24 April 2024

St Louis IX, Crusader King of France

Today is the 810th anniversary of St Louis's birth.

Saint Louis IX, King of France: Wisdom and Justice


a reading from Jean of Joinville's Life of Saint Louis IX of France.

The Seventh Crusade


This is a concise overview of King Saint Louis IX of France's crusade to capture Egypt, known to historians as the Seventh Crusade.

The Crusades of Saint Louis IX of France


A full documentary dealing with the Crusades of Saint Louis IX, King of France, which were major events in medieval history.

St. Louis, King of France, a Truly Catholic King


I found this excellent text and story of St. Louis, King of France, who truly was a Catholic King. The text comes from 1875 (public domain). You can read more from Mary Seymour here: https://www.google.com/books/edition/...

Last Words of Saint Louis IX, King of France, 1270


King Louis IX, a saint and King of France, is well known for his exploits in the Crusades. He was also one of the most respected, trusted rulers of the thirteenth century. Here we take a look at his last words as he lay dying during the Eighth Crusade, left to his son, Philip III of France. This testament is found in Jean of Joinville's Life of Saint Louis.

Rogation Days

Some information on the Major Rogation (today) and the Minor Rogations (the three days before Ascension Day).

From FishEaters


April 25 and the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday before Ascension Thursday are known as "Rogation Days," with April 25 being the "Major Rogation," and the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday before Ascension Thursday -- "Rogationtide" -- being the "Minor Rogation."

"Rogation" comes from the Latin "rogare," which means "to ask," and Rogation Days are days during which we seek to ask God's mercy, appease His anger, avert the chastisements He makes manifest through natural disasters, and ask for His blessings, particularly with regard to farming, gardening, and other agricultural pursuits. They are set aside to remind us how radically dependent we are on God through His creation, and how prayer can help protect us from nature's often cruel ways.  Hence, its mood is somber and beseeching; its liturgical color is purple.

It is quite easy, especially for modern city folk, to sentimentalize nature and to forget how powerful, even savage, she can be. Time is spent focusing only on her lovelier aspects -- the beauty of snow, the smell of cedar, the glories of flowers -- as during Embertides -- but in an instant, the veneer of civilization we've built to keep nature under control so we can enjoy her without suffering at her hand can be swept away. Ash and fire raining down from great volcanoes; waters bursting through levees; mountainous tidal waves destroying miles of coastland and entire villages; meteors hurling to earth; tornadoes and hurricanes sweeping away all in their paths; droughts; floods; fires that rampage through forests and towns; avalanches of rocks or snow; killer viruses and plagues; the very earth shaking off human life and opening up beneath our feet; cataclysmic events forming mountains and islands; animals that prey on humans; lightning strikes; great swarms of locusts that devastate food supplies and cause famine -- these, too, are a part of the natural world. And though nature seems random and fickle, all that happens is either by God's active or passive Will, and all throughout Scripture He uses the elements to warn, punish, humble, and instruct us: earth swallowing up the rebellious, power-mad sons of Eliab; wind destroying Job's house; fire raining down on Sodom and Gomorrha; water destroying everyone but Noe and his family (Numbers 16, Job 1, Genesis 19, Genesis 6). We need to be humble before and respectful of nature, and be aware not to take her for granted or overstep our limits. But we need to be most especially humble before her Creator, Who wills her existence and doings at each instant, whether actively or passively. Consider the awe-inspiring words of Nahum 1:2-8:
The Lord is a jealous God, and a revenger: the Lord is a revenger, and hath wrath: the Lord taketh vengeance on His adversaries, and He is angry with His enemies. The Lord is patient, and great in power, and will not cleanse and acquit the guilty. The Lord's ways are in a tempest, and a whirlwind, and clouds are the dust of His feet. He rebuketh the sea, and drieth it up: and bringeth all the rivers to be a desert. Basan languisheth and Carmel: and the dower of Libanus fadeth away. The mountains tremble at Him, and the hills are made desolate: and the earth hath quaked at His presence, and the world, and all that dwell therein.

Who can stand before the face of His indignation? and who shall resist in the fierceness of His anger? His indignation is poured out like fire: and the rocks are melted by Him. The Lord is good and giveth strength in the day of trouble: and knoweth them that hope in Him. But with a flood that passeth by, He will make an utter end of the place thereof: and darkness shall pursue His enemies.
Recalling these Truths, beseeching God and His Saints to protect us from disaster, and doing penance so He does not see us as His enemies are what Rogation Days are about. These days are divided between the Major Rogation -- 25 April (by coincidence alone, the Feast of St. Mark) -- and the Minor Rogation, which consists of the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday before Ascension Thursday.

The Major Rogation is of Roman origin, instituted by Pope St. Gregory the Great (b. 540) after a great plague besieged Rome. The Golden Legend, written by Jacobus de Voragine in 1275 explains:
For as the Romans had in the Lent lived soberly and in continence, and after at Easter had received their Saviour. After, they disordered them in eating, in drinking, in plays and in lechery. And therefore our Lord was moved against them, and sent to them a great pestilence, which was called the botche of impedimy. And that was cruel and sudden, and caused people to die in going by the way, in playing, in being at table, and in speaking one with another suddenly they died. In this manner sometime sneezing they died, so that when any person was heard sneezing anon they that were by said to him: God help you, or Christ help: and yet endureth the custom. And also when he sneezeth or gapeth, he maketh tofore his face the sign of the Cross, and blesseth him; and yet endureth this custom.
The Minor Rogation Days -- Rogationtide -- are of French origin, coming about in the 5th c., when St. Mamertus, Bishop of Vienne, Dauphiné instituted them after a series of natural calamities. According to the Golden Legend:
For then, at Vienne, were great earthquakes of which fell down many churches and many houses, and there was heard great sounds and great clamours by night. And then happed a terrible thing on Easter-day, for fire descended from heaven that burnt the king's palace. Yet happed more marvellous thing; for like as the fiends had entered into the hogs, right so by the sufferance of God for the sins of the people, the fiends entered into wolves and other wild beasts, which every one doubted, and they went not only by the ways ne by the fields, but also by the cities ran openly, and devoured the children and old men and women. And when the Bishop saw that every day happed such sorrowful adventures, he commanded and ordained that the people should fast three days; and he instituted the Litanies, and then the tribulation ceased.
Pope St. Leo III -- the Pope who crowned Charlemagne on Christmas Day of 800 -- introduced these days of penance into Rome in 816, the year of his death, after which they became standard throughout the Roman Church.

The liturgy for the Rogation Days, during which the priest is vested in purple, begins with Psalm 43:26 --"Arise, O Lord, help us and redeem us for Thy name's sake" -- which is followed by the Litany of the Saints. At the Litany's "Sancta Maria," all stand and a procession begins, which in older times was (and still is in rural areas) usually around the boundaries of the parish, giving to the procession the name of "beating the bounds."

