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LIFE: CONFERENCES DELIVERED AT TOULOUSE.
BY THE
REV. PERE
LACORDAIRE,
OP THE ORDER OF FRIAR-PREACHERS.
Translated from the French, with the Author's permission,
BY
HENRY
D.
LANGDON,
Author of " The Rivers of Damascus and Jordan"
NEW YORK PUBLISHER, 37 BARCLAY STREET, :
P.
O'SHEA,
etc.
AND 42
PARK PLACE. 1875.
TO
M. A. V. A
LOVING
TK
I
B U T E
OF
T
I
M
K- T R
I
RD
I 11
I
KN
I>
S
H
I
F
HDL.
DECLARATION.
ALTHOUGH
I
have constantly taught under the
authority and in presence of the Archbishops of Paris,
and
my
doctrine has never been criticized
or called in question
doctrine published
by them
;
although that same
by the press, has
excited neither
reproach nor discussion, yet, lest in treating
so
many theological questions some involuntary error may have escaped me, and this I must and do readily
presume from
submit
my
whose son
Eoman
my weakness, I declare that I
Conferences to the Catholic
Church
am, and in particular to the Holy Church, the mother and mistress of all I
Churches, wherein resides the plenitude of author ity founded on earth by our Lord Jesus Christ.
do not acknowledge the pretended reproductions of my Conferences which I also declare that I
I
have been made by various periodicals, whatever be their form or name. I once more protest against the violation of literary rights is
to place
under the name
whose
result
of a preacher discourses
imperfectly reported amidst an immense auditory,
and no
less
imperfectly corrected
of such speculations.
by the authors
Should the doctrine con
tained in these publications be attacked, I decline
the responsibility thereof as of a
work which
mine, and for which I can be
held
only by
a violation of
FR.
all
at the
not
accountable
right and equity.
HENRI-DOMINIQUE LACORDAIRE, Prov. des Fr. Precheurs.
NANCY,
is
Convent of Notre- Dame-du-Chene,
the I5lh October, 1851.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
DECLARATION LIFE IN
.
GENERAL
THE LIFE OF THE PASSIONS
....
.
5
,
9
.43
THE MORAL LIFE
85
THE INFLUENCE OF THE MORAL LIFE
MAN TO
HIS
LEADING
END
127
THE SUPERNATURAL LIFE THE INFLUENCE
IN
OF
...
165
THE SUPERNATURAL LIFE
UPON PERSONAL AND PUBLIC LIFE
211
LIFE IN GENERAL.
MY
LORD,* GENTLEMEN,
Twenty years of
ago,
God gave me
the thought
expounding from the pulpit the body of Chris
tian doctrine.
The
first
part of this
work
is
done.
begin the second. The times and places are greatly changed. Having reached this point in a laborious career,
To-day
I
I
would
future.
God
a glance upon the past and the Looking back upon the past, I thank
cast
who, in so long a course, amidst so many private and public vicissitudes, has permitted me ;
an extensive plan. Looking towards the future, I thank him for having opened this edifice to me, where I find an
to complete a large portion of
auditory less numerous, doubtless, and less cele
brated than before, but which has preserved the honor of religion with that of letters the tradi ;
with those of taste and knowledge. Ajnongst you, Gentlemen, I shall not forget the
tions of faith
*
Monsigneur Mioland, Archbishop of Toulouse.
but I shall not fear the future.
past,
will
be
words, and from you, per
my
the guardians of
You
they will fall back upon those, who, in other times and places, received I dare not say of my the first fruits of my ardor. haps,
my
last hearers,
apostolate.
When we view, the
treat of truth in a dogmatic point of
question
must we believe
When we live
What
:
is
faith,
and how
?
moral point of life, and how must
treat of truth in a
view, the question
we
is
is
What
:
is
?
These two questions, although bound up gether, are very different from each other.
I We may life.
despise faith, but
/We may
we
cannot despise refuse to submit our irinds to the
revealed will of God, and against his word
an arm of the reason which but
we cannot
masters of
come
will leave
own
be,
make
Him life,
;
as
you are
not wait for your will not wait for them to
It did
life.
to you,
you
essence,
hold from
Whosoever you may
life.
withdraw from you. it
we
stand up as rebels against
the subjects of orders to
to
it
It
came
to
in spite of you.
you without you It reigns
by
;
its
which does not depend upon you,
and which, nevertheless, you bear
in
yourselves
13
(
and an immortal
as in a fragile
but you
)
is
You
live,
and your power, which
live as subjects,
so great against faith,
vessel.
null against
is
life.
am
wrong. Would to God that we had but to submit to life By a strange contrast, how ever, we hold this life, which is not of us, which I
!
deals with us as
counsel.
and
it
lords,
We
obeys
it
speak, and ;
it
and, at the
we mingle with
when we
die,
listens
of
our
we command,
;
same time slaves and
the necessities of servitude,
the responsibility of rule.
nor can we
hand
pleases, in the
We
cannot be born,
please, neither can
we
choose the place and conditions of our existence but in the fatal circle where it holds us, although ;
we are the willing instruments we answer for ourselves to our
free in our actions, of our destiny
;
own fortune and ;
whilst nature convinces us of our
dependency, conscience convinces us of our sove Burdened with this double load from reignty. the
day
of our birth,
and slaves
unknown
we
thus advance, masters
of ourselves, to another
day which
is
and beyond that day, to ages and things wherein our life appears to us from afar under that double and terrible character
which and
it
to
us
;
presents even here below, of necessity
liberty, of invincible duration
and inevitable
14
(
account.
If,
therefore,
spoke with certainty, I speaking to you of force
life
)
when I treated feel much more ;
my
of faith, I
certain in
strength here derives
from your weakness, and instead
mind being able conscience
easily to object to
henceforth
will
be
my
of
your
truth,
your
most
sure
helper.
What then
What
is life ?
is
that mysterious
power which has been forced upon us as a stranger, and for which we must answer as for ourselves ? mountains.
have climbed high Under their solemn form they hold a
charm which
delights us.
Often, in
my
youth, I
us with them, our
It
souls
seems that in raising
take a higher soar, a
deeper scrutiny, and the poet has not said in vain
:
Jehovah has blessed the heights of earth.
We
mounted
charmed with our youth, touched by the scene which widened at each mo ment under our feet but, in proportion as we then,
;
mounted, light and joyous, something of nature vanished before us. The hum and flight of bird 3
became dense
;
rare, the air little
by
little
moved through even the
in a distant perspective,
mained
foliage less
trees fled before us
and a bloomless
to us as a last vestige of grace
field re
and
fertil-
(
15
Soon nothing was
ity.
)
but solitude
left
;
barren,
dreary, silent, without breath, and well-nigh with
own ceased also, and beholding, oppressed by weariness and wonder, we
out respiration ; our listening,
exclaimed within ourselves
What
then was wanting
doleful impression
movement and ment, death
?
Two
is sterile
dead
is
What gave
?
!
us this
things were wanting
y
fertility.
Nature
:
Life
a fertile
is
:
move
And as fertility movement, we believe
immobility.
always appears to us with that wheresoever it is, there
To hear
or
movement, is to hear or see life and as moves in nature, we believe that all nature
all
is
life.
see
;
living,
son.
even that which we
dead by compari
For there are many degrees
and, therefore,
we
call
many
degrees in
is
in
life.
movement, Hardly do
dare to say, save as a poetical figure, that air
and light are living, because if they move, it is under the impression of a force which, so far from being their own, does not leave to them even the shadow of individuality. They are rather the seat of life than living themselves.
