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<h2><span>Lecture I.</span></h2>
<h2><span>Christianity And Letters. A Lecture in the School of Philosophy and Letters.</span></h2>
<h3><span>1.</span></h3>
<p>
It seems but natural, Gentlemen, now that we are
opening the School of Philosophy and Letters, or,
as it was formerly called, of Arts, in this new University,
that we should direct our attention to the question, what
are the subjects generally included under that name,
and what place they hold, and how they come to hold
that place, in a University, and in the education which
a University provides. This would be natural on
such an occasion, even though the Faculty of Arts held
but a secondary place in the academical system; but
it seems to be even imperative on us, considering that
the studies which that Faculty embraces are almost the
direct subject-matter and the staple of the mental exercises
proper to a University.</p>
<p>
It is indeed not a little remarkable that, in spite of
the special historical connexion of University Institutions
with the Sciences of Theology, Law, and Medicine, a
University, after all, should be formally based (as it really
is), and should emphatically live in, the Faculty of Arts;
but such is the deliberate decision of those who have
most deeply and impartially considered the subject.<SPAN id="noteref_32" name="noteref_32" href="#note_32"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">32</span></span></SPAN>
Arts existed before other Faculties; the Masters of Arts
were the ruling and directing body; the success and
popularity of the Faculties of Law and Medicine were
considered to be in no slight measure an encroachment
and a usurpation, and were met with jealousy and
resistance. When Colleges arose and became the
medium and instrument of University action, they did
but confirm the ascendency of the Faculty of Arts; and
thus, even down to this day, in those academical corporations
which have more than others retained the
traces of their medieval origin,—I mean the Universities
of Oxford and Cambridge,—we hear little of Theology,
Medicine, or Law, and almost exclusively of Arts.</p>
<p>
Now, considering the reasonable association, to which I
have already referred, which exists in our minds between
Universities and the three learned professions, here is a
phenomenon which has to be contemplated for its own
sake and accounted for, as well as a circumstance enhancing
the significance and importance of the act in
which we have been for some weeks engaged; and I
consider that I shall not be employing our time unprofitably,
if I am able to make a suggestion, which, while
it illustrates the fact, is able to explain the difficulty.</p>
<h3><span>2.</span></h3>
<p>
Here I must go back, Gentlemen, a very great way,
and ask you to review the course of Civilization since
the beginning of history. When we survey the stream
of human affairs for the last three thousand years, we
find it to run thus:—At first sight there is so much
fluctuation, agitation, ebbing and flowing, that we may
despair to discern any law in its movements, taking the
earth as its bed, and mankind as its contents; but, on
looking more closely and attentively, we shall discern, in
spite of the heterogeneous materials and the various histories
and fortunes which are found in the race of man
during the long period I have mentioned, a certain formation
amid the chaos,—one and one only,—and extending,
though not over the whole earth, yet through a
very considerable portion of it. Man is a social being
and can hardly exist without society, and in matter of
fact societies have ever existed all over the habitable
earth. The greater part of these associations have been
political or religious, and have been comparatively
limited in extent, and temporary. They have been
formed and dissolved by the force of accidents or by
inevitable circumstances; and, when we have enumerated
them one by one, we have made of them all that can be
made. But there is one remarkable association which
attracts the attention of the philosopher, not political
nor religious, or at least only partially and not essentially
such, which began in the earliest times and grew with
each succeeding age, till it reached its complete development,
and then continued on, vigorous and unwearied,
and which still remains as definite and as firm as ever it
was. Its bond is a common civilization; and, though
there are other civilizations in the world, as there are
other societies, yet this civilization, together with the
society which is its creation and its home, is so distinctive
and luminous in its character, so imperial in its extent,
so imposing in its duration, and so utterly without
rival upon the face of the earth, that the association may
fitly assume to itself the title of <span class="tei tei-q">“Human Society,”</span> and
its civilization the abstract term <span class="tei tei-q">“Civilization.”</span></p>
<p>
There are indeed great outlying portions of mankind
which are not, perhaps never have been, included in this
Human Society; still they are outlying portions and
nothing else, fragmentary, unsociable, solitary, and unmeaning,
protesting and revolting against the grand
central formation of which I am speaking, but not uniting
with each other into a second whole. I am not denying
of course the civilization of the Chinese, for instance,
though it be not our civilization; but it is a huge, stationary,
unattractive, morose civilization. Nor do I deny
a civilization to the Hindoos, nor to the ancient Mexicans,
nor to the Saracens, nor (in a certain sense) to the Turks;
but each of these races has its own civilization, as separate
from one another as from ours. I do not see how
they can be all brought under one idea. Each stands
by itself, as if the other were not; each is local; many of
them are temporary; none of them will bear a comparison
with the Society and the Civilization which I have
described as alone having a claim to those names, and on
which I am going to dwell.</p>
<p>
Gentlemen, let me here observe that I am not entering
upon the question of races, or upon their history. I have
nothing to do with ethnology. I take things as I find
them on the surface of history, and am but classing phenomena.