The Litany is followed by Psalm 69, a series of petitions, and the Mass, with readings from James 5:16-20 and Luke 11:5-14. Prayer for God's blessing of farmers' fields so that they yield a bountiful harvest is common.

Just for informational purposes, here is what the Rogation Days' processions were like in medieval times, again from the Golden Legend. How marvelous!:
And in this procession the Cross is borne, the clocks and the bells be sounded and rung, the banners be borne, and in some churches a dragon with a great tail is borne. And aid and help is demanded of all Saints.

And the cause why the Cross is borne and the bells rung is for to make the evil spirits afraid and to flee; for like as the kings have in battles tokens and signs-royal, as their trumpets and banners, right so the King of Heaven perdurable hath His signs militant in the Church. He hath bells for business and for trumps, He hath the Cross for banners. And like as a tyrant and a malefactor should much doubt when he shall hear the business and trumps of a mighty king in his land, and shall see his banners, in like wise the enemies, the evil spirits that be in the region of the air, doubt much when they hear the trumpets of God which be the bells rung, and when they see the banners borne on high. And this is the cause why the bells be rung when it thundereth, and when great tempests and outrages of weather happen, to the end that the fiends and the evil spirits should be abashed and flee, and cease of the moving of tempests. Howbeit also that there is another cause therewith; that is for to warn the Christian people, that they put them in devotion and in prayer, for to pray God that the tempest may cease.

There is also the banner of the King, that is the Cross, which the enemies dread much and doubt. For they dread the staff with which they have been hurt. And this is the reason wherefore in some churches in the time of tempest and of thunder, they set out the Cross against the tempest to the end that the wicked spirits see the banner of the sovereign King, and for dread thereof they flee. And therefore in procession the Cross is borne, and the bells rung for to chase and hunt away the fiends being in the air, and to the end that they leave to tempest us. The Cross is borne for to represent the victory of the Resurrection, and of the Ascension of Jesu Christ. For He ascended into Heaven with all a great prey. And thus this banner that flyeth in the air signifieth Jesu Christ ascending into Heaven.

And as the people follow the Cross, the banners, and the procession, right so when Jesu Christ styed up into Heaven a great multitude of Saints followed Him. And the song that is sung in the procession signifieth the song of angels and the praisings that came against Jesu Christ and conducted and conveyed Him to Heaven where is great joy and melody.

In some churches, and in especial in them of France, is accustomed to bear a dragon with a long tail filled full of chaff or other thing. The two first days it is borne before the Cross, and on the third day they bear it after the Cross, with the tail all void, by which is understood that the first day tofore the law, or the second under the law, the devil reigned in the world, and on the third day, of grace, by the Passion of Jesu Christ, he was put out of his realm.

Dom Gueranger, in his work on the liturgical year, describes the processions as well, and who would march in them:
The main part of the Rogation rite originally consisted, (at least in Gaul) in singing canticles of supplication whilst passing from place to place, -- and hence the word Procession. We learn from St. Casesarius of Aries, that each day's Procession lasted six hours ; and that when the Clergy became tired, the women took up the chanting. The Faithful of those days had not made the discovery, which was reserved for modern times, that one requisite for religious Processions is that they be as short as possible.

The Procession for the Rogation Days was preceded by the Faithful receiving the Ashes upon their heads, as now at the beginning of Lent ; they were then sprinkled with Holy Water, and the Procession began. It was made up of the Clergy and people of several of the smaller parishes, who were headed by the Cross of the principal Church, which conducted the whole ceremony. All walked bare-foot, singing the Litany, Psalms and Antiphons. They entered the Churches that lay on their route, and sang an Antiphon or Pesponsory appropriate to each.

Such was the original ceremony of the Rogation Days, and it was thus observed for a very long period. The Monk of St. Grail's, who has left us so many interesting details regarding the life of Charlemagne, tells us that this holy Emperor used to join the Processions of these three Days, and walk bare-footed from his palace to the Stational Church. We find St. Elizabeth of Hungary, in the 14th century, setting the like example : during the Rogation Days, she used to mingle with the poorest women of the place, and walked bare-footed, wearing a dress of coarse stuff.

St. Charles Borromeo, who restored in his Diocese of Milan so many ancient practices of piety, was sure not to be indifferent about the Rogation Days. He spared neither word nor example to re-animate this salutary devotion among his people. He ordered fasting to be observed during these three Days; he fasted himself on bread and water. The Procession, in which all the Clergy of the City were obliged to join, and which began after the sprinkling of Ashes, started from the Cathedral at an early hour in the morning, and was not over till three or four o'clock in the afternoon. Thirteen Churches were visited on the Monday; nine, on the Tuesday; and eleven, on the Wednesday. The saintly Archbishop celebrated Mass and preached in one of these Churches.



Customs

In addition to the penance, fasting, processions and Masses mentioned above, all done to appease God's anger and avoid His chastisements, meditating on how devastating natural forces can be is in order. We are usually so buffered from the natural world with our cozy, modern homes, air conditioning, ability to fly through the air from Chicago to Paris in hours, and other wonders, that we can easily sentimentalize nature and see her in a Rousseauian way -- taking her for granted, being condescending toward her, and exhibiting masterful instead of masterly behaviors in our dealings with her. It is rare that nature breaches in cataclysmic ways the walls of civilization and technology we've set up around us, but breach them she can, and does, and this reality must be appreciated.

Tell your children about how the elements can escape our control, and how we should remember our place as those who've been given dominion over nature, but never apart from God -- something modern scientists arrogantly forget as a group. Tell them about some of the great disasters that have fascinated and frightened us throughout History -- e.g., the stories of Pompeii and Herculaneum, the Black Death, the London Fire of 1666, the great early 19th c. earthquakes along the New Madrid fault line that reversed the course of the Mississippi River, the Chicago Fire of 1871, the 1883 explosion of Krakatoa, the Yellow River Floods of 1887 and 1931, the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918 that killed many millions... Tell them stories, including fictional ones, about how science unmoored from theology and divorced from humility can wreak havoc -- e.g., the story of Mao Tse Tung's "Four Pests" program to eradicate mosquitoes, flies, rats, and sparrows and how it all led to the starvation of millions; the story of Frankenstein's monster, the fate of the "unsinkable" Titanic, etc. Teach them to have a fundamental humility before God, and a respect and love for His creation.
See also pages on Ember Days.



