hymns of perpetual praife, and beholding with the eyes of our underftanding thofe heavenly legions, that which pertains to Angels and Archangels, the honour and dignity of the Virtues, the array of the Powers, the miniftry of the Princi- palities, the adoration of the Dominations, the ftability of the Thrones, we approach to the fame hymns which are there fung, to the teachings, ufeful and falutary to fouls, to the blefled and moft wife tradition of the unceafmg and divine worfhip of the Seraphim, which with incorporeal tongues they offer to Thee, O our GOD ; to Thee Who art one Beginning, one Nature, and one Subftance, Who art acknowledged in three Perfons, by which the whole infinity of GOD is embraced, and without Whom was not anything made that was made : by Whom and by each of Whom, by it and to it, GOD is united in fubftance of nature, as to the LORD, and in very deed, according to the very felf-fame Divinity, not by communication alone nor introduction. For the FATHER, the SON, and the HOLY GHOST, are one fubftance and one nature of Divinity in their operation and according to the truth, not according to the imagination and fiction of the human mind ; which nature we diftinguifh trinely, but undividedly, we believe to exift onelily, not by efFufion ; and the hymn which exceeds human comprehenfion, we offer to Thee as the teftimony of fear, the fame, namely, which all the principalities of the orders of the heavenly hoft, the many-eyed Cherubim and the Seraphim of fix wings, fing to Thee with triumphal voice, glorifying Thee indefinently : R. Holy, &c. Or take another example from the Litany of Ignatius Bar- Wahib, patriarch of Antioch, of a Jlill later date : Thou art worthy of praife, Thou art worthy of thankfgiving, Thou art worthy of adoration from all the celeftial hdft and all men on earth, and all things which Thy efTence has created, whether fenfible or infenfible, or between the one and the other : becaufe Thou art to be praifed and glorified with Thy SON and with Thy HOLY SPIRIT. For Thou art He, O LORD, of Whofe praifes the heaven and the earth are full, and all that therein is ; Who by Thy power preferveft heaven and earth, which Thy Majefty has created, and ordained to the glory of Thy eflence : which although filent in their own nature, yet honour Thee. The Angels who are illuminated by the light of Thine eternity, glorify Thee, through the mediation of the Archangels. The Archangels rejoice before Thee, enlightened by the fplendour of Thine eflence, through the mediation of the Principalities. The Principalities honour Thee, irradiated by the glories of Thy hidden Ignatius Bar-Wahib. 77 nature, through the mediation of the Powers. The Powers celebrate Thee, kindled by the flame of Thy might, through the mediation of the Thrones. The Thrones exalt Thee, inflamed by the fire of Thy Divinity, through the mediation of the Dominations. The Dominations laud Thee, fet on fire by the brightnefs of Thy power, through the mediation of the Virtues. The Virtues venerate Thee in their hymns, filled with Thy fear, through the mediation of the Cherubim. The Cherubim blefs Thee, infpired by the brightnefs of Thy majefty, through the mediation of the Seraphim. The Seraphim, which, without any intermediation, are illuminated from the very fan&uary of the feat of Thy glory, hallow Thy name : with one triumphal voice, flying the one to the other, alternating the fong between the inferior and the fuperior order, with tongues more polimed than (harp fwords, with mouths breathing forth burning flame, with tremulous but exulting voices, beyond the comprehenfion of earthly minds glorify Thy Majefty which hath given exiftence to all. Thus much for the florid Illations of the mediaeval Eajl : the Arabejque imitations, if one may uje the metaphor, of glorious Middle-Pointed compositions, like S. James's and S. Mark's, and the Clementine Liturgies. Let us now turn to the Gallican ritual. It is very Jingular that this, which, on the whole, and in its chief peculiarities, fymbolifes with the Eajl and not with Rome, Jhould, in the matter of Illations, differ from the former more widely than does the latter. The Eajl, as we have reminded the reader, in all its varying Liturgies, knows but one Illation. The Gallican has a different Illation for every principal fejlival. Here is one, which, without hesitation, we would ajcribe to the third or fourth century : It is meet and right that we mould render thanks to Thee, O LORD GOD, through JESUS CHRIST, Thy SON, Who being Eternal GOD, vouchfafed to become Man for our falvation. O fingular yet manifold myftery of the Saviour ! that one and the fame perfeft GOD and perfeft Man, chief High Prieft, and moft facred of all Viftims, according to His Divine power created all things : according to His human condition gave liberty to man : according to the virtue of His facrifice expiated fin : according to the right of His Priefthood reconciled offences. O fingular and only myftery of redemption ! in which a new medicine healed for the LORD thofe ancient wounds; and the privileges of our falvation cut down the evil inflifted upon us by the firft man. The one was frenzied by the goad of concupifcence, the other pierced by the nails of obedience : the one extended, in his luft, his hands to the tree ; the other fitted them, in his patience, to the Crofs : the one, attracted by pleafure, fatisfied his appetite ; the other was afflifted by the agony of a mifery which He had not deferved. And therefore worthily does the punifh- ment ofinnocence become the abfolution of guilt ; and rightly are thofe debts forgiven to the debtor, for which He Who owed nothing had paid. Which fingular myftery not only men in earth, but angels alfo adore in heaven. To Whom worthily Angels and Archangels afcribe glory and honour, faying, R. Holy, &c. Compare the frejhnejs and rough beauty of a preface like the above with the worn-out epithets and gorgeous tinfel of thofe 78 Galilean Conteftations. Afiatic Illations. Jujl as with Chrijlian art, Jo with Chrijlian devotion : the young, rude life of the Church burjling forth in thoje hitherto uncultivated Gallican regions ; the fame life, but Jwamped and choked by luxury, ready to expire in the enervat- ing and luxurious indolence of the Eajl. Here is another, which we are dijpojed to ajcribe to the Jame date : It is meet and right, Almighty FATHER, to render thanks to Thee always, to love Thee above all things, to praife Thee for all things, by whofe gifts the dignity o Thy image is given to all men in nature : the enjoyment of eternity is vouchfafed in the foul : freedom of will is beftowed in life : the happinefs of baptifm is offered in grace : the heritage of the kingdom of heaven is promifed in innocence : the benefit of a remedy is preferved in penitence : the pardon of goodnefs does away with the punifhment of iniquity : fo that the loving-kindnefs of GOD abounding to all men, mould neither allow them whom it made, to perifh in wretchednefs ; nor them whom it taught, in ignorance ; nor them whom it loves, to remain in punifh- ment ; nor them whom it has redeemed, to fall fhort of the kingdom. Before whofe prefence the Angels ceafe not to cry and to fay, R. Holy, &c. An Illation of A. D. 176, we Jhall hereafter have occajion to tranjlate. We will now give an example (Jo far as we know, it is the only one) of an Illation in verje : the reader mufl excuje us if our lines are almojl as rude as thoje of the original. They bear a great rejemblance to the poem of S. Pro/per, and not im- probably proceeded from his pen : Worthy it is and meet that we mould raife To Thee, Almighty GOD, the hymn of praife ; Who giv'ft the omnipotent decree, and ftraight Each form is fixed, each creature animate. Nature at once obeyed the law decreed ; Worlds fprang to light, Thy voice their only feed : Thy SPIRIT ftretched the fky and decked the pole, O'er its appointed bed bade ocean roll : And when Thy image fell, o'erthrown by fin, And Death and Satan's empire entered in, Thou, Ruler of the world, didft deign to dwell Unknown, rejefted in that humble cell : Hence was the fierce decree that Herod fpake Againft the infant army for Thy fake, Who in their tiny limbs had fcarcely room To own the glorious wounds of martyrdom : Oh new, unheard-of fate, decreed on high ! Thus to be born that they might only die ; And in the firft and laft of all their days, Martyrs in deed, not will, to fpeak His praife. And Jo it goes on for a good many verjes more, with more reli- gion than poetry. And now it is worth while to examine a little more clojely the two branches into which the Gallican Liturgy divided it/elf, the Mozarabic and the Ambrojian ; Jo far as their Illations are Ambrofian and Mozarabic. 79 concerned. We Jhall find thofe of the former by far the longer, generally by far the more beautiful ; but jbmetimes degenerating into wordinejs and falje antitheJIs, from which the latter, with its greater brevity and pithinejs, is always free. We will give Jome examples of each. The Fifth Sunday in Advent. Ambrojlan : Through JESUS CHRIST our LORD, the power of whofe Divine Nativity was begotten by the unbegotten magnitude of Thine own might. Whom we proclaim to have been ever the SON, and generate before all worlds, be- caufe, in its fulleft and completed fenfe, the name of Eternal FATHER was ever Thine ; and Whom we confeis in honour, majefty, and power equal to Thee with the HOLY GHOST, while we own one equal majefty in the Three Perfons whom Angels praife, Archangels venerate, Whom Thrones, Domi- nations, Virtues, Principalities, and Powers adore 5 to Whom Cherubim and Seraphim, &c. Mozarabic : It is meet and right that we mould render thanks to Thee, Holy LORD, Eternal FATHER, Omnipotent GOD, through JESUS CHRIST, Thy SON, our LORD. Whole Incarnation was the falvation of the world, Whofe Paffion was the redemption of man fo long fmce begotten. May He therefore, we befeech Thee, omnipotent FATHER, lead us on to the reward Who redeemed us from the darknefs of Hell. He purge our flefh from fin Who aflumed it of the Virgin. He reftore us unhurt to Thy Majefty, who reconciled us to Thee by His blood. He juftify us in the examination of the Second Advent, who beftowed on us the gift of His grace in the firft. He come to judge in mercy Who of old time appeared in humility. He in the judgment manifeft Himfelf as moft gentle, Who, in former times, came in fecrecy ; to Whom, as is meet, Angels and Archangels ceafe not to cry daily, thus faying, &c. On S. Stephen's Day. Ambrqflan : Eternal GOD : Who haft called Stephen to be the herald of the Levites : he firft dedicated to Thee the name of martyrdom : he began firft to pour forth his blood : he merited to fee the heaven opened, and the SON (landing at the right hand of the FATHER. On earth he adored the Man, and in heaven he proclaimed the SON of the FATHER. He repeated the words of his Mafter; for that which CHRIST faid on the Crofs, that Stephen taught in the blood of his death. CHRIST on the Crofs fowed the feeds of pardon ; and Stephen made fupplication to the LORD for them that ftoned him. Therefore with Angels, &c. Mozarabic : It is meet and right and fufficiently laudable that we mould facrifice to Thee, in the day of Thy holy martyr, Stephen, the circuit of the year having gone about, the oblation of praife, that we mould pay our folemn offering. Whom the grace of our LORD, Thy SON, JESUS CHRIST, thus elected, His do&rine thus taught, His power thus confirmed, that among the Levites he fliould hold the reward, among the difciples the kingdom, among the martyrs the principality. Who confidently oppofing the word of truth to thofe that were in error, endeavoured to prove the truth of that fide on which he knew that 8o Mozarabic Illations. the victory lay. That blaming the Jews to their faces for their impiety, if he could not correft them when they erred, he might not fear them when they were enraged. Knowing that either wayjthe preaching of righteouf- nefs would be profitable to him ; whether they repenting, mould accept the wholefome doftrine fet before them, or, excited to fury, mould be the means of his own paflion. In fuch a refolve was there the love of CHRIST and of his neighbour ; either to hope for joy from the amendment of his countrymen, or to expeft a reward from the infliclion of his own punimment ; he fought not his own honour if purchafed by another's crime ; but he faw that from either alternative he muft reap glory. But if by preaching the truth he him- felf gathered others into the Church, or was (lain for the truth by any perfe- cutor, he knew his place, he remembered his office : for he knew that he himfelf was an altar, and prepared himfelf as a facrifice. Full of the HOLY GHOST, he manifefted the facraments, ready to drink of the cup which he preached to others. He ftood among thofe people who had learnt by the death of the LORD not to fpare the fervant, or who rather had by the death of the fervant advanced even to the death of the LORD. O marvellous defire of the LORD'S love ! For what elfe is it to defire to be (lain for the LORD, and to confels with fearlefs devotion the love of Him That was flain, even among His murderers ? He knew that by death he would rejoin that LORD from Whom, by furviving Him, he was disjoined. He held faft the precepts of the Mafter, which he had learnt, that the difciple was not worthy of Him, who did not take up his Crofs and follow Him. He defired to arrive where that Mafter was, who was willing to take up what that Mafter had com- manded : nor was he deceived in his opinion, who was ready for its refult. Behold, they who had ftumbled at CHRIST as at a ftone, ruftiedupon Stephen with ftones. That was thrown by their fury, on which their error had caft them. He Who to them was made a ftone of (tumbling, to Stephen became the Crown of Martyrdom. To Whom, as is meet, among the glorious Angels and the celeftial Virtues he unceafingly proclaims the hymn of due praife, and faith, Holy, &c. Let us take another beautiful example from the Mozarabic Mijfal, firjl giving the corresponding Illation from the Ambrojian that for the Third Sunday after Eajler. The Ambrojian : Through CHRIST, our LORD : Who pitying human error, vouchfafed to be born of a Virgin ; and by the paflion of death delivered us from eternal death, and by His refurreftion hath beftowed eternal life on us : the fame CHRIST JESUS, our LORD : Whom, together with Thee, &c. The Mozarabic : It is meet and right, very juft and falutary, that we mould render thanks to Thee, Holy LORD, Omnipotent GOD, through JESUS CHRIST, Thy SON, our LORD, the Eternal King, and joint Monarch with Thee: Who vouchfafed to bear fo much and (uch grievous fufferings for our falvation. Judged was He by the Jews, Who (hall judge the quick and the dead. Before the tribunal of the governor He ftood, Whofe tribunal is Heaven itfelf. He condefcended that His face mould be fpit upon, Who, a little while before, had touched with his fpittle the eyes of the man born blind. He conde- fcended to be crowned with thorns, by Whom the martyrs merited to be de- corated with celeftial diadems. He condefcended to have vinegar and gall given Him to drink, Who, out of the hard rock, had cau fed the people to be Mozarabic and Ambrojian. 