Under
their
influence, stones, minerals, metals, things obscure
and inanimate receive, nevertheless, their part of life in a subsistence which is proper to them, and wherein are hidden mysteries of affinities, increase,
16
(
and
relations.
Above
)
these, spreading out their
and their branches, producing leaves, blos soms, and fruit, upon an organized stock, the plants open a more definite reign, and in their roots
ascensions and radiations, prepare for us a living shade, and food as pleasant as their shade.
bound
But,
to the earth that nourishes them, they can
neither obey our voice nor follow our footsteps their captive
movement
holds
:
them upon the earth The animal seeks
whence they draw fertility. them there. In him life properly
so called
is first
inaugurated, because in him, movement, which in inferior beings
was only
taneous and sensible. hearing, in order to
becomes spon Endowed with sight and individual,
know
nature, with
memory
in
order to recall his impressions, with instinct in order to desire and to shun, the animal moves
not as a king, at least as a guest, and his form is already the foreshadowing of an
upon
if
earth,
other form which in
express the I
fire of
its
look and features
is
to
thought.
have named man.
An
animal
also, I see
him
which moves heavily; his arms have neither the strength of the lion nor the quickness in a flesh
and in comparing them by their speed in time and space, man seems to be the subject. of the eagle,
(
it is
Nevertheless,
ble at his fireside,
world
visible
move
he who
he
)
is
is still
Aged and
king.
the highest
fee
the
life of
^for he thinks, and to think
5
the infinite.^
in
17
is
to
Withdraw every horizon
subject to measure, every image even of earth and
heaven that
falls
weight, form
:
ment him all
under a
man
of the spirit
thinks
limit, forget !
With
a single
move
which animates him and makes
a thinking creature, he traverses
possible worlds
ness of
number,
;
his reason,
all
created,
and alone, in the calm bright he conceives and names the
Not the universe, but the universal appears to him not time, but eternity not space, but immensity. All becomes transformed under
infinite.
;
;
the action of his thought, and assumes an extent
which explains and holds all. He may be accused as a visionary but so to accuse him would be to ;
and no living being can annihi the individual may be killed, but the
destroy his reason, late itself
:
race cannot
;
which mocks
and in the race at death,
subsists the reality,
and truth, which mocks
at
negation.
Man moves also
in the infinite
moves there by
his will.
thought he Whilst the animal
by
his
:
obeys the instinct that urges him, man, stronger than his earthly appetites, commands and subjects
(
them.
By
desire
18
)
he dwells in the unutterable
sol
itudes of the eternal and the immense, and his love seizes the invisible ideal of beauty.
unmeasured
thinks,
in
He loves
.
as
affections
his
as
in
he his
thought, and his heart dilating like his intelligence, he feels free even under the weight of the infinite.
He
P
he loves, he is free Such is his life, such are you all, Gentlemen and in listening to thinks,
;
me your
conscience witnesses that I flatter neither
your nature nor your destiny. less, as faith
Above you, doubt
teaches me, there exist spirits unclothed
purer than yourselves, having a more direct vision of truth, but not another sphere,
with
flesh,
another movement, another liberty man, as well as the angel, has nothing above him but the infi :
nite, real
and
living, that is to say,
God.
Do you remember how God defined himself to Moses EGO SUM QUI SUM / am who am f Man, :
defining himself in his turn, has said in humbler,
but almost as marvellous language :'CoGiTO, ERGO
SUM
/ think,
therefore
I am^ That
conceive, I name, I inhabit the infinite
have
life.
is
;
to say, I
therefore I
For whosoever does not move
unmeasured
in that
orbit of being, possesses but a faint
reflection of life, a
shadow that fades and vanishes,
leaving no trace behind.
God
defines himself
by
19
(
the substance of being
)
man by
;
thought, which
is
and whereby he embraces, under God, the same horizon as God. his highest attribute,
God
the
is
and absolute
summit
act,
of
He
life.
an immutable
eternal
its
is
immoveable
act,
use such an expression, but of an immobility which is the first movement, because it
even,
I
if
For man, created beings, movement, which is their
is "infinite
for all
may
activity subsisting in itself.
has not this
life,
Thought
is
quality
of
subsistent
what approaches nearest
to
it.
repose. for
it
is
even here below, to reach the contemplation But contemplation, which is not ecstasy, truth.
able, of
does not exclude inquiry, desire, clouds, and uncer tainties, and but rarely, on great occasions, does the wayfarer attain the divinity of repose in the living act of thought. ,
I
it is
have defined
life.
is it
that
satisfied
it
we
all
movement, because
activity
But
is
since life
passes, whither does
expressed
it
go
?
move Whence
is
are not at peace within ourselves, and
with being
repose, even
is
or less perfect, until it attains
immutability in God.
ment, since
Life
and because
activity,
by movement more to
x
^
?
Why
does our
greatest
sleep, bring us only an incomplete
suspension of our faculties, and that upon the couch
20
(
where our limbs
)
our imagination still re volts and excites in us with dreams of action a
dream
of life
recline,
?
near to the coming of Christ, the temple of Jerusalem was filled with wondrous signs, and that a doctor of the law, on It is said that in the times
witnessing these prodigies, could not refrain from " What hast exclaiming temple temple :
thou, and
!
!
why art
thou troubled
"
And
?
I, speak that of than Jerusa temple greater lem, the temple of human life, I exclaim, with the
ing of another
same doleful accent thou, and
then, never find repose
Evidently,
and
all
object,
we
all
life
!
thou troubled
art
why
life
:
hast
Canst thou,
?
?
movement supposes
direction supposes an object. if
What
!
in each of our acts
direction,
If
w e had no r
and in their
did not suppose a term to w^hich
we r
totality
tend, at
would be impossible for us to move, or our move ments, deprived of all meaning, w ould wander at r
hazard, foreign to rection. is
to
all
rational
Movement implies
and mechanical
di
a starting-point, which
the free activity of the living being, and a point
be reached, which
something to which activity has not, and which it desires to is
aspires,
which
have.
This something
it
is
the end of
life.
What is
(
Do you know ?
it ?
21
)
Children of
life,
heirs of time
and space by your bodies, of the infinite by your souls, do you know what you desire, do you know what you do and whither you go ? Ah for myself, !
know
I
well
in yours
in
is
know what
I
to
for, like
;
you, I have received at
man, and the abyss which mine also. I know what I desire,
birth the heart of a
my is
it
you
I seek
I shall
and
making my confession make yours also. ^Wretched that we ;
in
are, I desire, I seek, I hope, I wait for '
" "
Happiness," to use an expression of
St.
happiness^ Augustine,
OMNES HOMINES APPETENDO ULTIMUM FINEM, QUI EST
the final end of man."
is
VENIUNT IN BEATITUDO.*
At of St.
word, although sheltered by the name Augustine, you should stop me, and I halt this
myself before a great scruple. For to say that happiness is the end of life, is to say that it is its motor, since the end determines at the same time of
the
movement and
But
to say that happiness
the
direction of is
movement.
the motor of our
not to confess that personal interest Can necessary principle of all our actions ? is it
life,
is
the
it
then
be possible that the very notion of life is in the notion of egotism ? Can it be possible that in *
De
Trinitate, lib. xiii., cap. 4.
