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<h2><span>Discourse I.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Introductory.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
In addressing myself, Gentlemen, to the consideration
of a question which has excited so much interest,
and elicited so much discussion at the present day, as
that of University Education, I feel some explanation is
due from me for supposing, after such high ability and
wide experience have been brought to bear upon it,
that any field remains for the additional labours either
of a disputant or of an inquirer. If, nevertheless, I still
venture to ask permission to continue the discussion,
already so protracted, it is because the subject of Liberal
Education, and of the principles on which it must be
conducted, has ever had a hold upon my own mind; and
because I have lived the greater part of my life in a
place which has all that time been occupied in a series
of controversies both domestic and with strangers, and
of measures, experimental or definitive, bearing upon it.
About fifty years since, the English University, of which
I was so long a member, after a century of inactivity, at
length was roused, at a time when (as I may say) it was
giving no education at all to the youth committed to its
keeping, to a sense of the responsibilities which its profession
and its station involved, and it presents to us
the singular example of an heterogeneous and an independent
body of men, setting about a work of self-reformation,
not from any pressure of public opinion, but
because it was fitting and right to undertake it. Its
initial efforts, begun and carried on amid many obstacles,
were met from without, as often happens in such
cases, by ungenerous and jealous criticisms, which, at
the very moment that they were urged, were beginning
to be unjust. Controversy did but bring out more
clearly to its own apprehension the views on which its
reformation was proceeding, and throw them into a
philosophical form. The course of beneficial change
made progress, and what was at first but the result of
individual energy and an act of the academical corporation,
gradually became popular, and was taken up and
carried out by the separate collegiate bodies, of which
the University is composed. This was the first stage of
the controversy. Years passed away, and then political
adversaries arose against it, and the system of education
which it had established was a second time assailed; but
still, since that contest was conducted for the most part
through the medium, not of political acts, but of treatises
and pamphlets, it happened as before that the threatened
dangers, in the course of their repulse, did but afford
fuller development and more exact delineation to the
principles of which the University was the representative.</p>
<p>
In the former of these two controversies the charge
brought against its studies was their remoteness from
the occupations and duties of life, to which they are the
formal introduction, or, in other words, their <em><span style="font-style: italic">inutility</span></em>; in
the latter, it was their connexion with a particular form of
belief, or, in other words, their <em><span style="font-style: italic">religious exclusiveness</span></em>.</p>
<p>
Living then so long as a witness, though hardly as an
actor, in these scenes of intellectual conflict, I am able
to bear witness to views of University Education, without
authority indeed in themselves, but not without
value to a Catholic, and less familiar to him, as I conceive,
than they deserve to be. And, while an argument
originating in the controversies to which I have referred,
may be serviceable at this season to that great cause in
which we are here so especially interested, to me personally
it will afford satisfaction of a peculiar kind; for,
though it has been my lot for many years to take a
prominent, sometimes a presumptuous, part in theological
discussions, yet the natural turn of my mind carries me
off to trains of thought like those which I am now about
to open, which, important though they be for Catholic
objects, and admitting of a Catholic treatment, are
sheltered from the extreme delicacy and peril which
attach to disputations directly bearing on the subject-matter
of Divine Revelation.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
There are several reasons why I should open the
discussion with a reference to the lessons with which
past years have supplied me. One reason is this: It
would concern me, Gentlemen, were I supposed to have
got up my opinions for the occasion. This, indeed, would
have been no reflection on me personally, supposing I
were persuaded of their truth, when at length addressing
myself to the inquiry; but it would have destroyed, of
course, the force of my testimony, and deprived such
arguments, as I might adduce, of that moral persuasiveness
which attends on tried and sustained conviction.
It would have made me seem the advocate, rather than
the cordial and deliberate maintainer and witness, of the
doctrines which I was to support; and, though it might
be said to evidence the faith I reposed in the practical
judgment of the Church, and the intimate concurrence
of my own reason with the course she had authoritatively
sanctioned, and the devotion with which I could promptly
put myself at her disposal, it would have cast suspicion
on the validity of reasonings and conclusions which
rested on no independent inquiry, and appealed to no
past experience. In that case it might have been plausibly
objected by opponents that I was the serviceable
expedient of an emergency, and never, after all, could
be more than ingenious and adroit in the management of
an argument which was not my own, and which I was
sure to forget again as readily as I had mastered it.