8 1 fatisfied with honey. He endured that His fide mould be wounded with a fpear, by Whofe fword hell was conquered. He vouchfafed that His hands and His feet fhould be pierced with nails, Whofe hands made the fabric of the heaven. Taken down from the Crol's, He willed to be buried, at Whofe word the dead were in a moment raifed to life. He gave commandment that He Himfelf fhould be offered for us, that no longer the blood of bulls and goats mould be poured forth upon the altar. He vouchfafed to be the Prieft and the Viftim, by Whom all that believe mould inherit eternal life. Where- fore, all the Angels and all the Saints ceafe not to cry to Thee thus, faying : Holy. Let us now give an example of Jbme of the Jhorter Illations of the Ambrojian Office. In this ritual, the Sundays after Trinity can, at the outfide, only be fifteen in number ; for let Eajler fall as early as it may, the Jixteenth Sunday mujl be the firjl after the Decollation of S. John Baptijl. There are, then, five Sundays after Decollation, the lajl of which does not occur when the Sunday letter is A, B, or C. The firjl Sunday in Oclober has its own fejlival of S. Mary ; the fecond Sunday is that before the Dedication of the great Church ; the third is The Dedication of the great Church, namely, the predecejjors of the wonderful cathedral of Milan : after which there may follow three Sundays after Dedication, and then begin the jlx Sundays of Advent. The firjl Sunday in Advent is that which imme- diately follows S. Martin's Day: when the Sunday letter is A, this, in point of fad, involves Jeven Sundays before Chrijlmas ; but the office of the Jeventh, which then falls on Dec. 24, is entirely of the Vigil. This is a great improvement on the Mozarabic Calendar, which gives only Jix Sundays after Trinity, and the rejl are made up by repetition, Jo that more than a third part of the year has no proper Dominical office. With this brief explanation, we will proceed to give the Illation for the Sunday before Dedication : Eternal GOD : befeeching Thy clemency that Thouwouldeft vouchfafeto direft thofe who are fuftaining the labour of the Divine warfare. And, becaufe it is ordained that of him to whom much is given, of him mould the more be required, do Thou of Thy mercy guide our aftions : that we may not be enfolded in our own errors, and may be delivered from thofe of others. Third Sunday after Decollation : Eternal GOD : And humbly to implore Thy Majefty that JESUS CHRIST, Thy SON, our LORD, may protect us and preferve us by His grace: and, becaufe we can do no good thing without Him, that we may receive of His gift the power of pleafing Thee for evermore. We may now take our leave of Illations, merely objerving that jbme of thoje in the Ambrojian book are comprised in two G 82 Miff*. or three lines, and that the longejl with which we are acquainted is that for the Fejlival of S. Vincent, in the Mozarabic, which occupies exactly two folio pages. We have next to conjider thofe Jo-called Collects, which are indeed addrejjed to the people rather than to GOD. Theje principally occur in the Mozarabic Office, where in the Liturgy they have the name of " Mijja." Take, for example, the fol- lowing for Eajler Saturday : Ye, who having been adopted by the grace of the fevenfold SPIRIT, cele- brate the folemnity of the Refurreftion of CHRIST, it befits you to venerate this feventh day, illuftrious for the LORD'S reft, by the like obedience. For in this, of old time, GOD Himfelf, having created and accomplifhed all things which are contained in the fabric of the univerfe, refted from His work. He refted when He had accomplifhed thofe things which He created; He refted after death in the fepulchre, for the redemption of man. In the one He ceafes from work ; in the other, being buried, He gives to His work perpetual reft. This is the end of His labours ; this is the ialvation of His redeemed. This is confecrated by the very number feven ; this is commanded to be kept holy by the precept of the ancient law. In this we are commanded to avoid fervile wo.-ks ; in this we are allb enjoined to keep a Sabbath holy to the LORD. Whence, ftirred up by the SPIRIT of the grace which has been imparted to us, let us befeech, beloved brethren, our great and wonderful Shepherd, JESUS CHRIST, fo to grant us to avoid the flavery of the work of fin on this day, that, ftrengthened by the quiet of its holinefs, we may rightly celebrate the feaft of the LORD'S Refurreftion by our tears of love, and by our gift of facrifices. Theje, then, prayers though they may be called, are dijlinfl Jermons attached to the Eucharijlic office. No theological work of the kind could be more valuable than one which Jhould trace theje Miflae back to their original jburces, Jpecifying the changes and omijjions which have been made in order to fit them for Divine Service. Several of theje compositions are extracted from the works of S. Augujlin, one or two from S. Fulgentius, three or four from S. IJidore, and others from other Fathers. No doubt a Jearch, Jbecifically directed to this object, would dij"- cover the origin of very many more. Probably aljb the brief Jermons actually delivered by the Archbijhops of Toledo were, when thought especially excellent, injertcd in the Office : for it is to be noticed that, though at Jbme little dijlance from it, the MtJJa follows the Go/pel (the Creed in the Mozarabic ritual is placed, jlrangely enough, immediately after the Conjecration). Thus the Mijja not only rejembles in character, but, to a certain extent, in place re/ponds to, the Jermon. Now, take another example from the Office for Whitfunday : Let us, beloved brethren, with as much faith, attention, virtue, joy, exultation, devotion, obedience, purity, as we can, ipeak of the Gifts of the Refponfes and Ver fides. 83 HOLY GHOST promifed to us by the SON of GOD, and to-day made good. Let our hearts be thrown open ; let the minds of them that believe be purged ; and let every fenfe and recefs of the foul be fpread wide. For no narrow breaftcan fufficeto narrate the praifes and the advent of that infinite SPIRIT. For He, confort with the FATHER and the SON ; He, of one and the fame Subftance, the third in Perfon, but the fame in glory j He Whom the heaven of heavens contains not, becaufe it cannot circumfcribe nor inclofe Him, to-day enters into the narrow tabernacle of our breaft. And who of us, beloved brethren, can fee in himfelf one worthy of fuch a Gueft ? Who can beftow on Him, when He comes, a meet reception, when He is the life of angels and archangels, and of all the c'eleftial virtues ? And therefore, becaufe we acknowledge that we are unworthy of fuch an inhabitant, let us befeech Him to prepare for HimfeJf an habitation in us. We now come to the Jixth divifion of our Jubjecl, namely, Refponjes and Verficles : that form of prayer which is called the " Preces " in mojl Wejlern Breviaries. In our own Prayer- book a faint trace of them remains in the Verjlcles which precede the firjl Collect. In the Sarum Breviary there is one peculiarity which well deferves attention in the ordinary Preces at Prime. The ujual Office of mojl Churches has, after the verfe, " Holy GOD, Holy and Mighty, Holy and Immortal," the jlmple re- Jponfe, " Have mercy upon us." The Sarum gives it thus : " O LAMB of GOD, That takejl away the jlns of the world, have mercy upon us ; " a change which cannot but remind Jcholars of the alteration made in the Trijagion, by Peter the Fuller, which has given rije to Juch repeated reclamations on the part of the Eajlern Church : " Holy GOD, Holy and Mighty, Holy and Immortal, Thou That wajl crucified for us, have mercy upon us." The Rejponjes at Prime are virtually the Jame in all Breviaries ; though here and there one or two more or one or two fewer verjes of the 57th and u8th PJalms maybe employed. For verjes and rejponjes on particular occasions, the various monajlic ujes will afford the richejl variety, and theje more especially in the Benedictions, which will form our lajl and concluding head. The verjes for the Benediction of the Table ujually take this form : . V. He hath difperfed abroad, He hath given to the poor. R. His righteoufnefs rerriaineth for ever. V. I will blefs the LORD at all times. R. His praife (hall ever be in my mouth. V. My foul mall make her boaft in the LORD. R. The humble mall hear thereof and be glad. V. O magnify the LORD with me. R. And let us exalt His name together. V. Blefled be the Name of the Lord. R. From this time forth for evermore. We have feen, however, Jmgular variations in jbme of the 84 Ambrofian Preces. German Breviaries. One of the mojl remarkable of theje was in an Erfurdt book. Here, at the conclufion of the above Rejponjes, the Superior, cenjing the image of S. Chrijlopher, proceeded with the well-known verje : V. Chriftofori SanU fpeciem quicumque tuetur R. Illo nempe die nullo languore gravetur. V. Sanfte Martyr Chriftofore, R. Memor efto noftri pie. V. Apud Deum omni hora , R. Nos tuere fine mora. In a Breviary which belonged to the Church of Cavailon, in Jbuth-eajlern France, we have Jeen what we never Jaw elfe- where a Jeries of varying Verficles and Rejponjes before and after dinner, for the chief fejlivals of the year. In the Jame book, the Preces at Prime varied in a Jimilar manner ; and on Jbme of the mojl remarkable occajions were forty or fifty in number. An inexorable railway prevented our transcribing what would not have been without its interejl to ritualijls. The Preces of the Ambrojlan Breviary, though not the Jame as the Roman, are of the Jame nature. On ordinary occajions they are as follow : V. (After the Creed.} The refurre&ion of the body. R. And the Life everlafting. V. O let my foul live, and it (hall praife Thee. R. And Thy judgments (hall help me. P. I have gone affray like a (heep that is loft. R. O feek Thy fervant, for I do not forget Thy commandments. V. Blefled are they, O LORD, that dwell in Thy houfe. /?. They (hall be praifing Thee for ever and ever. V. O ftablifti my fteps according to Thy law. R. That my feet may not be moved. P. I cried unto Thee, O GOD, for Thou (halt hear me. R. Incline Thine ear unto me, and hearken unto my words. V. From fuch as refift Thy right hand, O LORD, keep us as the apple of an eye R Protect us under the (hadow of Thy wings. Alleluia. Alleluia. In the Mozarabic Breviary, the Preces appear under Jeveral different forms. Thus, the Matutinarium, the Lauda, and the Sono,* have all of them Jbmething of the Jame character ; occu- pying, as it were, a midway pojltion between the Preces and the Jhort Rejponjes of the ujual Roman Hours. Here is the Sono for the Third Sunday in Advent : Alleluia. Ye that make mention of the LORD, keep not filence, and take no reft, till He eftablifh, and till He make Jerufalem R. A praife upon the earth. [Notice, even as early as the time of S. Ifidore the modern Spanifh ufe of Ablative for Nominative and Accufative.J Lauda and Sono. 85 V. For as the earth produceth her flowers, and as a garden caufeth the things that are fown in it to fpring forth : thus the LORD will caufe righte- oufnefs to fpring forth, R. A praife upon the earth. V. O Thou that evangelifeft to Zion, get thee up into the high mountain ; fay unto the cities of Judah, R. Behold, the LORD GOD will come with ftrong hand. V. The LORD, even the moft mighty GOD, hath fpoken, and called the earth. R. Behold, the LORD GOD will come with ftrong hand. Here is an example of the Lauda for Eajler Eve : V. Alleluia. I am the Firft and I am the Laft, and I was dead, R. And, behold, I am alive again, for ever and ever. Alleluia. V. Thou art worthy, O LORD, to receive the book, and to loofe the feals thereof, for Thou waft flain, and haft redeemed us to GOD by Thy blood, out of every kindred and tongue. R. And, behold, I am alive again for ever and ever. Alleluia. V. Alleluia. The Angel of the LORD defcended from heaven. R. And he came and rolled away the ftone from the door of the fepulchre. Alleluia, Alleluia. V. The ftone which the builders rejefted, the fame is made the head of the corner. R. And he came, and rolled away the ftone from the door of the fepulchre. V. His countenance was like lightning, and his raiment white as fnow. R. And he faid unto the women, Fear not ye ! V. O give thanks unto the LORD 5 for He is gracious: for His mercy endureth for ever. R. And he came and rolled away the ftone, and fat upon it. V. This is the True Bread of GOD, which cometh down from heaven, and giveth life unto the world : whofoever eateth of this mail live for ever. And the Bread which I will give, is My flefti, which I will give for the life of the world. R. He that believeth in Me (hall never hunger nor thirft. All. All. V. Behold, I appoint unto you a kingdom, as My Father hath appointed unto Me : that ye may eat and drink at My table, in My kingdom. R. He that believeth in Me mall never hunger nor thirft. All. All. V. Glory and honour be to the FATHER, and to the SON, and to the HOLY GHOST. R. He that believeth in Me fhall never hunger nor thirft. All. All. One of the mojl remarkable Jeries of Preces, however, occurs in the Jame ritual, at the reconciliation of the penitents, on Good Friday. The Archdeacon faith : Silence. Penitents, pray. Bend your knees to GOD. Let us befeech our LORD GOD, that He would vouchfafe to give us indulgence of our crimes, and remiffion of our fins. Rife. Pray : bend your knees to GOD. Let us befeech the LORD GOD that of His clemency He will ftretch forth His hand to the fallen, and beftow the fafeguard which is requefted of Him. Rife : Pray : bend your knees to GOD. Let us befeech our LORD GOD, that we, remembering the 86 The Mozarabic O's. tranfgreffions that we have committed, may henceforth avoid the fnares of the Enemy : that thofe whom the allurements of the devil had caufed to leave the Altar of GOD, plenteoufnefs of tears, their patrons with Him, may recall. Rife : our prayer is finifhed. Let us all, with one voice, aers . . Peter van den Bofch . JOHN STILTINCK John Limpen John van de Velde Conftantine Suyfkene John Perier . . . Urban Stycker . John Cle . Cornelius de Bye Ignatius Huben . James de Bue Jofeph Ghefquiere John Baptift Fonfon Can. Reg. Anfelm Berthod Beneditt. Siard van Dyck Preetnonft, Cyprian van de Goor Prumonft. Mathias Stalz Prtftnonfl. Ceffion from Collaboration. Commencemen t Labour Birth. of Labours. and Death. Years. Vols. 1 596 1631 + 1665 34 8 1600 1635 + 1681 46 24 1628 1659 + 1714 55 1650 1679 + 1723 44 13 1651 1681 + 1719 38 10 1669 1702 + 1740 38 12 1678 1714 + 1749 35 14 1686 1720 + 1741 21 II 1689 1721 + 1736 15 7 1703 1737 + 1762 25 ii 1709 1741 175, + ? 9 3 ? 1742 + J747 5 2 1714 1745 + 1771 26 II 1711 1747 + 1762 15 7 1717 1751 + J753 2 i 1722 J 753 1760 + 1800 7 3 1727 1772 1789 + 1801 17 6 1737 1772 + 1782 10 4 1728 1776 1794+1808 18 6 1731 1792 1794+1802 2 6 SECOND SERIES. Work fufpended in 1 794. THIRD SERIES. Jofeph van der Moere Retires 1847. Jofeph van Hecke Benjamin BoflTue Viftor de Buch Antony Tinnebroelc Thefirft Four Bollandifts. 