22
(
defining
life
)
a natural and lawful movement
as
towards happiness, we inscribe upon the front ispiece of the moral order, and under the very guardianship of the Gospel, an appeal to that pas Is man then sion of self which ruins all virtue ?
unable to withdraw from himself, and act under the impression of another motor than his happiness,
under the impression of duty ? Is sacrifice refused to him save under pain of renouncing his nature and his reason and that image of happiness, which ;
should be only an afterthought of the mind, an
consequence of justice desired and prac shall we place it, by our definition even of
ulterior tised,
in the first
life,
supreme
rank of our conscience, as the
which, before
light
others, should
all
enlighten and direct our actions
?
I love in you, atio
i
Gentlemen, that ready protestof good, and I would seal it with my blood ;
but the logical force of ideas still withholds me, and I dare not follow you so quickly to the gen erous ground whereto you invite me. /'Doubtless duty part of his
life
sidered in
its
;
but
is
a sacred notion of man, a
is it
essence,
the highest
is
a rule
;
it
Duty, con
?
is
the rule of
our actions, but not their object. It is the way, not the term; the means, not the end. Now the
(
means
is
inferior to the
23
)
end
;
we
means
desire the
for the end,
and not the end for the means'.
yourselves
when you perform
:
forget the reward
generally soever
end
of
your
there, as
if
life ?
you may duty,
how
may
be performed, the
last
Is
in
this I it
a duty,
it
grant
but
;
is
your power to stop
nothing were beyond
it,
either in
Does nature
or in your
thought? to the impulsions no obstacle here place
hope
heart
Ask
of
your itself
your
to be indifferent
It does not
permit you towards happiness, and although you are free to renounce duty, you are not free to renounce hap ?
Man, whatsoever he may do, is withheld between two necessities which govern his life the
piness.
:
necessity of the ing,
first
principles of his understand
and the necessity of the
ence.
He
final
end
of his exist
cannot free himself from the one or the
other, because the
one and the other form the
regular foundation of the intellectual and moral orders. ciples,
Without the necessity
man would
of the first prin
destroy light in himself
;
with
out the necessity of the final end of his being, he
would destroy
his
activity.
He must
see
and
hope in order to live the son of truth and beati tude, he may go astray in the palace of his fathers, but he cannot fly therefrom. \ :
(
The Gospel
24
how
itself,
)
exalted soever
may
it
be above nature, speaks to you on this head as nature speaks. It does not say, Blessed are they
mourn, without adding, for they shall be com It does not say, Blessed are the poor, forted. that
without adding, for theirs
is
the
kingdom of
Assuredly you would not aspire to higher perfection than that of the Gospel, and heaven.
however great
in
you
disinterestedness
may
be,
it
cannot be greater than in the heart of the Man-
God.
And
yet
my
I feel
soul responds to yours.
with you that I cannot place duty, sacrifice, the ardor of heroes and saints, on the second rank ;
and make the prospective the principle that leads
me
of personal happiness
to love good.
If I
do
not deceive myself, I love good for itself, and if happiness follow it, as it should do, I take it as a consequence, and not as the prime motor of love.\ It seems to me that I should not love
my if
I
loved in order to be happy, and although happi ness should be inseparable from love, I place it on the left hand, and not on the right.
Such
is
the
order which the heart teaches me, and although metaphysics with tradition assure me that happi ness
is
my
final end, I dare to believe that there
25
(
is
obscurity here which
)
requires to be
enlight
ened.
We of the
do
will
this
we will
;
pass this Thermopylae
moral order by asking ourselves
happiness
:
What
is
?
But who knows happiness ? Who has seen it ? Who can tell where it dwells ? Job said, Whence and where
then cometh wisdom,
derstanding f living,
and
hid
is
fowls of
be true of wisdom,
this
of happiness tion
!
seek
it,
the air
of
all
not*
If
eyes
know
it
how much more
true
is
it
With our ears we have
said,
the fame thereof.
piness as of
the
from
of un
Nevertheless, Job added, Destruc
and death have
heard
we
It
the
is the place,
And
We
wisdom.
this is true of
name
and consequently
it,
we
hap
desire
do not doubt
it
it,
it
not altogether a stranger to us. Yes, in this valley of our trouble, which David eloquently
is
called a vale of tears
which the Saviour
;
in this torrent of Cedron,
of the
world has crossed like
and from which we daily drink the and troubled water of our life, happiness is
ourselves, bitter
unknown to us, nor is it even absent. With man, when he fell, it passed the lost threshold of not
Eden, and for sixty centuries, banished like * Job. xxviii. 20, 21.
us, it
26
(
)
wanders with us in the world, the hallowed com panion of our misfortunes, the fellow-citizen of not permitted to appear coii: stantly or fully before us, but it is not forbidden to choose an hour and give it to us. Sometimes
our
It
exile.
is
knocks at our door, sits down by our hearth, desert or filled, and with a single glance cast upon it
our heart, draws from learn
what
it
who
whereby we
Tear of mothers who have found
it is.
and
their sons after absence
traveller
that tear
hails
perils
!
Tear
of the
with the dawn the shores of
Tear of heroes between country Tear of the just man under victory and death the tremor of conscience Tear of Augustine
his long-lost
!
!
!
speaking of
God
waves which are
mother by the brink of the bear him back pure to Carth
to his to
^How many w e never number, and how many more we ignore, because the heart of man, age
r
!
so deep for misery,
is
deeper far for happiness
!
Mise y comes to him from accident, happiness from his nature and his predestination.
Now within u
* The
turn, inherits rights
and sentiments
which Christianity has germinated in the bosom of his mother. Introduced, from his birth, at the gates of eternity, he drawls from the holy water
poured upon
an invisible but omnipo the hand of his father will touch
his forehead
tent character
him sparingly
;
;
he
will
grow up under the
roof
which has received him, as an ancestor who should one day reign there, and the forethought of his reign will cover
men
him with a
shield
which makes
same time the grace of his age will give him the tenderness which makes them happy. The servant also, covered by the same strong, at the
unction which flows from the wounds of Christ, has not been forgotten in the change of destinies.
Formerly a slave, he has become free a stranger Instead of merely, he has become a brother. ;
stigmas of bondage or marks of indifference, he bears in his visage the honor of useful service, and in his
hands the generous grasp of
fidelity.
His
220
(
years trouble him not
)
he knows that gratitude will give him time to die, and that charity will not refuse him the prayer which obtains and the
memory which Thus has
;
glorifies.
been
life
personal
enlarged
Thus has man, renewed
Christianity.
in
by the
ancient blessings, found again in his soul and in his
house some traces of the fortunes of his
Was
cradle. it
an abasement
serious
personal
;
life
?
Was
?
from you, the attack a question of knowing whether
is
it
them
to love with greater love
not however hide
I will is
a crime not to reject
it
first
has not,
it
Christians, stifled or
among
atjeast weakened public
life
;
and, to understand
importance of this doubt, we must render account to ourselves of what that other life is
the
which we
call
public
In personal in
public
life,
life,
life.
man
he
is
There, his personal
is
in
duties
and the
rights,
command
end happiness of a people occupy and, as a people public life.
life
is
also
Personal
is
evidently
his
own
his solicitude
rights, the
;
a people.
of
presence
duties and
perfecting and happiness, here, the
in presence of himself
;
perfecting
his thought,
more than a man,
evidently superior to personal
life,
alone, touches
upon egotism
;
221
(
its
very
virtues,
if
)
do
they
course in a wider region, easily
not take
their
become corrupted
under the empire of a narrow fascination. Would Until you have proof of this ? Open history.
now
it
shows us only two kinds of peoples
formed
to public life
;
the
others
;
some
deprived on
every hand of the direction of their affairs and held under the guardianship of a master who permits them only to live without complaining
under the laws which he makes for them. for such their
as
these,
Now,
remark the consequences
condemnation to personal
of
life.