But this is not so. The views to which I have referred
have grown into my whole system of thought, and are,
as it were, part of myself. Many changes has my mind
gone through: here it has known no variation or vacillation
of opinion, and though this by itself is no proof of
the truth of my principles, it puts a seal upon conviction,
and is a justification of earnestness and zeal. Those principles,
which I am now to set forth under the sanction of
the Catholic Church, were my profession at that early
period of my life, when religion was to me more a matter
of feeling and experience than of faith. They did but
take greater hold upon me, as I was introduced to the
records of Christian Antiquity, and approached in sentiment
and desire to Catholicism; and my sense of their
correctness has been increased with the events of every
year since I have been brought within its pale.</p>
<p>
And here I am brought to a second and more important
reason for referring, on this occasion, to the conclusions
at which Protestants have arrived on the subject of
Liberal Education; and it is as follows: Let it be observed,
then, that the principles on which I would conduct
the inquiry are attainable, as I have already implied, by
the mere experience of life. They do not come simply
of theology; they imply no supernatural discernment;
they have no special connexion with Revelation; they
almost arise out of the nature of the case; they are
dictated even by human prudence and wisdom, though a
divine illumination be absent, and they are recognized
by common sense, even where self-interest is not present
to quicken it; and, therefore, though true, and just, and
good in themselves, they imply nothing whatever as to
the religious profession of those who maintain them.
They may be held by Protestants as well as by Catholics;
nay, there is reason to anticipate that in certain times
and places they will be more thoroughly investigated,
and better understood, and held more firmly by Protestants
than by ourselves.</p>
<p>
It is natural to expect this from the very circumstance
that the philosophy of Education is founded on truths
in the natural order. Where the sun shines bright, in
the warm climate of the south, the natives of the place
know little of safeguards against cold and wet. They
have, indeed, bleak and piercing blasts; they have chill
and pouring rain, but only now and then, for a day or a
week; they bear the inconvenience as they best may, but
they have not made it an art to repel it; it is not worth
their while; the science of calefaction and ventilation is
reserved for the north. It is in this way that Catholics
stand relatively to Protestants in the science of Education;
Protestants depending on human means mainly,
are led to make the most of them: their sole resource is
to use what they have; <span class="tei tei-q">“Knowledge is”</span> their <span class="tei tei-q">“power”</span>
and nothing else; they are the anxious cultivators of a
rugged soil. It is otherwise with us; <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">funes ceciderunt mihi in prœclaris</span></span>.”</span>
We have a goodly inheritance. This
is apt to cause us (I do not mean to rely too much on
prayer, and the Divine Blessing, for that is impossible; but)
we sometimes forget that we shall please Him best, and get
most from Him, when, according to the Fable, we <span class="tei tei-q">“put
our shoulder to the wheel,”</span> when we use what we have by
nature to the utmost, at the same time that we look out
for what is beyond nature in the confidence of faith and
hope. However, we are sometimes tempted to let things
take their course, as if they would in one way or another
turn up right at last for certain; and so we go on, living
from hand to mouth, getting into difficulties and getting
out of them, succeeding certainly on the whole, but with
failure in detail which might be avoided, and with much
of imperfection or inferiority in our appointments and
plans, and much disappointment, discouragement, and
collision of opinion in consequence. If this be in any
measure the state of the case, there is certainly so far
a reason for availing ourselves of the investigations
and experience of those who are not Catholics, when we
have to address ourselves to the subject of Liberal
Education.</p>
<p>
Nor is there surely any thing derogatory to the position
of a Catholic in such a proceeding. The Church has
ever appealed and deferred to witnesses and authorities
external to herself, in those matters in which she
thought they had means of forming a judgment: and
that on the principle, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Cuique in arte sua credendum</span></span>.
She has even used unbelievers and pagans in evidence
of her truth, as far as their testimony went. She avails
herself of scholars, critics, and antiquarians, who are not
of her communion. She has worded her theological teaching
in the phraseology of Aristotle; Aquila, Symmachus,
Theodotion, Origen, Eusebius, and Apollinaris, all more
or less heterodox, have supplied materials for primitive
exegetics. St. Cyprian called Tertullian his master;
St. Augustin refers to Ticonius; Bossuet, in modern
times, complimented the labours of the Anglican Bull;
the Benedictine editors of the Fathers are familiar with
the labours of Fell, Ussher, Pearson, and Beveridge.