Looking, then, at the countries which surround
the Mediterranean Sea as a whole, I see them to be, from
time immemorial, the seat of an association of intellect
and mind, such as to deserve to be called the Intellect
and the Mind of the Human Kind. Starting as it does
and advancing from certain centres, till their respective
influences intersect and conflict, and then at length intermingle
and combine, a common Thought has been generated,
and a common Civilization defined and established.
Egypt is one such starting point, Syria another, Greece
a third, Italy a fourth, and North Africa a fifth,—afterwards
France and Spain. As time goes on, and as colonization
and conquest work their changes, we see a great
association of nations formed, of which the Roman
empire is the maturity and the most intelligible expression;
an association, however, not political, but mental,
based on the same intellectual ideas, and advancing by
common intellectual methods. And this association or
social commonwealth, with whatever reverses, changes,
and momentary dissolutions, continues down to this day;
not, indeed, precisely on the same territory, but with
such only partial and local disturbances, and on the
other hand, with so combined and harmonious a movement,
and such a visible continuity, that it would be
utterly unreasonable to deny that it is throughout all
that interval but one and the same.</p>
<p>
In its earliest age it included far more of the eastern
world than it has since; in these later times it has taken
into its compass a new hemisphere; in the middle ages
it lost Africa, Egypt, and Syria, and extended itself to
Germany, Scandinavia, and the British Isles. At one
time its territory was flooded by strange and barbarous
races, but the existing civilization was vigorous enough
to vivify what threatened to stifle it, and to assimilate to
the old social forms what came to expel them; and thus
the civilization of modern times remains what it was of
old, not Chinese, or Hindoo, or Mexican, or Saracenic,
or of any new description hitherto unknown, but the
lineal descendant, or rather the continuation, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mutatis
mutandis</span></span>, of the civilization which began in Palestine
and Greece.</p>
<p>
Considering, then, the characteristics of this great civilized
Society, which I have already insisted on, I think
it has a claim to be considered as the representative
Society and Civilization of the human race, as its perfect
result and limit, in fact;—those portions of the race which
do not coalesce with it being left to stand by themselves
as anomalies, unaccountable indeed, but for that very
reason not interfering with what on the contrary has
been turned to account and has grown into a whole. I
call then this commonwealth pre-eminently and emphatically
Human Society, and its intellect the Human Mind,
and its decisions the sense of mankind, and its disciplined
and cultivated state Civilization in the abstract, and the
territory on which it lies the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>, or the World.