Reading

Jeremias 10-11:1-6
Hear ye the word which the Lord hath spoken concerning you, O house of Israel. Thus saith the Lord: Learn not according to the ways of the Gentiles: and be not afraid of the signs of heaven, which the heathens fear: For the laws of the people are vain: for the works of the hand of the workman hath cut a tree out of the forest with an axe. He hath decked it with silver and gold: he hath put it together with nails and hammers, that it may not fall asunder. They are framed after the likeness of a palm tree, and shall not speak: they must be carried to be removed, because they cannot go. Therefore, fear them not, for they can neither do evil nor good.

There is none like to thee, O Lord: thou art great and great is thy name in might. Who shall fear thee, O king of nations? for thine is the glory: among all the wise men of the nations, and in all their kingdoms there is none like unto thee. They shall all proved together to be senseless and foolish: the doctrine of their vanity is wood. Silver spread into plates is brought from Tharsis, and gold from Ophaz: the work of the artificer, and of the hand of the coppersmith: violet and purple is their clothing: all these things are the work of artificers. But the Lord is the true God: he is the living God, and the everlasting king, at his wrath the earth shall tremble, and the nations shall not be able to abide his threatening.

Thus then shall you say to them: The gods that have not made heaven and earth, let them perish from the earth, and from among those places that are under heaven. He that maketh the earth by his power, that prepareth the world by his wisdom, and stretcheth out the heavens by his knowledge. At his voice he giveth a multitude of waters in the heaven, and lifteth up the clouds from the ends of the earth: he maketh lightnings for rain, and bringeth for the wind out of his treasures. Every man is become a fool for knowledge every artist is confounded in his graven idol: for what he hath cast is false, and there is no spirit in them. They are vain things and a ridiculous work: in the time of their visitation they shall perish.

The portion of Jacob is not like these: for it is he who formed all things: and Israel is the rod of his inheritance: the Lord of hosts is his name. Gather up thy shame out of the land, thou that dwellest in a siege. For thus saith the Lord: Behold I will cast away far off the inhabitants of the land at this time: and I will afflict them, so that they may be found. Woe is me for my destruction, my wound is very grievous. But I said: Truly this is my own evil, and I will bear it. My tabernacle is laid waste, all my cords are broken: my children are gone out from me, and they are not: there is none to stretch forth my tent any more, and to set up my curtains.

Because the pastors have done foolishly, and have not sought the Lord: therefore have they not understood, and all their flock is scattered. Behold the sound of a noise cometh, a great commotion out of the land of the north: to make the cities of Juda a desert, and a dwelling for dragons. I know, O Lord, that the way of a man is not his: neither is it in a man to walk, and to direct his steps. Correct me, O Lord, but yet with judgement: and not in fury, lest thou bring me to nothing. Pour out thy indignation upon the nations that have not known thee, and upon the provinces that have not called upon thy name: because they have eaten up Jacob, and devoured him, and consumed him, and have destroyed his glory.

The word that came from the Lord to Jeremias, saying: Hear ye the words of this covenant, and speak to the men of Juda, and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, And thou shalt say to them: Thus saith the Lord the God of Israel: Cursed is the man that shall not hearken to the words of this covenant, Which I commanded your fathers in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, from the iron furnace, saying: Hear ye my voice, and do all things that I command you: and you shall be my people, and I will be your God: That I may accomplish the oath which I swore to your fathers, to give them a land flowing with milk and honey, as it is this day. And I answered and said: Amen, O Lord.

And the Lord said to me: Proclaim aloud all these words in the cities of Juda, and in the streets of Jerusalem, saying: Hear ye the words of the covenant, and do them...

Shakespeare and Science

Mr Pearce looks at the lack of understanding on the part of a 'scientist' in examining Shakespeare's depictions of death in his plays.


 

From The Imaginative Conservative

By Joseph Pearce

Those who read as Shakespeare wrote, seeing the facts in the light of the truth they serve, will be servants of that greater science animated by a love of wisdom (philosophy) and of the greatest of all sciences which leads to a knowledge of God (theology). Those who read reality in this way are never satisfied with the mere facts because they seek the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

One of the most beguiling of Chesterton’s aphorisms is his insistence that we should not put facts first but truth first. As with Christ’s paradoxical axiom that the first shall be last and the last shall be first, Chesterton’s paradox would appear to be blatantly self-contradictory and therefore patently absurd. Facts are true and the truth is a fact. Chesterton is, therefore, an (oxy)moron. Similarly, and blasphemously, the first is not last and the last is not first, which makes Christ an (oxy)moron also. The problem is not with the apparent oxymoronic nature of the paradoxes, however, but in the inability of the reader to see the paradoxical truth which transcends the mere literal “facts”. A paradox is an apparent contradiction that points to a deeper truth.

Pride is putting ourselves first and others last. Love is putting others first and ourselves last. It is in this sense that the first shall be last, and the last first. He who puts himself first shall be last in the kingdom of heaven. He who puts himself last shall be first.

Facts, in the sense in which Chesterton uses the word in the aforementioned axiom, are literal whereas the truth is only accessible allegorically. Thus, for instance, we will not be understanding the Bible if we remain stuck with the facts and the facts alone. This must be insisted upon. Those who read the Bible only literally are not really reading it at all. As Thomas Aquinas reminds us, there are four levels of meaning in Scripture. The first level is the literal level, the facts being presented. Then there is the allegorical level, in which the Old Testament can only be understood in the light of the New Testament. Next is the moral level in which what we read is applicable to our own lives and situations, and those of our neighbours. Finally, there is the anagogical level of meaning in which what we read in the Bible relates to eternity in general and our own eternal destiny in particular. Since the literal level of meaning (the facts) is a means of pointing to deeper truths, we can say, with Chesterton, that we must not put facts first but truth first, in the sense that the former are the means by which the end is attained.

The foregoing is an explanatory preamble to the critical blindness of the so-called “scientific” approach to truth exemplified in a recent book, Death by Shakespeare by Kathryn Harkup, a British chemist who undertakes to explain what Shakespeare got wrong in his depiction of death in his plays. “He’s good at observation, but without necessarily understanding the science of what’s going on,” Dr. Harkup said in a recent talk at the Cheltenham Science Festival in Gloucestershire. “But he is not making a science documentary. He is entertaining his audience.” We might add that he is also telling the truth, as well as merely entertaining his audience, which means that he puts the scientific facts at the service of truth.

Take, for instance, the murder of Hamlet’s father. According to Dr. Harkup, the facts of his death display a lack of scientific knowledge on Shakespeare’s part which made his murder “unrealistic”:

Hamlet and the poisoning — I have big issues with this. If you want to get rid of your brother, don’t poison them by pouring stuff in their ear. That is a terrible idea. There’s not many blood vessels around that part of you. Your ear is protected with cartilage, thick skin, wax — getting the poison to be absorbed into the body properly to do the damage is not really going to work.