Pope Benedict XIV. cites according to the occasion the
works of Protestants without reserve, and the late French
collection of Christian Apologists contains the writings
of Locke, Burnet, Tillotson, and Paley. If, then, I
come forward in any degree as borrowing the views of
certain Protestant schools on the point which is to be
discussed, I do so, Gentlemen, as believing, first, that the
Catholic Church has ever, in the plenitude of her divine
illumination, made use of whatever truth or wisdom she
has found in their teaching or their measures; and next,
that in particular places or times her children are likely
to profit from external suggestions or lessons, which have
not been provided for them by herself.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
And here I may mention a third reason for appealing
at the outset to the proceedings of Protestant bodies in
regard to Liberal Education. It will serve to intimate
the mode in which I propose to handle my subject
altogether. Observe then, Gentlemen, I have no intention,
in any thing I shall say, of bringing into the argument
the authority of the Church, or any authority at all; but
I shall consider the question simply on the grounds of
human reason and human wisdom. I am investigating
in the abstract, and am determining what is in itself right
and true. For the moment I know nothing, so to say,
of history. I take things as I find them; I have no concern
with the past; I find myself here; I set myself to
the duties I find here; I set myself to further, by every
means in my power, doctrines and views, true in themselves,
recognized by Catholics as such, familiar to my
own mind; and to do this quite apart from the consideration
of questions which have been determined without
me and before me. I am here the advocate and the
minister of a certain great principle; yet not merely
advocate and minister, else had I not been here at all. It
has been my previous keen sense and hearty reception
of that principle, that has been at once the reason, as I
must suppose, of my being selected for this office,
and is the cause of my accepting it. I am told on
authority that a principle is expedient, which I have
ever felt to be true. And I argue in its behalf on its
own merits, the authority, which brings me here, being
my opportunity for arguing, but not the ground of my
argument itself.</p>
<p>
And a fourth reason is here suggested for consulting
the history of Protestant institutions, when I am going
to speak of the object and nature of University Education.
It will serve to remind you, Gentlemen, that I am concerned
with questions, not simply of immutable truth,
but of practice and expedience. It would ill have
become me to undertake a subject, on which points of
dispute have arisen among persons so far above me in
authority and name, in relation to a state of society,
about which I have so much to learn, if it involved an
appeal to sacred truths, or the determination of some
imperative rule of conduct. It would have been presumptuous
in me so to have acted, nor am I so acting.
Even the question of the union of Theology with the
secular Sciences, which is its religious side, simple as it
is of solution in the abstract, has, according to difference
of circumstances, been at different times differently
decided. Necessity has no law, and expedience is often
one form of necessity. It is no principle with sensible
men, of whatever cast of opinion, to do always what is
abstractedly best. Where no direct duty forbids, we
may be obliged to do, as being best under circumstances,
what we murmur and rise against, while we do it. We
see that to attempt more is to effect less; that we must
accept so much, or gain nothing; and so perforce we
reconcile ourselves to what we would have far otherwise,
if we could. Thus a system of what is called secular
Education, in which Theology and the Sciences are
taught separately, may, in a particular place or time, be
the least of evils; it may be of long standing; it may be
dangerous to meddle with; it may be professedly a
temporary arrangement; it may be under a process of
improvement; its disadvantages may be neutralized by
the persons by whom, or the provisions under which, it is
administered.</p>
<p>
Hence it was, that in the early ages the Church allowed
her children to attend the heathen schools for the
acquisition of secular accomplishments, where, as no
one can doubt, evils existed, at least as great as can
attend on Mixed Education now. The gravest Fathers
recommended for Christian youth the use of Pagan
masters; the most saintly Bishops and most authoritative
Doctors had been sent in their adolescence by
Christian parents to Pagan lecture halls.<SPAN id="noteref_3" name="noteref_3" href="#note_3"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">3</span></span></SPAN> And, not to
take other instances, at this very time, and in this very
country, as regards at least the poorer classes of the
community, whose secular acquirements ever must be
limited, it has seemed best to the Irish Bishops, under
the circumstances, to suffer the introduction into the
country of a system of Mixed Education in the schools
called National. Such a state of things, however, is
passing away; as regards University education at least,
the highest authority has now decided that the plan,