For, unless the illustration be fanciful, the object which
I am contemplating is like the impression of a seal upon
the wax; which rounds off and gives form to the greater
portion of the soft material, and presents something definite
to the eye, and preoccupies the space against any
second figure, so that we overlook and leave out of our
thoughts the jagged outline or unmeaning lumps outside
of it, intent upon the harmonious circle which fills the
imagination within it.</p>
<h3><span>3.</span></h3>
<p>
Now, before going on to speak of the education, and
the standards of education, which the Civilized World, as
I may now call it, has enjoined and requires, I wish to
draw your attention, Gentlemen, to the circumstance
that this same <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>, which has been the seat of
Civilization, will be found, on the whole, to be the seat
also of that supernatural society and system which our
Maker has given us directly from Himself, the Christian
Polity. The natural and divine associations are not
indeed exactly coincident, nor ever have been. As the
territory of Civilization has varied with itself in different
ages, while on the whole it has been the same, so, in like
manner, Christianity has fallen partly outside Civilization,
and Civilization partly outside Christianity; but, on the
whole, the two have occupied one and the same <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>.
Often indeed they have even moved <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pari passu</span></span>,
and at all times there has been found the most intimate
connexion between them. Christianity waited till the
<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span> attained its most perfect form before it
appeared; and it soon coalesced, and has ever since co-operated,
and often seemed identical, with the Civilization
which is its companion.</p>
<p>
There are certain analogies, too, which hold between
Civilization and Christianity. As Civilization does not
cover the whole earth, neither does Christianity; but
there is nothing else like the one, and nothing else like
the other. Each is the only thing of its kind. Again,
there are, as I have already said, large outlying portions
of the world in a certain sense cultivated and educated,
which, if they could exist together in one, would go far
to constitute a second <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>, the home of a
second distinct civilization; but every one of these is
civilized on its own principle and idea, or at least they
are separated from each other, and have not run together,
while the Civilization and Society which I have been
describing is one organized whole. And, in like manner,
Christianity coalesces into one vast body, based upon
common ideas; yet there are large outlying organizations
of religion independent of each other and of it. Moreover,
Christianity, as is the case in the parallel instance of
Civilization, continues on in the world without interruption
from the date of its rise, while other religious bodies,
huge, local, and isolated, are rising and falling, or are
helplessly stationary, from age to age, on all sides of it.</p>
<p>
There is another remarkable analogy between Christianity
and Civilization, and the mention of it will
introduce my proper subject, to which what I have
hitherto said is merely a preparation. We know that
Christianity is built upon definite ideas, principles,
doctrines, and writings, which were given at the time of
its first introduction, and have never been superseded,
and admit of no addition. I am not going to parallel
any thing which is the work of man, and in the natural
order, with what is from heaven, and in consequence
infallible, and irreversible, and obligatory; but, after
making this reserve, lest I should possibly be misunderstood,
still I would remark that, in matter of fact, looking
at the state of the case historically, Civilization too
has its common principles, and views, and teaching, and
especially its books, which have more or less been given
from the earliest times, and are, in fact, in equal esteem
and respect, in equal use now, as they were when they
were received in the beginning. In a word, the Classics,
and the subjects of thought and the studies to which
they give rise, or, to use the term most to our present
purpose, the Arts, have ever, on the whole, been the
instruments of education which the civilized <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>
has adopted; just as inspired works, and the
lives of saints, and the articles of faith, and the catechism,
have ever been the instrument of education in the case of
Christianity. And this consideration, you see, Gentlemen
(to drop down at once upon the subject proper to
the occasion which has brought us together), invests
the opening of the School in Arts with a solemnity and