This is all very amusing, indicative of Dr. Harkup’s own commendable ability to entertain her audience and readership, but is she being fair to Shakespeare? Irrespective of whether he had a firm grasp of all the scientific facts with respect to the anatomy of the ear, he would surely have been aware that pouring poison into the ear is not a very efficient or effective way of killing people. People had been killing each other for thousands of years by the time that Shakespeare was writing Hamlet. He would presumably have been as aware as the rest of us that the ministering of poison to the ear was not a tried and tested method of killing someone. He chose this unusual method, using poetic licence and expecting his audience to suspend their disbelief, because the poisoning of the ear is a major theme of the whole play. It is the poisoning of the ear by lies and deception which is the main cause of death in the play. The ministering of poison to the ear is indeed deadly. It has killed millions of people in the past and will continue to kill millions of people in the future. Sin is the poison which manifests itself throughout Hamlet, of which the poisoning of Hamlet’s father was but a metaphor.

Another example that Dr. Harkup cites is that of Cleopatra. In Antony and Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen chooses an asp to end her life because its venom “kills and pains not” and will make her die “at once”. “She wants two things from this death,” Dr. Harkup explains. “She wants a painless death. And she wants to make an attractive corpse.”

Presuming that the asp was probably a cobra, considering that the action of the play is taking place in Egypt, Dr. Harkup explains that any death caused by a cobra bite would be very painful and would not be instant, nor would it leave the corpse looking especially attractive. This is all impeccably accurate in terms of the facts but is not a reflection of the truth that Shakespeare is conveying. The asp is nothing as mundane as a mere cobra or any other species of snake. It represents that other serpent which tempted Eve in the Garden.

Let’s look at the facts surrounding Cleopatra’s selfish act of self-destruction in order to see the deeper truth to which they point. She kills herself in spite of Caesar’s warning that he would kill her own children should she commit suicide. Her act of self-slaughter is, therefore, a slaughter of the innocents. She chooses a serpent as the means by which she will take her own life, connecting the play’s final scene to the Book of Genesis, because its venom “kills and pains not”. Cleopatra chooses her own comfort in death as she had chosen it in life. She is the antithesis of the Christian who is called to accept and embrace suffering by taking up his cross and following Christ. “Peace, peace!” she proclaims as she holds the serpent to her chest. “Dost thou not see my baby at my breast that sucks the nurse asleep?”

Lest we should fail to connect the fall of Cleopatra with the fall of Eve, Shakespeare has the Guard report that the serpent had left a trail of slime on “these fig leaves”, indicating clear proof of the means by which she had died. In making this final biblical allusion, we are invited to see Cleopatra as more than merely a tragic heroine from ancient history but as a representative of fallen Eve and, by extension, our representative also. She is an Everyman figure. She is who we are and who we are doomed to be if we will not accept the redemption offered by Christ.

Such emergent truths are the living splendour of Shakespeare’s works, transcending the literal level of meaning grounded in the mere facts of the plot.

Those who read as Shakespeare wrote, seeing the facts in the light of the truth they serve, will be servants of that greater science animated by a love of wisdom (philosophy) and of the greatest of all sciences which leads to a knowledge of God (theology). Those who read reality in this way are never satisfied with the mere facts because they seek the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

The featured image is the Chesterfield Portrait of William Shakespeare (c. 1679) by Pieter Borsseler, and is in the public domain, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

MM Video: Vietnamese Imperial Family

A collection of pictures of the rightful Emperor of Vietnam and the Imperial Family.

From The Mad Monarchist (23 October 2011)


The current Vietnamese Imperial Family, a branch of the Nguyen Dynasty, descends from the Emperor Dong Khanh, the father of Emperor Khai Dinh, the father of the last Emperor Bao Dai. After returning to his throne in Vietnam Bao Dai married the Empress Nam Phuong and had five children. They later separated and Empress Nam Phuong died in 1963. He then married a French woman. His eldest son and heir Prince Imperiale Bao Long never had children. On his death the head of the family became his younger brother Prince Bao Thang.

Bishop Challoner's Meditations - Thursday After the Third Sunday

ON MORNING PRAYER

Consider first, that every servant of God ought to begin the day with the worship of God, and to give him his heart, as the wise man says, Eccles. xxxix. 6, and to resort early to the Lord that made him, and pour forth his prayer in the sight of the Most High. The manna of heaven melted away and was lost, if the people of God did not get up before the sun to gather it: 'that it might be known to all men,’ says Solomon, Wisdom xvi. 28, 'that we must prevent the sun to bless God, and worship him at the dawning of the light.’ ‘O God, my God' says the royal prophet, Psal. lxii., 'to thee do I watch at the break of day.’ My soul, see thou never neglect this morning worship of thy God. Let not the devil run away with thy first thoughts, but give them to God, by a pure and perfect offering of thy whole self to his love and service for that day and for all eternity, and whilst thou art rising and dressing thyself, keep thyself in his company and speak to him.

Consider 2ndly, what are the particular acts of virtue and religion that ought to be the ingredients of thy morning prayer, viz.: 1. An act of adoration of the infinite majesty of God, and of homage to him, by bowing down both body and soul to worship him with all thy powers, as thy first beginning and thy last end, and to acknowledge his absolute sovereignty, and thy total dependence on him. 2. An act of thanksgiving for all his benefits in general, and in particular to thee and to all the world; for creation, preservation, redemption, vocation to the true faith, &c., as also for his eternal love, and, in consequence of this love, his bringing thee to the beginning of this new day, in order to bring thee forward to the happy day of eternity. 3. An act of contrition, for all thy past ingratitude, and for all thy sins, with a sincere resolution of renouncing them all for the future. 4. An offering of all thy thoughts, words, and actions of the day, to the honour and glory of God; and of thy whole soul, to be employed in loving and serving him. 5. An humble and fervent supplication, to beg the grace of God and his blessing for thyself and for the whole church, that he would keep all from sin, and teach all effectually to love him and serve him for ever. 6. Conclude always with acts of faith, hope, and charity, and recommend thyself to the prayers and protection of the blessed Virgin, of thy good angel, and of all the angels and glorified saints.

Consider 3rdly, that thou must also remember, in thy morning exercise, to declare war against thy customary failings and sins, but more especially against thy predominant passion, which is the most dangerous of all thy enemies. This is that daily warfare in which all of necessity must be engaged who have a mind to save their souls - we must all fight, and fight continually, against our vices and passions, or they will carry us to hell. Now, this it is that obliges us to renew every morning our good resolutions, yet without trusting at all in ourselves; and to arm and prepare ourselves beforehand for these conflicts, by forecasting the occasions and temptations we are likely to meet with in the day and by concluding upon the measures proper to be taken in order to overcome them, either by flight, or fight, but principally by fervent prayer to our Lord, to help us in the combat, and to grant us the victory.

