Born:
Cardinal Robert Bellminin, eminent
Controversialist, Monte Pulciano, Tuscany; Richard
Cromwell, eldest surviving son of the Protector, 1626,
Huntingdon; Edmond Malone, editor of Shakespear, 1741,
Dublin.
Died:
Edwin the Great, king of Northumberland,
slain at Hatfield, 633; St. Francis, founder of the
Franciscans or Gray Friars, 1226, Assisi; John, Duke
of Argyll, statesman and general, 1743; Henry Carey,
musician, 1743, London; Samuel Horsley, bishop of St.
Asaph's, divine and controversialist, 1806, Brighton;
John Vandenhoff, tragedian, 1861, London.
Feast Day:
Saints Marcus and Marcian, and their companions,
martyrs, beginning of 4th century. The Martyrs of
Triers, 4th century. St. Ammon, hermit, founder of the
Hermitages of Nitria, 4th century. St. Petronius,
bishop of Bologna, confessor, 5th century. St. Edwin,
king of Northumberland, martyr, 633. St. Aurea, virgin
and abbess, 666. St. Francis of Assisi, confessor,
founder of the Friar Minors, 1226.
ST. FRANCIS
The memory of no saint is held in affection so
mingled with reverence by the Roman Catholic Church as
St. Francis, �the gentle and the holy.' He was born in
1182, in the romantic town of Assisi, in Umbria. His
father was a merchant, and a hard money-making man.
Francis he took into partnership, but he wasted his
money in gay living, splendid dress, and banqueting,
and made the streets of Assisi ring at night with song
and frolic. When about twenty-five, he was seized with
a violent illness, and when he rose from his bed,
nature looked dreary, and his soul was filled with
loathing for his past life and habits. He resolved to
he religious, and of course religious after the
fashion of his generation. He determined never to
refuse alms to a poor person. He met a troop of
beggars, and exchanged his dress for the rags of the
filthiest. He mortified himself with such severity,
that Assisi thought he had gone distracted. His father
had been distressed by his luxury, but now he thought
he should be ruined by his alms-giving. To bring him,
as he thought, to his senses, he beat him
unmercifully, put Min in fetters, and locked him up.
Finding him, how-ever, incorrigible, he carried him
before the bishop; and there and then he renounced all
his rights of ownership and inheritance, and stripped
off' his clothes in token of his rejection of the
world, and his perpetual choice of poverty.
Francis, thus relieved from all entanglement,
pursued his way with. a simple energy which nothing
could withstand. The fervour of his devotion diffused
itself like an epidemic, and crowds parted with their
possessions, and followed him into poverty and
beggary. He went to Rome, and offered himself and his
comrades to the service of the pope Innocent III, in
1210, incorporated the order, which grew into the
mighty and wide-spread fraternity of Franciscans, Grey
Friars, or Minor Friars. The first name they had from
their founder, the second from their gray clothing,
and the third from their humility. Their habit was a
loose garment, of a gray color reaching to the ankles,
with a cowl of the same, and a cloak over it when they
went abroad. They girded themselves with cords, and
went barefooted.
The austerities related of Francis are very much of
a piece with those told of other saints. He scarcely
allowed his body what was necessary to sustain life.
If any part of his rough habit seemed too soft, he
darned it with packthread, and was wont to say to his
brethren, that the devils easily tempted those who
wore soft garments. His bed was usually the ground, or
he slept sitting, and for his bolster he had a piece
of wood or stone. Unless when sick, he rarely ate any
food that was cooked with fire, and when he did, he
sprinkled it with ashes. Yet it is said, that with
indiscreet or excessive austerity he was always
displeased. When a brother, by long fasting, was
unable to sleep, Francis brought him some bread, and
persuaded him to eat by eating with him. In treating
with women, he kept so strict a watch over his eyes,
that he hardly knew any woman by sight. He used to
say:
'To converse with women, and not be hurt by it, is
as difficult as to take fire into one's bosom and not
be burned. He that thinks himself secure, is -undone;
the devil finding somewhat to take hold on, though it
be but a hair, raises a dreadful war.'