moment of a peculiar kind, for we are but reiterating an
old tradition, and carrying on those august methods of
enlarging the mind, and cultivating the intellect, and
refining the feelings, in which the process of Civilization
has ever consisted.</p>
<h3><span>4.</span></h3>
<p>
In the country which has been the fountain head
of intellectual gifts, in the age which preceded or
introduced the first formations of Human Society, in an
era scarcely historical, we may dimly discern an almost
mythical personage, who, putting out of consideration
the actors in Old Testament history, may be called the
first Apostle of Civilization. Like an Apostle in a higher
order of things, he was poor and a wanderer, and feeble
in the flesh, though he was to do such great things, and
to live in the mouths of a hundred generations and a
thousand tribes. A blind old man; whose wanderings
were such that, when he became famous, his birth-place
could not be ascertained, so that it was said,—</p>
<br/><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left">“Seven famous towns contend for Homer dead,</span>
<br/><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left">Through which the living Homer begged his bread.”</span>
<p>
Yet he had a name in his day; and, little guessing in
what vast measures his wish would be answered, he supplicated,
with a tender human sentiment, as he wandered
over the islands of the Ægean and the Asian coasts, that
those who had known and loved him would cherish his
memory when he was away. Unlike the proud boast
of the Roman poet, if he spoke it in earnest, <span class="tei tei-q">“Exegi
monumentum ære perennius,”</span> he did but indulge the
hope that one, whose coming had been expected with
pleasure, might excite regret when he had departed, and
be rewarded by the sympathy and praise of his friends
even in the presence of other minstrels. A set of verses
remains, which is ascribed to him, in which he addresses
the Delian women in the tone of feeling which I have
described. <span class="tei tei-q">“Farewell to you all,”</span> he says, <span class="tei tei-q">“and remember
me in time to come, and when any one of men
on earth, a stranger from far, shall inquire of you, O
maidens, who is the sweetest of minstrels here about,
and in whom do you most delight? then make answer
modestly, It is a blind man, and he lives in steep
Chios.”</span></p>
<p>
The great poet remained unknown for some centuries,—that
is, unknown to what we call fame. His verses
were cherished by his countrymen, they might be the
secret delight of thousands, but they were not collected
into a volume, nor viewed as a whole, nor made a subject
of criticism. At length an Athenian Prince took
upon him the task of gathering together the scattered
fragments of a genius which had not aspired to immortality,
of reducing them to writing, and of fitting them
to be the text-book of ancient education. Henceforth
the vagrant ballad-singer, as he might be thought, was
submitted, to his surprise, to a sort of literary canonization,
and was invested with the office of forming the
young mind of Greece to noble thoughts and bold deeds.
To be read in Homer soon became the education of a
gentleman; and a rule, recognized in her free age, remained
as a tradition even in the times of her degradation.
Xenophon introduces to us a youth who knew
both Iliad and Odyssey by heart; Dio witnesses that
they were some of the first books put into the hands of
boys; and Horace decided that they taught the science
of life better than Stoic or Academic. Alexander the
Great nourished his imagination by the scenes of the
Iliad. As time went on, other poets were associated
with Homer in the work of education, such as Hesiod
and the Tragedians. The majestic lessons concerning
duty and religion, justice and providence, which occur in
Æschylus and Sophocles, belong to a higher school than
that of Homer; and the verses of Euripides, even in his
lifetime, were so familiar to Athenian lips and so dear
to foreign ears, that, as is reported, the captives of
Syracuse gained their freedom at the price of reciting
them to their conquerors.</p>
<p>
Such poetry may be considered oratory also, since it
has so great a power of persuasion; and the alliance
between these two gifts had existed from the time that
the verses of Orpheus had, according to the fable, made
woods and streams and wild animals to follow him
about. Soon, however, Oratory became the subject of
a separate art, which was called Rhetoric, and of which
the Sophists were the chief masters. Moreover, as
Rhetoric was especially political in its nature, it presupposed
or introduced the cultivation of History; and
thus the pages of Thucydides became one of the special
studies by which Demosthenes rose to be the first orator
of Greece.</p>
<p>
But it is needless to trace out further the formation of
the course of liberal education; it is sufficient to have