All public activity being impossible to them, there remains only riches as a
and
its
of
of elevation,
acquisition as a serious occupation.
spirit of lucre seizes is
means
hearts.
upon
The
Country, which
the place of great things, changes into a place
commerce.
It
has
merchants
for
citizens,
counters for tribune, and the bank or the exchange for Capitol.
Generations
there disdain
because they do not lead to fortune nature, always fertile in spite of
duces living minds there, of their gifts
their
muse
we
men,
;
letters,
and, still
if
pro
see them, deserters
and renegades of genius, transform
into a courtesan and, in their thirst for
gold, betray
modesty and
truth.
Poets aspire to
(
222
)
the dignity of financiers, and the sound of glory
seems
like a
dream to them before the chink measured by
is
Every employ honor by
its
are great
names
profit.
the works of
The
its
of gold.
salary,
greatest names,
if
every there
in such a society, appear behind
commercial enterprise
;
and these
works, useful in the third or fourth rank, ingeni ously take the first, which none disputes with
Those even who
them. ests
direct the general inter
do not disdain to enrich themselves like other
men.
None know how
rich.
Luxury
irruption of ^parties
those
even the
increases with cupidity, and this
tastes divides the
which
common;
to be poor, not
have
no
people into two
longer
who enjoy
all,
anything in and those who
In the countries of public life, enjoy nothing. the honor of taking part in affairs excites a gener ous ambition, and places on the summit of the community a glorious counterpoise to the base tendencies of those
who
human nature
;
whereas here, among
live for themselves,
nothing stops the
course of blood and abjection.
luxury follows, pletes. \
the
For a consequence tutelage, not
to
Cupidity begins, corruption of morals com
of riches in nations held in
say servitude,
is
idleness;
and
(
the inevitable
idleness
is
What
to
is
223
be done when
)
mother
of
depravity.
we can no
longer gain our bread or our fortune and, amidst abundance which exempts from all trouble, we see noth
around us which
ing
from responsibility every rich
lished,
become
us
upon
labor
to
Where public life man is a patrician
is
estab
or
may
As
soon as the occupation of interests ceases, the general interest
such.
own
his
?
calls
appears to him and invites his genius and his heart. He reads in the history of his fathers the those
of
example
who have honored
patrimony by great
devotedness,
and
a
great the
if
elevation of his nature respond even but slight ly to the independence
which he has acquired or
received, the thought of serving the State opens to
him
must speak,
write,
command by
itself,
by
that other
and
his talent,
maintain that talent, however noble in
He
a perspective of sacrifice and labor.
it
may
power which never
be
suf
an eclipse with impunity, namely, virtue. From his early youth, the son of the patrician,
fers
that
is
to
say, of
the public man, passionately
watches the future which awaits him in presence of his fellow-citizens. He does not disdain letters, for he
knows
that
it is
the supremacy of the
mind ;
224
(
)
with eloquence and taste it is the history of the world the science of tyrannies and liberties ;
;
light received from time
the
the
all
into
shadow
of
men
descending from their glory which desires to resemble them,'
great
the
the
;
soul
and bringing
with the majesty of their memory, the courage to do like them. Letters is
had
it
longer
above
drawing near
are
Only those their end no
value, because, placing matter *
its
they no longer see that which en But or hear that which moves men.
living peoples, the cultivation of
among
after
the
divinity.
when Athens
ideas,
lightens
aroma
for
Pallas
who know
nations
is
it,
the palladium of true peoples ; and
rose,
is,
to
of
first
public treasure, the
youth and the sword
young
of
manhood.
It
and object he Demosthenes, and devotes
patrician's delight
therein
delights
the
religion,
letters
like
himself like Cicero
and
;
all
those images of the
preparing him for public duties, make already for him an arm against the too pre From letters he cocious errors of his senses. beautiful,
in
passes
to law.
public
life.
it
If
Law
the second initiation to
is
among
the peoples in servitude
leads only to the defence of
among
free peoples
it
is
vulgar interest, the door of institutions
(
225
)
which found or protect. Thus in elevated medi tations and magnanimous habits, the leaders of nations are formed.
If
riches
produce vo
still
luptuous men, it also produces citizens. If it But enervates some souls, it strengthens others.
wherever country is an empty temple which ex pects nothing from us but our silent passage, there rises
up
all
around in formidable idleness a rapid
The strength
corruption.
of
remain, becomes exhausted in
souls, its
should any
own
dishonor.
heads bear the weight of great inheri tances, and decayed hearts crawl along after dig
Empty nities
which
An
resemble them.
made between
the corruption of
exchange is the subjects and
the corruption of their masters.
nothing more
to
do, because
all is
These, having
permitted to
them, give the impulse to the destruction of mor als and all passes, with unanimous step, to the ;
place where Providence awaits the nations
unwor
thy to live. Let us in concluding, add another feature. In the countries of public life, the citizen inviolable
liberty
;
and
that his
is
by sovereign
to say his goods, his honor, his
person are sheltered from
trary attack, and
is
protected
legislation 15
at the
all
same
arbi
time
and invincible opinion
;
226
(
law alone controls him
of
all
not a dead law, but law
;
which
living in a magistracy
ent
is
itself
This
duties.
its
except
j
independ profound
security, which crime alone can trouble, elevates characters. Each feels himself at home the ser
vant
of
by
right
honorable
obedience,
but
mighty against the errors of power, whatsoever Noble respect for the common they may be. alty, sincere
of
evil,
devotedness to an authority incapable
spring
from that
The
self-confidence.
whole country breathes freely upon the soil given to it by God; injustices, or such evils as may be met with, are but the accidents attached
still
to
human
things, like those clouds
which pass
How
over the heavens in the brightest climates. different life
it
is
of
the countries where personal
Even law
reigns.
caprice
in
itself
is
a will which cannot
subject to the
be forestalled
;
the magistracy, changeable and dependant, obeys
other orders
there
than those of
justice
:
and
hands of a single man, shrinks into a state of fear which governs The his actions, his words, and his thought. each, aware that his lot
lowest soul
of
of
feelings,
that
is
in the
namely,
people.
fear,
becomes
the
Hypocrisy glides behind
fear, in order to lessen it
;
adulation, in order to
227
(
invite
Between these three
it.
disguise
)
which
vices,
and justify one another, hearts become cor
rupt, characters
nothing remains but servi certain but scorn.
fall,
tude, and nothing
is
a
Behold, Gentlemen, in the personal
Man
tions.
life, is
when
it
is
few words, where alone, leads na
all
a complex being, he has received
from God a body which gives him natural Me an intelligence which claims from him intellectual ;
life
a soul which raises
;
him
to religious life
;
a
family which enables him to enjoy domestic life but he has also received from the same hand a ;
country, the right and obligation to live in
mon
with his fellow-men
cate that life
com
and he cannot abdi
;
more than any
other, without falling
from himself and giving himself over to unfail ing degradation, which is the instrument and forerunner of death. is
accused of having
sonal
life,
since
it
is
When, stifled
a death-blow to
accuse
it
is
then,
Christianity
under per evidently aimed at it, public
life
of being in
mankind the
propagator of cupidity, of the corruption of morals
and the degradation of character. I declare at once that it cannot be so
I
am
around me, that a principal founded upon the Gospel cannot produce
certain, before I look
of life
;
228
(
such
)
and that the
results,
of Christians,
life
orable and useful in the order of personal
has been so also in the order of public
Let us
turn
Jesus
Since
us.