Conclude to be ever diligent in this morning exercise. A good beginning of the day is a great matter. He will have the whole day to whom thou givest the beginning of it.

25 April, Antonio, Cardinal Bacci: Meditations For Each Day

Word and Example

1. There is great power in the spoken word. It can act like a ray of light upon the mind of a man groping about in the darkness of error. It can present a moving appeal to a sinner to return to God. It can comfort the soul in affliction and in loneliness. Good example, however, is even more powerful than speech. At times it can be irresistible. A man can remain deaf to good advice, but it is difficult for him to remain unaffected by the virtuous behaviour and spirit of sacrifice of someone who is trying to lead him towards goodness. The sermons of the Saints were effective not only because they were inspired by love for God and for souls, but also because they were reinforced by the holiness of the preachers. St. Augustine was converted by the pleadings and prayers of St. Monica, but apart from the grace of God it was the example of his mother's sanctity which made her exhortations so convincing. It was as much by the example of his untiring zeal as by the simplicity of his sermons that the Cure d'Ars converted thousands upon thousands of people. St. Francis de Sales would never have converted so many heretics if his apostolic personality had not possessed such a quality of supernatural attractiveness. Let us do as much good as we can by means of speech whenever the opportunity arises, but above all let us make sure that our lives reflect faithfully the principles which we proclaim. This is the only way in which we shall be able to lead our fellow-men to God.

2. Good example is the most effective sermon, and we are all obliged to preach in this fashion. God entrusted the care of his neighbour to each one of us. (Ecclus. 17:12) Each of us is responsible for the salvation of those who have been entrusted to him in this way, especially for the salvation of those who live near him and are influenced by his behaviour. Jesus' exhortations in this regard have the force of a command. “Let your light shine before men,” He says, “in order that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven.” (Mt. 5:16) St. Paul urges us to “provide good things not only in the sight of God, but also in the sight of all men.” (Cf. Rom. 12:17) This must not be interpreted as meaning that we should be anxious for others to see our good deeds in order that they may respect and praise us. It is our own undoing if our good example is tainted with ostentation, for we should lose all merit for it and should deserve to hear the words of the Eternal Judge: “You have received your reward.” (Cf. Mt. 6:5) Our good example should be inspired only by the love of God and of our neighbour but never by self-love.

3. We should give good example everywhere and in every way, at home and in the church, in the company of those who are subordinate to us and of those who have authority over us, in speech and in dress, by moderation in our eating habits and in the furnishings of our house, by the pictures which we hang in our rooms and by the books and magazines which we read. We should be particularly careful to keep in safe custody those books and journals which are necessary to us for purposes of study but could be an occasion of sin for others. Our whole demeanour should radiate goodness. Let us remember the words of St. James: “He who causes a sinner to be brought back from his misguided way, will save his soul from death, and will cover a multitude of sins.” (James 5:20) By saving the souls of others we save our own.

Eastern Rite - Feasts of 25 April AM 7532

Today is the Feast of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist Mark.
✠✠✠✠✠

The Holy Apostle and Evangelist Mark, also known as John Mark (Acts 12:12), was one of the Seventy Apostles and was also a nephew of Saint Barnabas (June 11). He was born in Jerusalem. The house of his mother Mary adjoined the Garden of Gethsemane. As Church Tradition relates, on the night that Christ was betrayed he followed after Him, wrapped only in a linen cloth. He was seized by soldiers, and fled away naked, leaving the cloth behind (Mark 14:51-52). After the Ascension of the Lord, the house of his mother Mary became a place where Christians gathered, and a place of lodging for some of the Apostles (Acts 12:12).

Saint Mark was a very close companion of the Apostles Peter and Paul (June 29) and Barnabas. Saint Mark was at Seleucia with Paul and Barnabas, and from there he set off to the island of Cyprus, and he traversed the whole of it from east to west. In the city of Paphos, Saint Mark witnessed the blinding of the sorcerer Elymas by Saint Paul (Acts 13:6-12).

After working with the Apostle Paul, Saint Mark returned to Jerusalem and then went to Rome with the Apostle Peter. From there, he set out for Egypt, where he established a local Church.

Saint Mark met Saint Paul in Antioch. From there he went with Saint Barnabas to Cyprus, and then he went to Egypt again, where he and Saint Peter founded many churches. Then he went to Babylon. From this city the Apostle Peter sent an Epistle to the Christians of Asia Minor, in which he calls Saint Mark his son (1 Pet 5:13).

When the Apostle Paul came to Rome in chains, Saint Mark was at Ephesus, where Saint Timothy (January 22) was bishop. Saint Mark went with him to Rome. There he also wrote his holy Gospel (ca. 62-63).

From Rome, Saint Mark travelled to Egypt. In Alexandria, he started a Christian school, which later produced such famous Fathers and teachers of the Church as Clement of Alexandria, Saint Dionysius of Alexandria (October 5), Saint Gregory Thaumaturgus (November 5), and others. Zealous for Church services, Saint Mark composed a Liturgy for the Christians of Alexandria.

Saint Mark preached the Gospel in the inner regions of Africa, and he was in Libya at Nektopolis.

During these journeys, Saint Mark was inspired by the Holy Spirit to go again to Alexandria and confront the pagans. There he visited the home of Ananias and healed his crippled hand. The dignitary happily took him in, listened to his words, and received Baptism.

Following the example of Ananias, many of the inhabitants of that part of the city where he lived were also baptized. This aroused the enmity of the pagans, and they wanted to kill Saint Mark. Having learned of this, Saint Mark made Ananias a bishop, and the three Christians Malchos, Sabinos, and Kerdinos were ordained presbyters to provide the church with leadership after his death.

The pagans seized Saint Mark when he was serving the Liturgy. They beat him, dragged him through the streets and threw him in prison. There Saint Mark was granted a vision of the Lord Jesus Christ, Who strengthened him before his sufferings. On the following day, the angry crowd again dragged the saint through the streets to the courtroom, but along the way Saint Mark died saying, “Into Your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit.”

The pagans wanted to burn the saint’s body, but when they lit the fire, everything grew dark, thunder crashed, and there was an earthquake. The pagans fled in terror, and Christians took up the body of Saint Mark and buried it in a stone crypt. This was on April 4, 63. The Church celebrates his memory on April 25.

In the year 310, a church was built over the relics of Saint Mark. In 820, when the Muslim Jihadists had established their rule in Egypt and oppressed the Christian Church, the relics of Saint Mark were transferred to Venice and placed in the church named for him.