given some specimens in illustration of it. The studies,
which it was found to involve, were four principal ones,
Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic, and Mathematics; and the
science of Mathematics, again, was divided into four,
Geometry, Arithmetic, Astronomy, and Music; making
in all seven, which are known by the name of the Seven
Liberal Arts. And thus a definite school of intellect was
formed, founded on ideas and methods of a distinctive
character, and (as we may say) of the highest and truest
character, as far as they went, and which gradually associated
in one, and assimilated, and took possession of,
that multitude of nations which I have considered to
represent mankind, and to possess the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>.</p>
<p>
When we pass from Greece to Rome, we are met with
the common remark, that Rome produced little that was
original, but borrowed from Greece. It is true; Terence
copied from Menander, Virgil from Homer, Hesiod, and
Theocritus; and Cicero professed merely to reproduce
the philosophy of Greece. But, granting its truth ever
so far, I do but take it as a proof of the sort of instinct
which has guided the course of Civilization. The world
was to have certain intellectual teachers, and no others;
Homer and Aristotle, with the poets and philosophers
who circle round them, were to be the schoolmasters of
all generations, and therefore the Latins, falling into the
law on which the world's education was to be carried on,
so added to the classical library as not to reverse or interfere
with what had already been determined. And
there was the more meaning in this arrangement, when
it is considered that Greek was to be forgotten during
many centuries, and the tradition of intellectual training
to be conveyed through Latin; for thus the world was
secured against the consequences of a loss which would
have changed the character of its civilization. I think it
very remarkable, too, how soon the Latin writers became
text-books in the boys' schools. Even to this day Shakespeare
and Milton are not studied in our course of education;
but the poems of Virgil and Horace, as those of
Homer and the Greek authors in an earlier age, were in
schoolboys' satchels not much more than a hundred
years after they were written.</p>
<p>
I need not go on to show at length that they have
preserved their place in the system of education in the
<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">orbis terrarum</span></span>, and the Greek writers with them or
through them, down to this day. The induction of centuries
has often been made. Even in the lowest state
of learning the tradition was kept up. St. Gregory the
Great, whose era, not to say whose influence, is often considered
especially unfavourable to the old literature, was
himself well versed in it, encouraged purity of Latinity
in his court, and is said figuratively by the contemporary
historian of his life to have supported the hall of the
Apostolic See upon the columns of the Seven Liberal
Arts. In the ninth century, when the dark age was
close at hand, we still hear of the cultivation, with whatever
success (according of course to the opportunities of
the times, but I am speaking of the nature of the studies,
not of the proficiency of the students), the cultivation
of Music, Dialectics, Rhetoric, Grammar, Mathematics,
Astronomy, Physics, and Geometry; of the supremacy
of Horace in the schools, <span class="tei tei-q">“and the great Virgil, Sallust,
and Statius.”</span> In the thirteenth or following centuries,
of <span class="tei tei-q">“Virgil, Lucian, Statius, Ovid, Livy, Sallust, Cicero,
and Quintilian;”</span> and after the revival of literature in
the commencement of the modern era, we find St. Carlo
Borromeo enjoining the use of works of Cicero, Ovid,
Virgil, and Horace.<SPAN id="noteref_33" name="noteref_33" href="#note_33"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">33</span></span></SPAN></p>
<h3><span>5.</span></h3>
<p>
I pass thus cursorily over the series of informations
which history gives us on the subject, merely with a view
of recalling to your memory, Gentlemen, and impressing
upon you the fact, that the literature of Greece, continued
into, and enriched by, the literature of Rome, together
with the studies which it involves, has been the
instrument of education, and the food of civilization, from
the first times of the world down to this day;—and now
we are in a condition to answer the question which thereupon
arises, when we turn to consider, by way of contrast,
the teaching which is characteristic of Universities. How
has it come to pass that, although the genius of Universities
is so different from that of the schools which preceded
them, nevertheless the course of study pursued in those
schools was not superseded in the middle ages by those
more brilliant sciences which Universities introduced?