He was endowed, say his biographers, with an
extraordinary gift of tears; his eyes were as
fountains which flowed continuously, and by much
weeping he almost lost his sight. In his ecstatic
raptures, he often poured forth his soul in verse,
and Francis in among the oldest vernacular poets of
Italy. His sympathy with nature was very keen. He
spoke of birds and beasts with all the tenderness due
to children, and Dean Milman says the only malediction
he can find which proceeded from his lips, was against
a fierce swine which had killed a lamb. He had an
especial fondness for lambs and larks, as emblems of
the Redeemer and the Cherubim. When his surgeon was
about to cauterize him for an issue, he said: 'Fire,
my brother, be thou discreet and gentle to me.' In one
of his hymns, he speaks of his brother the Sun, his
sister the Moon, his brother the Wind, his sister the
Water. When dying, he said:
'Welcome, Sister Death.' While in prayer it is said
that he often floated in the air. Leo, his secretary
and confessor, testified that he had seen him, when
absorbed in devotion, raised above the ground so high
that he could only touch his feet, which he held, and
watered with his tears; and that some-times he saw him
raised much higher!
In his ardor for the conversion of souls, he set
out to preach to the Mohammedans. A Christian army was
encamped before Damietta, in Egypt. He passed beyond
its lines and was seized and carried before the
sultan, and at once broke forth in exposition of the
mysteries of faith. The sultan is reported to have
listened with attention, probably with the Mohammedan
reverence for the insane. Francis offered to enter a
great fire with the priests of Islam, and to test the
truth of their creeds by the result. The offer was
declined. �I will then enter alone,' said Francis.
If I should be burned, you will impute it to my sins;
should I come forth alive, you will embrace the
gospel.' This also the sultan refused, but with every
mark of honour convoyed the bold apostle to the camp
at Damietta.
The crowning glory of the life of Francis is
reputed to have occurred in the solitude of Mount
Alverno, whither he had retired to hold a solemn fast
in honour of the archangel Michael. One morning, when
he was praying, he saw in vision a seraph with six
wings, and in the midst of the wings the crucified Saviour. As the vision
disappeared, and left on his
mind an unutterable sense of delight and awe, he found
on his hands and feet black excrescences like nails,
and in his side a wound, from which blood frequently
oozed, and stained his garment. These marks, in his
humility, he hid with jealous care, but they became
known, and by their means were wrought many miracles.
Pope Alexander IV. publicly declared that, with his
own eyes, he had seen the stigmata.
These are a few instances out of the
mass of legends which made the name of Francis a great
power in Europe in the middle ages. He died at Assisi,
in 1226, on the 4th of October, which day was
appointed as his festival.
HENRY CAREY
Carey was a musician and a music-composer of great
merit, but not fortunate in his life or affairs, After
a long struggle with poverty, he died suddenly, and it
has been alleged by his own hand (but this is
doubtful), leaving a widow and four small children
totally unprovided for. One feels it to have been a
sad fate for the man who gave us the charming simple
ballad of Sally in our Alley, a strain which has been
the delight of an infinity of people, and will
probably continue so while the English language lasts.
Carey, however, would appear to have conferred a
greater musical obligation upon his country than even
Sally in our Alley. There is now pretty good reason to
conclude that he was the author of the Royal Anthem.
This noble composition has indeed been attributed to
Dr. Richard Bull, who lived in the reign of James I,
and another history would represent it as originating
in honor of James II, at the time when he was
threatened with the invasion of the Prince of Orange;
but there is in reality no evidence for the words or
air having existed before the year 1740.
In 1794, a
gentleman, named Townsend, was able to report that
his father had dined with a party which met in a
tavern in Cornhill, in 1740, to celebrate the capture
of Portobello, when he heard Henry Carey sing the song
as his own composition, with great applause from the
company. About the same time, Dr. Harington, the
celebrated physician and amateur-musician of Bath,
took down from the lips of John Christopher Smith, who
had composed an opera for which Carey gave the
libretto, a statement, which Dr. Harington had often
heard from the old gentleman before that Henry Carey
came to him with the words and music of God Save the
King, �desiring him to correct the base, which was not
proper' a, request which Mr. Smith complied with by
writing another base in correct harmony.
The anthem does not seem to have come into
notoriety till the first successes of Prince Charles
Edward Stuart in the autumn of 1745, called forth a
burst of loyal�that is, anti-popish feeling, in the
population of London. To gratify this sentiment, the
song was brought upon the stage in both Covent Garden
and Drury Lane theaters. The Daily Advertiser of
Monday, September 30, 1745, contains this statement:
On Saturday night last, the audience at the
Theatre-Royal, Drury Lane, were agreeably surprised by
the gentlemen belonging to that house performing the
anthem of God Save our Noble King The universal
applause it met with�being encored with repeated huzzas sufficiently denoted
in how just abhorrence they
hold the arbitrary schemes of our insidious enemies,
and detest the despotic attempts of papal power.'
The
song and air (the latter with some slight
inaccuracies) were printed in the Gentleman's Magazine
for October of that year; but Mr. William Chappell
believes that it had seen the light previously, in a
collection, entitled Harmonia Anglicana.