93 fixed his eyes on Daniel Papenbroch, who thenceforth gave up himjelf and his whole property, which was confiderable, to the work. Bollandus himjelf laboured at it for thirty-four years ; Henjchen for forty-Jix ; Papenbroch for fifty-five. And with the latter it was that the travels, correspondence, controversies, and persecutions of the Bollandijls began. For the complete forma- tion of the whole agency by means of which every monastery in Europe Jent up its own legends, Papenbroch may claim the chief praije ; and in this Jenje the verfe is true Quod Rofweydus prepararat, Quod Bollandus inchoarat, Quod Henfchenius formarat, Perfecit Papenbrochius. Let us dejcribe the prejent Bollandijl Library as we Jaw it on that Sunday afternoon. There were three not very large rooms, of which the central one contained the greatejl treasures and formed the chief work/hop. Round the walls, every known biography of a Saint ; hundreds of the rarejl mijjals and brevi- aries, hymnals, and martyrologies. Then in the centre of the room a large counter-like erection, Jerving as a table, but alfo fitted with drawers, each drawer numbered with one day of the then unfinifhed Bollandijl year, beginning from Oclober 17. When any of the Bollandijls happens to meet with a pajjage which may be ujeful in the hijlory of a future Saint, he makes a reference on a Jeparate piece of paper, and puts it into the drawer of the day on which that Saint will occur. Thus we remember that, while we were running over a proof-Jheet of the fifty-JIxth volume with Father Tinnebroek, a reference to Saint Cecilia occurred. Immediately he took one from the file of papers provided for the purpoje, made a reference to the page, and put it into the drawer for Nov. 22. Twenty years hence the then Bollandijls will make ufe of it. In 1660, Henfchenius and Papenbroch Jet forth on their firjl literary journey. Catholic and Protejlant librarians vied in doing them honour. They gleaned a life here, a Jequence there, a pro- per office in this church, a pajjion in that : at Wurzberg they beheld the Gojpel tinged with the blood of the martyr S. Kilian; at Bamberg they venerated S. Henry of Germany, and his Virgin Emprefs S. Cunegunda ; at Eichjladt, they lijlened to the legend of the Irijh S. Walpurga, at Augjburg to that of the glorious penitent, S. Afra ; at Eiligen they vijited the tomb of S. Hilde- gard ; at Munich, Peutinger the librarian, welcomed them as brothers ; at AJchafFenburg, they revelled eight days in the three halls full of charters which Father Garmaus had heaped together : at Saint Goar, and Bamberg, and Worms, they Jiipped at the 94 The Tours of the Bollandifts. electoral table. Papenbroch in his letters gives the mojl per- fecl pifture of enjoyment conceivable, (the fiery trial was for after years ;) he luxuriates, he revels, he runs riot in his de- Jcription ; nothing comes amijs ; he tells how proud the Sacrif- tan of Mayence is of the dujl of the Cathedral, becauje it was older than the Reformation ; how they dined with a very apo- Jlolical dean, where there were thirty-Jix covers, and twelve men Jervants, and where they drank Bollandus's health in hock I2O years old ; how they leajed Henjchenius by making him Jleep in Luther's bed at Worms ; how very Jurprijingly venerable Papenbroch looked in the chajuble of S. Witegijus at Mayence ; how Henjchenius, who had never feen a mountain, was frightened out of his wits in the defcent of the Alps, and lay like a heap at the bottom of the carriage. And at lajl they came to Italy. They revelled, by turns, in the libraries of Verona, Padua, Venice, Ferrara, Bologna ; and Jo they advanced on their pilgrimage to Rome. Alexander VII. received them as brothers. Orders and briefs opened every door, and unrolled every MS. Shortly after their arrival, one who had the greatejl means and the bejl will to help them, Luke Holjlein, librarian of the Vatican, was called from the world. Short as had been his intimacy with Henjchenius, he it was whom the venerable Jcholar choje to receive his confeJJIon, and to aj^ljl him in his agony ; and his lajl words were, Padre Hen- fcbenio ! But the other chiefs of ecclejiajlical literature, Kircher, and Ughelli, and Ciampini, Jupplied his place. For nine months they employed Jix amanuenjes. Papenbroch Jbmetimes purjued his tajk from two in the morning till nightfall. Ughelli gave the Bollandijls two folio volumes of notes, dejlined for his Italia Sacra. The Oratorians entrujled them with the MSS. of Baronius. Ecchelenfis tranjlated the Syriac Acls of the Saints. The Abbe Albani, afterwards Pope Clement XI, played the part of a humble copyijl ; better Jo employed than in the compojition of the Unigenitus. The Jame triumphal pro- grejs attended them everywhere. To Naples, to Monte Cajjlno, the Abbey of Abbeys, to Florence. Thence over the Alps to the Grande Chartreu/e, Cluny, Citeaux, Dijon, Paris, and Jo to Antwerp. That was the firjt hagiological journey of the Bol- landijls. Janning and Baerts afterwards in Aujlria and Hun- gary, Cuypers in Spain, laboured in the Jame cauje, and with the Jame Juccefs. Yes, it was all for that noble library, the glory of the Latin Church. There is a view of the facade in the firjl volume of March. There were then twelve cafes, each in thirty Jubdivifions, the former the months, the latter the days. Thefe were for the 'The Bollandift Library.. 95 acls, printed or MSS ; the rejl was for general hijlory. There, as a century rolled by, came in the great works of the hijlorians of the Church, Baronius and Raynaldus and the Calvinijlic tomes of the Magdeburg Centuriators ; and Ughelli's Italia, and Henry Warton's Anglia Sacra ; and the Gallia Chrijliana of the Sammarthani, and the Germania Sacra of Hanjiz ; and the Francijcan Annals of Luke Wadding, and the Benedictine Hijlory of Yepez, and the Origins of the Canons Regular of Pennotti, and Cajlillo's Dominican Order, and the countlejs Hijlories of Abbeys, of Bifhoprics, of hojpitals. But more glorious Jlill was the collection of Mijfals and Breviaries, of Hymnals and Pajjionals, of Martyrologies and Le<3ionaries, of Sacramentaries and Rituals, of Graduals and Sequentiaries, of Antiphonaries and Sanclorals. There were thoje glorious folios ; rough in their yellow hogjkin, and clamped and knobbed with wrought iron, and dotted down the face with the well-thumbed O * finger-holds ; with their illuminated initials, and flowing mar- gins, their quaint abbreviations and lovely letters : there were the Jcarcely lejs valuable incunabula as the Germans call the printed books of the fifteenth century ; there were the produc- tions of printers juch as John Scheffer at Mayence, or Peter Lichtenflein at Venice, or Wynkyn de Worde in Wejlminjler, or Conjlantine Fradin at Narbonne, or William Merlin at the Jign of the Savage Man at Paris, or George Stuchs at Nurem- berg. Europe poured in her treajures from every primatial uje : Toledo for Spain, Vienne for France, Braga for Portugal, Sarum for England, Aberdeen for Scotland, Spalato for Dalmatia, Cracow for Poland, Cologne and Salzburg for Germany, Upfala for Sweden : the Ambrojian rite and the Milaneje commentators, theMozarabic office and its Spanijh rubricians, all hajlened as into a treajury for the glory of the Saints, all went to Jwell the twelve thoujand volumes of the Bollandine Library. There Bollandus, after correcting a proof, wasjlruck withpalfy ; there Henjche- nius died in the midjl of his labours : there Papenbroch, blind, and in the eighty-fifth year of his age, Jlill prayed and laboured and directed. But the Bollandijls had been unworthy to write of the glory, had they not been called to a Jhare in the juffering, of the Saints. Of all their controverjies, that with the Carmelites was the mojl dangerous : it perilled their honour, it impugned their veracity, it threatened their very exijlence. Papenbroch wrote, and proved, that the Prophet Elijah was not the founder of the Car- melite religion. The order flew to arms. The Acls were denounced at Rome. Papenbroch combated by learning, Jan- ning by his prefence in the Papal Court. In 1695, the Spanijh p6 The later Bollandifts. Inquijition condemned the whole work : and earneJUy as Papen- broch prayed and laboured for its reverjal, there, on the very doors of the Bollandijl library, hung the decree, declaring the Acla offenjive to pious ears, Jujpefted of herejy, and even here- tical. Clement XI. was appealed to by the memory of his early labours in the Vatican to interfere. He did interfere, but too late. Papenbroch died, Jligmatized by the inquijltion as a heretic, in 1714, and the condemnation was retracted in 1715. Yes, and the later Bollandijls had a glorious revenge : juch a revenge as befitted the Annalijls of the Saints. The Carmelites had cruelly persecuted them, and they, in the 54th volume, the firjl of the New Series (1847) devoted Jix hundred folio pages to the glory of the Carmelites, S. Therefa. Van de Moere began and ended his labours on that one Saint. Henfchenius and Papenbroch Jlept with their fathers ; and for Jlxty years after the death of the latter, the Bollandijls purjued their labours. It cannot be denied that the plan increajed and altered as it went on. For example, the thirty-one days of January had been comprijed in two volumes ; in the latter part of the Jeries, three or four days were frequently found enough for one. Again, frejh discoveries and more extended researches de- tected mijlakes, new collaborators brought new opinions ; and on Jbme points of no jmall importance, for example, the foundation of the See of Antioch, the A&a twice altered their Jentiments. And now the work had reached the fifty-firjl volume, and the beginning of Oclober, when on the 2Oth of September, 1773, it was put an end to by the Bull of Clement XIV. for the Jup- prejjion of the Jejuits. Cle, the retired leader of the Bollandijls, was confined for two years. A committee was appointed to dijcufs the quejlion of the con- tinuance of the work. At length, Maria Thereja accepted the offer of the Abbat of Caudenberg, and the persecuted hijlorians of the Saints transferred themselves and their precious library thither. But an Imperial Order forbade them to add any com- mentary to the Afts, compelled the publication of a volume yearly, and commanded the completion of the work in ten years. The Abbey of Caudenberg was S u PP re IT e d in 1780, by the Erajlian JoSeph ; and the S urv ^vors of the Bollandijls were transferred to Brujjcls. Finally, Buxus, with the poor relics of the library, was received in the Abbey of Tongerloo ; and there he formed five new Hagiographers, FonSon, Berthon, Van Dyck, Van de Goor, and Stalz : one a Canon Regular, one a Benedicline, three PraemonjlratenSians. The French Revolu- tion broke out ; infidelity was poured over Europe : but this, the Second Series of Bollandijls, purSued its labours for Seven 'The fifty-eighth Volume. 97 years, and produced two volumes. The fifty-third appeared in May, 1794; and on Dec. 6, 1796, the Abbey of Tongerloo was fupprejjed. The five hagiographers were driven forth like their brethren, and, to human eyes, the work feemed at an end. In 1800, Napoleon Jet on foot a commifllon to inquire into the pciflibility of continuing the Afta. In 1810 a report ap- peared, Jlating the dejlrablenefs of the continuation, but naming two Jlight difficulties ; the want of Acls, and the want of Hagiographers. It was fuppofed that the unique library had perijhed, and that the printed portion and MS. of the fifty-fourth volume were irreparably lojl. It was not Jo. The peafants of Tongerloo had been their faithful guardians ; and in 1825, William I. King of Holland, difcovered and feized them. Here again we trace the finger of God. The King divided the library in two ; the printed works, which, however valuable, might be replaced, went to the Protejlant Hague : the MS., inejlimable, and unique, remained in Catholic BruJJels. The Belgian revolution broke out. Belgium became inde- pendent. The chambers voted the Atta a national work; decreed them to the re-ejlablijhed Jefuits; and in January, 1837, the company accepted the charge. It is pleafant to think that one of the ancient Bollandijls, Cyprian van der Goor, lived to fee the work re-undertaken and profpering, before he uttered his Nunc dlmittis. It took ten years to create the library, and the correspondence, and in faS, the fcience. The fifty-fifth volume, containing the fifteenth and fixteenth days of Oclober, appeared in 1847, two hundred and two years after the publica- tion of the firjl. It contains, as we have already faid, the mojl elaborate biography that has yet appeared in the Afta, the life of S. Therefa. The prefent Bollandijls are fathers Jojeph van Hecke, Ben- jamin Bojjue, Viclor de Buch, and Antony Tinnebroek ; father Jojeph van de Moere, the author of the life of S. Thereja, having retired. The lajl volume which they have publifhed is the 5 8th the loth for October. This is the fourth volume ijjued by the New Bollandijls. There, then, we leave thefe pious hijlorians to their labour. Sixty-eight days Jlill remain for them. We may trujl that now, unrejlricled by war and revolution, the work will proceed to its clofe ; but the grandfathers, Jay the Bollandijls, are not yet born of the men who Jhall fee the final completion of the Afta San&orum. H IV. KALENDARS. E are about to fpeak of Church Kalendars ; as we have lately done of the greatejl commentators on the Kalendar. Now we propoje to enumerate the different divijlons of Fejlivals in various branches of the Church, and we will begin with the Eajl. In the Conjlantinopolitan Church, Fejlivals are divided into three clajfes Great, Middle, and Little. Great Fejlivals are divided into three Je&ions 1. Eajler, which jlands by itfelf. 2. Twelve principal Feajls ; namely, Chrijlmas Day, Epi- phany, Purification, Annunciation, Palm Sunday, Ajcenjion, Pentecojl, Transfiguration, Repoje of the Mother of GOD, Nativity of the Mother of GOD, Exaltation of the Holy Crojs, Prefentation of the Mother of GOD. 3. Fejlivals called Adodecata, or, in Slavonic, Nedvana- dejlatiia, as not being equal in honour to the Twelve. Theje are : Circumcijion, Nativity of S. John Baptijl, SS. Peter and Paul, Decollation of S. John Baptijl. All theje are marked with 0. Fejlivals of the Second Clajs are divided into two jeclions I. Thoje in which the Office is not entirely of the day, but which have at Lauds an additional canon, in honour of the Mother of GOD. Thefe days are January 30, SS. Bajil, Gregory, and Chryjbjlom ; April 23, S. George ; May 6, S. John the Divine; November 13, S. John Chryjbjlom; Dec. 5. S. Sabbas ; Dec. 6, S. Nicolas of Myra. Theje are marked . The Kalendar of the Eaftern Church. 99 2. Middle Fejlivals of the Second Clafs have the Polyeleos (Pfalm cxxxvi.) at Lauds. Thefe are the days of the Apojlles, except as above : great doctors or wonder-workers, and certain " God-bearing " fathers, as S. Simeon Stylites. They are marked + . 3. Little Fejlivals have two clajjes. 1. Thofe which have the Great Doxology (as have all the preceding) at Lauds, and are called Doxologijed Feajls. They are marked . .) in red ink. 2. Thofe which have not the Doxology : they are marked thus, . .) in black ink. It is not necejfary to dwell at any length on the Armenian Divifion of Fejlivals. Briefly, it conjljls of four clajfes 1. Eajler and Epiphany. It is well known that the Armenian Church has no fuch Fejlival as Chrijlmas. 2. Thofe which form the remainder of great Fejlivals in the Orthodox Church, together with the days of S. Gregory the Illuminator, the Apparition of the ONLY-BEGOTTEN SON at Etchmiadzine ; the Martyrdom of S. Hripjime ; that of S. Gaiane ; and perhaps one or two others. 3. This is almojl the fame as the fecond Eajlern Clafs ; and, 4. As the Third. But we mujl remember that the various Saints of the Con- Jlantinopolitan Fajli are named, not in the mere formal profe of the wejl, but each in a Jlichos of two or more verfes ; and thefe ufually contain "a pun, punnet, or pundigrion, " to adopt Southey's clajjlfication of paronomajlae. They are to be found in the Menaea, after the Sixth Ode of the Canon for the Day, and before its Menology. In the year 1727, it pleafed a Leipjic fcholar, by name Urban Godfrey Siberus, to make a collection of thefe Jlichoi, and to accompany them with a mojl barbarous Latin verjion. The book, which is not very com- mon, makes a convenient Breviate of Eajlern Saints, for thofe who are not dejirous of going very deeply into the Jubjecl. Little as Juch punning verfes jeem to promife, they are fre- quently not without their beauty. It is difficult, from their very nature, to tranjlate them in a way which Jhould be intelligible to any but to him who can equally well comprehend the original Greek. But, in fome injlances, fuch a verfion may be pojjible. Let us take an example or two CHRIST came that He might kindle fire on earth : And in that fire was Xene's heavenly birth. (J an - *8.) That Mayfimas, in Syrian hymns who fung, Now fings with Angels in the Angels' tongue. (Jan. 23.) ioo Kalendars : Roman and Par ifian. Thy Polycarp, O WORD, who dies by fire, Brings forth much fruit to Thee upon the pyre. (Jan. a6.) The tyrant, Chares, may cut off thy feet : But not the lefs thou haft'ft thy LORB to meet. (Jan. 28.) Amid the fheepcotes Blafius dwelt of old : His home is now within the heavenly fold. (Feb. 3.) Lo ! Baptus and Porphyrius yield their life, Baptized with purple in the Martyrs' ftrife. (Feb. 10.) Eulogius finds the Monarch of the fkies, And greets Him with the Martyr's eulogies. (Feb. 13.) Not water doth Eudocia,* as of yore, To Thee, O SAVIOUR ! but. her life-blood pour ! (Mar. i.) This may Juffice as a Jpecimen ; but many of theje com- pojitions are of a yet far inferior kind. That our LORD, for example, was Ruler of the TTO'AO?, while He vouchsafed to ride on the TTOJAOJ. (The Englijh reader may conceive the wretched- nejs of the pun, by a like play on the words pole and foal.) We now proceed to the Wejlern arrangement of Feajls. The Roman clajjification of Fejlivals is this : Double of the Firft Clafs. Double. Double of the Second. Semi-double. Greater Double. Simple. The Parijlan dijpojition is as follows : Annuals. Lefler Doubles. Greater Solemns. Semi-doubles. Lefler Solemns. Simples. Greater Doubles. Thus adding another clajs to the Roman. Of different Mediaeval arrangements we may principally notice theje : A. That which prevailed in many early Kalendars of Reli- gious Orders, though afterwards by the fame Orders dropped. Triple. Lefler Double. Lefler Triple. Simple. Double. In which, Triple nearly anjwered to the Roman Double of the Firjl Clajs, and LeJJer Triple was jbmewhat more confined than Double of the Second. We have jeen this arrangement in early Cijlercian, Carthujian, and Praemonjlratenfian books. One of the mojl glorious Kalendars we ever jaw, at Nantes, which had belonged to Premontrc, was thus arranged. * The woman of Samaria. Doubles and Annuals. 