It might have seemed as if Scholastic Theology, Law, and
Medicine would have thrown the Seven Liberal Arts into
the shade, but in the event they failed to do so. I consider
the reason to be, that the authority and function of
the monastic and secular schools, as supplying to the
young the means of education, lay deeper than in any
appointment of Charlemagne, who was their nominal
founder, and were based in the special character of that
civilization which is so intimately associated with Christianity,
that it may even be called the soil out of which
Christianity grew. The medieval sciences, great as is
their dignity and utility, were never intended to supersede
that more real and proper cultivation of the mind which
is effected by the study of the liberal Arts; and, when
certain of these sciences did in fact go out of their province
and did attempt to prejudice the traditional course
of education, the encroachment was in matter of fact
resisted. There were those in the middle age, as John of
Salisbury, who vigorously protested against the extravagances
and usurpations which ever attend the introduction
of any great good whatever, and which attended the
rise of the peculiar sciences of which Universities were
the seat; and, though there were times when the old
traditions seemed to be on the point of failing, somehow
it has happened that they have never failed; for the instinct
of Civilization and the common sense of Society
prevailed, and the danger passed away, and the studies
which seemed to be going out gained their ancient place,
and were acknowledged, as before, to be the best instruments
of mental cultivation, and the best guarantees for
intellectual progress.</p>
<p>
And this experience of the past we may apply to the
circumstances in which we find ourselves at present; for,
as there was a movement against the Classics in the
middle age, so has there been now. The truth of the
Baconian method for the purposes for which it was
created, and its inestimable services and inexhaustible
applications in the interests of our material well-being,
have dazzled the imaginations of men, somewhat in the
same way as certain new sciences carried them away in
the age of Abelard; and since that method does such
wonders in its own province, it is not unfrequently supposed
that it can do as much in any other province also.
Now, Bacon himself never would have so argued; he
would not have needed to be reminded that to advance
the useful arts is one thing, and to cultivate the mind
another. The simple question to be considered is, how
best to strengthen, refine, and enrich the intellectual
powers; the perusal of the poets, historians, and philosophers
of Greece and Rome will accomplish this purpose,
as long experience has shown; but that the study
of the experimental sciences will do the like, is proved
to us as yet by no experience whatever.</p>
<p>
Far indeed am I from denying the extreme attractiveness,
as well as the practical benefit to the world
at large, of the sciences of Chemistry, Electricity, and
Geology; but the question is not what department of
study contains the more wonderful facts, or promises
the more brilliant discoveries, and which is in the
higher and which in an inferior rank; but simply which
out of all provides the most robust and invigorating
discipline for the unformed mind. And I conceive it is
as little disrespectful to Lord Bacon to prefer the Classics
in this point of view to the sciences which have grown
out of his philosophy as it would be disrespectful to St.
Thomas in the middle ages to have hindered the study
of the Summa from doing prejudice to the Faculty of
Arts. Accordingly, I anticipate that, as in the middle
ages both the teaching and the government of the
University remained in the Faculty of Arts, in spite
of the genius which created or illustrated Theology and
Law, so now too, whatever be the splendour of the
modern philosophy, the marvellousness of its disclosures,
the utility of its acquisitions, and the talent of its masters,
still it will not avail in the event, to detrude classical literature
and the studies connected with it from the place which
they have held in all ages in education.</p>
<p>
Such, then, is the course of reflection obviously suggested
by the act in which we have been lately engaged,
and which we are now celebrating. In the nineteenth
century, in a country which looks out upon a new world,
and anticipates a coming age, we have been engaged in
opening the Schools dedicated to the studies of polite
literature and liberal science, or what are called the
Arts, as a first step towards the establishment on
Catholic ground of a Catholic University. And while
we thus recur to Greece and Athens with pleasure
and affection, and recognize in that famous land the
source and the school of intellectual culture, it would be
strange indeed if we forgot to look further south also,
and there to bow before a more glorious luminary, and
a more sacred oracle of truth, and the source of another
sort of knowledge, high and supernatural, which is
seated in Palestine. Jerusalem is the fountain-head of
religious knowledge, as Athens is of secular. In the
ancient world we see two centres of illumination, acting
independently of each other, each with its own movement,
and at first apparently without any promise of
convergence. Greek civilization spreads over the East,
conquering in the conquests of Alexander, and, when
carried captive into the West, subdues the conquerors who
brought it thither. Religion, on the other hand, is driven
from its own aboriginal home to the North and West by
reason of the sins of the people who were in charge of
it, in a long course of judgments and plagues and persecutions.