In the ancient iconographic tradition, which adopted symbols for the holy Evangelists borrowed from the vision of Saint John the Theologian (Rev 4:7) and the prophecy of Ezekiel (Ez. 1:10), the holy Evangelist Mark is represented by a lion, symbolizing the might and royal dignity of Christ (Rev 5:5).

Saint Mark wrote his Gospel for Gentile Christians, emphasizing the words and deeds of the Savior which reveal His divine Power. Many aspects of his account can be explained by his closeness to Saint Peter. The ancient writers say that the Gospel of Mark is a concise record of Saint Peter’s preaching.

One of the central theological themes in the Gospel of Saint Mark is the power of God to achieve what is humanly impossible. The Apostles performed remarkable miracles with Christ (Mark 16:20) and the Holy Spirit (Mark 13:11) working through them. His disciples were told to go into the world and preach the Gospel to all creatures (Mark 13:10, 16:15), and that is what they did.

Troparion — Tone 4

From your childhood the light of truth enlightened you, O Mark, / and you loved the labour of Christ the Savior. / Therefore, you followed Peter with zeal / and served Paul well as a fellow-labourer, / and you enlighten the world with your holy Gospel.

Kontakion — Tone 2

When you received the grace of the Spirit from on high, O Apostle, / you broke the snares of the philosophers and gathered all nations into your net, / bringing them to your Lord, O glorious Mark, / by the preaching of the divine Gospel.

IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – THE GREATER LITANIES


IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – THE GREATER LITANIES: Dom Prosper Gueranger: This day is honoured in the Liturgy by what is called Saint Mark ’ s Procession . The term, however,is not a cor...

Pictured: Woodcut illustration of Pre-Reformation processional order, c. early 16th century

IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – SAINT MARK (Evangelist)


IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – SAINT MARK (Evangelist): Dom Prosper Gueranger: The Cycle of holy mother Church brings before us today the Lion, who, together with the Man, the Ox and the Eag...

IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – THURSDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK AFTER EASTER


IN LUMINE FIDEI: 25 APRIL – THURSDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK AFTER EASTER: Dom Prosper Gueranger: The Apostles have received their mission. The Sovereign Master has bade them divide among themselves the nation...

25 April, The Chesterton Calendar

APRIL 25th
ST MARK'S DAY

The only thing still old-fashioned enough to reject miracles is the New Theology.

'Orthodoxy.'

25 April, The Holy Rule of St Benedict, Patriarch of Western Monasticism


CHAPTER LXVII. Of Brethren who are sent on a Journey

25 Apr. 25 Aug. 25 Dec.

Let the brethren who are about to be sent on a journey commend themselves to the prayers of all the brethren and of the Abbot, and at the last prayer of the Work of God let a commemoration be always made of the absent. Let the brethren that return from a journey, on the very day that they come back, lie prostrate on the floor of the Oratory at all the Canonical Hours, while the Work of God is being performed, and beg the prayers of all on account of their transgressions, in case they should perchance upon the way have seen or heard anything harmful, or fallen into idle talk. And let no one presume to relate to another what he may have seen or heard outside the Monastery; for thence arise manifold evils. If any one shall so presume, let him be subjected to the punishment prescribed by the Rule. And he shall undergo a like penalty, who dareth to leave the enclosure of the Monastery, or to go anywhere, or do anything, however trifling, without permission of the Abbot.

26 April, The Roman Martyrology


Sexto Kaléndas Maii Luna décima séptima Anno Dómini 2024

April 26th 2024, the 17th day of the Moon, were born into the better life:

At Rome, the blessed Pope Cletus. He was the second who ruled the Church after the Apostle Peter, and was crowned with martyrdom in the persecution under the Emperor Domitian.
There also the holy martyr Pope Marcellinus, who was beheaded for Christ's faith's sake, in the persecution under the Emperor Maximian, along with Claudius, Cyrinus, and Antonine, at the time when the persecution was so great that seventeen thousand Christians were crowned with martyrdom within the space of one month.
At Amasea, in Pontus, [about the year 322,] the holy martyr Basil, Bishop of that see, who gained an illustrious martyrdom under the Emperor Licinius. His body was cast into the sea, but was found by Elpidiphorus on the warning of an angel and was honourably buried.
At Braga, in Portugal, [in the first century,] the holy martyr Peter, first Bishop of that city.
At Vienne, the holy Confessor Clarence, Bishop of that see, [about the year 620.]
At Verona, holy Lucidius, Bishop of that see.
In the monastery of Centule, [in the seventh century,] the holy Confessor, the Priest Requier.
At Troyes, the holy virgin Exuperantia, [in the year 380.]
℣. And elsewhere many other holy martyrs, confessors, and holy virgins.
℟. Thanks be to God.

Meme of the Moment

Meme of the Feast

Today is the Feast of St Mark, Evangelist.

Compline

From St Thomas Aquinas Seminary. You may follow the Office at Divinum Officium.

Whodunnit? The Strange Case of Shakespeare’s Will

Shakespeare died 408 years ago today. Mr Pearce looks at the question of the 'Spiritual Will' in which his father professed the Catholic Faith.

From The Imaginative Conservative

By Joseph Pearce

William Shakespeare is a mystery. What we know about the facts of his life is outweighed by what we don’t know. His life can be likened metaphorically to a jigsaw puzzle in which most of the pieces are missing. It is no wonder, therefore, that he continues to puzzle historians.

One of the most puzzling pieces of the puzzle is the spiritual will and testament of John Shakespeare, the poet’s father, which had been discovered in 1757 and has been the cause of controversy ever since. Most recently, Matthew Steggle has argued in the Shakespeare Quarterly that “John Shakespeare’s ‘Spiritual Testament’ Is Not John Shakespeare’s”. On the contrary, he argues, it was not written and/or signed by Shakespeare’s father but by the poet’s sister, Joan Hart.

Before we consider the evidence that Professor Steggle presents, let’s look at the history of the contested document, in which the signatory, be it the poet’s father or sister, affirms a devout and unequivocal belief in the doctrines of the Catholic faith.