which is abstractedly best, is in this time and country
also most expedient.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
And here I have an opportunity of recognizing once
for all that higher view of approaching the subject of
these Discourses, which, after this formal recognition, I
mean to dispense with. Ecclesiastical authority, not
argument, is the supreme rule and the appropriate guide
for Catholics in matters of religion. It has always the
right to interpose, and sometimes, in the conflict of
parties and opinions, it is called on to exercise that
right. It has lately exercised it in our own instance: it
has interposed in favour of a pure University system for
Catholic youth, forbidding compromise or accommodation
of any kind. Of course its decision must be heartily
accepted and obeyed, and that the more, because the
decision proceeds, not simply from the Bishops of Ireland,
great as their authority is, but the highest authority
on earth, from the Chair of St. Peter.</p>
<p>
Moreover, such a decision not only demands our
submission, but has a claim upon our trust. It not only
acts as a prohibition of any measures, but as an <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ipso facto</span></span>
confutation of any reasonings, inconsistent with it.
It carries with it an earnest and an augury of its own
expediency. For instance, I can fancy, Gentlemen,
there may be some, among those who hear me, disposed
to say that they are ready to acquit the principles of
Education, which I am to advocate, of all fault whatever,
except that of being impracticable. I can fancy
them granting to me, that those principles are most
correct and most obvious, simply irresistible on paper, but
maintaining, nevertheless, that after all, they are nothing
more than the dreams of men who live out of the world,
and who do not see the difficulty of keeping Catholicism
anyhow afloat on the bosom of this wonderful nineteenth
century. Proved, indeed, those principles are, to
demonstration, but they will not work. Nay, it was
my own admission just now, that, in a particular instance,
it might easily happen, that what is only second
best is best practically, because what is actually best is
out of the question.</p>
<p>
This, I hear you say to yourselves, is the state of
things at present. You recount in detail the numberless
impediments, great and small, formidable or only vexatious,
which at every step embarrass the attempt to carry
out ever so poorly a principle in itself so true and
ecclesiastical. You appeal in your defence to wise and
sagacious intellects, who are far from enemies to Catholicism,
or to the Irish Hierarchy, and you have no hope,
or rather you absolutely disbelieve, that Education can
possibly be conducted, here and now, on a theological
principle, or that youths of different religions can, under
the circumstances of the country, be educated apart from
each other. The more you think over the state of
politics, the position of parties, the feelings of classes,
and the experience of the past, the more chimerical
does it seem to you to aim at a University, of which
Catholicity is the fundamental principle. Nay, even if
the attempt could accidentally succeed, would not the
mischief exceed the benefit of it? How great the
sacrifices, in how many ways, by which it would be
preceded and followed! how many wounds, open and
secret, would it inflict upon the body politic! And, if
it fails, which is to be expected, then a double mischief
will ensue from its recognition of evils which it has been
unable to remedy. These are your deep misgivings;
and, in proportion to the force with which they come to
you, is the concern and anxiety which you feel, that
there should be those whom you love, whom you
revere, who from one cause or other refuse to enter
into them.</p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
This, I repeat, is what some good Catholics will say
to me, and more than this. They will express themselves
better than I can speak for them in their behalf,—with
more earnestness and point, with more force of
argument and fulness of detail; and I will frankly and
at once acknowledge, that I shall insist on the high theological
view of a University without attempting to give
a direct answer to their arguments against its present
practicability. I do not say an answer cannot be given;
on the contrary, I have a confident expectation that, in
proportion as those objections are looked in the face,
they will fade away. But, however this may be, it would
not become me to argue the matter with those who
understand the circumstances of the problem so much
better than myself. What do I know of the state of things
in Ireland, that I should presume to put ideas of mine,
which could not be right except by accident, by the side
of theirs, who speak in the country of their birth and
their home? No, Gentlemen, you are natural judges of
the difficulties which beset us, and they are doubtless
greater than I can even fancy or forbode. Let me, for
the sake of argument, admit all you say against our
enterprise, and a great deal more. Your proof of its
intrinsic impossibility shall be to me as cogent as my
own of its theological advisableness. Why, then, should
I be so rash and perverse as to involve myself in trouble
not properly mine? Why go out of my own place?