East
attain
to
Asiatic
which must judge history has but two
Christ,
Never has
An
life.
public
and the
traditions
The page
West.
the
short.
is
life,
life.
history,
and
East
pages, the
the
to
hon
of
been able to
it
impure mixture Greek decadency,
of it
languished for a thousand years, from Constan-
Mahomet
tine to
and
jesters
birth
of
schism,
its
with
fell
hands
part of too
the
to
the
show
even the
does
not
its
the weight of their vileness
of
the it
exist,
The Koran,
stranger.
under foot
world, the
that
the
having invented a foolish
it
dust, regenerating form the lamentable
long
willed
had witnessed the
its
another
eunuchs
sophists,
all
conqueror, treads
ble of
between
and they who
;
truth, after
the
into
II.,
first
and, incapa
;
continues under
in
misfortune.
by
that
Christian
life,
cannot
sooner
us,
desolations of
that
beauty and for
in
first
of
destiny
God has
solemn example, where public life or
schism and 'the
later
hinder
captivity of
doctrine.
Let us leave the East.
A
land of servitude
(
229
)
and abjection, Christianity has not been able to live there in its true form, which is the Catholic
Let us leave
form.
it
there until the day
when
Providence, satisfied with having taught us such
by its wretchedness, will give back the same time glory of free peoples and
great lessons to
it
at
the plenitude of truth.
It is
West which
the
the living centre of Christianity, there
study its influence on the public Like the East, and before
w e must
of nations.
life it,
is
r
the
West had
prey to the barbarians and if, masters of the soil, they had also become masters of the
fallen a
;
faith, there
ity in
would have been an end
mankind.
God
strong generations which
the
wave
the whole
of
Roman
the
the charm of
;
empire, rose even to their soul it.
The Sicambre bowed
head before that of Christ
before
Those
of camps,
in order to subjugate his
knew only
it.
become moved by more gentle than their own and the Gospel, which already covered
war and the order a civilization
of Christian
did not permit
cross;
and those
;
his f ramee
whom
bent
neither the
Rhine, nor the Alps, nor the Pyrenees, nor the Ionian legions had stopped, halted before the voice of bishops announcing to
and humiliated by love.
them a God
feeble
At the very moment
230
(
when
the old Greek world, marching to
its
moral
persecuting here and in false councils presided over by the
ruin, tortured the sies,
)
Gospel in
power degraded
imperial
apostolical hierarchy,
word
of
God with
its
the
majesty of
the
the barbarians accepted the
simplicity
;
and, not contented
with opening their hearts to him, they raised his the dignity of statesmen,
bishops to
them
a share in public affairs and
by giving
in the deliber
ations of the country.
Nevertheless into
fall
might
episcopacy, and
magnificent rudiments In elevating the theocracy.
these
by
a necessary consequence the
sovereign pontificate, to public life, modern na tions had to fear lest they should place them selves temporally under a tutelage
which would
take from them the direction of things relating to the community.
them
delivered
whether
own
Providence and their traditions
from
this
peril.
as tribes, or as soldiers, to
chiefs,
Accustomed, choose their
our ancestors preserved even in the
submission of their faith the remembrance of their patrimonial liberty, and grafted upon Christianity the institutions which they had brought from their forests.
them
A
side
by
human monarchy was founded by side with the divine
monarchy
;
a civil
231
(
and warlike aristocracy aristocracy
of
the
)
side
by
side
with the
Tacitus, relating
episcopate.
to his age the customs of the
celebrated
expression
:
Germans, gave this EEGIS EX NOBILITATE,
DUCES EX VIRTUTE SUMUNT. kings
from
birth,
their
"
They
military
called their
from
chiefs
This expression was as the law of a world. Whilst the East bent its dishonored
courage."
new
head under Cgesarism and pompously wore the toga of a fictitious nobility, the West became based
upon a right of inheritance tempered by election, and created a patriciate by the sword and by the
by the sword, which makes devotedness, by the soil, which makes independence. The general soil
;
affairs,
instead of being treated in a council of
revocable functionaries or in a senate as null in
name, were to be treated in assemblies which had at the same time the weight
power
as great in
and the
reality
of
greatness.
The bishops ap
peared there at the right hand of the barons and human speech, silent from the time of Caesar, rose \
again under a form before
same time Gospel
its
unknown
to
it,
at the
borrowing from the unction, from camps their virility, from religious
and
civic,
sovereign majesty. Thereby, the West suddenly became placed, at the very outset
the nation
its
(
232
)
under the inspiration of public life. /The old germanic liberties became allied to the of
its
young
career,
modern
liberties of the Gospel, the city of
times was seen rising from the ruins of antiquity
;
and Rome, already dead, Athens, which was no more, Jerusalem, buried under its curse, all the three extinct but immortal, awoke living in a re public greater and holier than their own, which
had Christ for head, the Gospel for charter, the brotherhood of mankind for cement, Europe for and eternity for future. \ That which until then had been wanting to Christianity, namely a people was given to it. Instead of
frontier,
:
;
which was
that bloody corpse
called the
Roman
empire, and of that ridiculous society which was called
the
Greek
empire,
people, barbarian indeed, but hale in virtues,
spirit,
able to
and sure
Christianity
young
redeem great
in
had
a
body and
faults
by great
of its future civilization in the
simple course of time and truth. All these elements, blended together under
new
forms, religion and war, birth and election,
independence and trust, prepared souls for some thing which had no name in history, and which has remained famous and cherished after having disappeared.
The
ancients
had known courage,
(
233
)
but courage in the service of country in order to defend and aggrandize it, and which, cleaving to
no other virtue than
itself,
to
no gentler and wider
sentiment, left to the hero only a name, the of soldier
;
to glory only a title,
contempt
name
of death.
A
noble work, doubtless, and worthy of respect The barbarian also was a soldier ; like the Greek !
Roman, he despised
or the
loved his country.
of Christ,
he had received
sword another revelation, a word which had not spoken to Themistocles, and which the
from it
Nevertheless, baptized in the
and meekness
light
death, and like them, he
his
The sword
Scipios never heard. tocles
:
Be
thyself.
It said to the
Themis
said to
strong for thy country Christian
:
and great for
Be
strong for
thy God, clement towards the weak, the slave of thy word, and even in the fury of blood forget not thy promised love, and think of thy colors. It was chivalry. The knight was the man of war
by the love of God, and by another tender love sprung from the elevation which softened
w oman had r
received from Christianity.
From
his
infancy, the child of the Christian baron learned to
handle arms, but he learned also to love order to serve him
;
hood had passed from
and,
when
God
a glorious
his heart to his
in
man
senses,
he
234
(
found
in
an
affection
)
powerful help of his virtue. living relations, in presence of
he came to the
altar
;
the
self-respected
all-
Surrounded by his his dead ancestors,
there he took oaths wherein
God, country, the poor, and love met together without wonder, and with that great day in his
memory, he went
forth to the
unknown
fields of
the future, uncertain of what he might find in
way, but sure of never betraying his sworn faith and of dying valiantly, if called upon to die. his
Sometimes he concealed
name, his titles, his remained to recognize the his
but enough knight and, even on those occasions when pru dence led courage, he said with Tancred glory,
;
:
Conservez
ma
devise, elle est cTiere
Les mots en sont sacres:
c'est
a man cceur ;
V amour
et
Vlionneur.