In 1930, the Shakespearean scholar, E.K. Chambers, published William Shakespeare: A Study of Facts and Problems, in which he affirmed the genuineness of John Shakespeare’s spiritual will in the face of earlier suggestions that it had been a forgery.[i] Four years later, G.B. Harrison, another eminent Elizabethan and Jacobean scholar, best known for his edition of Shakespeare’s works (1952), concluded cautiously that “Shakespeare’s family was apparently Catholic” and that, therefore, “it follows that Shakespeare was brought up in the old faith”.[ii] Then, in 1946, John Henry de Groot, in his work of groundbreaking scholarship, The Shakespeares and “The Old Faith”, asserted that the spiritual will “offers strong evidence that John Shakespeare was a Catholic throughout his life, and that his household was infused with the spirit of the old Faith”.[iii]

The spiritual will was discovered in 1757, as we have said, during renovation of the house in which Shakespeare had been born almost two hundred years earlier. During the retiling of the roof, the builder, Joseph Mosely, noticed a small, handwritten booklet wedged between the tiling and the rafters. Mosely kept the curious document for many years but eventually, on June 8, 1784, he passed it to Edmond Malone, the most prominent Shakespearian scholar of the time. “I have taken some pains to ascertain the authenticity of this manuscript,” wrote Malone, “and after a very careful inquiry am perfectly satisfied that it is genuine.”[iv] He continues:

The writer, John Shakespeare, calls it his Will; but it is rather a declaration of his faith and pious resolutions … It is proper to observe that the finder of this relique bore the character of a very honest, sober, and industrious man, and that he neither asked nor received any price for it; and I may also add that its contents are such as no one could have thought of inventing with a view to literary imposition.[v]

As for the spiritual will itself, it demonstrates John Shakespeare’s Catholic bona fides and itemizes his earnest desire to die a Catholic, in good faith and conscience. Item IV is particularly striking for its enunciation of his desire that he should receive the last rites of the Church, and his hope that the desire for the last rites should suffice should there be no priest to administer the sacrament at his moment of death. In the time of persecution in which John Shakespeare was living it was a crime, punishable by death, to harbour a priest in one’s home. It was, therefore, very possible that no priest would be available for the Catholic in extremis. It is in the spirit of this gloom of persecution, with the cloud of unknowing looming overhead, that John Shakespeare’s defiant desire for the last rites should be read:

I John Shakspear do protest that I will also pass out of this life, armed with the last sacrament of extreme unction: the which if through any let or hindrance I should not then be able to have, I do now also for that time demand and crave the same; beseeching his divine majesty that he will be pleased to anoint my senses both internal and external with the sacred oil of his infinite mercy, and to pardon me all my sins committed by seeing, speaking, feeling, smelling, hearing, touching, or by any other way whatsoever.

Item IX of the spiritual will renders “infinite thanks” to God for all the benefits he has received including “Vocation to the holy knowledge of him and his true Catholic faith”, and Item X invokes the Communion of Saints with the Blessed Virgin named as the “chief Executress” of the will.

The mystery surrounding John Shakespeare’s spiritual will was deepened in 1923, when Herbert Thurston, S.J., found, in the British Museum, a Spanish version of a spiritual testament which corresponded, phrase for phrase, from the middle of Item III to the end, with the spiritual will of John Shakespeare. Printed in Mexico City in 1661 it was entitled “The Testament or Last Will of the Soul” and was ascribed to St. Charles Borromeo. Father Thurston subsequently discovered another Spanish version of the “Testament”, dating before 1690, and a version in the Romansch dialect that had been printed in Switzerland in 1741, both of which also ascribe authorship to St. Charles Borromeo, the Cardinal Archbishop of Milan who died in 1584.

How does this trail of manuscripts, stretching across two centuries and three thousand miles, connect with Shakespeare’s father? It has been suggested by several scholars that the connection is St. Charles Borromeo himself, via the Jesuit missionaries to England, Edmund Campion and Robert Persons.

If St. Charles Borromeo was the original author of the document, as ascribed to him by the printed editions of it discovered by Father Thurston, it seems reasonable to assume that it would have been written between 1576 and 1578 when the plague struck Milan, killing an estimated 17,000 people. In such circumstances it would have been impossible for priests to hear the confessions and give the last rites to all the dying. The “Testament” would, therefore, have been written as a “spiritual insurance policy”, asserting the person’s desire for the sacrament of extreme unction, and serving as a “confession of desire” in the absence of a priest. The saintly Shepherd, Charles Borromeo, would be supplying his sickly sheep with a standard formula by which they could prepare themselves for a holy death in difficult circumstances.

Although the reason that the penitent soul might die in the absence of a priest was very different in the plague years in Milan than in the penal times in England, the need for the “Testament” was the same in both places. It would seem reasonable to assume, therefore, that the Jesuits brought copies of the “Testament” with them when they arrived in England in 1580. It is known that Edmund Campion and Robert Persons stayed with Charles Borromeo on their way to England from Rome, remaining with him for eight days in May 1580.[vi] Other priests from the English College in Rome also stayed in Milan with Charles Borromeo en route to England, and we know specifically that he entertained another group of England-bound priests in September 1580, only four months after Campion and Persons had stayed with him.[vii]

Let’s now return to Professor Steggle’s claim that the spiritual testament was not John Shakespeare’s. His argument is based on other printed texts of the spiritual testaments, which are ascribed to other authors or editors, i.e. not to St. Charles Borromeo, and which are all later than Charles Borromeo’s time. Since the editions that ascribe authorship to Borromeo are later than these editions, Professor Steggle argues that Borromeo’s alleged authorship was a later pious fabrication by those who venerated him as a saint.  The earliest printed editions that have been discovered date from 1613 and 1622 and are ascribed to two different authors or editors. Since John Shakespeare died in 1601, he could not have seen or signed a document which did not yet exist. It is on this seemingly solid evidence that Professor Steggle rests his case. Since John Shakespeare can’t be the signatory of the testament, and since it is clearly not a forgery, he concludes that it is Joan Hart, John Shakespeare’s daughter and the poet’s sister, whose name is on the document, she having reverted to the use of her maiden name following her husband’s death. It is, therefore, not John’s spiritual will and testament but Joan’s and it was she, presumably, who had hidden it in the rafters of the house.

The problem is that Professor Steggle bases his evidence on a logical fallacy. He assumes that the earliest discovered text is the original text. He assumes that any pieces of the jigsaw puzzle which we do not possess ipso facto do not exist. It goes without saying that we cannot assume that they exist, nor should we base anything but speculative arguments on their supposed existence, but we cannot state categorically that what has not been discovered does not exist. In point of fact, however, there is evidence of the existence of the text of the spiritual will and testament which dates back not merely to Charles Borromeo’s time but is listed amongst his very possessions. Buried in the footnotes of Professor Steggle’s paper is the following:

A manuscript entitled “Ultima volonta dell’anima fatta in forma di testamento,” with blanks which have been filled in, in a different hand, with the name “Carolus,” and annotated in a different hand “20 dec 1560,” is found bound in with a Book of Hours which belonged to Charles Borromeo during his time as Archbishop of Milan (1564–84).