101 B. Again, and this feems to have been ufual in Northern Churches, the following : Principale. Minus Duplex. Majus Duplex. IX. Leftionum. III. Leftionum. C. And fome Kalendars of this kind inferted Triplex between the Principale and the Majus Duplex. D. A favourite German divijion was as follows (thus we have Jeen books of Cologne, Ratijbon, Wiirzburg, Freiburg, Mag- deburg, Salzburg, and others) : Summum (others call it Dominicale). Simplex IX. Leftionum. Duplex. Officium. Collefta. The two latter titles meaning that on the day Jpecified by them in the one caj~e, Collect, Introit, and Pojl Communion, in the other Collect alone, were 0/*the Fejlival. Before we proceed, we cannot but exprejs our Jurprije that no work has ever yet been devoted to a Clarification of Mediae- val Mijjals and Breviaries after their families. Now that every part of Europe is Jo eajily accejjlble, ten or fifteen years' labour might accompli/h that which, in former centuries, could hardly have been brought to pajs by the devotion of a life. Now, taking the Parijian and Roman Kalendars as our model, let us examine which Saints' Days form their highejl clajjes. Roman. Paris. DOUBLES OF THE FIRST CLASS. ANNUALS. Chriftmas. Eafter. Epiphany. Whitfun Day. Eafter Day. Chriftmas. (Maundy Thurfday till Eafter Aflumption. Tuefday inclufive). Patron Saint. Afcenfion. Whitfun Day. GREATER SOLEMNS. Whitfun Monday. Afcenfion. Whitfun Tuefday. Corpus Chrifti. Corpus Chrifti. Dedication. S. John Baptift. Epiphany. SS. Peter and Paul. Purification. Aflumption. Annunciation. All Saints. Nativity B. V. M. Dedication of the Church. All Saints. Feaft of the Patron Saint. SS. Dionyfius and Rufticus. IO2 Saint John Baptift. DOUBLES OF THE SECOND CLASS. LESSER SOLEMNS. Every Feftival of an Apoftle. Trinity Sunday. S. Mark. The Secondary Patron. S. Luke. Circumcifion. Purification. S. John Baptift. Annunciation. SS. Peter and Paul. Sncepdon. GREATER D UBLES ' Vifitation. Eafter Monday. Circumcifion. Eafter Tuefday. Name of JESUS. Whitfun Monday. S. Stephen. Whitfun Tuefday. Holy Innocents. Low Sunday. S. Jofeph. Oftave of Afcenfion. Holy Trinity. Corpus Chrifti. Invention of the Crofs. Feftivals of Apoftles and Evan- S. Lawrence. gelifts S. Michael. S. Michael. It will be proper to make Jbme observations on theje Saints' Days. And, in the firjt place, the Roman comes nearer to the Primi- tive Calendar than even the Parijian, in excluding Candlemas, the Nativity of the BleJJed Virgin Mary, and the Annunciation from the highejl clajs of Fejlivals ; for (manifejlly) the Parijian Annuals and Greater Solemns together make up the Roman Doubles of the Firjl Clajs. In the latter, S. John Baptijt, SS. Peter and Paul, AJJumption, and All Saints, are the only fejli- vals of Jaints which occupy Jo high a place. S. John Baptijl. Let us compare the various offices of this Great Saint. In the Gregorian Miflal, there were two Majfes on this Fejtival ; * and, it Jeemed, in the former of theje Alleluia was not Jung, with reference to the Nativity having taken place under the old law ; in the fecond Majs it was employed to Jig- nify the commencement of the new Kingdom by the Saint. The Roman Epijlle is IJaiah xlix. I 7. They point out how "Jharp" a " Jword" John indeed was, when he uttered that proclamation, " O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come ?" And then, " That hath formed me from the womb to be thy Servant," well agrees with the Janclification of John, even from his mother's womb. But Jeveral of the German MiJJals had the Gojpel of our own Prayer- book, " Comfort ye, comfort ye my people ;" and this was the Gallican ufage. The Mozarabic Prophecy is the Roman Epif- tle : its Epi/Ue we do not Jo well under/land Galat. i. 11-24 Durancl. lib. iii. cap. 38. S. Alcuin. dc Divin. Offic. cap. 30. Hug. de S. Via. lib. iii. de Offic. Ecclcs. cap. 6. Saint John Baptift. 103 unlefs it be from the mere phrafe, " GOD, who jeparated me from my mother's womb." The Gojpel is everywhere the fame : the hijlorical narrative from S. Luke. The Creed is not Jaid ; and that with the beautiful Jymbolical reajbn, " He that is leajl in the Kingdom of Heaven is greater than he." If we turn to the Breviary, we find the firjl three Roman lejjons from Jeremiah i. I to end ; the jecond three from the homily of S. Augujline (20) on the Jame Fejlival; the third three, from the commentary of S. Ambroje on the Gojpel. The firjl jlx, in the greater part of the German Breviaries, are from a homily of S. Maximus : the lajt three from the commentary of V. Bede on the Gojpel. The firjl JIx in the Aberdeen from a homily, we know not of what jaint ; the lajl three as the Roman. In the Parijlan, the firjl three from " the occurring Scripture ;" the next three, a jermon of S. Augujline (not that in the Roman) ; the lajl three as the Roman. Now we think that we can Jcarcely give a more ujeful praxis on the various theories of Rejponje, than by a comparijbn of thoje from the lejjbns. ROMAN AND GERMAN (generally). I. R. There was a man fent from GOD, whofe name was John ; * the fame came for a wit- nefe, to bear witnefs of the Light, that he might prepare a perfect people for the LORD. V. John was preaching in the wildernefe the baptifin of repentance. The fame. a. R. Elizabeth, the wife of Zachariah, bare a mighjy man, John Baptift, forerunner of the LORD, * who prepared for the LORD a way in the defert. V. There was a man fent from GOD, whofe name was John. Who prepared. ABERDEEN. I. As Roman. a. R. The Angel Gabriel ap- peared to Zachariah, faying : A fon fhall be born to thee : his name fhall be called John. * And many fhall rejoice at his birth. V. For he fliall be great in the fight of the LORD, and fhall drink neither wine nor ftrong drink. And many. PARIS (modem). I. R. Elizabeth conceived and hid herfelf three months, faying : Thus hath the LORD dealt with me in the days wherein He looked upon me, and took away my reproach from among men. V. My age fliall be exalted in rich loving kindnefs. Thus hath. a. R. Mary entered into the houfe of Zachariah, and faluted Elizabeth, and when Elizabeth heard the falutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb. V. Thou didtt prevent them, O LORD, with the bleffings of goodnefs. And when. 3. R. Before I formed thee in the womb I knew thee, and before thou cameft out of the belly I fanaified thee, and gave thee for a prophet to the Gentiles. V. A man beloved by GOD, and honourable among men. And gave. Glory. And gave. 3. R. Thou, Child, fhalt be called the Prophet of the High- eft ; for thou (halt go before the face of the LORD * to prepare His ways. V. To give know- ledge of falvation unto His peo- ple for the remiffion of their fins. To prepare. Glory. To prepare. NANTES. 3. R. Elizabeth was filled with the HOLY GHOST, and cried with a loud voice, Whence is this to me, that the Mother of my LORD fliould come unto me ? Behold, f the babe leaped in my womb. V. Now I know that GOD hath bleffed me for thy fake. Behold. Glory. The babe. R. i. The LORD * formed me from the womb to be His fervant, that I might bring back Jacob to Him. P. GOD that maketh things that are not, as though they were. Formed. R. 2. I am glorified in the eyes of the LORD, and * my GOD is my ftrength. IO4 Saint John Baptift. V. When Elizabeth heard the falutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb. My GOD. /?. 3. Let me find grace in Thy fight: * now I know that the LORD hath blefled thee for my fake. V , Elizabeth cried : When I heard the voice of thy falutation, the babe leaped in my womb. Now I know. Glory. Let me find. ROMAN AND GERMAN (generally). 4. R. The Angel of the LORD came to Zachariah and laid, Re- ceive a fon in thine old age. * And he fhall be called John. V. This child fhall be great in the fight of the LORD; for the Lord alfo is with him. And he. 5. R. This is the beloved Forerunner and the Light that fhone before the LORD. * This is John, who both prepared the way of the LORD in the defert, and alfo preached of the Lamb of GOD, and illuminated the eyes of men. V. He fhall go before Him in the fpirit and power of Elias. This is John. 6. R. They made figns to his Either how he would nave him called : and he afked for a writing table, and wrote, faying, * His Name is John. V. The mouth of Zachariah was opened, and he propheficd, laying. His Name. Glory. His Name. ABERDEEN. 4. R. His name fhall be called John ; he fhall drink neither wine nor ftrong drink. * And many fhall rejoice in his birth. V. He fhall go before the LORD in the fpirit and power of Elias. And many. 5. R. He fhall go before Him in the fpirit and power of Elias, * that he may convert the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the unbelieving to the wifdom of the juft, to make ready for the LORD a perfect people. V. He fnall be great before the LORD, and fhall be filled with the HOLY GHOST. To make ready. 6. As in Roman. NANTES. PARISIAN. 4. R. They made figns to his father, how he would have him called. And he afked for a writ- ing table, and wrote, faying, * His name is John and they marvelled all. V. He fhall be called by a name which the mouth of the LORD fhall name. His name. 5. R. And immediately the mouth of Zachariah was opened, and he was filled with the HOLY GHOST, and prophefied, faying, Thou, Child, fhalt be called the Prophet of the Higheft, for thou fhalt go before the face of the LORD to prepare His ways. V. Say not, I am a Child, faith the LORD, for whitherfoever I fhall fend thee thou fhalt go. Thou fhalt go. 6. R. The child increafed, and waxed ftrong in fpirit, * and f he was in the defert until the day of his fhowing to Ifrael. V. And the child grew, and the LORD bleffed him, and the SPIRIT of the LORD began to move him. And he was. Glory. He was. R, 4. I will give thee hidden things and concealed treafures *, that thou mayeft know that I the LORD who call thy name am the Holy One of Ifrael. y. They beckoned to his father how he would have him called, and he afked tor a writing table, and wrote, faying, His name is John. That thou mayeft. R. 5. The LpRD declared His falvation *. He hath remembered His mercy and truth towards the houfe of Ifrael. V. And immediately the mouth of Zachariah was opened, and he fpake and bleffed GOD. He hath remembered. R. 6. I will proceed to do a marvellous work among this people*, even a marvellous work and a wonder. V. And all they that heard it laid it up in their hearts, faying, What manner of child (hall this be ? And the hand of the LORD was with him. Even a marvellous. Glory. I will proceed. ROMAN. R. 7. The LORD'S Forerunner Cometh, of whom He Himfclf icfiifirth : * Among them (hat are bom of women (here is not a greater than John Baptifl. V. Thii u the Prophet, and the more than Prophet, of whom the SAVIOUR faith. Among. ABERDEEN. R. 7. They made figns to his father how he would nave him called, and he called for a writing table, and wrote, faying, * His name is John. V. The mouth of Zachariah was opened, and he propheficd, faying, His name. PARIS. R. 7. There was a man fent from GOD whofe name was John. * He was not that light, but was fcnt to bear witncfs of that light, that all might believe through him. V. He ftood up as fire, and his word burned like a lamp. He was not. ROME. R. 8. Gabriel the Angel ap- peared to Zachariah, and ("aid, A fon (hall be born to thee, and his name (hall be called John * and many (hall rejoice in his birth. V. He (hall be great in the fight of the LORD, and he (hall drink neither wine nor ftrong drink. And many. Glory. And many. All Saints. ABERDEEN. R. 8. As Roman 7. 105 PARIS. R. 9. Among them that are born of women there hath not arifen a greater than John the Baptift, * who prepared the way of the LORD in the defert. V. There was a man fent from GOD whofe name was John. Who. Glory. Who. R. 8. John bare teftimony, and cried, faying: He that cometh after me is preferred before me, for He was before me, * and of His fulnefs have all we received. V. I awakened up laft of all, as one that gathered after the grape gatherers. And of His. R. o. He that fent me, the fame (aid to me, * Upon whom- foever thou (halt fee the Spirit defcending and refting, f He it is that baptizeth with the HOLY GHOST. V. The LORD that formed me from the womb to be His fervant faith. Upon. Glory. He it is. Let us now take another example : it Jhall be the Feajl of All Saints. And firjl, let us obferve what Durandus Jays as to this FeJ"- tival. After relating how, on the dedication of the Pantheon, by Pope Boniface, into the Church of All Martyrs, the firjl of May was fixed as the Fejlival of Santa Maria ad Martyres^ and that this Jblemnity was afterwards removed to the other half year, the firjl of November, when the harvejl had been got in, he continues thus : Now, however, this Feftival is general to All Saints its office is accor- dingly varied. For the firft Antiphon and the firft LeHon, and the firft Refponfory, are of the Trinity, becaufe this is the Feaft of the Trinity j the fecond of S. Mary, the third of the Angels, the fourth of the Prophets, the fifth of the Apoftles, the fixth of the Martyrs, the feventh of the Confeflbrs, the eighth of the Virgins, the ninth of all together. Therefore, the greateft perfon in the Church reads the firft leflbn, the Bimop, if he is prefent, or the Dean, or anyhow a prieft ; and fo, by gradual degrees, down to the boys. One of the boys always reads the eighth leflbn concerning the Virgin ; the laft is read by the greateft perfon again. In many Churches, the eighth refponfory is fung by five boys having candles in their hands, before the altar of S. Mary, to reprefent the five prudent Virgins, who went forth to meet the Bridegroom. Sicardus tells us the Jame thing, only adding that in Jbme Churches, the firjl lejjbn is that from IJaiah, " I Jaw the LORD Jilting upon His throne" which it is in the Roman Church at this day. We will now give Jbme examples of the LeJJbns and Rejponfories ; and it will be found that Englijh Rituals Jlood, as always, mojl faithful to the mediaeval pattern. In the LeJJbns, the Aberdeen Breviary appears to retain the old form, and gives a Jhort homily, firjl on the Blejjed Trinity ; Jecondly on S. Mary, &c. ; and fo down to the end. The Benedictions alfo accord to this ; we give them here : io6 All Saints. I. In caritate perfe&a confirmet nos Trinitas Sanfta. Leflio Prima de Trinitate : et legatur ab excellentiori perfona. II. Per interceffionem fax matris benedicat nos Filius Dei Patris. III. Ad Societatem Civium Supernorum producet nos Rex Angelorum. IV. Patriarcharum merita nos ducant ad regna celeftia. V. Apoftolorum interceffio