Honor, I had well-nigh forgotten it. Honor, throughout the West, was the soul and halo of public
life.
It
was not glory too dear
to pride,
it
was not virtue alone, with its sober inspirations it was more than glory and more than virtue a ;
;
itself, an overwhelming fear of all merited shame, the highest delicacy in the most hallowed modesty. It was St. Louis a captive and
sentiment chaste in
saying to his conqueror, under the threat of death
Become a Christian and I will make
:
thee a knight.
235
(
It
was Duguesclin
new
Bayard
;
unknown
characters
)
;
Godfrey de Bouillon
in ancient times,
;
who
would have enchanted Plutarch, accustomed as he was to illustrious men, and whose glory, preserved
from age
to age,
XI Y.
times of Louis line of
as
it
enlightened the degenerate
still
Honor
is
the
equinoctial
mankind, mankind grows ardent and pure
draws near to
it, it
chills
and tarnishes
as
it
withdraws therefrom.
now
Let us
Constantinople
return in thought to the walls of ;
let
us
enter those
ignoble factions dispute before the
lists
where for
Emperor
Let us enter those
the applause of the multitude.
where the theological mania dwells, which persecution stains with blood and effeminacy palaces
defames
;
let us
who gov soldiers who
observe those eunuchs
ern, those senators
who
bend, those
purchase peace, no longer being able to conquer it, that artifice which betrays even those
implores to save the Empire that
is
to
;
such
is
whom
it
the East,
say a Christendom where public
life
had
perished.
The West Under the
is
not, however, fully
known
to you.
sceptre of the Christian kings, below
the bishops and the barons there was the people.
The people form the foundation
of
human
society.
236
(
They
)
who
are formed of those
labor in order to
live,
because the labor of their ancestors or their
own
has not yet raised them to the independence
The people form the
of a sufficient patrimony.
living
soil
spring
all
return.
the
of
From
country.
them
that ascend, to
the
ruling, because
Incapable of
people
that descend
all
time and
science are wanting to them, they have, however,
need of public life, either not to be oppressed, or not to wither under the uniform contact of inter ests
In the West then, by the natural
and wants.
progress of things, the commonalty was founded.
The Church had been the the castle the second
A
alty.
tion,
the third was the
liberty
and
its
rights, it
its
flags.
had
its
Under
which bound the honor
council,
;
common
republic obscure, but respected,
the charter of its militia,
;
first citadel of
it
had
its chiefs,
that grave protec
of the
weaker
classes to
was formed, by commerce
that of the stronger, Christian society
not only by the liberal arts, but also and industry, so scorned by the ancient peoples, a rear-guard of knowledge and probity which took
rank in the destinies of Europe, and prepared for itself a
more complete
accession
to
public
life.
What had remained of the slavery left by the old to the new world tended daily to grow less, and at
237
(
)
length to disappear. The workman was free, and, warned by the example of the church, the nobility,
and the gentry, that every isolated man is a lost man, they formed associations in order to be
had masters, they had and they were no longer alone in
If
respected. rights also
;
they
still
presence of riches, nor alone before misfortune. Thus, from the prince to the peasant, from the sovereign pontiff to the artisan, a hierarchy grew in Christian political society
up his
place, his power,
and
where each had and where,
his honor,
none being alone, every one was something; a vast assemblage of
men
divided into nations, which,
notwithstanding the remaining vestiges of barba rian
customs, realized that form of government
composed of monarchy, aristocracy, and democ racy, which Aristotle considered to be the best, and of which " description
:
or in a people all,
Thomas, after him, gave
St.
The government is when one alone presides
according to virtue
under him who share virtue
;
and, in fine,
all
*Summa
;
when he
there over
has great
men
his authority according to
when
principate belongs to elect, or because
this
perfect in a city
all,
may
the one and the other either because all
be elected. "*
Theol., 1, 2, 9, 105, Art.
i.
may
r (
But, Gentlemen,
men and
institutions
what were the
238
it is
is
by
)
acts that the value of
decided
;
let us learn
acts of the Christian
then
West.
history has existed, and Moses on the
Since
Homer and Herodotus on the other, first lineaments, we see in the world but
one hand, traced
its
one great struggle, that of the most formidable part of the world against the least of all, the struggle between the East and the West. dle of vile,
man and
of his races, a land religious
cra
but ser
the East has never ceased to aspire to the
domination of it
The
all its posterity.
The Bible shows
to us founding the first empires, and,
from
capitals,
menacing the
who had
other designs, opposed Europe to
Homer, the
rest of the world.
its
God, it,
and
historian of his providence, has related
Troy the prelude of the two Marathon and Salamis followed
to us in the fall of
predestinations.
one another
;
the great king turned his back upon
those small republics, whose speech reached even to Persepolis
and troubled
his
sleep.
Alexander
struck the third blow, and from Granicus to the Indus, Asia, amazed, obeyed the word of a donian.
avenger. legislator
Mace
thousand years to obtain an Arabia gave him, and Mahomet, pontiff,
It required a
and conqueror, appeared, from the
pil-
(
239
)
Hercules to Pont Euxine, upon a line of twelve hundred leagues, before Christianity en
lars of
camped upon the other shore
of
its
destinies.
Europe and Christ found again the old enemy, but much more formidable than ever. It was no longer Asia held at Confucius, and
its
extremities in the bonds of
Buddha kept
pacific doctrines of Zoroaster
;
it
youth, and led by a spirit of the sword a faith and an apostolate.
with a religion in
which made
by the was Asia armed
in its centre
all its
was necessary to see falling under the yoke the conquests of Alexander and the Komans, the primi
It
tive churches,
and even the holy places where
rest
ed the bones of the prophets, the memory of the patriarchs, and the still fresh traces of the Saviour of
men.
A
pliant deism serving as a support to
depraved morals, an adoration of God in war and in success, a blind obedience to the lieutenants of Islam it
such was Asia as
Mahomet had made
it,
as
ruled over one half of the world, coveting the
other, its
;
and from time to time urging thitherward
fanatical squadrons.
Constantinople could but perish there a cen tury sooner or later. It was the West that under
took once more to save the world.
Chivalry,
following the roads of Alexander, for three cen-
(
240
turies arrested there the
saw again the
;
wave
Jerusalem
of error.
cross, whilst at the outer
extremity
of the battle-field Christian Spain regained foot
foot the lost in
ground
by
and shut up a triumph which was
of civilization,
Grenada the remains
of
be accomplished under the eyes of Isabella and Ferdinand. I know, Gentlemen, that the to
eighteenth century has given you another version of these heroic wars ; but the eighteenth century
was too young
for history
:
read
it
as a child
it
which have
reads, and, thanks to the revolutions
ripened our age, we read as men. Twice in fifty years our armies have found again the remains of the
Crusades,
decided colors
by
and the East has seen
Christianity
under
fate
its
banners
whose
were changed, but whose ascendancy had
no longer any under the walls Charles
Martel,
rival.