Each by itself pursues its career and fulfils its
mission; neither of them recognizes, nor is recognized
by the other. At length the Temple of Jerusalem is
rooted up by the armies of Titus, and the effete schools
of Athens are stifled by the edict of Justinian. So pass
away the ancient Voices of religion and learning; but they
are silenced only to revive more gloriously and perfectly
elsewhere. Hitherto they came from separate sources,
and performed separate works. Each leaves an heir and
successor in the West, and that heir and successor is
one and the same. The grace stored in Jerusalem, and
the gifts which radiate from Athens, are made over and
concentrated in Rome. This is true as a matter of
history. Rome has inherited both sacred and profane
learning; she has perpetuated and dispensed the
traditions of Moses and David in the supernatural order,
and of Homer and Aristotle in the natural. To separate
those distinct teachings, human and divine, which meet
in Rome, is to retrograde; it is to rebuild the Jewish
Temple and to plant anew the groves of Academus.</p>
<h3><span>6.</span></h3>
<p>
On this large subject, however, on which I might say
much, time does not allow me to enter. To show how
sacred learning and profane are dependent on each other,
correlative and mutually complementary, how faith
operates by means of reason, and reason is directed
and corrected by faith, is really the subject of a distinct
lecture. I would conclude, then, with merely congratulating
you, Gentlemen, on the great undertaking which
we have so auspiciously commenced. Whatever be its
fortunes, whatever its difficulties, whatever its delays, I
cannot doubt at all that the encouragement which it has
already received, and the measure of success which it
has been allotted, are but a presage and an anticipation
of a gradual advance towards its completion, in such
times and such manner as Providence shall appoint.
For myself, I have never had any misgiving about it,
because I had never known anything of it before the
time when the Holy See had definitely decided upon its
prosecution. It is my happiness to have no cognizance
of the anxieties and perplexities of venerable and holy
prelates, or the discussions of experienced and prudent
men, which preceded its definitive recognition on the
part of the highest ecclesiastical authority. It is my
happiness to have no experience of the time when good
Catholics despaired of its success, distrusted its expediency,
or even felt an obligation to oppose it. It has
been my happiness that I have never been in controversy
with persons in this country external to the
Catholic Church, nor have been forced into any direct
collision with institutions or measures which rest on a
foundation hostile to Catholicism. No one can accuse
me of any disrespect towards those whose principles or
whose policy I disapprove; nor am I conscious of any
other aim than that of working in my own place, without
going out of my way to offend others. If I have taken
part in the undertaking which has now brought us together,
it has been because I believed it was a great
work, great in its conception, great in its promise, and
great in the authority from which it proceeds. I felt it
to be so great that I did not dare to incur the responsibility
of refusing to take part in it.</p>
<p>
How far indeed, and how long, I am to be connected
with it, is another matter altogether. It is enough for
one man to lay only one stone of so noble and grand an
edifice; it is enough, more than enough for me, if I do
so much as merely begin, what others may more hopefully
continue. One only among the sons of men has
carried out a perfect work, and satisfied and exhausted
the mission on which He came. One alone has with
His last breath said <span class="tei tei-q">“Consummatum est.”</span> But all who
set about their duties in faith and hope and love, with a
resolute heart and a devoted will, are able, weak though
they be, to do what, though incomplete, is imperishable.
Even their failures become successes, as being necessary
steps in a course, and as terms (so to say) in a long
series, which will at length fulfil the object which they
propose. And they will unite themselves in spirit, in
their humble degree, with those real heroes of Holy
Writ and ecclesiastical history, Moses, Elias, and David,
Basil, Athanasius, and Chrysostom, Gregory the Seventh,
St. Thomas of Canterbury, and many others,
who did most when they fancied themselves least
prosperous, and died without being permitted to see
the fruit of their labours.</p>
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