nos jungat angelorum confortio. VI. Martyrum conftantia nos ducat ad regna celeftia. VII. SancH Evangelii Leclio fit nobis falus et proteftio. VIII. Chorus Sanftarum Virginum intercedat pro nobis ad Dominum. [And then follows the rubric : Let this Lection be read by one boy only in a furplice. And, in the meanwhile, let five boys go forth from the veftry in furplices, with covered heads and albs, and carrying lighted tapers in their hands, and let them fing the Refponfe.J IX. San&orum meritis mereamur gaudia lucis. The Mediaeval German Breviaries, while they agree with the Aberdeen in their leclions, have no fuch arrangement of Re- Jponjes. We may objerve that the observation of Durandus, with rejpeft to the ninth Rejponjbry of the Roman rite, Jhows that at that time it had not been obliterated by the Te Deum.. Now let us give the Rejponfes according to different rites, taking the Aberdeen as our pattern : ABERDEEN. (I) R. I. To the Supreme Trinity One GOD, be one Divinity, equal Glory, coeternal Majefty, to FATHER, SON, and HOLY GHOST, who fubdueth the whole world to His laws. V. The Blefled Deity of FATHER, and SON, and Kind SPIRIT, give U5 grace. Who. (l) Thefe Aberdeen Refponfes are nearly, but not verbally, the fame as thofe in the Refpon- forialc, published by Thomauus. (Tom. iv. p. 176.) R. 1. For Blefled art thou, holy Virgin Mary, and moft worthy of all praife. Since out of Thee hath arifcn the Sun of Rightcouiiicis, CHRIST our GOD. V. Pray for the people, propitiate for the Clergy, inter- cede for the devout female lex : let all feel thy help, who cele- brate thy celebrity. Since. ROMAN. R. i. I fawthe LORD fitting upon the throne, high and lifted up, * and His train filled the Temple. V. The Seraphim flood above it, each one had fix wings. And His train. R. l. Blefled art thou, Vir- gin Mary, Mother of God, who didft believe in the LORD : the things arc accompliOied in thee which were faid of thee : behold, thou art exalted above the Choirs of the Angels. Intercede for us to the LORD our GOD. V. Hail, Mary, full of grace, the LORD is with thee. Intercede. PARISIAN. R. I . We render Thee thanks, LORD GOD Almighty, which is and was and is to come, * Be- caufe Thou haft taken to Thee Thy great power, and haft given reward to the Saints. V. All Thy works (hall praife Thee, O LORD, and Thy Saints fhall give thanks unto Thee. Becaufe. R. 4. Then was given unto the Angel much incenfe, that he fliould offer it with the prayers of all Saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne. And the fmoke of the incenfe afcended up before GOD out of the Angel's hand. V. The eyes of the LORD are over the righteous, and His ears are open unto their prayers. And the fmoke. R. ). Thee, Holy LORD, all the Angel* praife on high, fay- ing, * Praife and honour be to Thee, O LORD. V. Cherubim and Seraphim, cry, Holy, and all the heavenly order* fing, Praife. Glory. Proiic. R. 3. Before the gods will I fine praife unto Thee, * and I will worfhip toward Thy holy Temple, and will praife Thy name, O LORD. V. Bccaufc of Thy mercy and loving-kindncfs and truth, for Thou h.ui mag- nified Thy name and Thy word above all things. And 1 will. Glory. And 1 will. R. \. Sing praifes unto our GOD, all ye His fervants, and yc who fear GOD, both (in. ill and great. * For the LORD GOD omnipotent rcigncth. f Rejoice in the LORD, O ye righteous, for it bccomcth well the juft to be thankful. For. Glory. Re- joice. All Saints. 107 ABERDEEN. R. 4. Among them that are bom of women, there hath not arifen a greater than John the Baptift, * who prepared the way of the LORD in the defert. V. There was a man fent from GOD whofe name was John. Who. ROMAN. R. 4. The forerunner of the LORD cometh, of whom He Himfelf teftifieth. * (i) Among them that are born of women, there hath not arifen a greater than John the Baptift. V. This is the prophet, and the more than prophet, of whom the Sa- viour faith. Among. PARISIAN. R. 4. All thefe attained a good report through faith. * Wherefore we alfo being com- paffed about with fo great a cloud of witnefles, let us run with patience the race that is fet before us. V. All thefe were honoured in their generations, merciful men, whofe righteouf- nefs hath not been forgotten Wherefore. (l) Obferve, while both the Aberdeen and Roman keep up the fymbolifm of Durandus, and make the fourth Refponfe typical of the prophets, and of John Baptift as their head, how much finer is the Roman Refponfe, introducing him, as it were, in a proceffion ; the idea is nobly followed out in that hymn, Sfonfa ChriJIi qua per orbem: as indeed by the Aberdeen, in R. 5. R. 5. Thefe the fellow-citi- zens of the Apoftles, and the domeftic fervants of GOD, ad- vance to-day, * carrying torches in their hands, and illuminating their country to give peace to the Gentiles, and to fet free the people of the LORD. V. Hear the prayers of us fuppliants, who aflc the rewards of eternal life, ye who bear in your hands the /heaves of righteoufnefs, and who joyoufly come forward to- day. Carrying. R. 5. Thefe are they who, living in the flcfh, planted the Church in their blood. * They drank the cup of the LORD, and became the friends of GOD. V. Their found is gone out into all lands, and their words into the ends of the world, (i) They drank. R. J. There was given unto them white raiment, and it was faid unto them, that they fhould yet wait a little time* until their fellow - fervants and brethren fhould be fulfilled. V. Bring my foul out of prifon that I may give thanks unto Thy name, which thing if Thou wilt grant me, then (hall the righteous refort unto my company. Until. (i) It is this verfe which fixes the whole Refponfory as belonging to the Apoftles, rather than, which might have been the cafe with the former part, to any other Saints. R. 6. O ye my Saints, who, while ye were in the flefh, fought the good fight, * I will render to you the reward of your labour. V. Come, ye bleffed of my FATHER, inherit the kingdom. I will. Glory. I will. R. 7. The fame as Aberdeen. R. 6. O laudable conftancy of the Martyrs, O inextinguifhable love, O invincible patience, which, although it feemed def- picable among the tortures of the perfecutors, * fhould be found to praife and glory and honour fin the time of retribution. V. We pray, therefore, that they, thus honoured by our FATHER, which is in Heaven, may help us, and that their merits. Should be found. Glory. In the time. R. 7. Let your loins be girded, and burning lamps in your hands, * and ye yourfelves like men that wait for their LORD, when He fhall return from the wedding. V. Watch, therefore, for ye know not at what time your LORD fhall come. And ye yourfelves. R. 8. I heard a voice from R. 8. At midnight there was heaven faying unto me, Come a Cry made, * Behold, the Bride- to Me, O ye wife virgins. * Lay groom cometh ; go ye out to up oil in your veflels until the meet him. V. O ye prudent Bridegroom (hall come. V. At Virgins, trim your lamps. Behold, midnight there was a cry made, Glory. Behold. Behold, the Bridegroom cometh ; go ye out to meet him. Lay up. R. 6. The LORD GOD (hall call His fervants by another name,* for the former miferies (hall have paffed away. V. There fhall be no more death, neifher forrow nor crying. For. Glory. For. R. 7. GOD, who is rich in mercy, for the great love where- with He has loved us, hath quickened us, * and hath made us fit together in CHRIST JESUS, that He might (how us the abundant riches of His grace. V. The meek alfo fhall increafe their joy in the LORD, and the poor among men fhall rejoice in the HOLY ONE of Ifrael. And hath made. R. 8. We have been filled with Thy mercy, O LORD, and we have been glad and rejoice in Thy falvation. * We have been comforted for the days wherein Thou haft plagued us, and for the years wherein we have fuffered adverfity. V. Our light affliction, which is but for a moment, work- eth for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. We have been. io8 All Saints. ROMAN. PARISIAN. R. 9. Thou haft redeemed us to GOD by Thy Blood, out of every kindred and tongue and nation. * And f Thou haft made us a kingdom and a pricfthood to our GOD, and we mall reign. V. Thou (halt bring them in and plant them in the mountain of Thine inheritance. And. Glory. Thou haft made. ABERDEEN. R. 9. Grant to us, O LORD, R. 9. None, pardon of our fins, and at the interceffion of the Saints, whole folemnity to-day we celebrate, * give us fuch devotion * that we may merit to attain to their fociety. V. May their merits affift us, whom our own fins fetter: may their interceffion excufc us, whom our own actions accuie. Grant. Glory. That. Thus we have gone through one of the mojl remarkable Series of the Refponjbries in the Wejlern Offices. The Aber- deen, as we jaid, keeps cloje to the original theory ; but, pro- bably, there are very few who will not think that the partial change in the Roman is a great improvement ; and we ourjelves are not ajhamed to confejs that the Parijian is yet more to our tajle. We mujl remember that it was a long time, even in the Wejl, before any were admitted to the title of ConfeJJbrs, except thoje who had actually confejjed Chrijl in torture, and come off with life. While, at the prefent time, all thofe Saints in the Wejlern Church who are not Martyrs, are dignified with the title of Confejjors, S. Martin being the firjl who obtained this honour, the Homologetes of the Eajl is much more nearly confined to its original Signification. At the fame time, the various clajjes of Saints in the Oriental Church are far more minutely charac- terized than thoje in the Wejl. Here, for example, we have IJapoJtle as well as Apojlle. This title is given to bifhops of Apojlolic conjecration ; to holy women, fellow-labourers with the Apojlles, as S. Mary Magdalene and S. Prijcilla ; to the firjl preachers of the faith in any country as we Jpeak of the Apojlle of Bavaria, or Belgium, or Northumberland ; and to the Princes, like Conjlantine or Vladimir, under whofe aufpices Chrijlianity became ejlablijhed in their country. Then we have the mfgalo-martyr, for thoje who were more especially illujlrious by their Bufferings ; the hiero-martyr, for thoje who were priejls as well as martyrs ; the hofio-martyr, for the religious of both jexes who obtained that crown ; and the thaumaturges or wonder-worker, attributed to Saints of all descriptions who were more especially conSpicuous for the gift of miracles. On Such a Subjefi as that on which we are jpeaking, nay, on each branch of it, whole volumes might be written. But we mujl next turn our attention to the occurrence and concurrence of one Fejlival with another ; the treatment of which difficulty forms one of the mojl jlriking advantages pojjejjed by the Wejlern over the Kajlcrn Church. In caSe any of our readers jhould be unacquainted with thefe Occurrences and Concurrences. 109 technical terms, he mujl obferve : one Fejlival occurs with another when the two feajls fall on the fame day ; as if Holy Thurfday happened on May i, SS. Philip and James. One Fejlival concurs with another, when its vigil falls on that other ; S. Mark would concur with Eajler, if Eajler were on the 24th of April. Every fuch difficulty is arranged by means of two little tables : but this is a late invention ; and the earlier miflals, fuch as the Incunabula, and thofe of the fir/I thirty years of the jlxteenth century, have very long and laborious rules for explaining what fervice is to be faid in cafe of occurrences. At the longejl, how- ever, they were nothing to compare for length with the typlcon of the Greek, the ou/tajfofthe Ruffian Church. Each of thefe is comprised in a thick folio volume ; and nothing can be more puzzling than the directions Jo given. But here we may objerve the greater flexibility of the Wejl. The Wejlern Church, when two important Fejlivals occur, can tranf- late the one : the Eajlern knows no Juch arrangement ; neither in the Oriental Church is a Fejlival ever omitted. Take, therefore, Juch an extreme cafe as the Annunciation occurring with Good Friday ; the Jervice is of both ; and to a Wejlern Jludent the effecl is extremely jarring and unpleafant. Eajlern ritualijls, however, admire the junction of the two, as one of the chief beauties of their Office Book ; and all one can Jay is, that great allowance mujl be made for ufe on both Jldes. The earlier Wejlern cujlom had much more rejemblance to the Eajl than has the prejent. Thus, according to modern Roman ufe, if Lady Day falls in Holy Week, it is transferred to the Monday after Low Sunday. But according to Sarum uje, if it fell on the Monday, Tuefday, or Wednesday in Holy Week, it was celebrated on that day. Now this quejlion of occurrences ajjiimes great importance with rejpecl to our own Prayer-book. No doubt, had tables been the cujlom at that time, the Reformers would have adopted them, and Jo left us a certain rule. But as the rubrics on the Jubjeci were then Jo very lengthy, for the Jake of that brevity on which the compilers of the Prayer-book Jo much prided themjelves, they were no doubt pajfed by. And here arijes our great difficulty ; we cannot in this refpecl follow the Sarum Uje, becaufe we have no power to tranjlate a Fejlival. That is to fay, though we have known injlances in which, on their own authority, individual clergymen have done fo, it feems doubtful how far they might not be contravening the Acl of Uniformity by fuch a practice. The quejlion then arifes, whe- ther it is better for that year to omit entirely a Fejlival which 1 10 Occurrences in the Englijh Church. would have been tranjlated, or irregularly to commemorate it. Our own practice has always been the former : but if it is to be commemorated at all, it Jhould be in the jlmplejl way, merely by the addition of the Colled. Yet to our minds there is Jbme- thing extremely unpleajing, on Juch a great Feajl as the Afcen- Jion, to commemorate additionally SS. Philip and James j or, on Eajler Day, the Annunciation, or S. Mark. There was a curious occurrence in the lajl century between a State- and a Church-FeJlival. George II. Jucceeded to the crown on the nthof June. The Accejjion Service was printed with a Jpecial notice that the Feajt of S. Barnabas was to be entirely ignored ; and accordingly for twenty-Jix years that Apojlle had no commemoration in the Englijh Church. Then came the change of Kalendar ; and Archbijhop Herring exerted himjelf to procure an alteration. A frejh rubric thenceforward fixed the king's acceJJIon to the 22nd of June. The idea entertained by the bijhops of Charles II. 's time as to occurrences, may be Jeen by the rubric prefixed to the now abrogated Jervice for the Rejloration. If the day happened to be AJcenJIon Day or Whitjun Day, the State Collecl only was added ; if it were Monday or Tuejday in Whitfun-week, or Trinity Sunday, the State PJalms aljb were Jaid ; but if it fell on any other Sunday, the whole State Service took precedence of the Sunday Office. But even on Whitjun Day the proper hymn Jupplanted the Venite. In the rubric for our prefent Accejjion Service, that office is ordered to be Jaid on Sundays, without any notice of the facl that the 2Oth of June might jujl fall on Trinity Sunday ; in which caje, Jurely no one would be Jo Erajlian as to obey the rubric literally. In many of the Gallican Breviaries, a further difficulty arijes with rejpeft to thoje Fejlivals which, though inferior in the Church'' s ejlimation, are kept as holy days by the people. It might, for example, happen that a local bijhop who, as the phraje goes, was " fejlivated," might occur with, Juch a day as Whitjun TueJ"day, or the oflave of the AJcenJion, which was not fejlivated. The lejjer feajl ought in that caje to have been tranjlated ; but it is very hard to tranjlate a popular holiday ; and the State aljb difcouraged it, on account of money becoming due, or leajes falling in as was Jo often the caje on Juch a Saint's day. If the Church allowed the day to be tranjlated, there might arijc all kind of legal qucjlions as to whether the original day to which the deed referred, Jlill held good, or altered in conjcquence of the tranjlation. There are, therefore, in the Churches where occurrences like theje are likely or pojjible, as in that of S. Brieuc, Quimper, (or, as it is generally called, 'Tables of Occurrences and Concurrences. in Cornouailles,) and Mende, another fet of rubrics which refer to fuch cafes. Generally, the fuperior Feajl is allowed for the nonce to be tranjlated. And in cafe the holiday fell in Holy Week, although the office was tranjlated, the fejlivation that year was abolijhed. It is well known that Jbmething of the fame kind occurred in the Concordat of 1801, at the injlance of Napoleon : the tranf- ference of the holiday and procejQion of Corpus Chrijli to the following Sunday. Thofe who have been in France or Belgium on the Fete-Dieu itfelf, know that it is fcarcely obferved at all : that not even in country places, do larger congregations than ufual attend. We will now give a table of occurrences, fuch as might be re- commended byfome future convocation for the ufe of the Englifh Church. OCCURRENCES. Double of the Firft Clafs 4 6 2 8 J. 4 Double of the Second Clafs . . . . 