Wait a minute. Let’s pause to catch our breath. Having asserted that the spiritual testament had not been written until after Charles Borromeo’s and John Shakespeare’s respective deaths, Professor Steggle confesses in a footnote that a manuscript bearing a remarkably similar title to the spiritual last will and testament of John Shakespeare was listed amongst Charles Borromeo’s possessions, with Charles Borromeo apparently appending his own name in the same blank spaces in which we find John Shakespeare’s name in the remarkably similar sounding document. And it is dated “December 1560” and bound in Charles Borromeo’s personal copy of the Book of Hours. How does this not demolish the whole of Professor Steggle’s case? It should be conceded that Professor Steggle declares that he would argue that “the date, and the implication that it is Borromeo’s personal copy, are both spurious” but he doesn’t argue it, in the sense that he offers no argument.

Playing devil’s advocate and assuming, for the sake of an argument that’s not been made, that the dating of the earlier “spiritual testament” and its ownership by St. Charles Borromeo are indeed “spurious” and of doubtful authenticity, it is also intriguing that Professor Steggle refrains from mentioning another reference to a “testament”, dating from 1581 and linking the “testament” to the Jesuit mission to England. In a letter from William Allen, the rector of the English College in Rheims, to Father Alphonsus Agazzari, rector of the English College in Rome, on June 23, 1581, Allen wrote that “Father Robert [Persons] wants three or four thousand or more of the Testaments, for many persons desire to have them.…”[viii] It has been suggested that the “Testaments” requested by Father Persons were copies of the New Testament in the Rheims translation. This is not possible. First, the translation of the Vulgate New Testament into English would not be completed until March of the following year, and would not, presumably, have been published until a month or two later. The title page reads: “printed at Rhemes by John Fogny, 1582”. Second, “three or four thousand or more” of such a costly and bulky volume would have created a major logistical problem for the Jesuit mission. How would one smuggle thousands of copies of an expensive 800-page quarto volume past the wary port officers at the English ports? And, assuming that one managed to smuggle the shipment into England, how would one transport such a bulky cargo around the country? In the very same letter in which Allen wrote of Persons’ desire for the “Testaments”, he reported that “the persecution still rages with the same fury, the Catholics being haled away to prison and otherwise vexed, and the Fathers of the Society being most diligently looked for”. Is it likely that fugitive priests, traveling incognito from one secret Catholic household to another, would be able to transport such a heavy cargo with them? Surely it is much more likely that the “Testaments” being requested were the “Borromeo Testaments” which, when printed, would be a booklet of not more than six pages. Irrespective of whether St. Charles Borromeo was the actual author of the testament, it seems inescapable that the testament that John Shakespeare signed was indeed a version of the text brought over by the first Jesuit missionaries in 1580 and 1581.

William Allen’s letter may also explain why John Shakespeare’s spiritual will is handwritten and not printed. It is clear from Father Allen’s letter that Father Persons had exhausted his original supplies of the printed version, hence the desire for several thousand more, and it is equally clear that demand was outstripping supply, “for many persons desire to have them”. It seems reasonable to assume that John Shakespeare was one of these “many persons” and that he had signed a hand-copied version in the absence of supplies of the printed originals.

The evidence that John Shakespeare was a defiant Catholic, in the midst of widespread anti-Catholic persecution by the Elizabethan state, is strengthened by the fact that he would be fined for being a Catholic recusant in 1592. In the presence of such evidence, honest scholars should be exploring the importance of William Shakespeare’s Catholic upbringing to his life and exploring the ways that this informed his work.

The trouble is that honest scholarship is in short supply in these meretricious times. This is not to impugn Professor Steggle’s honesty nor his scholarship. His presentation of much of the historical background is praiseworthy and his incisive presentation of the evidence for the authenticity of the Shakespeare testament is exemplary. What is not so praiseworthy is the farcical virtue signaling with which he chooses to conclude his argument. We will let it speak for itself:

 [A]t the risk of making an obvious point, there is a strikingly gendered element to the story I have told here. Despite being the sister of the most famous writer in Western history, Joan Shakespeare Hart is almost  unknown; she is truly the “Shakespeare’s sister” of Virginia Woolf ’s famous essay of 1925, a figure so trapped by gender conventions that it seems there is no chance of finding anything she wrote or created. And yet perhaps there is a profoundly personal statement of her religious faith that had already been in the public domain for over a hundred years at the point that Woolf wrote her essay. If the current essay is correct in its assertion, then it is ironic, and sadly appropriate for Woolf ’s thesis, that Joan’s spiritual testament has for all these years been wrongly assigned to her father.

If Professor Steggle is correct in his assertion, which he isn’t, he has only shown that Shakespeare’s sister was as devoutly and defiantly Catholic as her father and her niece Susanna (William’s daughter), both of whom were fined for their Catholic recusancy. One suspects that Virginia Woolf would not be amused. One suspects, in fact, that she would react in the same primly puritanical way in which she had responded to news that T. S. Eliot had become a Catholic. “I have had a most shameful and distressing interview with dear Tom Eliot,” she wrote to a friend on February 11, 1928, “who may be called dead to us all from this day forward. He has become an Anglo-Catholic believer in God and immortality, and goes to church. I was shocked. A corpse would seem to be more credible than he is. I mean, there’s something obscene in a living person sitting by the fire and believing in God.”[ix]

Although in prim Victorian fashion, Virginia Woolf would not be amused, the rest of us can at least find amusement and a reason to smile, and perhaps even an opportunity to laugh, at the way in which modern scholarship ends in such engendered farce. It’s the triumph of bathos. A corpse would seem more credible…. We might even succumb to letting Eliot have the last word, or the last laugh, at the expense of today’s hollow men:

This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
This is the way the world ends
Not with a bang but a whimper.

Notes:

[i] The evidence for the genuine nature of the spiritual will is utterly convincing but a full examination of all the facts is beyond the scope of this essay. Those wishing to pursue the matter further are referred to John Henry de Groot’s masterful treatment of the whole issue in his scholarly magnum opus, The Shakespeares and “The Old Faith” (1946, republished 1995).

[ii] G.B. Harrison, “The National Background” in H. Granville-Barker (ed.), A Companion to Shakespeare Studies, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press; cited in Mutschmann and Wentersdorf, Shakespeare and Catholicism. New York: Sheed and Ward, 1952, p. 73

[iii] John Henry de Groot, The Shakespeares and “The Old Faith”, Fraser, Michigan, Real-View Books edn., 1995, p. 110

[iv] Ibid., p. 65

[v] Ibid.

[vi] Richard Simpson, Edmund Campion: A Biography, Edinburgh, Williams and Norgate, 1867, pp. 111-12; cited in de Groot, op. cit., p. 86

[vii] de Groot, op. cit., p. 86

[viii] Ibid., pp. 87-8

[ix] Adrian Hastings, A History of English Christianity 1920-1990, London: SCM Press, 1991 (chapter 12); quoted in Walter Hooper, C. S. Lewis: A Companion and Guide, London: HarperCollins, 1996, p. 25.