Why so headstrong and reckless as to lay up for myself
miscarriage and disappointment, as though I were not
sure to have enough of personal trial anyhow without
going about to seek for it?</p>
<p>
Reflections such as these would be decisive even
with the boldest and most capable minds, but for one
consideration. In the midst of our difficulties I have
one ground of hope, just one stay, but, as I think, a
sufficient one, which serves me in the stead of all other
argument whatever, which hardens me against criticism,
which supports me if I begin to despond, and to
which I ever come round, when the question of the
possible and the expedient is brought into discussion.
It is the decision of the Holy See; St. Peter has spoken,
it is he who has enjoined that which seems to us so
unpromising. He has spoken, and has a claim on us to
trust him. He is no recluse, no solitary student, no
dreamer about the past, no doter upon the dead and
gone, no projector of the visionary. He for eighteen
hundred years has lived in the world; he has seen all
fortunes, he has encountered all adversaries, he has
shaped himself for all emergencies. If ever there was
a power on earth who had an eye for the times, who
has confined himself to the practicable, and has been
happy in his anticipations, whose words have been facts,
and whose commands prophecies, such is he in the
history of ages, who sits from generation to generation
in the Chair of the Apostles, as the Vicar of Christ, and
the Doctor of His Church.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
These are not the words of rhetoric, Gentlemen, but of
history. All who take part with the Apostle, are on the
winning side. He has long since given warrants for the
confidence which he claims. From the first he has
looked through the wide world, of which he has the
burden; and, according to the need of the day, and the
inspirations of his Lord, he has set himself now to one
thing, now to another; but to all in season, and to nothing
in vain. He came first upon an age of refinement
and luxury like our own, and, in spite of the persecutor,
fertile in the resources of his cruelty, he soon gathered,
out of all classes of society, the slave, the soldier, the
high-born lady, and the sophist, materials enough to
form a people to his Master's honour. The savage hordes
come down in torrents from the north, and Peter went
out to meet them, and by his very eye he sobered them,
and backed them in their full career. They turned aside
and flooded the whole earth, but only to be more surely
civilized by him, and to be made ten times more his
children even than the older populations which they had
overwhelmed. Lawless kings arose, sagacious as the
Roman, passionate as the Hun, yet in him they found
their match, and were shattered, and he lived on. The
gates of the earth were opened to the east and west, and
men poured out to take possession; but he went with
them by his missionaries, to China, to Mexico, carried
along by zeal and charity, as far as those children of
men were led by enterprise, covetousness, or ambition.
Has he failed in his successes up to this hour? Did he,
in our fathers' day, fail in his struggle with Joseph of
Germany and his confederates, with Napoleon, a greater
name, and his dependent kings, that, though in another
kind of fight, he should fail in ours? What grey hairs
are on the head of Judah, whose youth is renewed like
the eagle's, whose feet are like the feet of harts, and
underneath the Everlasting arms?</p>
<p>
In the first centuries of the Church all this practical
sagacity of Holy Church was mere matter of faith, but
every age, as it has come, has confirmed faith by actual
sight; and shame on us, if, with the accumulated testimony
of eighteen centuries, our eyes are too gross to
see those victories which the Saints have ever seen by
anticipation. Least of all can we, the Catholics of islands
which have in the cultivation and diffusion of Knowledge
heretofore been so singularly united under the auspices
of the Apostolic See, least of all can we be the men to
distrust its wisdom and to predict its failure, when it
sends us on a similar mission now. I cannot forget that,
at a time when Celt and Saxon were alike savage, it was
the See of Peter that gave both of them, first faith,
then civilization; and then again bound them together
in one by the seal of a joint commission to convert and
illuminate in their turn the pagan continent. I cannot
forget how it was from Rome that the glorious St. Patrick
was sent to Ireland, and did a work so great that he
could not have a successor in it, the sanctity and learning
and zeal and charity which followed on his death being
but the result of the one impulse which he gave. I
cannot forget how, in no long time, under the fostering