4 6 8 i 4 I x Within the Oftave 3 7 ,. 5 3 3 3 The Oftave 7 3 ? A. 7 5 H <* O U CO CO n V" cr o cr H. 5' 3 O- g. 3 n P *-< -< N o o < O o < co n O Sp n co n r* ft *"j C Q. CO n rf p -< o < o i-l o -t ft & o- O n a- n O E & w> ' 1. Tranflation of thefirft j office of the fecond. 2. Office of the firft ; tranflation of the fecond. 3. Commemoration of the firft ; office of the fecond. 4. Office of the firft ; commemoration of the fecond. 5. Nothing of the firft ; office of the fecond. 6. Office of the firft 5 nothing of the fecond. 7. Office of the more worthy ; commemoration of the lefs worthy. 8. Office of the more worthy j tranflation of the lefs worthy. 112 Examples. CONCURRENCES. " Sundays of the Firftor Second Cl. 4 3 3 3 o u Ordinary Sundays ? i i o i <; Double of the Firft Clafs 2 4 4 6 4 ^ Double of the Second Clafs. . . 4 4 6 3 4 1 Oftave 4 6 3 i 4 Within the O6tave 6 3 i i 3 ^ a a jj, ^* Oj o o 3 S, c c cr cr cr ^^ 9 o a a co ^ O 3 j*i V 1 *> a. ^N[ n cr rj fu *J5 O n CO o" . ^ & M ^ ti I 5^ 1 C- J^ O o E P All of the following j nothing of the preceding. All of the preceding ; nothing of the following. Office of the following ; commemoration of the preceding. Office of the preceding ; commemoration of the following. Office of the more worthy ; commemoration of the lefs worthy. To make the table complete, we mujl add that Sundays of the Firjl Clajs are : I. of Advent, I. of Lent, PaJJion, Palm, Eajler, Low, Pentecojl, Trinity. Sundays of the Second Clajs are : the others of Advent, the others of Septuagejima. And that the following are Greater Feriae, which are always commemorated by the addition of the preceding Sunday Collect : Advent, Lent, Ember Days, Rogation Monday. Let us now apply thefe rules to the anniversaries which will take place during the remainder of this year [1859], Sept. 29th, S. Michael and All Angels, the 30th being the Seventeenth Sunday after Trinity. Thus by the table of con- currences : (S. Michael being a Fejlival of the Second Clajs ; the Seventeenth after Trinity an ordinary Sunday :) the inter- jecting Jquare gives 4 ; 4 is explained to be the whole of the preceding, with commemoration of the following. Therefore on that Saturday evening the LeJJbns and Firjl Collect are of S. Michael, the Second Collect of the Sunday. Examples. 1 1 j Oft. 28, SS. Simon and Jude, occurs with the Twenty-firjl Sunday after Trinity. SS. Simon and Jude is a Fejlival of the Second Clajs, the Sunday an ordinary Sunday. The interjefting Jquare gives 4 ; 4 is explained, office of the fir/I, commemoration of the Jecond, the firjl being here the feajl, the Jecond being the Sunday. The whole Jervice will then be of the Saint's Day, with the addition of the Sunday Collects. And the rule which governs the feajl governs the vigil : therefore on Saturday, Oft. 27, the firjl Colleft is of the Fejlival, the Second is of the Sunday. TheJ*e are all the occurrences, &c. which take place during this year. Only one other observation we may make. Suppoje that the Second Vejpers of an ordinary Sunday were to concur with the Firjl Vejpers of a Fejlival of the Firjl or Second Clajs, as if the 27th of Oftober were the Eighteenth Sunday after Trinity ; then the Firjl LeJJbn at Vejpers is not the proper Lejjbn for the Sunday, but for the day of the month ; as in the injlance we have given, it would not be Ezekiel xxiv. but Ecclejlajlicus ix. It Jeems necejjary, too, to Jay a few words as to the Jeleftion of Apocryphal LeJJbns for the greater part of Saints' Days. The vulgar opinion Jeems to be that the compilers of the Prayer- book refujed to have Sunday Leftions from the Apocryphal Books, as not thinking them worthy of the Jblemnity of that day. The truth is jujl the oppojite, as any one may convince himjelf who will Jludy the Office drawn up by Jeremy Taylor in the necejjities of the Great Rebellion. Jujl becauje, in their opinion, an ordinary Saint's Day Jlood above an ordinary Sunday, the Reformers Jelefted chapters from the Sapiential Books, whe- ther Ecclejlajlicus, the Wijdom of Solomon, Proverbs, or Eccle- Jiajles, which they thought the mojl dijlinftly and Jlrikingly ujeful. We may be quite certain that, had they entertained the Jame ideas regarding the relative Janftity of the days which vulgar Protejlants of the prejent time entertain, our Firjl Sunday- Lejjons would have been from the Apocrypha, and thoje for the Saints' Days would have been Jelefted from the lefs Jlriking and lejs generally ujeful of the hijlorical or prophetical books. Never let this be forgotten, that a far greater proportion of the Apo- crypha is read by us yearly than is read of the rejl of the Old Tejlament. The two Books of Efdras, and the Prayer of ManaJJes, properly Jpeaking, cannot claim that title, and are in no Jenfe canonical. Of the rejl, we omit the two Books of Maccabees, but hardly a chapter in the remaining Books ; while, on the other hand, fully one-third of the Old Tejlament is utterly omitted, and we have but two or three chapters of the Apocalypfe. To turn to another Jubjeft : it may be well to Jay Jbmething 1 1 4 Selection of Saints. as to the various epochs at which the Saints commemorated in various Kalendars flourijhed. \Ve have been at the pains to reckon up thoje who have a place in the Parifian Breviary, according to their centuries ; and the rejult is as follows : In Century I. there are 36. In Century IX. there are i. II. 12. X. i. III. 35. XI. , i. IV. 33. XII. , 5. V. 19. XIII. , 13. VI. 25. XIV. 4. VII. 13. XV. o. VIII. 10. XVI. 4. In Century XVII. there are 4. And from this Jkeleton of a tabular view, we get a very fair idea of the hijtory of the Church of France. The firjl century is, of courje, occupied by Apojlolic and IJapoJlolic fejlivals, pretty equally common to the whole Church ; in the Jecond, while we loje theje, France was not yet Jufficiently evangelijed to give us many Jaints ; the third and fourth ages form the epoch of her glory; in the fifth there is a remarkable fall, to be accounted for from the anarchical breaking up of the Roman Empire, which has left its imprejs on the table ; in the Jixth and Jeventh centuries, again, the Gallican Church Jhone forth brightly; in the eighth, Jhe began to grow dim ; the ninth, tenth, and eleventh were days of darknejs, and give us between them but three Jaints ; in the twelfth, the monajlic reformation began to tell ; the thirteenth was the Jecond Jpring of the Gallican Church ; the fourteenth began well, but the mijeries of Englijh invajlon Jbon overwhelmed it. Every one acquainted with French hijlory would call the fifteenth, next to the eighteenth, its worjl age, and it made no addition to its Hagiology. The Jlxtccnth and Jeventeenth have each four Saints, S. Vincent de Paul and S. Francis de Sales being the brightejl Jtars of that little conjlellation. We are fond of fpeaking of the England of Saints. But how many more Saints have the French Sees added to the Kalendar of the Church than any of our own ! This, of courje, arijes partly from the faft, that the earlier French Bijhoprics had already exijled five hundred years when our own were formed ; but Jlill, even with this excufe, we fear that the diffe- rence is not entirely accounted for. We will now take a few Gallican Breviaries, and notice the Saints peculiar to each See which they commemorate ; and they Jhall be the Parijian, that of Metz, and that of Nantes. By way of contrajl with this, Galilean Kalendars. 115 we will then do the Jame thing for the Toledo and other Breviaries. Jan. PARIS. NANTES. METZ. 3 S. Genovefa, V. 512. S. Genovefa, V. JI2. 4 Rigobert, Bifhop of Rheims, Genovefa, V. 512. 743. 14 Hilary ,Bifhop of Poitou, 368. The fame. The fame. 15 Maurus, Abbat of Glanfeuil, The fame. VI. Century. Bonitus, Bifhop of Cler- mont, 710. 16 William, Bifhop of Bourges, 1209. 19 Sulpicius Pius, Bifhop of Bourges, 644. S. Launomar, near Chartres, Abbat, 594. 27 Julian, firtt Bifhop of Le The lame. Mans, III. or IV. Cent. 30 Bathildis, Queen, 680. Radegund, V. 680. Radegund, V. 680. Feb. 6 Vedaftus, B. of Arras, 539. Vedaftus, B. of Arras, 539. 10 S. William de Mala VaUe, Hermit, 1157. March 1 AJbinus, B. of Angers, 549. The fame. 3 Guingalous, Abbat near Qujm- per, 532. 6 Chrodogang, B. of Metz, 767. 10 Droftoveus, ift Abbat of S. Vincent at Paris, 578. 12 Paul, I B. of S. Pol de Leon, S7J- 30 Regulus, I B. of Senlis, 310. April 16 Patemus, I B. of Vannes, 448. 22 Invention of SS. Dionyfius, Rufticus, and Eleutherius, 630. Opportuna, V. 770. 30 Eutropius, B. of Saintes and Eutropius, B. of Saintes and M. M. III. Cent. III. Cent. May 2 Tranflation of S. Clement, I B. of Metz, 1090. 4 Briocus, I B. of S. Brieuc, joz. 11 Mamertus,B.ofVienne,475. Gildas, Abbat, VI. Cent. 13 Mamertus, B. ofVienne, 475. Mamertus, B. of Vienne, 475. lo Honoratus, B. of Amiens, 600. 19 Ivo, P. of Quimper, 1303. Ivo, P. of Quimper, 1303. 24 Donatian andRogatian,M.M. DONATIAN and ROGATIAN, 287 M. M. 287. (Greater Solemn.) 28 Germanus, B. of Paris, 576. June 2 Pothinus, B. of Lyons, Blan- As Paris. As Paris. dina, V. and 46 other Martyrs, 177. 3 Clotildis, Q. of France, J37- Clotildis, Q. of France, 537. Clotildis, Q._ of France, 537. 6 Claudius, Archbp. of Beuic.on, 581. Mereadoc, B. of Vannes, 600. 8 Medardus,B.ofNoyon,52j. As Paris. As Paris. 10 Landeric, B. of Paris, 656. 16 Similianus, B. of Nantes, IV. Century. '8 Hervacius, Monk, near S. Pol de Leon, VI. Cent, 4 1 Merennus, Abbat, near S . Maclou, 617. n6 Galilean Kalendars. June PARIS. NANTES. METZ. aj Gohardos, Aglibertus, and Gohardus, B. of Nantes, 843. their companions,Martyrs, III. Cent. 28 Irenaeus, B. of Lyons, and As in Paris. As in Paris. Defter of the Church, M. 202. jo S. Theobald, Hermit Nor- mandy, 1066. Theje fix months will afford a very good example of local Jaints, Jince, with the exception of S. Hilary, S. Mamertus, S. Pothinus, and S. Irenaeus, none of the holy men here comme- morated have been received into the general Kalendar of the Church. Let us make another jeleclion of the Jame kind; and this time, inflead of comparing three Churches of the Jame nation, let us take three illujlrious Churches of different nations. They Jhall be : Aberdeen for Scotland ; Toledo for Spain ; Cologne for Germany : Jan. ABERDEEN. 7 Kentigerna, Matron. 8 Nathaianus, Birti. 9 Felanus, Abbot. II 1 6 Furfe, Abbot. 28 29 Voloc, Bifhop. 30 Glafcian, Bifhop. Feb. I 5 Modanus, Abbot. 17 Finnanus, B. 18 Colmannus, B. March I Monan, Confcflbr. Mornan, B. 6 Baldric, B. 8 Duthac, B. 10 Kcflbg. II 1 2 Conftantine, King & Martyr. 14 Kcvoca, V. 16 18 Finian, B. 26 Death of the Third King. Huicbcrt, B. Heribcrt, B. Ludger, B. TOLEDO. Fruftuofus, Martyr. ILDEFONSO, Archbp. of Toledo : Double of the Second Clafs, with an Ofteve. Defcent of the B. V. into the Cathedral of Toledo. Julian, B. of Concha: Double of the Second Clafs. Valerius, B. of Saragoffa: Oftave of S. Ildefonfo. Czecilius, B. and M. Firft translation of S. Eugenius, Archbp. of Toledo. Hclladius, Archbp. of Toledo. Julian, Archbp. of Toledo. Eulogius, Prefbyter and Martyr. Theje three months may Juffice as an example of the above Jees. Now let us turn to another Jubjecl. Bejldcs the commemoration of Saints, there are in certain local Kalcndars notices of national events, connected with the well-being of the Church. Thus, in the Parijian Breviary, we have on the i8th of Augujl a commemoration of the victory of National Feftivals. 1 1 7 Philip the Fair in Flanders, A.D. 1304. It is worth while to give the LejQTons which refer to this event. In the firjl noclurn, the leclions of the occurring Scripture. In the Jecond noclurn : FOURTH LESSON. Philip the Fair, King of the French, in the year 1304, about the Feaft of S. Mary Magdalene, having let forth with his brothers Charles and Louis, and a large army, into Flanders, pitched his tents near Mons, where was the camp of the rebel Flemings. But when, on the i8th of Auguft, which was the Tuefday after the Aflumption of S. Mary, the French had from morning till evening flood on the defence, and were refting themfelves at nightfall : the enemy, by a fudden attack, rufhed on the camp of the King with fuch fury, that the body-guard had fcarce time to defend him. R. Come from Lebanon, my Spoufe, * come and thou (halt be crowned.f The odour of thy fweet ointments is above all perfumes. V. The Righteous Judge mail give a crown of Righteoufnels. Come. Glory. The odour. FIFTH LESSON. At the beginning of the fight, the life of the King was in great danger. But fhortly after, his troops crowding together from all quarters to his tent, where the battle was fharpeft, obtained an illuftrious vi6lory over the enemy. The pious King immediately underftood that this had been won by no human hand, but from GOD, at the interceflion of the Mother of GOD j whence, with all humility, he afcribed the whole praife of the viftory to Him Who had mown Himfelf the defender of the moft righteous caufe. R. Thou art all fair, My Love, * there is no fpot in thee : come from Lebanon, -f- the odour of thy garments is as the odour of incenfe. R. They that have not defiled their garments, they (hall walk with Me in white, for they are worthy. There is no. Glory. The odour. SIXTH LESSON. But that the memory of fuch a benefit mould be tranfmitted to pofterity, and that due honour mould be paid to the Virgin Mary for this celeftial help, Philip, by a deed, dated in the Camp near Lille, in the month of September, gave to the Church of Paris an annual revenue of a hundred francs for ever for the ufe of the Dean and Chapter, on this condition, that this revenue mould be diftributed among thofe only who attend at the Firft Vefpers, at Matins, and at Mafs, on this day. R. Righteoufnefs mail go before thee, and the glory of the LORD (hall be thy rereward ; * the LORD (hall fill thy mind with glory. 