The
of Poictiers,
on the
crescent
by
fields
vanquished
the Franks under of
Grenada
by
Ferdinand, in the waters of
Lepanta by another
Spaniard, before Vienna
Sobieski.
by
The
cres
cent has lately received from us the last insult that fortune brings to those
demned
:
we have defended
whom
it,
it
has
con
and the sword
of
Godfrey de Bouillon has signed the delay granted
by
Christ to his expiring adversary.
241
(
Masters
East
the
of
)
Crusades,
we have taken
unknown
to antiquity.
it
by the road in the rear
The
Atlantic,
world to
ships, has revealed the
however protected by its ices or able to escape from the curiosity over
the
all
supremacy
of those
a road
open to our and no land,
its
sun, has been
of
our science or
Jesus Christ has borne his
the ardor of our faith. flag
us,
by
the
of
bearing
seas,
who
therewith
the
adore him, and henceforth
our laws, morals, arms, commerce, enterprise, all our arts and all our designs hover over the
amazed
universe,
at
having for
the
ruler
its
narrowest and weakest of the continents fashioned
In three centuries, from Augustus to
by God.
Constantine, five
Christianity
Rome
conquered
from Clovis
;
in
to
Charlemagne, it subjected the barbarians, of whom it formed the new peoples; in six centuries, from Godfrey de centuries,
Bouillon to Sobieski,
reduced
it
to that
runner of death de
Gama
to the
;
it
overcame Islamism and
weakness which
is
the fore
in three .centuries,
from Vasco
unnamed days
our present
still
of
has taken possession of all the shores washed by waves, awaiting the inevitable day life,
it
over those portions of mankind which the distance or form of their lands has
when
it
will reign
16
242
(
hitherto withheld from
doubt, be believed that
)
its it
action.
It
may, no
will perish itself in its
triumph, leaving upon its tomb human reason altogether freed from the darkness of ignorance
and the mysteries mitted to
an illusion per our liberty, and whose merit it is useless of faith.
here to discuss, since
it
It is
certain that the Chris
is
West has performed its work, the greatest and most mighty work of which, in six thousand tian
years, history has immortalized the benefit.
Whether, then, we consider the modern nations formed by Christianity from within or from with out,
in
their
expansion,
it
having been
political
organization
remains that the public
under
or
in
their
life,
far
from
weight of the supernatural life, has derived therefrom unpar alleled strength, an original sap which has invigor ated
all
stifled
the
things, honor, liberty, letters, the sciences,
the arts, and, in fine, has raised the military and
power of regenerated mankind to a point of If the Eoman greatness which had no example. civil
senate could rise again,
once more on the
if
Greece could assemble
fields of Elis or of
Olimpia and
devote a day to hearing Bossuet, after Herodotus, ah doubtless, in spite of their patriotism reviving !
with them, the generous shades of those great
243
(
)
peoples would feel emotions worthy of them and
and their applause would greet an accom plished future which they had not even foreseen.
of us,
Nevertheless, Gentlemen, does the age in which
we
resemble herein the ages which have
live
preceded us ? an admirable Clovis, has
are
If
public
Europe has shown
in
since
development
the
time
of
not at length become exhausted, and
it
ruins devoured
by
now anything but
nations
the, Christian
What
life
fire,
dust driven by the wind
unity remains to them
?
and what liberty ? Horrible division produces in them at the same time servitude and anarchy. We no longer
know whither
that great
advancing, which
now
democracy, uncertain of like a
its
now
?
body
strikes
of
against unbalanced
road and
its
is
against unlimited
autocracy,
end, and appearing
drunken man rather than
like a society.
power and right somewhere remain in
Christendom
to
it, it is
If
not
that portion subject to the authority of the
but
Church, separated
England
in
among
from
her
the
nations
by schism
which
and
have
heresy.
Europe, the United States in America,
are the last representatives of order at the
Elsewhere on every hand and their repose, if they have any,
time free and stable. nations totter,
same
2-14
(
is
)
but a halt under the hand that represses their
Whence
respiration.
does
this state of things
is
and
?
not bear witness to the powerlessness of a
it
religion
which no longer knows how to direct or
hold
followers
its
?
Gentlemen, in the a
of
question
break
weakness it
of such or
such as
dogmas, souls of
such of
in its total action
less the Catholic
ity
influence
of
an error,
Christianity,
in
to
up, and argue therefrom in favor of the
it
taking
the
first place, it is
its its
parts, instead of
its
upon mankind. Doubt
Church alone contains Christian
God made
it,
with
its
hierarchy,
worship, and the full
efficacy
intercession and jurisdiction.
Catholic Church
its
over
But the
not limited, as you suppose, in measuring the outlines of her visible existence. Everywhere, even in the branches ostensibly sepa is
rated from their primordial stem, the Church holds a regenerating sap and produces effects whose honor
belongs to her. She the cement, such as it r':nnce
is
still
is,
the bond of schism,
of heresy
;
whatever sub-
and cohesion remain to them comes from
the blood which she has shed, and which dry, as
we
see branches fallen to the
the trunk which bore
them
sensible to light and dew.
still
is
not yet
ground under
holding vegetation
Death
is
not wrought
(
245
)
day among minds which truth enlightened. For a long time they preserve therefrom gleams in a
which light, impulsions which animate, and to bring them against the source from whence they sprang,
and which an
acts
still
ungrateful
from
his race,
as
and
of
is ?
it
holds
which treason has not entire
an exception to the Is
to attribute to
Thus England, which you have
Christian nations,
she
it is
son the merits which he
ly stripped him.
named
upon them,
social
decadency of
what has made England what
since her schism that she has found
ed the institutions to which she owes peace in
honor in obedience, and security even in It is not so, as you know. The agitation ?
liberty,
British institutions are the
when England paid
monument
of
an age
to the apostolic see the tribute
which she herself called Peter's Pence, and the hand of a catholic archbishop of Canterbury, the faithful
magnanimous hand of Stephen for ever marked upon the pages to
and
Langton. is which remount, from our age to saint Louis, the Her spirit political traditions of Great Britain.
and her laws were formed under the influence of the Church, at the
same sanctuary and
in the
same
which gave her St. Edward the Confessor for a The United States in their turn, sovereign.
faith
246
(
)
children of Old England, have carried her customs
America, and finding there
to the virgin fields of
no trace
which permitted them to settle under the shelter of an hereditary monarchy and an aristocracy of birth, they have made of that
of antiquity
new world
a republic animated
by
a Christian
although imperfect, showing by that exam ple that the public life is not attached to one single form of government, but that it depends spirit,
especially
upon the
spirit that
animates the peoples
and the sincerity that co-ordains their institutions. England reigns at home and elsewhere because she has
preserved her public right, slowly and
wisely appropriating
and wants
ideas
;
it
to the
development
of ages,
the United States reign at
home a new
and over themselves, because, as owners of land but heirs of an ancient spirit, they have trans ported the customs
their
of
illustrious
country to the shores of their young It
is
Christianity
which
is
civilization.
the father of these two
peoples and the guardian of their charters. fore the
Comte de
mother-
Maistre,
in
There
speaking of the
future of the world, did not desire for England that she should
only
;
become
meaning thereby,
Christian, in his
but
language
Catholic at
the
same time orthodox and penetrating, that what
is
(
247
)
wanting to England, is not the but the authority that guides.
faith that inspires
In
fact, a
people is the devoted to not same heresy traditionally thing as a heretic who has so become from his
own
erring heart.