breath of the Vicar of Christ, a country of heathen superstitions
became the very wonder and asylum of all people,—the
wonder by reason of its knowledge, sacred and
profane, and the asylum of religion, literature and
science, when chased away from the continent by the
barbarian invaders. I recollect its hospitality, freely
accorded to the pilgrim; its volumes munificently presented
to the foreign student; and the prayers, the
blessings, the holy rites, the solemn chants, which sanctified
the while both giver and receiver.</p>
<p>
Nor can I forget either, how my own England had
meanwhile become the solicitude of the same unwearied
eye: how Augustine was sent to us by Gregory; how he
fainted in the way at the tidings of our fierceness, and,
but for the Pope, would have shrunk as from an
impossible expedition; how he was forced on <span class="tei tei-q">“in
weakness and in fear and in much trembling,”</span> until he
had achieved the conquest of the island to Christ. Nor,
again, how it came to pass that, when Augustine died
and his work slackened, another Pope, unwearied still,
sent three saints from Rome, to ennoble and refine the
people Augustine had converted. Three holy men set
out for England together, of different nations: Theodore,
an Asiatic Greek, from Tarsus; Adrian, an African;
Bennett alone a Saxon, for Peter knows no distinction of
races in his ecumenical work. They came with theology
and science in their train; with relics, with pictures, with
manuscripts of the Holy Fathers and the Greek classics;
and Theodore and Adrian founded schools, secular and
monastic, all over England, while Bennett brought to the
north the large library he had collected in foreign parts,
and, with plans and ornamental work from France,
erected a church of stone, under the invocation of St.
Peter, after the Roman fashion, <span class="tei tei-q">“which,”</span> says the historian,<SPAN id="noteref_4" name="noteref_4" href="#note_4"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">4</span></span></SPAN> <span class="tei tei-q">“he most affected.”</span> I call to mind how St.
Wilfrid, St. John of Beverley, St. Bede, and other saintly
men, carried on the good work in the following generations,
and how from that time forth the two islands,
England and Ireland, in a dark and dreary age, were
the two lights of Christendom, and had no claims on each
other, and no thought of self, save in the interchange of
kind offices and the rivalry of love.</p>
<h3><span>7.</span></h3>
<p>
O memorable time, when St. Aidan and the Irish
monks went up to Lindisfarne and Melrose, and taught
the Saxon youth, and when a St. Cuthbert and a St.
Eata repaid their charitable toil! O blessed days
of peace and confidence, when the Celtic Mailduf penetrated
to Malmesbury in the south, which has inherited
his name, and founded there the famous school which
gave birth to the great St. Aldhelm! O precious seal
and testimony of Gospel unity, when, as Aldhelm in
turn tells us, the English went to Ireland <span class="tei tei-q">“numerous as
bees;”</span> when the Saxon St. Egbert and St. Willibrod,
preachers to the heathen Frisons, made the voyage to
Ireland to prepare themselves for their work; and when
from Ireland went forth to Germany the two noble
Ewalds, Saxons also, to earn the crown of martyrdom!
Such a period, indeed, so rich in grace, in peace, in love,
and in good works, could only last for a season; but,
even when the light was to pass away from them, the
sister islands were destined, not to forfeit, but to transmit
it together. The time came when the neighbouring
continental country was in turn to hold the mission
which they had exercised so long and well; and when
to it they made over their honourable office, faithful to
the alliance of two hundred years, they made it a joint
act. Alcuin was the pupil both of the English and of
the Irish schools; and when Charlemagne would revive
science and letters in his own France, it was Alcuin, the
representative both of the Saxon and the Celt, who was
the chief of those who went forth to supply the need of
the great Emperor. Such was the foundation of the
School of Paris, from which, in the course of centuries,
sprang the famous University, the glory of the middle
ages.</p>
<p>* * * * * </p>
<p>
The past never returns; the course of events, old in
its texture, is ever new in its colouring and fashion.
England and Ireland are not what they once were, but
Rome is where it was, and St. Peter is the same: his
zeal, his charity, his mission, his gifts are all the same.
He of old made the two islands one by giving them
joint work of teaching; and now surely he is giving us
a like mission, and we shall become one again, while we
zealously and lovingly fulfil it.</p>
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