7. An en- trance (hall be abundantly adminiftered into the eternal kingdom. And the glory. Glory. The LORD. This may ferve as an example of Jo very undejirable a mixture of politics and religion. The great Triumph of the Crojs, celebrated in all the Spanijh Breviaries, on the I4th of July, Jlands on a very different footing, becauje it was that victory which crufhed the Saracen power in Spain, and made that nation a part of the Chrijlian republic of States. We will not trouble the reader with Rejponjbries ; but they are not unworthy of the fubjeft : and the LeJJbns, from the various parts of the New Tejlament which treat of the Crofs, are jingularly beautiful. In 1 1 8 Memorise Technics. the Churches of Sardinia a mojl offenfive Jervice was in vogue till the end of the lajl century, in which the defeat of the French at Sajjari was commemorated ; the hymns, to excite the popular pajfllon to the utmojl, were vernacular, and began thus : Muiran, muiran los Francefos, Us trahidors de Saflarefos, Qui ban fit la trahicio Al molt alt rey de Arago. We ought now to jpeak of the various memories technics which are to be found in mojl Kalendars. No doubt the ordi- nary run of uneducated priejls in the Middle Ages found con- jiderable difficulty in remembering the JucceJJion of LeJJbns which made up the Church's year. The barbarous verjes in which they are jet forth can only remind one of the Memorla Technica for the order of the Epijlles, itfelf, we believe, of the time of Queen Elizabeth. Rom. Cor. Cor. Gal. Ephes. Phil. Col. Thes. Theflalo. Tim. Tim. Tit. Phil. Hebrews, James, Pet. Pet. 3 John, Jude, Revelation. Take, for example, theje, which are from the Aberdeen Breviary : Poft Tres Perfonas librum regum dare debes. (It is jcarcely necejjary to obferve that the poet would teach us that the Book of Kings is to be commenced after Trinity, as we commence it now. He then goes on to tell us which Vigils are aljb Fajls.) Nat. Domini, Penthe, Johan. Paul, fumptio fanfta: Iftis vigiliis jejunemus luceque Marci. Petrus et Andreas, Paulus, cum Simone, Judas, Ut jejunemus nos admonet, atque Matheus. For July we have the following : Et poft Sampfonem fapientem da Salomonem. (That is, after the Fcajl of S. Sampjbn jbme of our readers may remember his church at York on July 28, the Wifdom of Solomon is begun.) For Augujl we have : Poft Auguftinum doftorem Job lege juftum. (That is, after S. Augujline's Day.) In September : Tobiam diftum poft Protum atque Jacintum : Subjungas Judith poft vigiliamque Mathei : Poft Sandtum Cofinam dabis hittoriam Macabeo. Memorial Verfes. 1 1 9 (That is, Tobit is begun after the nth of September, the Feajl of SS. Protus and Jacinthus : Judith after the Vigil of S. Mat- thew : the Maccabees after S. Cojmas, Sept. 27.) For Oftober : Poft Judam Simonem fubjungas Ezekielem. For November we have a very neat line : Adventus Domini fequitur folemnia Lini. (That is, the firjl Sunday after the Feajl of S. Linus, Nov. 26th, is Advent Sunday.) Some Juch practical memories have kept their place in village recitations ; thus : Firft comes David, then comes Chad, Then comes Winnold as if he were mad. Or again and any one in the habit of daily Jervice at the mojl ujual time mujl often have admired its truth : S. Matthew, get candlefticks new : S. Matthi, lay candlefticks by. And Jo the well-known dread which mediaeval ages had of the occurrence of Good Friday with the Annunciation, was ex- prejjed by : When our Lady falls in our LORD'S lap, Then let England look for miftiap. We had occajion to Jpeak in a former paper of the tendency that exijted, during the later period of the Middle Ages, to jub- Jlitute, for the long Ferial PJalms, Saints' -day offices wherever it was practicable. We were not aware, when we wrote that article, of a Jingular rubric in Jbme of the early German Bre- viaries ; we quote it from the Cologne : Et ideo nemo afcribat feriis in Kalendario vacantibus fan6him aut fanftos, nifi Patronos ipfius legentis. Aliqui ex pigritia requirentes fanftum aut fanftos ex aliis Kalendariis, volentes ilium aut illos fervare ubi in Kalen- dario prediftae ecclefiae Feria vacat, ut non legantur Nofturni : illi errant. Quia debent fervare id quod eft debitum et inftitutum fecundum majorem ecclefiam fuae diocefis et non quod eft eis placitum ; fecundum di6tum beati Hieronymi qui dicit : Ingratum eft Spiritui Sanclo quidquid obtuleris, negle&o eo ad quod teneris. We might aljb Jpeak at Jbme length of the Mediaeval Fejlivals which later times have dijpenjed with altogether. Such, for example, were : The Feajl of the Invention of the Child, on the Friday after Sexagejima, for which Jeveral elegant hymns were written in German Breviaries ; the Feajl of the Face of our LORD a very pretty Jimple hymn may be J*een on this day 1 20 Feafts of our Lord. in the MeiJJen Breviary; it was on the I5th of January ; the Feajl of the Blood of our LORD this, in early Breviaries, is marked for the a6th of March. And the reafon is, that to the 25th of March is attributed, in mojl Mediaeval Kalendars, the PaJJIon, and to the 2yth the Rejurreclion. In Venice, this commemoration takes place on the firjl Friday in March ; in the dioceje of Linz on the Monday after Trinity. The Feajl of the Pajjion is marked in many Breviaries for the 1 5th of Novem- ber. The Feajl of the Hair of our LORD was celebrated on the Thursday before Trinity Sunday, in jbme Churches where this relic was venerated. The Feajl of the Milk of our Lady was not a very uncommon commemoration in Germany, and especially in the province of Salzburg, where a noted relic of this kind was kept : it was on the oftave of the Nativity of S. Mary : and hence, no doubt, the title Liebfrauenmilch to the excellent German wine of that name. Again, there was the Feajl of the AJs, which was celebrated at Rouen with Juch Jingular pomp, and in which, injlead of Amen, the rejponfe to all the prayers was Hinhan. The Feajl of the Divijlon of the Apojlles was a mojl celebrated one in Germany for the 1 5th of July, and has given rife to Jbme of the finejl early Jequences which we pojjejs. Many of the Gallican Breviaries occupy the Fridays of Lent with various commemorations of our LORD. For example : Firjl Friday, the Feajl of His Tears ; Second, of the LORD'S Prayer ; Third, of the LORD'S Dijcourfes ; Fourth, of the LORD'S Parables ; Fifth, of the LORD'S Sufferings. The/e lajl-named commemorations, it need hardly be Jaid, are among the very latejl developments. Among the curiojities of Mediaeval Kalendars mujl be reckoned thoje half-religious, half-medical, verjes which are to be found at the end of each month. Take, for example, the following, which occur in mojl of the Breviaries in North Italy. For January : In Jano claris calidifque cibis potiaris, Atque decens potus tibi fit poft fercula notus. Sedet enim medo potatus ut bene credo ; Balnea tutus intres et venam findere cures. We will give only one Jpecimen more : Nafcitur occulta febris Februario multa : Potibus et efcis fi caute minuere veils. Tune cave frigora, tune de pollice funde cruorem : Suge favum mellis ; pecloris morbofque curabit. One of the peculiarities of Mediaeval Breviaries was the poetical character of Rejponfories and Antiphons for local Saints. Let us take a few examples from the Aberdeen book. The Antiphons on the Feajl of S. Magnus, April 16, ran thus : Poetical Refponfes. 121 1. Magnus ex profapia Magna percreatus, A6tu, vita, moribus, Major eft probatus. Beatus vir. 2. Praedis vacans promitur Pravorum inftinhi, Et Paulus convertitur In via2 procindhi. Square fremuerunt. 3. Saulus ecce Paulus fit j Praedo fit patronus ; Perfecutor faftus eft Plebis Paftor bonus. Domine quid. Sometimes we have them in hexameters, as in the Feajl of S. Urjula and the Eleven Thoujand Virgins : 1. Purpureos flores caelefti rore madentes Decreto Domini faraofa Britannia mifit. Domine Dominus. 2. In cunis pofitae Baptifmi fonte renatae Et fidei verae funt legibus initials. Call enarrant. 3. Has pietatis amor fibi foederat ordine miro ; Dum retrahit mundo feftinat reddere coelo. Domini eft terra. And Jbmetimes the miracles of the Saints are related in a way which to us has rather a ludicrous effect. Thus, at Lauds, on S. Macharius's Day : i . Nullum dedit otio Tempus : vel orabat Semper, vel colloquiis Divinis vacabat. Dominus regnavit. ^. Fixo pifcis gutture Dron ofle vexatur ; Sed ad Sanfti fubito Preces liberatur. Jubilate. Now, remember that this feajl was a duplex principale at Aberdeen : the great day of the year, in facl : (many of our readers will recoiled the Cathedral of Old Machar.) And then judge how greatly that Breviary jlood in need of a thorough Reformation, when Lauds, on one of its highejl fejlivals, began thus : j 2 2 Poetical Refponfes. Ant. i. Never did he reft a whit : Either he was praying, Or in reading holy writ Pains and zeal difplaying. The Lord is King. Ant. 2. In his throat a fifh-bone lay; Dron was troubled greatly : But the Saint began to pray, And relieved him ftraightly. O be joyful. Thefe rhyming verfes are much more common in Englijh and Scotch, than in Continental Breviaries. But Hexameters are aljb ujual in German Offices. Take, for example, this Jpecimen from the Cologne Breviary, on S. Lambert's Day. The Invi- tatory is : Eternum Trinumque Deum laudemus et Unum, Qui fibi Lambertum tranfvexit ad aethera fanftum. The Antiphons to the firjl Noclurn are : i. Orbita folaris praefentia gaudia confert ; Praefulis eximii Lamberti gefta revolvens. Beatus vir. a. Hie fuit ad tempus Hildrici regis in aula : Dileftus cun&is et vocis famine dulcis. Square fremuerunt. 3. Sed poft ut fidei devotus dogmata fumpfit, Doftrine cumulos illi fapientia vexit. Domine quid. But both in our own and the German Breviaries the Refpon- Jbries are frequently in that Jlngular half-daclylic meafure, which was Jo great a favourite with Mediaeval writers. For example, take thcfe on the Feajl of S. Blaanus, the Patron of Dumblane, and a duplex principal in that Church : i. R. Adolefcens Supremo placuit, Et fe cunftis pium exhibuit 5 *Unde coelum ingredi meruit. V. Vitae verbum multis aperuit, Atque vita beata claruit. Unde. R. Domat carnis motus illicitos : Vincit iniiiidi conatus noxios. Terit hoftis antiqui tribulos. V. Manus mentem cordis et oculos Pie tendens fcmper ad fuperos. Tcrit. Various Families of Breviaries. 123 3 R. O res mira! fceptrum defpicitur ; Atque mundi decus contempnitur j *Et paupertas gratis eligitur. V. Et tota mente Chriftus diligitur, Ac pro Chrifto Corpus affligitur. Et. It would be, as we have already hinted, an interejling inquiry which Jhould invejligate the different Breviaries which, Jince the invention of printing, have been employed in the Church. We have often wondered that no Juch attempt has been made. We know that each of the following countries had its own family : (i.) Portugal, with perhaps Jeven different Breviaries ; the chief, Lijbon, Evora, Braga, Santa Cruz de Coimbra. All theje we have jludied. (2.) Spain, with twenty-two which we could count up, and probably as many more which we could not; the chief, Toledo, Seville, Santiago de Compojlella, Oviedo, Valencia, Salamanca, and, in later times, Granada and Cordova. (3.) France, with more than a hundred and fifty different rites, each of theje to be divided into the Mediaeval and Reformed arrange- ments. Of the Reformed arrangement, its three chief families are Paris, Amiens, and Rouen. Then again, (4.) Germany, of the offices of which we do not pretend to an equal knowledge, but Jhould divide them into the principal families of Cologne, Magdeburg, Salzburg, Cracow, Ratijbon. Next (5.) Denmark, of which perhaps Rojkild and Slejwig are the only two remark- able rites. Then (6.) Norway, with its one Breviary, Trondjem ; (7.) Sweden, with its four ; (8.) Lapland, with its one Abo ; (9.) that which is now PruJJia, with five or Jix. Going Jbuth- ward (10.) Italy; north, with five or Jix completely different families (we jay nothing of Milan) ; Venice ; Ravenna ; Gorz ; Turin; aljb Switzerland, with the Genevan and Chur UJes. Of the Jbuth of Italy and Sicily, we Jay for we are Jbrry to Jay we know nothing ; but that there mujl have been Jeveral families here we can have no doubt. Add together the rites we have already counted up, and then remember that they Jimply reprejent the Jecular ajpecl of the Church. We Jhould, after this, have to enter not only into the various religious orders, themjelves dif- fering very widely from each other, as all from the Jecular Bre- viary, but into the national ramifications of thoje orders, which would make, for example, a Polijh Premonjlratenjlan Breviary utterly different from a Gallican Book of the fame order ; and then Jee what an enormous Jcope is open for Liturgical Jludy, and that in a field in which absolutely nothing has been effected. We believe that the Jeries of papers, of which this is one, is the only attempt which has been made, not only in England, but in 124 Comparative Liturgiology. Europe, at a commencement, however poor and imperfect mijerably poor and imperfect it is of the jcience of Comparative Liturgiology (if we may borrow a term from anatomy). At all events, if there are any Juch European attempts, they have ex- cited little interejl and produced no rejult. But that this jcience will be purjued, and to an extent of which we at prejent have little idea, we cannot doubt. \Ve are jure that, in due time, given a Fejtival, and one or two of its leading points jay gradual, collect, and pojl-communion and the genus and clajs of its Liturgical family will at once be pointed out. For, while we look forward to almojl inconceivable progrejs in this jtudy, we cannot cloje our eyes to what has been already done. Fifty years ago, it would have Jeemed incredible that, were a hymn which he had never before jeen laid before a praclijed hymno- logijl, he would be able to tell you the nation of its writer, and the date, to jay the leajl, within twenty years on one jide or the other. Knowing what has been done in the pajl, we may, for the future (and we uje the words in no irreverent jenje) " thank GOD, and take courage." V. THE MOZARABIC LITURGY.* | MIDST all the branches of the Catholic Church, the Spanijh is that of which the hijlory is the leajl intelligible. In other nations, the brighter or objcurer phajes of religion Jeem to be in connection with each other ; there is a fequence in the progrefs of their ecclejiajlical annals ; one part explains the other, and we may obtain a practical lejfbn from the whole. But in Spain all Jeems out of joint. The five great epochs of the Church, her annals before the Arian inva/ion under the Arians her rejloration the Maho- metan conquejl her final viclory, bear no mutual rejpondence ; they are rather Jeparate pieces of hijlory, which have a forced and accidental connection, but no ejjential unity. There are, indeed, two keynotes which, unhappily, characterize the whole hijlory of the Peninjular Church laxity of morals, and violence in the propagation of the faith. She never appears as the un- corrupted Bride of CHRIST in the midjl of an adulterous and jlnful generation ; Jhe never appears as the tender, loving mother, the winner of Arian heretics or apojlates. Faith is too often made to ferve injlead of purity ; and fire and Jword are the means of propagating that faith. How it was that Spain and Aquitaine were plunged into Juch an excejs of licentioujnejs at the time of the Vijigothic invajion, is one of thoje myfleries of ecclejiajlical hijlory that cannot be Jblved. The tejlimony of Salvian is no lejs fearful than decifive. * Lateinifche und Griechifche Meflen, aux dem zweiten bis fechften Jahrhundert. Heraufgegeben von Franz Jofeph Mone, Archivdireftor in Karlfruhe. Frankfort am Main. 1850. [Latin and Greek Litur- gies, from the fecond to the fixth century. Edited by F. J. Mone, Librarian at Karlfruhe.] 126 Vtfigofhf Invafton. He imputes to his fellow Catholics, as open, as undenied, as notorious, as abounding in every city, crimes of which it is im- pojjible to think without Jhuddering ; and with theje he contrajls the purity, the devotion, and the high morals of the Arian con- querors. Vandals in Africa, Suevi in Portugal, Vijigoths in Spain, all found the fame corruption, all won for themjelves the fame praife ; but Spain is the country that is branded with the deepejl imputation of vice.