He
revolts, the people receive
they ignore rather than contradict truth, and, even if all are not innocent by their ignorance, his error
;
because they are able to overcome it, many have neither the time nor the light which would make
them
guilty before God.
They
belong, according
to the admirable expression of catholic doctrine, to the soul of the Church, children
mother although borne live in
in her
unknown
to their
womb, and who
still
her substance as they have sprung from
her fecundity. This remark made, Gentlemen, and highest importance Christianity
it is
of the
in appreciating the action of
upon the
destinies
of
mankind,
I
acknowledge that the greater part of the Catholic people are now in a violent crisis which neither permits liberty to become established nor power to count on the morrow. This is true, it would
be as puerile to deny it, as not to see its cause and to accuse Christianity of it. With the exception of England, who has preserved her public right, the people of the
European continent have
lost
248
(
)
and have not yet recovered or replaced it. They have lost it little by little, under the pro theirs,
gressive influence of a sovereignty troubled by
and which, employing with certain faults and evils in every
the Christian law, skill
persevering
have
age,
learned,
at
to
length,
the
despoil
Church, the nobility, and the commonalty of their acquired rights, and reduce them to absolute political
powerlessness in order to leave standing
arid active
only the summit of society.
work once done, modern it
If,
that
nations had accepted
would have been the East become master
of the
world, the Bas Empire arrived at universality, public
life
extinct,
and
Church
the
it,
all
herself
threatened sooner or later with that terrible legacy
which Constantinople has left That could not be. The race
magne, and
down
to St. Peterbsurg. of Japhet, Charle
St. Louis, that is to
in a single
day the work
say France, shook of
twenty genera all the rest, after and see we overthrown, tions, that which had hoped and attempted to be alone great.
But, from a misfortune which
still lasts,
an equal Christianity had
ruins of public right had brought with
ruin in the
faith
of
nations
suffered a fearful lessening of
and,
when
the
effort
of
;
its
the
it
reign in Europe,
France burst forth to
249
(
former
seize its
life
)
new
again under a
aspect,
irreligion directed, or rather led astray, her blows.
Whilst the revolution of England was accomplished under the empire of Christianity, our own was inspired
by doubt and negation
;
it
destroyed the
sanctuary under pretence of raising France, for getting that the Romans had placed in the same spot the tribune where their orators spake
the temples where spake their gods. has, for sixty years, disordered the
and
That error
world and con
demned the most generous plans to failure. Every cause from which religion is a,bsent, and still more every cause that repudiates religion, is a cause to which
mankind.
If
wanting the first foundation of France had accepted the help of her
old faith, a help
is
which advanced before her with
whose merit posterity will not doubtless she would nevertheless have
disinterestedness forget,
suffered greatly, because the establishment of a lost public right is the
most laborious work
of a
people and of an age, but at least she would have
preserved in her torments the element of tradition
and
stability, the
effectual 'presence of
God
;
and
Europe, instead of being hardly on the threshold of her future, would already bear the noble weight of
an edifice begun in earnest.
(
250
)
But however unfortunate such a be,
however
fertile in trials it
responsibility does not rest
situation niav
may
upon
life
human
of
societies.
peoples raised up
by
it
On
new demon
upon the public
the one hand, the
have not been able
accept the fate of the East
its
Christianity, or
rather Christianity draws therefrom a stration of its generous influence
yet be,
to
after a short sleep,
;
they claimed again their public right, being in capable of living out of a regular community arid
meekly yielding to repose bought at the cost of all the liberties which they held from their fore of
fathers. St.
They appealed from Louis XIY.
Louis, from Charles V.
to
England had appealed from Elizabeth to
to
Charlemagne, as Henry VIII., and
her ancient Parliament.
On
other hand, Christianity having been rejected
the
by
an ill-conducted revolution, that movement, so just in its causes, has been unable to settle after
more than by
its
itself,
sixty years of efforts
;
thus witnessing
had counted too much upon and that the Christian peoples, whatever
failures that
it
they may attempt, will never accomplish anything without the help of the faith Avhich has made them
what they are. Behold now the
future, Gentlemen,
and behold
(251 it
under an
)
infallible alternative.
nation recovered or replaced
save a Christian nation. able to raise
world
lost public right,
its
The Pagan
but, the first breath of
;
nations were
communities in the
illustrious
up
Never yet has a
their public
life
they have not been able to restore its Neither Athens, nor Sparta, nor inspiration. once
lost,
Rome, have revived
their institutions
and their patriotism extinct
destroyed
they have, perhaps, still produced great men, they have not produced citizens. Liberty does not rise again from its avshes
by
its
own
;
virtue, and,
when England,
after
the reigns which I have just cited, regained her
was a miracle without example,
national right,
it
and which, of
itself alone,
is
Even
the divinity of Christianity. is
a striking proof of as to
be born
a natural thing, and to be raised again from the
dead
public
laws life
a miraculous thing, so also, to be born to
is
life is, in
that govern
after
tion
able
a people, the effect of the general
society
lost
it, is
;
but to regain
public,
the effect of a regenera
having which comes from above. to
do
this
England has been because she was Christian, and
heresy which absolute power had imposed upon her, she has rejected with horror skepticism and unbelief.
because, although
preserving
the
(
,
252
)
was which formed her strength against the political traditions of Henry VIII. and Elizabeth, This
and
it
this
it is
which
still
forms
tations too often powerless in
it
against the agi
which the Continent
struggles before her eyes.
One
these
of
two things then
will
happen
Europe will return herself to the light the Gospel, and by the Gospel which gave either
Europe
its
institutions
inheritance reason,
it
it
fall
to
of
to
will recover its glorious
persevering in the pride of erring will continue to reject Jesus Christ, and, ;
or,
victim of corruption which will ever increase, will pass
:
on from chimera
fall,
to
the
repose
to chimera,
of
those
it
and from
generations
which have no longer any other liberty than that of dishonor. Then also Christianity will become Disgusted with the spectacle of bondage, they will withdraw more and
the last refuge of great souls.
more
into the true city of the Christian,
which
is
and thence they will shed upon the world that glory of saints which shines upon all eternity,
ruins in order to give to the saddest times a wit
ness and a hope.
Gentlemen, I have ended what I had to say to you in general upon life and its different forms. After having led you from degree to degree even
253
(
)
to the supernatural life, the highest of all, I shoulJ
now speak
to
therelrom as
its
the
of
you
fruit
virtues
and
its
which spring
But
expression.
already long ago, in another assembly, I have treated
of
all
the
supernatural virtues, such as
faith, humility, chastity, charity, religion
liness,
and ho
not neglecting also to show the influence
of these virtues
upon human
society as to right,
property, authority, family and political economy.
The work
then accomplished, and there would remain to me here only to speak to you of the
means
is
established
the supernatural
which
by God I
life.
to
communicate
mean
to us
the Sacraments,
have touched upon but once in regard to the intercourse between man and God, and under their
I
most general
Shall I be permitted to
aspect.
you, and thus to complete, after more than twenty years, the whole apology
expose
this doctrine to
of the Christian faith I
may meet you
you, whether
more, I
God
?
I
know
you without
a part of
having wrought city, which was the cradle of
Dominick had the of his thought,
but whether
here again or never more see close my mouth or open it once
shall not leave
in
not,
first
my my
feeling
happy
ministry in this order,
where
St.
vision and the first friends
and where
I
have met
in a
wor-
.
n L
,
r