* One of the few victories which Roman troops gained over the invaders, was won by a furprife on Sunday, when the heretics were at their devotions. Doubt- lefs, the Arian domination purified the lives of the Catholics. The fcum of the old, drifted off into the new ejlablijhment : pollution changed places, and GOD gave His Church another time of probation. The preaching of S. Martin of Dume, and the fplendid career of S. Martin of Tours, touched the heart of Charraric, King of the Suevi : Gallicia returned to the faith. About twenty-five years later, the martyrdom of S. Hermenigild won his father, King Levigild, to an acknowledgment, if not to the profeJJIon, of the truth ; and Recared, the brother and fuccejjbr of the martyr, confejjed the Confubjlantial in the Third Council of Toledo. It is worth while to notice, that neither in this Synod, nor in that of Braga (A. D. 561), which reconciled Gallicia, is any hint given that immorality had widely fpread among the laity : a melancholy contrajl with the Canons after- wards pajjed when the ejlablijhment was Catholic. A hundred and forty years brought back all, and more than, its old corruptions to the Church of Spain, The Mojlems pajfled the Jlrait. The empire of the Vijlgoths was dajhed to pieces on the banks of the Guadalete. Emerging from a tumul- tuous conflift of civil war, Abderraham-ben-Moaviah ejlab- lijhes an independent emirate at Cordova. Six of his descendants fucceed him in his title and in his power : the feventh, Abder- rahman III. takes the name of Khalif. Follow the long and weary Jlruggles of the Ommiadae and the Edrijites ; till Spain falls into independent emirates, and the entry of the Almora- vides in the eleventh century raifes, for a while, the Jinking fortunes of the Muflulmans, and gives them a further exijlence of four hundred years. This is the hijlory of more than three centuries. But in all that time, how little is there in the Church on which the annalijl can dwell with pleafure ! Valour everywhere displayed : city after city recovered to the faith : mofque after mofque reconciled: * " Quid ? Hifpanias nonne vel eadem vel tnajora forfitan crimina perdide- runt ? " is Salvian's expreflion. Philip II. and Ferdinand VII. 127 but of holinejs, of purity, of love, little enough. Affonfo VI, the great monarch of Cajlille and Leon, the recoverer of Toledo, and the prop of the Spanijh Church, had two concubines, bejides his legitimate wives. As the Crojs went on triumphing over the Crejcent, though it be the golden age of Spain, S. Ferdinand is the one great and bright character of its mediaeval annals. Granada was taken : and then began that remarkable phaje of religion which culminated in Philip II. Gloomy, moroje, aujlere ; Jhutting out, like its churches, light and cheerfulnejs : finding its palace in the EJcurial, its architect in Herrera, its painter in Velafquez, its poet in Calderon, its life in Madrid, its funeral in the Pant eon de los Infantes. Very grand it was and Jblemn : very moral and full of etiquette : as grave as the funeral Jaloon at Galapagar, and as pitilejs as the Inquifition. And yet this Jyjlem produced a Ximenes, and a S. Thereja. Its externals remained after the War of SuccejOTion, but its life was gone. Plunging deeper and deeper, during the dynajly of the Bourbons, into fenjuality and pollution, her monajleries Jpreading day by day, and day by day relaxing in fervour, the Spanijh Church was dajhed againft the terrific onjet of French infidelity. A Catholic people Jaw Jo-called Catholics exceed Mahometans in lujl and Jacrilege ; and Jo-called Protejlants the guardians of their churches, the rejpeclers of their property, the defenders of their honour. They Jaw a Soult worfhipping one day the miraculous image of Boucas, and the next, majjacring monks, polluting altars, and injulting nuns, They Jaw a Jink of degradation and vice, like Ferdinand, expend his piety in embroidering a petticoat for S. Mary. And they Jaw honour, and courage, and moral conduct, among thoje alone whom they were taught to call heretics. What wonder that the miserable rejult is Spain as we now fee it ! A Clergy impoverijhed, but not holy ; a middle clajs, when not utterly carelejs, utterly infidel : a peasantry, with all the feeds of faith yet Jlrong in their hearts, but finding no other nourijhment for it than the wildejl excejjes of Mariolatry; expending all their devotion on the Corte de Maria en Jus mas celebres imagine r, and worked up to fuch horrid blajphemies as Viva la Santifima^ y muerte a todos los Dios ! * * The urging the moft extreme worfhip of S. Mary, as the remedy for a corrupt age, is remarkably exemplified by a fermon of the great Portuguefe divine, Antonio Vieira, a preacher whofe eloquence ranks him with Maffillon or Bofluet, and whofe praftical inculcation of duties fets him above them. Preaching at Maranhao, in Brazil, in the year 1657, a city at that time rivalling Sodom in wickednefs, and taking for his fubjeft Our Lady of Light, he draws a parallel between our Lady as the Light, and our LORD as the Sun. And his fermon turns on thefe four heads : that the light has higher 128 Violence of the Spanlfh Church. But it is even more curious to trace from the very earliejl times that headjlrong violence which is the great characlerijlic of the Spanijh Church. The persecution of Prijcillian by Idacius and Ithacius, jet the firjl example of death for herefy. The unauthorized introduction of Jingle affujlon into the Ritual, and of the Filioque into the Creed, opened the door for the difajlrous fchifm of Eajl and Wejl. Even the martyrs were not free from the needlejs provocation of their perfecutors. S. Eulalia under Diocletian ; the Martyrs of Cordova and S. Eugenius himjelf, under the Mojlems, did their utmojl to bring on themjelves the jword of their tyrant. Seven centuries of a war for the propa- gation of the faith, feven centuries of partial intermixture with a people that had Jpread the Koran by the Jword, a perpetual crufade, and juch victories as Navas de Toloja, Campo d' Ou- rique, and the river Salado, could not but fojler this warlike Jpirit. The intermixture of Moors and Jews, when Spain became a Chrijlian monarchy, found an eajler cure in the Inquijltion than privileges than the fun : is more benignant : is more univerfal : is more ready to haften to our relief. (" Primeyra razao : porque a Luz he mais privile- giada que o Sol. Segunda : porque he mais benigna. Terceyra : porque he mais univerfal. Quarto : porque he mais appreflada para noffo bem.") It is no wonder that the fermon mould draw to its conclufion thus : (the quotation will be new to moft of our readers, and we make no apology for giving it) : " Having thee," he is addreiling S. Mary, " on one fide, and thy Son on the other, that great fervant and lover of both faid : Pojltus in media, quo me confounded. Vers. ad repetendum. Lead me forth in Thy truth, and learn me: for Thou art the GOD of my falva- tion : in Thee hath been my hope all the day. The triple repetition of the Antiphon feems to have been 138 The Officium. abolijhed at Rome about 1480, but is retained in our own printed Sarum books. The Mozarabic Officium for the fame Sunday is as follows : Off. Behold upon the mountains the feet of him that preacheth glad tidings of peace, Alleluia : and telleth good things, Alleluia : celebrate, O Judah, thy feafts, Alleluia : and pay unto the LORD thy vows. Alleluia. V. The LORD gave the word : great was the company of the preachers. Pfalm.* And pay unto the LORD thy vows. Alleluia. 7. Glory and honour be to the FATHER, and to the SON, and to the HOLY GHOST, unto ages of ages. Amen. Pfalm. And pay unto the LORD thy vows. Alleluia. Prieft. Always, unto all ages of ages. R. Amen. The Officluniy however, is not always from the Pfalms, nor always even from Scripture. That on the Epiphany is exceed- ingly remarkable, as proving the great age of the Mafs. It runs thus : Ye that have been baptized into CHRIST have put on CHRIST; Alleluia. V. Ye are the bleffed of the LORD, who hath made heaven and earth. Now thefe words clearly refer to the cujlom of a public bap- tifm of Catechumens at the Epiphany, as on Eajler and Whitfun- eve ; but this was complained of as an abufe by S. Himerius of Tarragona, to S. Damafus, about 380, and abolijhed by S. Siricius ; and therefore we cannot conceive this Officium to have a later date than the middle of the fourth century, while it may be much earlier. The " glory and honour" of the Doxology is a Spanijh ufe, fanftioned under pain of anathema by the fourth (fixth) Council of Toledo, and grounded on the ascriptions of praife by David, and in the Apocalypfe. The Gloria in Excelfis follows, which is Jo beautifully men- tioned by the Fathers of the fame Council, as having been begun in heaven and ended on earth ; and at its conclujlon, the Priejl repeats the words, Always, for all ages of ages. Amen. According to the ancient Ufe of the Gotho-Hifpanic Church, the Gloria in Excelfis was faid daily ; as we learn from Etherius and Beatus ; It is now omitted, after the Roman Ufe, in Advent and Lent. Next comes a Collect which, though it occupies the place of the Collect for the Day in the Roman Liturgy, is not, as we Jhall fee, the fame thing. This anfwers to the Ambrofian * This word, in Mozarabic MSS, is always written p". Arevalus decides that it means Pfalmus, and we follow him becaufe of his unrivalled expe- rience : elfe we mould have been difpofed, with others, to interpret the con- traftion Prejbyter. Oratiofuper Populum. Oratio fuper Populum, though that precedes the Gloria in Ex- celfiS) and to the Galilean Collegia pojt Prophetiam. The Moz- arabic prayer, in this place, is not, Jlriftly fpeaking, proper to the day. For example : the fame Oratio here occurs through- out Advent ; the Jame through Eajler-tide ; the fame, for the mojl part, as the fejlivals of Martyrs, We give that for Eajler : the commencement without Oremus, and the double ending, is common to all the Mozarabic Collects : To Thee we afcribe praife, O LORD our GOD j and we befeech Thy power that, as Thou didft vouchfafe to die for us finners, and didft again, after the third day, appear illuftrioufly in the glory of Refurreftion ; Ib we, abfolved by Thee, may merit to have in Thee perpetual joy : in like manner as Thou haft given us an example of true Refurre6Hon. R. Amen. Priefl, Through Thy mercy, O our GOD, Who art blefled, and liveft,and governeft all things unto ages of ages. R. Amen. This prayer having been ended, the Priejl continues : " The LORD be ever with you. R. And with thy Jpirit." And then follows the Prophecy. More of that presently. We will firjl parallelize the Mozarabic with the Gallican form, for the Jake of making our remarks clearer : MOZARABIC; GALLICAN. Benedittus. Oratio. Oratio poft Prophetiam (= Colleftio). LeBio Veteris Tejtamenti. Leftio Veteris Tejlamenti (vel Paflio Sanftorum). Pfallendo. Pfalmus refponforius. Eptftola. Eptftola. Evangelium. E et magn ificabit no- glorify Thy Name ? As yet we have ^ entuum?null ; demnobisadhuc no lyres that refound. Thy Saints, n . ~ who by the perfeverant concord of cythare perfonant j fanfti tui, qui bef- virtues have conquered the Beaft of tiam faeculi hujus, concordia virtutum this world, [may join in the Song of perfeverante vicerunt J nullum de Mofes and the Lamb : but] we have no bis Moyfi canticum, qui inter no Song of Mofes, who are as yet fluftus adhuc iftius feculi vo lutamur. rolled among the floods of this world. * We read diftu. t Clearly a miftake for via. % Something is wanting here, where the palimpfeft is cut into a new leaf. We have fuggefted a few words which feem to carry on the fenfe. Mone rightly obferves that this is the genitive cafe. i6o No. V. of Mone 3 We have no voice of Angels, un- lefs perchance they (/. e. thofe hea- venly fpirits) may praife us, who may probably be prefent with us when we confecrate the Body and Blood of Thy moft dearly beloved SON. Yet have we a pious care for the people, and holy prayer for the falvation of the multitude. And if the mind, intent on the divine worfhip, cannot fet forth in full the majefty of fuch a work, yet it endeavours to frequent the ufe of the benefit that is allowed. For who can with perfunftory fenfe pafs over Thy divine gifts ? Thou into corruptible flime and foluble clay didft vouchfafe to breathe the breath of life : Thou madeft that to be man which is flime ; and the mortal mate- rial Thou didft vivify with the fpi- ritual vigour of nature into Thine image andfimilitude, that fiery vigour might animate within the torpid earth and the dull clay ; and by the agile mo- tion of the warm vein our flefh might be quickened. What are we, and how much have we deferved ? For this clay Thy laws, for this clay the oracles of the prophets, for this clay the miniftries of angels, as foldiers have rendered fervice. For this clay the LORD JESUS Himfelf, pitying human labours, triumphed in the crofs of His Body. Why mould I tell how, at the aflies of Thy Mar- tyrs, the incorporeal powers are tor- Nulla vox Angelorum nifi forte laudare* nos poflunt, qui adefle nobis poflent, cum fili tui dele&iffimi cor- pus confecramus et fanguinem, fed pia cura pro populo, et fanfta pro falute plebis oratio. et mens cultui intenta divino fi non poteft maiefta- tem tanti operis explecare, nititur tamen ufum concert! muneris frequen- tare, quis enim poflit perfunftorio fenfu, divina tua praeterire munera, tu corruptibili limo lutoque folubili fpi- rituf vitas infufHare dignatus es, hominem fecifti efle quod limos eft. materiamque mortalem, ad imaginem fimilitudinemque tuam fpiritali vivi- ficafti vigore naturae, ut pigram humum hebetemque limum igneus vigor, intus animaret. agilifque { mo- tio venae tepentis. caro noftra vivefce- ret, quid fumus. et quantum eruemus huic limo leges, huic limo profeta- rum oracula angelorum minifteria militarunt, huic limo ipfe dominus Jhefus labores miferatus humanos cruce fui corporis triumfavit, quid loquar ad tuorum cineres torqueri incorporeas || poteftates, urit hie II- This is an extremely difficult paflage. Mone wants to read nifi laudare nos POSSUMUS, but the fenfe he would attach to his alteration does notfeem very clear. We think that the reading of the text may poflibly be explained as in our tranflation. The qui adefle nobis poflent is, to our minds, one of the moft convincing proofs of the great antiquity of this Mafs. f- "Fur den Ace. Die Abkurzung fefilt," fays Mone. But he is wrong. It is the common ufe of the ablative for the accufative, which occurs fifty times in the Mozarabic hymns, and in the writings of fouthern Gaul e.g. Medio no6lis tempore Per voce evangelica Venturas Sponfus creditur, Regni cceleftis conditor. A corruption which has engraved itfelf on the fouthern Romanic languages, both in the fecond and third Latin declenfion, as San&o for Sanftw, call* for call//, \\rtudf for virtt/. J We read agili. Mone fuggefts erimut or meruimus. The latter is probably right. || Anxious to draw the parallel between the Martyrs of Lyons and the mented? This clay burns thofe mus quos flamma non tangit, torquet whom the flame touches not: thefe c -,, afhes torment thole whom the tor- tavilla ^ un S lllae P 06 "* non inve ' ture of the hook cannot reach : their mt< au ditur gemitus quorum tormenta groans are heard, although we behold non cernimus et hxc quam magna not their torments. And thefe* fo -,.,,; i-kn-:- i great rewards of a little labour, it is pam ~" P" 6 " 11 *' mfilex volu P tas a wretched pleafure which rejefts. ( l uod eicit mifera caro. quid fibi in- Miferable flefh ! what does it grudge videt. de coelo fe revocat, et luto itfelf ! It calls itfelf back from hea- reddit . nec hocm irum fit erra praepon- ven, and gives melr again to clay. , /- . - Nor, would this be ftrange if earth dem ' fed c l uia tu domme deus P ater had the preponderance. But fince omnipotens, in tui unigeniti levatus Thou, LORD GOD Father Almighty, corpore coelumnosfepararejuflifti. ne haft commanded us, raifed up in the r . . Body of Thy Son, to refeek heaven, ^ uxfo P atiar t V1 P enre > nobls mif en- let not, I befeech Thee, Thy mercy cordiam tuam fatis fit quod inclufa to us be loft. Let it be enough that corpore anima in leges mifera tranfit the foul, (hut up within the bodv. i- * a- ' , r , ,. >' alienas generis poena communi t pro pafles, unhappy, under alien laws, Conteftatio as clofe as poflible, Mone has here recourfe to one of the mott extraordinary interpretations which ever entered a fcholar"s head. He will have incorporex either to mean corpore